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North Refuses to Give Notes to Senate Panel

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Associated Press

Oliver L. North invoked his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination Tuesday in refusing to turn over to congressional investigators nearly 3,000 pages of notes he made while a key White House operative in the Iran-Contra affair.

North’s refusal to turn over the dozens of spiral-bound notebooks was made through his lawyer, Brendan V. Sullivan Jr., before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. North, a recently retired Marine lieutenant colonel, did not appear.

Congressional investigators have been given portions of the notebooks, which are sprinkled throughout with references to drugs, drug traffickers, the Drug Enforcement Administration and the CIA. But large segments have been blacked out by Sullivan or by White House censors.

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Custodian of Documents

“It’s the first time I ever heard of in history that an attorney who is not code-cleared, classified-cleared or even any security clearance whatsoever, sits as the custodian of documents that have been walked out of the workplace of the most highly sensitive government agency that we have,” Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.) said.

“It’s unheard of, and I think it’s inappropriate,” said Kerry, chairman of the Foreign Relations narcotics subcommittee, which is investigating links between the aid network for Nicaragua’s rebels and drug trafficking.

Sullivan, in a closed-door meeting of the committee, presented an affidavit from North acknowledging the subpoena for his notebooks but citing his constitutional right not to incriminate himself as justification for withholding them. Kerry said the committee will meet again soon to review its options.

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