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Every
time I
look at New York Gov. Elliot Spitzer I see "Wild Bill," the pervert
serial killer from Silence of the
Lambs. Now this guy
Jimmy Swaggert is added to my olio of Spitzer imagery.
I've received a number of
e-mails about Spitzer's current plight (getting caught), but this from
"dlttylr" wins.
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Do
you think Mrs. Spitzer Swallows?
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Not any more.
Good. As New York's Attorney General, Spitzer displayed
all of predecessor Rudy Giuliani's worst traits, and none of the
good.
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Spitzer
himself does
not deserve an ounce of sympathy for the public humiliation he is set
to endure, because he built his career on the public humiliation of
others.
Back in 2002, as a wave of corporate scandals rocked
Wall Street and the Securities and Exchange Commission was seen by some
as too slow to respond, Spitzer cleverly seized on an opportunity to
make his name. By broadly defining his role as New York's Attorney
General and using any angle he could, Spitzer aggressively prosecuted
corporate malfeasance, whether it was real or perceived.
THOSE WHO ARE TEMPTED
to see Spitzer's "appointment" with a $5,000 prostitute as a private
matter should remember Jack Grubman. The former star analyst at Salomon
Smith Barney was forced to accept a lifetime ban from the securities
industry as part of a as a larger $1.4 billion settlement Spitzer
reached to combat the problem of research analysts publicly touting the
stocks of companies that they were seeking investment banking business
from.
While there was plenty to criticize in Grubman's behavior,
over the course of the probe, he was publicly humiliated by the
exposure of sexually-explicit emails he exchanged with a female client
that were unearthed by Spitzer's office.
Spitzer's career as
prosecutor was not only characterized by overzealousness, but by a
sanctimonious attitude toward his enemies that helped mask his own
shady dealings, including the fact that his wealthy father bankrolled
his political career by questionable means. [Eliot
Rex by Philip Klein
]
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