Re: Criminal Newsgroup Anonymous Internet Harasser "Chuck"
- From: "magruder" <smagruder10@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: 4 Oct 2006 14:44:25 -0700
From: kmdickson@xxxxxxxxxxx
[Add to Address Book]
To:
thomas.carson@xxxxxxxxx,fbinhct@xxxxxxx,tb-petitions@xxxxxxxxx,ngochr@xxxxxxxxx,vice_president@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx,comments@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx,spinlyme@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx,thomas.ryan@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx,attorney.general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx,kevin.kane@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx,SpinLyme@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: The anonymous Lyme newsgroup harasser, "Chuck" who talks
FILTH all the time, should join the Republican Congress- See how many
of then knew about Foley
Date: Wednesday, October 04, 2006 16:48:19 [View Source]
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20061004/ap_on_go_co/congress_pages_49&printer=1;_ylt=AurZCCeyjqDch3wsX17HBYiMwfIE;_ylu=X3oDMTA3MXN1bHE0BHNlYwN0bWE-
Chuck posted this:
http://groups.google.com/group/sci.med.diseases.lyme/browse_frm/thread/e3434128f9b1acaf/e66a398e86657054?q=I+hear+he+is+hung+like+a+horse&rnum=5#e66a398e86657054
And this:
http://www.actionlyme.org/CHUCK_NANCY_BLOWJOB.htm
What are all of you "law enforcement" people going to do about all this
filth
and harassment?
And the Lacy Peterson threat?
http://groups.google.com/group/sci.med.diseases.lyme/browse_thread/thread/737c59b6c5c3f481/940b6cbe6d735d5c?lnk=gst&q=lyme+roads+dangerous+lacy&rnum=2#940b6cbe6d735d5c
When are you going to start doing your jobs?
KMDICKSON
------------------------------------
Aide says he reported Foley 2 years ago
By DEVLIN BARRETT, Associated Press Writer 19 minutes ago
A senior congressional aide said Wednesday he told House Speaker Dennis
Hastert's office in 2004 about worrisome conduct by former Rep. Mark
Foley
(news, bio, voting record) with teenage pages - the earliest known
alert to the
GOP leadership.
Kirk Fordham told The Associated Press that when he was told about
Foley's
inappropriate behavior toward pages, he had "more than one conversation
with
senior staff at the highest level of the House of Representatives
asking them to
intervene."
The conversations took place long before the e-mail scandal broke,
Fordham said,
and at least a year earlier than members of the House GOP leadership
have
acknowledged.
Fordham resigned Wednesday as chief of staff to Rep. Thomas Reynolds
(news, bio,
voting record), R-N.Y.
Fordham spoke to the AP after ABC News quoted unidentified GOP sources
as
insinuating that he had intervened on behalf of Foley, his former boss,
to
prevent an inquiry into Foley's conduct.
"This is categorically false," Fordham said. "At no point ever did I
ask anyone
to block any inquiries into Foley's actions or behavior."
The longtime Capitol Hill aide said he would fully disclose to the FBI
and the
House ethics committee "any and all meetings and phone calls" regarding
Foley's
behavior that he had with senior staffers in the House leadership.
"The fact is even prior to the existence of the Foley e-mail exchanges
I had
more than one conversation with senior staff at the highest level of
the House
of Representatives asking them to intervene when I was informed of Mr.
Foley's
inappropriate behavior," Fordham said.
Fordham said one staffer to whom he spoke remains employed by a senior
House
Republican leader. He would not identify the staffer.
"Rather than trying to shift the blame on me, those who are employed by
these
House leaders should acknowledge what they know about their action or
inaction
in response to the information they knew about Mr. Foley prior to
2005," Fordham
said.
A Capitol Hill aide for more than a decade, Fordham said he resigned
because he
did not want his role in the Foley matter to harm his boss' re-election
bid.
"I have no reason to state anything other than the facts. I have no
congressman
and no office to protect," Fordham said.
Before his resignation as Foley's chief of staff, Fordham had been
serving in
the same capacity for Reynolds, a member of the GOP leadership who has
struggled
to avoid political damage in the scandal's fallout.
Republicans have been struggling to put the scandal behind them, but
another
member of the leadership, Rep Roy Blunt of Missouri, said pointedly
during the
day he would have handled the entire matter differently than Speaker
Dennis
Hastert did, had he known about the complaints when they were first
raised last
year.
"I think I could have given some good advice here, which is you have to
be
curious. You have to ask all the questions you can think of," Blunt
said. "You
absolutely can't decide not to look into activities because one
individual's
parents don't want you to."
Foley resigned last week after he was reported to have sent salacious
electronic
messages to teenage male pages. He has checked into an undisclosed
facility for
treatment of alcoholism, leaving behind a mushrooming political scandal
and
legal investigation.
Acting U.S. Attorney Jeff Taylor for the District of Columbia sought
protection
of the records in a three-page letter to House counsel Geraldine
Gennet,
according to a Justice official speaking on condition of anonymity.
Such letters often are followed by search warrants and subpoenas, and
signal
that investigators are moving closer to a criminal investigation.
The request was aimed at averting a conflict with the House similar to
a
standoff in May when FBI agents raided Louisiana Rep. William Jefferson
(news,
bio, voting record)'s office seeking information in a bribery
investigation.
Meanwhile, FBI agents have begun interviewing participants in the House
page
program, according to a law enforcement official who spoke on condition
of
anonymity because of the ongoing investigation. The official declined
to say
whether the interviews were limited to current pages or included former
pages.
Justice Department spokeswoman Tasia Scolinos stressed that the
investigation is
still preliminary. Also, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement
confirmed
that it has begun its own preliminary inquiry. Spokesman Tom Berlinger
said the
case is in its initial stages and is not a full-blown criminal inquiry.
Fordham played a key role in fast-developing events late last week.
Initially,
Foley was reported to have written overly friendly - not sexually
explicit -
e-mails to a former Capitol page. A day later, ABC news followed up
with a
report that said the Florida lawmaker had also sent sexually explicit
instant
messages to at least one other male page.
He said earlier this week he asked Foley about the sexually explicit
instant
messages, and the congressman confirmed they were probably his.
"Like so many, I feel betrayed by Mark Foley's indefensible behavior,"
he said.
He blamed Democrats for seeking to make a political issue of the matter
in
Reynolds' re-election campaign, "and I will not let them do so."
There were signs of concern among Republicans, as well.
Sen. John McCain (news, bio, voting record) of Arizona called for a
group of
former senators and others to investigate how the House handled the
affair.
"We need to move forward quickly and we need to reach conclusions and
recommendations about who is responsible," McCain said during a
campaign speech
for Sen. Lincoln Chafee (news, bio, voting record) in Rhode Island. "I
think it
needs to be addressed by people who are credible."
Some other Republicans rallied to the speaker. The chairmen of two
coalitions of
social and fiscal conservatives in Congress said he should not step
down.
"Speaker Hastert is a man of integrity," Rep. Mike Pence (news, bio,
voting
record), R-Ind., and Rep. Joe Pitts, R-Pa., said in a joint statement.
Rep. Rodney Alexander (news, bio, voting record), R-La., the
congressman who
sponsored the page at the heart of the furor, said Hastert "knew about
the
e-mails that we knew about," including one in which Foley asked the
page to send
his picture. But he quickly backed off that comment, saying he
discussed the
e-mails with Hastert's aides, not the speaker himself.
"I guess that's a poor choice of words that I made there," he told AP.
Hastert has insisted he not know about the e-mails that were discussed
with his
staff.
Alexander said in an interview he first took up the matter after
receiving press
inquiries in November, when he told Hastert's staff and the parents of
the
16-year-old boy who received the e-mails. The parents wanted the
correspondence
stopped but apparently did not want to take the matter further.
After a second round of press inquiries in the spring, Alexander said,
he again
notified the family and discussed the e-mails with the new majority
leader, John
Boehner of Ohio, on the House floor during a vote.
Alexander said Boehner turned first to Reynolds, the architect of the
Republican
midterm election strategy.
"I went to Boehner before Reynolds," Alexander told AP. "He sent
Reynolds to me
to talk about it. Within a minute Reynolds and I were talking."
Boehner and Reynolds have both said they had spoken with Hastert about
a
complaint concerning a former page from Louisiana last spring, after
Alexander
told them about it.
The uproar that followed Foley's resignation has enveloped Republicans
who were
already at risk at losing control of Congress in elections five weeks
away.
Conservative activist Richard A. Viguerie was among those who called
for Hastert
to step down. "The fact that they just walked away from this, it sounds
like
they were trying to protect one of their own members rather than these
young
boys," Viguerie said on Fox News.
Hastert has he would not quit.
Alexander defended Hastert on Wednesday, as well as his own response.
"Hey, what else was I supposed to do?" Alexander asked. "I was very
uncomfortable even talking to somebody in the speaker's office."
___
Associated Press writers Andrew Taylor, Lara Jakes Jordan and Laurie
Kellman in
Washington; Marus Kabel in Springfield, Mo., and Michelle Smith in
Providence,
R.I., contributed to this report
--
http://www.actionlyme.org
magruder wrote:
From: kmdickson@xxxxxxxxxxx
[Add to Address Book]
To:
thomas.carson@xxxxxxxxx,fbinhct@xxxxxxx,tb-petitions@xxxxxxxxx,ngochr@xxxxxxxxx,vice_president@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx,comments@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx,spinlyme@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx,thomas.ryan@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx,attorney.general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx,kevin.kane@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx,SpinLyme@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: The anonymous Lyme newsgroup harasser, "Chuck" who talks
FILTH all the time, should join the Republican Congress- See how many
of then knew about Foley
Date: Wednesday, October 04, 2006 16:48:19 [View Source]
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20061004/ap_on_go_co/congress_pages_49&printer=1;_ylt=AurZCCeyjqDch3wsX17HBYiMwfIE;_ylu=X3oDMTA3MXN1bHE0BHNlYwN0bWE-
Chuck posted this:
http://groups.google.com/group/sci.med.diseases.lyme/browse_frm/thread/e3434128f9b1acaf/e66a398e86657054?q=I+hear+he+is+hung+like+a+horse&rnum=5#e66a398e86657054
And this:
http://www.actionlyme.org/CHUCK_NANCY_BLOWJOB.htm
What are all of you "law enforcement" people going to do about all this
filth
and harassment?
And the Lacy Peterson threat?
http://groups.google.com/group/sci.med.diseases.lyme/browse_thread/thread/737c59b6c5c3f481/940b6cbe6d735d5c?lnk=gst&q=lyme+roads+dangerous+lacy&rnum=2#940b6cbe6d735d5c
When are you going to start doing your jobs?
KMDICKSON
------------------------------------
Aide says he reported Foley 2 years ago
By DEVLIN BARRETT, Associated Press Writer 19 minutes ago
A senior congressional aide said Wednesday he told House Speaker Dennis
Hastert's office in 2004 about worrisome conduct by former Rep. Mark
Foley
(news, bio, voting record) with teenage pages - the earliest known
alert to the
GOP leadership.
Kirk Fordham told The Associated Press that when he was told about
Foley's
inappropriate behavior toward pages, he had "more than one conversation
with
senior staff at the highest level of the House of Representatives
asking them to
intervene."
The conversations took place long before the e-mail scandal broke,
Fordham said,
and at least a year earlier than members of the House GOP leadership
have
acknowledged.
Fordham resigned Wednesday as chief of staff to Rep. Thomas Reynolds
(news, bio,
voting record), R-N.Y.
Fordham spoke to the AP after ABC News quoted unidentified GOP sources
as
insinuating that he had intervened on behalf of Foley, his former boss,
to
prevent an inquiry into Foley's conduct.
"This is categorically false," Fordham said. "At no point ever did I
ask anyone
to block any inquiries into Foley's actions or behavior."
The longtime Capitol Hill aide said he would fully disclose to the FBI
and the
House ethics committee "any and all meetings and phone calls" regarding
Foley's
behavior that he had with senior staffers in the House leadership.
"The fact is even prior to the existence of the Foley e-mail exchanges
I had
more than one conversation with senior staff at the highest level of
the House
of Representatives asking them to intervene when I was informed of Mr.
Foley's
inappropriate behavior," Fordham said.
Fordham said one staffer to whom he spoke remains employed by a senior
House
Republican leader. He would not identify the staffer.
"Rather than trying to shift the blame on me, those who are employed by
these
House leaders should acknowledge what they know about their action or
inaction
in response to the information they knew about Mr. Foley prior to
2005," Fordham
said.
A Capitol Hill aide for more than a decade, Fordham said he resigned
because he
did not want his role in the Foley matter to harm his boss' re-election
bid.
"I have no reason to state anything other than the facts. I have no
congressman
and no office to protect," Fordham said.
Before his resignation as Foley's chief of staff, Fordham had been
serving in
the same capacity for Reynolds, a member of the GOP leadership who has
struggled
to avoid political damage in the scandal's fallout.
Republicans have been struggling to put the scandal behind them, but
another
member of the leadership, Rep Roy Blunt of Missouri, said pointedly
during the
day he would have handled the entire matter differently than Speaker
Dennis
Hastert did, had he known about the complaints when they were first
raised last
year.
"I think I could have given some good advice here, which is you have to
be
curious. You have to ask all the questions you can think of," Blunt
said. "You
absolutely can't decide not to look into activities because one
individual's
parents don't want you to."
Foley resigned last week after he was reported to have sent salacious
electronic
messages to teenage male pages. He has checked into an undisclosed
facility for
treatment of alcoholism, leaving behind a mushrooming political scandal
and
legal investigation.
Acting U.S. Attorney Jeff Taylor for the District of Columbia sought
protection
of the records in a three-page letter to House counsel Geraldine
Gennet,
according to a Justice official speaking on condition of anonymity.
Such letters often are followed by search warrants and subpoenas, and
signal
that investigators are moving closer to a criminal investigation.
The request was aimed at averting a conflict with the House similar to
a
standoff in May when FBI agents raided Louisiana Rep. William Jefferson
(news,
bio, voting record)'s office seeking information in a bribery
investigation.
Meanwhile, FBI agents have begun interviewing participants in the House
page
program, according to a law enforcement official who spoke on condition
of
anonymity because of the ongoing investigation. The official declined
to say
whether the interviews were limited to current pages or included former
pages.
Justice Department spokeswoman Tasia Scolinos stressed that the
investigation is
still preliminary. Also, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement
confirmed
that it has begun its own preliminary inquiry. Spokesman Tom Berlinger
said the
case is in its initial stages and is not a full-blown criminal inquiry.
Fordham played a key role in fast-developing events late last week.
Initially,
Foley was reported to have written overly friendly - not sexually
explicit -
e-mails to a former Capitol page. A day later, ABC news followed up
with a
report that said the Florida lawmaker had also sent sexually explicit
instant
messages to at least one other male page.
He said earlier this week he asked Foley about the sexually explicit
instant
messages, and the congressman confirmed they were probably his.
"Like so many, I feel betrayed by Mark Foley's indefensible behavior,"
he said.
He blamed Democrats for seeking to make a political issue of the matter
in
Reynolds' re-election campaign, "and I will not let them do so."
There were signs of concern among Republicans, as well.
Sen. John McCain (news, bio, voting record) of Arizona called for a
group of
former senators and others to investigate how the House handled the
affair.
"We need to move forward quickly and we need to reach conclusions and
recommendations about who is responsible," McCain said during a
campaign speech
for Sen. Lincoln Chafee (news, bio, voting record) in Rhode Island. "I
think it
needs to be addressed by people who are credible."
Some other Republicans rallied to the speaker. The chairmen of two
coalitions of
social and fiscal conservatives in Congress said he should not step
down.
"Speaker Hastert is a man of integrity," Rep. Mike Pence (news, bio,
voting
record), R-Ind., and Rep. Joe Pitts, R-Pa., said in a joint statement.
Rep. Rodney Alexander (news, bio, voting record), R-La., the
congressman who
sponsored the page at the heart of the furor, said Hastert "knew about
the
e-mails that we knew about," including one in which Foley asked the
page to send
his picture. But he quickly backed off that comment, saying he
discussed the
e-mails with Hastert's aides, not the speaker himself.
"I guess that's a poor choice of words that I made there," he told AP.
Hastert has insisted he not know about the e-mails that were discussed
with his
staff.
Alexander said in an interview he first took up the matter after
receiving press
inquiries in November, when he told Hastert's staff and the parents of
the
16-year-old boy who received the e-mails. The parents wanted the
correspondence
stopped but apparently did not want to take the matter further.
After a second round of press inquiries in the spring, Alexander said,
he again
notified the family and discussed the e-mails with the new majority
leader, John
Boehner of Ohio, on the House floor during a vote.
Alexander said Boehner turned first to Reynolds, the architect of the
Republican
midterm election strategy.
"I went to Boehner before Reynolds," Alexander told AP. "He sent
Reynolds to me
to talk about it. Within a minute Reynolds and I were talking."
Boehner and Reynolds have both said they had spoken with Hastert about
a
complaint concerning a former page from Louisiana last spring, after
Alexander
told them about it.
The uproar that followed Foley's resignation has enveloped Republicans
who were
already at risk at losing control of Congress in elections five weeks
away.
Conservative activist Richard A. Viguerie was among those who called
for Hastert
to step down. "The fact that they just walked away from this, it sounds
like
they were trying to protect one of their own members rather than these
young
boys," Viguerie said on Fox News.
Hastert has he would not quit.
Alexander defended Hastert on Wednesday, as well as his own response.
"Hey, what else was I supposed to do?" Alexander asked. "I was very
uncomfortable even talking to somebody in the speaker's office."
___
Associated Press writers Andrew Taylor, Lara Jakes Jordan and Laurie
Kellman in
Washington; Marus Kabel in Springfield, Mo., and Michelle Smith in
Providence,
R.I., contributed to this report
--
http://www.actionlyme.org
Lymehelp wrote:
Cape doctor fighting 11 complaints to state
By CYNTHIA McCORMICK
STAFF WRITER
HYANNIS - A local physician facing an investigation by the state Board
of Registration in Medicine has agreed to stop practicing while on
maternity leave.
Dr. Neena Chaturvedi: Confident that issues with the medical board will
be resolved.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dr. Neena Chaturvedi, who is due to have her second child next month,
came to a voluntary agreement with the state board Sept. 27, when she
stopped seeing patients.
''The purpose was to use this time to ascertain (the) veracity of
unproven allegations and implement and document resolutions, if any, to
everyone's mutual satisfaction, so she may continue to provide
excellent care to her patients,'' her husband, Dr. Rahul Chaturvedi,
said in a written statement.
Neena Chaturvedi still has her medical license, but her agreement not
to practice while on maternity leave comes at a time when the Cape
already is suffering a dearth of primary care physicians.
''We're still several primary care physicians short of where we'd like
to be on the Cape,'' said David Reilly, spokesman for Cape Cod
Healthcare Inc., which includes Cape Cod Hospital.
Chaturvedi, an internist with Physician Medical Centers at 100
Independence Drive, is on the consulting staff at Cape Cod Hospital.
A copy of her voluntary agreement with the medical board shows she
faces 11 open complaints.
Russell Aims, spokesman for the Board of Registration in Medicine, said
he could not comment on the nature of the complaints.
But Rahul Chaturvedi, who owns Physician Medical Centers with his wife,
said some of the complaints emanated from Cape Cod Hospital itself.
In a press conference he called last evening, Rahul Chaturvedi said the
hospital's infectious disease consultant disagreed with Neena
Chaturvedi's aggressive treatment of a patient's Lyme disease with
long-term use of antibiotics, although some physicians consider that a
standard treatment protocol.
In another case, he said his wife was disciplined for lack of
responsiveness to a page by nursing staff, although it was determined
she was not on call that night.
''This is an emotionally scarring thing,'' Rahul Chaturvedi said. He
alleged the hospital's complaints came about after he talked about the
possibility of suing doctors at Cape Cod Hospital following the January
death of his father.
''We're the largest non-hospital facility on Cape Cod,'' Rahul
Chaturvedi said. The practice, he said, which includes three other
active physicians besides himself, is one of the largest MassHealth
providers in the county.
One of the worst aspects of the situation, the couple alleges, is
misinformation spread among area pharmacies about whether to honor
Neena Chaturvedi's prescriptions. They said patients can refill without
new prescriptions.
''The way it was handled and the way it created panic among people,
that was bothersome,'' said Neena Chaturvedi. She said she is confident
the issues with the medical board will be resolved and she'll be able
to return to work after a two- to three-month maternity leave.
Patient Patricia Yetman of West Yarmouth said she'll wait for her. ''I
love her,'' said Yetman, who was seeing one of Rahul Chaturvedi's
associates last evening. ''She's very careful, very thorough. She's the
kind that actually looks at you and listens to you.''
Reilly said he had no comment on the death of Rahul Chaturvedi's
father.
''We wouldn't comment about a specific patient case anyway,'' he said.
Other complaints filed with the medical board against Neena Chaturvedi
concern patient delays in getting medical records, according to the
couple.
After completing its investigation, the Board of Registration in
Medicine could take disciplinary action or close the complaints with no
action, Aims said. Disciplinary actions run the gamut from imposing a
fine to revoking a doctor's license.
According to her physician profile, which was pulled from the state
board's Web site after the voluntary agreement, Neena Chaturvedi went
to Maulana Azad Medical College in India and completed a residency
program at St. Vincent Hospital in Worcester. She is board certified by
the American Board of Internal Medicine.
Cynthia McCormick can be reached at cmccormick@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
.
- References:
- Another LLMD busted ...Cape doctor fighting 11 complaints to state
- From: Lymehelp
- Criminal Newsgroup Anonymous Internet Harasser "Chuck"
- From: magruder
- Another LLMD busted ...Cape doctor fighting 11 complaints to state
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