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To: sandintoes who wrote (739353)5/9/2006 9:19:21 AM
From: DuckTapeSunroof  Respond to of 769670
 
"The Only Hookers Fox WON'T Cover"

The Nation
Mon May 8, 11:49 AM ET
news.yahoo.com

As far as scandals are concerned, the widening investigation into former Rep. Duke Cunningham has got it all. The drumroll, in no specific order:

Prostitutes. Poker. The Watergate Hotel. Members of Congress. Shady limousine companies. CIA officials with names like Dusty Foggo and Nine Fingers.

What more could reporters want in a story? I seem to recall that the last time there was a sex scandal in DC, back in the late 1990s, reporters paid rapt attention.

But so far much of big media keep downplaying or ignoring Hookergate (go read Josh Marshall)--and its connection to departed CIA chief Porter Goss.

Maureen Dowd did pen a column over the weekend entitled "Poker, Hookers and Spooks." And her paper, The New York Times, is coming around belatedly. But TV news still has a long way to go.

As Media Matters astutely noted, these are the "only hookers Fox WON'T cover."

Copyright © 2006 The Nation
Copyright © 2006 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.



To: sandintoes who wrote (739353)5/9/2006 9:21:58 AM
From: DuckTapeSunroof  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
And... from the conservative 'MediaMatters.org', (investigators into the 'liberal media'):

The only hookers Fox WON'T cover ...

mediamatters.org

As Media Matters has repeatedly documented, if there's one kind of story Fox News likes nearly as much as partisan smears of progressives, it's a story about the sex trade. From the arrest of a man who left his son in his unlocked vehicle while he went to a strip club to a porn star at a fundraiser to Playboy's newest Playmate of the Year to interviews with Victoria's Secret models to a segment advising women to show "less skin" at the workplace (a segment that, naturally, required Fox to air images of women showing a great deal of skin) to a piece about a pole-dancing Pamela Anderson, Fox takes every available opportunity to broadcast photos and video of scantily clad women.

So when you have a story that involves A) prostitutes and B) corrupt politicians, you would think Fox News would be all over it, taking advantage of the ratings gold that had fallen into its lap.

Ah, but the corrupt politicians allegedly involved are Republicans. That changes everything, doesn't it? And not just for Fox News -- as blogger Joshua Micah Marshall has noted, major media outlets have all but ignored a story about "members of Congress getting sauced up at rollicking parties and set up with hookers by crooked defense contractors in exchange for help bagging pricey defense contracts." Marshall and his colleagues at TPMMuckracker.com (along with Harper's Magazine's Ken Silverstein and The Wall Street Journal's Scot J. Paltrow) have taken the lead in covering the federal investigation into whether contractors implicated in the bribery case of former Rep. Randy "Duke" Cunningham (currently serving a jail term for his misdeeds) provided Cunningham and other members of Congress with prostitutes and free limousines and hotel suites. As part of the probe, Silverstein wrote, the FBI is reportedly investigating current and former lawmakers on congressional defense and intelligence committees, "including one person who now holds a powerful intelligence post" -- a description that fits CIA director Porter Goss to a "T."

Josh Marshall:

You'd expect the press to be all over it. As [TPMMuckraker reporter] Justin [Rood] reported yesterday, the legendary Watergate Hotel has already received mulitple [sic] subpoenas from federal investigators investigating the hotel's role in 'Hookergate'. So this thing's for real.

Yet, I'm not seeing any morning show's running with it.

And, while the [Patrick] Kennedy story is 'newsy' it doesn't really have any greater policy implications. And the public trust implications are minor. The Wilkes-Watergate-Hooker story, on the other hand, is both. It's salacious, which the press loves. And it's also directly tied to crooks ripping off taxpayers, probably allowing our service members abroad to have shoddy equipment or defense dollars going to worthless projects.

So, we're on the Kennedy case. But why the silence on the much bigger scandal bubbling up out of the House Defense Appropriations Subcommittee?

Cricket, cricket ...

Late Update: A number of readers have told me that NBC Nightly News has a piece on the story last night. Good for them.

How thorough was the media blackout on this burgeoning scandal? Goss abruptly resigned his CIA post today after barely a year on the job -- and the cable news networks held out as long as they possibly could before mentioning the "Hookergate" story.

CNN, for example, not only avoided mentioning the speculation that he is caught up in the investigation in its initial reports, it went so far as to tell viewers: "Taking a look at what's out on the Internet -- not much controversy involving the director himself."

Well, unless you count the suggestion that the Director of Central Intelligence may be implicated in an FBI investigation into whether contractors already involved in a bribery case also supplied prostitutes, limos, and hotel suites to members of Congress who sit on defense and intelligence committees. Other than THAT, there isn't much controversy involving Goss.

CNN wasn't alone in looking the other way, of course: Fox News and MSNBC also held out as long as they could. Initial reports by The New York Times and The Washington Post similarly failed to mention the prostitutes-and-limos story.

Eventually the investigation did seep into news reports -- but not for long. On CNN, former Rep. Bob Barr (R-GA), who served with Goss when both were Republican members of Congress, first pointed out that the Cunningham investigation is "starting to reach into the CIA":

CAROL LIN (CNN anchor): But Congressman, see, there's something that doesn't make sense here, you know? There's something that doesn't make sense. And what I am wondering is whether this resignation is an indication of something to come. Porter Goss wants to get out of the way. Do you have any sense of that on Capitol Hill or from your sources in Washington?

BARR: It could very well be. I mean, we've seen brewing out of the Duke Cunningham -- former Congressman Duke Cunningham scandal, which has been growing now for several months --

LIN: That he accepted bribes from defense contractors.

BARR: Right. It's starting to reach into the CIA. And that could very well be something that is going to -- you know, like a sore that's been festering. That could bust out sometime now. And maybe that could reach into the top levels of the agency.

LIN: Are you saying the director himself, Congressman? Are you saying the director himself?

BARR: I can't imagine that. I know Porter. I've known him for many years. I cannot imagine that he would be a part of that, but if you have the top two or three people at an agency working under him, and he's the one that put them in there and placed the faith and trust of the government in these people, and then they become tainted with this, it certainly reflects on the leadership.

Later, CNN senior national correspondent John Roberts elaborated:

ROBERTS: Now, just to add a little bit to what former Congressman Bob Barr was talking about, what's all swirling around the CIA with the Duke Cunningham case goes to a fellow named Brent Wilkes, who was an unindicted co-conspirator in that -- that Cunningham case. There is a fellow who has pled guilty in that case by the name of Mitchell Wade who contends -- and this is only a contention, allegations again -- that Wilkes had been procuring prostitutes and limousines for Duke Cunningham and had also been hosting poker parties at a couple of hotels in Washington, one of them being the Watergate hotel right down there by the Potomac, and the other one being the Westin Grand up on M street at 24th.

Now, Wilkes has denied any involvement in this prostitution idea, but we do know that he did have some poker parties and that a very senior official at the CIA had been a guest at a few of those poker parties, a fellow by the name of Dusty Foggo, who is actually the number three at the CIA. There is an inspector general's investigation at the CIA going on over Foggo's appearance at those poker parties. And the CIA, I should say, has also come out to say that at no time did CIA director Porter Goss ever appear at one of those poker parties. So, this is reaching into the highest levels of the CIA.

Curiously, however, CNN omitted any reference to the investigation from the article it posted on CNN.com more than an hour later -- despite the fact that the article quoted other comments from Barr, including his statement that "I think there's going to be more coming out; we don't know the whole story." CNN's judgment about the significance of Goss's resignation is illustrated by the CNN.com front page at 4:30 p.m. ET, which is dominated by news of Rep. Patrick Kennedy's statement that he is entering a rehabilitation program for an addiction to prescription pain medication; Goss's resignation is given a three-word link to an article that omits mention of the Cunningham investigation.



To: sandintoes who wrote (739353)5/9/2006 9:27:50 AM
From: DuckTapeSunroof  Respond to of 769670
 
Ex-aide to Ney pleads guilty to corruption

By James Vicini and Thomas Ferraro
Mon May 8, 4:53 PM ET
news.yahoo.com

A former top aide to Ohio Republican Rep. Bob Ney (news, bio, voting record) pleaded guilty on Monday and agreed to cooperate in an expanding political corruption investigation centered on disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff.

Ney's former chief of staff, Neil Volz, pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit fraud and to violating a one-year ban on lobbying after leaving Ney's office in 2002 and joining Abramoff's lobbying firm.

"Guilty, your honor," Volz, 35, told U.S. District Judge Ellen Segal Huvelle during a brief court hearing.

Abramoff, Tony Rudy and Michael Scanlon, two former aides to Texas Republican Rep. Tom DeLay, have also pleaded guilty and agreed to cooperate in the investigation of a conspiracy to bribe members of the U.S. Congress in return for legislative favors.

The probe that has implicated Ney may reach others in Congress.

DeLay stepped down as House majority leader last September after he was indicted in Texas on unrelated charges. He and Ney have denied any wrongdoing.

As a lobbyist working in Abramoff's firm, Volz took part in the conspiracy to give various items to Ney in return for action by Ney, according to court papers filed by prosecutors.

"Mr. Volz accepts full responsibility for the activities described in the plea agreement and the related documents," his lawyer, Tim Broas, said in a statement. "He will cooperate with the government's investigation until it is completed."

Ney's defense attorneys, former federal prosecutors Mark Tuohey and Bill Lawler, said the documents they saw for the first time Monday either reflect proper legislative activity or allegations that are unsupported.

NEY FACES RE-ELECTION FIGHT

Ney, who faces a tough re-election fight, is "more confident than ever that he will be vindicated," his spokesman said, adding that Ney has every intention of continuing his work as a congressman and running a vigorous campaign.

In his own statement, Ney said he was "very saddened to see what has happened today. I also understand that Neil has been under tremendous pressure from the government."

The Abramoff scandal and other corruption cases have hurt Republicans as they seek to keep control of Congress in the November elections. In recent weeks, the Senate and House have passed legislation to clean up how Congress and lobbyists operate, but mostly Democratic critics called it inadequate.

Volz admitted that while working for Ney he accepted trips, frequent restaurant meals and drinks and entertainment. Volz, Ney and others performed official acts motivated in part by the gifts, prosecutors said.

Prosecutors said Volz concealed his receipt of gifts, which were in excess of the limits set by the House of Representatives.

Among the items Ney received were an all-expenses-paid golf trip to Scotland in 2002, a trip to Lake George in New York in 2003, regular food and drinks at Abramoff's restaurants and tickets to sporting events and concerts.

In exchange, Ney agreed to support and pass legislation, to support or oppose actions taken by government agencies and departments and to assist Abramoff in getting additional clients, prosecutors said.

Volz faces up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine, although he could receive less than that depending on his cooperation with prosecutors.

Copyright © 2006 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved.