-Caveat Lector-

from;
http://www.copvcia.com/contra~1.htm
<A HREF="http://www.copvcia.com/contra~1.htm">Celerino "Cele" Castillo III
</A>
-----
WORLD WIDE EXCLUSIVE From CASE FILE: CIA and DRUGS

Celerino "Cele" Castillo III
Author: "POWDERBURNS" Cocaine, Contras & The Drug War
   2709 N. 28 1/2 St., McAllen,Texas 78501
   Tele/Fax: 956-631-3818 Pager: 956-318-4913
   E-Mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]




WRITTEN STATEMENT OF CELERINO CASTILLO III, (D.E.A., RETIRED) FOR THE
HOUSE PERMANENT SELECT COMMITTEE ON INTELLIGENCE
April 27, 1998

For several years, I fought in the trenches of the front lines of
Reagan's "Drug War", trying to stamp out what I considered American's
greatest foreign threat. But, when I was posted, in Central and South
America from 1984 through 1990, I knew we were playing the "Drug War
Follies." While our government shouted "Just Say No !", entire Central
and South American nations fell into what are now known as, "Cocaine
democracies."
While with the DEA, I was able to keep journals of my assignments in
Central and South America. These journals include names, case file
numbers and DEA NADDIS (DEA Master Computer) information to back up my
allegations. I have pictures and original passports of the victims that
were murdered by CIA assets. These atrocities were done with the
approval of the agencies.

We, ordinary Americans, cannot trust the C.I.A. Inspector General to
conduct a full investigation into the CIA or the DEA. Let me tell you
why. When President Clinton (June, 1996) ordered The Intelligence
Oversight Board to conduct an investigation into allegations that US
Agents were involved in atrocities in Guatemala, it failed to
investigate several DEA and CIA operations in which U.S. agents knew
before hand that individuals (some Americans) were going to be murdered.


I became so frustrated that I forced myself to respond to the I.O.B
report citing case file numbers, dates, and names of people who were
murdered. In one case (DEA file # TG-86-0005) several Colombians and
Mexicans were raped, tortured and murdered by CIA and DEA assets, with
the approval of the CIA. Among those victims identified was Jose Ramon
Parra-Iniguez, Mexican passport A-GUC-043 and his two daughters Maria
Leticia Olivier-Dominguez, Mexican passport A-GM-8381. Also included
among the dead were several Colombian nationals: Adolfo Leon
Morales-Arcilia "a.k.a." Adolfo Morales-Orestes, Carlos Alberto Ramirez,
and Jiro Gilardo-Ocampo. Both a DEA and a CIA agent were present, when
these individuals were being interrogated (tortured). The main target of
that case was a Guatemalan Congressman, (Carlos Ramiro Garcia de Paz)
who took delivery of 2,404 kilos of cocaine in Guatemala just before the
interrogation. This case directly implicated the Guatemalan Government
in drug trafficking (The Guatemalan Congressman still has his US visa
and continues to travel at his pleasure into the US). To add salt to the
wound, in 1989 these murders were investigated by the U.S Department of
Justice, Office of Professional Responsibility. DEA S/I Tony Recevuto
determined that the Guatemalan Military Intelligence, G-2 (the worst
human rights violators in the Western Hemisphere) was responsible for
these murders. Yet, the U.S. government continued to order U.S. agents
to work hand-in-hand with the Guatemalan Military. This information was
never turned over to the I.O.B. investigation. (See attached response)

I have obtained a letter, dated May 28, 1996, from the DEA
administrator, to U.S. Congressman Lloyd Doggett (D), Texas. In this
letter, the administrator flatly lies, stating that DEA agents "have
never engaged in any joint narcotics programs with the Guatemalan
Military".

I was there. I was the leading Agent in Guatemala. 99.9% of DEA
operations were conducted with the Guatemalan military. In 1990, the DEA
invited a Guatemalan military G-2 officer, Cpt. Fuentez, to attend a DEA
narcotic school, which is against DEA policy. I know this for a fact
because I worked with this officer for several years and was in
Guatemala when he was getting ready to travel to the States.

Facts of my investigation on CIA-Contras drug trafficking in El
Salvador:

The key to understanding the "crack cocaine" epidemic, which exploded on
our streets in 1984, lies in understanding the effect of congressional
oversight on covert operations. In this case the Boland amendment(s) of
the era, while intending to restrict covert operations as intended by
the will of the People, only served to encourage C.I.A., the military
and elements of the national intelligence community to completely bypass
the Congress and the Constitution in an eager and often used covert
policy of funding prohibited operations with drug money.

As my friend and colleague Michael Ruppert has pointed out through his
own experience in the 1970s, CIA has often bypassed congressional intent
by resorting to the drug trade (Vietnam, Laos, Iran, Afghanistan,
Pakistan, etc).

When the Boland Amendment(s) cut the Contras off from a continued U.S.
government subsidy, George Bush, his national security adviser Don
Gregg, and Ollie North, turned to certain foreign governments, and to
private contributions, to replace government dollars. Criminal sources
of contributions were not excluded. By the end of 1981, through a series
of Executive Orders and National Security Decision Directives, many of
which have been declassified, Vice President Bush was placed in charge
of all Reagan administration intelligence operations. All of the covert
operations carried out by officers of the CIA, the Pentagon, and every
other federal agency, along with a rogue army of former intelligence
operatives and foreign agents, were commanded by George Bush. Gary Webb
(San Jose Mercury News) acknowledged, that he simply had not traced the
command structure over the Contras up into the White House, although he
had gotten some indications that the operation was not just CIA.

On Dec. 01, 1981, President Ronald Reagan signed a secret order
authorizing the CIA to spend $19.9 million for covert military aid to
the recently formed Contras--- hardly enough money to launch a serious
military operation against the Cuban and Soviet-backed Sandinista
regime.

In August 1982, George Bush hired Donald P. Gregg as his principal
adviser for national security affairs. In late 1984, Gregg introduced
Oliver North to Felix Rodriguez, (a retired CIA agent) who had already
been working in Central America for over a year under Bush's direction.
Gregg personally introduced Rodriguez to Bush on Jan. 22, 1985. Two days
after his January 1985 meeting, Rodriguez went to El Salvador and made
arrangements to set up his base of operations at Ilopango air base. On
Nov. 01, 1984, the FBI arrested Rodriguez's partner, Gerard Latchinian
and convicted him of smuggling $10.3 million in cocaine into the U.S.

On Jan. 18, 1985, Rodriguez allegedly met with money-launderer Ramon
Milan-Rodriguez, who had moved $1.5 billion for the Medellin cartel.
Milan testified before a Senate Investigation on the Contras' drug
smuggling, that before this 1985 meeting, he had granted Felix
Rodriguez's request and given $10 million from the cocaine for the
Contras.

On September 10, 1985, North wrote in his Notebook:

"Introduced by Wally Grasheim/Litton, Calero/Bermudez visit to Ilopango
to estab. log support./maint. (...)"

In October of 1985, Upon my arrival in Guatemala, I was forewarned by
Guatemala DEA, County Attaché, Robert J. Stia, that the DEA had received
intelligence that the Contras out of Salvador, were involved in drug
trafficking. For the first time, I had come face to face with the
contradictions of my assignment. The reason that I had been forewarned
was because I would be the Lead Agent in El Salvador.

DEA Guatemalan informant, Ramiro Guerra (STG-81-0013) was in place in
Guatemala and El Salvador on "Contra" intelligence. At the time (early
80's), he was a DEA fugitive on "Rico" (Racketeering Influence and
Corrupt Organizations) and "CCE" (Continuing Criminal Enterprise)
charges out of San Francisco. In 1986, he became an official advisor for
the DEA trained El Salvador Narcotics Task Force. In 1989, all federal
charges were dropped because of his cooperation with the DEA in Central
America. Guerra is still a DEA informant in Guatemala.

December 1985, CNN reporter Brian Barger broke the story of the Contra's
involved in drug trafficking.

               Notes from my Journals & Intelligence Gathering

January 13, 1986, I wrote a report on El Salvador under DEA file
(GFTG-86-9145).

January 16, 1986---HK-1217W--Carlos Siva and Tulio Pedras Contra pilots.


January 23, 1986, GFTG-86-9999, Air

Intelligence in "El Salvador" TG-86-0003, Samana and Raul.

In 1986, I placed an informant (Mario Murga) at the Ilopango airport in
El Salvador. He was initiated and wrote the flight plans for most Contra
pilots. After their names were submitted into NADDIS, it was revealed
that most pilots had already been document in DEA files as traffickers.
(See DEA memo by me date 2-14-89.)

Feb. 05, 1986, I had seized $800,000.00 in cash, 35 kilos of cocaine,
and an airplane at Ilopango. DEA # TG-86-0001; Gaitan-Gaitan, Leonel

March 24, 1986, I wrote a DEA report on the Contra operation.
(GFTG-86-4003, Frigorificos de Puntarenas, S.A), US registration
aircraft N-68435 (Cessna 402).

April 17, 86, I wrote a Contra report on Arturo Renick; Johnny Ramirez
(Costa Rica). Air craft TI-AQU & BE-60.. GFTG-86-9999; Air Intelligence.


April 25,26 1986--I met with CIA Felix Vargas in El Salvador
(GFTG-86-9145).

April of 1986, The Consul General of the U.S Embassy in El Salvador
(Robert J. Chavez), warned me that CIA agent George Witters was
requesting a U.S visa for a Nicaraguan drug trafficker and Contra pilot
by the name of Carlos Alberto Amador. (mentioned in 6 DEA files)

May 14, 1986, I spoke to Jack O'Conner DEA HQS Re: Matta-Ballesteros.
(NOTE: Juan Ramon Matta-Ballesteros was perhaps the single largest drug
trafficker in the region. Operating from Honduras he owned several
companies which were openly sponsored and subsidized by C.I.A.)

May 26, 1986, Mario Rodolfo Martinez-Murga became an official DEA
informant (STG-86-0006). Before that, he had been a sub-source for
Ramiro Guerra and Robert Chavez. Under Chavez, Murga's intelligence
resulted in the seizure of several hundred kilos of cocaine, (from
Ilopango to Florida) making Murga a reliable source of information.

May 27, 1986, I Met U.S. Army Lt. Col. Alberto Adame in El Salvador. Has
knowledge of the Contra Operation at Ilopango. He was in El Salvador
from 1984 thru 1987.

On June 06, 1986, I send a DEA report/telex cable to Washington DEA in
regards to Contra pilots, Carlos Amador and Carlos Armando Llamos
(Honorary Ambassador from El Salvador to Panama) (N-308P). Llamos had
delivered 4 1/2 million dollars to Panama from Ilopango for the Contras.
Information was gathered by informant Mario Murga. Leon Portilla-TIANO =
Navojo 31 & YS-265-American Pilot: Francisco Viaud. Roberto Gutierrez
(N-82161) Mexican (X-AB)

June 10, 1998, I spoke to CIA agent Manny Brand Re: Sofi Amoury (Cuban
Contra operator and Guatemalan Galvis-Pena in Guatemala.

June 16, 1986-GFTG-86-9999, Air Intel (DEA-6) El Salvador



Early part of 1986, I received a telex/cable from DEA Costa Rica. SA
Sandy Gonzales requested for me to investigate hangers 4 and 5 at
Ilopango. DEA Costa Rica had received reliable intelligence that the
Contras were flying cocaine into the hangars. Both hangers were owned a
nd operated by the CIA and the National Security Agency. Operators of
those two hangars were, Lt. Col. Oliver North and CIA contract agent,
Felix Rodriguez, "a.k.a." Max Gomez. (See attached letter by Bryan
Blaney (O.I.C.), dated March 28, 1991).

June 18, 1986, Salvadoran Contra pilot, Francisco "Chico" Guirrola-
Beeche (DEA NADDIS # 1585334 and 1744448) had been documented as a drug
trafficker. On this date, at 7:30a.m, he departed Ilopango to the
Bahamas to air drop monies. On his return trip (June 21) Guirrola
arrived with his passengers Alejandro Urbizu & Patricia Bernal. In 1988
Urbizu was arrested in the US in a Cocaine conspiracy case. In 1985
Guirrola was arrested in South Texas (Kleberg County) with 5 and 1/2
million dollars cash, which he had picked up in Los Angeles, California.
(U.S. Customs in Dallas/ Ft. Worth had case on him.)

June 18, 1986, DEA 6 on Air Intelligence, GFTG- 86-9999; El Salvador.

June 27 & 28, 1986, US Lt. Col. Albert Adame spoke with US Ambassador
Edwin Corr re: Narcotics.

In a July 26, 1986 report to the Congress, on contra-related narcotics
allegation, The State Department described the Frogman CASE as follows,
"This case gets it's nickname from swimmers who brought cocaine ashore
in San Francisco on a Colombian vessel." It focused on a major Colombian
cocaine smuggler,
ALVARO CARVAJAL-MINOTA, who supplied a number of west coast smugglers.
It was further alleged that Nicaraguan Contra, Horacio Pererita, was
subsequently convicted on drug charges in Costa Rica and sentenced to 12
years imprisonment. Two other members of the organization were ide
ntified as Nicaraguans Carlos Cabezas & Julio Zavala. They were among
the jailed West Coast traffickers and convicted of receiving drugs from
Carvajal. They claimed long after their convictions, that they had
delivered sums of monies to Contra resistance groups in Costa Rica.

July 28, 1986, I Met with CIA agents Don Richardson, Janice Elmore and
Lt. Col. Adame in El Salvador.

July 29, 1986, I Met with Don Richardson and Robert Chavez at the US
Embassy in El Salvador.

August 03,1986, Ramiro Guerra, Lt. Col. A. Adame, Dr. Hector Regalado
(Dr. Death, who claimed to have shot Archbishop Romero) and myself went
out on patrol in El Salvador.

In Aug. 1986, The Kerry Committee requested information on the Contra
pilots from the DEA. The Department Of Justice flatly refused to give up
any information.

Aug. 15, 1986, I spoke to CIA (Chief of Station) Jack McCavett and Don
Richardson; El Salvador; Re: Fernando Canelas Sanez from Florida.

Aug. 18, 1986, I received $45,000.00 in cash from CIA Chief of Station
(CIA), Jack McKavett for the purchase of vehicles for the DEA El
Salvador Narcotic Task Force.

Aug. 28, 1986, I had a meeting with El Salvador US Ambassador, Edwin
Corr, in regards to Wally Grasheim, Pete's Place and Carlos Amador (3:00
p.m.)

Oscar Alvarado-Lara "a.k.a." El Negro Alvarado (CIA asset and Contra
pilot) was mentioned in 3 DEA files. On June 11, 1986, Alvarado
transported 27 illegal Cubans to El Salvador Ilopango, where they were
then smuggled into Guatemala. On Sept. 28, 1987, Alvarado picked up CIA
officer Randy Capister in Puerto Barrios Guatemala after a joint DEA,
CIA and Guatemala Military (G-2) operation. Several Mexicans and
Colombians were murdered and raped. This was supported by the CIA. DEA
File TG-86-0005.

1986, DEA El Salvador, initiated a file on Walter L. Grasheim
(TG-87-0003). He is mentioned in several DEA, FBI and U.S Customs files.
This DEA file is at The National Archives in The Iran-Contra file in
Washington D.C (bulky # 2316). Also see attached Top Secret/Declassified
Record of Interview on Mr. Grasheim, by the Office of Independent
Counsel, dated Jan. 03, 1991.

Sept. 01, 1986, at approximately 5:00pm, I received a phone call in
Guatemala from (C.I) Ramiro Guerra, Re: Raid at Wally's house in El
Salvador Wally's plane (N-246-J).

On September 01, 1986, Walter Grasheim (a civilian) residence in El
Salvador was searched by the DEA Task Force. Found at the residence was
an arsenal of US military munitions, (allegedly for a Contra military
shipment). Found were cases of C-4 explosives, grenades, ammunition,
sniper rifles, M-16's, helicopter helmets and knives. Also found were
files of payment to Salvadoran Military Officials (trips to New York
City). Found at his residence were radios and license plates belonging
to the US Embassy. We also found an M16 weapon belonging to the US
Mil-Group Commander, Col. Steel. Prior to the search, I went to every
department of the U.S. Embassy and asked if this individual worked in
any way shape or form with the embassy. Every head of the departments
denied that he worked for them. A pound of marijuana and marijuana
plants growing in the back yard, were also found.

Sept. 02, 1986, I departed Guatemala on Taca Airlines @ 7:30a.m to El
Salvador.

Sept. 26, 1986, Meeting with Col. Steel Re: Mr. Grasheim (Col. Steel
admitted that he had given an M-16 to Grasheim) and CIA George W. Also
talked to Don Richardson (CIA) re: Ramiro Guerra. Talked to Col. Adame
Re: CIA George.

October 03, 1986, Spoke to DEA Panama re: Mr. Grasheim. Was advised to
be careful.

October 15, 1986, Asst. Atty. Gen. Mark Richard testified before the
Kerry Committee, that he had attended a meeting with 20 to 25 officials
and that the DEA did not want to provide any of the information the
committee had requested on the Contra involvement in drug trafficking.

October 21, 1986, I send a Telex/cable to Washington D.C on the Contras.


October 22, 1986 talked to El Salvador Re: Grasheim.

October 23, 1986, HK-1960P Honduras. 1,000 kilos of cocaine. DEA- 6 was
written on this case.

October 29, 1986 Talked to DEA HQS (John Martch) re Contras & Grasheim.

October 30, 1986, Talked to Salvadoran Gen. Blandon re: to Mr. Grasheim.


Nov. 07, 1986, Talked to John Martch 202-786-4356 and Azzam-633-1049;
Home: 301-262-1007. (Contras).

Nov. 13, 1986, I Met with Ambassador Corr @2:00pm re: Mr. Grasheim. (He
stated, "let the chips fall where they may." Met w/ Lt. Col. Adame.

November 14, 1986, Met with Salvadoran Col. Villa Marona re: Mr.
Grasheim. He advised that the U.S Embassy had approved for Grasheim to
work at Ilopango.

On January 20, 1987, Joel Brinkley (special to the New York Times)
reported. "Contra Arms Crew said To Smuggle Drugs" The 3rd secret had
surfaced. Brinkley wrote: "Fed. Drug investigators uncovered evidence
last fall that the American flight crews which covertly carried arms to
the Nicaraguan rebels were smuggling cocaine and other drugs on their
return trips back to the US. Administration Officials said today that
when the crew members, based in El Salvador, learned that DEA agents
were investigating their activities, one of them warned that they had
White House protection. The Times then quoted an anonymous US official w
ho said the crew member's warnings which came after DEA searched his San
Salvador house for drugs, caused 'quite a stir' at Ilopango."

Feb. 09, 1987, I had meeting with Lt. Col. Adame and Elmore re: major
argument with DEA HQS I.A. Lourdez Border. They had just arrived in
Guatemala for a two-day fact finding tour of El Salvador.

Feb.10, 1987, I met with U.S. Ambassador Corr (Salvador) re DEA HQS
Intel. Analyst Lourdez Border and Doug (last name unknown) - both were
rookies. In two days in El Salvador, they determined that there was no
contra involvement in drug trafficking.

February 27. 1987, I spoke to Mike Alston, DEA Miami, RE: Contra pilots
John Hall; Bruce Jones' airstrip in Costa Rica, Colombian Luis
Rodriguez; Mr. Shrimp-Ocean Hunter Costa Rica > to Miami. Contra
Operation from Central American to U.S.

March 03, 1987, met with Janis Elmore (CIA) from 9:00pm till 12:00

March 30, 1987, I invited U.S. Customs Agent Richard Rivera to El
Salvador in an attempt to trace ammunitions and weapons found in
Mr.Grasheim's residence. It's alleged that The Pentagon put a stop on
his trace. (They were never able to trace the items).

April 01, 1987, Bob Stia, Walter (pilot) Morales and myself flew to El
Salvador. Met with two CIA agents who advised us that we could no longer
utilize Murga because he was now working with them).

April 07,08,09, 1987, I met with John Martch in Guatemala Re: Contras
and OPR.

Sept. 27, 1987, Central American CIA agent, Randy Capister, the
Guatemala military (G-2) and myself, seized over 2,404 kilos of cocaine
from a Guatemalan Congressman, Carlos Ramiro Garcia de Paz and the
Medellin cartel (biggest cocaine seizure in Central America and top five
ever). However, several individuals were murdered and raped on said
operation. CIA agent and myself saw the individuals being interrogated.
The Congressman was never arrested or charged.

October 22, 1987, I received a call from DEA HQS Everett Johnson, not to
close Contra files because some committee was requesting file. If you
have an open file, you do not have access to the files under Freedom of
Information Act.

Aug. 30, 1988, Received intelligence from (Guido Del Prado) at the U.S.
Embassy, El Salvador re: Carlos Armando Llemus-Herrera (Contra pilot).

Oct. 27, 1988, Received letter from "Bill," Regional Security Officer at
the Embassy in El Salvador re: Corruption on US ambassador Corr and del
Prado.

Dec. 03, 1988, DEA seized 356 kilos of cocaine in Tiquisate, Guatemala (
DEA # TG-89-0002; Hector Sanchez). Several Colombians were murdered on
said operation and condoned by the DEA and CIA. I have pictures of
individuals that were murdered in said case. The target was on Gregorio
Valdez (CIA asset) of The Guatemala Piper Co. At that time, all air
operations for the CIA and DEA flew out of Piper.

Aug. 24, 1989, Because of my information, the U.S. Embassy canceled
Guatemalan Military, Lt. Col. Hugo Francisco Moran-Carranza, (Head of
Interpol and Corruption) U.S. visa. He was documented as a drug
trafficker and as a corrupt Guatemalan Official. He was on his way to a
U.S. War College for one year, invited by the CIA.

Feb. 21, 1990, I send a telex-cable to DEA HQS Re: Moran's plan to
assassinate me.

Between Aug. 1989 and March 06, 1990, Col. Moran had initiated the plan
to assassinate me in El Salvador and blame it on the guerrillas. On
March 06, 1990, I traveled to Houston to deliver an undercover audio
tape on my assassination. The Houston DEA S.A Mark Murtha (DEA File
M3-90-0053) had an informant into Lt. Col. Moran.

Feb. 24, 1990, I moved my family back home because DEA could not make a
decision.

March 15, 1990, After 6 months knowing about the assassination plan, DEA
transferred me out to San Diego, California for 6months.

April 05, 1990, an illegal search was conducted at my residence in
Guatemala by Guatemala DEA agents Tuffy Von Briensen, Larry Hollifield
and Guatemalan Foreign Service National, Marco Gonzales in Guatemala (No
search warrant). DEA HQS agreed that it had been an illegal search
requested by OPR S/I Tony Recevuto. (OPR file PR-TG-90-0068) On Sept.
16, 1991, a questionnaire was faxed to me in regards to the illegal
search. (see attached)

April 11, 1991, in an undercover capacity, Carlos Cabezas's wife sold me
5 kilos of cocaine in San Francisco. (DEA # R3-91-0036; Milagro
Rodriguez)

On April 16, 1991, I met with Carlos Cabezas at the DEA Office in San
Francisco. He stated to me that Zavala and himself were informants for
the FBI in San Francisco at the time his wife delivered the cocaine.
Alvaro Carbajal had supplied the 5 kilos of cocaine. (There is an
undercover audio tape available as evidence) Mr. Cabezas gave me his
undercover business card. It was identified as "The California Company"
 at 3519-Mission St., San Francisco, CA 94110 REAL ESTATE & INVESTMENTS
Carlos A. Cabezas, Sales Associate Pager: 371-7108 Fax: (415) 647-0918;
Res: (415 991-3104; Bus: (415) 647-8014.

May 10, 1990, DEA HQS OPR S/I Tony Recevuto returned to Guatemala and
requested the U.S. Ambassador, to please grant Lt. Col. Hugo
Moran-Carranza a US Visa, so that he could testify before the BCCI
investigation in Miami. The ambassador could not understand why anyone,
 for any reason would request a US Visa for an individual who had
planned the assassination of a US drug agent.

May 27, 1990, I was ordered to return back to Guatemala to pack my
household goods. The threat was still very real for me. On June 01,
1990, I departed Guatemala for the last time. On June 05, 1990, another
American was killed by the Guatemalan Military. Before the Kerry
Committee

The CIA acknowledged drugs in a statement by Central American Task Force
Chief Alan Fiers who testified: "with respect to (drug trafficking) by
the Resistance Forces...It is not a couple of people. It is a lot of
people."

The DEA has always stated that my reports were unfounded, but they later
recanted. DEA Assistant Administrator, David Westrate stated of the
Nicaraguan War: "It is true that people on both sides of the equation
(in the Nicaraguan War) were drug traffickers, and a couple of them were
pretty significant."

In a Sept. 20-26, 1989, series of debriefings and in subsequent
debriefing on Feb. 13, 1990, by DEA agents in Los Angeles, Lawrence
Victor Harrison, an American-born electronics specialist who had worked
in Mexico and had been involved with the leading figures in the Mexican
drug cartel, was interviewed. He testified that he had been present when
two of the partners of Matta-Ballesteros and Rafael Caro-Quintero, met
with American pilots working out of Ilopango air base in El Salvador,
providing arms to the Contras. The purpose of the meeting was to work
out drug deals.

Several days earlier, on Feb. 09, 1990, Harrison had told DEA
interrogators that Nicaraguan Contras were being trained at a ranch in
Vera Cruz, owned by Rafael Caro Quintero. It was at Quintero's
Guadalajara ranch that DEA Agent Kiki Camarena, and his pilot were
interrogated, tortured and buried alive.

January 23, 1991, letter to Mr. William M. Baker, Asst. Director of
Criminal Investigative Division, FBI; from Lawrence E. Walsh and Mike
Foster, requesting several FBI files on Walter L. Grasheim. (see
attached)

January 30, 1991, letter to DEA Ronald Caffrey, Deputy Asst.
Administrator for Operations at DEA from Craig A. Guillen, Associate
Counsel of the Office of Independent Counsel; requesting Walter L.
Grasheim reports. (see attached)

In 1991, a DEA General File was opened on an Oliver North in Washington
D.C. (GFGD-91-9139) "smuggling weapons into the Philippines with known
drug traffickers."

In 1991, before I departed the DEA, I met with FBI agent Mike Foster,
investigator for The Office of Independent Counsel on Iran-Contra, where
I gave him detailed information of the Contras' involvement in drugs.

October, 1994, The Washington Post reported that former Government
Officials, including the DEA, CIA, State Department, US Customs and
White House officials were quoted as saying that Lt. Col. Oliver North
did not advise them of his knowledge that the Contras were involved in
drug trafficking.

In 1997, I joined DEA SA Richard Horn in a federal class action suit
against the CIA. The suit is against the CIA and other federal agencies
for spying on several DEA agents and other unnamed DEA employees and
their families. United States District Court for The District of
Columbia; Richard Horn vs. Warren Christopher, Civil Action No.
1:96CV02120 (HHG) January 30, 1994.



This is a list of DEA case file and names of individuals that may help
support my allegations.

          GFTG-86-9145, GFTG-87-9145 El Salvador

       GFTG-86-9999, GFTG-87-9999, Air Intelligence

       TG-87-0003, Walter L. Grasheim (Salvador case)

       TG-86-0001, Leonel Guitan-Guitan

       DEA Informants STG-86-0006 and STG-81-0013

       US Ambassador Edwin Corr

       Janis Elmore (CIA 1986 through 1989). I reported to her when in
El Salvador.

       Don Richardson ( CIA & Political Officer in El Salvador 1986,87).
I reported to him in El Salvador.

       Felix Vargas (CIA El Salvador 1986, 87)

       Col. James Steel ( Mil-Group Commander El Salvador).

       U.S. Lt. Col. Alberto Adame (Under Steel)

       Lupita Vega (the only Salvadoran which was cleared for "Top
Secret")
       worked in the Milgroup in El Salvador.

       Felix Rodriguez (CIA at Ilopango hanger 4 & 5)

       Jack McCavett (CIA Chief of Station in El Salvador).

       CIA George Witter in El Salvador. He asked for US visa on drug
trafficker Carlos Alberto Amador.

       CIA Randy Capister (covert operation in Central America 1985
t090). Involved in several atrocities.

       CIA Manuel Brand (retired Cuban-American) Guatemala

       State Department (De Luoie) El Salvador

       State Department RSO Bill Rouche El Salvador

       State Dept. Official Del Prado (El Salvador)

       DEA John Martsh (DEA HQS)

       DEA Jack O'Conner (DEA HQS)

       DEA HQS Agents AZZAM & Frank Torello (retired) involved in Contra
ops in Europe

       Salvadoran General Bustillo (retired in Florida)

       US Custom Richard Rivera and Philip Newton

       DEA Sandy Gonzales (Costa Rica)

       Lincoln Benedicto-Honduras US Embassy-Consul General April 30,
1986. Re: Matta-Ballesteros

Some people have asked, "Why I am doing this? I reply, "That a long time
ago I took an oath to protect The Constitution of the United States and
its citizens". In reality, it has cost me so much to become a complete
human being, that I've lost my family. In 1995, I made a pilgrimage to
the Vietnam Wall, where I renounced my Bronze Star in protest of the
atrocities my government had committed in Central America. I have now
become a veteran of my third, and perhaps most dangerous war --- a war
against the criminals within my own Government. Heads have to roll for
those who are responsible and still employed by the government. They
will be the first targets in an effective drug strategy. If not, we will
continue to have groups of individuals who will be beyond any
 investigation, who will manipulate the press, judges and members of our
Congress,
and still be known in our government as those who are above the law.
© COPYRIGHT 1998, CELERINO CASTILLO & MICHAEL C. RUPPERT. ALL RIGHTS
RESERVED. PERMISSION TO REPRINT IN WHOLE OR IN PART IS EXPRESSLY GRANTED
ONLY IF THE FOLLOWING APPEARS: "Permission to reprint from Celerino
Castillo & Michael C. Ruppert, From The Wilderness @ www.copvica.com"


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Michael C. Ruppert
P.O. Box 6061-350, Sherman Oaks, CA 91413 * (818)788-8791 *
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[EMAIL PROTECTED] © COPYRIGHT 1998, MICHAEL C. RUPPERT. ALL RIGHTS
RESERVED.
-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End
Kris

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