The
below is an article I received many years ago. I
kinda blew it off then -- but after reading
The Secret Life of Bill Clinton it was all
linked up to Hillary having Vince and the guy in
charge of Private Investigator licenses in
Arkansas follow Wild Bill around (before the
election) to see what his Bimbo exposure was.
They apparently had a ton of reports and
photographs and the detective got greedy and
wanted to cash in. Wild Bill had Web Hubell
approach Vince Foster about this -- and a couple
days later the Director of the FBI was replaced
by Clinton's man. The next day Vince Foster was
murdered. Upon hearing about Vince's death the
detective told his wife he was a dead man. A
couple of days later his house was ransacked and
the incriminating evidence stolen. A day or two
later -- the private detective was machine
gunned down.
Check
out the book called
The Secret Life of Bill Clinton and you'll
better understand the Dixie Mafia down here --
that makes the Sicilians looks like nuns. Click
the Good
Reading button for more details.
101
Peculiarities Surrounding the Death of Vincent
Foster
By Richard L. Franklin
Please bear in mind that the purpose of this
catalog is rather modest. I merely want to
highlight what I see as a large number of gross
"peculiarities" surrounding the Foster case. I
hope to convey to the reader some sense of the
sheer weight of over 100 discrepancies and
unanswered questions. Also bear in mind that the
number "101" is itself a modest number. As a
practical matter, I was forced to omit dozens of
striking anomalies.
As you read this long list, consider that Vince
Foster's death was almost immediately labeled a
suicide by the U.S. Park Police. Normal
procedure in the case of a violent death is to
treat it as a homicide until all doubts are
resolved. Despite this, a homicide investigation
was never launched. Even before the death scene
or the body had been inspected, a suicide
confirmation process was under way. In her sworn
Senate testimony, senior Park Police officer
Cheryl Braun said, "We made that determination
[of suicide] prior to going up and looking at
the body." From that point on, all police and
FBI efforts were directed toward collecting
evidence that would support the suicide verdict.
No effort has ever been made to seek or collect
evidence supporting a possible homicide. Instead
of seeing a proper homicide investigation, we
have seen Foster's death become mired in a
morass of lies, confusion, and conflicting
evidence. Faced with this labyrinth, I knew that
any hope of putting together a challenge-proof
list of over 100 items was unrealistic. Is it
possible there are errors in this catalog?
Certainly. Nonetheless, I am confident 90% of
these assertions will hold up with time. For any
rational person, the weight of 90-plus
discrepancies must still remain staggering.
1. The man who discovered the body in Ft. Marcy
Park says he was curious about the cause of
death and looked closely for a gun. He
emphatically says there was no gun in either
hand. The FBI put great pressure on this witness
to change his testimony. Why? Did he interrupt
the staging of a suicide that was only completed
after he left the scene?
2. The powder-burn patterns found on both
Foster's hands apparently came from powder
discharged from the front of a gun cylinder. If
he had been gripping the handle, his hands would
have had stain patterns consistent with powder
discharged from the rear of the cylinder.
3. The gun was still in Foster's hand. It is
unusual for a .38 caliber weapon to remain in a
person's hand after discharge. Propelled by its
powerful recoil, a .38 normally is thrown a
considerable distance, sometimes as much as 15
feet. It is true a spasmodic reflex sometimes
freezes the fingers around the gun; however,
when the gun was removed from Foster's hand, his
fingers were still flexible, indicating such a
reflex never took place.
4. There was no blood or tissue on the gun.
Normally, the force of such a powerful explosion
within the mouth blows back a large amount of
blood and tissue.
5. No fingerprints were found on the exterior of
the gun. The FBI claims this was due to a lack
of sweat on Foster's hands. Consider that the
temperature that afternoon passed 95 degrees,
and the temperature-humidity index reached 103
(this estimates the effect of temperature and
moisture on humans, with 65 considered the
highest comfortable level). Furthermore, a man
about to fire a gun in his mouth is likely to be
sweating excessively. If the FBI explanation is
scientifically true, one has to conclude it is
exceedingly rare to find prints on any weapon.
6. The FBI lab found two fingerprints underneath
the removable hand grips. These prints did not
belong to Foster. No effort was made to identify
these prints through the FBI's computerized data
bank. (The FBI did try to find samples of prints
belonging to Foster's father.)
7. The gun was made up of parts from at least
two guns. Consider that professional killers
often use guns made from several guns to make
them untraceable. These are known as "drop
guns."
8. There is no evidence this gun belonged to
Foster. Nor is there any evidence this gun fired
the fatal shot.
9. When Lisa Foster went to look for her
husband's silver gun in its normal place, she
found a strange gun. No member of the Foster
family recognized this gun. Did somebody make a
swap? If so, who made the exchange? And for what
purpose?
10. The gun in Foster's hand, as shown in an ABC
color photo, is clearly black. Members of
Foster's family all agree Foster's gun was
silver. The FBI showed Foster's widow a silver
gun and told her it was the gun found at the
scene. Why did the FBI make this substitution?
11. It remains clouded as to what happened to
Foster's silver gun. We know it could not have
been the black gun found in Foster's hand. Was
it the silver gun the FBI showed to Lisa Foster?
Does the FBI have any proof this gun belonged to
Foster? Is it possible the black gun in the ABC
photo was merely a "place-holder" gun planted in
Foster's hand until Foster's own gun could be
retrieved?
12. No matching bullets for the crime-scene gun
were found on Foster or at his home. The only
bullets found in his home were .22 caliber. This
suggests Foster's silver gun was a .22, not a
.38. FBI reports do not identify the caliber of
the silver handgun in their possession. Why not?
13. The gun contained two cartridges, one spent
and one unspent. They were stamped with a code
indicating they were high velocity (extra
powerful) rounds. This is inconsistent with the
fact there was no pool of blood or large exit
wound.
14. The rush to deliver a suicide verdict
repeatedly corrupted normal police procedures.
The gun was an 80-year-old Army Colt Special.
Despite the age of the gun, the Park Police did
not test it to see if it would actually fire.
Six days after the investigation was closed,
they asked the BATF to test the gun. The test
results were announced five days later, or a
total of 11 days after the case had already been
closed.
15. Medical technician Richard Arthur was one of
the first to reach the death scene. Arthur
emphatically says he saw an automatic pistol in
Foster's hand. His description of the weapon is
very precise and correctly matches the profile
of an automatic. He adamantly swears it had a
barrel with straight lines as opposed to a
tubular shape and a hand grip that was "square
in shape." If his testimony is correct, it
suggests an automatic was replaced with a
revolver sometime after the police arrived.
16. Gun powder residue on Foster's glasses and
clothing did not come from the gun found in his
hand.
17. Foster's glasses were found 19 feet from his
head at the bottom of the embankment his body
was found on. The Park Police have theorized
that his glasses "jumped" to the bottom of the
slope when the gun went off. High underbrush
covered most of the slope. The police
explanation suggests his glasses were propelled
through 19 feet of this dense growth. Consider
that his head would have been slammed backward
against the embankment as his glasses flew
toward the ditch. What force could have thrust
his glasses 19 feet in the opposite direction?
No tests were conducted to test this implausible
theory. An earlier theory was that he threw his
glasses into the ravine prior to killing
himself. The presence of gun powder on his
glasses refuted this odd explanation.
18. Five homes are located an average of 490
feet from the crime scene, yet nobody in the
neighborhood heard a shot. The residence of the
Saudi Arabia ambassador is 700 feet from the
crime scene. Guards at the residence heard no
shot. Presumably the sound of a shot would
greatly alarm trained bodyguards. This anomaly
is neatly accounted for if (1) a silencer was
used, or (2) Foster was shot at another
location.
19. The Saudi bodyguards and the neighbors
living near the crime scene were not interviewed
until months later. This was a gross disregard
of police procedure. Evidence trails grow cold
quickly, memories fade, people move, and
witnesses become recalcitrant.
20. Authorities claim the bullet exited the rear
of Foster's skull. This bullet has never been
found. Why not? A bullet smashing through a
skull loses most of its force and rarely travels
far. Is it because the bullet never exited the
rear of Foster's skull? Bear in mind there is
substantial eyewitness testimony indicating no
such exit wound existed.
21. Several people who were at the crime scene
say there was little or no blood under Foster's
head. A .38 caliber weapon firing a
high-velocity slug normally makes a large exit
hole and produces a huge pool of blood.
Following a fatal shot to the brain, the heart
keeps pumping until it runs out of blood. This
action can last as long as two minutes, thusly
expelling a massive quantity of blood. The lack
of blood raises two questions: (1) Did Foster
die elsewhere? (2) Was the shot to the head
administered after he was dead? A careful
consideration of these possibilities was
precluded by the frantic rush to support an
official suicide verdict.
22. X-rays of Foster's skull have either
vanished or never were taken. Dr. James Beyer,
who did the autopsy, has made contradictory
statements as to whether he took X-rays. This
controversy remains unresolved.
23. Foster's head was moved after his death and
before crime-scene photos were taken. Was this
done intentionally? Or was it merely the product
of an inept crime-scene investigation? The FBI
report indicates the head was moved while the
blood was still wet. This claim is intriguing
because it suggests the head was moved before
investigators arrived.
24. In his written report, paramedic Corey
Ashford listed the death as a homicide. Did he
do this because he thought it was obviously a
homicide? Or was he only following proper police
procedure by initially treating a violent death
as a homicide?
25. Only a few trickles of dried blood were
found on Foster's face. One of these trickles
had run uphill in defiance of gravity. This fact
alone should have alerted the Park Police to the
possibility Foster's body had been moved from
another location or the body had been tampered
with after death.
26. The Army Colt .38 Special has a high sight
and a bulky ejector-rod head. These items
normally do significant damage to the teeth and
mouth when the gun barrel is explosively
expelled from the mouth. Foster's teeth were not
chipped, nor was his mouth damaged. The good
condition of his mouth has never been explained
by the FBI or Park Police. Is it possible a
silencer was used? Consider that a silencer is a
smooth, round extension that has no sight or
ejector rod.
27. No blow-back of blood or tissue was found on
the gun, on Foster's hand, or on his sleeve.
Most homicide experts believe this is physically
impossible given the power of the Colt .38. How
does one account for this discrepancy? A
much-discussed theory is that Foster was killed
with a .22 caliber pistol. Consider that this
small weapon is a favorite of professional
killers. There are four good reasons for this:
(1) it makes far less noise than a larger
weapon; (2) rather than blasting through a
person's head, its less powerful bullet tends to
ricochet within the skull, doing lethal brain
damage; (3) it does this deadly work without
generating a blowout of the brain case, a pool
of blood, or splattered brain parts; (4) there
is almost no blow-back of atomized blood
droplets to mark the assassin's clothing with
DNA.
28. No skull fragments were found at the scene,
even though a .38 fired into the mouth normally
inflicts severe damage as the slug blows out the
back of the brain case. Park Police officer John
Rolla observed, "There was no blowout. There
weren't brains running all over the place. . . I
initially thought the bullet might still be in
his head." This is consistent with the theory a
.22 was used to kill Foster. Why have Rolla's
observations been ignored?
29. All the paramedics who handled Foster's body
said they did not see an exit wound in Foster's
head. Corey Ashford helped lift Foster's body
into a body bag. While doing so, he cradled
Foster's head against his stomach. Ashford's
white shirt remained immaculate following this
contact. Nor did he have to wash his hands. He
says this is highly unusual in gunshot deaths,
which are normally extremely messy.
30. Dr. Julian Orenstein, the doctor who
certified Foster's death at the morgue, says he
did not see any exit wound in Foster's head. The
fact is all the people who initially handled the
body say they did not see an exit wound.
Consider that none of these people had a vested
interest in the operative suicide conclusion.
31. Dr. Donald Haut, the medical examiner who
visited the death site, has steadfastly
supported the suicide conclusion. He told the
FBI he saw an exit wound. He also stated it "was
consistent with a low velocity weapon" (jargon
for a small gun such as a .22). In other words,
it was a small wound with little blood. Later he
repeated his comments about a lack of blood to
reporter Chris Ruddy. Haut later denied this in
an interview with CBS reporter Mike Wallace. Why
did Haut change what he had previously said on
two separate occasions? Even more puzzling, why
would he deny this when he knew Ruddy had tape
recorded his comments?
32. A medical technician at the death scene says
he saw a small, circular wound on Foster's neck,
just below the jaw line. He says it "looked like
a small-caliber entrance wound." (For reasons
stated below, one has to consider the
possibility this was an exit wound.)
33. Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, a respected British
reporter, claims he has seen a photo of this
wound. He says the wound was on "the right-hand
side, about halfway along the jaw and about an
inch below the jaw." He describes it as "a
clearly visible wound about the size of a
dime... It has the appearance of a small-caliber
gunshot wound." He later said in a radio
interview that the "wound on the neck is the
origin and source of the blood that comes down
the neck and trickles down the collar."
34. According to Hugh Sprunt, a highly respected
Foster researcher, "White House sources... did
indicate to the media very shortly after the
death that two different guns were involved in
the shooting a .22 and one a .38." Park Police
notes of 7/26/93 also mention this, adding that
the information came from the FBI.
35. Dr. John Haut signed a document dated July
20, 1993, entitled "Report of Investigation of
Medical Examiner." In the words of Hugh Sprunt,
"Page two says 'Self-inflicted gunshot wound
mouth-neck' and there appears to be an
alteration on page one from 'Perforating gunshot
wound mouth-neck' to 'Perforating gunshot wound
mouth-head.'" It is probably more precise to say
whiteout was used on page one to cover what
appears to be a four-letter word, possibly
"neck." The word "head" was typed next to this.
Looking at this document, one notes that "head"
is slightly higher than the rest of the typing.
In other words, the document was removed from
the typewriter and later re-inserted to alter
it. Why? Consider that a .22 caliber slug fired
into the mouth often ricochets and exits through
soft locations such as the neck. "Mouth-neck" on
a report indicates the gun was discharged in the
mouth and the slug exited through the neck.
36. According to the FBI, no "coherent soil"
from the park was found on Foster's shoes.
Investigators for the independent Scalise Report
had two men walk the trail to the death site
wearing shoes similar to Foster's. In both
cases, their shoes picked up microscopic dirt
from the trail. CBS reporter Mike Wallace did
the same experiment and also picked up dirt. In
CBS' televised report on Foster's death a report
that strongly endorsed the suicide conclusion,
Wallace neglected to mention this private test.
Why did he and CBS conceal this important fact?
37. A tow truck driver says he was sent to the
Ft. Marcy Park to remove a car on the evening of
Foster's death. He says the driver's window was
broken, and there was blood on the dash and
seats. No in-depth investigation of this odd
story has ever been done by the FBI or Park
Police. Did the premature suicide conclusion
block another obvious path of investigation?
38. Also consider that hairs and multi-colored
carpet fibers were found on Foster's clothing,
including his underwear; yet the seat of
Foster's car was never checked for matching
hairs or fibers.
39. More significantly, the floor of Foster's
car trunk was not checked for carpet fibers
matching those on his clothing. Is it possible
his body was transported in the trunk of his
car? Is it possible Foster's body was wrapped in
carpet before being transported to Ft. Marcy
Park? Once again, the premature suicide verdict
seems to have prevented such obvious hypotheses
from being explored.
40. The White House discounted the abundance of
carpet fibers on Foster's clothing, claiming
they came from his recently re-carpeted home.
This was never substantiated by taking samples
of carpet fibers from the Foster home for
comparison.
41. If a person dies in a supine position, blood
settles to the back of the body where it creates
lividity marks. If the body is moved, gravity
may pull blood to other parts of the body where
it will imprint new marks. It was imperative for
the police to strip Foster's body and check its
entire surface for lividity marks before taking
it to the morgue. This was never done. As usual,
the premature suicide verdict eliminated a vital
police procedure. And once again, vital forensic
evidence was lost or destroyed.
42. The driver's seat of Foster's Honda was
pushed forward to a position appropriate for a
person about 5' 8" tall. Foster was nearly 6' 5"
tall. It would have been extraordinarily
difficult for Foster to have driven his car with
the seat in this position. Despite this,
authorities have persisted in saying Foster
drove his car to Ft. Marcy Park. The possibility
somebody else drove Foster's car has been
steadfastly rejected.
43. On the afternoon of Foster's death, at least
four eyewitnesses saw an older-model brown car
in the exact spot where Foster's car would later
be found. Foster's car was a light-gray recent
model. It materialized in place of the brown car
sometime after 6 p.m. In other words, Foster's
car apparently arrived after his body was found.
The tardy arrival of Foster's car was further
confirmed by a detective who felt the hood of
the car. It was still warm.
44. At least four witnesses saw a briefcase
lying on the front seat of Foster's Honda after
the police had arrived. Medical technician
George Gonzalez described it as "a black
briefcase-attach, case." This briefcase has
vanished. The contents of the briefcase might
have shed light on what Foster was doing just
prior to his death. Many items of evidence were
immediately turned over to the White House. Was
Foster's briefcase among these items?
45. Foster's pager was found at the scene.
Somebody had apparently erased its memory. The
Park Police turned it over to the White House
within hours of finding it. It is blatantly
illegal to give away key evidence, especially to
associates of the victim. Coworkers of murder
victims are pro forma suspects in homicide
investigations. Any officer turning over
physical evidence to potential suspects would
normally face serious charges. Instead, praise
and promotions were heaped on the Park Police by
a grateful White House. Cheryl Braun, for
example, was promoted to sergeant.
46. All the crime-scene photos taken with a 35
millimeter camera were "overexposed" or have
vanished. Furthermore, most of the Polaroid
photos of the crime scene have vanished or are
blurred. This includes shots of Foster's back
taken by officer John Rolla. Rolla's photos
presumably would have confirmed (or refuted) the
lack of a blood pool and a large exit wound,
anomalies mentioned by several witnesses.
47. Miquel Rodriguez, an early member of the
independent counsel's office, was suspicious of
the "original" Polaroid of Foster's neck. His
FBI staff repeatedly told him it was the
original, and that was all they had. With the
help of an accomplice, Rodriguez uncovered a
hidden file of photos containing the actual
original. He took the original and the blurred
copy to outside photographic experts who
determined that somebody had taken a photo of
the original and then altered it to hide what
appeared to be a small-caliber neck wound.
48. Mark Tuohey was head of the Office of
Independent Counsel in Washington. He took
Rodriguez aside and warned him he was not to
challenge the findings of the Fiske Report. In
other words, Rodriguez was given explicit orders
not to challenge the suicide verdict.
49. Rodriguez told Kenneth Starr he wanted to
summon FBI agents before the grand jury to
compel sworn testimony concerning their handling
of evidence. He also wanted to bring in private
experts to evaluate evidence. Starr refused both
requests and told him to wrap up the
investigation as quickly as possible. When
Rodriguez balked, Starr forced him to hand in
his resignation.
50. Shortly thereafter, Starr dismissed the
grand jury that had been getting information
from Rodriguez and formed a new one. The new
jury was not made privy to the thousands of
pages of facts that Rodriguez had presented to
the previous jury.
51. A video surveillance camera records all
comings and goings from the White House parking
lot. It has been persistently reported that the
tapes that would have recorded Vince Foster
leaving the White House on the day of his death
have vanished from the vault they are normally
stored in. A surveillance camera records whoever
enters and leaves this vault. The tapes that
would have recorded who took the parking lot
tapes from the vault have also reportedly
vanished. The White House and the FBI have never
denied this. If this story is false, it could be
laid to rest by simply producing the
surveillance tapes in question. Why have the FBI
and the White House failed to do so?
52. James Beyer, the deputy medical examiner,
did the autopsy. At the time, Beyer was under
considerable public suspicion for having
previously labeled two obvious homicides as
suicides. Since Foster's body was found in Ft.
Marcy Park, the autopsy fell under Dr. Beyer's
jurisdiction. Those who wanted a quick suicide
verdict could not have hoped for a more
compliant medical examiner than Dr. Beyer. If
finding the body in Ft Marcy Park was a
coincidence, it surely was a convenient
coincidence.
53. The X-rays are missing. Dr. Beyer told a
Park Police investigator X-rays had not revealed
any bullet fragments in Foster's head. He later
claimed he never took X-rays. Which statement is
true? More to the point, which is false?
54. Contrary to reports in the media, nothing
that could plausibly pass for a suicide note was
found. The note found by Bernie Nussbaum's aide
looks more like a list of reasons for returning
to Arkansas, something Foster had been seriously
contemplating. In fact, his wife says she had
encouraged him to write such a list.
55. This alleged "suicide" note had been torn
into 28 pieces. All but one of the pieces were
found in one of Foster's briefcases. This
happened after the briefcase already had been
searched twice by Bernie Nussbaum in the
presence of Park Police. The missing piece was
from the lower right-hand corner, the precise
spot where Foster's signature would presumably
have appeared. Consider these facts: (1) a
person's signature is the most difficult item to
forge; (2) forged suicide notes are often torn
up in an effort to make it more difficult to
verify the handwriting; (3) homicide experts
believe a late-appearing suicide note must
always be viewed with suspicion.
56. No fingerprints were found on the note
despite the fact Foster allegedly had torn it
into 28 pieces. Only Bernie Nussbaum's palm
print was found. Why would Foster wear gloves to
tear up this list? And why would he tear it up
in the first place? And what was Bernie Nussbaum
doing handling critical evidence? Why did it
take a week for the note to surface? How could
Nussbaum have missed seeing the 27 pieces after
having searched the briefcase twice?
57. Three handwriting experts independently
concluded the note is a forgery. One of the
experts, Reginald Alton of Oxford University, is
arguably the most eminent handwriting expert in
the world. He judged the forgery to be the
clumsy work of an amateur.
58. When these experts held a press conference
to announce their findings, the forum was almost
completely boycotted by the mainstream media.
These findings were a stunning development with
dramatic implications. Why was this story almost
totally ignored by the American media?
59. The handwriting "expert" for the Park Police
had previously declared the note authentic. This
"expert" has had no training in handwriting
analysis and only does it as a hobby.
Furthermore, he used only one sample of Foster's
handwriting, a clearly inadequate exemplar to
work from. Trained experts prefer 20 to 30
exemplars, with 10 being a bare minimum.
60. When Foster's wallet was found on the seat
of his car, it contained a note with the names
and phone numbers of three psychiatrists. When
they were contacted, they said they did not know
Foster and had never talked to him. Miquel
Rodriguez and others in the Office of the
Independent Counsel noted that the numbers
jotted down on the note were visibly different
from the way Foster wrote numbers.
61. The Park Police Department was immediately
assigned to the investigation. Normally an
investigation into the violent death of one of
the highest officers of the federal government
is handled by the FBI.
62. However, it now seems clear the entire time
the Park Police worked on the case, the FBI was
secretly involved. Did the White House direct
this subterfuge? If so, for what purpose?
63. The White House fired William Sessions, the
head of the FBI, the day before Foster's body
was found. He was fired on charges of misusing
minor perks. It was the first time in history a
president had fired a head of the FBI. Sessions
would later declare his firing had "seriously
compromised" the Foster investigation.
64. The Park Police lead investigator assigned
to the case had never handled a homicide case.
Once again, the premature suicide conclusion
compromised the investigation by directing it
away from a homicide investigation. Was it the
lead investigator's job to rubber stamp a
preordained suicide verdict?
65. The White House did not comply with police
requests that Vince Foster's office be
immediately sealed following his death.
66. Later that night, police officers would
passively sit outside Foster's office, while
White House aides freely went in and out. Since
Foster's office was technically part of a crime
scene, this was a gross violation of police
procedures.
67. White House aides were seen ransacking
Foster's office. A Secret Service agent saw
Maggie Williams moving Foster's files to her
office. No efforts were made by the Park Police
to recover this potential evidence. Why was this
criminal interference with a police
investigation tolerated?
68. Foster's administrative assistant, Deborah
Gorham, has testified that Foster's file index,
the document listing everything contained in his
files, has vanished. Several other documents and
letters, known by Gorham to have been in
Foster's safe, have also vanished.
69. Ms. Gorham testified that Bernie Nussbaum
demanded the combination to Foster's safe after
he learned of Foster's death. Technically,
Foster's safe was part of a crime scene. It is
possible it contained critical evidence.
70. It is not known whether Foster's appointment
book was in his briefcase or his office. In any
case, it has vanished. It would be considered
important evidence in a homicide investigation.
This is especially true in the case of Foster,
whose whereabouts for the five hours preceding
his death are unknown. Unaccountably, the
disappearance of the appointment book has been
ignored. As usual, the premature suicide
conclusion insulated the investigation from a
striking anomaly.
71. At the crime scene, Park Police officer John
Rolla searched Foster's pockets for personal
effects. Officers Cheryl Braun and Christine
Hodakievic watched while Rolla carefully
searched Foster's front and back pockets. Rolla
found nothing. Foster's wallet and credit cards
were found in his Honda, but his car keys were
missing. One of the most remarkable aspects of
the crime-scene investigation is that the
absence of the car keys never dampened the
operative suicide conclusion.
72. Later that evening, Braun and Rolla went to
the morgue to search Foster's pockets a second
time. Presumably they were ordered to so. Upon
arriving, Braun immediately found two key rings
in Foster's right front pocket. One ring had
four keys. How did Rolla miss them the first
time? Two key rings with six keys inside a front
pocket should have presented a bulky outline.
Even a simple police "pat down" should have been
enough to discover the keys. Who ordered Braun
and Rolla to the morgue to look for the keys a
second time? Why was this order given?
73. Foster was easily identified using the
photos on his White House pass and his driver's
license. The White House was then notified.
White House aide Craig Livingstone was ordered
to the morgue to "identify" the body. He called
special counsel William Kennedy and asked him to
meet him at the morgue. The reason for this rush
to the morgue remains murky. The body had
already been positively identified and two
officers had already been dispatched to notify
the Foster family. Kennedy was waiting at the
morgue when Craig Livingstone arrived. Why
couldn't Kennedy do the identification alone?
What was Livingstone expected to bring to the
"identification"?
74. What transpired at the morgue is unclear.
Livingstone and Kennedy must have asked for
access to the body. It seems probable the two
men did gain physical access, possibly an
illegal act. Since civilian access to the body
during a police investigation would have been
improper, morgue supervisor Christina Tea must
have balked. Did she call the Park Police
commanding officer for an okay?. What would the
commanding officer do in such a situation? Call
the White House? Normally, family and friends
must view a body from behind a glass window in a
separate room. This regulation apparently was
bypassed by Livingstone and Kennedy. Why
couldn't they have made the "identification" in
the usual manner?
75. The chronology of activities is noteworthy.
Shortly after Kennedy and Livingstone left the
morgue, officers Rolla and Braun arrived and
found the missing car keys. Bear in mind that
Foster's car keys were essential to the suicide
hypothesis. When the keys suddenly appeared, the
suicide verdict was rescued from a serious, if
not fatal, discrepancy. Some observers have
referred to this as the "magic keys" incident.
76. There are good reasons to doubt the White
House claim it did not learn of Foster's death
until 8.30 p.m. At about 6.15 p.m., White House
aide Helen Dickey called the governor's mansion
in Little Rock, Arkansas, to tell the governor
Foster had killed himself. The call was received
by trooper Roger Perry. He has said in a sworn
affidavit (which subjects him to perjury
charges) that he received the call about 6.15
p.m. Washington time. He states Ms. Dickey was
crying. She told him Foster had shot himself in
the White House parking lot. Perry says he
promptly called several people to tell them the
news. Among them was trooper Larry Patterson and
former state police commander Lynn Davis. Both
these men have signed affidavits attesting to
these calls. Time estimates vary, but all three
men agree the calls took place during rush-hour
traffic in Little Rock. As a final note,
consider that Ken Starr has never interviewed
Helen Dickey.
77. The London Telegraph filed a Freedom of
Information request for copies of the White
House phone logs for that evening. This request
was denied without explanation. The relevant
phone logs at the governor's mansion in Little
Rock have vanished.
78. That evening, at 8.30 p.m., Bill Clinton was
waiting to be interviewed by Larry King. As
Clinton was being prepared in the White House by
a makeup artist, he chatted with Mack McLarty.
According to the makeup artist, a male aide
entered the room and told Clinton, "They found a
note in Foster's office." This seems to
contradict Clinton's claim he was not told about
Foster's death until after his 9 p.m. interview
with Larry King. Robert Fiske deposed the makeup
artist, but her sworn statement was not included
in the Fiske Report, one of many peculiar gaps
in his porous report.
79. Patrick Knowlton drove into the parking lot
at Ft. Marcy Park on July 20, 1993, the day of
Foster's death. He was looking for a place to
relieve himself. As he was about to leave his
car, he saw a dark-skinned "Hispanic-looking"
man who glared at him. Knowlton says the man
stared at him with such ferocity he felt
intimidated and hid his wallet under his seat.
He says he had an odd feeling the man was
warning him to stay away. After Foster's death
was announced, Knowlton reported this to the
Park Police. In the spring of 1994, an FBI agent
finally interviewed Knowlton, nearly one year
after Foster's death. The agent later wrote a
report quoting Knowlton as saying he would be
unable to identify the man he had seen. Knowlton
says this report was false. On the contrary, he
had told the agent he remembered the man's face
extremely well and was confident he could
identify him. Why did the FBI lie about
Knowlton's statement? Why wasn't Knowlton
invited to look at police photos?
80. Knowlton would later describe the man to a
sketch artist for the London Telegraph. This
sketch was published in England, but the FBI
unaccountably ignored this key evidence.
Instead, the FBI launched a campaign of
harassment and intimidation of Knowlton. Teams
of agents harassed him 24 hours a day. He was
followed constantly. Agents on the street used
threatening gestures. Cars filled with four
agents followed him. His phone rang in the
middle of the night. Agents knocked on his door
at 3 a.m. A journalist, a private investigator,
and many of Knowlton's friends have witnessed
this harassment. Knowlton is currently suing the
FBI. Why has the FBI gone to such great lengths
to intimidate Knowlton?
81. The Fiske Report makes no mention of Patrick
Knowlton. Kenneth Starr refused to interview him
until the artist's sketch appeared in the London
Telegraph. When Knowlton was brought before the
grand jury, Starr's prosecutor grilled him with
great hostility, treating him as though he were
a liar and a charlatan. (Note: The Fiske Report
is riddled with lies and omissions. The
following ten items (82-91) are examples of this
malfeasance.)
82. The Fiske Report says, "Experienced FBI
Laboratory Technicians in Washington performed
extensive analyses of the physical evidence
identified during the investigation." Not true.
The FBI never did any analysis of the hair and
fiber evidence.
83. The Fiske Report says, "In addition to
conducting interviews, this Office examined
documentary and photographic evidence
including... documents removed from Foster's
office at the White House and turned over to
either the Clinton's private attorney or the
Foster family attorney." This is ingenuous. For
all we know, he may have seen only a handful of
innocuous documents. Furthermore, he makes no
reference to the documents that were placed in
the private living quarters of Hillary Clinton.
84. The Fiske Report says, "The only vehicular
entrance [to Ft. Marcy Park] is from the
Parkway." Not true. Fiske unaccountably tries to
gloss over the existence of a back road. This
road comes 300 feet closer to the body site than
the lot where Foster's Honda was parked. If
Foster's body had been transported to the park,
the killers would probably have used this back
road because of its privacy and proximity.
85. Besides ignoring this back road, Fiske pays
little heed to the condition of the ground
leading to Foster's body. The relatively steep
slope (about 45 degrees) drops down to a ditch.
As described by a witness, the underbrush from
the body down to the ditch and up the other side
of the ditch had been trampled down. Foster
could not have flattened this amount of
underbrush without climbing up and down the
slope several times. In other words, the swath
looked like it had been created by several
people climbing the slope. This trampled path
led toward the old road that Fiske has not
acknowledged. Once again, the operative suicide
verdict precluded a reasonable theory: namely
that Foster's body had been brought in via the
old road and carried over this trampled path by
several men.
86. Fiske interviewed a couple that had been in
the parking lot. His report states, "Neither
individual heard a gunshot while in the Park or
observed anything unusual." This contradicts
what the woman told the Park Police. She told
officers she had noticed two men hovering around
a Honda with its hood up. Was this Foster's car?
How can this be dismissed as not being
"unusual"?
87. The Fiske Report only briefly refers to
Foster's car keys, saying, "The keys to the car
were located in Foster's pants pocket." This is
clearly misleading.
88. The Fiske Report tried to make a case for
Foster being deeply depressed before his
suicide. Fiske says, "Although no one noticed a
loss of appetite, it was obvious to many that he
had lost weight." There is no basis for this
claim. Based on Foster's medical records, Foster
actually gained six pounds during the time frame
in question. Fiske saw these medical records.
Why did he invent a weight loss?
89. In order to promote the suicide conclusion,
Fiske and others have argued Foster was deeply
depressed. This runs contrary to statements by
all of Foster's friends and professional
associates. None detected any signs of
depression, and they were all stunned by his
suicide. Fiske brazenly altered or twisted the
statements of all those witnesses who said they
saw no signs of depression in Foster.
90. Many depositions are conspicuous by their
absence. For example: Fiske did not depose
Maggie Williams, who was seen carrying boxes of
documents from Foster's office. He did not
depose Helen Dickey, who made a 6.15 p.m. call
to Little Rock to report that Foster had been
found dead in the White House parking lot. Fiske
did not depose Craig Livingstone to determine
why it was necessary for him to drive to the
morgue to join Kennedy for an alleged
"identification." And so forth.
91. The Fiske Report gives the impression that
thorough forensic work was done in the original
investigation. Some idea of how thorough this
work was comes through in Dr. Beyer's
deposition. Consider the following questions and
Beyer's answers: Q: I would assume that most
autopsies would be pretty standard but wonder if
there is a way to determine if the autopsy on VF
was SOP. You used the expression concerning the
gunpowder on both hands, that it was interpreted
"grossly" as gunpowder. A: "Grossly" noted the
appearance of gunpowder. Q: But you didn't make
any more specific identification than that? A:
No, sir. Q: Doctor, is it your testimony that
your office would not make a determination as
to, or make an analysis as to time of death
absent a specific request from law enforcement
personnel? A: If they wanted assistance, we
would furnish it to them. In this particular
case, I have no record that it was asked. Q: Did
you have the fingernails scraped for debris? A:
They didn't ask for that examination to be done.
92. Beyer's testimony that the autopsy was
"standard" is simply false. When autopsies are
done at the request of the police, it is
standard procedure for the police department to
have investigators present to serve as witnesses
and to answer any questions the medical examiner
may have. Under White House pressure, Beyer
circumvented this by suddenly moving the autopsy
up 24 hours. This enabled him to work on the
body for an undetermined amount of time with no
witnesses present. By the time police
investigators arrived, Beyer had removed
Foster's soft palate and tongue and had driven a
metal rod through Foster's skull to "illustrate"
the official "exit wound." A mysterious
"assistant" had been working with Beyer. Beyer
refused to identify this assistant to the
police. As a final thought, consider that all
those who originally handled the body never saw
an exit wound in the back of Foster's skull.
93. Sundry contradictions are found in the
medical reports. Dr. Anh Hyunh, who did the
blood toxicology, stated in the official repor
tthat no Trazodone (an antidepressant) or
Valium-derivatives were found in Foster's blood.
Subsequently, the FBI did a report for the
Senate Whitewater Committee in which it was
stated that Trazodone and Valium-derivatives had
been found in Foster's blood. This would help
confirm Fiske's claims that Foster was
depressed, but it directly contradicts the
report of Dr. Hyunh, the official toxicologist.
Did the FBI falsify evidence to support the
depression thesis? We now know from testimony by
Dr. Frederic Whitehurst, formerly of the FBI
labs, that the labs have a history of tampering
with evidence.
94. The FBI reports that have been made
available have been drastically censored. Large
sections are entirely blacked out. In many
cases, one asks why. For example, when Foster's
body was rolled, Officer John Rolla made an
observation that was noted in the original
report. His remark has been blacked out. Why did
the FBI feel it was necessary to delete this?
Better yet, why censor any forensic details from
a report on a simple suicide?
95. According to Foster's secretary,
approximately six hours before his death, Foster
mailed a letter to his mother. He has often been
described as a "southern gentleman" with
extremely genteel manners. He was especially
courtly toward women. He seemingly had a healthy
relationship with his mother. Despite this, his
letter to his mother, sent only hours before he
allegedly killed himself, does not contain a
single expression of feeling. There is no hint
whatsoever this would be his last communication
with his mother.
96. There is much in Foster's behavior during
the days preceding his death that indicates he
had no intention of killing himself. Only days
before his death, he called James Lyons, a
friend and trusted advisor in Denver. He told
Lyons he needed him in Washington. They made
plans for Lyons to fly to Washington on
Wednesday, July 21 (the day after Foster
allegedly killed himself). Foster called Lyons
again on Sunday to confirm their Wednesday
appointment. It seems clear Foster was planning
on meeting Lyons. It also seems highly unlikely
he intended to kill himself the day before the
arrival of his friend.
97. All indications are that Foster deeply cared
for his sister Sharon Bowman. Sharon still lived
in Arkansas. She traveled 1,000 miles to
Washington to visit her brother, only to arrive
the day of her brother's death. Consider that
Vince had talked to Sharon and promised her an
exciting personal tour of and lunch at the White
House. It seems apparent he was looking forward
to seeing his sister. Yet he supposedly killed
himself on the day of her arrival. Such an
incredibly cruel way to miss his date with
Sharon is not consistent with the affection
Foster felt for her.
98. For four years, Ambrose Evans-Pritchard of
the London Telegraph relentlessly pursued the
countless discrepancies of the Foster case.
During his investigations, his Washington
apartment was broken into, and his four
computers were taken. Was this primarily to
steal his hard drives? His car was later broken
into and his briefcase was taken.
99. The late Jerry Parks owned a detective
agency in Little Rock. According to Jane Parks,
his widow, he had often done mysterious jobs for
Vince Foster. She says that shortly before he
died, Foster telephoned Jerry. She overheard
Jerry's half of the conversation. She says her
husband became highly agitated. He begged Foster
not to do something Foster was intent on doing.
After Foster died, Jerry became extremely
fearful and started carrying a gun. He was
gunned down gangland style within a month of
Foster's death. According to Jane, shortly
thereafter, teams of FBI agents ransacked the
Parks' house. They removed all office files,
film negatives, tape recordings, and floppy
disks. Jane says these searches happened
repeatedly. Apparently, none of the searches or
confiscations was legal.
100. According to Secret Service logs, at 7 p.m.
the day of Foster's death, an entry alarm went
off in Foster's office. To my knowledge, this
has never been explained or even referred to in
official reports on Foster's death. According to
Secret Service logs, at 7.10 p.m. that evening,
a group listed as "MIG" logged into the White
House. Aide Patsy Thomasson arrived at the same
time. Ambrose Evans-Pritchard believes MIG
stands for Maintenance and Installation Group, a
group of experts who handle such things as safes
and surveillance equipment. MIG and Patsy
Thomasson left together. No official explanation
has ever been given to account for these comings
and goings. Patsy Thomasson was one of the White
House aides who reportedly searched Foster's
office. Did MIG assist her by opening Foster's
safe? Did MIG disable the entry alarm?
101. To my knowledge the following story has
never been investigated. Debra von Trapp was a
member of George Bush's staff during his
presidency. She served as a computer
surveillance expert. She worked with a team that
has been described as Bush's "plumbers unit." In
this capacity, she often worked with Robert
Goetzman, an FBI agent. According to von Trapp,
Goetzman sounded drunk and extremely excited
when he called her California home from
Washington, D.C., at 11 p.m., July 20, 1993 (the
day of Foster's death). She says she records all
phone conversations. This is a partial
transcript of her alleged exchange with Goetzman:
RG: "We did him! We did him!"
DT: "Did who?"
RG: "Vince Foster."
DT "What do you mean?"
RG "We did him!"
DT: "Well, where did you do him?"
RG: "Well, we did him somewhere else, but we
dumped him in a queer park to send Clinton and
his queer wife a message!"
Although von Trapp wrote a long letter to
Kenneth Starr detailing his and other
allegations, to my knowledge, he never deposed
her or Robert Goetzman. Nor did he request the
tape recordings of the alleged phone
conversation. Nor did he check the phone company
records to verify the phone call. Why not? Some
Fostergate researchers suspect Ms. von Trapp is
a disinformation agent trying to cloud the
debate. I spent several hours interviewing Ms.
von Trapp and did not hear anything that would
support those suspicions. My strongest
impression was that she was genuinely
frightened. In any case, whatever one concludes
about her credibility, it remains rather odd
that she has never been deposed before a grand
jury.
This list is tentative and remains open to
corrections and debate. I can be contacted at:
adrem@atw.earthreach.com Please put my name in
the subject slot of all email responses.