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February 12,
1999
The Senate acquits the President on both impeachment charges. With 67 votes required to convict on either count, the perjury charge fails, with 55 voting against and 45 in favor, while the obstruction of justice charge tally is 50-50.
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February 10,
1999
As support for censuring the President fades, three moderate Republican
senators -- Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania, James Jeffords of Vermont and
John Chafee of Rhode Island -- announce they will oppose both articles of
impeachment.
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February 9,
1999
A motion to allow the public to watch the Senate's deliberations on the
evidence fails.
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February 8,
1999
Senators hear concluding arguments from House managers and from lawyers for the
President's defense.
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February 1,
1999
Monica Lewinsky is questioned under oath by Republican House managers for
six hours.
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January 27,
1999
The Senate rejects a motion to dismiss the two impeachment counts against
the President. In a second vote, the senators approve a motion to allow
House managers to depose witnesses.
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January 25, 1999
After a failed Democratic motion to stage open deliberations over whether
or not to dismiss all charges against President Clinton and end the
impeachment trial, the Senate debates the issue behind closed doors.
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January 24, 1999
House impeachment managers meet with Monica Lewinsky in Washington,
declaring her a potentially helpful witness in the Senate trial. Her
lawyer says she provided no new information and requests that she not be
called to testify.
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January 21, 1999
President Clinton's defense team, on its final day of presentations, pleads
for "political sanity," stating that the prosecution's case rests on
circumstantial evidence and unrelated facts.
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January 19, 1999
President Clinton delivers his State of the Union address, making no
mention of the impeachment trial.
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January 13, 1999
President Clinton's legal team presents its defense before the Senate,
warning against calling witnesses. Monica Lewinsky's attorney refuses a
request from the House Judiciary Committee to interview her.
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January 9, 1999
President Clinton is served a formal summons notifying him of the trial
under way in the Senate. Senators begin haggling over whether to call
witnesses to testify.
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January 7, 1999
While polls show most Americans do not approve of a Senate trial of President
Clinton, the trial opens.
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January 6, 1999
House Republicans nominate Illinois representative Dennis Hastert as
Speaker of the House.
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December 28, 1998
House Speaker-elect Bob Livingston announces his resignation from Congress
amidst revelations of marital infidelity.
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December 19, 1998
The House of Representatives approves two articles of impeachment against the President.
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December 18,
1998
As U.S. warplanes drop bombs over Baghdad, the House begins debating articles of impeachment against President Clinton.
December 12, 1998
Facing reporters in Jerusalem while on a Middle East peace mission, President
Clinton says he will not resign from office and again denies that he lied under
oath. The House Judiciary Committee approves the fourth and final article of
impeachment and dismisses censure as an option for punishment.
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December 11,
1998
The House Judiciary Committee approves the first
three articles of impeachment.
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December 9,
1998
The House Judiciary Committee unveils four articles of impeachment against
President Clinton. Two articles allege that he lied in the Paula Jones sexual
harassment case and in his testimony before Ken Starr's grand jury. The other
articles allege that he abused the powers of his office and obstructed justice
in the Monica Lewinsky affair.
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December 8,
1998
The White House presents a 184-page defense report to the House Judiciary
Committee, rebutting Ken Starr's charges against President Clinton of lying
under oath, obstructing justice and abuse of power.
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December 6,
1998
President Clinton's legal team appears
before the House Judiciary Committee, arguing that the President should not be
impeached.
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November 26,
1998
Members of the House Judiciary Committee draw up four
articles of
impeachment against the President.
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November 19,
1998
Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr testifies before the House Judiciary
Committee during its first day of impeachment hearings.
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November 16,
1998
The Justice Department dismisses most of the allegations of wrongdoing
launched against the office of the independent counsel, but indicates it will
continue gathering information about unresolved charges.
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November 13,
1998
President Clinton settles the Paula Jones sexual harassment lawsuit,
agreeing to pay Jones $850,000 while admitting nothing.
The independent counsel also sends Congress two boxes of information
related to former White House aide Kathleen Willey's allegations that the
President made unwanted sexual advances.
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November 9,
1998
In a setback for the White House, the Supreme Court refuses to hear
appeals that presidential adviser Bruce Lindsey should be covered by the
attorney-client privilege, and that the Secret Service enjoys a "protective
function privilege" against testifying about the President's activities
before a grand jury.
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November 5,
1998
The House Judiciary Committee asks President Clinton to answer 81 written
questions concerning the allegations contained in the independent counsel's
report.
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November 3,
1998
In a defeat for Republicans and the conventional wisdom, Democrats score upset victories in the 1998 midterm elections.
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October 30,
1998
Unsealed court papers show that U.S. District Judge Norma Halloway Johnson
has authorized an investigation into whether the independent counsel's
office illegally leaked grand jury information.
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October 20,
1998
Lawyers for Paula Jones ask a federal appeals court to reinstate her
sexual harassment lawsuit against President Clinton.
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October 8,
1998
With 31 Democrats voting yes, the House approves an open-ended impeachment
inquiry of the President by a vote of 258-176.
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October 4,
1998
Voting along party lines, the House Judiciary Committee approves a
resolution to recommend an im
peachment inquiry into the allegations contained in independent counsel
Kenneth Starr's report.
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October 1,
1998
The Judiciary Committee releases three volumes of supporting material to Starr's report,
including transcripts of Monica Lewinsky's telephone conversations with
Linda Tripp.
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September 21, 1998
The videotape of President Clinton's grand jury testimony, along with 2,800 pages of supporting evidence to Starr's report, is made public by the Judiciary Committee.
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September 12, 1998
The White House releases a rebuttal to Starr's report.
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September 11, 1998
The House of Representatives votes to release the Starr report on the Internet. The White House releases a prelinary rebuttal. At a
prayer breakfast, President Clinton says, "I don't think there is a fancy way to say that I have sinned," and for the first time expresses
regret publicly for hurting Monica Lewinsky and her family.
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September 9, 1998
Starr sends his report to Congress of possible impeachable offenses by President Clinton. Separately, the President tells a Florida audience, "I let you down. I let my fami
ly down. I let this country down. But I'm trying to make it right. I'm determined to never let anything like that happen again."
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August 20, 1998
The President surrenders a DNA sample to Starr for comparison with a reported semen stain on a dress owned by Monica Lewinsky.
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August 17, 1998
President Clinton testifies to the Lewinsky grand jury via closed circuit television from the White House's Map Room. That evening, he makes a televised address to the nation about his testimony a
nd admits that he had a "not appropriate" relationship with Ms. Lewinsky, but insists that he never told anyone to lie about it.
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August 8, 1998
Chief U.S. District Judge Norma Halloway Johnson orders a probe into allegations that Kenneth Starr's office has leaked information to the press about testimony to the Lewinsky grand jury.
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August 6, 1998
Monica Lewinsky begins testifying before Kenneth Starr's grand jury in Washington, D.C.
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August 4, 1998
Chief Justice William Rehnquist rejects the White House's appeal that Bruce Lindsey and other White House lawyers should be covered by attorney-client privilege.
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July 28, 1998
Monica Lewinsky reaches a tentative immunity deal with Starr.
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July 17, 1998
After Supreme Court Chief Justice William Rehnquist refuses to block the Secret Service from testifying, Larry Cockell, the head of Clinton's security detail, and other agents report to the grand
jury to face questioning.
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June 2, 1998
Lewinsky replaces her attorney, William Ginsburg, with two seasoned Washington attorneys, Jacob Stein and Plato Cacheris.
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April 24, 1998
In five hours of videotaped testimony, Starr questions Hillary Clinton at the White House about her legal work for the failed Madison Guaranty Savings and Loan during the 1980s.
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April 16, 1998
Paula Jones announces she will appeal the dismissal of her case.
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April 1, 1998
Arkansas federal judge Susan Webber Wright dismisses Jones' sexual
harassment suit against the President, saying Jones' complaint, even
if true, would not constitute a violation of law.
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March 15, 1998
Former Clinton aide Kathleen Willey
appears on CBS' "Sixty Minutes," and says the president made unwelcome
sexual advances towards her in a room adjacent to the Oval Office at the
end of 1993.
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March 5, 1998
Vernon Jordan testifies for a second day before Starr's grand jury.
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February 12, 1998
Hillary
Clinton lashes out at Internet journalism, where "the lie can be twice
around the world before the truth gets out of bed to find
its boots."
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January 30, 1998
Linda Tripp breaks her silence, faxing news organizations the scoop that she
overheard a 2 a.m. Lewinsky-Clinton phone call. U.S.
District Judge Susan Webber Wright rules the Secret Service can disregard
subpoenas related to presidential affairs. .
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January 27, 1998 Starr opens a grand jury probe into Monica
Lewinsky's allegations. Hillary Clinton, appearing on NBC's
"Today" show, says
the controversy has been fabricated by a "vast right-wing
conspiracy." The New
York Times reports Lewinsky met with Clinton at the White House
in late December, two
weeks after she was subpoenaed to provide information for the
Paula Jones case. In a 72-minute
State of the Union address, President Clinton makes no mention of the
Lewinsky controversy.
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January
26, 1998 At a
White House event, Clinton states,
"I did not have sexual relations with that woman. ... I never
told anybody to
lie." "These allegations are false."
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January
21, 1998 The
Washington Post first
reports Lewinsky's allegations and the existence of taped recordings. President Clinton
denies the charges in vague terms. "There is no improper
relationship," he
tells Jim Lehrer of PBS.
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January
17, 1998
President Clinton,
testifying under oath to lawyers in the Paula Jones sexual harassment
case, denies having
had an affair with Lewinsky. He reportedly acknowledges having had an
affair with Gennifer
Flowers, a charge he previously denied.
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January
16, 1998 Attorney General Janet
Reno, in consultation with the federal appeals court that oversees
independent counsels,
approves an expansion of Starr's probe.
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January
13, 1998 With
FBI assistance, Tripp
wears a body microphone during meeting with Lewinsky at the
Ritz-Carlton Hotel in Pentagon
City, Virginia, and records their conversation.
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January
12, 1998 Linda
Tripp contacts
Independent counsel Kenneth Starr's office, providing 20 hours of
taped conversations with
Lewinsky.
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January 7,
1998 Lewinsky,
in a sworn
affidavit, denies having an affair with Clinton.
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December
1997 Tripp
reportedly informs
Lewinsky that she will testify about their conversations regarding
Lewinsky's alleged
trysts with Clinton.
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April 1996
Lewinsky leaves the
White House for public
affairs post at the Pentagon.
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November
1995 According to sources,
Lewinsky becomes involved with the President in a sexual
relationship.
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Spring
1995 Monica
Lewinsky graduates
from Lewis and Clark College, and heads to Washington, D.C. for an
unpaid internship at
the White House.
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