http://www.geocities.com/jurisnot/
I swear we had NO SEX with Sallie Mae or Freddie Mac, we had NO
sexual relations with those Banks and S&Ls
Tommy N Company
The Great Texas Bank Job - The Scandal Widens
___________________________________________
DeLay indicted on conspiracy charges
House majority leader's position in jeopardy.
By Laylan Copelin
AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF
Wednesday, September 28, 2005
A Travis County grand jury today indicted U.S. House Majority
Leader Tom DeLay on one count of criminal conspiracy,
jeopardizing the Sugar Land Republican's leadership role as the
second most powerful Texan in Washington, D.C.
The charge, a state jail felony punishable by up to two years
incarceration, stems from his role with his political committee,
Texans for a Republican Majority, a now-defunct organization
that already had been indicted on charges of illegally using
corporate money during the 2002 legislative elections.
The grand jury, however, took no action against Texas House
Speaker Tom Craddick, Texas Association of Business President
Bill Hammond or state Reps. Dianne Delisi and Beverly Woolley,
both of whom sit on the political committee's board, for their
roles in the election.
The grand jury's term ended today.
Delay's defense team will hold a press conference in Austin
later this afternoon. The team includes defense attorneys Bill
White and Steve Brittain of Austin and Dick DeGuerin of Houston.
State law bans corporate money being spent in connection with
political campaigns and Travis County District Attorney Ronnie
Earle, a Democrat, has spent almost three years investigating
whether Republican groups and their business allies violated
that ban. The groups helped elect a Republican majority to the
state Legislature which, in turn, drew new Congressional
districts that benefited Republican candidates.
DeLay and his associates insisted the corporate money was
legally spent on committee overhead or issue advertising and not
campaign-related activity.
An indictment does not force DeLay to resign as a member of
Congress, but the GOP's rules demand that he resign his post as
majority leader as he fights the charges. Congressional
Republicans earlier tried to drop that requirement, citing
Earle's investigation as a political vendetta, but they
ultimately maintained the rule after withering criticism.
Over the past year, Travis County grand jurors have indicted
three DeLay associates — John Colyandro, Jim Ellis and Warren
Robold — as well as eight corporate donors, the Texas
Association of Business and DeLay's Texans for a Republican
Majority. Colyandro and Ellis were re-indicted this morning as
part of the conspiracy indictment.
DeLay had appeared to escape criminal scrutiny as early as last
year when Travis County prosecutors concluded they did not have
the jurisdiction to pursue election code violations against him.
Under the law, only DeLay's local district attorney, a
Republican, had jurisdiction, and he expressed no interest in
the case.
But a conspiracy charge falls under the criminal code, not the
election statute that bans corporate money from being spent on a
campaign. And Earle has the jurisdiction to prosecute DeLay for
conspiring with others to circumvent state law.
In recent days, the broad-based investigation has focused on one
particular transaction during the 2002 campaign.
Continued:
http://www.livejournal.com/users/mparent7777/3183149.html
judson witham
wrote:
judson witham
wrote: In taking over Charles Keating's notorious Lincoln
Savings & Loan, the RTC acquired some $1 billion worth of
property, including plots for 17 planned communities in Texas,
Arizona, Colorado, Florida and Louisiana. One of them is the
20,000-acre Estrella Project in the desert 20 miles southwest of
Phoenix. Although Lincoln invested $200 million in preparatory
work, only three homesites have been sold. !! except from
article below !!
This is the primary MO - Whitewater and the Thousands of BOGUS
DEVELOPMENTS in Texas were the same BS. I'll bet Nationwide !
Judson
See Ol "Kat" Woolford at:
SEE
http://www.geocities.com/jurisnot The Great Texas Bank Job
IT's NO JOKE
Date: Thu, 28 Apr 2005 07:56:39 -0700 (PDT)
From: judson witham
Subject: Judge Hughes RTC - CIA - TEXAS Here's A WAKE UP
To: judson witham ,
jeffandmary@ozarkopathy.org
CC: AFRA_EAGLE@yahoogroups.com ,
powerbeonme@surewest.net
Under The Penalties of PERJURY and DEATH, I can NOT Tell A Lie
JWWith $550 Billion Looted From Banks and S&Ls Land Speculation
FRAUD and Money Laudering COVERED UP by the Bank Liquidation
Folks at RTC Worked GREAT - JW A HUGE Scandal of EPIC
porportions from CIA to the Congress and Senate Etc. et al made
it all possible
Kat Woolford (BBA '72) of Baton Rouge, La., has done a little
bit of everything since graduation: exercised race horses,
worked for the Liquidation Division of the FDIC, and served as
an advisor to the Bank of Latvia and the National Bank of
Romania.
CIA LIKE I SAID
http://www.uga.edu/~gm/1298/Notes2.html
http://www.usaid.gov/locations/europe_eurasia/mt/images/fsnl.pdf#search='Woolford,%20FDIC'
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1218/is_n23_v107/ai_n12428575
For sale by owner: junk real estate
US News & World Report, Dec 11, 1989 by Monroe W. Karmin
For the grab bag of less luxurious listings that constitute the
bulk of the RTC portfolio - foreclosed homes, motels, shopping
malls, office and apartment buildings, industrial parks and
vacant land - the market seems even more forbidding. Still,
plucky sales agents are rising to the challenge. "The roof dips
a tudge on one side, the porch has a hole in it and there are
termites," admits Kat Woolford, who is hawking a $7,500,
two-bedroom shack on a third of an acre in Tomball, Tex., north
of Houston. "But it's a cute hideaway."
Amazing how many Crooked Texas Bankers and Slimy Land
Speculators and Former Texas Governors are swapping SPIT with
Roy Blunt and John Ashcroft. Tom DeLay and Kenny Boy Lay, Bernie
Ebbers and Charles Keating, Carl Linder N COMPANY are NOT
unique, Money Laundering Takes LOTS of Land Speculation and
Failed RESORT VENTURES.
DOPE INC. is a BIG PLAYER in Methouri. JW
Arizona real estate for sale: For sale by owner: junk real
estate
http://popup8.tok2.com/home2/coolzsky/arizona-real-estate-for-sale.html
For sale by owner: Junk real estate
Just as Americans have grown used to the idea of junk bonds, a
new financial bugaboo looms on the horizon: Junk real estate.
Set in desirable communities, many of the properties now being
jettisoned by insolvent savings and loan institutions seem to be
paradise. But like the 9-acre swath of Long Island beachfront
off the Texas Gulf Coast, spectacular vistas rarely live up to a
developer's dreams. Over half of the $400,000 Laguna Madre
parcel lies underwater. There is no sewer hookup and no sea
wall, and there are high fees to maintain a private bridge that
connects the island with Port Isabel on the mainland. "It could
all go underwater in a hurricane," admits a spokesman for La
Hacienda Savings Association in San Antonio, which holds the
property.
Peddling Texas swampland is just one of the dirty jobs facing
the Resolution Trust Corporation (RTC), the U.S. agency that
opened shop in early August to administer the coup de grace to
sick thrifts. The mop-up has landed federal regulators in the
same muck that mired the S&L industry: Thousands of
white-elephant properties, most located in markets as soft as
quicksand. The collection includes such exotica as a $900,000
equestrian center (reduced from $1.5 million) north of San
Antonio, the $25 million StarPass golf-course community in
Tucson, a historic bank building in Houston, a boarded-up
lumberyard surrounded by wetlands near Tampa, Fla., 77
condominium units on the tip of Long Island, N.Y., and a 55
percent stake in the opulent $200 million Phoenician Resort in
Scottsdale, Ariz. All told, RTC officials estimate they now must
dispose of close to $16 billion worth of real estate currently
on the books of 268 failed thrifts in 33 states.
Fool's gold. Most of the properties will fetch pennies on the
dollar's worth of book value - if they can be unloaded at all.
The 6-acre McCune Mansion in Paradise Valley outside of Phoenix
is typical of the RTC's daunting task. Built in the 1960s by oil
tycoon Walker McCune for his young bride, the 53,000-square-foot
house boasts numerous kitchens, a ballroom with an $80,000
chandelier, an Olympic-sized swimming pool and ice-skating rink,
a theater, a darkroom, its own beauty salon, a 14-car garage and
a guest house. Mrs. McCune refused to move in, and the place saw
a succession of owners, most recently Gordon Hall, cofounder of
the Nautilus fitness company. RTC inherited the property when it
took over the bankrupt Southwest Savings & Loan Association
earlier this year. "There's not a great market for
53,000-square-foot houses," says Jack Lake, the RTC agent
charged with finding a buyer.
For the grab bag of less luxurious listings that constitute the
bulk of the RTC portfolio - foreclosed homes, motels, shopping
malls, office and apartment buildings, industrial parks and
vacant land - the market seems even more forbidding. Still,
plucky sales agents are rising to the challenge. "The roof dips
a tudge on one side, the porch has a hole in it and there are
termites," admits Kat Woolford, who is hawking a $7,500,
two-bedroom shack on a third of an acre in Tomball, Tex., north
of Houston. "But it's a cute hideaway."
The heat is on for the RTC to speed up its fire sale. The agency
has three years to gather up all the nation's ailing S&L's and
seven years to dispose of acquired properties. Ideally, the feds
would like to get rid of their sick thrifts as whole entities,
bad real-estate investments and all. But most investors are
interested only in the best assets, saddling the government with
the white elephants. The longer the RTC hangs on to the losers,
the higher the taxpayers' tab, already estimated at $166
billion.
But the disposal process is being hindered by the fact that no
one knows how much sour real estate the RTC will have to offer.
An initial inventory of properties currently under its wing will
not be completed until the end of this month. And that is just
the beginning. Leonard Sahling, real-estate analyst for Merrill
Lynch in New York, figures the government will wind up with at
least a $50 billion portfolio when it actually takes over all
the thrifts that now are technically insolvent. Others put the
total at $100 billion as more S&L's go belly up in the years
ahead.
Nor can the RTC simply dump its holdings on the market
wholesale. "Everything we have is for sale," says Thomas Horton,
the agency's deputy director, "but everything is not for sale at
any price." The government is barred by law from selling its
assets for less than 95 percent of fair market value in the six
depressed states of the Southwest - Texas, Oklahoma, Arizona,
Arkansas, Colorado and Louisiana - where about two thirds of the
property is located. Still, "fair market value" is in the eye of
the appraiser; Horton admits that properties that cannot be sold
at 5 percent discounts will be "re-evaluated" until buyers are
found.
The most promising properties in the RTC's bag, mainly apartment
and office buildings whose rents cover expenses, are sure to be
snapped up by insurance companies, pension funds and other "deep
pocket" investors. But such quality properties are in the
minority. The largest proportion of the government's holdings
consists of vacant land, a tough commodity to peddle in the
Southwest and other overbuilt areas.
In taking over Charles Keating's notorious Lincoln Savings &
Loan, the RTC acquired some $1 billion worth of property,
including plots for 17 planned communities in Texas, Arizona,
Colorado, Florida and Louisiana. One of them is the 20,000-acre
Estrella Project in the desert 20 miles southwest of Phoenix.
Although Lincoln invested $200 million in preparatory work, only
three homesites have been sold. Now the RTC's agent, Mark
Randall, is trying to figure out what to do with the property.
"Vacant real estate has not fared well in the Arizona economy,"
he observes sadly.
Other parcels may not draw buyers - no matter how attractive the
price. "They'll have to be plowed under to grow soybeans,"
predicts Michael Aronstein, president of Comstock Partners, a
New York investment firm. But while developers may sniff at many
of the government's offerings, interest is cropping up in some
surprising quarters. Conservationists already are picking
through the pile of unwanted real estate for wildlife preserves
and other ecologically valuable property. The Florida Keys Land
& Sea Trust, for instance, paid $1.35 million for Crane Point
Hammock, a 63 1/2-acre estate that was going to be turned into a
resort before its developers went broke. Now, it is slated to
become a nature center.
PHOTO : Museum piece. The Phoenician Resort in
PHOTO : Picture perfect. Houston's historic Franklin National
Bank will appear in "Dark Angel"
PHOTO : Scottsdale, Ariz., comes decorated with millions of
dollars' worth of sculpture
PHOTO : Castle keep. The McCune mansion near Phoenix has a
14-car garage, an ice rink and a ballroom with an $80,000
chandelier
COPYRIGHT 1989 All rights reserved.
COPYRIGHT 2005 Gale Group
judson witham wrote
Date: Thu, 28 Apr 2005 07:15:29 -0700 (PDT)
From: judson witham
Subject: Re: [AFRA_EAGLE] Former CIA Agent Overturned on False
Affidavit
To: AFRA_EAGLE@yahoogroups.com
CC: powerbeonme@surewest.net
I know Judge Hughes as I had a couple cases before him years
ago. He is getting better with age apparently. I sued and beat
The American Title Insurance Company in his Court over a VERY
CORRUPT series of Land Deals in Texas back in the 1980s... SEE
http://www.geocities.com/jurisnot The Great Texas Bank Job
makes the MADISON S&L / Whitewater and the KEATING FIVE mess
with Lincoln Savings and Loan look like CHUMP CHANGE. (IN FACT
there are many, many THOUSANDS of Clinton Style Land Development
CONS all over America)
Old Judson Witham is the Real McCoy, IN FACT I was very
instrumental in having EVERY SINGLE, I mean EVERY Bank and S&L
in Texas Seized during 1985 - 1992. (I knew FDIC Bank
Liquidation Specialist Katheryn Woolford To) It Seems MASSIVE
Land Fraud Schemes have been RAMPANT in America for about 150
years. The Clinton's GANG at Quapaw Title in Little Rock and the
Rose Law Firm N Company (That's CIA for COMPANY) and the MENA
Air America DOPE Inc. GANG all had the American Continental
Corporation and Carl Linders MAFIA all Laundering Money using
CLINTON STYLE Land Development CONS.
NO KIDDING take some time and ACTUALLY read the CORROBORATION
and MANY,MANY Links listed at
http://www.geocities.com/jurisnot You will see WHY the
American banking Scandal of the 1980s 1990s well actually the
20th Century from 1900 to 2000 nearly always involved LAND
SPECULATION and BANKING Schemes !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Live Free
Judson Witham
OperationMissouriFreedom
http://www.geocities.com/jurisnot/OperationMissouriFreedom.htm
No Justice No Peace