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Michael Hand of Nugan Hand found - Printable Version

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Michael Hand of Nugan Hand found - Magda Hassan - 07-11-2015

David Guyatt Wrote:
Magda Hassan Wrote:It seems 60 Minutes have a segment on this week end about Michael Hand. He has been found living in the US and the finger prints match. I'll be watching this one even though I don't usually bother with 60 Minutes.

How interesting. Fled back to the US and obviously was protected from discovery by his old masters at Langley. I wonder if Oz will try to have him extradited? Or has the statute of limitations expired? Or would Oz do it anyway as it seems to me that they were happy to turn a blind eye to Nugan's death accepting it as suicide when it was almost certainly murder, imo anyway.

It will be interesting to see the public reaction and follow through of the Australian government. It is such a US client state. There are many pissed of investors here and of course the murder of Frank Nugan. That has no statute of limitations. Though the widow is saying she doesn't want to know any thing about it. Which is understandable and she is no doubt worried for her well being or that of her family.


Michael Hand of Nugan Hand found - Peter Lemkin - 07-11-2015

Magda Hassan Wrote:
David Guyatt Wrote:
Magda Hassan Wrote:It seems 60 Minutes have a segment on this week end about Michael Hand. He has been found living in the US and the finger prints match. I'll be watching this one even though I don't usually bother with 60 Minutes.

How interesting. Fled back to the US and obviously was protected from discovery by his old masters at Langley. I wonder if Oz will try to have him extradited? Or has the statute of limitations expired? Or would Oz do it anyway as it seems to me that they were happy to turn a blind eye to Nugan's death accepting it as suicide when it was almost certainly murder, imo anyway.

It will be interesting to see the public reaction and follow through of the Australian government. It is such a US client state. There are many pissed of investors here and of course the murder of Frank Nugan. That has no statuTe of limitations. Though the widow is saying she doesn't want to know any thing about it. Which is understandable and she is no doubt worried for her well being or that of her family.

Nugan was the most visible death, but there were SEVERAL others all connected to the Bank going under - forced 'under' - assets moved to BCCI (and elsewhere), and people moved around...some underground; some figuratively, some literally.


Michael Hand of Nugan Hand found - Peter Lemkin - 07-11-2015

Nugan Hand: CIA Operation in Australia

[COLOR=rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.54902)]Sep 2, 2014 [/COLOR]
[COLOR=rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.701961)]The following are excerpts from the book, Explosive Secrets of Covert CIA Companies, authored by Captain Rodney Stich

Nugan Hand: CIA Operation in Australia

[Image: 175412d.jpg]A primary CIA money laundering operation in the Pacific area was Nugan Hand Bank, with headquarters in Sydney, Australia and branch offices throughout the Far East, Europe, and the United States. Nugan Hand Bank was incorporated in 1976 in the Cayman Islands, a popular money-laundering location.
Nugan Hand Bank was a replacement for the CIA's Mercantile Bank and Trust Company and Castle Bank & Trust, incorporated in Nassau, Bahamas. Nugan Hand had branch offices in Far East countries, laundering drug money from the Golden Triangle drug producing area.
Earlier, the IRS, unaware of the CIA connection, started to conduct an investigation of Castle Bank and Trust Company, which was then quickly halted, obviously by the CIA, which often operated outside the law.
Secondary functions for these covert CIA companies were arms sales and funding covert activities, such as undermining governments and funding assassination squads. Nugan Hand was comprised primarily of people with ties to the U.S. intelligence community. The primary partners were Francis Nugan, Michael Hand, and Maurice Bernard Houghton.
Vast amounts of money were hidden in assets and financial holdings throughout the world. Either to appear as a legitimate international investment operation, or to defraud people out of millions of dollars, Nugan Hand took deposits from individuals throughout the world. That money would be lost by these investors when the CIA's cover was blown.
When the cover for this CIA-related operation was blown, these funds were quickly moved to other CIA proprietaries, inflicting financial losses upon the investors and depositors. Many of the individuals putting money into the CIA's Nugan Hand Bank were military personnel, who eventually lost everything they deposited.
Exposing Fraud in CIA's Nugan Hand Bank
Nugan Hand's cover was blown on April 11, 1980, by a reporter for Target, a Hong Kong financial newsletter. This required the CIA to shut down the operation and destroy evidence of its CIA links. It was further exposed as a CIA operation in an Australian Government Report that explained why the CIA needed the large money moving capabilities of these covert cover operations.
A strained American and Australian relationship had existed since the 1970's when the government headed by Prime Minister Gough Whitman found that U.S. secret activities were taking place on bases in Australia. Although joint operations with Australia had been approved, those covert operations were a complete surprise to the government there.
Officials in the Labor Government were outraged upon learning that even their country's Foreign Ministry was unaware of these operations. One base was used as a key ground control station for satellites and an early warning system, code named Casino. It was used to serve as a link in the Defense Support Program against Russian ICBM Attack on the U.S., its sister station located in Colorado.
The station operated the Rhyolite spy satellite, used to monitor Russian and Chinese telemetry data used during missile tests, and other communication as well. The base includes a large transmission facility relaying data to intelligence centers in the United States.
Another Australian U.S. station was used to direct commands to nuclear submarines and naval groups in the western pacific. All this, plus the fact that Australia's government then learned that the CIA operations moved billions of dollars through its Nugan Hand Bank in Sydney to support clandestine operations world wide, including actions targeted against the Australian government itself, caused considerable anger toward the United States.
The Whitman government went public with much of this information, resulting in a stern warning from Washington against further CIA exposure. At the same time a spy working for TRW in California, whose job it was to monitor clandestine messages in what was known as the "Black Box," passed CIA secrets to the Russian KGB. This information showed how CIA funds were being used to influence labor unions in Australia against the Whitman Government.
Key names associated with Nugan Hand were Edwin Wilson, imprisoned later for selling plastic explosives to Libyas Muammar Qaddafi. Wilson was a CIA officer from the mid fifties to 1971, before he went covert through a cover known as the Navy Task Force 157.
According to the Australian Report, the task force was used in conjunction with Nugan Hand Bank, and along with other CIA agents supplied arms to Africa, including 3,000 weapons and 10 million rounds of ammunition. These were shipped from a U.S. Company in the United States to Task Force 157. It appeared that a spy ship might have been sold to Iran at about the same time. It was estimated that over 100 proprietary companies might have been tied to the Nugan Hand CIA operation.
Other CIA personnel included Theodore Shackley, second in command of all CIA covert activities. He was once the station chief in Laos during the Vietnam War and held key posts in Agency operations in Saigon before becoming the number two man at CIA headquarters in Langley.
Shackley had been involved in the covert actions against Cuba's Fidel Castro. They ranged from trying to hire the Mafia to assassinate the Cuban dictator to such extremes as plans to feed him altered chemicals that could cause his beard to fall out. Theodore Shackley had a reputation within the spy agency as a ruthless man who would go to extremes to accomplish his goals. While stationed in Saigon as CIA Chief, a Special Forces unit asked their CIA liaison officer what they should do with a double agent they discovered. Shackley ordered him killed, as he had done to an estimated 250 political prisoners in Laos. According to the Australian Report, Shackley was a key figure in the Nugan Hand operations.
Another CIA agent was Donald Beazley, who was president of Nugan Hand Banking Group International. He later became president of City Bank in Miami. Beazley, according to the Australian Report, played an important part in the purchase of London Capital Securities Ltd. a.k.a. Stonehouse Bank. All were tied to A.P.I. Distributors of Houston, Texas, and helped Wilson sell 20 tons of plastic explosives to Qaddafi. Thomas Clines was also tied to Shackley and was a highly ranked CIA veteran of over 30 years. Beazley purchased the London Bank for $300,000 in travelers checks bought by Bernard Maurice Houghton, a Nugan Hand executive in Australia and a veteran CIA agent.
Another figure Major General Richard Secord, later of Iran-Contra fame, having just left his post as Secretary to Casper Weinberger, introduced Houghton to Shackley and Clines. Houghton ran Nugan Hand operations in Saudi Arabia, collecting large deposits in cash that were converted to traveler's checks and taken out of the country. The Australian Report estimated it at approximately $10 million dollars. Some checks were later tied to the London Bank purchase.
The Australian report tied Nugan Hand Bank to Lt. Gen. Leroy Manor, Chief of the Pacific Command in the Philippines, and Edwin Black, a former high-ranking intelligence officer and assistant Army Chief of Staff. Both men served as Nugan Hand Bank Presidents. Gen. Black maintained ties with Bishop Baldwin Rewald Dilling*ham and Wong after the fall of Nugan Hand Bank. In addition Walter McDonald, former Deputy Director of the CIA, became a business consultant to Nugan Hand.
General Black, who with his ties to both Nugan Hand and Rewalds operation in Hawaii, was an officer in the OSS (Office of Strategic Services) forerunner of the CIA. He was chief aide to Allen Dulles, the CIA Director, under Presidents Eisenhower and Kennedy. He also worked closely with Richard Helms, who became CIA Director.
Australia's complaints that the U.S. Intelligence community refused to cooperate in their investigation fell on deaf ears. The Report also said the CIA lied repeatedly to them. Admiral Bobby Ray Inman, former Deputy Director of CIA, stated on at least two occasions that any additional investigation by Australia would result in exposure of "a range of dirty tricks against foreign governments."
Most interesting was the comparison between Frank Nugan and Ronald Rewald, both relatively unknowns who in a short period of time became recognized as international financial and banking experts. Neither had prior banking experience, both in their mid-thirties and both had strong family relationships. Frank Nugan claimed that over a billion dollars a year ran through his bank. He, like Rewald, was portrayed as a whiz kid of the business world. Michael Hand, Frank Nugan's business partner, had grown up in the poor side of the Bronx, recruited early and worked for the CIA on a contract basis. Rewald was also recruited and worked for the CIA early on as an agent before becoming disgruntled with the spy agency.
According to the Australian Report, Shackley and Hand had a longstanding relationship. The report finally concluded that it could not say why or who killed Frank Nugan. Michael Hand was smuggled out of Australia by CIA operatives after Nugan's death, and fled the country before he could answer any investigators questions.
CIA Proprietary
According to Victor Marchetti, a former CIA agent and author of The CIA and the Cult of Intelligence, there are basically three types of CIA operations. One, known as a Proprietary, a concern that has been designed by the CIA to provide some type of needed service. The proprietary was wholly owned by the CIA itself, but was disguised to appear to the public as a privately owned business.
The CIA hires, and can fire, the heads of proprietaries, although for all practical purposes the proprietary conducts its own financial affairs with a minimum of oversight from Langley. If a proprietary were in need of funds for some reason, such as expansion, it would request funds from the CIA. Therefore, a proprietary tends to take on a life of its own. Several have grown too big and too independent to be either controlled or dissolved by CIA headquarters. Nugan Hand, most likely was also a proprietary, although some might consider it an "independent".
CIA "Front"
A second kind of CIA operation, Marchetti pointed out, was a simple front. A front is an organization whose purported business is a sham and is kept in place solely to provide a cover for covert CIA activities and involved agents.
Independent Asset
The cover of the third kind, Marchetti explained, is literally an independent organization that is closely allied to the CIA, not only ideologically, but also with many former or present CIA people working for it or running it. The organization has mutual goals with the CIA. An example cited by Marchetti was Interarms Company, the World's largest private arms dealer. It was run mostly overseas. Nugan Hand may have been more of this third kind than a proprietary.
Proprietaries are dangerous because they are hard to control and relatively easy to expose. Proprietaries are all used to provide covers, to launder money, and to serve as "cut outs" for highly clandestine operations. This means a direct link to the CIA and a problem for "plausible deniabili*ty." A paper trail to CIA headquarters at Langley almost always remains, no matter how much is shredded or hidden away, or how many lies are told by the Agency or government officials.
Francis Nugan was one of the most visible players in the Nugan Hand operation. He was an alcoholic with a reputation for talking too much, a trait that threatened to expose the CIA's role in the operation. Assassins killed Nugan,[1] leaving his body in a car alongside a lonely road outside of Sydney, Australia. A bolt-action rifle was found alongside the body, and the scene was made to look like a suicide.
An unspent bullet remained in the firing chamber of the bolt-action rifle. For an unspent bullet to be in the chamber after firing the shot that was instantly fatal, someone, other than Nugan, had to manually operate the bolt handle. Nugan obviously did not do this. The bullet had killed Nugan instantly, blowing away much of his skull and scattering it throughout the car. There were no fingerprints on the gun, indicating that whoever fired the fatal bullet wiped the fingerprints from the rifle.
The only identification on Nugan's body was a calling card apparently overlooked by the killers, belonging to William Colby, former Director of the Central Intelligence Agency, with a meeting date written on the back. Colby was legal counsel for Nugan Hand. He also had connections to the Wall Street law firm of Reid & Priest, suggesting that this firm was a front for the CIA or a CIA proprietary.
After Nugan's death, the CIA removed the funds from the various Nugan Hand offices and laundered them into other CIA operations. Misinformation commenced immediately, denying that the CIA had any connection to the rogue bank, despite the many intelligence agency officers in the operation.
Before Australian authorities started an investigation, Michael Hand disappeared, along with most of the Nugan Hand records. Although the media reported that Hand had disappeared, leaving no trace, two of my CIA sources had been in contact with him after he fled Australia. Hand secretly surfaced in Iran, followed by his participation in CIA Central America drug trafficking.
Hand disappeared as Australian authorities sought to question him about Nugan's death, the Nugan Hand Bank operation, and the disappearance of approximately one billion dollars from the bank. Hand first went to Thailand under CIA cover and then showed up in Florida and the Caribbean area. One of my deep-cover CIA contacts, Trenton Parker, told how he and Hand had worked together in the early 1980s. Parker's CIA faction was interested in discovering Hand's operation, and Parker met Hand in Jamaica on February 2, 1980. They then worked together on Operation Interlink and Operation Anacondor. Parker's CIA activities are detailed in my Defrauding America book.
Parker said that Hand and Vice President George Bush were in frequent contact after Bush became vice president, and while Australian authorities were searching for Hand. Parker stated that CIA Director William Casey frequently met with Hand in Panama in the early 1980s concerning arms sales and drug trafficking.
Parker stated that he and Hand took over one of the drug trafficking operations for the CIA in Central and South America. He said that Hand's experience in developing the Golden Triangle drug operations for the CIA made him useful in expanding the drug operations from Central and South America into the United States.
Like most CIA-related operations, Nugan Hand Bank relied upon a pattern of fraud and deception. Large amounts of currency were moved in and out of various countries, including Australia and the Golden Triangle areas.
Michael Hand was a Green Beret and a colonel in the U.S. Army, assigned to the CIA. Earlier, Hand was handling the CIA's drug business and laundered the money from the Golden Triangle area of Asia. In the 1960s, the CIA transferred Hand from the Golden Triangle assignment to Teheran, where he set up the secret police for the Shah of Iran. (I was an airline captain flying into and out of Iran, and residing in Iran, at approximately that same time, flying Muslim pilgrims to the holy cities of Mecca and Medina during the Hajj.)
The Nugan Hand affair received considerable media attention in Australia, but the mainstream media in the United States said virtually nothing about the CIA operation and its implications. Australian authorities conducted numerous investigations, but in their final report they whitewashed the Nugan Hand affair. The CIA had an ongoing relationship with Australia's Security Intelligence Organization (ASIO), which probably played a role in the cover-up of Nugan Hand.
One of Nugan Hand's CIA assets who suffered a fate similar to Nugan was John Fredericks; he and his bodyguard were killed (July 28, 1991) in Australia.
Staffed by the CIA
Most of the management personnel of Nugan Hand Bank were intelligence community personnel. When Nugan Hand shut down, most of them moved to other CIA operations. These players, with a long CIA and military intelligence background, moved into other covert activities.
Covert CIA Companies Staffed by Military and Other Insiders
Most covert CIA companies have been staffed at higher levels by former military and other government personnel, but mostly military. They are either retired personnel, or sheep-dipped from their prior positions. The various worldwide offices of Nugan Hand Bank had the following personnel:
  • Adm. Earl Yates, chief of U.S. strategic planning for Asia and the Pacific. He was president of Nugan Hand Bank. Yates had been command*er of the aircraft carrier, John F. Kennedy. He retired (or was sheep-dipped), from the Navy in 1974 and became president of Nugan Hand Bank in 1977.

  • Michael Jon Hand, CIA operative, former Green Beret, vice-chairman and part owner of Nugan Hand Bank.

  • Gen. Edwin F. Black ran Nugan Hand's Hawaii office.

  • Paul Helliwell was a CIA asset heavily involved in drug money laundering.

  • Gen. Earle Cocke, Jr., ran the Nugan Hand Washington office and headed the American Legion.

  • Wil*liam Colby, retired Director of CIA, was the lawyer for Nugan Hand Bank.

  • Dale Holmgren headed flight services for several CIA airlines and ran Nugan Hand's Taiwan office.

  • Robert Jantzen, CIA station chief in Thailand, was Nugan Hand's officer in Thailand.

  • Gen. Leroy Manor, chief of staff for U.S. Pacific Com*mand, ran Nugan Hand's Philippine office.

  • Walter Macdonald, former deputy director of CIA for economic research, was a consultant to Nugan Hand.

  • Theodore G. Shackley, top clandestine officer at the CIA, had numerous dealings with Nugan Hand.

  • Gordon (Billy) Young, CIA asset, represented Nugan Hand in the Golden Triangle drug zone of Southeast Asia.

  • George Farris was a military intelli*gence specialist working in the Hong Kong office of Nugan Hand.

  • Guy Pauker was an advisor to Henry Kissinger.

  • Edwin Wilson, a CIA operative, had fre*quent dealings with Nugan Hand Bank.

  • Thomas Clines, a CIA operative and deputy to Major General Richard Secord in the Iran-Contra arms network, had frequent dealings with Nugan Hand. After Nugan was killed, and before Australian authorities started investigating the bank, Clines rescued Houghton from Australia.

    Massive Cover-Up of the CIA Operation

Many people holding check-and-balance responsibilities covered up for the Nugan Hand scheme. These checks and balances included the oversight agencies in Australia; the Reserve Bank in Australia that had responsibilities over Nugan Hand; Citicorp, which traded securities with Nugan Hand; taxing authorities in Australia, who were familiar with Nugan Hand's operation; the accounting firm that certified the Nugan Hand records; U.S. Consul General in Australia who knew of the CIA operation; the Premier of Australia, who had offices adjacent to Nugan Hand; Irving Trust Company, the correspondent bank for Nugan Hand in the United States; Corporate Affairs Commission in Australia that stonewalled requests for information; prominent Australian lawyers who worked closely with Nugan Hand; Australian Department of Commerce, who had considerable information about Nugan Hand's activities; Australian intelligence agencies that worked with U.S. intelligence agencies, and who knew about the rogue operations, and others.
After Nugan's body was found, intense activities were initiated to destroy evidence linking Nugan Hand Bank to the CIA. Retired three-star U.S. General Leroy J. Manor (formerly chief of staff for all U.S. forces in Asia and the Pacific), who had been head of Nugan Hand's Philippine office, tried to have the wire services block the reporting of Nugan's death. Recently retired Rear Admiral Earl P. Yates (formerly chief of staff for strategic planning for U.S. forces in the Pacific and Asia) flew to Australia to direct the shredding of documents. Yates was president of Nugan Hand, and lived near CIA headquarters at Langley, Virginia. Michael Hand joined in the shredding. Maurice Houghton and his lawyer, Michael Moloney, also arrived. Hand threatened lower-level employees, stating if Maloney's orders to sanitize the files before the law arrived weren't followed, "terrible things would happen; your wives would be cut up and returned to you in bits and pieces." (Wall Street Journal, August 24, 1982.)
Two in a series of Wall Street Journal articles (August 25 and 26, 1982) described Nugan Hand Bank as a drug and arms-related operation, staffed by CIA and military personnel. The articles stated in part:
Nugan Hand bank was deeply involved in moving funds about the world for big international heroin dealers...U.S. servicemen are big losers in failure of Nugan Hand Bank.
Australia's Royal Commission on Drugs found so much evidence of drug and drug-money trafficking by the CIA operation that it recommended a separate Royal Commission be appointed just for the bank's operations. But Australia's intelligence agency, ASIO, blocked an investigation, reflecting the common practice of intelligence agencies protecting each other rather than their own country. U.S. officials stymied every attempt by Australian authorities to obtain information about Nugan Hand Bank.
During its investigation, the Royal Commission found that drugs were flown into a landing strip by former Air America pilot K.L. "Bud" King and Michael Hand. The strip was on a real estate development promoted by U.S. singer Pat Boone and financed by wealthy shipping magnate D.K. Ludwig. King, who also worked for the Boone-Ludwig project, whose testimony could have been very damaging to Nugan Hand and U.S. officials, died mysteriously in a fall.
Australian authorities connected Nugan Hand not only to drug and arms transactions, but also to contract murders, of which there were several associated with Nugan Hand's demise.
Australian lawyer John Aston and his law firm were found to represent Nugan Hand and various drug traffickers, and the law office was used as a drop point for money to be secretly deposited and moved by Nugan Hand.
The Australian investigations left no doubt that Nugan Hand management was heavily involved with drug dealers, including Khun Sa, the Golden Triangles biggest opium producer.
Pattern of Lies
One of the most pervasive traits of CIA-related companies is the lying by government officials, including those at the CIA, the State Department, the Defense Department, and elsewhere in government. Throughout these pages, in scandal after scandal, government officials "assured" the public that government officials were not involved. And the public swallows these denials, hook, line and sinker. U.S. officials "assured" Australia's prime minister, Malcolm Fraser, that the United States had no connections to Nugan Hand Bank. These "assurances," given routinely to Americans by their government, were, of course, lies. Vice President George Bush, while visiting Australia, also gave his assurances that the CIA wasn't involved with Nugan Hand Bank.
In Australia, the CIA worked secretly with ASIO to topple Australia's Labor government led by Prime Minister Gough Whitlam.
Hand's death, and the sudden publicity focused on Nugan Hand Bank, caused its liquidation in April 1980. With its demise, the CIA company concentrating on arms and drug sales and money laundering had to be replaced with another company. That company is described in following chapters.
Nugan Hand Bank and the Sultan of Brunei
Nugan Hand bank conducted extensive banking business for the Sultan of Brunei, who was one of the richest individuals in the world. In one instance, the Sultan of Brunei provided $10 million for the Enterprise subversion of Nicaragua. Oliver North, National Security Council staff member, gave the wrong account number in a Swiss bank and the $10 million ended up in someone else's bank account.
Among Firms Tied to Covert CIA Companies
The accounting firm of Price Waterhouse audited the books of Nugan Hand for several years, and gave it a clean bill of health, thereby covering up for the CIA activities. That same firm audited the books of other covert CIA companies, covering up for financial irregularities, and provided the same clean bill of health.
Citibank and Its Many Ties to Covert CIA Activities
Over the years as covert CIA operatives described their activities to me, several stated that they had ties with, or their superiors obtained for them positions with Citibank. Many years ago one of my first major CIA connections, Gunther Russbacher, described his placement with Citibank. More recently, a former FBI agent, Richard Taus,[2] described to me how military and covert operation officials provided him a position with Citibank after he left the Army and a after returning from a covert trip to Central America and before being hired by the FBI.
Filling Covert CIA Companies With Military Personnel
The CIA staffed many of its covert CIA companies with former military personnel. (Or military personnel sheep-dipped into the company position.) This was especially evident in the covert CIA companies described within these pages, starting with Nugan Hand Bank.
Far Eastern Economic Review had the headline, "A Former Admiral Commands Our Private Bank," and described the role played by Adm. Earl Yates. The article stated in part:
When Admiral Yates exchanged the gold stripes of an admiral for the pin stripes of a banker, he brought added strength to Nugan Hand International Private Bankers. He brought the experience of a man who administered the office that controls a powerful navy. He brought the executive experience of a man that controlled the careers of tens of thousands of men.
Another of the high military personnel with Nugan Hand was General Leroy J. Manor. (He had been involved with Marcos in negotiating a ten-year lease for the Clark Air Force Base in the Philippines. Manor was part of the team investigating the failed rescue of the 52 American hostages in Iran.)
General Edwin F. Black was another military officer who was sheep-dipped into covert CIA operations. Black headed the Nugan Hand office in Honolulu. He was also a key person in the Pacific Forum, a Honolulu-based organization in the 1970s.[3]
Gen. Black[4] was quoted in a series of articles appearing in the Wall Street Journal as being involved in the Nugan Hand Bank. He operated the Nugan Hand office in Honolulu, until the bank folded in 1980. As will be seen shortly, Black would then shift from the CIA's Nugan Hand Bank to another bank based in Honolulu that had branches in the same Far East locations as the former Nugan Hand Bank.
Nugan Hand Ties to Major Banking Figures in U.S.
The Washington, D.C. office of Nugan Hand was headed by former Brig. Gen. Erle Cocke, Jr., who, along with former Admiral Earl Yates, was listed in papers filed with the U.S. Secretary of the Treasury as the principal offices for Nugan Hand in the nation's capital. The purpose of the filing was to register the Washington, D.C. office of the Nugan Hand bank. In his position with Nugan Hand Bank, Cocke received a monthly salary and other perks. Cocke had an office in Washington, D.C., and Bernie Houghton used it for carrying out Nugan Hand business.
Cocke[5] also operated the public relations, lobbying, and consulting firm of Cocke and Phillips that had its offices in Washington, D.C.
It was believed that Cocke and Phillips International, of which Cocke and Gen. Eugene Phillips were the principals, was and is a covert off-the-books CIA company. That company had connections to Nugan Hand Bank and to another covert CIA company, Associated Traders Corporation.
A lawsuit filed in the late 1980s against Associated Traders Corporation caused CIA Director William Webster to seek a court order placing a secrecy lid on the case. Syndicated columnist Jack Anderson, in a series of articles, accused Associated Traders Corporation of various CIA activities, involving military weapon sales and money laundering. Cocke was alleged to be involved in that company.
Project Hammer and Brigadier General Cocke
Cocke was heavily involved with highly secret project called Project Hammer, a covert and complex money-moving operation involving banks throughout the world. In April 2000, shortly before he died of pancreatic cancer, Cooke gave a sworn deposition stating many facts about Project Hammer and his involvement in CIA and complex financial operations.
Cocke testified that Project Hammer was started by some unknown people in high government positions, that much of the money was diverted into covert activities, and that it was started as a secret program to repatriate dollar assets from several prior decades, starting with World War II. This also involved much of the gold bullion hidden in the Philippines by the Japanese during World War II. Cocke testified:
It was mainly to bring monies back to the United States from all types of activities, both legitimately and illegitimately. Not that they were in the smuggling business per se, but they were all in the arms business; they were all retracing dollars of one description or another that had accumulated all through the 40s and 50s. And that probably is as broad a definition as I can give you. All kinds of nationalities were involved, and all kinds of people became involved.
Cocke was asked if various agents of the U.S. government were involved, to which Cocke replied:
Yes. Obviously the CIA, the FBI, the national security agencies of all types, and the Pentagon in the broadest sense; and the Treasury, Federal Reserve. Nobody got out of the act; everybody wanted to get in the act.
Included in his sworn testimony was that Citibank was the main bank involved, especially the New York and Athens offices, with many other banks acting as correspondent to Citibank, and that Citibank was the disbursing bank.
The Trail of the Japanese Gold in the Philippines
Although it is a book-length story by itself, I make brief reference to a small part of the intrigue. During World War II the invading Japanese armies looted the gold from the countries they invaded, and much of the gold was hidden throughout the Philippines. Santa Romana was with the OSS in the Philippines during this time and discovered where some of the gold was buried, which he then obtained and put it into various financial institutions. Romana gave his attorney, Ferdinand Marcos (before Marcos became president of the Philippines) a limited power of attorney over his affairs while Romana was out of the country. Marcos allegedly manipulated the power of attorney and acquired rights to the gold. Romana died shortly after.
His widow, Luz, eventually remarried, marrying Jim Brown, and Brown then sought to reacquire the gold for Luz. I met Jim Brown while he and Luz were staying at a hotel in Concord, California during the late 1990s. He provided me with hundreds of documents showing the complex transfer of the gold bullion, some of which was acquired by the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) and the CIA and deposited in Citibank. In one way or another, some of this gold bullion became part of Project Hammer.
Additional Information Concerning General Cocke
During 2005 I received several e-mails from a person who worked with General Cocke before Cocke's death in 2000. He confirmed some of the statements I made in Defrauding America and Disavow.
The person, who was still in covert activities, identified himself only as "Clark." The following are some of the statements he made in his emails to me:
I have attached a copy of my credential which were authorized by General Cocke. There were only seven of us and we were known as the seven deadly sins. We were his best-kept secret. This card was issued a few months before he passed away in April of 2000.
Cocke had a Special Operations Team that was formed in the early 80s. This team was not part of the government per se. It was made up of ex-military guys such as myself. If the General wanted something done that had to be kept secret from everyone, he called on what he called "his Team." I was the Team Commander so I knew most of what went on.
Most everything that went on with General Cocke was highly secret. I knew he had secret meetings with many of the presidents.
Cocke was one of the most powerful and feared men in Washington, D.C. Although he was behind the scenes, he was calling the shots. He did a lot of secret banking all over the world for the government and died a very wealthy man His father was the one who created Bank of America.
Cocke would provide me with passports from other countries as well as U.S. passports under different names. He and several others ran everything. Admiral Turned and two other Generals, one army and the other Air Force, were all part of the group that was headed by Cocke. The General and his group needed his own people with no influence from the outside; therefore he formed a Special Operations Team, which was sometimes just called "The Team." Basically, the Team didn't exist to anyone other than Cocke and his group and I'm not sure how much the group even knew about us. If we showed up somewhere, the story was we were never there and we don't exist. Just like Area 51 a few years ago.
It was not part of the Special Operations Command and was basically an entity of its own made up of ex-military personnel. His reasoning for using ex-military guys was, if something went wrong they could deny our existence completely and prove we were not on military payroll. I had to sign a secrecy agreement with Cocke and I still keep those secrets.
I was in charge of the team for Cocke and still have the team together. Some of the members have changed, but the team still exists. Shortly before the General passed away, he told me to keep the team intact because we would be called upon again to continue working for different government agencies to serve our country.
Cocke would provide me with appointments with other governments as Trade Attaché or Ambassador at Large or military attaché that would allow me to move freely in and out of other countries using diplomatic passports, therefore never showing an exit stamp on my U.S. passport.
When I would ask, "Who do I say I work for if questioned," his response was, "When it's not convenient for you to say you work for CIA then you say D.O.D., When it's not convenient to say you work for D.O.D., and then say CIA, but you always work for me and I will keep you out of trouble."
Anything and everything we did was secret and clandestine. Nothing was ever over.
Hope this is helpful to you.
Thank you again for your response. It is a pleasure knowing you are providing the American people with the truth. Everything I have been seen written by you is truth.
God Bless You,
Clark.
In a May 28, 2005 e-mail:
All I can tell you about those operations is, I secretly worked for General Cocke Jr. from 1972 until 2002. I do know, what your book says, is true.
God bless you,
Clark
In another e-mail:
I don't think it's very safe to talk about most of the things I am aware of. I am fully aware of how easy it is for the government to make people disappear when they don't like what you are saying. My understanding is that the only reason you are 82 is because if they made you disappear it would add credibility to your books, which would make people realize you are telling the truth. So for you, your books are like an insurance policy.
I am presently working with a member of the president's roundtable, John P. Curry, ex-military, ex-Company. He was also a secret advisor to four presidents and at one time almost killed General Westmoreland with his bare hands. John is around 70 years old. I'm sure if you ask your company contacts about John Curry you will get many stories. John and I have formed a partnership and we are working on several secret projects now.
Clark
In response to my comments about one of my contacts, Steve Crittenden, who had described to me having recently flown loads of gold from the Philippines to the United States, Clark responded:
I did many of those trips to Manila, negotiating deals to bring back C-130s and C-131s with gold bars. Most of them went back to Atlanta or a private airstrip in Florida, the last one of those trips was a couple of years ago because it was after the death of General Cocke, and I was very concerned about doing the trip with new people involved, especially ones I had never met or worked with. On one of the trips I got into a hand-to-hand situation and I was cut on my left leg all the way to the bone about 11 inches long. It was not pretty and I also took a bullet in my left knee on one other occasion.
In another email:
I can tell you from the days of JFK, Erle Cocke was responsible for setting up ways to hide large amounts of money all over the globe. This money belonged to Senators, congressmen, and high ranking White House officials up to and including the President during each changing administration, up to the time of the General's death in April of 2000. Which means, the General worked for every president from JFK to GW Bush to find ways to hide and launder money for the government or government agencies such as the CIA.
There was a Navy Captain and also Admiral Stansfield Turner, ex CIA director, who were close to the General and often had lunch or dinner with him to discuss business. Meetings were often held at the Mayflower hotel.
He also was the key negotiator who set up the ownership of the HSBC bank[6]by the CIA among other well-known world banks. The Special Operations Team, known as the SDS (Seven Deadly Sins) were there to escort documents, currency, bank instruments and gold on behalf of the General. Our other function was to eliminate any person or entity that threatened the success of the mission by any means necessary.
According to the General, everything he did was sanctioned by the White House, which is why he could and did provide us with many different passports and identities. The General would set us up with diplomatic appointments for other countries, which would allow us to move freely throughout the world, allowing us to carry or ship just about anything from one country to another under diplomatic protection.
When I received the appointment to Gambia as Ambassador-At-Large and Trade attaché, it was the General who wrote the letter of recommendation. Also, when I was appointed Consul General for another African country, it was the General who pushed my papers through at the State Department.
From what I have been told by the General, he would orchestrate the secret ownership of world banks. He told me the public perception of ownership is one thing but the reality of who really owns or controls the bank is something else. When the General died in April of 2000 he was one of the owners of Bank of America and worth millions.
The above statements are true to the best of my recollection. If you have specific questions, feel free to ask. If I can answer them, I will. I will not go against the CIA. As you well know, they will end my life.
Clark
In a February 27, 2006, e-mail:
One of the things that General Cocke told me he helped set up was a secret wing at Leavenworth. If the government wants you out of the way, a team will extract you from your home and you will be taken directly to Leavenworth where you are put in front of a panel of four Naval officers who will read you the charges against you.
If you piss off the wrong person, your life as you know it will be over. I would be very careful about what you say regarding the CIA; that is very dangerous ground. They have unlimited funding and work outside the law as you well know. I personally believe the country is beyond repair at this point.
I wish you well,
Clark.


[1] January 27, 1980.

[2] I describe Taus' experiences in Defrauding America and also the book, The FBI, CIA, the Mob, and Treachery.

[3] Gen. Edwin Black commanded the deployment of army troops in Vietnam in the early days of the Vietnam War. He died in 1985 after he was shown as being involved in another covert CIA company in Honolulu.

[4] Black was in the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) during World War II, and then became part of the CIA.

[5] Cocke served as national commander of the American Legion during the last 1940s and early 1950s, a director at Delta Airlines, and operated the Nugan Hand office in Washington, D.C.

[6] HSBC Bank has over 100 million customers in 79 countries, with branches in the United States, Asia, China, Brazil, and Hong Kong. It was originally an Asian bank until it took over the Midland Bank in the United Kingdom in 1992.




[/COLOR]


Michael Hand of Nugan Hand found - Tom Scully - 08-11-2015

Quote:http://www.nytimes.com/1987/03/30/opinion/l-link-to-iran-arms-deal-and-nugan-bank-denied-200487.html
Link to Iran Arms Deal and Nugan Bank Denied
Published: March 30, 1987

To the Editor:

Your report that former military and intelligence officers who helped Lieut Col. Oliver L. North ship weapons to Iran and Central America were closely connected with Michael J. Hand, Australian financier and co-founder of a financial concern that collapsed in 1980 (news story, March 8), inaccurately describes my activities and does so in a manner that serves to destroy the public's confidence in the Central Intelligence Agency.

To begin with, the Tower Commission report does not link me to Colonel North's operation. Ample data in the public record, including the commission report, show I had nothing to do with the sale of weapons to Iran in exchange for hostage releases other than to pass on to the State Department a message received in a chance meeting in 1984 with Manucher Ghorbanifar that American hostages in Lebanon were alive and perhaps could be ransomed for money. This hardly makes me a ''North aide'' or a participant in the Iran-contra activities.

My knowledge of Michael J. Hand is confined to 1966-67 in Laos when I was employed by the C.I.A. I met Mr. Hand again in Washington in 1979 after he left the Army and I had retired. I have not been involved in any military or intelligence-related activities with him since 1967, as the 1983 Australian study of the Commonwealth-New South Wales Joint Task Force on Drug Trafficking, which you refer to, indicates (page 736).

I was in no way involved in establishing the Nugan Hand Bank. I never made or caused to be made any deposit into or withdrawal from that bank. No money over which I exercised any control was ever deposited in this bank. Incidentally, the photograph you identify as being of Michael Hand is not of the Michael Hand I knew in Laos or met in Washington in 1979. THEODORE G. SHACKLEY Arlington, Va., March 13, 1987

So, it turns out that Shackley was correct, the New York Times published the wrong photo, describing Frank Nugan as Michael Hand. The Times photo of Michael J. Hand published in November, 1982, has a distorted appearance. Innocent mistake, coincidental, despite no correction in the corrected article linked above and displayed again below, or are these signs of co-operation from the NY Times?

It is a crime for C.I.A. to propagandize inside the United States, but it seems it does not even have to break a law. The news media itself is packed with "journalists and editors" willing to print all the news that fits, with amazingly little, official prodding.

Quote:http://www.nytimes.com/1987/03/08/world/north-s-aides-linked-to-australia-study.html?pagewanted=all&src=pm

NORTH'S AIDES LINKED TO AUSTRALIA STUDY By KEITH SCHNEIDER, Special to the New York Times

Published: March 8, 1987
~Correction Appended


WASHINGTON, March 7 Several former military and intelligence officers who helped Lieut. Col. Oliver L. North ship weapons to Iran and Central America were closely associated with the co-founder of an Australian financial concern that collapsed in 1980, according to an Australian Government investigation.
The collapse of the financial concern came amid charges that it had laundered money earned from weapons and illicit drug sales.
Among those linked to the failed Sydney-based concern, Nugan Hand Bank, and its co-founder, Michael J. Hand, was Richard V. Secord, a retired Air Force major general who helped Colonel North conduct airlifts of weapons to the Middle East and Central America, according to the four-year-old Australian investigation.
The Australian study, parts of which are still secret, was conducted by the Commonwealth-New South Wales Joint Task Force on Drug Trafficking and was completed in March 1983. Although it is not new, the study is receiving scrutiny again in Washington because of the details about activities and movement of weapons around the world by many of the same figures involved in the Iran-contra affair. Congressional Interest
The Australian report, which has stirred Congressional interest, also concluded that several former Central Intelligence Agency officials and contract operatives, among them Theodore G. Shackley, Thomas G. Clines and Rafael Quintero, were involved in military and intelligence-related activities with Mr. Hand and other top officers of the Nugan Hand concern.
The Tower Commission report on the Iran-contra affair and other published reports have linked all of these men to operations in the Middle East and Central America directed by Colonel North, the National Security Council aide dismissed last November.
Mr. Secord and the other men in the network are the focus of a Senate Foreign Relations Committee investigation. The Australian study, a Congressional aide said, provides additional evidence that will help the committee determine whether this group simultaneously functioned over the years as official Government intelligence agents while also conducting legal and illegal operations for profit.
''Given the recent revelations about these men, I am greatly concerned,'' said Senator Edward Zorinsky of Nebraska, a member of the Foreign Relations Committee, hours before he died of a heart attack Friday. Clues Seen in Study
Investigators with the Senate and House Select Committees on Iran also are interested in what the Australian study says about Mr. Secord and his network. The study could provide clues to help them understand why Colonel North turned to Mr. Secord.
The Australian study does not demonstrate that Mr. Secord, Mr. Shackley, Mr. Clines or Mr. Quintero smuggled weapons or narcotics. It does, however, say that these men were close to Mr. Hand, a former Army Green Beret and military intelligence officer who served in Laos during the late 1960's with a C.I.A.-owned airline named Air America. It was the same period in which Mr. Secord played a large role in directing Air America's operations. Mr. Shackley and Mr. Clines were the two top officers of the C.I.A's Laotian station during this period as well, the report said. Mr. Hand, the report said, later worked with these men while he was directing his merchant bank, which he established in the early 1970's with Francis J. Nugan, an Australian.
The Joint Task Force study was one of four that has been published in Australia since the bank collapsed after the death by suicide of Mr. Nugan in late January 1980 at 37. Six months later, Michael Hand, then 38, disappeared and has still not been found. Agreements and Disipute
Two other Australian studies confirm the Joint Task Force findings. But the most recent investigation, a Royal Commission study published in 1985, disputes some of the Joint Task Force conclusions. .................
.................
On the day that the body of a co-founder, Francis Nugan, was discovered in Australia, said the report, Maurice Bernard Houghton, a top Hand officer and former American special forces team leader, arrived at Mr. Wilson's office in Geneva. According to an unidentified witness, Mr. Houghton left a travel case, then departed. In April, the report said, as the Nugan Hand affair began to cause a stir in Australia, Tom Clines and Rafael Quintero arrived at Mr. Wilson's Geneva office.
According to the witness, both men ''expressed some concern over what might be in the bag and Tom said that he wanted to take the bag from me.'' The witness said he refused, but the others persisted. ''Eventually the bag was opened in all our presence.''
Mr. Clines and Mr. Quintero, the report said, studied the documents inside and removed one. ''During the search, Richard Secord's name was mentioned and Clines said, 'We've got to keep Dick's name out of this.' ''
Numerous attempts were made to reach Mr. Secord, Mr. Shackley, Mr. Clines, and Mr. Quintero to discuss the Australian Joint Task Force report, without success. The lawyer for Mr. Clines and Mr. Shackley said their clients could not comment.
[Image: attachment.php?attachmentid=7673&stc=1]

Photo of Michael J. Hand (UPI) Correction: August 9, 1987, Sunday, Late City Final Edition and March 22, 1987, Sunday, Late City Final Edition A Washington dispatch on March 8 about the failed Nugan Hand Bank in Australia and the relationship of some of its principal officers to a former Central Intelligence Agency official, Theodore G. Shackley, quoted his lawyer's response incorrectly. The lawyer did not decline to comment; he said Mr. Shackley had no involvement with the bank.

The photo mislabeling is ignored in the correction, even though Shackley had called attention to it. The NY Times got around that "problem" by stating that the correction was based on a nonsensical explanation, and not on details in Shackley's letter to the editor of the NY Times.

Quote:http://www.nytimes.com/1982/11/13/business/australia-supspects-bank-link-to-cia.html
AUSTRALIA SUPSPECTS BANK LINK TO C.I.A.

‎
New York Times - Nov 13, 1982
... My Times Today's Paper Video Most Popular Times Topics New York Times ... Nugan Hand Merchant Bank was involved in trafficking in heroin and covert ....
[Image: attachment.php?attachmentid=7674&stc=1]

Quote:http://www.consortiumnews.com/archive/crack8.html
By Robert Parry
CIA, Contras & Cocaine: Big Media Celebrates

On Nov. 27, 1991, a Washington Post editorial began: "What is one to make of the riveting assertion, made by a convicted Colombian drug kingpin at Manuel Noriega's Florida drug trial, that the Medellin cartel gave $10 million to the Nicaraguan contras? Carlos Lehder is a key prosecution witness; the U.S. government cannot lightly assail his credibility."

Lehder's testimony also did not stand alone. It matched testimony from other cartel-connected figures, including money launderer Ramon Milian Rodriguez, that the cartel had funnelled millions of dollars to the CIA-backed contra rebels in the 1980s. The cartel apparently was trying to ingratiate itself to President Reagan who had hailed the contras as "freedom fighters" and the "moral equals of our Founding Fathers."

The alleged cartel pay-offs, in turn, were part of a larger body of evidence that the contras and their supporters had protected drug flights, employed known drug traffickers for supply operations and smuggled cocaine directly into the United States to raise money. In Iran-contra testimony, U.S. officials had acknowledged that the contras were implicated in this drug trafficking, as were many who worked with them: the Cuban-Americans, the Panamanian Defense Forces and the Honduran military.

By mid-1984, Oliver North's courier Robert Owen warned North at the National Security Council that the "Cubans [working with the contras are] involved in drugs." Another North aide, Col. Robert Earl, acknowledged to Iran-contra investigators that the CIA was worried because around the pro-contra Cuban-Americans, "there was a lot of corruption and greed and drugs and it was a real mess."

CIA Central American task force chief Alan Fiers testified that "with respect to [Costa Rican-based drug trafficking by] the Resistance [the administration's name for the contras], it is not a couple of people. It is a lot of people."

In Honduras, the situation was no better. One pro-contra general, Jose Bueso-Rosa, had even planned to finance the assassination of the country's civilian president with a cocaine shipment. After Bueso-Rosa was caught, North intervened to gain the general more lenient treatment because of his past help for the contras -- and out of fear Bueso-Rosa might divulge some secrets.

[For more details on the contra-drug evidence, see the "Drug, Law Enforcement and Foreign Policy" report by the Senate Foreign Relations subcommittee on Terrorism, Narcotics and International Operations, Dec. 1988, or Cocaine Politics by Peter Dale Scott and Jonathan Marshall.]

Testimony and documents -- disclosed during the Iran-contra scandal -- also made clear that senior Reagan administration officials sought to avoid embarrassing public disclosures that could undercut the contra cause. Indeed, one of the administration's greatest public-relations victories in the 1980s might have been steering the big media away from the contra-drug story.

So that November 1991 editorial in the Washington Post was an unusual acknowledgement of the problem. The editorial even went on to quote favorably from Sen. John Kerry's drug investigation which concluded, in 1989, that:

"Individuals who provided support for the contras were involved in drug trafficking, the supply network of the contras was used by drug trafficking organizations, and elements of the contras themselves knowingly received financial and material assistance from drug traffickers. In each case, one or another agency of the U.S. government had information regarding the involvement either while it was occurring, or immediately thereafter."

The Post editorial then offered a gentle criticism of the performance of the mainstream media, presumably including the Post. "The Kerry hearings didn't get the attention they deserved at the time," the editorial acknowledged. "The Noriega trial brings this sordid aspect of the Nicaraguan engagement to fresh public attention."

No Hand-wringing
But the Post and the rest of the mainstream press went no further. There were no critical internal reviews of why the big newspapers had pooh-poohed one of the biggest stories of the decade. There was no hand-wringing about how the media had failed to protect the public from government-connected cocaine smugglers. There was no renewed investigation of the evidence which might have implicated figures at the highest levels of Washington power, including possibly close aides to the sitting president, George Bush.

Still, that failure of the big newspapers, briefly recognized by the Post a half decade ago, is relevant again today as some of those same papers revel in a self-criticism published by the San Jose Mercury News for its 1996 series linking contra cocaine trafficking to the origins of the nation's crack epidemic. Mercury News executive editor Jerry Ceppos admitted that the series "fell short of my standards" in the reporting and editing of a complex story that contained many "gray areas."

Among the weaknesses of the series, Ceppos said were instances where the paper included "only one interpretation of complicated, sometimes conflicting pieces of evidence," such as assertions by Nicaraguan drug dealer Oscar Danilo Blandon about when he stopped sharing profits with the contras and the total amount of his assistance. "We made our best estimate of how much money was involved, but we failed to label it as an estimate, and instead it appeared as fact," Ceppos said.

In essentially distancing himself from investigative reporter Gary Webb, Ceppos stated that the series "strongly implied CIA knowledge" that a contra-connected cocaine ring was instrumental in launching the "crack" epidemic in Los Angeles in the early 1980s. "I feel that we did not have proof that top CIA officials knew of the relationship," Ceppos said.

(There is no doubt, however, that senior CIA officials knew of the broader contra-drug problem. As early as 1985, a CIA National Intelligence Estimate cited a contra faction in Costa Rica using cocaine profits to buy a helicopter. [AP, Dec. 20, 1985])

While noting these shortcomings in Webb's stories, Ceppos still maintained that "our series solidly documented disturbing information: A drug ring associated with the contras sold large quantities of cocaine in inner-city Los Angeles in the 1980s at the time of the crack explosion there. Some of the drug profits from those sales went to the contras." [ Mercury News, May 11, 1997]

Mocking Webb
Though nuanced, Ceppos's correction created an opening for the Washington Post and New York Times to resume a decade-long assault on the contra-drug story, the 1991 Post editorial notwithstanding. Both papers splashed stories about Ceppos's column on page one, highly unusual treatment for a media self-criticism. [WP, NYT, May 13, 1997] The Post story was written by media critic Howard Kurtz, who had used his column last fall to ridicule Gary Webb. At one point in mocking Webb, Kurtz chortled: "Oliver Stone, check your voice mail." [WP, Oct. 28, 1996]

Switching into his objective reporter hat for the front-page news story, Kurtz continued piling on. Kurtz quoted Rem Reider, editor of the conservative-leaning American Journalism Review, who called Ceppos's column a "significant, major correction" and referred to the original series as "another dark day for journalism."

The Post and Times -- and the Los Angeles Times -- all hailed Ceppos for so publicly undercutting his reporter. "I give him high marks for openness and candor, which is something newspapers don't have a very good record of doing," Los Angeles Times bureau chief Doyle McManus said in Washington. "We tend to bury our corrections in small type on page 2." [WP, May 13, 1997]

In an editorial entitled "The Mercury News Comes Clean," the New York Times said Ceppos's "candor and self-criticism set a high standard for cases in which journalists make egregious errors. ... Mr. Ceppos suggested that editors got too close to the story while it was being written and lost the ability to detect flaws that might have been obvious had they maintained a more skeptical distance." [NYT, May 14, 1997]

In truth, however, these major newspapers have taken almost no steps themselves to ameliorate their decade-long underplaying of the contra-cocaine story, nor to correct outright inaccuracies in their frequent debunkings of other people's work.

Though that 1991 Post editorial found fault with the media's inattention to "this sordid aspect" of the contra operation, the newspaper never explained why its reporter, Michael Isikoff, wrote a 700-word kiss-off of Kerry's contra-drug report when it was issued in 1989. The story, buried on page A20, presented little of the evidence that Kerry had marshalled, focusing instead of alleged weak-nesses in the investigation. [WP, April 14, 1989]

But the Post was not alone in mishandling the contra cocaine story. On Feb. 24, 1987, the New York Times published a story by Keith Schneider, quoting "law enforcement officials" as stating that the contra-drug allegations "have come from a small group of convicted drug traffickers in South Florida who never mentioned contras or the White House until the Iran-contra affair broke in November" 1986.

The Times article failed to note that the contra-drug allegations were first disclosed in an Associated Press dispatch (that I co-wrote with Brian Barger) on Dec. 20, 1985, nearly a year before the Iran-contra story broke. By April 1986, federal investigators in Miami were examining allegations of contra gun-running and drug-trafficking, as were Kerry's investigators. The Times even ran a pick-up of an AP story about that investigation on April 11, 1986.

'Shatter a Republic'
Despite the Times' clear errors, there was no public coming-clean on how Schneider and his editors could have bungled such an obvious fact as when the contra-drug charges had surfaced. The story also fit into a pattern of Schneider's biased work on the topic. He seemed to see his job less as reporting the numerous cocaine-trafficking allegations than as protecting the contras' image and defending the U.S. government officials who nurtured them.

"This story can shatter a republic," Schneider explained to In These Times. "I think it is so damaging, the implications are so extraordinary, that for us to run the story, it had better be based on the most solid evidence we can amass." [ITT, Aug. 5, 1987]

How Schneider approached that task was revealed in a Senate deposition taken from FBI informant Wanda Palacio.
She had been regarded as a credible source until she began alleging that she had witnessed planes owned by Southern Air Transport, a CIA-connected airline, flying cocaine from Colombia to Miami.

Palacio identified Wallace Sawyer, one of Oliver North's contra flyboys, as a pilot who flew a cocaine-laden SAT plane out of Barranquilla, Colombia, in early October 1985. Amazingly, Palacio's spotting of Sawyer in Barranquilla was corroborated after Sawyer died in a plane crash in Nicaragua on Oct. 5, 1986, and his recovered flight logs showed him piloting SAT planes to and from Barranquilla on three dates in early October 1985.

But when Schneider and a Cuban-American associate interviewed Palacio in Miami for the New York Times, she complained about their bullying tactics which seemed designed to break her down, rather than draw out her story. The Cuban man "was talking to me kind of nasty," Palacio told Senate investigators. "I got up and left, and this man got all pissed off, Keith Schneider." [For more details, see Lost History: Contras, Cocaine & Other Crimes, p. 104-5]

Having run off -- or run down -- witnesses to contra-drug trafficking, Schneider was able to conclude that except for a few convicted drug smugglers from Miami, the contra-drug "charges have not been verified by any other people and have been vigorously denied by several government agencies." [NYT, July 16, 1987]

In another blast at the contra-drug charges four days later, Schneider wrote "investigators, including reporters from major news outlets, have tried without success to find proof of ... allegations that military supplies may have been paid for with profits from drug smuggling." [NYT, July 20, 1987] This story, too, conflicted with the public record. As noted earlier, the original AP contra-drug story cited a CIA report establishing that drug profits were used to buy contra military equipment.

Belated Admissions
Ironically, it was not until Webb's series in 1996 that the major newspapers acknowledged, in a back-handed way, that their dismissal of the contra-drug allegations in the 1980s had been wrong. "Even CIA personnel testified to Congress they knew that those covert operations involved drug traffickers," wrote the Post's Walter Pincus as part of a package of several stories seeking to debunk Webb. [WP, Oct. 4, 1996] The Los Angeles Times, which published its own anti-Webb series, also noted that "the allegation that some elements of the CIA-sponsored contra army cooperated with drug traffickers has been well-documented for years." [LAT, Oct. 22, 1996]

But by effectively blacking out the issue of contra-drug trafficking in the 1980s -- as the cocaine was flowing into the United States -- the big newspapers made the administration's task of covering up those crimes much easier. Kerry's chief investigator Jack Blum complained about running into "an absolute stonewall" when seeking relevant information from the administration. [Testimony before the Senate Intelligence Committee on Oct. 23, 1996] The Washington news media had helped the Reagan administration build that "stonewall" and maintain it.

There is also the question of the big media's hypocrisy. While L.A. Times bureau chief McManus praised the Mercury-News internal critique of Webb's series, his paper showed no similar self-criticism over a 1984 front-page story that he wrote about U.S. charges that the Nicaragua's Sandinista government was involved in drug trafficking. That story turned out to be essentially a propaganda hoax, but was never retracted and continues to be cited by conservative publications to this day.

In a joint DEA-CIA "sting" operation in 1984, drug pilot Barry Seal flew a load of cocaine into Nicaragua. Sandinista military forces shot down the plane, but Seal then flew in a second plane to pick up the drug load. Seal snapped grainy photographs that purportedly showed Nicaraguan soldiers and Colombian drug smugglers transferring sacks of cocaine to the second plane.

Though the DEA's investigation was still at an early stage, the Reagan administration leaked the Sandinista allegations to the conservative Washington Times, right before a congressional vote on CIA military aid to the contras. When formal charges were filed in July 1984, only one Sandinista official was named, Federico Vaughan, a shadowy figure about whom little was known. But the New York Times carried a statement from unidentified "senior administration officials" claiming that U.S. surveillance had implicated top Sandinista officials, including Interior Minister Tomas Borge and Defense Minister Humberto Ortega. [NYT, July 19, 1984] Picking up the theme in one televised speech, President Reagan accused Nicaragua's rulers of "exporting drugs to poison our youth."

A Curious Case
But the Sandinista drug story had plenty of what Ceppos might have called "gray areas." When I questioned Drug Enforcement Administration officials at the time, they acknowledged that they had no evidence against any Nicaraguan official other than Vaughan and knew of not a single cocaine shipment that had come out of Nicaragua since the Sandinstas seized power in 1979 -- except for the Seal load. And that cocaine had been flown into and out of Nicaragua by the U.S. government.

The main reasons for this lack of cocaine smuggling through Nicaragua should have been obvious: there were embargoes on U.S.-Nicaraguan trade and the CIA maintained tight surveillance of air and sea traffic out of the country. Those two realities made Nicaragua an unappealing transit site to Colombian drug traffickers, who preferred countries that traded heavily with the United States. But the mainstream press showed almost no skepticism about the illogical charges brought by the Reagan administration -- or the scant evidence.

In 1988, the State Department acknowledged that it had "no evidence" of Sandinista drug connections, since the Seal case. [International Narcotics Control Strategy Report, March 1988, p. 144] Then, on July 28, 1988, a House Judiciary subcommittee held hearings at which DEA officials complained that their investigation had been compromised to sway the outcome of the contra-aid vote.

Even more troubling, Rep. William Hughes, D-N.J., the subcommittee chairman, stated that when his investigators called Vaughan's number in Nicaragua, the phone was answered at a house which had been rented by a U.S. embassy official. The phone number had been controlled by the U.S. embassy or some other Western embassy since 1981, the subcommittee discovered. It was never clear for whom Vaughan was really working -- whether for the Sandinistas or U.S. intelligence.

Though the Judiciary subcommittee hearing might have seemed newsworthy -- raising serious questions about a major Reagan administration propaganda claim -- the testimony received little notice. The Los Angeles Times ran only a brief wire-service pick-up. [LAT, July 29, 1988] The day after the Hughes' hearings, the New York Times and the Washington Post ran nothing at all.

Never Saying 'Sorry'
Not surprisingly, the Washington media's sloppy reporting on the contra-drug issue was evident, too, in the staunchly pro-contra Washington Times. Last summer, editor-at-large Arnaud deBorchgrave slammed Webb for allegedly not realizing that the contras were awash in CIA money in the early 1980s -- and thus had no motive for dealing drugs.

"Maybe Mr. Webb is too young to remember that the CIA had no need for illicit contra funds in those days," deBorchgrave wrote. "It was all legal. Congress had voted $100 million in military assistance to the contras." [WT, Sept. 24, 1996]

But it was deBorchgrave who was wrong. Congress did not approve $100 million for the contras until the fall of 1986. Webb was writing about cocaine shipments in the first half of the decade, when the contras were always scrambling for money. Indeed, the contras' financial crisis was the motive for North's decision in early 1986 to divert money from arms sale to Iran to the contras, the reckless act that gave the name to the scandal, Iran-contra.

Despite this history of clearly erroneous reporting by the Washington news media, there has been no known case of any major news organizations engaging in an internal review of these inaccurate stories or publicly apologizing. None of the reporters who gummed up important facts in defense of the contras is known to have faced discipline or public repudiation. For those reporters who have gone with the establishment flow, there has been only easy work, no headaches and never a demand to say "I'm sorry."

All the mainstream press criticism, it seems, has gone the other way. It's been concentrated on the few reporters who dared to go against the grain and sought to expose a serious crime of state. These reporters had the audacity to examine the substantial evidence that the U.S. government in the 1980s failed to protect the American people from criminal acts by the contras and their drug-connected friends, crimes that the big newspapers have done their best to protect, too.

Gary Webb was just the latest journalist to take on that challenge -- and the latest casualty. ~

So, it is even worse than what was known about Schneider's and the NY Times' loyalties and priorities. Schneider and the NY Times, over a five year period from 1982 to 1987, prevented all of their readers from being able to recognize Michael J. Hand, native New Yorker, if he happened to be walking down the street.

Hand's father, Oscar, apparently passed away in Flushing, Queens, NY in 1990.: https://familysearch...M9.1.1/JKYF-3ZW
First Name: Oscar
Middle Name:
Last Name: Hand
Name Suffix:
Birth Date: 27 November 1905
Social Security Number: 131-16-2346
Place of Issuance: New York
Last Residence: Queens, New York
Zip Code of Last Residence: 11354
Death Date: 15 June 1990
Estimated Age at Death: 85



Michael Hand of Nugan Hand found - Tom Scully - 08-11-2015

Quote:The Nugan Hand Bank | Chasing Nugan Hand

https://nuganhand.wordpress.com/the-nugan-hand-bank/


Sep 1, 2008 - The Nugan Hand Bank He's a former Vietnam U.S Green Beret soldier. ... We'd like to know where he is Are you on the net Mike? We'd like an interview? Give us a call! According to top US journalist Jonathan Kwitny, whose book "The Crimes of Patriots" (Touchstone, Simon & Schuster, New York. ISBN 0-671-66637-1) is the definitive text on the subject, Michael Hand fled Australia under a false identity on June 14, 1980 on a flight to Fiji. He was helped to escape by an American code-named "Charlie" a man subsequently revealed to be James Oswald Spencer, a former member of the US Special Forces and ex-CIA operative.
In 1991, top Australian journalist Brian Toohey reported in his The Eye' magazine that Hand had a postal drop at Suite 327, 1075 Bellevue Way, NE Bellevue, Washington State. Michael Hand's wife Helen was apparently living with him in Washington State. Not surprisingly he's since moved on. Do you know where he is?
...........
-
Quote:http://www.newportne...&story_id=25978
Posted: Wednesday, Jan 5th, 2011


[Image: Spencer,-James.jpg] James Spencer
James Oswald Spencer, 70, of Newport, Ore. and Fountain Hills, Ariz., died on Dec. 28, 2010 in a traffic accident near Williams, Calif., while en route to his Arizona home.

He was born James Spencer Oswald on Sept. 22, 1940 to James Stuart Oswald and Lorraine Long Oswald in Arizona. He attended Van Nuys High School in Van Nuys, Calif. and Santa Monica City College in Santa Monica, Calif., where he majored in photography, a lifelong passion and career.

At 17, he managed Van Nuys Car Wash and was also a skilled carpenter who did work making room additions to houses, some for celebrity clients. He was in the Army Special Forces from 1962-64. He changed his name to James Spencer when he was briefly a model and actor. Among his roles was an appearance in Tomorrow is Yesterday, a 1967 episode of the original Star Trek, where he played an air policeman, and he played Astronaut Ryan on Gilligan's Island in the Splashdown episode.

For more than 48 years, he provided innovative and imaginative photography for clients around the world with his company Creative Directions (www.creative-directions.net). Motorola, Texaco and AT&T were among his countless clients. He also specialized in corporate and personal portraits. His photos of the Oregon coast, Yaquina Lighthouses (www.yaquinalights.org) and White Sands National Monument, N.M. remain popular among visitors. He also taught several workshops in photography in White Sands.

In 2006, he married Ingrid Lila Fili in Las Vegas, Nev.

He enjoyed working on and riding motorcycles. He spent a great deal of time renovating his homes and doting on his dog, Mischa. His great sense of humor, contagious laughter and love of life made him many devoted friends.

He was preceded in death by his parents, James and Lorraine Oswald.

He is survived by his wife, Ingrid Lila Fili, of Newport and Fountain Hills; six children, Jessant (Bonny) Spencer of Spokane, Wash.; Melissa (Kevin) Davis of Sand Point, Idaho, Matthew (Trinity) Spencer of Spokane, Tate Spencer of Hillsboro, Morgan Spencer of Phoenix, Ariz. and Kendall Spencer of Phoenix; brother, William Clark Oswald of California City, Calif.; half brother, Stuart Grant Oswald of California; two stepdaughters; and eight grandchildren.

His wife, Ingrid, suffered serious injuries in the accident and is being treated at UC Davis Medical Center in Sacramento. His funeral arrangements will be made pending her recovery.

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Michael Hand of Nugan Hand found - Peter Lemkin - 08-11-2015

August 15, 2007

The CIA, Nugan Hand Bank, the Murder of Donald Mackay ... and Rupert Murdoch



CIA's Paul Helliwell meets Michael Hand and Frank Nugan

When Frank Nugan was found dead in Australia in 1980, it was accepted as a suicide and the sighs of relief could almost be heard in Langley, on the other side of the globe. But then William Colby's business card was found in Nugan's wallet, and Nugan's partner, Michael Hand, had been a contract agent for the CIA in Vietnam. Australian authorities began tracking Nugan Hand Bank, which developed into the most fun story of Golden Triangle drugs, money-laundering, profiteering, corporate shell games, and financial fraud that has yet surfaced in the CIA's unofficial history.

The most intriguing aspect of Nugan Hand Bank was the list of Yankees who were in on the scam. Theodore Shackley, Richard Secord, Thomas Clines, and Edwin Wilson played peripheral roles, while Gen. Edwin Black ran the Nugan Hand Hawaii office, Gen. Erle Cocke ran the Washington office, Gen. LeRoy Manor ran the Philippine office, Colby was their lawyer, former CIA deputy director Walter McDonald was a consultant, Adm. Earl Yates was president of Nugan Hand, and Robert Jantzen, a former CIA station chief in Thailand, got out of Nugan Hand when he smelled drugs. He needn't have bothered; apart from Kwitny's Wall Street Journal articles in 1982, Nugan Hand received little coverage and no official interest in the U.S.

Donald Mackay Murder - Twenty Five Years On

abc.net.au
16 July 2002
Presenter: James O'Brien

Donald Mackay

25 years ago, the people of Griffith in Southern NSW were coming to grips with news anti-drugs campaigner, Donald Mackay has been shot & killed by well-known Mafia Figures.

It's believed he was murdered outside the Griffith Hotel at about 6 o'clock on the evening of July 15, 1977, although his body has never been found.

The case, the country's first major drug crime, captured the nation's attention, and led to the international police hunt for Robert Trimboli, who ordered the killing.

Amongst those reporting on the event was a young cadet journalist with the local paper, "The Area News", Mike Donaldson, who now works for ABC Radio News in Canberra.

James O'Brien from Statewide Drive spoke with Mike Donaldson about his memories of the time, growing up and working in Griffith when this all occured.

http://www.abc.net.au/nsw/stories/s608468.htm

riverinamediagroup.com.au

Ex-cop killed Mackay'
15/08/2007

Latest book details new theory on murder

DONALD Mackay was killed by a corrupt ex-cop on the orders of a member of the Nugan family, an explosive new book has claimed.

The theory floated in John Jiggens' book The Sydney Connection - Nugan Hand, Murray Riley and the murder of Donald Mackay flies in the face of popular belief Mr Mackay's death was linked to local organised crime figures.

According to Mr Jiggens, the head of the Nugan Hand Bank, Frank Nugan, ordered the hit out of fear Mr Mackay would expose a money trail leading from the bank to several notorious Griffith marijuana growers.

He turned to Fred Krahe, the book claims, a former detective sergeant nicknamed the "Killer Cop".

Krahe, an alleged contract killer suspected of a number of other murders, was in Griffith working for Frank Nugan in 1977, the year of Mr Mackay's murder.

In the book, Mr Jiggens claims secret accounts in the names of local marijuana growers were found at the Nugan Group packing shed for hundreds of thousands of dollars. He claims Mr Mackay found out about the secret accounts scandal in the week before he was murdered.

"The man who ordered the hit was Frank Nugan," Mr Jiggens said.

"Through the Nugan Hand Bank, he was at the centre of the drug trade, not only in Australia, but also at an international level.

"He was a man who believed he had a licence to kill," Mr Jiggens said.
Mr Jiggens, a Brisbane academic, also speculates Bob Trimbole's Griffith Mob, with the nod from NSW Police, may have been working for Nugan Hand at the time. Donald Mackay disappeared from outside the Griffith Hotel on July 15, 1977.

A Melbourne heavy, James Bazley, got life in 1986 for conspiring to kill him.
Bazley has always maintained his innocence, fingering Fred Krahe for the murder.

The dogs have been barking for years that a NSW policeman killed Don Mackay. That policeman was Fred Krahe," Bazley said in the early '80s.

The price for the hit was said to be $10,000, but Dr Bert Weiner, an anti-corruption campaigner with vast knowledge of Victorian criminals at that time, told Mr Jiggens, "Jim Bazley would not break your arm for $10,000".

Frank Nugan committed suicide at Lithgow in January 1980.

In a recent article, investigative journalist Evan Whitton agreed Fred Krahe may have been responsible for Mr Mackay's murder.

But not everyone supports the theory.

Author of Shadow of Shame Bob Bottom, one of the nation's foremost authorities on the Mackay murder, said it was "highly unlikely" either Fred Krahe or Frank Nugan were involved.

"I'm very sceptical about the theory … no way," Mr Bottom said.

"Nobody did more at the time to investigate Fred Krahe than me and let me say I never thought he was involved in the murder.

"With no body found and no confession, the murder has always provided fertile grounds for all manner of conclusions.

"Remember at the time there were theories Mr Mackay had taken off with another woman and even the nonsense that his family were behind the murder."

http://www.riverinamediagroup.com.au/Home/news.asp?publication=The%20Area%20News&articleType=Local&ArticleID=19668

1980

Jan 27 Sydney: Co-founder of the Nugan Hand Bank, Francis John Nugan, found dead with a bullet wound to his head.
http://www.abc.net.au/archives/timeline/1980s.htm

http://www.crimelibrary.com/gangsters_outlaws/mob_bosses/robert_trimbole/5.html

"... As a co-conspirator in the Mackay disappearance and alleged murder, Bazley was sentenced to nine years in prison and four years for the theft of $260,000 from the security van. He was also found guilty of murdering the Wilsons and given a life sentence.

"He appealed against the murder convictions in 1986 but the appeal was subsequently dismissed.

"In an interview with Tom Prior from the Sydney Sun newspaper in 1987, Bazley denied the charges saying: "I didn't kill Mackay and I didn't kill the Wilsons." ...

http://www.crimelibrary.com/gangsters_outlaws/mob_bosses/robert_trimbole/5.html

The RUPERT MURDOCH-owned Foxtel (Australian pay-TV) Version - "Mafia did it" (no mention of Frank Nugan or the CIA):

"MARKING the 30th anniversary of the murder of popular Griffith anti-drugs campaigner Donald Mackay will be the world premiere of The Disappearance of Donald Mackay.

"Crime Investigation Australia: The Disappearance of Donald Mackay retraces the events of his shocking Australian underworld murder on Foxtel's Crime and Investigation Network premiering tonight at 7.30pm.

"Hosted by Steve Liebmann, this home-grown compelling documentary retells the sensational events that occurred in the NSW town of Griffith in July 1977 when Mafia drug dealers took revenge on drug informant Donald Mackay. ... "
http://72.14.253.104/search?q=cache:cZaFk4pMJZoJ:www.riverinamediagroup.com.au/images/forms/potterComp.pdf+murder+of+Donald+MacKay&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=11&gl=us













Michael Hand of Nugan Hand found - Magda Hassan - 08-11-2015

Michael Jon Hand is now Michael Jon Fuller who has been making and selling hunting knives in Idaho under everyone's noses. Same social security number. Same wife. An Australian author, Peter Butt, has gathered the evidence that tracked him down. Merchant of Menace. Doesn't seem to be on Amazon but is available at Book Depository and other sellers.


Michael Hand of Nugan Hand found - Magda Hassan - 08-11-2015

Nugan Hand bank mystery: Michael Hand found living in the United States

Date November 8, 2015 - 8:58PM

Damien Murphy




[Image: 1446976702050.jpg] Michael Hand, the disappeared part owner of Nugan Hand bank. Photo: Supplied

One of Australia's most wanted fugitives, Michael Hand, the co-founder of the Sydney-based international merchant bank Nugan Hand, has been found alive and well and living in small-town America.
He vanished in 1980 amid rumours of CIA and organised crime involvement in the bank as the United States attempted to back anti-communist governments and anti-communists insurgents at the height of the Cold War.
Sydney author Peter Butt found Hand. In his new book, Merchants of Menace, Butt reveals that Hand, 73, is living under the name Michael Jon Fuller and resides in the small town of Idaho Falls.
[Image: 1446976702050.jpg] A composite photo of the old and new Michael Hand. Photo: Supplied

Hand manufactures tactical weapons for US Special Forces, special operations groups and hunters.
Hand disappeared in June 1980 after his partner, Griffith-born lawyer Frank Nugan, then 37, was found dead beside a .30-calibre rifle in his Mercedes-Benz outside Lithgow and as corporate and police investigators, ASIO and the FBI started investigating the Nugan Hand bank. A coroner founded Nugan had killed himself.
The bank collapsed with debts in excess of $50 million and a subsequent royal commission found evidence of money-laundering, illegal tax avoidance schemes and widespread violations of banking laws.
[Image: 1446976702050.jpg] Michael Hand disappeared in 1980 after the his partner, Frank Nugan (pictured), was found dead. Photo: Supplied

Over the years, the two words Nugan Hand became shorthand for drug-dealing, gun-running, organised crime and clandestine intelligence activities.
But nobody has been convicted. Governments, security and espionage agencies ran dead or appeared to look the other way. Many men associated with the bank's affairs in Australia, the US and Asia have died early or in mysterious circumstances.
The most problematic death was William Colby's. Director of the CIA between 1972 and 1976 as the US wound down its involvement in Vietnam, Colby became a legal adviser to the Nugan Hand bank. He was found face-down in the water after leaving his Maryland home on a solo canoe trip in 1996.
Butt thought Hand had been protected since fleeing Australia in June 1980.
"It turns out that the FBI could have dealt with Michael Hand long ago. A simple background check reveals Fuller's social security number is identical to the one allocated to Michael Hand in New York in 1960," he said.
"The fact that Hand has been allowed to live the free life in the United States suggests that he belongs to a protected series, most likely of the intelligence kind. Indeed, an intelligence document I found places Michael Hand back working for the CIA in Central America 18 months after his disappearance."
Butt's previous "big reveal" was in 2006 when his well-watched and Logie award-winning ABC documentary, Who Killed Dr Bogle and Mrs Chandler?, claimed their unsolved deaths on New Year's Day 1963 may have been caused by accidental hydrogen sulphide poisoning from industrial waste that had concentrated in the bottom mud of the Lane Cove River.
While Australian and American authorities failed to find Hand after he disappeared in 1980, Butt hit upon the idea of using the former US Green Beret's most formative experience to track him down.
In 1965, Hand was in a small contingent of Special Forces troops dispatched to Dong Xoai on the Ho Chi Minh Trail. In June, Hand's outpost came under fierce Viet Cong attack. This was free-fire warfare without constraint. Only six of the 19 Americans survived. Hand saved four of them. He was awarded a Distinguished Service Cross, America's second-highest bravery award. His chutzpah brought him to the attention of the CIA out of bullets, Hand ended up in a hand-to-hand combat, during which he killed a killed a number of attackers with a Ka-Bar combat knife.
"Hand now manufactures tactical weapons for US Special Forces, special operations groups and hunters. Many of his weapons are designed to work in the unforgiving conditions of combat and hark back to that Technicolor Kodak moment in the battle of Doing Xoai when Hand used his Ka-Bar knife to rip through the sternum of a Viet Cong attacker before removing the man's head from his body with his bare hands," he said.
"It appears that Hand has spent the last 17 years alchemising that critical, existential moment in his life when a blade honed and sharpened to a micrometre represented the line between life and eternity.
"He now produces tens of thousands of such weapons a year, many of which he exports to countries around the world, including Australia."
On Sunday night, the Nine Network program 60 Minutes, using information provided by Butt, filmed Hand emerging from a pharmacy in his local shopping mall.
Shocked and befuddled, Hand said nothing but drove home and locked himself behind closed doors refusing a request for an interview.
Butt said he would inform the Australian Federal Police and the NSW Police of Hand's new identity and whereabouts.
He said he would also provide authorities with details unearthed during years of research about Hand's criminal deeds, including money-laundering for drug traffickers, tax evasion schemes, gun-running, foreign exchange fraud, false evidence to a royal commission, fabrication of a false passport and false declarations to customs.
"Australians who lost their life savings in the Nugan Hand debacle may wish to see Hand face his day in court, but it would be naive to believe this would come to pass," he said.
"Extradition from the US would require a serious measure of political will. It would also demand answers of our American friends as to why Hand, who had become an Australian citizen, was allowed to settle back into the United States when the Australian police and Interpol were desperately trying to track him down."



http://www.smh.com.au/national/nugan-hand-bank-mystery-michael-hand-found-living-in-the-united-states-20151107-gkthas.html


Michael Hand of Nugan Hand found - Magda Hassan - 08-11-2015

http://www.bookdepository.com/Merchants-Menace-Peter-Butt/9780992325220


Michael Hand of Nugan Hand found - Magda Hassan - 08-11-2015

Whitlam, the CIA and Nugan Hand

with one comment
[Image: dismissal.jpg?w=298&h=300]
November 11: Coup? What coup? [Green Left Weekly]
Sunday, November 21, 2010
By John Jiggens
Protest in support of Gough Whitlam after the constitutional coup, Sydney. Photo: Qu1j0t3/Flickr
Remembrance Day, on November 11, was celebrated again this year in the Australian media with pictures of red poppies and flag-draped coffins and historic photos of Australian soldiers who gave "the ultimate sacrifice" from the human-made wasteland of Flanders to the stony deserts of Afghanistan.
Paying tribute to the ten soldiers killed this year in the long war in Afghanistan, Governor-General Quentin Bryce said that Australians were good at remembering: "We seem to know what we ought to hold onto and what is best let go."
This art of selective forgetting is one the Australian media is particularly good at.
Remembrance Day passed with scarcely a mention that this year, November 11 marked the 35th anniversary of the constitutional coup the dismissal of the elected government of Labor prime minister Gough Whitlam by another governor general, John Kerr.
The exception a brief AAP report by Peter Veness called Whitlam's dismissal "the most divisive event in Australian politics". It concluded that the details of the dismissal have long been "muddied", but: "One thing is certain. The pain still remains."
Like many, I well remember that day. My mother rang to tell me the news, and like her, I was astounded. How could the governor-general dismiss an elected government?
Didn't we live in a democracy? Didn't the Australian people elect their government?
I flexed off early from my public service job and attended a huge meeting in Brisbane's King George Square. I heard impassioned speeches calling for a general strike and rumours (which turned out to be true) that Kerr was moving to call out the army.
I wondered what the army would do (I wonder). Would they act like Chilean military dictator General Pinochet, whose US-backed overthrow of the overthrow of the elected left-wing government of Salvador Allende was accompanied by the massacre of thousands?
Lest we forget.
Former Australian prime ministers Robert Menzies, Howard Holt, John Gorton, Bob Hawke and John Howard all compliantly sent Australian troops to fight US wars. But in the early 1970s, Whitlam's government had the courage to bring Australian soldiers home from the US war in Vietnam.
For this audacious action, Labor would never be forgiven by then-US president Richard Nixon, the CIA, Rupert Murdoch, the CIA, and corrupt conservative premiers Bob Askin (NSW) and Joe Bjelke-Petersen (Queensland) who all hated Whitlam as though he were Che Guevara.
Whitlam's election in 1972 began a short-lived era in which the stated aims of the new Labor government were to promote equality and involve the people in decision-making processes.
Within two weeks of Whitlam's election, conscription was abolished and draft resisters released from jail. Voting rights were extended to all Australians over 18, and university fees abolished.
Whitlam's youth constituency also gained community radio stations, and the Whitlam government intended to decriminalise marijuana. Aborigines were granted land rights in the Northern Territory.
Whitlam was less subservient than his Liberal predecessors to Washington's foreign policy directions. He took a more critical line in foreign policy, condemning Nixon's 1972 bombing offensive against North Vietnam and warned he might draw Indonesia and Japan into protests against the bombing.
The People's Republic of China was recognised and the Whitlam government spoke up in the United Nations for Palestinian rights. The French were condemned for testing nuclear weapons in the South Pacific, and refugees fleeing the CIA-backed coup in Chile were welcomed.
Nixon and the CIA found such independence intolerable. After Whitlam was re-elected in 1974, and Jim Cairns became his deputy, Nixon ordered the CIA to review US policy towards Australia. Although the CIA's response to Nixon has never been released, it seems it began a covert operation to destabilise the Whitlam government began then.
The puppet masters who led the coup were Ted Shackley and Marshal Green. Nixon appointed Green as US Ambassador to Australia in 1973. Nick-named "the coup-master", Green had been involved in several countries where the CIA had masterminded coups, such as Indonesia (1965) and Cambodia (1970).
Green's goals were to maintain US bases in Australia and to protect US economic interests.
Green let it be known that if the Labor government honoured one of its key election pledges to reclaiming ownership of oil refineries and mining industries, the US would respond. Green carefully cultivated the Fairfax, Murdoch and Packer dynasties that controlled the Australian media.
Ted Shackley, known as the "Blond Ghost", joined the CIA in 1951. Over the next two decades, he emerged as the agency's "dirty tricks" specialist, directing the CIA's campaign against Cuba and Fidel Castro's government in 1962.
In 1966 he became Chief of Station in Laos and directed the US secret war there earning his other nickname, "the Butcher of Laos".
In 1971, he became head of the CIA's Western Division (covering North and South America) where he plotted the overthrow of Allende. In 1974, Shackley became head of the Eastern Division of the CIA, covering Asia and Australia.
Shackley's speciality was financing black operations through the drug trade and he learned the dark art of running drug armies during the secret war in Laos. One of his foot soldiers in Laos was Michael Hand, co-founder of the Nugan Hand bank.
Michael Hand helped forge documents used by the media to discredit the Whirtlam government, while his partner Frank Nugan was the conduit for CIA money to the Liberal Party. Millions of dollars flowed to the conservative parties via Nugan Hand.
Shackley played a key role in the security crisis of November 1975, which revolved around the US military base at Pine Gap. Whitlam had threatened that if the US tried to "bounce" his government, he would look at the presence of US bases in Australia.
The lease for Pine Gap was due for renewal in December 1975. On 10 November 1975, the day before Whitlam was sacked, Shackley sent an extraordinary cable from the CIA to ASIO's director general, threatening to remove ASIO from the British-US intelligence agreement because he considered Whitlam a security threat.
The cable was published by the Financial Review in 1977 and has been widely reprinted. It shows Shackley's involvement in the security crisis.
Shackley was furious that Whitlam had accused the CIA of funding the opposition conservative parties and had claimed CIA money was being used to influence domestic Australian politics. In particular, Whitlam was asking questions about the close relationship between Richard Stallings, who ran the so-called joint facility at Pine Gap, and National Party leader Doug Anthony.
"The CIA has grave concerns as to where this type of public discussion may lead", Shackley's cable said.
In his 1977 speech calling for a royal commission into the activities of the CIA in Australia, Whitlam called Shackley's cable "a clear example of the attempted deception of the Australian Government by the American intelligence community … The message was offensive in tone, deceitful in intent and sinister in its implications."
For the Australian media, the message of Remembrance Day 2010 was clear: sleeping dogs must be allowed to lie. There could be nothing nobler to aspire to than the service of our imperial overlords, and to remind the Australian people that these imperial overlords had subverted a democratically elected government was well off message.
[John Jiggens has been involved in civil liberties and anti-corruption campaigning for many years. He is the author of a number of books, including the recently released The Killer Cop & the Murder of Donald Mackay, about the drug trade, Nugen Hand Bank and the overthrow of the Whitlam government.]
https://nuganhand.wordpress.com/2011/01/23/whitlam-the-cia-and-nugan-hand/