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Monday
Feb072005
Monday, February 7, 2005 at 05:41AM
After a secret three-year investigation, federal prosecutors have
decided to end a criminal inquiry into whether at least four Central
Intelligence Agency officers lied to lawmakers and their agency
superiors about a clandestine antidrug operation that ended in 2001
with the fatal downing of a plane carrying American missionaries,
Justice Department officials said last week. "The Justice Department
has declined a criminal prosecution," said Bryan Sierra, a Justice
Department spokesman, in response to a question about the previously
undisclosed investigation. The conduct under scrutiny was part of a CIA
operation authorized by President Bill Clinton beginning in 1994 to
help the Peruvian air force to interfere with drug flights over the
country. The Justice Department's decision ended an inquiry that
current and former government officials say was the most serious to
focus on the official conduct of CIA officers since the Iran-contra
affair in the late 1980s. More broadly, the inquiry had been seen
within the CIA as a message that employees could be held accountable
for operations that go awry, at a time when officers at the agency are
coming under scrutiny in other areas, like the interrogation and
detention of terror suspects. "A criminal investigation is something
that breeds a risk-averse culture at CIA," said a Bush administration
official familiar with the case. The officials said the investigation
had not been directly related to the act of shooting down the plane,
which was carried out by a Peruvian air force jet after the missionary
plane was misidentified as a potential drug smuggling aircraft by a CIA
surveillance plane operated by a contract crew. . [more]