Soldier4Christ
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« on: April 25, 2006, 03:30:23 PM » |
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Suit against former commander in chief to include Streisand, Travolta, Pitt, Ali
Bill and Hillary Clinton head an all-star cast of witnesses in a lawsuit by business mogul Peter Franklin Paul that alleges the former president reneged on a $17 million deal in which he promised to promote a business in exchange for massive contributions to his wife's Senate campaign.
The potential witness list includes celebrities such as Muhammad Ali, Brad Pitt, Barbra Streisand, James Brolin, Cher, Whoopi Goldberg, George Hamilton, Olivia Newton John, John Travolta, Diana Ross, Shirley McLaine, Michael Bolton, Toni Braxton, Paul Anka and Larry King.
Also on the list are former Vice President Al Gore, the Clinton's daughter Chelsea Clinton, former Attorney General John Ashcroft, Homeland Security chief Michael Chertoff, former California Gov. Gray Davis, former Democratic National Committee Chairman Terrence McAuliffe, CBS News reporter Mike Wallace and ABC News reporter Brian Ross.
Paul told WND these people, and many others, have direct knowledge of the alleged frauds. He says he explained, for example, in person to actors Pitt and Travolta that his personal contribution of some $2 million for a Hollywood gala and fund-raiser for Sen. Clinton's Senate campaign in 2000 was done in exchange for Bill Clinton promoting Paul's Internet business, Stan Lee Media, after leaving office.
Clinton was promised an additional $15 million in stock to join the board of the company, which Paul formed in partnership with famed Marvel Comics creator Stan Lee.
But Paul charges the former president caused the company's stock to collapse by diverting $5 million promised by a Japanese investor in an attempt to get out of the deal.
Paul has compiled his charges, with documentation on a website.
As WorldNetDaily reported, Paul, claiming Sen. Clinton pulled off the biggest campaign-finance fraud in history, separately is preparing to file a complaint with the Federal Election Commission charging the Democratic senator with submitting a false report – for a fourth time – that hides his personal multi-million dollar contributions to the Hollywood gala and fund-raiser that helped put her in office.
On April 7, a judge in Los Angeles dismissed Sen. Clinton as a defendant in the civil lawsuit, but she will be deposed as a material witness in preparation for a trial set for March, 27, 2007.
Already, the Clintons' longtime attorney David Kendall has moved to delay the testimony of the senator, who insists she had no knowledge of any business deal despite Paul's claim it was discussed on numerous occasions.
Kendall told WorldNetDaily he would not comment on the case.
In a letter to Paul's attorney, Gary Kreep of the public-interest law firm U.S. Justice Foundation, Kendall contended the delay is warranted because the court issued an order that any deposition cannot begin until 30 days after resolution of Sen. Clinton's motion to be dismissed.
California Superior Court Judge Aurelio N. Munoz granted Sen. Clinton her motion to be dismissed from the case based on the state's anti-SLAPP law, which protects politicians from frivolous lawsuits.
But Kendall, citing WND's story, noted Paul might appeal the dismissal and argues the motion to dismiss, therefore, is not resolved. Munoz had ruled Paul could not depose Sen. Clinton for the Anti-SLAPP motion.
Paul's team sees Kendall's move as another stalling tactic by the Clintons, pointing out any evidence gathered from the deposition could not be used in an appeal anyway.
Paul argues the judge made it clear he won't accept any attempts to block Sen. Clinton from serving as a material witness.
In court April 7, Kreep told Munoz: "I anticipate opposition to taking the deposition of Senator Clinton. I assume we'll be back to court on motions of that."
The judge replied: "Well, any opposition is probably going to be dead on arrival, if that will – if you understand what I'm saying, Mr. Kendall."
Kendall: "I do, your honor."
United States Justice Foundation attorney Colette Wilson told WND she believes the court's stay on discovery was lifted with the April 7 decision, but she acknowledged Paul's team may have to go back to Munoz for clarification.
'No recollection'
In her declaration, Sen. Clinton admitted spending time with Paul on several occasions prior to the gala and during the event, but said if there was any discussion of her husband's employment with Paul, she would have remembered it.
Paul stated in his declaration to the court, "Mrs. Clinton personally assured me she would specifically discuss with her husband, the President, my interest in making a post-White House business proposal to him. She told me her understanding that such a proposal would include my offer of substantial support for her Senate campaign as a good-faith advance on the business arrangement he would be agreeing to."
In her declaration, Sen. Clinton said she had "no recollection whatsoever of discussing any arrangement with [Paul] whereby he would support my campaign for the United States Senate in exchange for anything from me or then-President Clinton, and I do not believe that I made any such statements because I believe I would remember such a discussion if it had occurred. I also have no recollection whatsoever of talking with him about any future business arrangement of any kind between him and then-President Clinton, and I do not believe that I made any such statements because I believe I would remember such a discussion if it had occurred."
Paul called Clinton's declaration a "non-denial denial."
"If they were false allegations, why not just say they are untrue?" he asked.
But Paul believes he'll have better success getting a straight answer from Sen. Clinton during the case's discovery process, noting that unlike a criminal case, a witness in a civil matter can be compelled to testify against herself.
"This is unique for Hillary," Paul said. "She can't hide behind the Fifth Amendment unless it would involve an admission to a crime."
Financial collapse
As for Bill Clinton, Paul contends the former president will have difficulty denying his assistant, James Levin, interfered with a major investor in Stan Lee Media, leading to the company's financial collapse.
cont'd
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