ACTION ALERT: Misjudging Roberts
Tue Aug 2, 2005 20:15
http://www.apfn.net/messageboard/08-03-05/discussion.cgi.13.html
FAIR-L
Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting
Media analysis, critiques and activism
http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=2608
ACTION ALERT:
Misjudging Roberts
Newsweek dismisses accurate information on judge's record
August 2, 2005
Like much of the mainstream media coverage, Newsweek
magazine's August 1 cover story on Supreme Court nominee
John G. Roberts was overwhelmingly positive. But Newsweek
went even further than most, dismissing as inaccurate
stories that depicted Roberts as a conservative
partisan--even though it was Newsweek, in fact, that was
getting the stories wrong.
Newsweek led off its report by saying that "true believers
on the left and the right, hoping to rouse their armies for
a showdown over John Roberts, immediately trumpeted two
'facts'.... Both intriguing items about Roberts, widely
reported in the mainstream media, served as fodder for the
talkshow blab wars. Problem is, they aren't true."
The first supposed falsehood: "Liberal bloggers floated
conspiracy theories about the behind-the-scenes role he
played on Bush's legal team in the epic court fight after
the 2000 election, a contribution that supposedly earned the
president's undying gratitude." The reality, according to
Newsweek: "Roberts's role in the case of Bush v. Gore was
minimal, according to colleagues who worked with him.
Roberts did briefly go to Florida to be on hand as a legal
consultant, but he was preoccupied with working on the
adoption of a baby son."
As it turns out, the liberal bloggers' "conspiracy theories"
were closer to the mark, as more careful reporting revealed
that Roberts was an important part of the Bush legal team.
According to a report in the Miami Herald (7/27/05), Roberts
worked "as legal consultant, lawsuit editor and prep coach
for arguments before the nation's highest court, according
to the man who drafted him for the job." The Herald noted
that Roberts was considered one of the top names for the
effort, which he worked on for "a week to 10 days"; as Bush
adviser Ted Cruz told the paper, "There was no one better
for the job."
Newsweek's other gotcha: "Right-wingers smugly assumed
Roberts's membership in the Federalist Society, an
organization that has taken on an almost cultish mystique as
both incubator and old boys' network for conservative
jurists and lawyers in Washington." Here Newsweek was
following the line of the White House, which went so far as
to demand corrections from media outlets that had reported
Roberts was a Federalist Society member. But as the
Washington Post revealed (7/25/05), Roberts was not only
listed in the group's 1997-98 leadership directory--he's
named as a member of the Washington chapter's steering
committee.
Dismissing these accurate stories served to bolster
Newsweek's claim that Roberts was "conservative, but
apolitical," and that his confirmation was a sure thing. As
the magazine put it, "Roberts's marginal involvement as a
political activist is revealing. It suggests that Roberts is
not the hard-line ideologue that true believers on both
sides had hoped for.... Barring unforeseen and unlikely
bombshells, Roberts seems destined to be confirmed without
the kind of stormy melodrama that boosts cable-TV ratings
and fills the coffers of activist groups in Washington."
Indeed, Newsweek could hardly contain its enthusiasm about a
nominee who "sees the law as a set of time-tested rules that
allow people to work out their differences and to trust each
other--a body of principles and precedents that bring order
and predictability to civic life, which have the effect not
of dividing, but of harmonizing and unifying society." The
magazine concluded that "from all that can be gleaned about
Roberts, he will decide each case, one at a time, with great
intellectual rigor and honesty."
Given that Newsweek led its story with mischaracterizations
about Roberts' record, "intellectual rigor and honesty"
would compel the magazine to set the record straight for its
readers. But this week's issue of the magazine (8/8/05) did
not correct the article's inaccurate assertions.
ACTION:
Ask Newsweek to correct the inaccurate claims in its August
1 story about John G. Roberts' role in the Florida recount
and his connections to the Federalist Society.
CONTACT:
Newsweek
letters@newsweek.com
To read the Newsweek article, go to:
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/8683401/site/newsweek/
----------
=================
ROBERTS: His wife is big in Iraq satellite systems; Magie
Burns
http://disc.server.com/discussion.cgi?id=149495;article=87609;search_term=magie+burns;show_parent=1
# WINOKUR AND DYNCORP, HARVARD, ROBERTS CONNECTIONS....
Magie Burns
http://disc.server.com/discussion.cgi?id=149495;article=87842;search_term=magie+burns;show_parent=1
Our new Supreme Ct Nominee: His wife is big in satellite
systems; her company is targeting Iraq
by margieburns at 11:08AM (CDT) on July 20, 2005
http://www.margieburns.com/blog/_archives/2005/7/20/1054893.html
Yet another first for our boundary-breaching White House:
for the first time in American history, we're going to have
a justice on the high court whose spouse facilitates
financing and putting together global satellite systems.
Also, the company in which she is a partner, Shaw Pittman,
emphasizes among other things its expertise in facilitating
business in Iraq:
We offer one-stop service to clients pursuing projects in
Iraq, from solicitation and RFP counseling to working with
key government and multilateral agencies, and from initially
penetrating the Iraqi marketplace to final project
implementation. Our attorneys are recognized as leaders in
their fields, and at the cutting-edge in a variety of
disciplines relevant to Iraq reconstruction. A number have
served in senior government positions in key agencies
including the Departments of Transportation, Navy, Justice
and Commerce, as well as the Agency for International
Development (USAID) and the World Bank.
http://www.pillsburylaw.com/go/areamaster.nsf/practices-all/International:%20Iraq%20Reconstruction
Iraq has not yet been able to achieve an integrated
communications service (many Iraqis don't even have their
electricity back, yet.) By numerous accounts, satellite
communications/networks loom as a large unfilled need in
Iraq. Jane Sullivan Roberts credentials are solid, and
business-wise, her walk in life is largely helping clients
put together and get financing for satellite systems,
according to her company bio:
Ms. Roberts practices with the firm's communications and
global sourcing groups, concentrating in representing
clients in sophisticated transactions involving technology.
She has extensive experience in representing clients in the
buying and selling of space-related goods and services,
including companies involved in the development of
multi-billion dollar global and regional satellite systems.
Ms. Roberts' experience also includes representing clients
in information technology outsourcing transactions; software
licensing, development, and maintenance contracts; and
professional services arrangements. Prior to 1992, Ms.
Roberts practiced litigation in a wide variety of matters
before various courts and decision-making bodies, including
large international commercial arbitrations involving
nuclear power plants before the International Chamber of
Commerce.
http://www.pillsburylaw.com/Go/bios.nsf/professionals/Jane%20Sullivan%20Roberts
(I like that afterthought re nuclear power plants. Shades of
Homer Simpson.)
The following statements by and about Ms. Roberts come from
an article titled High flyers, high margins, high society
and space VC, in the publication Space Business
International (4th quarter 2000):
Shaw Pittman is a composite organization, in which teams of
associates, corporate finance partners, technology
procurement and transfer partners, intellectual property
strategists, corporate deal-makers work together with the
clear aim of dominating Washington's high-tech legal world.
They've made a good start - hands on involvement already in
25 percent of all metropolitan VC closures in Q1-2000.
Despite the March 2000 downturn in US stock markets, there
is still lots of VC money available, says Roberts. But the
way the money is channelled has changed - it's harder to
fund business-to-business dot.coms, especially where you
have to build a brand; and likewise for business-to-consumer
deals. But there is still plenty of money left to fund
wireless technologies, Internet infrastructure, next
generation networking devices and b2b software plays.
And Washington DC is cementing its position as an
international hub of the commercial space and satellite
industry. In terms of corporate headquarters, we have many
major players, including Loral Cyberstar, Astrolink,
Skybridge, Hughes Spaceway, Final Analysis, Ellipso,
INTELSAT, COMSAT, WorldSpace, and XM Satellite Radio. Not to
mention the major aerospace players
Ms Roberts specific targets are the procurement of satellite
systems and related services and technologies such as launch
services, launch insurance, terrestrial networks, terminals,
call centers and billing systems. As a technology
transaction lawyer, my role is to use contractual techniques
to minimize my client's completion risk, that is the risk
the satellite system will not be completed - designed, built
and deployed within established performance, cost and
schedule objectives. For a company seeking venture capital,
it is critical to demonstrate to potential investors that
the company is successfully managing its completion risk.
[This link is down, but you can get to the article by
clicking cached in a google search.]
A quite good, concise article by Ms. Roberts, on the risks
of putting together a new satellite system and attempting to
break into the market, is found at
http://www.pillsburylaw.com/go/News.nsf/news-publications-all/52D9281973A9BE6B85256FD40066ADE8?OpenDocument
The risks of building and financing a new satellite system
fall into three broad areas: market, regulatory and
completion. Market risk is the risk the target market does
not want or cannot pay for the satellite services offered.
Regulatory risk is the risk of not obtaining all regulatory
approvals required to build and operate the satellite
system, such as for orbital locations allocated by the
International Telecommunications Union, spectrum licensed by
the satellite operator's "host" or "home" government, and
"landing rights" granted in each country that will receive
the new satellite service. Completion risk is the risk the
satellite system will not be completed designed, built and
deployed within the established performance, schedule and
cost objectives.
(from Satellite Finance, Issue 16)
Perhaps it will surprise few people that Shaw, Pittman,
where Ms. Roberts is a partner, is offering its services for
a newly privatized Iraq:
Pillsbury's Iraq Reconstruction Practice is mobilized to
offer clients strategic legal advice in their postwar
reconstruction efforts. Comprised of lawyers from several
offices and backgrounds with relevant legal, industry and
regional experience, the team is well poised to support
virtually every endeavor in post-war Iraq, including:
Infrastructure development, construction and procurement
Intellectual property, technology and outsourcing services
[etc.]
http://www.pillsburylaw.com/go/areamaster.nsf/practices-all/International:%20Iraq%20Reconstruction
The company's web site does not indicate that Ms. Roberts is
on its Pillsbury Iraq Reconstruction Team. A call to the
company to inquire whether she has yet had clients/projects
in Iraq has not yet been returned. Stay tuned.
Meanwhile, the nominee husband's numerous investments also
include Shaw Pittman. One wonders whether a Justice Roberts
would have to recuse himself on any cases involving Iraq,
including cases about profiteering; procedure re detainees
rounded up in Iraq; Iraq contract fraud; and/or regulatory
or other violations by satellite systems companies that
hired his wife's firm or his wife herself.
TrackBack URL:
http://www.margieburns.com/blog/trackback/1054893
==========================
Re:
http://www.harvardwatch.org/
What background do you have...re:
John G. Roberts to the Supreme Court:
Supreme Court Nomination Quotes CONNECT THE DOTS...., Tue
Jul 19 23:22
http://www.apfn.net/messageboard/08-03-05/discussion.cgi.13.html
* More Spooky Harvard Connections Uri Dowbenko, Wed Jul 20
01:02
http://www.apfn.net/messageboard/08-03-05/discussion.cgi.13.html
* Republicans Must Choose: Bush Or America? Ted Rall, Wed
Jul 20 00:34
http://www.apfn.net/messageboard/07-19-05/discussion.cgi.35.html
Roberts was born in Buffalo, New York. Roberts's family
moved to Indiana when Roberts was in second grade. He
graduated summa cum laude from Harvard University with a
Bachelor of Arts degree in 1976 and received his law degree
magna cum laude from Harvard Law School (where he was
managing editor of the Harvard Law Review) in 1979.
====================
http://www.harvardwatch.org/
Harvard bailed out Bush's Harken with off-the-books
partnership
Boston Globe: Harvard invested heavily in Harken
Boston Globe: Board was told of risks before Bush stock sale
Read about it in Paul Krugman's NY Times column
The full HarvardWatch memo
Harken board meeting notes (page 1, page 8) obtained by
the Center for Public Integrity in which Bush motioned to
advance the partnership
The Wall Street Journal's investigative story
Reuters: Report Says Bush Oil Firm Had Enron-Like Deal
Washington Post: Bush Linked to Harken Off-the-Books Deal
TAKE ACTION: Sign a petition asking the SEC
Chairman Harvey Pitt to open the books
Deregulation Deception: Harvard, Enron, and
Electricity Deregulation
summary and recommendations
full report
timeline and biographical information
Trading Truth: Harvard's Enron Entanglements
summary and recommendations
full report
technical appendix
myth and fact
Ralph Nader's statement on the report
[05/10/02] Investing on the Edge in the Chronicle of Higher
Education
[03/01/02] Group Questions Harvard's Ties to Enron in the
Chronicle of Higher Education
[02/04/02] Harvard could face inquiry into Enron links in
the Guardian (UK)
[02/01/02] Watchdog Group Wants Investigation on Harvard
Official in the New York Times
[02/01/02] Harvard Students Say School May Have Profited by
Fund's Short Selling of Enron in the Boston Globe
[01/31/02] Harvard activists group call for Harvard to
investigate Enron ties by the Associated Press
What is HarvardWatch?
Our Principles
Contact HarvardWatch
Join our mailing list
http://www.harvardwatch.org/
===========================
http://www.apfn.org/apfn/enron_bush.htm
WINOKUR AND DYNCORP, HARVARD, ROBERTS CONNECTIONS....
As Federal investigations swirl around Winokur and
other board members, doubt has been raised about
the viability of independent investigation, given
Enron's enormous political clout, Winokur's leading
role in the company that manages information systems
for many of the investigative agencies raises a
special set of concerns.
Winokur owes much of his wealth to his role in
reconstructing Dyncorp, one of the Federal government's
largest private contractors. He is a former Dyncorp
chairman and remains a director of the company. At
present, Dyncorp manages e-mail and information
systems for the Department of Justice, the Securities
and Exchange Commission and the Federal Bureau of
Investigations.
Investigators are reportedly concerned that Dyncorp's
control of agency information systems could compromise
their investigations of Winokur and Enron.
more.... Harvard Watch Org.
See Full Report
http://www.harvardwatch.org
ENRON-HERBERT "PUG" WINOKUR, JR-DYNCORP-TERRORISTS
http://www.apfn.org/enron/dynacorp.htm
Dirty Tricks, Inc.:
The DynCorp-Government Connection
http://www.conspiracydigest.com/dirtytricks.html