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STUDENTS TO REOPEN CHANDRA LEVY INVESTIGATION
MODESTO BEE - Criminal justice students at a Georgia college are
preparing to undertake their own investigation of the 2001 slaying in
Washington of Chandra Levy, the Modesto resident whose death tainted a
congressman's career. . .
The 50 students plan to turn their findings and recommendations over to
Washington police and prosecutors at the end of the term. However, they
will not be graded or get course credit for their work interviewing
experts associated with the two cases, preparing timelines and looking
for clues in Levy's computer. . .
Levy, 24, had just finished working as an intern for the U.S. Bureau of
Prisons in May 2001 when she disappeared. Her body was found in a
Washington park a year later and her death ruled a homicide, but no one
has been charged.
The case attracted widespread attention over allegations that Levy had
been romantically involved with married U.S. Rep. Gary Condit. It was
cited as the main cause of his re-election defeat in the March 2002
primary.
http://www.modbee.com/2033/story/167261.html
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
THE BACK STORY
MIKE WISE, SF CHRONICLE, 2007 - Although he is no longer an FBI agent,
Brad Garrett still visits the steep, wooded hillside in a Washington,
D.C., park where the skeletal remains of Chandra Levy, a federal intern
from Modesto, Calif., were found five years ago this week, a year after
she disappeared.
No one has been charged in the killing of the 24-year-old, whose
disappearance generated enormous publicity after authorities revealed
that she had been having a relationship with her married hometown
congressman, Gary Condit. The Democrat was defeated in 2002 by his
former aide, Dennis Cardoza.
"The key to cold cases is being creative," Garrett, a private
investigator and a consultant to ABC News, said in a phone interview.
Until his mandatory retirement last year at the age of 58, Garrett was a
high-profile agent who had solved some of the bureau's most intractable
cases -- but not the Levy slaying.
"I go to Rock Creek Park sometimes, yeah, and go over the crime scene,
over and over again," he said. "What have I missed? The whole
atmospherics is very important. It's very frustrating that it's not
resolved. It's troubling."
On May 1, 2001, Levy used her computer in her apartment in the Dupont
Circle area of northwest Washington to look up the National Park Service
headquarters in Rock Creek Park, about a mile distant. She had recently
completed an internship at the U.S. Bureau of Prisons and planned to
return to Modesto, according to her mother, Susan Levy. Friends and
family became alarmed when Levy was not heard from, and a search began.
It wasn't until a year and three weeks later, on May 22, 2002, that her
remains were found in the 1,700-acre park. . .
The Washington Metropolitan Police Department lists the death as one of
6,000 cold cases. Since the intern's disappearance, the case has been
investigated by Detective Ralph Durant, a 37-year veteran of the
department. In a phone interview, Durant said, "There are still persons
of interest, yes, but we can't tell you who they are. We still get phone
calls and e-mails.". . .
Initially, media attention focused on Condit, the Modesto lawmaker 30
years Levy's senior. Police have said repeatedly that they do not
consider him a suspect. In the years since, Condit and his family have
been embroiled in several lawsuits. He and his wife, Carolyn, sued
American Media Inc., publisher of the National Enquirer, claiming they
had been defamed by the supermarket tabloid. The suits were settled. No
terms were disclosed. Condit also settled a suit against Vanity Fair
magazine columnist Dominick Dunne.
http://www.shns.com/shns/g_index2.cfm?action=detail&pk=CHANDRALEVY-05-22-07
JUNE 2002
ALLAN LENGEL, SARI HORWITZ WASHINGTON POST - Joe McCann, a private
investigator who found one of Chandra Levy's leg bones in Rock Creek
Park this month, was happy to provide D.C. police detectives with
details of the discovery. But during an interview at police
headquarters, the detectives asked McCann if he would submit to a
polygraph test and seemed to question the veracity of his story,
according to sources familiar with the incident. McCann, a former D.C.
homicide detective hired by the Levy family's attorney, was insulted by
the request -- and declined. Yesterday, D.C. Police Chief Charles H.
Ramsey said it is standard procedure in major cases to ask witnesses
with crucial information to take a polygraph . . . But former law
enforcement officials who know McCann said the polygraph request was
insulting and a possible way to divert attention from the real question:
Why didn't D.C. police find the bone during an earlier search of that
section of the park? "It's not routine" to ask for a polygraph in
instances such as McCann's, said defense lawyer Louis H. Hennessey, who
headed the D.C. police homicide unit in the mid-1990s. "I think they're
looking like fools and they're trying to cast aspersions on other
people."
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A14537-2002Jun19.html
MAY 2002
ROLL CALL - D.C. Metropolitan Police Department officials investigating
the death of Washington intern Chandra Levy have interviewed a man
serving a 10-year prison sentence for attacking two women in Rock Creek
Park last year. D.C. Metro Police investigators have "talked to" Ingmar
Guandeque, who was arrested in July 2001 after attacking two females
(one in May and one in July) who were jogging along the Broad Branch
trail in Rock Creek Park . . . A second official close to the Levy
investigation said that while Guandeque was interviewed after Levy's
disappearance last year, investigators are now taking a closer look at
him since the intern's body was discovered. "Clearly there are some
coincidences and links -- just because of the proximity of where he
[committed his crimes]," said a source close to the investigation. . .
The first attack occurred in mid-May 2001, at 6:30 p.m., about two weeks
after Levy disappeared. In that case, Guandeque came upon an unnamed
female jogger, attacking her from behind while brandishing a knife.
According to a press release issued Feb. 8 by the office of the U.S.
Attorney for the District of Columbia, the victim reported that
Guandeque grabbed her around the neck and pulled her to the ground,
where her portable radio fell off. She also reported that Guandeque bit
her when she tried to push him away. Guandeque fled the scene of the
crime, leaving the radio beside his victim.
On July 1, 2001, he attacked another female jogger at approximately 7:30
p.m., running up behind her as she reached the crest of a hill and
grabbing her from behind. The woman struggled, and when Guandeque
loosened his grip on her she managed to get away and report the incident
to the U.S. Park Police, who located Guandeque and arrested him.
PROGRESSIVE REVIEW - There remain several possibilities. For example,
if, as some have alleged, there is a tie - either direct or coincidental
- between this case and powerful individuals and their activities, there
is a considerable probability that the case will never be solved or that
a straw perpetrator will be charged with the crime. For example, some
stories have suggested a connection with an S&M sex ring in which a
number of well-known individuals are believed to have participated. As
USA Today's Tom Sequeri put it delicately, there are "dark aspects of
this story that we can't report yet." This is the sort of thing that
Washington is highly skilled at covering up and in this case there may
be more than adequate motive, especially since the DC police were badly
embarrassed in 1997 by revelations of the practice of "fairy shaking,"
in which a cop followed a married man out of a gay sex club, got his
license plate number, and later threatened to expose him unless he paid
hush money . . . There also continue to be doubts about the handling of
the last high profile DC murder, the Starbucks case in which the alleged
perp confessed and then recanted. Added to the curiosities about the
case was the fact that of all the 301 slayings that took place in DC in
1997, only these three killings attracted the attention not only of the
FBI but of Attorney General Reno herself. Reno overruled her own US
Attorney and called for the death penalty in the case.
OTHER ISSUES: The Washington Post reports, "The skull, which was not
complete, was cracked, although the cause was unclear. All the bones
that were discovered were found within five yards of the skull." Why was
the skull cracked? . . . The just jogging theory is countered by the
terrain. Writes the Washington Times: "Tansy Blumer, 59, who lives on
Davenport Road about 100 yards west of where the body was found, said
the two-lane, winding road is not a typical jogging path. 'There are no
sidewalks or shoulders,' she said. 'It's not a big jogging area. You can
walk on park trails, but they are difficult and not well-known trails,
and they are definitely not for running.'"
JUL 2001
ONE OF THE LEADS being investigated in the Chandra Levy case is that
Levy was murdered by a professional hit man involved in the local gay
S&M scene. Whether or not this proves to be the case, the mere
possibility has created unusual problems on Capitol Hill and for the DC
police. We hear that some big names on the Hill are extremely nervous at
the moment - not because of the Levy mystery itself but because what
such a solution might reveal. The MPD could also face possible blowback
because of its involvement a few years back in a major gay blackmail
scandal, perhaps involving some of the same players.
PAUL SPERRY, WORLDNET DAILY: Anne Marie Smith, the United Airlines
flight attendant who claims to have had a yearlong fling with U.S. Rep.
Gary Condit, charges that the congressman talked about other men during
phone sex, according to her lawyer. Washington police investigating the
disappearance of intern Chandra Levy, who also was seeing Condit, know
about the disturbing phone conservations, the lawyer says, and are
looking closely at anyone Levy might have been involved with through the
married California Democrat . . . Smith, who was based in San Francisco
before recently going on leave, had several long-distance phone
conversations with Condit over the past year in which Condit allegedly
urged her to participate with him in sexual acts with "other guys," her
lawyer James H. Robinson said. "What was really unusual was his phone
sex, in which he would talk about his sexual fantasies," Robinson told
Worldnet Daily. "He said he had friends who he wanted to get involved in
strange things." Robinson says he doesn't know to which "friends" Condit
was referring, saying only that they were male friends. He said Condit
once intimated to his client over the phone: "I have a fantasy about a
bunch of guys and one woman: you."
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=23715
WILLIAM WALKER, TORONTO STAR: Washington police also revealed they are
investigating the possibility 24-year-old Chandra Levy may have been
slain by a professional killer skilled in the disposal of bodies . . .
Levy's purse, wallet, personal identification and credit cards were all
left in her apartment, along with a laptop computer and her packed bags
prepared for a return trip home to attend her University of Southern
California graduation ceremony. All that was missing from her apartment
were her keys. Police found no signs of a struggle or forced entry and
nothing was stolen. [Chief Charles] Ramsey confirmed that although Levy
was last seen April 30, a search of her laptop computer revealed that
she was on the Internet visiting travel Web sites the next day, on May
1, for about three hours up until 1 p.m. . . . [Levy family lawyer]
Martin said his own investigation, conducted on behalf of the Levy
family by two retired Washington homicide detectives, indicates the
young woman went to meet someone she knew. "For some reason, Chandra
appears to have been lured, called, or brought out of the apartment
expecting to return,'' Martin said.
JAMES RISEN & RAYMOND BONNER, NY TIMES: Washington police investigating
the disappearance of the government intern Chandra Ann Levy have found
no evidence that would link her case to other recent missing-person
cases involving young women in the capital, law enforcement officials
said today. In particular, investigators for the Metropolitan Police
Department have reviewed two cases involving women whose bodies were
recovered in the Washington area, Joyce Chiang and Christine M.
Mirzayan. Ms. Chiang, a 28-year-old lawyer at the Immigration and
Naturalization Service, disappeared in January 1999, after last being
seen in the Dupont Circle area, a few blocks from where Ms. Levy, 24,
lived. Her body was discovered three months later on the Virginia side
of the Potomac River, but the authorities were never able to determine
the cause of death. Ms. Mirzayan, a 28-year-old intern at the National
Research Council in Washington, disappeared on Aug. 1, 1998. Her body
was found in a wooded area near Georgetown University the next day. Her
head had been crushed. No one has been arrested in either case. There
are some striking similarities between those cases and the Levy one. All
three women were Californians in their 20's and had similar physical
characteristics. Like Ms. Levy, Ms. Mirzayan was an intern, while Ms.
Chiang lived in the same neighborhood as Ms. Levy.
http://nytimes.com/2001/07/18/national/18INTE.html
AS WE HAVE NOTED, the Chandra Levy disappearance case may be far more
complicated that it first appeared. For example, there are now possible
ties to a local gay S&M group. The story is being kept under wraps by
news media lawyers - Newsweek and the Village Voice have both spiked
articles - but this much can be told: A former Republican congressman
wrote a lurid account for Newsmax, allegedly based on knowledgeable
sources, that claimed Levy to have been the victim of a gay prostitute
who has since returned to his native country. Newsmax quickly removed
the story, but it has been the subject of intense media investigation
since.
The Levy case has also revived interest in another woman's disappearance
two years ago, not far from Levy's apartment. The Starbucks mentioned
below, incidentally, is in the same block and across the street from the
Review's long-time former office. La Tomate serves as the Review's
conference room. The site is also near one of the numerous locations
where Vince Foster case witness Patrick Knowlton found himself under
overt surveillance - a technique used by intelligence agencies for
intimidation - in the aftermath of his visit to Ft. Marcy Park.
MORE
http://prorev.com/sexindc.htm#levy
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
STUDENTS TO REOPEN CHANDRA LEVY INVESTIGATION
MODESTO BEE - Criminal justice students at a Georgia college are
preparing to undertake their own investigation of the 2001 slaying in
Washington of Chandra Levy, the Modesto resident whose death tainted a
congressman's career. . .
The 50 students plan to turn their findings and recommendations over to
Washington police and prosecutors at the end of the term. However, they
will not be graded or get course credit for their work interviewing
experts associated with the two cases, preparing timelines and looking
for clues in Levy's computer. . .
Levy, 24, had just finished working as an intern for the U.S. Bureau of
Prisons in May 2001 when she disappeared. Her body was found in a
Washington park a year later and her death ruled a homicide, but no one
has been charged.
The case attracted widespread attention over allegations that Levy had
been romantically involved with married U.S. Rep. Gary Condit. It was
cited as the main cause of his re-election defeat in the March 2002
primary.
http://www.modbee.com/2033/story/167261.html
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
THE BACK STORY
MIKE WISE, SF CHRONICLE, 2007 - Although he is no longer an FBI agent,
Brad Garrett still visits the steep, wooded hillside in a Washington,
D.C., park where the skeletal remains of Chandra Levy, a federal intern
from Modesto, Calif., were found five years ago this week, a year after
she disappeared.
No one has been charged in the killing of the 24-year-old, whose
disappearance generated enormous publicity after authorities revealed
that she had been having a relationship with her married hometown
congressman, Gary Condit. The Democrat was defeated in 2002 by his
former aide, Dennis Cardoza.
"The key to cold cases is being creative," Garrett, a private
investigator and a consultant to ABC News, said in a phone interview.
Until his mandatory retirement last year at the age of 58, Garrett was a
high-profile agent who had solved some of the bureau's most intractable
cases -- but not the Levy slaying.
"I go to Rock Creek Park sometimes, yeah, and go over the crime scene,
over and over again," he said. "What have I missed? The whole
atmospherics is very important. It's very frustrating that it's not
resolved. It's troubling."
On May 1, 2001, Levy used her computer in her apartment in the Dupont
Circle area of northwest Washington to look up the National Park Service
headquarters in Rock Creek Park, about a mile distant. She had recently
completed an internship at the U.S. Bureau of Prisons and planned to
return to Modesto, according to her mother, Susan Levy. Friends and
family became alarmed when Levy was not heard from, and a search began.
It wasn't until a year and three weeks later, on May 22, 2002, that her
remains were found in the 1,700-acre park. . .
The Washington Metropolitan Police Department lists the death as one of
6,000 cold cases. Since the intern's disappearance, the case has been
investigated by Detective Ralph Durant, a 37-year veteran of the
department. In a phone interview, Durant said, "There are still persons
of interest, yes, but we can't tell you who they are. We still get phone
calls and e-mails.". . .
Initially, media attention focused on Condit, the Modesto lawmaker 30
years Levy's senior. Police have said repeatedly that they do not
consider him a suspect. In the years since, Condit and his family have
been embroiled in several lawsuits. He and his wife, Carolyn, sued
American Media Inc., publisher of the National Enquirer, claiming they
had been defamed by the supermarket tabloid. The suits were settled. No
terms were disclosed. Condit also settled a suit against Vanity Fair
magazine columnist Dominick Dunne.
http://www.shns.com/shns/g_index2.cfm?action=detail&pk=CHANDRALEVY-05-22-07
JUNE 2002
ALLAN LENGEL, SARI HORWITZ WASHINGTON POST - Joe McCann, a private
investigator who found one of Chandra Levy's leg bones in Rock Creek
Park this month, was happy to provide D.C. police detectives with
details of the discovery. But during an interview at police
headquarters, the detectives asked McCann if he would submit to a
polygraph test and seemed to question the veracity of his story,
according to sources familiar with the incident. McCann, a former D.C.
homicide detective hired by the Levy family's attorney, was insulted by
the request -- and declined. Yesterday, D.C. Police Chief Charles H.
Ramsey said it is standard procedure in major cases to ask witnesses
with crucial information to take a polygraph . . . But former law
enforcement officials who know McCann said the polygraph request was
insulting and a possible way to divert attention from the real question:
Why didn't D.C. police find the bone during an earlier search of that
section of the park? "It's not routine" to ask for a polygraph in
instances such as McCann's, said defense lawyer Louis H. Hennessey, who
headed the D.C. police homicide unit in the mid-1990s. "I think they're
looking like fools and they're trying to cast aspersions on other
people."
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A14537-2002Jun19.html
MAY 2002
ROLL CALL - D.C. Metropolitan Police Department officials investigating
the death of Washington intern Chandra Levy have interviewed a man
serving a 10-year prison sentence for attacking two women in Rock Creek
Park last year. D.C. Metro Police investigators have "talked to" Ingmar
Guandeque, who was arrested in July 2001 after attacking two females
(one in May and one in July) who were jogging along the Broad Branch
trail in Rock Creek Park . . . A second official close to the Levy
investigation said that while Guandeque was interviewed after Levy's
disappearance last year, investigators are now taking a closer look at
him since the intern's body was discovered. "Clearly there are some
coincidences and links -- just because of the proximity of where he
[committed his crimes]," said a source close to the investigation. . .
The first attack occurred in mid-May 2001, at 6:30 p.m., about two weeks
after Levy disappeared. In that case, Guandeque came upon an unnamed
female jogger, attacking her from behind while brandishing a knife.
According to a press release issued Feb. 8 by the office of the U.S.
Attorney for the District of Columbia, the victim reported that
Guandeque grabbed her around the neck and pulled her to the ground,
where her portable radio fell off. She also reported that Guandeque bit
her when she tried to push him away. Guandeque fled the scene of the
crime, leaving the radio beside his victim.
On July 1, 2001, he attacked another female jogger at approximately 7:30
p.m., running up behind her as she reached the crest of a hill and
grabbing her from behind. The woman struggled, and when Guandeque
loosened his grip on her she managed to get away and report the incident
to the U.S. Park Police, who located Guandeque and arrested him.
PROGRESSIVE REVIEW - There remain several possibilities. For example,
if, as some have alleged, there is a tie - either direct or coincidental
- between this case and powerful individuals and their activities, there
is a considerable probability that the case will never be solved or that
a straw perpetrator will be charged with the crime. For example, some
stories have suggested a connection with an S&M sex ring in which a
number of well-known individuals are believed to have participated. As
USA Today's Tom Sequeri put it delicately, there are "dark aspects of
this story that we can't report yet." This is the sort of thing that
Washington is highly skilled at covering up and in this case there may
be more than adequate motive, especially since the DC police were badly
embarrassed in 1997 by revelations of the practice of "fairy shaking,"
in which a cop followed a married man out of a gay sex club, got his
license plate number, and later threatened to expose him unless he paid
hush money . . . There also continue to be doubts about the handling of
the last high profile DC murder, the Starbucks case in which the alleged
perp confessed and then recanted. Added to the curiosities about the
case was the fact that of all the 301 slayings that took place in DC in
1997, only these three killings attracted the attention not only of the
FBI but of Attorney General Reno herself. Reno overruled her own US
Attorney and called for the death penalty in the case.
OTHER ISSUES: The Washington Post reports, "The skull, which was not
complete, was cracked, although the cause was unclear. All the bones
that were discovered were found within five yards of the skull." Why was
the skull cracked? . . . The just jogging theory is countered by the
terrain. Writes the Washington Times: "Tansy Blumer, 59, who lives on
Davenport Road about 100 yards west of where the body was found, said
the two-lane, winding road is not a typical jogging path. 'There are no
sidewalks or shoulders,' she said. 'It's not a big jogging area. You can
walk on park trails, but they are difficult and not well-known trails,
and they are definitely not for running.'"
JUL 2001
ONE OF THE LEADS being investigated in the Chandra Levy case is that
Levy was murdered by a professional hit man involved in the local gay
S&M scene. Whether or not this proves to be the case, the mere
possibility has created unusual problems on Capitol Hill and for the DC
police. We hear that some big names on the Hill are extremely nervous at
the moment - not because of the Levy mystery itself but because what
such a solution might reveal. The MPD could also face possible blowback
because of its involvement a few years back in a major gay blackmail
scandal, perhaps involving some of the same players.
PAUL SPERRY, WORLDNET DAILY: Anne Marie Smith, the United Airlines
flight attendant who claims to have had a yearlong fling with U.S. Rep.
Gary Condit, charges that the congressman talked about other men during
phone sex, according to her lawyer. Washington police investigating the
disappearance of intern Chandra Levy, who also was seeing Condit, know
about the disturbing phone conservations, the lawyer says, and are
looking closely at anyone Levy might have been involved with through the
married California Democrat . . . Smith, who was based in San Francisco
before recently going on leave, had several long-distance phone
conversations with Condit over the past year in which Condit allegedly
urged her to participate with him in sexual acts with "other guys," her
lawyer James H. Robinson said. "What was really unusual was his phone
sex, in which he would talk about his sexual fantasies," Robinson told
Worldnet Daily. "He said he had friends who he wanted to get involved in
strange things." Robinson says he doesn't know to which "friends" Condit
was referring, saying only that they were male friends. He said Condit
once intimated to his client over the phone: "I have a fantasy about a
bunch of guys and one woman: you."
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=23715
WILLIAM WALKER, TORONTO STAR: Washington police also revealed they are
investigating the possibility 24-year-old Chandra Levy may have been
slain by a professional killer skilled in the disposal of bodies . . .
Levy's purse, wallet, personal identification and credit cards were all
left in her apartment, along with a laptop computer and her packed bags
prepared for a return trip home to attend her University of Southern
California graduation ceremony. All that was missing from her apartment
were her keys. Police found no signs of a struggle or forced entry and
nothing was stolen. [Chief Charles] Ramsey confirmed that although Levy
was last seen April 30, a search of her laptop computer revealed that
she was on the Internet visiting travel Web sites the next day, on May
1, for about three hours up until 1 p.m. . . . [Levy family lawyer]
Martin said his own investigation, conducted on behalf of the Levy
family by two retired Washington homicide detectives, indicates the
young woman went to meet someone she knew. "For some reason, Chandra
appears to have been lured, called, or brought out of the apartment
expecting to return,'' Martin said.
JAMES RISEN & RAYMOND BONNER, NY TIMES: Washington police investigating
the disappearance of the government intern Chandra Ann Levy have found
no evidence that would link her case to other recent missing-person
cases involving young women in the capital, law enforcement officials
said today. In particular, investigators for the Metropolitan Police
Department have reviewed two cases involving women whose bodies were
recovered in the Washington area, Joyce Chiang and Christine M.
Mirzayan. Ms. Chiang, a 28-year-old lawyer at the Immigration and
Naturalization Service, disappeared in January 1999, after last being
seen in the Dupont Circle area, a few blocks from where Ms. Levy, 24,
lived. Her body was discovered three months later on the Virginia side
of the Potomac River, but the authorities were never able to determine
the cause of death. Ms. Mirzayan, a 28-year-old intern at the National
Research Council in Washington, disappeared on Aug. 1, 1998. Her body
was found in a wooded area near Georgetown University the next day. Her
head had been crushed. No one has been arrested in either case. There
are some striking similarities between those cases and the Levy one. All
three women were Californians in their 20's and had similar physical
characteristics. Like Ms. Levy, Ms. Mirzayan was an intern, while Ms.
Chiang lived in the same neighborhood as Ms. Levy.
http://nytimes.com/2001/07/18/national/18INTE.html
AS WE HAVE NOTED, the Chandra Levy disappearance case may be far more
complicated that it first appeared. For example, there are now possible
ties to a local gay S&M group. The story is being kept under wraps by
news media lawyers - Newsweek and the Village Voice have both spiked
articles - but this much can be told: A former Republican congressman
wrote a lurid account for Newsmax, allegedly based on knowledgeable
sources, that claimed Levy to have been the victim of a gay prostitute
who has since returned to his native country. Newsmax quickly removed
the story, but it has been the subject of intense media investigation
since.
The Levy case has also revived interest in another woman's disappearance
two years ago, not far from Levy's apartment. The Starbucks mentioned
below, incidentally, is in the same block and across the street from the
Review's long-time former office. La Tomate serves as the Review's
conference room. The site is also near one of the numerous locations
where Vince Foster case witness Patrick Knowlton found himself under
overt surveillance - a technique used by intelligence agencies for
intimidation - in the aftermath of his visit to Ft. Marcy Park.
MORE
http://prorev.com/sexindc.htm#levy
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||








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