234 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
234 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
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Conspiracy Nation -- Vol. 10 Num. 14
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=======================================
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("Quid coniuratio est?")
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P O T P O U R R I
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=================
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-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
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$50 million: From Illinois, to Arkansas, to the Cayman Islands
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-- Joseph Andreuccetti, an Illinois caulking contractor, gets put
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into involuntary bankruptcy. Supposedly he has borrowed
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$900,000, but really he never saw one dime of the money. So
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where did the money go? Allegedly it, included in a $50 million
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Resolution Trust Corporation contingency fund, got sent to
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Arkansas to cover up an embezzlement from Madison Guaranty
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Savings and Loan. I have spoke and met with Andreuccetti several
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times and believe that he was indeed robbed and that the courts
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are giving him the runaround in several cases he has subsequently
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brought forward.
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Next, Congressman Dan Burton (R., Ind.) goes on-record about a
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$50 million transfer of Arkansas Development Finance Authority
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(ADFA) money to the Cayman Islands. Burton wonders aloud, Why on
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earth did ADFA money, meant to benefit Arkansas small business,
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get sent to the Cayman Islands? Says Burton on May 29, 1996:
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ADFA [Arkansas Development Finance Authority] was created
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by Governor Clinton in 1985 to provide economic development
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loans in Arkansas. In December of 1988, ADFA deposited $50
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million in a Japanese bank in the Cayman Islands. I have a
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copy of the contract that I will enter into the record. I
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have also delivered a copy of this document to the
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Independent Counsel's office. Why would an economic
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development agency in Arkansas deposit $50 million in a
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bank in the Cayman Islands? The Cayman Islands are a
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well-known center of money laundering for drug dealers.
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The State Department's international narcotics control
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report described the Caymans as "a haven for money
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laundering."
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One of the questions that I think is very, very important
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is why did the Arkansas Development Financial Authority
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send $50 million of Arkansas money to the Cayman Islands to
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deposit in a bank in the Cayman Islands, which is a major
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drug transit point acknowledged by almost every DEA agent
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in the world? I have the electronic bank transfer
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statements in my office. I am going to put them in the
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Congressional Record. There is no doubt the money was
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wired to the Cayman Islands. The question needs to be
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asked, why was it wired? Why would the Governor of
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Arkansas allow that? (Congressional Record, 5/29/96,
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H5627-28.)
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Later in 1996, Sherman Skolnick and Joseph Andreuccetti file suit
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against, among others, First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton,
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charging that plaintiffs obstructed disclosure
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of the secret details of the unlawful transfer of a 50
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million dollar portion of 58.4 million dollars of funds of
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the Federal Home Loan Bank, parked and held in custody, and
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supposed to be so, with Household Bank and Household
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International in the Chicago area, and supposed to be held
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to make good the claims of plaintiff Andreuccetti.
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...the use of said 50 million dollar unlawful transfer by
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defendant Hillary Rodham Clinton was to cover up 47 million
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dollars that was misappropriated and embezzled, and/or
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otherwise unlawfully encumbered, used, or removed from an
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Arkansas savings and loan, Madison Guaranty Savings and
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Loan, as to which defendant Hillary Rodham Clinton and her
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husband, William Jefferson Clinton, committed or caused to
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be committed, and allowed, permitted, and condoned, and
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acquiesced in, acts and doings punishable under provisions
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of the federal criminal code.
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Responding to Skolnick and Andreuccetti's lawsuit, lawyers
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representing Hillary Rodham Clinton stated that
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Plaintiff's complaint fails to meet the minimum standards
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of intelligibility and brevity... The complaint is both
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frivolous and abusive and is yet another example of
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plaintiffs' misuse of the judicial process. Accordingly,
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the complaint against Mrs. Clinton should be dismissed with
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prejudice.
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[The plaintiffs' complaint is] a convoluted and lengthy
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collection of allegations that are either unintelligible or
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irrelevant. To take but one example, in paragraph 30 (part
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of a four-and-a-half page narration of a purported meeting
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with an IRS agent), plaintiffs appear to allege that a
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United States bankruptcy trustee is corrupt, that the
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"nephew/godson" of a bishop embezzled $900,000, that one of
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the plaintiffs has been put into involuntary bankruptcy as
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a result of fraud, that a bank involved in that bankruptcy
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was run by someone who used to be the head of the
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"mafia-dominated Vatican Bank," and that the United States
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Attorney's Office in Chicago is yet another corrupt
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institution. Even after partially untangling this dense
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web of accusations, the relationship of the allegations to
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any cause of action that might reasonably be brought
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against the defendant Hillary Rodham Clinton remains a
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complete mystery.
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Representing Hillary Rodham Clinton and authors of the above
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excerpts from "Memorandum of Points and Authorities in Support of
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Defendant Hillary Rodham Clinton's Motion to Dismiss" are David
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E. Kendall, Nicole K. Seligman, Max Stier, and also Michael R.
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Feagley and Walter M. Rogers of the firm Mayer, Brown & Platt.
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Confused? Or perhaps cherubic Lady Clinton's face makes you
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think, "Naw, not Hillary. She wouldn't be connected with any
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embezzlement." Then consider the following statement by Lisa
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Schiffren, as reported in the February 1997 issue of George
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magazine:
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A better financial journalist than me would be well
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employed finding out where the Clintons have stashed their
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money offshore. I would imagine there are hundreds of
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thousands of dollars sitting in the Cayman Islands. I
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really believe this. If I had a lot of time and someone
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was willing to pay me a lot of money, I'd go find it. The
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$100,000 [which Hillary Rodham Clinton made in the cattle
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futures market], courtesy of Tyson Foods, is the tip of the
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iceberg. I'm giving them credit for having been bought for
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more than a measly hundred grand.
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-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
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Charles "Chuck" Hayes Convicted -- Ex-CIA agent Chuck Hayes is
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fed up with corrupt government. He gets a powerful Cray
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computer, loads it into a semi-trailer, then he and his Merry Men
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roam the nation, hacking into secret Swiss bank accounts and
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putting the fear of God into American politicians. The corrupt
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politicos and their bureaucratic minions strike back. Presumably
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they have questionable quantity Lawrence Myers, journalist
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*extraordinaire*, lie to the FBI that Hayes is shopping for a
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"wet boy" (hit man). FBI has one of their agents, reportedly a
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former member of the Outlaws motorcycle gang, phone Hayes. Hayes
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apparently knows full well he is talking to an FBI man, but
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decides to play along. The FBI man says he can do the "job" for
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$5,000, and supposedly Hayes contracts with him to murder his
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son. Gotcha! FBI arrests Hayes, and Hayes stands trial. A jury
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convicts Hayes and he now faces as much as 10 years in prison.
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Present during the Hayes trial was "Limpiar Phebi Dojocia"
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(pseudonym). I spoke with "Limpiar" on the phone today, and
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here's what I got:
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** The jury was 8 to 4, with four of its members favoring
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acquittal. That got narrowed down to one, then none, and the
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jury returned a guilty verdict.
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** The prosecution did a last minute, dramatic unveiling of a
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Federal Express envelope, giving the impression it was "hot
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stuff, just in." The envelope, from the CIA, contained a
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response to inquiries. Says CIA: "Chuck Hayes? Chuck Hayes?
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Nope, never heard of him." But, says "Limpiar," the envelope in
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fact must have arrived on or about January 15, making the January
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29th "dramatic unveiling" misleading. An added prosecution
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benefit of this "last minute" routine is that defense discovery
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guidelines get bypassed; how can prosecution have shared the
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letter with defense when they themselves "just now got it."
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** Why didn't defense attorney Gatewood Galbraith call Bill
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Hamilton, of Inslaw, as a witness? Hamilton could have verified
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that Hayes was indeed a former CIA employee. "Limpiar" tells me
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that Hamilton was willing to testify. Much of the case hinged on
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whether or not Hayes really was a former CIA agent. Apparently
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the only one called by Galbraith to corroborate the claim was
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James Norman, former senior editor with Forbes magazine.
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-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
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Re-arranging Deck Chairs on the Titanic -- Commenting on recent
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revelations regarding FBI crime lab bungling and worse, Stephen
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Jones, attorney for accused OKC bombing(s) mastermind Timothy
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McVeigh, stated that it was "like re-arranging deck chairs on the
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Titanic." Jones thinks that the government's case against
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McVeigh is hopeless, and, seemingly, the recent revelations
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amount to nothing toward altering the futility of the
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government's case.
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So what is going on? Why the revelations?
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Recall how, not long after the April 19, 1995 bombing(s),
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Colonel (Retired) James "Bo" Gritz and others were referring to
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McVeigh as "Lee Harvey McVeigh." This was an allusion to Lee
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Harvey Oswald, accused lone assassin of President John F.
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Kennedy. Paraded into the angry Oklahoma sunshine shortly after
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the bombing of the Murrah Building, clad in a bright orange "see
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me" jumpsuit, it appeared as if *someone* might save the
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prosecution some work by murdering McVeigh, a la Jack Ruby doing
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the same to Oswald. Were the government and/or its agents hoping
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that might happen, that McVeigh would magically be removed from
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the equation?
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Unfortunately for those desiring the removal of McVeigh and
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consequent absence of a trial in the matter, McVeigh was not
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assassinated and the trial is at last imminent. McVeigh's
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attorney Stephen Jones seems to be no slouch, and with closed
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circuit television to be made available to interested survivors,
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family members, and apparently to an alert underground press,
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Jones *will* be heard. And he will be heard *without* the
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"helpful" little interpolations of corporate "news" media. This
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spells trouble for any working to cover up the truth about the
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Oklahoma City bombing(s). By now they must be wishing, more
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fervently than ever, that McVeigh could somehow just disappear.
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With that as background, consider how convenient it would be
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for the case against McVeigh to be thrown out, due to tainted
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evidence. Recent revelations about FBI crime lab misdoings come
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at an opportune time for any who are wishing that the upcoming
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trial would just go away. And, FBI could just sit back and say,
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"Well, we *know* that McVeigh did it. It's just that picky
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legalities thwarted justice."
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Views expressed do not necessarily reflect those
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of Conspiracy Nation, nor of its Editor in Chief.
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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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