Starr memoir recounts Lewinsky role in Clinton investigation
WASHINGTON — Ken Starr, the former independent counsel whose investigation led to President Bill Clinton’s impeachment, writes in his upcoming book that if Monica Lewinsky had co-operated with his probe from the beginning, “the country would not have been dragged through an eight-month ordeal.”
Recounting his Clinton-era investigation, Starr contends that the former White House intern who had a sexual relationship with the president carried “fierce but misguided loyalty” and “allowed herself to become a tragic figure of late twentieth-century America.”
“She carries with her forever the living reality of the Clintons’ victim-strewn path to power, the most visible casualty of the Clintons’ contempt,” Starr writes in “Contempt: A Memoir of the Clinton Investigation.” The Associated Press obtained a copy of the book, which will be released Sept. 11.
Starr’s book recounts his reluctant yet duty-bound decision to serve as independent counsel in the Whitewater probe that ultimately led to Clinton’s impeachment by the House on charges he lied under oath and obstructed justice. The case cast the former solicitor general and appellate attorney as the archnemesis of the Clinton White House.



