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In August, 1995, Carolyn Huber, an aide to Bill and Hillary Clinton, was doing a little tidying up around the White House when, in the so-called book room, she noticed a sheaf of computer printouts lying on a table. Without looking at them too closely, Huber picked up the papers and shoved them, along with a stray coat hanger, into a box, which she then pushed underneath a table in her office. The printouts--and the coat hanger--sat there, undisturbed, for five months, until Huber finally got around to cleaning her office and discovered what a mess she had got into.
The printouts were old billing records from the Rose Law Firm. They detailed work that Hillary ...