Trying to bolster their sexual misconduct suit against President Clinton, lawyers for Paula Corbin Jones today released more than 600 pages of sometimes graphic court documents in which they sought to portray Mr. Clinton as repeatedly engaging in sexual harassment of female underlings from his executive positions in government.

Most dramatic was the sworn deposition of Kathleen Willey, a former White House office worker, who described the President sexually groping her against her will in an Oval Office hallway on Nov. 9, 1993. ''I recall him saying that he wanted to do that for a long time,'' Ms. Willey testified in a deposition on Jan. 10.

The alleged incident, which the President firmly denied in his deposition, is a critical element in the Jones case's effort to portray Mr. Clinton as an executive who abused his authority and preyed on female subordinates. The President approached Ms. Willey in Washington for office sex, the lawyers argued, just as Ms. Jones was harassed in Arkansas when she was a state clerical worker in the Clinton administration.

The salvo of court documents was immediately denounced as ''a pack of lies'' by Mr. Clinton's main lawyer in the case, Robert S. Bennett, who said it was part of ''an organized campaign to smear the President of the United States'' through a groundless lawsuit financed by Mr. Clinton's political enemies.