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CheezieDanish
07-13-2004, 03:39 PM
Cheney Faces Criminal Indictments; Other Illegal Actions Raise Warning Flags at White House
By TERESA HAMPTON
Editor, Capitol Hill Blue
Jul 8, 2004, 04:59
[Source (http://www.capitolhillblue.com/artman/publish/article_4799.shtml)]


Vice President Dick Cheney faces criminal indictments for illegal activities while CEO of energy giant Halliburton and also illegally intervened to secure a $7 billion no-bid contract for his former employer after his election to office, an analysis by the White House counsel’s office concludes.

The Vice President is currently under investigation by French authorities for bribery, money laundering and misuse of corporate assets while at Halliburton and also faces a U.S. Securities & Exchange Commission probe of a $180 million "slush fund" that may have been used to pay bribes.

Although the White House Counsel analysis is not available to the public because of the secrecy of “attorney-client privilege,” it has generated speculation among senior White House aides who suggest the Vice President should step down as President George W. Bush’s running mate for the November Presidential elections. Such talk has increased in GOP circles lately with former New York Senator

Alfonse D'Amato Wednesday calling on Bush to dump Cheney.

Those who have read the analysis say it presents a “devastating” case against the Vice President and concludes Cheney has violated both the “spirit and intent” of federal laws on conflict of interest.

Even worse, Cheney faces indictment by a French court on charges of bribery, money laundering and misuse of corporate assets because of fraud associated with the construction of a $6 billion petrochemical plant built by Halliburton in Nigeria in partnership with Technip, one of France’s largest petrochemical engineering companies.

Cheney is under investigation by Judge Renaud van Ruymbeke, one of France’s famous investigating magistrates. Ruymbeke is a legend in legal circles because of his investigation into French campaign scandals in the 1990s, resulting in multiple indictments and convictions of top officials.

Because of Ruymbeke’s work on the case, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has opened an investigation into a $180 million “slush fund” that the French judge says was used to pay bribes.

London Lawyer Jeffrey Tesler, a consultant to Halliburton, admitted under oath in May that he made payments from the fund to Albert “Jack” Stanley, president of Halliburton subsidiary Kellogg, Brown & Root and a longtime friend and associate of Cheney. The payments, Tesler said, were personally approved by Cheney, who headed Halliburton at the time.

Although Cheney left his position at Halliburton before becoming Vice President, his financial disclosure statements show he continues to receive dividends from stock as well as deferred compensation from the company.

At least $5 million in payments to Stanley from the fund were wired to a secret numbered bank account in Zurich which Judge Ruymbeke discovered belonged to the KBR President. Tesler also testified he paid another $350,000 to another KBR executive, William Chaudran, through another secret bank account on the isle of Jersey.

Cheney served as CEO of Halliburton from 1995 until 2000 and approved the Nigerian contract in 1999. Halliburton publicly announced on June 18 it was “severing all ties” with Stanley, admitting he had received “improper personal benefits” while serving as President of KBR. Sources within Halliburton say the company’s internal investigation clearly implicates Vice President Cheney but acknowledge the investigation will remain sealed in light of the company’s $7 billion sweetheart contract with the Pentagon for work in Iraq.

French Judge Ruymbeke, however, is said to be offering Stanley a deal if he implicates Cheney and sources within the French legal system say the judge has more than enough to indict the Vice President on charges of bribery, money laundering and misuse of corporate assets.

The assessment of the White House counsel’s office agrees that Cheney faces “serious legal implications” from the pending French indictments and add that the Vice President’s illegal and unethical lobbying on behalf of Halliburton for the no-bid contract “raises additional questions.”

Cheney, however, is standing firm and recently told Senator Patrick Leahy of Vermont to “fuck off” when the Senator questioned him on the Halliburton matters.

According to White House sources, President George W. Bush laughed the matter off at a recent cabinet meeting.

“Fuck ‘em all,” Bush said.

The President’s bravado, however, is not shared by worried White House aides. Some point to the last vice president to step down because of fraud and corruption – Spiro T. Agnew, who served under President Richard M. Nixon, another Republican forced to leave office because of scandal.

CheezieDanish
07-13-2004, 03:40 PM
Wow. Who knew that the French hatred of us would pay off in spades, right?

America surrenders, gladly, Dick Cheney to your custody. Put him in Frenchie Federal Pound-You-In-The-Ass-With-A-Three-Week-Old-Baguette Prison

Meanwhile, most of Bush's former loyalists are coming out of the woodwork to expose how bad pre-war intel was and how bogus the war really is.

Hey look! You can almost hear the house of cards creak as it teeters in the wind. Reap the whirlwind, babies!

lily
07-13-2004, 07:55 PM
Damn you cheezie ;) ............you got my hopes up, just to be broken hearted again..............the French???? He needs to be taken to the woodshed by an American court..........like that would ever happen :eyes

CheezieDanish
07-13-2004, 10:56 PM
Guess what? If he's found guilty in France, he gets impeached here and can never hold office in the U.S. again. :D

suedanim
07-13-2004, 10:59 PM
And that can only be good news for the whole world to celebrate!

Emerald Eyes
07-13-2004, 11:02 PM
America surrenders, gladly, Dick Cheney to your custody. Put him in Frenchie Federal Pound-You-In-The-Ass-With-A-Three-Week-Old-Baguette Prison
:rollin
I love your way with words Cheezie :cheers

sinterest
07-13-2004, 11:09 PM
America surrenders, gladly, Dick Cheney to your custody. Put him in Frenchie Federal Pound-You-In-The-Ass-With-A-Three-Week-Old-Baguette Prison

I love your way with words CheezieAgreed!
My favorite and definately the very best with Quips.

lily
07-13-2004, 11:44 PM
Guess what? If he's found guilty in France, he gets impeached here and can never hold office in the U.S. again. :D

Stop toying with me cheezie............wouldn't he actually have to physically go to France to be prosecuted? I don't see him volunteering to go any time soon. If he was tried inabsentia (sp) how could France impeach him here? Don't tell me while I was asleep last night we had a French Revolution and I missed all those fabulous dresses and ridiculous hairdos :rollin

suedanim
07-14-2004, 03:10 AM
Thought this appropriate to stick here.

For Immediate Release
Jul 8, 2004 Contact: Press Office
202-646-5172

Former Enron Chief’s Indictment Raises More Questions About Energy Task Force (http://www.judicialwatch.org/3716.shtml//url)

Judicial Watch Urges Bush Administration To Release Documents From Vice President’s Energy Task Force


(Washington, D.C.) Judicial Watch, the public interest group that investigates and prosecutes government corruption, again called on the Bush administration to release documents from the Energy Task Force in the wake of today’s indictment of former Enron chief Ken Lay on criminal charges related to the collapse of the energy company.

The White House has admitted that Mr. Lay met with Vice President Cheney and the Energy Task Force at least six times in 2001. After learning about those meetings and about the participation in task force deliberations of other energy company officials, Judicial Watch requested access to and documents from the meetings under the Federal Advisory Committee Act (“open meetings” law). When it was denied, Judicial Watch brought a lawsuit against the Vice President and the task force to extract information about the meetings.

A U.S. District Court ordered the Bush administration to turn over task force documents, or assert executive privilege. The administration appealed the case to the U.S. Supreme Court, which in June ruled that the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit should determine whether the federal open meetings law can be used to obtain records and information from the Energy Task Force.

“The criminal indictment of Ken Lay raises more questions about the nature of the Energy Task Force meetings and about the Bush administration’s extraordinary legal efforts to prevent the release of information about meetings with Mr. Lay and others,” said Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton. “Mr. Lay is under indictment, and the Bush administration is stonewalling inquiries into its contacts with him. What is the Bush administration hiding about Ken Lay?”

CheezieDanish
07-14-2004, 04:28 AM
[..previous quotes removed..]



Stop toying with me cheezie............wouldn't he actually have to physically go to France to be prosecuted? I don't see him volunteering to go any time soon. If he was tried inabsentia (sp) how could France impeach him here? Don't tell me while I was asleep last night we had a French Revolution and I missed all those fabulous dresses and ridiculous hairdos :rollin

Well, I'll tell you why, how and what when I get back from a smoke break. ;) Stay tuned!

CheezieDanish
07-14-2004, 04:59 AM
If France convicts his ass, lily, he's done.

U.S. Constitution, Article II, Section 4:
The President, Vice President and all civil Officers of the United States, shall be removed from Office on Impeachment for, and Conviction of, Treason, Bribery, or other high Crimes and Misdemeanors.

The U.S. will impeach him, France doesn't have to come here to do anything.

Of course lily - and everyone else - I could be totally WRONG. If he is convicted in France, he just may not be able to travel there anymore.

It would be funny to see that Corporate Oompah taken down by the French, tho!

/laughs a snooty french laugh. *haogh haogh haogh!*

http://politics.hesswebdesign.com/vpviagra.jpg

sir digalot
07-14-2004, 05:48 AM
"teflon Dick" will get away with it I am sure ;)

kramsret
07-14-2004, 11:31 AM
It's not a matter of being "teflon"

It's a matter of being a Republican. As such, he pretty much has a free hand to commit any crime on the books, as publicly as he wants, and too-many Republicans--unAmerican partisans that they are--will continue to applaud him. While incessantly pointing fingers at any Democrat who would do something a tenth as bad.

Dave
07-14-2004, 12:59 PM
The Vice President is currently under investigation by French authorities for bribery, money laundering and misuse of corporate assets while at Halliburton and also faces a U.S. Securities & Exchange Commission probe of a $180 million "slush fund" that may have been used to pay bribes

This would be funny if the allegations against Cheney weren't so serious. It is public knowledge he is a corrupt individual, but alas he won't be touched because of his position.

The Righteous
07-14-2004, 02:57 PM
This would be funny if the allegations against Cheney weren't so serious. It is public knowledge he is a corrupt individual, but alas he won't be touched because of his position.[/quote]

Hate to burst your bubble but this has been kicking around since last winter and hasn't really amounted to much

Cheers

Dave
07-14-2004, 03:01 PM
:wave Welcome to P & CA

No bubble burst whatsoever. Cheney has been exposed in this scandal for probably longer than last winter and he will not be touched - This I know and is what I stated :)

CheezieDanish
07-14-2004, 04:02 PM
This would be funny if the allegations against Cheney weren't so serious. It is public knowledge he is a corrupt individual, but alas he won't be touched because of his position.

Hate to burst your bubble but this has been kicking around since last winter and hasn't really amounted to much

Cheers[/quote]

All dough needs time to rise. :D Welcome! :cheers

CheezieDanish
07-14-2004, 04:03 PM
Also... and this is important...

None of the huge Networks or Prime Media outlets are really carrying this story in the US..... WHY?

Fredfredson
07-14-2004, 05:14 PM
WHY?

I love rhetorical questions. :lol

:/

F
:pooter

sinterest
07-14-2004, 06:16 PM
None of the huge Networks or Prime Media outlets are really carrying this story in the US..... WHY?

Sweet Cheezie,
Do you really expect the "corporate media" to piss-off Bush's Federal communications comission at the time when they are paying the really big bucks to consolidate control?

Zan de Man
07-14-2004, 06:34 PM
http://www.ugandandiscussions.co.uk/covers/305_big.jpg

CheezieDanish
07-14-2004, 08:46 PM
:lol Well - I'm glad we've all had a good laugh.

sinterest
07-14-2004, 09:54 PM
Not funny to me - this media control scares the shit out of me.

CheezieDanish
07-15-2004, 03:40 AM
There is control in every facet of this American society, honey... so much so it would scare the shit out of anyone if they actually sat down and thought about it for a while.