From: alt.activism


http://www.votenader.org


>From The Wilderness

FTW Subscriber Bulletin 00-14:


9TH CIRCUIT BACKS CONTRA LEADER - RENATO PENA APPEALS CLAIM OF CIA
DRUG INVOLVEMENT - IT'S ALL BACK IN PLAY IN TIME FOR THE ELECTION

THE "SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER" today reported that the U.S. Ninth
Circuit Court of Appeals has found valid evidence that former Contra
supporter Renato Pena's claims of CIA involvement in protecting drug
trafficking to support the Contras were credible. The court also ruled
that Pena's assertions of CIA authorization for drug trafficking in
the San Francisco bay area were sufficiently grounded in fact to
warrant a remand of Pena's deportation case for an evidentiary hearing
in U.S. District Court (the full story follows).

Pena's attorney, Stephen Shaikin, contacted by FTW, doubted that the
U.S. Attorney would risk an evidentiary hearing in which Pena could
introduce into evidence Volume II of the 1998 CIA Inspector General's
report that would prove his case, outright. FTW agrees. Additional
facts supporting Pena's assertion contained in Volume I of the CIA IG
Report by Frederick P. Hitz and a subsequent Department of Justice
Inspector General's report by Michael Bromwich were drawn to Shaikin's
attention in an interview this afternoon. FTW has offered to make all
of our research available in preparation for the hearing. No date for
the evidentiary hearing has been set.

The language used by the Ninth Circuit was unequivocal and stunning
for it's directness:

"Pena and his allies supporting the contras became involved in selling
cocaine in order to circumvent the congressional ban on
non-humanitarian aid to the contras," the three-judge panel said.
"Pena states that he was told that leading contra military commanders,
with ties to the CIA, knew about the drug dealing. Pena believed that
the sole purpose of these drug transactions was to help the contras,
and he believed the United States government would not seek to
prosecute.

"The circumstances surrounding Pena's case, including his belief that
his activity was supported by the U.S. government and his alleged
reliance on the assurances of the assistant U.S. attorney regarding
his immigration status, raise important questions about public
confidence in the administration of justice."

San Francisco attorney Bill Simpich, acting as lead counsel for class
action suits filed against the CIA in 1999 based on the same issues
and evidence told FTW, "This is the best break we've had since we
filed our suits. This opens an important new vein of evidence with one
of the highest courts in the land, saying, in effect, that this issue
needs to be addressed."

It is all back in play and everyone please notice that this is
happening, just like Dark Alliance first did, in a Presidential
election year in time to influence votes  before the election. We will
probably see Congresswoman Maxine Waters break her deafening silence
on Volume II and the infamous actions of the House Intelligence
Committee this May in closing out their investigation and ignoring the
blatant evidence of CIA involvement contained CIA's own report.

This trial will allow Pena to put Volume II and all of the  available
documentation on trial. If the U.S. Attorney's office doesn't drop
this, it gives us all of Volume II and Gary Webb right back again in a
way that Porter Goss can't lie about because it now becomes
non-disputable evidence, openly submitted in a court of law for public
scrutiny. And that is exactly what the House intelligence Committee
should have done more than a year ago.

We wonder how quickly Congressman Porter Goss and the CIA will be in
touch with the U.S. Attorney in San Francisco telling them to drop the
case and give Pena a permanent green card.

[THE FULL STORY FOLLOWS IMMEDIATELY]

Mike Ruppert - Publisher/Editor

www.copvcia.com

www.suppressedwriters.com

Former contra wins review of U.S. drug ties

By Bob Egelko

OF THE EXAMINER STAFF    July 27, 2000

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Fights deportation to Nicaragua, says CIA knew of cocaine deals The
former Northern California spokesman for the Nicaraguan contras,
facing deportation for cocaine trafficking in the 1980s, will
apparently get the chance to convince a federal judge that he was
assured the drug deals had U.S. government approval.

The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled Wednesday that a judge
should hear and evaluate Renato Pena's claim that a federal prosecutor
in San Francisco had told him after his arrest in 1984 that he was at
no risk of deportation for having carried cocaine and cash to Los
Angeles about a dozen times.

In court papers opposing Pena's challenge to his current deportation
order, the U.S. attorney's office said no such assurance was given.
Pena's case recalls the controversy over allegations of CIA- backed
drug dealing by the contras, the U.S.-supported guerrillas fighting
Nicaragua's leftist government in the 1980s. Accused in a San Jose
Mercury News series of connections to the early crack cocaine trade in
Southern California, the CIA hotly denied having anything to do with
Los Angeles drug traffickers who claimed contra connections.

Pena said he had been told by Norwin Meneses, a major drug trafficker
with ties to the contras, that CIA-connected contra commanders were
aware of the drug operation in which Pena took part. The CIA has
denied any relationship with Meneses.

The appeals court stopped well short of finding that the government
condoned Pena's activity as a drug courier. But the court said Pena's
claims about the government's attitude were relevant to his attempt to
overturn his 1985 drug conviction, the basis of the current attempt to
deport him.

"Pena and his allies supporting the contras became involved in selling
cocaine in order to circumvent the congressional ban on
non-humanitarian aid to the contras," the three-judge panel said.
"Pena states that he was told that leading contra military commanders,
with ties to the CIA, knew about the drug dealing. Pena believed that
the sole purpose of these drug transactions was to help the contras,
and he believed the United States government would not seek to
prosecute.

"The circumstances surrounding Pena's case, including his belief that
his activity was supported by the U.S. government and his alleged
reliance on the assurances of the assistant U.S. attorney regarding
his immigration status, raise important questions about public
confidence in the administration of justice."

The court said a federal judge should hear testimony from Pena and
others about what assurances he had been given before pleading guilty
in 1985, and about whether his court-appointed attorney had acted
incompetently by failing to tell him he risked deportation. The judge
would then decide whether to set aside the guilty plea.

Pena's suit, seeking to overturn the guilty plea, had been dismissed
by U.S. District Judge Fern Smith in 1997. The hearing ordered
Wednesday would be held before another judge, because Smith now heads
the Federal Judicial Center in Washington, D.C.

"He's a credible person," said Pena's current attorney, Stephen
Shaiken. "He was good enough for the U.S. government when he was
spokesperson for the opposition and when he was an informant (against
others in the drug ring). He was telling the truth then, and he's
telling it now." He said Pena, now a San Francisco city employee, was
not speaking to reporters about the case.

The U.S. attorney's office, which represented immigration officials
who want Pena deported, declined comment on the ruling.

Pena was a member of the security force of Nicaraguan dictator
Anastasio Somoza, who was overthrown by the leftist Sandinistas in
1979. Pena came to the United States in 1980 and became the chief of
public relations in Northern California for the FDN, the contras'
political arm.

He applied for political asylum in August 1984 but was arrested three
months later on charges of possessing cocaine with intent to
distribute it. Pena said he had been asked by Norwin Meneses' nephew,
Jairo Meneses, to travel to Los Angeles with money that would be used
to buy cocaine and finance contras, whose U.S. military aid had been
cut off by Congress. He was paid about $6,000 for carrying money and
drugs to Los Angeles between March and November 1984, the court said.

Pena said he had agreed to cooperate with prosecutors in exchange for
a reduced sentence and been told by a federal prosecutor that he would
be taken care of and had nothing to fear about his immigration status.
He said he never would have pleaded guilty if he had known he could be
deported to Nicaragua, then governed by the Sandinistas. He also said
his court-appointed attorney had never spoken to him about the
possibility of deportation.

After serving a year in a halfway house and testifying against another
Meneses relative in the drug case, Pena was granted asylum in 1987,
the court said. But the Immigration and Naturalization Service revoked
his asylum in 1996 and moved to deport him to Nicaragua because of his
drug conviction.

In court papers, Special Assistant U.S. Attorney Robert Yeargin said
Pena's asylum had been withdrawn because he had failed to disclose his
conviction on his asylum application. Yeargin also said the original
prosecutor in the case, Rodolfo Orjales, had discussed drug smuggling
to Pena but made no promises to him.

Orjales, now a Justice Department employee in Washington, D.C., was
out of his office Wednesday and unavailable for comment.

(c)2000 San Francisco Examiner





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 This is not about the world that we inherited from our forefathers,
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the included information for research and educational purposes. Feel free to 
distribute widely but PLEASE acknowledge the source. ***
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The end is in the means as the tree is in the seed.
- Mahatma Ghandi
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Abraham Lincoln, letter to Wm. F. Elkins  Nov. 21 1864
Arthur Shaw ed.  The Lincoln Encyclopedia  40  {1950}

"We may congratulate ourselves that this cruel war is nearing
it's end.  It has cost a vast amount of treasure and
blood.........It has indeed been a trying hour for the
Republic, but I see in the near future a crisis approaching
that unnerves me and causes me to tremble for the safety
of my country.  As a result of the war, corporations have been
enthroned and an era of corruption in high places will
follow, and the money power of the country will endeavor to
prolong it's reign by working on the prejudices of the
people until all wealth is aggregated in a few hands and the
Republic is destroyed.  I feel at this moment more anxiety
for the safety of my country than ever before, even in the
midst of war."
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
http://www.angelfire.com/mi/smilinks/thirdeye.html




*** NOTICE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is 
distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving 
the included information for research and educational purposes. Feel free to 
distribute widely but PLEASE acknowledge the source. ***
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The end is in the means as the tree is in the seed.
- Mahatma Ghandi
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Abraham Lincoln, letter to Wm. F. Elkins  Nov. 21 1864
Arthur Shaw ed.  The Lincoln Encyclopedia  40  {1950}

"We may congratulate ourselves that this cruel war is nearing
it's end.  It has cost a vast amount of treasure and
blood.........It has indeed been a trying hour for the
Republic, but I see in the near future a crisis approaching
that unnerves me and causes me to tremble for the safety
of my country.  As a result of the war, corporations have been
enthroned and an era of corruption in high places will
follow, and the money power of the country will endeavor to
prolong it's reign by working on the prejudices of the
people until all wealth is aggregated in a few hands and the
Republic is destroyed.  I feel at this moment more anxiety
for the safety of my country than ever before, even in the
midst of war."
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
http://www.angelfire.com/mi/smilinks/thirdeye.html

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