From: nexusmagazine <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Extracted from the upcoming February-March 2000 edition of NEXUS Magazine.


Up Against the Beast: High-level Drug Running

An imprisoned former US Green Beret is suing the CIA, George Bush and
others, to draw attention to their complicity in government-sanctioned
drug-trafficking operations and cover-ups.

Part 1 of 2

by Uri Dowbenko � 1999
PO Box 43
Pray, Montana 59065
Email:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]

I.  BILL TYREE'S LAWSUIT:  DRUG PROFITS ALLEGEDLY FUNDED FEMA
Speculation about the mysterious origin and funding of the so-called US
Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) has continued for decades.
Most recently, the history of FEMA as an illegal, unconstitutional entity
has been exposed in an unprecedented lawsuit against the Central
Intelligence Agency (CIA) and its alleged drug-trafficking and
money-laundering operations.
In September 1998, a US$63 million lawsuit (Case No. 98-CV-11829-JLT) was
filed by Massachusetts attorney Ray Kohlman on behalf of former Green
Beret William M. (Bill) Tyree.  Kohlman, a former legal investigator for
attorney William Pepper in the Martin Luther King, Jr, murder trial of
James Earl Ray, filed a 101-page complaint on behalf of his client.  The
suit, replete with five inches of affidavits and appendices, names the
Central Intelligence Agency, former Massachusetts Governor A. Paul
Cellucci, former Massachusetts Attorney-General L. Scott Harshbarger,
former CIA Director and US President George Bush, and self-admitted
government assassin D. Gene Tatum as Defendants in a far-reaching case
involving US Government�sanctioned drug smuggling, murder and cover-up.
Bill Tyree is currently serving a life sentence for the murder of his
wife�a case eerily similar to that of Dr Jeffrey MacDonald, a Fort Bragg
doctor who was framed for the murder of his wife and children in the
early 1980s.
"In the mid-1970s, while serving in Panama, Tyree and other Green Berets
were led into Colombia under the command of Green Beret Colonels Cutolo
and Baker to plant radio beacons, so that planeloads of cocaine could fly
below Colombian and US radar and land undetected in Panama," writes
former LAPD officer Mike Ruppert in his newsletter, From the Wilderness
(PO Box 6061-350, Sherman Oaks, CA 91413, USA, website www.copvcia.com).
"Orders for these missions came from the CIA's Ed Wilson and Tom Clines,"
continues Ruppert.  "Tyree had been a part of many secret missions and
was losing his taste for it.  His wife was keeping a diary [for which she
was presumably murdered, after which the diary was confiscated and later
disappeared].
"Five Special Forces Colonels�Cutolo, Baker, Malvesti, Rowe and
Bayard�have died under mysterious circumstances since.  The heart of the
Tyree documentation consists of an affidavit allegedly written by Colonel
Cutolo, who was also Tyree's commanding officer at Fort Devens, Mass., at
the time of Tyree's arrest.  Both were then with the 10th Special Forces.
"That fifteen-page document gives precise details of CIA drug operations
using Special Forces personnel.  It also describes how Tyree was framed
for the murder of his wife and how Special Forces personnel were used to
intimidate and conduct illegal electronic and physical surveillance of
anyone who might expose CIA drug dealing," Ruppert concludes.

No Legal Funding For FEMA
According to the actual complaint in the lawsuit:  "...the Plaintiff
[Tyree] alleges that the Defendants CIA and George Bush were negligent
and failed at the conclusion of Operation Watchtower to monitor the
post-Watchtower events and seek legal congressional funding for the
origination of FEMA (Federal Emergency Management Agency), and this
failure led to the concealment and cover-up of Operation Watchtower,
written about in the diaries of Elaine Tyree, seized illegally and turned
over to Colonel Carone and then to the CIA which ensured that the
Operation Watchtower drug trafficking operation would remain covert,
allowing the drug profits from this Operation to be used to circumvent
Congress and fund FEMA and continue the pattern of criminal activity."
Colonel Carone, who died in 1990, was a CIA paymaster and Mafia-connected
money launderer, who incidentally held the rank of full colonel in Army
Intelligence.  As Oliver North's bagman, Carone also couriered large
amounts of cash in and out of the country.  According to former Federal
Aviation Administration (FAA) investigator Rodney Stich, "Carone had
complex relationships".  In his underground bestselling book, Defrauding
America (www.defraudingamerica.com), Stich writes that Carone was a
member of the Gambino family, had connections to other crime groups in
the eastern part of the United States, was a detective on the New York
City vice squad, a member of the military and a CIA operative.
Stich writes:  "Dee [Ferdinand, Carone's daughter] said her father was a
detective and 'bag man' in the New York City police department,
collecting money that was distributed to captains and inspectors as
payoffs for 'looking the other way' where drugs were involved...
"Referring to CIA�Mafia drug trafficking, she said she knew from what her
father said that the drugs coming from South America went to the Colombo,
Genovese and Gambino families, and that it was a joint CIA�Mafia drug
operation under the code name Operation Amadeus," continues Stich.  "She
said that during World War II, Operation Amadeus was involved in
transporting Nazi officers from Germany into South American countries.
According to her father's notes, Operation Amadeus split into several
other operations, including Operation Sunrise and Operation Watchtower."
In the lawsuit, Tyree alleges that CIA and George Bush were negligent by
allowing the stolen diaries of Elaine Tyree to be used to further cover
up "Operation Watchtower, which was one of several illegal drug
operations that produced a profit which was used in turn to help
originate and implement FEMA" (p. 23).
It is further contended in the lawsuit that CIA and George Bush violated
the "separation of powers, [i.e.,] the Executive Branch brought about an
agency (FEMA) which has the authority to suspend the US Constitution
(e.g., further suspending legislative and judicial branches), but is
vague in its verbiage as to what does constitute an emergency, and fails
to list what, if any, duties the legislature and judiciary will have to
perform if the US Constitution is suspended" (p. 23).
No Legal Standing For FEMA
Even though the origin of FEMA has remained historically unclear, Tyree
alleges in the lawsuit that FEMA, created by Executive Order, is
illegitimate "since Congress had to approve FEMA for two specific
reasons:  (1) FEMA is a vaguely written Executive Branch�created agency
that has the power to suspend the US Constitution and put the legislative
and judicial branches of government out of work; (2) FEMA is an Executive
Branch creation that clearly affects all three branches of Government
capable of silencing the voice of the people (i.e., legislative) and the
legal redress of the people (i.e., judiciary)".
FEMA was allegedly created by Executive Order 12148, which became law
simply by its publication in the Federal Registry.  In other words,
Congress was bypassed for FEMA's authorisation as well as its funding.
But if Congress never authorised the agency, where do operational
expenses come from?  Tyree's lawsuit alleges that laundered drug profits
were the initial source of FEMA's funding.
According to the lawsuit:  "...the Plaintiff [Tyree] alleges the
Defendants CIA and George Bush did intentionally engage in the
complained-of conduct herein to conceal:  (1) the origins of FEMA, and
that profits from drug trafficking by the CIA were used in some part to
originally fund FEMA and the drafting of the FEMA infrastructure..."
An even more astounding allegation in the lawsuit is that Colonel Carone
told Tyree himself that "Colonel Ollie North worked on developing a plan,
known as FEMA, which would in an ill-defined national emergency allow the
US Military to take control of the United States to ensure National
Security".  Colonel Carone said that "FEMA" originally stood for "Federal
Emergency Military Action" (i.e., martial law), but was retitled "Federal
Emergency Management Agency" because it would be better received by the
people of the United States.
The late Colonel Carone also claimed that he "took drug profits that were
clean and laundered in 1982�1984 to the following:  NSC�Colonel Oliver
North, who used the funds to create and develop FEMA" (p. 88 of the
lawsuit).

Colonel Oliver North and FEMA
Oliver North's role in the creation of FEMA should be better known.  In a
book called Guts and Glory: The Rise and Fall of Oliver North, author Ben
Bradlee, Jr, writes:
"North's work for FEMA�from 1982 to the spring of 1984�was highly
classified, and some would say bizarre.  During that period, the Miami
Herald reported, he was involved in helping to draft a sweeping
contingency plan to impose martial law in the event of a nuclear war, or
less serious national crises such as widespread internal dissent, or
opposition to an American military invasion abroad.
"The plan�which also gave FEMA itself broad authority to report directly
to the President, appoint military commanders and run state and local
governments [Executive Order 11490]�ruffled many administration
feathers," continues Bradlee.
"North would also play a role in helping FEMA stage a national emergency
simulation exercise [on] April 5�18, 1984...  Rex-84 Bravo, authorised by
President Reagan's signature of National Security Decision Directive 52,
was predicated in his declaration of a state of national emergency
concurrent with a mythical invasion (code-named Operation Night Train) of
an unspecified Central American country, presumably Nicaragua.
"...Rex-84 Bravo was designed to test FEMA's readiness to assume
authority over Department of Defense personnel, all fifty state National
Guard forces and a number of 'State Defense Force' units which were to be
created by state legislative enactments.  FEMA would 'deputize' all DoD
and state National Guard personnel, so as to avoid violating the federal
Posse Comitatus Act  which forbids using any military forces for domestic
law enforcement," writes Bradlee.
In the lawsuit, Tyree quotes Colonel Carone's testimony that "FEMA was
one of those off-the-shelf creations that was funded through the giant
black-operations fund which came about from drug-trafficking operations
instituted by the CIA, which Congress has no idea of and no control over"
and that "the FEMA Chain of Command, rules and regulations that he had
seen, violated the US Constitution and actually established a succession
to the Office of the President in the event of an emergency that
circumvented the Vice President and the Speaker of the House of
Representatives".
According to the lawsuit:  "Carone said, 'NSC [National Security Council]
used drug trafficking profits to start FEMA without congressional
approval...a 1981 NSC Directive written by Frank Carlucci [states]:
"Normally a state of martial law will be proclaimed by the President.
However, in the absence of such action by the President, a senior
military commander may impose martial law in an area of his command where
there had been a complete breakdown in the exercise of government
functions by local authorities."'
"Colonel Carone said a literal interpretation of the 1981 NSC Directive
was that a local yokel National Guard commander could institute martial
law, and the actions of FEMA, without local citizens ever knowing how
FEMA came to be or what FEMA was originally intended to be about, would
automatically be triggered without any type of presidential order," it is
alleged in the lawsuit.
"Congress doesn't even have the purse strings on this one," Carone said.
"It's all from the Black Operations fund which Congress will never force
the US Intelligence Community to admit even exists."
Incidentally, according to criminal conspiracy investigator Sherman
Skolnick, Representative Henry Hyde of Illinois has been handling this
fund for the CIA and has done an "admirable" job in keeping it under
wraps, completely removed from public scrutiny.
According to Tyree, Carone also said that unindicted drug conspirator
Oliver North's role was admitted in his own diary (p. 91 of the lawsuit):
"You want the diary of Oliver North [said Carone].  Inside that diary is
your whole case.  It will tell you that he knew of drug trafficking even
if he wasn't involved directly, which is what he will claim.  I remember
one entry from May 12, 1984, to the effect that he knew one of his
contacts was trafficking drugs.  Another entry from July 20, 1984
basically stated that there was cargo offloaded at the ranch of John
Hull.  The cargo that was offloaded was cocaine.  I recall seeing an
entry from August 9, 1985, that a specific aircraft was being used for
drug trafficking.  Then there was an entry from either September 9 or 10,
1985, in which Ollie North, through Colonel James Steele, used a Special
Operations Unit brought in by Wally Gresheim and Litton.  Get his diary."
None dares call it fascism, of course, but due to this explosive lawsuit
by a framed American serviceman, Bill Tyree, the origin of FEMA and its
illegal funding may finally be known.

II.  THE GREAT AMERICAN FRAME
Spooky Parallels:  The Tyree & MacDonald Cover-ups
When criminals in government are about to be exposed, a story is
concocted which uses some of the facts, mixes it with lies, and obscures
the rest.  This disinformation is then spread throughout the media
and�voil�!�a cover-up is born.  With Hollywood connections, a TV movie is
produced.  This new dose of fiction then becomes irrefutable "fact" in
public memory.
Just so, there are significant parallels between the murder case of
former Green Beret Bill Tyree and Dr Jeffrey MacDonald.  Both involve
CIA/military drug smuggling crimes and cover-ups.  Both men were set up
and convicted.  Both men have been languishing in prison for 20 years.
The story of emergency physician Dr Jeffrey MacDonald, framed for the
murder of his wife Collette and children Kimberly and Kristen in 1970,
remains a tragedy.  Author Joe McGinnis wrote a best-selling book, Fatal
Vision, which was made into a TV movie of the same name in 1984.
The real story is the frame-up of an innocent man who had powerful
enemies.  It's described in great detail by Jerry Allen Potter and Fred
Bost in Fatal Justice: Reinvestigating the MacDonald Murders (W.W. Norton
& Co., 1997).
However, as Errol Morris, director of The Thin Blue Line, writes:  "If
you think you know the Jeffrey MacDonald case from Fatal Vision, think
again.  Fatal Justice is the first account of the whole story."
The Boston Phoenix called Fatal Justice "a devastating rebuttal to Fatal
Vision".
An investigator in the MacDonald case, former LA FBI Special Agent in
Charge Ted Gunderson, obtained a signed confession from Helena Stoeckley,
"the girl in the floppy hat", who told him that the group she was
involved with "was active in an international drug operation that
involved US Army personnel, including Army officers, police officers and
at least two local attorneys" in the Fort Bragg area.  According to Time
magazine (January 1, 1973), heroin was being flown into the United States
from the Far East in plastic bags hidden in the body cavities of dead
GIs.
According to Gunderson, members of this group "...tried to shake down Dr
MacDonald because he was abusive to those who overdosed on drugs in the
civilian hospital where he was moonlighting...  The assailants [of
MacDonald's family] were high on drugs and the situation escalated to the
murders.  Their intentions to shake down Dr MacDonald were not known or
approved by the leaders of the drug operation.  When it was realized by
the leaders that members of their network committed these murders, they
were concerned that an investigation of the cult would expose the drug
operations�thus the cover-up and 'framing' of Dr MacDonald."
Gunderson has written his own summary of the facts in The Doctor Jeffrey
R. MacDonald Investigation (contact Gunderson International, PO Box
18000-259, Las Vegas, NV 89114, USA).  Evidence, such as fingerprints,
was intentionally destroyed by Army CID (Criminal Investigation
Division).  Other evidence, like a bloody syringe, bloody clothing and
boots, was lost.  More crucial evidence was never collected.  Then
allegations of FBI Crime Lab corruption surfaced through FBI
whistleblower Frederick Whitehurst.
Michael P. Malone, an FBI forensic specialist who testified in the
MacDonald case, was exposed by the Inspector-General's report.  "Mr
Malone has indeed testified falsely and outside his expertise," reported
the Wall Street Journal of April 16, 1997.  "In 1987 and 1988, Florida
appellate courts overturned guilty verdicts�citing insufficient
evidence�in cases in which Mr Malone had testified for the prosecution,"
the article continues.
In addition, an internal FBI memo written in 1989 alleged that Mr Malone
had given 27 instances of false or misleading testimony in the 1985
proceedings that led to the impeachment and ouster of former US District
Judge Alcee L. Hastings.
Was it just sloppy work or outright fraud?  The evidence shows that FBI
Crime Lab work cannot be trusted.  In MacDonald's case, Malone's
testimony alone should have been grounds for a mistrial.
In Psychic Dictatorship in the USA (Feral House, 1995), author Alex
Constantine also weighs in on the MacDonald case.  "Fatal Vision is a
political hit piece," he writes.  "The paperback indictment of MacDonald
has reinforced the public perception of MacDonald's guilt, and kept
dormant one of the most unconscionable scandals in American military
history.
"Three suspects in the murders have confessed.  MacDonald's version of
events has been confirmed by some 40 witnesses...  Fatal Vision is myopic
in its exclusion of any evidence that might clear MacDonald.  McGinniss's
claim to impartiality eroded completely in his flat refusal in 1980 to
even look at the 1200-page report compiled by MacDonald's defense
attorneys.  The report, taken together with the sworn depositions of
witnesses, press accounts and interviews with investigators, combines in
a case sharply at odds with the government's.
"MacDonald passed a polygraph," writes Constantine.  "He submitted to
five independent forensic examinations.  The government's own lab
specimens link Fort Bragg's body-bag [drug-smuggling] ring to the crime
scene, including a long, synthetic blonde strand corroborating
MacDonald's contention that Stoeckley wore a blonde wig the night of the
murders.  A bloody syringe found in his home was 'lost' by the
prosecution."

The case of William Tyree is just as complex, convoluted and byzantine.
Tyree was in the Army Special Forces and also convicted of his wife's
murder.  An Arts & Entertainment channel documentary, Murder at Fort
Devens, revealed evidence that he was also framed to conceal CIA/military
drug trafficking.  Tyree says that, as early as 1975, drugs were flown
into Panama and were subsequently shipped to Mena, Arkansas�a state
described as the CIA's own "banana republic" inside the United States.
According to Rodney Stich, author of Defrauding America, the CIA utilised
the Army Intelligence Agency in Operation Watchtower which began in the
mid-1970s.  US Colonel A. J. Baker was ordered to oversee part of
Watchtower, and turned the operation over to Colonel Edward P. Cutolo who
also commanded the 10th Special Forces based at Fort Devens,
Massachusetts.
"...Cutolo, who had been ordered by the CIA to supervise Operation
Watchtower, grew increasingly concerned about its flagrant illegality,
and conducted an investigation in an attempt to bring it to a halt,"
writes Stich.  "Fearing he might be killed because of the investigation,
he prepared a fifteen-page, single-spaced affidavit dated March 11, 1980,
describing the CIA drug trafficking and other activities...  Cutolo was
killed, as were several other people working with him to expose the drug
trafficking operations...
"The affidavit described the installation and operation of the radio
beacon towers [to guide airplanes bringing in drugs] and several of the
drug flights in which he participated."
Relevant to the Tyree case itself:  "The Cutolo affidavit described the
killing of an Army servicewoman, Elaine Tyree, who had knowledge of
Operation Watchtower which she described in her diary.  To shift
attention from the actual killer and his connection to the ongoing drug
operation, the military charged Tyree's husband with the killing," Stich
writes.
This affidavit stated:  "It was too risky to allow a military court to
review the charges against Pvt Tyree..."
"At the first military hearing, the presiding judge found no reason to
bind Pvt Tyree's husband over for trial for the murder of his wife,"
continues Stich.  "This decision risked further investigation and
possible exposure of the corrupt operation.  Army pressure caused the
county prosecutor to indict the husband for murdering his wife, even
though the Army knew the actual killer was someone else.  The Cutolo
affidavit stated:
'On 29 February 1980, Pvt Tyree was convicted of murder and will spend
the duration of his life incarcerated.  I could not disseminate
intelligence gathered under Operation Orwell [a surveillance operation
directed against US politicians] to notify civilian authorities [of] who
actually killed Elaine Tyree.'"
Murder at Fort Devens featured Judge James Killam, who initially
dismissed the case against Tyree, saying:  "I didn't believe a word the
prosecution's chief witness said.  He had the skills to do a
decapitation."  The judge was referring to Green Beret Earl Michael
Peters, who was present when the murder was committed.  Forensic evidence
and witness testimony show that Tyree was not present, and that Peters
was probably the real killer.
The lawsuit, filed on behalf of Bill Tyree by his attorney, Ray Kohlman,
states that the Plaintiff is seeking US$63 million�$21 million for each
year of incarceration and $42 million in exemplary damages�and is also
seeking an injunction against the CIA from engaging in further illegal
activities, as well as a new trial.
Bill Tyree, Dr MacDonald and many others, like former FBI Special Agent
Richard Taus, have been falsely arrested, convicted and imprisoned.
What's new?  Unlike the wrongfully imprisoned and recently released
former Black Panther, Geronimo Pratt�who did 27 years for a murder he
didn't commit�they are still political prisoners in the American Gulag.
It's called "Doing time for the CIA's crimes".  After all, even the
spooks make jokes that "CIA" stands for "Criminals in Action".

III.  SECRET HISTORY:  Dead Men Do Tell Tales
The lawsuit by former Green Beret William Tyree against the CIA et al. is
a work of art, a masterpiece of legal reasoning and an important
historical source document.  Why?  Because, for the record, it contains
first-hand knowledge and revelations by the late US Army Colonel Al
Carone of a far-reaching criminal conspiracy, namely, US Government drug
smuggling, money laundering, murder and cover-up.  Carone's information,
corroborated with evidence from other sources, reveals a dark history of
the United States that has been neglected by mainstream historians and
censored by the Mega-Media Cartel.
First, the lawsuit questions the constitutionality and legality of
so-called "Executive Orders".  According to the lawsuit, Executive Order
#12333, for example, authorised the "privatization of intelligence and
covert operations and permitted agencies other than the CIA to conduct
'Special Activities', thus effectively opening the door, previously
closed [by the National Security Act of 1947], to the White House
National Security Council Staff or even private entities/assets, i.e.,
third-party cut-outs, to carry out covert operations".
In plain language, this means that the CIA could subcontract or "farm
out" its drug smuggling and assassinations to third-party personnel and
continue to enjoy its "plausible deniability" status, i.e., denying any
knowledge of or involvement with criminal activities.
According to the lawsuit, Tyree claims his false imprisonment was due to
the theft of his murdered wife Elaine's diaries�which contain evidence
that would have exonerated him in his trial.
"Colonel Carone, either as a CIA asset/entity or as a CIA employee, did
receive the diaries of Elaine Tyree in 1979," reads the lawsuit.
"Colonel Carone became aware of the information that was listed in the
diaries that related to Operation Watchtower and the illegal surveillance
operation in New England/ Massachusetts.  Colonel Carone turned the
diaries of Elaine Tyree over to the CIA for security reasons, in an
effort to conceal the drug operation Watchtower and the subsequent
surveillance operation that took place in New England/Massachusetts.
"Through Dee and Tom Ferdinand [Carone's daughter and son-in-law], the
Plaintiff [Tyree] learned for the first time in August 1995 that Colonel
Carone had in fact been in possession of the diaries of Elaine Tyree and
had subsequently travelled to Langley, VA, to drop the diaries off at the
CIA."
The diaries of Mary Pinchot-Meyer (JFK's mistress and the ex-wife of CIA
operative Cord Meyer) also mysteriously disappeared following her
(unsolved) murder in 1964.  Nina Burleigh's book, A Very Private Woman
(1998), appears to be a cover-up, or at least a "limited hangout",
concerning the life and death of Pinchot-Meyer.  Did Mary Pinchot-Meyer,
like Elaine Tyree, know too much?  More importantly, did they document
the Agency's illegal "fun and games"?

All Along The Watchtower:  Bill Tyree's Story
According to the lawsuit:  "[Tyree] took part in a US Army�CIA Operation
Watchtower which brought cocaine out of Colombia into the US air base,
Albrook Air Station, Panama, where the planes (not US Air Force planes,
but planes of other Latin American countries and some unmarked airplanes)
landed and offloaded the cocaine while the mission commander Colonel A.
J. Baker and Colonel Noriega, among others, looked on."
"...in February and March 1976, a second and third Watchtower operation
took place under the command of Colonel Edward Cutolo, and more cocaine
was brought into Albrook Air Station, Panama.  [Tyree], who was also
involved in a non-volunteer capacity as Crew Chief on a US Army
helicopter, saw CIA Officer Edwin Wilson, CIA Officer Frank Terpil, CIA
Asset/Officer Colonel Albert V. Carone, and Israeli Colonel Michael
Harari.
"In late 1976, Colonel George Bayard, US Army, CIA Middle East Expert,
contacted US Army Special Forces Colonel Edward Cutolo and James N. Rowe
and told them that Operation Watchtower was not a sanctioned US
congressional operation, and he had found out this information through a
Middle East Intelligence contact associated with a bank known as BCCI.
"In 1977, Colonel Bayard went to Atlanta, Georgia, to follow up on a
lead, and contacted Colonel Rowe from Atlanta.  Colonel Bayard was
murdered in Atlanta after he spoke to Colonel Rowe, and that murder
remains unsolved...
"In October 1977, Tyree arrived at the 10th Special Forces Group
Airborne, Ft Devens, Massachusetts, and the Group Commander was Colonel
John Shalikashvili."
On December 31, 1977, Bill Tyree married Elaine.  She was an avid diarist
who had been keeping detailed notes on all the illegal activities she was
observing.  On January 30, 1979, Elaine Tyree was murdered.  Judge James
Killam III entered a written decision that SP4 Earl Michael Peters killed
Elaine Tyree and that "Pvt Aarhus assisted SP4 Peters in killing Elaine
Tyree".
In a bizarre string of events:  "...on June 6, 1979, in an unprecedented
decision from the Single Justice of the SJC [Supreme Judicial Court], not
only did the SJC strike down all criminal charges against Peters, but
issued the order which forbids any court in Massachusetts from issuing
criminal process against anyone in the Elaine Tyree homicide unless
authorised to do so by the SJC," according to the lawsuit.
"After Erik Aarhus stood trial for the murder and was convicted and
sentenced to life in prison, Tyree himself went on trial and was
convicted without testimony of Erik Aarhus on February 29, 1980."
A pretty good frame, if you can get away with it.
Elaine Tyree's Diaries:  To Die For?
In August�September 1996, former Army CID investigator Bill McCoy
introduced Bill Tyree to Dee Carone-Ferdinand, the daughter of Colonel
Carone.
According to the lawsuit, after a two-year-long correspondence by phone,
a stunning breakthrough occurred in the case when "...Dee Ferdinand at a
point notified the Plaintiff [Tyree] that she was the daughter of Colonel
Carone, and said:  'My father had the diaries that belonged to your wife
Elaine.  He went to Langley, Virginia, to drop them off with "the boys".
That's what he said.  I read some of the diaries, or at least the parts
that my father showed me.  I saw the photograph in the front of the
diaries that was of you and your wife.'"
Unfortunately, in 1997, CW4 William H. McCoy was found dead in his home
in Fairfax, Virginia, and was immediately cremated before the medical
examiner could determine the cause of death.
According to the lawsuit, McCoy told Tyree:  "No matter what happens, if
I die and you're not sure what I died from, have my family get an
independent medical examiner to check me out.  Be sure.  Give me your
word."
McCoy, after all, was concerned that people just seemed to drop dead
after they delved into the CIA cocaine operation at Mena, Arkansas.
Among the dead were Stanley Huggins, Kevin Ives, Donald Henry, Keith
McCaskell, Greg Collins, Jeff Rhodes and Richard Winters.  Or they got
"suicided"�like writer Danny Casolaro, attorney Paul Wilcher and NSA
Colonel Vince Foster.  Etcetera.  Etcetera.

Fighting Commies With Drug Profits:  Al Carone's Story
"The CIA had predicted a large communist build-up in Latin America in the
early 1970s," Carone told Tyree.
"Operation Watchtower was initiated to pre-position drugs in
Panama/Central America from South America to fund covert actions against
the predicted communist threat.  The prediction became reality and the
flow of cocaine into the United States increased as a result of the
prediction.  The American people wouldn't sufficiently fund a covert
action anywhere, following Vietnam, for the amount of money which was
needed.  The cocaine couldn't be moved into the United States until an
avenue was established that took the CIA out of the picture, because the
CIA was already busy fending off allegations of trafficking drugs out of
Southeast Asia and Europe, and the CIA couldn't be tied in to the Latin
American cocaine at all.
"Once Ronald Reagan became President," Carone continued, "his oldtime
friend William Casey, the head of the CIA, was able to convince him to
sign Executive Order #12333 into effect, which...took the CIA out of
covert operations business..., authorized the use of private
assets/entities to be used by the National Security Council to conduct
covert operations including the drug [smuggling]...  Allowing  private
assets and entities to do the dirty work meant the CIA could do whatever
it wanted to do, in or out of the United States..."
In other words, EO #12333 privatised CIA's drug smuggling, making the
Agency even more insulated from discovery of its criminal activities.
"You had NSC staffers that were tied right into the drug trafficking
themselves, like Ollie North," Carone said, continuing his history
lesson.  "Hell, his diary had everything in it.  Between his diary and
your wife's [Elaine Tyree's] diaries, the whole thing is blown.  Totally
compromised.
"I remember seeing him [North] write over 200 entries in his diary that
related to major drug profits being used to buy weapons for the Contras,"
continued Carone.  "The diary of Ollie North alone would prove what I've
told you and show the violation of 50 USC �403 and everything."
North's diary, for example, contained the following entry:  "July 5, 1985
� $14 million to buy arms came from drugs."
Unindicted drug kingpin Oliver North is still free, while William Tyree
has served 20 years in prison.  Why?  Because corrupt officials in the
CIA, Department of Defense and Department of Justice continue the
cover-up.
Colonel Carone told Tyree that "Operation Watchtower provided cocaine
that was sold to finance anti-communist operations in Latin America
because the US Congress has shut down general funding of anti-communist
activities in that area", while heroin trafficking by the CIA in
Southeast Asia was used to fight communism there.
Selling drugs to fight communism has to be one of the biggest ironies of
the 20th century.
"At the CIA there were a few people in the right positions who blamed the
decline of American culture on people of color living in the United
States," said Carone.  "The blame of the fall of American culture began
with the creation of the National Security Memorandum 200, which stated
among other things the concern of overpopulation in the United States.
Many at the CIA attributed it to the birthrate among people of color, and
there were some at the CIA that felt that physical slavery could be
replaced by pharmaceutical slavery, and that's why African-American
gangs, i.e., 'Bloods' and 'Crips', were singled out for distributing the
drugs brought into the United States by the CIA."
Carone also told Tyree that he had "...delivered money to the Los
Angeles�based gangs, i.e., the Bloods and the Crips, which are among the
most violent African-American gangs in the United States.  He had
delivered money to the gangs because they were on the CIA payroll under
Executive Order 12333 which allowed for the CIA to hire outside sources
to help the CIA perform their jobs.  He had delivered money to the gangs
because they transported drugs across the United States, i.e., Atlanta,
Norfolk, Philadelphia, New York and Boston."
Carone's information dovetails exactly with the in-depth investigations
of Gary Webb in his book, Dark Alliance (Seven Stories Press, 1998).
Continued in the next issue of NEXUS...

About the Author:
Uri Dowbenko is CEO of New Improved Entertainment Corp.  Most recently he
has completed a joint venture with publisher-editor-author Kenn Thomas,
launching a new online version of the respected US-based alternative
publication Steamshovel Press (www.steamshovelpress.com).  Uri can be
reached by e-mail at [EMAIL PROTECTED]




Duncan M. Roads
Editor, NEXUS Magazine
PO Box 30, Mapleton Qld 4560 Australia
Tel: +61 (0)7 5442 9280;   Fax:  +61 (0)7 5442 9381
http://www.nexusmagazine.com

"The nature of the universe is such that ends can never justify the means.
On the contrary, the means always determine the end."
(Aldous Huxley)


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