The story of black woman Charlotte Perry: another woman
abused by the Clintons
Bill illegally gave no-skills Gennifer
a state job
in 1990
over qualified black woman candidate Charlotte Perry
http://www.salon.com/news/1998/09/11newsa.html
BY MURRAY WAAS
WASHINGTON -- Late
on the same evening that President Clinton testified before Kenneth Starr's
grand jury from the Map Room of the White House that he had had an
"inappropriate" relationship with Monica Lewinsky, he defiantly went
on national television to ask the American people "to turn away from the
spectacle of the past seven months."
The entire affair should
now become a private matter between him, his family and God, he argued:
"Even presidents have private lives ... It's time to stop the pursuit of
personal destruction and the prying into private lives and get on with our
national life."
A longtime Arkansas state employee named Charlotte
Perry might be excused for believing otherwise. An African-American woman with three young
children at home, Perry is the type of person who comes to mind when, as he is
wont to do, the president talks about those who work hard and play by the
rules. It was such
folks whom Clinton said he wanted to serve when he
asked us to elect him as president in the first place.
In February
1990, Charlotte Perry hoped that her hard work, integrity and many years of
service to the state government were finally going to pay off. She applied for a better paying job
as an administrative assistant at a state agency called the Arkansas Board of
Review. The position paid slightly more than $17,500 a year.
But Perry didn't receive
the promotion she clearly deserved. Instead, it went to another woman with less experience and
fewer qualifications -- Gennifer Flowers, whom
everyone around Little Rock knew to be the governor's
girlfriend. An investigation of the matter by a state agency later determined
that the hiring
procedure that led to Flowers being hired over Perry was "improper"
and the result of favoritism.
Flowers, seeking work, had
approached Clinton about finding her a position with
the state. There were, after all, surely perks to be had for being the
governor's mistress, Flowers reasoned. Clinton turned over the dirty work of
finding the appropriate position for Flowers to an assistant named Judy Gaddy. Gaddy tried hard to find
something for Flowers, even landing her an interview with the Arkansas
Historical Preservation Program as a multimedia specialist. But Flowers was
found to be unqualified for that job.
On Feb. 23, 1990, even more desperate for work than before,
Flowers wrote Clinton: "Bill, I've tried to explain my
situation to you and how badly I need a job ... Unfortunately it looks like I
have to pursue the lawsuit to hopefully get some money to live on, until I get
employment."
The lawsuit Flowers was
referring to had been filed by a former Arkansas state employee named Larry Nichols.
He alleged that Clinton had had sexual relationships with
five women, including Flowers. Nichols had sued the governor after Clinton had fired him for stealing state
funds. When a local radio station named Flowers based on papers filed in the
lawsuit, Flowers told Clinton she would have to sue the radio station for
slander so that she would have some money to live on.
In fact, Flowers was only
bringing up Nichols' charges as a means to try to intimidate Clinton to find her a job. No one in Little Rock believed much of anything Nichols
had to say, because he was known as the local loony. The four other women he
named in the lawsuit simply laughed off his charges. And except for the one
radio station, no reputable news organization in the state of Arkansas gave credence to Nichols' charges.
Nevertheless, Flowers' ploy to intimidate Clinton had the intended effect.
In March 1990, the job
that Gennifer Flowers and Charlotte Perry were to
compete for became available. At first glance, things did not look good for
Flowers. She ranked ninth out of 11 applicants.
But then Flowers caught a
break. On April 26, 1990, Don K. Barnes, the chairman of the Arkansas
Board, abruptly changed the qualifications for the job. He did so at the
direction of his boss, William Gaddy, the husband of
Judy Gaddy, the governor's assistant to whom Clinton had earlier assigned the
task of finding a job for Flowers.
The new requirements for
the job now included experience with computers and public relations. As it
happened, Flowers had listed those precise qualifications on her resume a month
earlier when she applied for the Arkansas Board of Review job.
In two telephone interviews
last year, William Gaddy told me that he could not
recall any role in changing the job requirements to help Flowers: "I just
don't know what to think about that ... I'm not sure why my name has come up in
this." William Gaddy also denied to me that he
had ever spoken with his own wife, Judy, about the potential job for Flowers:
"She does her thing and I do mine," he said. "We never talked
with each other about Gennifer."
After failing to get the
promotion, Perry filed a complaint with the state Grievance Review Committee,
the Arkansas equivalent of a merit protections selection board, saying
that she was unfairly denied the job awarded to Flowers.
Barnes testified to the
committee that he changed the job description at the direction of William Gaddy. He said that he had supported Flowers because she
had told him about her experience with computers during a job interview.
In her own
sworn testimony, Flowers, however, could not recall any type of computer that
she knew how to use.
And asked how she had learned of the state job, Flowers swore: "It was
advertised in the newspaper and I had heard about it through the personnel
department."
Barnes, the
state official who hired Flowers, told Newsday in 1992 that he believed Flowers had
committed "perjury" by not disclosing the Gaddys'
assistance in finding her the state job.
Newsday also discovered
that Flowers had told a few lies on her job application. She had stated that
she had been "director of public relations" for the Dallas-based Club
Corporation of America, even though in an earlier
application for a state job, she had said that she was only the
"membership director" for that group. Flowers further represented on
her resume that she had an associate degree from the University of Arkansas. But that college had no record of
her ever attending. And Flowers had also lied about her experience working on
computers.
In early 1992, as
disclosures about their affair were on the verge of going public, Flowers
called Clinton and secretly recorded the conversations. Flowers told her former
boyfriend she was concerned that someone might find out about his assistance in
her obtaining the state job.
"The only thing that
concerns me, where I'm, where I'm concerned at this point, is the state
job," Flowers told Clinton.
"Yeah, I never thought
about that," Clinton responded, in that earnest manner
we are all so familiar with. "If they ever ask if you've talked to me
about it, you can say no."
When Flowers
told Clinton that she had lied about
how she learned about the job, he responded: "Good for you!"
Clinton's deceptions did not end there. As
Salon recently
disclosed, during that telephone conversation between Clinton and Flowers, Hillary
Rodham Clinton was standing only a few feet away from her husband.
According to a version of
the story that Hillary Clinton has told two close friends, the first lady-to-be
was standing right next to her husband as he talked to Flowers on a phone
extension in the kitchen of the Arkansas governor's mansion. The first lady
had told the friends that her presence was evidence that her husband could not
have possibly been deceiving her when he claimed that he had no relationship
with Flowers.
It was vintage Clinton: He was simultaneously encouraging
Flowers to conceal the relationship while saying nothing too incriminating in case
she was taping the conversation, and he was putting on a show for his own wife
as well.
On Jan. 23, 1992, Flowers held a press conference to publicize a
story in the Star tabloid, alleging that she had had a 12-year relationship
with Clinton. Having been paid hundreds of
thousands of dollars for the confession, she no longer had any use for her
state job. She never even bothered to call work to tell her bosses that she
wasn't coming in anymore. They had to figure that out on their own when she
simply stopped showing up.
Apparently believing her
husband's explanations that Flowers' charges were the result of Republican
dirty tricks, Hillary Clinton personally directed a campaign to raise similar
allegations against then President Bush. There had been rumors circulating
around Washington for years that Bush had had an extramarital affair with an
aide named Jennifer Fitzgerald. The only problem was that there was little
evidence to support the charges, which were most likely false.
According to
three sources, the first lady personally, and through her surrogates, began to
encourage a number of journalists to look into the allegations. Eventually, New Republic writer Sidney Blumenthal, now Clinton's aggressive spin doctor, convinced
a Spy magazine writer to include the Fitzgerald allegations in an article just
prior to the 1992 presidential election, even though the piece contained no
compelling evidence to support the rumors.
Blumenthal then publicly
questioned the ethics of Spy for publishing the story, even though he had put
the magazine up to publishing it in the first place. Hillary Clinton and
Blumenthal then spearheaded a further effort to have the sex allegations
against Bush circulated in the mainstream press.
"That was probably the
genesis of the so-called scorched-earth strategy ... You investigate our
sex-lives, we investigate yours," recalls one veteran of the 1992 Clinton-for-president campaign. (A spokesperson for the
first lady declined to comment for this story.)
New Yorker columnist Kurt Andersen,
who was then editor of Spy, said he didn't know about Blumenthal's involvement,
but offered: "Sidney's first political crush was Gary
Hart, whose career was ruined by a sex scandal ... a tragic and compulsive
motif in Sidney's career."
The Flowers allegations
were only a momentary distraction for Clinton, who would quickly move on to the
presidency and recidivism.
As for Charlotte
Perry, the Arkansas state Grievance Review
Committee ruled in her favor. It concluded that there had been favoritism and
"irregular practices" in the hiring of Flowers and recommended that Perry be
awarded Flowers' job, and also that she be compensated for back pay.
Still, justice
was never done. The review committee's findings were not binding. They were
overruled by Barnes, the very same official who was found by the committee to
have engaged in favoritism on Flowers' behalf in the first place.
Unlike Flowers and
Lewinsky, Perry is the other woman we should care about. Flowers and Lewinsky
were never the victims they have portrayed themselves to be. Flowers received a
state job and a half million dollars for her story, using Clinton perhaps as much, or more than, he
used her. As for Monica, now that she has confided to Starr's grand jury her
tales of White House trysts in all their glorious detail, fortune will surely
follow fame.
In contrast to all of them,
Charlotte
Perry is a true victim of the president's sexual misconduct. As we consider her story, it
illustrates why, despite the president's desire to the contrary, his private
affairs are sometimes public matters.
SALON | Sept. 11, 1998
Murray Waas has
published numerous investigative reports in Salon.