Updated July 29, 2016
In this brief update, I want to add a quote from Hillary Clinton's speech of July 28, 2016 where she accepted the nomination of the Democratic Party:
In this posting, you will see a very little-mentioned side of Hillary Clinton's long career as both a lawyer and politician. The story which took place in 1975 has received relatively little coverage by the mainstream media since it broke in June 2014 but is an interesting look into the real person behind the current Democratic presidential candidate. At the very least, it speaks to the moral fibre of the person who could be the leader of the free world.
In this brief update, I want to add a quote from Hillary Clinton's speech of July 28, 2016 where she accepted the nomination of the Democratic Party:
"My
mother, Dorothy, was abandoned by her parents as a young girl. She ended up on
her own at 14 working as a housemaid. She was saved by the kindness of others.
Her first-grade teacher saw she had nothing to eat at lunch, and brought extra
food to share the entire year.
The lessons
she passed on to me years later stuck with me. No one gets through life alone.
We have to look out for each other and lift each other up. And she made sure I
learned the words from our Methodist faith: Do all the good you can for all the
people you can in all the ways you can as long as ever you can.
(APPLAUSE)
So I went
to work for the Children’s Defense Fund, going door-to-door in New Bedford,
Massachusetts…
(APPLAUSE)
…on behalf
of children with disabilities who were denied the chance to go to school. I
remember meeting a young girl in a wheelchair on the small back porch of her
house. She told me how badly she wanted to go to school. It just didn’t seem
possible in those days. And I couldn’t stop thinking of my mother and what
she’d gone through as a child.
It became
clear to me that simply caring is not enough. To drive real progress, you have
to change both hearts and laws. You need both understanding and action."
With that as background, now let's go on to see how Hillary Clinton really treated children and her "win at any cost" personality.
In this posting, you will see a very little-mentioned side of Hillary Clinton's long career as both a lawyer and politician. The story which took place in 1975 has received relatively little coverage by the mainstream media since it broke in June 2014 but is an interesting look into the real person behind the current Democratic presidential candidate. At the very least, it speaks to the moral fibre of the person who could be the leader of the free world.
Let's open this posting
with quotes from Hillary Rodham's postgraduate scholarly article "Children
Under the Law" which was published in the Harvard Education Review in the Winter 1973 edition:
"Child citizens, although their needs and interests may be
greater than those of adults, have far fewer legal rights (and duties). Indeed,
the special needs and interests which distinguish them from adults have served
as the basis for not granting them rights and duties, and for entrusting
enforcement of the few rights they have to institutional decision-makers....The
needs and interests of a powerless individual must be asserted as rights if
they are to be considered and eventually accepted as enforceable claims against
other persons or institutions. The advocacy of rights for children, coming as
it does on the heels of adult rights movements, highlights the political nature
of questions about children's status. That children's issues are political may
seem obvious. Political theorists from Plato onward have sought to specify
proper child-rearing practices and have discussed
the proper position of children within society, often coming to conclusions
inconsistent with the prevailing American ones. In the United States, the
problems of children have usually been explained without any consideration of children's
proper political status. Accordingly, the obstructionist role of the unstated
consensus and the law reflecting it has seldom been appreciated. The pretense
that children's issues are somehow above or beyond politics endures and is
reinforced by the belief that families are private, non-political units whose
interests subsume those of children. There is also an abiding belief that any
official's failure to do what is best by a child is the exception, not the
rule, and is due solely to occasional errors of judgment. Moreover, nothing
countervails against this pattern, since children are almost powerless to
articulate their own interests or to organize themselves into a self-interested
constituency and adults allied with them have seldom exerted an appreciable
influence within the political system." (my bold)
Please keep
these points in mind as you read the remainder of this posting.
In 1975, a young lawyer
in Arkansas by the name of Hillary Rodham received a call from Washington
County prosecutor Mahlon Gibson, requesting a lawyer for Thomas Alfred Taylor,
a 41-year-old factory worker that had been accused of raping a 12-year-old
girl, the daughter of a family friend. Mr. Taylor picked up the girl and
she willingly went for a ride with him, a ride that ended up with Mr. Taylor
raping the young girl in his pickup truck. According to the victim, she
spent five days after the rape in a coma and spent months recovering from the
beating. Additionally, she spent over ten years in therapy. At his
court hearing, Mr. Taylor requested that a female lawyer represent him and the judge in
the case, Maupin Cummings, appointed Ms. Rodham who was looking to establish a
new legal aid clinic at the University of Arkansas Here is the
original document from the case:
Here is the arraignment document signed by his court-appointed attorney, Hillary Rodham:
Here is the motion for discovery and inspection of any evidence that the prosecution has against Mr. Taylor:
Here is Ms. Rodham's Motion to Dismiss based on the grounds that probable cause is not sufficient to allow a neutral and detached judge to find probable cause that a crime was committed or that her client actually committed the crime that he was accused of committing:
Here is Ms. Rodham's Motion to Modify Bail, filed because Mr. Taylor's incarceration was causing him "severe economic hardship":
Here is Ms. Rodham's Motion to Suppress Purported Statements that were made by Mr. Taylor because they were "obtained in violation of the defendant's privilege against self-incrimination and his rights to counsel as guaranteed by the Fifth, Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution":
When all other legal avenues failed, as would be expected, Ms.
Rodham went to the next level to defend her client. Keeping in mind that the victim in this crime was a 12-year-old girl and that Ms. Rodham claimed to be an expert on childhood legal matters, as you will see
in this document, she went to extremes, including
using the "blame the victim" strategy, famous in sexual assault
cases:
In case you can't read
the original affidavit, here is the text, keeping in mind that the complainant
was a 12-year-old girl:
"I have made an
investigation of the facts and circumstances in this case and verily believe
that a psychiatric examination of the complainant (name redacted) is necessary
and vital in this case.
I have been informed that
the complainant is emotionally unstable with a tendency to seek out older men
and to engage in fantasizing. I have also been informed that she has
in the past made false accusations about persons, claiming that
they had attacked her body. Also that she exhibits an
unusual stubbornness and temper when she does not get her way.
I have also
been told by an expert in child psychology that children in early adolescence
tend to exaggerate or romanticize sexual experiences and that adolescents in
disorganized families, such as the complainant’s, are even more prone to
exaggerate behaviour."
And, after all of that, here's how the case ended:
In June 2014, five plus
hours of audio recordings which were made during a mid-1980s interview by
Arkansas reporter/author Roy Reed were found in the Special Collections Department at
the University of Arkansas Libraries. In one part of the interview, Ms.
Clinton discusses the most significant criminal case of her relatively short
legal career that took place in 1975, the same year that she married her
current husband and reached her 28th birthday. Here
is the key part of the interview:
Here's a quote:
"I had some really
tough clients. I had one appear, a prosecutor called me years ago, said
he had a guy who was accused of rape and the guy wanted a woman lawyer.... This
guy was accused of raping a 12 year old who was the daughter of the family he
was living with in Springdale, the other side of the tracks in Springdale....
And was one of those rootless folks who wasn't going to make a living on the
land and he was kind of around....ended up in Springdale. Of course he
claimed that he didn't. All this stuff. He took a lie detector test.
I had him take a polygraph which he passed which forever destroyed my
faith in polygraphs. (Ms. Clinton laughs)."
So much for attorney -
client privilege! Apparently, Ms. Clinton must have missed that day in
law school.
In a 2014 interview with
the now 52-year-old victim, the victim told Josh Rogin of the Daily Beast that
"Hillary Clinton took me through Hell. I would say, "You took
at case of mine in 1975, you lied on me...I realize the truth now, the heart of
what you've done to me. And you are supposed to be for women? You
call that (being) for women, what you done to me. And I hear you on tape
laughing." The victim also denied that she had ever accused anyone
else of attacking her before her rape by Mr. Taylor. According to the
victim, she spent five days after the rape in a coma and spent months
recovering from the beating. Additionally, she spent over ten years in
therapy.
While Ms. Clinton keeps
reassuring the American public that she has "evolved", one has to
wonder whether her "evolution" has been bred by political necessity
to make her more palatable to her liberal base. Can we say "political opportunist"?
Let's close with an
additional quote from the victim of the rapist that Hillary Rodham defended:
"I think she wants to be a role model being who she is, to
look good, but I don’t think she’s a role model at all… If she had have been,
she would have helped me at the time, being a 12-year-old girl who was raped by
two guys. She did that to look good and she told lies on that. How many other
lies has she told to get where she’s at today? If she becomes president, is she
gonna be telling the world the truth? No. She’s going to be telling
lies out there, what the world wants to hear.”
Other
References:
Politifact - Did
Hillary Clinton asked to be "relieved"....
Daily Beast -
Hillary Clinton Took Me Through Hell....
I hate the be in the position to even remotely help Hillary or make her out to be anything by the true psychopath that she is. I mean who laughs about someone being raped or the rapist getting off? But the court documents only mention one guy and 2 witnesses? Then the victim says she was raped by 2 guys many years later? Seems either she protected one of the witnesses way back when or is remembering incorrectly years after the fact. HMMM
ReplyDelete"I hate the be in the position to even remotely help Hillar"..
ReplyDeleteDear Anonymous - You needn't be concerned about helping Hillary.. no one on earth can.
The warden can help her as he closes the door to her cell.
ReplyDelete"So much for attorney - client privilege! Apparently, Ms. Clinton must have missed that day in law school"
ReplyDeleteYou're saying that the results of the polygraph exam were privileged? Even though the client passed?