Friday, June 01, 2007

The Father, the Son, and the Holy Spooks

Agape Flights is a Florida-based aviation firm servicing missionaries in Haiti and other third world spots. Daniel Hopsicker has put together a remarkable skein of evidence suggesting that the firm may be transporting something other than the Word of the Lord.

In the 1980s, Christian Century magazine published a series of articles demonstrating that several well-known missionary organizations -- including the famed World Vision -- provided cover for CIA personnel operating in faraway lands.

Is Agape one such enterprise? I can offer no definitive answer; I ask only that you consider the possibility. While I cannot here summarize all of the indicators, the following summary should evince a Spock-like rise of the left eyebrow.

1. Agape operates at the world-infamous Venice airport, where Mohammed Atta trained. The firm is locally notorious for secrecy. They usually do their business behind closed hangar doors.

2. A pilot named Mark Mikarts flies for Agape. The same pilot was Atta's flight instructor. He also has been known to use the name Mark Wierdak. His sister works for the American consulate in Venezuela, and, when contacted, would not offer any rational explanation for the use of two last names.

(To read the rest, click "Permalink" below)


3. In 2006, an Agape pilot named Steve Huisman was flying a twin-engine Beechcraft King Air 90 in Florida -- during a tropical storm predicted to attain hurricane status. The aircraft crashed into a private home, killing the pilot instantly.

There was no flight plan.
Agape said that Huisman was releasing sterilized Med flies. In a near-hurricane.

4. Huisman also worked for Dynamic Aviation, a Virginia Company which hired him to fly in and out of Afghanistan. Nobody knows what he was shipping.

5. Agape rents office space and a hangar for the remarkable sum of $2,114 a month. (To put that sum into perspective, I recently saw a small storefront in a dismal area of the San Fernando Valley going for over $5K a month.) Agape leases out part of their office space for $5000 a month, which puts them into the black for doing nothing. (Interestingly, Agape faced eviction in 1999, back when they were in their old digs in Sarasota.)

6. The United States government has given Agape special permission to make regular flights to Cuba.

7. When Agape first moved to Venice, they shared hangar space with a man named Coy Jacob, who gave Hopsicker this startling report:
“I couldn’t believe what I was seeing. Its obviously a very well-funded operation, but the stuff they’re flying down to Haiti is junk,” he told us bluntly.

“Stuff that didn’t sell at garage sales. Used silverware and plates, used bedding. Every so often we’d see a new coffeepot, or a portable generator. But it was mostly all junk.”

“With the price of aviation gasoline today, it costs them between $6000 and $8000 just to fly down and back to Haiti. And for what? A couple hundred bucks worth of toasters?”
When Jacobs asked Agape executive Charlie Gardner about this mysterious cargo, Gardner became visibly uncomfortable and refused to say more.

I find Jacobs' report the most compelling indication that Agape may be involved with a "protected" smuggling operation.

(Perhaps I'm reaching, but while reading this material, my mind flashed back to those notorious Israeli "mover" companies which shipped trucks filled with junky furniture back and forth across the U.S.-Canada border.)

I'd like to add one connection which Hopsicker didn't catch.

Agape appears to be linked with the mysterious, cult-like missionary group Youth With a Mission, or YWAM. See here, here, and here.

If YWAM seems familiar to you, think back to the brouhaha surrounding the propaganda film Path to 911. That's the one which faked the facts to blame the "Osama problem" on Clinton. For still-unknown reasons, the Disney Corporation broadcast the thing commercial-free last year. The film's director, David Cunningham, is a member of YWAM, which was founded by his father, Loren.

I wrote a few stories about YWAM last September; see here and here.

Although YWAM does much legitimate missionary work, I discovered some troubling indications that the organization may have fit the "spooky" profile outlined in those old Christian Century articles. The stories on the other side of the afore-mentioned links should explain the reasons for my suspicions. Suffice it to say that YWAM had connections to Guatemalan tyrant Rios Montt, who rose to power with Agency help. When questioned about Path to 911, David Cunningham cryptically told an interviewer "We have our CIA consultants and Clinton has his."

Can I prove that Agape has any involvement with either smuggling or American intelligence? No. Not in the sense that one can offer proof for a mathematical problem. But the evidence offered by Daniel Hopsicker raises some troubling questions.

As the Book says: "Behold, I show you a mystery."

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

One name that caught my eye in the Hopsicker was the Summer Institute of Linguistics. This is a name that pops up mainly among people who direct their paranoia towards the Rockefellers (though Nelson Bunker Hunt was involved with it as well), so I haven't paid much attention to it. But now I'm wondering.

For example, there's this, from an anti-Council for National Policy site:

Incredibly, the Wycliffe Bible Translators, who were trained in modern anthropological methods and linguistics, were employed by Nelson Rockefeller and the CIA to gather anthropological and psychological information on Latin American tribes. In return, Wycliffe was recompensed with land, high-tech equipment and expensive airplanes, courtesy of the American government and corporations. . . .

The indigenous peoples of Latin America did not subvert their own governments, but rather the American robber barons overthrew legitimate governments and then used Wycliffe Bible Translators to bring native populations into subjection. Through the misapplication of Scripture, Cam Townsend taught the Latin American tribes to passively accept the overthrow of their governments and to submit to the puppet dictators installed by the multinational corporations


Link

Terry Hildebrand said...

I speculate that Mark uses the Wierdak pseudonym because he is such a "wierd act to follow."

Anonymous said...

Best. Post title. Ever.

Anonymous said...

Delightful CENTS of humor going on in the author's head - sometimes, more often than KNOT.

Anonymous said...

I live about 15 miles from Dynamic Aviation. I wouldn't be surprised if there were intel-type spooks relating to that company and doing stuff that pushes many ethical boundaries. They have a DoD contract to do work in Iraq to detect IEDs from the air. I wonder how this meshes with the Mennonite practice of peacemaking and non-resistance since the owner is a practicing Mennonite.

It seems to me that what DA, Agape Flights, SIL/Wycliffe, and other Christian or quasi-Christian organizations get wrong when they do military or intelligence work is that they think that being "Christian" means that they need to be patriotic. That's a big problem with the Fundamentalist Christians (not the only one) which undermines their claims to be people who bring "good news".

Anonymous said...

Several items in this article are just flat wrong:

"3. In 2006, an Agape pilot named Steve Huisman was flying a twin-engine Beechcraft King Air 90 in Florida -- during a tropical storm predicted to attain hurricane status. The aircraft crashed into a private home, killing the pilot instantly.

There was no flight plan. Agape said that Huisman was releasing sterilized Med flies. In a near-hurricane."


This is plain wrong. There was a flight plan, look it up on the FAA site. Also, Steve Huisman did not work for Agape at the time of his death. He had not worked for them for at least 2 years before he died. He only worked for Dynamic under a contract with the Florida Agriculture Dept. He did release sterilized MedFlies. That the only way to control them here in Florida.

Hurricane Alberto was not "predicted to attain hurricane status." It was barely a tropical storm. More like a very strong thunder storm. His plane had mechanical problems. The wreck was not at all weather related.

"4. Huisman also worked for Dynamic Aviation, a Virginia Company which hired him to fly in and out of Afghanistan. Nobody knows what he was shipping."

He went to Afganistan for Dynamic, under US Gov't contract, for two reasons. To fly NGO's (non-gov't officials) around, because, at the time, it was not safe to drive them around, and to witness and reach out to the local Afgan people.

Dakota said...

In addition to the inaccuracies that the last poster revealed, Agape only recently moved to Venice airport, well after 911. They were forced to relocate because their lease at Sarasota-Bradenton airport was up and the owner of the hanger would not allow them to renew as he had other plans for it.

Yes, they do release sterilized med flys in florida, no, the crash was not weather related. I don't know about the flight plan but that can certainly be verified easily enough.

Seems to me the author has done a fine job of drawing his own conclusions from a collection of poor research and incorrect facts.