Charles Ruff
Charles Ruff
Charles Frederick Carson "Chuck" Ruffwas a prominent American lawyer based in Washington, D.C., and was best known as the White House Counsel who defended President Bill Clinton during his impeachment trial in 1999...
fine point
Not to put too fine a point on it, but that's nonsense,
advocate calls case centuries certain images preserve respond sacrificed side themselves
I'm never certain how to respond when an advocate on the other side of a case calls up images of patriots over the centuries who have sacrificed themselves to preserve our democracy,
bedrock context government legal less nature principle privilege relationship
The attorney-client privilege is the bedrock principle of our legal system, ... The confidential nature of the attorney-client relationship is no less important in government than in every other context where it exists.
actual stated white
Is this still the White House's stated and actual policy?
knew listening misleading people relations room roosevelt secret sexual stood
There is no secret here when he stood in the Roosevelt Room and said 'I never had sexual relations with Ms. Lewinsky,' ... He knew when he said that ... that he was misleading the people who were listening to him.
absolutely clear defense effort fair found intensive letter meet needs ongoing pattern produce reader thompson
Yes, we didn't do this -- we didn't produce these videotapes on time. My letter to Sen. Thompson made clear we should have found them. But the one thing that is absolutely clear is that the only pattern here is not one of incompetence -- and we don't make an incompetence defense -- the pattern here is one of an ongoing intensive day-to-day effort to try to meet the committee's needs and that is the only pattern a fair reader can see,
deceive feels necessary prosecutor
Be wary, be wary, of the prosecutor who feels it necessary to deceive the court,
ally ask clinton father feelings framers history horrific last moment political preserved president saw step taking union whatever william
Whatever your feelings may be about William Clinton the man, or William Clinton the political ally or opponent, or William Clinton the father and the husband, ask only this: should William Clinton the president be removed from office? ... Are we at that horrific moment in our history when our union can be preserved only by taking the step that the framers saw as a last resort?
ad ads approve both compliance conclude counsel department ensure guidelines hopeful matter reviewed strict
Counsel for both the DNC and Clinton/Gore used those (FEC) guidelines to approve every ad to ensure strict compliance with the law. We are hopeful that once the Department has reviewed this matter fully, it will conclude that these ads were proper.
answer ask asked electorate judge nation president questions states suffers trauma united
Do you ask the same questions about the trauma the nation suffers when you are removing a judge as when you are removing a president? ... That answer must be stunningly different when you are asked should the president of the United States be removed and the will of the electorate overturned.
absolutely politics production time
The time of our production had absolutely nothing to do with politics or tactics.
compliance context counsel focus immediate issue needed understood
I understood that this was an issue that we needed to address, particularly in the context of the Independent Counsel subpoenas, ... My immediate focus was on the immediate compliance with the independent counsel's subpoenas.
cooperate eight house information legitimate oversight past provide remains responsive white willing
the White House remains willing to cooperate with the committee, as we have over the past eight months, and to provide information that is responsive to the committee's legitimate oversight and investigative concerns.
appears came continue dwell few heard house jones manager managers minutes percent perjury rejected somehow talk talked though
Now, just -- just a few minutes ago, you heard Manager Gekas talk to you about perjury, ... And probably 90 percent of what he talked to you about was perjury in the (Paula) Jones case. It appears to make no difference, though, that the House rejected this charge, for the managers do continue to dwell on it, as though somehow they could show the House from which they came that they'd made a mistake.