Yes, Camper, same Roger Chiang, brother of Joyce Chiang, who worked for the Democratic National Party when she disappeared, caught embezzling contributions to the DNC some five years later.
On the one hand, everyone involved was in Democratic politics, on the other hand, it is Washington, DC. I don't cover Joyce Chiang in Murder on a Horse Trail, but her end came eeriely similar to Chandra's in intersecting with that of Congressman Gary Condit, member of the House Intelligence Committee.
Earlier in 1996, which corresponds with the ending of two simultaneous affairs such as Condit had with Chandra Levy and Anne Marie Smith when Chandra disappeared, Joyce Chiang was working for another California congressman on an immigration bill that Condit was co-sponsoring. She then went to work for the Immigration and Naturalization Service, where further work with Condit was done, and Condit then testified for the bill before Congress. That they worked together should be a given, how well they knew each other Joyce will never be able to tell us.
Condit had no known mistresses between 1996 and her murder in January 1999, and Joyce's brother Roger says that his sister was secretive about where she was during this time, often being gone for the whole weekend. Whatever relationship she was in, she kept it a secret, just as Condit demanded of all his mistresses.
Her murder on the Potomac was not investigated by DC police just as Chandra's was not, both were believed by DC police to be suicidal. The only think keeping the DC police from continuing to say that Chandra committed suicide after she was found were her hands bound with stockings.
No such inconvenient bindings found on Joyce, no reason to look further. Women just seem to want to throw themselves to death in DC for some reason, the DC police seem to be all too readily to want to believe. Especially when the alternative is questioning a Congressman on the Intelligence Committee.
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