The case of Julie Hiatt Steele:
The human cost of the Kenneth Starr witch-hunt
  By David Walsh

Julie Hiatt Steele, hounded and prosecuted by Hardon Kenny Starr during the impeachment circus
is facing severe financial and personal difficulties arising from Starr's vendetta against her.

Steele hasn't worked since February 1998, when she submitted an affidavit in the Paula Jones case
undermining the credibility of Kathleen Willey. Steele lost her employment when the affidavit and her refusal
to go along with Willey's version of events became public. Subsequently she became the target of an
extraordinary campaign of prosecutorial terror and intimidation by Starr's office.

Steele was dragged before two grand juries. Her daughter and brother, as well as a former lawyer and accountant,
were also interrogated. She was forced to turn over tax and bank records, credit reports and telephone records
Herr Starr's inquisitors. Most despicably, Hardon Kenny threatened to move against Steele's parental rights,
making public the fact that it was looking into the legal procedures by which she had adopted her son.

In January 1999, Starr indicted Steele on obstructing justice and making false statements. She faced the possibility
of 35 years in jail and a one million dollar fine. Starr's office pursued its horseshit case against Steele to trial.
The case ended in a hung jury and mistrial, a humiliating defeat for Starr.His office decided not to pursue a retrial.

Starr's conduct toward Steele was of a piece with his legal attack on other would-be witnesses against the Clintons, including
Susan McDougal, whom he kept in prison for 18 months on contempt charges. In both cases, Starr used his legal powers to
prosecute and harass people who refused to give testimony that supported his vendetta against Clinton. Both McDougal and
Steele assert that Starr and his band of legal toughs persecuted them because they refused to give false testimony.

Having run through her savings and unable to work for emotional and physical reasons since her trial ended, Steele,
now faces the loss of her house in Virginia. She also suffered a broken leg and knee in an accident at home in September, which left her immobile until recently.

Steele told a WSWS reporter on March 8: “The most recent thing is that I've just run out of money and credit,
and the house is our anchor, it's all we have left, and it's going to go. I've lived here 22 years.”

Julie Hiatt Steele's sole crime was that, having become entangled in the web of prurient gossip spun by Starr and his Republican
right co-conspirators, she had the courage and principle to stand up to the modern day “Grand Inquisitor.”

In March 1997 her friend Kathleen Willey told Newsweek magazine reporter Michael Isikoff that Clinton had
groped her in the White House in November 1993. Willey asked Steele to confirm for Isikoff that she had told
Steele of the incident at the time. Steele, trying to be helpful to a somewhat unstable acquaintance, did so, off the
record and not under oath, thinking the story would go any farther.

When she realized in the summer of 1997 that Isikoff was going into print with Willey's allegation, Steele told the
reporter the truth, that Willey had never previously mentioned any such episode involving Clinton. Steele has stuck
to the same story ever since, under withering questioning from Starr's prosecutors, as well as the FBI.

Steele's insistence that Willey had never told her about a groping in the White House was an obstacle to Kenny's
campaign against Clinton. During Clinton's grand jury deposition in August 1998, one of Starr's underlings questioned
the president about the Willey incident, and Clinton denied that it had taken place.

Starr could have indicted Clinton on perjury charges if Willey's claim had been substantiated. Moreover, the Willey story, if
proven true, would have added a new charge to the list of Clinton's alleged improprieties and strengthened the effort of
Congressional Republicans to remove him from office.

Ms. Steele told the WSWS: “They intended to get me convicted and roll her [Kathleen Willey] back out. The [Paula] Jones
thing was always flimsy. But they could have made this perjury, because Clinton sat straight up in his chair and leaned forward
and said, ‘That didn't happen [with Willey].' They took an hour on August 17 [1998] in questioning him about the Willey grope.
To turn it into a perjury charge, they needed to convict me in order to raise her credibility. They needed to get me out of the
way, so her charge against him would hold. And that was a federal venue, instead of a civil case, like the Jones case.”

Having faced the Starr inquisitors and rejected their attempts to draw her in, Steele was hounded and financially devastated.
Her present situation stands as a warning to every working person of the threat to one's rights and very existence embodied in
the right-wing, conspiratorial methods which increasingly characterize the workings of the American political establishment.

While Steele's situation may be among the most severe, hundreds of innocent people were harassed, financially and emotionally
devastated, and subjected to cruel and unfair media attention in Little Rock, Washington and elsewhere. They are the
“collateral damage” of the right-wing war against the Clinton White House.

As the WSWS explained at the time of Steele's indictment: “The Starr probe, both in its methods and political motivations, raises the specter of a police state. The systematic abuse of civil liberties and democratic rights which has characterized the Starr investigation provides an indication of the type of governmental regime his political allies in the impeachment drive are aiming for.”

Steele makes clear that the decision by Starr in May 1999 to drop the case against her was not the end of the ordeal.
The media continued its attacks on her, presenting what Steele describes as “Chatty Kathy Willey week” on cable news
programs, when Willey was given a forum to claim that “I should be in jail, that Starr should come back at me.
It was the most despicable, horrible week I could imagine.”

She continues: “After the trial in 1999, I came home. I put a good face on it. I still thought, OK, we won. But I felt
traumatized, violated. I thought I would come home and not be as isolated as I had been. It really hasn't worked out
that way. The isolation has continued.”
 
 

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