FIERY IMMIGRANT WHO CHANGED AMERICAN POLITICAL HISTORY DIES — “Argentine Firecracker” 🧨(Later “Tidal Basin Bombshell”💣) Fanne Foxe (1936-2021) — Her Oct. 1974 Early AM Plunge 🏊🏻‍♀️ Into The Tidal Basin Derailed Career Of Rep. Wilbur Mills (D-AK), Then One Of The Most Powerful Politicos In Washington! — “Fanny [Sic] Foxe claimed that she fell into the water because she ‘got hysterical [and] the officer was drowning [her]. [She] didn’t need his help because [she] was an expert swimmer.’” — Stripper Was #3 On “Best Mistresses” & “Top U.S. Sex Scandals” Rankings, Earned Three Academic Degrees!👩🏻‍🎓

Quote Source: “Arkansas Congressman and the Argentine Stripper” – Ghosts of DC, https://ghostsofdc.org/2019/02/20/arkansas-congressman-and-the-argentine-stripper/

Fanne Foxe & Wilbur Mills
ST/SCANDAL — 1974 – Arkansas Rep. Wilbur D. Mills joins Annabel Battistella, a stripper with the stage name Fanne Foxe, at her Boston Theatre dressing room in 1974. – Credit: AP. Scanned from file photo Feb. 4, 1998.

Cathy and I arrived in the DC Area in August 1973. So, I remember the hoopla surrounding Fanne’s early AM dip in the TB with a rather incoherent Chairman Mills and buddies in tow.

No internet in those days. Every day, I got up early to thoroughly read the Washington Post before heading for the downtown “Shirley Express” bus that would take me within walking distance of my job at the BIA, then located in the now-long-gone International Safeway Building (yes, it contained a real Safeway grocery store on the ground level).

A couple of days later, the Post reported that Mills finally acknowledged that he was in the car with “family friend” Fanne. That, apparently, was after an evening of boozing and enjoying the entertainment, perhaps at the Silver Slipper, where FF originally displayed her considerable assets to the Chairman of the House Ways & Means Committee. Reportedly, on this or another occasion, Ol’ Wilbur dropped $1,700 on refreshments for the gang. Impressive fiscal responsibility at a time when I recollect that the top Civil Service salary was frozen at $36,000.

“Family friend” Fanne and her then ex-husband lived in the same Arlington apartment complex, on Eads Street, as the Millses. Supposedly, the foursome played “contract bridge,” although it’s pretty evident that Wilbur and Fanne had actually turned bridge into a “full contact sport.”

Even in those days, the obligatory sexist xenophobic slur was inevitable. “Never drink champagne with a foreigner,” became one of the Chairman’s deflections. This was despite the fact that by then Foxe was U.S.citizen. It worked with the voters of “Bible Belt” Arkansas, as Mills was re-elected only a month later. 

But, Mills’s obsession with Foxe, the “Argentine Firecracker” had since morphed into the “Tidal Basin Bombshell,” brought him down shortly thereafter. As reported in a detailed obituary by the Post’s Adam Bernstein (on which I drew for this account):

Ms. Battistella [Fanne Foxe] — christened “the Tidal Basin Bombshell” — was inundated with striptease offers that paid more than five times the $400 a week she had been drawing at the Silver Slipper. Mills pleaded with her not to bare herself again publicly.

“Mr. Mills wanted me to stay home . . . to study and get a job,” she told The Post at the time. “He wanted me to leave the whole [stripping] thing in the Tidal Basin. But my going back to work started the whole thing up again . . . not because of the publicity but because I promised him for the kids’ sake I wouldn’t go back to being a stripper.”

Fresh off reelection to his 19th term in office and reportedly fortified with two bottles of vodka, Mills appeared in the wings during a performance by Ms. Battistella at Boston’s Pilgrim Theatre. As Mills teetered onstage, she later said, she tried to make light of the situation, announcing: “Ladies and gentlemen, I have a visitor for you, and he wants to say hello. Mr. Mills, where are you?”

“Here I am!” he declared as he wandered out grinning. The crowd, which included reporters who had been tipped to his presence, began to holler, whistle and stomp. Mills took a microphone and walked to center stage, rambling incoherently.

Then, backstage, Mills delivered one of the most excruciating news conferences ever captured on film. Slurring his words, and with barely controlled fury, he declared that all Ms. Battistella’s future performances were off, as she struggled to defuse his wrath.

Back in Washington, Mills was removed as Ways and Means Committee chairman and sought treatment for alcohol addiction. He claimed to have no memory of the entire year of 1974 and blamed his indiscretions on mixing alcohol with “some highly addictive drugs” for back pain. With his career in tatters and citing exhaustion, he left office in 1977 and became an advocate for recovering alcoholics until his death in 1992.

Ms. Battistella prospered — for a while — and wrote of her unyielding loyalty to Mills even after he disappeared from her life.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/obituaries/fanne-foxe-dies/2021/02/24/87c04e6e-5e4c-11ea-b014-4fafa866bb81_story.htmli

Perhaps, Mills’s claim that the entire year of 1974, during which he chaired the powerful House Ways & Means Committee, was a “no remember,” tells us all we need to know about the Congressional budget process.

Foxe rose to #3 on Time’s list of “10 Best Mistresses,” while she and Mills also achieved a coveted #3 ranking on Bloomberg’s list of “Ten Best U.S. Sex Scandals.” While Foxe’s “Bombshell” career eventually faded along with the memories, she proved to be as multi-talented and resourceful as many other immigrants. Reinventing herself, she remarried, moved to Florida, raised another daughter, had seven grandchildren, and earned a B.A. in communications, and Master’s degrees in marine science and business administration.

Quite a remarkable life! I’m surprised that nobody ever turned it into a movie. She also seems like someone who could have written a lively autobiography. But, perhaps she just wanted to move on. 

R.I.P. Fanne!

Now, about Elizabeth (“Can’t Type, File, Or Even Answer The Phone”) Ray, “secretary” to Rep. Wayne Hays (D-OH), then Chair of the House Administration Committee, self-styled “Meanest Man in the House,” who didn’t let his marriage to his legislative aide after divorcing his wife of 38 years interfere with his “arrangement” with Liz  . . . .  Obviously, Hayes was as good at “administration” as Mills was at balancing the budget. I checked and learned that Ms. Ray is 77 and still going strong!

Colorful times, with unforgettable characters, to be sure!

PWS

02-25-21

A LIFE WELL LIVED: R.I.P. JUDGE PATRICIA WALD 1928 – 2019 — “The truth is that life does change and the law must adapt to that inevitability.” — Rev. Bob Jones Once Called Her An “instrument of the devil.” — Can It Get Any Better Than That?

https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/obituaries/patricia-wald-pathbreaking-federal-judge-who-became-chief-of-dc-circuit-dies-at-90/2019/01/12/6ab03904-1688-11e9-803c-4ef28312c8b9_story.html

Patricia Wald, pathbreaking federal judge who became chief of D.C. Circuit, dies at 90


President Barack Obama awards Judge Patricia Wald the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2013. (Evan Vucci/AP)

January 12 at 12:10 PM

Shortly before she graduated from Yale Law School in 1951, Patricia Wald secured a job interview with a white-shoe firm in Manhattan. The hiring partner was impressed with her credentials — she was one of two women on the law review — but lamented her timing.

“It’s really a shame,” she recalled the man saying. “If only you could have been here last week.” A woman had been hired then, she was told, and it would be a long time before the firm considered bringing another on board.

Gradually, working nights and weekends while raising five children, she built a career in Washington as an authority on bail reform and family law. Working for a pro bono legal services group and an early public-interest law firm, she won cases that broadened protections for society’s most vulnerable, including indigent women and children with special needs.

She became an assistant attorney general under President Jimmy Carter, who in 1979 appointed her to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit — often described as the country’s most important bench after the U.S. Supreme Court. She was the first woman to serve on the D.C. Circuit and was its chief judge from 1986 to 1991. Later, she was a member of the United Nations tribunal on war crimes and genocide in the former Yugoslavia.

Judge Wald, whom Barack Obama called “one of the most respected appellate judges of her generation” when he awarded her the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2013, died Jan. 12 at her home in Washington. She was 90.

The cause was pancreatic cancer, said a son, Douglas Wald.


Judge Patricia Wald in 1999. (Michael Williamson/The Washington Post)
More than 800 opinions

On the D.C. Circuit, Judge Wald served on three-member panels that decided some of the most complicated legal disputes on the federal docket. She wrote more than 800 opinions during her tenure — many on technical matters involving separation of powers, administrative law and the environment — and she counted herself among the more liberal jurists, viewing the law as a tool to achieve social progress.

At the time, demonstrators regularly gathered outside the South African Embassy to shame the apartheid regime and outside the Nicaraguan and Soviet embassies to call attention to human rights violations. (The case was brought by conservative activists protesting Nicaragua’s radical left-wing Sandinista regime and the treatment of Soviet dissident Andrei Sakharov.)

Writing for the majority, Judge Robert H. Bork cited the obligation of the United States to uphold the “dignity” of foreign governments. Judge Wald responded that the ruling “gouges out an enormously important category of political speech from First Amendment protection.”

Judge Wald played a small role in a long-running, high-profile case involving the Justice Department’s effort to break up the software giant Microsoft on the grounds of anti-competitive practices.

She dissented in 1998, when the court ruled that the company had not violated a consent decree regarding Microsoft’s bundling of its Internet browser with its Windows 95 operating system. She concurred with the government’s argument that bundling gave the software company’s browser an unfair advantage and could be financially harmful to competitors. (Microsoft and the Justice Department reached a settlement in 2002.)

In 1997, she delivered a unanimous opinion in a case growing out of a corruption probe involving Mike Espy, who served as agriculture secretary under President Bill Clinton and was accused of accepting illegal gifts. In her opinion, one of the most cited executive-privilege cases since the Watergate era, Judge Wald broadened the scope of executive privilege to include the president’s senior advisers while noting that it was “not absolute” and could not be claimed in all circumstances.

In a speech at Yale in 1988, she likened judges on the appeals court to “monks or conjugal partners locked into a compulsory and often uneasy collegiality. . . . I constantly watch my colleagues in an effort to discern what it takes to be a good appellate judge: alertness, sensitivity to the needs of the system and one’s colleagues, raw energy, unselfishness, a healthy sense of history, some humility, a lively interest in the world outside the courthouse and what makes it tick.”

Summer jobs at the factory

Patricia Ann McGowan was born in the factory town of Torrington, Conn., on Sept. 16, 1928. She was 2 when her father, whom she called an alcoholic, abandoned the family. Her mother raised her with the help of relatives. They all worked at Torrington Co., which produced sewing and surgical needles and, during World War II, ball bearings.

She remembered working summers, as a teenager, at the factory, “up to my arms in ball-bearing grease.” The drudgery and her encounters with union activists sparked her interest in labor law.

In 1952, she married a Yale classmate, Robert L. Wald. After a stint clerking for a federal judge and working as an associate in a Washington law firm, she shifted her attention to her family for the next decade.

She did legal research projects on the side, collaborating with Daniel J. Freed, a Yale classmate and Justice Department lawyer, on “Bail in the United States — 1964,” a book credited with spurring the Bail Reform Act of 1966. That landmark legislation upended the bail system, which had left poor defendants little choice but to languish in jail before trial, by allowing defendants to be released without bond in certain noncapital cases. (The act was later watered down by preventive-detention laws.)

Judge Wald led a team that successfully argued in 1970 before the D.C. Circuit federal appeals court that the financial barrier was effectively an unconstitutional denial of access to the courts.

Judge Wald’s subsequent work for the Center for Law and Social Policy, a public-interest law firm, led to one of the first court decisions requiring that school districts provide an adequate education to the mentally and physically disabled.

Sen. Gordon J. Humphrey (R-N.H.), citing an article she had written on the legal rights of children to seek without parental approval medical and psychiatric attention in extreme cases, accused her of being “anti-family.” Appearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee, Bob Jones III, a fundamentalist preacher and president of Bob Jones University in South Carolina, called her an “instrument of the devil.”

Judge Wald liked to recall that a reporter approached her son Thomas, then in high school, for his reaction to his mother being called a minion of Lucifer. “Well, she burns the lamb chops,” Thomas replied, “but otherwise she’s okay.”

Her husband, who became a prominent Washington antitrust lawyer in private practice, died in 2010. Survivors include their children, Sarah Wald of Belmont, Mass., Douglas Wald of Bethesda, Md., Johanna Wald of Dedham, Mass., Frederica Wald of New York and Thomas Wald of Denver; 10 grandchildren; and one great-grandson.

Judge Wald was a former vice president of the American Law Institute, an organization of legal professionals. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, she participated in American Bar Association efforts to assist structural changes to the legal systems of former communist nations in Eastern Europe.

In 1999, U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan named her one of 14 judges, from as many countries, to serve on the war crimes tribunal for the former Yugoslavia at The Hague.

She sat for two years on the now-defunct criminal court and was on the panel of judges that in 2001 convicted former Bosnian Serb general Radislav Krstic, the first person found guilty of genocide by the tribunal. The tribunal sentenced Krstic to 46 years in prison for his role in the slaughter of thousands of Muslim men and boys near Srebrenica in 1995. An appeals court later reduced the sentence to 35 years.

Judge Wald brought what the New York Times called a refreshing lack of pomp to the tribunal, often running down documents herself, instead of dispatching clerks to fetch them, leaving her office door open for visitors and taking her meals in a canteen where judges were seldom spotted.

She sat on many blue-ribbon panels and commissions. But she said she took particular pride in her role in an appellate decision involving a Naval Academy honor student, Joseph Steffan, who had been expelled because he was openly gay.

Judge Wald was part of the three-judge panel that unanimously ruled in 1993 that the armed forces could not make sexual orientation the sole criterion for expulsion. The Justice Department then asked for a rehearing by the full D.C. Circuit court, which in a 7-to-3 ruling — with Judge Wald dissenting — rejected Steffan’s readmission.

“You always have a sad feeling when you write a dissent because it means you lost,” Judge Wald said in an interview with a D.C. Bar publication. “But you write them because you have faith that maybe they will play out at some time in the future, and because of the integrity you owe to yourself. There are times when you need to stand up and say, ‘I can’t be associated with this point of view.’ That was certainly the way I felt in the gay midshipman case.”

*************************************
I knew Judge Wald back in the Carter Administration when she was the Assistant Attorney General for Legislative Affairs at the DOJ and I was the Deputy General Counsel of the “Legacy INS.” I was working for then General Counsel David Crosland, now Judge Crosland of the Baltimore Immigration Court. Part of my “portfolio” was the INS Legislative Program. Judge Wald’s “right hand man” on immigration legislation was my friend the late Jack Perkins who later went on to a distinguished career as a Senior Executive at EOIR.
I remember Judge Wald as wise, courteous, congenial, humane, practical, and supportive.  She was also a long-time friend of the late former EOIR Director Kevin D. Rooney who was then the Assistant Attorney General for Administration.
My favorite Judge Wald quote from this obit was the last one:
“You always have a sad feeling when you write a dissent because it means you lost,” Judge Wald said in an interview with a D.C. Bar publication. “But you write them because you have faith that maybe they will play out at some time in the future, and because of the integrity you owe to yourself. There are times when you need to stand up and say, ‘I can’t be associated with this point of view.’ That was certainly the way I felt in the gay midshipman case.”
Yup, I can certainly relate to that.
R.I.P. Judge Wald.
PWS
01-13-19