Business: How Much Did Bill Miller Know?

Lingering questions bedevil the Treasury Secretary

" Am I ever to be free?" That plaintive question was asked two weeks ago by Treasury Secretary G. William Miller as the Senate Banking Committee debated the appointment of a special prosecutor to look into charges of foreign bribes and Defense Department slush funds while he was chairman of Textron Inc. Answered California Senator Alan Cranston sternly: "The lingering doubt remains, from which you may never be free, that perhaps you didn't really want to know or you would have ordered an investigation." Two years after the allegations against Miller first surfaced, they continue to hound him.

The repeated charges and investigations have already begun to erode the Treasury Secretary's effectiveness as the nation's chief financial officer. Normally affable and confident, Miller has become truculent and testy after spending distracting hours huddling with his lawyer and countering questions by reporters. Policy clout is now beginning to drift away from the Treasury Department. Since Miller took office six months ago, his top deputies for domestic and international economic affairs have both resigned.

Miller's power ultimately rests on his retaining the confidence of Jimmy Carter. The Treasury Secretary was originally popular around the White House because he was a team player who defended Administration policy in public. But Carter has been warned by advisers to avoid an all-out "My Boy Bill" defense of Miller. Says Brookings Institution Economist Joseph Pechman: "Even if he continues to preside over economic policy, the President himself will naturally lose some confidence as a result of this episode." Impressions of Miller's vulnerability are already seeping into the business community. Concludes Bank of America President A.W. Clausen: "Bill Miller's effectiveness shouldn't be influenced by this, but I guess it will."

The case of G. William Miller reads like a business-mystery novel—with the last chapter missing. The Treasury Secretary confidently told the Senate Banking Committee two years ago during hearings for his confirmation as Federal Reserve chairman: "I do know my company did not bribe anybody." But the Securities and Exchange Commission charges that Textron's Bell Helicopter division spent $5.4 million in foreign kickbacks in ten countries between 1971 and 1978. The largest was the $2.9 million payment to a firm, owned in part by the deposed Shah of Iran's brother-in-law, in connection with the purchase of 489 helicopters for $500 million. The SEC also revealed that Textron, a major defense contractor, spent $600,000 between 1971 and 1978 entertaining Pentagon officials in violation of Defense Department rules.

Fearful that Textron's affairs would become public, company officials allegedly altered documents in the so-called White Rose files, which dealt with foreign payoffs. As the SEC dug into the Textron case over the past two years, executives also began losing their memories, and eleven employees took the Fifth Amendment and refused to answer questions. According to the SEC, documents relating to Textron's Defense Department entertainment fund were also destroyed.

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ROBB LEVIN, resident of Fairfax, Virginia, on the $15,000 lawsuit settlement made against Tareq and Michaele Salahi, the White House gate crashers, who are also involved in at least 15 other civil suits

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