Religions > Atheism > GOP Justice: Where a Serial Rapist Is Pardoned and Two Women Are Raped And Killed As a Result
| Topic: |
Religions > Atheism |
| User: |
"Yang, AthD h.c" |
| Date: |
06 Dec 2007 12:51:02 AM |
| Object: |
GOP Justice: Where a Serial Rapist Is Pardoned and Two Women Are Raped And Killed As a Result |
When Mike Huckabee was the governor of Arkansas, he was hell bent on
pardoning convicted rapist Wayne Dumond
Why? Because one of Wayne Dumond's was a distant relative of BILL
CLINTON, which to the GOPedophiles is enough evidence that Dumond is
"innocent".
Mike Huckabee got his wish, he commuted Wayne Dumond and he was a free
man.
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Wyane Dumond went on to rape and kill two women in Kansas.
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Conservative Compassion indeed!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Huckabee
Oh, and now pro-rapist Republican Christian Mike Huckabee now pretends
that no one could have foreseen that happening, tell that to the rape
victims of Duomond:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2007/12/04/documents-expose-huckabee_n_75362.html
--
Yang
a.a.#28
"I can hardly wait for your head to explode when the Repubs hold onto
both houses of Congress this November. And Yang can quote me on that."
-Fred Stone, 6/14/2006
.
|
|
| User: "Western Road Co." |
|
| Title: Re: GOP Justice: Where a Serial Rapist Is Pardoned and Two Women Are Raped And Killed As a Result |
06 Dec 2007 02:13:49 PM |
|
|
On Thu, 06 Dec 2007 06:51:02 GMT, "Yang, AthD (h.c)"
<eacmole@/*AWOLBUSH*/mail.com> mumbled:
Conservative Compassion indeed!
RECORDS SET
- The only president ever impeached on grounds of personal malfeasance
- Most number of convictions and guilty pleas by friends and
associates*
- Most number of cabinet officials to come under criminal
investigation
- Most number of witnesses to flee country or refuse to testify
- Most number of witnesses to die suddenly
- First president sued for sexual harassment.
- First president accused of rape.
- First first lady to come under criminal investigation
- Largest criminal plea agreement in an illegal campaign contribution
case
- First president to establish a legal defense fund.
- First president to be held in contempt of court
- Greatest amount of illegal campaign contributions
- Greatest amount of illegal campaign contributions from abroad
- First president disbarred from the US Supreme Court and a state
court
* According to our best information, 40 government officials were
indicted or convicted in the wake of Watergate. A reader computes that
there was a total of 31 Reagan era convictions, including 14 because
of Iran-Contra and 16 in the Department of Housing & Urban Development
scandal. 47 individuals and businesses associated with the Clinton
machine were convicted of or pleaded guilty to crimes with 33 of these
occurring during the Clinton administration itself. There were in
addition 61 indictments or misdemeanor charges. 14 persons were
imprisoned. A key difference between the Clinton story and earlier
ones was the number of criminals with whom he was associated before
entering the White House.
Using a far looser standard that included resignations, David R. Simon
and D. Stanley Eitzen in Elite Deviance, say that 138 appointees of
the Reagan administration either resigned under an ethical cloud or
were criminally indicted. Curiously Haynes Johnson uses the same
figure but with a different standard in "Sleep-Walking Through
History: America in the Reagan Years: "By the end of his term, 138
administration officials had been convicted, had been indicted, or had
been the subject of official investigations for official misconduct
and/or criminal violations. In terms of number of officials involved,
the record of his administration was the worst ever."
STARR-RAY INVESTIGATION
- Number of Starr-Ray investigation convictions or guilty pleas
(including one governor, one associate attorney general and two
Clinton business partners): 14
- Number of Clinton Cabinet members who came under criminal
investigation: 5
- Number of Reagan cabinet members who came under criminal
investigation: 4
- Number of top officials jailed in the Teapot Dome Scandal: 3
CRIME STATS
- Number of individuals and businesses associated with the Clinton
machine who have been convicted of or pleaded guilty to crimes: 47
- Number of these convictions during Clinton's presidency: 33
- Number of indictments/misdemeanor charges: 61
- Number of congressional witnesses who have pleaded the Fifth
Amendment, fled the country to avoid testifying, or (in the case of
foreign witnesses) refused to be interviewed: 122
SMALTZ INVESTIGATION
- Guilty pleas and convictions obtained by Donald Smaltz in cases
involving charges of bribery and fraud against former Agriculture
Secretary Mike Espy and associated individuals and businesses: 15
- Acquitted or overturned cases (including Espy): 6
- Fines and penalties assessed: $11.5 million
- Amount Tyson Food paid in fines and court costs: $6 million
CAMPAIGN FINANCE INVESTIGATION
- As of June 2000, the Justice Department listed 25 people indicted
and 19 convicted because of the 1996 Clinton-Gore fundraising
scandals.
- According to the House Committee on Government Reform in September
2000, 79 House and Senate witnesses asserted the Fifth Amendment in
the course of investigations into Gore's last fundraising campaign.
-James Riady entered a plea agreement to pay an $8.5 million fine for
campaign finance crimes. This was a record under campaign finance
laws.
CLINTON MACHINE CRIMES FOR WHICH CONVICTIONS WERE OBTAINED
Drug trafficking (3), racketeering, extortion, bribery (4), tax
evasion, kickbacks, embezzlement (2), fraud (12), conspiracy (5),
fraudulent loans, illegal gifts (1), illegal campaign contributions
(5), money laundering (6), perjury, obstruction of justice.
HISTORICAL CONTEXT
- Number of independent counsel inquiries since the 1978 law was
passed: 19
- Number that have produced indictments: 7
- Number that produced more convictions than the Starr investigation:
1
- Median length of investigations that led to convictions: 44 months
- Length of Starr-Ray investigation: 69 months.
- Total cost of the Starr investigation (3/00) $52 million
- Total cost of the Iran-Contra investigation: $48.5 million
- Total cost to taxpayers of the Madison Guarantee failure: $73
million
OTHER MATTERS INVESTIGATED BY SPECIAL PROSECUTORS AND CONGRESS, OR
REPORTED IN THE MEDIA
Bank and mail fraud, violations of campaign finance laws, illegal
foreign campaign funding, improper exports of sensitive technology,
physical violence and threats of violence, solicitation of perjury,
intimidation of witnesses, bribery of witnesses, attempted
intimidation of prosecutors, perjury before congressional committees,
lying in statements to federal investigators and regulatory officials,
flight of witnesses, obstruction of justice, bribery of cabinet
members, real estate fraud, tax fraud, drug trafficking, failure to
investigate drug trafficking, bribery of state officials, use of state
police for personal purposes, exchange of promotions or benefits for
sexual favors, using state police to provide false court testimony,
laundering of drug money through a state agency, false reports by
medical examiners and others investigating suspicious deaths, the
firing of the RTC and FBI director when these agencies were
investigating Clinton and his associates, failure to conduct autopsies
in suspicious deaths, providing jobs in return for silence by
witnesses, drug abuse, improper acquisition and use of 900 FBI files,
improper futures trading, murder, sexual abuse of employees, false
testimony before a federal judge, shredding of documents, withholding
and concealment of subpoenaed documents, fabricated charges against
(and improper firing of) White House employees, inviting drug
traffickers, foreign agents and participants in organized crime to the
White House.
ARKANSAS ALTZHEIMER'S
Number of times that Clinton figures who testified in court or before
Congress said that they didn't remember, didn't know, or something
similar.
Bill Kennedy 116
Harold Ickes 148
Ricki Seidman 160
Bruce Lindsey 161
Bill Burton 191
Mark Gearan 221
Mack McLarty 233
Neil Egglseston 250
Hillary Clinton 250
John Podesta 264
Jennifer O'Connor 343
Dwight Holton 348
Patsy Thomasson 420
Jeff Eller 697
FROM THE WASHINGTON TIMES: In the portions of President Clinton's Jan.
17 deposition that have been made public in the Paula Jones case, his
memory failed him 267 times. This is a list of his answers and how
many times he gave each one.
I don't remember - 71
I don't know - 62
I'm not sure - 17
I have no idea - 10
I don't believe so - 9
I don't recall - 8
I don't think so - 8
I don't have any specific recollection - 6
I have no recollection - 4
Not to my knowledge - 4
I just don't remember - 4
I don't believe - 4
I have no specific recollection - 3
I might have - 3
I don't have any recollection of that - 2 I don't have a specific
memory - 2
I don't have any memory of that - 2
I just can't say - 2
I have no direct knowledge of that - 2
I don't have any idea - 2
Not that I recall - 2
I don't believe I did - 2
I can't remember - 2
I can't say - 2
I do not remember doing so - 2
Not that I remember - 2
I'm not aware - 1
I honestly don't know - 1
I don't believe that I did - 1
I'm fairly sure - 1
I have no other recollection - 1
I'm not positive - 1
I certainly don't think so - 1
I don't really remember - 1
I would have no way of remembering that - 1
That's what I believe happened - 1
To my knowledge, no - 1
To the best of my knowledge - 1
To the best of my memory - 1
I honestly don't recall - 1
I honestly don't remember - 1
That's all I know - 1
I don't have an independent recollection of that - 1
I don't actually have an independent memory of that - 1
As far as I know - 1
I don't believe I ever did that - 1
That's all I know about that - 1
I'm just not sure - 1
Nothing that I remember - 1
I simply don't know - 1
I would have no idea - 1
I don't know anything about that - 1
I don't have any direct knowledge of that - 1
I just don't know - 1
I really don't know - 1
I can't deny that, I just -- I have no memory of that at all - 1
ARKANSAS SUDDEN DEATH SYNDROME
- Number of persons in the Clinton machine orbit who are alleged to
have committed suicide: 9
- Number known to have been murdered: 12
- Number who died in plane crashes: 6
- Number who died in single car automobile accidents: 3
- Number of one-person sking fatalities: 1
- Number of key witnesses who have died of heart attacks while in
federal custody under questionable circumstances: 1
- Number of unexplained deaths: 4
- Total suspicious deaths: 46
- Number of northern Mafia killings during peak years of 1968-78: 30
- Number of Dixie Mafia killings during same period: 156
It is important in considering these fatal incidents to bear in mind
the following:
The fact that anomalies need to be investigated further carries no
presumption of how a death actually occurred, only that there remain
serious questions that require answers.
The possibility of foul play must be taken seriously in a major
criminal conspiracy in which over two score individuals and firms have
been convicted and over 100 witnesses have pled the Fifth Amendment or
fled the country.
If foul play did occur in any of these cases, that fact by itself does
not carry the presumption that the the Clinton machine was involved.
Given the footprints of organized crime, drug trade, foreign
espionage, and intelligence agencies on the trail of the Clinton
story, such a assumption would not be warranted. It is also well to
keep in mind the classic prohibition era movie in which the corrupt
poitician's job was not to engage in illegal acts but to avoid
noticing them.
ARKANSAS MONEY MANAGEMENT
- Amount of an alleged electronic transfer from the Arkansas
Development Financial Authority to a bank in the Cayman Islands during
1980s: $50 million
- Grand Cayman's population: 18,000
- Number of commercial banks: 570
- Number of bank regulators: 1
- Amount Arkansas state pension fund invested in high-risk repos in
the mid-80s in one purchase in April 1985: $52 million through the
Worthen Bank.
- Number of days thereafter that the state's brokerage firm went belly
up: 3
- Amount Arkansas pension fund dropped overnight as a result: 15%
- Percent of Worthen bank that Mochtar Riady bought over the next four
months to bail out the bank and the then governor, Bill Clinton: 40%.
- Percent of purchasers from the Clintons and McDougals of resort lots
who lost the land because of the sleazy financing provisions: over 50%
THE MEDIA
- Number of journalists covering Whitewater who have been fired,
transferred off the beat, resigned or otherwise gotten into trouble
because of their work on the scandals (Doug Frantz, Jim Wooten,
Richard Behar, Christopher Ruddy, Michael Isikoff, David Eisenstadt,
Yinh Chan, Jonathan Broder, James R. Norman, Zoh Hieronimus): 10
FRIENDS OF BILL
- Number of times John Huang took the 5th Amendment in answer to
questions during a Judicial Watch deposition: 1,000
- Visits made to the White House by investigation subjects Johnny
Chung, James Riady, John Huang, and Charlie Trie. 160
- Number of campaign contributors who got overnights at the White
House in the two years before the 1996 election: 577
- Number of members of Thomas Boggs's law firm who have held top
positions in the Clinton administration. 18
- Number of times John Huang was briefed by CIA: 37
- Number of calls Huang made from Commerce Department to Lippo banks:
261
- Number of intelligence reports Huang read while at Commerce
Department: 500
UNEXPLAINED PHENOMENA
- FBI files misappropriated by the White House: c. 900
- Estimated number of witnesses quoted in FBI files misappropriated by
the White House: 18,000
- Number of witnesses who developed medical problems at critical
points in Clinton scandals investigation (Tucker, Hale, both
McDougals, Lindsey): 5
- Problem areas listed in a memo by Clinton's own lawyer in
preparation for the president's defense: 40
- Number of witnesses and critics of Clinton subjected to IRS audit:
45
- Number of names placed in a White House secret database without the
knowledge of those named: c. 200,000
- Number of women involved with Clinton who claim to have been
physically threatened (Sally Perdue, Gennifer Flowers, Kathleen
Willey, Linda Tripp, Elizabeth Ward Gracen, Juantia Broaddrick): 6
- Number of men involved in the Clinton scandals who have been beaten
up or claimed to have been intimidated: 10
THE HIDDEN ELECTION
USA Today calls it "the hidden election," in which nearly 7,000 state
legislative seats are decided with only minimal media and public
attention. But there was an important national story here: evidence of
the disaster that Bill Clinton was for the Democratic Party. According
to the National Conference of State Legislatures, Democrats held a
1,542 seat lead in the state bodies in 1990. As of 1998 that lead had
shrunk to 288. That's a loss of over 1,200 state legislative seats,
nearly all of them under Clinton. Across the US, the Democrats
controled only 65 more state senate seats than the Republicans.
Further, in 1992, the Democrats controlled 17 more state legislatures
than the Republicans. After 1998, the Republicans controlled one more
than the Democrats. Not only was this a loss of 9 legislatures under
Clinton, but it was the first time since 1954 that the GOP had
controlled more state legislatures than the Democrats (they tied in
1968).
Here's what happened to the Democrats under Clinton, based on our
latest figures:
- GOP seats gained in House since Clinton became president: 48
- GOP seats gained in Senate since Clinton became president: 8
- GOP governorships gained since Clinton became president: 11
- GOP state legislative seats gained since Clinton became president:
1,254
as of 1998
- State legislatures taken over by GOP since Clinton became president:
9
- Democrat officeholders who have become Republicans since Clinton
became
president: 439 as of 1998
- Republican officeholders who have become Democrats since Clinton
became president: 3
THE CLINTON LEGACY: LONELY VOICES
Here are some of the all too rare public officials, reporters, and
others who spoke truth to the dismally corrupt power of Bill and Hill
Clinton's political machine -- some at risk to their careers, others
at risk to their lives. A few points to note:
- Those corporatist media reporters who attempted to report the story
often found themselves muzzled; some even lost their jobs. The only
major dailies that consistently handled the story well were the Wall
Street Journal and the Washington Times.
- Nobody on this list has gotten rich and many you may not have even
heard of. Taking on the Clintons typically has not been a happy or
rewarding experience. At least ten reporters were fired, transferred
off their beats, resigned, or otherwise got into trouble because of
their work on the scandals.
- Contrary to the popular impression, the politics of those listed
ranges from the left to the right, and from the ideological to the
independent.
PUBLIC OFFICIALS
MIGUEL RODRIGUEZ was a prosecutor on the staff of Kenneth Starr. His
attempts to uncover the truth in the Vincent Foster death case were
repeatedly foiled and he was the subject of planted stories
undermining his credibility and implying that he was unstable.
Rodriguez eventually resigned.
JEAN DUFFEY: Head of a joint federal-county drug task force in
Arkansas. Her first instructions from her boss: "Jean, you are not to
use the drug task force to investigate any public official." Duffey's
work, however, led deep into the heart of the Dixie Mafia, including
members of the Clinton machine and the investigation of the so-called
"train deaths." Ambrose Evans-Pritchard reports that when she produced
a star witness who could testify to Clinton's involvement with
cocaine, the local prosecuting attorney, Dan Harmon issued a subpoena
for all the task force records, including "the incriminating files on
his own activities. If Duffey had complied it would have exposed 30
witnesses and her confidential informants to violent retributions. She
refused." Harmon issued a warrant for her arrest and friendly cops
told her that there was a $50,000 price on her head. She eventually
fled to Texas. The once-untouchable Harmon was later convicted of
racketeering, extortion and drug dealing.
BILL DUNCAN: An IRS investigator in Arkansas who drafted some 30
federal indictments of Arkansas figures on money laundering and other
charges. Clinton biographer Roger Morris quotes a source who reviewed
the evidence: "Those indictments were a real slam dunk if there ever
was one." The cases were suppressed, many in the name of "national
security." Duncan was never called to testify. Other IRS agents and
state police disavowed Duncan and turned on him. Said one source,
"Somebody outside ordered it shut down and the walls went up."
RUSSELL WELCH: An Arkansas state police detective working with Duncan.
Welch developed a 35-volume, 3,000 page archive on drug and money
laundering operations at Mena. His investigation was so compromised
that a high state police official even let one of the targets of the
probe look through the file. At one point, Welch was sprayed in the
face with poison, later identified by the Center for Disease Control
as anthrax. He would write in his diary, "I feel like I live in
Russia, waiting for the secret police to pounce down. A government has
gotten out of control. Men find themselves in positions of power and
suddenly crimes become legal." Welch is no longer with the state
police.
DAN SMALTZ: Smaltz did an outstanding job investigating and
prosecuting charges involving illegal payoffs to Agriculture Secretary
Mike Espy, yet was treated with disparaging and highly inaccurate
reporting by the likes of the David Broder and the NY Times. Espy was
acquitted under a law that made it necessary to not only prove that he
accepted gratuities but that he did something specific in return. On
the other hand, Tyson Foods copped a plea in the same case, paying $6
million in fines and serving four years' probation. The charge: that
Tyson had illegally offered Espy $12,000 in airplane rides, football
tickets and other payoffs. In the Espy investigation, Smaltz obtained
15 convictions and collected over $11 million in fines and civil
penalties. Offenses for which convictions were obtained included false
statements, concealing money from prohibited sources, illegal
gratuities, illegal contributions, falsifying records, interstate
transportation of stolen property, money laundering, and illegal
receipt of USDA subsidies. In addition, Janet Reno blocked Smaltz from
pursuing leads aimed at allegations of major drug trafficking in
Arkansas and payoffs to the then governor of the state, WJ Clinton.
Espy had become Ag secretary only after being flown to Arkansas to get
the approval of chicken king Don Tyson.
DAVID SCHIPPERS was House impeachment counsel and a Chicago Democrat.
He did a highly creditable job but since he didn't fit the right-wing
conspiracy theory, the Clintonista media downplayed his work. Thus
most Americans don't know that he told Newsmax, "Let me tell you, if
we had a chance to put on a case, I would have put live witnesses
before the committee. But the House leadership, and I'm not talking
about Henry Hyde, they just killed us as far as time was concerned. I
begged them to let me take it into this year. Then I screamed for
witnesses before the Senate. But there was nothing anybody could do to
get those Senators to show any courage. They told us essentially,
you're not going to get 67 votes so why are you wasting our time."
Schippers also said that while a number of representatives had looked
at additional evidence kept under seal in a nearby House building, not
a single senator did.
JOHN CLARKE: When Patrick Knowlton stopped to relieve himself in Ft.
Marcy Park 70 minutes before the discovery of Vince Foster's body, he
saw things that got him into deep trouble. His interview statements
were falsified and prior to testifying he claims he was overtly
harassed by more than a score of men in a classic witness intimidation
technique. In some cases there were witnesses. John Clarke was his
dogged lawyer in the witness intimidation case that was largely
ignored by the media, even when the three-judge panel overseeing the
Starr investigation permitted Knowlton to append a 20 page addendum to
the Starr Report.
.
|
|
|
|

|
Related Articles |
|
|