-Caveat Lector-

From: "Mike Ruppert" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Blacks Were Targeted for CIA Cocaine

It Can Be Proven

By

Michael C. Ruppert - www.copvcia.com.

January 28, 1999

((c) 1999 From The Wilderness Publications and Michael C. Ruppert at
www.copvcia.com. All Rights Reserved. Permission to reprint for educational
purposes only to paid subscribers of From The Wilderness with direct
sourcing as indicated in the Master Copyright. Any reprint for resale will
be vigorously prosecuted.)

For a long time, many people have believed that African-Americans were
targeted by the Central Intelligence Agency to receive the cocaine which
decimated black communities in the 1980s. It was, until now, widely accepted
that the case could not be proven because of two fallacious straw obstacles
to that proof. Both lie smack dab in the misuse of the word "crack" and that
is why, in my lectures, I have strenuously objected to the term "CIA crack".
First, it cannot and probably never will be established that CIA had
anything to do with the first creation of crack cocaine. Chemically, that
problem could have been solved as a test question for anyone with a BS in
chemistry. The answer: add water and baking soda to cocaine hydrochloride
powder and cook on a stove. A study of the literature (including articles I
wrote 14 years ago for The U.S. Journal of Drug and Alcohol Dependence), as
opposed to, for example, that pertaining to LSD, shows no CIA involvement
whatever in the genesis of crack cocaine. Also, there has never been any
evidence provided that CIA facilitated the transport or sale of crack
itself. What is beyond doubt is that CIA was directly responsible for the
importation of tons of powdered cocaine into the U.S. and the protected
delivery of that cocaine into the inner cities.
Another obstacle has been the fact that CIA imported so much cocaine that,
even if every black man, woman and child in the country had been using it,
they could not have used all of what CIA brought in. Ricky Ross, the
celebrated dealer of Gary Webb's Dark Alliance, sold approximately four tons
of cocaine during his roughly five years in business. Yet one CIA ring, that
of Miguel Angel Felix Gallardo and Rafael Caro-Quintero, was moving four
tons a month. And that was only a fraction of the total CIA operation.
Leaving the unsupportable arguments aside, is there a supportable case that
CIA directly intended for African-Americans to receive the cocaine which it
knew would be turned into crack cocaine and which it knew would prove so
addictive as to destroy entire communities? The answer is absolutely, yes.
And the key to proving that CIA intended for blacks to receive the drugs
which virtually destroyed their communities lies in the twofold approach, of
proving that they brought the drugs in and interfered with law enforcement -
AND that, by virtue of CIA's relationships with the academic and medical
communities, they knew exactly what the end result would be. Knowing that,
we then have a mountain of proof, especially since the release of volume II
of the CIA's Inspector General's Report (10/98) that the CIA specifically
intended and achieved a desired result.
For anyone not familiar with the ways in which CIA studies and manipulates
emerging social and political trends I cannot encourage strongly enough a
reading of The Secret Team by L. Fletcher Prouty, Col., USAF (ret.).
This article is a start, a beginning on the painful work that needs to be
done to build a class-action lawsuit. Such a suit, by necessity, will have
to include room for all the whites, Asians and Latinos who also fell prey to
cocaine addiction. But this article should convince any reader that the
argument is solid - and winnable. I thank Gary Webb and Orange County Weekly
reporter Nick Schou for giving me the missing pieces I had waited nineteen
years to find.

SOURCES:
- The Dark Alliance by Gary Webb, Seven Stories Press, 1998 (referenced as:
Webb)
- The Straight Dope by Nick Schou, The Orange County Weekly, May 30 - June
5, 1997 (referenced as Schou).
-  Between The Rock and a Hard Place by Michael C. Ruppert, The LA WEEKLY,
March 8-14, 1985 (referenced as Ruppert 1).
- Rock Cocaine Hits L.A. by Michael C. Ruppert, The U.S. Journal of Drug and
Alcohol Dependence, February, 1985 (referenced as Ruppert 2).
- U.S. Drug Experts Cancel S.A. Trip, by Michael C. Ruppert, The U.S.
Journal of Drug and Alcohol Dependence, November, 1984 (referenced as
Ruppert 3).
- Thy Will Be Done, The Conquest of the Amazon: Nelson Rockefeller and
Evangelism in the Age of Oil. - Gerard Colby, Harper Collins, 1995
(Referenced as Colby).
- The Secret Team (3rd Edition), L. Fletcher Prouty  (1973, 1992, 1997).
This book has been erased even from the Library of Congress. To my knowledge
it is available only on the Internet at www.ratical.com/ratville/JFK/ST/ST
(referenced as Prouty).

SPOOKS, SHRINKS AND SCHOLARS

As a budding LAPD narcotics investigator I was selected in 1976 to attend a
two-week DEA training school in Las Vegas. The diploma I received from that
school, approximately 30% larger than the one I received from UCLA, hangs
above my desk to this day. At that school I was given the official position
of the DEA and the government, which was that cocaine was less addictive and
less harmful than marijuana. I had only made one arrest for cocaine, a
heroin addict who liked speed balls (heroin and cocaine mixed), and I had
seen it less than a half dozen times in my life.
One of those times was right after my fiancée Nordica D'Orsay, a CIA agent,
had broken her ankle in the summer of 1976. Before I could take her to the
emergency room she had to make some urgent calls from a pay phone equipped
with the then new touch-tone technology. Our home phone was monitored, she
said. Having broken both ankle bones she was in severe pain. She went into
her purse and produced a paper bindle filled with a white crystalline
powder. She rolled a dollar bill and snorted the powder. Her people, she
said, recommended it to treat pain when an agent was wounded or over-tired
and needed extra strength. Once she ingested what was in the bindle we
delayed for about an hour while she made the urgent phone calls from a gas
station. Only then was I permitted to take her to the hospital. Her ankle
had swollen to the size of a grapefruit. She came out five hours later with
a cast from her toes to her crotch. Who was I to question the CIA?
That was the only time I was ever aware of her in physical possession of
cocaine. But it was not the only time she ever talked about it.
In 1979 Congress held rushed hearings into the perils of cocaine and was
told, time and again by expert after expert that cocaine was not a problem
because it was not seriously addictive, too expensive and not easy to find.
The hearings, chaired by Republican Congressman Tennyson Guyer in the House
Select Committee on Narcotics Abuse and Control did not live up to Guyer's
hopes of finding a devil in the drug cocaine.
"Witness after witness trooped up to the microphone to tell Congress that
cocaine was not only a relatively safe drug, but so rare that it could
hardly be called a nuisance, much less the menace Guyer was advertising."
(Webb - p24). Ron Siegel, PhD of UCLA's Neuropsychiatric Institute (NPI) had
written in an earlier monograph, "The rediscovery of cocaine in the
seventies was unavoidable because its stimulating and pleasure-causing
properties reinforce the American character with its initiative, its energy,
its restless activity and its boundless optimism." (Webb - p19).
Siegel, one of the world's leading experts on drug abuse had, however,
written a February, 1979 article for The New England Journal of Medicine
which warned of a growing trend toward the smoking of cocaine (freebase, not
rock) in the western United States. He traced the origins of freebasing back
to 1974 in the San Francisco Bay area. He, like others, noted that smoking
was a much more effective and powerful way to ingest cocaine because the
surface area of the lungs absorbed the drug more rapidly, more efficiently
and in larger quantities. He cautioned that smoking cocaine was also many
times more addictive than snorting. Yet Siegel concluded, "All in all the
long term negative effects of cocaine use were consistently overshadowed by
the long term positive benefits," (Webb - pp. 31-33).
The witnesses testifying before congress included the heads of the Drug
Enforcement Administration, that National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) and
a host of medical and psychiatric experts.  The conclusion: cocaine was not
a problem.
[NOTE: My sixteen years in 12 Step recovery from alcoholism and my work with
scores of recovering alcoholics and addicts belies the fact that powdered
cocaine can be, in and of itself, extremely destructive and addictive.]
Only one man, Dr. Robert Byck of Yale University was insistent that trouble
was coming and it was BIG trouble. Byck was a professor of psychiatry and
pharmacology at Yale Medical School. He began his testimony by stating,
"What I would like to talk to you about for the most part is the importance
of telling the truth... We have given a great deal of cocaine to many
individuals and find it to be a most unremarkable drug."
But, according to Webb, "Byck told the Committee that he'd hesitated for a
long time about coming forward with the information and was still reluctant
to discuss the matter at a public hearing. 'Usually, when things like this
are reported, the media advertises them, and this attention has been a
problem with cocaine all along.' The information Byck had was known to only
a handful of drug researchers around the world.
"For about a year, a Peruvian police psychiatrist named Dr. Raul Jeri had
been insisting that wealthy drug users in Lima were being driven insane by
cocaine. A psychiatrist in Bolivia, Dr. Nils Noya, began making similar
claims shortly thereafter." What had been discovered was an addiction so
overwhelming that middle and upper class students and middle class wage
earners in Peru and Bolivia had abandoned every aspect of a normal human
life, including eating, drinking, personal hygiene to the point of
defecating in clothes that would remain unchanged for days, family and
shelter in the pursuit of "basuco". (Webb - pp25-30).
Basuco, a sticky paste, was the first-stage product in the refinement of
coca leaves into powder. Although frequently mixed with a cesspool of toxic
waste such as gasoline, kerosene and other chemicals, the pharmacological
effects of smoking basuco are identical to the effects of smoking crack
cocaine which became popular in the US ten years later. So intense was the
addiction that desperate South American psychiatrists had resorted to
bilateral anterior cyngulotomies (lobotomies) to stop the addiction (Ruppert
3). But even these drastic measures resulted in a relapse rate of between
50-80% (Webb - p36) (Ruppert 2). Yale medical student David Paly, working
under Dr. Byck, recalled a 1978 conversation with his mentor. "The substance
of my conversation with Byck... was that if this ever hits the U.S., we're
in deep trouble." (Webb - p30)
Byck traveled to Peru to attend a symposium on cocaine with Siegel and other
experts in 1979. Later he obtained police permits and federal grants to
begin intensive research into cocaine smoking (Webb - p 31). The CIA
routinely monitors overseas travels of U.S academics and the purposes of
their travels. Since the Nixon Administration, emerging drug trends in
producing countries had been a mandate of CIA collection efforts. When law
enforcement grants, approvals and funding crossed international boundaries,
the Law Enforcement Assistance Administration (LEAA) and several special
units within CIA were automatically notified. Here, we begin to see that CIA
must have been well aware of the effects of basuco. The CIA's
well-documented role in providing training, assistance and advice to Latin
American law enforcement agencies guarantees that CIA was collecting
intelligence on the destructiveness of cocaine smoking as soon as it began
to be a problem. (Colby, Prouty). That was as far back as 1974. (Webb -
p33).
By the time the government was compelled to acknowledge that cocaine smoking
had reached the U.S., and that it was having a devastating effect, the
experts, including Siegel and Byck, who was now warning of an epidemic of
near biblical proportions, encountered nothing but resistance from the
government.
According to Webb "Byck said the Food and Drug Administration shut down
attempts to do any serious research on addiction or treatment, refusing to
approve grant requests or research proposals and withholding government
permits necessary to run experiments with controlled substances. 'The FDA
almost totally road blocked our getting anything done. They insisted that
they had total control over whether we could use a form of cocaine for
experimental purposes, and without a so-called IND [an Investigation of New
Drug permit] we couldn't go ahead with any cocaine experiments. And they
wouldn't give us an IND.
"' Why not? Once you get into the morass of government, you never understand
exactly who is doing what to whom and why.'" (Webb - p 37)
Again, to understand how CIA infiltrates various government agencies
including the FDA, The Forest Service and the Postal Service I recommend
Prouty and From The Wilderness (Dec. 1998).
What was Ron Siegel's experience? According to Webb, "When Siegel, under
U.S. Government contract, finished a massive report on the history and
literature of cocaine smoking, he couldn't get the government to publish
it." (Webb - p37). This writer interviewed Ron Siegel a number of times in
the mid 1980s and what I learned was that all of his studies had shown that
"rock" smoking, as it was then called, was, in effect, the bubonic plague of
drug abuse.

UCLA, The CIA and RAND

Between 1984 and 1987 I served as the West Coast Correspondent for The U.S.
Journal of Drug and Alcohol Dependence. During that time I had a number of
occasions to interview some of the world's leading experts on drug abuse and
rock cocaine. They included Dr. Louis "Joly" West, Dr. Sidney Cohen and Ron
Siegel.  All were a part of UCLA's Neurospychiatric Institute (NPI) which is
a world-renowned facility that includes among its specialties drug abuse
research. NPI is also jointly funded by the RAND Corporation, which was a
creation of the CIA and the U.S. Air Force. How tight is the relationship
between NPI and RAND? A check of NPI's home page on the Internet
(www.hsrcenter.org/program) reveals that 5 of 19 faculty scholars and 19 out
of 54 current investigators at NPI come from the RAND Corporation.
A check of the RAND Corporation's home page (www.rand.org) leads to the
following quote: "RAND's research agenda has always been shaped by the
priorities of the nation. With roots in the Cold War competition with the
Soviet Union, the early defense related agenda evolved - in concert with the
nation's attention - to encompass such diverse subject areas as space,
economic, social and political affairs overseas; and the direct role of
government in social and economic problem solving at home."
I remember when I was as a young boy, that my father, who worked on CIA
related projects for Martin-Marietta Corp, met frequently with people from
the RAND Corporation. In fact, my first boyhood crush was on the daughter of
a RAND executive. It was no small matter of pride in my family that RAND was
known to be part of the CIA.
As further corroboration for RAND's connection to both UCLA and the CIA I
met with UCLA Political Science professor Paul Jabber in early 1982. It was
Paul who confirmed for me that the National Security Council and CIA had
approved the use of heroin smuggled through Kurdestan, as a means of
(re)arming the Kurds to fight against Sadam Hussein in 1975. This was the
operation which, when I discovered it, ended my LAPD career in 1978. (For
further on this see my written Senate testimony at www.copvcia.com.)
Paul Jabber had been a RAND consultant and an NSC/CIA consultant throughout
the Carter Administration. He was still a RAND consultant when I met him at
UCLA.
A search of retired CIA officer Ralph McGehee's excellent CIABase
(www.ciabase.com) reveals 73 pages of annotated references to CIA's
longstanding relations with academia. Two portions of those printouts are
telling. One, a response to a Freedom of Information Act request turned up
more than 900 pages of documents relating to CIA contracts with the
University of California.  Another quote indicates that, circa 1957-77,
"Docs released under FOIA reveal long history contacts between CIA and
University California. Activities cover wide range cooperation between
several of its 9 campuses including: UC Vice Presidents 2-week tour with CIA
in which he advised Agency relating to student unrest, recruiting UC
students, Academic cover for Professors doing research for the CIA, and
improving CIA's image on campuses; a series of CIA sponsored seminars in
Berkeley and other sites for professors to share info with CIA; providing a
steady flow of CIA material on China and the USSR to CIA-approved
professors."
The CIA connections grow deeper and more ominous. Louis "Joly" West, who
died this month, served for many years as Director of NPI. The documentation
from government records is voluminous that West was a pioneer for CIA in the
development of and experimentation with LSD in the 1950's
and 1960s. The first time I met him a group of doctors were joking about how
he had "administered 10,000 micrograms of LSD to an enraged elephant for the
CIA. The elephant died. I recall one doctor quipping, "I sure am glad it was
a communist elephant!"
One last note before we move on: Joly West, is extremely well documented
from CIA's own records as having been one of the principal researchers in
CIA's MK-ULTRA program which used drugs and torture to produce mind-control
assassins and other useful servants. I recall one telling discussion with
NPI's sympathetic Dr. Sid Cohen who knew of my past struggles against CIA.
He told me, "CIA pretty much knows everything we do at NPI. It was set up
that way from the start." Cohen was qualified to speak on this subject. He
had been a consultant for the State Department, the U.S. Army and the World
Health Organization.
If that was the case, and if NPI housed some of the world's foremost
experts on crack cocaine, it is impossible not to believe that CIA didn't
know what UCLA, RAND and the governments of Ecuador, Peru and Bolivia knew.

Guns Make The Difference

Until the book Dark Alliance and an absolutely fabulous series of articles
appeared in The Orange County Weekly by reporter Nick Schou I had been
unconvinced that CIA had directly targeted African-Americans. I believed it
in my heart but I had never seen the evidence to prove it. In August 1996,
right after the Webb stories appeared, I was a call-in guest on a number of
radio talk shows with Gary and I recall stating that I knew nothing about
CIA selling crack cocaine on street corners but I knew a great deal about
CIA bringing it in on airplanes and boats. It was not until Schou's series
and Webb's book appeared that I was not only convinced, I was certain that
CIA had targeted blacks.
It is beyond the scope of this article to describe just how well Gary Webb
used court records, DEA, Justice Department, CIA and L.A. County Sheriff's
records to establish that the drug dealing operations of Danilo Blandon and
Norwin Meneses were sanctioned and protected by both DEA and the CIA. The
revelations in both volumes of the CIA's Inspector General's reports, as
covered in From The Wilderness, corroborate much of Gary's work.
In particular, Webb documented how Ricky Ross always seemed to avoid arrest
at the peak of his career. Danilo Blandon's direct connections to CIA assets
and agents are now a given. Let's look at what Ricky Ross had to say about
Blandon. "All I knew was like, back in LA he [Blandon] would always tell me
when they was going to raid my houses. The police always thought I had
somebody working for the police.
"And he was always giving me tips like, 'Man don't go back over to that
house no more,' or 'Don't go to this house over here.'" (Webb - p179)
The police told of serious frustrations at trying to arrest Ross. The most
telling event was when a joint task force of Sheriffs, LAPD and other
agencies set out to raid fourteen different locations in 1986. All of them
had been cleaned out by the time the surprise raids hit. (Webb - p310-321).
Only one location, the home of Ronald Lister, turned up anything of value -
government documents. Both Webb and Schou tied Lister directly to CIA and
Contra support operations and to Scott Weekly, an Annapolis classmate of
Oliver North. Subsequent investigations, lasting into 1997, not only showed
evidence of Weekly's links to CIA and DIA, including FBI wiretaps of his
phone conversations, but also established links between Weekly, North and
the staff of Vice President George Bush (Webb - pp320-323). Sheriff's
deputies and LAPD officers were amazed and knew full well that they were
investigating a CIA operation, which was being protected. Hundreds of pages
of government documents mysteriously disappeared from Sheriff's custody and
Blandon never got arrested. Neither did Ricky Ross until much later.
One of the heroes of Dark Alliance, Bell PD detective Jerry Guzetta, summed
up all of the police experience in trying to arrest Ricky Ross and Danillo
Blandon. "Every policeman who ever got close to Blandon was either told to
back off, investigated by their department, forced to retire or indicted,"
(Webb - p375).
In early November 1996, two weeks before I confronted CIA Director John
Deutch at Locke High School in Watts, I attended another congressional town
hall meeting in Compton hosted by Congresswoman Juanita Millender-McDonald.
At that meeting, before I took the microphone to talk about CIA drug
dealing, I had an opportunity to talk in private with Department of Justice
Inspector General Michael Bromwich and the commander of LAPD's Narcotics
Group, Commander (now Deputy Chief) Gregg Berg. I told both men exactly how
CIA protected their drug operations.
At the time all police agencies belonged to an organization known as the
Narcotics Intelligence Network (NIN). Any law enforcement agency conducting
an investigation of a drug trafficker must first run the suspect's name
through a computer search to find out if anyone else has an ongoing
investigation of that suspect. Such an arrangement is necessary to prevent
one agency from arresting another agency's undercover operatives. What the
CIA does is to use its contract agents or deep covers within local police
departments to constantly monitor NIN, which has to be notified of pending
raids. The CIA also uses its deep covers within police departments to
monitor investigations and warn CIA assets in time to avoid arrest.
How did I know this? Ten years before the Ricky Ross raids, in 1976, my CIA
agent fiancée had told me this was how "her people" protected certain
things. The job she was recruiting me for, which I refused to take, was to
work myself, with a little help, into a position where I would be the one
doing the monitoring - and the warning. She once told me that she had asked
"her people" if she could give me information which would lead directly to a
Los Angeles arrest of a major dealer. They wouldn't let her because I had
already told her that I would never overlook illegal narcotics. The unspoken
message was that if I wouldn't overlook when asked I couldn't be given a
"freebie".
Lister, an ex-policeman who served as a bodyguard/courier for Blandon
delivered both drugs and money while enjoying CIA protection. He and Blandon
delivered drugs and guns all over South Central. Danillo Blandon even sold
guns to Ricky Ross' immediate entourage. Ollie Newell, Ross's partner, was
able to purchase a .50 caliber machine gun on a tripod (Webb p 188). This is
a pure military weapon known as a "Ma Deuce" and something which is not
obtainable at your local surplus store.
Webb and Schou also documented that the police and the FBI knew that Lister
and Blandon were delivering not only guns but sophisticated radio equipment
(which enabled the monitoring of secure police frequencies) to Ross and the
gangs (Webb - pp. 179-193) (Schou). I knew then that the whole operation was
protected from start to finish by the Central Intelligence Agency. Why? If
you walk into a room filled with policemen and yell "Anybody want to take
some drugs off the street?" maybe half the room will stand up. But if you
walk into the same room and yell, "Anybody want to take some guns off the
street?" you will be crushed in the ensuing stampede. Only the federal
government, and especially the CIA, have the horsepower to make cops stay
away from arresting those who put guns on the streets.
Nick Schou demonstrated how Lister, through arms dealer Tim La France and
Weekly (who is himself a firearms master), was working on Agency contracts
serious enough to secure him end-user certificates from the State Department
to export weapons in a matter of days when the process usually requires
months. Indirect confirmation of these relationships was established when
the FBI denied release of some of Lister's documents under provisions of the
National Security Act (Webb - p 193).


Fluor - The Icing On the Cake

As documented by phone records and telephone calls placed to the Fluor
Corporation in Irvine, California by Lister's associates, Ron Lister held
frequent meetings with a Fluor Vice President named Bill Nelson (Webb -
pp191-193) (Schou). Bill Nelson was a retired Deputy Director of Operations
(DDO) of the CIA who had personally overseen the destabilization and
overthrow of Chile's Salvador Allende in the 1970s. The DDO is the second
most powerful position in the CIA and is directly in charge of all covert
operations. The Fluor Corporation, according to confidential sources, was a
major multi-national corporation which regularly provided services and cover
for the CIA over a period of roughly fifteen years.
It is inconceivable that a courier and contractor like Lister could have
held regular meetings with a retired DDO in Southern California unless he
was protected at the highest levels. One good narcotics detective could have
tailed Lister to one meeting which would have been enough to totally
compromise the Agency - especially if it had occurred just after Lister had
transported twenty kilos of cocaine or a trunk load of sub-machine guns.
Conversely, it is also inconceivable that a retired DDO would meet with
anybody unless he knew everything in the world there was to know about that
person beforehand. The Agency just does not work that way.
A former CIA officer, John Vanderwerker, confirmed to Schou that Nelson and
Lister knew each other (Webb - p195).

Closing Arguments

Crack cocaine was particularly devastating for African-American communities.
This was, I believe, by design. In early 1985 USC Sociologists Klein and
Maxson researched the phenomenon of crack use. "One thing they were unable
to explain was why crack was found only in L.A.'s black neighborhoods. 'The
drug," the sociologists wrote, at least currently seems to be
ethnically specific. Cocaine is found widely in the Black Community in Los
Angeles, but it is almost totally absent from the Hispanic areas," (Webb -
p184).
And the effects of crack use were, indeed, biblical. In 1985 50% of the
emergency room admissions in L.A were due to crack. Full-blown cocaine
psychosis was occurring as soon as eight months after first use and crack
cocaine hit hardest among those African-Americans who had some college
education and held steady jobs (Ruppert1&2).
I wrote in 1985. "So pervasive is the epidemic that it is threatening the
political and social systems that have held black communities together in
the face of cuts in social programs and rising unemployment in an already
depressed economy,"  (Ruppert 1). The Christopher Commission, charged with
finding the causes of the LA 1992 LA riot/insurrection found that one of the
primary causes was crack cocaine. The LA riots remain, to this day, the
largest domestic insurrection since the civil war.
--------------------

Picture a jury trial for a man accused of arson. No one saw the man light
the match (taught the dealers how to make the crack). Yet there is
incontrovertible evidence that the man knew and had studied fire science and
thus knew that by pouring gasoline onto dry wood and striking a match, that
the wood building would burn. There is also incontrovertible evidence that
the man brought gasoline, small bits of kindling and a person who liked to
play with matches to a large building. There is also hard proof that the
man, once a fire had started, deliberately interfered with fire fighters
attempting to reach the blaze. Then he brought in lots more gasoline. Not
only that but the man provided the match striker with guns and radios which
monitored the fire department frequencies so that he could fight off
firefighters and continue lighting more fires.
As the building burned, and people died inside, our suspect attempted to
cover-up for the match lighter and interfered with law enforcement
investigations into his activities. He even lied to Congress, which was
alarmed by the damage and the number of deaths. And, being trusted by
Congress, our suspect continued to thwart attempts to stop the fire and find
the cause.
Such a man would be convicted of arson in a heartbeat.

(c) Copyright 1999 From The Wilderness  at www.copvcia.com and Michael C.
Ruppert.
All Rights Reserved)



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