CIA-Linked Plane Landed In Canada
Intellpuke
Free Internet Press, NY
__________________
Ontario (Canada):
A mysterious Twin Otter plane owned by an alleged CIA front turned up in northern Ontario this fall, raising unanswered questions about why it was there.
It's the latest twist in a perplexing saga of aircraft controlled by apparent shell companies of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency.
Flight data obtained by the Canadian Press indicates the DeHavilland DHC-6-300 aircraft landed in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario., in early October after taking off from Michigan's Jackson County Airport. From there, the 22-seat turboprop made the short trip to the airport just southwest of the hamlet of Bar River, Ontario.
A Bar River airport official said he does not discuss planes that use the facility out of respect for customers' privacy."I suggest you don't pursue this any further," said the official, who asked not to be named. "I have no knowledge of any CIA aircraft."Planes that stop in Bar River generally do so for refuelling or maintenance, he said.
The airport is home to a company that specializes in work on DeHavilland aircraft. There is no record of the plane leaving Bar River.
Dec 05, 2005
Intellpuke
Free Internet Press, NY
__________________
Ontario (Canada):
A mysterious Twin Otter plane owned by an alleged CIA front turned up in northern Ontario this fall, raising unanswered questions about why it was there.
It's the latest twist in a perplexing saga of aircraft controlled by apparent shell companies of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency.
Flight data obtained by the Canadian Press indicates the DeHavilland DHC-6-300 aircraft landed in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario., in early October after taking off from Michigan's Jackson County Airport. From there, the 22-seat turboprop made the short trip to the airport just southwest of the hamlet of Bar River, Ontario.
A Bar River airport official said he does not discuss planes that use the facility out of respect for customers' privacy."I suggest you don't pursue this any further," said the official, who asked not to be named. "I have no knowledge of any CIA aircraft."Planes that stop in Bar River generally do so for refuelling or maintenance, he said.
The airport is home to a company that specializes in work on DeHavilland aircraft. There is no record of the plane leaving Bar River.
Dec 05, 2005