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The Soon Coming Judgment Of God Upon America and How To Escape It                194
a potential whistleblower including assassination, imprisonment or the murder of a loved one. He
gives the accounts of: 7 whistleblowers who have been persecuted and imprisoned; 29 suspected
whistle blowers in the US and 16 in other nations that have been killed. He says, there are up to
300 whistle blowers in prison from the 1980s alone.
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He also says that all the power and all the
offices of the Federal Government are used to persecute government whistleblowers including
the: US dept of justice, FBI, DEA, and the Bankruptcy courts.
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Stich writes:
It is standard practice of US intelligence agencies to silence a person,
especially one of their own, by inflicting harm, or death, upon someone close,
such as a wife, a child, or a parent.
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From 200 to 300 former CIA operatives or assets had been sentenced to
prison by Justice Department prosecutors during the 1980s, on charges arising out
of covert activities they were ordered to perform by their CIA bosses. It was their
unanimous belief that the prosecution of these CIA operatives was either to
silence them or to discredit them if they talked about the operations.
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If a whistleblower were to contact a federal agency to report criminal activity, it is very
possible he would be exposed by a mole in the agency placed by the CIA. The CIA has covert
operatives throughout federal departments. One of the more authoritative people to reveal this is
Colonel Fletcher Prouty. He is a CIA insider and author of Secret Team. He reveals that, “To
diffuse any criticism or exposure of the CIA’s unlawful activities, the CIA has people widely
dispersed throughout the U.S. government and industry.” He specifically writes:
There are CIA men in the Federal Aviation Administration, in State
[Department], all over the DOD, and in most other offices where the CIA has
wanted to place them. Few top officials, if any, would ever deny the agency such
a service, and as the appointive official departed, and his staffs came and went,
the whole device would be lost with only the CIA remembering that they were
still there. Many of these people have reached positions of great responsibility.
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The CIA and the International Drug Trade
According to Alfred W. McCoy, author of The Politics of Heroin: CIA Complicity In The
Global Drug Trade, CIA covert operations have included their involvement in international drug
trade; he writes:
Although there are problems in many CIA divisions, complicity with the
drug lords seems limited to the agency’s covert operation units. In broad terms,
the CIA engages in two types of clandestine work: espionage, the collection of
information about present and future events; and covert action, the attempt to use
extralegal means—assassinations, destabilization, or secret warfare—to somehow
influence the outcome of those events. In the cold war crisis of 1947, the national
security act that established the CIA contained a single clause allowing the new
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