LAWYERS FOR RENEGADE CIA AGENT EDWIN WILSON HAVE FILED A LAUNDRY LIST OF SUBPOENA REQUESTS SEEKING TESTIMONY AT WILSON`S FORTHCOMING TRIAL

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP99-00498R000200030011-8
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 20, 2016
Document Release Date: 
April 5, 2007
Sequence Number: 
11
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
November 2, 1982
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP99-00498R000200030011-8.pdf77.43 KB
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Approved For Release 2007/04/06: CIA-RDP99-00498R000200030011-8 UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL 2 NOVEMBER 1982 WASHINGTON STAT Lawyers for renegade CIA agent Edwin Wilson have filed a laundry list of subpoena requests seeking testimony at Wilson's forthcoming trial from Egyptian President Hosini Mubarak and Vice President George Bush as well as from a series of top intelligence officers, AFL-CIO officials and a White House lawyer. Wilson, accused of aiding Libya in the training of terrorists, is to stand trial Nov. 15 in nearby Alexandria, Va., on charges involving the alleged shipment to Libya of four revolvers and an ?-16. One of the handguns allegedly was used in the assassination of a Libyan dissident living in Bonn. Wilson and associate Frank Terpil face a variety of charges involving training Libyan terrorists and shipping weapons and explosives to Libya in the late 1970s. Wilson, 54, was lured back into the United States earlier this year. Terpil remains at large and was last reported seen in Beirut. Lawyers for Wilson also filed late Monday with U.S. District Court Judge Oren Lewis a lerthy list of CIA and other documents. Lewis will rule on which witnesses with flag-rank or Cabinet status will be called and what classified documents will be allowed. The government's document list was filed in a sealed envelope. In adds cn to Mubarak and Bush, who once ran the CIA, those sought by Wilson's 1=~: ers included Adm. Bobby Inman, former deputy CIA director and former r. ar --f the super-secret National Security Agency; Maj. Gen. Richard SEccrd, de uty assistant secretary of defense for Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs, h{_-CIO officials including President Lane Kirkland; several CIA figures ar Eypt's assistant ,'military attache in Washington. Also on t.'-he list are White House lawyer Fred Fielding, former presidential national :verity adviser Richard Allen and his successor, William Clark. The doc;:~,,,ei;ts defense lawyers Harold Fahringer and John Keats asked for include all CIA documents dealing with Wilson's collection of intelligence infor~matio^ in Libya, the Middle East and elsewhere, the ''book cable'' on Wilson sent to all. CIA stations by Adm. Stansfield Turner, a CIA chief, in 1976 and 177, all`i'nformation on the Glomar Explorer, a vessel involved in an attempt to salvage a sunken Soviet submarine.,in the Pa:cific.. The two a`tornays said they wanted the AFL-CIO to be asked to provide data on labor prcblams and information on what was described as Wilson's cooperation ans work with zhe labor group concerning CIA operations. They also sought from various agencies any documents on Wilson's relationship with an intelligence operation known as Task Force 157. The Defense Department was asked for data on Wilson's collection of intelligence data in Libya, the Middle East and elsewhere, documents on an arms pact between the United States and Egupt, and all records on an enterprise called EATSCO. STAT Annroved For RPIPasA 2f O7rn4If1Fi ? 1IA-RfPQA_ft(14 ann11 0 1