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Wednesday, July 6, 2011

True stories...all but one


On June 24, 1967,  OJ Simpson married Marguerite L. Whitley. In August 1979, Aaren their daughter drowned in the family's swimming pool a month before her second birthday. OJ at the time, had no criminal record and they sadly went about reporting it to the authorities.


On August 9, 1999, William Shatner returned home around 10 p.m. to discover his wife's body at the bottom of their back yard swimming pool. She was 40 years old. He reported her death to the authorities. Shatner has no criminal record. An autopsy detected alcohol and Valium in her blood, the coroner ruled the cause of her death as an accidental drowning. 


On June 16, 2008 two year old Caylee Anthony supposedly drowns in the family pool. Her grandfather is a former cop. Her mother Casey has no criminal record. On 12-11-2008 almost six months later, the child is found wrapped up in plastic bags (mouth and nose covered with duct tape) thrown in a laundry bag and then unceremoniously dumped in a wooded swamp. If she drowned in the pool why is her nose and mouth covered in duct tape?


Moral of the story:


If you have a smart enough attorney and a dumb enough jury you can get away with murder.




Casey Anthony displaying her newly acquired tattoo.

"Bella Vita" means "beautiful life" in Italian. Anthony got the tattoo while her daughter Caylee was still "missing".



Geraldo...don't all grieving mothers do that?



Five days after Caylee went missing Anthony entered this in her diary.









"I have no regrets, just a bit worried. I just want for everything to work out ok. I completely trust my own judgment. I know that I made the right decision. I just hope that the end justifies the means. I just want to know what the future will hold for me. I guess I will soon see."

The handwritten diary continues, "This is the happiest that I have been in a very long time." 


(Does this sound like a grieving mother or a conniving bitch trying to get away with murder?)


Update:

November 2012. Someone at the household typed in Google search box "Foolproof Suffocation" the day Caylee died. The defense knew about it, the prosecution did not. 

Prosecutors never learned about the search because the Orange County Sheriff’s Office didn't know the search existed, even though the department had possession of the family's computer. Instead, the sheriff's office gave prosecutors a spreadsheet with less than 2 percent of the computer’s Internet activity that day.

"There was an oversight,” sheriff’s Capt. Angelo Nieves told the station. “This has been a learning experience for investigators as well.”


Justice will be served Caylee.


Just not on this earth.







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Friday, July 1, 2011

How better to describe hot air?



On a tip from Ed Kilbane








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Thursday, June 30, 2011

If you had any doubt about Time magazine....




this should remove it. 



Time magazine shreds the Constitution.



 
            


This is a perfect example highlighting the reality of what a Conservative will have to go through in order to become President. He or she will have to fight twice as hard as the Messiah. Not only to win over the electorate but also short circuit the MSM which is overwhelmingly in his corner. It will be an uphill fight; but certainly a fight worth fighting! I think George and Ben would agree.





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Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Bachmann does bit on Comedy Central











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Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Have you heard anything about this from the MSM?



 This is like Nixon firing Archibald Cox.  I believe Obama and Holder are complicit in this up to their eyeballs. While the MSM looks the other way I can't help but wonder... does anyone see a story here worth investigating? Think about it folks. Cefalu has worked for the agency for 24 years, all of a sudden he has to turn in his gun and badge?









'Project Gunrunner' Whistleblower Says ATF Sent Him Termination Notice

By Maxim Lott



The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms is being accused of retaliating against an agent who helped publicize the agency's role in allowing thousands of guns to cross the U.S. border and fall into the hands of Mexican drug gangs.

The agent, Vince Cefalu, who has spoken out about the ATF's so-called "Project Gunrunner" scandal, says he was served with termination papers just last week, and he calls the move politically motivated.

"Aside from Jay Dobyns, I don't know of anyone that's been more vocal about ATF mismanagement than me," said Cefalu, a senior special agent based in Dublin, Calif. "That's why this is happening." Dobyns, an ATF special agent based in Tucson, has appeared several times on Fox News to discuss the scandal.

Cefalu first told FoxNews.com about the ATF's embattled anti-gun smuggling operation in December, before the first reports on the story appeared in February. "Simply put, we knowingly let hundreds of guns and dozens of identified bad guys go across the border," Cefalu said at the time.

Since then, Cefalu's claims have been vindicated, as a number of agents with first-hand knowledge of the case came forward. The scandal over Project Gunrunner led to congressional hearings, a presidential reprimand – Obama called the operation "a serious mistake" – and speculation that ATF chief Ken Melson will resign.

Yet last week, Cefalu, who has worked for the agency for 24 years, was forced to turn in his gun and badge. He can appeal but will be on "paid administrative leave" during the process.

ATF agent Vince Cefalu ten years ago, dressed to go undercover and infiltrate motorcycle gangs.


Cefalu's dismissal follows a string of allegations that the ATF retaliates against whistleblowers. When the Project Gunrunner scandal broke, Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, wrote the ATF that an agent who had been giving his staff members information about the scandal had been "allegedly accused... of misconduct" by the agent's boss for talking with Grassley's staffers.

And two days before Cefalu was served with termination papers, Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, sent a letter to the ATF warning officials not to retaliate against whistleblowers.

ATF spokesman Drew Wade denied in a statement to FoxNews.com that the bureau is retaliating, but he declined to comment about Cefalu's case. "ATF will not comment on specific, ongoing personnel matters. It is illegal to use disciplinary actions to retaliate against employees, and ATF does not engage in such improper reprisals."

The ATF's termination letter to Cefalu, obtained by FoxNews.com, makes no mention of Cefalu's role in the latest scandal.

"You think they would just come out and say that?" Cefalu said.

The letter instead says that Cefalu should be fired because he leaked documents on a website he helped create, CleanupATF.org, and showed a "lack of candor" on past projects, in particular a 2005 operation that Cefalu led. Cefalu admits he made information about the case public but says he did so only after redacting sensitive parts and exhausting internal channels.

In the 2005 case, local police wanted to wiretap a suspect to gather evidence, but Cefalu objected, saying it would be illegal to use wiretaps until all other options for gathering evidence had been tried.

Cefalu was then removed from the case. But he continued to speak out and file internal complaints about what he viewed as illegal ATF wiretapping. And that's when his life became difficult.

"That was the beginning of the end," Cefalu told FoxNews.com.

"I had never had a disciplinary action in 18 years. Outstanding evaluations -- above average -- and on the 19th year, when I filed a complaint, I get my first unsatisfactory evaluation ever."

Cefalu showed a copy of his 2005 evaluation to FoxNews.com, in which his supervisor, Dennis Downs, noted: "Not only have you meet [sic] performance expectations, you have exceeded them."

But that changed after 2005, Cefalu said. He received unsatisfactory evaluations complaining about his use of foul language. The termination letter also notes there were complaints about his smoking and "even your hygiene."

Another ATF agent, who requested to remain anonymous but who has provided accurate information on the Project Gunrunner case to FoxNews.com in the past, discussed what he knew about Cefalu.

"Common knowledge in the agency is that Cefalu outed an illegal wiretap quite some time ago, and he has been in the crosshairs since," the agent told FoxNews.com. "My impression of him is that he has probably ruffled lots of feathers and delicate egos in his time. He is very direct and honest."

But this agent said he'd "prefer that to a 'go along to get along' type."

"We don't avoid or learn from mistakes if we just lie to each other about how we never do anything wrong -- which is pretty much standard operating procedure from what I have seen of our HQ people," the agent said.

Cefalu said his work on the Project Gunrunner scandal likely was the last straw for his bosses.

"I think it's obvious why they're doing this. It was my willingness to expose (Project Gunrunner) and support other people to come forward," Cefalu said.







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