On May 15, 2:51=A0pm, "tomnln" <tom...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> "YoHarvey" <bailey...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
>
>
news:aaec8e41-6afe-48d9-bf22-5f98c7004a82@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> On May 15, 1:29 pm, curtjester1 <curtjest...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>
> > Without Johnson and Kennedy, former Vice-President Richard NIxon
> > finally managed to become the 37th President of the United States,
> > with no serious opposition. After taking office Nixon discussed the
> > Warren Re****t with aides H.R. Haldeman and Charles Colson and said,
> > "It was the greatest hoax that has ever been perpetuated."
>
> > The new Preident soon created a "dirty tricks" department to harass
> > politcal opponents that included CIA veterans E. Howard Hunt, Frank
> > Fiorini Sturgis, Bernard Barker, James McCord, G. Gordon Liddy, and
> > many anti-Castro Cubans from Miami. Their job was to create
> > situations and fabricate do***ents to embarrass and humiliate those
> > who opposed Nixon and his policies. Their targets were the most
> > pominent democratic leaders of the late 1960's and included Senator
> > Edward Kennedy, and Presidentail hopefuls Edmund Muskie and George
> > McGovern.
>
> > By early 1970 the war in Vietnam continued to divide the country and
> > haunted Nixon as it had President Johnson before him. In Febrary
> > National Security advisor Henry Kissinger began secret one-on-one
> > meetings with North Vietnamese negotiator Le Duc Tho outside of Paris,
> > and by the end of the year the Nixon administration ordered large
> > numbers of troops were withdrawn from combat. As increasing numbers
> > of troops were withdrawn and peace negotiations with the North
> > Vietnamese dragged on, Nixon began to pursue detente with both
> > communist China and the Soviet Union. He was eager to end the war in
> > Vietnam and win back the sup****t of the public before the election in
> > the fall of 1972. But like Presidents Kennedy and Johnson before him,
> > Nixon earned the animosity of the military industrial establishment as
> > he tried to end their war in Vietnam.
>
> > As Nixon and his political machine geared up to run for a second term,
> > the Committee to RE-Elect the President was formed. Known as "CREEP"
> > the committeee was comprised mostly of CIA agents and was funded by
> > the Mullen Company, a notorious CIA front. On June 17, 1972 members
> > of CREEP, including Frank Sturgis, Bernard L. Barker, Virgllio R.
> > Gonzales, Eugenio R. Martinez, and James W. McCord, broke into the
> > Democratic National Headquarters at the Watergate apartment-office
> > complex in Wa****ngton. These people had access to the most
> > sophisticated electronic and burglary tools in the world, yet they
> > used an ordinary piece of tape to keep the latch on the door unlocked.
>
> > A security guard, Frank Wills, noticed the tape and called the
> > Wa****ngton, D.C. police. When the police arrived at 2:30 A.M. and the
> > men were arrested, and had in their possession a walkie-talkie, 40
> > rolls of unexposed film, two 35 mm cameras, lock picks, pencil-sized
> > teargas guns, and bugging devices. Their tools made it appear that
> > they though they were going to "bug" the Democratic National
> > headquarters, but most political analysts agree that their efforts
> > were unnecessary. President Nixon was so far ahead of his opponents
> > in the polls that to most political observers the "Watergate break-in"
> > didn't make any sense.
>
> > In jail the veteran intelligence agents said nothing, but the police
> > found E. Howard Hunt's telephone number on one of the men. The
> > following day the police learned that one of the men worked for the
> > Committee to Re-Elect the President, which soon led investigators to
> > the White House. The FBI soon began an investigation.
>
> > (According to E. Howard Hunt, the burglars were trying to learn what
> > information the Democrats had concerning President Kennedy's
> > assassination. Frank Sturgis(Fiorini) said, "The reason we
> > burglarized the Watergate was because Nixon was interested in stopping
> > news leaking related to the photos of *our role* in the assassination
> > of President John F. Kennedy." OUR ROLE IN THE ASSASSINATION OF
> > PRESIDENT KENNEDY??? Hunt and Sturgis' accusations made it appear as
> > though Nixon was involved in the assassination of President Kennedy,
> > which would have destroyed his political career.)
>
> > Less than a week after the break-in, and long before the Watergate
> > burglary made national headlines, Nixon and his Chief of Staff, H.R.
> > Halderman, discussed how to stop the FBI investigation. Nixon told
> > Haldeman to ask CIA Director Richard Helms to pressure FBI Director L.
> > Patrick Gray into curtailing the FBI's investigation. Helms refused,
> > perhaps because he may have been part of the plot to destroy Nixon
> > politically.
>
> > Two months later veteran CIA agent E. Howard Hunt and G. Gordon Liddy
> > were arrested as co-conspirators and indictments were issued on
> > September 15, 1972. Within a month it became clear that all of the
> > men involved in the Watergate break-in were linked to the CIA and to
> > the Committee to Re-Elect the President (CREEP).
>
> > (Hunt, while in jail, attempted to blackmail the President by
> > threatening to expose many of Nixon's "secrets." White House Chief of
> > Staff John Ehlichman responded by ordering FBI Director L. Patrick
> > Gray to remove the contents of Hunt's safe and "deep six" them. On
> > December 8, 1972 Hunt's wife, former CIA agent Dorothy Wetzel Hunt,
> > was carrying a large amount of cash and was killed when United
> > Airlines flight #553 crashed prior to landing at Chicago's Midway
> > Air****t. Her death ended Hunt's threats to reveal Nixon's "dirty
> > secrets."
>
> > After CIA Director Richard Helms refused Nixon's requests to pressure
> > the FBI into curtailing their investigation, Nixon fired him on
> > February 2, 1973. Five days later, on February 7, 1973, the Senate
> > Watergate Committee was formed as public interest in the affair grew.
> > (Helms was replaced by 53-old William Colby, a lawyer and OSS veteran
> > from WWII.)
>
> > After firing the Director of the CIA President Nixon's days in the
> > White House were numbered, just as Kennedy's days were numbered after
> > he fired CIA Director Allen Dulles. Six weeks after Helms was fired
> > his close friend James McCord, who had worked for the CIA in the
> > Security Research Staff, wrote a letter to Watergate Special
> > Prosecutor Judge John Sirica and said that he and other defendants had
> > been under pressure by the White House to remain silent about the
> > Watergate break-in.
>
> > From March 25-29 McCord testified before the committee and named
> > Nixon's former Attorney General, John Mitchell, as their "overall
> > boss" and said that John Dean and Jeb Magruder were also involved. He
> > also claimed that E. Howard Hunt had promised him an executive
> > (Presidential) pardon if he would plead guilty. CIA -asset James
> > McCord's revelations were the beginning of the end for Nixon's term as
> > President.
>
> > On June 25 White House counsel John Dean testified before the
> > committee and further inplicated the President. He said that Nixon
> > proposed to raise $1,000,000 to pay the Watergate burglars for their
> > silence. He also told the committee that for the past 4 years the
> > Nixon White House had used the powers of the Presidency to attack
> > political enemies by harassing those who disagreed with his policies.
> > Dean's testimony was sup****ted by Donald Segretti who also told the
> > committee about Nixon's "dirty tricks."
>
> > While Nixon continued to deny any knowledge of involvement in the
> > Watergate affair one of his aides, Alexander Butterfield, told the
> > Watergate committee on July 13 that Nixon had secretly recorded all
> > conversations to and from the Oval Office. On July 17, 1973 the
> > Senate Committee requested that President Nixon turn over the secretly
> > recorded White House Tapes. Nixon, who feared exposing the contents
> > of the tapes, refused and soon an 18-minute segment in one of the
> > reels was erased. One of the recorded conversations, in which the
> > President was talking with H.R.Haldeman, shows that Nixon was very
> > concerned that E. Howard Hunt's involvement in the "Bay of Pigs Thing"
> > would be exposed:
>
> > "....Hunt, you will-that will uncover a lot of things. You open that
> > scab there's a hell of a lot of things and that we just feel that it
> > would be very detrimental to have this thing go any further....This
> > involves these Cubans, Hunt, and a lot of hanky-panky...the problem is
> > that this will open up the whole, the whole Bay of Pigs thing...Just
> > say....very bad to have this fellow Hunt, ah, he knows too damned
> > much, if he was involved....If it gets out that this is all involved,
> > the Cuba thing, it would be a fiasco. It would make the CIA look bad,
> > it's going to make Hunt look bad, and it's going to blow the whole
> > *Bay of Pigs thing* which we think would be unfortunate-both for the
> > CIA and the country....."
>
> > (According to Haldeman, Nixon always used code words when talking
> > about President Kennedy's assassination. Haldeman wrote in his book,
> > "The Ends of Power," that whenever Nixon referred to the "Bay of Pigs
> > thing," he was referring to President Kennedy's assassination. If
> > Haldeman is correct, then during their conversation President Nixon
> > was very concerned that E. Howard Hunt would expose the CIA's
> > involvement in the assassination of President Kennedy.)
>
> > (During the same conversation Nixon also referred to the
> > "Cubans." (Felix Rodriguez, Bernard Barker, Eugenio Martinez, etc.)
> > and the "Texans" (George H.W. Bush, Robert Mosbacher, and James
> > Baker.).
>
> > Amid the political turmoil of Watergate Nixon's Vice President, Spiro
> > T. Agnew, resigned on October 10 after pleading "nolo contendere" (no
> > contest) to charges of tax evasion. Two days later, On October 12,
> > 1973, Nixon nominated Gerald Ford as the new Vice-President a man
> > described by Newsweek as the CIA's "best friend in Congress."
>
> > As members of Nixon's staff continued to implicte him in the Watergate
> > affair he continued to deny any involvement and on November 17, 1973
> > told the nation in a nationally televised speech, "I'm not a crook."
>
> > On April 30, 1974 the Nixon White House released more than 1200 pages
> > of edited transcripts to the House Judiciary Committee, but refused to
> > release the tapes. The Committee then sought help from the Supreme
> > Court who, on July 24, ruled unanimously that President Nixon had to
> > turn over the tape recordings of 64 White House conversations,
> > rejecting the President's claims of executive privilege.
>
> > In late July 1974 the House Judiciary Committee recommended that
> > President Nixon be impeached on three charges: 1) Obstruction of
> > justice, 2) Abuse of Presidential power, 3) trying to impede the
> > impeachment process by defying committee subpoenas. These charges
> > stemmed mainly from Nixon's refusual to turn over the secret White
> > House tapes to the Watergate Committee. We know that on one of the
> > tapes Nixon discussed E. Howard Hunt's involvement in the "Bay of Pigs
> > Thing" and we know that an 18-minute segement on one of the tapes was
> > erased. We also know that fter Congress heard some of these
> > recordings they went into secret session, and only *12 hours* of more
> > than 4000 hours of recordings were ever released to the public.
>
> > On August 7, 1974 oilman, CIA agent, and Republican National Committee
> > chairman George Herbert Walker Bush publicly called for the President
> > Nixon's resignation. The following day (August 8) Nixon resigned and
> > former Warren Commission member Gerald Ford (the CIA's best friend in
> > Congress) became the 38th President. A month later, on September 6,
> > the new President granted Nixon "a full, free and absolute
> > pardon....for all offenses against the United States which he .....
> > has committed or may have committed or taken part of while
> > President." President Ford protected the secretly recorded (White
> > House) tapes and soon nominated New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller
> > as Vice-President.
>
> > The public learned from nationally televised Watergate hearings about
> > Nixon's abuse of Presidential power, and also learned that former CIA
> > operatives were involved. As public attention began to focus on CIA
> > involvement in Watergate, and their abuse of power, some members of
> > congress suggested the Agency should be dissolved. President Ford
> > quickly interceded on the CIA's behalf and established the
> > "Rockefeller Commission" to conduct yet another investigation. He
> > appointed former Warren Commission counsel David Belin and other like-
> > minded individuals to investigate the alleged CIA abuses, *which
> > virtually guaranteed a political "whitewash."
>
> > Incidentals. Nelson Rockefeller was the brain-child of the CIA agency
> > after WW!!. Bernard Barker was identified as the 'SA' who was
> > brandi****ng a badge on the Grassy Knoll by Dallas Sheriff Weitzman,
> > right after the final headshot that killed President John F. Kennedy.
> > CREEP, how apt a name for Nixon's committee and the folks behind the
> > dirty tricks of the CIA and the murderers of John F. Kennedy.
>
> > CJ
>
>
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> Yo(Momma)Hartvey wrote;
>
> zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
>
> I write;
>
> Yo(Momma)harvey has SLEPT through this whole issue since it's inception.
>
> So, he Lies his way through all of it.
>
> SEE>>> =A0http://whokilledjfk.net/baileynme.htm
>
> Explaining why he RUNS from these other issues>>>
>
> http://whokilledjfk.net/PROVEN%20LIES.htm
>
> http://whokilledjfk.net/CASE%20DISMISSED.htm
>
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I think your attempting to conduct class with an ADSer there.
CJ


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