SLIPS ON THE PAPER TRAIL

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SHE HAS A HEARTWARMING BOOK coming out about children. She recently described herself as a "Christmas fanatic'' and celebrated the holiday by wearing red earrings in the shape of ribbons. Even her shoulder-length flip has a more traditional look.

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But just when the First Lady was preparing to return to the political stage after a year quietly refashioning her image into a combination of Martha Stewart and Mother Teresa, Hillary Rodham Clinton now faces a crisis that even the most artful public relations may not be able to fix. Within the space of 48 hours last week, the sudden discovery of controversial records has cast new light on her role in two controversies: the purge of the White House Travel Office in 1993 and her work at the Rose Law Firm in Little Rock for Madison Guaranty, the Whitewater savings and loan that lost $60 million of taxpayers' money.

Seemingly out of nowhere, the White House last week released a previously unknown 1993 memo by former administrative aide David Watkins in which he said he fired the travel office staff at the "insistence" of Hillary Clinton. "She conveyed to me in clear terms," Watkins wrote, "...her desire for swift and clear action to resolve the situation." The memo, which Watkins apparently never sent to anyone, contradicts the First Lady's assertions that she had nothing to do with the mass firing.

Then two days later, the White House disclosed that a personal aide to the Clintons had stumbled upon 115 pages of billing records from Mrs. Clinton's Rose Law Firm that had been eagerly sought for more than two years by congressional investigators as well as by the Whitewater investigators. Carolyn Huber, who was the custodian of the Clintons' personal files taken from White House lawyer Vincent Foster's office after his 1993 suicide, discovered the copied billings while sorting through correspondence in her East Wing office.

Mrs. Clinton has long maintained that her billings on behalf of the bank were "minimal." The newly discovered billings, which contain handwritten notations by both Mrs. Clinton and Foster, show that Mrs. Clinton performed about 50 hours of work for Madison over a 15-month period. The papers also make clear that she made some 68 phone calls concerning Madison and engaged in two official contacts with Arkansas state officials on the bank's behalf. Mrs. Clinton's personal lawyer, David Kendall, asserts that the papers merely confirm that his client did not perform significant work for Madison.

The records also reveal that Mrs. Clinton had at least 14 meetings on what regulators have described as a fictitious property deal called Castle Grande. Mrs. Clinton has told RTC investigators that she does not recall working on the transaction. According to the billings, Mrs. Clinton met repeatedly with Seth Ward, the father-in-law of Webster Hubbell, former Associate Attorney General now serving time in federal prison for bilking the Rose Law Firm. Ward, say investigators, was a sham purchaser of the 1,000-plus-acre plot south of Little Rock because the only security Madison required for the loan was the land itself. A computer printout among the billings reveals that Mrs. Clinton drafted an option agreement for Ward to sell part of the project back to Madison for $400,000.

QUOTES OF THE DAY

Open quoteShe is going back to jail Saturday.Close quote

  • LEONARD PADILLA,
  • a bounty hunter who had posted bond for Florida woman Casey Anthony, who was being held on the disappearance of her 3-year-old daughter Caylee. DNA matches a strand of hair — found in a car linked to Casey — to her daughter