home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- NATION, Page 49American NotesIRAN-CONTRAAnd Then There Was One
-
-
- A cynic might suspect that one arm of the Government had
- protected another. The CIA swore to Attorney General Dick
- Thornburgh that if Joseph Fernandez, its former station chief
- in Costa Rica, were to use certain classified documents to
- defend himself at his Iran-contra trial, the nation's security
- would be endangered. Thornburgh last week repeated the claim in
- an affidavit to Federal Judge Claude Hilton. So Hilton dismissed
- all charges against Fernandez, even though Independent Counsel
- Lawrence Walsh scoffed that the "fictional secrets" had already
- been disclosed in the press.
-
- Earlier, Albert Hakim, who helped divert millions of
- dollars in U.S. Government profits from Iranian arms sales into
- secret Swiss accounts and siphoned some to the contras, was
- permitted to cop a plea. He admitted being guilty of a mere
- misdemeanor: helping to buy a security fence for Oliver North's
- suburban Washington home. In return, felony charges against him
- were dropped.
-
- That leaves only one Iran-contra defendant still facing
- trial: former National Security Adviser John Poindexter. He
- insists that testimony by former President Ronald Reagan is
- vital to his defense. Reagan is resisting Poindexter's subpoena.
- If Judge Harold Greene rules that Poindexter's ex-boss need not
- testify, the retired admiral presumably will ask to have his
- case dismissed too.
-
-