Article 16676 of alt.conspiracy:
Newsgroups: alt.conspiracy,alt.activism,alt.society.civil-liberty,alt.individualism,alt.censorship,talk.politics.misc,misc.headlines,soc.culture.usa
Path: cbnewsl!jad
From:
[email protected] (John DiNardo)
Subject: Part XIV, The Casolaro Murder --> The Feds' Theft of Inslaw Software
Organization: AT&T Bell Laboratories
Distribution: North America
Date: Wed, 21 Oct 1992 20:00:16 GMT
Message-ID: <
[email protected]>
Followup-To: alt.conspiracy
Keywords: CIA = Murder Inc., CIA desecrates the People's Constitution
Lines: 139
The following excerpts are from THE VILLAGE VOICE
(a New York weekly newspaper), October 15, 1991.
Subscriptions can be ordered and enquiries can be made
about obtaining back issues by calling 1(800) 347-6969.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
(continuation)
....
THURSDAY, AUGUST 8th:
Ann Klenk called, but got no answer. Casolaro called Danielle
Stalling and asked her to set up appointments for him the next
week with a former police officer, now employed as a private
investigator, to learn more about the Laotian warlord Khun Sa's
proposed Golden Triangle drug trade from his Asian stepmother.
Later that morning, Casolaro dropped by the office of his insurance
agent, Jim Kelly, and paid up the insurance policy on his house.
FRIDAY, AUGUST 9th:
By now Bill Hamilton was starting to worry.
"I talk to Danny almost every day."
Hamilton said.
"I had never gone [without speaking to him] for so long before,
so I called Bob Nichols in Los Angeles and asked whether he
had heard from Danny recently. He said `Yes, he called late
Monday night. Danny sounded like the cat who had swallowed the
canary. He was euphoric. I have probably had fifty hours of
telephone conversations with him in the last year; he always
plays chess with me on the phone. Danny told me that he had
just come back from meeting with a source, and he now knew
everything about Inslaw and PROMIS, and the Hamiltons were
going to be very excited.' He was going back for a final
meeting Tuesday. I said, `I haven't heard from him in a few
days. It's not like Danny.' Nichols said that he was taking
off for Europe that evening."
Then Hamilton called Wendy Weaver to find out if she knew where he
was. Wendy didn't know, but she promised to find out.
By now, Ann Klenk was also worried. Her television program had
done a live shot of former Air Force general and Ollie North
sidekick Richard Secord the night before; Casolaro knew they were
going to talk to Secord, and he'd certainly want to know what
happened. Why didn't he call? She phoned Hunter's and asked if
anybody had seen him. Nobody had.
Meanwhile, Olga, the housekeeper, was taking care of Casolaro's
house. She claimed to remember four or five telephone calls that
day. The first was about 9 A.M., a man's voice, "good English,"
she says, and it sounded far away. The voice said:
"I will cut his body and throw it to the sharks."
About half an hour to an hour later, there was a second call.
This voice, also a man's, had no accent, but she thinks it was a
different person's.
"Drop dead,"
he said, and hangs up.
"You drop dead,"
Olga remembers saying back. There was a third call. No voice,
just music, as if coming from a radio in the background. Olga
remembers saying into the phone,
"Don't call him no more."
The fourth call was the same. Olga left the house before dark.
She returned at night and turned on the porch light, thinking that
Casolaro would be returning soon. At 10 P.M. there was a fifth
call. Again, no voice, and this time no background noise either.
Olga slammed the phone down.
Sometime between 5 P.M. and 6 P.M., Casolaro placed a collect call
to his mother's home in McLean, [Virginia] where the family expected
him for dinner. His niece answered the phone; she later recalled
that Casolaro said something about having been in Pennsylvania,
but she doesn't remember this clearly. He told his mother that he
would be late, if he showed up at all, and not to wait for him.
SATURDAY, AUGUST 10th:
Wendy Weaver called Ann Klenk and told her that Bill Hamilton was
worried about Casolaro. Ann was now thoroughly alarmed, and she
paged Dr. Tony Casolaro, Danny's brother, at the suburban Virginia
hospital where he works. She was relieved to hear about what Tony
described as a call from Pennsylvania Friday evening.
Wendy Weaver called Hamilton and told him that Casolaro had been
in Pennsylvania and was on his way back. About mid-morning, Olga
heard the phone ring in Casolaro's house. When she picked up the
receiver, there was no voice and no background noise.
At 8:30 that evening, Olga returned to Casolaro's house to look
for him. The phone rang. A man's voice said,
"You son of a bitch. You're dead."
SUNDAY. AUGUST 11th:
Hamilton called Casolaro's house and got no answer.
Sometime after 4 P.M. Dan Bischoff, the national affairs editor at
the VILLAGE VOICE, received an anonymous phone call from a man who
said the paper should look into the disappearance of a reporter
investigating the October Surprise in West Virginia. Bischoff sent
a computer message to VOICE editor-in-chief Jonathan Larsen,
informing him of the tip.
Ann Klenk stopped by Casolaro's house that evening.
"It was so still. So empty,"
she remembered.
"It was just dead. I yelled for him and no one was there."
She left a note:
"Danny -- where the hell are you? I'm worried about you."
MONDAY, AUGUST 12th:
Bill Hamilton began the day with yet another call to Casolaro's
house. Again no answer.
Martinsburg police detective Sergeant George Swartwood called
Danny Casolaro's mother's house and told the family that Casolaro
was dead, an apparent suicide. By the middle of that day,
National Public Radio was broadcasting the first reports about
Casolaro's mysterious death and "the Octopus". At 10:30 that
morning, Hamilton learned from Ann Klenk that Casolaro was dead.
(to be continued)
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
This is one of countless stories unveiling the deeply corrupted
and subverted state of our theoretically democratic Government.
This story makes disgustingly obvious the fact that patriotism
is not the waving of flags, the tying of yellow ribbons and the
mindless support of the Government, just because it happens to be ours.
You don't support cancer just because you happen to have it.
Patriotism is telling the truth to the people of our country
in order that they may unite to conquer the anti-democratic
cancer that is gradually destroying ours and our children's
freedom. So please post the installments of this ongoing series
to other bulletin boards, and post hardcopies in public places,
both on and off campus. That would be a truly patriotic deed.
John DiNardo