Early one Saturday afternoon in July 2003, I made a simple phone call to Margie
Schoedinger, a Texas woman who filed a rape lawsuit against George W. Bush in
December 2002. I expected to leave a message on a machine, so I was caught a
little off guard when Schoedinger answered.
She, too, sounded somewhat surprised I had called, saying she hadn’t heard
from many other reporters. But she talked to me for a few minutes about the
legal action.
"I am still trying to prosecute [the lawsuit]," said Schoedinger, a
38-year-old African-American woman who lived in the Houston suburb of Missouri
City. "I want to get this matter settled and go on with my life." Well,
Schoedinger hasn't gone on with her life. In fact, three months after I spoke to
her, she died in an apparent suicide. And this matter remains unsettled.
When I asked her in July 2003 about the lack of media coverage, Schoedinger
said she wasn't seeking publicity. She said she did not even know about a
December 2002 article in the Fort Bend Star, the only U.S. mainstream media
outlet that covered this story, to my knowledge.
The Fort Bend reporter, LeaAnne Klentzman, said she even went to
Schoedinger's home and talked to a man there, who said she could not come to
door. While I reached and spoke to Schoedinger on my first attempt, maybe she
wasn't ready to talk back in December.
Anyways, Schoedinger said she was surprised the case wasn't covered more
because "it is true.... People have to be accountable for what they do, and
that's why I'm pursuing it."
To be sure, Schoedinger's accusations - which include being drugged and
sexually assaulted numerous times by Bush and other men purporting to be FBI
agents - are bizarre and hard for most people to believe. But her story fits in
with those told by a growing number of people who say they were used as guinea
pigs or whatever by members of the CIA or another U.S. agency who wanted to test
out the latest mind-controlling drug or just have a strange form of release. And
her death - let's just say government agents have made murders look like
suicides before.
In her court petition, Schoedinger said police in Sugar Land, another Houston
suburb where she said some assailants linked to Bush attempted to unsuccessfully
abduct her from her car shortly before the 2000 election, refused to take a
report or do anything about that incident. She filed a lawsuit against the Sugar
Land department and said that in preparing its defense, Sugar Land police found
out that she dated Bush as a minor. I didn't get a chance to ask Schoedinger
about that tie and didn't meet her in person, but her driver's license listed
her as being 5-foot-8 and weighing 125 pounds, for what that's worth.
The Fort Bend Star story quoted a Sugar Land police captain saying his
department had no record of any complaints by Schoedinger. All he had to do was
what I did - go to the Fort Bend County Internet site and do a simple search on
Schoedinger's name in the area of civil court records. I found the lawsuit
Schoedinger filed in December 2000 against Sugar Land police, and it even had
numerous responses by the department's attorneys in that case.
Just wait. This story gets stranger.
When I started asking Schoedinger about certain details of the case, such as
alleged surveillance at her home and if she was still legally representing
herself, she politely ended our conversation. "I need to see what has been
written," Schoedinger said. "I feel like it's best for me to end our
conversation."
Obviously, she had learned to be careful about what she said and to whom she
said it. I could understand her being leery about talking about her situation
with a stranger over the phone.
But I remember being puzzled by Schoedinger’s attitude after hanging up the
phone. I wondered that if she had made up such a wild story, why she didn't come
up with something a little less outlandish, in which people couldn't necessarily
dismiss her as a kook. I wondered why she didn't seek publicity to at least
provide some form of protection.
I've long learned that being as public as possible is one of your best
defenses against rogue intelligence agents. But she didn't even seem to want any
media to cover her story. I told several writers I knew, some of whom tried to
contact Schoedinger. None succeeded, as far as I know.
I remember thinking, "I hope she doesn't wind up on the wrong side of a gun."
And sure enough, in late September, Schoedinger did.
The Houston Chronicle wrote a bare-bones obituary that stated only that
Schoedinger "expired" on Sept. 22, 2003, and her burial was at Houston Memorial
Gardens.
I called the Harris County Medical Examiner's office, and a clerk told me the
cause of death: a "suicide" by a "gunshot wound to the head." I hung up amid
bombs going off in my mind.
For one, using a gun to commit suicide is predominantly executed by males,
according to psychiatrists and other sources like pharmaceutical firm Merck
& Co. Women are more likely to overdose on drugs, although the number of
gunshot suicides among women has increased in recent years.
Besides Pravda and Internet ezines - one of whom referred to Schoedinger as
"deranged" - I haven't seen stories on this strange death of a woman who filed a
rape lawsuit against the U.S. president and wound up dead nine months later. I
can't say I'm surprised. Or even angry. I don't know what the hell to think.
All I know is I was one of the last - if not the last - reporters to speak to
Schoedinger, and she didn't sound "deranged" to me in July 2003. She sounded
like someone who had gone through something weird and was trying to sort it out.
She sounded like someone who wanted the truth to come out. And now she's
dead.
If this had happened to Clinton when he was in the White House, do you think
the story would have been covered non-stop on FOX, CNN and the right-wing talk
shows? Do you think we'd have reporters asking Clinton and his people about this
death in press conferences? Is FOX unfair and imbalanced to the point of being
"deranged?"
There are some more odd twists to this case. I also found a 2002 criminal
case related to Schoedinger in which Christopher Schoedinger, her husband,
allegedly struck her. He pleaded no contest and was sentenced to a year in jail.
Christopher Schoedinger had also filed for divorce. Then since 1997, Margie
Schoedinger had filed for at least five assumed business names for various
ventures - including a communications firm, health and beauty business, travel
agency and publishing company.
Could a "deranged" person start all those businesses or even know how to file
a lawsuit? Schoedinger's lawsuit can still be viewed on the Fort Bend County
site at http://ccweb.co.fort-bend.tx.us/localization/menu.asp
- then go down to the bottom and click on civil court. Then type "schoedinger"
in the plaintiff box and click search. You should find another lawsuit she filed
against Sugar Land police, as well.
I can really understand media members being intimidated, even frightened, of
the Bush administration. As I've detailed before, these are not Boy Scouts
running the show. The Schoedinger death is just the latest in a string of
strange ones surrounding the Bush family - Bush biographer J.H. Hatfield, Sen.
Paul Wellstone, Sen. Mel Carnahan, and others that are detailed on various
sites, including at http://members.boardhost.com/gwbush/msg/362.html.
For the record, I contacted Bush's media office about Schoedinger and have
yet to hear back. Now that I live in the Washington, D.C., area, I can go down
to the White House in person and try to get someone to speak to me about this
case. As expected, I haven't had much luck with the Fort Bend County and other
Texas authorities. So maybe I'll stand outside the White House, holding a sign
saying, "Who killed Margie Schoedinger?" and passing out copies of my column on
the case. It would make about as much sense as anything else in this matter.
For all I know, maybe Schoedinger did kill herself. Maybe she dreamed up a
lot of this stuff. But I don't know, am I "deranged" to think it's weird that in
this mass-media, detailed-information age, so few people are even asking any
questions about how a woman who filed a rape lawsuit against the president could
be dead less than a year later?
Jackson Thoreau is an American writer and co-author of We Will Not Get Over
It: Restoring a Legitimate White House. The updated, 120,000-word electronic
book can be downloaded on his Internet site at http://www.geocities.com/jacksonthor/ebook.html.
He can be contacted at jacksonthor@yahoo.com or jacksonthor@justice.com.
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