Source:  http://www.fromthewilderness.com/free/ciadrugs/part_2.html

A.I.G.

[Part Two of a Multi-Part Series]

by

Michael C. Ruppert

[© Copyright 2001, Michael C. Ruppert and From the Wilderness Publications.
All Rights Reserved. May not be reprinted or redistributed without the
express permission of the author ]

[EDITORIAL NOTE - From The Wilderness is a sole proprietorship and dba. It
is written and edited by one person; Me. I do almost all of the research.
Therefore, in the following story, for both legal reasons and for better
reading I have decided to use the personal pronouns "I" and "me" instead of
standard editorial references in the third person.]

----------

This series is dedicated to Mark Swaney of the Ozark Gazette for his
intellectual courage and tenacity; to John McGlaughlin, the straightest and
toughest man who ever honestly carried a badge; to Celerino Castillo III,
with a heart bigger than his beloved Texas; to all the young men and women,
mostly minorities, who are serving up to life in prison for crimes that
don't remotely compare to those of Carlos Lehder; and to all the innocents
in Colombia who stand at the brink of the next Vietnam War.

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

There are mounting holes in the story of a woman, Coral Talavera Baca
(henceforth referred to by her maiden name Talavera), who has claimed to be
the wife of Medellin Cartel co-founder, Carlos Lehder, deepening the mystery
about relationships between her, Lehder himself, the insurance giant
American International Group (AIG), and the Central Intelligence Agency.
These new discrepancies, including her prior confirmation of the
authenticity of documents now suspected of being forged, have raised the
possibility that the U.S. Government, in partnership with AIG, has been
deliberately planting false information in the press to support the woman's
claims about Lehder's reported freedom and activities. Talavera has been
simultaneously described as either Staff Counsel for AIG's in house San
Francisco law firm or as its office manager.

In Part I of this series we reported that other journalists, who have asked
not to be identified, had received the same documents we continue to examine
here. Some of those documents purport to be official reports from the U.S.
Treasury and U.S. Attorney's offices. As FTW moves deeper into its
multi-part investigation - inspired by revelations of possible 1987-92 drug
money laundering involving AIG, Goldman Sachs and the Arkansas Development
Financial Authority (ADFA) - attention now focuses on Talavera's employer,
AIG. These events increased my interest in the 1987 founding of Coral
Reinsurance (Coral Re) by AIG, Goldman Sachs (whose then Vice Chairman
Robert Rubin served as Treasury Secretary in the Clinton Administration) and
ADFA. Lehder, arrested in 1987, was allowed to keep almost $3 billion in
assets in a move severely criticized by Merkle. Where did that money go? Was
it hidden it in a major insurance company with cash flows large enough to
conceal it? This question, more than any other, except establishing Lehder's
current status, prompted me to begin this investigation.

What is known about the firm which employs Talavera, who is not a lawyer,
and permits her to represent herself as "Staff Counsel" for its San
Francisco legal office while simultaneously representing herself as the wife
of a one-time cocaine cartel head? On June 22, just two days after I had
lunch with her and confirmed that I was writing a story, a receptionist at
Brown and Boland, AIG's San Francisco in-house counsel, told me and others
that Talavera had fled her employment and gone to Cuba. Yet the firm,
located in the AIG building and using AIG e-mail addresses, is currently
announcing in new, dated voice mail messages, that she is still the office
manager.

FTW has also conducted an extensive investigation into AIG and its
predecessors, including the C. V. Starr Insurance Companies, revealing deep
connections to US intelligence dating back to the Office of Strategic
Services (OSS) in World War II. These connections include documented CIA
operatives connected to drug smuggling from Southeast Asia and a current
board member, Frank Wisner, Jr., whose father was a key figure in the
creation of the CIA. History, as well as AIG's current operations, suggest
that these relationships continue unabated today.

These connections may go a long way toward explaining the behavior of
Talavera, a woman whose education, work experience and history apparently do
not qualify her to manage a legal office which, according to AIG spokesman
Michael Murphy, specializes in the international operations of a company
operating in 130 countries and with year 2000 revenues of $46 billion.

While the mystery deepens about the woman claiming to be his wife, the key
question as to whether or not Lehder is free remains unanswered.

In Part I of this series I reported that through a number of vehicles
including correspondence, e-mails, a telephone listing in the name of Carlos
Lehder, tape recorded conversations and in-person statements Coral Talavera
had represented to a number of people, including a retired DEA agent, me and
others that she was the wife of Medellin Cartel co-founder Carlos Lehder. In
an on-the-record interview and a legally tape recorded conversation she has
also vouched for the authenticity of documents that have either been shown
to be forged or are now seriously suspected of being forged. She
additionally made it clear that Lehder was out of prison, working for the
United States government and directly connected to the CIA and the U.S.
Treasury. This scenario was circumstantially, but well supported by
statements from a number of credible sources, including reporters,
Congresswoman Maxine Waters and Lehder's prosecutor (former U.S. Attorney
Robert Merkle). Their independent statements gave credibility to many of
Talavera's assertions. And suspicion or belief has been widespread that
Lehder is, in fact, free -- regardless of Talavera's actions. All this is in
spite of the fact that Lehder has been officially serving 55 non-parolable
years in prison after giving testimony of questionable value in the 1990
trial of former Panamanian dictator Manuel Noriega. Noriega's prosecutor,
Robert Mueller, who put Lehder on the stand, has just recently been
confirmed to head the FBI.

During a lunch meeting with Talavera on June 20 of this year, she went on
the record with me stating that she had worked for AIG since 1994 and that
she also owned a currently existing company named Capital Investment Group,
Ltd. (CIG) in the Bahamas. She had earlier written me, speaking for Lehder,
stating that neither she nor Lehder had any connection to Coral Re. In a
1999 tape recorded conversation she had discussed her marriage to Lehder and
e-mail notifications allegedly sent by him introducing her as his wife. My
investigation since that time has proven all of these assertions, and many
others allegedly made to colleagues or social contacts, are lies at worst,
or seriously suspect, at best.

One of the critical documents discussed in Part I of this series was a U.S.
Treasury "Report of Investigation," the authenticity of which I had been
unable to ascertain despite repeated contacts with Treasury. Since
publication of Part I have received communication from "Kincaid," a
confidential legal source, who has obtained an evaluation of that document
from Lehder's current legal team, that the document is not authentic. This
was the same document that, at the June 20 lunch meeting, Talavera went on
the record to evaluate, line by line, and state was a real document that had
been filed in a court case that she would not disclose to me.

The purpose of this portion of the on the record interview was to clarify
Talavera's relationship with a Bahamian investment company known as Capital
Investment Group, Ltd.

Although Bahamian law provides great secrecy for corporations, I was able to
learn in late July that CIG in the Bahamas was "not listed" on government
records. Through a confidential source with Caribbean banking connections, I
was told that a banking official offered four possible explanations for
CIG's "lack of registry." They include: the company was never formed; the
company failed to pay dues; the file was lost; and, the file was lost
intentionally at the request of the Prime Minister or the Attorney General.
Coincidentally, the largest single shareholder in AIG, the Starr
International Company (SICO), owning 13.62% of AIG stock, is also
headquartered in the Bahamas.

Information, developed while looking further into Talavera's background now
casts suspicion on the 1999 reported birth of a son, allegedly fathered by
Lehder, as well as her employment history, education and qualifications to
manage a legal office. So, with the exception of the statement that neither
she nor Carlos Lehder had anything to do with the founding of Coral Re,
almost all of Talavera's statements regarding her history have been shown to
be false. This now calls the Coral Re denial into question as well.

All of this begs the question as to why AIG would protect and employ a woman
engaged in these and other behaviors and with a history that could only
damage the company's reputation. The one fact of Coral Talavera's life that
has not been called into question by any of the sources I have contacted is
that Coral knew and had a relationship with Carlos Lehder in the 1980s. The
suspicions of many that Lehder is free have not yet been allayed. So these
disturbing developments also drive home the importance of a question that
the US government still has not answered. Where is Carlos Lehder and what
motive could the government -- or AIG -- have for wanting some people to
believe, or know, that he is free? If I am so patently wrong in what I have
reported in this investigation, including the publication of the tape-
recorded conversation wherein Talavera openly talks about Lehder's freedom
and says that she is his wife, why doesn't the government just deny it,
produce Lehder, discredit Talavera and state that the rest is pure bunk? Is
there a legend -- a cover story -- that the CIA and AIG are trying to
protect for the benefit of unknown third parties in other parts of the
world?

Why would AIG spokesman Michael Murphy have stated, after speaking with me
and learning of Talavera's representations regarding Lehder, that he
mentioned them briefly to her but did not pursue them because he, "didn't
want to pry"?

Deconstructing Coral

Coral Talavera's life has improved dramatically since 1995, the year that
she provided San Jose Mercury News reporter Gary Webb with documents
including federal grand jury transcripts that started an investigation which
subsequently established, through government records and a CIA Inspector
General report, that the CIA was a hands-on player in the drug trade during
the Contra war years of 1982-88. According to records filed in a protracted
and contentious 1994 divorce case involving a previous husband -- which I
obtained from the court -- Talavera was working as a legal secretary for the
Oakland law firm of Hanna, Brophy et al. Her salary was approximately
$26,000 per year and, according to a spokesperson for the firm which I also
visited recently, she was employed there for two years until February, 1994.
Hanna, Brophy specializes in Workman's Compensation defense of insurance
companies in California.

Confidential sources familiar with Talavera led me to another law firm,
Schmit, Morris, Bitner and Schmit where she reportedly worked throughout
1995 and into 1996, also as a secretary. Representatives of that firm
refused to disclose any information unless I presented written authorization
from Talavera for them to do so. Schmit, Morris is also a law firm
exclusively devoted to Workman's Compensation defense. It may be a
single-client firm representing AIG which may explain Talavera's "promotion"
to the in-house firm but I have been unable to confirm this.

Briefs and petitions filed in Talavera's divorce also indicate that she was
the mother of one female child whose paternity was ultimately questioned and
later verified as being of Talavera's then husband. In a dispute over the
property settlement it was alleged that she had stolen the seal of a notary
public and forged a deed giving her sole title to a piece of real estate
that was later judged to be community property. This fact lends credibility
to allegations made by a number of people, who asked not to be identified,
that she was the likely source of the forged documents. Those include forged
newspaper stories and magazine articles, alleged memoranda from an
unspecified U.S. Attorney's Office, a faked custom printed invitation to a
birthday party allegedly sent by Lehder, photographic surveillance reports
(including one purporting to be of her newborn son, Carlo), and the Treasury
report which was described as "consistent with similar reports" by a source
familiar with Lehder's case. [Some of these documents are posted on the FTW
web site at www.copvcia.com. ]

It was also alleged in the divorce settlement that Talavera had deliberately
placed the name of someone other than the real father, her then husband, on
the birth certificate of her daughter. Even though she told me, during a
1998 unsolicited phone call, initiated by her, that she was going to have a
child by Lehder, people who knew her during the period state that she was
never pregnant. As Talavera's story fell apart I checked birth records in
two Bay Area counties and found no recorded births listing Talavera as the
mother aside from the 1992 birth of her one known daughter. Yet, in the 1999
taped conversation with Castillo, Talavera specifically referred to a
purported news story entitled Beauty and the Beast which described a society
function which Talavera and Lehder allegedly attended in 1999, "just three
days after the birth of her son." During the conversation with Castillo,
Talavera did not dispute this reporting about the birth. Instead she went to
lengths to castigate the mean-spirited people who had written the story for
calling Lehder, her husband, a beast. Asked by Castillo what paper had
written the story Talavera stated on the tape, "Aw, who the hell knows?"

One document that seems beyond Talavera's ken, however, is a completely
rewritten and re-typeset article from the August, 2000 issue of
Architectural Digest, in which the 1,000 word story about the Ixtapa, Mexico
home of a Levi Strauss executive was completely rewritten with copy about
the new home of Mr. and Mrs. Carlos Lehder. In numerous conversations and in
written correspondence I found Talavera to be a good communicator, at times
very good, but her writing did not reach the style and skill of the
professional journalist who had to rewrite the story and make the copy fit
exactly into the same photograph-filled layout before faxing it to me.
Indeed, there is nothing in Talavera's educational or employment background,
that I have found, to indicate such skill. In fact, her statements to
colleagues about her education also reveal more glaring holes in her story.

Acting again on information from confidential sources who have worked with
Talavera, I learned that she had allegedly told people that she had BA and
MBA degrees from St. Mary's college in the Bay Area. Lacking the ability to
quote these sources by name I cannot confirm whether she made the
representations or not. However, a check with the registrar at St. Mary's
has revealed that she earned a BA in Liberal Arts in 1988 but has
subsequently earned no advanced degrees of any kind. The registrar's office
also stated that Talavera was currently enrolled in a graduate program but
that it is not an MBA program.

All of these revelations prompted me to recontact Coral's "former" employer
on August 3 to see what I could learn about her employment at AIG. It was
then that I heard the voice messages informing me that she was still there.
These messages, recorded within the last three weeks by senior attorneys
Robert Brown and Larry Kloenhamer, both specifically refer callers to Office
Manager Coral Talavera if the caller needs immediate assistance. A
switchboard operator also confirmed Talavera's current status with AIG.
Another interesting fact is that, on his current resume with the California
State Bar Association, Robert Brown states that he is a Vietnam-era veteran
of U.S. Army Special Forces. There is abundant evidence linking Special
Forces to covert CIA operations and drug smuggling during the Vietnam War.

Credible sources with longstanding legal and business experience are
perplexed to explain Talavera's apparent meteoric professional rise between
1992 and 1996. Asked about the transition from legal secretary at a
Workman's Comp defense firm to office manager for the firm handling some of
AIG's international operations, a legal expert with more than 20 years of
experience in a variety of law offices summed up general reactions to
Talavera's rise saying, "It's unprecedented."

The question as to what AIG knew and when it knew it gets stickier with the
fact that, in no less than ten e-mail messages to me, Talavera had a
signature block reading, "Coral Talavera, AIG Staff Counsel, 121 Spear
Street, Suite 410, San Francisco, CA 94105. [An example of this can be
viewed on my web site at www.copvcia.com]. The legal expert told me that
this practice would be illegal in the state of Florida. A spokeswoman for
the California State Bar Association told me on August 5 that the use of the
term was, at best, misleading. She referred me to the San Francisco County
District Attorney's office which subsequently stated that the action could
be a violation of California's Business and Professions Code. Although
Talavera was quick to point out in a number of conversations that she was
not an attorney, the use of the term in official correspondence, might give
AIG's overseas clients a different impression.

I have left three messages at AIG's law offices in San Francisco seeking
clarification. At press time no calls have been returned. The current voice
mail messages refer to Talavera as the "office manager."

So what is known then about the firm which employs Talavera and permits her
to represent herself as Staff Counsel for its San Francisco legal office
while simultaneously representing herself as the wife of a one-time cocaine
cartel head?

Is it possible that AIG's CEO Hank Greenberg, a legendary stickler for
detail and hands-on manager, would permit such activity, including the
representation about owning an offshore investment company that might
compete with AIG? In a June interview, AIG spokesman Michael Murphy, head of
AIG operations in the Bahamas and reported to be Greenberg's right-hand man
said, "Whenever there's the slightest hint of anything improper or of misuse
of funds, [AIG CEO Hank] Greenberg is the first guy to lead the posse and
clean house." I placed one follow-up call to Murphy's office for further
clarification but it was not returned.

I was able to locate two sources in the insurance industry who were familiar
with AIG and ask them if Talavera could be doing all this without
Greenberg's knowledge. One response was short and direct, "The possibility
that this is going on without Greenberg knowing is less than zero."

The second source was a bit more diplomatic. "M.R. Greenberg is a legendary
leader. All current and former AIG employees know he is not only a visionary
but a detail oriented person on all aspects of the firm's business
activities worldwide. The General Counsel of AIG, Ernest Patrikis, was the
senior legal officer of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, and given the
scrutiny AIG is subject to, it would surprise me if Mr. Greenberg was not
aware. Sometimes, however, in a big company things slip by, but when he
becomes aware, the situation is addressed quickly."

Deconstructing AIG

The seemingly mundane insurance business is, in fact, one of the primary
weapons of intelligence gathering around the world. And the founder of AIG,
Cornelius Starr, was an architect of its use in World War II. Consider these

quotes from a September 22, 2000 story by Los Angeles Times reporter Mark
Fritz entitled, "The Secret (Insurance) Agent Men."

"COLLEGE PARK, Md.ÑThey knew which factories to burn, which bridges to blow
up, which cargo ships could be sunk in good conscience. They had pothole
counts for roads used for invasion and head counts for city blocks marked
for incineration.

"They werenÕt just secret agents. They were secret insurance agents. These
undercover underwriters gave their World War II spymasters access to a
global industry that both bankrolled and, ultimately, helped bring down
Adolf HitlerÕs Third Reich.

"Newly declassified U.S. intelligence files tell the remarkable story of the
ultra-secret Insurance Intelligence Unit, a component of the Office of
Strategic Services, a forerunner of the CIA, and its elite
counterintelligence branch X-2.

"Though rarely numbering more than a half dozen agents, the unit gathered
intelligence on the enemyÕs insurance industry, Nazi insurance titans and
suspected collaborators in the insurance business. But, more significantly,
the unit mined standard insurance records for blueprints of bomb plants,
timetables of tide changes and thousands of other details about targets,
from a brewery in Bangkok to a candy company in Bergedorf. 'They used
insurance information as a weapon of war,' said Greg Bradsher, a historian
and National Archives expert on the declassified records. That insurance
information was critical to Allied strategists, who were seeking to cripple
the enemyÕs industrial base and batter morale by burning citiesÉ

"Germany had 45% of the worldwide wholesale insurance industry before the
war began and managed to actually expand its business as it conquered
continental Europe. As wholesalers, or 'reinsurers,' these companies covered
other insurers against a catastrophic loss that could wipe out a single
company. In the process, the wholesaler learned everything about the lives
and property they were reinsuring [emphasis, mine]É

"The men behind the insurance unit were OSS head William "Wild Bill" Donovan
and California-born insurance magnate Cornelius V. Starr. Starr had started
out selling insurance to Chinese in Shanghai in 1919 and, over the next 50
years, would build what is now American International Group, one of the
biggest insurance companies in the world. He was forced to move his
operation to New York in 1939, when Japan invaded China. In the early years
of the war, the German insurance industry expanded its business as it
conquered continental Europe. Nazi insurance brokers who traveled with
combat troops during invasions also scoured local insurance files for
strategic dataÉ"

On the special value of reinsurance as a vehicle for intelligence gathering
Fritz wrote:

"Such convoluted business dealings were traced largely through the work of
Ernest Stiefel, a member of the intelligence unit who diagrammed the way
insurance companies pooled their risks, invested in and insured each other
and, as a result, willfully or witlessly shared data about nations at war.
'Stiefel mapped the entire system, said [Timothy] Naftali, a historian at
the University of VirginiaÕs Miller Center of Public Affairs. "Each time I
take a piece of your risk, youÕve got to give me information. I am not going
to reinsure your company unless you give me all the documents. ThatÕs great
intelligence informationÉ"

Later in the story Fritz confirmed the value of reinsurance as a vehicle for
money laundering:

"With the Axis defeat imminent, U.S. intelligence officials focused greater
attention on ways the Nazis would try to use insurance to hide and launder
their assets so they could be used to rebuild the war machine..."

And how did Starr benefit from his service? Fritz writes:

"Starr sent insurance agents into Asia and Europe even before the bombs
stopped falling and built what eventually became AIG, which today has its
world headquarters in the same downtown New York building where the tiny OSS
unit toiled in the deepest secrecy.

Starr died in 1968, but his empire endures. AIG is the biggest foreign
insurance company in Japan. More than a third of its $40 billion in revenue
last year came from the Far East theater that Starr helped carpet bomb and
liberate.

"In The Shadow Warriors: OSS and the Origins of the CIA (Basic Books, 1983)
author Bradley F. Smith shed more light on Cornelius Starr and the OSS.

"It [a secret intelligence operation in China] was formed in April 1942,
when [Bill] Donovan persuaded British insurance magnate C.V. Starr to let
C.O.I. (Covert Operations Intelligence) use his commercial and insurance
connections in occupied China and Formosa to create a deep cover
intelligence network. Although the State Department was nervous about the
operation, Donovan went ahead and, with the cooperation of the U.S. Army,
bypassed the diplomats in operating the communications system. Starr's
people handled their own internal communication, then turned over their
intelligence findings to [General Richard] Stillwell's headquarters for
dispatch to the U.S. Starr, who was residing in the U.S. at the time,
provided these services to the Allied cause. Later Starr became disgusted
with what he considered Donovan's inefficiency and transferred his services
to the British S.I.S. But the Starr-Donovan connection worked in China at
least until the winter of 1943-44.

"The establishment of the Starr intelligence network, an operation so secret
that it even escaped the attention of Chiang's [Kai Shek] security police
(and of historians heretofore), was a major accomplishment for an
intelligence operation barely six months old" [p.133]

Drug Connections

The War Conspiracy (Bobbs-Merrill, 1972) by Peter Dale Scott, Ph.D. of UC
Berkeley is a book few Americans have seen. The compelling and meticulously
documented history of the creation of the Vietnam War was rushed from
bookstores and shelves almost as soon as it was published. Scott, author of
Deep Politics and the Assassination of JFK, The Iran-Contra Connection and
Cocaine Politics is an expert on the interface between covert operations and
the international drug trade. In Chapter Six of The War Conspiracy, entitled
"Opium, the China Lobby, and the CIA," Scott traces the connections between
drug trafficking in Southeast Asia and American intelligence operations.
There are detailed references to C.V. Starr and connections with some
figures, like CIA veteran Paul Helliwell, who have been irrevocably and
blatantly tied to the drug trade. Those connections also lead directly into
the so-called "China Lobby" and firms identified as either CIA proprietaries
or "affiliates" such as Sea Supply, Inc. (run by Helliwell), Civil Air
Transport (CAT), a CIA proprietary, Civil Air Transport Co., Ltd. (CATCL) --
a separate firm not owned by but affiliated with the CIA through CAT-- and
Air America, an evolution of Civil Air Transport. In 1957 the Airdale
Corporation which owned 100 per cent of Air America changed its name to
Pacific Corp. In 1976 CIA General Counsel Lawrence Houston testified before
the Senate's Church Committee looking into intelligence abuses about CIA Air
operations. When asked what the one single holding company, above all
others, was at the top of CIA proprietary and contract air operations, he
identified Pacific Corporation. According to published reports, Houston also
testified that the CIA also had interests in investment and insurance
companies.

Pacific Corp -- which one source has told me is currently insured by AIG --
and the CIA have, in the 1990s, been connected with the "laundering" of some
28 C-130 military transport aircraft into the hands of private, forest fire,
air tanker contractors in the U.S. Subsequently, many of those C-130s turned
up all over the world. Some were directly involved in drug trafficking and
one in particular, operated by Aero-Postale de Mexico, was seized with a
billion dollars in cocaine aboard in Mexico City in 1996. [See FTW, Vol I,
No 10 - Dec, 1998]

A key figure in the post-war operations was lawyer Tommy Corcoran, a
legendary "fixer" in the Roosevelt Administration, who went on to represent
Nationalist Chinese financial interests after the Communists took power in
1949. Corcoran and Helliwell worked closely together in Asia. One of the
critical and well-documented U.S. responses to the Communist takeover was to
fund remnants of the Chinese Nationalist army -- who had fled into Burma,
Thailand and Laos -- with opium. Much of that money, along with the drugs,
found its way into the U.S. As noted by writers like the late Jonathan
Kwitny of The Wall Street Journal in The Crimes of Patriots (Penguin, 1987)
and by Professor Alfred McCoy of the University of Wisconsin in The Politics
of Heroin (1972, 1991, Lawrence Hill Books), Helliwell paid the troops using
five-pound "sticky" bars of heroin. Helliwell later went on to head Castle
Bank and Trust in Florida and the Bahamas and then was heavily involved with
The Nugan Hand Bank in Australia and the U.S. Both banks have been heavily
linked in official investigations to both drug trafficking and money
laundering while also moving money for the CIA.

In The War Conspiracy Scott writes:

"For it is a striking fact that the law firm of Tommy Corcoran, the
Washington lawyer for CATCL and [China Lobbyist] T.V. Soong, had its own
links to the interlocking worlds of the China Lobby and of organized crime.
His partner W.S. Youngman joined the board of U.S. Life and other insurance
companies, controlled by C.V. Starr (OSS China) with the help of Philippine
and other Asian capital. Youngman's fellow-directors of Starr's companies
have included John S. Woodbridge of Pan Am, Francis F. Randolph of J. and W.
Seligman, W. Palmer Dixon of Loeb Rhoades, Charles Edison of the postwar
China Lobby, and Alfred B. Jones of the Nationalist Chinese government's
registered agency, the Universal Trading Corporation. The [Senate] McClellan
Committee heard that in 1950 U.S. Life [later part of AIG] (with Edison as a
director) and a much smaller company (Union Casualty of New York) were
allotted a major Teamsters insurance contract, after a lower bid from a
larger and safer company had been rejected, [Jimmy] Hoffa was accused by a
fellow trustee, testifying under oath before another committee, of
intervening on behalf of US Life and Union Casualty, whose agents were
Hoffa's close business associates Paul and Allen DorfmanÉ

"We find the same network linking CIA proprietaries, war lobbies, and
organized crime, when we turn our attention from CAT to the other identified
supporter of opium activities, Sea Supply, Inc. Sea Supply, Inc. was
organized in Miami, Florida, where its counsel, Paul E. Helliwell, doubled
after 1951 as the counsel for C.V. Starr insurance interests, and also as
the Thai consul in Miami..."

The historical connections to CIA covert or proprietary air operations are
interesting in light of the fact that AIG proudly announces in its 2000
annual report that with 494 full-sized jets -- 89 of which it manages itself
-- it owns "the world's most modern fleet of aircraft." AIG customers
include major airlines and a number of air transport companies. AIG also
reported that in 2000 it leased additional aircraft "to a number of
established customers" in South America.

CIA proprietary ownership or interest in companies is very difficult to
detect. But, it has been proven by writers like Scott and many other
researchers who combed through the paperwork that surfaced during the
Iran-Contra scandals of the 1980s, where Air America assets were laundered
into companies like Southern Air Transport and Evergreen Air. The single
largest stockholder in AIG, the Starr International Company (SICO), holds
13.62% of AIG stock. Aside from knowing that Maurice Greenberg owns 21.86%
of SICO (source, SEC) we may never be able to find out who, or what, owns
the rest.

They Even Put It In Writing

In September 1997 a group of business and labor executives* reviewed and
made recommendations on the use of sanctions by the President of the United
States to influence world events. One of those executives was Oackley
Johnson of AIG. The group, called the Sanctions Working Group (SWG) of the
Department of State's Advisory Committee on International Economic Policy,
having completed its review of the way the White House has imposed sanctions
on foreign governments, completed a detailed report which was sent to the
State Department by the Committee head, Michael Gadbaw of General Electric.
The advisory panel called for massive revisions in the way sanctions were
selected and imposed in foreign affairs to punish or induce foreign
governments to behave the way the U.S. wants.

Approval of the recommendations was unanimous from the business community
and opposition was unanimous and acerbic from organized labor
representatives who sent their dissent separately to the State Department.
The report, they said, cared about nothing but the financial interests of
major U.S. Corporations.

As an Appendix to the report, which was found at
http://www.usaengage.org/studies.html, Footnote 4 following Tab 5 listed
valid U.S. foreign policy objectives. It states: This report addresses
sanctions undertaken pursuant to laws or regulations that authorize or
mandate unilateral economic sanctions in order to achieve a foreign policy
objective.

"The foreign policy objectives may include the transition to democracy,
opposing terrorism or support of terrorist activities, sanctioning drug
production and transit or trafficking, supporting human and worker rights
and religious freedom, opposing proliferation of weapons of mass
destruction, and protecting the environment."

The language "support of terrorist activities" is ambiguous. It could mean
that the U.S. would punish those who support terrorist activities or that it
might support terrorist activities itself. The drug trafficking language
also catches the panel on the horns of a dilemma. As defined in the American
Heritage dictionary, to sanction something means to "grant authoritative
permission or approval." A secondary meaning means "to punish." In
government documents and reports, especially those laying out or
recommending policy, every word is reviewed dozens of times. Lawyers and
decision makers sign off on every aspect. Drafts usually circulate for weeks
before final approval. This language may mean exactly what it says. And if
there is ambiguity then it must have been intended.

The whole purpose of From The Wilderness is to teach the world that it is a
specific intent of Wall Street and the U.S. government to give authoritative
permission and approval to the drug trade to ensure that drug profits -- the
money -- comes back under the control of the people who sanctioned the trade
to begin with. Is that what Coral Talavera is doing at AIG? I e-mailed
Oackley Johnson at AIG and asked him to comment on the report. At press time
he has not responded. I have also solicited (again) comment from AIG
Corporate offices on the content of this story. Also no response. But I hope
to have something from them for Part III in September.

AIG has also been connected, albeit indirectly, to a major money laundering
case. As the insurance carrier for the Bank of New York (BoNY) they are
defending BoNY in a suit filed this year by BoNY shareholders charging
mismanagement of the bank. That suit arose from revelations (See FTW Vol II,
No.7, 9/99) in the major media that BoNY had been involved in laundering
between $7 and $10 billion in criminal money out of Russia during the 1990s
under its Chairman, Thomas Renyi. A credible source has told me, but I have
not been able to confirm it, that AIG also insures the U.S. Department of
Justice which was charged with investigating BoNY and which decided not to
file criminal charges in 1999.

Perhaps no one knows more about your life, not even your immediate family,
than the various companies who insure you. Your health, finances, work
history, medical records, driving habits and almost every other aspect of
your life is recorded in insurance files and records. Is this necessarily
something you want available to the CIA or any part of the government?
Remember that the CIA doesn't operate under the law or respect privacy. What
happens then when a giant like AIG winds up insuring parts of the government
or major businesses that violate your rights or break the law?

 

- Members of the Sanctions Working Group of the State Department's Advisory
Committee on International Economic Policy: -- Mark Anderson, AFL-CIO *
Harvey Bale, Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Assoc. * Steven Beckman, United
Auto Workers * Seddik Belyamani, Boeing * Fred Bergsten, Institute for
International Economics * Thomas Block, Chase Manhattan Bank * Carol
Brookins, World Perspectives * Anthony Corso, Mobil *Greg Farmer, Northern
Telecom * Isaiah Frank, Johns Hopkins (SAIS) * Don Fuqua, Aerospace
Industries Association * R. Michael Gadbaw, General Electric * R. Harkin,
United Technologies * Robert Hormats, Goldman, Sachs International * Nancie
Johnson, DuPont * Oackley Johnson, AIG * Robert Johnson, Phelps Dodge &
Morenci * Dale Jones, Halliburton * Robert Kapp, US-China Business Council *
Frank Kittredge, National Foreign Trade Council * Mary Lou Lackey, Motorola
* T. Lee, AFL-CIO *Charles Levy - Wilmer, Cutler and Pickering *Clement
Malin, Texaco * Rebecca Mark, Enron Development *Joel Messing, Cigna *Robert
Niemeth, Pfizer * G. Staley, Toys R Us * Roger Swanson, US-Japan Business
Council * Sandra Taylor, Eastman Kodak * Robert Vastine, Coalition of
Service Industries * Alan Wolff, Dewey Ballantine *

 

AIG Highlights

    * AIG has the largest market capitalization (total value of all shares)
of any insurance or financial services organization on the NYSE -- $198.4
billion in 2000. It has operations in 130 countries.
    * Ranked #7 on Forbes Super 100 list of companies. After GE, Citigroup,
BankAmerica, Exxon, IBM and Ford.

    * The largest U.S. underwriter of commercial and industrial insurance.

    * Operates AIG Financial Services Group, which sells investments,
international asset management and "advisory" services.

    * The largest seller of retirement annuities in the U.S. through its
acquisitions of SunAmerica and American General in 1999 and 2001
respectively.

    * AIG is licensed to operate banks in three countries, including the US
(1999) and also issues credit cards.

History

    * Originally formed as the Asia Life/C. V. Starr Companies in the 1930s
by founder Cornelius Starr who served with the OSS during World War II. The
Starr corporation shared the same office building as OSS headquarters in New
York, and functioned as an intelligence conduit on shipping, manufacturing
and industrial bombing targets in Asia and Germany throughout WW II. [The
Los Angeles Times, Sept. 22, 2000]
    * Early business centered primarily in China and Asia. Starr interests
centered in Asia and Panama.
    * 1951 - Changed name to American Life Insurance Company (ALICO).
    * Acquired major U.S. insurance companies in the 1950s and 60s.
    * 1967 - Incorporated as American International Group (AIG).

    * 1969 - First public offering.

    * First western insurance company to create joint ventures with Hungary,
Poland and Romania in the 1960s.

    * In 1980 established joint venture with the People's Insurance Company
of China.

    * First insurance company licensed to do business on its own in Japan
(1952), Mainland China (1990), and Vietnam (2000).

    * Member and staunch supporter of the World Trade Organization. During
1997 WTO negotiations, AIG collaborated directly with Treasury Secretary
Robert Rubin to negotiate Asian financial, investment and trade agreements
covering 102 countries, which one report described as bullying and marked by
"messages back and forth from Geneva to Washington, andÉ reports, between
the US Treasury and American International Group." [Third World Economics,
No. 175, 16-31, 12/97].

    * During the 1990s involved with U.S. investment in Russia (overseen by
Goldman Sachs and The Harvard Endowment) through Brunswick Brokerage.
Secured a $300 million OPIC (Overseas Private Investment Corporation)
guarantee for a Russian investment fund. [Paul Likoudis, Editor, The
Wanderer.]

    * AIG has "joint venture" interests in Latin America through
ZonaFinanciera with Citibank which in May 2001 purchased Mexico's Banamex
and will be placing reported drug money launderer and trafficker Roberto
Hernandez on its board of directors.

    * AIG insures more than half of the major US airports.

    * The world's "market leader" in leasing and remarketing of advanced
technology commercial jet aircraft - "the most modern fleet of aircraft in
the world. " With 2000 revenues of $2.44 billion AIG owns a fleet of 494
jets, 89 of which it "manages" itself. Clients include airlines in U.S.,
Canada, Europe, Asia, the Middle East and South America where, in 2000, it
leased, "additional aircraft to a number of established customers."

Maurice "Hank" Greenberg, 75 -- Chairman and CEO of American International
Group (AIG)

    * WWII, Served with US Army Signal Corps and Army Rangers
    * LL.B., New York Law School, 1950
    * Korean War, Investigated reported massacres at POW camps run by UN/US
personnel
    * Elected AIG President in 1962, CEO in 1967 and Chairman in 1989.
    * Former Chairman and Director of the New York Federal Reserve Bank.
    * Forbes 111th richest man in the world (More than $4 billion net worth)
    * Vice Chairman, Council on Foreign Relations
    * Vice Chairman, Center for Strategic and International Studies
    * Member, Board of Directors, New York Stock Exchange
    * Member, Trilateral Commission
    * Member, The Bilderberger Group
    * Chairman, The Nixon Center
    * Chairman, U.S.-China Business Council
    * Chairman, The Starr Foundation
    * Accompanied President George Bush on his trade mission to China in
1992
    * Major contributor to The Heritage Foundation
    * Name floated by Senator Arlen Specter to become CIA director in 1995
(Reported in U.S. News and World Report - 2/20/95)

AIG Board's Board of Directors as Reported to the SEC

    * M. BERNARD AIDINOFF -- SENIOR COUNSEL, SULLIVAN & CROMWELL
(Attorneys). Director since 1984 -- Age 72. [NOTE: Sullivan and Cromwell is
the legal firm that was home to Eisenhower Secretary of State John Foster
Dulles and his brother Allen Dulles, who was a key OSS leader during WWII
and who served as CIA Director under Presidents Eisenhower and Kennedy.]
    * ELI BROAD -- CHAIRMAN, SUNAMERICA INC (a wholly-owned subsidiary of
AIG). Director since 1999 -- Age 67.
    * PEI-YUAN CHIA -- RETIRED VICE CHAIRMAN, CITICORP AND CITIBANK, N.A.
Director since 1996 -- Age 62.
    * MARSHALL A. COHEN -- COUNSEL, CASSELS BROCK & BLACKWELL (Barristers
and Solicitors); FORMER PRESIDENT AND CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER, THE MOLSON
COMPANIES LIMITED. Director since 1992 -- Age 66.
    * BARBER B. CONABLE, JR. -- RETIRED; FORMER PRESIDENT, WORLD BANK, AND
FORMER MEMBER, UNITED STATES HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. Director since 1991
-- Age 78.
    * MARTIN S. FELDSTEIN -- PROFESSOR OF ECONOMICS, HARVARD UNIVERSITY;
PRESIDENT AND CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER, NATIONAL BUREAU OF ECONOMIC RESEARCH
(Nonprofit Economic Research Center), Director HCA and TRW. Director since
1987 -- Age 61.
    * ELLEN V. FUTTER -- PRESIDENT, AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY
Director, Bristol-Myers Squibb Company Consolidated Edison, Inc. (also
serves as Trustee of Consolidated Edison Company of New York, Inc.), J.P.
Morgan Chase & Co. Director since 1999 -- Age 51.
    * MAURICE R. GREENBERG -- CHAIRMAN AND CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER, AIG,
Director, Transatlantic Holdings, Inc. ('Transatlantic'), which is owned
60.0 percent by AIG. Also serves as Chairman of Transatlantic, a director,
President and Chief Executive Officer of C.V. Starr & Co., Inc. ('Starr'),
and a director of Starr International Company, Inc. ('SICO') and
International Lease Finance Corporation ('ILFC'); Starr and SICO are private
holding companies (see 'Ownership of Certain Securities'); ILFC is a
wholly-owned subsidiary of AIG. Director since 1967 -- Age 75.
    * CARLA A. HILLS -- CHAIRMAN AND CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER, HILLS &
COMPANY; FORMER UNITED STATES TRADE REPRESENTATIVE. (Hills & Company
provides international investment, trade and risk advisory services).
Director, AOL Time Warner Inc., Chevron Corporation, Lucent Technologies
Inc. Director since 1993 -- Age 67.
    * FRANK J. HOENEMEYER -- FINANCIAL CONSULTANT; RETIRED VICE CHAIRMAN,
PRUDENTIAL INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA. Director, Carey Fiduciary Advisors,
Inc. Cincinnati, Inc. Director since 1985 -- Age 81.
    * RICHARD C. HOLBROOKE -- FORMER UNITED STATES AMBASSADOR TO THE UNITED
NATIONS; FORMER VICE CHAIRMAN, CREDIT SUISSE, FIRST BOSTON. Elected February
7, 2001 -- Age 59.

    * EDWARD E. MATTHEWS -- VICE CHAIRMAN -- INVESTMENTS AND FINANCIAL
SERVICES, AIG. Director, Transatlantic. Also serves as a director of Starr,
SICO and ILFC, -- Director since 1973 -- Age 69.
    * HOWARD I. SMITH -- EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT AND CHIEF FINANCIAL
OFFICER, AIG. Director, Transatlantic, 21st Century Insurance Group ('21st
Century'), which is owned 62.8 percent by AIG. Also serves as a director of
Starr, SICO and ILFC -- Director since 1997 -- Age 56.
    * THOMAS R. TIZZIO -- SENIOR VICE CHAIRMAN -- GENERAL INSURANCE, AIG.
Director, Transatlantic. Also serves as a director of Starr and SICO. --
Director since 1986 -- Age 63.
    * EDMUND S.W. TSE -- VICE CHAIRMAN -- LIFE INSURANCE, AIG. Also serves
as a director of Starr and SICO. -- Director since 1996 -- Age 63.

    * JAY S. WINTROB -- PRESIDENT AND CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER, SUNAMERICA.
Director, Anchor National Life Insurance Company and First SunAmerica Life
Insurance Company, wholly-owned subsidiaries of AIG. Also serves as a
director of Starr and SICO -- Director since 1999 -- Age 44.
    * FRANK G. WISNER -- VICE CHAIRMAN -- EXTERNAL AFFAIRS, AIG. Director,
EOG Resources, Inc. -- Director since 1997 -- Age 62. [NOTE: Wisner is the
son of former CIA deputy Director, Frank Wisner, Sr. who was present at the
creation of the CIA. As head of the Office of Policy Coordination, the
forerunner of the CIA's Directorate of Operations. Wisner, Sr. once boasted,
"I can play the media like a mighty Wurlitzer." In a 35 year career with the
State department, Wisner, Jr. served as U.S. Ambassador to India, the
Philippines, Egypt and Zambia.]
    * FRANK G. ZARB -- CHAIRMAN, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF SECURITIES DEALERS,
INC. AND THE NASDAQ STOCK MARKET, INC. -- Elected February 7, 2001 -- Age 66
    * AIG is a client of Henry Kissinger and Associates. Kissinger is the
Chairman of AIG's International Advisory Board.

[© Copyright 2001, Michael C. Ruppert and From the Wilderness Publications.
All Rights Reserved. May not be reprinted or redistributed without the
express permission of the author ]

On or about August 16, 2001 FTW subscribers will be able to visit a secure
are of our web site and download selected portions of the taped conversation
between Coral Talavera and Celerino Castillo. Watch the FTW web site for
exciting new features -- for paid subscribers only! If you are a subscriber,
please make sure that we have your e-mail address to send you your
passwords.

********************

Ten Thousand, Two Hundred and Ninety Thanks

to the

Seventy-Seven Subscribers and Long-Term Supporters Who Responded To Our
Special Plea For Help Last Month

Thanks To You, FTW Will Be Around For Yet A While LongerÉ

Telling The Truth

Filling The Void

Taking The Risk

Shining The Light

Building The Map

 

Coming Next Month: More on Carlos Lehder * The History of Coral Reinsurance
* A Look at ADFA * Fallout From Part IIÉ Stay Tuned for Part III!

 

Important Announcement

Effective immediately, in order to reduce costs, all FTW subscribers who are
on-line with e-mail will be receiving their monthly issues over the
Internet.

In order to continue to bring you the news and information that you have
made it so clear you want, it is essential that we cut monthly printing and
mailing costs.

The recent loss of an investor, after he pledged to support a publishing
project FTW had invested almost $30,000 in, nearly put us out of business.
That investor, a high school classmate, moved and took his family out of
Southern California and has not been heard from since.

Last month we issued a plea for help to two hundred of our oldest
subscribers for financial assistance. The response has been overwhelmingly
positive and we have decided to fight on. This month's issue is proof of
that!

For those of you who have not been with us from the start, following are
some of the stories we have brought you since March, 1998.

We are not out of the woods yet but let's pray that this is still only the
beginning.

    * Two years of groundbreaking coverage on the Vietnamization of
Colombia.

    * Three years of reporting on the channeling of drug profits through
Wall Street.

    * The first news entity to publish the entire deposition of Adm. Thomas
Moorer admitting sarin gas use in SE Asia.

    * Exclusive coverage on the contents of a CIA IG report (10/98)
admitting direct CIA involvement in the drug trade.

    * Expanded coverage of the CIA illegally transferring military aircraft
to private companies that were later used to smuggle cocaine in the 1990s.

    * The connection between the crack cocaine epidemic and massive
foreclosures of HUD financed homes in South Central Los Angeles. (Ethnic
Cleansing)

    * The first US news entity to report in detail on connections between
the KLA and the heroin trade.

    * An exclusive two-part series connecting Dominican drug lords to money
laundering through the Democratic Party.

    * The first US news agency to fully explore the massive looting of
Russia through the Bank of New York and link it to the drug trade.
    * Gov George Bush flying in a Texas state airplane once owned by Barry
Seal (picked up by the AP).
    * Perjury committed by Deputy Attorneys General in the conviction of
Edwin Wilson.
    * The Democratic Party's Presidential Drug Money Pipeline.
    * The 9th Circuit Court Affirming Contra Leaders Claims of CIA Sanction
for Drug Trafficking.
    * Promis Software (2000).
    * The Bush-Cheney Drug Empire.
    * European Economic Conference on US Economy - (dateline Moscow).
    * Massive Holes in the U.S. Position on the Shootdown of Missionaries in
Peru

Source:  http://onlinejournal.com/artman/publish/article_3777.shtml

AIG is a ‘special case’
By Wayne Madsen
Online Journal Contributing Writer


Sep 23, 2008, 00:18

        Email this article
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(WMR) -- The U.S. government’s bail out of insurance giant American
International Group (AIG) comes as no surprise to intelligence community
insiders. In fact, AIG has been at the center of a number of CIA operations
for decades.

The federal government’s $85 billion “bridge” loan to AIG essentially makes
the United States government an 80 percent stakeholder in AIG, a move that
will prevent external players from peering into AIG’s myriad intelligence
operations on behalf of the CIA, according to an insider who has followed
AIG’s overseas operations for a number of years.

As attorney general of New York State and as governor, Eliot Spitzer made
AIG a prime target for his investigations. That ended when Spitzer was
brought down in a sex scandal involving a prostitution ring.

AIG’s chairman, before he was forced to resign amid scandal, was Maurice
“Hank” Greenberg. In 1962, Greenberg was hired by AIG’s founder, Cornelius
Vander Starr, the uncle of President Bill Clinton prosecutor Kenneth Starr,
as the chief of AIG’s North American operations. Greenberg eventually took
over as AIG’s chairman, as well as assuming the chairmanship and CEO
position of Starr’s other firm, C. V. Starr and Company. Greenberg retained
control of C. V. Starr and Company after having stepped down as AIG’s
chairman in 2005.

Greenberg, a close friend of Henry Kissinger, was considered a potential CIA
director in 1995 after James Woolsey resigned. Perhaps it was Greenberg’s
past connections to Whitewater Independent Counsel Starr’s uncle Cornelius
that dissuaded Clinton from giving Greenberg the keys to Langley’s top
executive washroom.

However, Greenberg and AIG had a long association with the CIA, according to
WMR’s sources. AIG’s intelligence operations in Asia even pre-date the CIA
and its predecessor, the wartime Office of Strategic Services (OSS).i
Greenberg has served as a member of the National Intelligence Council.

Cornelius V. Starr started AIG as “American Asiatic Underwriters” in 1919 in
Shanghai. Starr moved AIG from Shanghai to New York after the Communists
came to power in 1949. Ironically, AIG is back in China through its
ownership of People’s Insurance Company of China. AIG also owns AIG Korea
Insurance.

Ever since the days of Ken Starr’s uncle, Cornelius, AIG has, on behalf of
U.S. intelligence, kept tabs on rising players on the Asia political scene,
particularly in China, Japan, Korea, Singapore, Hong Kong, Taiwan, and other
countries. The quid pro quo for AIG is that it has weathered the storms
generated by Spitzer and the global financial meltdown with the strong
support from the U.S. government in return for permitting the mining of data
from AIG’s insurance files by the CIA.

Greenberg has maintained close relations with the Beijing leadership over
the years. However, his dealings with the CIA are also well known to the
Chinese intelligence services. In fact, Chinese intelligence is aware that
Greenberg has allowed AIG to be used as a major “placement” operation for a
number of the CIA’s Asia-based non-official cover (NOC) officers.

The CIA’s analysts who concentrate on Asia have also enjoyed routine access
to a huge AIG database maintained in San Francisco. AIG’s new building in
Hong Kong was intended to be a major outpost for CIA agents assigned the
China “beat.” However, Chinese intelligence succeeded in thoroughly wiring
the building with surveillance systems and AIG’s China operations were
blown. Chinese intelligence could not believe how sloppy Greenberg and the
CIA were in handling the Hong Kong operation.

With the U.S. government now in control of AIG, the Bush family will breathe
particularly easier. On June 20, 2005, WMR reported the following concerning
the connection between Greenberg and the Bushes:

“The investigations of the secret Bush money tranches are coming to the fore
as New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer focuses in on the scandal
involving Maurice “Hank” Greenberg and the inflation of the worth of
American International Group (AIG) through shady affiliates, including AIG
reinsurer Coral Re of Barbados. Greenberg was the CEO of AIG but was forced
to step down amid the Spitzer probe. AIG was founded from Asia Life/CV
Starr, a Shanghai-based international import/export and insurance firm
founded in 1919 by Cornelius V. Starr, an Office of Strategic Services (OSS)
operative in Southeast Asia during World War II. AIG’s largest shareholder
is Starr International Company (SICO), an off-shore corporation incorporated
in Panama with headquarters in Bermuda. Kenneth Starr, the independent
counsel who prosecuted President Clinton, is the nephew of Cornelius Starr.
Greenberg inherited the CEO job and Chairmanship from Starr as well as the
$3.5 billion Starr Foundation.”

Previously published in the Wayne Madsen Report.

Copyright © 2008 WayneMadenReport.com
Wayne Madsen is a Washington, DC-based investigative journalist and
nationally-distributed columnist. He is the editor and publisher of the
Wayne Madsen Report (subscription required).

Copyright © 1998-2007 Online Journal

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