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To: Jake The Goose

Stop being a goose and check his web-site. He put up a wall that's keeping illegals out of San Diego--even as we speak.
And lots of other things . . . educate yourself, FRiend.


61 posted on 02/19/2007 10:05:47 AM PST by tumblindice ("Conservative", `07--guns, mebbe they are jsut for hunting)
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To: tumblindice

I am from San Diego.

Listen - I like Duncan Hunter - but you have to know this.

He was tangled up in the Duke Cunningham fiasco.

It will come out and it will damage him.

The two of them were best friend - very best friends.

Oh - Duncan Hunter know nothing about Duke's odd increases in money, homes, boats, cars, art work, furniture, vacations...

Skeletons.


62 posted on 02/19/2007 10:09:38 AM PST by Jake The Goose
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To: tumblindice

Again - I like Duncan Hunter (honest) but he has a lot of baggage that will surface on the Duke Cunningham ADCS bribery scandal:

Taken from the USA Today - November of 2005, this just a sample of what Duncan Hunter may have to deal with.

WASHINGTON — A San Diego businessman under investigation in the bribery case of former congressman Randy "Duke" Cunningham is a well-known GOP fundraiser whose generosity to key members of Congress came at the same time his company saw large increases in its government contracts, public records show.

Brent Wilkes, the founder of defense contractor ADCS Inc., gave more than $840,000 in contributions to 32 House members or candidates, campaign-finance records show. He flew Republican lawmakers on his private jet and hired lobbyists with close ties to those lawmakers.

Since 1994, Wilkes and ADCS gave $40,700 in campaign contributions to Rep. Duncan Hunter, a San Diego Republican who now chairs the House Armed Services Committee. Hunter has acknowledged that he joined with Cunningham in 1999 to contact Pentagon officials who reversed a decision and gave ADCS one of its first big contracts, for nearly $10 million. Hunter's spokesman, Joe Kasper, said the congressman was unavailable for comment Tuesday.
Wilkes' ties to Hunter and Cunningham go beyond campaign contributions. In 2003, the businessman's foundation hosted a "Salute to Heroes" gala to give Hunter an award, just as it did for Cunningham a year earlier. The Wilkes Foundation gave $1,000 in 2003 to a charity run by two of Hunter's staffers, records show.
Wilkes also provided a jet that Cunningham and other Republicans used for more than a dozen flights to campaign fundraising events since 2001, records show.
Providing flights gives donors a chance for hours of one-on-one contact with the lawmaker they want to influence, said Keith Ashdown of the watchdog group Taxpayers for Common Sense.
"Most other lobbyists would give up their second lung to get that kind of access," Ashdown said. "It's not always illegal, but it's definitely a strategy of influence that's unparalleled."

http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/2005-11-29-cunningham-case_x.htm


63 posted on 02/19/2007 10:19:10 AM PST by Jake The Goose
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