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{{Short description|1993 death of an American White House lawyer}}{{Use mdy dates|date=November 2019}}
]]]
{{primary sources|date=August 2017}}
Deputy ] ''']''' was found dead in ] off the ] in ], outside ], on ], ]. His death was ruled a ] by all official investigations. However, some conspiracy theorists object to this conclusion.
Deputy White House counsel ] was found dead in ] off the ] in ], outside ], on July 20, 1993. His death was ruled a ] by five official investigations.


==Suicide and investigation==
==Official findings==
Park Police discovered Foster dead from an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head in Fort Marcy Park (off the George Washington Parkway in Virginia) on July 20, 1993. He was found holding a Colt .38 Special in his right hand, his thumb hooked through the trigger guard.
Foster's death was concluded to have been a ] by inquiries/investigations (in varying degrees of rigor) conducted by:
*the United States ]
*the ]
*the ]
*the ]
*] ]
*] ].<ref name="Starrreport"> of the report on the 1993 death of White House counsel Vincent W. Foster, Jr., compiled by Whitewater independent counsel Kenneth Starr.</ref>.


An autopsy and subsequent investigation later concluded Foster had died by shooting himself once in the mouth with the gun found at the scene. <ref name="nytimes_labaton">{{cite news|last1=Labaton|first1=Stephen|title=Autopsy on Counsel to President Points to Suicide|work=The New York Times |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1993/08/06/us/the-budget-struggle-autopsy-on-counsel-to-president-points-to-suicide.html|access-date=August 5, 2017|agency=New York Times|date=August 6, 1993}}</ref>
After a three-year investigation, Starr concluded that Foster's death was a suicide. CNN stated on ], ], "The report refutes claims by conservative political organizations that Foster was the victim of a murder plot and coverup," but "despite those findings, right-wing political groups have continued to allege that there was more to the death and that the president and first lady tried to cover it up."<ref> CNN ], ]</ref>


Subsequent investigations found that Foster was distraught over accusations and criticisms related to the ]. Foster had confided to friends and colleagues that he was considering resignation, but feared that he could not handle the "personal humiliation" of returning to Arkansas in defeat. Foster admitted to his sister that he was depressed shortly before his death, and he sought treatment for depression one day before committing suicide.<ref name="wapo_drehle">{{cite news|last1=Von Drehle|first1=David|last2=Schneider|first2=Howard|title=Foster's Death a Suicide|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/politics/special/whitewater/stories/wwtr940701.htm|access-date=August 5, 2017|agency=Washington Post|date=July 1, 1994}}</ref>
See also:
*Citizen's Independent Report by Hugh H. Sprunt<ref>http://www.assumption.edu/WebVAX/Foster/CIR/contents.html</ref> contains documented errors, inconsistencies, and ommisions from official investigations.


Although police found no evidence of foul play, several tabloids and newsletters speculated that Foster's death may have been a homicide, possibly involving the Clintons themselves.<ref name="Watson_suicide">{{cite magazine|last1=Watson|first1=Russell|title=Vince Foster's Suicide: The Rumor Mill Churns|url=http://www.newsweek.com/vince-fosters-suicide-rumor-mill-churns-185900|access-date=August 5, 2017|magazine=Newsweek|date=March 20, 1994}}</ref> Subsequent investigations by special prosecutor ] and the Senate Banking Committee concluded that there was no evidence of a homicide. A final investigation, led by special prosecutor ], also concluded that there was no evidence to support the claim that Foster was murdered. Starr's report addressed several additional questions about physical and forensic evidence that had previously fueled speculation about the case. The report established that Foster owned the handgun used in the suicide, and confirmed that the body had not been moved from its position prior to its discovery by police. The report concluded "In sum, based on all of the available evidence, which is considerable, the OIC agrees with the conclusion reached by every official entity that has examined the issue: Mr. Foster committed suicide by gunshot in Fort Marcy Park on July 20, 1993."<ref name="wapo_kessler">{{cite news|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/fact-checker/wp/2016/05/25/no-donald-trump-theres-nothing-fishy-about-vince-fosters-suicide/|title=No, Donald Trump, there's nothing 'fishy' about Vince Foster's suicide|last1=Kessler|first1=Glenn|access-date=August 5, 2017|agency=Washington Post|issue=2016–05–25}}</ref>
==Conspiracy theories==
===Background===
Some observers have questioned the reports of suicide, including independent researchers/investigators Hugh Sprunt and David Martin. One group is ] (AIM).<ref> ''Washington Post'' ], ]</ref> AIM quotes Assistant U.S. Attorney Miguel Rodriguez, who resigned from the investigation, as saying "I knew what the result was going to be, because I was told what the result was going to be from the get-go."<ref> Miguel Rodriguez ], ] ]</ref>


The suicide has nevertheless continued to fuel speculation: then-presidential candidate ] made news in 2016 when he remarked in an interview with the '']'' that Foster's death was "very fishy", and added "I will say there are people who continue to bring it up because they think it was absolutely a murder. I don't do that because I don't think it's fair."<ref name="wapo_delreal">{{cite news|last1=DelReal|first1=Jose A.|last2=Costa|first2=Robert|title=Trump escalates attack on Bill Clinton|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/trump-escalates-attack-on-bill-clinton/2016/05/23/ed109acc-2100-11e6-8690-f14ca9de2972_story.html?hpid=hp_rhp-top-table-main_trump-clinton-9pm%3Ahomepage%2Fstory|access-date=August 5, 2017|agency=Washington Post|date=May 23, 2016}}</ref><ref name="wapo_kessler" />
Some propose that Foster was murdered to prevent his revealing information derogatory to Clinton, about ], ], or other matters, or that ] was somehow involved by covering up activities together with Foster before his death. <ref>http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=20741</ref> Others allege a romantic relationship between Foster and Hillary Clinton.<ref name="affair"> BBC News ], ]</ref><ref>http://archive.salon.com/news/1998/05/28news.html</ref> Other critics of the Clintons have made even more lurid allegations, claiming that she had killed Foster herself <ref>http://web.archive.org/web/20060526161938/http://www.drudgereport.com/matth.htm</ref> or had him killed.<ref>http://mediamatters.org/items/200509210002</ref> Apart from the Travelgate allegations, no credible evidence or charges were ever brought forward in connection with any of these allegations. (The Travelgate fiasco, in which Foster was principally involved, is specifically mentioned three times in the 'suicide note' or draft resignation letter found in Foster's brief case, and thus, without doubt, had a significant bearing on his death).


==Evidence==
The ''Washington Post'' noted ] was "summoned" to a meeting with ] in ] at an airport hotel. Armistead laid out an elaborate "Vince Foster murder scenario," Brock said – a scenario that he found implausible."<ref>{{cite journal| url=http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/politics/special/clinton/stories/scaifeside050299.htm| title='Arkansas Project' Led to Turmoil and Rifts| journal=Washington Post| month=May 2| year=1999| pages=A24| accessdate=2006-05-03}}</ref> Both Brock and Armistead were reporters who were funded by ] to investigate issues ranging from drug smuggling to Foster to discredit Clinton with the ].<ref>], . '']'', 2000.</ref>
===Torn note===
{{Quote box
|title = Text of Foster's resignation letter
|quote=I made mistakes from ignorance, inexperience and overwork
I did not knowingly violate any law or standard of conduct


No one in The White House, to my knowledge, violated any law or standard of conduct, including ].
Scaife funded ]<ref>.</ref> (later founder of ]), who previously was a writer for the Scaife-owned '']'', to research Clinton for the ]. Ruddy has argued that while he posits no conspiracy theory about Foster's death, he believes a cover-up took place and that Foster's body had likely been moved. <ref name=annonline>, Ann Online.</ref>
There was no intent to benefit any individual or specific group


The ] lied in their report to the ]
Ruddy was backed by ] and Farah's organization the ].<ref name=annonline /> This group supplied Ruddy with "additional expense money, funding for ] requests, legal support and publicity during his book research of a conspiracy surrounding the suicide of Foster.<ref></ref> Ruddy eventually released '']'' which was published by Simon & Schuster. <ref>."Strange Death of Vincent Foster"</ref>


The press is covering up the illegal benefits they received from the travel staff
Nonetheless, in 1999 Farah's Western Journalism Center "placed some 50 ads reprinting Ruddy's ''Tribune-Review'' stories in the '']'', then repackaged the articles as a packet titled ''The Ruddy Investigation'', which sold for $12."<ref name="pack"> PublicEye.Org</ref> Shortly thereafter, the Western Journalism Center "circulated a video featuring Ruddy's claims, 'Unanswered-The Death of Vincent Foster,' that was produced by ], chairman of the ] (NTU) and co-editor of the Strategic Investment newsletter."<ref name="pack" /> (NTU's research arm receives funds from Scaife.) Eventually, Scaife became an investor and the third-largest stockholder of Ruddy's NewsMax<ref> ]</ref> and both NewsMax and the WorldNetDaily continue to publish materials that show the Clintons in a negative light."<ref> ]</ref>


The ] has lied and misrepresented its knowledge and role and covered up a prior investigation
Besides the official investigations, including ]'s report that ruled Foster's death a suicide, ] wrote a book, with encouragement from ] of ] house stating that Foster's death was a suicide and he found the scenarios were first promulgated by ] who shared ideas with ] at Accuracy in Media, and Christopher W. Ruddy, who was then at the '']''.<ref name="rest in peace"> Lori Leibovich ]</ref> Hines had falsely told "them that there is no exit wound in Foster's head," but Moldea explained, "I don't think there was anything nefarious here," rather Hines "was being approached by reporters and he wanted something to say."<ref name="rest in peace"/>


The ] plotted to have excessive costs incurred, taking advantage of Kaki and HRC
The main proponents of this telling of events were Christopher W. Ruddy of the ''New York Post'', and later with the ''Pittsburgh Tribune Review'' (owned by Richard Mellon Scaife), and ] of the ].


The public will never believe the innocence of the Clintons and their loyal staff
As to what prompted this line of investigation, reporter Dan Moldea claimed in an interview for ] that "Foster had some blond hair and carpet fibers on his suit jacket, and he had semen in his underwear. So, the ]s and the right-wing crowd get a hold of this information, and…they start making ] alleging that the Clintons were involved in this murder."<ref name="rest in peace"/>
Falwell produced the ], which Ruddy was involved with claiming the gun was placed in Fosters hand.<ref name="rest in peace"/> These videos and claims have been "widely discredited" the videos "sophisticated production" served as a reliable resource.<ref name="falwell"> by ] Salon.com</ref>


The ] editors lie without consequence
Funding for the film was ''Citizens for Honest Government'', which ] paid $200,000 to in 1994 and 1995.<ref name="falwell"/> In 1995 ''Citizens for Honest Government'' paid two Arkansas state troopers to make allegations supporting the conspiracy about Vincent Foster.<ref name="falwell"/> These two troopers were ] and ] who also were paid for their testimony in the ] (See: ]) claims.<ref name="falwell"/> ''Citizens for Honest Government'' also covertly paid individuals who provided information to media outlets such as the ''Wall Street Journal'' editorial page and the ''American Spectator'' magazine, which named them as sources."<ref name="falwell"/>


I was not meant for the job or the spotlight of public life in Washington. Here ruining people is considered sport.|source=<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Zi-xoFAPnPMC&pg=PA281|title=Comprehensive Textbook of Suicidology|isbn=1-57230-541-X|publisher=Guilford Press|year=2000|page=281}}</ref>
], president of Citizens for Honest Government, and producer of the Clinton Chronicles video appeared in its commercials as the "silhouetted individual whom he identifies only as an 'investigative reporter'."<ref name="falwell"/> When asked about the scene Matrisciana admitted he was not a reporter and replied "I doubt our lives were actually ever in any real danger. That was Jerry's idea to do that ... He thought that would be dramatic."<ref name="falwell"/>


|width=30%
===Different theories===
|align = right
Some conspiracy theorists allege no bullet fragments were ever found and very little blood was present at the body's final location. Thus, the theorists assert suspicions that the body had been moved from another location to the park site. Some reject the official reports and believe that while Foster was located on an incline, the trickle of blood ran contrary to gravity. No explanation was offered to explain this. The ] were assigned to investigate the case, but no more information was ever disclosed.


}}
With respect to this case, conspiracy theorists are largely divided into two groups. Some suspect that Foster committed suicide in a location that was embarrassing to figures connected to the Clinton administration and that government agents dumped his body in the park to avoid any embarrassment. Others suspect that Foster died from a shot from a small-caliber pistol to the neck and his body was dumped in the park. A book by Christopher Andersen entitled ''Bill and Hillary: The Marriage'' claims that Foster and Hillary Clinton were involved in an affair, and some claim that this supposed affair has some relation to Foster's death.<ref name="affair"> They claim the body was discovered in a flat that had been used for a sexual rendevezous between Hillary and Foster, then dumped in the Park, possibly by Hillary's Secret Service detail. It has recently been discovered, though, that Foster may have offed himself after Hillary told him she would no longer bang him, that she preferred women. He could not bear the thought of Hillary dining on twat instead of chugging cock, so he blew his brains out (not before he fucked the shit out of her one more time).


A draft of a resignation letter was found torn into 27 pieces in a briefcase after his death.<ref>{{cite news|first1=David|first2=Neil|last1=Johnston|last2=Lewis|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1994/02/04/us/report-suggests-clinton-counsel-hampered-suicide-investigation.html?pagewanted=all|title=Report Suggests Clinton Counsel Hampered Suicide Investigation|newspaper=]|date=February 4, 1994|access-date=July 30, 2017|quote=...One investigator said he had watched Mr. Nussbaum inspect the briefcase earlier without finding the note....}}</ref> Associate White House counsel, Steve Neuwirth, discovered the torn pieces of the note in Foster's briefcase on July 26.<ref name="Final Report of the Independent Counsel; Volume III, Part E">{{cite book|last1=Ray|first1=Robert W.|author-link1=Robert Ray (prosecutor)|date=January 5, 2001|chapter=Part E: The Discovery and Removal of Documents from Vincent W. Foster Jr.'s Office|chapter-url=https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/GPO-ICREPORT-MADISON/pdf/GPO-ICREPORT-MADISON-3-3.pdf|title=Final Report of the Independent Counsel in Re Madison Guaranty Savings and Loan Association|url=https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/GPO-ICREPORT-MADISON/content-detail.html|volume=III|location=Washington, D.C.|publisher=United States Government Publishing Office|page=277|access-date=July 31, 2017|ref={{harvid|Final Report of the Independent Counsel in Re Madison Guaranty Savings and Loan Association, Volume III, Part E|2001}}}}</ref> After receiving the note from Neuwirth, ] ] handled the note various times before giving it to Park Police Lieutenant Joseph Megby the following evening.{{sfn|Final Report of the Independent Counsel in Re Madison Guaranty Savings and Loan Association, Volume III, Part E|2001|p=278}}
Three federal judges (], ], and ]) attached an addendum to Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr's Report on Foster's death despite Starr's objection.


The ] revealed the note's contents at a joint press conference with the Park Police on August 10.{{sfn|Final Report of the Independent Counsel in Re Madison Guaranty Savings and Loan Association, Volume III, Part E|2001|p=278}}<ref name="The New York Times; August 11, 1993">{{cite news|last=Apple Jr.|first=R.W.|date=August 11, 1993|title=Note Left by White House Aide: Accusation, Anger and Despair|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1993/08/11/us/note-left-by-white-house-aide-accusation-anger-and-despair.html?pagewanted=all|work=The New York Times|access-date=July 31, 2017}}</ref> The DoJ stated that a smudged palm print was on the note, but no fingerprints; they confirmed the handwriting as Foster's.<ref name="The New York Times; August 11, 1993"/>
Special prosecutor ], the independent counsel who investigated the Clintons on several other issues, including Whitewater, concluded after a three-year investigation that Foster shot himself. Miguel Rodriguez, an ], doubted the official reports.{{fact}} According to Charles Carman, from the Center for Transparent Governance, it has been theorized that Foster was conflicted about forming a Presidential trust, in the face of growing scandal surrounding Bill and Hillary Clinton and their alleged role in a fraudulent Arkansas real estate deal known as the ].


] ]'s report regarding the ] stated the ] performed a 1995 fingerprint examination of the note and identified Nussbaum's palm print on it.{{sfn|Final Report of the Independent Counsel in Re Madison Guaranty Savings and Loan Association, Volume III, Part E|2001|p=278}}<ref>{{cite book|first1=Dan E.|last1=Moldea|author-link=Dan Moldea|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZrEA8i7z_PYC&pg=PA367|title=A Washington Tragedy: How the Death of Vincent Foster Ignited a Political Firestorm|publisher=]|date=1998|access-date=July 30, 2017|quote="…A fingerprint analysis of Foster's note by the FBI also reveals…that the palm print found on the note had been left by Bernard Nussbaum…."|page=367|isbn=9780895263827}}</ref> Three handwriting experts stated that the note was a forgery, with Oxford University manuscript expert Reginald Alton stating that the forgery was done by a "moderate forger, not necessarily a pro, somebody who could forge a check."<ref>{{cite news|date=October 26, 1995|title=Foster suicide note was a forgery, say experts|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/foster-suicide-note-was-a-forgery-say-experts-1579504.html |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220525/https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/foster-suicide-note-was-a-forgery-say-experts-1579504.html |archive-date=May 25, 2022 |url-access=subscription |url-status=live|work=The Independent}}</ref> However, the final report stated that three separate handwriting analyses of the note by the ] and the FBI determined that the handwriting on the note was Foster's.{{sfn|Final Report of the Independent Counsel in Re Madison Guaranty Savings and Loan Association, Volume III, Part E|2001|p=278}}
]-debunking ] ] cites the finding of the Starr investigation as evidence that Foster was not murdered: "If Foster had been murdered or if unanswered questions about his death remained, Starr would have been the last person to want to conclude the investigation prematurely."<ref name="bodycount"> ] January 2001 Barbara Mikkelson</ref>


===FOIA request=== ==Conspiracy theories==
===The Arkansas Project===
In an extremely unusual move, in November 1994 the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia circuit, in response to a request by the Wall Street Journal for the final Fiske Report (under the Freedom of Information Act), issued a ] that prevented the Journal from publishing a story about its response to the request. Presumably, the court denied the request itself (as no one has ever seen the final Fiske Report), but it also sealed its own response to the WSJ (originally covered by Michael Gartner in USA Today, Dec. 6th, 1994).{{Fact|date=July 2007}}
On May 2, 1999, '']'' published new details on the pursuit of a Foster conspiracy in an article by ], a key figure in the ] and ] scandals whose disillusionment with the political corruption motivating what would come to be known as the ] ended his commitment to the Conservative movement and facilitated public dissemination of insider details on what he described as G.O.P. machinations. The article explains how Brock was "summoned" to a meeting with ] in ] at an airport hotel. Brock claims that Armistead laid out for him an elaborate "Vince Foster murder scenario" – a scenario that he found implausible.<ref>{{cite news| url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/politics/special/clinton/stories/scaifeside050299.htm|title='Arkansas Project' Led to Turmoil and Rifts|newspaper=Washington Post|date=May 2, 1999|page=A24|access-date=May 3, 2006}}</ref>


===The Allan J. Favish FOIA Lawsuit=== ===''The Clinton Chronicles'': A Political Firestorm===
In 1997, crime reporter ] was approached by ], a conservative group whose leadership was impressed by Moldea's published works, to publish a book on the Foster case.<ref name="rest in peace">Lori Leibovich, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080513113126/http://archive.salon.com/news/1998/05/28news.html |date=May 13, 2008 }}, Salon.com, May 28, 1998.</ref>


In researching Foster's death, Moldea found that documents relating to the Whitewater corporation were removed from Foster's office on July 22 and sent to the Clintons’ personal attorney,<ref>{{cite book|first1=Dan E.|last1=Moldea|author-link=Dan Moldea|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZrEA8i7z_PYC&pg=PA146|title=A Washington Tragedy: How the Death of Vincent Foster Ignited a Political Firestorm|publisher=]|date=1998|access-date=July 30, 2017|page=146|isbn=9780895263827}}</ref> and that the most oft-used conspiracy scenario could be traced back to Park Police Major Robert Hines, who shared the idea with ] (]) and Christopher Ruddy ('']''). Moldea concludes, and Maj. Hines publicly maintains, that Hines incorrectly told Irvine and Ruddy "... that there is no exit wound in Foster's head ... I don't think there was anything nefarious here; he was being approached by reporters and he wanted something to say." Still, the "missing exit wound" claim continued to surface.<ref name="rest in peace"/>
The following discussion of the Allan J. Favish lawsuit makes many assertions. Proof for every assertion is in the which includes legal briefs and evidence filed by Mr. Favish and the federal government in the lawsuit.


Moldea's research sought, among other things, to discover the origins of this line of investigation into the Clintons' credibility. In an interview for '']'', he suggests that "Foster had some blond hair and carpet fibers on his suit jacket, and he had ] in his underwear. So, the ]s and the right-wing crowd get a hold of this information, and…they start making movies alleging that the Clintons were involved in this murder."<ref name="rest in peace"/>
Several federal agencies including the Federal Bureau of Investigation, United States Park Police and two Independent Counsels, Robert Fiske and then Kenneth Starr, all using FBI agents in their respective investigations, concluded that on July 20, 1993, Vincent Foster committed suicide in Virginia's Fort Marcy Park. From 1997 to 2004, a
forced the government to defend the credibility of those investigations and reports. The lawsuit presented the federal courts with documentary evidence that came overwhelmingly from the Government’s own files, including from the FBI and the Park Police. The documents, most of which were made public in early 1995, were ignored by the traditional media but analyzed by private citizens who shared their analysis over the Internet. Proof of all the facts stated in this discussion of the Favish lawsuit is


In 1994, Falwell subsidized the creation of a film called '']'' that featured Ruddy's claims that the gun that killed Foster was placed in his hand after the fact, and that Foster's body was laid out to give the appearance of suicide, among others.<ref name="rest in peace"/> Funding for the film was provided by ''Citizens for Honest Government'', an organization to which Falwell gave $200,000 in 1994 and 1995.<ref name="falwell">] , Salon.com, March 11, 1998.</ref>
In 2000, by a 2-1 vote, a panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit stated in that FOIA lawsuit that the plaintiff "in fact, tenders evidence and argument which, if believed, would justify his doubts” about those investigations.


Citizens for Honest Government covertly paid individuals who had provided information to media outlets such as the '']'' editorial page and the '']'' magazine;"<ref name="falwell"/> and in 1995, made discretionary payments to two Arkansas state troopers who had spoken out in support of the idea of a conspiracy surrounding Foster's death. The two troopers, Roger Perry and Larry Patterson, had also previously given testimony supporting ]'s claims of sexual misconduct and misuse of government resources against ] (see ]).<ref name="falwell"/>
However, in 2004, disagreeing with the Ninth Circuit, the Supreme Court stated that the plaintiff "has not produced any evidence that would warrant a belief by a reasonable person that the alleged Government impropriety might have occurred" regarding the Foster investigations and reports.


==See also==
Neither the Ninth Circuit nor the Supreme Court provided any analysis of the evidence to support their respective positions.
* ]
* ]


{{Portal|1990s}}
Which court was correct?

The evidence presented to both courts by the plaintiff, uncontradicted by the federal government under both the Clinton and Bush Administrations, established the following:

•Fiske failed to tell the public and Starr failed to tell the public and the three-judge panel about an FBI memo to the Director of the FBI, written two days after the death, stating that the shot was fired into Foster’s mouth without leaving an exit wound, thereby directly contradicting Starr, Fiske and the official autopsy report which all concluded that there was an exit wound in the back of the head.

•Fiske failed to tell the public and Starr failed to tell the public and the three-judge panel that the medical report by Dr. Donald Haut, the only doctor to examine Foster at the park, reported a neck wound that officially did not exist. Moreover, certified copies of his report are not the same and appear to have been improperly altered by obliteration of a word rather than drawing a line through the word so it can still be read, as is standard practice for medical records.

•Starr failed to tell the public and the three-judge panel that the Park Police and the only medical doctor at the death scene, Dr. Haut, reported that they did not see any blood spatter on the vegetation that would have appeared behind Foster’s head immediately after he allegedly shot himself while sitting up on the ground.

•Starr failed to tell the public and the three-judge panel that the first person officially to see Foster’s deceased body and who testified that he did not see any gun in Foster’s hand, also testified that the “gun in hand” photo that was leaked to the media in 1994 did not depict what he saw.

•The official death gun appears black. Foster’s widow Lisa failed to identify the official death gun from a photograph nine days after the death, in part, because the gun was not silver, the color of a gun the Fosters owned. According to the FBI, Lisa was shown the official death gun in May 1994 and the FBI stated that she “believes that the gun found at Fort Marcy Park may be the silver gun which she brought up with her” from Arkansas. Despite the obvious invalidity of an identification of a black gun as being silver, and without stating the gun colors and other relevant background facts, Fiske reported that Lisa “stated that the gun looked similar to one that” Foster owned.

•Starr failed to tell the public and the three-judge panel why Fiske did this. Starr failed to tell the public and the three-judge panel that one of Lisa’s reasons for not identifying the gun in the photo shown to her nine days after the death was because it was not silver. Also absent from Starr’s report is that the FBI expressly stated that Lisa believed the gun shown to her in May 1994 was silver as it was being shown to her.

•Starr failed to tell the public and the three-judge panel why Fiske’s deputy, Roderick Lankler and Lisa’s attorney, James Hamilton (who represented her in my case) and at least two FBI agents, apparently failed to note at the May 1994 interview that in their presence, Lisa described a black gun as being silver.

•Starr failed to tell the public and the three-judge panel why Lisa reportedly identified a black gun as silver, as it was being shown to her, in May 1994.

•Fiske failed to tell the public and Starr failed to tell the public and the three-judge panel that Foster’s nephew, who was the surviving family member most familiar with the family’s guns, could not identify the black official death gun, largely because of its color.

•Fiske failed to tell the public and Starr failed to tell the public and the three-judge panel that then United States Park Police Chief Robert Langston made a false statement to the public when he stated at a press conference in August 1993 that the Foster family had identified the official death gun as one of Foster’s guns.

•Starr falsely implied that the Park Police observed the entire autopsy but Fiske failed to tell the public and Starr failed to tell the public and the three-judge panel that before the Park Police arrived, Foster’s tongue and soft palate were removed by the autopsy doctor who violated policy by beginning the autopsy before arrival of the police. (The tongue and soft palate were significant because there is controversy over whether there was an entrance wound in Foster’s neck that would have resulted in a bullet path through the tongue and soft palate.)

•Starr failed to tell the public and the three-judge panel that three of the four witnesses who according to the Government, saw Foster’s car in the parking lot between 4:30 p.m. and just before 6:00 p.m., after he was dead, reported seeing a car that was brown and did not report seeing a car that was the color of Foster’s car, gray. Although Starr accurately reported that the fourth of these witnesses reported seeing a brown car, Starr concluded that Foster’s gray car was in the parking lot without explaining why all four of these witnesses reported seeing the same color car, brown, and did not report seeing a gray car.

•Starr relied on Dr. Henry Lee’s conclusion that Foster’s clothes revealed no evidence that Foster’s body had been dragged, without telling the public and the three-judge panel that this conclusion was worthless because the Park Police stated that they dragged Foster’s body when it began to slide down the hill during an examination.

•Starr implied that the reason for the lack of readable x-rays of Foster is that the x-ray machine was not functioning properly. However, Starr failed to tell the public and the three-judge panel that the records show that the first service call for the x-ray machine was made more than three months after Foster’s death. Also, if the machine was not functioning properly on July 20, 1993, Starr failed to explain why another machine was not used to take x-rays of Foster, a very high Government official, or why there are no records showing a service call for the machine at that time.

To date, nobody in the media has asked any of the relevant former Clinton Administration officials or Bush Administration officials or Hillary Clinton to specifically address either the Ninth Circuit's conclusion or the Supreme Court's conclusion regarding the uncontradicted evidence that was presented in the Favish FOIA lawsuit.

==See also==
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
*]


==References== ==References==
===Footnotes=== ===Notes===
{{reflist}} {{reflist|2}}


===Books=== ===Books===
* Hugh Sprunt,
* John Clarke, Patrick Knowlton, and Hugh Turley. "Failure of the Public Trust" Proof of the cover-up by the media and Office of Independent Counsel (], 1999, ISBN 0-9673521-0-X)
* John Clarke, Patrick Knowlton and Hugh Turley. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200807153440/http://www.fbicover-up.com/proof/index.htm |date=August 7, 2020 }}, McCabe Publishing, 1999; {{ISBN|0-9673521-0-X}}
*] "]''." (], 2003)
*], '']'', ], 2003.<!-- ISSN/ISBN needed -->
* Clinton, Bill (2005). "'']''." ]. ISBN 1-4000-3003-X.
* ] (2005). '']'', ]; {{ISBN|1-4000-3003-X}}
*] and ] "'']''." (], 2001)
*] and ], '']''. ], 2001; {{ISBN|0-312-27319-3}}
* ]. "A Washington Tragedy : How the Death of Vincent Foster Ignited a Political Firestorm" (], Inc, 1998)
*]. ''A Washington Tragedy: How the Death of Vincent Foster Ignited a Political Firestorm'', ], 1998 <!-- ISSN/ISBN needed -->
*]. "The Secret Life of Bill Clinton", Regenery Publishing, 1999. ISBN-13:978-0895264084.
*], ''The Secret Life of Bill Clinton'', ], 1999; {{ISBN|978-0-89526-408-4}}
* Christopher Ruddy. ''The Strange Death of Vincent Foster: An Investigation'', Free Press, 2002; {{ISBN|978-0-74324-253-0}}
* Dean Arnold, ''Hillary and Vince: A Story of Love, Death, and Cover-up'', Chattanooga Historical Foundation, 2016; {{ISBN|978-0692744871}}
* David Martin, ''The Murder of Vince Foster: America's Would-Be Dreyfus Affair'', Independent, 2020: {{ISBN| 979-8685698940}}


==External links== ==External links==
*
* (This version only the full report except the appendix.)
* from '']''
*
* posted by '']'' (NOTE: This file does not contain the report's footnotes or appendix)
*
* {{cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/12629062/white_house_attorney_an_apparent_suicide|title=White House Attorney An Apparent Suicide|date=July 21, 1993|publisher=Daily Sitka Sentinel|author=Nancy Benac|page=7|access-date=July 25, 2017|via=newspapers.com}}
*

*
{{Conspiracy theories}}
* posted by the ]
* on Google Video
*
*
* (on the death of Vince Foster)
*


{{DEFAULTSORT:Foster, Vince}}
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Latest revision as of 09:55, 26 December 2024

1993 death of an American White House lawyer
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Find sources: "Suicide of Vince Foster" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (August 2017) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Deputy White House counsel Vince Foster was found dead in Fort Marcy Park off the George Washington Parkway in Virginia, outside Washington, D.C., on July 20, 1993. His death was ruled a suicide by five official investigations.

Suicide and investigation

Park Police discovered Foster dead from an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head in Fort Marcy Park (off the George Washington Parkway in Virginia) on July 20, 1993. He was found holding a Colt .38 Special in his right hand, his thumb hooked through the trigger guard.

An autopsy and subsequent investigation later concluded Foster had died by shooting himself once in the mouth with the gun found at the scene.

Subsequent investigations found that Foster was distraught over accusations and criticisms related to the White House travel office controversy. Foster had confided to friends and colleagues that he was considering resignation, but feared that he could not handle the "personal humiliation" of returning to Arkansas in defeat. Foster admitted to his sister that he was depressed shortly before his death, and he sought treatment for depression one day before committing suicide.

Although police found no evidence of foul play, several tabloids and newsletters speculated that Foster's death may have been a homicide, possibly involving the Clintons themselves. Subsequent investigations by special prosecutor Robert Fiske and the Senate Banking Committee concluded that there was no evidence of a homicide. A final investigation, led by special prosecutor Kenneth Starr, also concluded that there was no evidence to support the claim that Foster was murdered. Starr's report addressed several additional questions about physical and forensic evidence that had previously fueled speculation about the case. The report established that Foster owned the handgun used in the suicide, and confirmed that the body had not been moved from its position prior to its discovery by police. The report concluded "In sum, based on all of the available evidence, which is considerable, the OIC agrees with the conclusion reached by every official entity that has examined the issue: Mr. Foster committed suicide by gunshot in Fort Marcy Park on July 20, 1993."

The suicide has nevertheless continued to fuel speculation: then-presidential candidate Donald Trump made news in 2016 when he remarked in an interview with the Washington Post that Foster's death was "very fishy", and added "I will say there are people who continue to bring it up because they think it was absolutely a murder. I don't do that because I don't think it's fair."

Evidence

Torn note

Text of Foster's resignation letter

I made mistakes from ignorance, inexperience and overwork I did not knowingly violate any law or standard of conduct

No one in The White House, to my knowledge, violated any law or standard of conduct, including any action in the travel office. There was no intent to benefit any individual or specific group

The FBI lied in their report to the AG

The press is covering up the illegal benefits they received from the travel staff

The GOP has lied and misrepresented its knowledge and role and covered up a prior investigation

The Ushers Office plotted to have excessive costs incurred, taking advantage of Kaki and HRC

The public will never believe the innocence of the Clintons and their loyal staff

The WSJ editors lie without consequence

I was not meant for the job or the spotlight of public life in Washington. Here ruining people is considered sport.

A draft of a resignation letter was found torn into 27 pieces in a briefcase after his death. Associate White House counsel, Steve Neuwirth, discovered the torn pieces of the note in Foster's briefcase on July 26. After receiving the note from Neuwirth, White House Counsel Bernard Nussbaum handled the note various times before giving it to Park Police Lieutenant Joseph Megby the following evening.

The United States Department of Justice revealed the note's contents at a joint press conference with the Park Police on August 10. The DoJ stated that a smudged palm print was on the note, but no fingerprints; they confirmed the handwriting as Foster's.

Independent Counsel Robert Ray's report regarding the Whitewater controversy stated the FBI Laboratory performed a 1995 fingerprint examination of the note and identified Nussbaum's palm print on it. Three handwriting experts stated that the note was a forgery, with Oxford University manuscript expert Reginald Alton stating that the forgery was done by a "moderate forger, not necessarily a pro, somebody who could forge a check." However, the final report stated that three separate handwriting analyses of the note by the Capitol Police and the FBI determined that the handwriting on the note was Foster's.

Conspiracy theories

The Arkansas Project

On May 2, 1999, The Washington Post published new details on the pursuit of a Foster conspiracy in an article by David Brock, a key figure in the Troopergate and Whitewater scandals whose disillusionment with the political corruption motivating what would come to be known as the Arkansas Project ended his commitment to the Conservative movement and facilitated public dissemination of insider details on what he described as G.O.P. machinations. The article explains how Brock was "summoned" to a meeting with Rex Armistead in Miami, Florida at an airport hotel. Brock claims that Armistead laid out for him an elaborate "Vince Foster murder scenario" – a scenario that he found implausible.

The Clinton Chronicles: A Political Firestorm

In 1997, crime reporter Dan Moldea was approached by Regnery Publishing House, a conservative group whose leadership was impressed by Moldea's published works, to publish a book on the Foster case.

In researching Foster's death, Moldea found that documents relating to the Whitewater corporation were removed from Foster's office on July 22 and sent to the Clintons’ personal attorney, and that the most oft-used conspiracy scenario could be traced back to Park Police Major Robert Hines, who shared the idea with Reed Irvine (Accuracy in Media) and Christopher Ruddy (New York Post). Moldea concludes, and Maj. Hines publicly maintains, that Hines incorrectly told Irvine and Ruddy "... that there is no exit wound in Foster's head ... I don't think there was anything nefarious here; he was being approached by reporters and he wanted something to say." Still, the "missing exit wound" claim continued to surface.

Moldea's research sought, among other things, to discover the origins of this line of investigation into the Clintons' credibility. In an interview for Salon.com, he suggests that "Foster had some blond hair and carpet fibers on his suit jacket, and he had semen in his underwear. So, the Jerry Falwells and the right-wing crowd get a hold of this information, and…they start making movies alleging that the Clintons were involved in this murder."

In 1994, Falwell subsidized the creation of a film called The Clinton Chronicles that featured Ruddy's claims that the gun that killed Foster was placed in his hand after the fact, and that Foster's body was laid out to give the appearance of suicide, among others. Funding for the film was provided by Citizens for Honest Government, an organization to which Falwell gave $200,000 in 1994 and 1995.

Citizens for Honest Government covertly paid individuals who had provided information to media outlets such as the Wall Street Journal editorial page and the American Spectator magazine;" and in 1995, made discretionary payments to two Arkansas state troopers who had spoken out in support of the idea of a conspiracy surrounding Foster's death. The two troopers, Roger Perry and Larry Patterson, had also previously given testimony supporting Paula Jones's claims of sexual misconduct and misuse of government resources against Bill Clinton (see Troopergate).

See also

References

Notes

  1. Labaton, Stephen (August 6, 1993). "Autopsy on Counsel to President Points to Suicide". The New York Times. New York Times. Retrieved August 5, 2017.
  2. Von Drehle, David; Schneider, Howard (July 1, 1994). "Foster's Death a Suicide". Washington Post. Retrieved August 5, 2017.
  3. Watson, Russell (March 20, 1994). "Vince Foster's Suicide: The Rumor Mill Churns". Newsweek. Retrieved August 5, 2017.
  4. ^ Kessler, Glenn. "No, Donald Trump, there's nothing 'fishy' about Vince Foster's suicide". No. 2016–05–25. Washington Post. Retrieved August 5, 2017.
  5. DelReal, Jose A.; Costa, Robert (May 23, 2016). "Trump escalates attack on Bill Clinton". Washington Post. Retrieved August 5, 2017.
  6. Comprehensive Textbook of Suicidology. Guilford Press. 2000. p. 281. ISBN 1-57230-541-X.
  7. Johnston, David; Lewis, Neil (February 4, 1994). "Report Suggests Clinton Counsel Hampered Suicide Investigation". The New York Times. Retrieved July 30, 2017. ...One investigator said he had watched Mr. Nussbaum inspect the briefcase earlier without finding the note....
  8. Ray, Robert W. (January 5, 2001). "Part E: The Discovery and Removal of Documents from Vincent W. Foster Jr.'s Office" (PDF). Final Report of the Independent Counsel in Re Madison Guaranty Savings and Loan Association. Vol. III. Washington, D.C.: United States Government Publishing Office. p. 277. Retrieved July 31, 2017.
  9. ^ Final Report of the Independent Counsel in Re Madison Guaranty Savings and Loan Association, Volume III, Part E 2001, p. 278.
  10. ^ Apple Jr., R.W. (August 11, 1993). "Note Left by White House Aide: Accusation, Anger and Despair". The New York Times. Retrieved July 31, 2017.
  11. Moldea, Dan E. (1998). A Washington Tragedy: How the Death of Vincent Foster Ignited a Political Firestorm. Regnery Publishing. p. 367. ISBN 9780895263827. Retrieved July 30, 2017. …A fingerprint analysis of Foster's note by the FBI also reveals…that the palm print found on the note had been left by Bernard Nussbaum….
  12. "Foster suicide note was a forgery, say experts". The Independent. October 26, 1995. Archived from the original on May 25, 2022.
  13. "'Arkansas Project' Led to Turmoil and Rifts". Washington Post. May 2, 1999. p. A24. Retrieved May 3, 2006.
  14. ^ Lori Leibovich, "Why Vincent Foster can't rest in peace" Archived May 13, 2008, at the Wayback Machine, Salon.com, May 28, 1998.
  15. Moldea, Dan E. (1998). A Washington Tragedy: How the Death of Vincent Foster Ignited a Political Firestorm. Regnery Publishing. p. 146. ISBN 9780895263827. Retrieved July 30, 2017.
  16. ^ Murray Waas "The Falwell connection", Salon.com, March 11, 1998.

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