MIKE RUPERT ON THE CIA USE OF FIREFIGHTING
PLANES FOR
DRUG RUNNING AND GUN RUNNING..
From: "Michael C. Ruppert"
<mruppert@c...>
Date: Thu Jun 27, 2002 5:42 pm
Subject: CIA Diverts Air Tankers From Fire Fighting to Drug
Smuggling - Records Show
As forest fires ravage the nation, a look back at the CIAs
role in controlling aircraft intended to fight these fires might
make all of us think about the ways a corrupt government can
threaten our safety. - MCR
ONLY THE GODFATHER
First Published in the From The Wilderness Newsletter, December
1998. Copyright 1998, 2002 From The Wilderness Publications. All
Rights Reserved. http:///www.copvcia.com. May be recopied or
distributed for non-profit purposes only.
CIA and Subsidiaries Exposed in Court Documents As Active Drug
Smugglers Using Military Aircraft Washed Through Forest Service
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December, 1998 Investigations Latest in Legacy of CIA's Drug
Operations and Corruption of Government
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Two Reagan Era Operators, Convicted in 1997, May Be Only The
First To Hit The Graybar Hotel
The Dark History - In 1976 Senator Frank Church submitted CIA
General Counsel Lawrence Houston to intense grilling over the
Agency's questionable and illegal operation of proprietary air
transport services. At that time, Houston admitted that the CIA
had routinely used the United States Postal Service and the U.S.
Forrest Service as covers for covert activities. Houston admitted
that The Forest Service had been infiltrated by CIA and that CIA
shared an address with the Forrest Service's Air Research and
Development unit on Kent Street in Alexandria, VA.
Houston also admitted that the primary company, responsible for
all of CIA covert air operations, was a holding company named
Pacific Corp. There is an Oregon based corporation known as
Pacificorp which has a multitude of sub entities with varying
versions of the name including Pacific Power & Light,
Pacificorp and Pacific Harbor Capital. In 1993 a Seattle paper
ran a story connecting Pacificorp to CIA's Pacific Corp. Under
oath, before the Senate in 1976, Houston admitted that Pacific
Corp, owned and controlled such CIA notables as Air America,
Southern Air Transport and Intermountain Air. In 1976 the CIA was
ordered to sell Air America and divest itself of all its
holdings.
Since 1973 the CIA had been anticipating this and had moved
quickly to give all of its clandestinely owned aircraft to its
alleged proprietary, Evergreen International based out of Marana
Air Park near Tucson Arizona and McMinville Oregon, near
Portland. Coincidentally, Medford Oregon is the home base of
aircraft broker Roy Reagan. Reagan was convicted in 1997, along
with another man on criminal charges stemming from a scheme to
fraudulently take $80 million worth of airplanes from the U.S.
government and place them in private hands. Reagan was also the
broker for Evergreen according to a lawsuit filed by former CIA
pilot Gary Eitel.
In the late 1970s and early 80s former military and CIA pilot
Eitel, also an attorney, became aware that the CIA was planning
to move a number of Australian C-130s under CIA control into the
private sector and transfer them to Bogot· Colombia. "They
were to be used for drug smuggling," said Eitel. The
attorney for the transfer was a man named John Ford who in later
years represented Pacificorp, Pacific Harbor Capitol and who is
currently said to be senior in-house attorney for Pacific Gas and
Electric in San Francisco (no connection). Several of the
Australian C-130's turned up in the drug trade and were moved
through facilities in Arizona and Mena, Arkansas, among others,
on their way into the cocaine trade.
Eitel has testified in Federal Court and confirmed to From The
Wilderness that CIA was flying drugs into Mena Arkansas as far
back as 1971-5. Eitel began his relations with CIA in 1968 as a
helicopter pilot who was willing to fly risky combat missions in
Vietnam. He has since broken with the Agency and has proven that
by giving sworn testimony both in court and in Congress exposing
illegal CIA operations.
Eitel, who has testified as an expert witness in several civil
and criminal cases, is now representing the U.S. Government as a
private citizen in a civil action charging the Forest Service and
CIA with defrauding the American people of close to $80 million
dollars in the illegal transfer of 35 C-130 aircraft to a number
of private firms. These firms serve as contractors to the Forest
Service. The aircraft transfer program, begun in 1987, was
intended to give private contractors serviceable aircraft in
exchange for worn out ones to help the Forest Service fight fires
as converted air tankers. Instead they have turned up all over
the world on covert operations. A few have been caught full of
drugs as recently as 1996.
THE AIRPLANE
The Lockheed C-130 Hercules first entered the inventory of the
U.S. Air Force in 1955. To this day it remains one of the most
versatile cargo aircraft ever built. The Air Force includes
various versions of the C-130 in its operational plans through
the year 2015. It can fly at cruise speeds of up to 350 mph, is
capable of taking off from short, unimproved runways and can haul
loads of up to 50,000 pounds. It is capable of dropping those
loads from a rear ramp while literally "on the fly".
While new C-130s cost the government around $20-25 million, used
aircraft are generally valued by the GAO at up to 3.5 million
each. A GAO report lists the value of one propeller at $100,000
and one engine at $250,000. It is the perfect drug smuggling
aircraft for long hauls.
Under United States law the C-130 is a military munitions
aircraft which is tightly controlled. It is forbidden to export
one to a foreign country without the prior approval of the State
Department, the Department of Defense, the FAA and the CIA. The
CIA is the only governmental agency with enough clout to secure
permissions from all of the preceding entities.
When used in a fire fighting application as an aerial tanker it
costs $3,300 per flight hour to operate a C-130 delivering 2,000
gallons of retardant as opposed to $1,600 per hour for the same
amount of retardant delivered from a readily available DC 7.
The Scheme
Roy Reagan, no relation to Ronald, has a long and detailed
history of connections to CIA and covert activities. In the 1980s
he was linked both to Evergreen Air and a number of operations
securing surplus helicopters and weapons for Contra support
operations. Evergreen Air itself, during the contra era, has been
documented as handling Contra military supplies, including
weapons, which were loaded onto C-130s in Corpus Christi, Texas.
One of Reagan's business partners, James Patrick Ross, who worked
with Reagan in Reagan Enterprises out of their offices in Chico,
California, was the same mechanic who signed off on a mechanical
inspection of a C-123 named The Fat Lady which was later shot
down over Nicaragua in 1986 while on a CIA mission. Only an
ill-starred cargo handler named Eugene Hasenfus survived the
shoot down. The Fat Lady's death and Hasenfus' survival triggered
the Iran-Contra scandal. The Fat Lady had previously been the
favorite personal airplane of Barry Seal.
Fred A. Fuchs (pronounced Fox) is a former career Forest Service
employee who rose to the rank of Assistant Director. The Forest
Service fired him in 1993 for his role in this scheme. He was
subsequently re-hired and then allowed to retire in 1996. Fuchs
lists his home as Las Lunas, NM which is, coincidentally, the
site of the Mid Valley airport used by Albert Vincent Carone and
his partner James Robert Strauss for CIA drug missions throughout
the eighties and early nineties. Carone and Strauss have been
previously documented in From The Wilderness as being the primary
bag men for Oliver North and George Bush as well as providing
liaison between the CIA and the Mafia for transfers of drugs and
drug profits.
In 1987 Reagan and Fuchs came up with a plan to literally steal
airplanes from the federal government which had a noble sounding
stated purpose. According to documents filed in an Arizona
federal criminal prosecution, which led to the conviction of the
two for fraud and theft in Oct. 1997, they said they were going
to save the nation's forests.
The scheme was simple. All around the country the U.S. Forest
Service had relied for years on the services of private
contractors who owned, operated and maintained air tankers used
to drop water and retardant on forest fires. The problem was that
by 1987 most of the Korean War and WW II vintage aircraft then in
use were wearing out. They were not capable of carrying the loads
necessary and spare parts were hard to find. If Reagan and Fuchs
got their way, which they did, the Forest Service would obtain
surplus C-130s, Navy P-3 Orion anti-sub planes and even jet
powered A-10 Warthogs, used as tank killers during Desert Storm,
and "trade" them to private contractors on a
one-for-one basis and place the aging aircraft in museums. The
government would then hire the planes as needed to fight fires
and the title to the aircraft would pass into private hands.
In reality, according to a lawsuit filed by whistleblower Gary
Eitel under the False Claims Act, (a little known civil war era
statute that allows citizens to file suit on behalf of the
government), Evergreen Air, as a behind the scenes player, was
using Reagan in a scheme to move as many as 50 C-130s into
"private" hands for use in a variety of covert
operations. These included drug smuggling and the direct
enrichment of a number of private contractors including Reagan
and at least five private companies in California, Arizona and
Wyoming. Eitel has been quoted in news sources as saying that one
purpose of the conspiracy was to defraud even the CIA, which
would help obtain the aircraft. However, in an interview with
From The Wilderness he acknowledged that Evergreen Air had card
carrying CIA officers on the property and had admitted being a
CIA contractor. "What happened also was that Reagan was
going to put about one out of every three C-130s back in his own
pocket for his own use."
The Law
From The Wilderness has obtained a copy of a Dec. 1989 memorandum
to Forest Service Associate Chief George Leonard from Assistant
General Counsel Kenneth Cohen, which seems to show that the
Forest Service knew it was having problems with the scheme all
along. Listing requirements from the Federal Property Management
Regulations, Cohen laid out three specific requirements which had
to be met before the transfer could be deemed legal. First the
transfer had to result in a greater return for the government.
That could hardly be the case if a C-130 valued at $3.5 million
were traded for a junk aircraft valued as low as $19,000 which
was inoperable. Second, aircraft and airframe structural
components were specifically prohibited from transfer. Third, the
items to be exchanged could not have been acquired for the
purpose of transfer and they had to have been used by the Forest
Service for a period of one year before being transferred out of
Forest Service inventory.
In spite of the fact that none of the above conditions were met
the transfers continued under the control of Fuchs and Reagan
through approximately 1989 when the last of the C-130's were
placed in the hands of five private air contractors. Out of 35
aircraft transferred into private hands twenty-eight were
actually re-titled. Some changed hands several times before
turning up in the control of drug dealers in Panama and Mexico.
Reagan and Fuchs tried to justify their actions by stating that
the C-130s, obtained from Air Force storage facilities and active
Air Reserve and National Guard units were historic planes
themselves and obsolete. That is hard to justify since the Air
Force currently has the C-130 slated for active duty until the
year 2015.
Last year, in the Tucson criminal trial of Reagan and Fuchs,
which was prompted by Eitel's 1994 lawsuit, three Air Force
generals testified that when they approved of the transfer to the
Forest Service they believed the titles would remain with the
Forest Service as they approved the transfer out of military
inventory."
Did the Forest Service know or suspect that the planes, under CIA
control, might be used for drug dealing? In the same memorandum
Kenneth Cohen states, "Apparently, DoD [Department of
Defense] thinks that by having the Forest Service as the
intermediary, if any future aircraft are used in drug smuggling,
the Forest Service and not DoD will suffer the adverse
publicity."
He was right.
The Good, The Bad and The Private Contractors
All of the C-130s were moved out into private hands passing
through Evergreen facilities at Marana Airpark and through
Davis-Montham Air Force base in Tucson right next door. The first
of the C-130s reached private hands and titles were transferred
in 1987. The five selected companies were Hemet Valley Flying
Service in Riverside County, California (which received the first
seven and showed Reagan as a signatory on one of its contracts);
Hawkins and Powers of Greybull, Wyoming; TBM of Tulare,
California; Aero-Union of Chico, California (which shared office
space with one of Reagan's shell companies where Contra mechanic
Ross worked) and T&G aviation of Chandler, Arizona. T&G
got in on the act after hearing of the bonanza and complaining to
Arizona Senators De Concini and McCain. T&G is owned by
admitted former Air America and CIA pilot Woody Grantham.
According to Eitel, Aero-Union has been documented as a CIA
contractor as far back as the Bay of Pigs invasion in 1961 when
it served as a cover for B-26 pilots who were prevented from
flying air support missions for the invasion. Also according to
Eitel, the very first C-130 delivered into private hands was
flown into Hemet Valley by James Patrick Ross, the CIA
pilot-mechanic who had originally come to the U.S. as a part of
the Australian C-130 transfer in the mid 1980s and who had
serviced Barry Seal's C-123.
According to documents filed in the civil lawsuit by Eitel, Roy
Reagan wasn't particularly happy with Grantham's T&G muscling
in on the deal but he later approached Grantham with a sweetened
offer that if he obtained extra C-130s for T&G, he would
receive a cash kickback and arrange the financing through a
client's company, Pacific Harbor Capital. Grantham agreed.
"Reagan also told Grantham he would arrange several covert
missions to be flown by T&G for Iran, Iraq and Kuwait as a
part of the deal," said Eitel.
The paper trail is black-hole dense but it is certain that
T&G received at least three C-130s from Hemet Valley. Others
it obtained directly from Reagan and other sources. After a
series of court battles in California between Hemet Valley and
financier Larry Wurth, three C-130s were transferred to Wurth and
then to T&G. Remember that Roy Reagan showed up as a signing
officer on one of Hemet Valley's contracts acknowledging receipt
of the planes. Approximately one fourth of the 35 planes given
over into private hands were eventually stripped for (free)
parts.
The record of the next ten years is as littered with lawsuits and
airplane transfers, sometimes between the various contractors, as
the killing fields of Cambodia were littered with Pol Pot's
murder victims. An entire book would be needed to document the
suits between firms like James Venable of Hemet Valley and Wurth
which saw planes held hostage and traded like helpless children
in a brutal custody battle which further clouded the issue of
ownership. The suits and custody battles may have been the actual
intention of CIA when it suspected that the illegal transfers
might be discovered, challenged and ordered corrected. It made it
all the harder for the Forest Service to recover the planes when
it got caught with it pants down. But in almost every case when
planes changed hands they went back through Evergreen first.
Of a certainty, the 35 C-130s, which actually changed hands in
the program, wound up doing many other things than fighting fires
on behalf of the Forest Service. They have been documented on
covert missions in France, Spain, Angola, South Africa, Central
America, and even Kuwait during Desert Storm. In June 1991 one of
Roy Reagan's C-130s crashed on a CIA mission in Angola killing
the nephew of Rep Curt Weldon, R-Pa who later participated in
hearings looking into the program.
"All of the contractors had unregulated air fields in remote
places that were not usually subject to any kind of Customs
inspections. All of the contractors were able to come and go
virtually undetected so they could have been doing anything. It
was an ideal cover both for drug smuggling and a variety of
covert operations," Eitel observed.
In 1994, as he was investigating his lawsuit, Eitel was
researching various aspects of the Forest Service transfer at the
Department of Justice. He was allowed to view classified
materials relevant to the investigation. "I saw a three ring
folder full of State Department Export certificates for C-130 and
P 3 aircraft allowing them to leave the U.S. for foreign
destinations. I logged 36 of the certificates and noted that at
least one was going to Panama for a company called Trans Latin
Air and at least one was going to a company named Aero Postale de
Mexico. Both aircraft were being sent from T&G.
"They were Forest Service aircraft", he added.
"And what caught my attention was the fact that the
certificates were signed by an attorney named John Ford. Ford was
known to me as a CIA Australian attorney involved in the C-130s
transferred to Bogot· in the 70s and 80s and he was also
connected to C-130s moved through Central America which came to
the attention of U.S. Ambassador to Costa Rica, Louis Tambs
during the Contra war. At the time State had protested the
transfer because of possible drug connections."
[NOTE: Louis Tambs was the same U.S. Ambassador connected to the
revelations arising from the La Penca bombing in Nicaragua and an
alleged plot by the CIA to murder Tambs using the services of
CIA/Oliver North asset John Hull and blame it on the
Sandinistas.]
"I questioned DoJ about the drug links and was assured that
the transfers were above board and not drug related," Eitel
continued. "I accepted their explanation for a while but in
1996 I did a data base search on a major drug trafficker named
Luis Carlos Herrera-Lizcano who was John Ford's partner way back
to the original C-130 transfers out of Australia in 83-84.
Herrera was the owner and CEO of Trans Latin Air and in 1994 he
was indicted by the U.S. Attorney in Chicago for using C-130s to
move billions of dollars of cocaine into the U.S."
Herrera entered into a plea agreement in 1996 and admitted to
having trafficked in drugs since the early and mid eighties.
According to both American and Mexican newspaper accounts, as
well as records in federal court, Herrera's aircraft came from
T&G and Woody Grantham.
The Trans Latin Air investigation led to an investigation of Aero
Postale de Mexico. In April 1998, stories in the Mexican paper La
Reforma reported that the Mexican Attorney General had indicted
three officials of the private freight hauling company Aero
Postale de Mexico which routinely delivered mail and other goods
throughout Latin and Central America on charges that they had
provided aircraft to the drug cartel headed by the Arellano Felix
brothers. That investigation had commenced in 1997 and Aero
Postale planes were reportedly hauling multi-thousand kilo loads
of cocaine during the period. One of the C-130s was impounded at
the Mexico City airport. Purchase of the aircraft was financed by
Mexican banker Carlos Cabal, who was assured repayment of the
loans by the U.S. Import-Export Bank. It is impossible to believe
CIA would not have noticed such a transaction. Woody Grantham and
T&G sold the planes to Aero Postale in 1993 at the same time
he sold planes to Trans Latin Air.
Riverside Press-Enterprise veteran reporter Dave Hendrix, who has
written many stories on the Forest Service and the C-130s (and
who contributed greatly to the research for this article)
questioned Grantham about the relationship. Grantham denied any
knowledge of wrongdoing and any knowledge of drugs. However, Gary
Eitel in his role as a federal independent counsel for the civil
suit against the contractors notes a discrepancy in Grantham's
statements. "Grantham tried to hide the C-130s in 1993 when
he learned that the Forest Service was going to be forced to take
them back," Eitel said. "He filed bankruptcy, hid the
planes and then tried to sell them to Herrera at Trans Latin Air.
The planes had already been leased to Trans Latin since 1990. He
states that he had no further contact or control over the planes
after that. Yet Herrera admitted at his sentencing that he had
been dealing drugs uninterrupted at Trans Latin from 1982 to
1994. Grantham's claims that he had checked this out with DEA
don't bear close scrutiny at all.
"And Grantham used the same law firm, Lewis and Roca of
Tucson and Phoenix, to file bankruptcy and transfer the planes to
Herrera which had handled the entire transfer of Air America
assets to Evergreen back in 1976." Asked how credible
Grantham's denial of drug involvement was, Eitel replied,
"It stinks."
Grantham's history is littered with CIA wreckage. According to
Eitel, "When Grantham wanted to leave Arizona undetected he
leased hangar space at an Indian reservation where Customs didn't
operate. He frequently flew into Area 51 and on his trips back
from Latin America he would land at El Toro Marine Air Station in
California.
Death of a Hero - The Murder of Jim Sabow
Marine Col. Jim Sabow was murdered at his home on the El Toro
Marine Air Station in January 1991. His death, ruled a suicide by
the Navy and the Marine Corps, has left a brave family virtually
destroyed. As opposed to the official military account that
Sabow, despondent over pending disciplinary actions for minor
offenses committed suicide, a lingering and persistent body of
evidence indicates that Jim Sabow was murdered because he caught
the CIA flying drugs onto a base where he was Chief of Air
Operations. Much of the evidence indicates that the cocaine
arrived on the same C-130s which had been given to the Forest
Service.
In a 1993 segment of her news program Eye to Eye, Connie Chung
covered the Sabow death in detail and showed evidence of the
murder by introducing statements from Sabow's brother, a medical
doctor, that Sabow had been unconscious and aspirating blood for
minutes before a shotgun was rammed so far down his throat that
it sheared off the uvula. In that same segment, veteran Air
America and CIA pilot Tosh Plumley stated that he flew loads of
cocaine as large as 2,000 kilos onto El Toro in the years and
months prior to Sabow's death - for the CIA. Plumley stated
clearly that he was flying C-130s operated by the Forest Service
and their contractors. In later conversations with this writer
Plumley admitted that he routinely flew loads as large as 2,500
kilos onto military installations in California and Arizona for
the CIA.
Both Eitel and veteran investigator Gene Wheaton, who still works
for the Sabow family which has a pending and oft delayed lawsuit
pending in San Diego for next year, believe that the C-130s
described in this story are the same ones which led to Jim
Sabow's murder. Wheaton, a retired Warrant Officer from Army CID,
has participated in and led investigations ranging from the
Christic Institute lawsuit of 1987 to the very suspicious crash
in Gander, Newfoundland of an Arrow Air flight in 1985 which took
the lives of more than 250 members of the 101st Airborne
Division. Arrow Air was, according to Wheaton, "One of Ollie
North's favorite airlines." He was also one of the first
investigators to uncover CIA drug smuggling in Mena, AK and is
today working with Sabow attorney Daniel Sheehan, formerly of the
Christic Institute, on the Sabow case. He has also conducted
extensive investigations of the Forest Service C-130s and worked
with Eitel on the case.
"The Marines were supposed to keep flight refueling records
of all non-military flights in transit on through the base at El
Toro," said Wheaton. "Those are government records and
would have shown that the same Forest Service aircraft passed
through the base at the same time that Jim started complaining to
his superiors about the drugs. The base is closed now but the
records should have been kept. They are government
documents."
Wheaton added, "They have all been destroyed."
Frogmen, Russoniello and
Gary Webb?!
In his series of articles for The San Jose Mercury News entitled
The Dark Alliance and in his brilliant book of the same name,
author Gary Webb described the interference of the CIA in the
infamous "Frogman" cocaine case of 1983. The U.S.
attorney, a Reagan appointee, who handled the case and ultimately
returned more than $36,000 in seized drug money to the CIA
connected traffickers arrested in San Francisco, was Joseph
Russoniello. As disclosed in Webb's book and documented in Volume
I of the CIA Inspector General's report, the CIA had contacted
Russoniello in an effort to contain any adverse publicity linking
the arrested traffickers to the Agency. In the Agency's own cable
traffic CIA stated that Russoniello was, "most deferential
to our interests."
Russoniello left the Department of Justice in the late 1980s and
entered private practice. In 1994 he became the attorney of
record for several of the fourteen defendants in the civil suit
filed by Gary Eitel - including Aero-Union of Chico California,
Reagan's home base and T&G. For the record Stuart Gerson,
former Acting Attorney General of Waco fame, represented Roy
Reagan in the civil fraud case. According to Eitel, "After a
series of articles in Oregon newspapers in 1997, Russoniello
withdrew from the case because of the adverse publicity linking
him to Webb's stories."
Joseph Russoniello is now a senior corporate attorney for Pacific
Gas and Electric in San Francisco. He is at the same address and
shares the same complex of offices as attorney John Ford.
Clanging Jail Bars and Dangling Press Releases
The Forest Service had been backed into a position by the Eitel
lawsuit and the Arizona fraud trial of Reagan and Fuchs where it
had to take action. In April 1998 U.S. District Court Judge
William Browning sentenced Roy Reagan to 30 months and Fred Fuchs
to 24 months in a federal penitentiary for their roles in
defrauding the government. Eitel's civil suit, which has been
joined by the Department of Justice, is still alive but in early
1997 Judge Browning issued a court order postponing the suit
stating that the interests of National Security outweighed the
defendants' right to a speedy trial.
As a result of public pressure the Forest Service had begun to
retrieve some of the aircraft in 1995-6. Four of those had been
totally stripped, their remaining airframes and components being
auctioned out at a total of $725,000 by the Forest Service under
the direction of Assistant Director Ron Hooper who had been
involved with the program since its inception. Hooper has made no
official objection of the fact that airplanes, worth $12 to 15
million, illegally taken from the government, had been stripped
of $11 million in parts. The low bidder was co-conspirator
Hawkins and Powers and the high bidders, which received the
aircraft hulks, were the alleged co-conspirators TBM and
Aero-Union.
On December 2, 1998 Hooper gave an interview to the Associated
Press. Whereas Hooper had, in previous audits, declared the
C-130s to be worth as little as $10,000 to $20,000 dollars
apiece, he now acknowledged their value at $2-3 million each. The
AP story indicated that Hooper and the Forest Service were moving
swiftly to secure the immediate return of all 11 outstanding
operable aircraft and that this "confiscation" would
not impair the nation's fire fighting capabilities. This was true
even though the Forest Service, according to Hooper, didn't need
and couldn't operate the planes.
Apparently, Hooper hoped that no one would notice the fact that
just a day earlier, on December 1, 1998, he had posted a press
release on the Forest Service web site which stated, "To
ensure that we have the air support necessary to aggressively
manage wildfires, we have successfully completed negotiations on
a new three-year National Airtanker Contract covering 1999
through 2001.
"The contract provides for continued operations as ownership
is being resolved and we are confident that the issues
surrounding the assertion of aircraft [ownership] can be worked
out with the contractors successfully."
"What Hooper was saying", says Eitel, "is that he
had just awarded paying contracts to the same contractors who had
defrauded the government in the first place. His statements to AP
make it look as though he was getting tough while he admits, the
day before, that he is still intending to leave the planes in
private hands and reward the wrongdoers."
Eitel filed complaints with the Justice Department on December 4
and he has told From The Wilderness that, as of December 14, both
the Department of Justice and the Department of Defense now have
active investigations of Ron Hooper.
A spokesman for the Department of Defense would neither confirm
nor deny the existence of an investigation of Hooper. As of press
time the Department Justice, Office of Professional
Responsibility has not returned a call asking for verification.
Forest Service spokesman Alan Polk told From The Wilderness,
"AP screwed their story up. The contractors were always
going to keep the planes while title remained in Forest Service
hands. We are now making sure that we know where the planes are,
what they are being used for and that they are not leaving the
country while ownership questions are resolved." Polk added
that he was unaware of any criminal investigations of Hooper.
A Tragic Footnote
In August 1994 14 firefighters burned to death in an out of
control forest fire in Colorado. The Federal Occupational Safety
and Health Administration subsequently cited the Forest Service
for "inadequate use of aviation resources." Where were
all the tankers? According to Eitel they were all out of the
country doing anything but fighting fires.
click image to enlarge
----------
SOURCES: The Riverside Press-Enterprise, AP, The Arizona
Republic, La Reforma, The Dark Alliance by Gary Webb and the U.S.
Forest Service
SPECIAL THANKS:
To Dave Hendrix of the Riverside Press-Enterprise. You are a true
bulldog and a reporter of courage and tenacity.
SUGGESTED READING: To understand how the CIA has for decades
infiltrated various agencies of the United States Government,
stolen property and subverted the will of Congress there is one
book which is on my "must read" list. That book is The
Secret Team - The CIA and its Allies in Control of the United
States and the World by L. Fletcher Prouty (1973, 1992 &
1997). The book is extremely hard to find but worth every ounce
of effort. You can download a copy at
www.ratical.org/ratville/JFK/ST.
BTW>> dave ratcliffe of ratical.org is one of my dearest
friends.. and his i remember talking with him when he went back
to DC to interview Fletcher Prouty.. Wio
end