The New Oceania
An Untold Story of the Growing Misuse of U.S. Power Against Its People
by
Book Details
About the Book
This is a true account of a heavily suppressed story of intrigue that begins with an inquiry into a strange and isolated shooting fatality in Texas in 1982. It leads progressively through Texas agencies to the FBI and eventually to highly placed officials in Texas, Arkansas and Washington D.C.
A former resident of Mena, Arkansas is allegedly shot to death in Texas in August 1982. Without conducting an investigation local authorities quickly rule the fatality an accident and impose a news blackout on the shooting. The father of the victim uncovers serious discrepancies and learns that local Texas FBI agents were associated with the incident as were federal agents in a federal grand jury investigation in Philadelphia. Appeals to the Texas State Attorney General for an inquiry to resolve the many discrepancies and contradictions in the case fail. Members of Congress contact the Texas Governor to request an official inquiry. The Governor grants their request but quickly terminates it without notifying them of his action. Arkansas Senator David Pryor and U.S. Representative John Hammerschmidt then take the matter up with the Director of the FBI, the Director of BATF and the Department of Justice in Washington only to encounter persistent evasions. The Texas fatality is later linked to government- sanctioned drug and arms smuggling activities in Mena, Arkansas that were being investigated by Arkansas State Trooper Russell Welch, IRS investigator Bill Duncan and private investigator Gene Wheaton.
The author's dogged investigation into the suppressed death of his son presents a well documented, fully corroborated account of the misuse of official power. That pernicious danger threatens the very fabric of American society and American constitutional freedoms. This intriguing tale of transgressions in high places is not just an engrossing story. It is a wake-up call.
About the Author
The author served in the United States Marine Corps from 1942 to 1946 as a radio-radar technician and small arms specialist with Marine Air Group 11 in the Guadalcanal and Bougainville operations in the South Pacific. As an electronics engineer he was engaged for 30 years in weapon systems design and the developments of armaments missiles and support equipment during his employment primarily with Motorola and Martin Marietta. He authored many articles and was the Arkansas winner of the national Philip Morris Magazine Essay Competition on freedom of speech and the first amendment as published in the book American Voices in 1987.