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There was a barracks bombed in Lebanon during Reagan's term as I recall, and he didn't go off on anybody. He was no dummy.
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In reference to my earlier comment about emails from Pelican. It now seems that at least 4 other people are getting messages saying to QUIT from Pelican. While it may be a server error as we were told so far everyone I have heard from who is getting this message was not sure about it either...
Will make a post and see how many people are getting this message. Joe A |
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Yeah mul, swept under the rug :rolleyes: Ex-Clinton aide's fate in jury's hands http://www.cnn.com/2005/POLITICS/05/25/fundraiser.trial/index.html Jury Clears Ex-Clinton Aide http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2005/05/27/politics/main698306.shtml The press was sooo quiet huh? I can't believe you don't remember the trial...I do.... |
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You remember the trial because you havn't drank the Kool-aid yet... http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1127954605.jpg |
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Just watching Meet the Press as well as our local talking heads.
How many people still feel that the Delay situation is not political? How many people know that the DA could not get a grand jury to indict Delay after 5 attempts at doing so? 5 different groups of people refused to agree that there was enough evidence to procecute. Most DA's would realize that the case was not strong enough but not Ronnie Earle. Finally on the 6th hand picked grand jury did they indict Delay and DA Ronnie Earle finally got to move ahead on the case he has been working on for years. Will be fun to see how this one turns out, especially after Peloisi has just been caught doing the same thing that Delay did... JoeA |
Grand juror: DeLay evidence is there
'Stacks of papers' support indictment, foreman says; U.S. Rep. says there's no case 07:47 PM CDT on Saturday, October 1, 2005 By CHRISTY HOPPE / The Dallas Morning News AUSTIN – Grand jurors were presented a load of evidence, including testimony and phone records, that led them to believe Rep. Tom DeLay should be tried on a conspiracy charge, the leader of the Travis County grand jury that indicted the congressman said Friday. "It was not one of those sugarcoated deals that we handed to [District Attorney] Ronnie Earle," William M. Gibson said. He added: "Mr. Earle has stacks and stacks of papers – evidence of telephone calls from Mr. DeLay and everybody." Mr. DeLay has said that Mr. Earle has no evidence to prove that he tried to subvert Texas election laws. The Sugar Land Republican's lawyers did not return calls seeking comments on Mr. Gibson's description of the grand jury proceedings. The indictment stems from the activities of Texans for a Republican Majority, a political action committee created by Mr. DeLay. The group, known as TRMPAC, is accused of trying to circumvent Texas laws that make it illegal to use corporate or union money in political campaigns. Labeling it a money laundering scheme, Mr. Earle says that TRMPAC took $190,000 in corporate donations and routed it – along with the names of seven Statehouse candidates – to the Republican National Committee in September 2002. The RNC then sent out $190,000 in contributions to those same seven candidates, who couldn't legally have accepted corporate money. At the heart of the conspiracy charge against Mr. DeLay is whether he knew about the transaction. Experts on Texas law say that knowledge alone might be all that is needed for a conviction under state law. Mr. DeLay, who stepped down as House majority leader when the indictment was issued Wednesday, and his lawyers say he knew nothing about the money exchange at the time it happened and that the indictment is a political vendetta against him. But in the first public acknowledgements of what evidence against Mr. DeLay might exist, Mr. Gibson, a 76-year-old former sheriff's deputy and state insurance investigator, said there were ample indications of the congressman's involvement. He said that Mr. DeLay provided the district attorney with a written statement that was given to the grand jury to consider but that Mr. DeLay declined to sign a sworn document or testify under oath. Mr. DeLay "just gave a statement saying he did nothing. And he didn't know how that money got back down here and all that stuff," Mr. Gibson said. "We believe different from other paperwork we got." He added, "I am very much convinced that he had" knowledge of the transaction. http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/dn/latestnews/stories/1001 05dntexdelay.20c896f8.html |
And Joe, I've heard from the neocons about these 5 previous grand juries who chose to not indict, but I've yet to see proof of this. I've asked repeatedly as well on another board, to no avail.
I've also searched for credible evidence that this is true, I can't find it. Do you have a link Joe? |
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This thread has sure wandered a long ways away from DeLay/Frist/Abramoff, hasn't it? I guess some can't take the heat. |
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I do not disagree that there may be evidence of wrong doing, or even that he did do something wrong, its just very interesting that most everyone says that this is not political but no one mentions that it took 6 grand juries to indict. Thats not a good sign for Earle. JoeA |
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I just find it surprising they would bring the same evidence to 6 grand juries. If this is true, maybe he had additional proof each time, but to me, I want to know if this is even true. It doesn't make much sense. A grand jury is a group of unknown civilians called for jury duty to look at evidence.....it makes no sense that this one would indict over nothing...what, were they paid off or something? See what I mean, why it sounds kooky to me? |
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Joe A It was not easy, as no one wants to report on it but here it is in the third paragraph: http://urbangrounds.com/2005/09/28/ronnie-earle-indicted/ <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< Travis County DA Ronnie Earle (D) Indicted For malicious abuse of power and egregious partisan hackery AUSTIN, TX—For the third time in recent memory, the partisan fanatic posing as my county’s District Attorney, Ronnie Earle, has abused the power of his elected office to exact baseless political retribution against his opposition. Ronnie Earle’s 1994 indictment against Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison (R) was quickly dismissed and his charges in the 1980s against former Attorney General Jim Mattox (D)—another political foe of Earle—fell apart at trial. Ronnie Earle convened five Grand Juries in an attempt to indict Tom Delay. None of these previous five Grand Juries could so much as indict a ham sandwich, much less Tom Delay. Not to be deterred, Mr. Earle convened a sixth Grand Jury (and I was wondering why my taxes where so high here in Travis County last year). Mr. Earle was finally able to find a Grand Jury who would hand down the indictment that he was begging for. With the entire Grand Jury process so slanted here in Travis County (Austin), I’m amazed that it took them 6 Grand Juries. But even then, the grand jury only came through with a vaguely worded indictment for the last-resort charge of “conspiracy”. *** >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> From the National Review: http://www.powerlineblog.com/ "Targeting DeLay" The editors of National Review weigh in on Ronnie Earle's indictment of Tom DeLay: Following the indictment of House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, conservatives are left wondering what to make of the charges. The answer is simple. The charges are absurd and should be thrown out of court. Travis County District Attorney Ronnie Earle has charged DeLay with conspiracy to make a contribution to a political party in violation of the Texas Election Code. The alleged violation involved a money swap between the now-defunct Texans for a Republican Majority PAC (TRMPAC), which DeLay helped found but never managed, and the Republican National State Elections Committee (RNSEC). TRMPAC sent a check for $190,000 to RNSEC, and RNSEC then sent checks totaling approximately the same amount to Texas House candidates in October of 2002. Earle, a Democrat, calls this money laundering, because the money that TRMPAC sent to RNSEC came from corporations, which are barred from contributing to campaigns in Texas. Earle is wrong. Before campaign-finance reform, this kind of soft-money for hard-money swap was perfectly legal and happened all the time. In October of 2002, the Texas Democratic party did the same thing when it sent $75,000 to the Democratic National Committee (DNC) and received $75,000 back from the DNC. Also, as former Department of Justice official Barbara Comstock noted yesterday, “Had corporations sent money directly to the RNC or RNSEC, the transaction would be legal. How could anyone conspire to do indirectly what could legally have been done directly?” Earle considers these transactions illegal because he thinks they should be, and he’s convinced a grand jury to play along with him. In addition, DeLay denies that he had anything to do with the (legal) transaction at issue. It strains credulity to think, as Earle apparently alleges, that the House Majority Leader was involved in the day-to-day mailing of checks by this PAC. |
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Ronnie Earle is gonna hang on this one. |
I'm sorry Joe, but that's not sufficient for me...a blog, opinion page....
you know what I mean? Just because a blogger says that doesn't mean it's true. Dates of these grand juries, what was presented, etc.....hell, even an interview with one of the previous jurors.... I'm deferring judgment until trial.....I want to actually see the evidence, not rely on suspicions, feelings.... |
LOL!
DeLay wasn't indicted by Earle. Stop the wailing and rending of garments. Let the courts decide. |
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Earle got indictments of 15 politicians -- 11 of whom were Democrats. But don't look for a rational response from the usual apologists here. Somehow, they'll find a way to invoke Clinton in 3 posts or less... |
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