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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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Still later Frandsen would serve as Quayle's campaign manager in Boone County during<br />

the 1986 senate race. It was thus no surprise that Frandsen was willing to admit Dan<br />

Quayle to law school as part of a program for disadvantaged students, primarily those<br />

from the black community.<br />

After all this, it may appear as a mircale that Dan Quayle was ever able to obtain a law<br />

degree. J. Danforth's receipt of that degree appears to have been mightily facilitated by<br />

the plutocratic Quayle family, who made large donations to the law school each year<br />

during Dan's time as a law student.<br />

What were Quayle's passtimes during his law school years? According to one account,<br />

they included recreational drugs. During the summer of 1988, a Mr. Brett Kimberlin told<br />

Dennis Bernstein and a radio audience of WBAI in New York that he had first met J.<br />

Danforth during this period at a fraternity party at which marijuana was indeed being<br />

consumed. "He found out that I had marijuana avilable at the time," said Kimberlin. "It<br />

was good quality, and he asked if I had any for sale....I thought it was kind of strange. He<br />

looked kind of straight. I thought he might be a narc [DEA agent] at first. But we talked<br />

and I felt a little more comfortable, and finally I gave him my phone number and said,<br />

'Hey, well, give me a call.' He called me a couple weeks later, and said, 'Hey, this is DQ.<br />

Can we get together?' and I said 'Yes, meet me at the Burger Chef restaurant.' We struck<br />

up a relationship that lasted for 18 months. I sold him small quantities of marijuana for<br />

his personal use about once a month during that period. He was a good customer. He was<br />

a friend of mine. We had a pretty good relationship. He always paid cash. [...] When him<br />

and Marilyn got married in 1972, I gave him a wedding present of some Afghanistan<br />

hashish and some Acapulco gold." [fn 41]<br />

Kimberlin repeated these charges in a pre-election interview on NBC News on November<br />

4, 1988. Kimberlin was a federal prisoner serving time in Tennessee after conviction on<br />

charges of drug smuggling and explosives. Later that same day Kimberlin was scheduled<br />

to address a news conference by telephone conference call. But before Kimberlin could<br />

speak to the press, he was placed in solitary confinement, and was moved in and out of<br />

solitary confinement until well after the November 8 presidential election. A second<br />

attempted press conference by telephone hookup on the eve of the election did not take<br />

place because Kimberlin was still being held incommunicado. On August 6, 1991, US<br />

District Judge Harold H. Greene ruled that the allegations made by Kimberlin against US<br />

Bureau of Prisons Director J. Michael Quinlan were "tangible and detailed" enough to<br />

justify a trail. Kimberlin had accused Quinlan of ordering solitary confiment for him<br />

when it became clear that his ability to further inform the media about Quayle's drug use<br />

would damage the <strong>Bush</strong>-Quayle effort.<br />

In March, 1977, Congressman Dan Quayle contributed an article to the Fort Wayne<br />

Indiana News-Sentinel in which he recommended that Congress take a "serious" look at<br />

marijuana decriminalization. In April, 1978, Quayle repeated this proposal, specifying he<br />

supported decriminalization for first-time users. [fn 42]

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