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To: Ramius

Hmmm... now I see a couple of intriguing answers. If that’s all it took, and Dean wouldn’t cop to it, he’s even more of a weasel than I thought he was.


28 posted on 05/19/2008 8:51:39 AM PDT by Ramius (Personally, I give us... one chance in three. More tea?)
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To: Ramius

Feb 10, 1997

New allegations have emerged in hundreds of papers filed recently in United States District Court in Washington that allegedly link Dean’s wife Maureen to a Capitol Hill sex ring. If true, the allegations could force the Deans to back out of the $150 million libel suit they filed five years ago against St. Martin’s Press Inc., publishers of Silent Coup, and its authors Len Colodny and Robert Gettlin.

The new charges, hotly denied by Dean, are intended to support what Liddy and others have been saying: The Watergate break-in had nothing to do with President Nixon but was a personal enterprise by Dean to protect his then-girlfriend Maureen by removing information that linked her to a call-girl ring run out of the Democratic National Committee headquarters in the Watergate.

But Dean’s Los Angeles attorney, John Garrick, insists Maureen was never a prostitute or friend of the mob. “There was no call-girl ring running out of the DNC,” Garrick tells Insight. “They have nothing to support it. Their whole story breaks down.” The Deans declined comment.

Sources familiar with the suit say the Dean team spent at least three days in early January trying to settle the suit. The one-time Nixon legal counsel, who implicated his superiors in the Watergate scandal and served four months in prison, took exception to the 1991 books assertion that it was he who masterminded the Watergate break-in and cover-up to get information on the escort service. The book claims escorts were provided from the Columbia Plaza Hotel, near the Watergate, to out-of-town Democrats. The book also asserts that the madam was tied to the mob and a close friend of Mo Dean.

The Deans naturally did not like Liddy’s suggestions that Maureen was more than just a friend to the madam or his labeling John a “serial perjurer.” Nor did the Deans take kindly to the madam’s lawyer and convicted pimp Phillip Mackin Bailley being a source for Silent Coup. Bailley’s address book linked Maureen to the call-girl operation, and spurred Johns interest in the break-in, according to the Colodny and Gettlin book, but Garrick denies Maureen was in the address book. The Deans responded by suing both Liddy and Bailley.

In December, Colodny’s attorneys dumped a 4,200-page summary-judgment motion into Dean’s lap, asking U.S. Magistrate Alan Kay to dismiss the case. Dean immediately requested a continuance to respond to the motion. It was a briar patch. The motion itself stands 2 feet high with 774 separate exhibits, including a section dedicated to outing Maureen as an alleged prostitute, which the book never directly stated. The allegations, if true, could bolster one of the theories from Silent Coup that John learned about the call-girl connection to DNC from his then-girlfriend Maureen and tried to protect her.

http://tinyurl.com/6gx24c


30 posted on 05/19/2008 8:55:52 AM PDT by kcvl
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