(10:15:09) And I would like to get an indication as to what and how you intend to deal with that when you get an opportunity to review these materials. I think that is important and I would appreciate that. Secretary BENTSEN. Senator, I will be pleased to receive them. Senator DAMATO. We will send them to you. And I thank the Chair. The CHAIRMAN. Senator Sarbanes. OPENING COMMENTS OF SENATOR SARBANES Senator SARBANES. Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman, Mr. Secretary, welcome. Mr. Altman and Ms. Hanson directly contradict one another about on what basis she went to see Nussbaum and to report to him back at the end of September. Do you have any knowledge about that matter? Secretary BENTSEN. No, I did not. I did not have knowledge of it. 13 Senator SARBANES. And do you have any perceptions now on this issue of whether Altman tasked her to go or whether she went on her own? Secretary BENTSEN. No. What you have in this, Senator is a situation, things that happened over 5 to 10 months ago, and you obviously have different recollections by the parties involved. That is not surprising. Senator SARBANES. Now you met with Altman and Hanson, I take it, on the 1st of February, and Altman discussed with you that he was thinking of recusing himself? Secretary BENTSEN. That is correct, Senator SARBANES. And then again you met with him the day before the hearing here on the 23rd of February? Secretary BENTSEN. That is correct. Senator SARBANES. And again, I take it, the issue of recusal came up in your discussions with Altman? Secretary BENTSEN. Yes, I think it did. Senator SARBANES. Now he has indicated to us that you in effect counseled or advised him to recuse himself. Secretary BENTSEN. I understand that he does. Let me say this, I sympathized with him a great deal. I thought he was in a tough position. He might have taken that and interpreted it that way. But I also very clearly, and I do not remember any such specific recommendation, but I do, I do recall very definitely this. That I told him it was his decision to make. lt was his judgment to exercise. That I did not know the facts in that case, did not have it, and was in no position to make that determination or tell him what he should do. Senator SARBANES. Did he indicate to you, in the second meeting on the 23rd of February-he met with you on the 1st of February and then he went to that meeting at the White House where the recusal matter arose. He then met with you on the 23rd of February. At the second meeting, did he indicate anything about what had transpired at the White House meeting on the recusal, and whether he felt he had been put under pressure not to recuse himself at that meeting at the White House? Secretary BENTSEN. I do not remember his stating that to me. Senator SARBANES. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. The CHAIRMAN. Senator Gramm. OPENING COMMENTS OF SENATOR GRAMM Senator GRAMM. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Senator Bentsen, I -want to ask you a couple of questions and then get Secretary BENTSEN. Well I was called Senator for a long time, and I accept that. Senator GRAMM. [continuing]. Fairly deeply into a couple. The Treasury Department has about how many employees? Just guess. Secretary BENTSEN. Well it is a guess, but it is a bunch. I think it is on the order of 160,000 people. 14 Senator GRAMM. How many people at the Treasury Department did you actually hire that were your people? I thought I remembered when you went over from the Senate secretary BENTSEN. Well I took Sam Sessions. Sam Sessions went over with me. Jack DeVore went over with me. Maurice Foley went over with me. Senator GRAMM. Would you say of the 160,000 that fewer than 10 were, quote, your people? Secretary BENTSEN. I think that is correct. Senator GRAMM. Mr. Altman was the President's appointment. While I am not in any way suggesting you were in any way unsupportive, he was not your nominee? Secretary BENTSEN. No, that is correct. Senator GRAMM. And the same would be true of Ms. Hanson? Secretary BENTSEN. Yes, that is right. Senator GRAMM. So basically in this 160,000 person agency, you have about 10 people that are your people, that came with you. Secretary BENTSEN. That is correct. Senator GRAMM. I would just like to say, having listened to Jack DeVore, and Jack is your Press Secretary, that as a person that I have worked with, and in some cases worked against, I think you were well- served by having a few gray hairs over in your Department. I was struck, yesterday, by
Wasted Land (H.A.D.S.) Over Cultivated Field
Farms, Farm Houses
Farm House (Young Man Looking)
Planting Farm Fields
Aerial of Farm Field
Farming (Planting Seeds)
Farm (Stables)
Farm
(No Title)
Coffee Industry
Stock Agriculture
A.V. Farmland
Old Farming (belongs in #22)
Ice Cream
Dairy van, Large Milk Truck Unloading
Ice Cream - Assembly Line, Cartons, Ladies Working
Exterior - Ice Cream Stands - Parlors, CSL Color Orig.
Cow Milking Machines
Misc. Dairy Industry
(10:20:36) Secretary BENTSEN. Let me interrupt a minute about Jack DeVore, because that is a long-time friend. He is the kind of a fellow that you would not hesitate to make guardian of your children. Senator GRAMM. I guess people assume that we sit up here and ask questions and do not learn anything. One of the things I have learned is, if you are trying to run the Government, you want a few people that have some experience, that know what they are doing, and I think you were blessed by having him. Secretary BENTSEN. Thank you. Senator GRAMM. Now I want to go to the testimony of Ms. Hanson. Mr. Secretary, I know that a lot of this stuff never bubbled up to you, or if it did, it bubbled up at a time when you were doing 50 other things. One of the things I am also convinced of is that we can never, ever have the acting head of an agency like the RTC be a person who has line authority in the Executive Branch of Government. That must never happen again, and as long as I am here, given the ability under the Senate Rules for one Member to stop something, I intend to stop it. But Secretary Bentsen, you have worked with Ms. Hanson. She is your Counsel, the General Counsel, for the Department, so you know her pretty well? Secretary BENTSEN. That is correct. Senator GRAMM. Now on September 29th, Ms. Hanson went to the White House. As far as we know that is the first meeting she had ever had where she went over to the White House to visit with someone as senior as Mr. Nussbaum and a handful of other people, There is conflicting testimony. I do not expect you to know who is 15 telling the, truth, but I want to ask you some questions related to what you might know or have feelings about. Secretary BENTSEN. All right. Senator GRAMM. Ms. Hanson says, under oath, that she was notified on behalf of Mr. Altman about these 9 referrals for criminal prosecution, and that Mr. Altman told her to go to the White House and tell Mr. Nussbaum. In fact, we also have another sworn statement in which Mr. Roelle says he was present in the room when she was told to communicate that information. None of these facts you know independently and we all understand that. But here is the point. Ms. Hanson is relatively young, she is relatively new on the job, and she is going to the White House to brief the President's Counsel on a criminal referral that has mentioned the President of the United States. She made, in her testimony, a major point of the fact that never, ever would there have been any possibility that she would have undertaken, on her own, that first time, to go to the White House for that meeting, had Roger Altman not told her to do it. I am not asking you to inject yourself into what is true and what is not true, but in your opinion, leaving everything else aside, do you believe, knowing her, knowing her position, knowing how the White House works and the Treasury works, do you believe it is likely that she would have initiated that contact without somebody telling her to do it? Secretary BENTSEN. That is an interesting question, Senator. Let me--she is a very competent, able person. She has a lot of self-confidence. I think that is possible, yes, possible. Senator GRAMM. You think it is possible that she, on her own initiative, without the clearance of anybody else, would have undertaken that activity? Secretary BENTSEN. I said possible. Senator GRAMM. Do you think it is likely? I know these are subtle distinctions, but I do think they are important. I think it is a fair question. Secretary BENTSEN. I do not really want to be the judge of that, Senator. Senator GRAMM. The recusal issue obviously has become a big issue. I have to admit, Mr. Secretary, in sitting here yesterday, and we sat here for 12 hours, I was stunned at our inability to get an answer out of Mr. Altman. I was stunned by the literally dozen clear contradictions. I want to read, from the front page of the Washington Post this morning, the following statement. This is an analysis article which appeared on the front page of the Post. Maybe you read it. Altman's statement about White House Treasury discussions on the Whitewater case triggered a flurry of hurried sessions at the White House, beginning that afternoon and continuing over the next several days. Senior officials, many of whom had participated in the very meetings Altman had failed to mention to the Senate, scrambled to determine what to do about his testimony.
Butterfly Aqarium
(10:25:59) The concern was so great that Deputy Chief of Staff Harold Ickes told Chief of Staff Thomas "Mack" McLarty about the difficulties with Altman's testimony the next day. Associate Counsel Neil Eggleston, one of the two White House lawyers who had attended the Senate hearings, called White House Counsel Bernie Nussbaum on vacation in Mexico to alert him to the problem. Now obviously, this thing was not only bubbling, it was boiling. 16 Did any of this ever, in any way during that period between the hearing on February 24th and the last letter on the 21st of the next month, a letter that, by the way, in no way answered the questions that were asked or in no way cleared up things in my humble opinion, did any of this ever, in this boil that was going on at the White House and the Treasury, did any of this ever bubble up to you? Secretary BENTSEN. I do not think it did. The CHAIRMAN. Senator Dodd. OPENING COMMENTS OF SENATOR DODD Senator DODD. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Secretary, welcome back to the Committee let me just make one observation, at the outset, and I think it is worthy of noting, because I think it does go to some of the difficulties. Secretary BENTSEN. Let me say to you, Senator, that a lot of things happen over there that do not get to me. Senator DODD. Just one observation that I do not think needs to be made about witnesses' testimony, that I think creates, in a sense, some of the problems we face as a hearing panel. Most of the witnesses have appeared already, before a Grand Jury, have been deposed by the Office of Government Ethics in sworn testimony, have been deposed by Counsel for our Committee in sworn testimony, and some have already appeared before the Committee in sworn testimony. One of the problems that emerges in that process is that witnesses become so trapped by their own statements that the fear of perjury and the advice of counsel of showing any willingness to modify a statement in light of whatever else comes along becomes difficult. I would just make that observation as a general proposition. When a person has testified four or five or six times, I think in a sense we then limit the ability of people to recollect better or to respond to questions, I make that as just a general observation. Second, in response to Senator Gramm's question about the issue of whether or not Mr. Altman would have directed Ms. Hanson to meet with Mr. Nussbaum, or not, I appreciate your response. I think it needs to be framed in the context in which the meeting on September 29th occurred at the White House. It has, I think, been stipulated, or should be stipulated, that that meeting at the White House was to meet on the Waco matter, and that it was at the end of that meeting at which Ms. Hanson talked to Mr. Nussbaum. I think that is a different scenario than the notion of just going down specifically for the purpose, and the fact that someone, in the context of another meeting, might raise the question of their own volition. I think that takes on a different meaning. I would quickly point out that there is a memo that was then sent on the 30th, the day after, in which one could certainly read into that memo that there was some direction. So I am not clear in my own mind as to it, but there is enough of an open question. And 1 am not necessarily soliciting a response from you, but just for the purpose of the record. 17 What I would like to ask you, and I commend you for your testimony, and Senator Gramm has sort of alluded to this already in his question or comment to you and that is what ought we to do in this Committee legislatively. I am deeply concerned about the statutory requirements of how you fill the Chief Executive Officer of the Resolution Trust Corporation when a vacancy occurs.
(10:35:22) I think the Secretary's point on that is extremely worthwhile. That jurisdiction may go to the Judiciary Committee. I would hope that someone would make some recommendations on how that might be dealt with as well. Secretary BENTSEN. Senator, that is right on the point and I had made it earlier, and you are amplifying it. That is particularly true for agencies that have some law enforcement responsibility. Senator DODD. Correct, correct. My time has expired. The CHAIRMAN. Thank you. Senator Bond. Senator BOND. Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman. Welcome, Mr. Secretary. Secretary BENTSEN. Thank you. Senator BOND. Just to follow up on a question that Senator Gramm was asking, I know it is very difficult to ask you to make decisions on the veracity of two of your top people. We do have what appears to be an irreconcilable conflict and it is a difficult task for us. But you have outlined to us today a very orderly procedure in which important matters are brought to your attention by means of a memo. 19 Would a discussion with a representative of the White House, like Mr. Nussbaum, by Counsel Jean Hanson from the Treasury or Treasury RTC, under your procedures have been recorded in a written memorandum? Would you expect that kind of information to be put in the record? Secretary BENTSEN. Not necessarily, particularly, Senator where there was nothing for me to do. There was no involvement by me. Senator BOND. Mr. Secretary, you have made it clear in your opening statement and in answers to questions that you told Mr. Altman, prior to February 25, that the judgment was his as to whether he should recuse himself, and that you were in no position to make that decision. The question we have is that Mr. Altman testified yesterday, without any hesitation, that you had recommended that he recuse himself. Secretary BENTSEN. My understanding what he testified to was that he thought I said that if I was in his position, that I would recuse myself. Frankly, I do not remember saying that. I do know that I certainly sympathized with him, and he might have interpreted it to be that. Senator BOND. Mr. Secretary, you were interviewed for the Treasury Department Inspector General's report on July 20th. Two days after you were interviewed, on July 22, the extensive search which you had directed apparently turned up documents reflecting your schedule that your office had just become aware of Those documents reflect that you had a meeting with Roger Altman and Jean Hanson on February 1, the day before the now infamous February 2 White House meeting, but the schedule also reflects that you had a meeting with Mr, Altman and Ms. Hanson on February 3rd, the day after the White House meeting. In your inter-view with the Inspector General, you recall the meeting on February 1st, and you recall discussing the statute of limitations in the Madison civil cases, but you did not recall being advised of the February 2nd meeting. There were no documents at the time reflecting that there had been a meeting two days afterwards, a meeting on February 3rd. With that information now available to you, thinking back when Roger Altman and Jean Hanson met with you on February 2, the day after Secretary BENTSEN. No, they met with me, I think, on February 1. Is that correct? Senator BOND. Well your notes from your office reflect that there was a meeting on February 3, as well. We have a copy of the redacted schedule which shows that there was a meeting on February 3. [Pause.] Pull that out. That shows that Mr. Altman and Ms. Hanson were on your schedule. Unfortunately, we are blessed with no shortage of paper work. This is the 1st, here is the 3rd.