Celerino Castillo
Celerino Castillo (spook, whistleblower) | |
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Born | 1949 |
Alma mater | University of Texas–Pan American |
Exposed | • “Iran-Contra” • CIA/Drug trafficking • Operation Fast and Furious |
A former DEA agent who exposed deep state involvement in drug trafficking. |
Celerino Castillo provided first hand testimony to the US Senate House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence. He told the Senators of his direct personal knowledge of massive CIA complicity in the drug trade. In 1975, he was closely involved in Operation Watchtower, a CIA run series of missions. Watch-Tower was pure "black ops," dedicated to shipping massive quantities of Cocaine from Bogata, Columbia, to Panama and onward to the United States for distribution. Directed by the CIA's ace field agents, Edwin Wilson and Frank Terpil, the operation was also supported by the Mossad.[1]
Career
In 1979, he joined the DEA as an enforcement agent fighting in the front-line trenches of America's so called "War on Drugs", and is best known for blowing the whistle on the CIA-backed arms-for-drugs trade (Spearheaded by Colonel Oliver North) that was used to prop up the 1980s Contra counter-insurgency in Nicaragua, and for the book that he published on that subject, entitled "'Powder Burns: Cocaine, Contras and the Drug War'"
Publications
In 1994 he published POWDERBURNS - Cocaine, Contras and The Drug War a TV exclusives on ABC's Primetime Live, Dateline NBC, and The Discovery Channel.
Later exposures
In 2008 (three years before Operation Fast and Furious was exposed publicly) Castillo made the revelation to reporter Bill Conroy that ATF agents were smuggling high powered weapons into Mexico. According to Castillo the source of that information was a government informer who was later murdered.
Arrest
In March 2008, Celerino Castillo was arrested for selling firearms without a permit (selling legally-purchased weapons without a firearms-dealer permit). He expressed his belief at that time that he was being targeted by the government in retaliation for his long-standing efforts to hold government agencies responsible for their felonious activities. He pled guilty on the advice of his attorney and was sentenced to 37 months in prison.