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Re: This is what American universities Yale, Harvard and Princeton produce - Client 9

by "GeekBoy" <abuse@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Mar 12, 2008 at 02:22 AM

Oh what is wrong ****King? Jealous becaus eyou **** skinned ****doos are
too 
****ing stupid to do anything on your own?
You ****doos have nothign but a ****ed up turd word ****hole
"indiaBPOking" <indiabpoking@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message 
news:e44a0b63-52a5-499c-8ea0-8fbf9cfa54c9@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Mar 11, 7:34 pm, "GeekBoy" <ab...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> I guess it's better than what you **** skins produce...****ED UP TURD 
> WORLD
> FAILURE s**** HOLE COUNTRIES..
>
> HAHA!! ****IGN LOSERS"indiaBPOking" <indiabpok...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in 
> message

**** your Yale, **** your harvard, **** your princeton good, and ****
you asshole.  No American ass left behind.

indiaBPOking.
>
> news:0ef96ea5-94e6-45d1-b52e-14b724875640@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> GOP lawmaker seeks Spitzer impeachment
>
> http://www.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS/03/11/spitzer/index.html
>
>  ALBANY, New York (CNN) -- The minority leader in New York's state
> Assembly said Tuesday that he will introduce articles of impeachment
> within two days if New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer does not resign first.
> art.podium.afp.gi.jpg
>
> Gov. Eliot Spitzer, with his wife, Silda, by his side, apologizes to
> his family and to the public on Monday.
>
> On Monday, prosecutors unsealed an affidavit detailing a rendezvous in
> a Wa****ngton hotel room last month as part of a federal prostitution
> ring investigation.
>
> The affidavit refers only to "Client 9," but a source with knowledge
> of the investigation told CNN on Monday that the reference was to
> Spitzer.
>
> Sources say Spitzer spent more than $15,000 for several encounters
> with prostitutes.
>
> "It's not something we rejoice in; it's nothing political,"
> Assemblyman James Tedisco, a Republican, told CNN's Wolf Blitzer.
> "It's what's right and what's wrong." Video Watch more of Tedisco's
> interview »
>
> Tedisco said he was providing the two-day window because Spitzer "may
> be making decisions or negotiations with the law enforcement officials
> in relation****p to the legal aspects of this."
>
> Meanwhile, aides to Spitzer and the state's lieutenant governor have
> begun planning for a possible transition, a top legislative staffer
> said Tuesday.
>
> Spitzer, whose reputation as a scourge of white-collar crime propelled
> him to the governor's office in 2006, has faced calls for his
> resignation since apologizing for an undisclosed personal indiscretion
> Monday afternoon. Video Watch how details of the scandal are emerging
> on the Web »
>
> A Democratic source with firsthand knowledge of the issue said, "it is
> a 'when' question on the resignation. Not an 'if'. He knows that. It
> is hard to come to terms with, and there are legal issues that are
> related to any big political decisions. But Eliot knows he cannot hold
> onto his job here. He might want to, but he is absolutely aware of his
> predicament."
>
> A Democratic campaign veteran with ties to the Spitzer team added, "a
> resignation was part of the discussions early yesterday but was
> tabled. The political people were clear about the options. There are
> none, not for him."
>
> If Spitzer resigns, Lt. Gov. David Paterson, 53, would become the
> first black governor in the state and the fourth in U.S. history. The
> former state Senate minority leader, who is legally blind, is the son
> of Basil Paterson, a longtime Democratic operative in New York City.
>
> Paterson comes into office as a relatively fresh face.
>
> "The public is hoping for that replacement to redeem the office and to
> redeem their faith in elected officials in general. So David Paterson,
> in a sense, walks into a great op****tunity," said Steve Kornacki of
> the New York Observer.
>
> No further information was immediately available about the re****ted
> meetings between Spitzer and Paterson staffers.
>
> Tedisco said impeachment articles are being prepared, though they
> haven't been introduced in the state Assembly in more than a century.
>
> He insisted that it wasn't about partisan politics but "about what's
> right and wrong in moving this government forward."
>
> "Our hearts are broken," Tedisco added. "But we have to continue with
> governance here, and this is a total distraction. It's a circus here
> at the New York State Capitol."
> All About Spitzer
> # Time magazine named Spitzer "Crusader of the Year" during his two
> terms as New York attorney general.
>
> # Tabloids labeled him "Eliot Ness" because of his reputation for
> rooting out corruption, busting white-collar criminals and tackling
> organized crime.
>
> # Spitzer also prosecuted prostitution rings.
>
> # He attended Princeton and Harvard universities and then became an
> assistant district attorney in Manhattan.
>
> # He worked for three New York law firms and decided to run in his
> mid-30s for attorney general.
>
> # The first-term governor had been considered a rising star in the
> Democratic Party.
>
> # Spitzer is married and has three daughters.
>
> More than half the Assembly would need to approve impeachment for it
> to pass. That would require all 42 Republicans and about a third of
> the 108 Democrats in the Assembly to cast "yes" votes. The GOP-
> controlled Senate then would need to pass the measure by a two-thirds
> vote.
>
> Tedisco spokesman Josh Fitzpatrick said the state's system of
> impeachment is modeled on the federal system, which cites "high crimes
> and misdemeanors" as the bar needed to convict by the legislative
> body.
>
> "Basically, it's like a trial of sort," Christina Dickinson, deputy
> counsel for the New York State Senate Minority Conference, said of the
> Senate's role. "They have subpoena power to get clarification on the
> issues. Then there's a judgment that is rendered."
>
> Though he hasn't been been charged with a crime, Spitzer has begun
> assembling a legal team. He has chosen Michele Hirshman as his lead
> attorney, said Madelaine Miller, a spokeswoman for Hirshman's law
> firm, Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison.
>
> Hirshman, who was the first deputy attorney general under Spitzer when
> he was New York attorney general, also is a former assistant U.S.
> attorney who "served as chief of the Public Corruption Unit, where she
> led major investigations and prosecutions of government fraud and
> political and police corruption," according to the law firm's Web
> site.
>
> The Republican Governors Association called on Spitzer to resign to
> "allow the people of New York to pursue honest leader****p."
>
> "The American people are tired of corrupt and hypocritical
> politicians. The governor of New York is just another in the long list
> of politicians that have failed their constituents," said Nick Ayers,
> the association's executive director.
>
> Spitzer, 48, took office in January 2007 after eight years as the
> state's attorney general, rising to national prominence.
>
> He built his career on rooting out public corruption and became a
> national figure with a series of high-profile Wall Street
> investigations. He also prosecuted prostitution rings. See a timeline
> of his life »
>
> Spitzer, who is married with three children, went before re****ters
> Monday to confess to an undisclosed personal indiscretion, saying he
> had acted "in a way that violates my obligations to my family, that
> violates my or any sense of right and wrong."
>
> He did not acknowledge the allegations, which were revealed Monday in
> The New York Times, nor did he take questions. Video Watch Spitzer's
> apology »
>
> According to two sources who spoke Tuesday with CNN, Spitzer hit the
> federal radar when a bank re****ted to the Internal Revenue Service
> that a significant amount of money had been suspiciously transferred
> from one account to another. View a gallery of recent political ***
> scandals »
>
> The prostitute, identified only as "Kristen," worked for the Emperors
> Club. The group charged between $1,000 and $5,500 an hour and operated
> in New York; Los Angeles, California; Miami, Florida; London, England;
> and Paris, France, according to court papers.
>
> If Spitzer paid for Kristen to travel from New York to Wa****ngton to
> perform ***ual acts for money, as is alleged in the affidavit, the
> governor could be found in violation of federal law. The Mann Act
> makes it a federal offense to take someone across state lines for the
> purpose of prostitution.
>
> A source identified the Wa****ngton hotel where the pair is said to
> have met as the tony Mayflower. Spitzer registered at the hotel under
> the name George Fox, two sources said.
>
> Now his lawyers may be questioned about how he paid for the alleged
> hotel encounter, whether the trail was concealed and whether any
> banking laws were cir***vented as a result, the source said.
> advertisement
>
> The investigation into the Emperor's Club, which began in October,
> included evidence from a confidential source identified in court
> papers as a prostitute who worked at the club in 2006 and was given
> immunity.
>
> It also included statements from an undercover officer who posed as a
> customer, more than 5,000 intercepted phone calls and text messages,
> more than 6,000 e-mails recovered with search warrants, bank records,
> travel and hotel records and physical surveillance.
 




 2 Posts in Topic:
Re: This is what American universities Yale, Harvard and Princet
"GeekBoy" <a  2008-03-11 21:34:55 
Re: This is what American universities Yale, Harvard and Princet
"GeekBoy" <a  2008-03-12 02:22:27 

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tan12V112 Fri Dec 5 8:14:47 CST 2008.