This cheap floosie - living off stolen tax payer dollars?

All properties and lands of this Rich should be confiscated and all bank
accounts tied up......so the guy did not take this excess baggage with
him, but she conducts business in his name along with Barak?

And all the time we thought the Mafia was Italian....you got to be
kidding.

Now if you pull up this picture of this woman under subject matter you
see she didn' exacly land with the Gentry - it is my hope they will
confiscate all goods and properties involved with this woman and her
husband - and all monies given to the Clintons - were stolen from the
American Taxpayers.

See Jesse Jackson holding up honest American business man and this is
just another bum who goes well with the Clintons and the rest of the
parasites who have been feeding off the poor and homeless....

This is the refuse which landed upon our shores.......remember the
little Church in Indianapolis and the IRS is going to confiscate their
tax exempt property

See what evil is personified......what the old rich used to call rich
trash - for that is what they are -  garbage on our shores.

These are snowbirds - bit time.
But still they are garbage on our shores.

Saba


Denise Rich indeed: Since 1993, the socialite has given more than $1.3
million in various political contributions to Bill and Hillary Clinton,
including $450,000 for the Clinton library in ArkansasA Pardon's PathThe
inquiry into Clinton's controversial decision to clear fugitive Marc
Rich heats up. What's nextBy Michael Isikoff

NEWSWEEK
    Feb. 19 issue �  Arthur Levitt Jr. didn't hide his feelings.
On the morning of Jan. 19, the day before Bill Clinton left office, the
Securities and Exchange Commission chairman got a phone call from a top
White House official. The official told Levitt that the president was
preparing a last-minute pardon for accused tax swindler Marc Rich. What
did he think?    
 
 
 
  "The man's a fugitive! This looks terrible."
� ARTHUR LEVITT JR.
SEC chairman          AFTER A QUICK CHECK with his staff, Levitt
called back. "The man's a fugitive!" he fumed. "This looks terrible."
The administration official sheepishly agreed. "Yeah," he said. "You're
right."
        Levitt wasn't alone in expressing early doubt at the
idea of pardoning Rich, who was charged with evading $48 million in
taxes and trading with Iran during the 1979 hostage crisis. White House
lawyers were concerned that the grounds for a pardon were shaky at best,
and would only lead to trouble. In the end, Clinton ignored them all.
But why? The former president, in New York exile, has insisted that he
granted the pardon strictly on the "merits," after hearing convincing
pleas from Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak and Rich's well-connected
attorney, former White House counsel Jack Quinn. "Once the facts are out
there," Clinton said, "people will understand what I did and why, even
if they may not agree with it."
Newsweek On Air: Unpardonable Pardons
       
MORE DUBIOUS THAN EVER
       He couldn't have been more wrong. If anything, the facts
in the case, which are now beginning to come out, have made the pardon
seem more dubious than ever. Last week the same Republican-led
congressional committee that spent years trying to unravel the Clinton
scandals began hearings into the Rich pardon, convinced that the
president acted wrongly and that laws may have been broken along the
way. The evidence and testimony strongly suggested that Rich and his
ex-wife Denise orchestrated a quiet campaign to persuade Clinton,
calling on foreign heads of state and a Nobel Peace Prize winner, and
hiring a lawyer with close personal ties to the president. Denise Rich
made sure she had the president's ear: since 1993 she had given more
than $1.3 million in various political contributions to Bill and
Hillary, including $450,000 for the Clinton library in Arkansas.
Congressional investigators want to know if Marc Rich was the
secret�and illegal�source of that cash. Since 1993 Denise Rich has
given more than $1.3 million in various political contributions to Bill
and Hillary, including $450,000 for the Clinton library in Arkansas.
        The latest Clinton mess has given an unexpected windfall
to the president's diehard political enemies, who seem delighted at the
opportunity to once again crank up the Washington scandal machinery. Yet
the former president also alienated and angered many on his own team by
deliberately keeping top aides and Justice Department officials in the
dark about the controversial pardon until it was too late. They, too,
are now demanding answers. NEWSWEEK has learned that Mary Jo White, the
U.S. attorney in Manhattan�where Rich was indicted in 1983 but never
prosecuted�is considering opening a criminal probe into the
contributions and gifts surrounding the pardon. White and the Justice
Department declined to comment, but sources close to White say the
hard-charging prosecutor is "livid" at not being consulted about the
pardon of a fugitive she hoped to bring to justice�and she is
determined not to let the matter drop. "I don't see how any prosecutor
could not look at this," says Morris (Sandy) Weinberg, the former
federal prosecutor who indicted Rich in 1983. Sources say White is
likely to pursue Denise Rich's bank records to determine if she was used
as a conduit for contributions from her ex-husband�who has renounced
his U.S. citizenship and may not be eligible to make political
donations. House Republicans are sending out subpoenas for the same
financial records. They also want the list of donors to the Clinton
library, but Clinton's lawyers have vowed to fight.
February 9 � Denise Rich isn't talking about why she is refusing to
answer questions from Congress about campaign contributions and access
to President Clinton. NBC's Pete Williams reports.
        Rep. Dan Burton, the Indiana Republican and Clinton
nemesis who called last week's hearings, wanted Denise Rich to come
before the committee and tell her side of the story. Instead, she
claimed her Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination and refused
to appear�a move that only added to speculation that she and others
involved in the pardon had something to hide. (Her lawyer, Carol Elder
Bruce, says Denise Rich "committed no wrongdoing with respect to the
pardon.") She was clearly more involved in her ex-husband's pardon than
she admitted at first. A remarkable flurry of e-mail, letters and
documents made public last week details of how Denise Rich, working with
a team of politically connected friends and Marc Rich's lawyers, worked
frantically to secure the pardon.
       
A LEGAL END RUN
       The pardon campaign's No. 1 rule: secrecy. "Frankly, I
think we benefit from not having the existence of the petition known,"
one of Marc Rich's lawyers, Robert Fink, wrote to Quinn on Dec. 26.
Rich's attorneys feared that if prosecutors found out about the pardon
they would raise strong objections and torpedo the deal. So Quinn went
around the usual process of filing a formal petition with the Justice
Department. Instead, he mentioned the matter to Deputy Attorney General
Eric Holder�who expressed regret last week for not paying closer
attention�and then took his case directly to the White House.
        One of Marc Rich's greatest assets was Denise, who first
wrote to Clinton on Dec. 6. She told the president that she supported
her ex-husband's pardon "with all my heart." Two weeks later the lawyers
planned a second emotional letter to be sent from Denise to Clinton.
Newsweek.MSNBC.com
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        Another key player in the effort was Denise Rich's
friend and fellow Democratic fund-raiser Beth Dozoretz, who apparently
appealed directly to Clinton. In a Jan. 10 e-mail, Fink told Quinn that,
according to Denise Rich, Dozoretz "got a call from POTUS," and Dozoretz
discussed the pardon with him. According to the e-mail, Clinton told
Dozoretz "that he wants to do it and is doing all possible to turn
around the WH counsels." (Dozoretz disputes that Clinton told her he was
trying to sway the lawyers.)
February 8 � NBC's Pete Williams reports on the legal procedures
behind presidential pardons.
        In their appeals to Clinton, Quinn and Denise Rich tried
to win sympathy for Rich by tapping into the president's own resentment
toward the zealous prosecutors who had dogged him for years. Quinn
portrayed Rich as the victim of a "highly publicized and aggressive
investigation." Denise Rich laid it on even thicker, saying she knew
"what it feels like to see the press try and convict the accused without
regard for the truth." Sources close to Clinton say these arguments hit
home. "I think Clinton wanted to pardon all of them," says one lawyer of
the applicants tugging on his sleeve. "He just can't stand law
enforcement." As he signed Rich's pardon, Clinton may have thought his
own troubles were at an end. If Republicans on the Hill and prosecutors
in New York have their way, the latest Clinton scandal may have just
begun.
       
       © 2001 Newsweek, Inc.
          
            
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