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Politics : I Will Continue to Continue, to Pretend....

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To: Sully- who wrote (1275)3/23/2004 7:26:31 PM
From: Sully-   of 35834
 
The Cover-up is Always Worse than the Crime
American Thinker
<font size=4>
Thomas Lipscomb, writing in the New York Sun, continues to scoop the entire rest of the American media in his coverage of John Kerry’s attendance at Vietnam Veterans Against the War meetings in Kansas City, where assassination of government officials was a topic of discussion.

Now, Lipscomb reveals alleged attempts to cover-up the facts, by influencing a witness to change his story.

Apparently, the lessons of Watergate have still not been absorbed by Democrats. The cover-up is always worse than the crime.<font size=3>

Posted by Thomas 03 22 04
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Publication:The New York Sun; Date:Mar 22, 2004; Section:Front page; Page:1
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KERRY’S CAMPAIGN ASKED A VETERAN TO CHANGE STORY

KANSAS MEETING AT ISSUE <font size=3>

By THOMAS H. LIPSCOMB Special to the Sun
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A Vietnam veteran who said he remembers John Kerry participating in a 1971 Kansas City meeting at which an assassination plot was discussed says an official with the Kerry presidential campaign called him this month and pressured him to change his story.

The veteran, John Musgrave, says he was called twice by the head of Veterans for Kerry, John Hurley, while a reporter for the Kansas City Star worked on a follow-up piece to a New York Sun article about the November 1971 meeting of Vietnam Veterans Against the War at which a plot to kill U.S. senators was voted down.

Asked by The New York Sun if he felt pressured, Mr.
Musgrave said, “In the second call I did.” Mr. Musgrave
said Mr. Hurley said Mr. Kerry had told him “he was
definitely not in Kansas City.”

According to Mr. Musgrave, Mr. Hurley said, “Why don’t you
refresh your memory and call that reporter back?”

A spokesman for Mr. Kerry’s presidential campaign, David
Wade, last week issued a statement to the Sun, following a
week of denials, that said “we accept” Mr. Kerry’s
presence in Kansas City as a “historical footnote.”

By then, the recollections of six witnesses, along with
minutes and FBI records, placed Mr. Kerry at the Kansas
City meeting.

But the news of the calls from the campaign to Mr. Musgrave may move the episode from what the campaign is describing as a “historical footnote” to a matter that involves the contemporary behavior of Mr. Kerry and his campaign.

Mr. Musgrave said he received three Purple Hearts in Vietnam. After the third Purple Heart for wounds by three 7.62 rounds, one to the jaw and two to the left chest, Mr. Musgrave refused the standard release from further service in the combat zone offered Marines with three Purple Hearts and tried to return to his unit, he said.

But because of the extent of his injuries he was retired from the Marines with full disability and sent home, he said.

Mr. Musgrave said, “I told Hurley it was my first meeting as a state officer of the VVAW, and I remember John being there. I remember what I remember.”

When asked whom he is supporting in the presidential election, Mr. Musgrave replied, “I am undecided. But I am sure not voting for some guy who called me a liar.”

Mr. Hurley did not return calls for comment for this article.

Another related episode in which the Kerry campaign had to handle questions about Vietnam Veterans Against the War involves a statement by Mr. Kerry himself.

At a Capitol Hill press conference on March 11, 2004, Mr. Kerry was asked by a reporter if he thought his credibility had been affected by his close association with Al Hubbard, a key VVAW colleague of Mr. Kerry’s who had appointed him to the leadership of the Vietnam Veterans Against the War.

Mr. Hubbard claimed to be a wounded Air Force officer who had served at Danang during the Vietnam War. He appeared with Mr. Kerry many times, including the “Meet the Press” interview after Mr.Kerry’s Senate testimony about American “war crimes” in Vietnam.

But Mr. Hubbard was never in Vietnam, was never wounded, and was not an officer, as subsequent research and Mr. Kerry himself have pointed out.

Mr. Kerry answered this month that he had not spoken to Mr.Hubbard since the week of April 19, 1971.

Yet the Kerry campaign now apparently accepts that Mr. Kerry was at the November 12 to 15, 1971,VVAW meeting. Mr. Musgrave said he remembers that at that meeting, Mr. Kerry challenged Mr. Hubbard’s continuing to maintain his false claims to being an Air Force officer wounded at Danang.

“Hubbard sort of sat there with his eyes downcast and Mike Oliver really did all the arguing for him,” Mr. Musgrave said. “And suddenly Hubbard got up and said he was having an ulcer attack and had to get to New York immediately to see his doctor and ran out of the room. You would think we didn’t have any doctors or hospitals in Kansas City.”

In addition, the New York Times reported on an August 29, 1971, fundraising party for the Vietnam Veterans Against the War at which “Mr. Kerry and Al Hubbard, another veteran, explained some of the aims of the organization.”
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