John McBooze: Married to the Mob

This weekend, John McCain played the "father-in-law card" (video):

I am grateful for the fact that I have a wonderful life. I spent some years without a kitchen table, without a chair, and I know what it's like to be blessed by the opportunities of this great nation. Cindy's father, who barely finished high school, went off and distinguished himself in World War II in a B-17 and came back with practically nothing and realized the American dream, and I am proud and grateful for that, and I think he is a role model to many young Americans who serve in the military and come back and succeed.

“So the fact is that we have homes, and I'm grateful for it... I'll continue to say I am blessed and very proud that Jim Hensley, a war hero, a man who barely graduated from high school, was able to pass on to his daughter what he struggled for and saved for. That's the ambition that all of us have for our children and grandchildren. If someone wants to disparage that, they are free to do that."

So who exactly was Cindy's dad? Howie Klein summarizes:

Like McCain himself, Hensley was a crook and a cheat-- a role model? Maybe for gangsters and other Republicans who think the rules are for suckers. Phoenix's New Times put the myth about Hensley being a legitimate businessman to bed many years ago. The New Times story was more an investigation into why McCain gets more contributions from the liquor industry than anyone else in the Senate-- this year they've coughed up $384,110 for their boy and they've given him $644,630 since he was first elected-- but they went into the family history as well, and how Hensley started down the road to so many homes for his daughter as a gangster and bootlegger.

Until McCain dumped his first wife for Cindy he had never earned more than a respectable $45,000 a year. Now he claims a net worth of $36 million, although Cindy's is several hundred million. The story "examines the roots of the Hensley fortune and John McCain's implacable bond to the liquor industry -- how it has enriched him personally and as a politician, and how those ties have dictated his actions on questions of public policy... The Hensley saga, meanwhile, swirls with bygone accounts of illicit booze, gambling, horse racing, deceit and crime. James Hensley embarked on his road to riches as a bootlegger... [A] 1948 federal criminal indictment charged, the Hensleys made approximately 1,284 false entries related to the sale of thousands of cases of liquor by their two companies-- United Sales Company in Phoenix and United Distributors in Tucson."

McCain's father-in-law was convicted on seven counts of filing false liquor records and on much more serious federal conspiracy charge. Hensley refused to testify and was sentenced to 6 months in prison. Strings were pulled and he didn't serve much time, even though he lost his appeal. Hensley, the one McCain calls a role model, was a henchman for a bigtime mobster who had a reporter murdered and also took out a hit on then Arizona Attorney General Bruce Babbitt. It's amazing that national journalists cover this story up so thoroughly even though the car Hensley's boss had blown to bits (with the journalist inside) is on display in DC at the Newseum.

Here is the Newseum entry for Don Bolles:

Died June 13 after losing both legs and his right arm in a car-bomb blast in a Phoenix parking lot where he had gone to obtain information about allegedly fraudulent land deals involving Arizona’s top politicians. "Mafia," he whispered to rescuers. His murder prompted the Investigative Reporters and Editors group to bring dozens of journalists to work on the Arizona Project, a year-long effort that continued Bolles' work. Newspapers across the country printed the project's investigation. The series resulted in 18 indictments.

Cindy's dad's mafia ties have not been touched by the media. But if McCain's campaign is going to be entirely about Rev. Wright, Tony Rezko, and Bill Ayres, then it's entirely fair for Obama or his supporters to talk about Jim Hensley.

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Haunted by Spirits John McCain

Haunted by Spirits
John McCain derived his wealth from his marriage to Cindy Hensley McCain, whose father started his road to riches as a bootlegger. As a politician, the senator has remained beholden to the liquor industry and the family business.

It is a long and very ugly story of the kind of corruption that one usually reads in dime novels from the 50s, but here it is including names, times and convictions. The article in the New Arizona Times is long and ripe with details, but reads a bit like the outline for a cheap novel, a summer read about Daddy's life as a denizen of the sleezy under belly of post WWII Arizona.

How in the world the GOP let a family like this represent them for leader of the nation is way beyond me, but it seems to be just find with them. Maybe their version of the American dream is not quite the same as ours? ;)

"When fascism comes to America, it will be wrapped in the flag, carrying a cross." ~ Sinclair Lewis

Maybe

Another reason might be that they are counting on no one reporting on this. They probably think that they can by off the media so that this story goes under the radar. We can only hope that that doesn't happen.

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