December 15, 2005

STEVE COHEN: MISREPRESENTATIONS OF BOYCOTT


In the recent interview with Aruba's new media representative, Mr. Steve Cohen, he said "When the governor, Governor Riley, imposed this boycott on Aruba." It is important that this statement be pointed out as untrue. The governor did not impose any boycott on Aruba; the call was for a national,
VOLUNTARY boycott preceded his endorsement of it. The boycott is not his to impose, nor is it his to remove. It is we, the American people, who will make this decision.

Richard R., Vermont, USA





Thanks to Scared Monkeys for update:

Steve Cohen discusses the upcoming Aruban delegation’s trip to Washington, DC and the status of Gerold Dompig and Karen Janssen.

COSBY: Well, there is news tonight of a shake-up in the investigation of missing Alabama teenager Natalee Holloway. Two key figures in the case could soon be shown the door, while local police refuse to continue their hunt for clues. Meanwhile, Alabama Congressman Spencer Bachus will host an Aruban delegation in Washington, D.C., this Friday.

Joining me now to talk about all this latest chaos in the case is Steve Cohen. He‘s a special adviser to the Aruban government. Steve, I want to ask you, first of all, why is this delegation coming to the U.S.? What does it hope to achieve?

STEVE COHEN, SPECIAL ADVISER TO ARUBAN GOVERNMENT: Well, the delegation that‘s going, it‘s basically a courtesy call. When the governor, Governor Riley, imposed this boycott on Aruba, Congressman Bachus said to us, Why don‘t you come and visit with me and tell me everything you know about the investigation? So we said, Look, give us a few weeks and we‘ll come by and we‘ll talk to you about it, and that‘s what we‘ve done.

I talked to Beth last night and she said she would not be in D.C. on Friday, and that the reason why he is going is NOT regarding the investigation. His role is representing Aruba as their special advisor PR spokesperson.

COSBY: You know, when you say it‘s a courtesy call, is this just sort of a PR game or PR show versus anything of substance?

COHEN: No. No, we‘re way past public relations here in the Natalee Holloway case. Everything has to be substantive. We‘re going to be giving him everything that we‘ve done since the release of the Kalpoes and Joran from the Kia (ph) institution on Labor Day, everything subsequent to that, as well as the first 10 days of the case. So then he can ask us any question he wants. And this is a deep background session, and that‘s its purpose.

As I mentioned before, Steve Cohen does not represent the police, prosector or ALE. He is the Aruba Travel Authority Spokesperson! The only person who should meet with anyone in Washington is the new special prosector handling the case.

COSBY: You know, there‘ve been some rumors, and a lot of people saying that it looks like the lead prosecutor may be removed in this case. What are you hearing?

COHEN: Well, I‘ll tell you exactly what‘s happening. The attorney general, Steve Croes (Isn't Steve Croes the party-boat owner that lied for JVDS, DK and SK and helped implicate the innocent black security guards? Does Cohen even know what he is talking about? Obviously, he doesn't know much about the investigation if he can't get names right. Karin Janssen is the lead prosecutor and attorney general) has had conversations with Karin Janssen for the last four to six weeks. They‘ve been very serious conversations that go along these lines. "What do you have?" "How quickly are you going to get to the end of this case, and if you‘re not going to get there quickly, do I need to remove you?"

The result of those conversations has been, Give me some more time. (7 months and counting...) We‘re going to try to accelerate this as fast as we can. (Let's not hold our breath!) Now, the AG said to Karin, Look, I believe you, but I‘m going to bring in another prosecutor from Curacao to check all of the work that‘s been done on the case. And that‘s where it is right now.

COSBY: What can this prosecutor do that Karin Janssen hasn‘t done after all this time?

COHEN: Well, that‘s a good question. I think what this prosecutor does is bring a new set of eyes. This individual can look at everything and say, That was a good pleading. You‘ve missed this piece of evidence. You could have been stronger here in front of the judge.

Remember that Janssen went to the judges four to five separate times, held Joran incarcerated and under interrogation for over 85 days. So she did a lot of good work, it‘s just that she could never get a judge to give her the OK on the case that she brought forward. (I've heard that Aruban men don't take women seriously, do you think the judge was biased against her gender? And the judge, a JVDS family friend, released 3 when the Dutch detectives said they were nearly ready to talk.)


COSBY: Was because of the system of Aruba, or was it the evidence? What do you think sort of has been her shortcoming? (how much more evidence do you need? What about all the leads that you never bothered to look into previously or just plainly ignored?)

COHEN: I don‘t think there‘s much question that the bulk of evidence is not weighty enough or has not been weighty enough, up to the release on Labor Day, to bring a case in terms of the way the Dutch judge is going to look at a case. In the Dutch system, you have to have a preponderance of evidence before it‘s present to the judge, versus our system, where the evidence is revealed through the court process.COSBY: What about the deputy police chief, Gerold Dompig? There‘s some word that maybe he might be removed from the case. And he came on my show—I‘m sure you probably heard this, Dompig—came on my show and said, quote, “The Three boys are guilty as hell. I just have to prove it.”

COHEN: I think there‘s no question that Gerold is loquacious. He says what‘s on his mind.

COSBY: Yes, he certainly does!

COHEN: And he‘s a very tough guy. You couldn‘t find a more honest cop anywhere on the planet. (Now he changes the subject... what about the remark Dompig made in Vanity Fair?) But at the same time, he‘s been very frustrated. You know, you spend six months on an investigation, do everything you can, and then a new prosecutor is brought in. Now, he was -he took a—you know, an affront to that. He thought it was a slap in the face. He took a few days off with the cops on his team. I‘m happy to say, as of tonight, that he‘s back on the case, as is his team. Karin Janssen is instructing them. (If Aruban officials have no confidence in Janssen, why are they allowing her to instruct Dompig and his team?)

And my expectation is that there‘s going to be an acceleration of efforts, not a deceleration, and we‘re going to try to move as quickly as we can towards whatever we can finally come up with that‘s either going to bring a case or not. (No comment needed...take a guess.)

COSBY: And Steve, you say that Gerold Dompig is an honest guy. He‘s come on our show and said that these boys are guilty as hell. Is that the assessment of the Aruban government, as well?

COHEN: No. I think the assessment of the government is that that‘s the most likely scenario, but we‘ve looked at four or five other scenarios, and every single scenario is being tracked so that we can figure out which one is going to lead us to a case. (There's no case now? Natalee's been missing for seven months.) so that we can figure out which one is going to lead us to a case.



Speak no evil, Hear no evil, See no evil



1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Too bad that Beth can't be there to confront this media whore with all of Aruba's lies, past and present.

Let's hope the congressmen will be on their toes.

And you're right ... why should a PR guy be sent?