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Decades-old CIA crack-cocaine scandal gains new momentum

poledriver

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Jul 21, 2005
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Decades-old CIA crack-cocaine scandal gains new momentum

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Nearly two decades after a US reporter was humiliated for connecting the CIA to a drug-trafficking trade that funded the Nicaraguan Contras, important players in the scandal – which led to the journalist’s suicide – are coming forward to back his claims.

Back in 1996, Gary Webb of the San Jose Mercury News broke a story stating not only that the Nicaraguan Contras – supported by the United States in a rebellion against their left-leaning government – were involved in the US crack cocaine epidemic of the 1980s, but also that the CIA knew and turned a blind eye to the operation.

As a result, Webb concluded, the CIA was complicit in a drug trade that was wreaking havoc on African American communities in Los Angeles.

The bombshell report sparked outrage across the country, but when national newspapers like the Los Angeles Times, New York Times, and Washington Post weighed in on the matter, they dismissed Webb and attacked his story to the point that it was disowned by the Mercury News. Webb was forced out of journalism and ultimately committed suicide in 2004.

Now, however, the whole ordeal is being looked at with fresh eyes in the form of two new films: “Kill the Messenger” and a documentary called, “Freeway: Crack in the System.” Additionally, several figures involved in the operation have recently spoken out, lending further credibility to Webb’s original reporting.

NSFW:
[video=youtube_share;VW4XO-52ubE]http://youtu.be/VW4XO-52ubE[/video]


Coral Baca, who had a close relationship with prominent Nicaraguan drug dealer Rafael Cornejo, told the Huffington Post that she remembered numerous occasions in which she meet Contra leader Adolfo Calero near San Francisco. During these meetings, she said Calero handled bags full of money, and he clearly knew that money was made through the drug trade.

“If he was stupid and had a lobotomy,” he might not have realized, Baca added. “He knew exactly what it was. He didn't care. He was there to fund the Contras, period.”

If true, the news would contradict multiple reports made by national media outlets at the time, which doubted just how much cash was going to the Contras – or even if the Contras knew it was coming from crack cocaine sales.

Meanwhile, Nicaraguan drug importer Danilo Blandon recently confirmed to documentary filmmaker Marc Levin that he was involved in drug trafficking, and that he supported the Contras. Back in 1996, Blandon was asked in court if he ran the LA drug operation, which he confirmed. Then, too, he said all the profits went to the Contras.

Despite a 1986 LA County arrest warrant detailing allegations that Brandon “filtered” drug money to the Contras, other newspapers dismissed Webb’s allegation that the Contras’ drug trafficking operation directly impacted the increased use of crack in the US – primarily, they said, because Blandon split off from the group and ran his own drug venture.

Last year, though, former LA Times reporter Jesse Katz apologized for attacking Webb’s story and reputation.

“As an L.A. Times reporter, we saw this series in the San Jose Mercury News and kind of wonder[ed] how legit it was and kind of put it under a microscope,” Katz said, according to LA Weekly. “And we did it in a way that most of us who were involved in it, I think, would look back on that and say it was overkill. We had this huge team of people at the L.A. Times and kind of piled on to one lone muckraker up in Northern California.”

“We really didn't do anything to advance his work or illuminate much to the story, and it was a really kind of tawdry exercise. ... And it ruined that reporter's career.”

While Webb was also criticized for suggesting the CIA intentionally devastated African American communities with crack, he defended himself saying that was not the case.

“It’s not a situation where the government or the CIA sat down and said, 'Okay, let’s invent crack, let’s sell it in black neighborhoods, let’s decimate black America,’” Webb reportedly says in the upcoming documentary. “It was a situation where, 'We need money for a covert operation, the quickest way to raise it is sell cocaine, you guys go sell it somewhere, we don’t want to know anything about it.'”

Following the scandal, in 1998 the CIA quietly published an internal inspector general’s report into the matter, which prior to its release was much-touted for whitewashing the agency’s reputation. Instead, it seemed to add legitimacy to the accusations, saying, “CIA knowledge of allegations or information indicating that organizations or individuals had been involved in drug trafficking did not deter their use by CIA.” At other times, the “CIA did not act to verify drug trafficking allegations or information even when it had the opportunity to do so.”

“No information has been found to indicate that CIA informed Congress of eight of the ten Contra-related individuals concerning whom CIA had received drug trafficking allegations or information,” the report added.

Continued -

http://rt.com/usa/194992-cia-crack-scandal-webb/
 
This article makes me overjoyed. The US government and its associated agencies need to be exposed as the lying, corrupted, bloodthirsty fucks that they are. Its poisonous tentacles have reached every corner of the globe. Happy Columbus day everyone!
 
It was public knowledge that the CIA and the Reagan administration was involved in funding the Contras and selling weapons to Iran while it was under sanctions all exploded during the Congressional hearings. Reagan should have been impeached. Remember that A-hole, Col. Oliver North, Poindexter et al? The Reagan Admin and CIA was involved with cocaine to get additional off the books funding for the Nicaraguan Contras.
Following Reagan, Bush Sr made war on Panama to essential get General Manuel Noriega who was helping with the transhipping of cocaine. The General is doing life in the Federal slammer.
He had outlived his usefulness so Pres Bush decided to bust him. Bush Sr had been head of the CIA before becoming Reagan's VP.
Go all the way back to the Vietnam War and the CIA was facilitating heroin importation.
Now it's Afghanistan and Opium and heroin.
It's a never ending vicious circle.
 
I agree with the entirety of your post except for the last sentence. I have faith that I will see the end of the war on drugs in my lifetime. From the trailer, "Drugs suck.. Drugs are really bad. But the war on drugs is worse." I didnt really like the first trailer, but I suppose the plot is good..
 
Of course I wish the drug wars would end in my lifetime but as I'm in my early 60's, I know it won't happen.
If you are less than 50 you may see Cannabis become legal in the entire USA but I sincerely doubt any other drugs will be legalized in your lifetime.
Even though Colorado and Washington recently legalized recreational Cannabis that happened when polls showed about 54% were in favor of legalization of Cannabis.
Recent polling is showing a decline in support of legalized cannabis. I think it has dropped to about 47% in favor. There is a good chance that if the Washington initiative 502 was on this fall's ballot it would fail.
It is likely to be a hot day in Antarctica before all recreational drugs are legalized in the USA. I would love to live to see a time when I am wrong about my expectations.
I thought at least Cannabis would have become legal throughout the USA when I was in my 20's and 30's but of course that never happened.
I know we are part of the ongoing culture wars and we will see some more progress with Cannabis but it will require that we keep up the good fight.

Even very liberal minded drug users have different opinions on legalizing drugs other than Cannabis. Most of us would have a list excluding some drugs although I am not one of them. Still, it is harder for me to imagine methamphetamine ever becoming legal but I see less of a problem with cocaine and heroin.
MDMA, Psilocybin, LSD and mescaline. These should definitely be legal. I would stipulate that all legal mescaline be synthesized so the slow growing cacti species containing mescaline were not harvested to extinction. And thinking more about it, MDMA production is currently endangering Sassafras tree species. MDMA should also be entirely synthesized.

I think all drugs should be legal. Unfortunately there probably always be many "druggies" who give the rest a bad rap.
When I think of them I always remember what one of the comic book artist, R. Crumb, characters said. "There's no room in the drug culture for amateurs." I just can't remember if it was Mr. Natural who said it or the fabulous Furry Freak Brothers. I know it was the FFB's who said, "Dope will get you through times with no money better than getting through times with money and no dope."
 
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It's weird to me that you say sassafras is going endangered. I live in massachusetts and it grows like crazy all around my house.
 
Currently the most used source of Sassafras oil is extraction from the bark of different species of trees.

Cinnamomum parthenoxylon, for example, is a plant typical of Indochina and particularly rich in safrole (up to 97%), which has been now included in the International union for
the conservation of nature (IUCN) Red book of the endangered species. This is not the only example that could be mentioned.

China is the largest consumer of sassafras oil, using around 2000 tons annually for the production of heliotropine and other derivatives. In addition to this, a further annual requirement may be estimated at around 500 tons for the world-wide production of piperonyl butoxide. Considering that more than 95% of the needed Sassafras oil comes from destructive harvesting of the trees, most of which is illegal, it can be estimated that more than 500.000 trees are destroyed annually, which means 5 million trees were lost only in the past 10 years.

Sources of Sassafras oil are now becoming more and more difficult to find both due to the more strict control on the illicit use of the product and, even more importantly, in order to prevent massive deforestation of tropical forests. China, Brazil and Vietnam, the three main historical producers of Sassafras oil, have now banned harvest of the trees to prevent depletion of the resource. Brazil was the first country to stop harvesting in 1990. Vietnam then took the place of Brazil as a producer, but in 1999 the Vietnamese government also banned harvesting, while exports stopped in 2000. Up to 2003, Vietnam followed a policy of import and re-export the raw Sassafras oil [2].


Beginning in 2003, production moved to Cambodia, namely in the Cardamom Mountains controlled by the Khmer rouge, but just a couple of years later (in 2005), the Cambodian government also banned harvesting of Sassafras trees, which are now classified in the country as rare species. Apparently the stop to production didn’t work too efficiently, since in 2005 more than 600 tons of oil were produced and exported.

A more stringent control by the local authorities, also assisted by the U.S. DEA, led to the seizure in a Thai port in October 2007 of three containers containing 50,4 tons of safrole ready for export to America and China. The last seizure occurred recently in June 2008: the cooperation of the Cambodian authorities with the Australian police blocked 33 tons of safrole-rich oil, an amount big enough to produce 245 million tablets of Ecstasy. According to a declaration of the Australian Embassy in Cambodia, the stockpile had a potential street value of more $7.3 billion.

The oil was destroyed by the Cambodian National authority by burning it over a three-day period, under the supervision of the Australian Federal police. Cambodian authorities have been working since 2002 to stem the distillation of the oil and since then have succeeded in detecting and dismantling more than 50 clandestine laboratories capable of producing up to 15 gallons of oil a day, according to the Australian Federal police. Production of Sassafras oil in China is strictly controlled by the authorities, but the Chinese companies, as well as those in Vietnam, operate in Laos and Burma on a sporadic basis. The trade is illegal; despite this, a few tons of oil from these regions occasionally enters China [2].
 
I understand that most people are sheep and the system has blinded the vast majority, but it doesn't take super conspiracy theories to figure this stuff out. If you start at the source of production and you look at the places these drugs grow, and then look at who really rules those areas, and then follow the money all the way to the US, while tallying all those who profit along the way and once it is over here, it should be obvious.
 
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