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- U.S. CAMPAIGN, Page 30Consider the Source
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- By Jay Peterzell/Washington
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- In citing Scott Barnes as a key source for his bizarre
- dirty-tricks charges, Ross Perot described him as a former
- "contract employee for the CIA." That's an exaggeration. But if
- Perot is confused about Barnes' real identity, so is Barnes.
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- The 38-year-old Arizona dress-shop owner first came to the
- attention of the national press in 1982, when he claimed to have
- taken part in a covert mission into Laos the previous year.
- Barnes' story: his team found two American soldiers in a Laotian
- prison camp but were unable to rescue them. The team radioed the
- CIA's headquarters, and the agency ordered them to kill the men.
- ABC's Nightline planned a three-part series on the story but
- later dropped the project, as did the Los Angeles Times, which
- sent two reporters to Thailand in a vain effort to verify the
- tale.
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- Barnes claimed to have worked at various times for the
- CIA, FBI and Drug Enforcement Administration. In April 1982, he
- said U.S. advisers in El Salvador were poisoning streams and
- experimenting with chemical warfare. Two years later, he
- surfaced in the case of Ronald Rewald, a Hawaiian banker who was
- in jail at the time facing fraud charges in connection with the
- collapse of his investment firm. Rewald had also provided cover
- for the CIA, and said the agency had engineered his troubles.
- In September 1984, ABC News reported Barnes' claim that the CIA
- helped him get a job as a Honolulu prison guard so that he could
- spy on Rewald. Barnes said the agency had then ordered him to
- kill the banker. ABC later admitted it could not substantiate
- the story. In 1988, after Barnes published a book about his
- adventures in Laos, the Defense Intelligence Agency released a
- rare public statement calling the work "rife with total
- fabrications" and denying that Barnes had ever worked for any
- federal intelligence agency.
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- Barnes now claims that he taped conversations with a
- former top defense official seeking damaging information on
- Perot. The only sign that there may be something to Barnes'
- charge is Bush campaign counsel Bobby Burchfield's refusal to
- say whether the ex-official is associated with the election
- effort.
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- Barnes' links with Perot are equally murky. On July 1,
- Perot told a Senate committee in a secret deposition that the
- two men had never met, but said Barnes called him once or twice a
- year. Then, on Aug. 5, Perot's security guards caught Barnes in
- the billionaire's Dallas headquarters after hours. According to
- Perot, Barnes said the Republicans had hired him to wiretap the
- Texan's computers and ruin Perot financially so he could not run
- again. "Maybe it doesn't make sense," Perot said when asked why
- he had not made these charges public until now. "But that's me."
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