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White House Denies Political Use of Database

Contributions: File on 350,000 Executive Mansion visitors wasn't used for any fund-raising, spokesman says in response to flurry of questions.

January 31, 1997|ELIZABETH SHOGREN and GLENN F. BUNTING, TIMES STAFF WRITERS

WASHINGTON — Attempting to douse new brush fires in the broadening campaign finance controversy, the White House denied Thursday that one of its own computer databases was used for political purposes.

A White House spokesman deflected a barrage of questions about the White House Office Database known as WhoDB that stores information on 350,000 White House visitors.


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"The database was not used by the White House for any fund-raising capacity," White House spokesman Barry Toiv said. "The DNC [Democratic National Committee] did not have access to it."

The Times reported Thursday that, despite guidelines and legal opinions advising that the system could be used only for official government purposes, White House staff members frequently retrieved data on large political contributors and gave it to the committee to assist in raising money, according to a former DNC official.

The official, Truman Arnold, told The Times that his staff routinely used the information from the computer to identify candidates who might make increased donations.

"I kind of thought of it like [the commercial, nationwide database] Lexis/Nexis," Arnold, a former finance chairman of the party, said in an interview Tuesday. "Everybody logged in. I didn't know there was anything special about it."

On Thursday, the Democrats issued a press release that said Arnold was "unavailable" and instead issued a statement under his name.

"I never heard of WhoDB until I read about it in the February [3] issue of Time," the DNC quoted Arnold as saying. That issue of Time, which was distributed this week, ran a story on the database and quoted Truman as talking about it.

The national committee issued its own denial in the same press release. "To our knowledge, there was no use of the White House database by DNC officials or employees," press aide Amy Weiss Tobe said in a statement.

The White House could not explain how a top Democratic official could speak so freely about the information he received from the computer to aid his fund-raising efforts if the database had been used only for official purposes.

"I don't know what Truman Arnold said but I can tell you that the only use of the database would have been to consult it to see who had attended what events here at the White House and that would only be in the context of putting together an official event here at the White House," Toiv said.

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