Robert Owen
Oliver North's courier in Central America whose phone number was found aboard a drug-seized Contra supply plane.
Robert Owen was Oliver North's courier in Central America during the Contra war, serving as a key link in North's illegal resupply operation.1
Drug Trafficking Evidence
In 1985, Owen reported to North that a DC-6 owned by Mario Calero (brother of Adolfo Calero) "which is being used for runs out of New Orleans is probably being used for drug runs into U.S." Owen's phone number was found aboard a DC-4 seized by the DEA in March 1987 on a suspected drug run off Florida's coast. The plane, used by pilot Frank Moss to ferry Contra supplies, also contained marijuana residue and Moss's notes with "the names of two CIA officers and their telephone numbers," according to a CIA cable.1
Nunez and H&M Corp
A 1986 memo from Owen to North described Dagoberto Núñez's plan to sign an agreement with Heroes and Martyrs Trading Corporation (H&M Corp.), the official import-export agency of the Sandinista government, for shrimping rights off the Pacific Coast of Nicaragua. Núñez was a Costa Rican-based drug trafficker working for North and the Central Intelligence Agency. "Nunez is doing this so he can help us. He will cooperate and do anything we ask," Owen told North. "He believes this will provide an opportunity to use his boats for cover operations, or to implicate the Ortegas and Borge in taking money on the side for their own pocket. He is right on both counts."2
The Kelso Affair
In August 1986, Owen was in Costa Rica when Joseph Kelso, a CIA and U.S. Customs informant fleeing DEA agents who had threatened his life, arrived at John Hull's ranch. Owen later recounted in a deposition that Kelso told him: "I think the DEA people are trying to kill me. I am convinced that they were involved in narcotics trafficking and looking the other way." Hull wrote a report for Oliver North detailing Kelso's allegations and gave it to Owen to deliver. Hull wrote: "Since you are in Wash[ington] you might check these things out. If the DEA people are in the drug business it should be stopped."3
Back in Washington, U.S. Customs enforcement chief William Rosenblatt called North about Kelso's evidence tapes. North sent Owen to collect them. Owen listened to tapes of Costa Rican officials accusing DEA agents of corruption, confirmed the content, and then threw the tapes away when the Iran-Contra Affair broke in October 1986. "They were thrown out, along with a bunch of other stuff, when I moved," Owen testified. The tapes were never seen again. The congressional Iran-Contra panel noted Owen "did not tell Rosenblatt he worked for North or the CIA. He told him he worked for a private organization. Not surprisingly, Owen never returned the tape recordings."3
Sources
- 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" ↩
- Webb, Gary. Dark Alliance: The CIA, the Contras, and the Crack Cocaine Explosion. Seven Stories Press, 1998. Chapter 13: "The wrong kind of friends" ↩
- Webb, Gary. Dark Alliance: The CIA, the Contras, and the Crack Cocaine Explosion. Seven Stories Press, 1998. Chapter 17: "We're going to blow your fucking head off" ↩
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