

Henry Kissinger and that former US Ambassador to china and CIA director are very old now, dirty dick cheney and oliver north still spill their poison, have no doubt, PUBLISH and let the chips fall where they may, those old coots need to live the consequences of their greed and infamy before they go, instead of still whispering shit on the "president elect" helped by his new "national security adviser" conspiracy theorist per excellence Michael "look at me trying to look like a very bad eagle" Flyinn the former US Giniral who retired to cash in on his connections, from Russia and turkey and the donal from tha american people getting a new shellacking from the crook-o-diles the donal' is filling the swamp with.Īnd thanks for bringing us a chance again.Desperados Latin Drug Lords, U.S. Used his own political power from the shadows to make money through intrigues, drug trafficking, assassination, revenge and domination of THE CIA, ok,īut the CIA never had the balls to man up and let things fall on their own, and even helped hide the truth, and the DEA also obliged, threatening Héctor Berrellez with deportation, i mean EXTRADITION TO MEXICO to make him shut the fack up,Ĭele Castillo, was silenced, Phil Jordan, and Guillermo Gonzalez Calderoni GOT SILENCED, and that paints their agencies with a real shitty paint of a real shitty color. Molloy's story and depending on our reader's reactions I may publish the entire story in 3 separate posts.Ī former CIA director and US ambassador formed his own National Security Team with his own political associates and operatives.

I have posted an except from the first part of "Blood on the Corn" following Ms. In my opinion you are a fast reader if you can read it in that estimated time. The editor on the website where the story was posted estimates the reading time of the whole story at a little over an hour. I have not posted "Blood on the Corn" simply because it is in three parts and is very long. His co-author of that epic story, Molly Molloy, tells us in the following story why it took so long (16 years) and meant so much. The "Blood on the Corn" investigation was his final story - a report on a web of corruption and killing involving the DEA, CIA, drug cartels and high officials of the Mexican government. The unsolved murder of a DEA agent Enrique Camarena haunted the celebrated reporter for decades-and he finally completed his investigation in August 2014, just before he died. There was a gun under his desk, even one in the bathroom." "The DEA told us there were three contracts on his life. "we had guns in every single room - he was careful to never let anyone know where he was," she said. He had a lot of dangerous liaisons with people in dangerous places." said his then live-in partner while he was living in Tuscon. If they wanted me dead they wouldn't use threats, they would use bullets. Publicly he shrugged off those threats and told interviewers "Those people are just trying to intimidate me and shut me up. He had a lot of death threats (because of his work). Many have wondered how he was able to investigate and report in such depth on what was happening in Mexico while so many journalist and reporters were being killed for their reporting. In addition to his 26 books, Bowden wrote hundreds and hundreds of magazine articles, and was a contributing editor for GQ, Harpers, Esquire, and Mother Jones. He was one of a kind.ĭescribed by some as a "lone voice crying in the wilderness", he was the first American to speak and write about the femicide killings in Juarez and from that point on was relentlessly writing about the drug trade on both sides of the border for more than 20 years until his death in August 2014.Īmong Bowden's two-dozen-odd books were "Murder City: Ciudad Juarez and the Global Economy's New Killing Fields" (2010) Dreamland: The Way Out of Juarez" (2010) "Down by the River: Drugs, Money, Murder, and Family" (2004) "Some of the Dead Are Still Breathing: Living in the Future" (2009) and "Juarez: The Laboratory of Our Future" (1998), with an introduction by Noam Chomsky and Eduardo Galean. When he got a hold of a story, he wouldn't let it go, A finalist for a 1984 Pulitzer Prize, he won numerous other awards and the respect of reporters everywhere with his gritty yet painstaking work.
