The fishy part is that former director Fukino claimed to have seen an original birth certificate, along with registrar Alvin T. Onaka, Ph.D. Abercrombie obviously cannot show that record to the public and the ledger entry is something he doesnt want to show either. Lets keep in mind, he was vowing to show up the so-called birthers by backing up his buddy Obama and now this only came up because a reporter asked him about the status of this mission. Abercrombie sounded very hesitant to talk about it and he carefully parsed how he answered the question. They dont have jack squat to back up Obama.
And so the excuse for not being able to display it physically is the docs/records must have gotten misplaced when Fukino et al left as the new regime is now coming in.
Or is Jon Klein’s statement going to be the new narrative.
“Last week, CNN’s Lou Dobbs demanded Obama’s original birth certificate. CNN/U.S. President Jon Klein told staffers of Lou Dobbs Tonight that the issue is a “dead” story, Kline told the Los Angeles Times in an interview published Sunday.
In an e-mail, the Times reported, Klein wrote that CNN researchers determined that Obama’s 1961 birth certificate no longer exists because Hawaiian officials had discarded paper documents .”
http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2009-07-27-obama-hawaii_N.htm
“former director Fukino claimed to have seen an original birth certificate”
I’m surprised Rush didn’t mention the fact that Fukino did NOT say WHERE the ONE was born. Just that he had seen the birth certificate.
Janice Okubo:"I am not aware of any birth certificate records that have been destroyed"
"Directly contradicting CNN chief Jon Klein who ordered host Lou Dobbs to quit discussing President Obama's birth certificate the Hawaii Department of Health affirmed that no paper birth certificates were destroyed when the department moved to electronic record-keeping.
"I am not aware of any birth certificate records that have been destroyed by the department," Janice Okubo, public information officer for the Hawaii DOH, told WND. "When the department went electronic in 2001, vital records, whether in paper form or any other form, [were] maintained. We don't destroy records."...."