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Mayor's Scandal: Prosecutor's Decision
Last post 10-28-2008, 1:47 PM by hellokitty. 7884 replies.
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05-13-2008, 9:42 PM |
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Cheryl48
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Joined on 03-29-2008
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Re: Kilpatrick, Beatty share quick hug in court
Laura56: Cheryl48: Laura56: Cheryl48: Laura56: OncRN:
The kwamster is keeping Beatty's hopes alive with a little PDA...
http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080513/NEWS01/80513098
Kilpatrick, Beatty share quick hug in court
By JOE SWICKARD • FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER • May 13, 2008
Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick and his former chief of staff Christine Beatty — facing criminal charges stemming from an illicit affair — exchanged a brief hallway hug today after hearings in 36th District Court.
The mayor also appeared to give her a social peck on the cheek before departing. The brief exchange was a departure from their courtroom appearances on felony charges of perjury and obstruction of justice, where they have kept their distance.
During the hour and 15 minutes of legal hearings and arguments, defense attorneys and public relations handlers maneuvered to keep Kilpatrick and Beatty well separated in the small courtroom.
When she arrived, Beatty nodded to the mayor’s plainclothes bodyguard, but she and Kilpatrick did not acknowledge each other.
While in court, Kilpatrick sat in the gallery with his legal team and bodyguard while Beatty sat at the defense table as her lawyer Mayer Morganroth argued. They swapped seats when Kilpatrick’s lawyer James Thomas argued his motion.
After the hearing, Kilpatrick was headed toward a private exit outside the courtroom when the mayor veered toward Beatty and embraced her as she waited for a public elevator. He offered her a peck, and she returned the quick hug.
Much of the pending criminal case stems from an illicit affair between Kilpatrick and Beatty. The two lied under oath in a police whistle-blower case when they denied an affair and offered misleading testimony about the firing of Deputy Chief Gary Brown.
The officers charged in the suit that Kilpatrick and Beatty tried to block a probe of a rumored but never proven party at the Manoogian Mansion because it would expose their liaisons.
Kilpatrick approved an $8.4-million settlement of the suits in October in return for hiding text messages he swapped with Beatty. |
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How stupid can they be?
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I still don't understand how it was the right thing for CB to resign and it is the right thing for KK to stay in office. (According to KK)
So, comes the question, how is CB paying her mortgage, her lawyers, her grocery bill? Her job hunting doesn't seem to be very successful and now, with the preliminary hearing not taking place until late September, it is unlikely that she'd be available to work if/when a trial takes place.
Who's paying the bills?
A Kwame supporter, most likely. One of the whales (big believer.) Also, even though Kwame and his mom cry poor they are millionaires in their own right. Politics has been good to them. They're going pay for Beatty's attorney because they don't want her to turn.
***************
Makes sense... but how many "gifts" can she receive before the IRS becomes interested. Her credit wasn't good enough to qualify for her house without help, so it's pretty suspicious that financially she seems OK now (even though she's been out of work for months). Just thinking about appearances.
I've said it before, but I'd be on the curb in no time if I didn't have a job.
She's not receiving it as "gifts." The money is going to the "trusts" that were set up to take donations for Kwame and Beatty's is funneled through H. Sheffield's church.
It's not a gift.
**************
There's that word "trust" word again. Thanks for the clarification. I remember you mentioned how slick they were when her website was set up a couple of weeks ago.
Oh, what a tangled web they weave.............
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05-13-2008, 9:50 PM |
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Tushana
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Re: Watson's comes to the other side
OncRN:
Interesting read
http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080513/COL10/80513092/0/COL33
ROCHELLE RILEY
Inside Watson's heartfelt phone call with Kilpatrick asking him to resign
May 13, 2008
It was a heart-to-heart between two elected officials, but may as well have been between Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick and his constituents. Or the mayor and a favorite, but disappointed aunt.
Within minutes of Detroit City Council members taking their historic votes to ask the governor to oust the mayor and to begin forfeiture hearings to oust him themselves, one of JoAnn Watson’s aides handed her a piece of paper. As members prepared to adjourn, she told Council President Ken Cockrel Jr. that she had received a note from the mayor and needed to reconsider her vote.
TV cameras and reporters swarmed her as she marched to the elevators and rode down to the11th floor to talk with Kilpatrick.
What most people didn’t know was that the talk wasn’t their first. And it wouldn’t be their last.
Watson said the mayor and his supporters called her all weekend, and that she called the mayor herself one last time just before the council convened at 10 a.m. yesterday. Watson thought she was negotiating an exit strategy. But it appears the mayor was trying to play her. She wanted him to save the council from the vote she knew would happen. The mayor would not get out of the way of the train.
“I urged him to resign if the council voted. I even said, ‘If there are issues around vesting your pension, I’m happy to play a role in assisting with that.’ He called back while I was in session,” Watson said.
She saw the note as a missive of hope. She had told him nothing less than resignation could save him. Maybe he was planning to do the right thing.
She walked in. Fifteen minutes later, Sharon McPhail escorted her out.
Defeated.
Heartbroken.
Defied.
Watson had asked the mayor, for the umpteenth time since Friday, to resign. She went to his office to get him to put in writing what she was hearing in his voice, what she read in the note. Instead, he had tried to convince her that he should remain in office.
So she went back to her office, where she met with the media, ate half a tuna sandwich and sat near tears hoping he would come around.
She waited.
And waited.
“If he calls, I’ll answer, but if he doesn’t put it in writing, I’m not going to reconsider (my vote),” she said.
The mayor’s deadline was 2:30 p.m., the time that Council President Cockrel had set to reconvene and hear from her. The weight of the vote was on her shoulders. The weight of the city was on her shoulders.
“He’ll call,” she said.
And he did, returning her morning call and continuing their meeting from an hour before.
It was a come-to-Jesus dialogue that was personal, dramatic, spiritual, fiery and heartbreaking. It held the hopes of business leaders who have not spoken out, and city employees who cannot speak out, and children who did speak out at Tuesday’s meeting. She sat in her office, door open, speaking firmly in a conversation that everyone in the office could hear.
“You’re a young man. You can come back,” she said.
“It’s not for us! It’s not for us, Mr. Mayor. It’s for the city!”
“The city council had nothing to do with it.”
“ ‘When ya’ll gonna take care of that.’ That’s what people ask me.”
“Mr. Mayor, we don’t want to! We want you to help the city move on. Help the city move on!”
“Didn’t Marion Barry come back?” she asked, referring to former Washington, D.C. mayor whose downfall followed a public videotape of him using crack. “He resigned and came back! You can resign and come back.”
“Nobody wants a white woman in Lansing to decide the fate of a black man in Detroit. That’s why I’m begging you to resign.”
Knocks at the office door drew everyone’s attention. Cockrel, the council president, told Watson he could no longer keep the council waiting.
The call ended.
The effort ended.
Watson took the long walk back to chambers, let the public know her vote would stand, and returned to her office to regroup before a series of evening meetings.
“You showed everybody how much of a chance you gave him,” her aide said to her, as she sat, shocked and tired.
“It’s not about us. It’s for the city,” she said. “The city deserves better, and who wants to be saddled with this drama for the next weeks and months? We have work to do. I’ve got to fight to get the incinerator closed. I’ve got to fight for summer jobs right now. All you have to do is look at the faces around the table. Nobody’s happy with it. There’s no dancing in the streets over this one. Nobody’s happy. It’s very sad, very sad. Tragic.
“I said to him, “Resign.” (And he said,) “I can’t. How will I fight?... If you’re thinking about using the mayor’s office to raise money for the defense fund, that’s not going to work anyway because the council will be watching every vendor you bring forth to see if they contributed?...”
“This business is painful for me,” she said. “It’s painful. My overwhelming concern is for the city, not one person. And as a city official, I must look at the big picture, and citizens don’t deserve to be submerged in this business any longer.”
JoAnn Watson’s action may finally move others to step up. Detroit Renaissance head Doug Rothwell, who has been talking to other corporate leaders, plans to meet with Dave Bing Thursday to discuss the mayor. City Hall sources say some of those leaders are ready to give support to the governor to fire the mayor.
But it was Watwson who carried the voices of many Detroiters into her office for that last conversation with the mayor. She saw hope. She saw a resolution to pain.
“I perceived movement,” she said.
And despite what Kilpatrick’s attorneys said, maybe for just a moment, there was.
“He said it would look like he was giving up,” she said. “I said no, it would look like he was stepping up. It acknowledges that the city is bigger than you.”
They didn’t speak again in the afternoon. But a mayoral aide did come to her office to retrieve the note. And his attorneys later said he never sent it.
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the comments are interesting
Some people will commend her efforts and I am sure this is painful for her. She needs to understand that in her efforts to seek a resolution from the mayor cannot be accomplished. She needs to understand and accept that sociopaths work only on their terms. Her attempts were wasted on an illusion but she had to try....hopefully for the last time in getting this sociopath to make a "movement" that would be good for the city. I am sure many others have walked before her with the same efforts including Dave Bing.
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05-13-2008, 10:19 PM |
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05-13-2008, 10:26 PM |
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Cheryl48
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Do you think that Sen. Obama will meet with KK, public or private? They were showing his arrival at the airport on the news.
Did Sen. Clinton?
Or are they being smart and staying away? Just wondering.........
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05-13-2008, 10:34 PM |
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Kathy 1007
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Re: Watson's comes to the other side
Laura56: Cheryl48: OncRN:
Interesting read
http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080513/COL10/80513092/0/COL33
ROCHELLE RILEY
Inside Watson's heartfelt phone call with Kilpatrick asking him to resign
May 13, 2008
It was a heart-to-heart between two elected officials, but may as well have been between Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick and his constituents. Or the mayor and a favorite, but disappointed aunt.
Within minutes of Detroit City Council members taking their historic votes to ask the governor to oust the mayor and to begin forfeiture hearings to oust him themselves, one of JoAnn Watson’s aides handed her a piece of paper. As members prepared to adjourn, she told Council President Ken Cockrel Jr. that she had received a note from the mayor and needed to reconsider her vote.
TV cameras and reporters swarmed her as she marched to the elevators and rode down to the11th floor to talk with Kilpatrick.
What most people didn’t know was that the talk wasn’t their first. And it wouldn’t be their last.
Watson said the mayor and his supporters called her all weekend, and that she called the mayor herself one last time just before the council convened at 10 a.m. yesterday. Watson thought she was negotiating an exit strategy. But it appears the mayor was trying to play her. She wanted him to save the council from the vote she knew would happen. The mayor would not get out of the way of the train.
“I urged him to resign if the council voted. I even said, ‘If there are issues around vesting your pension, I’m happy to play a role in assisting with that.’ He called back while I was in session,” Watson said.
She saw the note as a missive of hope. She had told him nothing less than resignation could save him. Maybe he was planning to do the right thing.
She walked in. Fifteen minutes later, Sharon McPhail escorted her out.
Defeated.
Heartbroken.
Defied.
Watson had asked the mayor, for the umpteenth time since Friday, to resign. She went to his office to get him to put in writing what she was hearing in his voice, what she read in the note. Instead, he had tried to convince her that he should remain in office.
So she went back to her office, where she met with the media, ate half a tuna sandwich and sat near tears hoping he would come around.
She waited.
And waited.
“If he calls, I’ll answer, but if he doesn’t put it in writing, I’m not going to reconsider (my vote),” she said.
The mayor’s deadline was 2:30 p.m., the time that Council President Cockrel had set to reconvene and hear from her. The weight of the vote was on her shoulders. The weight of the city was on her shoulders.
“He’ll call,” she said.
And he did, returning her morning call and continuing their meeting from an hour before.
It was a come-to-Jesus dialogue that was personal, dramatic, spiritual, fiery and heartbreaking. It held the hopes of business leaders who have not spoken out, and city employees who cannot speak out, and children who did speak out at Tuesday’s meeting. She sat in her office, door open, speaking firmly in a conversation that everyone in the office could hear.
“You’re a young man. You can come back,” she said.
“It’s not for us! It’s not for us, Mr. Mayor. It’s for the city!”
“The city council had nothing to do with it.”
“ ‘When ya’ll gonna take care of that.’ That’s what people ask me.”
“Mr. Mayor, we don’t want to! We want you to help the city move on. Help the city move on!”
“Didn’t Marion Barry come back?” she asked, referring to former Washington, D.C. mayor whose downfall followed a public videotape of him using crack. “He resigned and came back! You can resign and come back.”
“Nobody wants a white woman in Lansing to decide the fate of a black man in Detroit. That’s why I’m begging you to resign.”
Knocks at the office door drew everyone’s attention. Cockrel, the council president, told Watson he could no longer keep the council waiting.
The call ended.
The effort ended.
Watson took the long walk back to chambers, let the public know her vote would stand, and returned to her office to regroup before a series of evening meetings.
“You showed everybody how much of a chance you gave him,” her aide said to her, as she sat, shocked and tired.
“It’s not about us. It’s for the city,” she said. “The city deserves better, and who wants to be saddled with this drama for the next weeks and months? We have work to do. I’ve got to fight to get the incinerator closed. I’ve got to fight for summer jobs right now. All you have to do is look at the faces around the table. Nobody’s happy with it. There’s no dancing in the streets over this one. Nobody’s happy. It’s very sad, very sad. Tragic.
“I said to him, “Resign.” (And he said,) “I can’t. How will I fight?... If you’re thinking about using the mayor’s office to raise money for the defense fund, that’s not going to work anyway because the council will be watching every vendor you bring forth to see if they contributed?...”
“This business is painful for me,” she said. “It’s painful. My overwhelming concern is for the city, not one person. And as a city official, I must look at the big picture, and citizens don’t deserve to be submerged in this business any longer.”
JoAnn Watson’s action may finally move others to step up. Detroit Renaissance head Doug Rothwell, who has been talking to other corporate leaders, plans to meet with Dave Bing Thursday to discuss the mayor. City Hall sources say some of those leaders are ready to give support to the governor to fire the mayor.
But it was Watwson who carried the voices of many Detroiters into her office for that last conversation with the mayor. She saw hope. She saw a resolution to pain.
“I perceived movement,” she said.
And despite what Kilpatrick’s attorneys said, maybe for just a moment, there was.
“He said it would look like he was giving up,” she said. “I said no, it would look like he was stepping up. It acknowledges that the city is bigger than you.”
They didn’t speak again in the afternoon. But a mayoral aide did come to her office to retrieve the note. And his attorneys later said he never sent it.
____________________________________________
the comments are interesting
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Love the last line!
"But a mayoral aide did come to her office to retrieve the note. And his attorneys later said he never sent it."
Lie and Lie and Lie........that's Kwame and teams mantra
I felt an overwhelming sense of sadness reading this. This all is so very sad.
Isn’t it slightly inappropriate for her to be having so much private contact at this point. Unless the call was recorded no one really knows what the Mayor said, Hope she made a copy of that note.
Kathy1007
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05-13-2008, 10:36 PM |
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taxpayer
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Joined on 09-11-2007
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Re: Watson's comes to the other side
Tushana: OncRN:
Interesting read
http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080513/COL10/80513092/0/COL33
ROCHELLE RILEY
Inside Watson's heartfelt phone call with Kilpatrick asking him to resign
May 13, 2008
It was a heart-to-heart between two elected officials, but may as well have been between Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick and his constituents. Or the mayor and a favorite, but disappointed aunt.
Within minutes of Detroit City Council members taking their historic votes to ask the governor to oust the mayor and to begin forfeiture hearings to oust him themselves, one of JoAnn Watson’s aides handed her a piece of paper. As members prepared to adjourn, she told Council President Ken Cockrel Jr. that she had received a note from the mayor and needed to reconsider her vote.
TV cameras and reporters swarmed her as she marched to the elevators and rode down to the11th floor to talk with Kilpatrick.
What most people didn’t know was that the talk wasn’t their first. And it wouldn’t be their last.
Watson said the mayor and his supporters called her all weekend, and that she called the mayor herself one last time just before the council convened at 10 a.m. yesterday. Watson thought she was negotiating an exit strategy. But it appears the mayor was trying to play her. She wanted him to save the council from the vote she knew would happen. The mayor would not get out of the way of the train.
“I urged him to resign if the council voted. I even said, ‘If there are issues around vesting your pension, I’m happy to play a role in assisting with that.’ He called back while I was in session,” Watson said.
She saw the note as a missive of hope. She had told him nothing less than resignation could save him. Maybe he was planning to do the right thing.
She walked in. Fifteen minutes later, Sharon McPhail escorted her out.
Defeated.
Heartbroken.
Defied.
Watson had asked the mayor, for the umpteenth time since Friday, to resign. She went to his office to get him to put in writing what she was hearing in his voice, what she read in the note. Instead, he had tried to convince her that he should remain in office.
So she went back to her office, where she met with the media, ate half a tuna sandwich and sat near tears hoping he would come around.
She waited.
And waited.
“If he calls, I’ll answer, but if he doesn’t put it in writing, I’m not going to reconsider (my vote),” she said.
The mayor’s deadline was 2:30 p.m., the time that Council President Cockrel had set to reconvene and hear from her. The weight of the vote was on her shoulders. The weight of the city was on her shoulders.
“He’ll call,” she said.
And he did, returning her morning call and continuing their meeting from an hour before.
It was a come-to-Jesus dialogue that was personal, dramatic, spiritual, fiery and heartbreaking. It held the hopes of business leaders who have not spoken out, and city employees who cannot speak out, and children who did speak out at Tuesday’s meeting. She sat in her office, door open, speaking firmly in a conversation that everyone in the office could hear.
“You’re a young man. You can come back,” she said.
“It’s not for us! It’s not for us, Mr. Mayor. It’s for the city!”
“The city council had nothing to do with it.”
“ ‘When ya’ll gonna take care of that.’ That’s what people ask me.”
“Mr. Mayor, we don’t want to! We want you to help the city move on. Help the city move on!”
“Didn’t Marion Barry come back?” she asked, referring to former Washington, D.C. mayor whose downfall followed a public videotape of him using crack. “He resigned and came back! You can resign and come back.”
“Nobody wants a white woman in Lansing to decide the fate of a black man in Detroit. That’s why I’m begging you to resign.”
Knocks at the office door drew everyone’s attention. Cockrel, the council president, told Watson he could no longer keep the council waiting.
The call ended.
The effort ended.
Watson took the long walk back to chambers, let the public know her vote would stand, and returned to her office to regroup before a series of evening meetings.
“You showed everybody how much of a chance you gave him,” her aide said to her, as she sat, shocked and tired.
“It’s not about us. It’s for the city,” she said. “The city deserves better, and who wants to be saddled with this drama for the next weeks and months? We have work to do. I’ve got to fight to get the incinerator closed. I’ve got to fight for summer jobs right now. All you have to do is look at the faces around the table. Nobody’s happy with it. There’s no dancing in the streets over this one. Nobody’s happy. It’s very sad, very sad. Tragic.
“I said to him, “Resign.” (And he said,) “I can’t. How will I fight?... If you’re thinking about using the mayor’s office to raise money for the defense fund, that’s not going to work anyway because the council will be watching every vendor you bring forth to see if they contributed?...”
“This business is painful for me,” she said. “It’s painful. My overwhelming concern is for the city, not one person. And as a city official, I must look at the big picture, and citizens don’t deserve to be submerged in this business any longer.”
JoAnn Watson’s action may finally move others to step up. Detroit Renaissance head Doug Rothwell, who has been talking to other corporate leaders, plans to meet with Dave Bing Thursday to discuss the mayor. City Hall sources say some of those leaders are ready to give support to the governor to fire the mayor.
But it was Watwson who carried the voices of many Detroiters into her office for that last conversation with the mayor. She saw hope. She saw a resolution to pain.
“I perceived movement,” she said.
And despite what Kilpatrick’s attorneys said, maybe for just a moment, there was.
“He said it would look like he was giving up,” she said. “I said no, it would look like he was stepping up. It acknowledges that the city is bigger than you.”
They didn’t speak again in the afternoon. But a mayoral aide did come to her office to retrieve the note. And his attorneys later said he never sent it.
____________________________________________
the comments are interesting
Some people will commend her efforts and I am sure this is painful for her. She needs to understand that in her efforts to seek a resolution from the mayor cannot be accomplished. She needs to understand and accept that sociopaths work only on their terms. Her attempts were wasted on an illusion but she had to try....hopefully for the last time in getting this sociopath to make a "movement" that would be good for the city. I am sure many others have walked before her with the same efforts including Dave Bing.
Thank you for posting that OnceRN. The most telling part of the entire story was this...
"They didn’t speak again in the afternoon. But a mayoral aide did come to her office to retrieve the note. And his attorneys later said he never sent it."
Ever til the last, Kwame remains and always will be a coward.
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05-13-2008, 10:58 PM |
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taxpayer
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Joined on 09-11-2007
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Re: Kilpatrick, Beatty share quick hug in court
Laura56: Cheryl48: Laura56: Cheryl48: Laura56: OncRN:
The kwamster is keeping Beatty's hopes alive with a little PDA...
http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080513/NEWS01/80513098
Kilpatrick, Beatty share quick hug in court
By JOE SWICKARD • FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER • May 13, 2008
Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick and his former chief of staff Christine Beatty — facing criminal charges stemming from an illicit affair — exchanged a brief hallway hug today after hearings in 36th District Court.
The mayor also appeared to give her a social peck on the cheek before departing. The brief exchange was a departure from their courtroom appearances on felony charges of perjury and obstruction of justice, where they have kept their distance.
During the hour and 15 minutes of legal hearings and arguments, defense attorneys and public relations handlers maneuvered to keep Kilpatrick and Beatty well separated in the small courtroom.
When she arrived, Beatty nodded to the mayor’s plainclothes bodyguard, but she and Kilpatrick did not acknowledge each other.
While in court, Kilpatrick sat in the gallery with his legal team and bodyguard while Beatty sat at the defense table as her lawyer Mayer Morganroth argued. They swapped seats when Kilpatrick’s lawyer James Thomas argued his motion.
After the hearing, Kilpatrick was headed toward a private exit outside the courtroom when the mayor veered toward Beatty and embraced her as she waited for a public elevator. He offered her a peck, and she returned the quick hug.
Much of the pending criminal case stems from an illicit affair between Kilpatrick and Beatty. The two lied under oath in a police whistle-blower case when they denied an affair and offered misleading testimony about the firing of Deputy Chief Gary Brown.
The officers charged in the suit that Kilpatrick and Beatty tried to block a probe of a rumored but never proven party at the Manoogian Mansion because it would expose their liaisons.
Kilpatrick approved an $8.4-million settlement of the suits in October in return for hiding text messages he swapped with Beatty. |
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How stupid can they be?
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I still don't understand how it was the right thing for CB to resign and it is the right thing for KK to stay in office. (According to KK)
So, comes the question, how is CB paying her mortgage, her lawyers, her grocery bill? Her job hunting doesn't seem to be very successful and now, with the preliminary hearing not taking place until late September, it is unlikely that she'd be available to work if/when a trial takes place.
Who's paying the bills?
A Kwame supporter, most likely. One of the whales (big believer.) Also, even though Kwame and his mom cry poor they are millionaires in their own right. Politics has been good to them. They're going pay for Beatty's attorney because they don't want her to turn.
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Makes sense... but how many "gifts" can she receive before the IRS becomes interested. Her credit wasn't good enough to qualify for her house without help, so it's pretty suspicious that financially she seems OK now (even though she's been out of work for months). Just thinking about appearances.
I've said it before, but I'd be on the curb in no time if I didn't have a job.
She's not receiving it as "gifts." The money is going to the "trusts" that were set up to take donations for Kwame and Beatty's is funneled through H. Sheffield's church.
It's not a gift.
You are right. The money Kwame is funneling to Beatty is in no way gifts. Beatty spent many days and nights sweating and working, working and sweating, lots of hard work.Hot, steamy, sweaty, wet, work baby. lol Freaky Chris payed for them gifts.
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05-13-2008, 11:12 PM |
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Cheryl48:
Kimberley:Starting from day 1 the Navigator investigation, the media should bring back one investigation each day and REMIND the people just what kind of liar they're dealing with. Don't let these past issues get swept under the rug......
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Great idea, Kimberley! I can see it now........
Today, in 2003, Kwame ripped off the city by.................
Today, in 2004, Kwame ripped off the city by ..................
Today, in 2005, Kwame ripped off the city by.............
The newpapers could have a corner section on the front page to share the Krimes of Kwame.
Lmao! They could title it "Today in Kwame history"
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05-13-2008, 11:15 PM |
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Re: This from www.firejerryo.com
paspeen:
MONICA CONYERS & MARTHA REEVES, HOW DID THESE TWO OBVIOUSLY UNEDUCATED WOMEN CON THE VOTERS TO ELECT THEM TO COUNCIL, WHO HELPED THEM PAD THERE RESUMES ?HAVE EITHER OF THEM MADE ANY KIND OF POSITIVE IMPACT SINCE THEY HAVE BEEN ON COUNCIL EXCEPT TO COLLECT THERE PAYCHECKS AND ALL THE PERKS THAT GO WITH THE JOB AND WHY ARE THEY SO PRO KWAME ? COULD IT BE THEY HAVE A SECRET DESIRE TO PLAY HIDE THE KWAME SALAMI LIKE C. BEATTY DID OR IS IT BECAUSE THEY REALLY ARE TWO VERY IGNORANT WOMEN WHO SHOULD NOT BE WHERE THEY ARE AND IF THE VOTERS PUT THEM BACK IN COUNCIL THEN THEY GET WHAT THEY DESERVE, NOTHING, EXCEPT TWO DUMB BROADS WHO ARE LAUGHING AT THE VOTERS EVERY TIME THEY CASH THERE PAYCHECKS, SO MAYBE THEY ARE NOT SO DUMB AFTER ALL.....
I met Martha Reeves once. Trust me. She is rock solid stupid.
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05-13-2008, 11:18 PM |
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Kathy 1007
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Re: Guiles already showing favoritism
Why was the court date moved so far back? Guiles should have read them the riot act for not paying for the discovery papers so they wouldn’t need extra time to prepare. That’s why they move the court date back isn’t it?
Another thing that went by relatively Un addressed was the fact KK and CB weren’t in court in the beginning. ALL those lawyers and their only response was they didn’t know the both had to be THERE. COME ON. I hope Kim Worthy has a good support system because she really need to have someone to help with the frustration. A life size Kwame punching bag comes to mind!
Kathy1007
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05-13-2008, 11:20 PM |
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Kathy 1007
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Joined on 01-30-2008
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Re: This from www.firejerryo.com
taxpayer: paspeen:
MONICA CONYERS & MARTHA REEVES, HOW DID THESE TWO OBVIOUSLY UNEDUCATED WOMEN CON THE VOTERS TO ELECT THEM TO COUNCIL, WHO HELPED THEM PAD THERE RESUMES ?HAVE EITHER OF THEM MADE ANY KIND OF POSITIVE IMPACT SINCE THEY HAVE BEEN ON COUNCIL EXCEPT TO COLLECT THERE PAYCHECKS AND ALL THE PERKS THAT GO WITH THE JOB AND WHY ARE THEY SO PRO KWAME ? COULD IT BE THEY HAVE A SECRET DESIRE TO PLAY HIDE THE KWAME SALAMI LIKE C. BEATTY DID OR IS IT BECAUSE THEY REALLY ARE TWO VERY IGNORANT WOMEN WHO SHOULD NOT BE WHERE THEY ARE AND IF THE VOTERS PUT THEM BACK IN COUNCIL THEN THEY GET WHAT THEY DESERVE, NOTHING, EXCEPT TWO DUMB BROADS WHO ARE LAUGHING AT THE VOTERS EVERY TIME THEY CASH THERE PAYCHECKS, SO MAYBE THEY ARE NOT SO DUMB AFTER ALL.....
I met Martha Reeves once. Trust me. She is rock solid stupid.
Your ansere is in your question CON
Kathy1007
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05-14-2008, 1:39 AM |
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RayStar
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Joined on 02-29-2008
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Cheryl48:
Do you think that Sen. Obama will meet with KK, public or private? They were showing his arrival at the airport on the news.
Did Sen. Clinton?
Or are they being smart and staying away? Just wondering......... NO Mr. Obama has too much class and too much to lose by being anywhere near little kk.
Posting is invisible-nothing personal RayStar
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05-14-2008, 3:05 AM |
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05-14-2008, 4:49 AM |
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Gene210
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Joined on 01-29-2008
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Re: Link to the "New" Forum
Well good morning to everyone, well looks like the debtroiters want to keep there mayor well good for them idoits, that is why debtroit is failing too. Just to many idoits in debtroit and running the city. another shame.
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05-14-2008, 7:00 AM |
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Cheryl48
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Joined on 03-29-2008
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Posts 960
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From the Freep Wednesday morning:
Tuesday's filing deadline for this year's elections brought surprises in races from Detroit congressman to Oakland County prosecutor.
The biggest shock may be that the Rev. Horace Sheffield III, the well-known pastor of New Galilee Missionary Baptist Church in Detroit, is running against U.S. Rep. John Conyers. Conyers has represented the mostly Detroit district since 1964.
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How did we miss this one?
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