Tag: George H.W. Bush

  • Ex-Surgeon General Antonia Novello pleads not guilty

    New York politicians and political appointees are falling faster than bank stocks these days.

    The latest to be criminally charged is former U.S. Surgeon General Antonia Novello, who pleaded not guilty Tuesday to forcing state employees to work overtime to handle her personal chores when she was New York’s health commissioner from 1999 to 2006.

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    In a case reminiscent of the one that ended the career of former state Comptroller Alan Hevesi, who pleaded guilty in 2006 to using state workers to chauffeur his wife, Novello faces a 20-count indictment charging her with theft of government services, defrauding the government and filing a false instrument.

    Now an executive with Disney Children’s Hospital at Florida Hospital in Orlando, Novello, 64, could face up to 12 years in prison if convicted of all charges.

    It is a huge fall from grace for the politically connected physician and public health administrator. When George H.W. Bush appointed her Surgeon General in 1990, she was the first Puerto Rican and the first woman to serve in that job.

    Novello has long been a darling of the Republican Party, as well as a star in the public health world. During her tenure as Surgeon General, which continued until 1993, Novello focused on the health of women, children and minorities, as well as on underage drinking, smoking, and AIDS.

    But she was controversial among abortion rights advocates for supporting a policy prohibiting family planning program workers who received federal aid from discussing abortion with their patients.

    When former New York Gov. George Pataki, a Republican, appointed her health commissioner in 1999, she was considered a catch for New York.

    But almost from the start, there were complaints from those who worked with her. A scathing, January, 2009 report by state Inspector General Joseph Fisch found that she habitually abused the services of four state health department employees, requiring them to serve as her personal chauffeurs for shopping trips, driving around visiting relatives, buying her groceries, moving furniture and even watering the plans in her apartment when she was out of town.

    Medicaid fraud investigator Noreen Schifini, told state investigators that she was too busy driving the commissioner to Macy’s and Saks Fifth Avenue, among other destinations in New York City, to carry a portfolio of investigations.

    On numerous occasions, the report found that Novello had state workers drive her or her mother from the Albany area to Newark Liberty International Airport, roughly 300 miles round trip, to fly to Puerto Rico for personal business.

    On one occasion, she purchased a heavy statue of Buddha during a shopping excursion in Troy, N.Y., then required a Health Department security guard to move it into her apartment, and then a few days later move it to another spot in her home because she didn’t like how it looked, according t the report.

    Security guards who acted as her drivers said in interviews with state investigators that she would embarrass and yell at them if they did not do things the way she wanted and expected them to be at her beck and call at all hours.

    Fisch referred the case to Albany County District Attorney David Soares’ office, which brought the case to a grand jury.

    Novello’s attorney, E. Stewart Jones, said the charges were politically motivated and should have been addressed in a lawsuit, not a criminal case.

    “She is here because she has a bull’s-eye on her back,” he told the Asssociated Press. “Because politics is a contact sport. Because there are people who are vindictive and who wanted to get her ever since she left the state.”

    The investigation against Novello started in July 2007 under former Inspector General Kristine Hamann, an appointee of Democratic former Gov. Eliot Spitzer. Soares, Albany County’s district attorney, is also a Democrat.

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    • Characters in Lost would be lost without Jacob

      May 15, 2009 at 10:26am

      In NBC’s hit drama Lost, connections count. And the season finale this week introduced viewers to the most connected character of all: Jacob.

    • Lawsuit against Skull and Bones renews mystery about Geronimo’s remains

      The descendants of Geronimo, the Apache chieftain whose skull is rumored to be part of the initiation rite of Yale’s Skull and Bones Society, filed a lawsuit Tuesday demanding the return of his remains.

      The lawsuit, which named Yale’s oldest and most powerful secret society, the university and the U.S. government, was brought by 20 members of the legendary warrior’s family on the 100th anniversary of his death.

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      Three members of Skull and Bones, including George W Bush’s grandfather, Prescott Bush, are said to have dug up the remains when they were stationed at Fort Sill, Oklahoma during World War I, and taken them back to the society’s headquarters at Yale, called the Tomb.

      The society, whose membership includes three U.S. presidents, including two Bushes, supposedly makes new members kiss the Chiricahua Apache’s skull as part of their induction.

      “It’s been 100 years since the death of my great-grandfather in 1909. It’s been 100 years of imprisonment,” Harlyn Geronimo said outside of court in Washington D.C.

      “The spirit is wandering until a proper burial has been performed. The only way to put this into closure is to release the remains, his spirit, so that he can be taken back to his homeland in the Gila Mountains, at the head of the Gila River.”

      The suit contends that Geronimo’s descendants are entitled to his remains and funerary possessions under the 1990 American Indian Graves Protection and Repatriation Act.

      The Geronimo family is being represented by Ramsey Clark, who was attorney general under President Lyndon Johnson. “In this lawsuit, we’re going to find out if the bones are there or not,” Clark said.

      The latest support for the claim that Geronimo’s remains had been swiped by members of the powerful clandestine society was uncovered two years ago by a researcher at Yale. It’s a June 1918 letter from one Bonesman, Winter Mead, to another, F. Trubee Davison:

      “The skull of the worthy Geronimo the Terrible, exhumed from its tomb at Fort Sill by your club . . . is now safe inside [the clubhouse] together with his well worn femurs, bit & saddle horn.”

      Another account alleges that Prescott Bush was one of the grave robbers. But at least until now, no member of the society has ever come forward to answer questions.

      We’ve written before about how Sen. John McCain tried to broker a meeting in the mid-1980s between George H.W. Bush and one of his Arizona constituents – a former Apache chieftain name Ned Anderson seeking the return of the remains.

      Bush, however, wasn’t interested, and the matter was dropped, according to Alexandra Robbins, author of Secrets of the Tomb. A 2006 appeal for the skull’s return, this time to George W., from Harlyn Geronimo, also went unanswered, according to a report by the Associated Press.

      For all the intrigue, some believe the whole thing is a story concocted by drunken frat boys.

      “It’s all a bunch of poppycock,” said Towana Spivey, a Geronimo expert, a Chickasaw, and director of the Fort Sill National Historic Landmark Museum told the Washington Post. “He’s still buried where he was originally.”

      Spivey says he is so certain because the Apaches deliberately misled outsiders as to the location of the grave, and a description of the tomb the Bonesmen allegedly found doesn’t match Geronimo’s.

      Of course, Skull and Bones could clear up the controversy, if it wanted, by sending out its skull for forensic testing, said Garrick Bailey, professor of anthropology at the University of Tulsa and former member of the board that oversees the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act.

      “You should be able to tell whether or not it’s that of an elderly Native American male,” Bailey told the Hartford Courant. “Geronimo was one of the great iconic figures of American Indian history, particularly as it relates to the spirit of resistance. If I was his descendant, I would be appalled that the question lingers.”

      Yet those questions are what give a secret society its grasp on the imagination. The order, founded in 1832, has always been a favorite topic of conspiracy theorists because of its closely held secrets and its powerful membership.

      In the 2004 U.S. Presidential election, both the Democratic and Republican nominees were members. George W. Bush wrote in his 1999 autobiography: “[In my] senior year I joined Skull and Bones, a secret society; so secret, I can’t say anything more.”

      When asked what it meant that both he and Bush were Bonesmen, former Presidential candidate John Kerry said, “Not much because it’s a secret.”

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