Paul E. Sperry | |
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Occupation | Pundit, author, investigative journalist, and Stanford University Hoover Institute media fellow |
Notable work(s) | Muslim Mafia; Infiltration; Crude Politics |
Paul E. Sperry is a conservative pundit, author, investigative journalist, and Stanford University Hoover Institute media fellow.[1][2] In the wake of the Fort Hood Shooting, he gave an interview to Coast to Coast AM on November 7, 2009, about his co-authored book Muslim Mafia.[3]
Contents |
In 1999, at the annual White House press picnic, Sperry, then the Washington bureau chief of Investor's Business Daily, asked President Clinton when he was going to hold his next formal news conference. Clinton asked why, and Sperry responded: "The American people have a lot of unanswered questions." Clinton asked "Like what?", and Sperry said: "Questions about illegal money from China, and the campaign finance scandal." Clinton reportedly exploded in anger, and told Sperry that "the FBI wants you to write about that, rather than write about Waco." Clinton said his campaign had given Justice "every shred of evidence, and they haven't found a thing." Photos of the incident show a red-faced Clinton wagging his finger about a foot in front of Sperry. A White House spokesman said, "The President does not regret making those comments," and Sperry said Press Secretary Joe Lockhart personally told him he would never be invited back to the White House.[4]