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  1. Susan Carol McDougal (née Henley; born June 27, 1955) is a real estate investor who served prison time as a result of the Whitewater controversy . Her refusal to answer "three questions" for a grand jury, on whether President Bill Clinton lied in his testimony during her Whitewater trial, led her to receive a jail sentence of 18 ...

    • Businesswoman
    • .mw-parser-output .marriage-line-margin2px{line-height:0;margin-bottom:-2px}.mw-parser-output .marriage-line-margin3px{line-height:0;margin-bottom:-3px}.mw-parser-output .marriage-display-ws{display:inline;white-space:nowrap}, Jim McDougal, ​ ​(m. 1976; div. 1990)​
  2. The key witness against President Clinton in Starr's Whitewater investigation, was banker David Hale who alleged in November 1992 that Clinton, while governor of Arkansas, pressured him to provide an illegal $300,000 loan to Susan McDougal, the partner of the Clintons in the Whitewater deal.

  3. 21 de ago. de 1996 · Susan McDougal, a former business partner of President and Mrs. Clinton, was sentenced to two years in prison today in a Whitewater-related fraud case, a decision that one of Mrs....

  4. 24 de jan. de 2003 · Susan McDougal, who refused to testify against the Clintons in the Whitewater trial, talks about her imprisonment and her new memoir. She shares her experiences in seven different prisons and why she chose to go to jail.

  5. 13 de abr. de 2015 · Hale alleged that Clinton pressured him to issue a fraudulent $300,000 loan to Susan McDougal, money that Hale claimed had been used in part to shore up Whitewater.

  6. 24 de nov. de 1998 · Susan H. McDougal, President Clinton's former partner in the Whitewater deal, was acquitted today on all nine counts that she forged checks and credit card receipts to steal $50,000 from the...

  7. 5 de out. de 2023 · Susan McDougal is a former Arkansas real estate developer and political activist who refused to testify before the Whitewater grand jury in 1996. She was convicted of bank fraud and served almost two years in prison, but was later found not guilty and released. She wrote a best-selling book about her experience and became a chaplain at UAMS.