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I read this in the Wash Times, but could only find it here:
Deroy Murdock on Hillary Clinton & Rule of Law
Consider the unfolding controversy over whether Florida’s and Michigan’s delegates will participate in August’s Democratic National Convention. Despite signing a pledge last September 1 (as did Barack Obama) to isolate these renegade states for voting before February 5, as DNC regulations require, the Clintons now want to seat these pro-Hillary delegations. The Clintons are like a sagging baseball team desperately trying to offset its regular-season losses by demanding to count its spring-training victories. Then again, their partnership is a pageant of disdain for the rules.
Nice list of Klinton Mis Deeds ......
After White House Deputy Counsel Vincent Foster died from a gunshot to the head in Fort Marcy Park near Washington on July 20, 1993, his office should have remained sealed for forensic purposes. Yet, two days later, “After speaking with the first lady, I arranged for the files [the Clintons’ personal financial records in Foster’s office] to be temporarily kept in a locked closet in the White House residence,” Maggie Williams — Hillary’s then-chief of staff and current campaign manager — told the Senate Whitewater Committee July 26, 1995. The Clintons’ personal attorney, Robert Barnett, took control of these files five days later. White House lawyer Clifford Sloan’s contemporaneous notes support Williams’ account: “Get Maggie. Go through office. Get HRC-WJC stuff.” Presidential attorney Stephen Neuwirth testified that his boss, White House counsel Bernard Nussbaum, said “the first lady” worried that law-enforcement officials would have “unfettered access” to Foster’s office.
Just a reminder about Kilnton's 8 yrs in Power .........
One hundred and sixteen pages of subpoenaed billing records from Clinton’s days at Little Rock’s Rose Law Firm magically materialized at the White House in January 1996, — just four days after a statute of limitations expired, thus sparing her from potential civil liability for advising Madison Guaranty, a failed bank whose collapse cost taxpayers $60 million.
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