17 June 2008

Whitehouse.Com's Sinclair Disclosure at NPC: New Time

Earlier today I posted that Whitehouse.Com, the group that paid Larry Sinclair $20,000 to take a two-part polygraph exam concerning his allegations about Barack Obama, had arranged a press conference to be held at the National Press Club at 5:00 pm, 18 June. Well, they've changed their start time to further attract people who attend Sinclair's event. If media interest is piqued, Whitehouse.com will help to sate it:
WASHINGTON, June 17, 2008: Whitehouse.com will hold a press conference regarding the Larry Sinclair controversy on June 18, 2008 in the Visagor Lounge of the National Press Club, 529 14th Street NW, Washington, DC 20045. Signup will start at 3:00 PM, and the actual conference will start at approximately 4:00 PM, following the conclusion of Mr. Sinclair's press conference, which is scheduled earlier in the day.
[. . . .]
During the press conference, Whitehouse.com will release the results of the polygraph examinations, the reports of the experts, and a video of Mr. Sinclair taken while the examinations were being administered.
This should be interesting. After reportedly failing both parts of the exam, Sinclair accused Whitehouse.Com of accepting a $75,000 bribe "to suppress and or alter the results of the polygraph examinations." Sinclair claimed to have heard of the bribe from someone via email, but, as with Mr. Sinclair's other claims, he's produced no credible evidence to support this allegation.

In other news: Head on over to The Mitch and Nan Show to discover what fresh silliness Montgomery Blair Sibley has enacted. He's written a motion (not an appeal) requesting that he continue as Sinclair's attorney although he's been suspended by the DC Bar. Moreover, he's written this motion to the wrong court: Judge Kennedy can't overrule the Bar with one sweep of a pen. I guess this means that Sibley hasn't heard back from the Supreme Court.

Question: What role will Sibley play at Sinclair's press conference?
Answer: Kilt-wearing jackass.

UPDATE: Apparently, Whitehouse.com's presser was a dud. Their equipment didn't work, so they made a brief statement--no Q & A--and left the building. If this report is true, their actions are unimpressive to say the least.

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