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Cain: Politico Had No Documentation of Accusations - Pt 1 (Must See!)
FOX News ^ | November 11, 2011 | Neil Cavtuo

Posted on 11/11/2011 3:11:05 PM PST by Raebie

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To: Scoutmaster
Maybe documentation is too specific of a word. Politico had no documentation AND no evidence whatsoever. The who, what, where, when and why of the story were entirely missing.

The burden is on the accuser to prove that the charges are true, not on the accused to prove a negative.

You asked about my feelings on the matter.. who do I believe? Until I see some real evidence, I believe that Cain is probably innocent of the charges, but there is currently no way for any of us to know. I do think it is suspicious that the accuser won't bring forth the agreement that she and her attorney signed.

In the end, I believed Clarence Thomas because not a one of the folks who knew both Thomas and Hill sided with her. And in the end, even if everything she said was true, what's the big deal? I have no patience for women who want to be equal to men in the workplace, but still want to be put on a pedestal. It drives me crazy.

Since I live in CA, my opinion on the election is pretty irrelevant. The candidate will be picked before we even vote, which is OK with me, since most of CA is pretty liberal.

For what it's worth:
1) I hate Romney
2) I don't care for Huntsman or Paul
3) I think a Cain/Gingrich ticket makes a lot of sense, but I could support any of the remaining candidates without reservation. My two cents.

61 posted on 11/12/2011 8:11:53 PM PST by Aunt Polgara
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To: Aunt Polgara
Maybe documentation is too specific of a word. Politico had no documentation AND no evidence whatsoever.

Now you and I are getting closer to agreeing and its time to share a coffee. The headline of the post was 'documentation.' As an attorney (and I apologize to you; I apologize to myself daily), that word has a specific definition. Its use in the headline almost seemed intended to create an "A-AH!" in minds when lack of documentation is often meaningless.

And I wouldn't say Politico had no evidence. We don't know to whom Politico spoke. I'd say that chances are they had very shaky evidence, very thin evidence, and perhaps clearly unreliable evidence. Although we could be quite surprised. There's a tiny, tiny chance that the past President of the National Restaurant Association - a Marriott, if I believe, and Romney friend - was the original source of the "two women' story.

You said "The burden is on the accuser to prove that the charges are true, not on the accused to prove a negative." That's a standard in a court of law for *most" situations. It's not a standard for printing a news story (or a slur story). And even in court, there are some exceptions. In products liability action (and I need to simplify this so I don't write a book here) there is a doctrine of strict liability, and another doctrine in the law called res ipsa loquitur, "the thing speaks for itself", where the fact that something happened is evidence itself. At that point, you're stuck proving a negative.

So all along, I've been arguing not for or against Cain or any candidate on this post.

It all started with an innocent question - can somebody summarize? Because the headline was "no documentation." And the idea that 'no documentation' of that first claim was meaningful didn't seem to be meaningful.

62 posted on 11/13/2011 6:11:56 AM PST by Scoutmaster (I stand for something; therefore, I can't stand Romney)
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To: Scoutmaster
UGH! No Coffee... now, if you wanted to share some Lupicia fine Japanese tea, I could go for that. :-)

You said "The burden is on the accuser to prove that the charges are true, not on the accused to prove a negative." That's a standard in a court of law for *most" situations. It's not a standard for printing a news story (or a slur story).

Of course, even though Cain is a public figure, Politico may still be open to being nailed for printing a story with reckless disregard for the truth.

With regard to the issue of documentation, I find it extremely suspicious that even after the NRA gave permission for the accuser to speak, she still did not produce the "agreement." What does that tell you? I suspect that there is stuff in that agreement that the accuser doesn't want publicized, so I do believe that the fact that the accusers didn't produce those documents to be significant.

It's also suspicious that the accusations have only come from those associated with the NRA (a very short time in Cain's career), and that they came out of Chicago. As you probably know, Obama twice was able to destroy opponents with scandal accusation. Perhaps the GOP establishment and the dems are working together. I have no idea, but, to date, there have been no developments that would lead me to definitively believe one party or the other. We simply don't have enough evidence.

63 posted on 11/13/2011 12:02:58 PM PST by Aunt Polgara
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To: Aunt Polgara
Of course, even though Cain is a public figure, Politico may still be open to being nailed for printing a story with reckless disregard for the truth.

In practice, the "actual malice" is almost impossible to prove. If there were two settlements, we really start getting into an area of - where was the defamation?

With regard to the issue of documentation, I find it extremely suspicious that even after the NRA gave permission for the accuser to speak, she still did not produce the "agreement."

I haven't followed it closely. Did she refuse to give the NRA the right to release the agreement? I will say that long before Obama appeared on anyone's radar screen, I was naturally skeptical of anything that came out of Chicago, Memphis, or Little Rock.

And not Little Rock because of Clinton. Little Rock was the mob and gambling and corruption before Las Vegas existed. Memphis is still a place where I don't think I would trust a politician or a law enforcement agent. When it comes to Memphis in recent years, I have only two words: "Logan Young."

I don't believe in conspiracies, but I'm convinced that man was murdered. Although three days after he was murdered, the Memphis police decided that it was an accidental slip and fall against the bannister of his stairs that caused him initially to be "beaten beyond recognition."

64 posted on 11/13/2011 3:03:58 PM PST by Scoutmaster (I stand for something; therefore, I can't stand Romney)
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To: Scoutmaster
I have no idea who Logan Young was. I presume some kind of a local story.

In practice, the "actual malice" is almost impossible to prove. If there were two settlements, we really start getting into an area of - where was the defamation?

You keep referring to it as a settlement. Cain made a big deal about it being an agreement. Do you see a difference? Also, until we see what the complaints were, how can we judge if there was anything to them? We will probably never know since it is common to pay people to just go away, whether the complaint is justified or not. I've seen it many times.

I haven't followed it closely. Did she refuse to give the NRA the right to release the agreement?

I have followed it reasonably closely. It is my understanding that her attorney hid behind the nondisclosure agreement. Then the NRA released her from the agreement, but she didn't disclose it. Neither did the NRA. Whether the NRA asked her to release them or not, I haven't heard. I suspect that the NRA would like to stay as far away from this as they can.

By the way, I'm sure you've heard the quip that the law is a game that lawyers play using other people's money to keep score. That's certainly been my experience, and a great deal of it was mine. :-/

65 posted on 11/13/2011 5:42:06 PM PST by Aunt Polgara
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To: Aunt Polgara
I have no idea who Logan Young was. I presume some kind of a local story.

I had tossed in Memphis, Tennessee as an example of another historically corrupt city and Logan Young as one very minor possible example of corruption, and clearly not the best example of Memphis corruption. Was it a local story (I don't live in Memphis)? The concept of 'local' is always relative. Viewed in one perspective, Caylee Anthony was a local Orlando, Florida, story. Her disappearance and death, and her mother Casey's trial, were in Orlando.

You keep referring to it as a settlement. Cain made a big deal about it being an agreement. Do you see a difference?

No.

That's the magic of we lawyers. There's no law stating that when you settle a dispute you must call the resolution a "settlement." The resolution is whatever the parties agree it is.

In Chapter 6 of Lewis Carroll's classic, Through the Looking Glass, Alice confronts Humpty Dumpty about using the word "glory" to mean a "nice knock-down argument." In reply:

When I use a word,' Humpty Dumpty said, in rather a scornful tone, 'it means just what I choose it to mean — neither more nor less.'

'The question is,' said Alice, 'whether you can make words mean so many different things.'

'The question is,' said Humpty Dumpty, 'which is to be master — that's all.'

When resolving a dispute such as sexual harassment claim, the 'style' (title) of the document resolving the claims, and the description of any payment made in resolution means just what the parties choose them to mean, and the parties are master.

To make this generic, I'll refer to to Company and Employee (because that rolls off the tongue easier than Aggrieved Party), instead of National Restaurant Association and Cain Accuser.

Off the top of my head, I could style the resolution agreement: Agreement; Resolution; Resolution Agreement; Settlement; Settlement Agreement; Termination Agreement (if the Employee agreed to be terminated so she could receive unemployment); Severance Agreement (if the Employee agreed to leave employment with unemployment benefits); Declaration of Rights, Agreements, Covenants, Represents, and Warranties of the Parties; or Agreement Without Title. I could simply not give it a style (in which case people would probably call the agreement). To compound matters, if the agreement (and they're all agreements, even a settlement) provided for nondisclosure, modify the above styles, so that you have styles such as: Resolution and Nondisclosure Agreement; Resolution and Covenant of the Parties Not to Make Disclosures; Resolution and Agreement not to Disclose; and Resolution and Confidentiality Agreement; Resolution and Mutually Beneficial Binding Particulars With Respect to Confidentiality of Its Terms.

We attorneys are (and I say this with admiration and self-loathing) regular Humpty Dumptys.

Now, let's start our heads spinning. This agreement, whatever we may wish to call it, is to provide for a payment by Company to Employee (or maybe not, please follow me). Generally, the Employee is only concerned with receiving the money; if so, then the Employee does not care what the payment is called, and in what terms the payment is couched. It may be a settlement payment or a resolution payment. In most cases, however, the company wishes honestly to be able to say it never paid a settlement to Employee. Or honestly to be able to say in only paid x settlements. So, if the claim was never made public before it was paid, and the employee will no longer be working at the company, the money is paid as a severance payment or a termination payment.

Humpty Dumpty lives! The parties are the master, not the words.

I've seen on situation in which the payment is made to a charity, because the employee is more interested in making certain the employer 'feels the pain' than in receiving the money. And because the payment was a donation to a corporation that was exemption from Federal taxation under Section 501(c)(3) of the IRS Code, the corporation's payment was tax deductible and the employee had the leverage to make the company pay more in settlement.

But the agreement simply indicated that the Company agreed to make a charitable contribution to a specific charity; the Employee agree to a waiver and dismissal of all claims of (in my case, age discrimination) sexual discrimination (using appropriate legalese) arising from or related to her employment by Company during the period of her employment (notice that no particular offending executive is named, serving two purposes; first, it's additional blanket protection for the Company, and second, no executive's name appears); Employee's employment is terminated immediately; and nobody can disclose the terms except as required by law, or in testimony in court (many states have specific legal exceptions to nondisclosure terms in employment contexts). There's a lot of specific waivers under Federal laws, and legalese regarding COBRA, and everything is much more specific and tightly worded than I suggested. There are several pages of boilerplate provisions to address Federal and state employment issues.

The agreement may be styled "Confidential Agreement to Make Charitable Contribution."

Can you imagine how a Company executive who was the subject of a sexual harassment claim could play that in the press years later?

So, after FR's lengthiest lead-in, allow me to return to your question.

Cain made a big deal about it being an agreement. Do you see a difference?

No. As a former Cain supporter, that position either shows that Cain is naive or is playing word games in a style that rivals Bill Clinton. There. Is. No. Difference.

66 posted on 11/14/2011 4:57:35 AM PST by Scoutmaster (I stand for something; therefore, I can't stand Romney)
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To: Aunt Polgara
I have no idea who Logan Young was. I presume some kind of a local story.

I had tossed in Memphis, Tennessee as an example of another historically corrupt city and Logan Young as one very minor possible example of corruption, and clearly not the best example of Memphis corruption. Was it a local story (I don't live in Memphis)? The concept of 'local' is always relative. Viewed in one perspective, Caylee Anthony was a local Orlando, Florida, story. Her disappearance and death, and her mother Casey's trial, were in Orlando.

You keep referring to it as a settlement. Cain made a big deal about it being an agreement. Do you see a difference?

No.

That's the magic of we lawyers. There's no law stating that when you settle a dispute you must call the resolution a "settlement." The resolution is whatever the parties agree it is.

In Chapter 6 of Lewis Carroll's classic, Through the Looking Glass, Alice confronts Humpty Dumpty about using the word "glory" to mean a "nice knock-down argument." In reply:

When I use a word,' Humpty Dumpty said, in rather a scornful tone, 'it means just what I choose it to mean — neither more nor less.'

'The question is,' said Alice, 'whether you can make words mean so many different things.'

'The question is,' said Humpty Dumpty, 'which is to be master — that's all.'

When resolving a dispute such as sexual harassment claim, the 'style' (title) of the document resolving the claims, and the description of any payment made in resolution means just what the parties choose them to mean, and the parties are master.

To make this generic, I'll refer to to Company and Employee (because that rolls off the tongue easier than Aggrieved Party), instead of National Restaurant Association and Cain Accuser.

Off the top of my head, I could style the resolution agreement: Agreement; Resolution; Resolution Agreement; Settlement; Settlement Agreement; Termination Agreement (if the Employee agreed to be terminated so she could receive unemployment); Severance Agreement (if the Employee agreed to leave employment with unemployment benefits); Declaration of Rights, Agreements, Covenants, Represents, and Warranties of the Parties; or Agreement Without Title. I could simply not give it a style (in which case people would probably call the agreement). To compound matters, if the agreement (and they're all agreements, even a settlement) provided for nondisclosure, modify the above styles, so that you have styles such as: Resolution and Nondisclosure Agreement; Resolution and Covenant of the Parties Not to Make Disclosures; Resolution and Agreement not to Disclose; and Resolution and Confidentiality Agreement; Resolution and Mutually Beneficial Binding Particulars With Respect to Confidentiality of Its Terms.

We attorneys are (and I say this with admiration and self-loathing) regular Humpty Dumptys.

Now, let's start our heads spinning. This agreement, whatever we may wish to call it, is to provide for a payment by Company to Employee (or maybe not, please follow me). Generally, the Employee is only concerned with receiving the money; if so, then the Employee does not care what the payment is called, and in what terms the payment is couched. It may be a settlement payment or a resolution payment. In most cases, however, the company wishes 'honestly' to be able to say it never paid a settlement to Employee. Or 'honestly' to be able to say in only paid x settlements, and doesn't want this payment to add to the number of settlements it has paid. So, if the claim was never made public before it was paid, and the employee will no longer be working at the company, the money is paid as a severance payment or a termination payment.

Humpty Dumpty lives! The parties are the master, not the words.

I've seen on situation in which the payment is made to a charity, because the employee is more interested in making certain the employer 'feels the pain' than in receiving the money. And because the payment was a donation to a corporation that was exemption from Federal taxation under Section 501(c)(3) of the IRS Code, the corporation's payment was tax deductible and the employee had the leverage to make the company pay more in settlement.

But the agreement simply indicated that the Company agreed to make a charitable contribution to a specific charity; the Employee agree to a waiver and dismissal of all claims of (in my case, age discrimination) sexual discrimination (using appropriate legalese) arising from or related to her employment by Company during the period of her employment (notice that no particular offending executive is named, serving two purposes; first, it's additional blanket protection for the Company, and second, no executive's name appears); Employee's employment is terminated immediately; and nobody can disclose the terms except as required by law, or in testimony in court (many states have specific legal exceptions to nondisclosure terms in employment contexts). There's a lot of specific waivers under Federal laws, and legalese regarding COBRA, and everything is much more specific and tightly worded than I suggested. There are several pages of boilerplate provisions to address Federal and state employment issues.

The agreement may be styled "Confidential Agreement to Make Charitable Contribution."

Can you imagine how a Company executive who was the subject of a sexual harassment claim could play that in the press years later?

So, after FR's lengthiest lead-in, allow me to return to your question.

Cain made a big deal about it being an agreement. Do you see a difference?

No. As a former Cain supporter, that position either shows that Cain is naive or is playing word games in a style that rivals Bill Clinton. There. Is. No. Difference.

67 posted on 11/14/2011 5:13:06 AM PST by Scoutmaster (I stand for something; therefore, I can't stand Romney)
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To: Scoutmaster

I’m not a lawyer (I’m an engineer), but you may find my take on the use of the word “documentation” useful or interesting (or not - LOL).

Politico reported a rumor, essentially. They had a person who called them, that said they had a beef, and who claimed to have some form of proof. From what I have been able to gather, they did not get access to any form of proof, but instead relied on the juiciness of the story to “vouch” for its veracity.

What Cain means here, I think, is that Politico reported on what it wanted to be true before it had any evidence beyond hearsay that it might be true. If Politico failed to even make records their alleged conversations, then they failed to produce indirect documentation as well.

The legal term “documentation” appears to be a small extension from the engineering term, where various data are commonly summarized into written form with references to the underlying data. It appears that the summarized references to the underlying data (at best) or the underlying data (at worst) were missing from the Politico portfolio.

JMO, natch...


68 posted on 11/14/2011 5:41:19 AM PST by MortMan (Americans are a people increasingly separated by our connectivity.)
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To: MortMan
Politico reported a rumor, essentially. They had a person who called them, that said they had a beef, and who claimed to have some form of proof.

Thanks. In summary, I thought Politico's very first article (out of are now hundreds) said there were two claims, and it was vague about them. It appeared that Politico's source was either at (or was formerly at) the National Restaurant Association or had previously been connected with Herman Cain, because the source knew of two claims.

Herman Cain promptly identified the leak by name: a man who consulted on his Senate campaign, whom Cain had told of one claim so that the campaign would be prepared if the issue arose, and whom now supported Perry in some capacity.

My only point in getting on this thread was that someone posted a twenty-minute video, and that was only the first part of the interview; he was asking for help in linking the second part. Normally, the headline of a thread or video summarizes the primary 'take-home' point from the video. I didn't have time to watch a twenty-minute video, nor the second part.

But it appeared that the main point of perhaps forty minutes of video was that Politico didn't have 'documentation.'

To me, that seemed like a strawman argument unless there was more to that argument in the video, so I asked if somebody could summarize.

As I've explained, some of the greatest sources for legitimate news stories in the world may not have documentation. Actually, the story of the Empty Tomb in the Gospels is a perfect example of reporting that many of us believe not only to be true, but to be True, and yet Mary had no documentation.

So this entire kerffufle is about me saying "is that it? That's it? Twenty to forty minutes and the most important thing is that the source had no documentation? Seriously? That was all? Can somebody please explain precisely what source was identified in this video, and what story that source told to Politico, that was supposed to have documentation?"

Because if the first person to leak the story was the former NRA executive who was connected to Marriott, and therefore connected to Romney, he may have knowledge but he wouldn't have any documentation unless he had access to files to make a photocopy and deliver it to Politico. Or any of those other "there wouldn't be documentation" reasons I've listed above.

So to somebody who watched the video, why is 'no documentation' the most fundamental point of the entire video?

69 posted on 11/14/2011 7:32:33 AM PST by Scoutmaster (I stand for something; therefore, I can't stand Romney)
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To: Scoutmaster
Now I see why I didn't know who Logan Young was... I looked him up...sports guy...not my cup of tea. :-)

So, now I finally get it. I guess I'm a little dense, but your Humpty Dumpty analogy hit home... when you started fussing about the word “documentation” in post 9 and following posts, you were just playing word games. :-) It wasn't until post 61, when I clarified that the word “evidence” might be more appropriate than “documentation” that we started to come together, but now you seem to be saying that it's all just one big word game... sigh..

Let's recap what has been put out there:

- There are apparently 4 or 5 accusers.

- Two of the accusers are anonymous with vague charges, impossible to defend against. They may or may not even exist, so I don't give them any credence at all although at least one of the anonymous accusers got a settlement from the NRA according to news reports.

- Karen Kraushaar filed a complaint against Cain when she worked at the NRA, but 3 years later she filed a complaint against her new employer, the INS, for unfair treatment by her supervisors (a red flag in my mind... would you ever consider hiring someone who has filed 2 different complaints?). She received about $45,000 from the NRA, and as far as I know, she has refused to charge anything specific. I do believe that she was one of the anonymous sources, so that leaves just one anonymous source.

- Donna Donella accused Cain of trying to get her to set up a dinner date with another woman, which she refused to do; and then he asked her to join him for dinner. And that rises to sexual harassment? Pulleeze.

- And of course there is Sharon Bialek who made lurid charges with attorney Gloria Allred standing next to her of Cain groping her in the car. Let's examine the charges. According to Bialek, Cain put one hand up her skirt and tried to pull her head into his lap while sitting behind the wheel of a car. That sounds just a wee bit difficult to me. She did not receive a settlement from the NRA since she wasn't an employee at the time. She may or may not be one of the “anonymous” sources although it doesn't seem likely since there are 2 different attorneys involved.

Cain denies all of it, and there has been no evidence presented to the public to allow us to make any kind of determination. The fact that neither of the settlements (or any other corroborating evidence) have been produced is a big red flag to me.

I could just as well hire Gloria Allred and accuse Freeper Scoutmaster of diddling scouts on an outing in the late eighties. Now try to defend yourself. :-/

For what it’s worth, you may be aware that a voice analyzer was used on Bialek and Cain, and according to the operator, Cain came out as truthful and Bialek as not so truthful. I'm sure it's not admissible in a court, but then none of this stuff is either because of the statute of limitations.

The story does seem to be fading, though. I think for 2 reasons: 1) There's no THERE there and 2) The Penn State story is much more lurid and has sucked the wind out of the Cain matter.

70 posted on 11/14/2011 9:57:54 AM PST by Aunt Polgara
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To: Aunt Polgara
Thanks. I know what's out there. I wasn't playing word games. I was suggesting that the headline was word games. It made everybody say "hey! No documentation? Well . . . then it has to be false. Everybody knows if there's no documentation then a story is false."

And yet that is clearly not the case. Documentation has nothing to do with an *original* story being false if the *original* story was that somebody said there were two claims and we don't have much detail. At that point, making 'lack of documentation' your argument sounds as if you're trying to sucker the masses.

Which is why my request. What about that original, vague, 'there were two claims' story required any documentation other than the fact that a source, such as somebody from the NRA or the Cain Senate Race staff knew it? Subsequent claims, perhaps.

But since nobody can answer the question, this former Cain supporter is left to believe that using "no documentation" as an argument means the Cain camp didn't have a legitimate defense to an initial truthful assertion about two claims, and they were using "no documentation" as a smokescreen for people who don't pay attention to careful use of the English language.

71 posted on 11/14/2011 10:12:44 AM PST by Scoutmaster (I stand for something; therefore, I can't stand Romney)
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To: Scoutmaster
Hi Scoutmaster,

Now you have been on FR longer than I have, and I've been here about 10 years. By now you should realize that Freepers don't have a lot of patience with those who want someone else to do their homework, which is what you asked for, since you “didn't have time” to watch the video. I do believe that you have probably spent a lot more time kvetching than the 20 minutes it would have taken you to see the video for yourself.

With that being said, I did go back and do your research for you, and I believe that you have actually misread the headline. In the video, Cain said that there were no facts or basis for the accusations. He also said that there was no documentation of the accusations (same as the headline).

He did not say that there was no documentation to support the accusations. He said that the accusations were not documented. In other words, the accusations themselves were not spelled out... big difference. Don't you think that Politico owed him chapter and verse of what was being claimed, so that he at least had a chance to respond intelligently?

Now I completely agree that many people probably also misread the headline, but the headline is accurate, even if misleading. Cain had no control over the headline, and I've seen much worse, as the headline writers are not the same ones as those who write the stories.

72 posted on 11/14/2011 3:23:10 PM PST by Aunt Polgara
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