-Caveat Lector-

 Re: The WACKENHUT Corporation
 ===================================================================
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (nessie)
 Date: Thu 4 Jan 1996
 Subject: Fwd(2): more on Wackenhut (pt. 2)


 PAY YOUR MONEY, TAKE YOUR CHANCE

 PART 2 OF 2

 Lack of proper training has been a Wackenhut trademark for years.
 The reduction in cost provided by cutting this corner enables
 Wackenhut to deliver their admittedly reduced services at
 substantial savings to organizations who value a penny saved over
 the lives of their employees and customers, and to individuals who
 put a price on the life of their families.  The spate of terrorist
 attacks against Americans and their allies, during the Gulf War
 included some pesky snipers in Saudi Arabia. Was the House of Saud
 safe? According to the Jonathan Littman, the Saudi ruling family
 negotiated (at least) with Wackenhut over a contract for security
 at Crown Prince Fahd's palace itself. Whether Wackenhut delivered
 is not for commoners to know.  These negotiations took place by way
 of the tiny (but sovereign) band of Cabazon Indians in Southern
 California. The Cabazons have also allegedly fronted for
 Wackenhut's role in the secret (and illegal) Contra supply scam.
 Both Wackenhut and the Cabazons prefer the term "joint venture."

 In 1978 the Cabazons hired a certain John Philip Nichols to manage
 their finances. This self proclaimed "Doctor of Theology" was
 reputed to be a "premier" obtainer of grants. Once he had obtained
 the Cabazons' trust, Nichols began proposing an array of projects
 involving tank cartridges, laser-sighted assault rifles, portable
 rocket systems, night vision goggles and, most ominously,
 biological weapons. Many of these proposals grew out of the tribe's
 partnership with Wackenhut. The Cabazons' sovereign status, and
 it's accompanying freedom from costly regulation, enables great
 ease in the bidding process.

 "I was present at one meeting where Wackenhut people were present.
 We were told it was part of the security system on the
 reservation," said Cabazon Joe Benitez. "Later on, I found out they
 were working to develop munitions. It seemed amazing to me."

 It is unclear which, if any, of the deals went through. It is a
 matter of court record, though, that in 1985, Nichols pleaded no
 contest to the charge of solicitation to murder. He served 18
 months. His son, John Paul, took over as acting administrator of
 the Cabazons while his father did time. After his release, Nichols
 was barred by his felony record from running any of the
 reservation's gambling operations. His brother, Mark, inherited the
 position of Cabazon administrator. What, if any, role Wackenhut
 plays in Cabazon life today is unclear. Wackenhut denies any. "It
 turned out that we never got any contracts and, after two years,
 the venture was canceled," claims director of public relations,
 Patrick Cannan (1-305-666-5656).

 Cannan also denied any connection with the so-called "Inslaw case."
 Wackenhut's name has come up consistently in relation to claims
 made by Michael Riconoscuito that while a research director for a
 joint venture between Wackenhut and the Cabazon Indians, he
 modified a stolen copy of Inslaw's PROMIS software for sale by Earl
 Brian to the Canadian government.  Brian is a crony of Reagan's
 Attorney General, Edwin Meese. Meese is best known as gutter of the
 Fourth Amendment, and Wedtech scandal principal. Another former US
 Attorney, General Elliot Richardson, is the attorney for Inslaw. He
 has been quoted as saying that Inslaw "is far worse than
 Watergate." In fact, the Inslaw case does make Watergate look like
 a small town parking ticket fix. The press has barely scraped the
 surface of this most sordid of scandals, and not without reason.
 Among the few honest journalists to poke a nose in this nest of
 hornets and live to tell the tale is Jonathan Littman. According to
 Littman, Riconoscuito was a "consultant" for Wackenhut. According
 to Patrick Cannan, Riconoscuito. was a "hanger on." Everyone is
 entitled to their own opinion.

 The Inslaw case stems from the alleged theft of software by the
 Justice Dept.  from the Inslaw Corp. It has grown from a title and
 bankruptcy case into one that includes allegations of sales of the
 software to foreign governments (such as Canada, Iraq, South Korea,
 Libya and Israel) by such Iran-Contra figures as Robert McFarlane
 and Richard Secord. The case attracted more public attention
 following the apparent suicide death of journalist Joseph D.
 "Danny" Casolaro on mid-August in a Martinsburg W. Va. motel room.
 Casolaro had told friends that he had made connections between
 Inslaw, Iran-Contra and the so-called "October Surprise."
 (allegations that representatives of the Reagan-Bush campaign team,
 headed by Casey, had convinced the Iranian government to delay
 release of American hostages until after the 1980 U.S. elections)
 Casolaro also allegedly told his brother that, if he was reported
 to have had an accident, not to be believe it. Elliot Richardson
 has demanded a federal investigation of Casolaro's death.

 Cannan also denied that William Casey was legal counsel to
 Wackenhut before joining the government and that former CIA
 officials Frank Carlucci and Admiral Bobby Ray Inman were Wackenhut
 directors. Cannan said, "Although Casey's law firm represented
 Wackenhut, Casey himself never had any connection with us. Carlucci
 was a director of the firm -- he is no longer -- but Inman was not.
 We did have another director with a similar background to Inman, an
 admiral who was chief of naval operations, and that might have lead
 to the incorrect rumor."

 Plausible deniability has been an American tradition at least since
 the Boston Tea Party. "The Indians did it." Right. Sure. Tell us
 another one.

 Operating fronts within fronts, is a standard modus operandi, and
 not just of Wackenhut. Wackenhut Corp. itself appears on occasion
 to be the collective front of a variety of scofflaws, felons and
 worse. They hide behind a wall of omerta excused by "national
 security" and enforced by an old boy network rooted deep in the
 intelligence community. Some successful scams are hidden behind the
 facade of ineptitude projected by their under-trained and
 under-paid employees. Perhaps they hire a lot of fuck ups to divert
 our attention from how slick a few of their operatives actually
 are. If so, this has proved a somewhat less than successful tactic.
 The blowback has come from disgruntled former employees. Wackenhut
 Corp. does not inspire a degree of loyalty up, commensurate with
 the loyalty down they demand. Instead, they buy it. They buy it
 cheap. Loyalty bought is intrinsically fleeting. Loyalty bought
 cheap is fleeter still. Consider the degree to which testimony of
 disgruntled former employees has damaged Wackenhut's reputation in
 court as well as the press.

 Then there's the prison biz. Wackenhut operates 10 detention or
 correctional facilities, in seven states, that house 3,456 inmates.
 At least, those are the ones we know about. It's first facility, a
 federal Immigration and Naturalization Services detention center,
 opened in 1987. Biz burgeoned.  Within two years the correctional
 business generated about $25 million of Wackenhut's $462 million
 1989 revenue This is according to the company itself, not to
 independent auditors. Robert Hennelly reported in the Village
 Voice, that Wackenhut is also developing and marketing electronic
 systems for tracking prisoners under house arrest for local, state,
 and federal authorities.

 According to the L. A. Times, Wackenhut does not "operate" any
 jails in California, but it does "run" a minimum security
 "correctional facility" for the state in McFarland, where parole
 violators are housed. This subtle distinction may be lost on those
 outside the profession.

 Wackenhut has some serious competition for market share  in the
 prison boom.  "Privatization is a slap in the face to corrections
 officers as professionals," said Jeff Doyle (no relation), a prison
 guard and California Correctional Peace Officer Assn. vice
 president. "It's irresponsible for government to turn this over to
 the private sector." Although Doyle acknowledged there is an
 element of self-protection among the state guards who are upset
 with privatization plans, he emphasized that the Wackenhut guards
 do not have the same level of training and experience that state
 corrections officers do.

 Consider the effect of Wackenhut's level of competence of life in a
 typical American city, San Diego. While California law prohibits
 counties from contracting out the management of its jails to the
 private sector, the San Diego county counsel's office (not a Court
 of Law) determined that the sheriff could contract for beds in the
 city's proposed jail. According to correctional officials, the Otay
 facility would be the first privately owned and operated jail in
 California. Pete Abrahano, the San Diego manager for Wackenhut,
 said the guards who will run the Otay Mesa facility, would be
 better trained than the rest of the company's guards. "They will
 have the necessary training and experience required by federal
 law," he said. "These will not be just regular guards."

 Wackenhut's "just regular" guards are no strangers to informed San
 Diegans.  When the Union-Tribune Publishing Co. brought in the
 Tennessee law firm King & Ballow to handle its contract
 negotiations, King and Ballow fired all the Union-Tribune security
 guards and hired new guards from Wackenhut. Bringing in Wackenhut
 is standard procedure when King and Ballow enters a newspaper labor
 dispute. The Newspaper Guild complains that the tactic is meant to
 intimidate employees.

 When intimidation fails to do the trick, there's always the courts.
 Slander is a fact of human life. No one gets through life without
 ever being slandered. But Wackenhut attorneys have refined slander
 to a high art.  Consider the case of murder victim Richard Crake,
 who met his demise in La Jolla in 1981. In 1985 a jury lodged
 $217,500 in compensatory damages against the Wackenhut Corporation,
 the security firm that guarded the complex where Crake lived.
 Before the trial his widow, Kathryn Crake, turned down an offer
 from attorneys for the Wackenhut Corporation and it's co-defendants
 to settle the case for $1.3 million. Then Ken Grider, 32, of Los
 Angeles, alleging to have been Richard Crake's male lover,
 testified as a witness for the defendants about how much time Crake
 spent with him daily before he was killed. The defendants'
 attorneys argued that the Crake marriage was doomed because of the
 love affair and would not have survived had he lived.  Compromising
 the reputation of their dead client failed to redeem that of the
 Wackenhut guards who bungled his protection, but it did save the
 company a right smart piece of change. It is an aphorism of the
 trade that "dead clients don't pay." They're not the only ones.

 Wackenhut hires much better trained attorneys than guards. They
 need them. In August 1986 it took a 4th District Court of Appeal
 ruling just to gain a Los Angeles woman the mere right to sue
 Wackenhut Corp. and it's co-defendants.  Florence Blakely was
 struck by a passenger gate blown open by a blast from a jet engine
 at John Wayne Airport, where Wackenhut provided the security. Judge
 Sonenshine, citing "human error" as a "further complication" found
 the gate dangerous, despite sworn statements from airport officials
 that there had been no prior reports of negligence by guards
 opening the gates. Gates are the business of guards. You'd think
 they'd know how to work the latch.  Fortunately for them, Wackenhut
 knows how to work the courts.

 Wackenhut guards are as likely to be brutal as they are to stupid.
 Consider the case of survivor George Bagwell Jr., who sued futilely
 for redress in the wrongful death of his father. George Bagwell Sr.
 had suffered from Alzheimer's disease for years. He had driven to
 Lindbergh Field in January, 1988, thinking his son was due to
 arrive on a flight. Bagwell wandered into a security area and
 didn't respond when Harbor Police and Wackenhut Corp. security
 guards called to him. According to the lawsuit, guards beat and
 kicked Bagwell, in the course of his arrest. At the time of the
 incident, Bagwell was wearing a medical bracelet that explained his
 health problems. He had further details about his condition inside
 his billfold. Bagwell's son said his father was about 130 pounds
 and 5-foot-7, hardly a threat.

 The lawsuit said Bagwell suffered lacerations and injuries to the
 face, scalp, arms and body, which led to his death in April, 1988.
 Medical experts testified at trial that the stress of the incident
 contributed to his death.  He did not die in the guard's hands, but
 died soon thereafter. Bagwell Jr.  said the January 1991 verdict
 was a second disappointment, although the family has no misgivings.

 While wiser counties such as Los Angeles and Orange use their own
 deputies to guard hospitalized prisoners at county hospitals, San
 Diego employs Wackenhut. It was a poor choice. One prisoner escaped
 in a wheelchair, kidnapping his guard in the process. You'd think
 if Wackenhut was so "premier," a guy in a wheelchair wouldn't be
 too much for them to handle.

 One of the reasons San Diego County Sheriff's Department uses
 Wackenhut is economics, said Sgt. Bob Takeshta, public affairs
 officer with the Sheriff's Department. "It's a pure fact of dollars
 and cents." Sheriff's deputies are paid an average of $12 to $16 an
 hour for their services. Peter Abrahano, area manager for
 Wackenhut. declined to say how much his guards made per hour,
 except to say that they are paid less than sheriff's deputies.

 To Takeshta's knowledge, the escape was not highly unusual. "This
 is not an isolated incident; there have been others," he said.
 Earlier that month, a narcotics suspect escaped by jumping out a
 fourth floor window. Hospital guards are unarmed and do not wear
 uniforms, said Sheriff's Lt. Sylvester Washington, a shift watch
 commander at County Jail downtown. The Sheriff's Department ". . .
 prefers it that way," he said, "The guards don't have adequate
 training to be armed." Wackenhut also works for private companies
 and, in some instances, its guards are armed. Washington said it's
 a wonder hospital escapes aren't more common. "We've been lucky,
 very lucky," he said.

 "There's no reason for guards to be armed," said Abrahano. "You
 don't really think (prisoners) are going to go anywhere."

 Not really thinking seems to be an ongoing problem at Wackenhut.

 Consider case of the 27-year-old fugitive from Colorado who escaped
 from custody at UC San Diego Medical Center ten days later, the
 third such escape from a hospital room in less than six weeks. In
 each case the inmate had been guarded by Wackenhut Corp., under
 contract to the San Diego County Sheriff's Department. Wackenhut
 cost the Sheriff's Department $410,000 that year, according to
 county officials. The prisoner, who jail officials had considered
 to be an escape risk, eluded two Wackenhut security guards but was
 arrested after crashing a stolen truck into a tree across the
 street from a San Diego Police Department substation. Clearly this
 was no rocket scientist either, but it is equally clear that he was
 smarter than his guards.

 According to police, the escape occurred about noon when, with one
 of the guards apparently out to lunch, the prisoner asked the other
 guard for permission to take a shower. He then asked for shampoo
 and, when the guard left to get it, escaped from his 10th floor
 room by taking a stairway that leads outside. Well, duh!

 The growing privatization of the ever expanding prison industry
 places ever greater demands on the public for "raw material."
 Wackenhut operates 10 detention or correctional facilities in seven
 states that house 3,456 inmates. It's first facility, a federal
 Immigration and Naturalization Services detention center, opened in
 1987. Within two years the correctional business generated about
 $25 million of Wackenhut's $462 million in 1989 revenue This is
 according to company spokesman, not independent auditors.  Robert
 Hennelly reported in the Village Voice that Wackenhut is also
 developing and marketing electronic systems for tracking prisoners
 under house arrest for local, state, and federal authorities.

 Never in my life did I even imagine that one day I would be
 sticking up for a screw, but by golly there folks, this Doyle guy
 is right, at least as far as he goes. If we the public want to be
 perceived as members of a just society we can't buy justice from
 any body, least of all the lowest bidder. It makes us look real
 bad. It also aint justice. If we want actual justice, and not just
 the perception, we have to participate in the process. History has
 proven conclusively that prisons are no solution to the problem of
 crime. If they were, it would have happened by now. Only a complete
 restructuring of society can even begin to address the problem. The
 problem of crime is structural. Victimless crimes are nothing more
 than a cash cow for the state.  Crimes against property are
 political offenses, and almost always the result of drug
 prohibition. There's also the ever sticky problem of definition of
 property. The sanctity of personal property is respected near
 universally.  Public property and private property are a little
 harder to define, at least without sufficient arms. This leaves
 violent crime, a tiny minority of all crimes. Violent criminals
 should not be imprisoned, per se, but offered asylum, on a purely
 voluntary basis of course, where they could seek treatment for
 their mental disorders, and protection from the rest of us. If they
 decline asylum, kill 'em and be done with it. Don't hire somebody.
 That's totally gutless. It doesn't work very well, either. If it
 did, violence would have subsided by now. Do it yourself. If you
 need help, don't hire; inspire. If you can't inspire, you're living
 wrong; change. Don't oppose the death penalty. The death penalty is
 good. Oppose its monopolization by the state. The only truly
 effective defense against violence is effective self defense.
 Collective self defense benefits from the economy of scale. History
 has proven conclusively that courts, prisons, and cops (both public
 and private), are useless. They have failed, miserably, to cure the
 problem. In fact, they made it worse, much worse. Worse still, they
 use the power we grant them against us. Then they have the
 unmitigated gall to charge us money for the service. Then they
 don't even deliver. How much worse does it have to get before we
 wise up? It doesn't matter whether we hire our cops through the
 private sector or the public sector, they're still basically
 mercenaries. Machiavelli was right. Mercenaries are useless.

 We all have a practical as well as a moral duty to protect
 ourselves and each other. Most of us still lack  the skill. The
 time to start learning has come and gone. While the practice of
 hiring bumbling thugs to "protect" us has long withstood the test
 of time, our freedom has not. It dwindles even as I speak. Neither
 are we protected. Do you feel protected by the current system?  Or
 do you feel, like me, merely used? Can you foresee the situation
 getting any better on its own? I sure can't, and I'm an inveterate
 optimist. As we approach the increasingly corporate millennium, we
 can look forward to life in a private prison that encompasses all
 society and subjugates every moment of daily life: work, a prison
 of measured time, and play, a supervised activity. For this we
 sacrificed our freedom. For this, we even hire our own guards,
 guards who work for money, not for us, guards who have their own
 agenda. And a lot of them aren't even good at it, which is a mixed
 blessing.  They, themselves, are a curse.









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