-Caveat Lector-

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Date sent:              Thu, 7 Nov 2002 23:20:37 -0800 (PST)
Subject:                [CIA-DRUGS] Was Wellstone Whacked? -- NEWSLETTER #21
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Dave's newsletter's always a good read -- no exception here:

NEWSLETTER #21
Special Edition: Was Wellstone Whacked?
November 5, 2002


Greetings, once again, to all subscribers!
Two years ago, I wrote the following words: "October 16th is not, as it turns
out, a good day to travel by air if you happen to be a politician who has
become, shall we say, troublesome." October 16, 2000 was, for those suffering
from that peculiarly American malady known as "lack of historical memory,"
the day that populist (relatively speaking) Senatorial candidate Mel
Carnahan's chartered plane allegedly crashed due to inclement weather.
(http://davesweb.cnchost.com/regressive.htm)
Now it seems that October 25 is also not a good day to travel by air if you
happen to be a democratically-minded Senatorial candidate, as the Wellstone
family has just learned the hard way. Widely regarded, accurately or not, as
the most progressive voice in the U.S. Senate, Wellstone has just succumbed
to "small chartered plane carrying left-leaning politician meets inclement
weather" syndrome.
And there will be no repeat of the "Corpse Beats John Ashcroft and Gains
Senate Seat for Widow" scenario, since Wellstone's wife and daughter were
killed along with the Minnesota Senator in what the media would like us to
believe was a tragic accident that was not, of course, in any way suspicious.

At the time of his demise, Mr. Wellstone was uniquely poised to reveal the
lies and fraudulence of the Washington establishment and their media cohorts,
by virtue of the fact that he was the only Senator in a contested race to
vote against the Congressional resolution that unconstitutionally transferred
war-making power to the executive office.
By casting a dissenting vote, Wellstone had committed political suicide -- or
so said all the Washington spinmeisters. As George Bush likes to say,
"America speaks with one voice" on the issue of waging genocidal war against
the Iraqi people. And the media, of course, don't really bother to challenge
such specious claims.
Paul Wellstone though opted to speak with a different voice, thereby
allegedly guaranteeing his political demise. To hasten that demise, his
opponent was reportedly hand-picked and enthusiastically endorsed by Boy
George himself, and was supplied with truck loads of campaign money.
(http://www.startribune.com/stories/587/3382739.html)
But a strange thing appeared to be happening: Wellstone seemed to be on his
way to electoral victory. Contrary to Washington spin, Wellstone had gotten a
large boost in his poll numbers as a direct result of his vote on the Iraqi
resolution. But how could that be? How could a maverick Senator who had
chosen to voice such an 'unpopular' opinion actually gain support?
The vast majority of Wellstone's allegedly 'Democratic' colleagues chose to
give a thumbs-up to transferring war-making power to the White House, despite
being inundated with correspondence from constituents who strongly opposed
the measure.
(http://www.washtimes.com/national/20021003-851543.htm)
It has been almost universally proclaimed by pols and pundits that these
'Democrats' lined up behind Bush on the war resolution (as they had on the
Patriot Act, and the resolution authorizing the use of force in Afghanistan,
and various other reactionary measures) because it was the "politically
expedient" thing to do.
Wellstone's reelection would have revealed this 'conventional wisdom' to be a
craven lie. As the hopelessly compromised Nation put it in a posting from May
of 2002, "If [Wellstone] wins, a blow will be struck not just against the
Bush machine but against those in the Democratic Party who argue for tepid
moderation."
(http://www.thenation.com/doc.mhtml?i=20020527&s=nichols)
In truth, the blow would have been struck against the entire, and entirely
fraudulent, Democratic Party -- which doesn't argue for "tepid moderation,"
but is in fact wholly complicit in advancing the increasingly fascistic
agenda of Team Bush. As Michael I. Niman argued, in a posting on AlterNet, a
Wellstone victory "would both be an embarrassment to the Bush administration
and to Democratic Quislings such as Hillary Clinton who voted to support 'the
president.'"
(http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=14399)
Even without a Wellstone victory, the Democratic Party has largely revealed
itself for the fraud that it is by failing to follow up on what it claimed
was one of the "politically expedient" reasons for green-lighting an attack
on Iraq and beyond: to enable the party to shift the focus of the campaign
onto domestic issues, where Bush is said to be vulnerable.
Now maybe I've been in a coma or something, but I don't recall any Democratic
candidates challenging their Republican rivals on the current state of the
economy, or on the massive tax cuts handed out to corporate America, or on
the direct connections of various members of the Bush mob to massive
corporate scandals, or on the rollbacks of environmental safeguards, or on
the decidedly anti-labor stance of the White House, or on the repeated
attacks on civil liberties, or on the erosion of the separation between
church and state, or on the blocking of any meaningful inquiry into what
happened on September 11, or on the failure to investigate the anthrax
attacks, or on the failure to capture bin Laden despite laying waste to the
nation of Afghanistan, or ....
It is clearly not the case, as The Nation claimed, that "most Democrats are
still trying to figure out how to challenge a popular President" -- but
rather that most Democrats are trying to figure out how to continue to
masquerade as some sort of legitimate opposition party even while signing off
on every police-state measure and every imperialistic military venture that
has been proposed by the administration.
So while there may be some truth to The Nation's contention that "getting rid
of Wellstone is a passion for Rove, Dick Cheney, George W. Bush and the
special-interest lobbies that fund the most sophisticated political operation
ever assembled by a presidential administration," it is arguable whether it
was not the 'Democrats' who had the most to gain from Wellstone's death.
The reality is that Wellstone did nothing to slow down the Bush juggernaut,
and wasn't exactly the principled leftist that he is made out to be. He had
no problem signing off on the Patriot Act or the resolution authorizing the
brutal assault upon the nation of Afghanistan, and had little or nothing to
say about the brazen theft of the presidential election or the evidence
indicating that the official story of what happened on September 11 is almost
entirely a work of fiction.
And even on those issues where Wellstone did take a stand in opposition to
the White House, the effects of his actions were negligible. Since Bush took
office, and certainly since September 11, 2001, there has not been a vote in
Congress on any resolution of any significance that has not gone
overwhelmingly in the Bush administration's favor.
So it seems to me that the 'Democrats' had as much or more to gain as did the
'Republicans' by terminating Wellstone's political career -- though that of
course assumes that 'Democrats' refers to an identifiable group that is
separate and distinct from the 'Republican' Party, and that there is more
than one political orientation represented in Washington.
And that, of course, really isn't the case. But it is of supreme importance
to maintain the illusion that that is the case. And Paul Wellstone was
threatening to partially shatter that illusion by stripping away some of the
lies that the 'Democrats' have been hiding behind.
It would probably be more accurate then to say that the Washington
establishment, as a whole, had a motive for eliminating Paul Wellstone. So
... was he whacked?
It seems a fair question to ask, though the conspiracy bashers on the fake
left have been working overtime to launch what is essentially a pre-emptive
strike against anyone who dares to pose such questions.
(http://twincities.indymedia.org/front.php3?article_id=7814&group=webcast and
http://www.salon.com/news/col/sullivan/2002/10/30/wellstone/?x)
The speed with which the debunkers have issued their missives, and the
vehemence with which they have insisted that only those on the lunatic fringe
would speculate that Wellstone's demise was due to anything other than a
tragic accident, is enough to make a skeptic wonder if there isn't something
to hide.
Postulating that foul play was involved does not, it should be noted,
necessarily imply the guilt of the Bush administration, or of any other
players in Washington. As was seen during the DC sniper case, and during the
anthrax mailings (to name just two examples), Washington and the media are
quick these days to blame almost any tragedy or act of violence on
'terrorism.'
And yet, as USA Today was quick to report, "FBI spokesman Paul McCabe said
there was no indication the crash was related to terrorism." This
proclamation was made, of course, before any sort of an investigation had
even begun, and while we were being told that it would take months to
determine the cause of the crash.
(http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2002-10-25-plane-down-minnesota_x.htm)
With the wreckage still smoldering, the Star Tribune reported that Acting
NTSB Chairman Carol Carmody "refused to speculate on what happened in the
crash, but said NTSB specialists would be looking at all aspects of the
accident, including weather, the engines, human performance, the plane's
structure and airworthiness of the aircraft."
(http://www.startribune.com/stories/1752/3390667.html)
Conspicuously missing from that list, and apparently ruled out before the
investigation even began, was sabotage. So much for "looking at all aspects
of the accident." But then again, why would you look at that possibility when
you are "looking at all aspects of the accident"? You would only look for
that if you were looking at all aspects of the crash, to determine if it was
in fact an accident. And Carmody, of course, isn't doing that.
Carmody, by the way, who is now serving as the spokeswoman for what has been
referred to as the NTSB's "Go Team," has a rather interesting history. Her
official NTSB biography proudly proclaims that her career has included
"serving at the Central Intelligence Agency."
(http://www.ntsb.gov/Abt_NTSB/bios/carmody.htm)
That should set everyone's mind at ease -- as should the fact that she "has
been [an] on-scene member at several accidents, including the aircraft
accident which killed Governor Carnahan in October 2000."
Joining Carmody, as the lead investigator on the case, is Robert Benzon,
whose previous claim to fame was leading the cover-up ... ooops, that must
have been some kind of Freudian slip, because what I meant to say is that he
led the investigation into the cause of the November 12, 2001 crash of
American Airlines flight 587 into a neighborhood in Belle Harbor, New York.
(http://www.ntsb.gov/events/2001/AA587/default.htm)
Benzon began his aviation career in the jungles of Vietnam, where he served
on a secretive Tactical Electronics Warfare Squadron, according to his own
account: "I served as a 2nd Lt, then 1st Lt copilot in the 362 TEWS at DaNang
AB during 1972 and 1973. We closed the unit down several months after the
spring of 1973 cease fire agreement. Interestingly, we continued to fly
missions from DaNang after the cease fire with South Vietnamese markings on
the airplanes. I never did fully understand that little maneuver. I went on
to fly as a copilot and aircraft commander in KC-135s, shot through the ranks
to Captain, and went off active duty in 1980 or so. I'm now an aircraft
accident investigator for the National Transportation Safety Board."
(http://www.ec47.com/returns3.htm)
It's interesting to note here that Benzon writes that he went off active duty
"in 1980 or so." Does he not know when he went off active duty? Perhaps
Benzon operates in that murky world where the lines between 'active duty' and
'plausible deniability' are a little fuzzy.
Ooops ... I guess that by speculating about such things I have qualified
myself for a fitting for a "tin foil hat." Or did I already qualify myself
for membership in that club simply by questioning whether the crash of
Wellstone's plane might have been due to something other than an accident,
rather than boldly insisting, absent any corroborating evidence, that it
definitely was an accident -- which is apparently considered intelligent
political discourse?
So what does the evidence suggest in the Wellstone crash? Details are sketchy
at best at this point. There are, of course, the usual glaring contradictions
in the early reports that we have all grown accustomed to.
All avenues of the media, for example, are in agreement that there were no
voice or flight recorders on the plane, thus denying investigators a key
piece of evidence. Early reports, however, claimed that there was indeed a
voice recorder on the aircraft, and that it was actively being searched for.
The Star Tribune, for instance, reported that Carmody had "said investigators
would be searching for the cockpit voice recorder as they sought to determine
what happened." The recorder was said to be "key to learning more about the
crash." USA Today concurred, noting that "Carmody said the first priority was
finding the cockpit voice recorder."
(http://www.startribune.com/stories/1752/3390667.html and
http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2002-10-25-plane-down-minnesota_x.htm)
It is possible that Carmody was mistaken about the existence of a cockpit
voice recorder, though one would think that the Acting Chairman of the NTSB,
with "more than 20 years experience with the aviation community," including
"11 years at the FAA," would know about such things.
(http://www.ntsb.gov/Abt_NTSB/bios/carmody.htm)
You've got to wonder why they even bother with those 'black boxes.' They
either aren't on board when you need them to be, or they manage to get
destroyed in the crash, despite being virtually indestructible. Go figure.
There is also some question as to where exactly the plane crashed. The
Washington Post, for one, claimed that the "FAA said the plane crashed in
trees about two miles short of the runway. Wreckage was spread over a wide
area, indicating that it did not nose into the ground but crashed at a
relatively flat angle."
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A17030-2002Oct25.html)
Such reports strongly implied that the plane simply came up short on its
landing, hitting trees rather than a runway. Was the FAA simply mistaken, or
did it deliberately try to misrepresent the crash?
Later reports, such as this one from CNN.com, place the location of the
wreckage elsewhere: "tree damage around the crash site indicated the plane,
which should have been landing from the east on an east-west runway, was
actually turning away from the airport, traveling from northwest to southeast
about 2 miles south of the runway, when it crashed."
(http://www.cnn.com/2002/US/Midwest/10/26/wellstone.investigation/index.html;
see also http://www.grandforks.com/mld/grandforks/news/4372594.htm)
The CNN report also holds that the "angle of tree damage showed a descent
much steeper than would be expected with a controlled landing," while a
posting on the WSWS website mentions that there were eyewitness accounts of
"a near vertical plunge."
(http://www.wsws.org/articles/2002/oct2002/well-o29.shtml)
The WSWS report also noted that "none of the typical causes of a small plane
accident - engine failure, icing, pilot error - appear to be involved." These
are largely the same causes that Carmody claimed to be looking at: "weather,
the engines, human performance, the plane's structure and airworthiness of
the aircraft."
The media has for the most part pointed to the weather as the most likely
culprit. Several reports though dispute the notion that the weather was to
blame for the crash. The St. Paul Pioneer Press reported that the airport's
manager "said the weather was overcast with light snow and a temperature of
31 but was well within the landing limits at the airport."
(http://www.grandforks.com/mld/grandforks/news/4372594.htm)
USA Today talked to a pilot, Don Sipola, who told them that "visibility in
the area at the time of the crash was 2.50 miles, well above the one-mile
minimum for a standard instrument landing."
(http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2002-10-25-plane-down-minnesota_x.htm)
A newsletter sent out by Mike Ruppert quotes the following exchange, between
correspondent Wolf Blitzer and a local reporter, that was aired on CNN:
Reporter: There is no evidence that weather had anything to do with the
crash.
Blitzer: But the plane was flying into some sort of ice storm, was it not?
Reporter: There is no evidence that the weather had anything to do with the
crash.
According to Ruppert, CNN quickly cut away from this reporter, who was never
heard from again.
As further indication that the weather at the time of the crash wasn't nearly
as bad as the media would have us believe, and wasn't likely the cause of the
crash, it has been reported that "two smaller Beech Queen Air planes had
landed at Eveleth without incident two hours before the crash, when
temperatures were colder."
(http://www.wsws.org/articles/2002/oct2002/well-o29.shtml and
http://www.twincities.com/mld/pioneerpress/news/local/4371837.htm)
There was certainly no indication from the plane's crew that they were having
trouble with the weather -- or any trouble of any kind, for that matter. The
Pioneer Press reported that "there was no distress call or any indication of
trouble before the plane went down about 10:20 a.m."
(http://www.grandforks.com/mld/grandforks/news/4372594.htm)
This was in spite of the fact that the aircraft had been in radio contact
just two minutes before it plowed into the ground. According to the New York
Times, during that last transmission, at 10:18 a.m., "there was no evidence
on the controller's part or from the pilot's voice that there was any
difficulty, no reported problems, no expressed concern."
(http://www.nytimes.com/2002/10/28/politics/28CRAS.html)
No expressed concern about, for instance, icing, though the media has been
rife with speculation that icing could have played a role in the crash. The
King Air A100, as the Washington Post noted, "is equipped with numerous de-
icing systems. Wings and tail surfaces are equipped with pneumatic de-icing
'boots' that inflate and deflate repeatedly to break ice from the leading
edges of these surfaces. The plane's engine intakes are protected by electric
heating elements, as are propeller surfaces. Fuel is heated automatically."
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A17030-2002Oct25.html)
It seems unlikely then that icing was a major contributor to the crash,
unless the aircraft's multiple de-icing systems failed, and the aircraft's
warning systems failed to notify the pilots of those failures -- but if that
were the case, then perhaps the most likely explanation would be sabotage,
and that has, of course, already been ruled out.
The King Air A100 is said to have a very good safety record, with the last
fatal crashes occurring six years ago. Strangely, there were two such fatal
crashes involving the A100 just eleven days apart in December of 1997. Even
more strangely, one of those two crashes was of a plane that was owned by the
very same charter company that owns the plane that Wellstone was killed in.
As the Pioneer Press reported, the 1997 crash that killed two Minnesota men,
and that bore "some eerie similarities to Friday's accident ... involved a
King Air owned by Aviation Charter, Inc., of Eden Prairie. That company has
the same business address and CEO as Beech Transportation." Beech
Transportation, of course, is the owner of the plane that was carrying
Wellstone.
(http://www.twincities.com/mld/pioneerpress/news/local/4371837.htm)
So as long as the King Air planes are not owned by this particular charter
company, and don't happen to be carrying residents of the state of Minnesota,
they are known to be very safe and reliable aircraft.
The particular King Air plane carrying the Wellstone family "had only two
reports of problems in its [23-year] history, according to the FAA. Both were
in March 1996 and were problems with worn fuel cutoff levers that were
replaced with the recommendation for more frequent inspections."
(http://www.twincities.com/mld/pioneerpress/news/local/4371837.htm)
We have thus far covered weather, icing, and the structure and airworthiness
of the plane as likely causes of the crash. Next up is engine failure. That
one, alas, doesn't seem very likely either.
The New York Times held that "Officials have said that both of the plane's
engines showed blade damage, which they said suggested that the engines were
running when the plane crashed," while CNN noted that Carmody voiced the same
conclusion: "propeller damage indicates the engines may still have been
operating at the time of the crash."
(http://www.nytimes.com/2002/10/28/politics/28CRAS.html and
http://www.cnn.com/2002/US/Midwest/10/26/wellstone.investigation/index.html)
The only other typical cause of small plane crashes is pilot error, and that
also doesn't seem very likely. Though only required to have a single pilot,
Wellstone's plane had two pilots on board, and both were fully qualified to
fly the aircraft. The primary pilot, Captain Richard Conry, held an "airline
transport pilot certification -- the highest certification a pilot can
receive."
(http://www.twincities.com/mld/pioneerpress/news/local/4371837.htm)
It appears as though the WSWS was right then in concluding that none of the
typical causes of small aircraft crashes appear to apply in this case. That
is not to say that they can be definitively ruled out -- just that they don't
initially appear to be applicable.
Wellstone, in other words, appears to have been in good hands with regards to
the choice of aircraft and the flight crew, and the flying conditions - while
less than ideal - were well within the abilities of the plane and its crew.
And yet, in just two minutes time, with no distress calls and no warning,
something went horribly wrong.
Casting doubt on the most likely causes of an accidental crash does not, of
course, prove that an alternative theory - such as sabotage - is true.
Neither, for that matter, does placing the crash in its proper context in
light of recent history, though it seems appropriate to do so.
Though not widely reported, Wellstone was apparently previously targeted for
assassination while visiting Colombia in December of 2000, which of course
was right after Mel Carnahan's plane fell out of the sky just a few weeks
before election day.
(http://abcnews.go.com/sections/world/DailyNews/colombia001201.html,
http://www.counterpunch.org/pipermail/counterpunch-list/2000-
December/004162.html, and http://www.fas.org/irp/news/2000/12/irp-001201-
col.htm)
As has already been forgotten by the media, Congress was shut down for a
period of time just after the September 11 attacks due to the anthrax
mailings -- widely portrayed at the time as yet more 'terrorist' doings, and
now rarely talked about at all.
And who was it that was targeted by those mailings? Two of the most prominent
Democrats in the Senate: Tom Daschle and Patrick Leahy. These were not likely
meant to be successful attacks, by the way, since Daschle and Leahy are good
team players, but rather were probably meant as a warning to others.
Some have theorized that Flight 93, which never made it to its intended
target on September 11, was scheduled for an attack on Congress. If so, were
the anthrax attacks meant to do the job that Flight 93 failed to accomplish --
 put the fear of God into Congress and force the temporary closure of the
legislative body?
More recently, the House considered legislation that would enable the quick
replacement - which is to say, replacement without going through the bother
of checking with the voters - of House members in order to maintain
"continuity of government" in the event of - what else? - some sort of
terrorist attack.
(This legislation was discussed in an L.A. Times article from October 2,
2002, the link to which no longer works.)
This legislation could very easily be perceived, by any dissenters in the
legislative crowd, as a not-so-subtle warning that they can be quite easily
replaced with hand-picked stand-ins.
When viewed on a continuum then, with the attempted assassination of
Wellstone, what is widely perceived to be the assassination of Carnahan, the
possible (and, admittedly, entirely speculative) targeting of Congress on
September 11, the attack on Congress just after September 11, and the House
legislation allowing for rapid replacement of members who might suddenly find
themselves victims of a terrorist attack, it is only natural to speculate on
whether the Wellstone crash was something other than an accident.
So what are we to make of all this? We can, through a process of elimination,
narrow the options on the causes of the crash, but we cannot then conclude
that the plane was in fact sabotaged (or shot down, as evidence at the
Carnahan crash site seemed to indicate).
We can speculate that assassinating Wellstone fits in with what seems to be a
systematic effort to quell any and all dissent in Congress, but that likewise
doesn't allow us to reach a definitive conclusion.
So the key question, if we are to construct a case built on something more
than speculation and circumstantial evidence, is: has any direct evidence
surfaced that there was foul play involved in the crash?
There are a couple of tidbits of information that point in that direction.
There were reports, for instance, of what Carmody herself referred to as "an
intense post-crash fire." The Pioneer Press quoted airport manager Gary Ulman
as saying that the plane, broken into several scattered pieces, was engulfed
in fire that "was still burning five hours after the crash."
(http://www.cnn.com/2002/US/Midwest/10/26/wellstone.investigation/index.html
and http://www.grandforks.com/mld/grandforks/news/4372594.htm; see also
http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2002-10-25-plane-down-minnesota_x.htm)
And there was one letter writer to the WSWS who says that there "was at least
one witness, a blond haired man who said he saw a flash of light at the rear
of the plane. This was on CNN. Saw him once and that was it."
(http://www.wsws.org/articles/2002/nov2002/well-n02.shtml)
Of course, this claim, as with that of Mike Ruppert's correspondents, cannot
be verified unless someone happened to catch it on videotape. But neither
should these accounts be dismissed out of hand. It is in fact the case that
the cable news networks run live footage that contradicts what later emerges
as the official story. The networks invariably then proceed to pretend as
though the offending footage never aired.
So ... was Wellstone whacked? The only way to definitively answer that
question is through a full investigation of the crash -- preferably one not
run by a former CIA analyst and a former electronic warfare specialist who
both have experience in issuing questionable reports on the causes of high-
profile aircraft crashes.
And now, I leave you with this cryptic posting that has been circulating of
late, and that was purportedly first posted in May of 2001. If so, the
pseudonymous poster made some uncannily accurate predictions. Of course, this
could also be a hoax created after the fact and pre-dated.
The missive claims that several Senators were being "evaluated" for possible
assassination. The means of assassination was being "narrowed down to one of
several choices. One being a carefully planned 'plane crash.' Another is
through the delivery of certain biological agents to the Senator."
(http://www.voxnyc.com/archives/senator-assassination.html)
The author specified that if a biological approach was used, it would most
likely be an "Anthrax hit." Also specified in the posting is that if "the
death occurs just prior to the midterm senatorial elections, expect it to be
in a state with a close race. Expect a 'Mel Carnahan' style hit."
Strange but true, or just a hoax? I couldn't tell you, but I pass it along
for whatever it's worth.

------- End of forwarded message -------
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ANOMALOUS IMAGES AND UFO FILES
http://www.anomalous-images.com
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