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GARY CONDIT:
A PANICKED PAY PHONE CALL FROM CAVERN COUNTRY
(AND OTHER STENCH FROM THE SKUNK WORKS)


By: Todd� Brendan Fahey


It is an odd juxtaposition: just as the FBI is transferring the Chandra Levy
investigation to its "Cold Case Unit" (the one that did such a good job
solving the death of Vince Foster), with the explanation that, or so CBS's
Jon Stewart is reporting, "local police have put an inappropriate emphasis on
the role of Congressman Gary Condit, D-Calif., in the case," humble armchair
sleuths have learned that Congressman Gary Condit made a panicked-telephone
call (the "I think I might be in some trouble" call) to stewardess-cum-galpal
Anne Marie Smith, from a pay phone in front of a McDonald's fast-food joint
way out in Luray, Virginia., at the edge of the Blue Ridge Mountains--some 80
miles from his Washington D.C. digs.

Posters at FreeRepublic.com, hearing this odd tidbit as reported on FoxNews,
July 17th (with Rita Cosby continuing to perform a genuine public service in
keeping the world to-date on this story), uncovered some strange facts about
Luray, Virginia:

--that it is some 80 miles away from his Washington D.C. digs

--that it is renowned for its caverns (according to restaurant and motel-desk
area travel brochures) (a Google search for Luray, Virginia, will produce all
sorts of references to the "famous Luray Caverns")

--that it is reputed to be a haven for motorcycle gangs, of the 1%er
variety...

And because the media and investigators, incredibly, have not followed
through with the basic question, that being: "Congressman, What was the
purpose of your visit to a remote part of Virginia, a long way away from your
Congressional office, and how did you get there, and why did you feel
compelled to call Anne Marie Smith from a pay phone in front of a McDonald's
restaurant, to say that you `think I might be in some trouble'; and,
specifically, what was the nature of that `trouble' that you felt you might
be in?"; ...because no one else is asking these questions, I thought I would
take the time to do so, now.

Additionally, the good Congressman from Modesto, California, has yet to make
a public statement, other than his initial half-truth, that he and intern
Chandra Levy were "good friends"; but he made a potentially huge misstep
whilst attempting to recall his own schedule during the last day of Ms.
Levy's last known day on this Earth; to wit:


--Condit was NOT with "off-air" ABC reporter Rebecca Lynch from between
6:30-7:30pm, May 1, as was previously reported to Washington D.C. police by
Condit's chief of staff Mike Lynch, who, on June 29, released a timeline of
the Congressman's activities during the days in question. The restaurant
meeting, which ostensibly served as a discussion between Condit and reporter
Cooper on various House Agriculture committee goings-on, took play on May
2--two days AFTER Levy was last seen, and a day after the last known activity
coming from her cell-phone or computer via the Internet). Here we have one
full hour unaccounted for by Gary Condit on the day that Levy might have left
this Earth and a bald-faced "error" in Condit's timeline, as offered by his
chief of staff to D.C. police. Furthermore, according to Su-Lin Nichols, a
spokesperson for ABC News, Ms. Cooper has "not been contacted by any law
enforcement authorities." (Source material condensed from "Washington's
Incurious Police")

--We do know that Mr. Condit met with Vice President Dick Cheney at 12:30pm,
May 1, in a meeting that has been put at roughly 45 minutes in duration by
White House sources; but the timeline released by chief of staff Mike Lynch
reveals that there is no evidence of the whereabouts of his boss from between
1:15 and 3:30pm, when he was seen attending a constituents' meeting. Recall:
Ms. Levy's last known activity (or the last activity reported by her computer
log) was 1:30pm.

There is also a question as to the roughly 60 minutes that Mr. Condit is
supposed to have spent at a doctor's office later that same day (May 1), from
between 5:00 and 6:00pm. Were I Washington D.C. police and/or FBI, I would
want to know the doctor's name, address, the purpose of the Congressman's
visit, and would, of course, want to verify with said physician and attendant
nurses/receptionist that Condit was, indeed, present at the doctor's office
during this period.

In sum: Gary Condit, clearly the strongest non-suspect in this case, and who
had maintained a sexual relationship with Chandra Levy, has fully three and
one-half hours of unexplained absences in his schedule, on the day that
Chandra Levy--who was, as the media has just revealed, surfing Condit's House
Agriculture Committee Web site and also various media sites, including
Washington City Paper, Washington Post and the Drudge Report --is last
reported to have been alive.

It is curious that still available online in the Washington City Paper, is an
in-depth 1999 story of another dead intern
, one Joyce Chiang. At 26, young
and sexy (FBI profilers, are you paying attention?), Ms. Chiang, who interned
for Rep. Howard Berman (D-CA), in an office then- directly adjacent to the
office of Congressman Gary Condit, was last seen at a Starbucks coffee shop
in Dupont Circle, January 9, 1999; on April 1, a paddling canoeist found
Chiang's corpse washed up against some boulders at the edge of the Potomac,
south of Belle Haven Marina in Fairfax County. There is not much more to be
said about the similarities between the two interns, other than that Chiang
had also left behind in her apartment her pager (Levy, her cell phone); and,
that the last call Chiang received on that pager was from a pay phone at
Dulles Airport. To-date, D.C. police have never identified Chiang's last
phone call.

Gary Condit is fairly infamous among his own staff, and the staffs of past
official positions he has held, for "checking out" at odd intervals, "going
incognito," as one of his staff called his behavior recently. Stewardess Anne
Marie Smith says that he wore disguises--different hats and
sunglasses--during their public outings. And, most coincidentally, Chandra
Levy's aunt, Linda Zamsky, revealed to investigators that her niece would
frequently contact her Congressional beau by means of a beeper, or pager, to
a secret number, which would alert him to the inquiry of one among his stable
of babes.

There are other troubling pustules in this case: Condit's known dalliances
with the Hell's Angels motorcycle gang, and even, according to a New York
Post article recently, his attendance at a birthday party held for a biker
convicted of the killing of a police officer.

We also have former Congressman John LeBoutillier's deeply-disturbing
anecdotal report
that Mr. Condit might like to take a walk on the wild side,
as it were; and what with the attorney for Anne Lee Smith divulging recently
that Condit enjoyed sexual excitement of the sort that was "not normal for a
heterosexual man," and with growing interest in the contents of the
"forbidden closet" in the Congressman's apartment and "DNA evidence" having
reportedly been found all over Condit's carpets, I, for one, won't be
surprised when Mr. LeBoutillier's report is verified as being true, but only
as the tip of the iceberg.

That this Congressman also has a brother who is a known speed-freak, a
convicted felon, a fugitive who has not been seen since 1996, is also
worrisome, as is the fact that the Congressman also has another brother who,
while a Sergeant in the employ of the Modesto Police Department, bought a
between nine and 11 weapons illegally, from a gray-market police surplus
clearinghouse, and who, when requested to return those weapons, could only
produce four (4) of them to his superiors. That the fugitive-con, speed-freak
sibling--as is being reported today (7/20) by Geraldo Rivera, and which will
be the subject of tomorrow's Star tabloid, was found in Tampa, Florida, after
disappearing for a week at the end of April from his job at a construction
site and reappearing the first week of May, with the use of a cane, should be
of concern to FBI/D.C. police, as well.

America, we have as a member of the House of Representatives a man who sits
on the House Permanent Select Intelligence Committee-- ostensibly, a man who
provides Congressional oversight to WE THE PEOPLE over those who guard our
nation's most sensitive National Security secrets--and who is legendary among
his staff for disappearing without a trace, who wore disguises with at least
one mistress; who has at least two mistresses (some sources say there could
be 10 women cooperating with investigators); who appears to be fairly
profligate in his spending habits (the $2,500 gold bracelets to Levy and who
knows who else should raise some red flags, on a Congressman's official $140k
salary); who has refused to speak of this matter to his own constituents and
who has repeatedly stonewalled law enforcement investigators and perhaps even
(by the errors in his May 1st timeline) lied outright of his whereabouts; who
employs the very best of attorneys and pricey spin-doctors, who are being
paid for, how?, we-don't-know and who fits every inch the profile of a spy, a
la Robert Hanssen, regardless of the outcome of the Levy case.

And now the case is being turned over to the very same FBI office that failed
to produce a credible explanation as to the death of Clinton legal advisor
Vince Foster--an FBI which has just been exposed as having "lost" up to 140
laptop computers, three of which contained classified data, as well as
hundreds of firearms, sans explanation.

Ladies: The scum hath risen to the top. The Peter Principle is fully in
force. We have a fox guarding the hen house. And yet we take it like chumps
and suckers. It is well past time to demand accountability of Washington, and
to rise up by any means necessary--be it by passive resistance, tax revolt or
force of arms--if We The People are blown off in our request for a return to
basic Constitutional principles and reasonable representation.

I feel sick just writing these words. But it's all too clear: We've been had.


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