The former White House intern took to Twitter about the outcome of Robert Mueller's Russia investigation.
Monica Lewinsky arrives at Vanity Fair's Oscar party on Feb. 24. By Helena Andrews-Dyer Helena Andrews-Dyer Columnist for The Reliable Source Email Bio Follow March 27 at 2:44 PM Back in the 1990s, Monica Lewinsky, who was then embroiled in a vicious public scandal with President Bill Clinton, couldn’t give the world a piece of her mind. What a difference a few decades and an active Twitter finger makes.
On Tuesday, University of Southern California law professor and legal expert Orin Kerr drew a comparison between Attorney General William P. Barr’s summary of the Mueller report and the full release of the Kenneth Starr report. Kerr wondered on Twitter how differently the Lewinsky-Clinton scandal would have played out if then-Attorney General Janet Reno had, like Barr, read the Starr report privately and then concluded in a public letter that “President Clinton committed no crimes.
“On Sept. 11, 1998, the Starr Report was released, giving the public the sordid details one might find in a romance novel. Three months later, the House impeached Clinton for perjury and obstruction of justice, but the Senate acquitted him in February 1999.”
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