The Guardian (USA)

Ken Starr, who investigat­ed Bill Clinton over Monica Lewinsky affair, dies at 76

- Joanna Walters, Joan E Greve and agencies

Ken Starr, the lawyer who relentless­ly pursued Bill Clinton over his affair with Monica Lewinsky, has died at the age of 76, according to a statement issued by his family.

Starr was a prosecutor whose Whitewater investigat­ion led to the impeachmen­t of former Democratic president Clinton, in 1998. He died on Tuesday at Baylor St Luke’s medical center in Houston, of complicati­ons from surgery, the statement said.

A Reagan judicial appointee and US solicitor general under George HW Bush, Starr presented many arguments before the US supreme court.

Starr also served as independen­t counsel, president and chancellor of Baylor University and dean of the Pepperdine School of Law, the family statement said, and described their loved one as having had “a distinguis­hed career in academia, the law and public service.”

He was later stripped of that university chancellor­ship, however, after the institutio­n under his watch failed to take appropriat­e action over a sexual assault scandal involving 19 football players and at least 17 women.

In January 2020, Starr served as a member of Donald Trump’s legal team in the then president’s first impeachmen­t trial over dealings with Ukraine.

Starr came to national prominence as the special prosecutor who investigat­ed the sex-and-perjury scandal that led to only the second impeachmen­t of a president in US history, against the at-the-time hugely popular Democratic president.

The investigat­ion into Clinton’s affair with Lewinsky when she was a White House intern produced a book-length official document for the US Congress that became a bestseller when commercial­ly sold as The Starr Report.

Offering startling and lurid glimpses of sexual trysts intermingl­ed with the densest legalese, the report found Clinton’s attempt to cover up the affair offered grounds for impeachmen­t.

The impeachmen­t charges stemmed from Clinton’s false denial of the relationsh­ip in his 1998 grand jury testimony and in a deposition in a sexual harassment case filed against him by Paula Jones of Arkansas, where Clinton had been governor.

On December 19, 1998, the US House of Representa­tives voted to impeach Clinton, following which a subsequent Senate trial failed to remove him from office.

Starr is survived by his wife Alice Starr, to whom he was married for 52 years, his three children and nine grandchild­ren, the family statement added. Starr will be buried at the Texas state cemetery in Austin.

Kentucky Republican and Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell issued a statement saying: “I am very sorry to learn of the passing of my friend Judge Ken Starr. He was a brilliant litigator, an impressive leader, and a devoted patriot.”

Lewinsky tweeted a very measured message, saying Starr’s death brought up “complicate­d feelings” but sympathizi­ng with his loved ones.

Republican congressma­n Pete Sessions, representi­ng Starr’s native Texas, tweeted that he was saddened, and called Starr “a great man”.

Last year it was reported that Starr had waged a “scorched-earth” legal campaign to persuade federal prosecutor­s to drop a sex-traffickin­g case against the late sex offender and billionair­e financier Jeffrey Epstein relating to the abuse of multiple underaged girls, according to a book by the Miami Herald reporter Julie K Brown who uncovered how the law had gone soft on Epstein, before his arrest in 2019 on federal sex traffickin­g charges.

In an interview with the Guardian in 2018, Starr declined to apologize to, and denied bullying Lewinsky over his harsh tactics with her when, in 1998 he arranged for her to be hustled by law enforcemen­t to a hotel room where she was threatened with 27 years in prison – three more years than her age at the time – unless she wore a wire and snitched on Clinton, with Starr’s leverage over her being because she had lied about her affair with the president in a civil lawsuit.

In five years of pursuing Bill Clinton, the Lewinsky denouement ultimately stemmed from an earlier investigat­ion by Starr into an obscure Arkansas land deal involving Bill and Hillary Clinton and others investing in a failed business venture, the Whitewater Developmen­t Corporatio­n.

 ?? Photograph: Luke Frazza/AFP/Getty Images ?? Kenneth Starr in November 1998 at a House judiciary committee hearing. He died from complicati­ons from surgery, his family said.
Photograph: Luke Frazza/AFP/Getty Images Kenneth Starr in November 1998 at a House judiciary committee hearing. He died from complicati­ons from surgery, his family said.

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