Broadwell Scandal widens-Two Generals intervened in a custody battle involving Jill Kelley’s sister


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As Broadwell scandal widens several men holding top positions in U.S military are expected to be dragged into the controversy which is presumed would put President Obama in a very sticky situation.
On Tuesday NBC reported that two the Two Generals, David Holly Petraeus and John Allen wrote recommendation letters on behalf Jill Kelley’s twin sister Natalie Khawam, who was  involved in bitter custody battle with her former husband.

The NBC also published the letter that was addressed to District of Columbia Superior Court. Khawam was seeking to relax a judge’s order restricting her visit with her now four year old son. Holly Petreaus, the wife of the General too wrote an affidavit in support of Khawam.
The letters came to light after Kelley emerged as a key player in the scandal surrounding emails that officials say were written by Petraeus biographer Paula Broadwell – a trail of correspondence that led to Petraeus’ resignation as CIA director and a Pentagon investigation of Allen over what defense officials have described as “potentially inappropriate” emails he exchanged with Kelley.

The legal battle between Khawam and Wolfe has been bitter, according to court records. Both sides have accused one another of repeatedly lying to the court — including about invitations to events involving prominent members of Congress.
Jill Kelly, who has emerged as a central figure in the Broadwell scandal is seeking Diplomatic protection because she is Honorary Consular General.
She told a 911 dispatcher in one of her many calls that she wants diplomatic protection because many people are around her house and that she is the honorary Consular General.
It’s not clear whether she holds such a title, but investigations revealed  that she made up the title.
The court records also shed some light on the lifestyle of the Kelley family: At one point, the judge — who had directed Kelley’s sister to pay child support and the legal fees of her ex-husband — noted that Khawam lived “rent-free in Florida with her sister” in a home described as a “ten bedroom mansion in a beautiful neighborhood right on Tampa Bay.”
 Read David Petraeus letter to the Courts
Read John Allen’s letter to the Courts
The judge also ruled that Jill Kelley was a “patently biased and unbelievable witness” when she testified about an alleged case of domestic abuse by her twin sister’s ex-husband.

In a Nov. 9, 2011, ruling, D.C. Superior Court Judge Neal E. Kravitz dismissed Kelley’s testimony that she saw Wolfe push Khawam down a flight of stairs inside the Kelleys’ home. Kelley testified that her sister was holding the couple’s baby in one hand and “somehow was able to stand her ground on the staircase” as Wolfe, “who is substantially larger and stronger … pushed Ms. Khawam from above with both hands and all of his might.”
“The court does not credit this testimony,” Kravitz wrote, after calling Kelley an “unbelievable witness.” He called it “part of an ever-expanding set of sensational accusations against Mr. Wolfe that are so numerous, so extraordinary and … so distorted that they defy any common sense view of reality.”

Petraeus and Allen entered the case two months ago, penning separate letters attesting to Khawam’s parenting.

“My wife and I have known Natalie for approximately three years, getting to know her while serving in Tampa, Florida, through her friendship with Dr. and Mrs. Scott Kelley,” Petraeus wrote in his letter dated Sept. 20, identifying himself under his signature as “General, U.S. Army (Retired.) “

He added that he has observed Khawam  with her son on many occasions, “including when we hosted them and the Kelley family for Christmas dinner this past year. “It was “clear to me,” he added, that Natalie’s son “would benefit from much more time with his Mother and from removal of the burdensome restrictions imposed on her.”

Allen’s letter, dated Sept. 22, which identified him under his signature as “General, United States Marine Corps,” is similar. It stated that he had gotten to know Khawam while serving at the U.S. Central Command in Florida and observed her with her son “on multiple occasions” at “command social functions.”

“In light of Natalie’s maturity, integrity and steadfast commitment to raising her child, I humbly request your reconsideration of the existing mandated custody settlement,” the letter concluded.

Defense official fires back, denies Afghanistan commander exchanged ‘inappropriate’ emails

A source familiar with Kelley’s views said Tuesday night that both Petraeus and Allen have been friends of Kelley and her sister Khawam for years. The source added:  “When you’re involved in a custody issue, you want letters of support. There is nothing unusual about that.”

Sandra Wilkof, the lawyer for ex-husband Wolfe, said the letters from both high ranking military men misstated the facts of the case. Both letters asked the court to change the terms of a “court settlement” between the couple. In fact, Wilkof, said, “There was no court settlement. There was a court order,” she said, awarding custody to Wolfe and supervised visits for Khawam.

Judge Kravitz has not given Wolfe a free pass. He wrote in the Nov. 9, 2011 ruling that Wolfe “does not possess an entirely healthy psychological make-up.” And he noted that Wolfe had taken “questionable deductions” on his tax returns and “may have been less than fully candid in his testimony about contacts he may have had with the FriendFinder online dating service.”

But he has saved his harshest words for Khawam, writing that “Mr. Wolfe … is much more honest than Ms. Khawam, and he conducts himself with far greater integrity.”

In the ruling, he found that Khawam had taken the couple’s son to Florida when he was only four months old and refused to tell Wolfe of his whereabouts, ignored court orders to allow visits with his father, changed the boy’s first name without his father’s knowledge and made unfounded claims of abuse against her ex-husband.

“The evidence established that Ms. Khawam has extreme personal deficits in the areas of honesty and integrity,” Kravitz wrote. “Ms. Khawam’s false domestic violence petitions (and her equally false testimony at trial relating to many of the same allegations) are merely the most stunning examples of Ms. Khawam’s willingness to say anything, even under oath, to advance her own personal interests at the expense of Mr. Wolfe, the child, and others.”

Khawam’s lawyer, Greg Jacob, with the law firm of O’Melveny & Myers, did not respond to requests for comment.

In the latest wrinkle in the case, Wolfe’s lawyer filed a motion on Oct. 26 opposing the efforts of Khawam to modify the visitation schedule, saying that neither of the letters by Petraeus and Allen promised “corroborating testimony” relevant to the court’s determination.

The motion also argued that Khawam had misrepresented social events she had asked the court to let her attend with her son. In one case, Wolfe’s motion stated, Khawam had asked the court to let her take her son to a “family clambake” at “the personal invitation” of Rhode Island Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse. In fact, the motion states, this was “nothing more than a … political fundraising event.”

On other occasions, the motion states, Khawam had sought to take her son to events with “Senator Kerry” and the baptism of “former Congressman Patrick Kennedy’s child” in New Jersey. In fact, the motion states, the invitation to be with Sen. John Kerry was a Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee event in Martha’s Vineyard and that he denied her request to take the boy to those events because he did not believe it was in “the child’s best interests.
Source of Article: NBC

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