Tag: Fred Thompson

  • William Cohen pushes Mideast arms deal

    When Congress gets back to business in the new year, one of its priorities will be consideration of the Bush administration’s request for a massive arms sale – in the neighborhood of $20 billion – to Saudi Arabia and other Persian Gulf states.

    Israel and Egypt also stand to gain billions more in U.S. weapons as part of the package Congress will review.

    The proposed deal is controversial because of the Saudi component. Given the Saudi government’s questionable record on fighting terrorism and curtailing terrorism financing, its funding of extremist wahabbist mosques, its supply of foreign fighters into Iraq and a judicial system that recently ordered 200 lashes for a rape victim, some in Congress don’t believe the kingdom should be rewarded with top-of-the-line American weaponry. (Story continues below interactive map.)

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    More than 250 House lawmakers have signed a letter warning the White House that they might not support the sale – especially of highly accurate smart bombs known as JDAMs – unless the administration can certify that the weapons won’t be used against American or allied forces.

    One of the of the big names supporting the deal is William Cohen, the former senator and defense secretary under President Bill Clinton and regular commentator on CNN.

    Cohen has opined on the cable network that the arms deal is good for the U.S. and good for Saudi Arabia.

    “The issue really is, are we going to help them modernize their forces so they can be a force to contend with an expansionist Iran, with Iran trying to spread its Shia and revolutionary zeal,” Cohen said last summer when the administration first proposed the sale.

    “I think it’s an important idea,” Cohen said on CNN. The Persian Gulf countries “are worried about Iran. In order to help them prepare for their defense capabilities, we should be the country supplying it, so it will be interoperable with our own forces.

    “They can buy it from us, they can buy it from the French, the British, the Russians, the Chinese or other country, potentially,” said Cohen. “So the real issue is, are we going continue to solidify our own influence or have it undermined by other countries quite willing to move in and take over the position that we had to date.”

    While Cohen cloaked the sale in terms of what is best for American interests, he left out that the weapons sale is good business for him personally.

    As chief of the Cohen Group, a lobbying and consulting firm based in the nation’s capital, Cohen represents some of the country’s largest weapons manufacturers, companies that stand to benefit from the weapons sale.

    For example, according to lobbyist disclosure documents on file with the U.S. Senate, the Cohen Group represents:

    · Lockheed Martin, the country’s largest weapons contractor and builder of high performance jets such as the F-16 and F-35 fighter jets, and the C-130 transport plane. The company also is a major supplier on the JDAM smart bomb.

    The Cohen Group has other direct ties to Lockheed Martin. Two of the Cohen Group’s senior officials – retired Air Force Gen. Joseph Ralston, former vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff; and James Loy, former commandant of the Coast Guard and deputy secretary of the Department of Homeland Security – sit on Lockheed Martin’s board of directors.

    · Pratt & Whitney, manufacturer of engines that power high-performance military aircraft. The company’s engines are in Air Force F-15s and most F-16 aircraft and the F-35 jet.

    · Sikorsky Aircraft, a manufacturer of military helicopters, including the Black Hawk and CH-53 heavy lift helicopters.

    · Rolls-Royce North America, a builder of military engines for weapons such as the Global Hawk unmanned aircraft, the V-22 Osprey, Kiowa helicopters and C-130 transports.

    · General Dynamics, manufacturer of combat ships, tanks and the Stryker armored combat vehicle.

    Like Henry Kissinger, Madeleine Albright and others in senior Cabinet posts, Cohen has traded on his government service to build an impressive operation that offers clients access to the halls of government and strategies for meeting their corporate goals.

    In addition to the defense companies, clients of the Cohen Group include DynCorp International, T-Mobile USA, Oracle, Iridium Satellite, Alcoa, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries and Bechtel.

    The roster of lobbyists and consultants on the Cohen Group’s payroll boasts former high-ranking government officials along with a coterie of staffers who know how to navigate official Washington’s bureaucratic class.

    In addition to Ralston and Loy, group staff includes Marc Grossman, a former State Department under secretary, Lord George Robertson, former NATO secretary general, retired Army Gen. Paul Kern, former chief of the Army Materiel Command, and retired Air Force Lt. Gen. Harry Raduege, former chief of the Defense Information Systems Agency.

    According to the lobbying disclosures, Kern is conducting lobbying for the Cohen Group on behalf of Sikorsky and Pratt & Whitney. Kern is responsible for “identifying Defense Department market opportunities for aircraft engines” and “identifying opportunities for helicopter sales,” the documents say.

    Ralston is listed as another Sikorsky lobbyist. So is Lesley Kalan, who previously worked on the Senate defense appropriations committee, which helps set defense spending priorities.

    The Cohen Group lists Paul Gebhard and Danny Sebright as lobbyists on behalf of General Dynamics. Gebhard previously worked as assistant chief of staff for former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and for Cohen when he was the defense chief. Sebright also worked under Rumsfeld and Cohen when they ran the Defense Department

    The Cohen Group’s disclosure statements list Gebhard and Sebright as lobbyists on behalf of Lockheed Martin, along with Deborah Rosenblum, formerly a homeland security advisor at the Pentagon, and Brian Knapp, also a former Pentagon adviser.

    Contact: eric@muckety.com

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  • Theatrical Rusty Hardin takes Clemens’s case

    Baseball’s Roger Clemens has never been one to back down and go easy on batters.

    So it’s no surprise that he has launched a very public campaign to clear his name of allegations leveled against him in the Mitchell report on the use of steroids and other performance-enhancing drugs in baseball.

    And it’s also not surprising that Rusty Hardin, a Houston-based criminal defense lawyer, is representing Clemens. (Story continues below interactive map.)

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    “(Hardin) remains the name that should be on the speed-dial of every athlete or deep-pocketed Houstonian who might ever conceivably get into trouble,” wrote the Houston Press in naming Hardin Houston’s best criminal defense lawyer of 2005.

    The honor didn’t come easily, as Houston has long had a reputation for effective and flamboyant criminal defense lawyers.

    However, selecting Hardin was a no-brainer, the Press wrote, “like naming Lance Armstrong as Best Bicyclist from Texas.”

    Hardin, 66, a Vietnam War veteran, and a graduate of Southern Methodist University Law School, first made a name for himself working as a prosecutor in Houston for the Harris County District Attorney’s office.

    During his 15 years there, he almost always won. By his own account, he sent 15 men to death row, according to The New York Times.

    The key to his victories was his preparation and his folksy ability to win over juries. “His closing arguments were pure theater,” wrote Pamela Colloff in a 2000 Texas Monthly profile.

    Summing things up for the jury at the end of one trial, Hardin reenacted the murder by pretending to pump shotgun shells into a truck. In another summation, he swung a pickax — the murder weapon — into a phone book.

    Hardin left the D.A.’s office in 1990 and went into private practice. His resume shows a wide variety of clients. He represented the accounting firm of Arthur Anderson LLP in an Enron-related case. His firm, Rusty Hardin & Associates, P.C., has also handled cases for Rice University, ExxonMobil and Dow Jones & Co.

    Hardin successfully represented the estate of J. Howard Marshall II against claims by Marshall’s wife, Anna Nicole Smith, a former Playboy centerfold.

    He has also has fared well defending sports stars, so much so that his firm’s website has a section headed “Professional Athletes.”

    Former basketball star Calvin Murphy turned to Hardin when he was charged with sexual assault of a child. A jury acquitted Murphy after a five-week trial.

    Hardin also got an acquittal after NFL quarterback Warren Moon was charged with assaulting his wife. Hardin represented basketball coach Rudy Tomjanovich and basketball player Steve Francis in separate driving-while-intoxicated cases. Juries acquitted both men.

    Clemens, one of the biggest names in baseball and the winner of 354 games over a 24-year Major League career, hasn’t been charged with any crimes.

    But former Sen. George J. Mitchell, D-Maine, named Clemens in a report about the use of performance-enhancing drugs in baseball.

    Allegedly, Clemens used steroids while playing for the Toronto Blue Jays in 1998 and while a New York Yankee in the early 2000s. The report also accuses Clemens of using human growth hormone.

    Brian McNamee, a former trainer with the Blue Jays and strength coach with the Yankees, is the source of these allegations.

    Hardin says that McNamee is lying in exchange for easy treatment by federal authorities. “(He) only came up with names after being threatened with possible prison time,” Hardin said at a press conference earlier this month.

    The Times reported Saturday that McNamee has retained Richard D. Emery, a New York City lawyer with experience in libel and defamation cases. Emery took aim at a 60 Minutes interview by Mike Wallace with Clemens that’s scheduled to air Jan. 6.

    The lawyer said that if Clemens uses the interview to accuse McNamee of lying, the baseball player could expect a defamation lawsuit.

    Hardin responded by saying, “My advice to Brian and his lawyers would be to stay tuned because (Clemens) told Mike Wallace the truth.”

    Related stories on Muckety:
    George Mitchell: connected or conflicted?
    Barry Bonds hires powerful defense team
    Steroid report centers on two suppliers

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  • Barkin and Perelman continue their quarrel

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    The battles between Revlon billionaire Ronald Perelman and ex-wife Ellen Barkin didn’t stop with divorce court.

    Despite a divorce settlement in the tens of millions (estimates range from $20 million to $60 million), Barkin sued Perelman in August for $3.4 million. Last week, Perelman sued her right back.

    Barkin’s suit had accused Perelman of withholding money he promised to invest in her film company, Applehead Pictures. Perelman, in turn, accused Barkin of diverting his original investment into a competing venture, Applehead Pictures II.

    Barkin, known for her work in Ocean’s Thirteen and The Big Easy, founded Applehead Pictures in 2005 with her brother, George Barkin. During the marriage, Perelman invested $465,000 in the venture.

    Perelman’s complaint, referring to the original company as Applehead I, charged: “Far from operating Applehead I as a good-faith venture of three members to produce motion pictures, the Barkin Defendants have misappropriated Applehead I’s assets, diverted business opportunities away from Applehead I and have otherwise breached their fiduciary duties to Applehead I.”

    Perelman maintains that Barkin used his money to fund a lawsuit that she filed against him, as well as to pay her own company, Barkin Industries, approximately $7,000. Perelman also said his investment has been used to inappropriately fund George Barkin’s “excessive compensation package” from Applehead Pictures of $250,000 per year.

    Barkin and Perelman divorced in 2006 after being married for five years. It was the fourth marriage for Perelman, and the second for Barkin, who told Parade Magazine last May: “I’m not proud of that marriage.”

    Barkin was previously married to actor Gabriel Byrne.

    Perelman recently was named the twenty-eighth richest American by Forbes, which estimated his net worth at $10 billion.

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  • Gossip Girl Resurrects Oc Themes

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  • Bewkes Taking Reins at Time Warner

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  • Linda Stein’s assistant accused of murder

    New York City police arrested the personal assistant to celebrity real estate broker Linda Stein today, charging her with murdering her boss by bludgeoning her with yoga equipment.

    Natavia Lowery, 26, confessed to killing Stein after Stein refused to stop blowing marijuana in her face, police said. Lowery told investigators that Stein had verbally abused her and that she had snapped. She said she repeatedly struck Stein with a yoga stick.

    Stein, former co-manager of the Ramones and real estate agent to the stars, was found dead last week in her apartment on Manhattan’s Upper East Side. Her many clients included Billy Joel, Sylvester Stallone and Debra Winger.

    Longtime friend Elton John is preparing a memorial service.

    Related story: Linda Stein, celebrity real estate agent, found murdered

  • Heinz Prechter Leaves a Legacy

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