Saturday, June 17, 2006

A 20-gauge shotgun worth $2,073 that Katharine Armstrong and 10 other friends gave to Karl Rove

Rove discloses $2,073 shotgun as a gift

By The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The owner of the South Texas ranch where Vice President Dick Cheney accidentally shot a hunting companion chipped in for the gift of a shotgun for presidential aide Karl Rove last year.

Specifically, a Beretta 687 Silver Pigeon II, a 20-gauge shotgun worth $2,073 that Katharine Armstrong and 10 other friends gave the senior adviser and deputy chief of staff to President Bush, according to financial-disclosure forms released Friday for top White House aides.


The only detail provided by White House spokesman Ken Lisaius was that the shotgun was a gift to Rove from friends.

Rove's disclosure revealed he is worth between $1.8 million and $6.9 million, mostly in stock and bond funds, a rental house in Ingram, Texas, and a Florida beach house. He reported receiving several other gifts, including from Nancy Reagan a $411 shadowbox with silver coins that included former President Reagan's signature.

The disclosures cover 2005. Federal ethics laws require that financial information be reported in broad ranges.

White House chief of staff Joshua Bolten listed assets worth $1.1 million to $2.3 million, including a vacation home in Key West, Fla., worth $500,000 to $1 million.

Bolten reported receiving tickets worth $8,000 to the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, two for the National Symphony season-opening ball in September 2005 and two for the Kennedy Center Honors in December 2005.

Joel Kaplan, the former deputy White House budget director who is now a deputy chief of staff, listed $60,000 to $115,000 in law-school loans and reported that he took out a nine-month loan in 2005 to buy a Tiffany engagement ring worth $15,000 to $50,000.

Bush's national-security adviser, Stephen Hadley, listed assets held by him, his wife and his two daughters worth $2.8 million to $6.8 million. His holdings include money-market accounts, CDs, investment funds, life-insurance policies, a real-estate partnership, retirement accounts and education funds.

Dan Bartlett, counselor to the president, has from $417,021 to $1.1 million in stock, bond and money-market funds, about the same as last year. His assets include land in Kerr, Texas, worth $15,000 to $50,000.

Allan Hubbard, Bush's top economic adviser, and his family reported assets of $11.7 million to $52 million in private holdings, retirement accounts and other business investments. He reported that the total included his wife's assets of between $9.8 million and $46.7 million and his children's assets of between $500,000 and $2.8 million.

Copyright © 2006 The Seattle Times Company

Tuesday, June 06, 2006

cia interpol action

Sounds kinda like Loyd "the Steal" Neal....Posted on May 13, 2006 at 05:17:52 AM by Jaime Kenedenoso how is he not under investigation? Details soon!

Re(1): He always goes to Florida in the Summertime, however......Posted on May 14, 2006 at 00:07:20 AM by dannoynted1

he means the 5thcoaReplies:

He always goes to Florida in the Summertime, however......Posted on May 13, 2006 at 08:37:40 PM by Jaime Kenedenoyour words are accurate. Look up the case with Jack Hunt and Yemen in the 14th COA.

Also, the King Ranch wants....Posted on May 13, 2006 at 08:46:39 PM by Jaime Kenedeno


their land back in Cuba. Now Cuba, that is where the CIA made a big blunder leading to the Murder of our President JFK. LBJ, the Hunts (who were on the grassy knoll and the Clebergs coupled with Brown & Root, Anne Armstrong, Nixon (and his "Bay of Pigs"). Well it is confirmed with the connections leading up to our modern day vice president and The Kenedy's "Chicago Ranch" from which the Artesian Aquifer of dinero flows.



start of thread....

3rd in command of CIA arrestedPosted on May 12, 2006 at 11:52:59 PM by JVCFeds Search Home, Office of CIA Official By MARK SHERMAN WASHINGTON (AP) - Federal agents searched the home and office of the CIA's departing No. 3 official on Friday as part of a corruption investigation that has sent a former congressman to prison and now involves CIA contracts. Investigators from five federal agencies acted under search warrants at the home of Kyle ``Dusty'' Foggo in Vienna, Va., and his office at the CIA's Langley, Va., campus, FBI spokeswoman Debra Weierman said. Both locations are in the Washington suburbs. The warrants themselves were sealed and officials would not discuss what agents were seeking. Foggo agreed to step down as the CIA's executive officer under pressure because federal authorities are investigating whether he improperly awarded contracts to San Diego businessman and friend Brent Wilkes, according to federal law enforcement and intelligence officials. They spoke on condition of anonymity because investigations were ongoing. Prosecutors have implicated Wilkes in a scheme to bribe former Rep. Randy ``Duke'' Cunningham, R-Calif., but he has not been charged and his lawyer has said Wilkes did nothing wrong. Among the contracts under scrutiny is one that dates from Foggo's previous job of running the logistics at a secret facility in Europe that supplies CIA personnel in war zones, the law enforcement official said. Foggo gave the multimillion-dollar contract to supply bottled water to a Wilkes-related company, the official said. Foggo, who was in the process of clearing out his office at the end of a 25-year CIA career, has denied any wrongdoing. ``Mr. Foggo maintains that government contracts for which he was responsible were properly awarded and administered,'' the CIA said in a statement last week. CIA spokeswoman Jennifer Millerwise Dyck said Friday that top CIA officials were informed of the warrants shortly before the searches began. ``The agency is cooperating fully with the Department of Justice and the FBI,'' she said. The agencies taking part in the searches are: the FBI, the Internal Revenue Service, the Defense Criminal Investigative Service, the U.S. Attorney's office in San Diego and the CIA's inspector general, Weierman said. The inspector general has been investigating Foggo's relationship with Wilkes for more than two months. The inquiry stems from the investigation of Cunningham, who is serving a prison term of more than eight years after admitting last year that he took $2.4 million in bribes from government contractors. Mitchell Wade, another contractor, pleaded guilty in February to conspiring with Cunningham and is cooperating with investigators. Wilkes is described in court papers as an unindicted coconspirator. The investigation includes allegations, raised by Wade, that Wilkes provided Cunningham with prostitutes, limousines and hotel suites. Foggo has acknowledged participating in poker games organized by Wilkes at the hotel rooms, but he has said nothing untoward went on while he was there. ``If he attended occasional card games with friends over the years, Mr. Foggo insists they were that and nothing more,'' the CIA statement said. Lawyers for Wilkes and the limousine company, Shirlington Limousine and Transportation Inc., of Arlington, Va., also have denied any involvement with prostitutes. Foggo announced his retirement from the agency this week, three days after CIA Director Porter Goss said he would be stepping down. Dyck said the Foggo investigation has ``absolutely nothing, zero'' to do with Goss' resignation. Goss asked Foggo to step down as executive director last week because he felt the accusations had become a distraction and could damage the agency's reputation, the unnamed intelligence official said. Foggo's associates have said he received the Intelligence Commendation Medal for supporting the war on terror in 2002. Before becoming the agency's No. 3 leader in 2004, he was the chief of base at a secret facility that supports the war on terror. As executive director, Foggo had the powerful position of overseeing the day-to-day operations of the CIA. One FBI agent told reporters from Copley News Service, who were at Foggo's residence, that Foggo was not at home in his quiet suburban neighborhood near CIA headquarters and had not been detained. The agents refused to answer other questions about the raid. A neighbor told Copley that the agents arrived about 8 a.m. EDT. A white Chevrolet van was backed up to the carport of the split-level brick home and, at one point, a man wearing latex gloves emerged from the house and went around back. Replies:
Re(1): 3rd in command of CIA arrested - By code name: Smith May 13, 2006 at 07:17:20 PM
Also, the King Ranch wants.... - By Jaime Kenedeno May 13, 2006 at 08:46:39 PM
He always goes to Florida in the Summertime, however...... - By Jaime Kenedeno May 13, 2006 at 08:37:40 PM
Re(1): He always goes to Florida in the Summertime, however...... - By dannoynted1 May 14, 2006 at 00:07:20 AM
Sounds kinda like Loyd "the Steal" Neal.... - By Jaime Kenedeno May 13, 2006 at 05:17:52 AM

I'll Save ya Bush Baby

With all due respect Mr President, if you are wrong denying it will only make things worse. Just admit you are human and cherish your wife.


...two mainstream media sources have confirmed that their sources also have reported an ongoing affair between Mr. Bush and Rice.

Informed sources Inside the Beltway report that First Lady Laura Bush has established temporary residence in the Mayflower Hotel in Washington, DC as a result of a tiff with President Bush over an extramarital relationship involving her husband. Mr. Bush's tryst is said to involve Secretary of State Condole


Randi Rhodes
just reported that Laura Bush has moved out of the White House, and into the Mayflower Hotel in Washington, D.C. The report originated with super secret backgound sources that passed along the information to ex-CIA agent
Wayne Madsen..