The Mueller Report: The Dangers of Getting Too Close - WhoWhatWhy The Mueller Report: The Dangers of Getting Too Close - WhoWhatWhy

Robert Mueller
Special counsel Robert Mueller departs the United States Capitol in Washington, DC, on Wednesday, June 21, 2017. Photo credit: © Ron Sachs/CNP via ZUMA Wire

So now we know for certain; no new indictments, no Russian collusion, no obstruction of justice charges.

Pundits are spinning this as “evidence that the system works.” Well, history will be the final judge of that. Because it will take time, maybe a long time, before every piece of those puzzles can be found and put in its proper place.

Clearly, investigative opportunities were neglected, ignored or simply avoided. But by whom and for whom? Someday we will learn. Until then no one has any right to claim “the system worked.” It most assuredly did not. And for that America’s long nightmare will continue.

As a retired investigative reporter focused on government scandals over several administrations, spanning from Ronald Reagan through Bill Clinton, my perspective may be broader than most.

After covering scandals, from Iran-Contra through the looting of our savings and loan industry, I learned something that explains why so few — if any — high-level players ever see the inside of a courtroom, much less prison.

First, I was amazed that, no matter what the stage of a federal investigation, many investigative journalists knew more about what was going on at the grassroots level of these operations than the feds did.

Federal investigators viewed these events from the macro level, viewing events from 30,000 feet, as it were. Reporters, not having access to classified materials and not having subpoena powers, had no other choice but to crawl through the weeds at ground level.

And, what we found in all these scandals were more often than not casts of characters that would get you laughed out of the room if you were to try to put them in a screenplay. They were beyond cinematic, but rather bordered on the absurd.

Which, as it turned out, was a feature of these events, not a bug.

During our investigation into just who was making off with billions of dollars from failed savings and loans, my co-authors, Mary Fricker and Paul Muolo, learned from several sources — backed up by lots of circumstantial evidence — that the CIA was a player, using footloose thrifts to gain funding for the Contras that Congress refused to allocate.

To do this they employed dozens of professional con artists to take out fraudulent loans and then funnel part of that booty into Ollie North’s illicit Contra operations. One mob-associated crook told us, “We do stuff for them (the CIA) and they allow us to continue to do business in our traditional way.”

Oliver North
Oliver North is sworn in by Senator Inouye on day 23 of the Iran-Contra Investigation, July 7, 1987.
Photo credit: C-SPAN

Now it’s important you understand that these cons were, well, real characters. Take Joe Kelso, a man who was first caught trying to sell a ground-to-air missile to an ATF undercover agent in Denver. He was arrested, and then sprung from jail by a lawyer who said he did not know who paid his fee. Kelso then disappeared into eastern Europe, where he allegedly was working undercover for the DEA. He got there using professionally produced fake passports. His next appearance was in Oliver North’s diary, when he was arrested in Costa Rica by police. Thereafter he showed up in John Hull’s secret Contra supply camp.

Kelso was an associate of several cons who were part of the looting of Aurora Bank in Denver.

When Kelso died three years ago his brother called to tell us that when he tried to retrieve boxes of documents from his brother’s locked storage unit, he was told by the manager that “men in two Chevy Suburbans with blacked-out windows arrived one night and cleaned the place out.”

This is just one of at least a dozen cases that left us certain that the CIA had played some poorly understood role in the secret, and illegal, financing of Contra operations. But at every stage, we could only get so far before the trail disappeared.

‘After That, We Own Them’

We only got one break in that Denver story. A retired CIA field supervisor agreed to talk, if just a bit. We asked him why we kept running into so many “colorful” characters claiming, when arrested, that they were working for the CIA on an approved operation.

“Yes,” he replied while laying his own recorder on the table.

We find those kinds of people at places like small county airports and firing ranges. We are looking for Walter Mitty types. We approach them, show them our IDs and ask them if they’d like to serve their country. The first thing we do is put them with someone else we just picked to spy on for us. Then we give them a job that could get them arrested. When that happens we get them out, and after that we own them.

But, we asked, they tell everyone they blow the CIA’s operations by talking. What sense does that make?

“By that time,” the ex-CIA agent said, they are easily proven to be liars and con-artists. And many of them have long, documented arrest histories. So when confronted by those claims, we just reply, “You’ve gotta be kidding.”

And, in my experience, it works. When I learned Joe Kelso was dead I hoped records would emerge. But all that was left on the floor of the storage unit were a half-dozen fake gold certificates with face values in the hundreds of millions of dollars each. Kelso died in abject poverty.

Were those fake certificates left on purpose, to seal the cover story that he was just a brazen con? We’ll never know. All we know for sure is that Oliver North certainly was keeping track of this guy.

Donald Trump
Photo credit: The White House / Wikimedia

Dead End, Really Dead

I only mention all this to provide the profile of just one of the dozens of such characters who, to this day, fill my filing cabinet of government-involved scandals that ended with more a whimper than a bang.

Which is why I will understand if Mueller ends up failing at connecting the dots all the way to an indictment of Donald Trump, or even proving “collusion” with Russian actors. After all, if our own intelligence services can cover their tracks so well, Russian intelligence is even better at it. Russians don’t rely on discrediting a threatening source, they just kill them. End of trail — dead end.

And that message is not lost on those Mueller is looking at in his Russia probe. Almost two years ago I received a document from an offshore source who alleged he had taken an active part in one of the Trump-Russia money laundering operations. He provided just enough information to show he did know something, but not enough to nail it down. When I asked him for more details he simply replied, “What are you trying to do, get me killed? You don’t seem to understand who I’m dealing with here.”

Then he cut off contact.

That’s the world Robert Mueller has been wading through. So don’t be surprised if his final report concludes that he could not confirm “collusion.”

I won’t be.

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