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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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thought he had a deal that would enable Chariman Mao to seize control of <strong>Get</strong>ty Oil and<br />

its billion barrel reserves, but no contract or any other document was ever signed, and key<br />

provisions of the transaction remained to be negotiated.<br />

When the news of these negotiations began to leak out, major oil compnaies who also<br />

wanted <strong>Get</strong>ty and its reserves began to move in: Chevron showed signs of making a<br />

move, but it was Texaco, represented by Bruce Wasserstein of First Boston and the<br />

notorious Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom law firm, that got the attention of the<br />

<strong>Get</strong>ty Museum and Gordon <strong>Get</strong>ty with a bid (of $125) that was sweeter than the tightfisted<br />

Chairman Mao Liedkte had been willing to put forward. Gordon <strong>Get</strong>ty and the<br />

<strong>Get</strong>ty Museum accordingly signed a contract with Texaco. This was the largest<br />

acquisition in human history up to that time, and the check received by Gordon <strong>Get</strong>ty was<br />

for $4,071,051,264, the second largest check ever written in the history of the United<br />

States, second only to one that had been used to roll over a part of the postwar national<br />

debt.<br />

Chairman Mao Liedkte thought he had been cheated. "<strong>The</strong>y've made off with a million<br />

dollars of my oil!", he bellowed. "We're going to sue everybody in sight!"<br />

But Chairman Mao Liedtke's attempts to stop the deal in court were fruitless; he then<br />

concentrated his attention on a civil suit for damages on a claim that Texaco had been<br />

guilty of "tortious interference" with Pennzoil's alleged oral contract with <strong>Get</strong>ty Oil. <strong>The</strong><br />

charge was that Texaco had known that there already had been a contract, and had set out<br />

deliberately to breach it. After extensive forum shopping, Chairman Mao concluded that<br />

Houston, Texas was the right venue for a suit of this type.<br />

Liedtke and Pennzoil demanded $7 billion in actual damages and $7 billion in punitive<br />

damages for a total of at least $14 billion, a sum bigger than the entire public debt of the<br />

United States on December 7, 1941. Liedke hired Houston lawyer Joe "King of Torts"<br />

Jamail, and backed up Jamail with Baker & Botts.<br />

Interestingly, the judge who presided over the trial until the final phase, when the die had<br />

already been cast, was none other than Anthony J.P. "Tough Tony" Farris, whom we<br />

have met two decades earlier as a <strong>Bush</strong>man of the old guard. Back in February, 1963, we<br />

recall, the newly elected Republican County Chairman for Harris County, <strong>George</strong> H.W.<br />

<strong>Bush</strong>, had named Tough Tony Farris as his first assistant county chairman. [fn 2] This<br />

was when <strong>Bush</strong> was in the midst of preparations for his failed 1964 senate bid. Farris had<br />

tried to get elected to Congress on the GOP ticket, but failed. During the Nixon<br />

Administration, Farris became the United States Attorney in Houston. Given what we<br />

know of the relations between Nixon and <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> (to say nothing the relations<br />

between Nixon and Prescott <strong>Bush</strong>), we must conclude that a patronage appointment of<br />

this type could hardly have been made without <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong>'s involvement. Tough Tony<br />

Farris was decidedly an asset of the <strong>Bush</strong> networks.<br />

Now Tough Tony Farris was a State District Judge whose remaining ambition in life was<br />

an appointment to the federal bench. Farris did not recuse himself because his patron,

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