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Bill Clinton Bill McCuen signed Arkansas Traveler Certificate State Seal 1987

$ 96.54

Availability: 100 in stock
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
  • Condition: Preowned- Certificate has tape on the back that held it in place at one point in the frame. It is unmatted. Mary Abell Young's name and the date is faded a bit. The frame is 12"x16". The certificate is loose in the frame and has been removed at least once for photos for this listing. I believe this is real and authentic signatures and not photocopies. There are slight impressions on the back of where Bill Clinton's signature is. Please feel free to ask questions. Please see full description. I will ship without the frame for cheaper shipping. Please message me for a quote.
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer

    Description

    Preowned- Certificate has tape on the back in four places (one piece has a piece of debris under it) that held it in place at one point in the frame. It is not matted. Mary Abell Young's name and the date is faded a bit. The frame is 12"x16". The certificate is loose in the frame and has been removed at least once for photos for this listing. It measures 15.25"x11.25". I believe this is real and authentic signatures and not photocopies. There are slight impressions on the back of where Bill Clinton's signature is. The Arkansas State Seal is a gold color foil type with red and blue ribbons coming from it. Purchased in Mobile, Alabama. Please feel free to ask questions.
    A litle bit about Mary Abell Young:
    YOUNG Mrs. Mary Abell Young - A native of Paragould, Arkansas and a longtime resident of Mobile, Alabama died on Saturday, July 14, 2012. She was a member of Holy Family Catholic Church and was retired from the Mobile County Public School System.
    Bill McCuen's Obituary :
    Bill McCuen, the former secretary of state known for his bombastic style and imprisoned for corruption in office, has died.
    McCuen, who was diagnosed with cancer while serving a 17-year prison term, died Saturday at his Heber Springs home, a spokeswoman for Cleburne County Coroner Dwight Olmstead's office said. He was 57.
    Before his election to secretary of state in 1984, McCuen was a school teacher and principal in Hot Springs. He was elected to the Hot Springs City Council in 1972 and served as Garland County judge from 1977 to 1980, when he was elected state land commissioner.
    McCuen developed a flair for the dramatic during 10 years as secretary of state, once allowing a Hollywood film crew to fake blowing up the Capitol dome for a movie. He also decked out the dome in twirling, ornate flashing white lights at Christmas-time, prompting comparisons to a disco ball.
    He put his trademark signature on everything at the Capitol, and his tenure was steeped in controversy.
    McCuen, a Democrat, ran for Congress in 1992, defeating longtime incumbent Beryl Anthony in the primary before losing to Republican businessman Jay Dickey in the general election that year.
    After his defeat, McCuen took a trip to Las Vegas with two female members of his staff, including one who later got a promotion and a 400 percent increase in pay.
    "Bill was the John Wayne of politics in a way. Everything he did was colorful and he didn't hide much. That was probably his downfall," said McCuen's lawyer and longtime friend, Q. Byrum Hurst of Hot Springs. "He was a very able and good public servant for many years. It's unfortunate that late in his career, he had the scandal that happened."
    Steve Faris, who worked for McCuen from 1985 through 1991, rising from notary clerk to director of legislative affairs, recalled Monday that McCuen's door was open to the public.
    "He was probably the best person at constituent service I have ever seen," working the phones to help people who had problems with other state agencies, recalled Faris, now a state representative from Malvern.
    "That was one of the strengths of his early political career," Faris said.
    Faris, who said he had not stayed in touch with McCuen, said he'd never gotten wind of any illegality in the office. When McCuen was accused of corruption, "I just thought it was sad," Faris said.
    "Early in his career, Bill McCuen did a lot of good for the state of Arkansas and it's unfortunate that the circumstances surrounding him at the end of his career is what he will be most remembered for by many," he said.
    Gov. Mike Huckabee issued a statement offering condolences to McCuen's family.
    "When I was first elected to public office, Bill McCuen didn't give me the red-carpet treatment. However, we later became friends. Despite the mistakes for which he paid dearly, there were some good and decent qualities the public never saw," Huckabee said. "We extend our prayers to his family."
    McCuen flirted with another run for Congress in 1994 but ran for re-election instead, losing to Sharon Priest in the party primary.
    Late that year, the state police began investigating McCuen's involvement in a scheme with political consultant Darrell Glascock to purchase ,650 worth of flags from a sham company.
    McCuen was indicted on public corruption charges in 1995. He pleaded guilty or no contest in January 1996 to charges involving bribery, taking kickbacks, tax evasion and trading in public office. He was sentenced to 17 years in prison and fined ,000.
    McCuen was diagnosed with colon cancer while in prison, a factor that led to his parole in February 1999.
    What Bill McCuen was quoted in the Washington Times and published on Mach 13, 1998:
    A
    former Arkansas official has told an attorney for Paula Jones that he witnessed an oral sex episode in his own office between Gov. Bill Clinton and a young state worker, according to a source familiar with the men's meeting.
    Former Secretary of State William J. McCuen identified the woman involved in the episode, naming her as one of two female staff members at the secretary of state's office who accompanied McCuen on his controversial 1990 road trip to seven cities in which all three reportedly shared hotel rooms.
    McCuen also told the lawyer that when Mr. Clinton saw Mrs. Jones, then Paula Corbin, for the first time at the state Capitol, he said, "God, who's that?" and commented on the young clerk's "good body and tight clothes."
    Mr. McCuen reportedly made the statements to Robert Rader, a lawyer with the Dallas firm that took over Mrs. Jones' case in October, during a meeting at the Texarkana, Ark., prison, where McCuen is serving a 17-year state sentence for corruption.
    The Washington Times has learned that Mr. Rader went to see McCuen again Thursday, this time at a prison in Pine Bluff, Ark., where McCuen is receiving special medical care.
    Until recently, McCuen has been a reluctant witness in the case. While dangling incriminating tidbits before Mrs. Jones' attorneys, he vowed to recant if subpoenaed, fearing the parole board's retaliation if he went public against the former governor.
    "I'm telling you all this, but I'll lie if put under oath," he said to Mr. Rader, according to the source.
    But McCuen, 54, is said to have reassessed that stand since learning in recent weeks that he is dying of colon cancer and might not live long enough even to attend his first parole hearing next March.
    A source familiar with Thursday's meeting said Mr. Rader apparently sought a written declaration from McCuen to buttress Mrs. Jones' legal response to motions asking U.S. District Judge Susan Webber Wright to throw the lawsuit out of court on a summary judgment. It was not learned whether he succeeded.
    The deadline for filing that response is Friday, and it was expected to be hundreds of pages long, including documentary evidence and testimony from previously sealed witness depositions, including that of Mr. Clinton.
    As a convicted felon, any testimony by McCuen would be attacked by attorneys for the president, but he also brings some stature: He was a multiterm secretary of state and in 1992 defeated incumbent Rep. Beryl Anthony Jr. for the 4th District Democratic congressional nomination in which Mr. Clinton took sides with Mr. Anthony.
    McCuen lost the congressional race by 10,000 votes to Republican Jay Dickey in 1992 and then lost re-election to his own job in 1994.
    He was indicted the following year for charges involving a ,560 purchase of flags from a nonexistent company and several other corruption counts. McCuen pleaded guilty, expecting a suspended sentence as a public servant admitting victimless crimes. He got 17 years.
    If a jury believed McCuen now, that oral sex anecdote and others he related could be vital to Mrs. Jones' case because they corroborate her charge of "quid pro quo" sexual harassment at work -- using a governor's power to reward women who cooperate and punish those like her who did not.
    In the first meeting at the Texarkana prison, McCuen told Mr. Rader that he first told the governor the identity of Paula Corbin. That was some unspecified time before the governor summoned her to his suite at the Excelsior Hotel.
    His testimony about Mr. Clinton's comments about the woman would buttress the claim that the governor considered her a sexual target before summoning her May 8, 1991, to his suite, where Mrs. Jones says he groped her, exposed his penis and said, "Kiss it."
    McCuen also said he advised the governor to arrange a state job requested by his admitted sexual partner Gennifer Flowers.
    "With what she knows, you've got to give her a job," McCuen said he told the governor, the source said.
    And he described watching Mr. Clinton flirt and pay attention to Mrs. Flowers in the presence of Hillary Rodham Clinton during a Democratic fund-raiser at the Capitol Club in Little Rock.
    McCuen's current lawyer, John Wesley Hall Jr. of Little Rock, gave permission to contact his client about the episode, but McCuen sent word through a prison official that he didn't care to discuss it with The Times.
    Mrs. Jones' attorneys cited the gag order when asked about McCuen.
    McCuen collects a ,722-a-month pension despite the convictions. After entering prison in 1996, McCuen married Rhonda Langster, who headed his elections division and ethics office. He spends occasional weekend furloughs at their Hot Springs home.
    Until chemotherapy last week left him too sick to work, McCuen held a job outside the Texarkana prison as manager of a Mr. Gatti's pizza shop. Thursday, assistant manager Ron Ferguson said McCuen never got specific about his relationship with Mr. Clinton.
    "He said he had some run-ins with Clinton but never explained that to me. I liked him. He always was straight and honest with me," Mr. Ferguson said.
    Pulaski County prosecutor Larry Jagley said here Thursday that McCuen never told any Clinton-related anecdotes while seeking a light sentence.
    "He has zero credibility with me and this office. He was difficult to catch, not helpful or truthful," Mr. Jagley said.
    By coincidence, Mr. Jagley's wife, Angela Jagley -- now a federal prosecutor so aggressive she is nicknamed "the mongoose" -- was the assistant attorney general who defended McCuen in official lawsuits against the state.
    Copyright 1998 News World Communications, Inc.