Archive for the ‘Franklin Credit Union’ Category

Mark Tapscott

 

Claims to fame: Director of The Heritage Foundation’s Center for Media and Public Policy; ex-communications director for Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Mormon, UT); assistant director of U.S. Office of Personnel Management under Ronald Reagan; Washington Examiner editorial page editor; former assistant managing editor of Rev. Sun Myung Moon’s Washington Times; hard-hard-hardcore Republican; alleged john

Moral apex: Implicated in the Franklin Credit Union Child-Sex Ring Scandal.

It figures: Uses words like “vociferous” and “homosexual activists” in the same sentence.

Fun fact #1: His “About Me” blurb on his blog reads: “Follower of Christ, devoted husband of Claudia, doting father of Marcus and Ginny, conservative lover of liberty, journalist, Formula Ford racer, Okie by birth/Texan by blood/proud of both, resident of Maryland.”

Fun fact #2: He’s been blogging since September, 2004, and as of this writing (June 12, 2006) his counter shows 7,387 views (including two hits from us) of his profile page. That’s an average of 10 whole hits a day! (Lesson: Don’t feel bad about your blog’s low traffic; this guy is actually supposed to be somebody!)

Fun fact #3: Took a bunch of U.S. senators to task for pushing “earmarks” (pet projects, or legislative “pork”), then had to apologize for “misreading” the data he used — and possibly misidentifying the senators he was attacking. We say: Nice investigative journalism, Mark! Not.

Craig J. Spence

 

Claims to fame: Republican lobbyist; Washington socialite; closet homo; rent-boy john

Moral apex: See Franklin Credit Union Child-Sex Ring Scandal.

Charles K. Dutcher

Claim to fame: Former associate director of presidential personnel under Ronald Reagan

Moral apex: Implicated in the Franklin Credit Union Child-Sex Ring Scandal (q.v.).

Ronald Roskens

 

Claims to fame: Administrator, U.S. Agency for International Development under George H.W. Bush; president/CEO of Action International think tank; honorary consul general of Japan; president, Global Communications; director, ConAgra Foods; former chancellor, University of Nebraska

See:

Franklin Credit Union Child-Sex Ring Scandal

Lawrence E. King, Jr.

 

Claim to fame: Former manager, Franklin Credit Union, Omaha, Nebraska; embezzler; ex-con; alleged child-prostitution ringleader

See:
Franklin Credit Union Child-Sex Ring Scandal

Jeff Gannon, née James Guckert



Claims to fame: Man-whore who pretended to be a reporter; self-loathing (and loathesome) homophobe; plagiarist; crybaby; walking, talking punch line

Pseudonyms include: JD, Bulldog, Lou, The Conservative Guy, USMCPT@aol.com, James Dale Guckert, James Daniel Guckert, J. Daniels, Jeff Daniels, Jeff Gannon

Nicknames include: “Chip Rightwingenstein of the Bush Agenda Gazette,” courtesy of Jon Stewart.

Moral apex: It’s a tie between posing as a legitimate journalist, and pretending he didn’t own, operate, and/or advertise his sex-for-hire “services” on gay-porn Web sites.

The Reader’s Digest Condensed version:

Military fetishist James Guckert, who reinvented himself as Jeff Gannon, went to work for a right-wing pretend-news organization called Talon News. It was a “pretend-news organization” because it was only a Web site, and the “organization” appears to have consisted of exactly two people, including Guckert. Vanity Fair generously called it “little more than a collection of amateurs and true believers posting a hodgepodge of right-wing ‘news’ items.”

Guckert managed to wrangle a press pass to the White House, where he lobbed numbingly partisan softball questions at George W. Bush’s vacant-eyed press lackey, Scott McClellan. The Boy King, too, liked him well enough to call on Guckert by name (”Jeff,” not “Jim”), and rub his bald head (which is a well-known fetish of Georgie’s).

And somebody may have liked Guckert enough to give him a classified CIA memo outing CIA agent Valerie Plame. In fact, it was Gannon’s own interview with Joseph Wilson in which Guckert himself insinuated that he had been privy to “an internal government memo prepared by U.S. intelligence personnel”; then, seemingly unable to stop himself, kept bragging about unfettered access to said memo.

“The truth will set you free!” Guckert wrote on July 10, 2004, in one of many posts to FreeRepublic.com. “I point you to the WashPo story from Dec 26, 2003 that says the CIA is upset with me for talking about a document they say is a forgery (when they are not denying that it exists) that details EXACTLY what the Senate Intel Committee says.”

(As a result, Guckert was subpoenaed by Special Prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald to testify before the grand jury in the Plame leak case… which Guckert denied ever happened.)

When Anderson Cooper suggested that Guckert himself implied that he had seen such a memo, Guckert replied, “I didn’t do that at all. I didn’t do that at all. If you read the question, and I provided — my article was actually a transcript of my conversation with Ambassador Wilson — I made reference to a memo.”

When asked how he knew about the memo in the first place, Guckert said he had read about it in the Wall Street Journal.

Initially, however, it was his most shamelessly partisan question to Bush, referring to Democrats — “How are you going to work with people who seem to have divorced themselves from reality?” — that really started the blogosphere on the trail of this obvious right-wing plant. A particularly intrepid hive of DailyKos posters (led by Susan Gardner) pooled their resources and broke the story that Jimmy-Jeff Guckert-Gannon wasn’t all he appeared to be.

In fact, he wasn’t anything he appeared to be.

“Prompted,” read a February 10, 2005, DailyKos press release, “by a Jan. 26 report by MediaMatters.org regarding Guckert’s ’softball’ questions to White House Press Secretary Scott McClellan and President Bush, members of DailyKos, an online community, began investigating the matter.”

That report read in part:

Although Gannon is a regular at White House press briefings and Talon News claims to be a news organization, Talon appears to be little more than an arm of the Republican Party. Talon News’ editor in chief, Bobby Eberle, is a Republican activist who served as a delegate to the 1996, 1998, and 2000 Texas Republican Conventions and to the 2000 national Republican Convention. In 1999, Eberle “was recognized with a unanimously approved resolution of commendation by the Republican Party of Texas for service and dedication to the Republican cause.” His biography on Talon’s website notes: “Bobby has devoted considerable time and energy to the Republican effort” and “Bobby is a member of Texas Christian Coalition and Texas Right to Life.”

Eberle is also the president and CEO of GOPUSA.com, a “conservative news, information, and design company dedicated to promoting conservative ideals” that carries articles and commentary by Gannon and Talon News. GOPUSA is also affiliated with MillionsofAmericans.com, a conservative advocacy organization run by Bruce Eberle, a relative of Bobby Eberle and a conservative fundraising consultant. Gannon’s articles for Talon News frequently appear on GOPUSA.com. Bruce Eberle and his company have made extensive financial contributions to Republican Party candidates and committees.

In other words, “Talon News” was nothing more than a front for GOPUSA.com.

“The information discovered by this investigation,” added the DailyKos release, “was in the public domain, readily available to anyone with internet access. Much of the information was derived from Guckert’s own sites which he published himself on the internet, or from comments he himself posted on various sites.”

It certainly was.

On January 28, 2005, at the same time Atrios broke the news that “Jeff Gannon” was a pseudonym, the blogosphere suddenly exploded with an intensive, collective investigation into Guckert’s background.

Guckert abruptly quit Talon News on February 8, 2005, stating that he hoped his resignation would end some vague, unspecified “threats” to his family. Web sites that had published his articles (more than a few of which were composed of chunks of Republican Party press releases) quickly scrubbed all traces of Guckert’s existence; Guckert shut down his own site, and Talon News itself soon disappeared from the Web.

Yet while the bloggers’ real goal — exposing Guckert as just another ringer in a growing line of paid Republican shills pretending to be journalists — was accomplished, the most damaging information came in an altogether different form of “exposure.”

John Aravosis — longtime equal-rights activist and auteur of AMERICAblog.com, StopDrLaura.com, DontAmend.com, and DearMary.com — who has an impressive track record of outing hypocritical, anti-gay closet cases on the Right, picked up the Guckert story and ran with it. Digging deep into the seamy underworld of prostie porn sites, Aravosis “dug out” what CNN’s Howard Kurtz would later call “the naked truth about Jeff Gannon”: dozens of X-rated pictures of “Jeff Gannon” on Web sites Guckert either owned, operated, or used to advertise his “services,” such as USMCPT.com (”PT” for “part time,” as Guckert told his Web designer), MilitaryStud.com, MaleCorps.com, MeetLocalMen.com, HotMilitaryStud.com, MilitaryEscorts.com, Guys4Rent.com, WorkingBoys.net, et. al., as well as a profile for Jimmy-Jeff’s America Online alter ago, USMCPT@aol.com.

“There’s been so much about me on the Internet that people have, you know, made assumptions about,” Guckert told CNN’s Wolf Blitzer on February 10th, in an attempt to deny his involvement with any “sexually explicit” Web sites. “And I just can’t — I don’t even know them all and I can’t address them all here.”

The following day, Guckert reiterated to Editor & Publisher magazine: “They [the Web sites] were done through a private company. I was involved with doing Web site development about five years ago. The sites were never hosted, and nothing was ever posted to the sites.”

It was a blatant lie, and the dodgiest of deflections; if Guckert never displayed his manhood in all its erect glory on his own domains, he certainly peddled his wares all over the rest of the Web. And Aravosis had the pictures to prove it.

But he had displayed himself on at least one of the sites he owned — or, rather, he had somebody do it for him: In 1999, he paid California Web designer Paul Leddy $200 to build the site which eventually became USMCPT.com, using nude pictures (all in provocative positions, and several that can only be described as scatalogical in nature) Guckert provided of himself. (The site was launched in late 1999, and, not surprisingly, suddenly vanished after the scandal broke.)

After the Aravosis report came out, noted the Washington Blade, two sources confirmed…

…that Guckert attended a December 1998 Christmas party near Leesburg, Va., that “always turns into an orgy toward the end.”

The party was described as being predominantly for gay men, though not exclusively. The sources, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said that about 25 people attended. The sources provided to the Blade two photos from that party of a man who appears to be Guckert. In one image which the Blade has decided not to publish, the man poses with his arm around another man and his penis is exposed.

Guckert responded to inquiries for this article, but declined to comment. He has not commented publicly about his sexual orientation.

“There are people out there who will turn people’s lives inside out,” Guckert whined to the Delaware New Journal. “They tried to intimidate me, punish me. Then they tried to embarrass me, and they’ve done a pretty good job of that.”

“We put up the pictures,” John Aravosis told CNN’s Howard Kurtz, “because the issue really wasn’t whether Jeff Gannon had been working with escort services. The issue was how Jeff Gannon, what we would consider a fake journalist with fake credentials, got into the White House to report fake news.

“And the issue of whether he was an escort came to the larger issue of who was this guy and how could he get regular access to the White House for two years, access to the president, and reportedly, according to him, access to classified information regarding Valerie Plame.”

After listening to an attack by a right-wing blogger who called Aravosis’ actions “an absolute outrage” and “pure, flat out gay-baiting,” Aravosis responded:

“[A]s a gay man who’s been working on gay issues for years, I wish there were more people on the right who claimed to care about gay issues.

“But we have an administration here that goes out of its way to bash gays, whether it’s the marriage amendment or what. And then we’ve got a writer like Jeff Guckert … who writes anti-gay articles and then wants the protection of saying, ‘Oh, I’m a gay man.’

“The bottom line is we had a hooker in the White House talking to the president two weeks ago, and if that president’s name was Bill Clinton, it would be people like [the right-wing blogger] and others who rightfully would say, ‘What’s this guy doing there?’”

Gannon’s Greatest Hits:

Some of Gannon’s greatest hits, as featured in a video montage on [Keith] Olberman’s show last night:

May 10, 2004: “Q In your denunciations of the Abu Ghraib photos, you’ve used words like ’sickening,’ ‘disgusting’ and ‘reprehensible.’ Will you have any adjectives left to adequately describe the pictures from Saddam’s rape rooms and torture chambers? And will Americans ever see those images?

“MR. McCLELLAN: I’m glad you brought that up, Jeff, because the President talks about that often.”

July 15, 2004: “Q Last Friday, the Senate Intelligence Committee released a report that shows that Ambassador Joe Wilson lied when he said his wife didn’t put him up for the mission to Niger. The British inquiry into their own prewar intelligence yesterday concluded that the President’s 16 words were ‘well-founded.’ Doesn’t Joe Wilson owe the President and America an apology for his deception and his own intelligence failure?”

April 1, 2004: “Q I’d like to comment on the angry mob that surrounded Karl Rove’s house on Sunday. They chanted and pounded on the windows until the D.C. police and Secret Service were called in. The protest was organized by the National People’s Action Coalition, whose members receive taxpayer funds, as well as financial support from groups including Theresa Heinz Kerry’s Tides Foundation.

“MR. McCLELLAN: I would just say that, one, we appreciate and understand concerns that people may have. I would certainly hope that people would respect the families of White House staff.”

Feb. 10, 2004: “Q Since there have been so many questions about what the President was doing over 30 years ago, what is it that he did after his honorable discharge from the National Guard? Did he make speeches alongside Jane Fonda, denouncing America’s racist war in Vietnam? Did he testify before Congress that American troops committed war crimes in Vietnam? And did he throw somebody else’s medals at the White House to protest a war America was still fighting?”

— Dan Froomkin
Scandal in the Press Corps
Washington Post
February 10, 2005

Memorable observations:

This issue is important from an ethical as well as from a national security standpoint. It is hard to understand why a man with little real journalism experience was given a White House press corps credential let alone access to sensitive security documents. In fact, it only raises questions as to the nature of the relationship between “Jeff Gannon” and the White House, and whether there was an alliance of interests that did not conform to ethical and security standards.

— House Democratic Whip Steny Hoyer (D-Md.)
on the Plame memo handover to Guckert

GOPUSA, while spouting the usual GOP talking points, has on occasion taken it a bit too far. In November of 2003 it posted an anti-semetic piece entitled “Satan Lives in George Soros” by a pseudonymous author known as “Sartre.” Yes, folks, these are the kind of “agencies” that are getting White House reporter credentials these days.

— SusanG
Plame Leaked by Fake News Source? Overview: Part IV
DailyKos, January 30, 2005

[E]vidence shows that “Mr. Gannon” is a Republican political operative, uses a false name, has phony or questionable journalistic credentials, is known for plagiarizing much of the “news” he reports, and according to several web reports, may have ties to the promotion of the prostitution of military personnel. …

In fact, it appears that “Mr. Gannon’s” presence in the White House press corps was merely as a tool of propaganda for your Administration.

— Louise M. Slaughter (D-N.Y.-28)
Ranking Member, Committee on Rules
Letter to George W. Bush, February 8, 2005

He actually had two jobs — one obviously was sleazy and shameful, and the other was a gay male prostitute. …

I think I know what Bush meant now when he said he has a mandate.

— Bill Maher

If I talk to Jeff about a lot of gay issues, he freaks — he can’t go there. Jeff never stood in front of the mirror, he doesn’t think he’s part of the gay community, and he doesn’t think what he’s done affects the gay community. The guy at the end of American Beauty — that’s Jeff. He can’t come to terms with who he is.

— Unnamed friend of Guckert’s, discussing
Guckert’s conflicted sexuality with Vanity Fair

As always, more power to you if you have an AOL profile that’s really sexy and looks, well, kind of gay. But don’t go sucking up to the family values crowd and writing stories defending Santorum’s dog-sex comments, then expect people to give you a pass on whether you meet the standards of the very family values your buddies are promoting.

— John Aravosis
This is the AOL profile everyone is talking about
AMERICAblog.com, February 9, 2005

Why should we care about Jeff Gannon?

A potential male prostitute gets White House credentials using a fake name, provides McClellan a welcome ideological lifeline during press conferences, and somehow gets access to classified CIA documents that outs an undercover CIA operative.

— Markos Moulitsas
The bottom line
DailyKos, February 9, 2005

I am very impressed with James Guckert, a k a Jeff Gannon.

How often does an enterprising young man, heralded in press reports as both a reporter and a contributor to such sites as Hotmilitarystud.com, Workingboys.net, Militaryescorts.com, MilitaryescortsM4M.com and Meetlocalmen.com, get to question the president of the United States?

Who knew that a hotmilitarystud wanting to meetlocalmen could so easily get to be face2face with the commander in chief?

It’s hard to believe the White House could hit rock bottom on credibility again, but it has, in a bizarre maelstrom that plays like a dark comedy. How does it credential a man with a double life and a secret past? …

I’m still mystified by this story. I was rejected for a White House press pass at the start of the Bush administration, but someone with an alias, a tax evasion problem and Internet pictures where he posed like the “Barberini Faun” is credentialed to cover a White House that won a second term by mining homophobia and preaching family values? …

In an era when security concerns are paramount, what kind of Secret Service background check did James Guckert get so he could saunter into the West Wing every day under an assumed name while he was doing full-frontal advertising for stud services for $1,200 a weekend? …

I know the F.B.I. computers don’t work, but this is ridiculous.

— Maureen Dowd
Bush’s Barberini Faun
New York Times, February 17, 2005

[As Keith Olbermann] explained, “Jeff Gannon” … was a newsman no more real than a “Senior White House Correspondent” like Stephen Colbert on “The Daily Show” and he worked for a news organization no more real than The Onion. Yet the video broadcast by Mr. Olbermann was not fake. “Jeff” was in the real White House, and he did have those exchanges with the real Mr. McClellan and the real Mr. Bush. …

When the Bush administration isn’t using taxpayers’ money to buy its own fake news, it does everything it can to shut out and pillory real reporters who might tell Americans what is happening in what is, at least in theory, their own government. Paul Farhi of The Washington Post discovered that even at an inaugural ball he was assigned “minders” — attractive women who wouldn’t give him their full names — to let the revelers know that Big Brother was watching should they be tempted to say anything remotely off message.

The inability of real journalists to penetrate this White House is not all the White House’s fault. The errors of real news organizations have played perfectly into the administration’s insidious efforts to blur the boundaries between the fake and the real and thereby demolish the whole notion that there could possibly be an objective and accurate free press.

— Frank Rich
The White House Stages Its ‘Daily Show’
New York Times, February 20, 2005

Most surprising observation nobody noticed: On February 18, 2004, nearly a year before the Guckert story broke wide open, a little-known — and short-lived (with exactly three entries in the course of its single year in existence) — blog called WebDems posted this:

Would you be surprised to learn that (as White House reporters are browbeaten daily) a seat in the fourth row of the WH briefing room is occupied by a volunteer for a rinky-dink right-wing “news service” whose reporters include a personal trainer, a scout camp director, an aerospace employee, and a high-school student? This volunteer, credentialed by the White House, is a denizen of the barely credible web forum freerepublic.com. Read down; this gets worse. …

The Talon reporter assigned to cover the White House is Jeff Gannon, whose product from this plum position is a one-minute daily webcast on Talon’s site and a weekly broadcast over the radiofreerepublic.com network. Freerepublic.com is the faded home-base of the Clinton haters; a message board where some dirty tricks against liberals are hatched (the recent bogus photo of Kerry and Fonda originated there) and a whole lot of blind Bush-kissing continues. Freerepublic’s shrill, extremist rallies in Washington attract only a handful of people.

Talon News Service is obviously a silly and kooky wannabe outfit. And yet a precious seat in the fourth row of the White House briefing room is Gannon’s. He boasts on freerepublic about asking questions designed to elicit “gasps” from the real correspondents.

How and why did Talon gain permission to access White House briefings while the same White House threatened denial of access to correspondents from media giants NBC and CNN and The Washington Post? And doesn’t Talon’s inclusion cement the critical need for reporters to be credentialed through peer review?

Bulldog’s Ballsiest Bullshit:

Isn’t it amazing? There has not been one single person to step forward and say, ‘Oh, yes, I know him! On such and such a date, I did this!’ Not a single person has come forward.

— Guckert to Vanity Fair in 2005, implying “that he
never actually worked as an escort, despite the
fact that he advertised himself as one.”

Rates: $1200/weekend
Did he live up to his physical description?: Yes
Did he live up to what he promised?: Yes

Top, Bottom, Versatile?: Top
In Calls / Out Calls / Not Sure: out only
Does He Kiss?: No

I hired Jeff last winter when I was in Philadelphia on business. I was so pleased with the experience that I recently had him travel with me on a weekend trip to North Carolina. I am an active duty senior officer in the US Army. Discretion is of utmost importance to me. Jeff understands that because of his Marine background. He has so many talents besides the bedroom, it was a great experience for me. He is all-man, athletic and self-assured. … The sex was great, he’s a hard core top, verbal and strong, never romantic, but not mean. … Being military also, we had much in common. I feel completely at ease that my secret is safe with him.

— Review of “Bulldog - DC”
Male4malescorts.com
July 11, 2000

Rates-Time Only: $200 hour
Did he live up to his physical description?: Yes
Did he live up to what he promised?: Yes

Top, Bottom, Versatile?: 100% Top
In Calls / Out Calls / Not Sure: Out Call with me
Kisser: Yes

Contacted Bulldog 2 days before and got a short but positive reply. Further e-mails were short and to the point. He provided a pager number to use once I arrived at my hotel. A quick call to confirm got a quick response. He showed up exactly on time in jeans and a USMC sweatshirt. We relaxed briefly over a beer after he suggested a “get acquainted time” since he was there for me and had no reason to hurry or be on the clock. We both felt more relaxed as the clothes came off. Man oh man does this guy know how to take charge and take care of a horny bottom. …

[explicit description dedacted by LavLib]

— Review of “Bulldog - DC”
Male4malescorts.com
November 12, 2002

Fun facts:

• Guckert is a freeper.

• Guckert’s online military-stud persona is nothing more than a fetish; while he claimed to have served in the U.S. Marine Corps, he never did.

• He also lied about his age; he was already in his 40s when he advertised his stud service, listing his age as 31.

• Another, albeit non-titillating, tidbit that came out about Guckert is that, as of mid-2005, he owed the state of Delaware some $20,700 in back income taxes for the years 1991 through 1994.

• Guckert has repeatedly denied that he ever wrote anything “anti-gay.” Guess it depends on your definition of “anti-gay” — but we think that catering to the Radical Right’s homophobia with a screed against the Kerry-Edwards “support for an extensive pro-homosexual platform,” in a piece titled “Kerry Could Become First Gay President,” fits the bill.

• The kaput Talon News domain, talonnews.com, now redirects visitors to an online pharmaceutical site pushing Viagra, Levitra, Cialis, and other impotence remedies on its home page.

• The wildest story we’ve ever heard about Guckert is the heavy-duty conspiracy theory that he is actually Johnny Gosch, an Iowa paperboy who was supposedly kidnapped and pressed into service as a child sex slave. The whole story is in our writeup about the Franklin Credit Union Child-Sex Ring Scandal.

Essential reading:

Becoming Jeff Gannon
Michael Dietz, AlterNet, April 22, 2005

Jeff Gannon’s Public Blogging
David Margolick and Richard Gooding, Vanity Fair

Jeff Gannon
MediaMatters

“Go ahead, Jeff”: Talon News “reporter” Jeff Gannon is McClellan’s lifeline during briefings
MediaMatters, February 2, 2005

Sex, Lies, and Jeff Gannon: The unmaking of a media whore
Justin Raimondo, Antiwar.com, February 18, 2005

Some “Jeff Gannon” highlights no longer available on the Talon News website
MediaMatters

Reporter, editor say ‘Jeff Gannon’ plagiarized article
Raw Story

‘Jeff Gannon’ and L’Affaire Plame: Summary of CIA leak
DailyKos, February 9, 2005

Suggested Bible reading for Mr. Guckert:

And if the people of the land do any ways hide their eyes from the man, when he giveth of his seed unto Molech, and kill him not: Then I will set my face against that man, and against his family, and will cut him off, and all that go a whoring after him, to commit whoredom with Molech, from among their people. And the soul that turneth after such as have familiar spirits, and after wizards, to go a whoring after them, I will even set my face against that soul, and will cut him off from among his people.
— Leviticus 20:4-6




Curious footnote:

For reasons no one has ever been able to discern, in May of 2005, Pittsburgh (PA) WTAE news anchor Scott Baker made an entry on the Huffington Post, “‘I’m the Guy Who Taught Jeff Gannon Everything He Knows About Journalism.”

He essentially outed himself as — summarized nicely by Will Bunch of the Philadelphia Daily News — “a conservative mole in the mainstream media … actively helping a Karl Rove acolyte to train new right-wing journalists, and that one of his ’star pupils’ is none other than the notorious ‘Jeff Gannon,’ the gay-hooker-turned-bogus-pro-GOP journalist.”

Baker shot back that Bunch’s conclusion was a lie (his HuffPo piece was supposed to be “humorous”), and WTAE news director Bob Longo defended his star.

“But,” opined Rob Owen of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, “what made Bunch’s accusations newsworthy was that they raised legitimate questions about the appearance of impropriety,” or at least “political partisanship.”

Why Baker would want to associate himself with Guckert at the height of the “Jeff Gannon” scandal is anybody’s guess, but the reason seems to be sheer ego.

“In the end,” wrote Owen, “Baker created this tempest because he was unable to contain himself. This should come as no surprise to viewers who are accustomed to his frequent interjections in Channel 4’s 5 p.m. news. … In the case of the blog post, his intentionally provocative subject line was just more of the same.”

Then, one year later:

WTAE-TV has shuffled its weekday news anchor lineup, ending a 13-year relationship with anchor Scott Baker, promoting Wendy Bell and moving sports director Andrew Stockey to the morning news desk.

The changes to the Channel 4 Action News team will become effective Monday, but it appears Baker has already left the station.

Baker had no comment yesterday, and news director Bob Longo said he could not comment on personnel matters, saying only that Baker is “no longer going to be an anchor with the station.” Baker’s bio has already been removed from the station’s Web site. …

— Timothy McNulty
WTAE shakes up anchor desk
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
June 6, 2006

We don’t know why Baker was really sacked. We surmise that it had something to do with Baker’s insufferable ego combined with his inability to hide the fact that he really is a conservative mole.

How can we say that? Baker teaches at Morton C. Blackwell’s Leadership Institute, whose mission “is to identify, recruit, train, and place conservatives in politics, government, and media.”

“Excellent presentations on the Internet and its potential to advance conservative politics,” gushes a testimonial for one LI program called Internet Activist School. “It is a program for conservative victory via the Internet!”

‘Nuff said.

Franklin Credit Union Child-Sex Ring Scandal


Lawrence E. King, Jr.; The Washington Times; Craig J. Spence


On June 29, 1989, the front page of Rev. Sun Myung Moon’s Washington Times blazed with the headline:

Homosexual prostitution inquiry
ensnares VIPs with Reagan, Bush

‘Call boys’ took midnight tour of White House

The Times reportedly got hold of “hundreds of credit-card vouchers” showing the purchase of “homosexual prostitute services” by a number of influential aides and advisors in both the Reagan and Bush I administrations, including:

Charles K. Dutcher, former associate director of presidential personnel under Reagan;

Paul R. Balach, political personnel liaison to the White House for Labor Secretary Elizabeth Dole (wife of former V.P. Bob Dole), former aide to Dan Quayle, and who, ironically, was once an aide to Robert Bauman, the disgraced Maryland Republican rep caught red-handed (so to speak) with a teenage boy;

Todd A. Blodgett, Republican National Committee staffer whose job was to ferret out dirt on Democrats (also known as “opposition research”);

Craig J. Spence, Republican lobbyist and…

…Washington socialite and international trade consultant… [who] spent upwards of $20,000 a month for male prostitutes who provided sex to him and his friends, said to include military personnel who also acted as his “bodyguards.” It was Mr. Spence who arranged the nocturnal tour of the Reagan White House.

The Times also fingered one of its own: Stanley Mark Tapscott, assistant managing editor of the Times until his resignation just nine days before the story broke.

Mr. Tapscott… said he had not procured homosexual escorts or sexual services of any kind. He said in an interview that he had talked to two women he arranged to meet through the escort service as part of an investigation of dial-a-porn services he had initiated a year earlier when he was editor of the newspaper’s Money section. … His editors knew of no such investigation. …

Before joining The Times, Mr. Tapscott worked for the Office of Personnel Management in the Reagan administration.

What the Times didn’t mention (yet) was the name of Lawrence E. King, manager of the Franklin Credit Union in Omaha, Nebraska.

How, you ask, could a Midwestern bank manager who looked like a 300-pound version of Al Sharpton on a drunken binge be mixed up with a White House callboy ring?

Well, it’s a long story.

In 1976, about eight years after the Franklin Credit Union was established, an accountant discovered some $400,000 missing from the books. In 1981, an anonymous letter tipped off the National Credit Union to the funny bookkeeping; an investigation confirmed that the funds were indeed missing, but nothing much came of the probe.

Yet.

In 1984, Edward Hobbs, a Franklin Credit teller wrote several letters, including one to the board of directors, alleging embezzlement. “The following day,” notes FranklinCase.org, “Hobbs was fired. Hobbs also supplied a letter to an Attorney and a Legislator. Their response to Hobbs was that ‘We’ve been watching Lawrence King for some time. We are aware of his living beyond his means. However, the Department can’t do anything because we don’t want to seem like the big bad white guy jumping on the tiny, black credit union.’”

Investigators apparently stopped worrying about being “the big bad white guy” in 1988; Franklin Credit was raided by the FBI and the IRS, and shut down. And it was about time, too; no longer was it just a measly four hundred grand missing: “After the closing,” says FranklinCase.org, “$37,000,000 in secret liabilities were discovered. Originally the Franklin Credit Union ledgers showed $2,600,000 in liabilities.” A few months later, this estimate was increased to $40 million.

King was indicted in May, 1989; rather than stand trial, he and his wife, Alice (also implicated in the whole mess) entered a plea bargain. Both went to prison; Alice served two years and was released in 1993; King was sentenced to 15 years but served less than 10, and was released in early 2001.

So, what does all this have to do with a White House callboy ring?

It seems that during the embezzlement probe, some nasty photographs surfaced at the Franklin Credit Union.

King — a Republican activist and “rising star” in the party, who sang the National Anthem at both the 1984 and 1988 Republican national conventions — when not busy diverting bank funds to his personal and political interests, was allegedly involved in procuring, or rather, allegedly kidnapping underage teens and turning them into prostitutes.

Now, we’re not telling you, or even asking you, to believe all this, or any of it (beyond the facts about the embezzlement case). We don’t believe a lot of what you’re about to read below. We’re just telling you what’s been reported by dozens of different sources over the past couple of decades.

The bottom line: Lawrence E. King, Jr., was believed to have operated a nationwide child-sex-slave ring.

Hang in there. It gets weirder.

The New York Times filed this report December 15, 1989:

The collapse of the credit union and the Government’s lawsuit alleging embezzlement were the extent of the case, at least on the public record, until last Monday. Then rumors that had been circulating in Omaha for much of the last month made their way into remarks presented to the Executive Board of the State Legislature in Lincoln. The speaker was State Senator Ernie Chambers of Omaha, who said he had received numerous reports, to which he clearly gave credence, that instances of child sexual and physical abuse were linked to the scandal. …

[P]articipants in a closed meeting that followed the Executive Board’s public session say he told of boys and girls, some of them from foster homes, who had been transported around the country by airplane to provide sexual favors, for which they were rewarded.

Republican Nebraska lawmaker John DeCamp “clearly gave credence” to these reports, too. In 2004, DeCamp told radio host Alex Jones:

I had just gotten out of the [state] Senate a year or so before when this started breaking. …

Stories started floating out as always happens when some incident like that occurs and some of the stories involved missing money that was used for this and that but some of those stories were even strange. They were coming from kids all over. Young kids — 16, 14, 13 — kids telling about how they had been on Larry’s private jet to this party or that party. Or that they had been at the Republican National Convention here or they had been at this political event in Washington and the stories had to do with they were there and were used as drug couriers. … And the kids also were telling these stranger tales that seemed bizarre at the time: that they had had sex or were involved in sex with this or that famous politician or businessman or whatever.

And I was one of the first ones who stood up and said this has got to be the most hilarious, ridiculous story I’ve ever heard. First of all, I knew Larry King. What the heck! … So I said, “It’s absurd.” Well the stories started cropping up more and more and I said something else and I said look if I believe even one of these crazy stories I’d be the first one to stand up and demand that something be done. Then I got a letter from a kid named Paul Bonacci who was in a jail in Omaha. And he said, “Look, if you come and talk to me, I can show you that these aren’t just fake tales.”

Continued the New York Times article:

Then the Omaha office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation acknowledged that it has independently received reports of sexual abuse and that they were a subject of its own criminal inquiry into the credit union affair. …

In the Executive Board’s public session Monday, Mr. Chambers said the activities of Lawrence E. King, Jr., the credit union’s manager for the last 18 years and the central figure in its collapse, were “just the tip of an iceberg, and he’s not in it by himself.”

“Before his arrest,” notes The Frances Farmers Revenge Web Portal:

…King had commuted often to Washington, D.C. He was a business partner in a call-boy operation run by the late Craig Spence… The [Washington Times] exposé was immediately occasioned by the resignation of an aide to Elizabeth Dole [Paul R. Balach]. In his resignation letter, [Balach] complained that one of Spence’s male prostitutes had blackmailed him with threats of disclosure. The Times reported that Spence, a former ABC reporter, was said to have been running a CIA blackmail operation: Spence’s Victorian Mansion on Wyoming Avenue, where he often threw parties for Washington’s power elite, was “planted with electronic bugs and video recording equipment that, according to homosexual call-boys and others who routinely visited the house, was used to make incriminating tapes to blackmail guests.” The parties were attended by the likes of William Casey, Ted Koppel, John Mitchell and Eric Severeid. A political tempest threatened when Spence’s credit card receipts implicated Reagan and Bush appointees, but few names reached the public print.

Four months after the story broke, Spence was found dead at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel in Boston. Police ruled his death a suicide.

Also rumored by numerous sources to be neck-deep in the prostitution scandal were then-Omaha Herald publisher Harold Andersen and then-University of Nebraska chancellor Ronald Roskens — another name deeply enmired in Republican politics.

Explains FFRWP:

Lawrence King had been one of [Roskens’] closest “advisers.” Roskens was fired from the position in 1989 when his involvement in homosexual orgies was reported to the university’s board of regents and verified by them. A year later, President George Bush called Roskens to Washington to head the Agency of International Development (AID), commonly utilized as a cover in CIA operations overseas. AID also disburses $7 billion in nonmilitary foreign aid, and thus wields enormous geopolitical power.

In 1992 a 107-page congressional report was issued by Rep. John Conyers Jr., urging Bush to fire Roskens, who had “abused the public trust” for private gain until AID’s inspector general “forced a change in his patterns of behavior.” His “patterns,” according to the Washington Post for October 2, 1992, included “taking thousands of dollars from outside organizations, including some that do business with AID.”

In the words of Ernie Chambers, King was indeed “just the tip of an iceberg.” Countless other names of note pop up repeatedly in connection with the story, and allegations go far beyond child-sex-slavery and into the realm of satanic ritual abuse, and even murder and necrophilia.

And that’s where we’re going to stop before we get so deep we need hipwaders. It’s not that we have no interest in the story, or that we have any qualms about relaying the worst details; it’s simply that we’re not sure how much of this we believe.

After all, when victims start accusing Hunter S. Thompson of making a snuff film of underage callboys at Bohemian Grove

Yes, that’s alleged by Paul Bonacci, the most prominent King accuser, and purported victim of “mind control.”

And that’s where our suspension of disbelief really starts to falter. We’re getting into “The CIA implanted microchips in my brain!” territory, and we don’t want to go there. We like a good conspiracy theory as much as anyone, but we also know there’s a lot of mentally disturbed individuals who really believe in… well, things for which there is no proof.

We’re not saying none of the story is true — where’s there’s smoke, there’s usually fire — but we also think there’s a good reason a Nebraska grand jury called the whole story “a carefully crafted hoax.”

On the other hand, DeCamp reportedly won a $1 million judgment against King on behalf of Bonacci. So, go figure who’s telling the truth, and who isn’t.

Anyway, the story has been covered elsewhere, repeatedly, by researchers whose efforts far outweigh ours.

With all that’s out there, we could easily write a book on the scandal — but we don’t have to, because somebody already did: The Franklin Cover-Up: Child Abuse, Satanism, and Murder in Nebraska by the aforementioned John DeCamp — who takes every word of Paul Bonacci as the gospel truth.

In his 2004 interview with Alex Jones, DeCamp said:

[A]s a young kid his uncle or grandfather or somebody had taught him [Bonacci] religiously to keep a diary where you mark things down everyday. Well, he did it and he did it in detail. So when I went and visited with him and he told me these strange tales and then you had the head of psychiatry from one of the major medical institutions in the state say, “Hey, this kid he ain’t crazy. He’s a multiple personality and he’s probably telling the truth because multiples don’t need to lie. They just switch personalities.”

Anyway, so to make a long, long bizarre story short. I found out that he was in jail because he had been one of those intimately involved in all this, and he had to be shut up real quick. …

If you want the rest of the dirt, in all its midboggling confusion (connecting the callboy ring to everything from Skull and Bones to the death of former CIA director William Colby to the Freemasons), we suggest you start with these articles and Web sites (you’ll find plenty of links to lead you even further into the mess):

FranklinCase.org

The Franklin Coverup Scandal, The Law Party

The Washington Child Sex Ring Coverup, Vox News

George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography: Chapter -XXI- Omaha, Webster G. Tarpley & Anton Chaitkin

The Franklin Scandal Tried in Civil Court, The Seventh Fire

One last bizarre note: It’s been thought that there’s a connection between the Franklin Credit Union scandal and the Jeff Gannon / James Guckert prostitution scandal.

Is your head spinning yet? Try this on for size: There’s speculation that Gannon/Guckert is actually Johnny Gosch, an alleged satanic-ritual victim who was supposedly abducted while delivering the Sunday paper in Des Moines, Iowa, in 1982.

Not only that, but Gannon/Guckert may not even know he’s really Johnny Gosch, thanks to CIA “brainwashing.”

The Des Moines Register sums it up:

The Iowa paperboy was kidnapped in 1982, with unsubstantiated stories emerging later from his mother that he was abducted into a child pedophilia ring. No trace of him has ever been found, and no suspects have been arrested.

Nearly 23 years later, White House correspondent Jeff Gannon, who wrote for a conservative Web site, was exposed in February as James D. Guckert, a man with no journalism experience and links to several gay escort addresses online.

If you have the time to read a few hundred Web postings, you will see how Johnny Gosch and Jeff Gannon, two completely unrelated individuals, became the same person on the Web. …

It took the random efforts of scores of Web loggers (bloggers), credulous readers and longtime followers of the case to assign the two men a bizarre, shared backstory involving satanic CIA agents, pedophiles and presidents. And, of course, [Rush] Limbaugh. …

The complete concoction goes like this: Gosch was kidnapped into a pedophilia and child pornography ring that serviced the upper echelons of Washington, D.C., society. He was brainwashed by the CIA, trained to be part of a top-secret escort program. Then, he became Jeff Gannon and was given a plum job as a White House correspondent with the online conservative news service to keep him quiet. …

Despite the story’s more ludicrous subplots, a few coincidences seem eerie — the matching cheek marks, the coincidental names, the sexual overtones of the scandals. Add in the rumor that Johnny Gosch’s mother, Noreen, declared Gannon was her son, and it’s no wonder that some bloggers stuck by the story.

In reality, she says she’s not convinced either way.

Several facts, however, do not add up. Gosch and Gannon/Guckert would be 12 years apart in age. Gannon is 48, and Gosch would be 35. …

But if you want to believe something, and you’ve got the catchall reasoning that the CIA can alter anything, it’s not hard to brush aside such discrepancies. …

— Erin Crawford
Is he Johnny Gosch?
Des Moines Register
April 5, 2005

(The “coincidental names” remark refers to the fact that the editor of the Des Moines Register at the time Gosch disappeared was one Jim Gannon.)

Whatever the truth, about anything, people like John DeCamp are sold on the whole child-slavery/satanic-ritual story:

This isn’t a fantasy. …

You know, I know people listening right now will think this is la la land, this is make-believe, these are fruitcakes talking about this. This couldn’t happen — particularly, with prominent people. They wouldn’t be diddling little kids and wouldn’t be… Well, unfortunately, I also believe that. I guess I still want to believe that. But I’ll guarantee you some bad things have happened out there. They do happen. One of the coincidences that I think is going to rock some people here very shortly is one of the centerpieces of this thing was using a lot of kids out of a place called Boys Town. …

I’m not much of a conspiracy theorist. I just kind of look at the lay of the land and pretty much accept it the way it is…

Karmic Komeback: Paul Balach was stupid enough to apparently fall head-over-heels with one of the callboys, Jason Michael Manos, giving Manos free use of his credit cards, and even signing over power of attorney. While Balach was out of the country, Manos cleaned him out (and wrecked his car). “That was a nightmare in my life,” said Balach, blaming “loneliness, laziness” for his own stupidity. When the scandal came to light, he was forced to resign. He said he wasn’t “allowed” to speak with his boss, Libby Dole, about the incident.

Fun facts:

• “In 1972,” reported the New York Times, “[King] headed a national political organization, Black Democrats for George McGovern. But he gained greater prominence after he had switched parties a while later, serving for a time as vice chairman of the National Black Republican Council, an official affiliate of the Republican Party, and becoming a familiar figure on the Republican social scene.”

• A documentary, Conspiracy of Silence, that is said to have been scheduled to air on the Discovery Channel (but was supposedly suppressed) called the story “a cancer at the heart of America, and of its continuing coverup at its highest levels.” You can watch it via streaming video here.

Bible reading for… Oh, forget it. If any of this story is at all true, we’d just have to throw the entire Bible at all the participants.

Todd Alan Blodgett

Claims to fame: Son of Iowa state Republican assemblymember Gary Blodgett; protégé of GOP dirty-trickster Lee Atwater; Bush/Quayle election committee domestic policy adviser; Council of Conservative Citizens lackey; neo-Nazi / neofascist white supremacist; alleged john

Moral apex: Implicated in the Franklin Credit Union Child-Sex Ring Scandal (q.v.).

Oh, yeah, and then there’s the neo-Nazi thing:

[T]here they were, National Alliance leader Dr. William Pierce at a table along with two Skinheads and his host Todd Blodgett, a former Reagan White House staffer, GOP strategist and associate of national socialists, finalizing Pierce’s takeover of the most lucrative white supremacist enterprise in North America: Resistance Records. …

Pierce and Blodgett’s high-dollar dealing in the exclusive environs of Washington’s University Club was the culmination of what began more than six years earlier in a suburban Ontario bedroom with a young Skinhead’s dream of an Aryan rock ‘n’ roll empire. …

Padded by a wealthy Republican father, Todd Alan Blodgett has been a free-range hustler inside and out of the Washington Beltway since he served as a staffer in the Reagan White House.

The 39-year-old son of Republican State Rep. Gary Blodgett of Iowa, Todd Blodgett was a protégé of the late Lee Atwater, a key GOP campaign strategist of the time. Fresh from Drake University journalism school in 1983, Todd Blodgett went to work for since-retired Republican Sen. Roger Jepsen of Iowa.

Within a year, he was enjoying the run of the Reagan White House as a staff editorial assistant. Then it was on to the Bush/Quayle election committee as a domestic policy adviser.

But by 1995, Blodgett also had slipped into the anti-Semitic arms of Willis Carto. Splitting his time between GOP strategy and marketing Carto’s anti-Semitic tabloid The Spotlight, Blodgett was soon operating a number of Carto’s financial shells, including one that later held Resistance Records.

Late in 1998, Blodgett was a glad-handing fixture at the functions of various racist groups, including American Renaissance, a magazine run by white separatist Jared Taylor that focuses on alleged biological differences between races; the Council of Conservative Citizens, a white supremacist group with ties to many politicians that long has tried to portray itself as a mainstream conservative organization; and the neofascist British National Party.

By early spring 1999, having already reached out to Pierce, Blodgett was knocking back drinks with National Alliance middle managers, white supremacist Hammerskins [Hammerskin Nation] and assorted Klansmen.

Resistance Records LLC was incorporated in the District of Columbia on April 26, 1999. The names on the incorporation papers read William Luther Pierce and Todd A. Blodgett. The magazine initially was supposed to appear in June. The Resistance catalogue and inventory was supposed to be relocated from California to Washington that same month. …

During Pierce’s annual Labor Day weekend “leadership conference,” Blodgett delivered a brief report on the Resistance project. He was not well received. …

To cap off his weekend humiliation at the hands of Dr. Pierce, Blodgett managed to get himself punched out in a bar near Hillsboro by an irate West Virginian who took offense at his attentions toward a local young lady.

Mistrusted by veteran Skinheads, especially those in the militant Hammerskin Nation, Blodgett was flogged by white nationalists via the Internet and faxes. In a “Movement Warning” flyer from one of Todd’s former Skinhead gofers, Blodgett is described as “a parasite” and “a class ‘A’ horse’s ass.” The screed lambastes Blodgett and Jason Snow for allegedly bleeding the assets of Resistance for their personal gain.

But Blodgett appears oblivious to such attacks. He is now moving into the fresh green pastures of the Council of Conservative Citizens, where he and Aryan Nations crony Chris Temple expect to pull a few hundred thousand dollars out of CCC bosses Gordon Baum and Tom Dover in return for upgrading the Council’s publication and fundraising efforts. …

Money, Music and the Doctor
Southern Poverty Law Center

See also:

Deafening Hate: The Revival of Resistance Records
Anti-Defamation League

Suggested Bible reading for Mr. Blodgett:

Have we not all one father? hath not one God created us? why do we deal treacherously every man against his brother, by profaning the covenant of our fathers?

— Malachi 2:10

Paul R. Balach

Claims to fame: Former political personnel liaison to the White House for Bush I Labor Secretary Elizabeth Dole; former aide to Bush I V.P. Dan Quayle; former aide to Robert Bauman

Moral apex: Implicated in the Franklin Credit Union Child-Sex Ring Scandal (q.v.).