"Somebody." In November 2001, just weeks after his father's death, Wade took Cunningham shopping. The two men went on quite a spree, picking out antique nightstands, a leaded glass cabinet, a buffet, four armoires. When Wade went to pay the $12,000 tab, federal prosecutors say, Cunningham "wandered to a different area of the store." Afterward, Cunningham "expressed his appreciation" for Wade's "willingness to bribe him," prosecutors say, and told Wade he would make him a "somebody." Wade's business records show that, with what prosecutors called the "green light" from Cunningham, the value of MZM's government contracts soared, from "less than a million dollars per year, to tens of millions per year."One thing that stood out at me from the USNews piece was a rather disturbing insight into James King's personality.
One of King's favorite aphorisms: "There are no lies; the truth keeps changing."James King is the head of
These are bad men. They are very very bad men. Our congressman took their money, and gave them really sweet deals at the expense of his own constituents. This ad tells the simple, ugly truth of MZM and Virgil Goode. Watch it, and help us keep the ad on the air.