Sheila Anthony Defends Her
Changed Foster Story
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Vince FosterÕs older sister, Sheila Foster
Anthony, has reacted with great indignation to Donald TrumpÕs suggestion that
there was something Òvery fishyÓ about the circumstances surrounding the death
and the ÒinvestigationÓ of the death of her brother, Deputy White House Counsel
Vincent W. Foster, Jr. She has done
so today (May 27, 2016) in a prominently displayed article in The Washington Post (WouldnÕt you
know?) Here is the nub of her
testimony on the subject:
Vince called me at my office in the
Justice Department a few days before he died. He told me he was battling
depression and knew he needed help. But he was worried that such an admission
would adversely affect his top-level security clearance and prevent him from
doing his job.
I told him I would try to find a
psychiatrist who could help him and protect his privacy. After a few phone
calls, I gave him three names. That list was found in his wallet with his body at
Fort Marcy Park in McLean. I did not see a suicide coming, yet when I was told
that Vince was dead I knew that he had killed himself. Never for a minute have
I doubted that was what happened.
As it happens, of all of the evidence
offered in support of the official and mainstream press suicide-from-depression
story, none is fishier than that served up by Sheila Anthony. One of the fishiest things about it is
that it is a completely changed story.
You did not have to be working in our
nationÕs capital as I was when Foster died to know that in the first few days
after his body was found in an obscure Civil War relic of a park across the
Potomac from Washington, DC, to know that no one around Foster could offer any
clue as to why he might have killed himself. These included Hillary Clinton, who knew
Foster very well, indeed, who said, ÒOf a thousand
people who might commit suicide, I would never pick Vince.Ó At the time she got
the news of FosterÕs death she was in Little Rock. The following is from the FBI interview
of her friend James ÒSkipÓ Rutherford:
RUTHERFORD had lunch at HILLARY CLINTONÕs
motherÕs residence. HILLARY CLINTON
was in complete disbelief and shock at the thought of FOSTER committing
suicide. HILLARY CLINTON told
RUTHERFORD that she could think of no indication or reason for the
suicide. HILLARY CLINTON and
RUTHERFORD were trying to determine a motive for FOSTERÕs suicide.
Hillary and Skip had lots of company at
the time, including the entire Foster family, and that certainly includes
Sheila and her husband, the former Arkansas congressman, Beryl Anthony. They were all at FosterÕs house in
Georgetown on that fateful July night in 1993 when the police investigators
arrived and asked questions. No one
present, according to the police, could offer any clue as to why Vince Foster
might have taken his own life.
But speaking of changed stories and fishiness,
this news was not reported by The
Washington Post at the time because, in spite of the fact that at least one
of its reporters, Walter Pincus, was at the house, The Post reported that Lisa FosterÕs
lawyer turned the police away. That
continued to be the ÒfactÓ of record for The
Post and the mainstream press for almost a year until U.S. Park Police investigators
testified before the Senate Banking Committee and described what happened at
the house, and subsequently released their long-suppressed report.
The Amazing Morphing Suicide Story
FosterÕs body was found on a Tuesday. For the rest of that first week the
story coming out of the White House and from all officialdom was in complete
accord with that FBI statement from Rutherford. But to see how things changed we pick up
the narrative from my ÒAmericaÕs
Dreyfus Affair: The Case of the Death of Vincent Foster:Ó
In
slow and awkward stages the story of the mysterious, motiveless suicide began
to change. The first attempt at changing the story amounted to something of a
false start. The little-read Washington
Times of Saturday, July 24, four days after Foster's death, carried an
inside article about depression in which [White House spokesperson Dee Dee] Myers was quoted as saying of Foster, "His family
says with certainty that he'd never been treated [for depression]." But on
the front page was a story based upon information from an anonymous
"source close to the Foster family" who said
that Foster was, indeed, experiencing emotional problems and had turned to
other family members for psychiatric recommendations. Among the family members
mentioned to the reporter was brother-in-law, former Arkansas Congressman Beryl
Anthony. The reporter had telephoned Anthony and asked him about the allegation
and Anthony had responded, "That's a bunch of crap. There's not a damn
thing to it," and angrily hung up the phone.
These
early, spontaneous reactions, as with Hillary in Little Rock and the Foster
family at their house on the night of the death, have the ring of authenticity.
* But the story slowly
changed. Here we pick up the
ÒDreyfus AffairÓ narrative:
The next significant contribution to the
theory that Foster was experiencing psychological problems came four days later
in The Washington Post Wednesday,
July 28, on page A8. The first sentence bears quoting in its entirety:
White House officials searching the
office of Vincent Foster, Jr. last week found a note indicating the 48 year-old
deputy White House counsel may have considered psychiatric help shortly before
he died July 20 in what investigators have concluded was a suicide, federal
officials said yesterday.
The full quote is important because two
days later, as part of a much longer article on the ongoing investigation, The Post said that the note had been found by the Park Police in FosterÕs automobile at
Fort Marcy Park, which was eventually in the report released by the Park Police
almost a year later. (The July 30 Post
article said, however, that the list contained the names of two psychiatrists,
both of whom were named and one of whom was interviewed. Neither had been
contacted by Foster. The problem here is that when the police report was
released, three names were on the list and the names were blacked out as though
to protect their confidentiality. The blackouts were missing in a version of
the police report released some time later, and the first name on the list, the
one not named in the Post article,
looked as though it had been written in a different hand.)
It is also interesting to observe that
mention of the list of psychiatrists does not turn up in police records until
July 27, though the police had all evidence from the car in hand the night of
the 20th.
The observation that investigators had
concluded the death was a suicide is also not correct, at least not in any
official sense. That conclusion was officially made by the
Park Police on August 10.
Please
note carefully that in todayÕs article, Sheila (or whoever wrote it for her to
sign) repeats the claim that she is the source of the list of psychiatrists,
but she says that the note Òwas found in
his wallet with his body.Ó
So The Post has now printed at least three
stories on where this very likely bogus list of psychiatrists was found, in
FosterÕs office, in FosterÕs car at Fort Marcy Park, or in FosterÕs wallet with
his body at the park. When it comes
to changed stories, Sheila has nothing on The
Post.
We said
that the whole story about this list of psychiatrists is probably bogus, and
for substantiation of that claim we turn to my article, ÒVince
FosterÕs Valuable Murder:Ó
That's the confusing state in which
our propagandists left matters until about a year later when ninety pages of
police documents were released to the public. There we find the number of
psychiatrists given as three and the place where the note was found was
Foster's car. This is curious on a number of counts. If the police found the
note in Foster's car, why is it not specifically listed among the things
reported found there? And if they were specifically searching for indications
that Foster might have been suicidal, why did they let more than a week pass
while the White House was saying that there were no indications of any sort of
motive for Foster's "suicide?" The names of the three psychiatrists,
like much else in the police report, were also blacked out, or "redacted,"
even though two of them had already been identified by The Washington Post. Might there have been some concern about the
handwriting?
Some time later, as part of the
Senate Banking Committee's investigation of the Foster death, the police report
was released again, and this time the blackout had been removed. Sure enough,
there is something odd about the handwriting. The first name on the list, the
one we see for the first time, Dr. Robert Hedaya, is
handwritten in block letters while the other two are written in cursive. No
indication has ever been given as to who might have done the writing.
Dr. Hedaya
is interesting because we learn from the Senate documents that he told
investigators that Sheila Anthony, Vince's sister, had called him on the Friday
before Foster's death on Tuesday, informing him that Vince would be calling him
to talk to him about his depressed state of mind. But we also learn from a
report by lead Park Police investigator, John Rolla, that the police had called
all three psychiatrists on July 22, two days after the death, and Rolla reports
routinely that all three psychiatrists said that Foster was not a patient of
theirs. Is it at all believable that Hedaya would
have made no mention of the Anthony call and, if he did, that it would have escaped
mention in Rolla's report? The best bet on this particular Rolla document is
that it is a backdated forgery. Not only is it inconsistent in content with Dr.
Hedaya's statement, but it is also inconsistent in
its timing with other revelations about this note. Furthermore, to this
admittedly untrained eye, the "John Rolla" signature at the bottom
looks nothing like his signature on other documents.
Smell the Fish at The Post
At this point if nothing smells
fishy to you, I think you have a serious olfactory problem. I see a lot of people getting leaned on
to make their stories accord with the slowly developed
Òsuicide-from-depressionÓ one. But
when a story is being concocted, itÕs hard to maintain consistency among the
various parties. In Special
Prosecutor Robert FiskeÕs report, Sheila reportedly talked to one of the
psychiatrists who had been recommended by a friend. She doesnÕt say which psychiatrist or
who the friend was. Hedaya, as a native of Iran, might have made a good
candidate for pressure with a possible threat of deportation. Who knows how Sheila got leaned on, but
after she got on board with the depression story, she told an FBI interviewer
that her brother had lost lots of weight, when in fact he weighed 194 pounds at
a physical exam he took on December 31, 1992, and his body weighed 197 pounds
after drying out for a few hours in the heat of July 20, 1993.
The Washington Post is
absolutely the last organization to have any standing when it comes to
discovering the truth in the Foster death case. From the very first day they have sold
the suicide thesis as hard as Rush Limbaugh sells the product or service of one
of his advertisers. In fact, it was
their bizarre reporting and their apparent total lack of curiosity and
skepticism that originally aroused my suspicion. Why were they so quick to call it an
Òapparent suicideÓ when there was really nothing apparent about it? I had lived and worked in the area for
about a decade by that time and I had never noticed Fort Marcy Park, even
though I had driven by its entrance a number of times off the George Washington
Parkway as one heads north. How
would this person who had newly arrived from Arkansas even know about this
park, I wondered, and why would he take off from work in the middle of the day,
walk to a far corner of the park, and shoot himself there? It didnÕt make any sense, but The Post clearly wanted us to swallow it
all right down.
The outright suppression of
important news has been a vital part of The
PostÕs suicide selling job. Nowhere
has their news blackout been more important than their failure to report the full contents of Kenneth
StarrÕs report on FosterÕs death.
In Part 3 of
ÒAmericaÕs Dreyfus Affair,Ó I called it ÒThe Great Suppression of Ô97.Ó Even
today, The Post leaves out that
important appendix from the Starr Report posted on
its web site. They can get by with
repeating their ÒFoster suicideÓ mantra only by depriving their readers of the
letter submitted by the lawyer for the dissident witness in the case, Patrick
Knowlton. That letter, ordered by
the three judges who appointed Starr to be appended over StarrÕs strenuous
objections, completely destroys the suicide thesis. One important way it does
so is by destroying the story that Vince Foster drove to Fort Marcy Park. Knowlton, in spite of what his FBI
interviewers reported, is adamant that the car he saw in the Fort Marcy parking
lot was not FosterÕs. Furthermore,
his description of the reddish brown Honda that he saw is in accord with the
recollections of other witnesses.
KnowltonÕs testimony also rules out the possibility that that list of
psychiatrists could have been found in ÒFosterÕs carÓ at the park.
Before that The Post had blacked out the news of the lawsuit that Knowlton had
begun, announced in a news conference, against several members of the FBI for
the harassment he had
suffered as a grand jury witness.
When reporter Christopher Ruddy had held his news conference at the
Willard Hotel with three handwriting experts declaring that the torn-up note
found in FosterÕs briefcase and touted as a sort of suicide note was a forgery,
The Post blacked out that news, as
well.
Finally, in todayÕs Washington Post op-ed piece today
attributed to Anthony, the writer wails lugubriously about the pain inflicted
upon the Foster family by suicide skeptics like me. For those who canÕt see on its face how
preposterous such a claim is, some time ago I penned this poem:
Solicitude
DonÕt
you think that the family has suffered enough?
Why
must you stir up this mess?
He
wasnÕt constructed of very strong stuff;
He
couldnÕt put up with the press.
He
must not have been what he seemed to be.
He
could not have been very stable.
That
he might have been killed for his honesty
Is
just a romantic fable.
WeÕll
fight for his right to be off in the head.
What
do you mean we offend you?
If
you should turn up mysteriously dead,
This
is how we would defend you.
con brio
If
you should turn up mysteriously dead,
This is how we would defend you.
* Interestingly, the now out-of-the-closet fake critic of the
Clintons, Christopher Ruddy, in his book The
Strange Death of Vincent Foster, describes the Anthonys
as the primary supporters of the suicide-from-depression thesis. He completely omits any mention of the
crucial Anthony flip-flop, which is probably a good indication of how important
it is. I know that he had read my
ÒAmericaÕs Dreyfus Affair, Part 1Ó because I gave him a copy by hand and he
later told me in person that he had read it. Richard L. Franklin, in his strong
article, Ò101 Peculiarities Surrounding the Death
of Vincent Foster,Ó in Sam SmithÕs Progressive
Review did notice it, at a stroke demonstrating greater credibility than
Ruddy and giving the lie to the charge repeated ad nauseam in the press that only extreme right-wingers are
skeptical of the official story of FosterÕs death.
David
Martin
May
27, 2016
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