Justice official recommends special counsel to investigate Gore

By Pete Yost, Associated Press, 6/22/2000

WASHINGTON - A top Justice Department prosecutor has recommended a special counsel be appointed to investigate Vice President Al Gore in the 1996 campaign fund-raising controversy, government officials said Thursday.

The recommendation came from Robert Conrad, supervising attorney for the Justice Department task force investigating 1996 fund-raising abuses, said the officials, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Conrad interviewed Gore and President Clinton in April. Conrad signaled activity in the investigation on Wednesday when he declined to answer a senator's questions about the vice president and the president.

Officials said Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., recently learned about Conrad's recommendation.

"I have reason to believe that Mr. Conrad has made a recommendation that an independent counsel be appointed as to matters related to Vice President Gore," Specter said in a telephone interview.

Gore, while campaigning for president in Minnesota, said he didn't know anything about a recommendation regarding a special counsel.

"You're privy to news I don't have," Gore told reporters.

At the White House, vice presidential spokesman James E. Kennedy said the office had "received no word from the Department of Justice about the reported campaign finance development."

"As you know, the vice president has cooperated fully with the investigation every step of the way. What we have heard is a Republican senator making his own announcement about the investigation," he added.

Among the issues that came up in the fund-raising scandal of 1996 was Gore's visit to a campaign event at a Buddhist temple in California. The vice president has always denied that he knew he was attending a fund-raiser.

Sources familiar with Conrad's questioning of Gore in April say that the investigators did delve into the temple matter in that interview.

It could not be learned from the officials whether Conrad wants a special counsel to investigate the temple issue or other topics.

Justice Department spokesman Myron Marlin had no comment on the substance of the report about Gore.

"The campaign finance task force has been investigating irregularities in the 1996 election cycle since 1996," Marlin said. "That investigation is still ongoing and has prosecuted 25 people to date. It is inappropriate to comment on ongoing matters or internal deliberations."

At Wednesday's hearing before the Senate Judiciary subcommittee on administrative oversight and the courts, Specter asked Conrad whether "you made or attempted to make a recommendation" on a special counsel to investigate Gore or Clinton.

"I don't feel comfortable discussing" the matter, Conrad replied. Conrad said it is "something that pertains to an ongoing investigation."

Specter, in the interview on Thursday, said Attorney General Janet Reno "has done a great disservice to Vice President Gore because these matters should have been investigated a long time ago."

Reno repeatedly declined to seek appointment of an Independent Counsel before the statute expired a year ago.

Specter said that his hearings into decision-making within the Justice Department on the fund-raising scandal "have been very embarrassing to the Department of Justice" in that "they did not proceed with an independent counsel as to the vice president a long time ago."

Reno twice rejected an independent counsel to investigate Gore -- once for fund-raising phone calls from his White House office, the second time for possible false statements about that fund-raising.

The recommendations of Conrad and others will go to Reno, who ultimately would make a decision on whether or not to appoint a special counsel.

The special counsel process was set up inside the Justice Department after the independent counsel law expired in June 1999. Under that law, a panel of federal appeals judges appointed independent counsels to investigate matters that would be a conflict of interest for the attorney general to pursue. The attorney general is an appointee of the president.

Reporter John Solomon contributed to this report.