From: David Goldman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

>From Drudge:

DRUDGE REPORT
October 24, 1999

Author J.H. Hatfield�s Response to the Controversy Surrounding the
Publication and Recall of Fortunate Son: George W. Bush and the Making of an
American President

My recently published biography Fortunate Son: George W. Bush and the Making
of an American President is �scrupulously corroborated and sourced,� as
described by my publisher, St. Martin�s Press, in their own press release on
October 18. However, when an author writes about the current governor of
Texas and the front-runner for the U.S. presidency (whose father happens to
have been the former director of the CIA and the president of the United
States), it is amazing how quickly the smear campaign and character
assassination efforts can be mobilized.

On Monday October 18, I was in New York City promoting Fortunate Son.
Although John Murphy, the head of the publisher�s publicity department, had
previously promised they could arrange an appearance by me on the Today
show, Good Morning America, and interviews with most major news outlets in
the country (I even taped a segment for the CBS Evening News with Dan
Rather), we quickly found ourselves running into a virtual news blackout and
lack of media coverage of the release of my new biography of the leading
presidential candidate George W. Bush. St. Martin�s Press, a respectable
publisher who had previously published the Barbara Bush�s best-selling
memoirs and Monica Lewinsky�s story, were told repeatedly �off the record�
by news agencies that the George W. Bush presidential campaign was putting
pressure on the news organizations to NOT give my biography any coverage.

Two days after the book tour began, the emphasis of the story changed from
presidential front-runner George W. Bush to biographer J.H. Hatfield. From
the beginning of civilization, if you wanted to destroy the message, you had
to destroy the messenger. And, quite frankly, that has happened this week.
Not only have I been attacked repeatedly in the news media and harassed to
the point that I was forced to send my wife, and less-than-a-month-old baby
girl into hiding, the publisher took the unprecedented step of not only
suspending publication of the book (there are 90,000 copies in print), but
also recalling it from bookstores because St. Martin�s Press called into
question their ability to trust the information provided to them by the
author.

>From Midland to Dallas to Houston, I spent over a year researching Fortunate
Son, interviewing hundreds of George W. Bush�s friends, college classmates,
business associates, political colleagues, employees, acquaintances�all who
graciously contributed their time, knowledge, and experiences. Thomas Dunne,
whose division and imprint published the biography for St. Martin�s Press,
told a reporter on Monday, October 18, that the book had been �carefully
fact-checked and scrutinized by lawyers.� Actually, during my stay in New
York earlier in the week to promote the book�s publication on October 19, my
editor Barry Neville, and others, told me that I didn�t realize the extent
of this book�s legal review by not only the publisher�s in-house counsel,
but also the company�s outside legal firm, Levine Sullivan & Koch of
Washington, D.C. Supposedly, I was a �dream author� who kept meticulous
notes and background material exhaustively researched. I have been
complimented repeatedly for the almost sixty pages of source notes in the
last pages of the biography, which, incidentally, the publisher�s legal
representatives�both in-house and outside attorneys�reviewed after the
manuscript was completed.

The Bush family responded directly to Fortunate Son at least a month ago,
when one of their representatives called my publisher in regards to an
allegation we made in the book that George W.�s engagement to Cathryn Lee
Wolfman in 1967 was called off due to pressure from the elder Bushes because
the prospective bride�s stepfather was Jewish. In the interest of balanced
reporting, we added a footnote to the book before it went to press that the
Bush family �vehemently denied this explanation� for the young couple�s
breakup, even though we stood by our sources who stated otherwise.

On Saturday, October 16, my publisher and I were informed that George W.
Bush had a copy of Fortunate Son�s twelve-page Afterword, in which we
alleged through three informed sources that he had been arrested for cocaine
possession in 1972 and had his record expunged by a Houston judge after he
worked as a youth counselor for several months at Project P.U.L.L., where
his father was a heavy contributor and honorary chairman. Because the word
�expunge� is defined as �to blot or strike out; erase,� this created
significant problems for me as a biographer. I had to rely on the informed,
but confidential testimony of three sources close to the Texas governor who
were knowledgeable of the cocaine possession charge against Bush when he was
a younger man. In a court of law, attorneys rely on documentary evidence and
sometimes more heavily on the testimony of witnesses. The Afterword to the
Bush biography relied solely on the irrefutable testimony of three sources
close to the governor and because of that proof I came under attack. But
these are informed sources who had previously aided with the writing of the
biography in other areas of Bush�s life and their testimony was always
corroborated by other documentary evidence or other sources.

Cited confidential sources appear every day in newspapers and magazines
around the world. While flying to New York, I was reading U.S. News and
World Report, a respected weekly newsmagazine, and noted in an article on
the current rivalry between the F.B.I and Janet Reno�s Justice Department,
that an unnamed White House staffer stated that the FBI had been attempting
to damage the Clinton administration for some time. In another article in
that same magazine, an unnamed Bush campaign official was quoted as saying
that former Defense Secretary Dick Cheney was on the short-list of possible
running mates with Bush if he received the Republican presidential
nomination. If it wasn�t for that mysterious, shadowy figure, Deep Throat,
who assisted Washington Post reporters, Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, we
may have never learned the truth about Watergate and Richard Nixon may never
have been forced to resign. Because of their proven credibility and close
attachment to George W. Bush himself, I stand by my sources and the
allegations we make in his biography regarding the cocaine possession charge
in 1972 and the subsequent expunging of the arrest after he performed
community service. And although my publisher urged me to violate my
journalistic principles and confidentiality agreement with my sources and
provide their names to various news agencies in hopes of advancing publicity
for Fortunate Son, I steadily declined.

I have received hundreds of e-mails this week from concerned Americans
questioning why the elder Bush, the former president, felt compelled to give
an exclusive interview with the Fox News Channel to discuss my biography and
the charges I make, and why the publisher took the unprecedented step of
recalling what they termed �furnace fodder� while the book was on the top 10
of Amazon.com�s best-seller list. Although my CHARACTER has certainly been
called into question, my CREDIBILITY as a biographer cannot be debated
because this �scrupulously corroborated� (the publisher�s own words)
biography was exhaustively researched by the author and fact-checked
numerous times by several lawyers representing my publisher.

What does Fortunate Son: George W. Bush and the Making of an American
President contain within its covers that the presidential front-runner, and
now evidently my publisher, doesn�t want you to read? It could be any one of
the following:

*How George W. avoided the draft at the height of the war in Vietnam and
remained stateside in the National Guard through the assistance of a Houston
businessman and close Bush family friend;

*Bush's partnerships with controversial Middle Eastern money men (including
the family fortune of Saudi terrorist, Osama bin laden), whose enormous
financial sources were used to underwrite his oil drilling ventures in
Texas;

*How he transformed a $606,000 investment in the Texas Rangers major league
baseball team into a multimillion dollar profit in less than a ten years;

*The intimate details behind Rev. Billy Graham�s role in Bush's religious
conversion and why he quit drinking alcohol on his 40th birthday;

*Bush's behind-the-scenes role as his father's chief troubleshooter and
�loyalty enforcer� during the 1988 presidential race; and the same role in
1992 when the politically instinctive Bush was the first adviser to focus on
the seriousness of Texas billionaire H. Ross Perot�s grassroots candidacy,
arguing that he was entering the race largely to fulfill his personal
vendetta against the president and was �trying to steal away� some key
states; along with former president Gerald Ford attempted to persuade his
father to dump the seemingly hapless Dan Quayle (�another political
liability�) from the Republican ticket; urged his father to bring back media
adviser Roger Ailes, and �go ballistic� in negative television ads attacking
Clinton like they successfully did against Michael Dukakis in 1988; advised
the reelection effort to focus on Perot�s opposition to the Gulf War, his
support of abortion rights, and the $146,550 he and his family had given to
congressional campaigns since 1978; talked the elder Bush into going to
Bentonville, Arkansas, �home of Wal-Mart and Clinton�s own backyard,� to
present the company�s founder, the revered and terminally-ill Sam Walton,
with the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation�s highest civilian award;
and implored his father to �green light� the use of GOP private
investigators who wanted to track down rumors of young black women Clinton
had allegedly impregnated in south Arkansas while he was the state�s
attorney general;

*Charges of insider trading and subsequent SEC investigations after Bush
sold almost a million dollars' worth of oil company stock a week prior to
the end of a quarter in which the firm posted a $23 million loss;

*Why his business partners have profited enormously while he has served as
governor;

*Bush's record as a "compassionate conservative," which has proven to be
merely another way of packaging the right-wing agenda and old-fashioned
intolerance;

*Details of his well-planned, long-considered strategy to win the White
House in 2000.

As pointed out earlier, Fortunate Son: George W. Bush and the Making of an
American President was fact-checked, corroborated by documentary evidence
and the testimony of numerous sources by several in-house and outside
attorneys representing St. Martin�s Press, who remarked in their press
release upon the book�s publication: �No other book this season will be as
balanced or impartial in its portrait of George W. Bush as Fortunate Son.
The author�s insights will be invaluable to anyone who wants to make an
informed decision come Election Day.�

Thanks to the Dallas Morning News (which ironically employs a reporter who
has written the only other competing George Bush biography at this time), my
credibility has come under attack this week, but in my defense I must quote
my former editor at Kensington Publishing Company, Tracy Bernstein, who
edited my first six books and stated in the October 21 edition of the
on-line magazine Salon.com: �I found Jim Hatfield to be a tireless worker
who I could count on to always deliver, and in every way an easy author to
work with,� she said. �Most of the books we worked on concerned pop-culture
trivia, but even those books had a certain amount of �backstage� info about
the stars, creators or what have you. So those books, as well the Patrick
Stewart bio, were vetted by our lawyers and anything that was questioned he
had reputable sources for. I thus never had cause to doubt his
professionalism or honesty.�

Although, in the span of a few, short days, Fortunate Son rose to the top 10
of the best-seller list, the book�s success certainly took its toll on me
personally and my family. My credibility as a biographer and author of eight
books was questioned, but worse, my character was fiercely battered and
beaten. Was it all worth it? I must answer with a definitive �no.� Keeping
that in mind, I will not appear on 60 Minutes or a host of other national
television shows or grant interviews to Newsweek or the Wall Street
Journal�all who offered me an opportunity to �tell my side of the story.�
Simply stated, I don�t have a story to tell. I did not write an
autobiography of J.H. Hatfield. I wrote an even-balanced, but unflinching
biography of possibly the next president of the United States. That should
be the topic of discussion�not me. Please return your attention to Fortunate
Son and question why the emphasis shifted from George W. Bush to J.H.
Hatfield. As Confederate General Robert E. Lee once said, �When you�re too
weak to defend, you must attack.�

Please allow my wife, new baby, and me to continue with our lives because
after a family discussion (and against the advice of legal counsel and
publicists who wanted to put a successful �spin� on this story), we have
decided to take the �high road� and not dignify the press accounts regarding
my character. I can provide background material on my life today, tomorrow,
and the next day, but it would never be enough to satisfy the media and I
would remain the center of the story, rather than George W. Bush. We�re not
discussing character. We�re discussing credibility and Fortunate Son, a
definitive biography of Bush, speaks volumes about my credibility as an
author and, more importantly, his credibility as a candidate for president
of the United States. Quite frankly, my family and I are disturbed by the
fact that we�re on defensive while no one is questioning the presidential
front-runner. Why does he continue to refuse to answer allegations about
past drug use? Rather than me, what is George W. Bush hiding in his past?
What does that say about this country and the real issues when the media is
more obsessed with the life of the biographer instead of the subject of the
biography?

Therefore, we will have nothing further to say about this book or the
allegations regarding my own past. I am not the one running for office, I am
not a presidential candidate, and I am not the subject of a biography.
Please refocus your attention on the appropriate person and determine if
George W. Bush should be elected to the highest political office in the
United States. As I point out in Fortunate Son: �The only thing most voters
know for certain about Bush is who his parents are. It�s way past time that,
not only Texans, but the rest of America begins to learn more�a lot
more�about the younger Bush, the man who would be a second-generation
president."

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