I am not a professional investigator or a lawyer-- but I filed a Federal lawsuit against a bunch of Republican thieves located in Miami Florida. According to a recent article by a reporter at MadCow, Jack Abramoff is a Republican nightmare.
http://www.madcowprod.com/I am still doing research into my civil lawsuit, but, one of the possible theories, I have is that parties with the knowing knowledge of law firms in Miami created a lawsuit to achieve fraudulent ends.
For example, I later learned that attorneys for-- I will call them Party A-- was the attorney against Party B. But my research into Party A and Party B disclosed that Party A and Party B (and their law firms)--had created a business together at a phony address right around the time of the lawsuit between Party A and Party B, as well as many other issues such as would take to long to discuss here.
In short, it is possible that Woodward was possibly implicated in Watergate, with his knowledge or not. How is that? Because; if they control, the investigators, they can then control the results of the investigation.
Just like with my civil lawsuit, if the lawyers, and the parties control, the lawsuit giving the appearance of being for and against one issue verse another-- but in reality, those lawyers really only represent one party for reasons that are unknown.I know for a fact-- that law firms and parties benefited from this smoke and mirror legal strategy, (in my civil lawsuit), because, they are the only ones that benefited from it -- and I had no benefit.
I would like to discuss how they benefited --and how I did not benefit-- but I am still doing research into it, because there are possibly conflicting accounts. of how much money the Republican thieves stole.
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NOTES ON DEEP THROAT
Wednesday, June 01, 2005
http://www.bostonphoenix.com/medialog/2005/06/notes-on-deep-throat.aspWhen in 1982 the Colliers invited Washington Post Assistant Managing Editor Bob Woodward to view a six-hour videotape of voting fraud in Dade County and inquired "what Katharine Graham knew and when she knew it?" Woodward replied, "Don't start a war with me on this."
As soon as FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover died on May 2, 1972, a 27-year-old Justice Department employee named Craig C. Donsanto signed Petersen's name to a "courtesy" letter telling Democratic Congressman Claude Pepper of Miami that all hell was about to break loose. Pepper learned that Democratic National Committee offices based at the Watergate ostensibly were in cahoots with a California computing firm anxious to corner the market on the new computer voting industry and that Dade County had been a guinea pig.
One of the three TV stations implicated in the 1970 fraud case was WPLG-TV of Miami, an affiliate of the "Washington Post" and Newsweek, and the property of Post owner Katharine Graham, who is Bob Graham's brother-in-law. The call letters WPLG were a tribute to her late husband, Philip L. Graham.
The Watergate burglars (from Miami, you will recall) did not break into the Watergate to tap a telephone. It doesn't take six people to do that. They were looking for evidence of vote fraud and conspiracy.