More on Jack Abramoff
The 'secret world' of Jack Abramoff being probed by investigators
today has definite connections and unmistakable links to the one
inhabited during their final year in the U.S by Mohamed Atta and the
other hijackers.
So as the scandal embroiling House Major Domo Tom Delay and
Republican lobbyist Jack Abramoff grows hotter, there may be new
revelations about the 9.11 attack.
One of the most amazing thing
about this most amazing scandal—hundreds of millions in slush funds
beats Oval Office blowjobs by a mile—is that some of
the same names in the Abramoff scandal also surface in connection
with Mohamed Atta’s.
Less than a
week before the 9.11 attack, for example, Atta and several other
hijackers made a still-unexplained visit onboard one of Abramoff’s
casino boats.
What were
they doing there? No one knows.
Wrestling with alligators
There
remains a strong suspicion that Atta’s terrorist cadre—supposedly
unknown and friendless and burrowing into the woodwork—was able to
call on the assistance, when necessary, of a friendly global
network.
Could it be
that this network is the same one being probed so gingerly today by
investigators looking into Jack Abramoff?
What could a
scandal involving Indian casinos and gambling boat “cruises to
nowhere” & pay-for-play government officials have to do with the
story of 19 hijackers planning a mass murder in supposed isolation
in Florida?
Let’s take a
look.
A soupcon of
secret history
While Abramoff’s Indian gaming troubles may be
getting the most publicity, his other major 'area of concern’ is
where the real scandal resides. Involvement with Mob-run casino
boats may turn out to be a faux pas, even for Republicans.
The casino
boat ‘industry’ can be traced back to a few seemingly
inconsequential sentences buried in a 1992 federal law called ''An
Act to provide for the designation of the Flower Garden Banks
National Marine Sanctuary.''
(The “Flower
Garden Banks” are the northernmost coral reefs in the United States,
located off Texas and Louisiana.)
The obscure
bill offered the perfect place to slip in a few sentences, which,
deciphered, added ships of U.S. registry to vessels already covered
under the Johnson Act of 1951, which regulated the transportation of
gambling devices, and allowed ships of foreign registry, which often
offered gambling, to dock at U.S. ports as long as no one used or
repaired gambling equipment while in U.S. territorial waters.
The amendment
was a Trojan horse which extended this privilege to U.S. ships…
And the
result was a burgeoning new industry in Florida, and the state was
soon encircled by almost thirty casino boats swarming the
peninsula’s ports like the bloodthirsty pirates of yore. The booty
these pirates were plundering was the mad money of bored retirees.
They were
called “cruises to nowhere.” And in short order the boats were
generating hundreds of millions of dollars a year in
revenues. Hundreds of million of dollars of unregulated
revenue…
While not
getting ahead of ourselves, we still note that this was more than
enough money to help tip the balance in the last two Presidential
elections. At a minimum, for the casino operators it provided
instant access to anything and anybody worth being accessed.
Thanks to the
Johnson Act, we’re protecting our coral reefs. But we may have lost
our democracy.
Vegas without
rules
What the
Abramoff scandal is about at the core can be simply stated as: Vegas
without rules. And what the politicians are arguing over is the
biggest slush fund in the history of the world. Democrats don’t want
to eliminate it. They just want in on the action.
Who
owns Florida's gambling boats? No one is certain. There is virtually
no state or federal oversight. No one licenses the operators. No one
ensures that the games aren’t rigged. No one ensures that the boats
aren't used to launder money. No one investigates whether organized
crime is involved.
And while
ex-felons can’t vote in Florida—as many became aware during the
memorable presidential election in 2000—this disadvantage is more
than offset, for some, by the fact that an ex-felon can run a
gambling boat in the state with no fear at all of flunking the
background check.
The reason?
There is none.
This
situation clearly suits some people just fine…. While Governor Jeb
Bush may be minutely concerned with what happened to Terry Schiavo
fifteen years ago, on this issue of real interest—massive
corruption—he phones in his regrets.
Just why
might that be?
Florida's
cruises-to-nowhere represent "the largest unregulated gambling
industry in the United States," said Bill Thompson, a professor of
gambling at the University of Nevada at Las Vegas and nationally
recognized expert on the industry, in an interview in the Miami
Herald.
They gross at
least $170 million a year. And that’s just the number they report
voluntarily. No one knows the true ‘take.’ Everyone assumes there’s
a ‘skim.’
The
Miami Herald cited the example of Joseph Polidore, who listed
himself as the sole owner of Boca Casinos in Pompano Beach but said
he received money for his investment from a "personal friend."
Polidore admitted he had silent partners, but insisted they were
“nobody illegal.”
What would
happen if an applicant gave such vague information to the Nevada
Gaming Control Board? The lack of regulation, officials elsewhere
say, should concern Florida authorities.
"A casino is
a cash business. You could have money laundering and skimming,"
Keith Copher, chief of enforcement for the Nevada Gaming Control
Board, told the Miami Herald. “When you obtain money illegally
through drug sales and other methods. You need to find a way to
launder it, to make it look like a legal source. Regulation is
needed to prevent this."
While
“Florida authorities” piously oppose gambling, their inaction speaks
for itself, and may even have been exploited by the 9.11 hijackers.
Betting Red All the Way
“There is a
weird report just a day or two after 9/11 that someone reported to
the FBI that three or four of the hijackers were seen gambling on a
SunCruz boat,” wrote a source in Miami. “The FBI interviewed
everyone who might have seen them, that very day by all reports.”
Sure enough.
We found an Associated Press story on Sept 26, 2001 headlined
“SunCruz Casinos turns over documents in terrorist probe.”
“SunCruz
Casinos has turned over photographs and other documents to FBI
investigators after employees said they recognized some of the men
suspected in the terrorist attacks as customers.… Names on the
passenger list from a Sept. 5 cruise matched those of some of the
hijackers... Two or three men linked to the Sept. 11 hijackings may
have been customers on a ship that sailed from Madeira Beach on
Florida's gulf coast.”
Less than a
week before the 9.11 attack, Atta and several other hijackers were
aboard one of Abramoff’s casino boats. What no one seems able to
answer is this:
What possible
thrill could gambling offer men getting ready to die in less than a
week? To this date, their Sept 5 visit to a gambling vessel overrun
with retirees remains unexplained.
The gambling
motif in the terrorist’s timeline doesn’t end there. The hijackers
had no apparent reason to visit Las Vegas... so why did they?
On June 28 at
Boston’s Logan Airport, Mohamed Atta boarded a United Airlines
flight and flew first class nonstop to San
Francisco. He bypassed the bohemian North Beach district, and didn’t
take the cruise to Alcatraz…
Atta headed
for Vegas.
On Aug. 10,
Hani Hanjour and Nawaf Alhazmi used first-class tickets for a United
flight from Dulles Airport near Washington, D.C., to Los Angeles
International Airport, then on to Las Vegas. The story of the
terrorists Las Vegas connection may never be known, admitted the Las
Vegas FBI.
Murder will
out
‘Islamic
fundamentalist’ Atta may have felt right at home in the world of
fast cash and unlicensed gambling boat ‘cruises to nowhere’ of
Republican lobbyist (and observant Jew) Jack Abramoff. He would
almost certainly have been comfortable with the “gangland-style
hit straight out of ‘Goodfellas” that cemented Abramoff’s
prominent position in that industry.
At the time
of the Sept 11 attack one of Abramoff’s chief claims to fame was as
the proud owner of the SunCruz line: a dozen unlicensed gambling
boats plying the waters off the Florida coast in a fashion which in
any other state would have been considered criminal.
How did Jack
Abramoff get lucky enough to be the guy passing out all that long
green? Where did Jack Abramoff get his ‘juice?’
Short answer:
Not everyone is savvy to opportunities presented by riders in
obscure legislation. Not so the connected, the covert, the—dare we
say “blessed?”
“Elite
deviance” is a sociological term for a condition in a society in
which the elite in the society come to believe that the rules no
longer apply to them.
Casino boats
turned out to be a elite deviant’s dream.
One
time-honored way to get rich is to marry money. Another is to kill
someone that has it… In Abramoff’s case, it appears that Gus Boulis,
the owner of the lion’s share of the casino boats in Florida, had to
die first.
Three men
formed an ownership group that apparently made Boulis the
proverbial offer he couldn’t refuse. They bought SunCruz from him,
even though it wasn't for sale.
When
Greek tycoon Gus Boulis was gunned down in his BMW on February 6,
2001 Fort Lauderdale police investigators immediately began
scrutinizing SunCruz Casinos. Suspicion focused on the recent sale
of the fleet. Boulis and one of the three men had been carrying on a
very public feud.
“We certainly
aren't lacking in suspects,” said a homicide
detective drolly.
Less than two
months later,
Sun Cruz
announced plans to move a
150-foot, $10-million floating casino to the Northern Marianas.
Almost every article we'd
read cites
Abramoff & Delay's interest in the Marianas being
sweat-shop related. Meaning they're in favor of them. Their primary
focus wasn't sweatshops. It was gambling.
A Bebe Rebozo Memorial Hit
“Read about
SunCruz and it sounds like a South Florida version of "The
Sopranos,” reported the South Florida Business Journal. “ Feds go
after owner Gus Boulis. Former Miami Subs kingpin forced to sell.
New SunCruz chairman says Boulis threatened him. Boulis whacked.”
As if to
confirm the account, other newspaper reports mentioned a climate of
fear after the Boulis murder.
“The shooting
death… cast a pall of fear over the people who knew him, with some
of his closest associates admitting concern at being connected with
a man targeted by hit men,” the local Sun-Sentinel reported the day
after the hit.
“There are a
lot of people who aren't talking for reasons of personal safety,"
said Fort Lauderdale Police Detective Mike Reed.
Another
associate declined to discuss anything about Boulis with the paper…
"I've got my
family to worry about," he said, on condition of anonymity.

Even a
cursory look at the executive management of the cruise-to-nowhere
company that Boulis founded turns up violent thugs and organized
crime figures. But that’s pretty typical of South Florida...What is
unusual are that in with Sun Cruz’s mobbed-up crew are prominent
Republican Party members with long-standing, deep ties to the
religious right.
Two SunCruz
executives, Jack Abramoff and Ben Waldman, are walking examples of
the strange alliance between the family-values party and the
gambling industry. Both men have strong ties to Pat Robertson’s
Christian Coalition, which is adamantly opposed to gambling; Waldman
was Robertson top aide in the televangelist's run for the
presidency.
Abramoff, who
perhaps wisely only took the title of vice president (less heat) has
been connected to the Christian right since a student at Brandeis
University, where as head of the College Republicans he enlisted Top
Christian Ralph Reed as his top deputy. The two have remained close
friends ever since.
A man named
Adam Kidan became Sun Cruz’s new chairman. Kidan’s mother had been
murdered in a gangland-style hit in New York. Madonna’s one-time
boyfriend and South Beach restaurateur Chris Paciello, was
eventually convicted in the case.
Today he is
in Federal Witness Protection, and word is there are several movies
about him in development.
Just another
American success story.
The Seminal Seminoles
The Seminole
Tribe of Florida led the way in parlaying mom-and-pop bingo parlors
into today’s $19 billion a year Indian casino industry. Along with
legendary Chief James Billie (Wrestles with Alligators) Rob Tiller
was a seminal figure in this growth.
Tiller is
also a South Florida aviation insider and former business partner of
terror flight school owner and secretive financier Wally Hilliard.
He even met Atta and Marwan one day after a meeting with Hilliard,
he says, with whom he was working on an airline start-up called
Havana Air.
Small world.
A week before
Gus Boulis was murdered, Tiller was called to take a meeting with
him. Tiller says Boulis was scared. Boulis hadn’t wanted to sell.
Now he was
worried he’d be whacked.
“He called me to a meeting at
the Ocean Reef Club. Very snooty. You cant even land there without
permission. I flew my airplane down to meet him,” Tiller recalled.
“He said, ‘I
want out. People think I make a lot more money than I really do. I
don’t need the headache anymore. I want to sell my casino boats to
the Seminoles.’”
What
was Tiller’s response? “I said, ‘Gus you’re sure rocking a lot of
people’s boats here.’”
”A
couple days later, I hear he’s been blown apart dead. See, Gus
wanted to muscle his way into the casino business in a real bad way.
His Miami subs were everywhere. He was using them to launder money,
big-time, for somebody.”
Who might
that be? Even asking the question brings a shiver.
He wrote a check?
At
the time Boulis was murdered, suspicion focused on company chairman
Adam Kidan, also an active Republican and campaign contributor. He
had been in Israel at the time of the murder. His alibi held.
But then news
surfaced that just before Boulis’ death Kidan had written at least
$30,000 in checks to a reputed Mob enforcer named
Anthony Moscatiello, a one-time associate of crime boss John Gotti.
Moscatiello
is apparently what is known in criminal parlance as a
“torpedo.” (We're not quite sure what that means, but it doesn't
sound good.)
This is a
paper trail some U.S. Attorney's (in Manhattan, perhaps) would
describe as "to die for." But things work differently in South
Florida. To date no one has been charged in the murder of Gus Boulis.
The official back-story on Boulis is he left his
native Greece as a teenager and came to
North America, bought a Toronto sandwich shop and
turned it into a successful company with franchises all across
Canada.
After his
Canadian success, he moved to Florida in the early 1980’s (to retire
to the Keys, he said). But Florida’s money-making opportunities
overrode his desire for shuffleboard, and soon he was building
another successful fast-food chain, Miami Subs, and then building
and deploying the crown jewels in his empire, his SunCruz Casino
fleet.
What
explained Boulis’ success in a restaurant business where failure is
far more common? The question strikes some as naive.
"Miami subs
was the first take out place ever to serve Dom Perignon through the
takeout window,” snickered Tiller. “Word was he had made his money
in Canada in the sub business. But I learned later it was nothing
but a Laundromat.”
We were once
more back in the precincts of money laundering, which seems more and
more like one of Florida’s major industries. We pictured dollar
bills drying in the sun all over the state, after being washed
through the Everglades.
No doubt this
is all just freak coincidence.
Still, even with our suspicious minds, when we
learned who Tiller thought was responsible for Boulis’ death, we
were shocked.
Tiller
referred us to the manner of the Boulis hit…
Setting an example
A man in a
BMW was driving down a quiet side street after an evening meeting at
his Fort Lauderdale office when a car slowed to a stop in front of
him. A second car boxed the BMW in from behind, then a dark Mustang
appeared from the opposite direction. The Mustang's driver pulled
alongside and pumped three hollow-point bullets into the BMW
driver's chest.
“Boulis was
murdered in the exact same way as Don Aronow, Bush’s
other partner,” he stated.
Bush’s
other partner? The question hung in the air.
“Something is
really going down bad here,” Tiller stated. “Don Aronow. Gus. Jim
Shore…All tied in to Bush.”
When NBC's
Dateline did a story recently about sources of terrorist funding
right here in the U.S., they made bold to announce “the emerging
threat of a new alliance between al Qaeda and common criminals.”
But it was
hardly time to stop the presses.
Over three
years ago—within a month of the 9.11 attack—British Prime Minister
Tony Blair had presented the case against Bin Laden. He sketched out
the Cliff Notes version of the evidence. It wasn’t much, but it was
the only explanation we ever received.
“Al Qaeda is
a terrorist organization with ties to a global network,” Blair said.
In truth, the
idea that Mohamed Atta and his henchmen needed help from an outside
organization while they were in the U.S. was easy to understand...
Logistical support is difficult to arrange from caves.
Still, the
FBI stepped in and quickly put a kibosh on that kind of talk…
“Government sources now say that the investigation so far suggests
the 19 had ‘no major help’ in the United States," said a story in
the Washington Post which came out soon after Blair’s alarming faux
pas.
"The 19
hijackers who carried out the worst act of terror ever to occur on
U.S. soil worked with little outside help as a single, integrated
group,” the Post reported.
PBS’s
Frontline documentary on 9.11 supported this ‘lone cadre theory.’
Correspondent Hedrick Smith, to his everlasting discredit, opened
the show with this lie: “19 hijackers slipped through Europe and
America unnoticed.”
Like lone
gunmen, lone cadres are easier to explain.
Even in the
seemingly-unrelated Heaven's Gate mass suicide in the posh enclave
of Rancho Santa Fe near San Diego, which we will learn is not so far
afield from 9.11 as might appear, the cultists were quickly dubbed a
lone cadre.
“We have
absolutely nothing... that would indicate that this is anything but
a sole group of 40 people,” stated the chief investigator on the
case.
Although a
cache of weapons was found in a storage locker of the (supposedly)
nonviolent cult, and the Heaven’s Gate leader left a videotape
conspicuously praising the Order of the Solar Temple, whose members
had been found dead in a mass suicide just days earlier…
Well, you
know the story by now. Almost everyone does. In the gap between what
happens every day and what gets reported
lies the secret history…
“There’s a
secret world all around us,” a legendary CIA agent informs a young
recruit in “Overworld,” L.J.. Kolb’s eye-opening account of growing
up as the son of an American spy. “You just don’t see it unless you
know where to look.”
(Source: Mad
Cow Morning News) |