Marlene Cooke was yet another one of the Evil Jack Kent Cooke's Bitches where I read this bastards resume to Youngest Brother today and He was like "WHAT THE FUCK!?!?"
Again!?
THIS IS WHY I DON'T PAY BUT SO MUCH ATTENTION TO THE CYNTHIA G'S BECAUSE THEIR ASSES WEREN'T FUCKIN PAST KIDDIE YEARS WHEN THIS SHIT WAS GOING ON!
Jack Kent Cooke was married 5-times and the first bitch was a Carnegie-Family member!
Marlene Cooke has suspicious ties to the Crack-Epidemic of the 80's and WAS AN INFORMANT FOR THE GOVERNMENT!
I remember it well because the moment Cooke DIED!?
Immigration and Naturalization Services IMMEDIATELY SWOOPED IN TO DEPORT HER!
I SPECIFICALLY REMEMBER THAT THE EVIL JACK KENT COOKE HAD SET IT UP FOR HER BOLIVIAN-WHORE-ASS TO BE DEPORTED!
ONCE HE FUCKIN DIED!!!!!
This fuckin Whiteman was so evil that even during the LAST SUPER BOWL that the Washington Redskins won he had Native-American Protestors screaming about the Fact that the Redskins were a racial-slur and insult!
He said ON LIVE TV DURING THE INTERVIEW that HE DIDN'T GIVE A DAMN ABOUT WHAT THEY THOUGHT OR FELT!
Mind You!?
I LITERALLY HAVE BEEN LOOKING ON YOUTUBE FOR THIS INTERVIEW AND I HAVE NOT FUCKIN FOUND IT YET!
But this BULLSHIT-STUPIDITY that PRESENT-DAY BLACKS TOLD THEIR FUCKIN CHILDREN?
The Super Bowl, and this is in 1991.
NOT 1981!
I was LITERALLY a Sophomore at Lincoln University and was watching the Super Bowl with Milford and Alex. Paul and Winston.
And when the Fact that the Redskins name IS INDEED THE EQUIVALENT OF CALLING A NATIVE-AMERICAN INDIAN A NIGGER.
When this Master of Evil was asked about this HE GOT HOT QUICK!
And he let Them KNOW!
He's not gonna change SHIT! AND HE DOESN'T GIVE A FUCK!
Where He then POINTS OUT HE HAS AN INDIAN PLAYING QUARTERBACK RIGHT NOW FOR THE SUPER BOWL!!!!!!
Mark Rypien.
So he didn't give a FUCK!
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MARLENE COOKE SUES
TO
STOP DEPORTATION
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Nearly two years after immigration agents tried to deport her, Marlene Ramallo Chalmers Cooke still is fighting to stay in the United States, the country that she and law enforcement officials say she helped by providing key testimony against several international drug kingpins.
In late September, her attorney, Robert S. Bennett, filed a lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Washington on behalf of the wife of Washington Redskins owner Jack Kent Cooke seeking to force the Immigration and Naturalization Service to drop its deportation order. The suit uses her maiden name of Ramallo and asks a federal judge to place much of the case under seal. Although Bennett later filed a public version of the lawsuit, the Justice Department has filed its response under seal.
The desire for such secrecy seems to stem at least in part from concern over divulging too much about large-scale drug investigations and endangering the safety of Cooke and others involved in the probes.
But Cooke's work as an informant is no secret. The Washington Post reported in March 1994 that Cooke helped authorities lock up more than 30 drug dealers from 1988 to 1990 to save herself from being deported to her native Bolivia. Because she pleaded guilty to a drug charge in 1986, she is a convicted felon and was on the verge of being kicked out of the country after her release from prison.
In the lawsuit, Bennett portrays Cooke, a jet-setter best known for her two marriages to Jack Kent Cooke and speeding through Georgetown in 1993 with a man hanging on to the hood of her Jaguar, as a woman wronged by coldhearted bureaucrats at the INS.
The INS officials, according to the transcript of an Oct. 10 hearing, appear to take the position that Cooke made her deal with federal prosecutors in Alexandria and the Drug Enforcement Administration, not them.
Bennett vigorously contests the INS position, accusing the agency of having a "vendetta" against Cooke and trying to "deliver her into the cross hairs of the South American drug lords." He based much of his suspicion on a complaint by the immigration judge who was miffed at seeing Cooke on TV sitting next to then-Vice President Dan Quayle at a Redskins game in 1989.
"If Ms. Ramallo were deported to Bolivia, she will, in all likelihood, be tortured or executed" by associates of drug dealers she helped put away, Bennett wrote, accusing the government of "extreme . . . misconduct" by placing her in such grave danger.
Bennett insists in court papers that the INS was in on the deal. He cited a high-level government meeting in May 1990, in which INS officials and prosecutors discussed the best way to allow Cooke to stay in the United States. No one at the meeting mentioned any problems for her, he said. An INS memo shows that INS officials appeared more concerned about who would field media calls and whether the agency would be viewed as giving "preferential treatment" to Cooke by working out a way for her to stay in the country.
Bennett wants U.S. District Judge Charles R. Richey to force the government to honor its deal with Cooke by allowing her to keep her green card and ordering the INS to drop attempts to deport her.
Cooke came to the United States in 1972 with her 6-month-old son and received permanent resident status in 1978. She married Jack Kent Cooke the first time in 1990 and again in July.
In March 1994, Cooke's status was imperiled when INS agents burst into her home on a weekend and attempted to throw her out of the country. Bennett persuaded a Virginia judge to stop them, and the battle moved into the INS bureaucracy.
Eventually, the Board of Immigration Appeals ruled that its hands were tied because Cooke had agreed -- on bad legal advice, Bennett now says -- to waive her right to appeal a deportation order entered automatically against her at the time she was working out her deal with law enforcement officials.
The board also said it could do nothing for Cooke because she had "self-deported" by leaving the United States several times since 1987. Bennett, however, argued that her agreement with the DEA allowed, and required, her to travel.
Cooke appealed the board decision to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit in Richmond. On Nov. 7, appellate Judge H. Emory Widener Jr. put the case on hold so Cooke could file her lawsuit in Washington. Widener said he agreed to do so because he did not understand why the government was trying to deport her despite a deal he said it appeared she had and had honored.
According to court papers, Cooke felt she had no choice but to become a DEA informant. She had been arrested after returning from a trip to Brazil in June 1986 with friends, one of whom was caught with cocaine.
Her attorney at the time never told her that pleading guilty to a felony meant that she automatically would be deported, according to the lawsuit. He talked her into pleading guilty, even though she maintained -- and later law enforcement officials acknowledged -- that she played little, if any, role in her friend's smuggling attempt. She spent 5 1/2 months in prison.
When the INS began deportation proceedings after her release, the lawyer she hired then helped broker the deal that would keep her here but didn't get the deal in writing, although he did manage to get an oblique reference to it on the record during a May 1988 hearing before an immigration judge.
The legal miscue that continues to haunt Cooke is that she agreed, as part of her bargain with the government, to waive her rights to appeal a deportation order that was technically entered against her despite the deal.
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