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To: KonKilo who wrote (10273)10/2/2003 2:33:42 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 793842
 
Maybe in yours and Rush's world...

You live in a world where it is "Racist" to suggest that someone got a job for racial reasons? That kind of thinking is why we can't communicate about race in this country.



To: KonKilo who wrote (10273)10/2/2003 5:52:37 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 793842
 
Well, now they have nailed Rush. This really hurts with his audience. He obviously took them for his ear problem, and got hooked. After two DeTox, he paid off the informant and she still turned him in. He is going to have to do about a week of "Mea Culpa" on the air to save himself with his audience.
_______________________________________________________________________


Rush Limbaugh
in pill probe
By TRACY CONNOR
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER
Thursday, October 2nd, 2003

Talk-radio titan Rush Limbaugh is being investigated for allegedly buying thousands of addictive painkillers from a black-market drug ring.
The moralizing motormouth was turned in by his former housekeeper - who says she was Limbaugh's pill supplier for four years.

Wilma Cline, 42, says Limbaugh was hooked on the potent prescription drugs OxyContin, Lorcet and hydrocodone - and went through detox twice.

"There were times when I worried," Cline told the National Enquirer, which broke the story in an edition being published today. "All these pills are enough to kill an elephant - never mind a man."

Cline could not be reached for further comment yesterday, but her lawyer, Ed Shohat of Miami, said his client "stands behind the story."

The Daily News independently confirmed that Limbaugh is under investigation.

His lawyers, Jerry Fox and Dan Zachary, refused to comment on the accusations and said any "medical information" about him was private and not newsworthy.

They said Limbaugh - who has a top-rated syndicated radio show but resigned early today from a weekly ESPN football segment amid criticism of racial comments about Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Donovan McNabb - was traveling and had no comment.

The Palm Beach County state attorney's office, which is running the probe, said it could not confirm or deny the allegations.

Scoring in parking lot

Cline told the Enquirer she went to prosecutors with information about Limbaugh and others after four years of drug deals that included clandestine handoffs in a Denny's parking lot.

She said she wore a wire during her last two deliveries to the conservative commentator and gave the tapes to authorities.

She also gave the Enquirer a ledger documenting how many pills she claimed to have bought for him - 4,350 in one 47-day period - and E-mails she claimed Limbaugh sent her.

In one missive, Limbaugh pushed Cline to get more "little blues" - code for OxyContin, the powerful narcotic nicknamed hillbilly heroin, she said.

"You know how this stuff works ... the more you get used to, the more it takes," the May 2002 E-mail reads. "But I will try and cut down to help out."

The account Cline gave the Enquirer is that she became Limbaugh's drug connection in 1998, nine months after taking a housekeeping job at his Palm Beach mansion.

It started after her husband, David, hurt himself in a fall, and Limbaugh asked how he was.

"He asked me casually, 'Is he getting any pain medication?' I said, 'Yes - he's had surgery, and the doctor gave him hydro-codone 750,'" Cline said. "To my astonishment, he said, 'Can you spare a couple of them?'"

Husband's pills

Cline said she gave Limbaugh 10 pills the next day and agreed to give him 30 of her husband's pills each month. When the doctor stopped renewing the prescription in early 1999, Limbaugh allegedly went ballistic.

"His tone was nasty and bullying. He said, 'I don't care how or what you do, but you'd better - better! - get me some more,'" Cline said.

The housekeeper said she found a new supplier and arranged to hide Limbaugh's stashes under his mattress so his wife, Marta, wouldn't find them.

After several months, Limbaugh told her he was going to New York for detox and didn't need any more pills, Cline said.

But a month later, he said his left ear was hurting and asked her for hydrocodone, followed by an order for OxyContin.

Limbaugh, 52, suffered from autoimmune ear disease, a condition that left him deaf and had to be corrected with cochlear implant surgery two years ago.

Cline said she continued to make deliveries to Limbaugh even after she quit as his housekeeper in July 2001 - but he became increasingly paranoid, even patting her down for recording devices, she said.

In June 2002, Limbaugh told her he was going to New York for detox a second time.

After he returned, "I went to talk to him, and he cried a little bit," she said. "He told me that if it ever got out, he would be ruined."

She claimed that a lawyer for Limbaugh gave her a payoff - $80,000 he owed her, plus another $120,000 - and asked her to destroy the computer that contained the E-mail records.

Soon after, Cline and her husband retained Shohat and contacted prosecutors.

Feeling no pain

The drugs Rush Limbaugh is accused of abusing are legal only with a doctor's prescription. All are habit-forming.

- Hydrocodone

Anti-cough agent and painkiller similar to morphine. Side effects include anxiety, poor mental performance, emotional dependence, drowsiness, mood changes, difficulty breathing and itchiness.

- Lorcet

Brand name for the combination of Tylenol and hydrocodone, prescribed for moderate to severe pain. Side effects include dry mouth, nausea, vomiting, decreased appetite, dizziness, tiredness, muscle twitches, sweating and itching.

- OxyContin

Potent time-release medication for relief of moderate to severe pain, known as hillbilly heroin because of black-market popularity in some rural areas. Side effects include drowsiness, dizziness, sweating, muscle twitches and decreased sex drive. A large dose can be fatal.

nydailynews.com



To: KonKilo who wrote (10273)10/2/2003 8:20:51 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793842
 
Arnold vs the Media. He played it the right way for him. The California media were all going to come out against him, so why pander to them? Boston Globe
_____________________________________________________________________________________________

THE MEDIA
Despite efforts, press can't seem to pin down Schwarzenegger

By Mark Jurkowitz, Globe Staff, 10/2/2003

Ever since Arnold Schwarzenegger seized Jay Leno's ''Tonight Show'' stage to announce his effort to bid ''hasta la vista, baby'' to California Governor Gray Davis, it was clear that the action-hero-turned-politician would have an unorthodox relationship with the media.

Given his status as the celebrity candidate running in a short California recall campaign, concerns surfaced that the actor might navigate an end run around the press, staging glitzy photo opportunities instead of submitting to serious scrutiny of his positions and qualifications. In a column written in August, Philip Trounstine, director of a survey research institute at San Jose State University and a former political editor at the San Jose Mercury News, prodded journalists to ask the tough questions. Trounstine warned that ''no one should be allowed to become governor of 35 million people and the fifth-largest economy in the world without being vetted in the political process.''

Now, with the election less than a week away and a new Gallup Poll anointing Schwarzenegger as the front-runner, the feeling among some California media analysts is that the ''Terminator 3'' star did a skillful job of evading much of that vetting process.

''I don't think the media have been able to penetrate the Schwarzenegger campaign at all,'' Trounstine says. ''The strategy of the Schwarzenegger campaign has been to bypass journalists and to create the image . . . of a candidate who is engaging the news media. But he is doing nothing of the sort.''

As a former communications director for Davis, Trounstine may not be a neutral observer, but he is not alone in his view. Jim Bettinger, director of the John S. Knight Fellowships for Professional Journalists at Stanford University, says Schwarzenegger ''to this point, for the most part, has been able to avoid close scrutiny. . . . And it has been very difficult for the serious California media.''

Michael Parks, the former Los Angeles Times editor who heads the Annenberg School of Journalism at the University of Southern California, says Schwarzenegger ''was largely successful in the medium that matters to most people, television -- [in] not getting into any sort of discussions except for one television debate. . . . We don't know much about him. We know he can make movies.''

Still, Parks, like others, says political reporters have tried to pin down Schwarzenegger and gives the state's print press a B+ grade for coverage and effort. Last weekend, for example, when Schwarzenegger flew around the state in a private jet that offered no seats to reporters, the Los Angeles Times chartered its own plane to follow him. But the paper has had only one 20-minute sitdown interview with Schwarzenegger, says deputy metro editor David Lauter. ''He has generally not been willing to sit down with reporters covering the campaign,'' Lauter says.

A Schwarzenegger campaign spokesman, Todd Harris, disagrees with those who accuse the candidate of ducking scrutiny, noting that ''every utterance from Arnold is parsed, picked apart and analyzed. He has participated in over 75 interviews with the media'' including press conferences.

Daniel Weintraub, a Sacramento Bee columnist, acknowledges that Schwarzenegger has held press conferences and given some interviews, but says he has not been forthcoming with details on his budget plan for the state. ''I think we've got a very good sense of who he is and what his values are,'' Weintraub adds. ''It's just a leap of faith'' to assume he has a solid plan for the budget.

From the opening moments of his campaign, Schwarzenegger proved that he could garner intense -- and often flattering -- media attention simply because of who he is.

Schwarzenegger may be the only candidate to emerge unscathed from an old interview in a skin magazine in which he talked proudly of his participation in group sex. USA Today posed him, standing tall against a California skyline, in a two-page spread headlined ''Schwarzenegger's American Dream.'' This week's news of his lead in the polls dominated the front pages of the New York tabloids, 3,000 miles from the California recall battle. And a good deal of the television footage of his campaign events have looked like commercials, with Schwarzenegger surrounded by adoring admirers.

In what could be considered the most serious test of his candidacy, the televised Sept. 24 debate, Schwarzenegger -- who defused Arianna Huffington's attack by joking that he had a part for her in ''Terminator 4'' -- finished second behind a fellow Republican, Tom McClintock, when Gallup asked Californians who had done the best job in the forum.

Harris points out that this week Schwarzenegger will demonstrate his accessibility by traveling with more than 200 members of the media -- including reporters from more than a dozen countries -- on a four-day bus caravan. When asked if the names the campaign has given the four buses carrying the reporters -- ''Predator I, Predator II, Predator III and Predator IV'' -- suggests a candidate who views journalists as adversaries, Harris responds: ''One should assume that we have a sense of humor.''

boston.com