That certainly remains to be seen, but with all the “suspicious” and “sudden death” victims connected to Hillary and Bill you would think it would get harder and harder to cover one’s trail. Speaking of trails, it looks like the FBI files linking Hillary Clinton to former White House counsel, Vince Foster and his “suicide” are now suddently missing from the White House.
H/T DailyMail:
FBI agents’ reports of interviews documenting that Hillary Clinton’s stinging humiliation of her friend and mentor Vince Foster in front of White House aides triggered his suicide a week later are missing from where they should be filed at the National Archives, Daily Mail Online has learned exclusively.
On two separate occasions, this author visited the National Archives and Records Service in College Park, Md., to review the reports generated by FBI agents assigned to investigate the 1993 death of Bill Clinton’s deputy White House counsel.
On the first visit, archivist David
Paynter provided the box of records that he said contained the FBI
reports of interviews conducted by FBI agents on Foster’s death.
On a second visit, archivist James Mathis provided what he said were those same documents.
While the box contained dozens of FBI
reports concerning Foster’s death – including interviews with the
medical examiner, U.S. Park Police officers, and White House aides about
the contents of Foster’s office – the reports on Hillary Clinton’s
role in his death were absent.
After filing a Freedom of Information
request with the National Archives, Martha Murphy, the archives’ public
liaison, reported that she directed a senior archivist to conduct a more
thorough review of the relevant FBI files, including those that had not
been previously made public in response to FOIA requests.
‘He examined all eight boxes but found no
interviews by any investigator that detail either a meeting between
Hillary Clinton and Vince Foster or the effects of a meeting between
Hillary Clinton and Vince Foster on Vince Foster’s state of mind,’
Murphy reported in an email.
‘We did not limit ourselves to interviews by the two individuals [FBI agents] you mention.’
While Murphy said the archives searched
for ‘the records that would be responsive to your request’ and concluded
that they could not be found, when asked for comment, John Valceanu,
the archives’ director of communications and marketing, said, ‘We do not
agree with your conclusion that the records you requested are missing
from the National Archives simply because we were unable to locate any
responsive records in response to your request.’
While confirming that the records could
not be located, Valceanu held out the possibility that the FBI
interviews were not filed where they should have been and were somewhere
else in the more than 3,000 boxes of records amounting to 7.5 million
pages generated by the Starr investigation.
This is not the first time documents related to the Clintons have apparently vanished from the National Archive.
In March 2009, the archives found that an
external hard drive from the Bill Clinton White House containing
confidential documents was missing.
The FBI investigation into
Foster’s death was conducted for independent counsel Kenneth W. Starr’s
probe of the Clintons’ investments in the Whitewater real estate
development.
For unknown reasons, Starr elected to conceal the FBI’s findings in his final report.
But in interviews
for my book The First Family Detail: Secret Service Agents Reveal the
Hidden Lives of the Presidents, the FBI agents revealed the truth about
Foster’s death on July 20, 1993 when he shot himself at Fort Marcy Park
along the Potomac River.
In interviewing Clinton White House aides
and Foster’s friends and family, the FBI found that a week before
Foster’s death, Hillary held a meeting at the White House with Foster
and other top aides to discuss her proposed health care legislation.
Hillary angrily disagreed with a legal
objection Foster raised at the meeting and ridiculed him in front of his
peers, former FBI agent Coy Copeland and former FBI supervisory agent
Jim Clemente told me. Copeland was Starr’s senior investigator and read
the reports of other agents working for Starr.
During the White House meeting, Hillary
continued to humiliate Foster mercilessly, according to both former FBI
agents, who spoke about the investigation for the first time.
‘Hillary put him down really, really bad
in a pretty good-size meeting,’ Copeland says. ‘She told him he didn’t
get the picture, and he would always be a little hick town lawyer who
was obviously not ready for the big time.’
Indeed, Hillary went so far as to blame
Foster for all the Clintons’ problems and to accuse him of failing them,
according to Clemente, who was also assigned by the FBI to the Starr
investigation and who probed the circumstances surrounding Foster’s
suicide.
…unfortunately, we all know what happened after that.
Foster’s behavior changed dramatically. He
became withdrawn and preoccuppied. He talked to people about feeling
“trapped” and he even told his wife on July 13, 1993 he
considered resigning. He spent the weekend with friends, but isolated
himself and seemed unsociable, which was totally out of character for
Vince.
Two days later the apparent “suicide” of
Vince Foster happened. He “allegedly” took his own life with a .38
caliber revolver on July 20, 1993 in Ft. Marcy Park along the Potomac
River. However, details that followed of the apparent suicide were very
suspicious.
Hillary’s denunciation of Foster in front
of White House aides is consistent with her treatment of the Secret
Service agents who protect her. As detailed in The First Family Detail,
the presidential candidate is so nasty and abusive to her own Secret
Service agents that being assigned to her detail is considered a form of
punishment.
So WHAT really happened?
But over time, major questions have been raised about what may have really killed him. Now, recently discovered evidence blows the case wide open!
Discovered in the files of the National Archives and Records Administration, Starr’s lead prosecutor Miguel Rodriguez submitted a 2-page resignation letter and a 31 page memo about the injuries Foster sustained. Rodriguez notes in the letter details about injuries around Foster’s neck which were not reported in official government documents.
At the time, the FBi claimed that Foster’s neck injury photos were underexposed, and therefore useless to them.
Rodriguez claims that after he produced additinal damning evidence of a possible Foster murder coverup, he became a target and was investigated internally!
In the letter, he explained 12 ways in which the case has mishandled and compromised. Then, he noted:
“I steadfastly maintained, and continue to maintain, that I, at all times, conducted myself as an experienced and trained prosecutor, with years of federal prosecutorial experience and federal grand jury experience.”These records indicate Foster didn’t really die from one .38 caliber gunshot… but two gunshots! The other shot was on the right side of his neck, made by a “Small caliber” bullet hole.
Here’s part of Miguel Rodriquez’s own testiment:
Who was Vince Foster?
Foster had been a long-time friend and companion to Hillary. The two shared a brokerage account called Midlife Partners. When Barbara Walters asked Hillary if she had been having an affair with Vince Foster, Hillary lowered her eyes and told the 20/20 cameras, “He was a very special man.” When he died, Hillary said publicly that Vince Foster was the last person who would have committed suicide. Friends reported she was genuinely shocked and aggrieved.
…
According to Ambrose Evans-Pritchard in a 1996 Telegraph (UK) article, Hillary Clinton asked Vince Foster to help her spy on her libertine husband in 1990. Foster hired Jerry Parks, an Arkansas investigator who later worked as the head of security for the Clinton/Gore campaign. According to Parks’s widow, “Jerry asked Vince why he needed this stuff on Clinton. He said he needed it for Hillary.” When Vince Foster showed up dead in a Washington-area public park in the summer of 1993, Parks was terrified. Two months later Parks was shot nine times at close range, at a stoplight, in his SUV, in Little Rock. Parks’s home was then raided by eight Federal agents, including officers from the FBI, IRS, Secret Service, and (unusual for a domestic case) the CIA.
Bottomline…Vince Foster knew TOO much and he was TOO honest and couldn’t be trusted by the Clintons.
You can draw your own conclusions, but why would ANYONE take files about Vince Foster from the White House Archives, unless there was evidence that was traceable back to them? And why would you take WH Archive files of Vince Foster unless there was something very important happening in your life, like a presidential election, where the outcome might be affected by these files?
But the real question is…Are there any persuadable voters left who will be affected by this?
#NeverHillary
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