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Bill, Hillary Clinton Denied $3.5 Million in Attorney Fees
Posted on 07/15/2003 7:22:20 AM PDT by ElRushbo
Breaking News on Bloomberg
TOPICS: News/Current Events
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To: mountaineer
There are any number of candidates - Marc Rich, the Indonesian family that Bill supported while he was first predator, any number of Chinese companies that stole our technology kindness of Bill...really, the list is quite endless.
41
posted on
07/15/2003 8:04:25 AM PDT
by
MarkT
To: Sen Jack S. Fogbound
Now if we can get them to PAY for Hill's home in NY instead of taxpayers making the mortgage payment! Speaking of which ...
A friend at my club today was discussing the arrangement the Clintons have at their Chappaqua house where they rent space to the Secret Service for their guard shack for an amount which just happens to cover their mortgage. My friend wanted to know if other former Presidents were also collecting rent from the Secret Service.
Does anyone know?
ML/NJ
42
posted on
07/15/2003 8:06:53 AM PDT
by
ml/nj
To: jjm2111
I don't know why anyone gives them money anymore. They're radioactive these days. The Irish just gave Bill's foundation 158 million dollars for AIDS work ..... they just pissed that money down a hole.
43
posted on
07/15/2003 8:08:32 AM PDT
by
Centurion2000
(We are crushing our enemies, seeing him driven before us and hearing the lamentations of the liberal)
To: LiteKeeper
"He has become a multi-millionaire in only three years. Amazing!"
Been going on for longer than that, I fear. ...Dan Lasater, James McDougal, Robert Lee Bone, John Huang, Vincent Foster, Marc Rich...
44
posted on
07/15/2003 8:09:50 AM PDT
by
c-five
To: ElRushbo
Danger,Danger, Warning, Warning: To all United States Tax Payers, HOLD ONTO YOU WALLETS AND CHECK YOU BANK STATEMENTS CAREFULLY, BENT WILLIE AND CRUSTY ARE LOOKING FOR OTHER PEOPLES MONEY TO PAY THEIR DEPTS.
45
posted on
07/15/2003 8:09:51 AM PDT
by
chiefqc
To: FreeTheHostages
46
posted on
07/15/2003 8:13:29 AM PDT
by
Congressman Billybob
("Don't just stand there. Run for Congress." www.ArmorforCongress.com)
To: chiefqc; All
Pennsylvania Teacher Takes on the President
Christopher Ruddy
November 02, 1997
A Pennsylvania man, outraged that his insurance company was paying Bill Clinton's legal bills in the Paula Jones dispute, fought back and won. The current spin from the White House and major media tells us that "no one cares, no one can change anything" when it comes to the scandals infecting the Clinton administration.
Thomas Flocco disagrees. Flocco, 50, is an elementary school music teacher who was living a happy American life with his wife and two teen-age sons in suburban Philadelphia - with little interest in politics. Then allegations surfaced about Bill Clinton, and Flocco became interested. He devoured James Stewart's book on Whitewater, "Blood Sport," and was surprised how little the media had covered the subject.
He became intensely curious about following the Clinton scandals, and while reading an article about the Jones case noticed that his insurer, State Farm, and another insurer, Chubb, were paying the president's legal bills to defend himself against Jones' sexual harassment suit. "I couldn't believe it," Flocco recalled in a recent interview. "I had been a State Farm policy holder for years - my house, my cars, everything - and they were paying his legal bills."
The facts of the Jones case are well-known. Jones is suing the president for $700,000 for the humiliation she alleges he put her through in 1991 when he dropped his pants and asked her to perform oral sex.
But Flocco had stumbled onto a matter potentially more serious: the highly suspicious financial circumstances surrounding the insurers in that case. Shortly before the Jones incident was said to have taken place, Clinton purchased - for less than $200 - a $1 million homeowner/renter policy from Chubb that included an "umbrella" provision covering the insured against lawsuits for slander and defamation. Clinton bought a second defamation policy from State Farm after the incident allegedly occurred.
Flocco noted that Clinton had not even bothered to file a claim with State Farm for more than a year, a fact that should have immediately disqualified the claim since the insured must file all claims within a matter of months of a covered incident. Flocco says he checked out the issue with his own State Farm agent, who agreed the whole transaction seemed fishy.
Then, armed with suspicions about abuse of power and a possible bribe from insurance companies, Flocco began calling major media outlets. "I called Time, Newsweek, the networks, and they all said, `Yeah, that sounds interesting. We'll have to look into that.' "
Flocco quickly learned no one in the press was really looking into it. One reporter at a leading news magazine was bluntly honest, Flocco recounted. The reporter told him "no way are we going to touch it," but in the same breath recommended that Flocco call Larry Klayman, head of a legal advocacy group called Judicial Watch.
Contacted by Flocco, Klayman immediately saw the merits of Flocco's argument. If Clinton's legal bills were being paid by insurance companies when he was not entitled to coverage, it could be construed as a bribe. Klayman has noted that neither Chubb nor State Farm offers policies covering the specific behavior that Clinton was paid to defend against. Neither insurer issues any protection against sexual harassment because it is considered a deliberate and willful act, somewhat akin to arson by the holder of a fire-insurance policy.
David Duffy, a Chubb spokesman, refused a reporter's request for comment on the Clinton case other than to say that decisions to represent clients in such situations are made on a "case-by-case" basis. Industry sources, however, noted that sexual harassment is not covered by Chubb's personal-liability policies.
DEFENDING CASES
Los Angeles insurance attorney Richard C. Giller, who researched the case for the respected Bureau of National Affairs, found that based on State Farm's policy and Arkansas law there was no obligation for the company to defend cases like Clinton's. He cited a Florida appeals court opinion involving another State Farm case that held that "harassment and discrimination are neither negligent nor accidental," so State Farm did not have to pay for the defense of such acts under a liability policy it had issued.
Both Chubb and State Farm have maintained that they would have denied coverage outright for a sexual harassment charge. What "triggered" their involvement was the finer point of defamation claimed by Jones. Jones claims that after she went public with her allegations, Clinton and his associates defamed her character and reputation.
In a press release, State Farm conceded that the alleged sexual harassment took place prior to Clinton purchasing their policy, and was therefore not covered. However, the defamation allegedly occurred in 1994 while the policy was in effect, thereby triggering the State Farm payout.
Giller maintains that since the defamation claim arose directly from Clinton's alleged sexual harassment, it should all be considered one incident, and neither Chubb nor State Farm are obligated to pay for Clinton's defense.
Fred Joseph, a Maryland attorney whose firm specializes in insurance work, told one reporter that insurers generally do their best to avoid such cases. If it were "Joe Blow or Harry Homeowner," he told one publication, "I would be extremely surprised if the insurance companies would cover legal fees, and usually, if insurance companies do cover the case, they insist on using their own lawyers."
Klayman agrees. "Unless you live at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave., no insurance company in the country would dream of paying you for your defense in a case like this," he said. "Ms. Jones alleges that Mr. Clinton committed the grossest sort of sexual harassment" and then defamed her "by having his staff call her a liar when she brought her charge. Insurance policies just don't cover that conduct."
There seems little doubt that Clinton was recompensed by his insurance companies in a way that ordinary policyholders aren't. "If this was Ma and Pa Kettle," asked Klayman, "would (the insurance firms) cut a check to pursue a tangential issue of law?"
Yet Clinton was given $1.5 million to pay his top-notch attorneys, including Robert Bennett, who commands $495 an hour for his formidable skills. Most insurance companies have a ceiling of $225 an hour for outside attorneys.
In a strange twist to the case, a court "victory" by Clinton might have been the worst of all consequences for him. On Aug. 22, federal Judge Susan Webber Wright dismissed Jones' defamation claim, along with a due-process claim. Robert Bennett, Clinton's attorney, said he was "pleased by the dismissals." By persuading the judge to dismiss that defamation claim, Giller suggested Bennett may have "slaughtered the cash cow that had been paying his fees."
After the judge's decision to throw out the defamation charges, which the insurers had said was the only reason they had paid on the policy in the first place, Giller noted that both State Farm and Chubb were entitled to withdraw from the case entirely. Within a month, both insurers did.
WINNING ROUND 1
So Flocco won Round 1. "We cut off the faucet. We stopped the cash flow," he said after the insurance companies pulled out. But he and Klayman are still pursuing his suit against State Farm. As Giller argued in the Los Angeles Daily Journal, "Under a recent California Supreme Court decision, they would be allowed to demand that Clinton repay the $1.5 million in fees they had paid to date."
Klayman contends that one or both of the two insurance companies involved made improper, indeed illegal, payments to Clinton on his insurance policies. The motive was simple, he suggested: "to buy influence."
It could be even worse than a plain old influence-buying operation, said Klayman. Perhaps even a kind of extortion was involved. "When the president calls on you and leans on you, and (his attorneys) say `Pay the settlement,' you pay," Klayman told the press. "Otherwise, the only alternative is a shakedown."
In early September, when State Farm announced it would no longer foot the president's legal bills, Clinton's lawyer, Robert Bennett, said, "The president isn't going to pay any money out of his pocket." Was Bennett hinting he would work pro bono, or was he hoping the president's legal defense fund would pick up the tab?
"It's my understanding that, in fact, no final decision has been made by either company, and I am hopeful that on further reflection both companies will continue to stand by their insured," Bennett told the press.
Klayman's lawsuit on behalf of Flocco demands return of the legal fees paid Clinton. So far, Chubb and State Farm have paid out more than $1.5 million defending against Jones' $700,000 claim.
Flocco is invigorated by his success so far. "We are not going to settle. We don't want a penny ourselves. We want the policyholders to be repaid."
The experience for the music teacher from Pennsylvania has been eye-opening, particularly because of the unusual indifference the media have shown to his case. "The media is more biased than I ever thought," he said.
47
posted on
07/15/2003 8:19:47 AM PDT
by
CFW
To: All
Thought some of you might like this old article.
48
posted on
07/15/2003 8:20:20 AM PDT
by
CFW
To: skeeter
Is the b***h exempt from income tax? If not, I'd say she's down to to two million. Let's hope it rains some more on her parade.
49
posted on
07/15/2003 8:20:53 AM PDT
by
meatloaf
To: skeeter
Is the b***h exempt from income tax? If not, I'd say she's down to to two million. Let's hope it rains some more on her parade.
50
posted on
07/15/2003 8:21:17 AM PDT
by
meatloaf
To: jriemer
How much you wanna bet this WON'T be part of abccbsnbccnn news tonight! I'll be anxiously waiting with baited breath.
Hah! Not!
To: linn37
52
posted on
07/15/2003 8:21:51 AM PDT
by
Quilla
To: ElRushbo
Maybe Klinton can contact the Chinese for help as they seem to be free-wheeling 3.5 million here and there...most recently the PLO.
To: Congressman Billybob
54
posted on
07/15/2003 8:28:20 AM PDT
by
FreeTheHostages
(but please note the contest judge is drunk)
To: meatloaf
Is the b***h exempt from income tax?Soiled undershorts deduction notwithstanding, I'd imagine not.
That is, if Bill & she are still filing a joint return.
55
posted on
07/15/2003 8:29:08 AM PDT
by
skeeter
(Fac ut vivas)
To: Semper Paratus
lol.
56
posted on
07/15/2003 9:03:59 AM PDT
by
verity
To: Centurion2000
The Irish just gave Bill's foundation 158 million dollars for AIDS work ..... they just pissed that money down a hole.
** ***** ** * ***** ***
This is prep for BJ Bill to go to africa on his own tour to give money away. This 158 million is going to be used as bribe money and probably as part of his drug smuggling.
To: Centurion2000
My theory is that the William Jefferson Blythe Rockefeller Clinton Foundation is nothing more than a money laundering scheme. Ireland's money is going into some off-shore account, like all the graft the Clintons collected while ruling Arkansas, and not a single AIDS patient will be helped. Of course, it's just a theory.
To: ElRushbo
HA-HA!
59
posted on
07/15/2003 2:15:35 PM PDT
by
gbunch
(God bless our President and our troops.)
To: ml/nj
Speaking of which ...
A friend at my club today was discussing the arrangement the Clintons have at their Chappaqua house where they rent space to the Secret Service for their guard shack for an amount which just happens to cover their mortgage. My friend wanted to know if other former Presidents were also collecting rent from the Secret Service. Does anyone know?
I did some research and here is the answer! Dang, I didn't want to hear this!
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Bill and Hillary Clinton's New York Home Mortgage is Being Covered By Secret Service Payments-Fiction!
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Summary of Rumor Bill and Hillary Clinton bought a house in New York, but there was no room for the Secret Service, so they built a special area for the Secret Service...and are charging the same amount for the Secret Service's use of that area as their mortgage payment.
This eRumor is also sometimes circulated with the eRumor about Hillary Clinton refusing to meet with a group of mothers of veterans, which is also Fiction! CLICK HERE for that story. |
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The Truth All presidents and former presidents are eligible for Secret Service protection and, according to a Secret Service spokesman, the presidents are reimbursed for any area of the home that is used by Secret Service agents. The amount is based on a formula, however, not defined by the homeowner. Based on that formula, Mr. Clinton would be eligible for more than $1,000, but he has declined the money for his New York home. |
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A real example of the story as it has been circulated: |
Just in case your blood pressure wasnt up enough. As you know, the Clintons had to establish residence in New York for Hillary to run for the Senate. So they bought that big house - BUT there was no place for Secret Service which has statutory responsibility to protect the First Family. So, a special safe area was built. NOW, the Clintons are charging them rent! Perfectly legal. BUT...! It just happens that their rent is about the same amount as the Clintons mortgage payment! In short, we taxpayers pay for the Secret Service addition, AND the Clintons mortgage! Dang deal, eh?What will it take for the American public to wake up? Dont you just feel like youve been suckered again, fellow taxpayers? I say lets pass this info throughout the length and breadth of this Nation to shake the American people into a heightened state of anger upon knowing they have been literally raped during their long sleep by no other than those trustees they have appointed to look after their interests.
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