The following is from Archibald Cox's obituary at Washingtonpost.com

That fuck Bork fired Special Prosecutor Cox. 

That is why Bork never made the Supreme Court.

xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx


"...An angry Nixon demanded Cox's firing. But Attorney General 
Elliot Richardson, who had recruited Cox as the Watergate special 
prosecutor, refused to carry out the president's order. He resigned, 
as did his deputy, William D. Ruckelshaus. Robert H. Bork, who as 
solicitor general was the third-ranking officer of the Justice 
Department, dismissed Cox. 

Almost overnight, from Capitol Hill and in the national media, came 
the sounds of protest and dismay. Sen. Barry M. Goldwater (Ariz.), 
one of the most influential Republicans in Congress, declared that 
Nixon's credibility "has reached an all-time low from which he may 
not be able to recover." 

In the House of Representatives, members introduced 22 bills calling 
for the impeachment of the president or an investigation into 
impeachment proceedings. More than a million telegrams demanding 
impeachment poured into congressional offices. 

Newspaper editorial writers and columnists made somber references to 
an "attempted coup d'etat." Cox appeared on the cover of Newsweek 
magazine, wearing his trademark bow tie, neatly knotted as always. 
Time had photos of Cox and the president facing each other over the 
caption, "Nixon on the Brink." 

The firing of Cox, on Oct. 20, 1973, came at a time of high 
turbulence and political unrest. The Watergate scandal was 
increasingly engulfing the Nixon presidency. A summer of televised 
hearings on Capitol Hill had produced a steady flow of testimony 
suggesting burglary, lies, duplicity and criminality at the highest 
levels..."

--- In cia-drugs@yahoogroups.com, "E Bryant Holman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:
> No he can't. Why didn't Clinton just fire Starr? No one can fire a 
special prosecutor. He was hired just for that reason.
>   ----- Original Message ----- 
>   From: james Karl 
>   To: cia-drugs@yahoogroups.com 
>   Sent: Tuesday, August 02, 2005 11:36 AM
>   Subject: Re: [cia-drugs] Tom Heneghen report on July 17
> 
> 
>   Bullshit.  Bush as President can fire any US Attorney.
> 
>   Linda Minor <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 
>     This show aired before the disclosure about the actual 
indictments reported by Flocco.
>     =======
> 
>     http://www.total911.info/2005/07/tenet-under-investigation-for-
pre-911.html
>     Tom Heneghen reports to Cloak & Dagger Internet Radio (late of 
50,000-watt blowtorch CFMJ-AM) that a trusted "source close to the 
Fitzgerald investigation" says the independent prosecutor is looking 
into former CIA Director George Tenet's role in pre-9/11 put options 
placed on American Airlines.
> 
>     Previous editions of Cloak & Dagger reported that the special 
prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald has taken his investigation beyond who 
named Valerie Plame as a CIA agent into who frauded up claims that 
Saddam Hussien was seeking yellowcake uranium and, ultimately, the 
9/11 scam. 
> 
>     C&D correspondent Tom Heneghen reported on the July 17 show 
that Fitzgerald is looking into insider trading on airline stocks 
before 9/11. Heneghen reports that over the three trading days 
before 9/11 on the Chicago Board of Options 4,516 put options (bets 
the price would tank) were placed on American Airlines stock vs only 
748 call options (bets the price would go up).
> 
>     According to C&D, Fitzgerald is investigating Tenet's role in 
connection to Buzzy Krongard, a former No. 3 at the CIA, and that 
man's relation to the 2,157 airline options placed through Morgan 
Stanley/Dean Witter, located on 22 floors of the WTC.
>     ============
>     Texas money laundering operation involving Hunts
>     Philippines
>     V.K. Durham trust
>     Beverly Enterprises and Stephens, Inc.--45 nursing home 
associates--Mena, Ark.
>     bogus gold cert.
>     Brady Bond fraud
>     Wachovia Bank
>     assassinations--William Doonesbury and ____ ?
>     offshoot of Muslim Brotherhood
>     financial and operational terrorist fraud
>     leaker to Judith Miller
>     Bolton cables and intercepts with Uzbekistan
>     hedge fund in London involving two "suicides" in NY
>     James Warren at Chicago Trib is obstructing justice
>     Chicago Mercantile
>     Roger Morris, NSC--Air Force One signal of Bush and Cheney 
talking about Valerie Plame
>     Leo Wanta letter to Dick Cheney about Philippine money --
linked to Wachovia Bank
>     Marc Rich
>     Russian Mafiya
>     Arrest of "E.P" in London, money laundered through Denmark
>     If Bush fires Patrick Fitzgerald, it will set P.F. free to 
talk.
>     white-skinned Moslems in Texas
>     Arrests in London are the same as what went on in NY after 
9/11 to shut up people who knew too much
>     Subway bombs were underneath the trains and could not have 
been planted by the youths they arrested.
>     Private company, mock drill, piggy-backed with actual bombing.
>     P-2 and Calipari, who was assassinated in Iraq.
>     Niger's embassy broken into and papers stolen
>     Bush is desperate to fire Fitz., but can't.  Indictments will 
open up the whole money laundering network.
>     Throughout the tape, there has been no mention of any sources 
for the information--where any leaks are coming from other than 
documents submitted by Tom Heneghen.
> 
>     =======
>     
http://www.uow.edu.au/arts/sts/bmartin/dissent/documents/health/bever
ly_arkansas.html
> 
>     A Rose Law Firm Deal, Revisited
>     The Wall Street Journal PAGE A20 - - - 03/15/1994
>     Jonathan Roos
>     (Copyright (c) 1994, Dow Jones & Co., Inc.)
> 
>     The following is reprinted with permission from the Des Moines 
Register of June 13, 1993. A related editorial appears nearby {see 
related editorial: "Review & Outlook (Editorial): Who Was Webster 
Hubbell? -- I" -- WSJ March 15, 1994}.
> 
>     When Hillary Rodham Clinton complained in a recent speech 
about profiteering in the health care industry, she could have found 
a ready example in the role one of her former Arkansas law partners 
played in an Iowa nursing-homes deal that made millions for the deal 
makers.
> 
>     William H. Kennedy III, a partner in the Rose Law Firm of 
Little Rock and now associate counsel to President Clinton, 
shepherded the deal for Beverly Enterprises, a giant nursing-home 
company that paired up with a Texas banker to sell its Iowa and 
Arkansas nursing homes.
> 
>     Forty-one Iowa homes were acquired four years ago by a 
nonprofit corporation, now known as Care Initiatives, that was 
effectively controlled by the banker, Bruce Whitehead. The deal was 
financed by $86 million in tax-exempt revenue bonds.
> 
>     Whitehead and the bond underwriters took up-front profits 
exceeding $15 million.
> 
>     Beverly, which needed cash to reduce its crippling debt, made 
about $10 million.
> 
>     "Kennedy was involved in the whole thing, period. He was the 
point man for Beverly," says Frank Pechacek, a Council Bluffs lawyer 
who investigated the deal for county assessors. The assessors were 
contesting Care Initiatives' claim to property tax exemptions for 
its nursing homes in about 30 counties.
> 
>     Kennedy could not be reached for comment.
> 
>     Other Rose Law Firm partners who now work in the Clinton 
administration may have been involved, too. Webster Hubbell, who 
holds the No. 3 slot in the Justice Department {Mr. Hubbell resigned 
yesterday}, listed Beverly Enterprises among his 26 Rose Law Firm 
clients.
> 
>     Vincent Foster Jr., deputy counsel to the president, 
represented Stephens Inc., a Little Rock investment-banking firm 
that owns 10% of Beverly's stock. Beverly hired Stephens to find a 
buyer for many of its nursing homes. The search led Beverly to 
Whitehead.
> 
>     "There was absolutely no way that these people didn't know 
what was going on," said Roy Drew, a former Stephens broker and an 
independent investment adviser whose criticism of a similar nursing-
home transaction in Arkansas involving Beverly, Whitehead and a 
nonprofit corporation helped touch off a political furor that 
scuttled the deal.
> 
>     No one is saying that nursing-home company executives, 
lawyers, bankers or others involved in the Iowa homes' sale acted 
illegally. In fact, great care was taken to dot the i's and cross 
the t's on the contracts.
> 
>     But critics of the transaction have complained of profiteering.
> 
>     Said Drew: " Rose Law Firm made it legal, but it didn't have 
anything to do with what was right or fair to taxpayers or people in 
nursing homes. It had only to do with getting Beverly and Stephens 
Inc. off the hook."
> 
>     Last month, the Iowa Supreme Court upheld District Judge Gene 
Needles's denial of Care Initiatives' request for an exemption from 
paying property taxes on its nursing homes. Total taxes on the homes 
exceed $800,000 a year.
> 
>     Needles and the Supreme Court sided with county assessors in 
concluding that Care Initiatives did not meet the tests of a 
charitable institution.
> 
>     Said Needles, "Care Initiatives is a `shell' nonprofit 
corporation used by Bruce H. Whitehead and the bond underwriters to 
obtain the financing necessary to enable them to make millions of 
dollars of excessive profits."
> 
>     Whitehead and lawyers for Care Initiatives contended that the 
profits were reasonable, given the size of the deal and the 
financial risk involved.
> 
>     Court records and transcripts of testimony by Whitehead and 
his lawyer show that Kennedy looked after the interests of Beverly 
Enterprises. He prepared the financial documents and negotiated with 
Whitehead and other parties to the Iowa and Arkansas nursing-home 
deals.
> 
>     Whitehead testified that the nation's largest operator of 
nursing homes "was having severe financial difficulty. They needed 
to raise cash desperately because of the financial problems they 
were having."
> 
>     In 1988, Beverly sought to sell off its nursing homes in Iowa, 
South Dakota, Nebraska and Arkansas. But finding a buyer and 
conventional financing for the sale would be difficult.
> 
>     Whitehead, the Texas banker, was interested in only the Iowa 
and Arkansas homes. A proposed sale agreement prepared by Kennedy 
called for a company controlled by Whitehead to buy Beverly's Iowa 
and Arkansas homes for about $115 million.
> 
>     The Iowa portion of the deal was sealed in the summer of 1989. 
Whitehead's Ventana Investments bought the Iowa nursing homes for 
$57 million as part of a two-step transaction that left Whitehead a 
hefty profit. The homes were then sold to nonprofit Care Initiatives 
(known then as Mercy Health Initiatives) for $63.5 million.
> 
>     The money was borrowed through the sale of $86 million in tax-
exempt revenue bonds that the Iowa Finance Authority, a public 
agency, agreed to issue.
> 
>     The Iowa Finance Authority served as a conduit; no state money 
was loaned. Nursing-home revenue is used to repay investors who 
purchased the bonds.
> 
>     The Iowa transaction caused no ripples. At a public hearing, 
Whitehead assured the Iowa Finance Authority board that the Beverly 
employees in Iowa would keep their jobs. At a follow-up meeting 
conducted over the telephone, the board voted unanimously to 
authorize the bond sale.
> 
>     "There was the belief that there was a danger that some of 
those {nursing homes} could have closed," said Ted Chapler, 
executive director of the Iowa Finance Authority.
> 
>     The lost jobs would have dealt an economic blow to the rural 
communities where the nursing homes are located, said Chapler, who 
was the finance authority's general counsel when the bond sale was 
approved by the group's board and Gov. Terry Branstad.
> 
>     Care Initiatives employs 2,800 workers in Iowa. Its nursing 
homes have 3,200 residents.
> 
>     The sale of 36 nursing homes in Arkansas was to be financed in 
the same way, using $81 million in revenue bonds and another 
nonprofit corporation that had been set up for Whitehead. He stood 
to gain $4 million from the transaction. But during the fall of 1989 
the deal unraveled.
> 
>     The Arkansas Development Finance Authority, which had become 
an important economic tool for then-Gov. Bill Clinton, initially 
supported the proposed bond sale but backed away as criticism of the 
deal mounted. When Bob Nash, president of the Arkansas agency, 
recommended rejecting the deal, Whitehead challenged him to a fist 
fight, according to Little Rock news accounts. Whitehead later 
testified in the Iowa property-tax case that he lost over $2 million 
in Arkansas.
> 
>     Clinton, who had the last word in killing the deal, was 
brushed by the controversy but suffered no lasting political damage. 
He was re-elected governor in 1990.
> 
>     There have been changes in Iowa since the deal. Last year, 
Care Initiatives severed its ties with Whitehead and his nursing-
home management company. Duncan Graham, the firm's president, says 
Care Initiatives now is managing the nursing homes itself.
> 
>     He says the move should strengthen the firm's new bid for 
property-tax exemptions for its Iowa homes. That's expected to touch 
off another court battle.
> 
>     Copyright (c) 1999 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights 
Reserved.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
>   End the oppression of cannabis and its consumers. Self defense 
is always correct, and it is never illegal.  b_jb2001
> 
> 
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> 
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