http://www.americanfreedomnews.com/commentary/arkenside.htm
Top CIA intelligence officer commits ‘Arkancide’ two days after China gets
spy plane. Looks like suicide…smells like murder.
By Rick Wiles
April 9, 2001
© American Freedom News
A top member of the CIA’s national intelligence council was found dead at his
Northern Virginia home on Tuesday, April 3 – just two days after the loss of
the highly classified EP-3 surveillance plane to Red China.
Rick Yannuzzi, a senior analyst at the CIA, had risen through the spy
agency’s ranks to become the CIA’s deputy intelligence officer for strategic
and nuclear programs. He joined the Central Intelligence Agency in 1977. As
a member of the national intelligence council, Yannuzzi was responsible for
presenting analysis on strategy and nuclear weapons for Washington’s top
government decision-makers.
Yannuzzi, age 46, was married with three children. He was found inside his
Oakton area home at about 3 p.m. Tuesday. The state medical examiner
performed an autopsy on Thursday and ruled the cause of death was
asphyxiation. There was no explanation of the exact method of asphyxia that
was used by Yannuzzi to kill himself. The Washington Post reported that
Yannuzzi left a suicide note in which he expressed his love for his family.
He gave no reason for committing suicide.
The CIA says it is satisfied with the suicide verdict of Yannuzzi’s death.
The official CIA cover story for Yannuzzi’s suicide, however, is highly
suspect. The spy agency planted a very suspicious story to Fairfax police as
a possible explanation for his unexplained death.
According to the Washington Post account, Yannuzzi had been one of several
CIA employees questioned in March by the agency’s Inspector General regarding
accusations by a manager who complained that her privacy rights had been
violated. According to the dubious story, the manager filed a complaint
after anonymous letters were sent to CIA officials protesting the woman’s
receipt of two cash performance bonuses and a promotion.
The manager was given $6,500 in bonuses and a promotion despite having been
found guilty of choking another agency employee during an office altercation
in September 1998. Following the promotion and bonuses, CIA agency officials
received more anonymous letters protesting the actions. The letters led to an
internal investigation.
Apparently, the CIA wants the American public to believe that a top-level
intelligence officer involved in nuclear strategy committed suicide over
being questioned about anonymous letters sent to superiors regarding pay
performance bonuses and promotions.
Considering that his body was found about 48 hours after China forced down
one of the most top-secret spy planes in the world, questions should be asked
about what Rick Yannuzzi knew about the planes arrival at a PLA air base –
and who he planned to tell.
It appears to be another case of ‘Arkancide.’ That’s what happens to people
who know too much about the international crime syndicate that has overtaken
the US government. It’s common in Arkansas. It looks like suicide – but
smells like murder.
