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The Pedophocracy, Part III:
Uncle Sam Wants Your Children

By David McGowan
August 2001
"It should come as no surprise, then, that long-time CIA and ‘intelligence
complex’ operatives turn up on the FMSF Advisory Board. Perhaps the most
public member has been Dr. Louis Jolyon ‘Jolly’ West, a legendary figure in
CIA mind control circles operating out of UCLA. Another is Dr. Martin Orne,
an authority on torture who currently works at the University of
Pennsylvania’s Experimental Psychiatry Lab … Still another false memory
luminary is Margaret Singer, professor emeritus at the University of
California-Berkeley."
Toward Freedom, May 1998

One of the names raised at the Bonacci trial was that of Michael Aquino.
Aquino is the ‘High Priest’ and chief executive of the Temple of Set, an
overtly satanic cult that split off from the Church of Satan in 1975. Besides
tending to those duties, Aquino also has occupied his time serving as
(according to an official biography once circulated by the Temple) a
“Lieutenant Colonel, Military Intelligence, U.S. Army.”

        Aquino was accused in court by the mother of a victim as being a key
player in a nationwide pedophile ring. Paul Bonacci himself has also
positively identified Aquino as an associate of King, known to the children
only as 'the Colonel.' King's personal photographer has identified Aquino as
the man to whom he saw King hand over a suitcase full of cash and bonds.

        The photographer, Rusty Nelson, also has said that King told him that
Aquino was part of the Contra guns and cocaine trafficking operation run by
George Bush and another notorious Lt. Col., Oliver North. Aquino has also be
en linked to Offutt Air Force Base, a Strategic Air Command post near Omaha
that was implicated in the investigation by the Franklin Committee. He was
also claimed to have ordered the abduction of a Des Moines, Iowa paperboy.

        This was certainly not the first time that Aquino had been implicated
as a key figure in large scale pedophile/child pornography rings. In July of
1988, not long before the King and Spence cases broke, the San Jose Mercury
News ran a lengthy exposé on the Presidio Child Development Center run by the
U.S. Army in San Francisco.

        Allegations of abuse being perpetrated at the center first emerged in
November of 1986. Alarmed by accusations made by her child, a parent had
sought a medical examination which confirmed that the three-year-old boy had
in fact been anally raped. The boy identified his rapist as 'Mr. Gary,' a
teacher at the center named Gary Hambright.

        Even with the conclusive medical evidence, “it took the Army almost a
month to notify the parents of other children who had been in 'Mr. Gary's'
class that the incident had taken place.” Within a year, at least sixty
victims had been identified, all between the ages of three and seven, and
further “allegations would be made by parents that several more children were
molested even after the investigation had begun.”

        Amazingly enough, the center remained open for more than a year after
the first case of abuse was reported, though the Mercury News noted that “day
care centers under state jurisdiction are routinely closed when an abuse
incident is confirmed.” And this was considerably more than a simple abuse
incident that was confirmed.

        The stories told by the children implicated many other perpetrators
besides Hambright. They also told of being taken away from the center to be
abused in private homes; at least three such houses were positively
identified. They also told of being forced to play “poopoo baseball” and the
“googoo” game – 'games' that involved the children being urinated and
defecated upon, and being forced to ingest urine and feces.

        Many of them also spoke of having guns pointed at them and of having
been told that they and/or their parents and siblings would be killed if they
told anyone what had been done to them. Despite the mounting number of
victim/witnesses, and the numerous crimes alleged by these children, it was
only Gary Hambright who was arrested - on January 5, 1987 - and he was
charged with abusing just a single child. And even then the charges were
dismissed just three months later, in March of 1987.

        There is little doubt that literally dozens of children were in fact
severely abused at the center.
There was irrefutable medical evidence to document that fact. Five of the
children had contracted chlamydia, a sexually transmitted disease; many
others showed clear signs of anal and genital trauma consistent with violent
penetration, which authorities chose to ignore. One mother complained to the
San Francisco Chronicle that the FBI never interviewed her or her son, even
after doctors had confirmed the boy’s abuse.

        There were unmistakable psychological signs as well. As The American
Journal of Orthopsychiatry noted in April of 1992: “The severity of the
trauma for children at the Presidio was immediately manifest in clear cut
symptoms. Before the abuse was exposed, parents had already noticed the
following changes in their children: vaginal discharge, genital soreness,
rashes, fear of the dark, sleep disturbances, nightmares, sexually
provocative language, and sexually inappropriate behavior. In addition, the
children were exhibiting other radical changes in behavior, including temper
outbursts, sudden mood shifts, and poor impulse control. All these behavioral
symptoms are to be expected in preschool children who have been molested.”

        The journal article, written by Diane Ehrensaft, Ph.D., also noted
that: “The Presidio case has confronted both the public at large and the
mental health community with an extraordinary and abhorrent situation of
grave psychological proportions: the willful molestation of young boys and
girls by representatives of the most patriarchal and supposedly protective
arm of the American government – the U.S. Army.”

        The article further noted the nearly homicidal rage provoked in the
fathers of the children abused in this way, as they saw the investigations of
the crimes perpetrated against their children stonewalled and covered up. One
father is quoted as saying: “When something about the Presidio comes on TV, I
want to blow someone away.” Another father echoed this sentiment: “I was
ready to blow the army base away.”

        One of those who the fathers would have liked to blow away was
Michael Aquino, along with his wife Lilith. One child positively identified
the pair, known to the kids as 'Mikey' and 'Shamby,' and was also able to
positively identify the Aquino's home and to describe with uncanny accuracy
the distinctively satanic interior of the house. The young witness also
claimed to have been photographed at the Aquinos' home.

        On August 14 of 1987, a search warrant was served on the house.
Confiscated in the raid were numerous videotapes, photographs, photo albums,
photographic negatives, cassette tapes, and name and address books. Also
observed was what appeared to be a soundproof room. Neither Aquino nor his
wife were charged with any crimes, nor have they been to this day – a fact
that Aquino claims proves his innocence.

        The next month, a fire - which the Army deemed to be accidental -
destroyed the Army Community Services Building adjacent to the Presidio's day
care center. Strangely enough, “the fire occurred on the autumnal equinox, a
major event on the satanic calendar,” as the Mercury News noted. The fire
also destroyed some of the center's records.

        “Three weeks later, fire struck again, this time at the day care
center itself.” A building that housed four classrooms, including that of
Gary Hambright, was completely destroyed. Investigators from the Bureau of
Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms determined that “both fires, contrary to the
Army's finding, had been arson.”

        In between the first and second fires (with evidence indicating that
a third arson attempt had been made as well), Hambright was again indicted,
this time charged with molesting ten children. In February of 1988, all but
one of the charges were dropped. Shortly thereafter, the remaining count was
dropped as well, and Hambright was a free man once again. No further charges
were brought against him.

        In January of 1988, Aquino filed suit against the Army to have it
cleared from his record that he had been investigated as a suspected
pedophile. According to court records, he also had the gall to charge “Cap
tain Adams-Thompson [the father of a victim] with conduct unbecoming an
officer because the Captain reported the allegations of child abuse to the
San Francisco police.”

        In denying Aquino's motion, the court concluded that “there was
probable cause to title Aquino with offenses of indecent acts with a child,
sodomy, conspiracy, kidnapping, and false swearing,” despite the fact that
“the San Francisco police department (SFPD) closed its investigation and
filed no charges against the plaintiff or anyone else.”

        Aquino and various of his defenders have consistently claimed that no
one was ever prosecuted in the case due to a lack of evidence – proof that
the entire affair was no more than a ‘witch hunt.’ Of course, the failure to
prosecute the federal charges could also be due to the fact that, at the
time, the U.S. Attorney in San Francisco handling the case was Joseph
Russoniello.

        Russoniello would later be identified by reporter Gary Webb of the
San Jose Mercury News as a player in the Contra cocaine smuggling operation
led by Lt. Col. Oliver North and company, just as witnesses would later
identify Lt. Col. Michael Aquino as an operative in the very same sordid
affair. It always helps when your legal ‘adversaries’ are actually on your
side.

        In May of 1989, Aquino was again questioned in connection with child
abuse investigations; this time at least five children in three cities were
making the accusations. The children had seen Aquino in newspaper and
television coverage of the Presidio case and immediately recognized him as
one of their abusers.

        Three of the children lived in Ukiah - former home of the People’s
Temple - where Police Chief Fred Keplinger was overseeing the investigation
of the allegations. The Mercury News quoted the chief as saying that “the
children are believable. I have no doubt in my mind that something has
occurred.” Aquino was also identified by children in Santa Rosa and Fort
Bragg.

        In the Fort Bragg case, “allegations of ritual abuse erupted ... in
1985 when several children at the Jubilation Day Care Center said they were
sexually abused by a number of people at the day care center and at several
locations away from the center, including at least two churches.” Aquino was
identified as having been at one of those churches.

        The Mercury News also reported that there was clear evidence of
satanic cult activity on the grounds of the Presidio base, including an
abundance of satanic graffiti, a satanic altar, and numerous artifacts of
satanic rituals. A former MP at the base is quoted as saying: “We were
sitting there, we've got a cult on the Presidio of San Francisco and nobody
cares about it ... We were told by the provost marshal to just forget about
it.”

        On April 19, 1988 - the eve of Adolf Hitler’s birthday, and seven
years to the day before the Oklahoma City Federal Building would explode,
allegedly due to an act of ‘domestic terrorism’- an open-house was held on
the grounds of the Presidio heralding the opening of the new day care
facility built to replace the fire-damaged Child Development Center.

        As a final note on the Presidio case, a report in the Marin
Independent Journal revealed that Aquino owned a building in Marin County -
inherited from his mother, Betty Ford-Aquino - that had been jointly leased
to the Marin County Child Abuse Council and Project Care for Children. The
stated purpose of Project Care was, interestingly enough, to assist parents
in locating day care for their children.

        As disturbing as the Presidio case was, it was just one of many
ritual abuse cases directly tied to one or more branches of the United States
armed forces. As the Mercury News reported: “By November, 1987 the Army had
received allegations of child abuse at 15 of its day care centers and several
elementary schools. There were also at least two cases in Air Force day care
centers,” and another in a center run by the U.S. Navy.

        In addition, “a special team of experts was sent to Panama [in June
of 1988] to help determine if as many as 10 children at a Department of
Defense elementary school had been molested and possibly infected with AIDS.”
Yet another case emerged in a U.S.-run facility in West Germany.

        These cases erupted at some of the most esteemed military bases in
the country, including Fort Dix, Fort Leavenworth, Fort Jackson, and West
Point. Many of those making the accusations were career military officers who
had devoted their lives to unquestioned allegiance to the U.S. armed forces.
Many would resign their posts in outraged protest.

        It would be redundant to review all these cases, as most of them
followed a remarkably similar pattern. Given though that West Point is
America's premier military academy, and given also that the case - like many
others - was linked by witnesses to the Presidio, a brief review is warranted
here.
        As The Times Herald Record reported in June of 1991: “The incidents
[at the West Point Child Development Center] unfolded against a backdrop of
satanic acts, animal sacrifices and cult-like behavior among the abusers,
whose activities extended beyond the U.S. Military Academy borders to Orange
County and a military base in San Francisco, parents charged.”

        The case first broke in July of 1984, when a three-year-old girl
found herself in the emergency room of the West Point Hospital with a
lacerated vagina. She told the examining physician that a teacher at the day
care center had hurt her. The next month, the parents of another child
leveled accusations of abuse at the center.

        As the Mercury News reported: “By the end of the year, 50 children
had been interviewed by investigators. Children at West Point told stories
that would become horrifyingly familiar. They said they had been ritually
abused. They said they had had excrement smeared on their bodies and been
forced to eat feces and drink urine. They said they were taken away from the
day care center and photographed.”

        Despite abundant medical and psychological evidence, and literally
dozens of child witnesses, and despite “950 interviews by 60 FBI agents
assigned to the investigation, an investigation led by former U.S. Attorney
Rudolph Giuliani produced no federal grand jury indictments,” according to
the Herald Record.

        The Herald also noted that: “In 1987, Giuliani said his detailed
investigation showed only one or two children were abused.” This was, it
should be noted, a bare-faced lie from the fascistic future-mayor and
would-be Senator, as the Herald report divulged: “a still-secret, independent
report - produced by one of the nation's top experts on child sexual abuse -
confirms the children's accusations of abuse.”

        This was not the first time that the prestigious academy had shown an
appalling willingness to overlook extreme levels of abuse directed at
children by army personnel. A year before the abuse case broke, a
22-month-old child was murdered by an Army staff sergeant. The Mercury News
reported that: “After a court martial hearing, the sergeant was given an 18
month suspended sentence and dishonorable discharge.”

        In other words, he served no time and was essentially given a free
ride for murdering a child. With help from Giuliani, the FBI, the U.S. Army,
and the grand jury, the abusers of countless children at the day care center
(which was, appropriately enough, building number 666 on the academy grounds)
were likewise given a free ride.

        As with the Franklin case, the children and their parents were to
find justice only through the civil courts. The Herald Record reported that:
“lawyers for both the government and the 11 child plaintiffs agreed that some
children were sexually abused at the center two years ago” (again
contradicting Giuliani's bogus conclusions). The government, however, claimed
that it could not be held responsible, due to the “assault exemption in the
Federal Tort Claim Act.”

        As the New York Times explained: “under federal law the government
cannot be held liable for assaults committed by its employees and thus cannot
be sued for assault.” In other words, the Army did not dispute the
allegations, it just rather cavalierly maintained that it was exempt from
being sued. The court saw otherwise and awarded $2.7 million to nine of the
child victims – paltry compensation for their suffering, but a victory of
sorts nonetheless.

        The Times opined that the settlement amount “was large for a
child-abuse case in which no criminal charges were filed.” The article
claimed that the failure to prosecute the case was due to the fact that “the
Federal Bureau of Investigation found ‘insufficient evidence to prosecute,’”
when in fact the Bureau appears to have deliberately ignored and/or
covered-up that evidence.

        And so ended the West Point case, except that - as one mother noted -
it was hardly over: “These people stole our children. She's nothing like she
used to be. She's a very angry little girl. She doesn't trust anyone. She's
nothing like she was before this happened. It's never going to be over for
them, or for us.”

        The mother of a Presidio victim had this to say: “People keep telling
us we've got to let it go -- just forget about it and go on ... Three weeks
ago, our youngest daughter was having nightmares and our other daughter was
closing out the whole world, going to her room and siting there, with no
radio, no TV, no nothing. Tell me it's over.”

“I cannot accept promotion in a system that at first refused to acknowledge
and now refuses to deal with the victims of extensive child abuse that
occurred at the West Point Child Development Center.”

Army Captain Walter R. Grote, refusing a promotion to Major in June 1985.
Grote referred to his protest as a “fight for the human rights of all
children.”

REFERENCES:
1.  Al-Kurdi, Husayn “Messing With Our Minds,” Toward Freedom, May 1998
2.  Arce, Rose Marie “Liability in Point Abuse Case Debated,” The Times
Herald Record (Middletown, New York), December 23, 1986
3.  Blood, Linda The New Satanists, Warner Books, 1994
4.  Cunningham, Douglas and Alan Snel “A Legacy of Pain: Settlement Doesn't
Ease Abused Children's Fears,” The Times Herald Record (Middletown, New
York), June 11, 1991
5.  DeCamp, John W.  The Franklin Cover-Up, AWT, Inc., 1992
6.  Ehrensaft, Diane “Preschool Child Sex Abuse: The Aftermath of the
Presidio Case,” The American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, April 1992
7.  Goldston, Linda “Army of the Night,” San Jose Mercury News, July 24, 1988
8.  Goldston, Linda “Satanic Priest Questioned in New Sex Case,” San Jose
Mercury News, May 13, 1989
9.  Hays, Constance L. “$2.7 Million Settles Army Child-Abuse Case,” New York
Times, May 23, 1991
10.  Sawyer, Kathy “Army Doctor Turns Down Promotion; Lax Response to Case of
Child Abuse Cited,” Washington Post, June 25, 1985
11.  Steinberg, Jeffrey “Satanic Subversion of the U.S. Military,” EIR, July
2, 1999
12.  “Army Doctor Refuses Promotion in Protest,” San Diego Union Tribune,
June 25, 1985
13.  “The Keys to Hell and Death – Part II,” SFLR News (the newsletter of San
Francisco Liberation Radio), May 21, 2001
14.  Michael Aquino v. The Honorable Michael Stone, Secretary of the Army
(Civ. A. No. 90-1547-A), United States District Court, Alexandria Division,
July 1, 1991



PART IV
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