275 lines
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275 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
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Conspiracy Nation -- Vol. 1 Num. 39
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======================================
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("Quid coniuratio est?")
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[From an interview with the former marketing director of the
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Arkansas Development and Finance Authority, and former associate
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of Bill Clinton, Larry Nichols. This interview took place on the
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May 5, 1994 "America's Town Forum" radio show, hosted by Tom
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Donahue. The show is broadcast most weekday evenings at 7 pm
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(cst) on shortwave frequency 5.810 mHz. (Nichols speaks via
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telephone with Donahue.)]
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[...continued...]
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TOM DONAHUE: We're back. Tom Donahue, "America's Town Forum,"
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patriotism in action, 1-800-298-8255.
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Larry Nichols, our special guest. He worked with Bill Clinton
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when he was Governor. He was the marketing director of the
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Arkansas Development and Finance Authority [ADFA].
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How long were you at this agency, and what problems did you
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encounter? I guess you had a moral dilemma and you resigned?
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LARRY NICHOLS: I apologize for having to get off the phone. A
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California truck pulls up in my driveway and sets there, I get a
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little nervous...
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DONAHUE: Yeah.
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NICHOLS: ...and, uh, as it turns out, they left. {1}. And I was
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on a talk show this morning -- I'm a little paranoid -- and the
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talk show received death threats, so, uh...
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DONAHUE: I understand.
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NICHOLS: It gets a little rough sometimes.
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I was there [ADFA] from February of '88 until September of '88.
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It didn't take me long to get in and get out. The dilemma that I
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was involved in is simple: If you're standing next to someone,
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and they rob a 7-11, you have two choices: you either say
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nothing, at which point you become a part of the crime, or you
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tell the truth, which removes culpability. The problem I had...
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DONAHUE: You're talking either an accomplice or a whistle blower.
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NICHOLS: That's it.
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DONAHUE: One way or the other.
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NICHOLS: And it's not a good position to be in, I can assure you.
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The problem I had at ADFA, you see the... when I first went
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there, they wouldn't include me in anything. When I'm the
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marketing guy, how can you not include me?
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Well in about 2 months I started going to the board meetings. And
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I found out that people that should get loans, didn't; people
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that shouldn't [get loans], got 'em. And I went to the president,
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Lou Knepp(?), and I asked, "What's the criteria? We have a
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problem if people find out about this." And he said, "It's
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whoever Bill [Clinton] wants to get the loan."
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Then I found out. The thing that startled me and scared me most,
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which was... (and I kind of hate to have to do these little
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histories, but you know, it's complicated.)
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DONAHUE: Yes. Um-hmm. [affirmative]
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NICHOLS: Mena airport was going strong in those days. And, uh,
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the Mena airport, for your listeners, is the little place in
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Arkansas, 5500-6000 people, and it had an airport that would land
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jets.
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Barry Seal, who was hauling arms and supplies to the *Contras*
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during the early '80s {2}, had figured out that, goodness, he
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could bring his planes back and the DEA [Drug Enforcement Agency]
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would not touch them because they were CIA planes. So he started
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back hauling, from Columbia and Panama, cocaine. And he was
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running 100 million a month in cocaine through the little Mena
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airport. Well the problem at Mena was, you got that much cocaine
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and you've got that much money -- but you have to launder that
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money. Dan Lasater, Bill Clinton's best friend, who went to jail
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with Roger Clinton for cocaine -- not selling it, but giving it
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away -- had a bonding, a bonding house. And guess what? He did
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the bond underwriting for ADFA.
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We found out 2 weeks ago from a high-ranking, ex-CIA official, a
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person who is authentic and he is on the record, that Dan Lasater
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was indeed the man that [Barry] Seal used to launder the money.
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For Mena. Some of that laundered money went into the Arkansas
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Development Finance Authority.
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DONAHUE: Did you know that at the time?
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NICHOLS: I didn't know it, but I found it out.
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DONAHUE: Um-hmm. [understands]
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NICHOLS: And uh, what they were doing, they would issue a bond
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and let's say give, like I told your audience before, Webster
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Hubbell {3}, who created ADFA -- I mean drafted it, legislated
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it, got it passed -- he and his father-in-law, Seth Ward, got the
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first loan at ADFA for $2.85 million. You can't find that he ever
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paid anybody back.
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Other, other recipients of "loans" were Don Tyson, Tyson
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Industries, International Paper.
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Well the problem at ADFA was you couldn't find one person that
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*ever bought the bonds*. What Lasater was doing was taking the
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drug money, running it through ADFA as if people were buying the
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bonds. That money would lead ADFA to one of the banks that they
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used out of state, 2 of which I think were in BCCI's [Bank of
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Credit and Commerce International, a.k.a. Bank of Crooks and
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Criminals International] network. And the other underwriter of
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bonds at ADFA at the time was none other than Stephens'
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investment firm. And the man that brought BCCI to America was
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Jackson Stephens.
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One of the banks they used in Chicago, Guaranty, guess who owns
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part of it? Dan Rostenkowski. {4}.
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DONAHUE: Dan Rostenkowski, yeah. Um-hmm [pensive].
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NICHOLS: Now you understand the rest of the story, why when Bill
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Clinton first got elected he fired the federal prosecutor that
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was on Rostenkowski's case. You also see now why he broke
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precedent and went to Chicago and campaigned in a primary [for
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"Rosty"].
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DONAHUE: But isn't it poetic justice that this Mr. Stevens {5}
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shows up, working in another department which ended up being Bill
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Clinton's worst haunt?
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NICHOLS: [laughs] Yes it was. And uh, Mr. Stephanopoulos is gonna
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be a "sacrificial lamb" for that little exercise.
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DONAHUE: Now, because of the verbal exchange and he was upset
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that Jay Stevens had been hired there and how could that have
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happened?
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NICHOLS: Absolutely. Now you see, to show you how slick Clinton
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was, when he held his infamous press conference he said that no
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one in his cabinet called them. Well let me give your audience a
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little clue, or something they didn't know: *Time* magazine, as
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you know, wrote that Saturday, with their [news] feed, saying
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that, in fact, Stephanopoulos *had* called the RTC [Resolution
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Trust Corporation]. Bill Clinton knew it that night. He knew that
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that story was coming. Yet he stood there and lied to the
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American people and said they knew nothing about it. And you
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would think, "Gosh, what a technical blunder on his part. I mean,
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that was stupid."
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It isn't. You see, I don't know what *Time* magazine's
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circulation is, but let's give it some millions. That does not
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match the hundreds of million that prime time TV brings to it.
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DONAHUE: Right. Um-hmm. [understands]
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NICHOLS: So some millions [read] the truth. But hundreds of
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millions of people heard him lie and believed it.
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DONAHUE: Now Jay Stevens was a former U.S. attorney who was
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investigating Rostenkowski in the district there. Um, then he
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ended up with, um, what's the oversight organization regarding
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S&Ls? [Savings & Loans]
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NICHOLS: Um, the RTC?
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DONAHUE: Yeah. Right. So he ended up working out of that
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department instead. And *he* was the one that, for the most part,
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initiated the investigation into Whitewater and Madison Guaranty.
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NICHOLS: Absolutely. And again, there's no connection between Jay
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Stevens and Jackson Stephens. Jackson Stephens is the wealthy man
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from Stephens investment firm out of Little Rock.
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DONAHUE: Right. Um-hmm [understands]. Now what was Bill Clinton
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to gain, besides satisfying his corporate interests there in the
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state? Uh, let's talk about the direct connection that Bill
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Clinton... how he benefited through the Arkansas Development and
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Finance Authority.
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NICHOLS: Well they, Bill Clinton and the power brokers, the
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Stephens, the "good ol' boy" political machine -- it's been
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around for over 100 years -- have been grooming Bill Clinton to
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run for President for 20 years.
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The way he gained is, [for] every one of those loans, they had to
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make major campaign contributions. As a matter of fact, during
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the primary, when no other person could raise money, -- and I'm
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talking about Paul Tsongas, Kerry, I mean these are known
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entities -- Bill Clinton got $1.78 million of his campaign money
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from tentacles that are from ADFA. He got the balance of his
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money from tentacles that are the Stephens investment firm.
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Now. When he entered the race as President, the day he entered,
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he had $10 million. And if you understand primary races, the man
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that wins in a primary is the person with money.
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DONAHUE: He also used the same tentacles to acquire the
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Governorship.
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NICHOLS: Absolutely. Now the problem that the American people
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have today, Tom, is this: When you deal with these people, you
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owe them. And now the American people "owe" those power brokers.
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DONAHUE: We'll be right back. Larry Nichols is our special guest.
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Stay tuned.
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(to be continued)
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--------------------------<< Notes >>----------------------------
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{1} Nichols' nervousness regarding the "California truck" that
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pulled into his driveway and sat there originates in the large
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number of apparent "suicides" and violent deaths of persons who
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have been connected with Bill Clinton. See, for example, "The
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Clinton Body Count" by Linda Thompson.
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{2} "...who was hauling arms and supplies to the *Contras* during
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the early '80s..." *That*, in itself, was illegal. Putting aside
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for the moment the issue of bringing back cocaine, just smuggling
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arms to the *Contras* was a violation of the Boland amendment.
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{3} "...Webster Hubbell..." On April 19, 1993, the day of the
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"final solution" to the problem of the Branch Davidian standoff,
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Webster Hubbell was the highest ranking official in the FBI
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operations center and remained in phone contact with ground
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commanders throughout the siege. [Source: "The Massacre of the
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Branch Davidians" by the Committee for Waco Justice. PO Box
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33037, Washington, DC 20033. Phones: (202) 986-1847, (202) 797-
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9877.]
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{4} The Arkansas-Chicago connection: Covered by Sherman Skolnick
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and included in a "Conspiracy for the Day -- Special Edition."
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Excerpts below:
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A big cover-up with congressman Dan Rostenkowski of
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Chicago, arranged by the corrupt IRS, the Justice
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Department, and the White House.
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[...]
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The hundreds of millions of dollars per month from
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cocaine and such was reportedly funneled through
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Garfield Ridge Trust and Savings Bank of Chicago. The
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bank has been owned and operated by congressman
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Rostenkowski and his cronies, who have commented on the
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bank's reported criminality for some 20 years now.
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[...]
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{5} "...Mr. Stevens..." To my recollection, it is spelled
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"Stevens" and not "Stephens." I refer to Jay Stevens, an
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apparently *real* prosecutor who was investigating ADFA, etc. and
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was pulled off the case. The "poetic justice" that Donahue
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mentions is that Stevens wound up investigating Stephens.
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-----------------------------------------------------------------
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Aperi os tuum muto, et causis omnium filiorum qui pertranseunt.
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Aperi os tuum, decerne quod justum est, et judica inopem et
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pauperem. -- Liber Proverbiorum XXXI: 8-9
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