In the obstruction of justice portion of the report, prosecutors say that Mr. Clinton took an active role in trying to hide his relationship with Ms. Lewinsky from the Jones lawyers and later from Mr. Starr's investigators by concealing gifts they exchanged, which had been subpoenaed.
During the Jones case, the President obstructed justice and had an understanding with Ms. Lewinsky to jointly conceal the truth about their relationship by concealing gifts subpoenaed by Ms. Jones's attorneys.
ALLEGATION V Concealing Gifts and an Intimate Note In its fifth allegation, the OIC contends that President Clinton obstructed justice by concealing gifts he had given to Ms. Lewinsky.
First is the independent counsel's charge that the President conspired with Ms. Lewinsky to conceal gifts he had given her.
The obstruction article charges Mr. Clinton with having encouraged Ms. Lewinsky to file a false affidavit and to conceal gifts he had given her.
Encouraging Ms. Lewinsky to conceal gifts he had given her; 4.
Mr. Starr has charged the President with trying to obstruct justice by concealing gifts that the Jones lawyers had subpoenaed from Ms. Lewinsky.
Third, she undermined the allegations in Article 2, Subpart 3, with respect to alleged efforts to conceal gifts.
Lewinsky's testimony that Clinton concealed gifts was contradicted by both Clinton's testimony and that of his personal secretary Betty Currie, who each said that it was Lewinsky who asked him for some gifts and that he tended to give a number of his staff gifts as an act of courtesy.
Mr. Clinton has been accused in the past of trying to conceal several gifts he had given Ms. Lewinsky.