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To the Defense
The Smollett trial is happening in Hillary Rodham Clinton’s hometown where the Kenyan-Indonesian-Hawaiian Barack Obama was re-designed as a minority black activist. It gets worse. The legal defense team for Smollett is BreenPugh, headed by Todd Pugh (pronounced “phew”) and the venerable Thomas Breen, a former DA in the Chicago region. Attorney Pugh, a graduate of Florida Atlantic University (hear alarms bells ringing?) in Boca Raton, FL, and his first job was under the public defender’s office in Palm Beach and Broward Counties, DWS turf inherited from Meyer Lansky. (Read my Florida school shooting articles for the skivvy.) After relocating to Chicago, one of Pugh’s first cases was in pro bono defense in a retrial for Rolando Cruz on charges of raping and murdering a 10-year-old girl.
One of Pugh’s most recent cases was in defense of George Papadopoulos, the Russiagate suspect deeply involved in the Israeli oil-pipeline project in the Eastern Mediterranean and energy adviser to the neocon Hudson foundation. (my Russiagate series goes into his relationships with the MI-6 and his Rothschild-funded European socialist handlers.) So with a defense line-up with those connections, why does the court need a prosecution?
While the courtroom drama is happening in the Midwest, the defense strategy for Jussie Smollett is being crafted by a celebrity lawyer with the Los Angeles Bar Association named Mark Geragos (who is Armenian not Mexican). A contemporary of high-power American lawyer Robert Kardashian, Geragos shot to national prominence through his representation of Susan McDougal, who was a partner with the Clintons in the Whitewater real estate scam along with her banker husband James. His out-of-court tactics cut short her prison sentence with a presidential pardon from Bill Clinton in the last hours of his White House term in 2001. Geragos was basically the trusted family counsel for the Clintons, winning also the release of the president’s roguish brother Roger from a DUI charge.
Geragos represented Michael Jackson against child-molestation charges and Palos Verdes millionaire Cameron Brown who tossed his 4-year-old daughter off a seaside cliff. One of his more gruesome cases was in defense of a low-life yakuza “businessman” for the gunshot murder of his wife (his second lover lethally assailed), possibly linked to a larger sex-crime syndicate.
The celebrated lawyer also served as counsel for the Carradine family during the probe into the death of actor David Carradine in Bangkok, covered up by the media as an auto-erotic asphyxiation hanging. Note: I visited the hotel where the body was found hanged in a closet, with a rope tautly stretched between his neck and penis. The bellhops challenged that storyline, saying that the ladyboy who allegedly assisted the ropework was never present on site. The star of that legendary TV series “Kung Fu” had just arrived in Bangkok to meet artist-director Charles de Meaux for his role in the movie “Stretch” (as in rope, the sick joy in self-lynching for pleasure). According to bouncers in the Patpong nightlife district, two tall white men had been present on the evening of his death at that sin city’s only S&M club, which suggested his corpse was transported to the hotel room inside a large piece of luggage and then trussed up to appear as an unintended suicide. None of these details were ever released to the news media by the FBI unit posted at the US Embassy or the LA police, or by the Geragos law office. Two Thai coroners in Bangkok separately concluded Carradine’s death was not a suicide but an “accident”.
Geragos has been a frequent guest on the CNN show Anderson Cooper 360. He has also represented singer Chris Brown against Rihanna’s charges of assault. His most recent high-profile case was for former quarterback Colin Kaepernick against the NFL. His law firm’s fees are a minimum $500 per hour, plus a hefty share of any settlement.
Bucking the Law…