Condit, D-Calif., provided the new details about
his relationship with Levy in a second,
hour-long interview with police Saturday, but
stopped short of saying whether he and the
24-year-old had a romantic relationship, the
sources said. Condit did, however, strongly hint
that the two had been lovers, the sources said.
When Condit delicately broke things off with Levy
with the explanation that she was moving
back to California, she was distraught, refusing
to take no for an answer and even becoming
obsessed with him, the sources said.
Levy called Condit several times on a special
line in the 24 hours before she vanished,
but he never returned those calls, the sources
said.
Condit, 53 and married, has repeatedly said through
public statements that he and Levy
were only good friends, with his staff denying
there was a romantic relationship.
Lynch also reiterated Thursday that Condit had nothing to do with Levy's disappearance.
ha ha
It's illegal for lawyers to lie, right?
Levy's parents, Susan and Robert Levy of Modesto,
Calif., have hired former Washington
homicide detectives to scour their daughter's
Washington studio apartment for fibers, love letters,
notes and any other clues that could help them
find out what happened to their daughter,
who has not been seen since April 30.
In another development, a 39-year-old flight attendant
told the FBI she ended a year-long
romantic relationship with Condit when she saw
press reports about the missing Washington
intern, a source close to the woman told Fox
News - and they never lie.
Ann Marie Smith said she has not spoken to Condit
since one or two weeks before the
24-year-old disappeared. Smith also said she
knew the California Democrat was married
and suspected he might be seeing someone else,
but she didn't know for sure.
Smith also said Condit told her he was "lonely
in Washington," with his chronically ill wife
spending 99 percent of her time in California.
Smith said she had no information on the Levy case.