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Foley and the Blame Game
The American Thinker ^ | 10-1-06 | Clarice Feldman

Posted on 10/02/2006 4:42:33 AM PDT by Renfield

Pardon me, but I smell something very peculiar in the way we have learned of the disgrace of Rep. Mark Foley.

The email scandal which led to the resignation of the Republican Congressman is reverberating throughout the capital and the nation, as Democrats attempt to capitalize on bad news for Republicans. The seamiest of the released emails, which Foley has not denied, are right up there with Rhodes Scholar and Illinois Democratic Congressman Mel Reynolds’ taped phone conversations lusting for 15 year old Catholic school girls in their uniforms.

But Democrats are attempting to make hay by alleging that the Republican leadership may have known about the inappropriate emails and covered them up for months. Their hope, no doubt, is to discourage turnout by disillusioned evangelical and other voters sensitive to moral issues. But the emerging background detail suggests that this is simply not the case, and that an attack strategy has been devised by parties anxious to damage the GOP and swing the coming election.

In July a blog appeared, designed it said to trace sex predators. Few posts were made in that month or the following month. All recounted years old stories. Then on September 18, the blog printed the fairly innocuous email exchange between Congressman Foley and an unnamed page.In this correspondence initiated by the former page, Foley asks the former page how he is after Katrina (the boy lived in Louisiana) and asked for a photo. Thus began the latest political kerfuffle which swirls through the final five weeks of the campaign. How likely is it that this site with virtually no readership , few posts and hardly any history or posts of interest suddenly receives this bombshell? I’d say slight. About as likely as Lucy Ramirez handing Burkett Bush’s TANG papers. Let’s track back what else we know of this story. Sometime last year a former page contacted the St. Petersburg Times with an exchange of emails between himself and Congressman Foley. In the words of the editor, they never ran the story. (The following has been realeased by the office of the Speaker of the House, but does not yet appear online at the time of this writing.)

In November of last year, we were given copies of an email exchange Foley had with a former page from Louisiana. Other news organizations later got them, too. The conversation in those emails was friendly chit-chat. Foley asked the boy about how he had come through Hurricane Katrina and about the boy’s upcoming birthday. In one of those emails, Foley casually asked theteen to send him a “pic” of himself. Also among those emails was the page’s exchange with a congressional staffer in the office of Rep. Alexander, who had been the teen’s sponsor in the page program. The teen shared his exchange he’d had with Foley and asked the staffer if she thought Foley was out of bounds.

There was nothing overtly sexual in the emails, but we assigned two reporters to find out more. We found the Louisiana page and talked with him.He told us Foley’s request for a photo made him uncomfortable so he never responded, but both he and his parents made clear we could not use his name if we wrote a story. We also found another page who was willing to go on the record, but his experience with Foley was different. He said Foley did send a few emails but never said anything in them that he found inappropriate. We tried to find other pages but had no luck. We spoke with Rep. Alexander, who said the boy’s family didn’t want it pursued, and Foley, who insisted he was merely trying to be friendly and never wanted to make the page uncomfortable.

So, what we had was a set of emails between Foley and a teenager, who wouldn’t go on the record about how those emails made him feel. As we said in today’s paper, our policy is that we don’t make accusations against people using unnamed sources. And given the seriousness of what would be implied in a story, it was critical that we have complete confidence in our sourcing. After much discussion among top editors at the paper, we concluded that the information we had on Foley last November didn’t meet our standard for publication. Evidently, other news organizations felt the same way.

Since that time, we revisited the question more than once, but never learned anything that changed our position. [b]The Louisiana boy’s emails broke into the open last weekend, when a blogger got copies and posted them online. Later that week, on Thursday, a news blog at the website of ABC News followed suit, with the addition of one new fact: Foley’s Democratic opponent, Tim Mahoney, was on the record about the Louisiana boy’s emails and was calling for an investigation. That’s when we wrote our first story,for Friday’s papers.

After ABC News broke the story on its website, someone contacted ABC and provided a detailed email exchange between Foley and at least one other page that was far different from what we had seen before. This was overtly sexual, not something Foley could dismiss as misinterpreted friendliness. That’s what drove Foley to resign on Friday.

So, the paper had nothing it could act on. But Foley’s opponent somehow got wind of the story which had appeared before only on a very new, utterly obscure blogsite and demanded an investigation. ABC then picked up the story and when it did , further anonymous sources with far more salacious and troublesome evidence appeared on the scene. What an amazing-and unlikely to me-turn of events. Like that paper, the Republican leadership only knew of the innocuous email exchange:

Late night Congressman Hastert said of the incident (in terms remarkably similar to the editor’s):

In the fall of 2005 Tim Kennedy, a staff assistant in the Speaker’s Office, received a telephone call from Congressman Rodney Alexander’s Chief of Staff who indicated that he had an email exchange between Congressman Foley and a former House page. He did not reveal the specific text of the email but expressed that he and Congressman Alexander were concerned about it.

Tim Kennedy immediately discussed the matter with his supervisor, Mike Stokke, Speaker Hastert’s Deputy Chief of Staff. Stokke directed Kennedy to ask Ted Van Der Meid, the Speaker’s in house Counsel, who the proper person was for Congressman Alexander to report a problem related to a former page.Ted Van Der Meid told Kennedy it was the Clerk of the House who should be notified as the responsible House Officer for the page program. Later thatday Stokke met with Congressman Alexander’s Chief of Staff. Once again the specific content of the email was not discussed. Stokke called the Clerk and asked him to come to the Speaker’s Office so that he could put him together with Congressman Alexander’s Chief of Staff. The Clerk and Congressman Alexander’s Chief of Staff then went to the Clerk’s Office to discuss the matter.

The Clerk asked to see the text of the email. Congressman Alexander’s office declined citing the fact that the family wished to maintain as much privacy as possible and simply wanted the contact to stop. The Clerk asked if the email exchange was of a sexual nature and was assured it was not. Congressman Alexander’s Chief of Staff characterized the email exchange as over-friendly.

The Clerk then contacted Congressman Shimkus, the Chairman of the Page Board to request an immediate meeting. It appears he also notified Van Der Meid that he had received the complaint and was taking action. This is entirely consistent with what he would normally expect to occur as he was the Speaker’s Office liaison with the Clerk’s Office.

The Clerk and Congressman Shimkus met and then immediately met with Foley to discuss the matter. They asked Foley about the email. Congressman Shimkus and the Clerk made it clear that to avoid even the appearance of impropriety and at the request of the parents, Congressman Foley was to immediately cease any communication with the young man.

The Clerk recalls that later that day he encountered Van Der Meid on the House floor and reported to him that he and Shimkus personally had spoken to Foley and had taken corrective action.

Mindful of the sensitivity to the parent’s wishes to protect their child’s privacy and believing that they had promptly reported what they knew to the proper authorities Kennedy, Van Der Meid and Stokke did not discuss the matter with others in the Speaker’s Office.

Congressman Tom Reynolds in a statement issued today indicates that many months later, in the spring of 2006, he was approached by Congressman Alexander who mentioned the Foley issue from the previous fall. During a meeting with the Speaker he says he noted the issue which had been raised by Alexander and told the Speaker that an investigation was conducted by the Clerk of the House and Shimkus. While the Speaker does not explicitly recall this conversation, he has no reason to dispute Congressman Reynold’s recollection that he reported to him on the problem and its resolution.

Sexually Explicit Instant Message Transcript

No one in the Speaker’s Office was made aware of the sexually explicit text messages which press reports suggest had been directed to another individual until they were revealed in the press and on the internet this week. In fact, no one was ever made aware of any sexually explicit email or text messages at any time.

It is not only the recent, unread blog spot breaking the story which raises my suspicions. The rest of the genesis of the story is as murky.

Brian Ross of ABC ran the story, beginning with the same “overly friendly” but not sexually suggestive email exchange and adding a series of instant messages dating to 2003 previously unseen by anyone in Congress between Foley and anonymous recipients said to be former pages. The Republican leaders, seeing the more damning correspondence, sought and got Foley’s resignation.

As soon as the ABC story ran, and organization called C.R.E.W., which said it had the original exchange which Hastert had heard of and the St Peterburg paper had seen, put them on their website .They said they’d earlier conveyed them to the FBI, were releasing them because of the ABC story, and asked for the appointment of a special prosecutor to investigate the Republican leadership.It is abundantly clear to me that C.R.E.W. and ABC communicated and may have coordinated the release of this story.

Who is C.R.E.W.?

Here’s what The Hill wrote:

One target of Republican criticism is Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW), the group that last year assisted former Rep. Chris Bell (D-Texas) in drafting an ethics complaint against DeLay, which resulted in an admonishment of DeLay from the ethics committee. At last week’s press conference, Melanie Sloan, CREW’s executive director, said that DeLay should step down as majority leader.

From 1995 to 1998, CREW’s Sloan served as minority counsel for the House Judiciary Committee under Rep. John Conyers (D-Mich.). Before that, Sloan served as the nominations counsel on the Senate Judiciary Committee under Sen. Joe Biden (D-Del.).

According to GOP research, Mark Penn, who had been a pollster for President Clinton, and Daniel Berger, a major Democratic donor, are on CREW’s board. Spokeswoman Naomi Seligman declined several requests to reveal the membership of CREW’s board, although she confirmed that Penn and Berger are members. Last year, Berger made a $100,000 contribution to America Coming Together (ACT), a 527 group that was dedicated to defeating Bush in the presidential election, according to politicalmoneyline.com, a website that tracks fundraising.

CREW declined to respond to the RNC talking points or House GOP research.

C.R.E.W. is one of four “public interest” organizations which the RNC has long identifed as major recipients of George Soros richly-funded Open Society Institute. It is backing the risible Wilson/Plame civil suit against Cheney and others.

What do we know of Brian Ross?

My favorite media watcher, Steve Gilbert reports:

Brian Ross of ABC News is the reporter behind the story that Rep. Dennis Hastert is being investigated by the Department Of Justice. Ross is sticking to his charges despite vehement denials from both the DOJ and Hastert himself.

Some may recall that Brian Ross has been involved in past journalistic controversies. Just last week, Mr. Ross reported he was tipped off by unnamed “senior federal officials” that his cell phone was tapped by NSA.

Last month, Ross was one of the first (if not the first) to report that Rush Limbaugh “had been arrested.” Reports which turned out to be greatly exaggerated, but which Ross never corrected.

In January, Brian Ross was the first to promulgate the claims of the self-proclaimed NSA whistleblower, Russell Tice. Ross treated Tice has a highly credible source even though Tice had been cashiered from the agency due to “psychological problems.”

ABC has not disclosed the names of the recipients of the instant messages which were sexually explicit, years old, and not seen by anyone else. We do not know how anyone but the recipients could have retrieved them. We do not even know if they are authentic. None of the recipients has come forward and identified himself. What we do know is that reputable media and the Republican leadership acted appropriately on the initial innocuous correspondence and could not proceed further in view of the parents’ demand that their son’s privacy be respected only to find months later just before the election that same correpondence showing up on an unlikely blog site and then almost simultaneously on ABC and on C.R.E.W.’s site. As for the demand that a special prosecutor be appointed, maybe Patrick Fitzgerald can be appointed. Then he can fail to ask ABC or C.R.E.W. how they got the correspondence, ignore their political motivations, conflate their partisanship with “whistleblowing”, not look for the sources of the later sexually explicit emails, and nab Hastert for forgetting when he went to the bathroom on the day he heard about the emails. Clarice Feldman is an attorney in Washington, DC. and a frequent contributor to American Thinker


TOPICS: Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: abc; crew; democrats; dnc; florida; foley; liberals; scandal
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To: moondoggie

I read the IM... and FReeper ought to do and editorial that this is not what we stand for !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I will not FReep to protect a child molester
NEVER


41 posted on 10/02/2006 6:30:09 AM PDT by Boner1 (Its Time to change are drug laws for some have gone on to be POTUS while other's have been inprison)
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To: Dianna

We'll find out eventually what went down here. Maybe not until after the election, but I am very interested to know -- if the page's family did not want the email exchange released -- how they got that original "overly friendly" exchange in the first place.


42 posted on 10/02/2006 6:31:50 AM PDT by AmishDude
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To: Renfield

YOur suspicions about the timing of this issue appear to be valid


I agree with your suspicions, however, if the Republicans would stay out of trouble than the democratic party would not have any ammunition. The timing is suspect, but it was a Republican who is guilty of at least lapse of judgement. We just gave the democrats the opportunity to make us look foolish. I would imagine that we would get on the bandwagon if the situation were in reverse....oh yes we did Cynthia McKinney - she thankfully lost the primary because in part...US!!!!!


43 posted on 10/02/2006 6:34:23 AM PDT by napscoordinator
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To: Renfield

FNC just reported Foley is in ALCOHOL REHAB!!!!!!

A homosexual solicits a child for sex and ALCOHOL REHAB is the treatment?

The crew, democrat dirty tricks team, should be reported for knowing about child endagerment (particularly if any of them are laweyrs)


44 posted on 10/02/2006 6:36:22 AM PDT by longtermmemmory (VOTE! http://www.senate.gov and http://www.house.gov)
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To: AmishDude
Maybe not until after the election, but I am very interested to know -- if the page's family did not want the email exchange released -- how they got that original "overly friendly" exchange in the first place.

The only place we knew for sure that had the e-mail (aside from Foley and the boy) was Alexander. He would be the first in line for suspicion, which makes me think it wasn't him.

I don't have a clue.

45 posted on 10/02/2006 6:37:21 AM PDT by Dianna
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To: moondoggie

facts and truth don't get in the way of a good democrat demmigogue - or smear now that I think of it.


46 posted on 10/02/2006 6:45:20 AM PDT by camle (keep your mind open and somebody will fill it full of something for you)
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To: Renfield
ABC has not disclosed the names of the recipients of the instant messages which were sexually explicit, years old, and not seen by anyone else. We do not know how anyone but the recipients could have retrieved them. We do not even know if they are authentic. None of the recipients has come forward and identified himself. What we do know is that reputable media and the Republican leadership acted appropriately on the initial innocuous correspondence and could not proceed further in view of the parents’ demand that their son’s privacy be respected only to find months later just before the election that same correpondence showing up on an unlikely blog site and then almost simultaneously on ABC and on C.R.E.W.’s site.


ABC and C.R.E.W. knew of a child being solicited for sex and did nothing.


ABC and C.R.E.W. were ready to allow the horror of a child sexually molested by an adult in order to time the release!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
47 posted on 10/02/2006 6:46:17 AM PDT by longtermmemmory (VOTE! http://www.senate.gov and http://www.house.gov)
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To: Jedidah

"Does Foley think that slapping an "alcoholic" label on top of "pervert" somehow makes it better?"

It works if your name is Kennedy and you have a (D) after your name. As an aside, Yes Foley is a sicko.




48 posted on 10/02/2006 6:46:24 AM PDT by AngieGOP (I never met a woman who became a stripper because she played with Barbie dolls as a kid.)
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To: All
ABC has not disclosed the names of the recipients of the instant messages which were sexually explicit, years old, and not seen by anyone else. We do not know how anyone but the recipients could have retrieved them. We do not even know if they are authentic. None of the recipients has come forward and identified himself. What we do know is that reputable media and the Republican leadership acted appropriately on the initial innocuous correspondence and could not proceed further in view of the parents’ demand that their son’s privacy be respected only to find months later just before the election that same correpondence showing up on an unlikely blog site and then almost simultaneously on ABC and on C.R.E.W.’s site.


ABC and C.R.E.W. knew of a child being solicited for sex and did nothing.


ABC and C.R.E.W. were ready to allow the horror of a child sexually molested by an adult in order to time the release!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
49 posted on 10/02/2006 6:46:28 AM PDT by longtermmemmory (VOTE! http://www.senate.gov and http://www.house.gov)
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To: Dianna
"The problem is that the rats, who are oh so worried about children, sat on this information until it was politically useful. How many children did Foley interact with while the Dems sat on this information?"

That may well be the case. My condemn is more direct. Regardless how the information was delayed, manipulated or covered up is of no great importance. Say, for instance, the Democrats manipulated the release of the information and Republicans crossed their fingers and held their noses over the past few years hoping nothing would become public. As a conservative I would be more upset with the Republicans.

The behavior of the Democrats may be predictable. But, I am not responsible for their choices. I am, however, deeply concerned with conservative choices and, for that, I am responsible.
50 posted on 10/02/2006 6:47:05 AM PDT by spatso
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To: moondoggie
I was researching all the child predator federal laws on explicit but not pornographic material and all of them up until July '06 have been ruled unconstitutional or sent back to the lower courts. The courts also ruled that the Feds were prohibited from enforcing the laws sent back for review. In July of '06 the President signed the Adam Walsh bill with Foley's punishment amendments. If the courts ruled the new law is constitutional then unless Foley sent "luring or explicit" e-mails on or after that date they can't retroactively prosecute him for his doings.
51 posted on 10/02/2006 6:50:30 AM PDT by tobyhill (The War on Terrorism is not for the weak.)
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To: AmishDude

"We aren't as bad as them."

Stop your whining and sniveling. What is wrong with you? Simply, stand up, say this is unacceptable, fix it and move on. Everything about this file this morning appears to be a mistake. You cannot justify what is fundamentally corrupt. We do not believe in it, we reject it, we condemn it. If Democrats want to play politics with this matter, so be it. The only choice for conservatives is to act responsibly. If Democrats are outraged by the behavior, our only choice is to be more outraged.


52 posted on 10/02/2006 6:54:50 AM PDT by spatso
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To: Dianna

Alexander is a Republican, BTW, and if he really wanted to get Foley, he wouldn't do all of this cloak-and-dagger, Soros stuff. According to him, he never saw the emails. If he were lying, the parents would surely say otherwise.

The only people who saw the emails were the kid and the parents and Foley.

Unless we have a "Martins" situation in Florida again.


53 posted on 10/02/2006 7:01:45 AM PDT by AmishDude
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To: spatso
(1) Foley should resign. He should be drummed out of the party. He should be investigated, charged and convicted if he's committed any crimes. And he should get the max.

(2) However the timing of all this demonstrates that Foley isn't the only criminal: Democrat activists have clearly known for months, and have been able to prove for months, that Foley was a sexual predator.

A good citizen who cared about the welfare of his fellow citizens would have reported Foley as soon as they had hard evidence.

But these Democratic activists decided to wait for months until just before the election to reveal the information.

People could have been victimized while they waited, but they didn't care.

It was more important for them to score a political point than to do the right thing.

54 posted on 10/02/2006 7:03:47 AM PDT by wideawake ("The nation which forgets its defenders will itself be forgotten." - Calvin Coolidge)
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To: wideawake
"People could have been victimized while they waited, but they didn't care."

Absolute total nonsense! Whatever the Democrats knew the Republicans knew it before them. I totally reject conservatives choosing this line of moral reasoning in order to avoid responsibility. If the behavior is unacceptable in Democrats, it is doubly unacceptable for conservatives. This is not a time to go wobbly on values.
55 posted on 10/02/2006 7:11:36 AM PDT by spatso
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To: spatso
Whatever the Democrats knew the Republicans knew it before them.

Incorrect.

The evidence given in this article shows that the information which proved wrongdoing was new to the GOP.

If the GOP actually knew that he was committing crimes months ago, they should have turned him in to prosecutors the second they had the evidence.

But the hard evidence seems to have been held only by CREW and ABC and revealed to the GOP only days ago.

56 posted on 10/02/2006 7:25:07 AM PDT by wideawake ("The nation which forgets its defenders will itself be forgotten." - Calvin Coolidge)
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To: Renfield

bttt


57 posted on 10/02/2006 7:38:37 AM PDT by kalee
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To: Renfield

I forgot about Mel Reynolds!!! Clinton gave him some kind of job afterwords.


58 posted on 10/02/2006 7:43:20 AM PDT by Suzy Quzy ("When Cabals Go Kabooms"....upcoming book on Mary McCarthy's Coup-Plotters.)
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To: ClaireSolt

Urging foley to turn over a new page.

(..and join the democrat party)


59 posted on 10/02/2006 7:58:16 AM PDT by longtermmemmory (VOTE! http://www.senate.gov and http://www.house.gov)
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To: spatso

It's unacceptable and it's fixed. He's out of Congress and subject to prosecution (although if there is no other evidence, he probably will get probation).

Now, what did they know and when did they know it?


60 posted on 10/02/2006 7:59:20 AM PDT by AmishDude
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