Ken Starr Died at 76 Due to Surgery Complications

Former U.S. Attorney General Ken Starr died on Sept. 13, 2022, at Baylor St Luke’s Medical Center in Houston, according to a statement from his family. Starr, the prosecutor whose criminal investigation led to the impeachment of former President Bill Clinton in 1998, was 76 years old when he died of surgical complications. According to PR News Wire, Starr will be buried in the Texas State Cemetery in Austin. His wife, Alice, and three children survive him. According to the BBC, one of Ken’s children, Randall, released a statement saying:

“We are deeply saddened by the passing of our wonderful and loving father and grandfather, whom we adored for his tireless work ethic, but who always gave priority to his family.”

His former colleague Mark Lanier told Politico that the former had spent about four months in the intensive care unit at the hospital in Houston.

Ken Starr was the man behind the Monica Lewinsky scandal.

Ken Starr was born in Vernon, Texas on July 21, 1946. He attended Harding University before attending George Washington University. He also attended Brown University and Duke University, where he received his law degree. Starr’s net worth at the time of his death was $3 million, according to Celebrity Net Worth. Starr was hired by the U.S. Department of Justice in 1994 to investigate the 1980s land venture plan known as Whitewater, which featured Bill and Hillary Clinton.

Ken Starr

Starr’s investigation lasted five years, during which time he investigated a series of bogus property deals involving one of Clinton’s associates, examined the removal of documents from Vincent Foster’s office after his suicide and, most importantly, uncovered evidence that Bill Clinton was sexually involved. with a former White House intern, Monica Lewinsky. Ken Starr presented a report to the US House of Representatives after exposing his affair, alleging that Bill Clinton lied under oath and violated the president’s constitutional obligation to enforce legislation. In 1998, the United States House of Representatives impeached Bill Clinton.

Ken Starr admitted in a 2018 CBS interview that he felt terrible for the pain some people went through when Clinton’s romance with Monica Lewinsky went public. He went on to say that “it had to be done” and declined to apologize for the consequences. Monica Lewinsky took to Twitter after learning of Starr’s death to express her feelings.

“My thoughts about Ken Starr are mixed, as many will understand… But more importantly, I think it’s a heartbreaking loss for those who loved him.”

Ken Starr

Starr was selected to represent former President Donald Trump during his 2020 impeachment trial, according to Politico, Starr made a remarkable speech during the trial in which he said:

“I believe we live in the ‘era of impeachment,'” says the author.

In addition, he said that “presidential impeachment is hell.”

Starr was forced to retire as president of Baylor University in Waco, Texas, in 2016 when it was discovered that the university had not properly handled the charges against its soccer team. Starr, on the other hand, went to work as a lawyer after being expelled from college. He taught constitutional law, published many books and was a legal expert for Fox News.