Waco and the Drug Mafia
Wednesday, November 12, 1997 7:42:23 AM
Paul Watson
(pwatson@utdallas.edu )
Question, was there a drug connection in Waco?
http://www.konformist.com/vault/wacodrug.htm
I think there is a strong connection. Ken Fawcett said on
the short wave show Radio Free America that he and his
friends found the remains of a meth lab stored in a metal
shed on the back of the Mount Carmel property. As I recall
the story, when Koresh was digging the peer and beam holes
for one of the new buildings, he dug up the lab and several
rubber stamps with fictitious names of companies, but all
had the same post office box.
He called the sheriff, who told him just to get rid of it,
they knew all about it. The guess is that Roden, the past
head of the Davidians, was running the meth lab. WFAA (Belo
Broadcasting ABC) here in Dallas did a series of
investigative reports on the Waco DA: plea bargaining down
many of the drug dealers charged in his county, well below
the state average. The DA sued Belo, and I have been told
they settled out of court for $10 million. The drug path
goes to Mena, Arkansas and Dan Lasater: the CIA and Ollie
North running drugs back into Mena. It is rumored that
Clinton was paid 10% of the money to look the other way. Dan
Lasater, Webster Hubbell, Hillary Clinton, and the Rose law
firm are all part of the Arkansas drug connection. Webster
Hubbell was the White House representative at the House Waco
hearings. It is said that Webster Hubbell, Vince Foster and
Hillary Clinton ran the whole Waco siege from the White
House. Many think Waco was behind the death of Vince Foster.
Then there is the FBI director William Sessions, who was
fired the day after Vince Foster died. Davidian lawyer Dick
Degarrin was a law school friend of Sessions. William
Sessions said on ABC Barbara Walters show that Dick called
him and convinced him to come down and talk to Koresh
directly to end the siege. As soon as the White House found
out, he was put under "House arrest" in his office and fired
and Vince Foster died all in the same couple of days. This
all sounds a little to connected for me.
The Mafia Boss in Waco?
As best as I can find it was Benard Rapoport who sells all
the life insurance to Teamsters Union members and is of
course connected to the Chicago Mafia, Dan Rostenkowski,
Hillary Clinton, Hubbell, Dan Lasater, Mochtar Riady, John
Huang, the Chinese Communist and the whole Opium-China-CIA
connection going back I guess to the Boxer rebellion.
Bernard Rapoport of Waco
Trent C Mulkern (tmulkern@mail.ameritel.net)
Clinton Friend Is Questioned In Federal Teamsters Probe
By GLENN R. SIMPSON
Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
WASHINGTON -- Federal prosecutors and Senate investigators
have questioned a Texas businessman close to President
Clinton about his knowledge of possibly improper financial
dealings between the Teamsters union and the Democratic
Party.
Bernard Rapoport, owner of a Waco insurance company that
sells policies to members of the Teamsters and other unions,
told investigators that he learned from a Teamsters official
and a Democratic senator of possibly improper plans to help
fund Teamster President Ron Carey's re-election campaign
last year. But he said he advised against the plans and
didn't help Mr. Carey's campaign. Mr. Rapoport, a major
contributor to the Democratic Party, was questioned Monday
by Senate investigators and spoke with prosecutors in
Manhattan several weeks ago about fund raising for Mr.
Carey.
Federal prosecutors are investigating an alleged agreement
between Democratic Party officials and fund-raisers for Mr.
Carey to swap campaign contributions. The brief involvement
of Mr. Rapoport in the talks between the Teamsters and the
Democrats sheds more light on the once-obscure dealings
between the two groups, although they apparently never
resulted in any actual transactions.
Last month, three Carey associates pleaded guilty in federal
court in Manhattan to fraud charges involving the Teamsters
election, including charges that the attempted donation swap
was part of a criminal conspiracy to defraud the Teamsters.
Prosecutors continue to question a number of Democratic
Party operatives.
In a recent interview, Mr. Rapoport acknowledged meeting
with prosecutors but wouldn't give details. "Neither this
company nor myself ever take sides in a labor election," he
said Monday, "because our business is primarily with unions
and our unalterable rule is we never take sides in their
internal affairs." Several lawyers and government
investigators described Mr. Rapoport's involvement in the
matter.
Under the alleged swap agreement, Democratic officials were
to persuade some of their large contributors to help Mr.
Carey in exchange for Teamsters political-action committee
contributions to the Democrats; prosecutors are exploring
whether Mr. Rapoport may have been one such person. The
Teamsters official who allegedly discussed the contribution
swap with Mr. Rapoport, say lawyers and others involved in
the matter, was William Hamilton, who ran the Teamsters
PA...il he came under investigation by prosecutors last
summer. Mr. Hamilton, whom prosecutors have depicted in
court documents as a central figure in the contribution-swap
scheme, and Mr. Rapoport are longtime associates through
their involvement in Texas Democratic politics. Mr.
Hamilton's lawyer, Bob Gage, declined to comment.
Investigators are looking into whether a Sept. 30, 1996,
fund-raiser for Mr. Carey, attended by an aide to Mr.
Rapoport, is linked to the swap discussions. Jules Pagano, a
Washington representative of Mr. Rapoport's American Income
Life Insurance Co., is listed along with Mr. Hamilton on an
invitation for the $100-a-ticket Washington event.
Mr. Rapoport said he wasn't involved in the fund-raiser,
adding, "If Mr. Pagano went, he went as an individual and
certainly not as a representative of our company." Mr.
Pagano Monday said that he agreed to be a host of the
fund-raiser at the request of a former labor leader's widow
and that he wasn't asked to do so by Mr. Rapoport. Mr.
Pagano said he didn't contribute to Mr. Carey after he
learned that under federal labor law he was ineligible to
help Mr. Carey because he is an employer.
The Democratic senator with whom Mr. Rapoport allegedly
discussed the swap proposal was Bob Kerrey of Nebraska, who
chairs the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee. As
reported, the Senate Democrats' fund-raising group also
discussed the contribution-swap plan with party officials. A
spokesman for Mr. Kerrey said the senator remembers hearing
about the proposal and wouldn't be surprised if he had
mentioned it to Mr. Rapoport, whom he regards as an adviser.
But the spokesman said Mr. Kerrey never took the proposal
seriously, and Mr. Rapoport said Mr. Kerrey wasn't
interested in pursuing the contribution swap.
Meanwhile, Mr. Carey Monday again denied involvement in the
alleged fund-raising improprieties. In a speech at the
National Press Club, he said it was a "few individuals" in
his campaign who devised and carried out the schemes.
In another disclosure about the Teamsters probe, the
Associated Press reported that an $85,000 mailing by the
National Council of Senior Citizens last year, paid for by
the Teamsters, benefited Mark Warner, a Democratic candidate
for the Senate in Virginia. Prosecutors have alleged that
this was the first step in an improper transfer of funds
from Mr. Warner's campaign to Mr. Carey's effort through a
direct-mail firm. The seniors group denied any wrongdoing,
and a lawyer for Mr. Warner's campaign said she was unaware
of any impropriety.
--Glenn Burkins contributed to this article.
http://www.konformist.com/vault/wacodrug.htm
----------------------------------------------------
Masonic Grand Lodge, Waco, Texas
With trains, buses, and roads all routed through Waco, the
Masons relocated their Grand ... The current Masonic Grand
Lodge is located in downtown Waco, ...
MORE:>>
Inside Mount Carmel. March 8, 1993. Hillary Directed Waco
new9.gif (1418 bytes). A one hour and 58 minute Windows
Media Video (more below). ...
MORE:>>
Branch Davidian - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
There was a general meeting at Mt. Carmel of all Branch
Davidians over Passover ... Mount Carmel, resulting in the
deaths of four agents and six Davidians. ...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Branch_Davidian
David Koresh - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For a more complete description of the circumstances
surrounding the raid on and siege of Mount Carmel see the
Branch Davidian article. ...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Koresh
The controversial siege between the FBI and the Branch
Davidians in Waco ... At the time, one of the ATF agents was
at Mount Carmel
GOOGLE MORE:>>
Texas Rangers Investigative Report - Branch Davidian
Evidence
Texas Rangers Investigative Reports on Branch Davidian
Evidence. ... Photograph of Mount Carmel Center. Attachment
B, Photograph of Fired 40 mm "Ferret" ...
http://www.txdps.state.tx.us/director_staff/public_information/branch_davidian/
==================================================
Davidians and Branch Davidians flourish in scattered
communities in the United States and beyond. In 1991
Davidians purchased part of Old Mount Carmel, where they
reestablished a press for reproducing Houteff's message. The
Branch Davidians own New Mount Carmel. Though it has not
been rebuilt, a small group meets there regularly for
Sabbath study. The best known Davidian artifact is a clock,
set in the floor of the central building of Old Mount
Carmel, with the hands set near the eleventh hour,
indicating that the end of time is near. This physical
reminder of the end of time captures perfectly the essence
of the Davidians and Branch Davidians. See also ADVENTIST
CHURCHES.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: James R. Lewis, ed., From the Ashes: Making
Sense of Waco (Lanham, Maryland: Rowman and Littlefield,
1994). Bill Pitts, "The Davidian Tradition ," Council of
Societies for the Study of Religion Bulletin 22 (November
1993). Bill Pitts, "The Mount Carmel Davidians: Adventist
Reformers, 1935-1959," Syzygy 2 (1993). Stuart Wright, ed.,
Armageddon in Waco (University of Chicago Press, 1995).
William L. Pitts
The following, adapted from the Chicago Manual of Style,
15th edition, is the preferred citation for this article.
Handbook of Texas Online, s.v. "DAVIDIANS AND BRANCH
DAVIDIANS,"
http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/DD/ird1.html
(accessed March 9, 2006).
(NOTE: "s.v." stands for sub verbo, "under the word.")