Thursday, May 26, 2005

Gosch-2-Gannon: The conspiracy theory that refuses to die

Admittedly, my thinking on the Jeff Gannon/Jim Guckert scandal has been (you should pardon the expression) outside the box. In sum and in short, I suspect -- but cannot prove -- that "Jeff" and a certain fellow we shall here know only as "W" have made the beast with one back.

Don't presume, though, that I'm likely to fall for every oddball theory to arise out of this controversy. One popular theory which I have treated scoffingly holds that Jeff Gannon (whose real name is James Guckert) is actually famed child kidnap victim Johnny Gosch.

This scenario should have lost all popularity by now, given the tidal wave of counter-evidence. We have:

1. The documented history of Guckert's youth (including yearbook photos).

2. The divergence in ages between Guckert/Gannon and Gosch (47 and 35, respectively -- presuming Gosch is still alive).

3. An utter lack of verifiable, factual material in the presentations of the best-known Johnny/Jeff theorists, Ted Gunderson and Sherman Skolnick. Neither man has a sterling reputation.

Despite all this, the Gosch-2-Gannon theory refuses to acknowledge its own death. Like El Cid on his mount, the damn thing rides into post-mortum battle.

The latest charge comes to us via a report broadcast on KWWL news in Dubuque, Iowa. The report quotes an investigator named James Rothstein. Of Gosch's kidnapping in 1982, Rothstein says:

"This man has told us that at the end of their investigation that there were 834 kids involved that were kidnapped," says James Rothstein. He's talking about a former CIA agent who must remain anonymous.

Rothstein is a former New York City police detective, now a private investigator working the case for Johnny's mother, Noreen. And within the last couple weeks, Rothstein has uncovered new evidence linking Johnny's kidnapping to child prostitution.
More:

Rothstein is talking about individuals who would spend as much as $10,000 to have sex with young boys and girls. And this new evidence points to the involvement of U.S. government officials. "They were using kids to compromise people. And what better way to compromise somebody than get a young boy with a politician or some powerful person that may be in the military or whatever and then you can compromise them and get what ever you want."

Last month, people on the internet and investigators like Rothstein began to believe a man who passed himself off as a White House reporter and known male prostitute Jeff Gannon could be Johnny Gosch. And while Gannon's true identity still can't be confirmed, Rothstein says the more clues he uncovers, the possibility Gannon may be Gosch increases...
Who is Rothstein? A bit of cursory googling indicates that he is fairly well-known on the "conspiracy" circuit. He has been associated with radio host Michael Corbin, a decent fellow who operates on a level located some ways above the Skolnickian sewer. This site offers a rather tantalizing tidbit:

Noreen Gosch and James Rothstein were interviewed on KCRO radio in Omaha, Nebraska by Marty Stacy, a local talk show host in Omaha. Following the interview, Marty Stacy was fired from his job, and Noreen had a strange warning at her home in Iowa.
There may be less here than meets the eye. The only web-based info I have on Stacy indicates that he runs, or ran, a religious radio show that has aroused the interest and the ire of various fanatics. (Readers in Iowa may be able to help me gather more data.) At any rate, insubstantial data of this sort cannot add much strength to the Gosch-2-Gannon rumor.

Toward the end of the KWWL story, Rohstein refers to a "phone conversation he had with a CIA agent. 'That's solid information with names. That's where you start investigating and that should have been done years ago,' he says."

So far, what do we have? Simply this: A man claiming to be CIA calls Rothstein out of the blue and offers up some names and other tidbits. The investigator decides to do some investigating. At some point, the investigator decides -- for reasons never made clear to the public -- that the Gosch-2-Gannon story may be valid.

Now, I have little problem with any of this; in checking out the info provided by his source, Rothstein has proceeded precisely as he ought.

Even so, I counsel caution. Leads are not evidence. The Gosch-2-Gannon theory has at least three serious strikes against it, and we've been given nothing to counter the counter-arguments. Rothstein's tale reminds me of the one told by Ted Gunderson, who also based his report on the word of a never-named informant -- whose information we are given no reason to trust.

Lots of people -- lots and lots of people -- have falsely claimed to work for one intelligence agency or another. And even if Rothstein's source presents verifiable bona fides -- what of it? Spies lie.

Ah, but now we come to the most intriguing question of all: Why would this source lie? Why (as I have elsewhere suggested might be the case) would someone mount a disinformation campaign intended to deceive researchers into accepting a false link between Gosch and Gannon?

A widespread obsession with an intriguing false theory may misdirect interested parties away from an equally intriguing reality. I advise the reader to scroll back to this post's opening -- particularly to my beast-with-one-back jape. The rest of the story should tell itself.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

The "yearbook photos" have not proven to be authentic...not ONE high school classmate has vouched for them (or Guckwhatever, for that matter) either. There is also the birthmark that Johnny had that Guckwhatever coincidently ALSO has...

Anonymous said...

I doubt there's ever been a time in history so rife with conspiracy theories. Many of the theories may be true. Certainly anything is possible with the people in power today. What's interesting is not so much which of the theories are true, but rather the fact that a huge majority of Americans believe in one or another of them. The USA is in a credibility crisis. No one anymore trusts in the conventional wisdom. No one trusts in a shared cultural myth. And this includes both the Right and the Left, and all in between.

Maybe this conspiracy theory kind of paranoia is ultimately not a big deal. Or maybe it is far more significant than we realize. Consider that much of Bush's support depended on the perception that he was "authentic", "a good old boy at heart", untainted by all the secret forces that influence events in the world.

Unfortunately for him--and for the Repubs and the Fundamentalists, the majority of Americans now include the administration in one or more of the extant conspiracy theories.

Personally, I don't believe a word the gov't says anymore. And for once, I don't feel out of the mainstream.

Where's this all leading? I don't know. But at no time in history has political/cultural credibility been so tattered. And I can't imagine that a society so cynical about the surface explanations of events can survive for long.

Anonymous said...

first of all, i take joe's cautions about this story, especially the fact that the gannon piece is included (almost gratuitously), very seriously. it has karl rove's signature all over it: include a weak element, discredit the source, and poof! the whole thing vanishes, truth and all.

second, that first point is not to say that these stories do not have inherent credibility. i'm a licensed psychologist who viewed most of the MKUltra stories, and pedophilia/sex cult stories, not only with skepticism, but with some snobbish contempt. for chrissake, i always wondered, don't we have enough issues out there to occupy our time without jeopardizing our credibility with this fantastical, prurient stuff?

but then i started noticing the numbers of cases popping up, including those in the catholic church of course, and was increasingly struck by the involvement of those in power, not just in the church in those cases, but the involvement of govt and/or wealthy and powerful in non-church cases. and then often they overlap with some church or other.

these observations got me to thinking about the likely convergence of power abuse and sex abuse in the psyche, and it all began to make sense. try to imagine anyone who is inclined to abuse power who would also have a healthy sex life. it just does not work that way. in fact, the impulses to abuse power are completely consistent with abuse of anyone vulnerable, and particularly sexually. sexual domination is a primary action of power, both biologically and culturally, second only to physcial domination.

there is also the equally intriguing means of cultural domination by holding religious power over another. that one is all too easy to see unfolding, both throughout history and now.

put it all together and its an easy recipe for sex cults targeting the most vulnerable among us, children, to satisfy those who would abuse power because, i suppose, they have no healthy means of feeling empowerment.

this is all a very simplified way to say that we should not be surprised to see all manner of sexual deviation emerging from those who demonstrate the inclination to abuse power. the past couple of weeks have been particularly rich in exposures, my favorite being of course neal horsley's apparently unabashed admission to having had sex with a mule.

gives another whole dimension to the political implications of that image, does it not?

Anonymous said...

Here's one part of the Gannon White House gay mafia conspiracy theory I think we can put to rest. I even hesitate to bring this up yet again -- it's about conspiracy theories promoted by TBRNews. TBRNews seems to be a prime source of innuendo that Gannon's "client" in the White House is W, himself. But the very interesting information about Gannon's log ins and log outs was developed by other bloggers. They did not jump to conclusions about who Gannon was "doing" in the White House during overnight visits -- if indeed, these logs even show there were overnights, rather than simply the secret service not logging all Gannon's entries and exits.

TBRNews seems to be the main source of innuendo suggesting that Gannon's "client" is none other than W, rather than Scotty or Rove or someone else.

I feel that any theory promoted by TBRNews should not only be taken with a grain of salt but absolutely doubted. Here is proof of TBRNews unreliability:

Remember that TBRNews promoted the idea that a certain Todd Blodgett was running a gay escort service whose clients included administration officials. I am only beating this dead horse because TBRNews recently ressurected this idea, on May 21, here:

http://www.tbrnews.org/Archives/a1611.htm

(quote)
There have always been gays in the White House, especially during the Reagan years. The Blodgett case is one I recall. He was a little, hyper blonde with serious emotional problems who got so randy he was booted out and sent over to the RNC. He proved to be so active there that they got rid of him and he promptly opened a male whorehouse over at the Kenendy-Warren. Eventually, he got so bad they threw him out of his club and town. He and von Kloberg were both devoted Republicans and both gay as hell.
(unquote)

What TBRNews doesn't tell you is that Blodgett used to work for a TBRNews affiliate, the Barnes Review. In this very interesting testimony by Blodgett, in the Carto/Liberty Lobby bankruptcy case, Blodgett testifies that he sold add space for Carto's publications, including The Barnes Review:

http://homepage.mac.com/lsf/litigation/bankruptcy/990701hearing.html

(quote)
Q. You also mentioned that you sold something for an organization called Barnes Review?

A. Well, I didn't -- well, okay. TAB Agency sold -- when I first started with advertising, we also sold ad space in the Barnes Review, but I did not sell any ad space in the Barnes Review for the final nine or ten months I was there.
(end quote)

Later Blodgett's testimony provides detail of how Carto committed fraud on the bankruptcy court:

(quote)
Q. Could you tell me what the money was for that you received here?

A. In this case, the direct mailer had rented The Spotlight subscribers.

Q. The subscribers?

A. To The Spotlight. They made payable to Response Unlimited a check for those names. Response Unlimited, under the terms of its contract, took off a management fee, then remitted to me the balance. I then took off 20 percent as per my contract and the remainder was $3,000.

Q. Why is this check written to GEF?

A. Well, I was in a meeting with Willis on that day in his office and I had reminded him that TAB Agency was sitting on this money that belonged to Liberty Lobby and at that point he said to make the check out to -- he said under the circumstances, we should make the check out to GEF, Government Education Foundation.

Q. Do you know why Mr. Carto directed you to make the check payable to GEF rather than to Liberty Lobby?

A. Well, it was done for -- it was -- they wanted to buy a computer for GEF and they wanted GEF to own the computer, so I made the check payable to GEF for the computer.

Q. The date of this check, was this after the bankruptcy filing?

A. Yes.

Q. Did Mr. Carto know about the bankruptcy when he gave you these instructions?

A. Yes.

Q. How do you know that?

A. Well, because the bankruptcy was May 15 and the check was made payable three months after that or four months after that.
(end quote)

Now, Blodgett may be gay, he may even run an escort service; hell, he may even be Gannon's pimp to the White House. But for TBRNews to not disclose this prior relationship is unconsciounable, journalistically, even for a blogger.

In other words, all the innuendo about Blodgett that misled bloggers (including me), is probably a very vindictive right wing company savaging a former agent who spilled the beans on their fraud in open court.

I like to read TBRNews "Voice of the White House" as much as anyone else -- but for entertainment, not for informed speculation.

HamdenRice from DU

Anonymous said...

I haven't visited here for awhile, but would like to offer a belated correction: KWWL (one of my former employers) is located in Waterloo, Iowa - not Dubuque.

Anonymous said...

KWWL interviewed Gannon in DC. The story is on their website, KWWL.com