Monday, March 2, 2026

A TALE OF TWO DANNYS--HOPSICKER AND CASOLARO (Part One)

ABOUT THE AUTHORS of Gangster Planet 

“Scandal in contemporary U.S. life is an institutionalized sociological phenomenon. It is not due primarily to psychopathological variables, but it is due to the institutionalization of elite wrongdoing which has occurred since 1963. Many of the scandals that have occurred in the U.S. since 1963 are fundamentally interrelated: that is, the same people and institutions have been involved."

—Prof. David Simon, Elite Deviance (6th edition) 

 

Linda Minor, Co-Author

Linda Minor 1990
I first met author, Daniel Hopsicker online before Barry and 'the Boys' was published. My best guess is that it was 1996. The Internet was then newish. 

My job as an Assistant Harris County Attorney in Houston, Texas, was in its sixth year, and I had just received my first ever computer, loaded with Windows 95. A few months later a county official I represented, Bruce Austin, taught me how to use the Internet, probably calling it the Worldwide Web. I was in total awe.

Kris Millegan
One of the first people I discovered after buying my own PC shortly afterwards was Kris Millegan, who had set up a couple of “list-servs”: Conspiracy Theory Research List (CTRL) and CIA-Drugs List, which we could reach by dialing in to an AOL phone line to connect. 

Suddenly, my life began to take on two separate personas—family life, with a husband and stepdaughter was real enough. To that I added a separate “research reality” with a whole new set of friends interested in the same subject that was uppermost in my mindhow the world really worked.

This new faceless phenomenon had brought together many diverse individuals, all looking for answers to myriad questions we wondered about—contradictions between what we saw with our own eyes and what we were being told was true.

The first member I met in person was Catherine Austin Fitts, who was then crisscrossing the country in an effort, she said, to stay alive. She had been impressed by my ability to do research online and asked me to help her figure out who had destroyed an investment business she had created. I was happy to do so, even though much of what she told me I did not understand.

Catherine, 2012
Over a period of years beginning in 2002, Catherine would stop off at our small home to stay and visit, sometimes for up to a week at a time. Even though her priorities were not the same as mine, I felt we had the same goal—“seeing the world whole,” as she phrased it.

I interpreted that to mean she wanted to integrate the reality we found in our research into our personal lives. The last time I saw her was just before the election in 2016. She was coming through my town, and we met at Starbucks. When she left after an hour of talking, I was crying. She told me reluctantly that she would be voting for Donald Trump, but the explanation she gave me for doing so has since been forgotten. That was the last time we spoke, other than a possible email or two she forwarded to me. Today she has a podcast that informs listeners about “financial transaction freedom and the building of wealth.” The goal we did not share was her desire to be rich.

Through Catherine, however, I had met, online and by telephone, Lois Battuello, whom Catherine called “the Goddess of Research.” Lois wrote an anonymous column posted at Newsmakingnews.com and helped other members of Kris’ CIA-Drugs list, notably Michael Ruppert, with research projects. She also did research with Sander Hicks for a time, Craig Unger, and even the notorious Gerald Posner.

Michael Ruppert
Ruppert, a former Los Angeles Police Department detective, was also a member of CIA-Drugs. He attended a town hall meeting in South Central Los Angeles and confronted CIA Director John Deutsche about the CIA’s involvement with selling drugs in that community.

Kris Millegan hosted “CIA - Drugs Symposium” in Eugene, Oregon on  Saturday, June 10, 2000, to allow the various email acquaintances to finally put a face to the folks they’d been in contact with for the previous three years.

CIA - DRUGS SYMPOSIUM Sat, 06/10/2000 - 12:00pm

I did not attend. Daniel did, along with an assortment of other members of the internet-based email group called CIA-Drugs. Daniel wrote an introduction for himself for the symposium  with these words:

Daniel Hopsicker has spent a career in business television, producing “Inside Wall Street” and “The Emerging Growth Stock Report,” among others. He was the executive producer of a business news magazine airing on NBC inter-nationally when he went to Bill Clinton's Arkansas to film a story for a new series pilot and discovered that “things ain't always been jes' right down here,” in the words of a famous Mississippi lawman.

The initial result was a two-hour TV special, “The Secret Heartbeat of America,” which he was told “would not air while Clinton was President.”

(“They” were right: it airs next winter, after Clinton leaves office.)

He has just completed the first full-length look at the career of CIA agent/drug smuggler Adler Berriman Seal called “Barry and 'the boys,'” as well as a TV documentary detailing some of his findings called “In Search of the AMERICAN Drug Lords.”

The shocking true story of American 'super-spy' Barry Seal—the inspiration for the 1966 hit “Secret Agent Man.” written by his long-time friend Johnny Rivers—is the story of what happens when guys we pay to protect us—CIA guys—go into business with guys we're paying them to protect us against: “Made" guys. Mobsters...Organized Crime.”

Daniel Hopsicker

Gangster Planet is Daniel Hopsicker’s third and final book. Researched and written for his website between 2006 up until his death on August 22, 2023, it covers more years of work than his first two books combined.

Needless to say, it took a great deal of thought and work to organize all the threads that went into it. Although the book was, unfortunately, delayed numerous times, the publication of Daniel’s magnum opus completes his mission in life.

His Back Story 

Danny H.
Daniel was born on July 16, 1951, at Grant Hospital in Chicago, Illinois, to Harold J. “Harry” and Rita Jean Garry Hopsicker, who had married eleven months earlier. A year later a sister, Carol, was born, followed in 1959 by the youngest, David Hopsicker.

Harry joined the U.S. Navy on his 18th birthday and returned from World War II after an eventful year. His rating changed several times between the dates of May 5, 1945, and his discharge at San Diego the following year. He rose from Hospital Apprentice, 2nd Class to 1st Class while berthed on the USS Haven, a hospital ship which sailed for Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, on July 6, 1945. From there, the ship departed for Japan, assigned to pick up Allied  troops, who had been prisoners of war held by the Japanese, in Okinawa. From there the Haven advanced to Nagasaki, Japan, by September 11, taking on new patients suffering from the effects of the atomic blast. Once these troops were added to the hospital ship’s patient list, the Haven began its return voyage to San Francisco, stopping at Guam, Saipan, and Pearl Harbor, on its way to San Francisco on January 31, 1946.

Harry Hopsicker by then was looking forward to his 19th birthday. During the months at sea, he added Pharmacy Mate 3rd class to his rating.

Along with a teen-age Harold Hopsicker, the USS Haven also carried, on that same voyage that left San Francisco, radiological equipment and scientific researchers to participate in “atomic tests” in the Pacific as part of Operation Crossroads. The tests were part of a high-level plan being set up by the future head of the Atomic Energy Commission, Lewis Strauss, and Secretary of the Navy James Forrestal, according to a declassified memo in which Strauss wrote: “If such a test is not made, there will be loose talk to the effect that the fleet is obsolete in the face of this new weapon and this will militate against appropriations to preserve a postwar Navy of the size now planned.”

Even without a college education, Harry qualified for a good job with Victor Chemical Works at its headquarters plant in Chicago Heights, once he returned to Chicago. It would be the only job he had until his retirement in 1980. Initially, the only chemical the plant produced was monocalcium phosphate, one form of baking powder, but the company expanded into other products as time went by.

 Harry Hopsicker’s only background in chemistry was what he’d been taught while he was in the Navy, but he did qualify to be Victor’s personnel director and hiring manager. He was also used to resolve disputes in the event of a threatened strike.

Harold and Rita had undoubtedly become familiar with southwest Florida as a result of his inspection of the Tarpon Springs plant, which had been built by Victor as early as 1947 “to burn phosphate ore and turn it into elemental phosphorus for use in foods, fertilizers and ammunition,” according to a story by Diane Steinle, published in the Tampa Bay Times in 2014, who added that the “furnace produced toxic smoke and radioactive slag. The plant, purchased by Stauffer Chemical in 1960, shut down in 1981.”

Harry made trips to inspect plants as a member of Victor Chemical’s inspection committee during the ‘50s. Photos of the committee appeared in newspapers in cities with phosphate plants the committee maintained over the years before it merged into Stauffer. Harry’s last ten years with the company—after it became Stauffer—could not have been pleasant, though Daniel had no idea what his father may have been dealing with.

The Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) called the Tarpon Springs site “a public health hazard due to harmful levels of air pollutants, primarily sulfur dioxide and particulate matter, released from the Stauffer plant while it was in operation.” Set aside in 1994 as a Superfund Site, it is still managed to prevent the elemental phosphorus, arsenic, antimony, beryllium, thallium, and radium-226 found in both soils and groundwater samples from leeching into nearby water wells.

Diane Steinle stated in her 2014 Tampa Bay Times article that the Tarpon Springs plant’s “contaminated soil — hundreds of thousands of cubic yards of it — wasn't removed. It's still right there, pushed into mounds and covered with a water-tight cap that supposedly will contain it indefinitely. Groundwater under the property, which is now fenced off with barbwire and covered with green grass, will be monitored for pollutants forever.” As a result of a series of corporate mergers, AstraZeneca eventualy became owner of the Superfund site.

The Hopsicker Heritage

Whether or not Daniel Hopsicker had any inkling of the problems within the corporations where his father spent thirty years, we don’t know. He was aware, as he indicated in one letter back home while he was a student at UCLA that he had noticed remarks they had made about money being tight.

Dan always felt closer to his mom than to his dad, repeating what he’d been told by his aunts that he had Rita's same temperament. As the youngest of four girls and one boy, Rita, as Danny was told by his aunts, “was always a little flighty,” especially while she was pregnant with him. Although online military records were not found that support it, Daniel had been told his dad was away in Korea during that pregnancy, which, in his mind at least, partially explained symptoms that led to his 1987 diagnosis of ADD.

Rita and her siblings, 100% Irish, were, actually reared by their mother and stepfather, John Slepicka—from a family mix of Austrian, German, Polish and Czech ancestry. Rita’s Irish birth dad died in 1932 at the young age of 36, leaving Rita fatherless when she was three, and her mom, Myrtle Garry, married Slepicka in 1938. He would be the only father Rita and her four Garry siblings remembered. He was a Swift Meatpacking Co. employee and supported all five children to adulthood, dying in 1966 after all were married.

Two years after John Slepicka's death, Dan’s family left their comfortable Chicago Heights home, where Dan had played basketball, baseball and football at Marian Catholic high school. Harry was transferred to Concord, California eight years after his long-time employer, Victor Chemical Works, merged into Stauffer Chemical Co. of San Francisco.


The move placed Dan in public school at Ygnacio Valley High, the most profound change of his life up to that point. California represented freedom to him, as he landed near the hub of the counterculture movement in the late 1960s:

“Haight-Ashbury was the most notable San Francisco neighborhood that drew in almost 100,000 youths during the summer of 1967, who soon became the heart and soul of the counterculture movement. This summer of youth migration became known as the Summer of Love, which marked the prominence of a movement that would impact decades to come.”

After two years in Concord, his dad told him he’d been transferred again, and the family would be moving to the East Coast. Dan wouldn’t accept it. He told his coauthor he had devised a plan. Realizing San Francisco was the center of the peace movement, he thought he would have more success convincing his dad to let him go to college in Los Angeles. It was not at the time associated with Berkeley’s revolutionary ideas. Then he cajoled, begged, and promised that he would be an ideal son. He’d do anything if his parents would just let him stay in California.

His mother saved every letter he wrote home during that time. One was postmarked Jan. 24, 1972, with the only return address: “Heir Apparent.”

He argued his case:

“Dear Folks,

“Just a quick note to let you know what’s happening. Not too much. The weather today [remember it’s January, and he’s writing to people in Connecticut] is beautiful. I’m sitting out on the grass in front of the Theater Arts building basking in the 65-degree sunshine and hoping it will stay like this for awhile.

“I happened to think of something last night which I thought I’d pass along to you. I figured it out, and you are paying not one cent more for the move [to an apartment from a frat house], you are also not paying it one second sooner! So where’s the gripe?—except that my residency at any one place is somewhat more than unstable. Well, I’ve got to go to class. Will give you a fuller review of things later in the week.   Love, Dan”

When he’d started UCLA in the fall of 1970, his parents had him safely ensconced at the Zeta Beta Tau Fraternity house across the street from the campus. But during his second year he moved unannounced with his then-best friend Rick to a house “in the hills” a mile and a half north of campus. A letter he wrote home tried to put what he’d done in a positive light:

“And now here’s the financial news. Hopsicker, Very Limited, a subsidiary of the parent company Hopsicker Enterprises, Inc., is presently at 50, with a forecast of slow dissipation for the next two weeks until a consolidation takes place with a food concern known as The Great American Food & Beverage Co.  Hopsicker, Sr. preferred stock, on the other hand, has shown definite upswing due to the liquidation and transfer of 125 shares from Hopsicker, Limited to the parent company.”

Inside the envelope was a carbon copy of his list of classes, which included History of Art, an English class on Shakespeare, another called Special Studies English, Introduction to Theater, and a Workshop in Theater. He had already developed an interest, it seems, in becoming a playwright.

He got his degree in English Lit, participating in the Creative Writing program. He’d loved books and reading all his life, but he was also introduced to music by his friend Tommy Kane in Chicago Heights. Not classical music, of course. It was the ‘60s and ‘70s when rock and roll became every Baby Boomer’s passion.

He would visit the family from that point in Westport, Connecticut, until his father retired ten years later. After that, he would visit them at their retirement community in Venice, Florida, where Rita’s three older sisters, each living with her respective spouse, also lived.

The Times, They Are A-Changing - 1968 

When Harry Hopsicker moved his family to California in 1968, he had been transferred there by Stauffer Chemical Co., Victor Chemical’s owner since 1960. Stauffer produced polyvinyl chloride (PVC) at its plant near San Diego, and researchers in 1973 found carcinogenic ingredients in the smoke it emitted into the air, which California’s Air Reserve Board (ARB) chairman, Dr. Arie Jan Haagen-Smit of Caltech, linked to cancer. Dr. Haagen-Smit, first appointed by Governor Ronald Reagan to the ARB in 1968, retired in 1974, at about the same time Reagan replaced the entire board with people recommended by Edwin Meese III.

Meese, a former Alameda County official from Oakland, California, began working for Ronald Reagan, the politician as early as 1966, serving the former movie star turned governor as his executive assistant and chief of staff. He remained Reagan’s “counsellor” after election to the Presidency, heading the transition team, then being named Attorney General.

Daniel Hopsicker during protest at UCLA
Meanwhile, Harry's eldest son Daniel was discovering California, graduating high school in Concord, California in 1969. The teen-age Dan fell in love with California at first sight, determined he'd never leave. Thus began his campaign to convince his dad to finance his education at UCLA, a university then approaching its peak of anti-war activism during LBJ's last and Nixon's first term. 

Those years saw Edwin Meese III having returned to Oakland after his cold war stint in military intelligence and law school at UC Berkeley. He became a prosecutor under Oakland's Alameda County district attorney J. Frank Coakley, serving alongside fellow deputy D. Lowell Jensen, who was elected D.A. in 1969.

Jensen had prosecuted Black Panther Huey Newton in the late '60s, as well as the kidnappers of Patty Hearst in the '70s, while Meese moved on to Sacramento to work on Gov. Ronald Reagan's staff.

Danny Casolaro
Twenty years later journalist Danny Casolaro, shortly before his bled-out body with slashed wrists was found in a bathtub in West Virginia in 1991, had placed Meese at the center of a plot involving a secret operation dubbed “the Enterprise,” overseen by retired Air Force major general Richard Secord, who cut his teeth on covert operations in Laos in the ‘60s. Working for the CIA-owned Air America, Secord learned how to launder opium drug profits into private enterprise, as described in a variety of Iran-Contra documents that came out of Reagan's time in offie.
 
Casolaro had taken his research a step beyond official reports by zeroing in on then-current activities of private individuals with connections to former Reagan officials still making money by supplying products secretly to George Bush’s Defense Department. Danny’s death occurred in the final days of Bush’s term, but the activities would continue with President Bill Clinton, who had been complicit with the Reagan and Bush administrations engaged in covert drug drops and money-laundering in Mena, Arkansas in the ‘80s. Clinton used the Arkansas Development and Finance Authority to launder the drug money proceeds after setting up a re-insurance company (Coral Reinsurance) in Barbados, according to the Staff of the Ozark Gazette's research project called "Gray Money." See Mark H. Gaffney's book, Black 9/11 for the full story.
Edwin Meese III was the third generation of his name to run political affairs in Alameda County, and he was a natural in overseeing Reagan’s political affairs in Sacramento after the new governor’s inauguration in early 1967, the same year, incidentally, that the Hopsicker family left Chicago Heights for their move to California.

During the 1970’s--while the primary author of Gangster Planet, was studying at UCLA--a ban was issued by California's Air Resources Board (ARB) on sulphur dioxide emissions from industrial facilities. The ban was followed by a complaint for injunctive and declaratory relief filed by Daniel's dad's employer, Stauffer, joined in by other plaintiffs, including Chevron U.S.A., Inc., and Allied Chemical, as well as the Federal Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). The fact that Harry’s company was "under attack" by  California while he was paying his son’s California tuition may help explain the generational conflict that arose between father and son at the time.
Harry Hopsicker officially retired from the company in 1980, three years before Stauffer’s executives and accountants got in trouble with the Securities and Exchange Commission for a “multimillion-dollar fraudulent scheme to overstate its 1982 and 1983 earnings.” Stauffer entered into a consent decree—settling the case without admitting wrong-doing. By this time, of course, Harry and Rita were making plans to move from Stauffer’s headquarters in Westport, Connecticut to Venice, Florida.

Stauffer and Phosphorous Trichloride 

Harry may not have known that Stauffer had sold the design for a phosphorous trichloride chemical plant it owned in Pennsylvania to a Swiss company, Krebs A.G. Sale documents acknowledged the design would be used by El Nasr Pharmaceutical Company of Egypt, a fact that alarmed even the Bush administration in 1989. Besides pesticides, phosphorous trichloride was also a key ingredient for “Sarin, a deadly nerve gas and is on the Western core list of precursor chemicals.”

Deadly sarin gas nerve agents
Sarin gas was used during the Iran-Iraq war begun in 1980. This use resulted in a ceasefire and an agreement designed to prevent Egypt from manufacturing the gas in another plant. Consequently, Krebs was forced to sell out to Imperial Chemical Industries (ICI) of the UK. 

ICI's interest in toxic chemicals first rose in 1948, according to a book by Dan Kaszeta (Toxic: A History of Nerve Agents, From Nazi Germany to Putin’s Russia. Oxford University Press 2021, p. 89), while doing research on pesticides. A long-winded article in the Harvard Business Review in 1995 analyzed why ICI had, in 1987, “demerged” its businesses. ICI kept the part of the company that made industrial polymers, paints, and explosives, but it sold the part that made drugs, pesticides, and specialty chemicals to Zeneca—now merged into AstraZeneca.
Stauffer was in the process of leaving the scene by 1987, as we learned in a piece by the New York Times on June 23, 1987, printed here in full:
Imperial Chemical Industries P.L.C. said today that it would sell the specialty chemicals part of its soon-to-be-acquired Stauffer Chemical Company to the Dutch chemical group Akzo N.V. for $625 million. (emphasis added)
I.C.I. announced on June 5 that it would acquire Stauffer from the British-Dutch conglomerate Unilever N.V. for $1.69 billion. Analysts then predicted that I.C.I., the world's fifth-largest and most profitable chemical company, would soon sell off parts of Stauffer and concentrate on agrichemicals. Stauffer is based in Westport, Conn.
Aarnoud Loudon, the chairman of Akzo, said the deal fulfilled several of the group's goals by increasing its business in the United States. Akzo's activities include basic and specialty chemicals, salt, man-made fibers, coatings, pharmaceuticals and diagnostics, and consumer and other industrial products.


Chemical Company Rabbit Holes

Akzo, intriguingly, led me from the chemical company from which Dan Hopsicker’s dad retired to a research laboratory Danny Casolaro’s dad helped set up. Yet neither of the sons realized how closely tethered their respective fathers were to the octopus they were searching for. 

While searching for Akzo, I made what to me was a discovery not to be ignored. Two years before Akzo acquired Stauffer, the Dutch company's subsidiary, Organon Teknika, bought half of Bionetics company which Dr. Joseph D. Casolaro helped found, and which Litton Industries bought in a stock swap in 1968, acquiring all of the more than 536,000 shares of Bionetics in exchange for 11,002 shares of Litton common.

Dr. Joseph D. Casolaro's name was included in a list of “organizers” given credit for founding Bionetics Research Laboratories (BRL) in 1960. Casolaro was the only medical doctor named in the list, all the others seemingly having non-medical Ph.D's. Discovering that Danny's dad was involved in Bionetics, later a division of Litton Industries, took me from one rabbit hole (Stauffer) into another (Bionetics). 
Bionetics was not created as a chemical company, but its origin stemmed from a need for research animals for use in the space program being developed during the Kennedy administration's attempt to put a man on the moon.  

The Space Race


New Mexico top-secret sites
The research laboratory was rooted in Air Force testing then being conducted at the highly secret Holloman Air Force Base near Alamogordo, New Mexico.
 As part of that testing program, Lt. Col. John Paul Stapp, a Texan, had been painfully subjected to 35 and 40 times negative gravity during a deceleration test that took place at Holloman, 90 miles across the desert from Fort Bliss, Texas. 
 
Only nine years earlier, a joint program of the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) and the U.S. Army Counter Intelligence Corps, called “Operation Paperclip,” a “rocket-pioneering group of German scientists and engineers,” had been brought in May 1945 to Fort Bliss in El Paso, Texas. The group consisted of Dr. Wernher Von Braun and 350 other German scientists who had worked for the Nazi Government. Their first job would be the Manhattan Project, building the bombs dropped on Japan. Their sights were next trained on the moon.
 
Dr. Ernst A.Steinhoff, who was part of that group, had been captured at Peenemünde, Germany, at the close of World War II. As the Director of Flight Mechanics, Ballistics, Guidance and Control, and Instrumentation at the Reich’s Army Rocket Research Center, Steinhoff worked on both submarine-launched and on V-2 rockets. His new job in the United States was to engage in rocket research focused on building “the platform from which America launched rockets to the Moon in the late 1960s.” (See above link.)
 
In 1959, the Holloman crew acquired a new recruit named Ham. Born in Cameroon, Africa, the chimpanzee joined Nick and Vickie at the "animal colony" at Holloman. His name was an acronym derived from Holloman Aeromedical Research Laboratory. Lt. Col. James Ellsworth Cook was a "veterinarian who went to Cameroon to purchase the first 20 baby chimpanzees for the Space program." When he left New Mexico for his last Air Force duty station at Walter Reed Armed Forces Institute of Pathology, Washington, D.C., the "animal colony" was moved to nearby facilities in Virginia and Maryland. Bionetics Research Laboratory (BRL), incorporated in 1961, was located close to the Pentagon as well as to the National Institute of Health, within close reach of its government clients. Dr. Cook retired from the military in 1969 and became a professor in Kansas.
 
BRL was first mentioned in newspapers in March 1962 when it received a contract from the National Institute of Health to induce cancer in monkeys.  An ad had been placed in the classified section of the Washington Post the previous month for animal handlers and others to work for the Falls Church lab at 205 West Jefferson Street. There were zoning issues in Falls Church, which were quickly resolved.
 The lab had been up and running for a year when another problem arose in the form of unwanted publicity focused on Bionetics. 
 
 
A cute wire-service photo of two baby rhesus monkeys spread to newspapers all over the country, informing people that these innocent animals were the subject of cancer testing. It was bad enough that animal-rights activists in the United States learned of the testing, but the uproar also could be heard in India, then the sole source for that type of monkeys, said to be considered too sacred there to be sold for cancer research. 
 
When India soon forbade further purchases, Bionetics acquired an uninhabited island in South Carolina on which to breed the animals for research purposes. (Val Palmer, "Monkeys take over Morgan Island," Beaufort, S.C. Gazette, Dec 17, 1979.) Bionetics by then was a division of Litton Industries.

Area surrounding CIA HQ

Bionetics, which "arose out of" the Holloman project, according to Oldfield in a footnote on page 118, had its government contracts to keep it afloat before it became necessary or desirable to bring in revenue from the public. Once animals were no longer being used in the space program, however, the research lab sought to become an independent private corporation. Several of the men Oldfield named as organizers of Bionetics Research Lab were BRL presidents during its early history—Francis E. Miller and Arthur J. Pallotta were two—while another, Richard Guttmacher, was executive vice president in 1967, the year prior to the acquisition of the lab by Litton.  

Guttmacher came from a Jewish family consisting of numerous doctors, notable in a variety of fields of medicine. One of them--a member of the faculty of the Albert Einstein School of Medicine, emeritus professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York, and previously a clinical professor at the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons in New York--was Dr. Alan Guttmacher, who acknowledged the role of  Charles B. Thornton, president of Litton Industries with a merit award by the Einstein Medical School in March of 1963.

The Einstein Medical College had opened in 1955 after four years of fund raising work headed by Dr. Samuel Belkin of Yeshiva University. It was named for the scientist who created the theory of relativity, Albert Einstein, who had died in 1952 and left his papers to Hebrew University in Jerusalem. Although called an ardent Zionist, Einstein's desire in 1946 was for Israel's “secured bi-national status in Palestine with free immigration,” adding that it defies common sense to “ask to be given the political rule over Palestine where two thirds of the population are not Jewish.”

Another man mentioned as a Bionetics organizer was L. P. Gray III, whom we realized was the Louis Patrick Gray III, who had been a special assistant to Vice President Nixon in 1960 as well as an assistant to Robert H. Finch, who managed Nixon's first Presidential campaign. Finch got his law degree from USC in Los Angeles (where he was a classmate of Herbert Kalmbach). Finch met Gray at George Washington University in 1947, the same year Gray met Nixon, who was then a Congressman. Finch was working for Rep. Norris Poulson while he attended graduate classes at GWU. Finch later served as Lieutenant Governor of California during Ronald Reagan's first term as Governor in 1966.

It is the connect-a-dot philosophy obvious in the foregoing paragraph which results in conclusionary conspiracy theories, with good reason. It assumes because the men (all were white men at the time) were drawn together there was a secret plan in operation. I do not endorse that theory. I believe each of the men had good intentions and had worked hard to attain his career status. So what went wrong? 

 

 

 

End of Part I  

(to be continued)