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The Woman Who Wouldn’t Talk

  • The Woman Who Wouldn't Talk
  • Attribution

    Susan McDougal ; with Pat Harris ; introduction by Helen Thomas
  • Publication Details

    Book, 1st Carroll & Graf ed, Carroll & Graf Publishers, 2003
  • Availability

    LOCATIONCALL #STATUS
      (LOWER LEVEL)  F415.3.M39 W66 2003         AVAILABLE

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  • Description

    A Tale of Brazen Politics that also Charts an Extraordinary Choice and a Journey of Personal Redemption How a small-town Arkansas woman became a nationally known felon is one of the most fascinating and unexamined legacies of the Clinton presidency. In the mid-1990s, Susan McDougal unexpectedly found herself facing federal prosecutors who represented Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr. For millions of Americans who believe that Starr, appointed by Republicans dissatisfied with the first Whitewater prosecutor, pushed his investigation too far, Susan McDougal remains the very embodiment of the ordinary citizen whose liberty is usurped by a coercive government. (automatically summarized from Amazon.com)
  • Authors

  • Subject

  • Places in this work

  • Notes

    • Includes index
    • "How a small-town Arkansas woman became a nationally known felon is one of the most fascinating and unexamined legacies of the Clinton presidency. Born to a U.S. Army sergeant and his Belgian bride, Susan Henley was one of seven children in a boisterous Arkansas family; in her teens, she made patriotic speeches at her local American Legion hall. In 1976, she married Jim McDougal, a mercurial entrepreneur, who soon turned their life into a rolling sideshow of bank acquisitions and real estate deals, including one fatefully dubbed Whitewater." "In the mid 1990s, Susan McDougal unexpectedly found herself facing federal prosecutors who represented Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr. They offered her a deal - relief from legal jeopardy that included Whitewater charges in exchange for damaging information on Bill and Hillary Clinton." "McDougal examines the life choices she has made. She also offers fresh anecdotes about the Clintons’ early years in politics, a close-up view of Starr’s sinister investigation, and a moving portrait of what happens to women in American prisons."–BOOK JACKET
  • ISBN

    • 0786711280
  • LCCN

  • Open Library ID

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