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The GOP's "Crying Game."
by Wayne Madsen    The Wayne Madsen Report
Entered into the database on Friday, January 13th, 2006 @ 19:48:35 MST


 

Untitled Document

Something that has been lost in the GOP's media circus over Judge Samuel Alito's wife, Martha-Ann, having her pre-meditated weeping "breakdown" during Sen. Lindsey Graham's pre-planned line of questioning. The families of gangsters and thugs often cry when their loved ones are outed as the despicable scoundrels they truly are.

To Tell The Truth: Would the real Tiny Tears please stand up?

MSNBC, Sept. 19, 2005. Ex-Tyco executives get up to 25 years in prison. "Family members wept in the gallery as the sentences were imposed. Kozlowski was led out of the front of the courtroom in handcuffs as his wife quietly sobbed from a bench three rows back."

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The Republic, Springfield, MA, Mar. 1, 2005 -- "Former Police Commission Chairman Gerald A. Phillips could face more than a year in prison after being convicted yesterday with three co-defendants in a no-show jobs scheme at a taxpayer-financed job training agency . . . Also convicted yesterday were Giuseppe Polimeni, 53, of Springfield, on 11 fraud and obstruction charges . . . Polimeni, whose face sagged as the guilty verdicts were read, remained dry-eyed while his wife wept in the gallery, and later, while waiting for the elevator."

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Orlando Sentinel, Nov. 5, 1998. McCorkle Found Guilty, Collapses, Convicted On 151 Charges. "Deliberating just nine hours, a federal court jury Nov. 4 convicted William J. McCorkle of fraud and money-laundering. When the jury announced its verdict, his wife wept uncontrollably . . ."

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San Diego Union-Tribune, July 19, 2005, Councilmen Guilty. "San Diego Councilmen Michael Zucchet and Ralph Inzunza were convicted of conspiracy, extortion and fraud yesterday in a surprisingly swift verdict by a federal jury that dealt another body blow to a City Hall already staggering from a pension fund scandal, a vacancy in the mayor's office and eroding public confidence . . . Zucchet declined to comment after the verdict. He appeared wan and shaken in the minutes after the court session ended, hugging friends, family and supporters inside and outside Miller's courtroom. Several wept."