Dewey Clarridge
Chief of the CIA Latin American Division from 1981 to 1984 who oversaw the creation of the Contra project, recruited Contra leaders including Eden Pastora, and was later indicted for perjury during the Iran-Contra investigation.
Duane "Dewey" Clarridge was the chief of the Central Intelligence Agency's Latin American Division from 1981 to 1984 and oversaw the creation of the Contra project.1 He recruited many of the Contra leaders, including Eden Pastora in 1981.1
Contra Project Leadership
Clarridge headed the CIA effort to organize, fund, and direct the Contras from the project's inception. Under his leadership, the agency assembled the scattered anti-Sandinista factions into a unified fighting force, created the FDN, and established the Costa Rican-based Southern Front under Eden Pastora.2
When asked by a British television crew in late 1996 about Iván Gómez, the pseudonymous CIA agent in Costa Rica whom Carlos Cabezas identified as supervising Contra drug money, Clarridge said he had never heard of him. The 1998 CIA Inspector General's report confirmed that Gómez was indeed assigned to Costa Rica in 1982, largely corroborating Cabezas's account.2
Iran-Contra Indictment
Clarridge was indicted in 1991 on seven counts of perjury and providing false information to Congress during the Iran-Contra Affair investigation. He was pardoned before trial by former CIA director George H.W. Bush.1
Sources
Local network
Dewey Clarridge's direct connections. Click any node to navigate, drag to pan, scroll (or pinch) to zoom. + 2‑hop expands the neighborhood one level further.