-Caveat Lector-

CIA-DOJ Collusion in Drug-Trafficking Coverup?
by Uri Dowbenko

http://www.zolatimes.com/v3.12/cia_doj.htm
Despite documented evidence by government whistleblowers, the US Central
Intelligence Agency and the Department of Justice have never been held
accountable for their collusion in, or acquiescence to, to drug trafficking.
On March 15, 1999, however, class action lawsuits were filed by attorneys
Katya Komisaruk, William M. Simpich and Kenneth Frucht on behalf of Rosemary
Lyons and Olivia Woods in Northern California and Donna J. Warren and
Berlina M. Doss in Southern California (Case No. 99-02603).

The suit names the Central Intelligence Agency, United States Department of
Justice, Estate of William Casey, Robert Gates, John Deutch, George Tenet,
Estate of William French Smith, Edwin Meese, Richard Thornburgh, Janet Reno
and others as defendants, alleging that these US Government agencies and
employees were responsible for the 1980s crack cocaine epidemic and the
resulting social and economic devastation of inner city communities.

According to the Statement of Facts, "on March 16, 1998, CIA Inspector
General Frederick Hitz appeared before the House Intelligence Committee to
report on his investigation of the CIA, the Contras and crack cocaine. Hitz
testified that beginning in 1982, the CIA entered into an undisclosed
agreement with the Department of Justice, allowing CIA officers to refrain
from reporting drug trafficking by its "agents, assets and non-staff
employees." Hitz admitted that "there are instances where the CIA did not in
an expeditious or consistent fashion, cut off relationships with individuals
supporting the Contra program who were alleged to have engaged in drug
trafficking activity, or take action to resolve the allegation."

When asked by Congressman Norman Dicks of Washington, "Did any of these
allegations involve trafficking in the United States?" Hitz's answer was
"yes." Hitz acknowledged that the CIA knew of drug trafficking allegations
"regarding dozens of individuals and a number of companies connected in some
fashion to the Contra program or the Contra movement."

Hitz recounts in Volume II of the Inspector General's Report dated 10/9/98
that through the secret agreement, the CIA and DOJ attempted to exempt the
CIA from reporting about the drug trafficking of persons "employed by,
assigned to, or acting for an agency within the intelligence community."

Since the CIA itself admitted to having knowledge of its own "assets" being
involved in illegal activities, the argument seems to be indisputable.



Government Agencies Violate Federal Statutes

"Plaintiff claims that the CIA/DoJ agreement violated a federal statute,
28USC 535," the lawsuit alleges, "which imposes a duty on every department
and agency in the Executive Branch to report promptly to the Attorney
General any information, allegations or complaints relating to possible
violations of [criminal law] by officers and employees of the government."

In other words, if federal agency employees are aware of violations, these
must also be reported. There is another category of criminal code violation
called misprision of felony, which refers to the offense of concealing
knowledge of a felony by one who has not participated in it. CIA officials
could be charged with this as well.

"The private CIA/DoJ agreement attempted to get around this federal law by
redefining the term 'employee' to mean only full time career officials -- as
opposed to persons 'employed by, assigned to, or acting for an agency within
the intelligence community.' In addition, the secret agreement violated
Executive Order 12333 issued in 1981, which required the reporting of drug
crimes."

The suit also states that the 1989 Kerry Report ("Drugs, Law Enforcement and
Foreign Policy") made specific findings that "drug trafficking had pervaded
the entire Contra war effort, that 'one or another agency of the US
Government had information regarding the involvement either while it was
occurring or immediately after' and that 'senior policy makers were not
immune to the idea that drug money was a perfect solution to the Contras'
funding problems.'"

A Little History, Please

"In the opening phase of the crack cocaine epidemic, between 1982 and 1986,
CIA officers and other intelligence agencies received reports regarding Bay
Area cocaine importers Norman Meneses and Danilo Blandon," the lawsuit
alleges. "Both of these men were among the primary importers in the United
States and dominated the market on the West Coast. Because of the secret
CIA/DoJ agreement which purported to exempt the CIA from having to report
drug crimes, cocaine suppliers connected with the Contras or other US covert
operations were able to import their 'unregulated product' under the cloak
of national security."

"Meneses and Blandon funneled vast quantities of cocaine, at a price far
lower than other suppliers, to 'Freeway Rick' Ross, who proceeded to flood
South Central Los Angeles with a new low-cost product dubbed 'crack.' By
1984, Ross was selling 150 kilograms of cocaine every week, enough to put
3,000,000 doses of crack on L.A.'s streets, every seven days."

"The crack cocaine epidemic enveloped Los Angeles between 1982 and 1986.
Government documents show that the CIA and DoJ knew or should have known of
the massive importations by Meneses, Blandon and other cocaine supplying
operations," the lawsuit continues. "Common sense and a review of the news
coverage for that period indicate that these agencies knew or should have
known that their ongoing policy of deliberate silence allowed the crack
epidemic to rage unchecked. The CIA turned its back while shipment after
shipment of this new, intensely addictive form of cocaine was delivered to
one of Ross's five cookhouses and then put up for sale throughout South
Central Los Angeles and Compton. The result was the death of men, women and
children, the collapse of businessess and the destruction of whole
neighborhoods."

"Once the initial Southern California market was glutted, crack moved north.
Mid-level dealers diverted the flow to other African-American communities in
California such as East Palo Alto, San Francisco, Oakland and Richmond. The
consequences to these communities, in terms of loss of life, family
structure and economic power continue to this day."

The lawsuit categorized two classes of plaintiffs -- (A) inner city
residents of Northern and Southern California (Alameda, Contra Costa, San
Francisco, San Mateo counties) "largely African American, who experienced
particular economic, physical and or emotional injuries arising from the
neighborhoods hardest hit by the crack cocaine epidemic, such as addictions
to crack, death or absence of loved ones due to drug related crimes,
reduction of income and increase in the number of dependents," and (B)
"residents of the metropolitan areas of the counties listed above who
experienced injuries suffered by the community as a whole, such as lack of
safety, overburdened social services, loss of local businesses and damage to
the tax base."

CIA/DOJ Liable for Crack Epidemic

According to the lawsuit's Theory of Causation, "the signatories of the
CIA/DoJ secret agreement -- Attorney General William French Smith and CIA
Director William Casey -- and their successors, agencies and agents are
legally liable for the pipeline of crack cocaine which inundated California
urban centers from 1982 to 1986, and for the after-effects which continue to
the present day."

"Smith, Casey, their successors and their agents knew or should have known
that failing to report drug crimes would interfere with law enforcement
agencies' efforts to halt the importations of cocaine," the lawsuit
continues, "and that this would ultimately result in a 'crack epidemic'
involving addiction, death, increased crime, higher taxes, exhaustion of
social services and destruction of businesses. The outcome followed the
well-known pattern of opium in China and heroin in the United States which
similarly devastated low-income urban communities."

"The proof of the harm which ensued is based on official statistical
evidence from city and county budgets, public health departments, hospitals,
police departments, courts and jails. In addition, individual plaintiffs and
witnesses will testify concerning the injuries they sustained due to the
crack epidemic."

This class action suit against the CIA demands a jury trial and no specific
dollar amount for damages, but certainly "money to rebuild the community and
to fund drug treatment."

"To a large degree, we tried to take it [the lawsuit] verbatim from
government docs," says one of the lead attorneys, Bill Simpich of Oakland,
California, in a recent telephone interview.

"We're trying to use this case as a floor," he continues, "so we can start
with this very stark premise -- the CIA had a written agreement with the DoJ
starting in 1982 that they did not have to report drug trafficking."

"The critical issue here is the admission that they had a written policy to
not report, and then 'let the chips fall where they may.' They can offer any
explanation they want -- and none of them are good."

Judicial activist Michael C. Ruppert (http://www.copvcia.com) was
instrumental in getting the lawsuit off the ground.

Also for the record, the late US Army Colonel Al Carone, a CIA operative,
has stated in a sworn affidavit -- part of a lawsuit against CIA by former
Green Beret William Tyree -- that "at the CIA there were a few people in the
right positions who blamed the decline of American culture on people of
color living in the United States. The blame of the fall of American culture
began with the creation of the National Security Memorandum 200 which stated
among other things the concern of overpopulation in the United States. Many
at the CIA attributed it to the birthrate among people of color, and there
were some at the CIA that felt that physical slavery could be replaced by
pharmaceutical slavery, and that's why African-American gangs, i.e. 'Bloods'
and 'Crips,' were singled out for distributing the drugs brought into the
United States by the CIA."

Meanwhile, since the Big Media Cartel continues to ignore the story, books
by whistleblowers documenting CIA drug trafficking and coverup have become a
veritable American industry. These include:

CIA: Cocaine in America, by Kenneth Bucchi (1994), SPI Books, 136 West 22nd
St., New York 10011
Powderburns: Cocaine, Contras and the Drug War, by Celerino Castillo and
Dave Harmon (1994), Mosaic Press, 85 River Rock Dr., Suite 202, Buffalo, NY
14207
Whiteout: The CIA, Drugs and the Press, by Alexander Cockburn and Jeffrey
St. Clair (1998), Verso, 180 Varrick St, New York, NY 10014
Drugs & US Government Agencies (video), by Bob Fletcher, World News Insight.
10061 Riverside Dr., N. Hollywood, CA 91602, 800-729-4131
Drug Smuggling, by Ted Gunderson, Gunderson International, PO Box 18000-259,
Las Vegas, Nevada 89114
The Big White Lie: The CIA and the Cocaine Crack Epidemic, by Michael Levine
(1993), Thunder's Mouth Press, 632 Broadway, 7th Floor, New York 10012
Compromised: Clinton Bush and the CIA -- How the Presidency Was Co-Opted by
the CIA, by Terry Reed and John Cummmings, (1994) SPI Books, 136 West 22nd
St., New York, NY 10011
Defrauding America: Encyclopedia of Secret Operations by the CIA, DEA and
Other Covert Agencies, Third Edition, by Rodney Stich (1998), Diablo Western
Press, PO Box 5, Alamo, CA 94507, 800-247-7389,
http://www.defraudingamerica.com

Dark Alliance: The CIA, the Contras, and the Crack Cocaine Explosion, by
Gary Webb (1998), Seven Stories Press, 140 Watts St., New York, NY 10013


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Uri Dowbenko is the CEO of New Improved Entertainment Corp. He can be
reached by e-mail at [EMAIL PROTECTED]

-30-

from The Laissez Faire City Times, Vol. 3, No. 12, March 22, 1999



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