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Famed
Prosecutor/Author
Vows President Bush Will
Be Brought to Justice for Mass Murder
By Mark Anderson
The former Los AngelesCountydistrict
attorney who put Charles Manson and his followers behind bars for life
is not
finished with outgoing President George W. Bush. Indeed—rough
though the road
may be—Vincent Bugliosi sees the upcoming post-Bush period as
an even better
time to forge ahead to try Bush on murder allegations, on the basis of
Bush
getting America into the deadly Iraq war under false pretenses.
ARTICLE
FOLLOWS AFTER VIDEOS
PART ONE OF
INTERVIEW WITH BUGLIOSI
PART TWO OF
INTERVIEW WITH BUGLIOSI
Since
American Free Press broke
the story last summer that Bugliosi was to be the keynote speaker at an
Andover,Mass.
law conference on high-levelAmerican war crimes—as a prelude
to attending the
September conference to interview him—Bugliosi says he has
been fighting the
American media’s resistance to his effort to alert a sizable
portion of
Americans about the case against Bush. His book, The
Prosecution of GeorgeW.
Bush for Murder, has sold well, having made the NewYork
Times bestseller
list. But nothing seems to stick.
“We’re
looking for a few good prosecutors,”
Bugliosi said in a December interview, describing his quest to locate
some
local prosecutors, among 2,200 in the nation, with the fortitude to try
the
president. “I have to think that there is at least one out of
2,200.”
Since
no one among
the 50 attorneys
general in the states seems particularly interested in this matter
(yet), Bugliosi,
quoted Mark Twain: “Why is physical courage so common but
moral courage so
rare?” All setbacks considered, Bugliosi was happy to report
that an associate
raised enough money to send 2,200 copies of his Bush book, along with a
signed cover
letter, to those 2,200 local prosecutors at the county level (or
“parishes” in Louisiana).
Any such prosecutor
whose jurisdiction includes soldiers who died in Iraq
has jurisdiction, as Bugliosi
sees it. Since Vermont
has perhaps the highest
number of deaths in the current conflict as a percentage of its
population, Bugliosi
helped Charlotte Dennett in her unsuccessful effort to run as an
independent
last year for Vermont
state attorney general. She received just 6 percent of the vote in
November,
but she announced her candidacy only 90 days before the general
election.
Bugliosi’s
2008 book that explains the
case against Bush is his most recent in a string of major books that
started
with Helter Skelter, the blockbuster about the
Tate-LaBianca murders
that Manson inspired. The Bush book reveals how happy-go-lucky the
president has
behaved in what should be a highly somber time, with American soldiers
bearing
the brunt of the current conflicts and needlessly dying one-by-one in
an
ongoing occupation that resulted from what Bugliosi shows were false
reports of
Iraqi weapons of mass destruction, with bogus threats against the United States
itself. This propaganda, he contends, was designed to
“lie” Americans into an
imperial war that was never declared by Congress as the Constitution
requires.
According
to
Bugliosi, Bush also missed
about 1,000 days of in-the-White House work in his eight
years—during an Iraqi
occupation that, while helping drain the U.S.
economy to the breaking point,
has killed at least 90,000 Iraqi civilians and, officially, some 4,215
American
soldiers. Many soldiers died later from injuries and illnesses. Other
thousands
lost eyes, limbs and had their entire lives shattered. Meanwhile, Bush
spent
the equivalent of three years at his Crawford, Texas
ranch or at Camp
David,Maryland,
which is how Bugliosi defined the
president’s extensive time off.Bugliosi’s
central point is that Bush ought to be prosecuted on the basis of
“vicarious
liability,” the concept that a participant in a criminal
conspiracy (in this
case a war based on lies) still is guilty of any resulting murders even
if that
participant did not pull any triggers.Bugliosi
contends that sending American troops into harm’s way and
thereby bringing
about the troops’ deaths is murderous, since falsehoods were
foundational to
such events.This also applies to the innocent Iraqis who died at the
hands of
those troops.Ironically,
the same logic
was used to convict CharlesManson, who never set foot in the homes
where those
notorious California
murders occurred in 1969.For
Bugliosi,
even getting his Bush book published, including an audio version, was
hard
enough, due to the exceedingly narrow perspective of American
conventional media,
who have an unhealthy degree of reverence for government authority,
especially
the presidency.Bugliosi
told AFP he had
to go to the British Broadcasting Co. to record the audio version; and
in order
to raise money for a planned “big screen”
documentary, he had to seek Canadian
sources. Despite Bugliosi’s fame and legal
skills—he lost only one of the 106
felony cases he tried as a prosecutor, which included winning 21 out of
21
murder cases—the American media treat him like a virtual
nonentity for focusing
on America’s
imperial president.
Bugliosi
has long
lamented that neither
impeachment nor even a meaningful reprimand has found its way to Bush,
whose
only known “jolt” in eight years was a pair of
shoes recently thrown at him by
an Iraqi journalist over his disgust with Bush’s war
policies. As veteran
journalist William Norman Grigg noted in his Pro Libertate blog:
“. . .
(Muntadar) al-Zaidi found himself unable to abide the spectacle of Bush
stewing
in self-congratulation while (Iraqi official) Nouri al-Maliki and the
assembled
reporters dutifully played along with the charade, passively ratifying
the lies
that continue to sustain the world-historic crime that is the Iraq
war.”
Grigg
also noted:
“Unlike Bush . . .
(al-Zaidi) lives in Iraq.
He has to live with the consequences of Bush’s whimsical
little venture in mass
murder and social destruction.”
Mr.
al-Zaidi was reportedly beaten by guards,
suffered broken bones and may go to trial for throwing shoes that
missed the
president. It seems punishment is only for the powerless. Bombs are OK;
shoes
aren’t.Bugliosi
seems dedicated to
pursuing a president who he sees as a major conspirator in this
“world-historic”
crime. In 2009, the 40th anniversary of the Tate-LaBianca murders, will
anybody
with authority be the first to step forward and go after Bush?
Mark
Anderson is
the corresponding editor for American
Free Press and the host of Across the Nation.
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