Sandy Berger last week agreed to give up his law license, two years after admitting he snuck classified government documents out of the National Archives, hiding some of them in his pants and some of them in a nearby construction site.
Then on Tuesday, the former National Security Adviser under President Clinton spoke of America’s need “to replenish the moral authority,” as he closed a conference called “America in the World,” sponsored by the Center for American Progress and the Century Foundation.
Neither he nor anyone else on the official program made reference to his legal troubles.
