Category Archives: State government offenses

FOI reques to the U of A Athletic Dept. re: broadcasting sports in Spanish


Joe McCutchen

2916
Heather Oaks Way

Fort Smith, AR 72908

(479)
646-8261

joeusa@cox.net

December 5, 2007

 

Matt Shanklin

University of Arkansas

Broyles Athletic Center

PO 7777

Fayetteville, AR 72702

 

Re:       FOI request
concerning broadcasting in Spanish – via hard copy and email at shanklin@uark.edu

 

Dear Mr. Shanklin:

 

I hereby request the
following documents pursuant to the Arkansas Freedom of Information Act.   Please include documents in any format
including but not limited to faxes, emails, computer files, or other forms of
written communication.

 

1)         Copies
of any documentation showing the source and amount of money spent to create or
operate a Hispanic radio network, or television programming, or other Spanish
language media for Razorback football, baseball, basketball, or other sports.

 

2)         Copies
of any documents which would show what markets and media are being used to
broadcast radio or television programming of Spanish language Razorback sports
events.

 

This is my firm promise to pay the costs of
reproduction, but if the cost is expected to exceed $50, please call me first
at 479-646-8261.

 

 

Kindest regards,

 

 

 

 

 

Joe McCutchen

 

Gov. Beebe: “Let Feds Handle Immigration”….as Arkansas sinks

Dateline Fort Smith, Ark. 
November 3, 2007

Fort Smith Times Record Article  “Radio call-in show”

Headline:  Beebe:
Let Feds handle Immigration.

 

The following will provide quotes from Gov. Beebe and my
response to the Governor’s obfuscations and lies.

1.      
Beebe, “Arkansas lacks the resources to “do the
federal government’s job” in enforcing immigration laws.

2.      
Joe, “Arkansas presently has over $1 billion in
surplus funds. Beebe states it’s the Feds job. See USC8 1324a & c. below”  see arkansasfreedom.net
for details

3.      
Beebe, “As the governor, I can tell you I don’t
have the resources (is it I or we, governor?), and I’m not going to raise your
taxes to get the resources to do the job”.

4.      
Joe, “Resources addressed above.  Governor, am I to understand, and you are
correct, that the Feds refuse to implement Article 4, Section 4 of the
Constitution, and you are taking the erroneous position that as Governor you
aren’t going to deter the illegal invasion; therefore we citizens are to sit
idly by and allow our sovereignty, heritage, culture, the rule of law,
language, and standard of living be destroyed by illegal 3rd world
Mexican hordes?

5.      
Beebe, “Early this year, Beebe asked Ark. State
Police Director Col. Winford Phillips to inquire about sending state trooper to
an ICE training course.

6.      
Joe, “Trooper Phillips’ claim to fame was his
long-term bodyguard function of Ark. Razorback coach Houston Nutt, and has no expertise
in these areas. Phillips’ enquiries are a further postponement of dealing with
the crisis.”

7.      
Beebe, “I have to tell you our law enforcement
agencies are pretty taxed”.  â€œI view as
an inordinate amount of violent crime that we keep seeing reported and talked
about in the media”.

8.      
Joe, “Arkansas State Police running up &
down the major thoroughfares “clicking & ticketing” for failures to use
seat belts.  Violent crime Governor?  Who’s committing these crimes?  31% of inmates in our penitentiaries are
illegals.  In Ft. Smith there is MS-13
and Los Zetas activity. Governor, what are your sworn constitutional duties?”

9.      
Beebe, responding to one caller who was critical
of the newly formed Friendship Coalition, an association of civic, business,
and church leaders, that opposes punitive state or municipal legislation
targeting immigrants (don’t you mean illegal aliens?)  Beebe, “There’s some really good people on
that Coalition”.  Beebe said, “the
coalition is correct in maintaining enforcement of immigration laws is
primarily the federal government’s responsibility.”

10.  
Joe,  “let’s
examine briefly the Arkansas Friendship Coalition and its members.  To name a few, Archie Schaffer (Tyson’s)
relative of Sen. Dale Bumpers who was instrumental in giving away the Panama
Canal.  Warren Stephens (Stephens, Inc.),
Rita Sklar (ACLU), Rabbi Gene Levy (Reform Jewish leader), Skip Rutherford
(Clinton School), Alan Leveritt (Ark. Times & El Latino newspapers), and
Steve Copely (N. Little Rock Methodist Minister & Coalition Chair), Randy
Wilbourn (Alltel), and a host of preachers. 
These individuals are actively promoting and are violating U. S. laws.  Where is the Friendship in this
coalition?  These are all open-border,
cheap labor globalists who have no other concern than PROFIT & EXPLOITATION
OF 3RD WORLDERS AND MIDDLECLASS TAXPAYING CITIZENS BEARING THE
BURDEN.   Chairman Copely states “we are
a nation of immigrants”….prepare yourself with the facts preacher, we are a
nation WITH immigrants.  He continues on
by speaking of immigrants, Copely there is a huge difference between immigrants
and illegal alien invaders.  He further
states “all Arkansas residents deserve dignity and protection of their rights”.  Copely, illegal aliens have no “rights”. This
group represents the most arrogant frontal assault on American citizens, which
can only end in the destruction of our society if not terminated.   Religious orders are involved in this crime
scheme up to their collective noses, most particularly the Catholic
Church.  Methodists, Presbyterians, and Episcopal
are nothing more than cheer leaders.

 

Beebe says routinely that “legal is legal, illegal is
illegal, and we must determine what is legal & illegal”.  Translation—I feel strongly both ways.  Our Governor is a Democrat, meaning
open-borders, cheap labor, amnesty, and votes. 
He is bought and paid for by the Tyson’s, Wal-Mart, Alltel, Stephens,
etc. He has endorsed Hillary Clinton for president and you know she is for
giving driver’s licenses to illegals.

 

The state is routinely paying for illegal alien women’s
prenatal care, prescription drugs, transportation, translations, social
services, ad infinitum—most services not available to Ark. Citizens.  We are now running, and the numbers are
escalating, and now are now averaging 6,000 monthly not counting the anchor
babies they produce.

 

I am suggesting Beebe call a special session and do away
with Huckabee’s and the 2005 legislature’s attack on taxpayers by taking their
money by force for redistribution to illegal criminals prenatal care,
intensifying and enlarging the illegal magnet. 
Particularly now since Oklahoma has passed a terrific immigration law,
Tennessee has made cuts to illegals, and Missouri is crafting an illegal alien
law which makes Arkansas the sugar spot.  
Cancelling this horrific law immediately would put tens of millions more
in the coffers for enforcement.

 

Beebe has been faxed the laws governing illegal
immigration on multiple occasions and it has been suggested that he work with
Gov. Blunt (MO) in this regard—no response.

 

Beebe has sold his soul to Arkansas’ corporate giants and
unless our citizens rally soon the Founder’s great dream is setting in the
sunset.

 

What the churches, the Tyson’s, Alltel, Stephens, ACLU,
etc. are advocating is Sedition.  Where
are the federal prosecutors?

Just a reminder:  These laws have been sent to officials all over our state and elsewhere…they pretend these don’t exist & refuse to enforce–why?  We know, don’t we?

Federal Law

8 USC Sec 1325 – Illegal Entry

Any
alien who enters U.S. other than at  A
port of entry by false or misleading representation shall be subject to civil
and criminal penalties can be fined and imprisoned

Section 1324a Hiring
– Harboring – Transporting any illegal alien

Any
person who knowingly hires/harbors/ transports any illegal alien is guilty of a
felony
punishable by 10
years jail + $2,000 fine per illegal alien + forfeiture of vehicle or property
used to
commit the
crime.

Section
1324c Law officers have authority to make arrests…

All
officers whose duty it is to enforce criminal laws shall have authority to make
arrests for
violation of
any provision of this section (affirmed US vs. Perez-Gonzalez 2002 Fed App
0360, 6th Circ.) Section 1324a Hiring – Harboring – Transporting any illegal
alien.

Section
1644

No
local ordinance, rule, or measure shall stop law enforcement officers from
enforcement of this
section   (affirmed Southern District Court of NY, US
vs. Rudy Giuliani, 1996.

NOTE: all immigration violations are criminal – not civil offenses.

 

 

Huckabee:Plane Ride No Conflict of Interest???

Huckabee: Plane
Ride No Conflict Of Interest

June 16, 2006

ARKANSAS NEWS BUREAU

LITTLE ROCK — Gov. Mike Huckabee’s use of a plane provided
by a provider that has an $8.5 million contract with the state was
an in-kind contribution to  Huckabee’s political action comittee, the
governor’s office said Thursday.

 

There was no conflict of interest
in Hucka­bee’s use of the plane provided by the director of the Lord’s Ranch
youth camp for a flight to Ra­leigh, N.C., to a state Republican convention
this month, Huckabee spokesman Alice Stewart said.

“Arrangements were made
through the Hope America PAC,” she said.

The
weekly
Arkansas
Times of Little Rock reported Thursday that the plane the governor, first lady
Janet Huckabee, their daughter, Sarah, a Huckabee aide and at least one state
police security officer flew to Raleigh in on June 2 was owned by Southeastern
Asset management, a New Hamp­shire corporation managed by Ted Suhl, director of
the Lord’s Ranch, a religious-based youth home in Warm Springs.

The
flight gained atten­tion when Huckabee said the plane developed engine trouble
and had to make an emergency landing in Chattanooga, Tenn.

Julie
Munsell, spokes­woman for the state Depart­ment of Health and Human Services,
said the facil­ity has a state contract paid through Medicaid of about
$8.5
million this fiscal year—up from under $140,000 in 2000.

Stewart
said Thursday that Suhl is “one of numer­ous plane owners who have offered
to provide trans­portation to various candi­dates.”

She
said the flight was listed as an in-kind contribution, but that the exact cost
of the” flight was not known.

The
type of plane used, by Huckabee, a Citation SII; costs up to SI,900 an hour!

Huckabee
told The Associ­ated Press on Thursday that he was “very careful with my
own personal things not to mix that” when asked if the contribution posed
a conflict, of interest.

According
to the Bureau of Legislative Research, Huckabee spent the $500,000 on 22
things, the most being $100,000 for a group called Play It Again Ar­kansas
“to purchase [musical] instruments and provide opera­tional funding.”
Huckabee has been supportive of that group, which distributes used musical
instruments to children.

Among
other things, he gave $10,000 to the Hot Springs Doc­umentary Film Institute to
buy a car; $97,000 to the Game and Fish Commission’s “Hooked on Fishing,
Not Drugs” program: 10,000 to the city
of Little Rock to
help in “the development of ‘he Mexican
Consulate” office; 5,000 for the Arkansas chapter
»f
the American Red Cross to help “prepare young people to deal with disaster
situations.” Huckabee’s wife, Janet, works for the Red Cross.

Sen. Percy Malone, D-Arkadelphia, made the request
at the Joint Budget Committee for a list of everything Huckabee has used the
emergency fund for.

“I want to make sure it’s not a fund the
governor has to use however they want,” Malone said. “If that’s what
we’re going



 

 

 

 

 

What Huckabee’s illegals are doing to schools

Poverty, influx of
Hispanics
called
hurdles for schools



June 28, 2006

BY HEATHER WECSLER

ARKANSAS DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE

The growing percentage of low-income students and other
population shifts in Arkansas’ public
schools present a challenge
to education leaders in meeting the state’s
educational goals, ac­cording to a Southern Regional Education Board report

The board,
which concluded its
annual two-day meeting Tuesday, released a report on Arkansas’ prog­-
ress in meeting such educational goals as availability of early child­ hood programs and compliance
with the federal No Child Left Be­hind Act of 200L Most of the data, such as the state’s results on the
Na­-
tional Assessment of Educational Progress, have been issued before. But the report also tracks demo­
graphic changes in the state.

According to the report, the
percentage of the state’s students
who are low-income
— defined as
students
who qualify for the Na-
tional School Lunch Program—has
climbed from 39 percent of Arkan­-
sas students in 1990 to 56 percent
in
2004. In that year, 251,000 students
were approved for the school lunch
program  in Arkansas

Ken James, the state
education
commissioner and a member of the
board who attended the meet­
ing,
said the state is already trying
to
address the number of students
living in poverty by supporting
pre-kindergarten programs and funneling
state funds toward dis­
tricts with high percentages of low-income
students.

“We’re doing our best to level
the playing field for those stu­-
dents who are coming to us with
poverty and other contributing
factors,” James said. “That’s go­
ing to pay dividends, and I think
already is when you look at our
fourth-grade Benchmark scores
for the last few years.”       

  Based
on the current popula- tion of first-graders, the report also predicts that over the next 12 years
the proportion of Hispanic graduating high school seniors in the state will grow from 5 percent



To 27
percent
The report projects that
the percentage of white and black seniors will
drop. The over­
all student
population is expected
to slightly decrease from about 452,000 students in 2006 to about 447,000
in 2012.

Such trends will make improv­ing student test scores and gradu­ation rates tougher for Arkansas, the
board said. The board —
a nonprofit nonpartisan organiza­tion based in Atlanta — advises state
educators and policy-mak­ers on how to
improve education. Its 16 member states extend from
Texas in the
southwest to Dela­ware in the northeast.

Benny Gooden, the superin­tendent of
the 13,400-student Fort
Smith School
District, said in 20
years he has seen the Hispanic population of his
school system grow from less than one-half
of 1
percent to about 21 percent.

He said those students fre­quently
arrive on campus without
good language skills.

“They also typically don’t have good preschool experienc­es to
prepare them for school,” Gooden said.

The report says
Hispanic eighth-
graders in Arkansas
who scored at
or above basic level in
math on the
National Assessment of
Education­
al Progress trailed white
students
by 19 percentage points in
2005.
Black eighth-graders trailed
their
white counterparts by 45
percent­age points in 2005. But the report
also says in Arkansas, the
high school graduation rates for black students
and Hispanic males ex­ceed the national
average. And the
state’s overall
graduation rate of 77
percent exceeds
the national aver­age in 2003 of 74 percent

Sea Jim Argue, D-Little Rock, who
also attended the Southern Regional
Education Board meet­
ing, said he
believes Arkansas has
taken
important steps in address­
ing its
demographic challenges.

“Our future is something we can change,” he said. “But it
re­quires choices for school improve­ment to be made today.”

Huckabee crushes hard drives (including his use of State plane) & Guts emergency fund


div>

 

 

 

 (NOTE: INCLUDED IN THE CRUSHED HARD
DRIVES WERE ALL THE RECORDS OF HUCKABEE’S USE/ABUSE OF THE STATE POLICE KING
AIRPLANE)

 

Huckabee
left computers, fund gutted

BY SETH BLOMELEY AND MICHAEL R.
WICKLINE

Posted on Friday, January 19, 2007

URL:
Former Gov. Mike Huckabee depleted
the governor’s office emergency fund in the final weeks of his administration
in part to pay for the destruction of computer hard drives in his office.

That left Gov. Mike Beebe, who
replaced Huckabee on Jan. 9, with no emergency funds for the last half of
fiscal 2007.

Documents that the Arkansas
Democrat-Gazette obtained under the Freedom of Information Act, describe the destruction
of the computer drives, as ordered by Huckabee’s office, and Huckabee
complaining strongly about his cell phone and Blackberry not working.

A memo dated Jan. 9 from a state
Department of Information Systems official to Huckabee told of the “disposition
of data maintained” by the department “for the office of the governor” during
Huckabee’s tenure.

“All drives have been subsequently
crushed under the supervision of a designee of your office,” wrote Gary
Underwood, the agency’s chief technology officer and a former Huckabee staff
member.

Beebe has asked the Legislature to
replenish the $ 500, 000 emergency fund, but a legislative committee has so far
rejected his request.

On Jan. 3, the Department of
Information Systems requested $ 25, 000 from the governor’s office “for the
closeout of information systems for the office of the governor.”

Huckabee on Jan. 5 sent the
department the last $ 13, 000 in the emergency fund, leaving an outstanding
balance of $ 12, 000. The $ 13, 000 would be used to help pay for crushing the
hard drives.

Department of Information Systems
Director Claire Bailey said hard drives for 83 computers and four servers were
destroyed, or “crushed,” after information was downloaded onto backup tapes.
Underwood supervised it and delivered the backup tapes to Huckabee Chief of
Staff Brenda Turner, who had ordered the hard drives crushed, Bailey said.

She said the computers were located
in the state Capitol; the state’s Washington, D. C., office; the state police
airport hangar; the Governor’s Mansion; and the Arkansas State Police drug
office.

In 2003, Huckabee announced that
after he left office, his official gubernatorial papers would be stored at his
alma mater, Ouachita Baptist University, a private institution in Arkadelphia.
He said at the time that the college would decide which documents would be
released to the public.

A Nov. 20, 2006, e-mail from
Huckabee’s director of media operations, Kerry Rodnick, to Turner asked, “Is
there someone at OBU that could tell me how they’d like to receive our digital
files ?”

With the emergency fund empty just
before he took office, Beebe asked the Joint Budget Committee to put another $
500, 000 in it. On Thursday, the committee rejected Beebe’s request.

An alternate resolution for $ 250,
000 to meet Beebe’s request halfway also failed.

Lawmakers said they wanted to know
why Huckabee had spent it all and where it went.

Beebe said he’s not sure what to
make of the committee’s rejection of his request.

“I don’t know what’s going on,” Beebe
said. “I hope that it’s not an inside political issue at the expense of taking
care of emergencies and taking care of our people. The emergency fund is there
for a reason. We just had seven counties declared disaster areas. We may have
more. We’re coming into tornado season. That fund they usually try to keep, if
at all possible, at $ 500, 000 at all times so that money is there for counties
and cities and people if there is a disaster. I don’t know what they’re doing,
but I’m going to have a visit with a few legislators and I’ll find out.”

Beebe said he didn’t know whether it
was normal for the governor’s office computer hard drives to be destroyed.

“It certainly removes any
opportunity to have any information,” he said.

Beebe has just finished a four-year
term as attorney general. He said he knows of no hard drives being destroyed
there in advance of his successor, Attorney General Dustin McDaniel, taking
office.

“Certainly [there were ] no orders
for that by me,” Beebe said.

He said he did tell his attorney
general staff to delete e-mails and other files from office computers in
preparation for the new staff in McDaniel’s office.

Asked whether “crushing” hard drives
should be considered a criminal offense of destroying state property, Beebe
said he didn’t know.

Bailey said the Department of
Information Systems arranged to handle computers during the transition in
administration in the governor’s and lieutenant governor’s offices, but not the
attorney general’s or treasurer’s offices, which are the other constitutional
offices that changed hands in January as a result of the November election.

She said the Department of
Information Systems didn’t crush hard drives in the lieutenant governor’s
office.

“Some of our customers do crush and
/ or overwrite their hard drives themselves, and some of our customers ask for
our assistance,” she said. “We, as an agency, always overwrite or physically
crush our internal hard drives depending on the sensitivity of the data.”

A Huckabee spokesman didn’t return a
message Thursday, and Huckabee didn’t respond to an e-mail seeking his response
to questions about the computers and his use of the emergency fund.

Beebe said he wasn’t aware until
recently that Huckabee had used the last of the emergency fund to pay costs
associated with the governor’s office file purge.

Beebe spokesman Matt De-Cample said
Beebe’s office now has 22 “updated” computers with new hard drives, 27 new
desk-top computers, and 22 new laptops. He said the computers and other
equipment were purchased with money from the governor’s office operational
fund.

“We are operational,” he said. “We
are not lacking in computers right now. We couldn’t run the office without
computers, and we couldn’t make the request [to the Legislature for the
computers ] until we were in office.”

He said that forced Beebe to dip
into the operational fund for $ 335, 000 to buy the computers.

Bailey said the computers would
likely have been replaced even if the hard drives weren’t crushed. She said that
her department had replaced the computers at the governor’s office the day
before Beebe took office and Beebe had to reimburse the department.

HUCKABEE EXPENSES According to the
Bureau of Legislative Research, Huckabee spent the $ 500, 000 on 22 things, the
most being $ 100, 000 for a group called Play It Again Arkansas “to purchase
[musical ] instruments and provide operational funding.” Huckabee has been
supportive of that group, which distributes used musical instruments to
children. Among other things, he gave $ 10, 000 to the Hot Springs Documentary
Film Institute to buy a car; $ 97, 000 to the Game and Fish Commission’s
“Hooked on Fishing, Not Drugs” program; $ 10, 000 to the city of Little Rock to
help in “the development of the Mexican Consulate” office; $ 15, 000 for the
Arkansas chapter of the American Red Cross to help “prepare young people to
deal with disaster situations.” Huckabee’s wife, Janet, works for the Red
Cross.

Sen. Percy Malone, D-Arkadelphia,
made the request at the Joint Budget Committee for a list of everything
Huckabee has used the emergency fund for.

“I want to make sure it’s not a fund
the governor has to use however they want,” Malone said. “If that’s what we’re
going to do, we don’t need to call it an emergency fund.”

Kim Arnall, assistant director of
the Bureau of Legislative Research, said the fund has traditionally been used
by governors for “emergency type situations or maybe not emergency type
situations.”

Arnall said the governor has another
fund at his disposal, the Governor’s Disaster Fund, which amounts to $ 9. 5
million each year for things such aid during natural catastrophes.

Beebe’s request to replace the $
500, 000 failed with 22 votes in favor, seven votes short of the 29 needed to
pass. The alternate motion for $ 250, 000 failed with 25 votes.

Sen. Jim Argue, D-Little Rock, said
he voted against the $ 250, 000 in hopes that his colleagues later would
approve the $ 500, 000.

Rep. Bruce Maloch, D-Magnolia,
offered the motion to give Beebe half of what he requested. He said later that
it was not legislators’ attempt to send a “message” to Beebe as some at the
Capitol thought.

He said he and other legislators
thought that the emergency fund being depleted “really isn’t our problem.” But
he said he also thought that it “isn’t Gov. Beebe’s fault either.” He said he
wanted to “be fair” to Beebe, but he and other legislators want more
information about the fund. He said Beebe may end up getting the entire $ 500,
000.

Richard Weiss, director of the state
Department of Finance and Administration, said the emergency fund is typically
replenished during changes of administrations.

Rep. Rick Saunders, D-Hot Springs,
wondered in the committee whether Beebe wanted more emergency money to buy
lighting for news conferences in the governor’s conference room. He noted that
he had read in the Democrat-Gazette that Huckabee’s staff removed lighting
which wasn’t state property.

A Dec. 28 e-mail from Rodnick,
Huckabee’s director of media operations, to Huckabee chief of staff Turner
detailed some last-minute sorting out of state property and private property.

“Gary Underwood and I met this
morning and went through all equipment and communications related material to
determine what belongs to the state and what did not,” Rodnick wrote. “We were
able to define what was his, mine and the Republican Party’s.”

Rodnick noted that the
conference-room podium was bought with party funds but “retrofitted with state
money.” He wrote that one option would be deconstructing the podium to give the
proper parts to the state and the party.

“The concern comes when the new
administration comes in and notices the podium gone and the guts on the floor,”
he wrote. “I feel it would be better to avoid potentially negative press by
leaving the podium asis.”

Clint Reed, executive director of
the state GOP, said he had no knowledge of the party buying items for the
governor’s office.

As for the Department of Information
Systems billing, Beebe said, “What I do know is apparently DIS never charged
the governor’s office what they were supposed to over the last several years
for the governor’s office proportional share of [information technology ]
services.”

He noted that the state continues to
have “big problems” with the way the Department of Information Systems has
billed state agencies for computer services.

Last fall, Huckabee recommended that
the state set aside $ 37 million of the expected $ 843 million state surplus to
pay the federal government in case the state loses a lawsuit related to
Department of Information Systems’ billing.

The federal government has
maintained that federal dollars sent to the state wrongly went toward computer
billing at the Department of Information Systems.

Beebe said the governor’s office
owes a “bunch” of money to the Department of Information Systems for services
provided in the past few years, but he wasn’t sure of the exact amount. He said
Bailey would know.

Bailey said the governor’s office
owes $ 33, 302 for services rendered during the Huckabee administration. She
blamed “internal DIS billing process failures” for bills not previously being
sent to the governor’s office. BLACKBERRY AND CELL PHONE

Huckabee also was dealing with other
technological issues in the weeks before he left office.

“WHO THE HECK TURNED OFF MY
BLACKBERRY ?????” Huckabee wrote in a Dec. 23 e-mail.

The Dec. 23 e-mail from Huckabee to
Bailey concerned a disruption in the governor’s communication services during
the transition to Beebe’s administration.

“My Blackberry has been disconnected
by some genius who must have thought I quit being governor Dec. 23,” Huckabee
wrote. “1. Who did this and why ? I’d like an answer now. 2. Get it turned back
on. NOW ! I’ve called Cingular to try to get this fixed. We need to make sure
our computer lines aren’t down. This is beyond excusable.”

Huckabee was one of the first people
at the Capitol to have a Blackberry, a portable email and cell phone device the
he has had since at least 2002.

Bailey quickly responded to
Huckabee’s concern, writing that “I will take care of this now.”

Huckabee then wrote Bailey, saying
that his cell phone wasn’t working either. “I want to know why this happened
and who was responsible. It wasn’t very smart.”

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