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Twists and Turns in the Monica Lewinsky Scandal
 
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APRIL 24, 1998
In five hours of videotaped testimony, Starr questions Hillary Clinton at the White House about her legal work for the failed Madison Guaranty Savings and Loan during the 1980s.
 


JUNE 2, 1998
Lewinsky replaces her attorney, William Ginsburg, with two seasoned Washington attorneys, Jacob Stein and Plato Cacheris.


JULY 17, 1998
After Supreme Court Chief Justice William Rehnquist refuses to block the Secret Service from testifying, members of the President's security detail report to the grand jury to face questioning.


AUGUST 6, 1998
Monica Lewinsky begins testifying before Kenneth Starr's grand jury in Washington, D.C.


AUGUST 8, 1998
Chief U.S. District Judge Norma Halloway Johnson orders a probe into allegations that Kenneth Starr's office has leaked information to the press about testimony to the Lewinsky grand jury.


AUGUST 17, 1998
President Clinton testifies to the Lewinsky grand jury via closed circuit television from the White House's Map Room. That evening, in a televised address, he says his relationship with Monica was "not appropriate," but insists th at he never told anyone to lie.


SEPTEMBER 9, 1998
Starr sends his report to Congress of possible impeachable offenses by President Clinton. Two days later, the House of Representatives votes to release the Starr report on the Internet.
 


SEPTEMBER 14, 1998
According to a CNN/USA Today/Gallup poll, the President's approval rating edges up to 64 percent, while 31 percent think he should be impeached and 36 percent think he should resign.


SEPTEMBER 21, 1998
The videotape of President Clinton's grand jury testimony, along with 2,800 pages of supporting evidence to Starr's report, is made public by the Judiciary Committee.


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AP