The Electronic Telegraph Sunday 15 January 1995 World News
THE SCOPE of the inquiry into the mysterious death of the top White House aide Vincent Foster has suddenly been broadened, casting doubt on the original verdict of suicide.
It has now emerged that Kenneth Starr, the independent counsel investigating the Whitewater affair, which concerns alleged shady business deals linked to President Clinton and his wife, summoned several police officers before a Grand Jury late last week.
During the meeting he took the unusual step of reading them the statutory definition of perjury. The officers were grilled on the precise circumstances surrounding the discovery of Foster's body in a Virginia park in July 1993.
The cause of death of Foster, an intimate friend of the Clintons, had been considered settled by most observers in Washington. An inquiry by Robert Fiske, the former independent counsel who was later replaced by a panel of judges, endorsed the police conclusion that Foster shot himself in the mouth. He attributed the suicide to depression unrelated to the Whitewater property dealings of the Clintons.
However, Mr Fiske did not convene a Grand Jury for that part of his investigation. This was considered strange by many legal experts. The rescue workers and park police who found the body did not testify under oath, and Mr Fiske essentially confined himself to a review of their report rather than conduct his own probe.
The Grand Jury questioning last week, which took place in secret, appeared to focus on the precise location of Foster's body in the park. One of the police officers was overheard reassuring a grand juror in the lobby that he would bring a map to assist testimony.
The seemingly minor issue of where the body was found could turn out to be of critical importance. A journalist for the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, Chris Ruddy, has been fighting a lone crusade for several months seeking to establish that the park police misreported the location of the body.
Ruddy is convinced that it is the key to exposing a cover-up that allegedly involves the police, the White House, even elements of the FBI. If Ruddy is right, it suggests a political scandal of colossal proportions.
Ruddy's latest revelation is that Dr Donald Haut, the Virginia medical examiner who viewed the scene of the crime on the night of Foster's death, said the body was 10 to 20 yards beyond the first cannon in the park. This is in direct contradiction to the Fiske report.
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