Charles Ruff Dead At Age 61
Charles Ruff, an influential Washington lawyer who made a career of defending politicians with legal problems and represented President Clinton during the Monica Lewinsky scandal and his impeachment trial, has died at age 61.
"All of us at the White House admired Chuck for the power of his advocacy, the wisdom of his judgment and the strength of his leadership," Mr. Clinton said. "We loved him for his generous spirit and his keen wit which he used to find humor in even the most challenging circumstances."
The president issued a statement aboard Air Force One during the flight back to Washington after his historic visit to Vietnam.
Patrick Marshall, watch commander at the District of Columbia Metropolitan Police Department's Second District headquarters said Ruff's wife found him unconscious in the master bedroom of their Washington home.
"It appears to be from natural causes, there is no indication of foul play," said Marshall. Paramedics were unable to revive Ruff and he was pronounced dead at D.C. General Hospital.
Ruff had used a wheelchair since contracting a rare tropical paralyzing disease while teaching law in Africa in the 1960s.
After building a career representing powerful political figures and, occasionally, their adversaries, Ruff was asked by Clinton in 1997 to become his chief legal adviser. At the time, President Clinton was being investigated by independent prosecutor Kenneth Starr for possible wrongdoing in an Arkansas land deal.
The investigation, known as Whitewater because of the name of the land development scheme in which Clinton and his wife were partners, soon expanded to include his affair with Lewinsky, a former White House intern. Starr's investigation led to the House impeaching Mr. Clinton in December 1998 on charges that the president had lied under oath when questioned about the affair and obstructed justice.
In an interview with the New York Daily News, Ruff said his decision to serve the president was no choice at all.
"When the president of the United States asks you to do something you don't say, 'Let me think about it.' You say, 'How can I help you, Mr. President.'"
Ruff represented Anita Hill in her sexual harassment accusations against Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas. He also represented Sens. Charles Robb and John Glenn when they were embroiled in scandals and former White House aide Ira Magaziner.
As Mr. Clinton's lawyer, he mounted a powerful defense of the president in his closing arguments to the Senate in its impeachment trial, accusing House GOP prosecutors of being more motivated by politics than what was good for the nation.
"I believe their vision to be too dark, a vision too little attuned to the needs of the people, too little sensitive to the needs of our democracy. I believe it to be a vision more focused on retribution, more designed to achieve partisan ends, more uncaring about the future we face together," he said.
Ruff entered hardball Washington politics during the 1970s when he served as a prosecutor during the Nixon-Watergate investigation. He initially helped prosecute President Nixon's chief fund-raisers for taking illegal campaign contributions and then took over as special prosecutor in 1975.
In one of his final duties, he looked into charges that President Ford, Nixon's successor, had improperly used campaign funds. Ruff found no wrongdoing by Mr. Ford.
Later, as an associate deputy attorney general in the Justice Department, he helped prosecute members of Congress in the Abscam bribery case.
Ruff left the government in 1982 to join the Washington law firm of Covington & Burling, where he earned his reputation for helping political leaders in legal hot water. He retuned to public service in 1995 when he accepted a huge pay cut to take on the job as chief lawyer for the District of Columbia.
Charles Frederick Carson Ruff was born Aug 1, 1939, in Cleveland, Ohio. He received his undergraduate degree from Swarthmore College in 1960 and went on to law school at Columbia University, graduating in 1963.
Fresh out of law school he received a Ford Foundation grant to teach law in Liberia. It was there that Ruff was struck by paralysis in his legs. The cause of the affliction was never determined, but his doctors said they believed it was caused by a virus.
Ruff is survived by his wife Sue, his daughters Carin and Christy and his mother Margaret.
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