Nichols: Good morning.
Quinn: I got a source in Arkansas that is a source I never used before, that is why I'm preceding with a caveat this morning, and I have absolutely no idea how credible this is. He claims that the Arkansas State Police are in possession of a black-and-white video of Bill Clinton snorting cocaine with Dan Lasater, and that it would be released this week to the media.
Nichols: Likely as not, that source will in some way end up being Larry Case. Larry Case is a private investigator who lost his license, and during the campaign he was assigned to me by Betsy Wright...
Quinn: Wait a minute. He was assigned by Betsy Wright? The bimbo eruption spinbopper, the enforcer for the Clinton Administration? The person who comes down to Arkansas and make people's minds rank when they start to talk about Bill Clinton?
Nichols: That's right, and then makes them sign sworn affidavits, and when they don't sign them she still uses them as if they'd signed them.
She came up with a story, and Case would go around to all of my sources, to all of the media people who were working with me; and the job was to get them after him that he had this picture. Now all the media would get off of Larry Nichols and go chasing after this Case guy and then find out there's not going to be a picture. Then six weeks later they find out the picture was a joke and then guess what the media does? They say all of the stories was just rumors. If they can prove just one story wrong, a rumor, then all of the other stories are not credible. That's how the disinformation game goes.
Now I'm going to be shocked that that picture shows up this week, because I can't imagine Clinton, and his goons running this state police, that they would leave a picture laying around with the state police for someone like Larry Nichols, who as you know has friends at the state police, to get a copy from.
Quinn: My first response to that is: There was a guy who had a video of Bill Clinton putting his key into Gennifer Flowers' door, and he was beaten to within an inch of his life and left for dead, after he had given the video tape to the two cops.
Nichols: So imagine the horrors in store for the man who had a picture of Clinton doing cocaine. Now watch out, folks. What you're going to see is a little bit more of the mainstream media getting involved, their starting to pick up on some of this stuff.
So now that they've fed all of the media this story, they're going to jump on it, and when they get to the end of the trail, there's not going to be a story. They're going to be duped and, guess what they're going to do the next day? They'll say we've investigated all these rumors and there's nothing to them.
Quinn: Disinformation, is it? And I've been spreading it this morning. But, at least with a caveat that I didn't know.
Nichols: That's the problem. As long as you admit that everything he's said is proved, that gives it credibility. You're throwing it out there, it's your job to let the people know.
Quinn: You don't have very long to wait, because they're saying it's going to be released this week. So it won't take long to figure out if it's real or not.
Nichols: Another thing. We really don't know how long certain media have been chasing this thing down. They may have been chasing this thing for six weeks and they've been told by Case they're fixing to get the piece and they're fixing to break it this week. The story is not coming through, the journalists, whichever journalists or journalist has been sucked into this story.
Quinn: There hasn't been that many, it's one source out of Arkansas. I don't see it as the mainstream media having picked up on it.
Nichols: I got three faxes last night from different parts of the country telling me that there is a story coming out; and again, you have to check the source on it. The facts that I have is, it comes from a conservative group out of Phoenix, Arizona. They have the pictures or video.
Quinn: They also say they're going to post these pictures on the Internet, but you know, pictures are easily faked.
Nichols: It comes from Free Speech Newspaper, Phoenix, Arizona.
Quinn: OK, I've got a copy of that too. So you may be right, it may be disinformation.