Grievance 32 - Collusion

The U.S. Constitution failed to prohibit government agencies from joint
operations and agreements that deceived the American taxpayers of
illegal activity, and to specifically protect disclosurers on the inside.

While the government issued denials, numerous newspapers, magazines
and independent researchers reported on arms and drug operations that
involved both U.S. and Israeli agents. On December 14, 1987, the
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette reported that a CIA pilot, Barry Seal, had
used the Mena, Arkansas airport as a drop-off point for drugs flown from
Central America. The newspaper said the Internal Revenue Service had
seized Seal's assets after he disclosed the truth, and that he was later
found slain. The report said federal officials interfered in local law
enforcement investigation of the drug operation. Six months later, the
newspaper reported that a former military investigator gave a sworn
deposition claiming that he engaged in drug-smuggling and gun-running
with the consent of both the CIA and the Drug Enforcement
Administration.

In a 1994 book titled "Compromised; Clinton, Bush and the CIA", Terry
Reed gave an eye-witness account of the Mena operation.

On October 18, 1994, the Wall Street Journal reported that an IRS
investigator documented drug profits and money "laundering" in Arkansas.
The agent also said the U.S. Justice Department wanted him to lie to a
grand jury.

Time Magazine reported that CIA facilities in Venezuela were used to
store l,000 kilos of cocaine headed for the U.S., and Nation Magazine
reported the CIA helped put drug cartel leaders in power in Bolivia in
1980.

Former U.S. Navy pilot, veteran commercial airline pilot, and Federal
Aeronautics Administration investigator, Rodney Stich, published a
detailed expose' of government collusion in "Defrauding America" in
1993. Former "deep cover" CIA and DEA operatives came forward to Stich
after he earlier published government coverups that he had officially
investigated involving airline crashes caused by equipment failure, but
blamed on "pilot error";

"Federal officials covered up...serious
violations of important federal air safety
requirements by (the airline) management,
and the record-falsification associated with
the practice."

Stich detailed the "October surprise" coverup which altered the 1980
Presidential election, the Iran-Contra arms for drugs deal, and
collusion with the Israeli Mossad.

Stich's attempts to bring documented evidence of collusion to the
attention of the judicial, executive and legislative branches of
government were rejected, often under mysterious circumstances.

Government disclosurers, or "whistleblowers", often had their lives, or
the lives of their families threatened for making public disclosure of
wrongdoing.

In the 1992 Presidential election, Third Party candidate Ross Perot
promised not to use the drugs and arms smuggling issues in his campaign
against Clinton and Bush, forestalling complete nationwide disclosure of
the truth and any possible complicity. Clinton was Arkansas Governor
and Bush, a former CIA Director, was Vice President at the time of the
Mena drug operation.

With an AUTHENTIC CONSTITUTION in harmony with the natural
Cosmic Laws of the universe, and producing High Moral Values and
Democratic Ideals, disclosurers of alleged collusion or other wrongdoing
in government are fully protected, and investigation and prosecution is ongoing.

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