Tepper Aviation: Difference between revisions

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→‎Aircraft operated by Tepper: L-100-30 N3867X, c.n. 4684 / Delaware corporations
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*N8183J - Lockheed L-100-30 c.n. 4796
*N8183J - Lockheed L-100-30 c.n. 4796
*N9205T - Lockheed L-100 c.n. 4129 (crashed November 27, 1989)<ref name="N9205T"/>
*N9205T - Lockheed L-100 c.n. 4129 (crashed November 27, 1989)<ref name="N9205T"/>
*Although it's not proven, it appears likely that the recently re-registered N3867X is also operated by Tepper.
*Although it's not proven, it appears likely that the recently re-registered Lockheed L-100-30 N3867X, c.n. 4684, is also operated by Tepper. The airframe is registered to T3D&H, L.L.C., 824 Market Street, Suite 1000, Wilmington, Delaware - CIA front companies have been known as "Delaware corporations", as described by former Deputy Director of the CIA Robert Amory, Jr., due to the lenient incorporation laws of that state. The [[Glomar Explorer]] was built in a Delaware shipyard.
*N4557C is widely supposed to be operated by Tepper, given that it is owned by the same shell company as N2189M and N8183J. However, this is also not proven.
*N4557C is widely supposed to be operated by Tepper, given that it is owned by the same shell company as N2189M and N8183J. However, this is also not proven.



Revision as of 00:15, 12 April 2007

Tepper Aviation, Inc. is based at the Bob Sikes Airport in Crestview, Florida.[1] The company has a long association with the CIA. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, it was widely reported to be flying weapons into Angola to arm the UNITA rebels.[2] More recently, it has been linked with the practice of extraordinary rendition.[3]

Tepper appears to have close links with Crestview Aerospace Corporation, as it shares the same address, and Charles R. Shanklin is a director of both companies.[1][4] Additionally, Tepper director Jack E. Owen was President of Crestview Aerospace until 2001.[5]

Operations

Recent destinations for Tepper airplanes

According to flight records, N2189M has visited the CIA's Camp Peary training facility at least twice, in late April and in mid-May 2006.[6] That aircraft also visits the Caribbean: it was seen in Puerto Rico in February 2006, and flew to Barbados in late May of that year.[6] And in February 2006, N8183J flew from Andersen Air Force Base in Guam to Mactan Cebu airport in the Phillipines.

According to information previously published by aerospace journalist Keith Stein's ISI Consulting website, in 2002 both aircraft visited the Department of Energy's Desert Rock Airport in Nevada, an airstrip at a disused nuclear weapons testing facility.[7]

The Swiss newspaper Blick has speculated that, given the large number of movements of CIA-linked aircraft in and out of this supposedly disused facility, Desert Rock has been used at some point as a secret prison or black site. It is not known whether Blick's source was Stein's website or if it obtained the information independently.[8]

Running guns to UNITA for the CIA

The first report of Tepper's involvement in Angola was in early 1989, in the UK Independent newspaper:

"The CIA has appointed a new airline to ferry weaponry to the US and South African-backed Unita guerrillas fighting the Marxist government in Angola. The CIA's previous airline for this task was forced to close after media revelations. Tepper Aviation, based in Crestview, Florida, operates a Hercules freighter aircraft which, according to former employees, has flown between the Kamina air base in southern Zaire and Unita- held territory in eastern Angola. Tepper was set up in late 1980, after the demise of the CIA's previous carrier, St. Lucia Airways, whose activities, in addition to the Angolan work, included the transport of Colonel North and weapons to Iran... Bud Peddy, who heads Tepper, categorically denies that the Hercules has been in Zaire or Angola.[2]

The categorical denial by Tepper's chief was somewhat undermined by his own death just months later in an aircrash in Angola, as reported by Flight International:

"The Lockheed L-100 Hercules which crashed while on a US Central Intelligence Agency mission in Angola late last month was owned and operated by Tepper Aviation, a Florida-based company with a history of involvement with CIA operations. Bud Peddy, the head of Tepper Aviation, was piloting the aircraft and was killed in the crash along with, at least two West Germans, a Briton and a second American. The aircraft, painted grey and known as the 'Grey Ghost', came down at night on 27 November as it was coming in to land at Jamba, the main base of the UNITA guerrillas fighting Angola's Marxist Government. The aircraft was carrying a cargo of weapons, plus several guerrillas, as well as the Europeans and Americans.[9]

The plane in question was N9205T.[10] The head of Tepper at the time was in fact named Pharies 'Bud' Petty (both The Independent and Flight International managed to get this wrong). "The Book of Honor" by Ted Gup describes the ill-fated mission in some detail:[11]

"The lumbering cargo plane that would take him into Angola was to be one of the 'Gray Ghosts,' so named for their slate-colored paint. The plane had four seats in the front -- for a pilot, copilot, navigator, and loadmaster. The fuselage was largely open for cargo. On board that night was a seasoned crew of six. Even by Agency standards, it had a distinctly international flavor. Heading the team was Pharies 'Bud' Petty, a veteran Agency pilot who, at least on paper, presided over a Florida firm called Tepper Aviation, located in Crestview, just off Eglin Air Force Base. The other crew members were all ostensibly employees of Tepper."

Gup's book identifies Gracie T. Petty as Petty's widow[11]. She is currently secretary and treasurer of Tepper Aviation.[1]

Aircraft operated by Tepper

  • N1018H - Cessna TR-182, c.n. R18201649 - owned by Tepper
  • N2189M - Lockheed L-100-30 c.n. 4582
  • N8183J - Lockheed L-100-30 c.n. 4796
  • N9205T - Lockheed L-100 c.n. 4129 (crashed November 27, 1989)[10]
  • Although it's not proven, it appears likely that the recently re-registered Lockheed L-100-30 N3867X, c.n. 4684, is also operated by Tepper. The airframe is registered to T3D&H, L.L.C., 824 Market Street, Suite 1000, Wilmington, Delaware - CIA front companies have been known as "Delaware corporations", as described by former Deputy Director of the CIA Robert Amory, Jr., due to the lenient incorporation laws of that state. The Glomar Explorer was built in a Delaware shipyard.
  • N4557C is widely supposed to be operated by Tepper, given that it is owned by the same shell company as N2189M and N8183J. However, this is also not proven.

Known officers and directors

From the Florida state government's website.[1] Note that Tepper's company records prior to 1996 are not available online. Also note that "Jack Owen" was misspelt on filings before 2001 as "Jack Owens".

Name Director Vice President President Registered Agent Sec/Treas
Thomas M. Bledsoe 1996-2000
Michael D. Chesser 2005-2006
Scott L. Eder 1998-2000
John M. Herms 1996-1997
Jose L. Hernandez 2006
Jayna L. Hill 2001-2006
Bruce R. Lehfeldt 1996 1996
Jack E. Owen 1996-2006
Bobby L. Owens 1996-2005 2006
Gracie T. Petty 1997-2006
Dale E. Rice 1996-1998 1996-2004
Charles R. Shanklin 2001-2006

References

  1. ^ a b c Company records for Tepper Aviation, accessed May 16, 2006.
  2. ^ a b Alan George, "Airline 'carrying CIA guns to Unita'", The Independent (UK), February 18 1989.
  3. ^ "European rights watchdog probes CIA prisoner flights", ABC News (Australia), November 24, 2005
  4. ^ Company records for Crestview Aerospace Corp, accessed May 18, 2006.
  5. ^ Uniform Business Report for Crestview Aerospace Corp (TIF image), February 7, 2001
  6. ^ a b Tracking data for N2189M, flightaware.com. Undated, accessed June 5, 2006. Registration req'd to view historical data.
  7. ^ Desert Rock, Nevada", published by aerospace journalist Keith Stein's ISI Consulting website. Now only available from the Google cache (dated June 11, 2005).
  8. ^ Henry Habegger and Beat Kraushaar, "CIA-Jets: Stelldichein in Camp Atom", Blick (Switzerland), March 8, 2006. Machine translation by Google.
  9. ^ "Angolan CIA Hercules air crash kills Tepper Aviation chief", Flight International, December 13, 1989.
  10. ^ a b Accident description for N9205T, Aviation Safety Network. Undated, accessed May 18, 2006.
  11. ^ a b Ted Gup, "The Book of Honor : Covert Lives and Classified Deaths at the CIA", pages 326-345 (search within the book). ISBN:0385495412. Gives a detailed account of the crash of N9205T.

Portions of this article were taken from "Tepper Aviation", at SourceWatch, a wikiproject of the Center for Media & Democracy which is licensed under the GFDL. The list of original authors and the article's edit history can be viewed here.

See also