-Caveat Lector-

Richie Rich aka Marc Rich aka Marc Reich is obviously Jewish Mafia and
one of the biggest crooks to hit this county since the others named in
the item attached hereto.     Does Rich have anything to do with the
billions of dollars the Israelies now hold in form of diamonds?
Remember thIs FBI spy just paid in part in diamondns?

This has been all tax free money for the Rich garbage while Palestinians
are being murdered daily - their land stolen from them by neo nazis
working with Hitler?  By their fruits we shall know them all.   They
have made Amrica land of Sodomists and den of vipers.

When people realize how he has personally hurt so many Americans
personally and when the realize what this association is between his
wife an the President - the idea now is to put the sex back in the
routine, probably sodomy and all, to lead people away from the truth and
the truth is you cannoo hurt these people with charges of sodomy you can
only hurt them by taking back that which is yours to take - the billoins
of dollars stolen from theAmerican Public and this includes Rich's
attempt to destroy the Steelworkers Union.

Do you or does anybody want garbage like this manipulating the lives of
Americans some who died in a WWII to protect these bastards and you
wonder how an Adolph Hitler came into power?

Saba

Take a look at our social network diagram that displays connections
among the 100 names that appear most frequently in the books described
below. You may also get a name index and availability information for
any of these books.
Scandals / Wall Street
Bruck, Connie. The Predators' Ball: The Inside Story of Drexel Burnham
and the Rise of the Junk Bond Raiders. New York: Penguin Books, 1989.
399 pages.
This book, originally published in 1988 by Simon and Schuster, was the
first to blow the whistle on Michael Milken. Connie Bruck, a staff
writer for the New York Times, worked on it for two and a half years,
and interviewed almost 300 people. Fred Joseph, CEO at Drexel, agreed to
cooperate with Bruck in February, 1986 -- a time when the business press
universally admired Drexel for their ability to turn junk into gold.
Drexel felt unassailable, and for months Bruck kept scribbling while
they kept bragging. Then in November, 1986, Ivan Boesky pleaded guilty
to insider trading and Drexel circled their wagons. Milken offered Bruck
$250,000 not to publish the book, while Milken's attorney Arthur Liman
(remember Iran-contra?) obtained a copy of the manuscript despite Simon
and Schuster's security precautions, and planned an all-out
counterattack with the help of Linda Robinson and her PR firm.
Bruck says that when she started this book, her sympathies were more
with Milken than with the corporate establishment that Milken was
attacking. It was her willingness to be driven by the evidence that
caused Jason McManus, Time Inc.'s editor in chief, to regard this book
as "the finest piece of business investigative journalism since the
turn-of-the-century muckrakers, Lincoln Steffens and Upton Sinclair."
Copetas, A. Craig. Metal Men: Marc Rich and the 10-Billion-Dollar Scam.
New York: Harper & Row (Perennial Library), 1986. 224 pages.
Marc Rich started as a "metal man," a specialized form of commodity
trading that deals in mineral resources. Of the eighty natural metals in
the earth, forty are of industrial importance, and are bought and sold
on the open market by traders. Innocent investors speculate on price
fluctuations, while the metal men -- known for their wheeling and
dealing -- might bribe foreign officials, start market rumors, or play
tricks on other traders. Marc Rich did all of the above and more, and
made $10 billion in the process. He started in 1954 at Philipp Brothers
Trading, and by the 1970s was making huge profits for them by venturing
into the spot oil market. At the end of 1973 he and Pincus (Pinky) Green
left to form their own empire. They hired away some of Philipp Brothers'
more aggressive traders -- the young high- rollers who thrived on
cocaine and casual sex in the fast lane. Operating from New York,
London, and Switzerland, Rich was in a league where one country is
played off against another, with shadowy deals washed through Panamanian
shell companies and dripped into off-shore banks. In the early 1980s,
the U.S. went after Rich for tax evasion and oil-pricing scams. But as
of 1994, he was living comfortably in Zug, Switzerland, where he is so
important to the local economy that the Swiss legal system still refuses
to extradite him.
Stein, Benjamin J. A License to Steal: The Untold Story of Michael
Milken and the Conspiracy to Bilk the Nation. New York: Simon &
Schuster, 1992. 221 pages.
Benjamin J. Stein's coverage of Michael Milken and Drexel was the first
to reveal the extent of the junk bond problem. By the time this book was
published, Milken was nearly out of jail -- his expensive lawyers had
already convinced the judge to lessen his sentence from ten years to two
years. Stein began noticing Milken and Drexel in the mid-1980s, received
a death threat from a Drexel hotshot in 1988, and was trashed a few
years later in a book by Jesse Kornbluth -- a biography arranged by
Milken's publicist Ken Lerer that claimed Milken wasn't really
interested in money.
Stein is a lawyer, an economist who knows finance, a good writer, and
someone who has a social ethic that goes beyond private profiteering. He
might be the only such person in America who can get an occasional book
published. He compares Milkenism to organized crime in its "use of
underworld tactics of the con and the shakedown, the swindle and the
heist, in the world of finance on a national and international scale."
If the gruff, cagey Mafia hoods who testified at the Kefauver hearings
in 1950 had been slick enough to work in "legitimate" business instead
of street-corner gambling and loan-sharking, how much more money would
they have been able to make? "Now we know," writes Stein. (page 187)
Stewart, James B. Den of Thieves. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1991. 494
pages.
In the early 1960s, students at UC Berkeley spent their summers
registering black voters in the south; in 1964 they started the Free
Speech Movement and in 1969 it was People's Park. But in 1986 Berkeley
seniors voted to invite Ivan Boesky to speak at their commencement.
Boesky, who had never been to college, looked up from his text and said,
"Greed is all right, by the way. I want you to know that. I think that
greed is healthy. You can be greedy and still feel good about yourself."
The students broke into spontaneous applause.
Boesky, at the time worth $130 million, was convicted of insider
trading. He helped finger Michael Milken, who was worth $700 million
when he was released from prison after serving two years of a ten-year
sentence. Meanwhile the 1986 class is having trouble finding jobs, and
when it comes time for them to invest in their children's education, a
good portion of their income will still be paying for the S & L deficit
-- which was partially caused by Milken's junk-bond trading. It all
fits.
Den of Thieves is basically a biography of Boesky, Milken, Dennis
Levine, and Martin Siegel -- all convicted for Wall Street crimes.
Author James Stewart, an editor at the Wall Street Journal, makes Oliver
Stone look like he was guilty of understatement in his movie "Wall
Street."   Are these men all Zionists or just the Jews who say they are
jews and are not.

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