---
aliases:
- Brad Brunon
- Bradley Brunon
category: Law Enforcement & Legal
created: 2026-05-17
summary: Los Angeles attorney who represented Danilo Blandon and provided firsthand
  observations about Contra fundraising through cocaine trafficking.
tags:
- Person
- Lawyer
- UnitedStates
- 1980s
- ContraWar
- DarkAllianceInvestigation
title: Brad Brunon
updated: 2026-05-17
---

Bradley Brunon was a Los Angeles attorney who represented [Danilo BlandÃ³n](/people/danilo-blandon/) throughout his legal troubles and provided firsthand observations about the intersection of Contra fundraising and cocaine trafficking in the early 1980s.[^1]

### Observations of Contra Cocaine Trafficking

Brunon met BlandÃ³n while defending a middle-class [Nicaraguan](/places/nicaragua/) exile accused of drug trafficking. He said BlandÃ³n was one of several former [Somoza](/people/anastasio-somoza/) supporters dealing cocaine in [Los Angeles](/places/los-angeles/) in the early 1980s. "People were being arrested who had high government connections, or high military connections, in the Somoza regime, who didn't have any particular lifestyle consistent with being cocaine dealers, didn't have a background consistent with that, but they were highly politicized individuals. And the only politics I was aware that they were involved with was this attempt to fund the Contra revolutionary insurgency."[^1]

Brunon said it was his understanding that "the [Contras](/organizations/contras/), and I don't even know if they were known as that then... had no above-the-line funding. Everything was sub rosa and one of the ways they were trying to raise money was importing cocaine." He clarified that this information "was information that I didn't specifically receive from BlandÃ³n, but that I had surmised based on a series of events that were happening."[^1]

### Knowledge of BlandÃ³n's Contra Involvement

BlandÃ³n was fairly close-mouthed about his role with the Contras, according to Brunon. "I don't know the formal particulars of it other than there was this kind of atmosphere of [Central Intelligence Agency](/organizations/central-intelligence-agency/) and clandestine activities and so forth that surrounded him when I met him. He never was specific. I mean, I believed he was involved with the Contras. I don't think there's any doubt about that. Beyond that, I never got into the particulars with him, because I didn't have a need to know at that point."[^1]

### Encounters with Ronald Lister

Brunon met [Ronald Lister](/people/ronald-lister/) in 1986, when Lister showed up unannounced at the lawyer's office and began asking very detailed questions about BlandÃ³n's background. "It was just like the hair on the back of your neck goes up. What does this guy want? What's he doing here? Is he investigating BlandÃ³n?" Brunon said. "I never knew what his true role was. I mean, he covertly insinuated that he was CIA. At least, if not a sworn member, whatever the hell they do to get to become employees â€” some sort of operative." Brunon "really didn't have much communication with the guy because he scared me."[^1]

Brunon described Lister as "one of these guys who would boast about having bugging capabilities, would boast about having wiretap capabilities, you could get any information any time, one of those... I-can-uplink-to-the-satellite sort of guy."[^1]

### CIA Claims and the FBI

A 1986 [Federal Bureau of Investigation](/organizations/federal-bureau-of-investigation/) report about BlandÃ³n obtained by [Gary Webb](/people/gary-webb/) through a FOIA request revealed that Brunon had called the [L.A. County Sheriff's Office](/organizations/los-angeles-county-sheriffs-office/) after a police raid and claimed the CIA had "winked" at BlandÃ³n's activities.[^2]

### DEA Knowledge of BlandÃ³n

Brunon stated in court in 1992 that the [DEA](/organizations/dea/) possessed extensive knowledge of BlandÃ³n's drug dealing spanning over a decade: "I have some 300 DEA-6 reports regarding Mr. BlandÃ³n, and the reports relate to activities between approximately 1981 and May 1992." This was a period during which BlandÃ³n was granted U.S. political asylum, ran a multimillion-dollar cocaine operation, and served as a DEA informant.[^3]

### Views on BlandÃ³n's 1992 Case

[LAPD](/organizations/lapd/) narcotics detective Ron Hodges, who investigated BlandÃ³n in conjunction with the DEA in 1991-92, told Webb that the case against BlandÃ³n was remarkably weak. "What's hard to understand [is] when we actually did the investigation on him and it came to a conclusion, I think he was charged with what they consider a 'no-dope conspiracy,' which is like nothing. It's so minimal. It's like trying to do something when there is nothing there." Brunon pointed out that his client had no criminal record, and the DEA had nothing more than some loose talk with criminal informants and no evidence of actual drug dealing.[^4]

[^1]: Webb, Gary. *Dark Alliance: The CIA, the Contras, and the Crack Cocaine Explosion.* Seven Stories Press, 1998. Chapter 6: "They were doing their patriotic duty"
[^2]: Webb, Gary. *Dark Alliance: The CIA, the Contras, and the Crack Cocaine Explosion.* Seven Stories Press, 1998. Prologue: "It was like they didn't want to know"
[^3]: Webb, Gary. *Dark Alliance: The CIA, the Contras, and the Crack Cocaine Explosion.* Seven Stories Press, 1998. Chapter 10: "Teach a man a craft and he's liable to practice it"
[^4]: Webb, Gary. *Dark Alliance: The CIA, the Contras, and the Crack Cocaine Explosion.* Seven Stories Press, 1998. Chapter 25: "Things are moving all around us"
