Thursday, June 12, 2008

CIA "Ghost" Planes Hidden in Cayman Isles Trusts?

After making an emergency landing at the International Airport José Tadeo Monagas in Maturin, Venezuela, the pilot and co-pilot of the American-registered twin-engine Piper Cheyenne (N395CA) bailed out of the plane, leaving it sitting in the middle of a runway as they sprinted for the airport fence. Onboard were 28 suitcases stuffed with 700 kilos of cocaine, and 14 empty cans of fuel. The busted drug flight joined a second American plane, also suspected of drug trafficking, and registered to a Houston firm widely thought to serve as a front to hide CIA planes, which was involved in a fiery crash near Caracas on April 28 that made international headlines. One of the dead passengers onboard was revealed to be Alfredo Anzola, a 34-year old software engineer for a controversial Chavez-connected election company whose election code remains embedded in thousands of electronic voting machines in the U.S. Another drug-laden American with hundreds of kilos of cocaine showing up unbidden on the runway of a Venezuelan airport is more grist for the mill in the propaganda war being waged between Hugo Chavez and the Bush Administration, and the bust was hailed like manna from heaven by Freddy Alonso Carrion, the commander of the Venezuela National Guard.



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