-Caveat Lector-

from alt.conspiracy
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As always, Caveat Lector.
Om
K
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Subject: Military Corruption/Drug Trafficking --Pt.1
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Abemarf)
Date: 5/21/99 1:54 AM Pacific Daylight Time
Message-id: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

THE STRANGE DEATH OF COLONEL SABOW

By Gary Null

The official version of the colonel's death just doesn't add up. So his
brother
is left asking a number of questions: What happened? Is it possible that
elements of every major department of government could have been involved in
either incompetence or intentional malfeasance, including a coordinated
coverup? And if the latter is the case, what could have been the motive?



On the morning of January 22, 1991, neurologist Dr. David Sabow received a
telephone call while he was at work in his office. The call was one that would
change his life forever, and change his outlook on the integrity of parts of
this country's military and political systems. It was from a Marine Corps
chaplain, informing him that his older brother, Colonel James E. Sabow, had
just committed suicide. At first, Dr. Sabow could not process the information.
His thoughts were continually interrupted by snapshots of his brother Jimmy's
life. And there was also this: David knew his brother so very well, and
suicide
was completely out of character for the man. Jimmy Sabow was a well-respected,
highly intelligent, and extremely talented Marine officer, a man who had the
ability to work as hard as he played and who demonstrated a strong devotion to
his family. David recalls, "He was, without exaggeration, one of the best
balanced individuals I've met in my life. So, I was immediately taken aback by
the designation of suicide, simply because I knew my brother inside and out."

As it turned out, there were logical holes in the official account of Colonel
Sabow's so-called suicide. These, combined with the discrepancy between what
Dr. Sabow knew his brother to be and the idea of the man committing suicide,
led Dr. Sabow into an investigation of his brother's death. He knew in his
heart he could do no less.

Colonel Sabow's "suicide" and its aftermath have turned up far-ranging
ramifications. As this special in-depth investigation will show, an unreported
secret network of CIA agents was involved in illicit drug traffic from Mena,
Arkansas, and dozens of other small airports around the country, the illegal
sale of C-130 aircraft from the Forest Service, and the untimely deaths of
investigative reporters and pilots. These agents were also involved with one
of
the largest drug trafficking operations coming into the country and illegal
arms going out of the country.

Events Leading to Colonel Sabow's Death

Dr. Sabow begins his account of the events preceding his brother's death in
late 1990. That was when Chief of Staff Colonel Joseph Underwood came under
investigation, allegedly as the result of an anonymous phone call to the
Department of Defense's fraud and abuse hotline. While Colonel Sabow was in
Minneapolis due to a family crisis, he received a phone call from Colonel
Underwood. They discussed the fact that the Inspector General of the Marine
Corps, Hollis Davison, and three assistants, had arrived on base, in El Toro,
California. Underwood stated that he (Underwood) was under investigation for
the illegal use of government aircraft.

After the call, Colonel Sabow explained to his brother David that Underwood's
investigation probably had to do with taking some golf clubs along on a
training flight. When David asked if this was a serious offense, Jimmy replied
that it wasn't; it was, in fact, rather commonplace. When you went out on a
training flight, he explained to the doctor, you took equipment with you. If
you played tennis, you took tennis rackets; if you read, you took books; and
if
you were a golfer, you took golf clubs. Jimmy went on to explain that Colonel
Underwood was a champion golfer who played in Marine Corps tournaments. At
this
point, James did not seem to be overly concerned.

The Inspector General's visit took place in the middle of Operation Desert
Shield and right at the beginning of Desert Storm. Why the Marine Corps would
send the Inspector General's team to the California base at that particular
time to investigate Underwood for taking golf clubs along on a flight remains
a
mystery, for, after all, Underwood was chief of staff.

On January 12, 1991, Colonel Underwood was relieved of his duties as chief of
staff. A day later, Colonel Sabow returned to El Toro, and learned of
Underwood's dismissal. He called his close friend Bill Callahan. Both men were
sure that something else was going on because many of the allegations seemed
trivial, commonplace, and not at all deserving of dismissal.

In the days following Underwood's dismissal, many officers were interviewed,
but Colonel Sabow was not one of them. He found it odd that no one was talking
to him. On January 16, General W.T. Adams informed Colonel Sabow that he,
Sabow, was under investigation by the Inspector General, who had requested his
presence at the legal department the next day.

Colonel Sabow immediately sought legal help and was assigned to Captain Paul
McBride, a young attorney in El Toro's legal department. Since no allegations
had been made against Sabow, McBride advised him not to make any statements to
the Inspector General during their meeting.

On January 17, Colonel Sabow and Captain McBride arrived at the Law Center and
met with the Inspector General and his staff. Colonel Sabow was informed that
he was under investigation for the alleged misuse of government aircraft. The
meeting lasted ten minutes. When Colonel Sabow left the room he was
immediately
met by an aide who directed him to General Adams' office across the street.
General Adams relieved Colonel Sabow of his duties. The entire scenario was
obviously prearranged, as there was no time for the Inspector General's office
to discuss the situation with General Adams.

Colonel Sabow informed his staff of the news, collected his personal
belongings, and left. No sooner had he arrived home when military personnel
entered his premises and removed his autovan phone system and cellular phone.

Colonel Sabow could not comprehend why he was being treated like a criminal
after he had devoted his entire life to the Marine Corps. His wife believed
that some terrible mistake had been made that would soon be righted. After
all,
her husband, a loyal officer, had a sterling reputation. But much to Colonal
and Mrs. Sabow's dismay, no one called to tell them that an error had been
made.

Colonel Sabow met several times with his defense attorney, Captain McBride,
over the next four days and learned that no formal allegations had been made
against him. Several general areas of inquiry were provided by the Inspector
General, but any allegations against him in these areas Sabow could easily
refute through log books, signed orders, and other hard data.

Only one area was not covered by hard data--the transportation of several
unauthorized insignificant articles to his son in Spokane, Washington. The
articles, which included two posters, several carpet remnants, a pair of
twenty-year-old stereo speakers, and two plastic beer advertisements, had no
monetary value. The Inspector General's office repeatedly insisted on
referring
to these items as furniture. Captain McBride believed that further
investigation was to be carried out on Colonel Underwood, but not on Colonel
Sabow.

On January 18, the Inspector General's team handed over their allegations to
General Adams. That evening, General Adams, General Davison, and General J.K.
Davis, a retired Assistant Commandant of the Marine Corps, met for supper at
Adams' residence. The following day, Davison returned to Washington.

On Monday, January 21, 1991, Colonel Sabow met with Colonel Underwood and a
mutual friend, Archibald Scott. Scott quoted Colonel Sabow as saying,
"Quitters
never win and winners never quit."

When James Sabow returned home, his wife, Sally, recalls, he was white as a
ghost. He was obviously upset but did not want to talk about it. An hour
later,
Underwood stopped by and repeatedly tried to talk Jimmy into accepting an
early
retirement to avoid a court-martial. Jimmy objected strongly. At this,
Underwood became quite angry. Sally stated, "I have never seen such a vicious
face as Joe's when Jimmy said he would not retire and would take the entire
matter to a court-martial if necessary. Underwood jumped up and said, "You'll
never go to a court-martial, and I mean never!"

Jimmy telephoned General J.K. Davis to get some advice. He assumed that the
general did not know about his situation. Davis never once mentioned his prior
Friday dinner with Generals Adams and Davison where he obviously would have
learned of the allegations against Colonel Sabow. General Davis later did
admit
to Dr. Sabow that Jimmy intended to demand a court-martial to clear his name.
He spoke to Jimmy the night before his death and indicated that Jimmy was in
good spirits. Yet no one ever questioned him after the death regarding Jimmy's
state of mind.



Colonel Sabow's Death

Dr. Sabow relates what happened the day of his brother's death:

"Sabow arose between 5:30 a.m. and 6:00 a.m. Sally did not feel well and
remained in bed and dozed. She was aware of many telephone calls while she lay
resting.

"Deirdre [Colonel Sabow's daughter] left for school at 7:20 a.m. She had
talked
with her father while she prepared her lunch. He seemed cheerful, talkative,
and relaxed. She observed him as having already showered and shaved.

"Sally joined her husband in the living room just after Deirdre left for
school. He showed Sally the morning newspaper, which contained an article
about
Colonel Underwood being relieved of his command. Underwood had called Sabow at
about 7:00 a.m. and told him of the article. He also stated that Jimmy would
be
in the news, the very next day. When Sabow told Sally of Underwood's warning,
Sally said this was absurd, for Underwood had no way of knowing what would
appear in the following day's newspaper."

Colonel Sabow's lawyer, Captain McBride, recalls three separate telephone
conversations he had with his client that morning. The last one was made at
8:10 a.m., and lasted ten minutes. In a later conversation with Dr. Sabow and
in a letter to General Adams, McBride described Sabow's attitude as being
appropriately concerned about his situation, but as not being desperate. (This
is important because it directly contradicts statements made by Marine Corps
investigators.)

"At 8:30 a.m.," Dr. Sabow reports, "Sally finished talking to Sue Bloomer, the
wife of a retired general. She checked her time, because she wished to attend
Mass at the Catholic church located a short distance off the base. She
explained to Jimmy that since it was already 8:30 she would miss most of the
mass but that she would go anyway and receive Holy Communion."

"Exactly at the moment when she was opening the front door to leave, the phone
rang and she stopped to observe Colonel Sabow, who was sitting in his leather
easy-chair in front of the TV, which was approximately twelve feet from the
front door. Colonel Sabow answered, saying, 'Colonel Sabow...[pause]...Colonel
Sabow...[pause]...This is Colonel Sabow.' What was further said by Jimmy is
unknown, for just at that moment, Sally closed the door behind her as she left
for Mass. Mysteriously, the one who placed this final call to Colonel Sabow
has
never acknowledged making it. That call was made just minutes before Colonel
Sabow died, and consequently identification of the caller was of the utmost
importance. All other calls made to Sabow earlier that morning have been
identified."

Dr. Sabow stresses strongly that the fact speaks for itself. "The caller was
involved in the murder. The caller gave Sabow a message which caused him to go
into his backyard and lock his two dogs in the garage. However, first he put
the TV on mute, which he often did if he intended to momentarily return."

Dr. Sabow also explains that Colonel Underwood, Jimmy's next-door neighbor,
was
afraid of the Sabows' German shepherd. So before Underwood would visit his
neighbor he would telephone him and have him secure Nika in the garage.

At the exact time that Jimmy received his final phone call, a meeting was in
progress in the base commander, General Adams', office. Present were Adams,
the
new Chief of Staff, Colonel Williams, Colonel Lucas, the chief legal officer,
and Captain Betsy Sweat, the publicity officer. They had been summoned for an
8:00 a.m. meeting.

Lucas stated that the meeting was to discuss the potential for bad publicity
that could emerge from the newspaper article about Colonel Joe Underwood.
However, since the article had only just appeared in the Orange County
Register
that morning, it's unlikely, if not impossible, for that to have been the
reason for that gathering. Except for General Adams, all the others lived off
base, and even if they had been notified immediately after the newspaper
delivery, there simply would not have been enough time to gather them at 8
a.m.

Dr. Sabow goes on: "Lucas recalls being notified on Monday evening about the
meeting, but he can't recall by whom. Furthermore, since Monday was Martin
Luther King Day, it was a federal holiday and the base was, for all practical
purposes, closed. It would have been highly unlikely for a leak of the
Underwood article to have been made on Monday, January 21, under these
circumstances. Hence, it must be assumed that the meeting was called for other
than the expressed purpose and probably by General Adams himself. If so, a
possible, if not probable, explanation was to establish an alibi.

It has been acknowledged that the Colonel's death occurred between 8:30 a.m.
and 9:00 a.m. During that time frame, Sally was attending Mass, General Adams
was at a meeting in his office, and Colonel Underwood was at his home next
door
to the Sabow house. It is presumed that Colonel Sabow, who had just been on
the
telephone, had gone into his back yard, put the dogs in the garage, and was
intending to return to his living room to resume viewing the reporting on the
Gulf war. He never made it!"



The Aftermath

"Sally arrived home at 9:30 a.m.," Dr. Sabow explains. "She noticed that the
television was on mute and called for her husband, but there was no response.
Out on the patio, she saw him laying on the grass. Sally ran to him, placed
her
arms around his head, and felt a large swelling."

She immediately ran next door to get help from Underwood. As she went in she
exclaimed that Jimmy had shot himself. Sally never once mentioned that her
husband was in the backyard, yet Underwood went directly to the backyard gate
and confirmed the death at a distance of over 40 feet.

Underwood claims not to have heard the 12-gauge shotgun blast due to noise
from
air traffic and the television. Records show no air traffic at this time, and
the TV was kept exceptionally low due to Mrs. Underwood's sensitivity to
sound.

Underwood immediately called General Adams at headquarters even though it was
an hour before the general normally arrived. The general notified the provost
martial, Major Goodrow and his deputy, Captain Fouquer, by radio, and they
were
the first to arrive on the scene. The radio dispatch was intercepted by
Sergeant Randy Robinson, an M.P. patrolling the vicinity. He was the next to
arrive at the scene.

Robinson observed several Naval Investigation Service personnel handling the
weapon without gloves. He also found the ammunition closed up in a garage
cabinet with two shells missing. But the ammunition was photographed as if it
was strewn on the floor.



Suspicion of Murder

Several hours after learning of his brother's death, Dr. Sabow called
Underwood
in an attempt to make sense of the apparent suicide. The colonel mistakenly
thought that the call was from another David Sabow, Jimmy's son. When the
doctor corrected him, explaining that he was Jimmy's brother, not his son, the
colonel changed his entire demeanor. Responses to inquiries became cold and
calculated, Dr. Sabow reports, and Underwood hesitated before answering even
simple questions.

Finally, David caught the colonel in an outright lie. When David asked, "What,
my God, happened that my brother would have taken his life?" Underwood replied
that Colonel Sabow had just come under investigation for the illegal use of
aircraft. David told the colonel he understood that he (Underwood), was the
one
under investigation, and Underwood said that Colonel Sabow was too. David then
said, "For God's sake, Jimmy was third in command, and you were second. What
happened to General Adams? Doesn't he take care of you guys?" To this,
Underwood replied that General Adams and Jimmy were very, very close friends.

That statement immediately put up a red flag, as far as David was concerned.
The doctor knew that his brother was not a friend of Adams, and that, in fact,
he did not respect him. Colonel Sabow had even described General Adams as a
disgrace to the Marine Corps. So David knew immediately that Underwood was
lying. Within hours, he went from wondering why his brother committed suicide
to a firm suspicion of foul play.

This impression was strengthened during the funeral, when David had a chance
to
speak to Underwood in person. The first thing he noticed was that Underwood
did
not want him to speak to Mrs. Underwood alone. He surmised that Underwood was
afraid that his wife would contradict his account of what took place on the
morning of the Colonel's death. Over the phone, for example, Underwood had
told
David that his wife had a series of seizures on the morning of the murder.
Yet,
Sally Sabow says that when she ran into the Underwood house after discovering
Jimmy's body, she found Mrs. Underwood sitting up and watching television.

Further information implicating Underwood's involvement was collected on the
way to the funeral. David rode in the van driven by Underwood. This allowed
him
the opportunity to interview him. Underwood talked about how he had told
Colonel Sabow to move his guns from a rack in the garage to his son, David's,
vacant bedroom. He specifically mentioned to Jimmy that someone was going to
walk into the garage and take his gun since the garage door was often left
open. Underwood noted that the shotgun was a special gift from his father and
that he ought to move it to a safer location. Sally overheard the
conversation.
This means that Underwood was one of the few people who actually knew where
the
shotgun was kept. He also knew where the ammunition was located and that it
was
left in a cabinet in the garage.

Underwood went on to state that it was a terrible thing to be under
investigation by the military. David asked what this meant since Jimmy had
only
just come under investigation. Joe Underwood replied that back in 1980 and
1981
he had been the target of an NIS (Naval Investigation Service) investigation.

David continued to question Underwood about being under investigation. He
learned that Underwood had been stationed in Panama at the time he was accused
of smuggling somewhere between $300,000 and $400,000 worth of contraband into
this country. The NIS had conducted a 10-month investigation of Underwood and
then suddenly dropped it "for unknown reasons."

Something that seemed strange to David at the funeral was that right after the
requiem mass, none of the high command or field grade officers came up to him,
his brother Tom, or their wives to express condolences. It appeared as if they
wanted to stay away.

So after one day in El Toro, David Sabow became highly suspicious, if not
convinced, of foul play in his brother's death. He came to believe that
something very bad was going on, and resolved to find evidence of his
brother's
murder. He knew he had to do so in a truly scientific manner because the
authorities were going to dismiss him as simply a bereaved brother.



Meeting with the Military

Following his brother's death, David sought cooperation from the Naval
Investigation Service and from the legal department at El Toro. But no
cooperation was forthcoming. After a month and a half of frustration with the
military channels of information, he set up a meeting with a journalist from
the Los Angeles Times. General Adams became aware of the planned meeting, and
begged David to meet with him first. This was the first time that David had
heard from the military. David agreed to the meeting only if several others
would be present: Colonel Lucas, the head of the legal department; General
David Shuter; and General J.K. Davis, retired Assistant Commandant of the
Marine Corps ('83-'87). General Adams said that he would comply with these
terms.

On March 9, 1991, David and his brother's widow, Sally, attended the meeting.
Several Marines, including generals, were there. Colonel Lucas, however, was
conspicuously absent. This disturbed David, who believed that Lucas had
information critical to his search. In his place was a man by the name of
Wayne
Rich, a supposedly retired, but reactivated, Marine. At the time, David did
not
know Rich's importance to the meeting.

The meeting, Dr. Sabow reports, turned out to be nothing more than an attempt
at intimidation. For five hours, he and Sally sat dumbfounded as Adams and
Rich
slandered Dr. Sabow's dead brother. James Sabow was accused of felony, of
falsifying documents, and of other serious crimes. No one came to the dead
colonel's defense. Only General Shuter reminded those present that Colonel
Sabow had been found guilty of absolutely nothing, and that these charges were
only unproved allegations. In the face of intimidation, however, he did not go
on to defend the colonel's reputation of incorruptibility. It became obvious,
David says, that Adams and Wayne Rich had conspired to concoct a scenario of
lies that would paint the dead colonel with a brush of disgrace. They hoped to
shame the colonel's widow and brother into silence.

During the meeting, General Adams pointed to Sally and demanded that she not
talk to his ex-wife. Sally, taken by surprise, countered that she would talk
to
anyone she pleased. Adams then warned her to stop spreading rumors that he had
some involvement in her husband's death. But up until that point, Sally had
never considered this idea; she believed her husband's death was a suicide.

David asked General Adams why Colonel Sabow was implicated for the misuse of
government aircraft. Adams suggested that he did a lot of flying with
Underwood. David says that this was an outright lie--for several reasons.
First, Colonel Sabow was not allowed to be the first officer of the type of
planes they were flying. This is because he was a jet pilot and a fighter
pilot, but had never qualified on small aircraft.

Also, Underwood was in a somewhat similar situation. Underwood was overweight,
hypertensive, and on medication for a prostate condition. He did not pass his
physical, and consequently, for a great deal of the time that Colonel Sabow
was
stationed in El Toro, Underwood was not allowed to be the first pilot.
Therefore, the two could not fly together. In the course of reviewing
Underwood's flight record, Adams claimed to have seen Sabow's name a lot, when
that could not be the case. He could only have flown with a qualified first
officer.

After four hours, General Adams dismissed everyone but the NIS agents. David
insisted on speaking to them privately, which irritated the general. David had
asked for a full report to back up their official determination of suicide.
But
it appeared that General Adams was determined to keep this information from
him. After all this, he was not even able to obtain autopsy or fingerprint
information from the NIS forensic experts.



The First Real Help

Three months subsequent to the meeting, David obtained information from a
secret source that he developed. The information included copies of several
documents.

The most damaging evidence was a five-page hand-written summary by Wayne Rich.
By this time, David knew that Rich was an Assistant Attorney General from
Washington, who replaced Colonel Lucas at the March 9 meeting. These notes
were
written by Rich during a telephone conversation with the deputy SJA in
Washington, Colonel Lang, on the day before the El Toro meeting, and included
statements such as: "We are about to try to convince Sabow's brother that his
brother was a crook and so big a crook..."

The packet also contained an order from one legal officer to another regarding
the investigation of ways to have Dr. Sabow's medical license revoked.

There was also a copy of a memorandum written by the head legal officer, SJA
Colonel Lucas. The memorandum was in reference to the peculiar behavior of
Lieutenant General Hollis Davison, the Inspector General of the Marine Corps,
during an investigation into Colonel Sabow and Colonel Underwood at El Toro
from January 10 until January 17, 1991, days before the murder. Lucas talked
about the repetitiveness of the Inspector General's questions, and his
peculiar
behavior while conducting his interviews. The last paragraph of Lucas'
memorandum stated that he put this into his personal files to protect himself
for the future. He stated that if the Inspector General's behavior became
public, it would be very bad for the Marine Corps.

There was also a memorandum from Captain McBride to Colonel Lucas. The memo
reported conversations between McBride and Dr. Sabow. This order was from Rich
or Adams ordering McBride to divulge confidential information, and violated
the
trust of the attorney-client relationship.

The packet also included transcribed responses of "witnesses" interviewed by
the I.G. in an attempt to depict Colonel Sabow's misconduct. There was a
glaring omission in the transcription--the questions asked of those
"witnesses." David learned that at least one person interviewed, Major Bob
Friend, would not sign the transcript because the statements did not reflect
his responses.



The JAGMAN Reinvestigation

In the fall of 1991, David contacted Captain Tony Verducci, a Marine Corps
officer at El Toro. Verducci had authored the first Judge Advocate General
Manual Investigation (JAGMAN), and David appealed to him to reopen a second
one. He was also handling his sister-in-law's attempt to obtain death benefits
from the Veteran's Administration. The V.A. was withholding money on the
grounds that Colonel Sabow died in a manner "not becoming of a Marine Corps
officer." Sally trusted Captain Verducci to clear up this problem.

Verducci appealed to Brigadier General Drax Williams, who had replaced General
Adams. Williams immediately assigned Verducci to the case. After two days of
getting things organized, Verducci was dumbfounded when Williams removed him
from the case, stating that the investigation was near completion.

The reinvestigation was reassigned to other legal officers who were not from
El
Toro, but from adjacent bases. According to Verducci, Colonel Pearcy and
Captain Bowe had no previous knowledge of the case. Their entire inquiry and
analysis spanned approximately 2« days. During that time, they never left the
legal department, and they never consulted Verducci. They never even talked to
major players in the affair, including Underwood and Adams. Nor did they visit
the crime scene. Their reinvestigation relied on two interviews and old NIS
reports. Basically, they shuffled papers.

The sizable document that resulted from this supposed reinvestigation was
approved by the appropriate people in Washington. Yet, this report is "replete
with misstatements, illogical conclusions, and outright lies," according to
David. Indeed, there were accusations of guilt against a man who was never
formally charged, and, further, who could not defend himself against the
charges. These are the basic conclusions of the reinvestigation:





Colonel Sabow was desperate.

Colonel Sabow was guilty of misconduct.

Colonel Sabow was guilty of conduct unbecoming a Marine Corps officer.





The transparency of the lies was obvious. For instance, the report included a
letter by Captain McBride, who had spoken to Colonel Sabow minutes before his
death. In the letter, McBride described Sabow as appropriately concerned "but
not desperate." The report contradicted his statement by saying that Colonel
Sabow was desperate. Strangely, McBride's letter was attached as part of the
evidence, an apparent ploy to make suicide appear more plausible.

The specific allegations of misconduct against Colonel Sabow were revealed for
the first time during the JAGMAN reinvestigation. They claim that he made
several illegal flights. David gave the material to Colonel Sabow's best
friend, Colonel Bill Callahan, who disproved the allegations by obtaining the
relevant flight records, orders, and flight plans. Callahan showed
conclusively
that each and every allegation was unfounded. For example, Colonel Sabow was
said to have flown to his ranch for business rather than for a training
flight.
Yet Sabow never even owned a ranch. His in-laws had owned a ranch south of
Tucson, but sold it in 1985 due to illness. According to the report, Colonel
Sabow took these illegal flights in 1990. At times, Colonel Sabow would fly to
a nearby base to fulfill required training hours, and stay over at his in-laws
to visit, but he would never do so if friends and family were there to avoid
the appearance of impropriety. The Marine Corps and the NIS twisted the
colonel's caring behavior to discredit him.

Another allegation was that Colonel Sabow went to Phoenix to pick up Callahan
to fly him back to El Toro. What actually happened was that Colonel Sabow was
assigned to Yuma, Arizona to attend a change of command ceremony for an
officer. On his way back, he was to stop in Phoenix, and then return to El
Toro.
-----
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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