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- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Tue, 27 Aug 91 21:36 EDT
- From: "Silicon Surfer" <unixville@news.group.com>
- Subject: File 5--More on Casolaro (INSLAW) Suicide (Mary McGrory reprint)
-
- Tentacles of Scandal Touch Journalist's Mysterious "Suicide"
- (By Mary McGrory, syndicated columnist)
-
- One thing in the sad muck is clear: Before he died, Danny Casolaro saw
- an octopus. He told his friend Bill Hamilton about it. The tentacles
- reached into all the scandals we are grappling with in this summer of
- conspiracies unlimited.
-
- The body of investigative reporter Joseph Daniel Casolaro, 44, was found
- in the bathtub of a West Virginia motel on Saturday, Aug. 10.
- Martinsburg police pronounced it a suicide and proceeded to embalm the
- body with extraordinary haste - before they got around to notifying
- Casolaro's family, which finally heard the news on Monday, Aug 12.
-
- His brother, Dr. Anthony Casolaro, doesn't believe it was a suicide.
- Nor does anyone who knew him - or talked to him in his last days.
-
- A crime reporter, Casolaro was a happy, outgoing, gregarious person, the
- kind who cracks wise with secretaries and waitresses and endears himself
- to children. The day before he died, according to the Martinsbug Morning
- Journal, Casolaro told a Pizza Hut waitress that he liked her brown eyes
- and that he was a member of the Edgar Allen Poe Society. He quoted "The
- Great Gatsby" to her.
-
- He told Hamilton, his brother, his girlfriend and others that he was on
- the point of cracking the story that had absorbed him for a year. He
- had begun investigating the Inslaw case, a tangled affair of government
- perfidy and international intrigue that has been in litigation since
- 1983. In his explorations, he found out about related scandals - BCCI,
- S&Ls, Iran-Contra, the October Surprise - but until last week, he found
- nothing about Inslaw. Then he, joyfully said, he hit Bingo. One more
- interview and the case was cracked.
-
- Suicides do not tell their intimates day before taking the hemlock that
- they are "ecstatic" or "euphoric". Casolaro did. Nor do they attend
- family birthday parties, as Danny Casolaro was planning to do hours
- before he died. The last known call he made was to his mother. He would
- be late, but he was headed home. A manic-depressive might do that.
- Nobody ever suggested that Danny Casolaro was one.
-
- All the circumstances beg for disbelief, none more than the supposed
- suicide note. "I'm sorry, especially to my son," from a man who lived by
- words, just doesn't ring true. Casolaro wrote a novel, a children's
- book. His prose style, at least as displayed in an outline submitted to
- Little Brown of a book he proposed to write about the octopus called,
- "Behold, A Pale Horse," is on the florid side. Such a terse farewell,
- unless composed or dictated at gunpoint, is entirely unconvincing.
-
- The man who could have resolved the Inslaw case, Richard Thornburgh,
- resigned as attorney general the day the West Virginia police came
- forward with an autopsy. Excess was the hallmark of his farewell
- ceremony: an honor guard, a trooping of colors, superlatives from
- subordinates. Willam P. Barr, his deputy and possible successor, spoke
- of Thornburgh's "leadership, integrity, professionalism and fairness,"
- none of which Thornburgh - now, by the way, a candidate for the Senate -
- displayed in his handling of Inslaw.
-
- Although the Inslaw case occurred in the time of Ed Meese, Thornburgh
- took it to his busom. Bill Hamilton, a perfectly nice Midwesterner,
- invented Promis, a computer software program specially adapted to crime
- statistics, which he sold to the Justice Department. The second year,
- Justice stopped paying the bill.
-
- Hamilton and his wife, Nancy, believed that cronies of Meese got the
- franchise to sell it around the world. Promis has turned up in Canada
- and Pakistan. The link with the October Surprise is Earl Brian,
- allegedly the agent who paid off the Iranians to keep the hostages. He
- was paid back with huge profits from Promis.
-
- Thornburgh refused to discuss the case with the Hamiltons or their
- counsel, Elliot Richardson. He did not answer Richardson's letters. He
- did not return his phone calls. He refused to receive his distinguished
- predecessor.
-
- The Hamiltons have been to court many times. Judges have recused
- themselves, witnesses have disappeared or recanted. The man who knows
- the most, Michael Riconosciuto, was picked up in Washington state on
- drug charges and is in jail. What was merely sinister has now turned
- deadly.
-
- Thornburgh calls the Inslaw case "a little contract dispute." He refused
- to testify about it to the House Judiciary Committee. Richardson thinks
- it could be "dirtier than Watergate," and he should know.
-
- Thornburgh's conduct is the most powerful argument for believing that
- Danny Casolaro saw an octopus before he died.
-
-
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