A news release from World Ahead Publishing advises that on Oct. 26: "Juanita Broaddrick and Kathleen Willey will visit the William J. Clinton Presidential Library and Museum in Little Rock."
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They will be accompanied by their attorney Candice Jackson, author of the World Ahead book "Their Lives: The Women Targeted By The Clinton Machine."
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"Broaddrick and Willey have both accused Clinton of assaulting them. Broaddrick alleges that then-Governor Clinton raped her during a conference in Little Rock in 1978. Willey says that Clinton assaulted her when she worked in the White House in 1993. Both also charge that Clinton's inner circle – including wife Hillary Rodham Clinton – subsequently attempted to pressure and intimidate them to silence."
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This news release is dated Oct. 12, 2005. Three days later, WorldNetDaily reported two legal developments – at opposite ends of the United States – which might just provide a prediction as to what will happen if these two sexual victims of Bill Clinton try to enter the Clinton Presidential Library in Little Rock.
In California, a judge who declared all public areas of Los Angeles County courthouse "no speech zones" has been hit with a federal civil-rights lawsuit.
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According to the complaint filed Thursday, a general order issued Sept. 13 by California Superior Court Judge William MacLaughlin "prohibits such free speech activities as picketing, distribution of literature, and demonstration." "The courts are supposed to be protecting our First Amendment rights, not suppressing them," said Mike Johnson, senior legal counsel for the Alliance Defense Fund. "This judge's order is a constitutional travesty and has already forced our clients and other law-abiding citizens from engaging in classic, ordinary free speech."
In Massachusetts, a pair of sidewalk evangelists – one of whom is confined to a wheelchair – claim they were roughed up by city police for little more than trying to spread the Gospel.
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The Boston Herald reports Ann Cataldo, 50, and friend Ann Hayden, 35, "officially" were arrested for "panhandling" – requesting money from passers-by on the street – but they maintain they only were passing out religious literature for donations.
The paper said the women have claimed two police officers – John Curley and Michael O'Hara – used excessive force while apprehending them. One of the women, Hayden, says audio of the incident was captured on a tape recorder she carried in her pants. And for the record, she now also is charged with illegal wiretapping, the Herald said.
Police arrested the women after receiving complaints from local business owners.
If this can happen in the land of the original Minutemen – as well as in our nation's other most liberal state – who can be assured that Bill Clinton's two sexual victims will not be barred from entering the Bill Clinton Presidential Library?
What then will happen to the First Amendment's guarantee of freedom of speech and assembly?