Reader comment: Hi Watchman, I am watching the new, very interesting Barry Seal video.
Below, the movie "Doublecrossed" the movie about Barry Seal.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vH-cuspaCac
When Roger Reaves met Barry Seal and other stories about Barry
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4FkoESusYWM&t=611s
In your Barry Seal article, you may want to add "Oliver North had Seal killed" . . . . . and it was AFTER Colonel Oliver North leaked the Photos to the NY Times. And please show proof in the article. The reader is correct on that point and it is pointed out not only in the article but in the movie "double crossed" when an attorney or U.S. attorney telephones Oliver North and tells North he did something to Seal that was terribly wrong.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vH-cuspaCac
When Roger Reaves met Barry Seal and other stories about Barry
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4FkoESusYWM&t=611s
The assassination of Barry Seal was one of the most sensational
high-profile killings to rock Baton Rouge since the 1935 assassination of U.S.
Sen. Huey Long.
The brutal murder of Barry Seal, 46, at a Baton Rouge halfway
house in 1986 would send shock waves up and down the political spectrum. It
would focus the glare of the media spotlight on not only the Colombian Medellin
Cartel, but also on the FBI and CIA as well as such political icons as then-Vice President George H.W. Bush
and Oliver North.
Most of all, Seal’s murder would lay bare for all the world to
see the seamy underbelly of America’s duplicitous war on drugs, and how drug
smuggling was in fact sanctioned by powerful men in order to advance a hidden
agenda. That agenda would turn up in the sordid details of the Iran-Contra
scandal.
Seal’s
life—and death—would seem a perfect fit for Hollywood. In fact, there was a
made-for-cable movie, Double Crossed, that starred Dennis Hopper as
Seal and Seal was featured in the Netflix series “Narcos”.
Seal, who began flying at age of 15, flew weapons to Fidel
Castro in 1958 when Castro was fighting to overthrow Fulgencio Batista. It was
only after Castro succeeded in overthrowing Batista in 1959 and declared
himself a Marxist that other forces then began their efforts to overthrow
Castro.
In 1964, Seal went to work for TWA and became their youngest 707
captain and later their youngest 747 captain. He was fired by TWA after his
1972 arrest in New Orleans on charges of flying explosives to anti-Castro
Cubans in Mexico. The buyer, it turned out, was a federal agent. Soon after
that, Seal turned to drug smuggling and subsequently was arrested in Honduras
with 40 kilos of cocaine worth a reported $25 million.
He spent nine months in a Honduran prison and while there, met William Roger Reeves, a
fellow prisoner who worked
for the Ochoa family of Medellin, Colombia. Reeves, Ochoa’s New Orleans
business manager, brought Seal into what in 1982 officially became the Medellin
Cartel after Jorge Ochoa
and Pablo Escobar joined forces to form a 2,000-man army to destroy M-19, the
Marxist revolutionary group that was causing problems for the Colombian drug
barons.
By 1982, Seal was making regular runs on behalf of the Medellin
Cartel, bringing tons of cocaine into the U.S. It was at this time that he
moved his operations from Baton Rouge to Mena, Arkansas. The governor of Arkansas
was no other than Bill
Clinton. Reportedly Bill Clinton was tied to the drug smuggling conspiracies
in Mena.
In 1984, Seal was indicted in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, on
charges of smuggling Quaaludes and money laundering. Facing a 10-year prison sentence,
he decided to flip but federal prosecutors were not interested in a deal so he
simply went over their heads. Seal flew to Washington and met with two members of Vice President
George Bush’s Task Force on Drugs.
In secret testimony before the task force, Seal said the
Medellin Cartel had cut a deal with the Marxist Sandinistas in Nicaragua. The
agreement, Seal said, called for the cartel to give a cut of drug profits to
the Sandinistas in exchange for use of an airfield in Managua as a trans-shipment
point for narcotics.
That news proved too enticing for President Reagan who was eager
to wage an all-out war on the Sandinistas. Because Reagan feared another
communist regime in the Western Hemisphere, Seal was enlisted as an undercover informant for the Drug
Enforcement Administration (DEA).
By this
time, Seal had purchased a C-123. The larger transport plane, which he
affectionately referred to as The Fat Lady, was needed to haul tons
of cocaine for the cartel. As part of his agreement with DEA, he rigged the C-123 with a
hidden camera and was able to photograph Pablo Escobar helping Nicaraguan
soldiers load 1,200 kilos of cocaine at the Managua airport. Reagan was
ecstatic and went on national television shortly afterwards, waving the
photograph given to him by Col. Oliver North and denouncing the Sandinistas as
“drug smugglers corrupting American youth.”
As a result of Seal’s cooperation, the judge in his Florida case
praised Seal and reduced his sentence to six months probation.
North, meanwhile, was busy orchestrating a complicated arms deal
with Iran in negotiations to obtain Iran’s help in freeing seven American
hostages held by pro-Iranian terrorists in Lebanon. The U.S. would conceal the
transactions by selling the weapons first to Israel and then re-selling them at
significant “off the books” markups to Iran’s Islamist government for use in
its war with Iraq. Despite several such transactions, it would take years to
obtain freedom for all the prisoners.
Part of the $48 million paid by Iran to the U.S. for the Hawk
and TOW missiles was in turn used to fund the Contras in their fight against
the Marxist Sandinistas. This was in direct violation of a 1984 law banning
such aid.
In December of 1984, Seal was arrested in Louisiana for flying a
cargo of marijuana into the state. U.S. District Judge Frank Polozola was bound by the Florida plea
agreement and was furious at being powerless to put Seal away.
Polozola on December 20, 1985, invoked the sentence handed down
by the Florida judge and sentenced Seal to six months supervised probation,
taking the occasion to say that people like Seal were “the lowest, most
despicable people I can think of.” A condition of the sentence was that he had to spend every night, from
6 p.m. to 6 a.m., at the Salvation Army halfway house on Airline Highway in
Baton Rouge. Polozola further stipulated that Seal could not carry a gun or
hire armed bodyguards.
Seal’s attorney, Lewis Unglesby, told Polozola his ruling
amounted to a death sentence for his client. Seal told friends that the judge
“made me a clay pigeon.”
At 6 p.m. on February 19, 1986, Seal promptly drove up to the
Salvation Army in his white Cadillac. As he parked his car, he was approached
by a man carrying an assault weapon. Two quick bursts riddled Seal’s head and chest,
killing him instantly.
On March 27, a
state grand jury in Baton Rouge indicted Miguel Velez, Bemardo Antonio Vasquez,
Luis Quintero, and Jose Renteria-Campo for the murder. In May of 1987, a jury
found Vasquez, Velez, and Quintero guilty of first-degree murder and sentenced
all three to life in prison without parole. Renteria-Campo was extradited to
Miami to be tried on federal weapons charges.
Unglesby said the Medellin Cartel killed Seal to prevent the
extradition of Medellin Cartel co-leader Jorge Ochoa from Spain, where he was hiding. U.S.
authorities wanted to put him on trial for drug smuggling. “It worked,”
Unglesby said. “Ochoa wasn’t extradited.”
But even in death, Seal would not go away easily.
On March 3, 1986, only two weeks after Seal was murdered,
Louisiana Attorney General William Guste hand-delivered a five-page letter to U.S. Attorney General Edwin
Meese. In his letter, Guste made a formal request for a complete
investigation with respect to the government’s relationship with and handling
of Seal.
“In October, as Chairman of the Subcommittee on Narcotics and
Drug Interdiction of the President’s Commission on Organized Crime, I had
presided over a seminar at which Barry Seal had testified,” Guste continued.
“His purpose there was to inform the commission and top United
States officials of the methods and equipment used by drug smugglers….and (he)
was scheduled to be a key witness in the government’s case against Jorge
Ochoa-Vasques, the head of one of the largest drug cartels in the world. WHY
WAS SUCH AN IMPORTANT WITNESS NOT GIVEN PROTECTIOIN WHETHER HE WANTED IT OR
NOT?” Guste asked, using all capital letters.
There was no word as to whether or not Meese ever responded to
Guste’s letter.
Seven months after Guste delivered his letter to Meese, on
October 5, 1986, a Sandinista patrol shot down a C-123 cargo plane that was
supplying the Contras. Eugene
Hasenfus, who was on board the plane, survived the crash and told his
captors that he thought the CIA was behind the operation to supply the Contras.
It
proved to be the singular event that blew the Iran-Contra scandal wide open.
The C-123 that had been shot down was The Fat Lady, Seal’s beloved
cargo plane. Somehow, the plane had fallen into the hands of Oliver North and
his covert operation.
Hasenfus said that was by sheer coincidence.
That’s not likely. Seal’s offshore bank accounts disappeared and
the IRS filed a multi-million dollar lien against his assets. His property,
including his home and all his airplanes, were seized. Seal’s wife was said to
have found George Bush’s private phone number in Seal’s wallet. The C-123 was
ultimately sold to a company with connections to the CIA and was shot down soon
afterwards.
In 1993, Colombian and U.S. authorities cornered Pablo Escobar
at a house in Medellin and killed the drug kingpin in a shootout. This shootout
was also featured in the Netflix series “Narcos”.
The CIA, DEA, and State Department have each been implicated in
various drug trafficking enterprises that were used to fund illegal covert
operations in nations all over the globe.
Twenty-five years after Seal’s murder, America’s war on drugs
continued at a cost of $52 billion per year, or $1600 for every second of every
day. That investment included not only the cost of preventative measures, but
also the cost of housing fully 20 percent of all federal and state prison
inmates (more than 400,000) for drug-related offenses. Below, is allegedly Seal's old C-123 "the fat lady".
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