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Palm Beach Post - Limbaugh linked to painkillers
PalmBeachPost.com ^ | October 3, 2003 | John Pacenti and Mary McLachlin

Posted on 10/03/2003 12:31:25 AM PDT by HAL9000

WEST PALM BEACH -- A former housekeeper for Rush Limbaugh claims she supplied the conservative commentator with thousands of doses of painkillers, some of which may have come from a mom-and-pop pill mill busted earlier this year in Lake Worth.

The housekeeper and her husband, residents of The Acreage, told their story to a Miami lawyer, and then to the Palm Beach County State Attorney's Office after a promise of immunity from prosecution. Then they sold the tale to The National Enquirer, which splashed the allegations across their front page in Thursday's edition under the headline: "Rush Limbaugh Caught In Drug Ring."

Whether State Attorney Barry Krischer is interested in prosecuting Limbaugh isn't known. But prosecutors rarely pursue drug addicts unless they catch them with drugs. The Enquirer story stopped short of saying Limbaugh was caught red-handed.

Krischer's office would neither confirm nor deny the allegations Thursday. But sources said prosecutors would not be surprised if Limbaugh contacted them.

Limbaugh, 52, wasn't talking, either, but he was communicating with powerhouse criminal defense attorney Roy Black of Miami, who had no comment.

Limbaugh, in a statement posted on his radio show's Web site, said: "I am unaware of any investigation by any authorities involving me. No governmental representative has contacted me directly or indirectly. If my assistance is required in the future, I will, of course, cooperate fully."

Limbaugh wasn't on the air Thursday. Instead he gave the keynote speech at the National Association of Broadcasters convention in Philadelphia. He made no mention of the drug allegations, but focused instead on his resignation as an ESPN sports analyst late Wednesday.

He gave up the job three days after saying on the sports network's Sunday NFL Countdown that Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Donovan McNabb was overrated because the media wanted to see a black quarterback succeed.

The sources for the Enquirer's exposé were former housekeeper Wilma Cline, 42, and her husband, David, 41, who claim they were Limbaugh's drug suppliers from 1998 to 2002 and that he paid them tens of thousands of dollars.

They said they sold him 11,900 tablets over six months in 2001. Many exchanges of drugs and money took place at a Denny's restaurant parking lot on Belvedere Road, they alleged.

Trail leads to pharmacy

The Enquirer story said the couple got nervous and contacted Edward Shohat, a noted Miami criminal defense lawyer. Late last year, Shohat escorted them to Palm Beach County prosecutor James Martz.

Given immunity, the Clines became part of a drug probe that led to the arrest of Louis and Gloria Beshara last May. Authorities believe that the Clines' illegal supply of painkillers came from the Besharas.

Investigators tracked 450,000 doses of the powerful narcotic painkiller hydrocodone that were dispensed at the Besharas' small pharmacy, World Health Association, in suburban Lake Worth. The Besharas were charged with trafficking and conspiracy to traffic in hydrocodone, a painkiller similar to morphine.

During a six-month undercover operation, law enforcement agents from the multi-agency task force also seized 73,000 narcotic tablets from the Besharas' home in Loxahatchee and from the pharmacy, and unearthed $806,000 in cash.

Louis Beshara's attorney, James Eisenberg, told The Post he knew of no connection between the Clines and the Besharas.

"Those names (the Clines) have never come up. Never," Eisenberg said. "There is nothing in the case about Limbaugh, about the Clines, about anything like that. There is no connection as far as I can tell."

Court documents show as many as four confidential informants were involved in the Beshara case, but Eisenberg said he didn't believe they included Wilma or David Cline.

The Enquirer said the Clines backed up their claim of being Limbaugh's drug suppliers by providing e-mails that Limbaugh allegedly sent them with such messages as, "You know how this stuff works... the more you get used to, the more it takes."

The messages also mention "small blue babies," an apparent reference to the painkillers.

According to Wilma Cline's story, Limbaugh's descent into drug addiction happened after she told him that her husband was hurt in a fall from a ladder and that he was taking some hydrocodone.

"To my astonishment, he said, 'Can you spare a couple of them?' " she told the Enquirer.

She said David Cline was impressed by who Limbaugh was and gave him 10 pills from his prescription.

The next day in the laundry room of Limbaugh's $24 million mansion, he asked his $370-a-week housekeeper for more pills, Wilma Cline told the tabloid. Soon, she said, the couple was supplying Limbaugh with 80 pills a month.

When her husband's doctor stopped prescribing him painkillers, she said, Limbaugh got upset and yelled at her, "I don't care how or what you do but you'd better -- better! -- get me some more."

With the help of an unnamed houseman, she said, she continued to supply Limbaugh illegally, hiding the pills under his mattress so his wife wouldn't find them. Several months later, Limbaugh told her he would be undergoing drug rehabilitation and wouldn't need the drugs.

But one month later, Limbaugh called and asked if he could get an even more powerful painkiller: OxyContin, Wilma Cline told the Enquirer.

She started to keep a log of her purchases, she said, and within the first 47 days she delivered 4,350 pills to Limbaugh.

She said Limbaugh became increasingly paranoid, one time groping her to see whether she was wearing a wire for the authorities.

He tried to kick his habit again at a New York hospital to no avail, she said, and piled up drug bills of $80,000.

In 2002, Wilma Cline said, a Palm Beach attorney showed up on her doorstep, gave her a check for $100,000 and made her sign a promissory note, but said the "loan" would never be collected. Four months later, in November, the attorney gave her a check for $100,000 and told her not to give Limbaugh any more pills.

The attorney also told her to hand over the computer retaining Limbaugh's e-mails, Wilma Cline said, but she took the hard drive from another computer and smashed it in front of him. Then the Clines sought legal help.

Enquirer Editor-in-Chief David Perel declined to say whether the Clines were paid for their story, but said the tabloid does pay for interviews. The Clines could not be reached Thursday.

David Cline was arrested for cocaine trafficking in 1982 in Collier County. He posted bond to get out of jail and then skipped, living as a fugitive in New York and Fort Lauderdale under different names until surrendering in 1989. He was convicted and sentenced to five years in prison.

In April 2000, while he and his wife were allegedly supplying Limbaugh with drugs, Cline was arrested in Palm Beach County and charged with identity theft, having a counterfeit or stolen driver license and a false vehicle registration, possessing marijuana and resisting arrest. He wound up with a combined sentence of time served, 18 months probation, community service and court costs.

The injury that put a hydrocodone prescription into David Cline's hands happened in March 1998, while he was doing odd jobs at the Palm Beach home of Patricia Bradshaw.

A pull-down attic ladder broke, sending him crashing to the floor. The Clines sued Bradshaw for $75,000, but Circuit Judge Jorge Labarga ruled against them in January 2001.

Under questioning by Bradshaw's lawyer, Cline said he had made $40,000 to $50,000 a year and that he had not filed any income tax returns for the preceding five years. He also said he had used an alias to avoid paying child support for two children from a previous marriage.

The Clines live at the end of a dirt road, where some of the 2-acre lots are fenced, with locked gates and "No Trespassing" and "Beware of Dog" signs.

Their house is a 10-minute drive from where Louis and Gloria Beshara live in the Fox Trails community near Lion Country Safari. Their Besharas' house is surrounded by a high stone wall.

Crews from CNN and the NBC network joined local reporters in a stakeout on the road in front of the Clines' yard Thursday. Scott and Cathy Pauldino, who live across the street, said the Clines had always been helpful and neighborly in their five years as neighbors.

"They're good people," Cathy Pauldino said.

Limbaugh called good boss

Wilma Cline had told them Limbaugh was a good person to work for, but revealed no details about the commentator's personal life.

Limbaugh's friends also defended him.

Advertising executive Dina Sontag, who worked with Limbaugh from 1993 to 1996, said she never saw Limbaugh take any drugs.

"As far as I know, it's all ludicrous," she said.

Limbaugh's fill-in host on Thursday, Sacramento broadcaster Tom Sullivan, alluded briefly to the fact that "Rush is in the headlines today."

"Nobody better to talk about Rush than Rush," Sullivan said at the beginning of the three-hour broadcast. "And when he gets back, he will, I'm sure, delve into all of the news about him as he always does."



TOPICS: News/Current Events; US: Florida
KEYWORDS: barrykrischer; davidcline; edshohat; gloriabeshara; jamesmartz; limbaugh; louisbeshara; royblack; rushlimbaugh; wilmacline
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To: HAL9000
She started to keep a log of her purchases, she said, and within the first 47 days she delivered 4,350 pills to Limbaugh.

She said Limbaugh became increasingly paranoid, one time groping her to see whether she was wearing a wire for the authorities.

He tried to kick his habit again at a New York hospital to no avail, she said, and piled up drug bills of $80,000.

In 2002, Wilma Cline said, a Palm Beach attorney showed up on her doorstep, gave her a check for $100,000 and made her sign a promissory note, but said the "loan" would never be collected. Four months later, in November, the attorney gave her a check for $100,000 and told her not to give Limbaugh any more pills.

The attorney also told her to hand over the computer retaining Limbaugh's e-mails, Wilma Cline said, but she took the hard drive from another computer and smashed it in front of him. Then the Clines sought legal help.

These are the most damaging allegations I've read. Two checks for 100k each should be easy to trace. I wonder what the tax implications were.

161 posted on 10/05/2003 12:02:29 PM PDT by af_vet_1981
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To: af_vet_1981
Yeah, I'd say 2 checks for 100K each would be pretty easy to cough up proof of for a maid making 370/week.


This is one facet though that makes me really wonder. Her attorney, Ed Shohat is no dummy even though a major Rat and I'm wondering why he has not to our knowledge offered proof of these payoffs yet.

...if they even exist.
162 posted on 10/05/2003 12:06:09 PM PDT by wardaddy (The Lizard King it was.....)
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To: wardaddy
Rush must have trusted her to let her into his home. I'm content to wait for Rush to tell us everything, "more than we want to know" as long as he did not hurt another person. I've heard no allegations he did that.
163 posted on 10/05/2003 12:24:49 PM PDT by af_vet_1981
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To: af_vet_1981
It would not bother you if Rush were a dopehead?

if these allegations are true.
164 posted on 10/05/2003 12:50:49 PM PDT by wardaddy (The Lizard King it was.....)
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To: Cacophonous
My point is that we have to hold our conservative heroes and icons to the same standards of behavior as we do liberals

Maybe we should stop thinking of them as icons. I'm not a hero worshiper. I respect what the man has to say. I respect him as a man, not a prophet.

As far as working within the system goes, I guess I didn't make my point by going back to the founders. I'll try a more recent example.

Segregation laws were not overturned by politicians, the courts or people working within the system. They were overturned by people breaking those laws.
165 posted on 10/05/2003 12:56:10 PM PDT by LittleJoe
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To: wardaddy
I think he most likely was addicted to prescription drugs and it bothers me a greal deal. His credibility with me is diminished. I would be hard pressed to vote for him in any election.
166 posted on 10/05/2003 3:34:00 PM PDT by af_vet_1981
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To: Don Munn; Cacophonous
and what happen to their rat counter parts, Byrd, Clinton, Leahy....NOTHING

But isn't that the point? We're suppose to be BETTER than they are.

167 posted on 10/05/2003 3:37:52 PM PDT by Howlin
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To: A. Pole
Agreed
168 posted on 10/05/2003 4:15:47 PM PDT by johnwayne (I)
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To: LittleJoe
Segregation laws were not overturned by politicians, the courts or people working within the system. They were overturned by people breaking those laws.

That is inaccurate. The civil disobedience and marches etc. brought about legislative and judicial action. Action whose fruits are still rather mixed results btw.

169 posted on 10/05/2003 4:16:05 PM PDT by wardaddy (The Lizard King it was.....)
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To: Howlin
yep.
170 posted on 10/05/2003 4:20:01 PM PDT by wardaddy (The Lizard King it was.....)
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To: WorkingClassFilth
At the basic level of good v. evil though, I have a difficult time with branding God as a Republican. Perhaps a more likely notion is that more of the crumbling homage to absolute truths and moral restraint are embodied in the American conservative agenda and, therefore, our particular vehicle of Republicanism is the last gasp of 'good' in the early part of the 21st century.

No political party has monopoly on truth. I think that the fragments of truth are present on the right and on the left and probably most is outside of the political spectrum.

"But where sin abounded, grace did much more abound" (St. Paul, Romans 5:20)

171 posted on 10/05/2003 4:58:45 PM PDT by A. Pole ("Is 87 billion dollars a great deal of money? Yes. Can our country afford it?" [Secretary Rumsfeld])
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To: wardaddy
You've done admirable work on this. We're supposed to be "right is right and wrong is wrong" people, not "hey, if it's a guy we like, whose work is helpful to our cause..." people. Then we become like George Poppycockopolous types. There are two levels to this thing, both of which have to be dealt with: (1) a "feel good/feel better" drug addiction, equaling a weakness of character, and (2) criminality. And BTW you don't have to forgive anyone unless they (believably) ask for it. Our Lord doesn't require of us something He isn't willing to do.
172 posted on 10/05/2003 6:50:24 PM PDT by 185JHP ( "This Train don't carry no scammer)
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To: 185JHP
Bluntpoint said earlier yesterday that we should try not to let our bias cloud our perspective.

I agree with that.

I hope that all we are hearing is not true. If it is, then it won't matter much what we all here think. The damage will be done and irreversible.

Forgiveness is fine but compromised is still compromised.

I know.....I am (was) a compromised individual myself.

Rush will have to just dust off and see where he goes from here but he will fall hard..no doubt....at least for a time.

And conservatism will have to answer for his mistake...rightly or wrongly.....the scrutiny of rightists by our culture is patently unfair but it is there nonetheless.

If he is guilty that is...

Regards
173 posted on 10/05/2003 8:10:13 PM PDT by wardaddy (The Lizard King it was.....)
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To: wardaddy
It's a question of honor - if there's anything to the allegations. The emails will be important. They can't be faked well enough to fool pros. I don't buy this gal using "password cracking" software to break into a Rush computer to send emails to herself... FReegards
174 posted on 10/05/2003 9:58:01 PM PDT by 185JHP ( "This Train don't carry no scammer)
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To: wardaddy
That is inaccurate. The civil disobedience and marches etc. brought about legislative and judicial action. Action whose fruits are still rather mixed results btw.

No, that is very accurate. There would have been no judicial or legislative action without the civil disobediance. The same was true for prohibition.

Marches were media events. The masses violating the law is what caused the changes.

I do agree about the mixed fruits...lol
175 posted on 10/05/2003 10:54:59 PM PDT by LittleJoe
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To: Don Munn
I would answer that Newt, Livingstone, Bennett, et al, lowered themselves.
176 posted on 10/06/2003 2:56:28 AM PDT by Cacophonous
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To: Cacophonous
and then you want Rush out and then who next.

You stand in a circle and shoot yourself.

Principles are fine, to a point, but you can so far that no one is left standing because no one can live up to your principles.

177 posted on 10/06/2003 5:46:23 AM PDT by Don Munn
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To: LittleJoe
I support civil disobedience.

I wish every gunowner in this nation would march on DC weapons in hand as a message.

I would also like to see the same by pro-life folks.

You are right that sometimes it takes these measure to get lawmakers to pay attention.
178 posted on 10/06/2003 9:34:49 AM PDT by wardaddy (The Lizard King it was.....)
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To: wardaddy
Yes, tyrants always demand that their subjects "work within the system".

It's a sad fact that the system always defends itself against change, even when change is for the better. That's just the nature of the beast.
179 posted on 10/06/2003 12:48:38 PM PDT by LittleJoe
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To: 185JHP
They can't be faked well enough to fool pros

Yes they can.
180 posted on 10/06/2003 12:52:32 PM PDT by LittleJoe
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