Home > NAMES, PHOTO OF 13 CIAs Germany Just Issued Warrants For

NAMES, PHOTO OF 13 CIAs Germany Just Issued Warrants For

by Open-Publishing - Thursday 1 February 2007

Europe Attack-Terrorism Secret Services USA Italy

The arrest warrant issued in Germany today for 13 CIA employees has not been made public, but here are the names that will appear on it anyway. Most if not all are aliases, although the first names of the three pilots probably are correct.

The warrants are for the kidnaping and torture by U.S. Government agents of Khalid el-Masri. El-Masri was on vacation in Macedonia when he was kidnapped and transported to a CIA-run "black site" in Afghanistan. After several months of confinement in squalid conditions, he was abandoned on a hill in Albania with no explanation. He was never charged with a crime.

The German newsmagazine of the broadcast network ARD identified the three pilots, found their real names, and photographed one (shown here). All three are in North Carolina near the location of their "torture taxi," a Boeing 737 operated out of the Global Transpark (GTP) in Kinston, NC.

The pilots work for Aero Contractors, an aviation-services company with offices at the GTP and at the Johnson County Airport in Smithfield, NC.

Here are the names on the warrant (aliases, although the first names of the pilots are thought to be correct):

Bird, Kirk James [James Robert Kirkland], the pilot.
Bryson, Charles Goldman
Deckard, John Richard
Fain, Eric Matthew, another pilot.
Fairing, James [Faring ?], the captain Also in Milan case? Age about 51.
Franklin, Jason
Grady, Michael
Greesbore, Walter Richard
Loren, Hector [Lorenzo ?]
Lumsden II, Lyle Edgar [III ?]
O’Hale, James
O’Riley, Patricia
Payne, Jane

The person in the photo probably is "Eric Fain." He lives with his parents near the Kinston GTP. Here is a rough translation from the report by Panorama:

******
Eric Fain rises in his wuchtigen, black Pick UP Truck with eight cylinders. It lets white single family house be behind itself and the small locality, in which it lives.

On the Highway 70 brew it by the fields North Carolina, by silvery shining cotton fields and tobacco plan days. Here in the south of the USA smoking is still permitted, in restaurants and bars, even at the province airport Kinston, where Fain parks its car.

The “Kinston regionally jet haven” recruits enough with its long runway, long for Boeing 737, which roll now from a hangar. Here pilot Eric Fain leaves the contemplative of the Southern States behind itself and advanced to the front lines its, which calls the US Government the global war against the terror.
******

Fain and the other two pilots refused to be interviewed by the reporters, who had flown all the way from Germany for the purpose. The reporter did get the photo shown, however.