Meya wa Detroit na vi sms vyake kwa Kimada!

Write everything like your mother will see it and it will be published in the New York Times Uhuru, ThisDay and all over, with your name on it.

These two are fools, especially the disgraced mayor.Anybody who knows how the telecom systems work knows it is very easy to eavesdrod the conversation or text message, especially from service providers.
 
DETROIT -- More potentially damaging evidence of perjury by Detroit's mayor has been uncovered by the Detroit Free Press just a couple of days after the paper released thousands of personal text messages between the mayor and his chief of staff.

The sexually charged messages between Kwame Kilpatrick and Christine Beatty explicitly indicated that a romantic relationship did exist between them despite their denials under oath during last summer's police whistleblower trial.

The newly released messages present evidence of more than one romantic rendezvous between Kilpatrick and Beatty, including trips to Houston, Virginia and Denver.

One exchange went like this:

Kilpatrick: "I just made my reservation."

Beatty: "You made it Denver? Leaving when and returning when?"

Kilpatrick: "Nov. 7th- 8:57 return Nov. 10th-11:25. Arrive at 4:11."

Beatty: "…Should I take the same flight?"

Kilpatrick: "Yes."

A credit card statement shows the mayor used his city credit card to reserve a $474 room at the exclusive Sonnenalp Resort of Vail, Colo.

According to the mayor's official calendar, the paper said, Nov. 7-10, 2002, was listed as "Hold for mayor gone fishing."

A text message from Beatty says the mayor asked her to perform a sexual act on him at the club. She did not, but later wrote to him that she wished she had.

Meanwhile, there have been mixed reactions from Detroit officials who spoke with Local 4 on condition of anonymity.

One official said Kilpatrick should resign, saying, "He gets a kick out of lying. He's able to do it. There's nobody above the law and as an attorney he should know better. This has consumed everything. This city has to go on. He should resign."

Another Detroit officeholder forgives the mayor, saying, "This has nothing to do with his ability to lead and move forward. There are so many spouses who cheat, but everything we do as public officials is magnified. He does need to come forward, but it's a huge blow to his self esteem."
 
mwenzenu napiga mluzi tu hapa... sasa sisi wengine wenye maumbo madogo n.k tunaweza kujificha kwenye kamotel na hakuna anayeweza kutujua ni nani.. lakini jitu kama Kwame anaweza kwenda kujificha kwenye kiresort gani?
 
Tumwombee tu mema ili yaishe- wote tuaiba tu- wala hakuna cha nini!

Je kuna kati yetu hajawahi kuiba?

Acheni kuwanyooshea wenzenu vidole!
 
mwenzenu napiga mluzi tu hapa... sasa sisi wengine wenye maumbo madogo n.k tunaweza kujificha kwenye kamotel na hakuna anayeweza kutujua ni nani.. lakini jitu kama Kwame anaweza kwenda kujificha kwenye kiresort gani?

Hahahahaha...hapo umenifurahisha.....sasa neno "jitu" lina collocate na "li"....kwa hiyo ingependeza zaidi kama ungeandika hivi..."jitu kama Likwame linaweza kwenda kujificha kwenye kiresort gani?"
 
Nyani, BAKITA wanakutafuta maana ulivyonyambulisha matumizi ya "li" inabidi uingie kwenye kipindi cha "Lugha Yetu"..
 
Yaani hili Lijamaa halikomi...hebu someni hii habari...

Detroit mayor's reported tryst saddens King event organizers
by Leslie Boyd

Asheville – Reports that Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick had a woman other than his wife with him at the Grove Park Inn before speaking at the Martin Luther King Prayer Breakfast left event organizers disappointed Friday.

Detroit television station WXYZ aired a report Friday that the mayor had been with a woman who called herself Carmen Slowsky and that the two had enjoyed champagne and a whirlpool bath together at a cost of more than $500.

A copy of the hotel invoice shows a stay arranged for two.
A prosecutor in Michigan launched an investigation Friday into allegations that Kilpatrick lied under oath about an affair with his top aide.

Kilpatrick is married, and news of an extramarital affair with his chief of staff had surfaced in Detroit recently. Kilpatrick has said the affair was over.
 
now that is new.. our mayor got no game! gademu!! boarding school tulikuwa tunayaita majibu kama haya KJ...
 
Wakuu, msisahau pia kuna kifo cha yule stripper katika ile
party nyumbani kwa meya.Iko shughuli hapa na hayaishi leo!
 
Kilpatrick, Beatty Charged With Perjury, Obstruction, Misconduct



DETROIT -- Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick and his former top aide, Christine Beatty, turned themselves in to be photographed and fingerprinted Monday afternoon after Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy charged them with a total of 12 counts involving perjury, obstruction and willful misconduct in the text-message scandal.



Worthy announced the charges in a speech Monday morning that was part civics lesson, part stump speech and all condemnation when it comes to the mayor's and the city's conduct during her investigation.

Worthy blasted the city's lawyer for what she called "deliberate obstruction" of her investigation and on the importance of telling the truth under oath.

Oaths, she said, "must matter and that's why witnesses take them. Every witness in every case."

Public trust was violated, she said, in a case that she emphasized was not about texting or sex.

"Even children understand that lying is wrong," she said. "If a witness lies ... people can literally get away with murder."

Kilpatrick and Beatty turned themselves in to the Wayne County Sheriff's Department in Westland on Monday afternoon to face charges.

The investigation, however, does not end with the mayor and Beatty, Worthy said. "Our investigation has led to other potential defendants."

In response Kilpatrick, reading from a prepared text, said Monday that he is "deeply disappointed" in the Wayne County prosecutor's decision, but he looks forward to "complete exoneration once all the facts in this case are laid forward."

"This has been a very flawed process from the very beginning," Kilpatrick said. "However, at the same time, I recognize that this is merely the first step in a process that I believe in that is grounded in a presumption of innocence that is guaranteed to each and every American citizen by the constitution of these United States."

Kilpatrick and Beatty are scheduled to be arraigned in 36th District Court on Tuesday.

State Rep. Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick, D-13th District, Kwame Kilpatrick's mother, released the following statement: "I am disappointed with the Wayne County prosecutor's decision. However, we must allow the process to run its course. The Mayor is entitled to a speedy and fair trial. I hope all involved will allow this case to be tried in a court of law."

In all, Kilpatrick faces the following charges: conspiracy to obstruct justice, obstruction of justice, misconduct in office, perjury in a court proceeding and two counts of perjury other than in a court proceeding.

Beatty is charged with conspiracy to obstruct justice, obstruction of justice, two counts of perjury in a court proceeding and two counts of perjury other than in a court proceeding.

A tired-looking Beatty sat in between her pastor Ronald Griffin and lawyer Mayer Morganroth as they talked about Monday's ordeal.

Morganroth said, "I would like our express profound disputations with the prosecutor's decision to issue a set of charges long in assertions and conjecture and short on facts and evidence."

Griffin said he was sad to hear the new developments and Beatty was devastated by Monday's announcement.

Many of the allegations named in the charges have to do with the firing of former Deputy Police Chief Gary Brown and an alleged conspiracy to cover up an investigation into the mayor's conduct into the matter.

Also, they have to do with the $8.4 million settlement the mayor reached with police officers in last summer's whistle-blower trial – a settlement that was allegedly reached to prevent romantic text messages between Kilpatrick and Beatty from being revealed publicly.

And they have to do with alleged perjury committed by both Kilpatrick and Beatty when they denied during last summer's trial that they had a romantic affair – a denial that was shown to be false when the Detroit Free Press released transcripts of romantic text messages.

During her news conference, Worthy alleged that the city's lawyers were blocking her investigation at every turn, implied that documents were being "lost or destroyed" and even had to go to the Michigan Supreme Court to obtain documents she had subpoenaed Jan. 31.

The investigation, Worthy said, clearly showed that public dollars were used and public trust trampled on.

For his part, Kilpatrick's attorney Dan Webb said that he is eager for all these allegations to go before a jury, where he predicted the mayor will be exonerated.

"After a jury has heard the actual evidence in a courtroom … the mayor will be found not guilty and he will be exonerated of each and every one of the charges," Webb said during a news conference Monday, with the mayor at his side.

The mayor, for his part, said he would not comment any further and will still focus on his economic programs for building the "Next Detroit."

Meanwhile, City Council will continue to investigate the mayor's conduct in the text messaging scandal surrounding his administration regardless of what Wayne County's prosecutor announces Monday, council member Kwame Kenyatta told Local 4 on Sunday during an appearance on "Flashpoint" with Devin Scillian.

Kenyatta, whose resolution calling on the mayor to resign was approved by City Council last week, told Scillian that there are two processes at work.

"One political and one legal," Kenyatta said. "The legal one is dealing with a crime that was committed based upon the law. The political one dealing with 'was there a violation of the City Charter or the Constitution,' in one's conduct in office. And I believe there was."

City Council President Ken Cockrel Jr., who would succeed Kilpatrick as mayor if he steps down, told reporters that he believes he and the other council members are of the same mind.

"We still have our regular daily duties and responsibilities. We're going to continue to do that," Cockrel said. "It wasn't something that was totally unexpected to me, except for the number of charges. However, certainly, it doesn't lessen the impact. This is a tragic day for the city."

When Worthy said she had no tolerance for deliberate obstruction, she was referring in part to Detroit city attorney John Johnson and Patricia Peoples, deputy director of human resources.

Both were in court on Monday, accused of not cooperating with the prosecutor's investigation into the mayor.

After a 45-minute, closed-door meeting with the judge and Johnson's attorney, Johnson came out saying he was prepared to remedy the issue and answer all questions.

Peoples showed up without an attorney said she was unaware of any subpoena and needed more time. That frustrated the prosecution team, which said the city was asked to produce the person who destroyed the documents they were seeking.

The type of documents were not discussed in open court. The city had 54 days to hand over those needed documents.

Oakland County Executive L. Brooks Patterson called the charges a 21st-century rerun of a classic Greek tragedy: fallen heroes, lost opportunities, unfulfilled promise.

"With tens of thousands of jobs lost, plants closing and people being forced out of their homes, it is the responsibility of us in leadership roles to stay focused at this hour on the important work before us."

Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm, a Democrat, has the power to remove local officials for misconduct, but spokeswoman Liz Boyd said Granholm believes "it's important the legal process be allowed to work," and doesn't plan to get involved at this point.

Worthy began her investigation in late January, the day after the Detroit Free Press published excerpts from 14,000 text messages that were sent or received in 2002-03 from Beatty's city-issued pager.

The messages called into question testimony Kilpatrick and Beatty gave in a lawsuit filed by two police officers who alleged they were fired for investigating claims that the mayor used his security unit to cover up extramarital affairs.

In court, Kilpatrick and Beatty strongly denied having an intimate relationship, but the text messages reveal that they carried on a flirty, sometimes sexually explicit dialogue about where to meet and how to conceal their trysts.

Kilpatrick is married with three children. Beatty was married at the time and has two children.

The city eventually agreed to pay $8.4 million to the two officers and a third former officer. Some of the charges brought against the mayor on Monday accuse him of agreeing to the settlement in an effort to keep the text messages from becoming public.
 
Detroit mayor charged on eight criminal counts

He faces 15 years if convicted on all counts.

Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick was charged with perjury, obstruction of justice, misconduct in office and other criminal counts on Monday. The charges arise from his decision to have the city of Detroit, which is nearly bankrupt, pay millions of dollars in hush money to several former policemen whose eyewitness accounts of Kilpatrick’s behavior would be politically damaging.

Kilpatrick was booked on eight criminal charges, while his former chief of staff, Christine Beatty, was charged on seven counts in the same case. Kilpatrick and Beatty are charged with lying under oath during civil suits brought by the three cops, who claimed they had been fired to cover up a sexual affair between the mayor and his longtime top aide.

Last October, the Detroit City Council approved an $8.4 million settlement with the three policemen, Gary Brown, Harold Nelthorpe and Walter Harris, after the mayor suddenly dropped his opposition to any such compromise. In January, the Detroit Free Press began publishing extensive excerpts of text messages by Kilpatrick and Beatty, sent out over their city-owned cell phones, which confirmed both their affair and the retaliatory firing of the policemen.

Kilpatrick faces up to 15 years in prison if convicted on all counts and would be removed from office under the city charter if found guilty of a felony. The Detroit City Council, which has no authority to remove the mayor from office, passed a resolution last week, by a 7-1 vote, urging him to resign. Kilpatrick has adamantly rejected such appeals and continued to do so after Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy said that she would be bringing charges against him.

In her statement Monday morning announcing her decision, Worthy implicitly rejected any comparison to the Clinton impeachment proceedings. “This was not an investigation focused on lying about sex,” she said. “Gary Brown’s, Harold Nelthorpe’s and Walter Harris’s lives and careers were forever changed. They were ruined financially and their reputations were completely destroyed.”

She cited the Free Press article on the text messages as the origin of her investigation, indicating that there had been no ongoing effort to target the mayor—a longtime political ally—until the text messages demonstrated that he and Beatty had lied repeatedly under oath. At that point, she said in a subsequent press interview, “The decision became easy.”

Without naming names, Worthy suggested that several lawyers working on behalf of Kilpatrick and Beatty had engaged in “deliberate obstruction” of her investigation, including the possible destruction of documents and other evidence. There were “potential” charges against them as well, she said.

Two high-ranking Detroit city employees, John Johnson Jr., a city attorney, and Patricia Peoples, Kilpatrick’s cousin and the deputy director of human resources, were in court Monday facing contempt charges for refusing to cooperate with Worthy.

The Kilpatrick case has split the Democratic Party officialdom in Detroit and surrounding Wayne County. Kilpatrick himself is a scion of this establishment, the son of Congresswoman Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick, currently chair of the Congressional Black Caucus, and Bernard Kilpatrick, a longtime top official in the Wayne County government. The lone vote on the Detroit City Council opposing the call for his resignation came from Monica Conyers, wife of Detroit’s other long-serving congressman, John Conyers.

While the Kilpatrick camp has portrayed the prosecution as a plot by white suburbanites to seize control of the city government, those leading the campaign for his ouster included figures like Councilman Kwame Kenyatta, with a long career of black nationalist demagogy, and City Council President Ken Cockrel Jr., son of the late civil rights attorney, who would become mayor if Kilpatrick is ousted.

Kym Worthy is also a pillar of the black Democratic Party establishment, going back to her role as an assistant prosecutor of two white policemen who beat to death a black man, Malice Green, on the city’s southwest side in 1992.

More importantly, there are no serious political differences between Kilpatrick and the business and financial elite of the Detroit area. He has carried out the mandate of the auto bosses and millionaires to hold the line on wages and benefits of city workers, cut services to the city’s impoverished residents, and create a “business-friendly” environment in the city, including tax-free enterprise zones and the promotion of casino gambling that preys on the most vulnerable sections of the working class.

The disaffection with Kilpatrick on the part of the corporate establishment arises because his personal corruption has become an obstacle to the implementation of their agenda. Even before the current scandal, Kilpatrick had become notorious for plundering city resources for his family’s benefit while demanding incessant sacrifices from city employees.

In 2005, Kilpatrick barely survived a challenge to his reelection mounted by Freeman Hendrix, a former city deputy mayor. Kilpatrick finished second to Hendrix in the first round of the non-partisan election, but won a runoff by a narrow margin.

In the period since the Free Press exposé, Kilpatrick’s behavior has become increasingly bizarre and provocative. He and his wife appeared side-by-side in a televised event at a Detroit church January 30 at which the mayor expressed contrition for unnamed sins—effectively conceding that the text messages were genuine.

Meanwhile, city attorneys fought a month-long rearguard action to keep secret the documents surrounding the settlement with the three fired policemen, which had been withheld from the Detroit City Council before it voted to approve the huge financial payoff. They ultimately lost this battle in the Michigan Supreme Court.

Kilpatrick subsequently told one radio station that he was “born” for the position of mayor and was “on an assignment from God.” He said he had “an intention of being mayor, you know, until God tells me to do something else.”

In a state of the city speech March 11, broadcast over local television, Kilpatrick departed from his prepared remarks to denounce demands for his resignation, calling the campaign a lynch mob, and claiming he was being treated as a “n—-er”—despite the fact that most of those seeking his ouster are also black.

After the City Council voted 7-1 to urge him to step down, Kilpatrick declared, “You take a whole day to discuss an issue like this? My reaction is: This is over. It has no effect. It’s not binding. Let’s get back to work.”

In a related matter, the surviving children of Tamara Greene, an exotic dancer who was murdered in 2003, have filed a $150 million lawsuit against Kilpatrick and the city of Detroit, charging that the mayor’s office quashed an investigation into her killing.

Greene was believed to be a participant in a widely rumored “stripper party” at the mayor’s official residence, Manoogian Mansion, one of the many reported scandals during his first term in office. Greene was shot to death shortly afterwards, and former Detroit police officer Alvin Bowman has charged that his homicide unit was pressured to drop the case, although it appeared to be a “hit,” possibly carried out by another policeman.

Detroit Police Chief Ella Bully-Cummings has denounced accusations of a police cover-up of the death of Tamara Greene as “reprehensible.” Attorneys for the family have subpoenaed the text messages exchanged by city employees and the police during the early-morning hours on the day Greene was killed.

Harold Nelthorpe, one of the three policemen involved in the $8.4 million settlement, told attorneys for the Greene family that Kilpatrick’s wife had returned home unexpectedly during the stripper party, and “that a fight ensued between Ms. Kilpatrick and a dancer, and that the dancer received injuries requiring medical attention.” Greene was said to be the dancer in question.

The descent of the Kilpatrick administration into gangsterism is a demonstration, not merely of his personal corruption, but of the decay of the whole Democratic Party establishment in Detroit. The Democratic Party has long abandoned even token efforts to improve the living standards and social conditions of the masses of impoverished working people in the city. Its leading personnel, black and white, have integrated themselves into the corporate establishment and many of them have seen the resources of the city as an opportunity for personal enrichment.

Source: World Media
 
WOW, its amazing how married people can have big plans for cheating! But I keep asking myself, what is the main cause of cheating among married couples? Is intense in this scandal, and unfortunatelly is a cronic disease everywhere; I don't want to mention my mother land Bongo!mhhhh
 
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