Linda Norgrove

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

911 Commissioner says missile hits the Pentagon youtube

Rumsfeld says Pentagon hit by missile
EXCERPT:
"It is a truth that a terrorist can attack any time, any place, using any technique and it's physically impossible to defend at every time and every place against every conceivable technique. Here we're talking about plastic knives and using an American Airlines flight filled with our citizens, and the missile to damage this building and similar (inaudible) that damaged the World Trade Center. The only way to deal with this problem is by taking the battle to the terrorists, wherever they are, and dealing with them."

James Wallwork wikipedia
EXCERPT:
He was re-elected in 1971, 19733 and 1977. His running mate was Assemblyman, later Governor, Thomas Kean.

Wallwork sought the Republican nomination for Governor of New Jersey in 1981, but finished fourth in the GOP primary with 16% of the vote. He lost to Kean, who won the general election. During the campaign, Wallwork was reported to be the subject of an attempted assassination at a Veterans Administration hospital by a gunman disguidsed as a surgeon.[3] The incident was deteremined by the FBI to be a hoax.[4] In an unrelated indictment, federal prosecutors stated that the hospital chief of security had staged the attempt.[5]

Kean appointed him to serve as a Commissioner of the Bistate Waterfront Commission.

In 1993, Wallwork again ran for Governor, finishing third in the GOP primary with 24%. The winner was Christine Todd Whitman.

He married the former Lark Lataner of Orange, New Jersey in 1965. They have one daughter, Lyric Wallwork Winik, a writer who works for Parade magazine.

Thomas Kean Wikipedia
EXCERPT:
Kean is best known globally, however, for his 2002 appointment as Chairman of the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States, widely known as the 9/11 Commission


Christine Todd Whitman youtube

Christine Todd Whitman sourcewatch
EXCERPT:
Cheney Energy Task Force
"Whitman owns interests in oil wells in Texas and Colorado valued at between $55,000 and $175,000," reported the San Jose Mercury News on February 28, 2001 ("Top officials face conflict of interest queries over oil connections"). "She has promised to divest of them to meet ethics guidelines." The particular companies Whitman held investments in were CEX Operating Co. of Dallas, Hunt Oil Co. of Houston, and St. Mary Operating Co. in Colorado. The conflicts were highlighted during meetings of Vice-President Cheney's Energy Task Force.

Hunt Oil Company sourcewatch
EXCERPT:
The privately-held Hunt Oil Company—"one of the big money Texas donors behind the Bush family political empire"[1]—and the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) announced September 8, 2007, that "they've signed a production-sharing contract for petroleum exploration in northern Iraq, the first such deal since the Kurds passed their own oil and gas law in August.

"A Hunt subsidiary, Hunt Oil Co. of the Kurdistan Region, will begin geological survey and seismic work by the end of 2007 and hopes to drill an exploration well in 2008, the parties said in a news release. Terms of the deal were not disclosed."[2]

Jack Abramoff wikipedia
EXCERPT:
Jack Abramoff was born in Atlantic City, New Jersey into a wealthy and prominent Jewish family.[13] His father, Franklin Abramoff, was president of the Franchises unit of Diners Club.[14]

JD Hayworth's funds from Abramoff
EXCERPT:
Arizona's U.S. Rep. J.D. Hayworth, ranked as one of the top recipients of campaign contributions from interests enmeshed in a raging lobbying scandal, has no reason to return the money, his top aide says.

Moreover, the donors want Hayworth to keep the funds, chief of staff Joe Eule said.

With four other politicians returning more than $250,000 in recent days to Indian tribes and others connected with disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff, pressures have mounted for Hayworth and other recipients to follow suit. advertisement

Eule said that the Republican congressman has received campaign contributions totaling $150,000 from tribes affiliated at one time or another with the former lobbyist but that the donations had nothing to do with actions that have put Abramoff at the center of Senate and criminal investigations into possible influence-buying.

Click the url to see the list of doners below.
JD Hayworth and Jack Abramoff FIT Trust

Jack Abramoff wikipedia at pedia
EXCERPT:
On an episode of Public Radio International's This American Life that aired in June 2006, journalist Jonathan Gold described Abramoff as a high school bully. "He was the sort of person who would walk across the street to be unpleasant to somebody," Gold says, going on to describe how Abramoff knocked him and his cello down a flight of stairs.[7] The episode was number 314, "It's Never Over".

College and law school years
As an undergraduate at Brandeis University, Abramoff served as Chairman of the Massachusetts Alliance of College Republicans, which organized student volunteers for Ronald Reagan's 1980 presidential campaign. He graduated in 1981 and earned his JD at the Georgetown University Law Center in 1986.

According to Nina J. Easton's book Gang of Five, Abramoff gained much of his credibility in the conservative movement through his father, Franklin Abramoff. As president of Diners Club, Abramoff's father worked closely with Alfred S. Bloomingdale, a personal friend of Ronald Reagan, and Abramoff would use the name in fundraising.

Abramoff's Bloomingdale connection
EXCERPT:
Alfred S. Bloomingdale died of throat cancer in 1982 in Santa Monica, California, aged 66. Newspaper headlines soon screamed with stories of his affair with Vicki Morgan as a result of unsubstantiated details provided in her unsuccessful multi-million dollar palimony lawsuit, which she filed after Betsy Bloomingdale refused to pay for Morgan's silence, and cut off all funds from the Bloomingdale estate that had been going to Morgan.

Although the case against Bloomingdale's estate was quickly dismissed by the courts, the entire affair was soon back in the headlines when Morgan was murdered in a brutal attack by her roommate less than a year after Alfred S. Bloomingdale had been interred in the Holy Cross Cemetery in Culver City, California.

Vicki Morgan - Bloomingdale and the White House scandal
EXCERPT:
Less than 24 hours after Vicki was laid to rest last week—in a hurriedly arranged service paid for by a mystery benefactor—Robert Steinberg, a Los Angeles lawyer with no official connection to Vicki or her accused murderer, Marvin Pancoast, claimed to be in possession of videotapes that were potentially highly embarrassing to the Reagan White House. According to Steinberg, the tapes—which he later said were stolen from his office—showed Vicki and three other women having sex with Bloomingdale, a Congressman, two top-level presidential appointees and several cronies of Ronald Reagan. There were also reports of other incriminating videotapes and written documents picked up by the Los Angeles Police Department at the murder site, though the LAPD would neither confirm nor deny the existence of such "evidence." Palimony pioneer Marvin Mitchelson, who filed Morgan's 1982 suit against Bloomingdale, claimed he had learned that a White House adviser had confirmed the existence of the LAPD tapes, and that they reportedly compromised a Reagan Cabinet member.

This was not the first time the Reagan White House had been embarrassed by Vicki. The erstwhile model first gained notoriety last summer when she hit Bloomingdale, a member of Reagan's "Kitchen Cabinet," with a $5 million palimony suit, the bulk of which was thrown out of court by a judge who called the relationship "no more than that of a wealthy, older, married paramour and a young, well-paid mistress." Morgan's lurid allegations about Bloomingdale's sadomasochistic romps spattered her own reputation even as they provided grist for Beverly Hills gossipmongers: She testified to watching a "drooling" Bloomingdale flog naked women until they wept.


How many explosions on 9/11 BE sure to watch the video
EXCERPT:
“What happened?” someone off-camera asks.
Firefighter #2 answers, “We was in an explosion.”

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