-Caveat Lector-
In a message dated 1/25/04 12:15:22 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


The only other president, Bill Clinton,
was a Rhodes Scholar.
     Nakano



And he went to Yale Law School in New Haven, along with Hilary from 69-73, right up the street from Bones and across the street from Book & Snake

and then there is this going on -
http://www.findarticles.com/cf_dls/m1157/2_61/55411636/p2/article.jhtml?term=

In spring 1969 for instance, New Haven, Connecticut, chief of police James Ahern authorized his intelligence squad to establish wiretaps on Panther homes, despite a state law prohibiting the use of electronic listening devices. The New Haven police listened without acting while a known FBI informant compelled members to torture and ultimately murder a suspected police informant. In the winter of the same year in Chicago, FBI agent Roy Mitchell passed on information to the Chicago police that was used in a predawn raid that claimed the lives of Panther leaders Fred Hampton and Mark Clark. After the police laid the ground work, the FBI along with the courts legitimized their actions.
The permissive environment therefore extended from the cop on the beat and the FBI agent in the field to the state and federal court system, all designed to neutralize political agitators. This phenomena is described best by Chicago policemen Howard Saffold in the Eyes on the Prize series as "open season," when police did not have to worry about the law. The government used the trials to remove potentially threatening influences from circulation and, at times, applied a "Garveyesque" strategy of steeping black political agitators in legal trouble. The goal was to decimate the membership of these organizations with an eye toward disruption. The motives of the federal government were not invisible, and by 1970, many prominent Americans spoke out to denounce what was happening. Referring to the trial of several Black Panthers in New Haven in 1970, for instance, Yale University president Kingman Brewster angered vice president Spiro Agnew and many others in the government when he expressed his doubts that a black revolutionary could receive a fair trial in the United States.

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Om
K
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