Y' ..a. :. .:_.. - _xT a. . .. Packwood disputes accumacy of his ory s The Michigan daily - Monday, September 11, 1995 - Diaries give insight into Senate business Los Angeles Times WASHINGTON - With his career and personal affairs in shambles, Sen. Bob Packwood tried yesterday to sal- vage some of his reputation as a respon- sible legislator, rejecting indications in his own diaries that he traded favors with lobbyists and tried to extract fi- nancial benefits from his Senate com- mittee chairmanship. Three days after the public release of passages from the diary helped force his resignation, the senator insisted that many of the accounts in it - dictated in his own voice over 25 years - are misstated or never happened. About other incidents, he said he had no recol- lection. He says the diary passages were based on misunderstandings of events he held at the time. Packwood's comments about the diary passages illustrate his relentless determi- nation to dispute every point of the mas- sive ethics case compiled against him, Judges to hear cases on gays m military WASHINGTON (AP) - Lt. Paul Thomasson fired off a letter to his boss - the admiral enforcing the Navy's policy against homosexuals - days after President Clinton's "don't ask, don't tell" policy went into effect. "I am gay," he wrote. Despite Thomasson's stellar 10-year record and the support of his command- ing officer, the Navy moved to dis- charge him. Thomasson fought back in court, challenging the policy as unconstitu- tional. His case goes before the 4th CircuitCourt of Appeals in Alexandria, Va., this week - the first challenge of the Clinton policy to reach the federal appeals court level. A second challenge to the policy - Able vs. Perry - is slated to be argued before the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals later this year. The two cases illustrate how differ- ent judges can hear similar arguments on the same issue and reach opposite conclusions. They also cast doubt on the Clinton administration's claim that people would no longer be discharged from the mili- tary merely for being gay or lesbian. At the crux of the new policy is the presumption that someone who says he or she is homosexual would engage in homosexual activity, which is prohib- ited. To remain in uniform, openly gay members must prove they won't have gay sex. So far, four people have "rebutted the presumption" that because they are gay they would engage in homosexual activity, according to court papers. But "two effectively recanted and said they were confused and not gay," said C. Dixon Osburn, co-executive director of the Servicemembers Legal Defense Network, which advises gay and les- bian servicemembers and helps them find lawyers. Pentagon officials were unable to say how many servicemembers have at- tempted to challenge the theory. But the discharge rate under the new policy has not changed significantly from the rate under the old policy, according to figures provided by the Defense Department. Lawrence Korb, assistant defense sec- retary for manpower under President Reagan, now a scholar at the Brookings Institution, called the new policy only "marginally different" from the old. "In some cases, it may even be worse because you get into the whole question of freedom of speech," he said. It may ultimately be up to thejustices on the Supreme Court to decide if the policy is unconstitutional. "I think what you've got now is three for, three against and three in the middle," Korb said, identifying the swing votes as Justices David Souter, Sandra Day O'Connor and Anthony Kennedy. Korb, who used to enforce the old policy on homosexuals, has appeared as an expert witness on behalf of gay servicemembers in several high-profile court challenges. Neither Thomasson nor the six Able even while abdicating in the face of it. "I have discovered there are many inaccuracies in the diary," Packwood said in an interview on the CBS News program "Face the Nation." "Some of them simply weren't true. I didn't know it at the time, but they weren't true." Entries from the diary, which was obtained by the Senate Ethics Commit- tee during its two-year investigation of Packwood and released upon the completion of the case, portray Packwood as sometimes adding provi- sions to legislation to help favored lob- byists and then relying on their finan- cial help to keep him in office. In one such instance, he told of his intention to "hit up" lobbyists and busi- ness executives to hire his estranged wife, Georgie Packwood, to lessen her need for alimony. And he talks of concealing contribu- tions from donors, saying of support WASHINGTON (AP)-Sen. Bob Packwood wrote his own headline for the behind-the-scenes dealings with lobbyists that helped lead to his downfall: "Republican Fat Cat Buys off Senator with Job to Senator's Wife." That diary entry, dated Dec. 10, 1990, is part of a rare glimpse into the backroom connections among money, politics and lobbyists that usually are only whispered about on Capitol Hill, if they are mentioned at all. The Oregon Republican hadnot slept the night before, worried that his di- vorce proceedings would have to go to a public trial and the arrangements he had made with lobbyists and political backers to reduce his alimony pay- ments would become known, resulting in headlines like the one he wrote. The Justice Department earlierthis year declined to prosecute Packwood for soliciting jobs for his former wife from the lobbyists. Yet the diaries provide unusual in- sights into how lobbyists and busi- ness executives sometimes exploit personal connections inside the Capi- tol. Excerpts were released last week by the Senate Ethics Committee. In one blunt entry, Packwood wrote that Ronald Crawford, a lobbyist with the firm F/P Research Associates, was helpful to him in raising money from Washington political action committees "because much of his income is dependent on his relation- ship with me. He has got a vested interest in my staying in office." In another, Packwood recounted a 1990 dinner conversation with Crawford in which the lobbyist of- fered to put up $7,500 a year to help support Packwood's wife, Georgie; after their marriage broke up. "If you're chairman of the Finance Committee, I can probably double that," he quoted Crawford as saying. Packwood, who at the time was a senior minority member of the tax- writing panel, later told the Ethics Committee the remark was meant as a joke. Packwood's entries underscore that access to the powerful is the commodity that nets lobbyists their six-figure sala- ries. AP PHOTO Sen. Bob Packwood (R-Ore.) speaks to members of the press outside CBS studios yesterday after his appearance on the television show "Face the Nation". from auto dealers: "Of course we can't know anything about it.... We've got to destroy any evidence we've ever had." Asked in the interview why the pub- lic shouldn't get a picture of the Senate as a place for "backroom deals," Packwood said: "Because those are all taken out of context. When you look at the full panoply of diary entries, you will see in this, time and time and time again, references that say, 'I will not allow that as a quid pro quo,''I will not do this,' or 'these people think they can get in here and give money and get something, they're totally wrong - I throw them out."' The Oregon Republican, for years a central force on the Senate Finance Committee, had a reputation as a dili- gent legislative arbiter, advocate for women's issues and tax policy expert before sexual harassment allegations A