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April 23, 2000

 

WASHINGTON, APR 22 (AP) - Federal prosecutors have interviewed both President Bill Clinton and Vice President Al Gore in the government's long-running investigation into alleged fund-raising abuses in the Democrats' 1996 re-election campaign.

 

After Friday's White House disclosure, Gore's spokesman said the vice president's lawyer was assured Gore is not a target of the Justice Department Campaign Finance Task Force. A White House official said Clinton also is not a target of the investigation. Clinton's interview was Friday, Gore's Tuesday.

 

"The president and the vice president cooperated fully with the task force and voluntarily agreed to be interviewed this week," a statement from press secretary Joe Lockhart said.

 

Attorney General Janet Reno established the task force to investigate allegations that illegal foreign and corporate donations were made in the 1996 presidential campaign.

 

Federal prosecutors also are investigating whether the White House tried to obstruct investigators by failing to surrender e-mails related to 1996 campaign fund-raising allegations, including Gore's use of White House telephones and a Buddhist temple to solicit campaign contributions.

 

The White House refused comment on the subject of the interview. Gore held a press conference on his campaign plane returning to Washington from Michigan but said he couldn't discuss the substance of the task force interview.

 

"It's a legal proceeding that customarily is protected from open discussion, lest it somehow interfere with the success and fairness of the undertaking. That's just pretty traditional," Gore told reporters.

 

Asked if he would encourage the Justice Department to end its investigation before Election Day in November, Gore said: "I don't think it's for me to encourage or discourage the conduct of this

investigation in any particular way. I don't think that's my role.

 

That's for them to decide." Gore, appearing relaxed, also was asked whether he worries that the investigation will harm his campaign for president. "I have no feelings about it," he said.

 

 Gore has been questioned five times under oath involving various investigations during the Clinton administration. "I volunteered to cooperate fully, as I have from the beginning of their

investigation," Gore said of the campaign finance task force. 

  

"I of course answered every question fully and completely," Gore said, adding he didn't know whether he would be asked for further interviews. "There are no outstanding - there are no

requests," he said.

 

The Justice Department task force has indicted 24 people, including several Clinton-Gore donors and organizers of the April 29, 1996, event at a Buddhist temple in Hacienda Heights,

California.

 

Gore attended that event but says he didn't know it was a fund-raising event. On various occasions, he has said he thought it was community outreach, finance-related and keeping donors happy -"donor maintenance" in political terms.

 

Gore's role in the fund-raiser has continued to dog his presidential campaign.

 

Chris Lehane, Gore's campaign spokesman, said the Justice Department has assured the vice president's private attorney, Jim Neal, that Gore is "not a target" of the investigation.

 

Gore was questioned for four hours Tuesday in the dining room of the vice presidential residence by Robert Conrad, head of the Justice Department task force.

 

At the White House, Lockhart was asked whether the president sticks by his earlier assertions that he has done nothing wrong. 

 

"All of his statements still stand," the spokesman said. Clinton's interview was under oath and, like Gore's, lasted four hours, said a White House official who declined to be named. It took

place in the Treaty Room on the second floor of the private White House residence, with White House counsel Beth Nolan in attendance, along with Clinton's private lawyers David Kendall and Nicole Seligman.

 

A prosecutor and four FBI agents conducted the interview, which was transcribed by a court reporter. 

 

They took two short breaks, and the interview ended at approximately 4:30 p.m. (2030 GMT) The official said he believed this was Clinton's third interview on campaign finance. The others

were Nov. 11, 1997, and Nov. 9, 1998.

 

Gore spokesman Lehane said the vice president was accompanied in his interview by his attorney, Neal, and by attorney Elizabeth Brown of the vice president's office.

 

Gore's staff said they delayed telling reporters about the interview at the request of President Clinton's private lawyers, who asked that public disclosure until after the president's interview.

 

Gore said he did not discuss his interview with Clinton. Reno has taken heavy criticism from Republicans for opting for the task force instead of recommending an independent counsel. The

federal prosecutors she put in charge of the probe in 1997 and FBI Director Louis Freeh both recommended an independent counsel. 

  


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