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Tuesday,
October 2, 2001
Clinton
suspended from U.S. Supreme Court
By Anne Gearan
Associated Press
WASHINGTON
The Supreme Court opened its new term Monday with a
rebuke of former President Clinton, suspending him from practicing
law before the justices.
Clinton
was among 18 lawyers nationwide who received the same discipline.
The justices
gave Clinton 40 days to say why he should not be permanently
disbarred from practicing law before them. A Clinton lawyer
said the former president would argue that high court disbarment
would be inappropriate.
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Chuck
Kennedy/KRT
Former President Bill Clinton, center, listens to speakers
at a prayer service remembering the victims of Tuesday's
terrorist attacks on Friday, Sept. 14, 2001.
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Clinton
was admitted to the Supreme Court bar in 1977 but has never
argued a case there. Most lawyers admitted never do, but the
right to do so is considered an honor.
The court
did not explain its action, but Supreme Court disbarment often
follows disbarment in lower courts. The court acted after
it was notified by the Arkansas Supreme Court that Clintons
Arkansas law license was suspended for five years and he paid
a $25,000 fine.
On a
somber note in the courtroom Monday, Chief Justice William
H. Rehnquist began the 2001-2002 term by asking fellow justices
and others in the packed room to remember the hijacking victims
and their families, including chief Bush administration appellate
lawyer Theodore Olson, whose wife was killed in the plane
that hit the Pentagon.
Olson
removed his glasses and wiped his eyes several times as Rehnquist
spoke.
In cases Monday, the court:
Turned down an appeal that would have allowed the justices
to address the volatile issue of racial profiling. The case
involved hundreds of young black men in the upstate New York
city of Oneonta who contend police used skin color as the
sole reason to round them up for questioning in a burglary
case.
Rejected an appeal from convicted Oklahoma City bombing conspirator
Terry Nichols, who sought a new trial based on the FBIs
failure to give his lawyers thousands of documents from the
bombing investigation.
Declined to review a lower courts decision that rumors
spread to hurt a company are not entitled to free-speech protection.
The case grew from Procter & Gambles allegation
that rival Amway and Amway distributors spread a baseless
story that P&G was linked to devil worship.
The justices
had indicated earlier that they would hear important cases
this year on school vouchers, affirmative action, the death
penalty and child pornography.
In the
Clinton case, the court followed its standard rules, which
include suspending him from practice in the court and giving
him a chance to say why he should not be disbarred.
Typically,
the court issues a final disbarment order sometime after the
40 days elapse.
Clinton agreed to an Arkansas fine and suspension Jan. 19,
the day before he left office, as part of an agreement with
Independent Counsel Robert Ray to end the Monica Lewinsky
investigation. Ray had taken over the prosecution from Kenneth
Starr.
The agreement
with Ray also satisfied the legal effort by the Arkansas Supreme
Court Committee on Professional Conduct to disbar Clinton
for giving misleading testimony in the Paula Jones sexual
harassment case.
This
suspension is simply a consequence of the voluntary settlement
entered into last January with the Arkansas Bar, said
Clinton lawyer David E. Kendall. Pursuant to the Supreme
Courts order, we will show cause why disbarment is not
appropriate.
Clinton
is a native of Arkansas and was governor there before he was
elected president in 1992. He moved to New York after he left
office but has not applied to practice law there.
Should
Clinton apply, the Arkansas suspension would be honored, said
Frank Ciervo, a spokesman for the New York State Bar Association.
Rehnquist
and the court he leads have dealt with several Clinton scandals.
The justices, including the two chosen by Clinton, were unanimous
in their 1997 ruling that Paula Jones could sue Clinton alleging
sexual harassment.
The following
year Rehnquist drew grumbles from partisan Democrats when,
acting alone, he rejected White House attempts to shield Secret
Service agents and Clinton lawyers from having to testify
in the Lewinsky investigation.
Amid
the loud partisanship of the Clinton impeachment hearings,
Rehnquist won praise from Clintons lawyers as judge
to the Senates jury. His own views, if any, on guilt
or innocence were not apparent.
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