Packwood warns diary covers others' sex lives : ethics: he says affairs of at least two lawmakers would be disclosed if senate enforces subpoena of personal records. Vote on dispute expected soon.

Packwood warns diary covers others' sex lives : ethics: he says affairs of at least two lawmakers would be disclosed if senate enforces subpoena of personal records. Vote on dispute expected soon.


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WASHINGTON — Sen. Bob Packwood (R-Ore.) warned Monday that the sex lives of at least two other lawmakers would be disclosed to the Senate Ethics Committee if the Senate subpoena for nearly


five years of his personal diaries is enforced. Packwood insisted that he is not trying to “blackmail” senators into voting to reject the unanimous demand of the ethics panel, which is


conducting an inquiry into charges that Packwood repeatedly made unwanted sexual advances to women on his staff. Rather, the Oregon lawmaker said, it is the Ethics Committee that wants


entries from his diary concerning the longtime affair of another senator and an intimate relationship between a member of the House Democratic leadership and a Senate staff aide. In his


dealings with the committee, Packwood said, he concealed the name of the prominent Democrat by masking it with a piece of paper. “The Ethics Committee lifted the piece of paper and saw the


name and demanded that we produce that page in the diary,” Packwood said. “These were not threats by my lawyer, that if my diary is subpoenaed, that I will tell these things.” Sources close


to Packwood said he fears that some of his diary entries would become public through leaks to the media, even if the committee itself does not disclose them. The committee said in a report


to the Senate last Thursday that Packwood reneged on an agreement to allow a neutral third party to screen the diaries and exclude those parts covered by attorney-client or doctor-patient


privileges or related to personal, private family matters. It voted, 6 to 0, to issue a subpoena for Packwood’s diaries from 1989 to the present, concluding that “the documents in their


entirety may be relevant and probative” in connection with its investigation of Packwood’s conduct. Unless a compromise can be reached, the Senate is expected to vote shortly on whether to


back up the Ethics Committee by authorizing it to seek a federal court order for the diaries or to uphold Packwood’s protests that his privacy is being invaded. Packwood told the Senate that


he has kept a personal diary for 25 years that now amounts to 8,200 single-spaced pages. He sets aside time early each morning to dictate his thoughts about events of the previous day,


apparently covering both his personal life as well as his official duties. Entries cover his “hopes and dreams and despair,” the 61-year-old Packwood said, including his discussions with


former President Richard Nixon over the Watergate scandal, as well as meetings with Rep. Dan Rostenkowski (D-Ill.), chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, on tax reform. In


addition, as Packwood’s attorney James F. Fitzpatrick said in a statement Friday, the diary also has information on the senator’s “private consensual personal relationships” with women who


were not on his staff. Senate records disclosed that Packwood has raised more than $280,000 for a legal defense fund since the Ethics Committee started its inquiry early this year, including


a $10,000 donation from Sen. Robert F. Bennett (R-Utah) and a $1,000 contribution from Sen. John H. Chafee (R-R.I.). Lobbyists and other major campaign contributors have put up most of the


money. Packwood, accused by more than two dozen women of sexual harassment over the last two decades, also has been charged with using his Senate staff to try to silence his accusers by


intimidation. MORE TO READ