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    Thursday , November 20, 2008 CIA Inspector: Agents Lied About 2001 Missionary Shoot-Down in Peru PDF Print E-mail
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    Wednesday, 26 November 2008 13:53

    CIA Inspector: Agents Lied About 2001 Missionary Shoot-Down in Peru

    Thursday , November 20, 2008
    FOX NEWS

    WASHINGTON ­
    CIA personnel lied to Congress in April 2001 about a missionary plane shot
    down in Peru that killed a woman and her 7-month-old daughter, the CIA
    inspector general revealed in a report being released by California Rep.
    Pete Hoekstra on Thursday.

    At the time, CIA personnel said the Peruvian Air Force suspected the plane
    was full of drug traffickers. The damning report, however, shows that CIA
    employees misled and even lied to Congress about what happened and did not
    supply accurate information to the Department of Justice or the Bush
    administration.

    The inspector general's report, written up about six weeks ago, said the CIA
    covered up the actions of those involved. The Peruvian Air Force had claimed
    that the incident was an unavoidable accident because the fighter pilot
    followed international guidelines to shoot after the missionary plane
    ignored repeated warnings to land.

    According to an April 2001 report in Christianity Today, the Peruvian Air
    Force opened fire on the Cessna 185 floatplane that was carrying a
    missionary couple and their two children from the Colombian border toward
    the city of Iquitos, 600 miles northeast of Lima. Veronica Bowers and her
    baby, Charity, were killed. Bowers' husband, James Bowers, and the couple's
    7-year-old son, Cory, survived as did the pilot, Kevin Donaldson.

    The IG report has a number of recommendations to the CIA, but intelligence
    sources say CIA Director Michael Hayden hasn't made any decisions yet about
    which ones or whether to adopt them, and is seeking input from an external
    advisory board of 12 people he set up.

    The CIA will not comment yet on the substance of the report, which is still
    being reviewed by Hayden.

    FOX News' Jim Angle contributed to this report.
    ----------------------------------------------------------

    Lawmaker Accuses CIA of Coverup
    Classified CIA Report Said to Harshly Criticize Deadly Drug Plane Shoot-Down
    Program

    By JASON RYAN and JACK DATE
    Nov. 20, 2008­
    http://www.abcnews.go.com/print?id=6299557

    A classified CIA report shows the agency operated a drug interdiction
    program outside of the law and that officials lied to Congress in an attempt
    to cover it up, the top Republican on the House Intelligence Committee said
    Thursday.

    Rep. Pete Hoekstra, R-Mich., is pushing for the declassification of the
    report, issued by the CIA inspector general, which is critical of the
    Narcotics Air Bridge Denial program, an agency initiative designed to shoot
    down suspected drug smuggling aircraft in South America.

    The report, according to a congressional source, harshly criticizes the
    program, which dates back to the mid-1990s.

    In April 2001, one of Hoekstra's constituents lost family members who were
    traveling in South America as missionaries after a plane they were in was
    shot down by the Peruvian Air Force because of faulty information provided
    by the CIA.

    Veronica Bowers and her 7-month-old daughter Charity were both killed in the
    incident; her husband Jim and their son Cory, as well as the plane's pilot,
    Kevin Donaldson, survived.

    The U.S. government suspended the program in 2001 after the Peru incident.
    It relaunched it in Colombia in 2003.

    "The IG reports states that parts of the intelligence community, parts of
    the CIA were acting outside of the law with the drug interdiction program at
    the time that the Bowers' plane was shot down. That there was an active
    coverup within the community," Hoekstra said at a news conference in
    Washington Thursday. "It was enabled by a culture that failed to recognize
    either internal or external accountabilities."

    The IG report, which remains classified, is said to uncover systemic
    problems in the program which led to the shoot down and other incidents.
    Hoekstra has called for the Justice Department to review the facts in the
    matter and requested that prosecutors review the report to determine if a
    criminal investigation is warranted.

    In response to Hoekstra's accusations, CIA spokesman Paul Gimigliano said,
    "[the] CIA takes very seriously questions of responsibility and
    accountability."

    "The only accountability process worthy of this agency is one conducted with
    care, candor, and common sense. That's the single goal here. It's still
    unfolding, and it's not something that should ever be subjected to political
    pressure of any kind," he said.

    Hoekstra said at the press conference that the CIA withheld information from
    lawmakers and other government officials.

    "After the shoot down the CIA denied Congress, the National Security Council
    and the [Justice] Department access to key findings of internal reviews that
    established and documented the sustained significant violations of the
    established procedures," Hoekstra said. "The Inspector General found that
    CIA officials made false or misleading statements to Congress. The IG found
    the CIA never informed the Department of Justice of significant material
    information in connection with consideration of potential criminal charges."

    According to an official briefed on the matter, in 2005 the Justice
    Department declined to prosecute the case after reviewing it with the CIA
    Inspector General.

    Spokesman Gimigliano said that CIA Director Michael Hayden reviewed the
    report in late August, but that he has reached "no decisions at this point
    regarding conclusions and recommendations sent forward by the IG."

    "This process is still open," he continued. "In fact, the director has
    sought input from a cleared outside expert, one who would know the complex
    issues involved in an air interdiction program."

    Gimigliano also noted that the agency has shared the report with the Justice
    Department.

    An unclassified portion of the report said that within hours of the
    incident, "CIA officers began to characterize the shootdown as a one-time
    mistake in an otherwise well-run program. In fact, this was not the case."

    Another unclassified section of the report says the "routine disregard of
    the required intercept procedures" in the program "led to the rapid shooting
    down of target aircraft without adequate safeguards to protect against the
    loss of innocent life."

    According to participants in the program interviewed for the report,
    performing the takedowns according to the established protocol would have
    "taken time and might have resulted in the escape of the target aircraft,"
    the report continues. Because the procedure was difficult to follow, so "it
    was easier to shoot the aircraft down than to force it down."

    "The result," the report says, "was that, in many cases, suspect aircraft
    were shot down within two to three minutes of being sighted by the Peruvian
    fighter -- without being properly identified, without being given the
    required warnings to land, and without being given time to respond to such
    warnings as were given to land."

    Those actions were in violation of Presidentially-mandated intercept
    procedures, according to the report.

    "Bottom line, if this program and these people had been held accountable for
    implementing procedures," Hoekstra said, "the Bowers plane would never have
    been shot down."
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