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Wen Ho Lee Settles Suit for $1.6 Million (NM Richardson involved)
The Albuquerque Journal ^ | Saturday, June 3, 2006 | Mark Sherman, AP

Posted on 06/03/2006 10:15:45 AM PDT by CedarDave

WASHINGTON— Wen Ho Lee, the former Los Alamos nuclear weapons scientist once suspected of being a spy, settled his privacy lawsuit Friday and will receive $1.6 million from the government and five news organizations in a case that turned into a fight over reporters' confidential sources.

Lee will receive $895,000 from the government for legal fees and associated taxes in the 6 1/2-year-old lawsuit in which he accused the Energy and Justice departments of violating his privacy rights by leaking information that he was under investigation as a spy for China.

The Associated Press and four other news organizations have agreed to pay Lee $750,000 as part of the settlement, which ends contempt-of-court proceedings against five reporters who refused to disclose the sources of their stories about the espionage investigation.

Gov. Bill Richardson and others were identified in an earlier federal appeals court ruling in the privacy case as likely sources of the leaks that identified Lee as a suspect in the espionage investigation. The governor was federal Energy secretary when the Lee case emerged.

Richardson has steadfastly refused to comment on Lee's suit. A spokesman for the governor said Friday he was in rural northeastern New Mexico and couldn't be reached for comment.

Lee was fired from his job at the Los Alamos National Laboratory, but he was never charged with espionage. He was held in solitary confinement for nine months, then released in 2000 after pleading guilty to mishandling computer files. A judge apologized for Lee's treatment.

The appeals court decision said Richardson and two others were among those who "in particular had been identified as likely sources of the leaks" about Lee but that the three "were unable (or unwilling) to identify the leaker(s)" in depositions they gave for Lee's privacy suit.

(Excerpt) Read more at abqjournal.com ...


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Extended News; Government; News/Current Events; US: New Mexico
KEYWORDS: billrichardson; losalamos; richardson; wenholee
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To: Incorrigible

LOL


21 posted on 06/03/2006 11:26:42 AM PDT by Diddle E. Squat
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To: Cicero

You stated my thoughts quite nicely.


22 posted on 06/03/2006 11:42:32 AM PDT by lilylangtree
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To: ChessExpert

Good source. Worth reposting here as a reminder of what is really going on:

http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=1138

Spy Stories: The Wen Ho Lee Cover-Up
By David Horowitz
FrontPageMagazine.com | October 3, 2000

FBI DIRECTOR Louis B. Freeh got my attention when he tried to explain why the Justice Department dropped 58 of 59 charges against suspected nuclear spy Wen Ho Lee. “The Department of Justice and the FBI stand by each and every one of the 59 counts in the indictment of Dr. Lee,” Freeh told the Senate Judiciary and Select Intelligence committees. (AP 9/26/2000) “Each of those counts could be proven in December 1999 [when Lee was indicted], and each of them could be proven today.” Justice had agreed to a deal of guilt on one count (and a sentence of time served) in order to secure Lee’s cooperation in locating the missing files he had stolen from the nation’s top nuclear weapons lab. But the real reason for the cave-in was that the rules of a trial “posed serious obstacles to proving those facts without revealing nuclear secrets in open courts.” It was that statement that got my attention.

These were the same words, almost verbatim, that a Harvard Law Professor had said to me 28 years ago, in 1972. Not coincidentally, he was advising me on how to get away with violating the same code of the U.S. Espionage code that Wen Ho Lee had been accused of breaking.

The professor’s name was Charles Nesson, and I was, at the time, one of the editors of Ramparts, the largest magazine of the New Left. I had called Nesson in Los Angeles where he was serving as part of the defense team for Daniel Ellsberg, a Pentagon official who had copied a classified history of U.S. Vietnam policy (subsequently known as “The Pentagon Papers”) and illegally delivered them to the New York Times. I had been delegated to make the call by my fellow editors to seek advice from a man who was one of the leading constitutional law experts in the country, because of a story we were about to publish.

The story had been brought unsolicited to us by a man who told us his name was “Winslow Peck” (this later was shown to be an alias). He had come to the Ramparts office with a tale about a secret U.S. spy agency called the National Security Agency, which was tasked with all U.S. electronic intelligence operations. He himself had been an intelligence operative, stationed in Turkey, but had become disaffected because of the Vietnam War. Now he wanted to reveal to the world - including America’s enemies - the secrets to which he had been privy.

When we sat down with him, tape recorders running, “Winslow Peck” told us how the National Security Agency operated and what America’s intelligence professionals knew. He gave us the code words that they used to describe their operations. (One of our staffers, Bob Fitch, who had served in intelligence in the 82nd Airborne Division during the Cuban Crisis, was so shaken to recognize these codes that he refused to work on the article. He was that sure he would be sent to jail.) “Peck” told us that he had listened in on the last-minute telephone conversation that Soviet premier Alexi Kosygin had with a doomed cosmonaut whose rocket was not going to make it back to earth. He told us he had intercepted the communications between the Israeli command center in Tel Aviv and General Moshe Dayan that relieved Dayan of his post. He told us that the United States knew the name of every Russian pilot and the destination of every Russian airplane, around the clock.

The real secret that “Peck” was revealing to us (a fact I did not even realize at the time) was that United States intelligence had cracked the codes of both the Soviet Union and Israel, and was able to read all their electronic communications. This information would have been among the most guarded intelligence secrets of all. By making public to both ally and enemy that the United States had broken their codes, our informant was, in fact, alerting the intelligence agencies of both countries to change them. Thus the information “Peck” gave us was, or might have been (we had no way of knowing), a major blow to the United States’ national security in the midst of the Vietnam War.

As New Leftists, my fellow editors and I may have been arrogant, irresponsible and reckless, but we were not crazy. We understood that we had skated onto dangerously thin ice, with consequences we could only dimly imagine, and we wanted to know as clearly as possible what we might be facing if we decided to publish the story that “Peck” had brought us. I was delegated by my fellow editors to put in a call to the Ellsberg defense team to see just what risks we might be taking. That is how I happened to be talking to Harvard Law Professor, Charles Nesson. I have reported the conversation that took place in my autobiography Radical Son:

“After I had outlined the situation, Nesson explained the law. Technically, he said, we would be violating the Espionage Act. But, he added, the act had been written in such a way that it applied to classified papers removed from government offices, or material copied from government files. The government was able to indict Ellsberg because he had reproduced actual papers. It was important for us, in insulating ourselves from possible prosecution, not to acknowledge that any papers existed.” If any did exist, he added, destroying them would be helpful.

I now cannot help but ask myself whether this same calculation might have been behind Wen Ho Lee’s destruction of 310 of the classified computer files he had illegally removed from the Los Alamos Lab after finding out that the FBI was on his tail.

But to continue my story: “If we took his advice, Nesson suggested, we might get away with publishing [Peck’s] article. To make its case in a court of law, the government would have to establish that we had indeed damaged national security. To do so, it would be necessary to reveal more than the government might want the other side to know. In fact, the legal process would certainly force more information to light than the government would want anybody to know. On balance, there was a good chance that we would not be prosecuted.”

Reading my account of this incident, I am struck by the fact that Nesson’s strategy, which columnist William Safire has called “graymail,” of daring government prosecutors to go into open court and reveal their hand, is precisely the reasoning that Freeh volunteered to the congressional committee to explain the prosecution’s decision not to proceed with their case against Wen Ho Lee. To prove in a court of law that a defendant has endangered national security requires a prosecution to reveal far more information about a nation’s national security systems than any government may want to reveal. In concluding my account of the conversation with Nesson in Radical Son, I observed: “I had just been given advice by a famous constitutional law professor on how to commit treason and get away with it.”

Is Wen Ho Lee guilty? Wen Ho Lee illegally removed 400,000 files from the nation’s top nuclear weapons lab during a period of years when he had repeated contacts with Chinese government scientists and at a time when the Chinese Communist dictatorship was systematically stealing the secrets of America’s most sophisticated nuclear arsenal. His response to the FBI investigation was that of a seemingly guilty man. He destroyed files in his possession and repeatedly tried to break into the lab after his access was denied. Yet, Wen Ho Lee has acquired an almost martyr-like status as a victim of government persecution, and even of government “racism.” The presiding judge roundly condemned the ineptitude of Lee’s prosecution and his “punitive” treatment, in particular the fact that he was held in solitary confinement for months, and threatened by his interrogators with the specter of the Rosenbergs, who were executed for a crime similar to the one of which he was accused. The President himself has apologized for his own Justice Department’s handling of the case. And the nation’s editorial rooms have resounded with outrage at the entire affair.

Yet it is all very unconvincing. Begin with Clinton’s peculiar apology (without explanation) for a prosecution he himself was responsible for. The U.S. Attorney who handled the Lee case is Clinton’s friend and former college roommate. Within a week of Clinton’s apology, he was in New Mexico to raise money for the same prosecutor’s run for a state office. The argument of some of Lee’s supporters that an anti-Chinese bias was behind an intemperate Justice Department prosecution is hard to square with the fact that the current Deputy Attorney General in charge of civil rights is Chinese himself.

Columnist William Safire and others have suggested a more plausible explanation. The zealous pursuit of Lee followed the release of the bi-partisan Cox report detailing the theft of America’s nuclear arsenal by the Chinese government. Much of this theft took place during Clinton’s watch. Moreover, the Clinton Administration had been aggressive in lifting security controls on satellite, missile and computer technologies particularly instrumental in developing nuclear-tipped ballistic weaponry. The Clinton Administration had then sold those technologies to the Chinese.

The Cox Report had come on the heels of congressional investigations by government oversight committees into the unprecedented access given by the Clinton-Gore Administration to Chinese military and intelligence officials and their agents, possibly in exchange for illegal contributions to the Democratic National Committee and the Clinton-Gore campaign. Senator Fred Thompson had opened his hearings with the charge -- based on CIA testimony -- that the Chinese government had systematically set out to influence the presidential elections of 1996, which put Clinton and Gore in the White House. More than a hundred witnesses called to testify about these facts took the Fifth Amendment or fled the country. Finally, among the charges leveled at the Clinton-Gore team was that the Administration routinely authorized electronic surveillance of U.S. citizens (some seven hundred wire taps were approved) but that the Administration had turned down the FBI’s request for a tap on Wen Ho Lee. In fact, this was virtually the only tap the Clinton Justice Department refused.

In sum, the zealous prosecution of Wen Ho Lee, according to this theory, took place only after a period of endless foot-dragging and dangerous laxity on security issues, followed by the sensational revelations of the Cox Report. At this juncture, Clinton’s personal political interest dictated a vigorous effort to establish his vigilance, particularly in relation to the security threat from the Chinese. Only when his personal political jeopardy was over (for example, now) was he able to resume the posture of minimizing the problem itself.

The support for Wen Ho Lee and the view that he is an innocent victim of overzealous government security concerns is a familiar trope in American politics. The same attitude can be seen as a dominant feature of American liberalism in its approach to the Hiss case over half a century, and even to the Rosenbergs. It is not insignificant that the Rosenbergs were actually the last spies executed in America.

Charles Nesson, the professor who counseled me on how to commit treason, is still a highly respected law professor at Harvard and thus a legal lion of the establishment culture. In fact, the culture of Harvard is completely comfortable with professor Nesson who has never, so far as I know, expressed regret for his subversive advice in the Sixties. At the same time, the political culture of Harvard, is completely uncomfortable with someone like myself, who has. This is not an anomaly. The most prominent scholars to have used the newly opened Soviet archives to establish the guilt of Hiss, the Rosenbergs and other American spies are without exception conservative intellectuals and are shunned outsiders to the university culture. On the other hand, the most prominent scholars of American communism, in that same culture, are almost without exception apologists for American communism and partisans of the political left. The defining argument of their historical perspective, in fact, is to deny either treasonous activity or treasonous intent by actual communist party activists in the Forties and Fifties.

These are but two indicators of a phenomenon that is well known but rarely discussed. A large swathe of the American intelligentsia that is shaping opinion towards the Wen Ho Lee case is what is often euphemistically called the “adversarial” culture. It is a community that is indifferent at best to perceived American national interests, including the national security interest. Since World War II, this community has never been persuaded that America has enemies it does not deserve. The adversary culture can find a moral equivalency between American democracy and virtually any oppressive regime that is not American. I have a vivid memory of the late conductor Leonard Bernstein being interviewed on television during the election of 1988, which was one year before the fall of the Berlin Wall and a time when the Soviet dictatorship was still intact. Bernstein practically spit into a television news camera the following comment: “I infinitely prefer Mr. Gorbachev to Mr. Bush.”

The “adversarial” culture assumes that America is so powerful as to be invulnerable to any foreign threat. It is typified by Energy Secretary Hazel O’Leary’s pronouncement at the outset of the Clinton Administration, on declassifying 11 million pages of nuclear information, including the records of all American nuclear tests, that nuclear secrecy was part of a “bomb building culture” that it was necessary to end. It would be ended, in her view, by sharing America’s national secrets with everyone, and thus “leveling the playing field.” This was, in fact, precisely the attitude that inspired me and the other editors of Ramparts to divulge the secrets of America’s electronic intelligence agency to the world. We viewed it as an effort to level the military playing field so that America would no longer be the superpower that was able to lord it over everyone else.

In retrospect, the most important lesson of my Sixties encounter with a defector from our own intelligence service was the tolerance, sympathy and even support for treason that can be found in mainstream liberalism itself. Even though we thought of ourselves as radicals, the mainstream culture that we despised was so tolerant and even supportive of our radical postures, that we were never prosecuted for the crime we had committed. We were given a kind of hero status, instead, for our “journalistic coup” in printing the revelations of “Winslow Peck.” The New York Times gave our story front-page coverage.

It is obvious to me now that the adversarial attitude that inspired me in the Sixties (and which I have since rejected) lies behind the sympathy for Wen Ho Lee and the preposterous belief that his activities were “innocent.” This attitude is both typified by and given ominous expression in the role played by an old comrade of mine, who preceded me at Ramparts and who later became a national correspondent and then a powerful columnist at the Los Angeles Times - which is the very paper that led the attack on the Cox Report and also the defense of Wen Ho Lee.

There is perhaps no more outspoken champion of Wen Ho Lee in American journalism than L.A. Times pundit Robert Scheer, who has authored more than a dozen columns on Lee (including one filed from Albuquerque where Lee was indicted and held). Scheer has even called Lee “an American Dreyfus,” after the French Jew who was falsely accused by anti-Semites of treason in the 19th Century: “In a case that parallels the frame-up of Alfred Dreyfus, a Jewish captain in the French army a century ago,” Scheer wrote at the time of Lee’s arrest, “the U.S. government is hell-bent on destroying Wen Ho Lee, a naturalized American citizen and former Los Alamos nuclear weapons scientist,… In both cases, the ‘foreignness’ of the suspect was used by officials and the media to stoke fears of betrayal of the nation's security to a dangerous enemy.”(LA Times, December 19, 1999)

The idea that the Administration of Bill Clinton singled out Lee for ethnic persecution is laughable. The notion that Dreyfus (a Frenchman), and Lee (a Chinese immigrant whose nation of origin is a nuclear power hostile to the United States), are parallel cases is simply ludicrous.

Even before taking up the cause of Lee, Scheer had led the attacks on the bi-partisan Cox Report, released in the spring of 1999, which documented the theft of America’s nuclear arsenal, including the miniaturized W-88 warhead suited for placement on cruise-type ballistic missiles. Attacking Cox and the Democrats who supported him as “fear-mongers” and national security hysterics, Scheer actually claimed that there were no nuclear secrets to begin with, so the Chinese couldn’t have stolen them. “The dirty secret of the nuclear weapons business is that there are no secrets,” Scheer wrote in the Times on August 3, 1999. “Nothing has happened since Hiroshima and Nagasaki to render these weapons any more plausibly useful as weapons. A crude nuclear weapon dropped from a propeller-driven plane or carried in a suitcase does the job of terrorizing civilian populations -- the only function of nuclear weapons -- as effectively as the modernized warheads, whose technology some claim Beijing has stolen.”

The statement betrays an astounding ignorance of modern nuclear strategy for a columnist at the Los Angeles Times. But as though even this howling claim was not sufficient to make Scheer’s point, he also invoked Hazel O’Leary’s “level playing field.”. Whatever weapons the Chinese Communist dictatorship did not already have, Scheer wrote, the United States should provide to them, in the interests of peace! “It would be in our national security interest to supply the Chinese with a Trident-class sub that works, as opposed to their lone sub contender that leaks radiation so badly that it isn’t operational. And, heresy of heresies, we should give the Chinese some submarine-suitable missiles armed with the miniaturized W-88 warhead that they are supposed to have stolen. That way, even if they thought a nuclear weapon was en route to them, they would not have to instantly respond, being secure in the knowledge that they possessed survivable retaliatory power.” (Los Angeles Times, August 3, 1999).

Where do such bizarre, alienated and delusional attitudes come from? As I have already mentioned, Robert Scheer preceded me as the editor of our radical left magazine, Ramparts. In fact, I and my co-editors fired him in 1969, less than three years before we published the revelations of national security agent “Winslow Peck.” Although our firing of Scheer was not political, it turned out that he subsequently veered further to the left than any of us were ever tempted to go. While we were divulging the secrets of America’s electronic intelligence agency in the pages of Ramparts’, Scheer was joining the Red Sun Rising Commune and becoming an acolyte of North Korean dictator Kim Il-Sung.

Unlike myself and others who have had second thoughts (but just like Charles Nesson), Robert Scheer has never had second thoughts. He has probably changed some of the beliefs he held in the Sixties and has probably reconsidered some of the actions he took. But he has never repudiated them, never acknowledged how wrong he had been, and never relinquished the adversarial attitudes that led him astray in the first place. That is the real national security problem that the latest turn in the Wen Ho Lee case reveals.


23 posted on 06/03/2006 11:44:33 AM PDT by Diddle E. Squat
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To: Cicero

It is quite clear that this treasonous bastard is guilty as hell. He simply was the fall guy, but that doesn't make him in the least bit innocent.


24 posted on 06/03/2006 11:46:08 AM PDT by Diddle E. Squat
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To: CedarDave; Alamo-Girl; All

.

NEVER FORGET


...Why did then CLINTON Energy Secretary BILL RICHARDSON, a former U.S. Congressman who represented Los Alamos for 11 years,

...knowingly authorize fires to be set near a Los Alamos Nuclear Lab during that area's annual windy season?

...Fires that, of course, ended up engulfing a Los Alamos Nuclear Lab that suddenly found its suitcase Nuclear technology missing during this careful diversion?

Why hasn't anyone asked BILL RICHARDSON,

...WHY..????


NEVER FORGET

.


25 posted on 06/03/2006 12:02:11 PM PDT by ALOHA RONNIE ("ALOHA RONNIE" Guyer/Veteran-"WE WERE SOLDIERS" Battle of IA DRANG-1965 http://www.lzxray.com)
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To: Diddle E. Squat

Yes, I don't disagree with that. Probably he's guilty. But who put him into a top secret lab in the first place? Who made the FBI destroy most of its evidence and told them that they must not communicate about these matters with the CIA? Who gave the orders and made the arrangements to sell these secrets to the ChiComs?

Richardson, among others, but chiefly billyjeff himself. Chinese Communist intelligence agents didn't kick in tens of millions of dollars to BJ's political campaign for nothing.


26 posted on 06/03/2006 12:10:43 PM PDT by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: ALOHA RONNIE

To be fair, Richardson was secretary of the Department of Energy at the time of the fire. DOE recommended against setting the fires as did the Forest Service. It was the National Parks guys that actually set the fires against recommendations. (It was so windy it took two boxes of matches to the the fire lit.) The idea was to burn out a cluster of trees and reproduce an ancient (30,000 year old) meadow. I don't know why; the trees were only about 100 yrs old. (Now they're only 6 years old.)

Some of you may even remember my posting just before evacuating.


27 posted on 06/03/2006 12:12:55 PM PDT by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch ist der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: Doctor Stochastic

.

Still, WHY did our suitcase Nuke technology have to turn up missing due to the fires of Los Alamos?

And WHY didn't CLINTON Energy Secretary BILL RICHARDSON act pro-actively to make sure that those fires were not set during the windy season of Los Alamos?

.


28 posted on 06/03/2006 2:12:51 PM PDT by ALOHA RONNIE ("ALOHA RONNIE" Guyer/Veteran-"WE WERE SOLDIERS" Battle of IA DRANG-1965 http://www.lzxray.com)
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To: CedarDave

And they never found the missing computer discs either. It's a miracle that this country is still in one piece with such incompetents running Los Alamos. The federal government signed another long contract with the University of California last year for their *great* management of Los Alamos.


29 posted on 06/03/2006 2:16:47 PM PDT by kittymyrib
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To: ALOHA RONNIE

Indeed. Thanks for the ping!


30 posted on 06/03/2006 3:26:37 PM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: ALOHA RONNIE
Still, WHY did our suitcase Nuke technology have to turn up missing due to the fires of Los Alamos?

No evidence of such.

31 posted on 06/03/2006 3:33:44 PM PDT by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch ist der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: Doctor Stochastic
To be fair, Richardson was secretary of the Department of Energy at the time of the fire.

Interesting how you are always on the side of Richardson.

32 posted on 06/03/2006 5:37:47 PM PDT by tallhappy (Juntos Podemos!)
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To: Doctor Stochastic; Alamo-Girl; All

.

NEVER FORGET


Shortly after the Fires of Los Alamos a nuclear technology expert appeared on the FoX News Channel delcaring that our suitcase NUKE technology had turned up missing there during those fires.

Just like the day after the Attacks of 9/11 another nuclear expert, MONSOOR IJAZ, appeared on the FoX News Channel TV Network to tell the American People that all could have been avoided the day before...

...if only the CLINTON White House hadn't refused his 3 deals he had personally brokered with the Sudan during the 1990's to give us OSAMA bin LADEN on a silver platter.

A suitcase nuclear technology that we fear here domestically most gravely in this new time of war with an enemy that's now just around the corner and up our streets, hell bent after our own Freedom this time around.

Both stories that non-complicit, but now news-by-ommission, major TV News Networks would have locked onto big time long ago.

Wasn't it BILL RICHARDSON that the Communist North Koreans went to here, after all, to run their interference in an international stand-off with President BUSH's handling of the North Korean Nuclear crisis?


NEVER FORGET

.


33 posted on 06/03/2006 6:23:53 PM PDT by ALOHA RONNIE ("ALOHA RONNIE" Guyer/Veteran-"WE WERE SOLDIERS" Battle of IA DRANG-1965 http://www.lzxray.com)
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To: CedarDave; All

Outstanding thread bump!


34 posted on 06/03/2006 6:42:52 PM PDT by PGalt
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To: PGalt

Thanks!


35 posted on 06/03/2006 7:03:32 PM PDT by CedarDave (Sleeper trolls are like cicadas - emerge in the heat and contribute nothing but loud annoying noise)
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To: ALOHA RONNIE
Wasn't it BILL RICHARDSON that the Communist North Koreans went to here, after all, to run their interference in an international stand-off with President BUSH's handling of the North Korean Nuclear crisis?

Yes it was. It was cleared with the White House and had no official status. Not too surprising. In North Korea, who you know counts, not who is elected.

36 posted on 06/03/2006 7:55:21 PM PDT by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch ist der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: tallhappy
Interesting how you are always on the side of Richardson.

Interesting how you are always on the side of the Communist Chinese spies.

37 posted on 06/03/2006 7:56:56 PM PDT by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch ist der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: ALOHA RONNIE

During the visit, most of my friends were asking if Bill was getting a job for Monica with North Korea. Bill is running for president; it will be interesting to watch him an Hillary duke it out (Bill has a weight advantage.) On the other hand, maybe there will be a Rodham and Richardson ticket.

Bill's just another carpetbagger in New Mexico (even if he's a very popular governor.) He came in to get a "safe" Democrat seat. I don't know of anything he has done that was worthwhile as governor.


38 posted on 06/03/2006 8:00:45 PM PDT by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch ist der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: ALOHA RONNIE; Doctor Stochastic
A little too much tin-foil hat conspiracy for me. The fire was set a full week before it reached the main portion of the lab.

The department (Interior) responsible for the fire was run by Bruce Babbitt not Bill Richardson (Energy).

Missing technology as a result of a "careful diversion"? Hardly, I'm not so paranoid as to believe that setting the fire and losing 400 homes causing billions in damage just to remove and cover up nuclear suitcase technology was in the Clinton-Gore-Richardson plans. Whether someone took advantage of the fire to remove the data or whether it was gone long before the fire started I don't know. But the two events (fire and loss) are coincidental and not directly connected.

LOS ALAMOS FIRE UPDATE (and timeline)

Los Alamos Launches Probe Into Missing Files

39 posted on 06/03/2006 8:13:10 PM PDT by CedarDave (Sleeper trolls are like cicadas - emerge in the heat and contribute nothing but loud annoying noise)
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To: ALOHA RONNIE

Thanks for the ping!


40 posted on 06/03/2006 8:28:59 PM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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