-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://www.guerrillanews.com/wildcard/vreeland_one
Click Here: <A HREF="http://www.guerrillanews.com/wildcard/vreeland_one";>
GuerrillaNews Special Report: Wildcard</A>
-----
WILDCARD: Down the rabbit hole
with the man who says he tried to
warn the world about 9/11

A GNN Special Report
By Sander Hicks

Part One: : A White Knight?

“The question of could [9/11] have been prevented will haunt us
as long as we exist as a country.” - Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-Ca.)

Delmart "Mike" Vreeland wants to meet me in the parking lot of the Loblaw
grocery store on Lake Shore Drive in Toronto. I arrive as a silver Lincoln
circles the parking garage. I park and the car silently glides to me. The
passenger door opens. Vreeland is sitting in back, hair cropped short into a
Caesar cut, wearing a tight black ribbed t-shirt and black parachute pants.
He looks like Eminem. He leans forward and says, "Lock your car. Get in."

As a black storm builds out in the harbor, we head to a big tourist
restaurant on the waterfront called "Docks." Vreeland buys us two beers each,
we drink and talk. He wonders aloud if anyone is tailing us. Suddenly
everyone around me is middle-aged, dressed inconspicuously and wearing
sunglasses. The storm breaks and we run inside. The middle-aged men follow us
in, still wearing their sunglasses.

That night the limo takes me, Vreeland, Vreeland's son, and the son's best
friend up north to a resort lodge. Vreeland feels safer there. He says he's
buying a condo for $600,000, in one lump sum to be wired over. From where? He
won't say. Does it have to do with his work with former U.S. Treasury
operatives, people who claim to be attempting to recover over $27.6 trillion
lost in 1993 when a secret Israeli/Palestinian peace deal went awry? (Yes,
that's right, $27.6 trillion) Perhaps . . . or perhaps it’s just another
Vreelandism: a wild story that dissolves in the waters of scrutiny.

Vreeland was no ordinary jailbird. He told Canadian authorities he was a spy
for the Office of Naval Intelligence.
This story begins in December, 2000, when Vreeland, an American citizen, was
arrested in Toronto and charged by Canadian authorities with fraud,
obstructing a peace officer and making a death threat (really, the last one
he says was for cursing his betrayers while being arrested). The Canadian
charges were soon dropped to speed his extradition back to the U.S., where he
was wanted in numerous states on charges that include identity and financial
fraud, forgery, and battery to an officer.

Despite his impressive litany of warrants and heavily tattooed body, Vreeland
was no ordinary jailbird. He told Canadian authorities he was a spy for the
Office of Naval Intelligence, one of the oldest and most powerful
intelligence arms of the U.S. government. He also claimed if he was
extradited to the U.S. he would be killed. Why? Vreeland claimed to have some
very sensitive information.

While in prison, during the summer of 2001, Vreeland says he repeatedly
attempted to warn the world about imminent terrorist attacks. Vreeland’s then
attorney Rocco Galati, (a respected former Canadian prosecutor known for his
support of progressive causes) made what he called "head-bashing attempts"(1)
to have Vreeland put in touch with the proper authorities, to pass on "vital
information about national security"(2) to the governments of Canada and the
U.S.

The notes listed a number of potential terrorist targets including the Sears
Towers, World Trade Center, White House, and Pentagon; as well as the phrase,
"Let one happen. Stop the rest!!!"
Sometime around August 11 or 12, Vreeland wrote a set of notes. They listed a
number of potential terrorist targets including the Sears Towers, World Trade
Center, White House, and Pentagon. The notes also included the phrase, "Let
one happen. Stop the rest!!!" [see the notes here] He sealed them in an
envelope and handed them to his Canadian jailers. His lawyers, Galati and
Paul Slansky, another well-known former Canadian prosecutor, introduced the
documents into court that October, arguing that Vreeland’s life would be in
danger if he was sent back to the U.S. The lawyers were harassed with dead
cats hung on their porches, and smashed car windows. Galati has since bowed
out of the case.

News of Vreeland’s case spread quickly when alternative 9/11 journalist Mike
Ruppert began sending back dramatic dispatches from the courtroom in Toronto.
Ruppert called Vreeland a “White Knight Talking Backwards," in articles
published on his site, copvcia.com, and here on GNN.tv. To Ruppert,
Vreeland's story, combined with his lawyers’ testimony, proved that elements
within the U.S. government knew 9/11 was coming and did nothing to stop it.

The story became something of an Internet phenomenon, with thousands of
readers around the world tracking every dramatic twist and turn. But just as
Vreeland's star began to rise, it came crashing down. His long, colorful list
of outstanding warrants in the U.S. was released to the public and the
international man of mystery was quickly dismissed as a two-bit con man who
had concocted an elaborate yarn to avoid prosecution. Canadian authorities
dropped their charges against Vreeland on March 14, 2002, and he was paroled
to house arrest to await an extradition hearing.

The Nation's Corn wrote Vreeland, “was no spy, he was a flim-flammer,” and
characterized Ruppert as little more than a web surfer with a vivid
imagination.
His case might have slipped off the radar completely, but on March 30, The
Nation's Washington correspondent David Corn published an article entitled
“The 9/11 X-Files." The article lumped Georgia Congresswoman Cynthia
McKinney, the French book that claimed a plane didn’t hit the Pentagon, and
Vreeland supporter Ruppert into the same ‘kook’ category. Corn claimed their
‘misguided’ efforts to look for a conspiracy at the top distracted the public
from the more important work of analyzing the Bush Administration’s real
political misdeeds. Corn wrote Vreeland, “was no spy, he was a flim-flammer,”
and characterized Ruppert as little more than a web surfer with a vivid
imagination: “Ruppert is no journalist.” Ruppert fired back, and hundreds of
his supporters wrote Corn and The Nation in protest. Corn’s response was to
intensify his attack, publishing "To Protect And To Spin," a scathing profile
of Ruppert full of personal details: romantic affairs gone awry among other
nadirs.

Vreeland's most vocal critics could be found on Toronto's alternative radio
station CKLN. DJs Ron Aninich and Greg Duffel interviewed numerous people
associated with Vreeland, including alleged victims of his scams, and the man
himself, in the end, concluding he was little more than a common criminal.
They also built an exhaustive Vreeland web site listing interviews, articles
and every court document they could find on his case. They even composed a
Negativland-esque, anti-Vreeland reworking of the disco hit "In the Navy."
Partly in response to what he felt were brutal attacks from CKLN, in the
spring of 2002, Vreeland developed his own site, www.ltvreeland.com. He
posted information about his case, court documents and records of financial
transactions involving a former Reagan White House secret operative named Leo
Wanta (more on him later). The site is about as organized as a shotgun blast
and did little to help his cause.

Then, on May 21, 2002, the plot thickened. A devoted, lifelong-career FBI
agent from Minnesota named Coleen Rowley publicly accused FBI director Robert
Mueller of hampering crucial investigations into alleged 9/11 conspirators,
charging there was a "delicate and subtle shading/skewing of facts by you
[Mueller] and others at the highest levels of FBI management." In July,
Arizona-based FBI Special Agent Ken Williams wrote the now-famous Phoenix
Memo accusing the FBI of ignoring a call to investigate potential terrorists
training at flight schools. In the international press, German, Russian and
Israeli intelligence were quoted as claiming they had warned the White House
that an attack was imminent. More recently, many family members of 9/11
victims have joined the call for answers. Kristin Breitweiser lost her
husband Ronald in the World Trade Center. She told Phil Donahue on MSNBC
recently, "At this time of year, everyone is asking us … what can we do to
memorialize, what can we do to memorialize. And you know what? An independent
investigation. Let’s make sure our husbands, our loved ones did not die in
vain."

Could Vreeland be the one U.S. intelligence operative who blew the whistle
before the 9/11 tragedy? Or is his story just the Robert Ludlum fantasies of
a low-life military con man?
On September 18, Eleanor Hill, the staff director of a congressional
intelligence inquiry into 9/11, testified that there were no less than twelve
separate warnings about terrorists hijacking planes in the past five years,
including, contrary to the Bush Administration’s previous statements, one
that specifically involved crashing a plane into the World Trade Center.

As serious doubts about Bush's official story become more accepted, maybe the
idea of an American intelligence officer having foreknowledge of 9-11 is not
so far-fetched. Could Delmart Vreeland, extensive criminal record and all, be
the one U.S. intelligence operative who blew the whistle before the 9/11
tragedy? Or is his story just the Robert Ludlum fantasies of a low-life
military con man, as so many have concluded?

It is a bizarre tale, part Bourne Identity, part Miami Vice, and part Jerry
Springer, in which facts, disinformation, and delusion all seem to intersect
in the dark underbelly of black ops, geopolitics and family dysfunction. The
story includes alleged ties to the late-White House lawyer Vince Foster,
pardoned arms dealer Marc Rich, a mysterious international financier who
calls himself “Reagan’s junkyard dog,” a restaurateur accused of smuggling
cocaine inside live elephants, the Iraqis, a shady Russian tycoon, and
Vreeland’s country-western musician half-brother, who has a seemingly
inexhaustible vendetta to see Vreeland sent to prison.

In the end, this six-month investigation for GNN confirmed what many already
know: Delmart Vreeland is a liar and an accomplished con man, adept at
spinning tales, and manipulating allegiances to further his own goals. In
other words, he is the perfect candidate for work in U.S. intelligence.
Footnotes:

1) "Diplomat’s Death Remains Unsolved; What Killed Him: A Thief, Natural
Causes or Cloak-and-Dagger?,” Kathleen Harris, The Ottawa Sun, Dec. 9, 2001
2) Ibid.

Part One: A White Knight?
Part Two: Dissecting the Notes
Part Three: The World's Best Con Man
Part Four: Moscow Nights
Part Five: The Man from Michigan
Part Six: The World's Worst Liar
Part Seven: ONI and CIA
Part Eight: The Junkyard Dog
Part Nine: AWOL in Wonderland


-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
All My Relations.
Omnia Bona Bonis,
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End

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