Американская военная машина. Глубинная политика, глобальная связь ЦРУ с наркотиками и путь в Афганистан - Peter Dale Scott
pleyades.net/sociopolitica/sociopol_1001club01.htm).
28. Block, Masters of Paradise, 51. Intra Bank also had a Bahamian branch, Intra Bahamas Trust Ltd.
29. Staff and editors of Newsday, The Heroin Trail (New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1974), 137 (Francisi); McCoy, The Politics of Heroin, 39 (Luciano). El-Khoury “used Luciano’s money to buy off Lebanese police and customs agents” (Alexander Cockburn and Jeffrey St. Clair, Whiteout: The CIA, Drugs, and the Press [London: Verso, 1998], 131).
30. McCoy, The Politics of Heroin, 541.
31. James Mills, The Underground Empire: Where Crime and Government Embrace (New York: Dell, 1986), 70.
32. Peter Dale Scott and Jonathan Marshall, Cocaine Politics: The CIA, Drugs, and Armies in Central America (Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1998), x–xi. Dayle made this statement during a videotaped teleconference in the presence of Marshall and myself.
33. Drinkhall, “IRS vs. CIA.” Dalitz, Kleinman, and Tucker, all veterans of the gambling scene in Cleveland, later had a controlling interest in the Desert Inn casino in Las Vegas (Investigation of Organized Crime in Interstate Commerce: Hearings before the [Kefauver] Special Committee to Investigate Organized Crime in Interstate Commerce, U.S. Senate, 81st Cong., 2nd sess., and 82nd Congress, 1st sess., Part 10 [Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1950], 907–26). Block’s and Weaver’s later and more detailed study claims that Dalitz did not have an account at Castle but adds former Lansky associate Lou Rothkopf to the list of mob figures who did (Block and Weaver, All Is Clouded by Desire, 45).
34. Block, Masters of Paradise, 189.
35. Lernoux, In Banks We Trust, citing Wall Street Journal, May 23, 1977, February 17, 1981; see also Parapolitics, Spring 1981, 88: “Like Castle, Mercantile was a conduit for CIA money, and Price Waterhouse accountants were ‘under orders’ to make sure ‘outsiders’ did not have access to the books. If they probed around, said a CIA source, they ‘could unravel a trail to the intelligence community.’”
36. Block and Weaver, All Is Clouded by Desire, 40; cf. Block, Masters of Paradise, 188–91, where Kleinman is called “perhaps a hidden owner” of Castle.
37. Block, Masters of Paradise, 163; New York Times, September 1, 1989 (“part owner”).
38. House Select Committee on Assassinations, Final Report, Investigation of the Assassination of President John F. Kennedy (March 1978), 173; Block, Masters of Paradise, 164.
39. CIA Inspector General’s Report of 1967 on CIA-Mafia Plots to Assassinate Castro, 15–16, NARA #151993.08.11.16:44:08:750007, 3–4. Cf. Peter Dale Scott, Deep Politics II: The New Revelations in U.S. Government Files, 1994–1995 (Ipswich, MA: Mary Ferrell Foundation Press, 2007), 59–63.
40. Memo of September 5, 1975 to DDO from CI Staff Chief George Kalaris, NARA #104-1010-10003, 2. Mario Brod, a former U.S. Army Intelligence captain in Rome with Angleton, is not easily portrayed in a footnote. According to Richard Mahoney, when Senator John F. Kennedy ran for the presidency in 1960, his father sought out John Rosselli “to help him arrange a summit meeting with Mafia leaders. But the best Rosselli could do was to get the Chicago Outfit to attend and, interestingly enough, the attorney Mario Brod” (Richard D. Mahoney, Sons and Brothers: The Days of Jack and Bobby Kennedy [New York: Arcade, 1999], 43–44).
41. Tom Mangold, Cold Warrior: James Jesus Angleton: The CIA’s Master Spy Hunter (New York: Touchstone/Simon and Schuster, 1991), 314–15. For Jay Lovestone’s extraordinary life shift from Communist Party leader to anticommunist work with Angleton, see Ted Morgan, A Covert Life: Jay Lovestone, Communist, Anti-Communist, and Spymaster (New York: Random House, 1999).
42. Douglas Valentine, “The French Connection Revisited: The CIA, Irving Brown, and Drug Smuggling as Political Warfare,” Covert Action, http://www.covertaction
.org/content/view/99/75.
43. Paul Buhle, “Lovestone’s Thin Red Line,” The Nation, May 6, 1999, http://www.thenation.com/doc/19990524/buhle.
44. House Select Committee on Assassinations, Investigation of the Assassination of President John F. Kennedy, Appendix to Hearings, Volume 9 (March 1978), 47.
45. Ed Reid, The Grim Reapers: The Anatomy of Organized Crime in America (New York: Bantam, 1969), 174.
46. Mangold, Cold Warrior, 329–30, cf. 305, 337. Other authors have written that Dulles and Angleton maintained a “second agency,” or “agency-within-the Agency”; see, e.g., Mark Aarons and John Loftus, Unholy Trinity (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1991), 260.
47. Mangold, Cold Warrior, 105.
48. Memo of November 4, 1970, from John K. Greaney, Assistant General Counsel, CIA, NARA #104-10106-10374.
49. United States of America, Appellee, v. Leonard Russo, et al., Defendants-Appellants.
50. Memo of November 4, 1970, from John K. Greaney, Assistant General Counsel, CIA, NARA #104-10106-10374. Robert Sam Anson once claimed that two of the defendants in these kickback trials, John Larocca and Gabriel Mannarino, were acquitted in 1971 when “one of the star witnesses turned out to be the local head of the CIA” (Robert Sam Anson, “They’ve Killed the President” [New York: Bantam, 1975], 296). Anson told me that this witness was Brod, but I have found no court record of Brod’s testimony.
51. Dan E. Moldea, The Hoffa Wars: Teamsters, Rebels, Politicians, and the Mob (New York: Paddington Press, 1978), 130–31.
52. Time, June 9, 1975, 14.
53. Church Committee, Testimony of John Scelso, May 7, 1976, 41-42, NARA #157-10014-10083, 45–46. Angleton’s response suggests that he may have believed what Hank Messick and others later charged: that Lansky had somehow obtained protection from the bureau (Hank Messick, John Edgar Hoover [New York: David McKay, 1972], 229–31).
54. William R. Corson, Susan B. Trento, and Joseph J. Trento, Widows (New York: Crown, 1979), 71.
55. For details see Scott, The War Conspiracy, 387; Scott, Deep Politics II, 30–33.
56. See Scott, Deep Politics II, 17–18, 92; see also Peter Dale Scott, “Oswald and the Hunt for Popov’s Mole,” The Fourth