The Strange Death of Vincent Foster
A review
I wrote the following review in the wake of the late 1997 publication of The Strange Death of Vincent Foster, An Investigation by journalist Christopher Ruddy. I have since learned that the title was
drawn from a much earlier book of dubious credibility entitled The Strange Death of President Harding. I
initially posted the review on Amazon.com and gave the book three stars, the
only person out of 45, as of this date, who has done so. The review has been well received. All of the 18 people who have weighed in
mark the box denoting that the review was helpful, and on November 15 of this
year I received the following laudatory comment:
Some time ago I wrote a
book review on Amazon of Peter Janney's book Mary's
Mosaic. There are similarities between that case and this case that Mr. DC Dave
has opened up for us in his in-depth and mesmerizing analyzes, "Looking at
Washington corruption through a keyhole." When I read the review, I had a
strong sense of not looking through a keyhole, but rather being introduced to a
criminal investigation "with the double doors shot wide open on either
side." There are no beating around the bushes here! On the contrary, in
every line Mr. DC Dave cuts straight through to the core, lightens up as he
goes and ads information which, in his opinion, should
already have been in the book from the beginning. Why not write his own book about this subject? I welcome it, and so would
many others. -
Harald Jan
The review has held up better through time than has author RuddyÕs reputation as any sort of brave truth-teller. After having revealed so much about this
truly shocking criminal episode in the Bill ClintonÕs administration, Ruddy
seems now to have gone back on it all and joined the Bill and Hillary Clinton
political camp. It is the sort of
move that might have embarrassed even Benedict Arnold. I write about it in ÒDouble Agent Ruddy Reaching for Media Pinnacle.Ó For the very latest on the subject go to
the updated fbicover-up.com web site, particularly the page entitled ÒWho Is Christopher Ruddy?Ó
David Martin
November 20, 2015
On
July 20, 1993, Deputy White House Counsel Vincent W. Foster, Jr. was found dead
in Fort Marcy Park, Virginia. On January 27, 1994, Christopher Ruddy became the
first American journalist to write anything about the death that was both based
upon actual interviews of witnesses at the park and called into question the
official suicide ruling. Now he has reached another milestone. More than four
years after the death he has become the first person to have a serious,
critical book on the Foster death published by a "mainstream"
publisher, in this case The Free Press, a division of Simon and Schuster.
The
book, like his reporting on the case, first for the New York Post and later for the Pittsburgh
Tribune Review, is thick with facts that contradict the official version, a
version which we have, up to now, only been given by the initial Special
Prosecutor, Robert Fiske, in a sparse, double-spaced, 58-page report (We are
not counting the numerous journalists, most notably James Stewart in the Simon
and Schuster book, Blood Sport, who have also peddled the official
suicide-from-depression story.).
Here's
an outline of some of the most important evidence that Ruddy reveals to us:
The
Body
Foster
was laid out as though ready for a coffin with his legs straight and his arms
down by his side. He was neat and
tidy. None of the gore that one would expect when a person has blown his brains
out with a .38 caliber revolver was present. Only a trickle of blood was seen
oozing from the nose and the corner of the mouth. No samples of skull, brain
tissue, or hair were collected, or even reported seen, on the ground or
vegetation. There was no large pool of blood. There was no blowback on the
barrel of the gun, his hand, or the sleeve of his shirt. His teeth were not
chipped nor his mouth damaged from, as we were told, having held the pistol's
barrel deep in his mouth when he fired it.
None
of the witnesses in the park reported seeing the large exit wound at the crown
of the head that is in the autopsy report of Dr. James Beyer, a man with a
record of serious mistakes on autopsies resulting in suicide rulings when
murder was more likely. On his report, Dr. Beyer checked that he took X-rays
and an attending policeman wrote on his report that Dr. Beyer had told him that
the X-rays showed no bullet fragments in the head, yet Dr. Beyer later said,
and Fiske reported, that no X-rays were taken because the machine was not
working. Service records on the X-ray machine, however, belie the claim that it
was not working.
An
emergency worker at the park has testified to having seen a small wound on the
right side of the neck. Ruddy claims to have seen a photograph leaked to him
from Kenneth Starr's office that shows a similar neck wound. Recently, a
document was uncovered in the National Archives that indicates that medical
examiner Dr. James Haut also reported seeing a neck wound. A good part of the
Polaroid photographs taken of the scene have disappeared, and it has been
claimed that the 35-mm photos taken by the principal police photographer were
spoiled by under-exposure.
The
Gun
Neither
police nor FBI apparently ever showed the gun found in Foster's hand to immediate
family members for identification. The gun was an old 1913-vintage Colt made up
from parts of two or more guns. The preponderance of evidence suggests that it
was not Foster's gun.
The
earliest witness said there was no gun in the hand when he saw the body. The
next witness, a Park Policeman, also saw no gun, though he claims not to have
looked very closely. One of the earliest emergency workers to arrive has given
sworn expert testimony that the gun he saw was an automatic, not a revolver.
No
fingerprints from Foster were on the gun or the bullet shell casings.
Powder
markings on the webbing between thumb and forefinger of both hands indicate
either that Foster held the gun in an impossibly awkward position, someone
caused the markings to be there after the death, or Foster was trying to ward
off a shot by grabbing the gun by the front cylinder gap.
No
matching bullets to the two shells (one spent) in the gun were found anywhere.
The
supposed fatal bullet was never found.
The
police ruled suicide before ever testing the gun to see if it was functional
and had been fired. Originally, the Park Police gave erroneous information
about the testing of the gun.
The
Note
The
note that has been liberally interpreted as a suicide note was reportedly found
in a briefcase that had been emptied, searched, and inventoried in front of
several investigating officials.
Though
torn into 28 pieces, none of Foster's fingerprints were on it.
The
Capitol Hill policeman to whom it was unaccountably sent for authentication is
not a certified handwriting examiner, and he used only one document putatively
written by Foster for comparison.
A
serious effort was made to keep a photocopy of the note out of the hands of the
public.
A
trio of respected handwriting examiners, including the world's leading
authenticator of literary manuscripts from Oxford University in England, has
declared that the note is a forgery.
Senator
D'Amato's Whitewater Committee, seemingly forgetting about their subpoena
power, refused to look into the authenticity question because "the family
would not turn over the note."
One
could continue in this vein with equally strong sketches under "The
Spurious ÔDepression'," "The Car and the Keys," "Doctored
Statements and Intimidated Witnesses," "The Time of White House
Notification," and several other categories, but space is limited and we
would not want the reader to think that he now has no need to read the book.
The book is well worth its price if only for the truly splendidly rendered
morality play described in Chapter 9 (The chapters, unfortunately, are not
named; they are only numbered.). Ruddy seems to be the proverbial fly on the
wall as "the hero of the story," federal attorney Miguel Rodriguez makes what looks like a
serious attempt to get at the truth, grilling witnesses before the grand jury,
only to be undercut at every turn by his superiors, Mark Tuohey
and Kenneth Starr. Rodriguez eventually gives up and unceremoniously resigns.
Properly executed, this chapter by itself would make a very powerful movie.
The
first thing that has to come to anyone's mind as he reads these shocking
revelations is "Why haven't I heard any of this before? There is
information here that would have sold newspapers by the ton and kept people
glued to the TV screens. Whatever happened to the aggressive free press motivated, if not by a
love of truth, at least by profit, and where are the sleuths of
Watergate?" Ruddy has no answer. He doesn't even bother to ask the
question. What terrible secret, incriminating to so many, must lie behind the
Foster death? He also has no explanation as to why the supposed
"opposition" Republicans have rolled over
like trained seals. Again, he fails even to ask the question.
Instead,
with as powerful a case as he has, Ruddy gives up the moral high ground by
choosing to have his book touted on the dust cover by William Sessions, the man
who directed the FBI at the time of the Ruby Ridge and Waco outrages. The tone
of the endorsement, the first thing that most readers will see, is so timid and
defensive that it almost amounts to damning with faint praise: "Mr. Ruddy
has carefully avoided drawing undue inferences about the death. It is
legitimate to question the process employed by authorities to make their
conclusions."
Ruddy,
seeming not to recognize the strength of his hand, echoes Sessions' tone near
the book's end with a long, inadequate response to the patently spurious and
insincere arguments that he has heard against his pursuing the case "not
only from media colleagues, but from leading political and law enforcement
figures as well." Does he not realize that it is they, not he, who have
the answering to do?
Finally,
I am troubled by Ruddy's omission of a number of
crucial facts about the case. To cite the worst example, he does not tell us
that the witness, Patrick Knowlton, has filed suit for witness intimidation
against a number of individuals working for the FBI. Rather, there is only
mention in a chronology in an appendix that Knowlton "file(d)
suit in federal court alleging the government violated his civil rights."
From what we are told it sounds like no more than a trivial nuisance suit, but
it is far more than that. Now that Starr has closed the case the Knowlton suit
is the public's best chance of learning the truth, but Ruddy
would seem to prefer that we know virtually nothing about it.
The
other major pressure point is with the Congress, and the Republicans there,
particularly Chairman Dan Burton of the House Government
Oversight and Reform Committee, once a lonesome Congressional champion of truth
in the Foster case, completely escape censure by Ruddy. These omissions and
others, sad to say, are more than enough to make one question Ruddy's motives. Does he, the outsider who started out at
the Rupert Murdoch-owned New York tabloid and then fell to the tiny suburban
Pittsburgh newspaper owned by that notable funder of conservative causes,
Richard Mellon Scaife, want too badly to be accepted
by the cozy, thoroughly discredited club of "media colleagues" and
"leading political and law-enforcement figures?" Some things, he
should recognize, are more important than that.
David
Martin
March
1, 1998 (with links added Nov. 20, 2015)
The
reviewer is author of "America's Dreyfus Affair, the Case of
the Death of Vincent Foster." See also
"Fake Clinton
Critic Ruddy,"
"More Ruddy
Trickery,"
and "Cohen on
Ruddy."
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