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won't be certain that Congressman Gary Condit is guilty until Alan Dershowitz
defends him. But the possibility that Condit wasn't involved in the disappearance
of intern Chandra Levy grows more remote with each passing day. And not
only because of who's already defending him.
Because you can't turn on the TV without seeing breaking news on the Levy
investigation, this is like explaining who "John Kennedy Jr." was, but:
Levy is the 24-year-old graduate student from the University of Southern
California who had just finished her internship with the federal Bureau
of Prisons and was about to head back to California when she vanished
without a trace from her apartment near Dupont Circle on April 30.
The longer Levy remains missing, the more likely it is that she will not
emerge alive. She didn't fit the profile of a runaway (and runaways tend
not to leave their purses behind). There is no ransom note.
If Levy has been the victim of foul play, chances are overwhelming, from
a statistical point of view, that she was the victim of someone she knew.
It's been two months and the police still haven't found a body. Suicides
don't hide the body, random street criminals don't hide the body, even
serial killers tend not to hide the bodies. Police dogs have searched
nearby jogging trails, and Levy's running shoes were in her apartment.
If she were involved with someone, the possibility that that such person
is involved is even higher. If she were involved in an adulterous relationship
with a married man, the odds again increase. If she disappeared during
a period when the married man's wife suddenly came to town, the odds increase
further.
Levy was having an affair with Rep. Gary Condit. His wife arrived in Washington
days before Levy disappeared.
Supplementing this mounting suspicion is Condit's practice of acting guilty.
Even as the days grew into weeks and weeks grew into months with no sign
of Levy, Condit kept lying about the affair. We learned in the Clinton
era that affairs are "private family matters" and "everyone lies about
sex." But this was beginning to look like a murder investigation.
So it was odd that Condit still engaged in Herculean efforts to conceal
his affair. (He must have thought he was being pretty smooth, but everyone
knew anyway. As a rule of thumb, whenever a congressman calls an intern
a "good friend," he's having sex with her.) If the affair and Levy's disappearance
were unrelated, why would Condit persistently lie about the affair?
After issuing preposterous denials for two months, Condit finally did
the honorable thing and owned up to his relationship with Levy
right after Levy's aunt went public with the affair. Condit also lied
to Levy's parents about when he had last spoken with Levy, later giving
the Clintonian explanation that he meant "in person" as opposed to "on
the phone."
Maddeningly, the police are refusing to cough up the details of their
investigation to an inquiring press. But the FBI was sufficiently interested
in Condit to contact his other mistress soon after Levy disappeared. The
other-other woman, flight attendant Anne Marie Smith, knew nothing of
Levy (for reasons pertaining to the logic of mistresses). Thus, early
in the investigation, something led investigators to stray beyond acquaintances
of Levy to acquaintances of Condit.
When Smith told Condit that the FBI had called, he promptly attempted
to suborn her perjury. (Another proven method of looking innocent.) According
to Smith, Condit informed her that she didn't have to talk to the FBI.
He then had his lawyers draft an affidavit for her denying the affair.
Condit, evidently, does not like mistresses who talk. Smith refused to
sign, and took her story to Fox News Channel.
Condit responded to the subornation charge with more Clintonian dodges.
He swore up and down, in 17 different ways, that he had told absolutely
everyone to tell the truth
about Levy's disappearance. Thus, he "denied"
asking Smith to lie about the affair by saying he had instructed her to
tell the truth about Levy's disappearance (something Smith manifestly
knew nothing about).
Condit's attorney on the affidavit later explained that it was only a
draft affidavit and Smith had been encouraged to edit anything that was
incorrect. (Like changing the part about not having an affair with Condit
to having an affair with Condit.)
But Smith's most intriguing piece of information was that Condit told
her on May 5 or 6: "I'm going to have to disappear for a while. I think
I may be in some trouble." Levy's parents didn't tell Condit their daughter
was missing until the evening of May 6. If Condit told Smith he was in
trouble before being informed of Levy's disappearance, he's lying about
more than the affair.
At least there won't be a DNA-stained dress. Maybe politicians are capable
of learning from the mistakes of others.
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