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Hilarious Halloween

by: William Rivers Pitt, t r u t h o u t | Columnist

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Roland Corning, Republican assistant attorney general for South Carolina (L) and Sarah Palin, former governor of Alaska (R). (Photo Illustration: Troy Page, t r u t h o u t; Adapted From: WSPA, euart / flickr , roberthuffstutter / flickr)

Everyone expects to see and hear some strange stuff whenever Halloween comes around. The costumes, the parties, the old ghost stories that always make the rounds and that ever-present breed of individual who takes the season a little too seriously and decides they'll actually try to be a vampire for a night. 'Tis the season. The definition of "strange," however, tends to get bent into all sorts of bizarre new shapes whenever the GOP gets into the game, and several of that party's members have apparently decided to make this Halloween something truly special for the rest of us.

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Take, for example, Mr. Roland Corning, former Republican state representative and current assistant attorney general for South Carolina. Back on Monday, a police officer spotted Mr. Corning's SUV parked at Elmwood Cemetery. The officer took special notice of the car, because that cemetery was a known spot for picnics of a carnal nature, and went in to investigate. When the officer approached, Mr. Corning sped away, and the officer gave chase.

When Corning was finally pulled over several blocks away by a second officer, they found him with an 18-year old stripper from the Platinum Plus Gentlemen's Club, a bag of sex toys and a dose of Viagra. Corning and the stripper gave differing explanations for their presence in the cemetery, and when asked about the bag of sex toys he had with him, Corning replied that he always kept those with him, "just in case."

Wait, it gets better.

Corning, being in the AG's office, carries a badge, and flashed it at the officer in the hope that it would inspire some gold-shield camaraderie and lubricate his release. Unfortunately for Mr. Corning, the officer called the AG's office to confirm that Corning actually worked there ... and got Corning's wife Megan on the phone, who also works for the AG. Corning's wife sent the report up the bureaucratic food chain like an Atlas rocket, and before long, his employment at the AG's office was terminated. One has to assume, given his wife's reaction, that his marriage is likewise soon to go the way of the dodo.

Hang on, there's more.

Mr. Corning, during his time as a Republican state representative, was a known holy man and ardent supporter of all that is family values in South Carolina. He once proposed legislation making it mandatory for women on welfare to be given sub-dermal contraceptives. Obviously, for this member of the GOP tribe, fleeing the police, sex toys and strippers are as much a part of good, clean living as eugenics.

While this fiasco was indeed a noble attempt, try as he might, Mr. Corning is never going to take the Top Fool spot away from the reigning champion of idiotic GOP debacles, former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin. Palin, who garnered 25 percent of a recent CNN poll on who Republicans prefer as their 2012 nominee, has been riding the rails to push her new book and, it is to be assumed, a potential presidential run next time around. That plan may be in jeopardy, however, especially if her former-kinda-whatever son-in-law and father of her grandson, Levi Johnston, has anything to say about it.

Levi, who appears all too happy to keep bringing up tidbits of Palin's past with reporters, told CBS News the other day that he had something "huge" on the former governor, and would be more than willing to divulge it before a battery of cameras if she messes with him. He accused Palin of calling her son Trig, who has Down Syndrome, "retarded."

As for any further revelations, Johnston would only say, "I have things that can, you know, that would get her in trouble, and could hurt her. Will hurt her. But I'm not gonna go that far. You know, I mean, if I really wanted to hurt her, I could, very easily. But there's - I'm not gonna do it. I'm not going that far." Palin released a statement blasting Johnston and CBS for the report, to which Johntson replied, "If she's going to go out there and say things to me, about me, I'm going to leak some things on her. I mean that's just how it is."

We can only hope. Happy hilarious Halloween.

  

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William Rivers Pitt is a New York Times and internationally bestselling author of two books: "War on Iraq: What Team Bush Doesn't Want You to Know" and "The Greatest Sedition Is Silence." His newest book, "House of Ill Repute: Reflections on War, Lies, and America's Ravaged Reputation," is now available from PoliPointPress.

Comments

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A friend put together a

A friend put together a Anita Dunn Mao horror costume using one of those salt sucker masks and a grey wig usinga totally grey communist style outfit with the word freedom drawn in blood on the back with a rubber knife glued to it.

Come on Levi, don't be shy .

Come on Levi, don't be shy . . . we all love dirt.

I'm torn. I can't decide

I'm torn. I can't decide which is worse -- down-low Repubs whose public façade of moral rectitude masks behind-the-scenes depravity, or Dems who proudly proclaim their degeneracy and parade it for all the world to see. Somebody help me out here.

Watch out Levi, but thanks.

Watch out Levi, but thanks. I want to hear it all, but I wish you had taken recordings and pictures and noted dates and numbers.

palin's really some

palin's really some grotesque work of art, she will be better off as some stand up comedian than some politician,

Sher's already a stand-up

Sher's already a stand-up comedy _routine_, why not a comedienne? I wouldn't pay to see it, but someone might.

Hey Mike in NYC -- the

Hey Mike in NYC -- the "dems" who are proclaiming the degeneracy of the "repubs" are just trying to hold those same "family values" folks to that higher standard that was self-proclaimed in the first place. If "repubs" don't want to suffer the consequences of their bad behavior -- perhaps they ought not to behave badly ...

You may want to verify your

You may want to verify your sources for the Mr. Roland Corning scandal as I've read that it was not Mr. Roland Corning's wife who worked at the AG office but rather the wife of the investigating officer Officer Wines.

I am a little torn here,

I am a little torn here, too. Family value types who are anything but are not my favorite people. But what happened to the Constitution. Since when do cops have the right to find sex toys in a car without a warrant? And when did become necessary to reveal the occupation of an occupant in one's car and illegal to drive in a car with someone who makes a living as a stripper? It seems to me that the only possible violation might be speeding, depending uponthe real meaning of "sped away." I suppose that if South Carolina is still flying the Confederate flag, cops must assume that the US Constitution is not in force.

No need to be torn, the

No need to be torn, the Constitution is safe. Anonymous, the police probably didn't stop & question the Assistant AG because of his driving activities. The Police Officer suspected that someone was on Cemetery Property "after hours" and not there for to venerate the dead but in pursuit of activities that many people don't want conducted on or near their graves, or the graves of loved ones. According to the article, the intruder was suspected of being there for a night "picnic of a carnal nature." When the officer approached what he thought was an intruder, that person fled - in the very same car that at the outset cause the officer to suspect trespassing and other illegal activities. The officer pursued that very car & with the assistance of a fellow officer, stopped & questioned the suspect, not to enforce traffic laws, but probably to find out why he was on cemetery property, whether he had a right to be there - perhaps he was the night watchman, and what he was doing on the property. The answers they provide indicate that neither of the individuals is authorized to be in the cemetery after dark & thus were trespassing. After that, the officer's questions and search were probably intended to determine what activities these trespassers had been conducting on the cemetery property. (Presumably when the officer first spotted the car, the young lady was not in it; thus it appears that she too was trespassing and then fled the scene.) It isn't possible to tell if the search of the car was illegal. For example, were the objects "in plain sight"? Did the officer have reason to believe that a gun might be in the vehicle? Did the trespasser consent to the search? If he did not, did the officer have probable cause to search the vehicle for evidence that might show what they had been doing and whether there might have been additional crimes involved? The evidence found and the identity of the other occupant could lead the officer to conclude that activities of "a carnal nature" had indeed been planned or were being conducted by these trespassers before they fled. Perhaps this could lead to a separate criminal charge. The company of a young lady in the Assistant AG's car could be perfectly innocent; it's probably not illegal to attend a "Gentlemen's Club," nor to be a stripper in one. However, the officer first became aware of them, not on the road, but in a cemetery known to be used at night for "carnal" activities; then they fled the approach of a police officer, and continued to flee even after it was clear that their pursuer was a police officer. Although being a stripper does not mean she was engaging in "carnal" activities, the young woman was substantially younger than the (former) Assistant AG. ( For his sake she had better have been 18.) She was not a relative of his. She was also not at her place of business but had been recently in the company of this much older man, at night, and in a cemetery. This not only makes it appear that they were there for carnal activities, it also raises the possibility that this young woman was enticed to be there, perhaps by an offer of money. The exchange of carnal services for money is typically known as "prostitution" and considered a crime in almost the entire United States. I don't think SC is an exception. The Assistant AG was very keen to show his badge to the officer, apparently under the impression that this might garner him special treatment. Thus it also appears that what enticed the young woman might not (just) have been money. The man may have used his government position to pressure the young lady to this time and place - also a crime. Even if he didn't try to use his government position to garner favors, the young lady may have felt pressured to do as he requested because he was an individual who could prosecute her for real, or alleged criminal activity.