Clintons, Obama and Democrats’ trail of dead bodies, KKK, Jim Crow, Whitewater and scandals
The Whitewater scandal began with an investigation into the real estate investments of both Bill and Hillary Clinton. It also involved some of their associates, namely a married couple named Jim and Susan McDougal, in the Whitewater Development Corporation, which was a failed business venture somewhere in the mid-1970s and 1980s.
In March of 1992, a New York Times article published during the U.S. presidential campaign reported that the Clintons, who was then governor and first lady of Arkansas, had invested and lost money in the Whitewater Development Corporation. The article caught the eye of Laura J. Lewis, a Resolution Trust Corporation investigator. The part about “losing money” may not have been true.
Ms. Lewis was looking into the failure of Madison Guaranty Savings and Loan, owned by Jim and Susan McDougal. Lewis began looking for connections between the savings and loan company and the Clintons. After gathering a certain amount of evidence, she submitted a criminal referral in September 1992 to the FBI naming Bill and Hillary Clinton as witnesses in the Madison Guaranty case. A compromised Little Rock U.S. Attorney named Charles A.
Banks, and the FBI determined that the referral lacked merit, but Lewis continued to pursue the case. As soon as Bill Clinton got into the White House, he fired every federal prosecutor in the country, and put in his own corrupt people, probably to keep from being prosecuted.
From 1992 to 1994, Lewis issued several additional referrals against the Clintons, and repeatedly called the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Little Rock and the Justice Department regarding the case. Her referrals eventually became public knowledge, and she testified before the (kangaroo) Senate Whitewater Committee in 1995.
Nothing major came of it.