Quote:


Associate White House Counsel Cheryl D. Mills told investigators
someone broke into her car Tuesday shortly after 11 p.m. while it was
parked in the 2200 block of H Street NW, smashing a passenger-side
window and taking a blue gym bag containing her handwritten notes and
correspondence between the White House and Congress.
. . . . Ms. Mills told police she was in the area to conduct personal
business.
. . . . According to law-enforcement officials, the papers -- said to be
copies of original notes already turned over to the various Whitewater
and Waco committees --included information on the White House's handling
of Mr. Foster's office papers on the night his body was found in a rural
Virginia park, and documents on raids by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco
and Firearms and the FBI on the Branch Davidian compound in Waco, Texas,
in 1993.





Quote:

In a handwritten note, the former law partner of Mrs. Clinton's
said declaring a loss on the couple's 1992 tax returns for the sale of
their share of the Whitewater venture to partner James B. McDougal could
result in a "can of worms you shouldn't open




By the way, Foster had scheduled a meeting with Bill Clinton for the following morning at which time he was going to resign.

The first witness to find the body did not recall seeing a gun. Fosters memory on his pager had been erased. Before the park police got to Fosters office it had been cleared and his belongings boxed up and moved.

Quote:


Doug Buford, friend and attorney, stated, "...something was badly askew." Foster's brother-in-law, a former congressman, also did not accept that depression was what had been behind the "suicide": "That's a bunch of crap." And Webster Hubbell, former Clinton deputy attorney general, phoned a mutual friend to say, "Don't believe a word you hear. It was not suicide. It couldn't have been."




Quote:


Vincent J. Scalise, a former NYC detective, Fred Santucci, a former forensic photographer for NYC, and Richard Saferstein, former head of the New Jersey State Crime Lab formed a team and did an investigation of the VWF case for the Western Journalism Center of Fair Oaks, Calif. They arrived at several conclusions:

(1) Homicide cannot and should not be ruled out.

(2) The position of the arms and legs of the corpse were drastically inconsistent with suicide.

(3) Neither of VWF's hand was on the handgrip when it was fired. This is also inconsistent with suicide. The investigators noted that in their 50 years of combined experience they had "never seen a weapon or gun positioned in a suicide's hand in such an orderly fashion."

(4) VWF's body was probably in contact with one or more carpets prior to his death. The team was amazed that the carpet in the trunk of VF's care had not been studied to see whether he had been carried to the park in the trunk of his own car.

(5) The force of the gun's discharge probably knocked VF's glasses flying; however, it is "inconceivable" that they could have traveled 13 feet through foliage to the site where they were found; ergo, the scene probably was tampered with.

(6) The lack of blood and brain tissue at the site suggests VF was carried to the scene. The peculiar tracking pattern of the blood on his right cheek also suggests that he was moved.






Now, here's a photo leaked by the white house. Um, where's the blodd on the hand? There is none. No blood on his nice white shirt on the trigger hand. Sorry Jim, but you can't have a gunshot at point blank range and not get any blood on your self.







Attachments
250133-Foster_hand.jpg (2 downloads)



Edited by Moxie (07/22/07 09:14 PM)
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