Thx. Both father & son have vivid imaginations--They should collaborate on a novel:
>WIKIPEDIA: During litigation with a local bank, McClellan resigned his Texas law license. The litigation was subsequently dismissed and McClellan resigned in lieu of disciplinary action by the State Bar of Texas Office of the Chief Disciplinary Counsel. For more information, please contact the State Bar of Texas Office of the Chief Disciplinary Counsel at (877)953-5535.* [1]
McClellan is the father of Scott McClellan, former White House press secretary, and Mark McClellan, former Food and Drug Administration Commissioner and former director of Medicare for the George W. Bush administration* [2] Two other sons, Dudley McClellan and Bradley McClellan, are attorneys in Austin, Texas.
Disallowed from practicing law, McClellan published Blood, Money & Power: How LBJ Killed JFK*[3], in 2003 which became a best-seller in November of that year. In the book McClellan presents a theory that Lyndon B. Johnson and Edward Clark were involved in the planning and cover-up of the Kennedy assassination. McClellan also named Malcolm Wallace as one of the assassins. The killing of Kennedy, he alleged, was paid for by oil millionaires such as Clint Murchison, Sr. and Haroldson L. Hunt. McClellan purports that Clark got $6 million for this work. French journalist William Reymond published a book the same year in which he claims that Cliff Carter and Malcolm "Mac" Wallace were key to helping plot the murder of the JFK. McClellan's book has been translated into Japanese. He is presently completing a sequel to his book.
McClellan states, the assassination of Kennedy allowed the oil depletion allowance to be kept at 27.5 percent. It remained unchanged during the Johnson presidency. According to McClellan this resulted in a saving of over 100 million dollars to the American oil industry. During President Richard M. Nixon term, in 1970, it dropped to 15 percent.
McClellan and his wife Cecile live in Gulfport, Mississippi. He is rewriting a novel on the death penalty that was recognized in international competition in 1982 and is producing a play first presented in Houston in 1992.< |