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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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Again Don this day was one of the greatest of my life. I love boats, always have. But ever since<br />

knowing you that private side of my life has become ever more exciting and fulfilling.<br />

Incidentally, I didn't get to tell you but my reliable 28 footer Cigarette that is, still doing just<br />

fine...no trouble at all and the new last year engines.<br />

All the best to you and all your exciting ventures. May all your boats bee [sic] number one and<br />

may the hosres [sic] be not far behind.<br />

At the end of this message, before his signature, <strong>Bush</strong> wrote in by hand, "My typing<br />

stinks." [fn 7]<br />

As a result of this outing, <strong>Bush</strong> is said to have used his influence to see to it that Aronow<br />

received a lucrative contract to build the Blue Thunder catamarans at $150,000 apiece for<br />

the US Customs Service. This contract was announced with great fanfare in Miami on<br />

February 4, 1985, and was celebrated a week later in a public ceremony in which Florida<br />

Senator Paula Hawkins and US Customs Commissioner William von Raab mugged for<br />

photographers together with Aronow. <strong>The</strong> government purchase was hyped as the first<br />

time that the Customs would receive boats especially designed and built to intercept drug<br />

runners on the high seas, a big step forward in the war on drugs.<br />

This was the same <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> who in March, 1988 had stated: "I will never bargain<br />

with drug dealers on US or foreign soil."<br />

As one local resident recalled of that time, "everyone in Miami knew that if you needed a<br />

favor from <strong>Bush</strong>, you spoke to Aronow." [fn 8] It was proverbial among Florida pols and<br />

powerbrokers that Aronow had the vice president's ear.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Customs soon found that the Blue Thunder catamarans were highly unseaworthy and<br />

highly unsuitable for the task of chasing down other speedboats, including above all<br />

Aronow's earlier model Cigarette boats, which were now produced by a company not<br />

controlled by Aronow. Blue Thunder was relatively slow class, capable of a top speed of<br />

only 56 miles per hour, despite the presence of twin 440-horsepower marine engines. <strong>The</strong><br />

design of the catamaran hulls lacked any hydrodynamic advantages, and the boats were<br />

too heavy to attain sufficient lift. <strong>The</strong> stern drives were too weak for the powerful<br />

engines, leading to the problem of "grenading" : when the drive shafts severed, which<br />

was often, the engines began to rev far beyond their red line, leading to the explosion or<br />

disintegration of the engines and the sharpnel-like scattering of red-hot steel fragments<br />

through the boat. This meant that the boats had to be kept well below their maximum<br />

speed. Most Blue Thunders spent more time undergoing repairs than chasing drug<br />

runners in the coastal waters of Florida. Blue Thunder was in boating parlance "wet," a<br />

complete lemon, useful only for photo opportunities and publicity shots.<br />

Documents found by Burdick in the Dade County land records office show that USA<br />

Racing, the company operated by Aronow which built the Blue Thunder catamarans for<br />

the Customs service was not owned by Aronow, but rather by a one Jack J. Kramer in his<br />

capacity of president of Super Chief South Corporation. Jack Kramer had married a niece<br />

of Meyer Lansky. Jack Kramer's son Ben Kramer was thus the great nephew and one of

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