A whole SLEW of articles this morning on this topic, as it would seem a whole bunch of documents just got released that TPM Muckraker is pleading for people to look through for details. I personally wonder, since 27 of the 28 counts against Foggo were dismissed for "security reasons", if we're still seeing only a small segment of the real criminal acts this bum committed, and some in government on a bipartisan basis are doing so in hopes of sating our appetite for a "wealth" of juicy information out on him now, but holding back on the real serious stuff that we should be getting.
Anyway, here are some of the articles that came out just in the last 24 hours, that you all might want to read...
From ProPublica:
http://www.propublica.org/article/corruption-touched-cias-covert-operationsCorruption Touched CIA’s Covert Operationsby Marcus Stern, ProPublica - February 25, 2009 12:00 am EST
Above is a never-before-published picture of the wine locker at the Capital Grille that defense contractor Brent R. Wilkes shared with Kyle Dusty Foggo when Foggo was the executive director of the CIA and illegally steering contracts to Wilkes. Wilkes paid for many expensive meals for Foggo at the restaurant. (Photo by Jerry Kammer)Paramilitary agents for the CIA's super-secret Special Activities Division, or SAD, perform raids, ambushes, abductions and other difficult chores overseas, including infiltrating countries to "light up" targets from the ground for air-to-ground missile strikes. This week the government acknowledged for the first time that some of SAD's sensitive air operations were swept up in a fraud conspiracy that reached the highest levels of the CIA and cost the government $40 million.
That information was contained in a series (1) of court (2) filings (3) released in advance of the long-awaited sentencing of Kyle Dustin "Dusty" Foggo, the disgraced former No. 3 official at the CIA.
One remarkable affidavit came from a leader of SAD, a branch of the CIA's National Clandestine Service, which handles covert actions. It indicates that Foggo forced SAD to use a shell company set up by defense contractor Brent R. Wilkes to handle its sensitive air operations, even though Wilkes and his company had no experience in clandestine aviation operations.
Wilkes was Foggo's boyhood friend and a co-conspirator in the bribery scandal that erupted around former Rep. Randy "Duke" Cunningham, who is serving more than eight years in federal prison.
...
From the Associated Press:
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5hSoMDsA5PakZOd1o1yx655Egw9ngD96IR5VO0Feds: Misconduct by CIA's Foggo spanned decades
By MATTHEW BARAKAT – 26 minutes ago
ALEXANDRIA, Va. (AP) — A former CIA agent rose to the agency's No. 3 rank despite a record of misconduct that stretched over 20 years, prosecutors said, until his career came to an end with his conviction in a bribery scheme.
In court papers, prosecutors describe how Kyle "Dusty" Foggo was investigated in the late 1980s for punching a bicyclist in a traffic dispute and for numerous relationships with foreign women that could have compromised security.
Foggo rose through the ranks to become the agency's executive director from 2004 to 2006. Had his crimes gone uncovered, he planned to retire and run for Congress in San Diego, according to prosecutors.
Instead, Foggo is scheduled to be sentenced Thursday in U.S. District Court in Alexandria after pleading guilty to a single count of fraud as part of a plea bargain. He is the highest ranking CIA officer ever to be convicted of a federal felony.
...
From TPM Muckraker:
http://tpmmuckraker.talkingpointsmemo.com/2009/02/foggos_road_rage_plus_your_help_needed.php?ref=m1Foggo's Road Rage ... Plus: Your Help Needed!By Zachary Roth - February 25, 2009, 11:33AM
There are certainly more important revelations contained in the trove of court documents filed yesterday in connection with the sentencing of former CIA Number 3 Dusty Foggo, who pleaded guilty in the Duke Cunningham bribery scandal. Indeed, Pro Publica's Marcus Stern has already picked out some key ones.
But this excerpt from the government's sentencing memo certainly sheds some light on what kind of a guy Foggo was:
In 1989, while stationed overseas, Foggo stopped his car in front of a bicycle bypass. One frustrated passing cyclist slapped the trunk of Foggo's car. After the two exchanged words, Foggo responded by knocking him off his bike and punching him in the face. Then, much as he would later lie to others at the CIA about the "cigar bar" cover story for him and JC, Foggo concocted a story that local police officers had fabricated the entire incident as payback for Foggo's having spurned their efforts to solicit a bribe from him. Foggo's superiors and the local officials considered his explanation to be "unrealistic and implausible." Foggo's chief of station was convinced that Foggo was lying to him. Foggo's assault on one of its citizens so outraged that nation that officials there filed a Diplomatic Protest with the U.S. Ambassador.
We've got a feeling there's plenty more like that out there. But as always with this stuff, we could use your help. So take a look through the court documents, and let us know, in comments or emails, what else is in there...
The government's sentencing memo and its appendix are
here and
here. Prosecutors' response to Foggo's sentencing memo is
here.
From the Washington Post:
http://voices.washingtonpost.com/washingtonpostinvestigations/2009/02/cia_foggo_favors_sentencing_th.html?hpid=news-col-blogCIA Officer Was A 'Con Man,' Prosecutors SayPOSTED: 12:52 PM ET, 02/25/2009 by Derek Kravitz
TAGS: CIA, contracting, federal courts
Check out the court filing on the Foggo case belowAs lifelong best friends, CIA executive director
Kyle "Dusty" Foggo and California defense contractor
Brent Wilkes did nearly everything together. Their families went on overseas vacations to Scotland and Hawaii, shared meals at Washington restaurants, such as the Capital Grille, and frequently exchanged e-mails and phone calls about their various goings-on.
Foggo
But prosecutors also found that for more than three years, Foggo, the No. 3 official at the agency, steered millions of government contracts to Wilkes in exchange for gifts and favors -- for "a taste of the life that awaited him" after he retired from the agency, according to court documents (PDF) released this week.
In those same court documents, Foggo is likened to a charismatic "con man" who was never "truly honest." Prosecutors say a sense of "narcissism and patriotism" drove his actions; a former supervisor of Foggo, who knew him for decades, said he "was seriously flawed, ethically and morally, who would cut corners to achieve his aims."
For his part, Foggo blamed Wilkes and said his crimes constituted a "lapse in judgment."
... From ProPublica:
http://www.propublica.org/article/foggo-addendum-in-their-own-wordsFoggo Addendum: In Their Own Words
by Marcus Stern, ProPublica - February 25, 2009 2:32 pm EST
AP Photo
Court documents released this week in advance of Thursday’s sentencing of former CIA Executive Director Kyle "Dusty" Dustin Foggo provide a remarkable glimpse into the mindset of the key players in a sordid drama involving corruption that reached the highest levels of the CIA and
touched the agency’s most sensitive and secret covert operations in the war on terror.
Depositions show that Foggo had his sights set on succeeding Randy "Duke" Cunningham in Congress, even after the former war hero and champion of defense spending had fallen from grace, bilking – for years – the very same defense budgets that he defended passionately from the well of the House. They show that Foggo was appointed to the CIA’s No. 3 post despite a checkered history with the agency. And they show that even as Foggo was defrauding the government the agency gave him three monetary performance awards worth a total of $24,280.
Here is a link to
documents filed in Foggo’s case. The depositions can be found
here. But if you don’t have time to read all the depositions, here is a trail of illuminating highlights.
...
From Associated Press:
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5hSoMDsA5PakZOd1o1yx655Egw9ngD96IQ8R80Feds: Misconduct by CIA's Foggo spanned decades
By MATTHEW BARAKAT – 1 hour ago
ALEXANDRIA, Va. (AP) — A former CIA agent rose to the agency's No. 3 rank despite a record of misconduct that stretched over 20 years, prosecutors said, until his career came to an end with his conviction in a bribery scheme.
In court papers, prosecutors describe how Kyle "Dusty" Foggo was investigated in the late 1980s for punching a bicyclist in a traffic dispute and for numerous relationships with foreign women that could have compromised security.
Foggo rose through the ranks to become the agency's executive director from 2004 to 2006. Had his crimes gone uncovered, he planned to retire and run for Congress in San Diego, according to prosecutors.
Instead, Foggo is scheduled to be sentenced Thursday in U.S. District Court in Alexandria after pleading guilty to a single count of fraud as part of a plea bargain. He is the highest ranking CIA officer ever to be convicted of a federal felony.
...
From TPM Muckraker:
http://tpmmuckraker.talkingpointsmemo.com/2009/02/former_counter-intel_chief_flabbergasted_by_gosss.phpFormer Counter-Intel Chief "Flabbergasted" By Goss's Choice Of Foggo For Number 3 PostBy Zachary Roth - February 25, 2009, 2:55PM
I was flabbergasted when Mr. Foggo was selected as the Executive Director. I found Director Goss's selection to be quite revealing, that Mr. Goss would be taken in by a "con man" like Mr. Foggo.
That's the view, as reflected in the
appendix to the government's sentencing memo, of Jim Olson, a former CIA chief of counter-intelligence, who also served as CIA's chief of station at several different overseas locations, and supervised Foggo. (Olson is identified only as "John Doe #2", but details of his career and current employment make clear that it's him.)
That sounds like an indictment of Porter Goss, who has already taken his fair share of lumps in the Foggo matter, after appointing Foggo to be the agency's number 3 man.
But it's also worth considering that Olson admits in the memo that he too was impressed by Foggo, recommending him for continued employment -- even though he knew about the incident in which Foggo assaulted a pedestrian, and about the fact that Foggo had failed to report contacts with numerous foreign women, as CIA rules require (for good reason.)
...
From Center on Immigration Studies:
http://cis.org/node/1061Immigration Fraud, on Top of Everything Else
By Jerry Kammer, February 25, 2009
The CIA's former No. 3 official awaits sentencing tomorrow in Virginia on federal charges that he conspired with a life-long friend to bilk the government out of millions of dollars and forced the CIA to hire his mistress. In their pre-sentencing memo, prosecutors also allege that Kyle "Dusty" Foggo helped facilitate an act of immigration fraud.
Prosecutors claim that Foggo, who in 2006 was forced to resign as the CIA's Executive Director, enlisted a private contractor who worked with the CIA "to write a letter falsely purporting to offer a job" to a foreign national so that the foreign national could obtain a visa. Before that bit of deceit, Foggo wrote an e-mail to the contractor's boss, suggesting that they seek some political influence to get the visa. He suggested that "maybe we can get Duke (Congressman Duke Cunningham, R, Calif) to write a joint letter with Cong. (Mary) Bono (D, Calif) . . . .Do you think Duke would join? It would be worth a little campaign help, I'm sure."
The e-mail recipient was Brent Wilkes, the California defense contractor convicted in 2007 of bribing Cunningham for earmarks in defense appropriations bills. Cunningham resigned in disgrace in 2005, after press disclosures of his corrupt ties to another, now-convicted defense contractor. Cunningham is serving an eight-year sentence in a federal prison in Arizona.
Prosecutors say Foggo received "lavish vacations, extravagant meals, and expensive gifts" in return for rigging inflated, multi-million dollar contracts for Wilkes despite Wilkes' lack of qualifications. Their memo details Wilkes' squandering of $88,000 on a vacation trip they took to Scotland: "That trip cost Wilkes $12,000 in private jet flights, over $4,000 in tickets to the Lion King musical, and over $44,000 for a stay at the Pitcastle estate, which offered trout fishing on hill lochs, salmon fishing on the River Tay, clay pigeon shooting, archery and a seven-person staff."
...
Interesting on this last article. When did Mary Bono join the Democratic Party? :)