Author Topic: Clinton Big Money Donor Wanted for Grand Theft (and other Democrat Misdeeds)  (Read 153377 times)

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Judge rules John Edwards must be deposed again in sex-tape lawsuit
By the CNN Wire Staff
April 29, 2011 

(CNN) -- A North Carolina judge ruled Friday that one-time presidential candidate John Edwards must testify more in a lawsuit pitting his former mistress against a top Edwards aide, lawyers said.

Edwards has given a deposition in the lawsuit of Rielle Hunter, with whom he fathered a child, against Andrew Young, a key figure in the politician's 2008 presidential campaign. Hunter is suing Young to reclaim materials that she says belong to her, including an alleged sex tape that involves Edwards.

Superior Court Judge Carl Fox announced Friday that he'll preside over Edwards' further deposition, according to Amanda Martin, who was part of a media group's team of lawyers in the Raleigh, North Carolina, court Friday. The media group has been pushing for the release of documents related to the case.

The deposition will take place on June 20, Fox said during Friday's two-hour hearing that also included lawyers for Young, Hunter and Edwards. Within two weeks after the transcript is finished and distributed, Judge Fox will consider arguments and decide whether to release all, part or none of Edwards' deposition, according to Martin.

The group of media companies, which include CNN, scored at least a partial victory Friday when Fox authorized the release of two documents in the case.

That includes the unsealing of one motion, filed on March 7 by Edwards' attorney James Cooney, urging the judge to bar any further deposition of his client. The lawyer wrote, "Further examination is being conducted either in bad faith or in such manner as to unreasonably annoy, embarrass or oppress (Edwards)."

The other motion was from Young's legal team, which includes Robert Elliot, David Pishko and Allison Maddux. The lawyers claimed that Edwards "failed and refused to respond adequately to questions asked of him during his February 8, 2011 deposition."

Edwards' attorney did not immediately return a call asking for his client's opinion on Friday's developments. Messages left for the attorney for Andrew Young, as well as court officials in North Carolina, were not immediately returned.

The group of media companies wants more information on the case to be released by the North Carolina court. The group's attorneys argue that many such details already have been made public by various parties, and therefore the motions and depositions so far should be public records as called for under North Carolina law.

The media group's motions do not call for the release of the alleged sex tape or any intimate photos that might exist.

During Friday's hearing, Young's lawyers gave no indication they intended to brand any depositions or similar documents as confidential. Edwards' attorney did not detail what, if anything, his client might want kept sealed, Martin said. Lawyers for Hunter, meanwhile, said they were talking about "a small amount that (they) were considering designating as confidential," according to Martin.

This legal wrangling all centers around Edwards, once a U.S. Senator from North Carolina and the Democratic party's 2004 vice presidential nominee. After losing that race with running mate John Kerry, Edwards -- with his now-deceased wife Elizabeth by his side -- announced that he was running for president in 2008.

Yet Edwards' bid floundered, and he soon became embroiled in a scandal after published reports said he had been having an affair with Hunter.
Young initially claimed to be the father of Hunter's child, ostensibly in order to protect his former boss, only to later publish a tell-all book.
Edwards eventually did acknowledge his paternity of the child. His last public appearance was at the funeral for his wife, Elizabeth Edwards, who died last December after a six-year battle with cancer.

Edwards also is under investigation about whether or not he illegally used campaign funds to cover up his affair with Hunter, a campaign videographer.

http://www.cnn.com/2011/CRIME/04/29/north.carolina.john.edwards/index.html

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Top official from Obama-backed black chamber faces criminal charges
Daily Caller ^ | 5/6/11 | Jonathan Strong
Posted on May 6, 2011 8:55:13 PM EDT by Nachum

A top official from the U.S. Black Chamber, Inc. – the Obama-backed, rival upstart to Harry Alford’s National Black Chamber of Commerce – has a checkered past and faces criminal charges from allegations he exploited a Hurricane Katrina victim. According to Raleigh, N.C.-based WRAL, which broke the story, Brandon Trainer, who led the North Carolina Regional Black Chamber of Commerce and served as treasurer for the U.S. Black Chamber, skipped town in 2006 when he was charged with defrauding a Hurricane Katrina victim out of $1500.

(Excerpt) Read more at dailycaller.com ...

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Obama's half-brother runs questionable charity
NY Post ^ | May 8, 2011 | ISABEL VINCENT and MELISSA KLEIN





President Obama's half-brother runs an off-the-books American charity that claims to support poor Kenyans -- but it lies about its federal status and no one knows how it spends its money.

The group, the Barack H. Obama Foundation, was named after the president's father and founded by his sibling Abon'go Malik "Roy" Obama, a 53-year-old polygamist who recently made headlines by adding a third wife -- who's still in her teens.

Its Web site claims to have provided drinking water in Kenya's Siaya District, which includes the Obama clan's ancestral village. The organization also says it has completed a madrassa, or Muslim school, and is building an imam's residence. A photo of the tidy little school building is displayed on the site.

That and other photos on the site are the only purported evidence that the nonprofit has accomplished any of its mission.

A group of Missouri State college students who visited the Obama family village of Kogelo in 2009, and who met the president's half-brother, felt something was amiss. They sensed he was an "operator" and decided to give their donation of 400 pounds of medical supplies directly to a local clinic.

"We didn't know what he was going to do with them," said Ken Rutherford, a former Missouri State professor who led the trip and who shared in the 1997 Nobel Peace Prize for his work to ban landmines


(Excerpt) Read more at nypost.com ...

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Edwards investigation appears close to end, source says
By: CNN Senior Producer Kevin Bohn

(CNN) - A resolution appears near in the Justice Department's investigation of former Sen. John Edwards, a source with knowledge of the investigation said Wednesday.

A federal grand jury in North Carolina has been investigating payments the former senator's campaign and supporters made to Rielle Hunter, his mistress, who also worked as a videographer for his campaign.

Edwards, a former Democratic senator from North Carolina, was his party's vice presidential nominee in 2004. He sought the party's nomination for president in 2008.

The Edwards legal team hoped that the Justice Department would drop the case. Possible outcomes now appear to include an indictment or plea deal.

The source declined to be named because of the sensitive nature of the investigation, which focuses on Edwards' bid for the 2008 Democratic presidential nomination.

In his tell-all book "The Politician," former Edwards aide Andrew Young wrote that heiress Rachel "Bunny" Mellon gave Edwards a gift of $700,000 that was used to cover up the affair with Hunter, who was pregnant with the former senator's child.

Edwards declined to comment Tuesday to CNN affiliate WRAL-TV of Raleigh, North Carolina.

Young told WRAL in 2010 that Mellon did not know how her money was used, but she said the money went toward flights and to pay rent for Hunter's California home while Young pretended to be the father of Hunter's child.

Edwards later admitted he fathered the child.

His 2008 presidential bid floundered, and Edwards soon became embroiled in a scandal after published reports said he had been having an affair with Hunter.

Young initially claimed to be the father of Hunter's child, ostensibly in order to protect his former boss, only to later publish a tell-all book.

Edwards and his wife, Elizabeth, separated in January 2010. She died in December 2010 after a six-year battle with cancer.

http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2011/05/25/edwards-investigation-appears-close-to-an-end/?hpt=T1

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Barney Frank knocked on his Fannie
Rep admits to helping lover land job at mortgage giant in ’91
 By Dave Wedge
Thursday, May 26, 2011 - Updated 3 hours ago
Boston Herald Chief Enterprise Reporter



U.S. Rep. Barney Frank admitted he helped his ex-lover land a lucrative post with Fannie Mae in the early 1990s while the Newton Democrat was on a committee that regulated the lending giant — but he called questions of a potential ethical conflict “nonsense.”

“If it is (a conflict of interest), then much of Washington is involved (in conflicts),” Frank told the Herald last night. “It is a common thing in Washington for members of Congress to have spouses work for the federal government. There is no rule against it at all.”

Frank said he helped his former longtime companion, Herb Moses, land a job at Fannie Mae in 1991 after Moses graduated with a master’s degree in business administration from Dartmouth College. Frank said he was approached by a Fannie Mae executive and vouched for Moses, who formerly worked as an economist in the Department of Agriculture.

“(The executive) said, ‘Herb applied for a job,’ and I said, ‘Yeah, I think he’d be great. He’s an economist and he’s got an MBA,’ ” Frank said, recounting the conversation. “He was hired to an entry-level position.”

Asked if he should have disclosed his efforts to help Moses land the job at Fannie Mae, Frank said: “It was widely known. It was out there in the public. It’s nonsense.”

Congressional Republicans pounced on the embarrassing revelation.

“Just when you think you’ve heard the worst, Democrats in Massachusetts take shameless politics to a new low,” said Tory Mazzola, spokesman for the National Republican Congressional Committee. “The fact that Barney Frank didn’t see this as a conflict of interest is alarming by itself, but it’s so deceitful that it really shows voters that he’s not looking out for them in Washington.”

Moses, who lived with Frank in Washington at the time, worked for Fannie until 1998, when he left the mortgage behemoth. Moses, who could not be reached for comment, and Frank split up that year.

Frank was a junior member on the House Financial Services Committee at the time he helped Moses land the job and served on the committee, which regulates lenders, for the duration of their relationship. Frank wasn’t on the subcommittee that directly dealt with Fannie and Freddie Mac legislation but he once abstained from voting on a Republican amendment to limit executive compensation at the government-backed lenders.

“I said publicly that my companion worked there and I voted present. I didn’t think I should vote on it,” the congressman said.

Frank’s assistance in helping Moses land the job was first reported in a new book about the fiscal meltdown by Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times [NYT] reporter Gretchen Morgensen.

In an interview Tuesday on WBUR’s “Fresh Air,” Morgensen said Frank “was very aggressive and really tough on those who were testifying in Congress about reining in Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac” during hearings after Moses was hired. She said Fannie Mae “rolled out the red carpet” for Moses as part of a strategy to curry favor with Frank and other members of the Financial Services Committee.

Morgensen also noted that members of the committee raked in tens of thousands in campaign donations from Fannie and Freddie execs, including Frank, who received $42,000 in contributions from 1989 through 2008.

Frank denied he turned a blind eye to Fannie until after the 2008 mortgage meltdown. He says he criticized the Bush administration’s policies on government-backed lenders in 2004 and backed legislation to deal with lending concerns in 2006 but was thwarted by the GOP-controlled Congress.

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Inside the case against Edwards
By: CNN Correspondent Joe Johns

Raleigh, NC (CNN) - The John Edwards case as we know it may hinge on a single question: when and whether a gift to a candidate for federal office can be considered a political contribution.

A source with knowledge of the behind the scenes legal maneuvering in the case of former U.S. Senator and vice presidential candidate John Edwards has told CNN that the government is basing its investigation of alleged campaign finance law violations on an 11 year-old advisory opinion issued by the Federal Election Commission, which asserted that a gift to a candidate for federal office would be considered a campaign contribution.

The decision, dated June 14, 2000 is known as "Harvey" and is named after a man named Phillip Harvey who sought guidance from the FEC because he wanted to give a gift of money to an individual who was preparing to run for federal office, but didn't want the money to be used for campaign purposes.

The reason why this opinion is so important is because Edwards received hundreds of thousands of dollars –possibly in excess of one million dollars– from two contributors; 100 year old philanthropist Rachel “Bunny” Mellon of Virginia and the late attorney Fred Baron.

Edwards’ attorneys have asserted that the money was not and should not be considered political contributions. So if it wasn't a political contribution, what was it? The most widely reported theory - which the Edwards team has publicly neither confirmed nor denied - is that the money was given to keep Edwards' wife Elizabeth from finding out that her husband had been having an affair and even fathered a child with his mistress Rielle Hunter.

The source with knowledge of the inner workings of the case and other legal observers have noted that the advisory opinion is shaky ground to base a federal prosecution on because it is not a black letter federal statute, and apparently has not been cited in any important case law, or legal authority behind any important court decisions.

Federal prosecutors in Raleigh have declined to comment on the case because it is a matter relating to a grand jury.

Last week, sources said prosecutors in Raleigh have been given authority to seek an indictment in the case.

Since then the question has been whether Edwards and his legal team would work with prosecutors on a plea agreement, or if they were prepared to fight it out in court. The Edwards team has declined to comment.

http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2011/06/01/inside-the-case-against-edwards/?hpt=hp_t2

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One of the biggest crash and burns in American political history IMO.  He is getting what he deserves. 

John Edwards indicted on conspiracy, campaign law violations
By Kevin Bohn, CNN
June 3, 2011

Washington (CNN) -- Former Democratic vice presidential nominee and two-time presidential candidate John Edwards was indicted by a federal grand jury Friday on six counts, including conspiracy, issuing false statements, and violating campaign contribution laws.

If convicted on all counts, the former North Carolina senator would face up to 30 years in prison and a maximum fine of $1.5 million.

Edwards is scheduled to appear in federal court in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, at 2:30 p.m. ET, according to a Justice Department official.

Edwards' attorney, Greg Craig, said his client will plead not guilty. Edwards "did not break the law and will mount a vigorous defense," Craig declared in a written statement.

A grand jury has been investigating whether money given to support Edwards' mistress, Rielle Hunter, by benefactors of Edwards should have been considered campaign donations, a contention Edwards' team has disputed.

Prosecutors allege that Edwards improperly accepted over $900,000 as part of an effort to conceal facts he believed would damage his White House bid.

Plea discussions had been ongoing between Edwards' defense lawyers and federal prosecutors, but no agreement was reached. Edwards had not wanted to plead guilty to a felony because he could lose his law license, a source familiar with the inquiry previously told CNN.

"Democracy demands that our election system be protected, and without vigorously enforced campaign finance laws, the people of this country lose their voice," U.S. Attorney George E.B. Holding said in a written statement. "The U.S. Attorney's Office and the Department of Justice are committed to the prosecution of individuals who abuse the very system of which they seek to become a part."

"Public servants are held to the same laws as everyone else in this country. The position sought does not exempt anyone, even those running for president of the United States," said North Carolina FBI lead agent Chris Briese.

The case involves financial aid given to Hunter. During their affair, Hunter became pregnant with Edwards' baby, though at first he denied he was the father.

While prosecutors believe the monetary help given to Hunter by two of Edwards' political backers should have been considered campaign donations, Edwards' attorneys disagree.

Edwards' attorney Greg Craig has said his client "has done wrong in his life -- and he knows it better than anyone -- but he did not break the law." He said the government's theory of the case "is wrong on the facts and wrong on the law."

The government is believed to be building its case that Edwards violated campaign finance law based on an 11-year-old advisory opinion issued by the Federal Election Commission, which asserted that a gift to a candidate for federal office would be considered a campaign contribution, a source with knowledge of the inquiry told CNN this week.

The decision, dated June 14, 2000, is known as "Harvey." It's named after a man named Phillip Harvey who sought guidance from the FEC because he wanted to give money to someone who was preparing to run for federal office, but didn't want the money to be used for campaign purposes.

The opinion is important because Hunter received more than $1 million from two contributors, 100-year-old philanthropist Rachel "Bunny" Mellon of Virginia and attorney Fred Baron, who has since died.

Edwards' attorneys have said that the payments were not and should not be considered political contributions. If they weren't political contributions, what were they? The most widely reported theory -- which the Edwards team has publicly neither confirmed nor denied -- is that the money was given to keep Edwards' wife, Elizabeth, from finding out about his mistress and child.

Elizabeth Edwards died of cancer last December.

The source with knowledge of the inner workings of the case and other legal observers have noted that the Harvey advisory opinion is shaky ground to base a federal prosecution on because it is not a black-letter federal statute, and apparently has not been cited in any important case law, or as legal authority behind any important court decisions.

Some experts have said the Justice Department will have a strong case in court if it can prove Edwards knew about the funds and what they were being used for -- a contention he has denied.

http://www.cnn.com/2011/POLITICS/06/03/edwards.case/index.html

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Two Americas   ::)  ::)  ::)

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Source: Jail time at heart of collapse of plea talks in Edwards case
By Kevin Bohn, CNN Senior Producer
June 6, 2011

Washington (CNN) -- The insistence that former Sen. John Edwards serve some jail time over allegations he broke campaign finance laws caused a collapse in plea negotiations between lawyers for the former presidential candidate and the Justice Department last week.

Edwards wanted to have as "minimal" impact on his two younger kids as possible, a source with knowledge of the talks confirmed to CNN Sunday. Edwards has a 10-year-old son and a 12-year-old daughter.

The Raleigh News and Observer, which first reported the story, said the Justice Department was insisting that Edwards serve six months in jail if he pleaded guilty.

After initially saying Edwards had to agree to plead guilty to a felony in earlier discussions, CNN is told prosecutors last week offered for him instead to plead guilty to some misdemeanors.

But the jail time was the breaking point.

"He did not want to have an extended period of time away from his kids," said the source, who would not speak on the record because the details of the plea discussions have not been made public.

After the breakdown in negotiations, a grand jury indicted Edwards, a former Democratic vice presidential nominee, on six felony counts.

In court on Friday, Edwards pleaded not guilty.

"I will regret for the rest of my life the pain and the harm that I've caused to others. But I did not break the law. And I never, ever thought I was breaking the law," he told reporters outside the federal courthouse in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.

The News and Observer also reported that Edwards' lawyers were not confident they would be allowed to urge a judge to consider alternatives for incarceration such as a halfway house, weekend passes or home arrest in order to give him more time with his children. After the death of his wife, Elizabeth, Edwards is the primary caregiver for the two younger children.

http://www.cnn.com/2011/CRIME/06/05/edwards.plea.talks/index.html

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I've always loathed that thief.   Edwards was the worst of the worst.   Sort of like the LW Huckabee   

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I've always loathed that thief.   Edwards was the worst of the worst.   Sort of like the LW Huckabee   

Edwards and Huckabee are not in the same universe.  As far as we know, Huck didn't run for president while cheating on his terminally ill wife, telling the public he was a devoted family man, impregnate his mistress within days of taking a picture with his wife celebrating a wedding anniversary, and pay his mistress nearly $1 million in hush money. 

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Edwards and Huckabee are not in the same universe.  As far as we know, Huck didn't run for president while cheating on his terminally ill wife, telling the public he was a devoted family man, impregnate his mistress within days of taking a picture with his wife celebrating a wedding anniversary, and pay his mistress nearly $1 million in hush money. 


I guess you are right when you look at it that way.    ;D  ;D  ;D

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Weiner apologizes for lying, 'terrible mistakes,' refuses to resign
By the CNN Wire Staff
June 6, 2011

(CNN) -- A week after claiming a hacker had posted a lewd photo to his Twitter account, U.S. Rep. Anthony Weiner on Monday apologized for lying about the incident and admitted carrying on inappropriate relationships with several women he'd met online.

Weiner, a New York Democrat, said he is not resigning his seat, nor is he planning on separating from his wife. But he said he took "full responsibility" for his actions -- both the relationships and for lying about sending the photo last month of his bulging underwear on his Twitter account.

"To be clear, the picture was of me, and I sent it. I'm deeply sorry for the pain this has caused my wife, and our family, my constituents, my friends, my supporters and my staff," he said, claiming he'd posted the Twitter photo accidentally as a "joke" and then "panicked." "I lied because I was ashamed at what I had done, and I didn't want to get caught."

An emotional Weiner described his actions as "dumb," "destructive" and "deeply, deeply hurtful" -- both for his admitted coverup and for repeatedly engaging in "inappropriate conversations conducted over Twitter, Facebook, e-mail and occasionally on the phone" with women he'd met online, mostly via Facebook.

The congressman claimed that he never met any of these women in person, and that his wife Huma only learned he'd been lying about the Twitter picture on Monday morning.

"I have made terrible mistakes," Weiner told reporters. "I have not been honest with myself or my family. ... I should not have done this, and I should not have done this particularly when I was married."

Weiner claimed he does not believe he used any government resources, while he "exchanged messages and photos of an explicit nature with about six women over the last three years." Some of those relationships began before his 2010 marriage and some happened, and continued, afterward.

Still, House minority leader Nancy Pelosi announced that she would call "for an Ethics Committee investigation to determine whether any official resources were used or any other violation of House rules occurred."

Weiner issued a statement saying he would "welcome and fully cooperate" with the probe, which other Democratic leaders also rallied behind. But one Republican source called the move "hollow," saying Pelosi should have insisted that Weiner resign -- as former Rep. Chris Lee, a New York Republican, did in February amid reports that the married man had tried to solicit women via Craigslist.

The seven-term congressman said during his press conference that he'd talked with Pelosi briefly that day, saying she was "not happy" but "also told me that she loved me and wanted us to ... pull through this."

He hails from New York's solidly Democratic 9th district, which includes parts of the New York City boroughs of Queens and Brooklyn. He handily won re-election last November, besting his Republican challenger by 22 points.

If Weiner were to resign or be compelled to leave office, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, also a Democrat, would determine the timing of a special election to replace him.

Monday afternoon's admission came hours after images were published on BigGovernment.com, a conservative website run by Andrew Breitbart, that purportedly showed Weiner shirtless.

Before the congressman spoke at his scheduled 4 p.m. press conference, Breitbart -- who claimed he just happened to be staying at a hotel a few blocks down -- unexpectedly took over the podium to challenge Weiner and the media and defend his site's story.

"This is an ongoing story, this is a compelling story," said Breitbart, bristling at reports he orchestrated the issue for political purposes and was responsible for hacking Weiner's account. "I did not like that he doubled down that this is about Breitbart."

The conservative blogger also claimed that he had, in his possession, another "X-rated" photo allegedly from Weiner that he said he wasn't releasing because he hoped "to save (Weiner's) family."

"I'd like an apology," a defiant Breitbart said. "This was his strategy, which is to blame me for hacking."

During his press conference, Weiner apologized "to everyone that I misled in the media" -- including Breitbart -- but most of all to his wife.

"This was me doing a dumb thing, and doing it repeatedly, then lying about it," Weiner said.

Breitbart's website was the first to publish an incriminating photo, sent May 27 via Twitter from Weiner's account of a man in his underwear.

Weiner initially released written statements claiming that he was the victim of a hacker and a prank. Then, during a testy press conference, he dodged questions about whether the photo was of him and why he hadn't asked law enforcement to investigate if his account had, indeed, been compromised.

The following day, in a series of interviews, he said he could not say with "certitude" if the photograph was of him. He has also deflected recent questions from CNN, saying he had hired an attorney at the firm of Baker Hostetler to look into the matter.

The woman who received the Twitter photo in late May, Gennette Cordova, denied on her own account that she was one of the six women who Weiner admitted having an "inappropriate relationship."

But ABC News reports that Melissa Broussard, a 26-year-old single mother from Texas, provided them with dozens of photos, e-mails, Facebook messages and cell phone call logs related to her relationship with Weiner.

In a posting on BigGovernment.com, Broussard said she was a U.S. Army veteran and full-time college student who, on April 20, went to Weiner's Facebook page and commented that the congressman was "hot" on one of his videos. She said the two began corresponding "within an hour," adding that she didn't know if he is a "horrible person" but decided to speak out after hearing he'd "hired an investigative firm to go through all of his files."

CNN has attempted to contact Broussard, but she could not be immediately reached for comment.

Many Democrats first rallied around the liberal congressman. But members of the House Democratic leadership have talked repeatedly in recent days to try to get him to end what has become an unwelcome political distraction, a member of the party's leadership told CNN before Weiner's press conference Monday.

"It's frustrating because we'll talk to him, and say clean it up, and then he goes out and does stuff," said the member of the House Democratic leadership, who declined to speak on the record about private discussions with Weiner.

"He's got to put the period at the end of the sentence," the Democratic source said before Weiner's confession. "It's painful."

http://www.cnn.com/2011/POLITICS/06/06/new.york.weiner/index.html

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I've always loathed that thief.   Edwards was the worst of the worst.   Sort of like the LW Huckabee   

lock his scumbag ass up

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Edwards is a real pofs. 

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I thought this was a country of innocent until proven guilty.

Sad you're ready to lock him up.

I was not talking about criminal aspect, just him as a person.   

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Oh, I wasn't really talking about you... but I think 240 said to lock him up and there are others who probably agree.

I am always an innocent until proven guilty kind of person.

This ain't Law and Order.  People can have opinions without some criminal trial.  I read the indictment (see the link I posted) and that's all I need to know.  No question in my mind he solicited hush money for his mistress and tried to hide it so it wouldn't have to be reported as campaign contributions.  

He's one of the worst cads in American political history IMO.

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Haha... exactly.. guilty because you want it to be.

That CAD!!!

BWAHAHA!

No doubt.  A cad because the facts show he's a cad.   :)

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Elizabeth Edwards’ revenge from the grave: She 'secretly recorded death-bed video testimony'
Daily Mail ^ | 8th June 2011 | John Stevens
Posted on June 8, 2011 9:39:05 PM EDT by tlb

In a final act of revenge, Elizabeth Edwards secretly recorded a testimony in her dying days that helped prosecutors indict husband John last week, it was claimed today.

John Edwards is due to stand trial on charges that could lead to a 30-year jail sentence after he pleaded not guilty on Friday to using $925,000 in campaign funds to cover up an affair and love child.

The estranged wife of the former presidential candidate is alleged to have filmed a damning testimony that was central to the prosecution’s case for charges.

Friends said the cancer victim, who died in December, wanted to ‘haunt’ her estranged husband and his mistress Rielle Hunter, with whom he fathered a child and made a sex tape

Bruce Baron, an expert on federal law, said: ‘The value of a potential dying declaration, or tape, containing the testimony of Elizabeth Edwards, is devastating to any case or defence that Edwards would have.

‘On the secret video, Elizabeth spells out everything she knew about John’s affair with Rielle and how he managed to cover it up for so long,’ a source told the Enquirer.

‘She also spills all of John’s lies – many of which could be what sends him up the river.’

‘Elizabeth wanted to haunt John and Rielle – literally from her grave – and she has,’ the source told the Enquirer.

‘She hated them with a vengeance. This was a woman who took her final breath in the same bed where John once had sex with his mistress.’

(Excerpt) Read more at dailymail.co.uk ...

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Shocking Audio: Rep. Fred Clark's Disturbing Comments about Female Constituent
Republican Party of Wisconsin ^ | Jun 13 | katie.mccallum




Rep. Fred Clark (D-Baraboo), running in a recall election against Senator Luther Olsen, was caught on tape last week saying he would like to "smack around" a woman in his district.


The comment was recorded on the home answering machine of Sue and John Stapelman of Baraboo. Clark phoned the family while making campaign calls, and had a short, curt conversation with Sue Stapelman. Stapelman then hung up the phone, but her answering machine was still rolling, and caught Clark saying, "I feel like calling her back and smacking her around."


John Hogan, director of the Committee to Elect a Republican Senate, said "This disturbing and inappropriate comment gives us an unfortunate glimpse of what Representative Clark is like when he thinks no one is listening. Domestic violence is a devastating problem in our state , and abuse is on the rise. To be able to so freely threaten violence against a woman, even in jest, shows a tremendous lack of character.”


“Coupled with his record of killing jobs and increasing spending, the mounting evidence of Fred Clark’s recklessness and lack of common sense will be flatly rejected by voters at the polls this summer.”


Transcription of call from Fred Clark:


[Answering machine picks up the call, then Sue Stapelman picks up phone]
SS: “Yes”
FC: “Hi, this, uh, Ms. Stapelton?"
SS: “Yes it is.”
FC: “Hi, this is Representative Fred Clark.”
SS: “Ok.”
FC: “Yes, I just want to give you and John a call again tonight. You may know I’m running against Luther Olsen here in the recall election in the 14th Senate District.”
SS: “Yeah, isn’t that a crime.” [hangs up]
[Answering machine still recording]
FC: “Ok. I feel like calling her back and smacking her around.”

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Elizabeth Edwards’ revenge from the grave: She 'secretly recorded death-bed video testimony'
Daily Mail ^ | 8th June 2011 | John Stevens
Posted on June 8, 2011 9:39:05 PM EDT by tlb

In a final act of revenge, Elizabeth Edwards secretly recorded a testimony in her dying days that helped prosecutors indict husband John last week, it was claimed today.

John Edwards is due to stand trial on charges that could lead to a 30-year jail sentence after he pleaded not guilty on Friday to using $925,000 in campaign funds to cover up an affair and love child.

The estranged wife of the former presidential candidate is alleged to have filmed a damning testimony that was central to the prosecution’s case for charges.

Friends said the cancer victim, who died in December, wanted to ‘haunt’ her estranged husband and his mistress Rielle Hunter, with whom he fathered a child and made a sex tape

Bruce Baron, an expert on federal law, said: ‘The value of a potential dying declaration, or tape, containing the testimony of Elizabeth Edwards, is devastating to any case or defence that Edwards would have.

‘On the secret video, Elizabeth spells out everything she knew about John’s affair with Rielle and how he managed to cover it up for so long,’ a source told the Enquirer.

‘She also spills all of John’s lies – many of which could be what sends him up the river.’

‘Elizabeth wanted to haunt John and Rielle – literally from her grave – and she has,’ the source told the Enquirer.

‘She hated them with a vengeance. This was a woman who took her final breath in the same bed where John once had sex with his mistress.’

(Excerpt) Read more at dailymail.co.uk ...


 :o  Score one for Elizabeth. 

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Activists cry foul over FBI probe (Obama's Chicago socialist terrorist pals)
Washington Post ^ | June 13, 2011 | Peter Wallsten
Posted on June 13, 2011 10:54:47 PM EDT by Second Amendment First

CHICAGO — FBI agents took box after box of address books, family calendars, artwork and personal letters in their 10-hour raid in September of the century-old house shared by Stephanie Weiner and her husband.

The agents seemed keenly interested in Weiner’s home-based business, the Revolutionary Lemonade Stand, which sells silkscreened infant bodysuits and other clothes with socialist slogans, phrases like “Help Wanted: Revolutionaries.” http://www.washingtonpost.com

The search was part of a mysterious, ongoing nationwide terrorism investigation with an unusual target: prominent peace activists and politically active labor organizers.

The probe — involving subpoenas to 23 people and raids of seven homes last fall — has triggered a high-powered protest against the Department of Justice and, in the process, could create some political discomfort for President Obama with his union supporters as he gears up for his reelection campaign.

The apparent targets are concentrated in the Midwest, including Chicagoans who crossed paths with Obama when he was a young state senator and some who have been active in labor unions that supported his political rise.

Investigators, according to search warrants, documents and interviews, are examining possible “material support” for Colombian and Palestinian groups designated by the U.S. government as terrorists.

(Excerpt) Read more at washingtonpost.com ...