-Caveat Lector-

"If infidelity is the test, there would be a number of members of Congress
that should resign," Rep. Christopher Shays (R-Conn.) said on CNN's "Late
Edition."


[Lol! Try *ALL* members of the House and Senate!!  I heard Ramsey last
night on CNN's Face the Nation.  Rock Creek Park will be the first to be
searched today by a large number of police academy cadets and recruits that
he called in to do the now nearly random searching as they begin to run out
of more productive leads to run.  Walsh (America's Most Wanted) was also a
guest on the show.  He said that his show's Sat night Levy segment
generated 160 seemingly decent leads.  While they wait forensic lab
results, the detectives will reinterview ppl and follow-up on most of the
AMW generated leads while the cadets/recrutes randomly search wider and
wider circles from Levy's apt.  Btw, for the ongoing FR thread on this
stuff, see: http://www.freerepublic.com/forum/a3b5272952a5b.htm .   --MS]



http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A1202-2001Jul15.html


Levy Looked Up Map Of a Rock Creek Site

Intern Was on Computer May 1, D.C. Police Say

By Allan Lengel and Sari Horwitz
Washington Post Staff Writers
Monday, July 16, 2001; Page B01


Chandra Levy looked up a map site on the Internet for the Klingle Mansion
in Rock Creek Park before logging off her laptop computer for the last
time, a senior police official said yesterday.

For more than three hours starting about 9:30 a.m. May 1, Levy was on her
computer, looking up the Rock Creek site and other locations as well as Web
pages for airline and train tickets to California, where she planned to
attend her graduation ceremony at the University of Southern California,
Executive Assistant Police Chief Terrance W. Gainer said.

Police said they are not sure whether Levy, 24, ever visited Klingle
Mansion, and they declined to disclose the other locations that she was
checking on the Internet. Levy was last seen at her D.C. health club April
30.

Meanwhile, as police released more details about her last known movements,
Senate Minority Leader Trent Lott (R-Miss.) called for Rep. Gary A. Condit
(D-Calif.), to resign if "these allegations are true" that he had a
romantic relationship with Levy, a recent intern at the U.S. Bureau of
Prisons who has been missing for 11 weeks.

"Infidelity is always unacceptable, but particularly when you have an
elected official involved in a position of trust with a young girl, an
intern," Lott said on "Fox News Sunday."


Marina Ein, a publicist for Condit, declined to comment on Lott's remarks.

According to sources, Condit -- whom police have interviewed three times --
told investigators in his most recent interview that he was having an
affair with Levy when she disappeared. Police have said that he is not a
suspect in what is still classified as a missing persons case.

Police have not ruled out suicide, homicide or the possibility that Levy
ran off on her own. But D.C. Police Chief Charles H. Ramsey said yesterday
on "Face the Nation" that he thought it unlikely that Levy was abducted by
a stranger because she was "a pretty cautious woman and just wasn't one to
just throw her door open to anybody if there was a knock at the door and
things like that."

Today, police plan to launch a two-week search throughout the city, using
about 50 police recruits to look for a body or a fresh burial spot in areas
where people picnic, park or have romantic liaisons, Gainer said.

The search will include the Klingle Mansion, the area of which police
searched about four weeks ago, Gainer said. The three-story, gray stone
Pennsylvania Dutch-style farmhouse, which was built in 1823, sits on a
weedy hill overlooking a block of large homes near a shallow wooded area.
It is a popular destination for dog walkers, bikers, hikers and joggers.

The mansion is about two miles north of Levy's apartment in the 1200 block
of 21st Street NW and about a mile from Adams Morgan, where she was known
to visit restaurants and Condit's apartment.

Gainer said police have also contacted the D.C. Taxicab Commission and
asked for all 1,600 registered drivers in the city to submit their logs
from April 30 to May 2 to see whether anyone took Levy to the mansion or
anywhere else. Levy did not have a car in the District.

As part of the probe, investigators, at the invitation of Condit's
attorney, Abbe D. Lowell, interviewed members of Condit's staff in recent
days. Over the weekend, they searched a car of a staff member who on more
than one occasion recently has picked up the congressman at his apartment,
Gainer said.

Many leads in the case have proved fruitless. Police examined a 911 call
made at 4:37 a.m. May 1 from a woman in Levy's apartment building who said
she heard a scream for help outside the building. Nothing was found. Gainer
said Levy appeared to have been on her computer five hours after the call,
leading police to believe it was not relevant to the case.

Police said they plan to release more information about Levy's movements in
hopes of jogging the memory of someone who may have seen her.

Condit told police that Levy last visited his apartment April 24 and that
the two spoke several times between then and April 29, when he last heard
from her, law enforcement sources said.

Lowell announced Friday that his client had passed a privately administered
polygraph in which the examiner asked whether Condit had any involvement in
Levy's disappearance.

But police, who had been talking through the week with Lowell about getting
Condit to take an FBI-administered polygraph, expressed skepticism about
the private test. They said an examiner needs to know the facts of the case
before questioning the subject and indicated that they still wanted Condit
to take a law enforcement-administered test.

Police said they have more questions to ask Condit in hopes of finding out
more about Levy's state of mind.

"He's not a suspect, but obviously he had a bigger role in her life than
many," Gainer said.

Gainer said polygraphs are not foolproof. "I can tell you, in my homicide
[detective] days, I had people who passed who were the murderers and I had
people who failed the polygraph and in fact were not the murderers," he
said. "It is not infallible."


Staff writers Petula Dvorak and Abhi Raghunathan contributed to this
report. Dvorak reported from Modesto, Calif.


� 2001 The Washington Post Company


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             Kadosh, Kadosh, Kadosh, YHVH, TZEVAOT

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