I do. In the first place, both the things I posted yesterday are public documents. More importantly, this case needs to be before the eye of the public. They need to be aware of the crimes that have been committed, and about the ongoing efforts to secure (or on the other side to thwart) justice. By making this as public as possible as it happens (something I, Don and Teri have tried to do all along) we destroy the ability of the Clintonistas to rewrite history after the fact.
Don't forget what they tried to do to Don Adams. They actually put him on trial, to convince the public that the victim was the perpetrator! They did everything they could to protect the aggressors at every step. Nothing is beyond these people. The more open the process is, the more information goes out before the public, the less able they are to dictate what history accepts as the truth of the matter.
For anyone else reading who might not be familiar with the incident, here's the truth of the matter. Clinton was facing the possibility of impeachment, and was ready to do anything to protect his public image. Someone at the White House called Ed Rendell (then mayor of Philadelphia) to arrange that the reception of Clinton would only be positive. Ed Rendell called his friend Johnny Morris, head of Teamsters Local 115, to bring out Teamster demonstrators, with the understanding that opposition to Clinton would not be tolerated. After the violence broke out, the Rendell administration did everything in its power to distance itself and the White House from the incident, while simultaneously manipulating the justice system in Philadelphia to protect the guilty.
But Don and Teri Adams didn't cooperate. With the support of FreeRepublic, they went after the people who beat them. At that point, the Rendell administration brought the Philadelphia justice system to bear against Don Adams, and prosecuted him on the trumped-up charge that he beat three Teamster women to precipitate the incident. He remains the only person actually to stand trial as a result of the incident. (He was acquitted.) The Teamsters copped lenient pleas. It is worth noting that Ed Rendell has publicly admitted that the Teamsters control the Philadelphia courts.
Ed Rendell was rewarded for his skullduggery with the chairmanship of the Democratic National Committee. Johnny Morris escaped legal consequences, but received a worse fate: partly as a result of the Adams beating case, Teamster Local 115 was raided by the International Brotherhood of Teamsters. What they found as a result was enough to put the Local into trusteeship, and to strip Johnny Morris of his position in the union.
You have them pegged. Good Luck and thanks for your efforts to counter these bozos.