Michael Ruppert
Michael Ruppert (Activist, Writer, Talk show host, Narcotics investigator) | |
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Confronting John Deutch about CIA drug running | |
Born | 1951-02-03 Washington, D.C. |
Died | 2014-04-13 (Age 63) Calistoga, California |
Alma mater | UCLA |
Founder of | From The Wilderness |
Contents
Background
Mike Ruppert was working for LAPD when he uncovered evidence of the CIA's drug running. After raising the matter, he was threatened with death, and survived 3 assassination attempts.
Confronting John Deutch
His most famous video moment was on November 15th, 1996, at a town hall meeting at Locke High School in Los Angeles to allay citizen's fears about drug dealing, when he confronted the Director of Central Intelligence John Deutch from the audience. He stood up and said, "I am a former Los Angeles Police narcotics detective. I worked South Central Los Angeles and I can tell you, Director Deutch, emphatically and without equivocation, that the Agency has dealt drugs in this country for a long time." Deutch, visibly shocked by the forthrightness of Mikel Ruppert's denunciation,[1] feigned interest and stuttered out a reply, but although Ruppert submitted documents to the Select Intelligence Committees of both Houses, it remains only a document submitted in advance of testimony and has not been placed in the Congressional Record.
Dissident Journalist
Mike Ruppert became a dissident journalist, and founded From The Wilderness, a newsletter and website dedicated to investigating political cover-ups. His knowledge of criminal investigation has proved very helpful in looking into hidden events such as the US military drills carried out on September 11th. He has published influential books on Peak_Oil and US Foreign Policy. His 2009 film, Collapse was successful at reaching a wide audience. He worked on Collapsenet, a website-based network of people working on self-sufficient communities.
Death
He died in 2014 of a gunshot to the head. It was ruled a suicide and may well have been one.
A Document by Michael Ruppert
Title | Document type | Publication date | Subject(s) | Description |
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Document:Ed Wilson's Revenge | report | January 2000 | CIA Edwin P. Wilson Arms for Libya | An example of how plausible deniability worked for the CIA - their 3rd most senior CIA official produces an affidavit that they had had no dealings with Edwin Wilson since 1971. Although legions of insiders knew this was a lie, the court accepted it. Finally exposed as a lie almost 20 years later, all those who lied in court are given immunity. |