To: J_F_Shepard who wrote (67064 ) 3/5/2012 8:29:59 PM From: John 2 Recommendations Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 103300 How is Slick Willie's Black bastard, Danny Williams, these days? -g- webcache.googleusercontent.com excerpt: Hillary Bio: Bill Traded Pardon for Silence on 'Love Child' Did Bill Clinton believe he was really the father of Danny Williams, the Little Rock teen who gained worldwide fame after NewsMax.com reported last November that his family wanted a presidential paternity test? Now, thanks to Joyce Milton's new Hillary bio, "The First Partner," we may have the answer to that question. For the first week and a half of 1999, speculation ran wild after Internet sleuth Matt Drudge spread the word that Star magazine had struck a paternity test deal with Danny's family, obtaining DNA samples from the teen and his mother, Bobbie Ann. Williams' genetic code would be compared to the scant profile of Clinton's DNA available in the FBI lab section of the Starr report. The tests came back negative on Jan. 9 and media interest quickly evaporated. Hardly anyone noticed when NewsMax.com revealed a week later that the FBI lab refused to vouch for the accuracy of the presidential DNA profile Star magazine had used. (See: Clinton Paternity 'Test' Called into Question) Now author Milton traces the curious history between Clinton and the man who first called attention to his purported "love child," Little Rock impresario Robert "Say" McIntosh. In 1988, McIntosh got wind that Bobbie Ann, then a Little Rock hooker, was telling friends her baby Danny belonged to the governor. He tried to peddle the story to one reporter after another, finding his only success with Globe magazine, a supermarket tabloid that finally ran an expose in February 1992. The prestige press dismissed the tale, but among Clinton cognoscenti, McIntosh's claims about a presidential "love child" became the stuff of legend, inspiring, in part, 1996's best-selling book, "Primary Colors." Author Milton reports that in 1991 McIntosh publicly claimed Clinton had promised to grant his then-imprisoned son an early release. Young Tommy McIntosh was serving a 50-year jail sentence on a cocaine rap. The demand languished until Jan. 20, 1993, when the wheels of justice suddenly came unstuck. With newly minted Arkansas Gov. Jim Guy Tucker in D.C. for Clinton's first inauguration, the honor fell to president pro tempore of the Arkansas State Senate, Dr. Jerry Jewell. Tommy McIntosh was sprung years before he would have normally gotten anywhere near a parole board. As Milton puts it: "Right up to the day Star revealed the [paternity] test results, the White House failed to issue a flat denial of the allegations. Either Clinton did have relations with Bobbie Ann Williams at some point or, perhaps more likely, even his closest aides were never entirely sure that they could trust his protestations of innocence." Tommy McIntosh's incredibly early parole, says Milton, suggests that the Clinton camp "struck a deal with Say McIntosh in exchange for his silence." Weeks after his son's release, McIntosh said that his bargain with Clinton was sealed right after the election, telling the Washington Times: "Those who question my credibility should asked themselves, 'If there was no deal, how did this happen?' How did my son get out of prison 18 years before he was eligible for parole?" Good question. --- LOL. Slick Willie has a Black bastard from a Black whore he was screwing. -g-