posted on Dec, 3 2003 @ 03:56 PM
Associated Press
Published December 3, 2003 FOST03
LOS ANGELES -- Five government investigations concluded that the death of a White House attorney in 1993 was a suicide. But a southern California man
suspects murder and is demanding to see 10 of the police photos.
The U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments today on whether to release them. The potentially precedent-setting case pits the public's right to know
against the privacy of Vincent Foster's family, which opposes the request.
The case is more than a battle over sensational evidence in the death of a high-level Clinton administration official. It represents the first time
the court has agreed to rule directly on the privacy interests of the surviving family in a Freedom of Information Act case.
The outcome could increase the government's ability to withhold information from the public and the media, said Jane Kirtley, a media ethics and law
professor at the University of Minnesota who filed a brief in support of Allan Favish, a Santa Clarita insurance lawyer.
Foster, 48, was found dead of a gunshot to the head in a park in Virginia, outside the nation's capital. A longtime friend of Bill and Hillary Rodham
Clinton, he was handling several personal legal matters for them. His widow, Lisa, has said he was severely depressed and afraid that seeking
treatment could jeopardize his career.
Independent prosecutor Kenneth Starr and other investigators concluded that Foster shot himself; conspiracy theories that he was murdered in a White
House conspiracy abound.
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