Claimed

Fellow Cave Man camp members

Connection Details

Overview of the Connection Between Edwin Meese III and Douglas H. Ginsburg

Edwin Meese III, who served as U.S. Attorney General under President Ronald Reagan from 1985 to 1988, and Douglas H. Ginsburg, a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, are allegedly connected through their shared membership in the Cave Man camp at Bohemian Grove. Meese, also a fellow at Stanford University's Hoover Institution, and Ginsburg, whose 1987 nomination to the U.S. Supreme Court was withdrawn after admitting to past marijuana use, are said to have participated in the secretive annual gathering of influential men at the private redwood forest compound in Monte Rio, California. Bohemian Grove, known for hosting over 2,200 members including politicians, CEOs, and media figures, organizes attendees into various camps, with Cave Man being one of them.

Evidence and Timeline of the Alleged Connection

The connection between Meese and Ginsburg as fellow Cave Man camp members is based on a leaked attendance list, as reported by sources such as the publication that obtained exclusive access to Bohemian Grove records. According to these sources, both individuals have been associated with the Cave Man camp, though specific years of attendance or direct interactions between the two have not been publicly verified. The timeline of their potential overlap at Bohemian Grove remains unclear, as attendance lists are not consistently dated or comprehensive in public records. Meese’s tenure as Attorney General (1985-1988) and Ginsburg’s judicial career, including his high-profile Supreme Court nomination in 1987, suggest they were active in political and legal circles during overlapping periods, which could align with their alleged participation in Bohemian Grove events during the 1980s or later.

Since the fact check status of this connection is claimed rather than verified, the evidence remains anecdotal and reliant on unconfirmed reports. No official statements from Meese or Ginsburg have confirmed their joint attendance or personal interactions at Bohemian Grove.

Significance to Bohemian Grove

The alleged connection between Meese and Ginsburg highlights the broader role of Bohemian Grove as a networking hub for America’s elite. The Cave Man camp, like other camps within the Grove, serves as a social grouping where members reportedly form bonds through shared activities and discussions during the annual two-week retreat. If true, the shared membership of two prominent legal figures in the same camp underscores the potential for informal alliances or influence among political and judicial leaders at such gatherings.

Bohemian Grove’s secretive nature, combined with the lack of public records, fuels speculation about the impact of these connections on policy or judicial decisions. However, without verified evidence of specific interactions between Meese and Ginsburg, the significance of their relationship remains speculative within the context of Bohemian Grove’s broader reputation as a space for elite networking.

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Type
Social
Status
Claimed
Sources
1 source

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