CLINTON ADMITS OVERSTATED LOSS ON WHITEWATER THREE STAR Edition 1

In a televised news conference, Clinton also said he knew of no White House efforts to interfere with the federal investigation into Whitewater's relationship to a failed savings and loan run by a former partner in Whitewater. The president called the news conference to address the swirling Whi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inSt. Louis post-dispatch
Main Author Robert L. Koenig and Bill Lambrecht Post-Dispatch Washington Bureau The Associated Press contributed to this report
Format Newspaper Article
LanguageEnglish
Published St. Louis, Mo Pulitzer, Inc 25.03.1994
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Summary:In a televised news conference, Clinton also said he knew of no White House efforts to interfere with the federal investigation into Whitewater's relationship to a failed savings and loan run by a former partner in Whitewater. The president called the news conference to address the swirling Whitewater controversy that has become more prominent in recent days. This week the House voted to schedule hearings - the Senate did the same last week - and several White House officials testified before a grand jury impaneled by a special counsel looking into Whitewater. The president acknowledged that a report on Whitewater issued during the 1992 campaign had overestimated his family's losses. That report valued the losses at about $70,000. But Clinton said that the actual loss was about $22,200 less.