-Caveat Lector-

an excerpt from:
The Great Heroin Coup - Drugs, Intelligence, & International Fascism
Henrik Kruger
Jerry Meldon, Translator
South End Press©1980
Box 68 Astor Station
Boston, MA 02123
ISBN 0-89608-0319-5
240pps - one edition - out-of-print
Orginally published in Danish
Smukke Serge og Heroien
Bogan 1976
--[15]--

FIFTEEN
THE CUBANS OF FLORIDA

Meyer Lansky, the Syndicate's financial wizard and its chairman from around
1947, began building his Cuban empire in the early forties. When free
elections chased his close friend and dictator Fulgencio Batista from office
in 1944, Lansky also left the island, entrusting his empire to the
Trafficante family headed by Santo, Sr. Lansky and Batista settled in
Hollywood, Florida, just north of Miami. Before long, Lansky was running an
illegal casino empire on the coast, and in 1947 he eliminated Bugsy Siegel
and moved into Las Vegas.

All the while Lansky expanded the narcotics trade founded by Lucky Luciano.
The older Mafia dons deemed the trade taboo, so Lansky's wing of the
Syndicate cornered the market, with Trafficante's eldest son, Santo, Jr.,
overseeing the heroin traffic.[1]

When Florida's illegal casinos were shut down in 1950, Lansky promoted
Batista's return to power in Cuba. The drive bore fruit in 1952. With
Trafficante, Sr.'s death in 1954, Santo, Jr. became Lansky's right-hand man
and manager of his Cuban interests. Until then, he had managed the Sans Souci
Casino, a base for running Havana's tourist trade and keeping tabs on heroin
shipments from Marseilles to New York via Florida and Cuba.[2]

Trafficante, Jr. has proven more talented than his father. Extraordinarily
intelligent and energetic, he has handled the most acute crises with detached
calm. Luciano characterized him as ". . a guy who always managed to hug the
background, but he is rough and reliable. In fact, he's one of the few guys
in the whole country that Meyer Lansky would never tangle with."[3]

In no time, Trafficante, Jr. ingratiated himself with dictator Batista, while
remaining loyal to Lansky, who appointed him manager of his own Florida
interests in addition to those in Cuba. Lansky needed to spend increasing
amounts of time in New York, between travels to Las Vegas, Rome, Marseilles,
Beirut, and Geneva.

Many envied Lansky's ever-increasing power and wealth, among them Murder,
Inc. chairman of the board Albert Anastasia. In 1957 the latter tried
enlisting Trafficante's aid in removing Lansky from the Havana scene. It was
one of Anastasia's last moves. Trafficante arranged a "friendly" meeting in
New York's Sheraton Hotel. An hour after Trafficante had checked out,
Anastasia was murdered in the hotel's barber shop, shaving cream still on his
face.[4]

According to Peter Dale Scott, "certain U.S. business interests collaborated
with the narcotics-linked American Mafia in Cuba-as they did with similar
networks in China and later in Vietnam -for the Mafia supplied the necessary
local intelligence, cash and muscle against the threat of communist
takeover.[5] As Scott wrote those words in 1973, Cuban-Americans recruited by
the CIA were suspected by federal and city authorities to be "involved in
everything from narcotics to extortion rackets and bombings."[6] The Church
committee and other Senate and law enforcement reports would confirm these
allegations.

Again we observe the Cuba/ Southeast Asia/ CIA triangle, and it's no secret
who managed the Cuban side. There Trafficante, Jr. hired the fast-learning
natives, while dictator Batista's men made the empire safe for organized
crime, often appearing more loyal to Trafficante than to Batista himself. In
return the Cubans learned the business.

With Fidel Castro's 1 January 1959 ouster of Batista, Lansky and Trafficante
were in trouble. Though they were expelled from their Cuban kingdom, nearly a
year elapsed before the Syndicate departed and the casinos were closed. Along
with 'Trafficante and Lansky, half a million Cubans left the island in the
years following Castro's takeover. Some 100,000 settled in the New York City
area, especially Manhattan's Washington Heights and New Jersey's Hudson
County. Another 100,000 headed to Spain, others to Latin America, and a
quarter of a million made their new home in Florida, the site of
Trafficante's new headquarters.

Out of the Trafficante-trained corps of Cuban officers, security staffers and
politicians, a Cuban Mafia emerged under the mobster's control. It
specialized in narcotics, first Latin American cocaine, then Marseilles
heroin. With his Cubans Trafficante also grabbed control of La Bolita, the
numbers game that took Florida by storm and became a Syndicate gold mine.[7]

Besides the Cubans, who comprised the main wing of his organization,
Trafficante also worked closely with the non-Italian Harlan Blackburn mob, a
break with Mafia tradition.[8] But the core of the Trafficante family
remained Italian, and the Italians also dealt in drugs. In 1960 his man
Benedetto "Beni the Cringe" Indiviglio negotiated the opening of a narcotics
route with Jacques I'Americain, the representative of Corsican boss Joseph
Orsini.[9] Benedetto and his brothers Romano, Arnold, Charles and Frederick
eventually ran Trafficante's Montreal-bound smuggling network, and were later
joined by the notorious New York wholesaler Louis Cirillo.[10]

Trafficante settled in Tampa, but continued to run some of his activities
from Jimmy Hoffa's Teamster Local 320 in Miami. Traffiicante and David Yaras
of Sam Giancana's Chicago mob were instrumental in founding Local 320, which,
according to the McClellan hearings, was a front for Syndicate narcotics
activities.[11]

After losing his Havana paradise, far-sighted Meyer Lansky used straw men to
buy up much of Grand Bahama Island and erected a new gambling center around
the city of Nassau. But though Lansky and Trafficante each survived in style,
neither they nor the Cuban exiles relinquished hope of a return to Cuba.
Moreover, they were not alone in dreaming of overthrowing Castro. The CIA in
particular let its imagination run wild to this end. Its covert operations
expert, General Edward Lansdale, seriously planned to send a submarine to the
shore outside Havana, where it would create an inferno of light. At the same
time, Cuba-based agents would warn the religious natives of the second coming
of Christ and the Savior's distaste for Fidel Castro. However, "Elimination
by Illumination" was shelved in favor of less fantastic suggestions for
Castro's assassination. The latter brought together the CIA, Cuban exiles,
and the Syndicate in the person of Santo Trafficante.

In 1960 the CIA asked its contract agent Robert Maheu to contact the mobster
John Roselli. Roselli introduced Maheu to Trafficante and Sam Giancana, the
Chicago capo, and the strange bedfellows arranged an attempt on the life of
Castro.[12] The agency had previously stationed an agent on Cuba who was to
flash the green light when assassination opportunities arose. He was Frank
Angelo Fiorini, a one-time smuggler of weapons to Castro's revolutionary
army, to whom Castro had entrusted the liquidation of the gambling
casinos.[13]

Through the latter assignment Fiorini had made the acquaintance of
Trafficante.

In February 1961 Maheu, `Trafficante and Roselli met at Miami's Fountainebleu
Hotel. There Maheu gave the hoods untraceable poison capsules for delivery to
a Cuban exile connected with the Trafficante mob.[14] 0ther Cubans were to
smuggle them to the island and poison Castro; but the attempt failed.
Trafficante engineered more attempts, including one in September 1962,[15]
and his organization also provided Cubans for the Bay of Pigs invasion.[16]

Never before had there existed a more remarkable, fanatical group of
conspirators than that assembled to create, finance, and train the Bay of
Pigs invasion force. The top CIA figures were Lansdale protege Napoleon
Valeriano, the mysterious Frank Bender, and E. Howard Hunt, who was himself
involved in at least one of the attempts on Fidel Castro's life. They were
supported by a small army of CIA operatives from four of its Miami cover
firms.[17]

Runner-up to Hunt for the Most Intriguing CIA Conspirator award is Bender, a
German refugee whose true identity remains a matter of speculation. Some
contend that he had been an agent of the West German Gehlen espionage network
under the name Drecher; others contend it was Droller.[18] The former
security chief for Dominican Republic dictator Rafael Trujillo claims that
Bender was in fact one Fritz Swend, a Gehlen collaborator and leader of
ex-Nazis in Peru. Prior to the Bay of Pigs invasion Swend was allegedly the
CIA's man in the Dominican Republic as Don Frederico. There he purportedly
planned the invasion along with mobster Frank Costello and exCuban dictator
Batista.[19]

The invasion's moral and financial supporters included many leading China
Lobbyists. Most important was the multi-millionaire behind Claire Chennault's
Flying Tigers, William Pawley.[20] Pawley had been involved in the CIA's 1954
overthrow of Guatemala's democratically elected Arbenz regime. Like Lansky
and Trafficante, Pawley had had a big stake in Cuba. Prior to Castro's
takeover he had owned the Havana bus system and sugar refineries. He met with
President Eisenhower several times in 1959 to persuade the president to
assist Cuban exiles in overthrowing Castro. Pawley then helped the CIA
recruit anti-Castro Cubans.[21]

The key Cuban exile conspirators in the Bay of Pigs operation and the ensuing
attacks on Cuba and Castro included Manuel Artime, Orlando Bosch, Felipe de
Diego, and Rolando Martinez -the first a close -friend of Howard Hunt's, the
last two future Watergate burglars. The name of Bosch was to become
synonymous with terrorism.

Distinguishing the noncriminal element among the Bay of Pigs' anti-Castro
Cubans is no easy matter, since so many emerged from Trafficante's Cuban
Mafia. According to agents of the BNDD, nearly 10 percent of the 1500-man
force had been or eventually were arrested for narcotics violations.[22] Its
recruiters included Syndicate gangsters like Richard Cain, the former Chicago
policeman who became a lieutenant for Sam Giancana.

The Dominican Republic, a focal point in the invasion scheme, also became a
transit point for Trafficante's narcotics traffic. Furthermore, the CIA,
according to agents of the BNDD, helped organize the drug route by providing
IDs and speedboats to former Batista officers in the Dominican Republic in
charge of narcotics shipments to Florida.[23]

It is of paramount importance to note the close CIA cooperation with
Trafficante's Cuban Mafia, whose overriding source of income was the
smuggling of drugs.

One of Trafficante's personal CIA contacts for the Bay of Pigs was Frank
Fiorini, Castro's liquidator of Mob casinos, who now preferred the name Frank
Sturgis.[24] In late 1960 Sturgis ran the Miami-based International
Anti-Communist Brigade (IACB), said to be financed by the Syndicate.[25]
According to Richard Whattley, a brigade member hired for the invasion,
"Trafficante would order Sturgis to move his men and he'd do it. Our ultimate
conclusion was that Trafficante was our backer. He was our money man."[26]

Another detail from Sturgis's past is especially interesting in light of
Frank Bender's alleged ties to the Gehlen organization. For a period in the
early fifties Sturgis was involved in espionage activities in Berlin, serving
as a courier between various nations' intelligence agencies, and was thereby
inevitably in contact with the Gehlen network.[27]

The Bay of Pigs invasion was, of course, a fiasco. But that hardly stopped
the CIA, the Syndicate, or their Cuban exile troops. Wheels were soon turning
on new assassination attempts under CIA agent William Harvey, who again
collaborated with the underworld. Within months, the Miami CIA station
JM/Wave was again in full swing. It sponsored a series of hit-and-run attacks
on strategic Cuban targets that spanned three years and involved greater
manpower and expenditures than the Bay of Pigs invasion itself.

To head the JM/Wave station, the CIA chose one of its up-and-coming agents,
the thirty-four year old Theodore Shackley, who came direct from Berlin. His
closest Cuban exile associates were Joaquin Sangenis and Rolando (Watergate
burglary) Martinez.[28] Some 300 agents and 4-6000 Cuban exile operatives
took part in the actions of JM/Wave. As later revealed, one of its last
operations was closed down because one of its aircraft was caught smuggling
narcotics into the United States.[29]

Shackley is another contender for the Most Intriguing CIA Conspirator award.
After years of collaboration with Trafficante organization Cubans, he and
part of his Miami staff were transferred to Laos,[30] where he joined Lucien
Conein.[31] There they helped organize the CIA's secret Meo tribesmen army,
the second such army drummed up by Shackley that was up to its ears in the
drug traffic.

Vientiane, where Shackley was the station chief, became the new center of the
heroin trade. Later he ran the station in Saigon, where the traffic flowed
under the profiteering administration of Premier Nguyen Cao Ky. When the
agency prepared its coup against the Chilean President Salvador Allende,
Shackley was its chief of covert operations in the Western Hemisphere. When
William Colby became the director of the CIA in 1973, Shackley took over his
job as chief of covert operations in the Far East. Eventually he was booted
out of the agency as part of the shakeup ordered by its current director
Stansfield Turner.[32]

In the JM/Wave period a great expansion in China Lobby-Traffiicante-Cuban
exile-CIA connections occurred. William Pawley financed a mysterious summer
1963 boat raid against Cuba in his own yacht, the Flying Tiger II. Besides
Pawley himself, the crew included mafioso John Martino, who had operated
roulette wheels in one of Trafficante's Havana casinos; CIA agents code-named
Rip, Mike, and Ken; the ubiquitous Rolando Martinez; and a dozen other Cuban
exiles led by Eddie Bayo and Eduardo Perez, many of whom eventually
disappeared mysteriously.[33] Loren Hall, another former Trafficante casino
employee, claimed that both his boss and Sam Giancana had helped plan the
raid.[34] CIaire Boothe Luce, a queenpin of the China Lobby, testified during
Senate hearings on the CIA that she had financed an exile gunboat raid on
Cuba after JFK had ordered the agency to halt such raids.

I will not wander deeply into the quagmire of circumstances surrounding the
murder of President John F. Kennedy. However, it is worth repeating a few
lines from the final report of the House Select Committee on Assassinations:
"The Committee's extensive investigation led to the conclusion that the most
likely family bosses of organized crime to have participated in such a
unilateral assassination plan were Carlos Marcello and Santo Trafficante."[35]

Of the many connections between Trafficante and Dallas the most important are
his association with Jack Ruby, who visited him in a Havana prison in 1959;
his statement to Cuban exile financier Jose Aleman that Kennedy "is going to
be hit"; and his close association with fellow Mafia capo Carlos Marcello.
The Cuban exiles, drug racketeers, and the CIA had no shortage of
anti-Kennedy motives, which were all the more intensified as the three forces
gradually welded together.

The anti-Cuba actions continued well into 1965, at which time a crucial
three-year turnabout for the Lansky Syndicate began. Its money had been
invested in the unsuccessful attempts at toppling Castro and in its new
casino complex in Nassau, which was threatened by local antigambling forces.
So when Southeast Asia began emerging as a new heroin export center, Lansky
sent his financial expert John Pullman to check out the opportunities for
investment. Close on his heels went Frank Furci, the son of a Trafficante
lieutenant.[36]

>From 1968 on, Trafficante's Cubans were in effective control of the traffic
in heroin and cocaine throughout the United States.[37] The Florida capo's
only gangland partner of significance was the Cotroni family in Montreal.

Trafficante carried out his business in a cool and collected manner. Never
out of line with the national Syndicate, he enjoyed relative anonymity while
other, less prominent gangsters wrote their names in history with blood. His
organization was so airtight that when narcotics investigators finally
realized how big a fish he was, they had to admit he was untouchable. The
BNDD tried nabbing him in its 1969-70 Operation Eagle, then the most
extensive action ever directed against a single narcotics network. The Bureau
arrested over 120 traffickers, wholesalers, and pushers, but made no real
dent. Within days, well-trained Cubans moved into the vacated slots.[38]

To the BNDD's surprise, a very large number of those arrested in Operation
Eagle were CIA-trained veterans of the Bay of Pigs and Operation 40. Among
them were Juan Cesar Restoy, a former Cuban senator under Batista, Allen Eric
Rudd-Marrero, a pilot, and Mario Escandar.[39] Their fates were most unusual.
Escandar and Restoy, alleged leaders of the narcotics network, were arrested
in June 1970 but fled from Miami City Jail in August. Escandar turned himself
in, but was released soon afterward when it was established that Attorney
General John Mitchell had neglected to sign the authorization for the wiretap
that incriminated Escandar. He returned to narcotics and was arrested in 1978
for kidnapping, a crime punishable by life, but for which he got only six
months.[40] As this book went to press the FBI was investigating Escandar's
relationship with the Dade County (Miami) police force.

Juan Restoy, on the other hand, turned to blackmail. He threatened to expose
a close friend of President Nixon's as a narcotics trafficker, if not given
his freedom and $350,000.[41] Restoy was shot and killed by narcotics agents,
as was Rudd-Marrero.

In late 1970, in the wake of Operation Eagle, Bay of Pigs veteran Guillermo
Hernandez-Cartaya set up the World Finance Corporation (WFC), a large company
alleged to be a conduit for Traffiicante investments and for the income from
his narcotics activities.[42] Duney PerezAlamo, a CIA-trained explosives
expert involved with several Cuban exile terrorist groups, was a building
manager for the WFC. Juan Romanach, a close Trafficante associate, was a WFC
bank director.[43] As Hank Messick put it:

"Escandar, of course, was a friend of Hernandez-Cartaya, who was a friend of
Dick Fincher, who was a friend of Bebe Rebozo, who was a friend of Richard
Nixon, who once told John Dean he could get a million dollars in cash.[44]

In 1968 Trafficante himself went on an extended business trip to the Far
East, beginning in Hong Kong, where he had located his emissary Frank Furci
.[45] After a slow 1965-66 start, Furci had made great headway. Through his
own Maradem, Ltd. he had cornered the market on Saigon's night spots catering
to GIs.[46] He even ran officer and soldier mess halls, and he had set up a
chain of heroin labs in Hong Kong to serve the GI market.

>From Hong Kong, Trafficante journeyed to Saigon, registering at the
Continental Palace hotel owned by the Corsican Franchini family. His last
stop was in Singapore, where he contacted a branch of the splintered Chinese
Mafia.

Several doors had to be opened to gain access to the opium treasure. The
first led to the CIA-controlled&iwan regime, the second to the Golden
Triangle's KMT Chinese and Laotian Meo tribesmen. The latter door had already
been opened by the CIA. Still another led to the Triads (Chinese gangster
organizations) in Hong Kong. Traffiicante opened that door with the help of
Furci, who gave him access to Southeast Asia's overseas Chinese. There was no
way around the Nationalist Chinese suppliers and middle men. The world had
long been told that the narcotics came from Red China, but the facts belied
that propaganda claim.[47]

Trafficante liked what he saw in his Southeast Asian tour. With enough
trained chemists, his Mob could be supplied with heroin at a fraction of what
it was then paying out to the Corsicans. But first the smuggling networks had
to be worked out and the Corsicans had to be eliminated.

So Santo Traffiicante began his war against the Corsicans.[48] His major foe,
Auguste Ricord in Paraguay, wasn't about to roll over and die. Ricord got
hold of his own Hong Kong connection, Ng Sik-ho,[49] also known as "Limpy
Ho," a major Nationalist Chinese heroin smuggler well-connected to the Taiwan
regime.[50] After Ricord's emissaries had travelled twice in 1970 to Japan,
where they met with Mr. Ho,[51] heroin shipments began going to Paraguay via,
among other transit points, Chile. 62 When in 1972 Ricord was extradited to
the U.S., Limpy Ho tried establishing his own smuggling route to the U.S. via
Vancouver. But that failed when two of his lieutenants, Sammy Cho and Chang
Yu Ching, were arrested in the U.S. with fifty pounds of pure heroin.

By early 1970, Southeast Asian-produced heroin was ready to be tested on GI
guinea pigs. Meyer Lansky, facing charges of business illegalities, turned
over control to Trafficante and fled to Israel. On July 4 Lansky narcotics
associates reportedly made their investment plans for Southeast Asia at a
twelve-day meeting with representatives of several Mafia families at the
Hotel Sole in Palermo, Sicily.[53]

Weeks later the Corsican Mafia contemplated counter-moves in a meeting at
Philippe Franchini's suite in Saigon's Continental Palace Hotel. Turkish
opium production was already waning and could no longer be relied upon.
Unrest in the Middle East was destabilizing the production of morphine base.
The Corsicans had to do something to regain control over their longtime
Southeast Asian domain, a task made all but impossible by the U.S. presence.
But the Corsicans still

had large stocks of morphine, their Marseilles labs, and a smoothly
functioning smuggling network. Trafficante and company could agree that if
the Corsicans were to be neutralized, it had to be done totally and
effectively. That was a job for President Nixon and his White House staff,
the BNDD/White House Death Squad, and the Central Intelligence Agency.

pps. 141-152

--[Notes]--

1. Santo Trafficante, Jr.'s first important appearance in his role as
overseer of the heroin traffic might have been at a 1947 summit in Havana
reportedly attended by Auguste Ricord, alias Lucien Dargelles, the French
Nazi collaborator who became Latin America's narcotics czar; see V.
Alexandrov: La Mafia des SS (Stock, 1978).

2. A.McCoy: The Politics of Heroin in Southeast Asia (Harper& Row, 1972).

3. M. Gosch and R. Hammer: The Last Testament of Lucky Luciano (Little, Brown
& Co., 1974).

4. Lansky was not then entirely sure of T~afficante's loyalty. He had the
latter swear a "holy" oath, witnessed by Vincent Alo: "With an ancient
Spanish dagger — none from Sicily was available — Trafficante cut his left
wrist, allowed the blood to flow, and wet his right hand in the crimson
stream. Then he held up the bloody hand: 'So long as the blood flows in my
body,' he intoned solemnly, 'do 1, Santo Trafficante, swear allegiance to the
will of Meyer Lansky and the organization he represents. If I violate this
oath, may I burn in Hell forever.'" — H. Messick: Lansky (Berkeley, 1971).

5. P.D. Scott: "From Dallas to Watergate," Ramparts, November 1973.

6. New York Times, 3 June 1973.

7. E. Reid: The Grim Reapers (Bantam, 1970).

8. Ibid.

9. P. Galante and L. Sapin: The Marseilles Mafia (W.H. Allen, 1979).

10. The Newsday Staff: The Heroin Trail (Souvenir Press, 1974).

11. D. Moldea: The Hoffa Wars (Charter Books, 1978).

12. U.S. Congress, Senate, Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations
with respect to Intelligence Activities, Alleged Assassination Plots
Involving Foreign Leaders, Interim Report, 94th Cong., 1st Sess., Senate
Report No. 94-463, 1975. (Henceforth referred to as Assassination Report).

 13. P. Meskill: "Mannen som Ville Myrde Fidel Castro," Vi Menn, 1976.

14. Assassination Report, op. cit.

15. Ibid.

16. Ibid.

17. D. Wise and T.B. Ross: The Invisible Government (Random House, 1964);
P.D. Scott: The War Conspiracy (Bobbs-Merrill, 1972).

18. The name Drecher appears in T. Szulc: Compulsive Spy (Viking, 1974);
Droller is used in P. Wyden: The Bay of Pigs (Simon & Schuster, 1979).

19. L. Gonzalez-Mata: Cygne (Grasset, 1976). According to this source (the
author was the chief of security for the Dominican Republic's dictator,
Rafael Trujillo), Howard Hunt went to the Dominican Republic with the mobster
John Roselli in March 1961.

20. Pawley eventually built five large airplane factories around the world.
It is also likely that he was involved in the CIA's Double Chek Corp. in
Miami, as he had similarly been in the Flying Tigers. The CIA's air
proprietaries are said to stick together. When in 1958, CIA pilot Allen Pope
was shot down and taken prisoner in Indonesia, he was flying for CAT. When he
was released in 1962 he began flying for Southern Air Transport, another
agency proprietary, which operated as late as 1973 out of offices in Miami
and Taiwan. Southern's attorney in 1962 was Alex E. Carlson, who a year
before had represented Double Chek when it furnished pilots for the Bay of
Pigs invasion; see V. Marchetti and J.D. Marks: CIA and the Cult of
Intelligence (Jonathan Cape, 1974). On 23 March 1980, just as Iran's
revolutionary government was about to request that Panama extradite Shah Reza
Palevi, the ex-dictator who had been installed on his throne in 1953 by a CIA
coup, he was flown off to Cairo on an Evergreen International Airlines
charter. As reported by Ben Bradlee of the Boston Globe, (20 April 1980), in
1975 Evergreen had assumed control over Intermountain Aviation, Inc., a CIA
proprietary. George Deele, Jr., a paid consultant for Evergreen, controlled
the CIA's worldwide network of secret airlines for nearly two decades.

21. M. Acoca and R.K. Brown: "The Bayo-Pawley Affair," Soldier of Fortune, Vol
. 1, No. 2, 1976.

22. The Newsday Staff, op. cit.

23. H. Kohn: "Strange Bedfellows," Rolling Stone, 20 May 1976.

24. The main character in Howard Hunt's 1949 spy novel, Bimini Run, was "Hank
Sturgis."

25 . H. Tanner: Counter-Revolutionary Agent (G.T. Foules, 1972).

26. Kohn, op. cit.

27. Meskill, op. cit.

28. Shackley was also indirectly responsible for Martinez's participation in
the 17 June 1972 Watergate breakin; see T. Branch and G. Crile III: The
Kennedy Vendetta," Harper's, August 1975.

29. New York Times, 4 January 1975.

30. Branch and Crile, op. cit.

31. J. Hougan: Spooks (William Morrow, 1978).

32. Shackley might also have been responsible for the CIA's tapping of all
telephone converstions to and from Latin America in the first half of 1973
"in connection with narcotics operations" (see Newsweek, 23 June 1975).
According to Branch and Crile, op. cit., Shackley, as chief of the CIA's
Western Hemisphere Division of Clandestine Services, "had overall
responsibility for the agency's efforts to overthrow the Allende regime in
Chile."
In a recent article in which he refers to Shackley as one of "the CIA's most
esteemed officers," journalist Michael Ledeen claims that Shackley left the
agency voluntarily when "forced to choose between retirement and accepting a
post that would have represented a de facto demotion." (New York, 3 March
1980). Ledeen, incidentally, is a colleague of Ray S. Cline at Georgetown's
rightwing propaganda mill, the Center for Strategic and International Studies
(see chapter 14, footnote 20).

33. Acoca and Brown, op. cit.

34. D. Russell: "Loren Hall and the Politics of Assassination," Village
Voice, 3 October 1977.

35. The New York Times, ed.: The Final Assassinations Report (Bantam, 1979).
In early 1980 the Justice Department was investigating allegations that
Marcello had offered Mario T. Noto, the Deputy Commissioner of Immigration, a
guaranteed "plush job" after retirement, in return for Noto's help in lifting
Marcello's travel restrictions. Noto's attorney, ironically, is Myles
Ambrose, who stepped down from his job at the head of the BNDD in the wake of
corruption allegations. (New York Times, 11 February 1980).

36. McCoy, op. cit.

37. H. Messick: The Mobs and the Mafia (Spring Books, 1972). 38. The Newsday
Staff, op. cit.

39. H. Messick: Of Grass and Snow (Prentice-Hall, 1979); The Newsday Staff, op
. cit.

40. Miami Herald, 30 March 1978.

41. Messick: Of Grass and Snow, op. -cit.

 42. Ibid.

43. Ibid.

 44. Ibid.

 45. McCoy, op. cit.

46. Ibid.

47. In the early seventies the opium bankrollers in Taiwan sent out, through
their international lobby, the WACL, propaganda charging Red China with "the
drugging of the world." The propaganda was directed at Nixon's rapprochement
with mainland China. A 1972 BNDD report stated, however, that "not one
investigation into heroin traffic in the area in the past two years indicates
Chinese Communist involvement."

48. The existence of such a drug war is also mentioned in A. Jaubert: Dossier
D ... comme Drogue (Alain Moreau, 1974).

49. S. O'Callaghan: The Triads (W.H. Allen, 1978).

50. F. Robertson: Triangle of Death (Routledge and Keagen Paul, 1977). 51.
O'Callaghan, op. cit.

52. McCoy, op. cit.

53. F. Wulff in the Danish Rapport, 14 April 1975. A BNDD agent on the scene
was reportedly discovered and liquidated. Apparently he hadn't known that the
code words were "baccio la mano" — I kiss your hand. Subject number one of
the meeting was Southeast Asia, which the conferees decided would replace
Turkey and Marseilles as the main source of opium and heroin. Mexico, to
which Sam Giancana was sent, would be a safety valve. On one thing they were
uananimous: the Corsicans had to be eliminated. To begin with, $300 million
was to be invested in the bribery of politicians, as well as of military and
police officers in Thailand, Burma, Laos, South Vietnam, and Hong Kong.
Another nine-figure sum was set aside to maximize opium production in the
Golden Triangle.
--[cont]--
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End

DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion and informational exchange list. Proselyzting propagandic
screeds are not allowed. Substance—not soapboxing!  These are sordid matters
and 'conspiracy theory', with its many half-truths, misdirections and outright
frauds is used politically  by different groups with major and minor effects
spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRL
gives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers;
be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credeence to Holocaust denial and
nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://home.ease.lsoft.com/archives/CTRL.html

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to