Declassified documents by the United States government.-  
      FBI Report on Directorate of National Intelligence (DINA)    
        21 January 1982  
      Pinochet and Contreras dealings with
      the italian maffia in Madrid in 1975  
      The murder of general Carlos Prats and wife  
      Attempting murder of Bernardo Leighton and wife 
        
          | January 21, 1982
           DIRECCION DE
          INTELIGENCIA NACIONAL (DIRECTORATE OF NATIONAL INTELLIGENCE) (DINA)  
          DINA was the name of the Chilean
          Intelligence Service until late 1977, when it was renamed the Centro Nacional de
          Informaciones (National Information Center) (CNI).  
          Former Assistant United States
          Attorney Eugene M. Propper, the chief prosecutor in the Orlando Letelier assassination
          case, and author Taylor Branch are collaborating in writing a book detailing the United
          States investigation of the assassination of Orlando Letelier, the former Chilean
          Ambassador to the United States, who was killed on September 21, 1976, in Washington, D.C.
          Propper and Branch advised that during their research they secured a number of letters
          which were sent from the United States by self-admitted DINA agent, Michael Vernon
          Townley, to Gustavo Etchepare, his DINA/CNI "cut-out" in Chile. They made copies
          of these letters available to the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) in September,
          1981. In many instances the letters were extremely cryptic and Townley utilized code words
          and code names throughout. The subject matter of the letters, among other topics, covered
          DINA activities circa 1974-1976.  
          Set forth below is a topical
          summary of information in Townley's letters:  
          This document contains neither
          recommendations nor conclusions of the FBI. It is de property of the FBI, and is loaned to
          your agency; it and its contents are not to be distributed outside your agency.  | 
            | 
         
        
          | TOPICAL SUMMARY OF
          INFORMATION  I.
          Disinformation Forwarded to Chile by Townley:  
          Throughout his letters, Townley
          furnished the recipients numerous items of disinformation which, for the most part, were
          self-serving. Townley obviously has attempted to minimize damage to his and his families
          interests as a result of information furnished by him to the U.S. Government concerning
          DINA operations. In some instances, it appears that Townley may have knowingly lied.  
          II. Transmittal of Documents
          to CNI by Townley:  
          In several letters, Townley made
          veiled references to unspecified documents, which he apparently removed from the U.S.
          Attorneys Office, Washington, D.C., and forwarded to Chile. Specific examples of such
          communications are an undated letter from Townley to Chilean President Pinochet and a
          letter to Gustavo Etchepare dated 6/24/78. Townley was interviewed at FBIHQ on 10/20/81 by
          SAs L. Carter Cornick, Jr., and Robert W. Scherrer and was specifically asked to identify
          the documents he removed from the U.S. Attorneys Office, Washington, D.C., and forwarded
          to CNI in Chile. Townley claimed he could not specifically recall which documents he
          forwarded to Chile; however, he did admit that he forwarded the text of a declaration
          executed by U.S. Ambassador to Chile George W. Landau to CNI. Ambassador Landau's
          declaration was incorporated into the U.S. Government's extradition request to the Chilean
          Government for General Contreras, Colonel Espinosa and Captain Fernandez and became part
          of the public Chilean court record.  
          III. Visit of Virgilio Paz to
          Chile during 1976:  
          In addition to information
          previously furnished by Townley during 1978 concerning Paz's visit to Chile, Townley,
          during interview on 10/20/81, advised that when Paz arrived in Chile in Spring of 1976 he
          brought with him a Colt .45 caliber automatic pistol, which was a special competition
          model. Townley advised that Paz claimed that this weapon had recently been used by the
          Cuban Nationalist Movement in a "hit" and that his purpose in bringing the
          weapon to Chile was to dispose of same. Townley advised that he witnessed Paz break the
          weapon into pieces with a sledge hammer and indicated that Paz subsequently disposed of
          the broken parts in Santiago. Townley claimed he had not furnished this information
          previously since he had completely forgotten the incident.  | 
            | 
         
        
          | IV. Withholding
          of Potential Evidence by Townley:  In a letter dated 11/24/78 to General Orozco in Chile, Townley
          claimed that during August, 1978, when his attorney, Seymour Glanzer, turned over to the
          U.S. Government officials in Washington, D.C., Townley's false U.S. passport in the name
          of Kenneth Enyart, which Townley's wife had brought from Chile to the United States along
          with other documentation, Townley was able to remove a second unidentified passport and
          avoid having it turned over to the U.S. Government as evidence.  
          V. Interception of Townley'
          Mail in Chile:  
          In several of his letters,
          Townley expressed concern that someone was intercepting his mail in Chile. Specific
          references in this regard are contained in Townley's letter to his wife dated 6/18/78 and
          in letters dated 3/17/79 and 6/29/79 to Gustavo Etchepare. In the latter communication,
          Townley informed Etchepare that his Chilean attorney, Manual Acuna, informed him that
          General Contreras was responsible for the interception of Townley's mail in Chile and that
          Contreras still had contacts in the Chilean Post Office who were in positions to continue
          intercepting Townley's mail. Townley's letters, which were intercepted by Contreras and
          subsequently utilized by him in the response to the U.S. Government's extradition
          requests, are identified below:  
          5/25/78 letter to his wife,
          6/15/78 and 6/18/78 letters to Etchepare.  
          VI. Townley's Concern Regarding
          the Prosin Limited Checking Account at the Southeast First National Bank, Miami Florida:
           
          The above account was maintained
          at the Southeast First National Bank by Townley in order to transact DINA business. In the
          following letters from Townley to his contacts in Chile, Townley expresses concern that
          the U.S. Government will uncover damaging information (not further specified) against him
          and DINA:  
          12/14/78 letter to Manual Acuna,
          his 6/29/79, 8/23/79, 9/7/79 and 9/10/79 letters to Gustavo Etchepare.  
          In his 12/14/78 letter to Acuna,
          Townley suggested that someone in Chile be officially named as an agent for Prosin
          Limited. Townley added "It would be best if this person appear one day and thereafter
          disappear forever." Townley's reason for the foregoing suggestion was not clear.
                                   
                                   
                              -2-   | 
            | 
         
        
          | In the other
          letters to Etchepare, listed above, Townley indicated that the Prosin Limited account
          would disclose checks reflecting payments to fugitive Virgilio Paz's wife. In addition,
          Townley also claimed that information contained in the Prosin Limited account might lead
          to the discovery of the whereabouts of fugitives Virgilio Paz and Jose Dionioso Suarez.
          Townley also expressed concern that information in the Prosin Limited account would lead
          to the discovery of details regarding "Project Andrea."  Records of the Prosin Limited account
          were subpoenaed through the U.S. Attorneys Office, Washington, D.C. in September, 1979. A
          thorough review of transactions in the account contained absolutely no information
          indicating payments to Paz's wife or any information that would assist in establishing the
          whereabouts of fugitives Paz and Suarez. The account contained no information related to
          "Project Andrea."  
          VII. Visit of Chilean
          President Pinochet to Spain During November, 1975, with General Contreras Where They Met
          with "ALFA," an Italian Terrorist:  
          According to former Assistant
          U.S. Attorney Eugene M. Propper and author Taylor Branch, ALFA is identical with an
          Italian terrorist whose true name is Stefano Delle Chiaie.  
          Townley made reference to ALFA,
          although he did not disclose his true identity, in the following communications to Gustavo
          Etchepare:  
          Letters dated 4/26/79, 6/11/79,
          6/16/79, 8/23/79, 8/29/79 and 9/2/79.  
          In his 4/26/79 letter to
          Etchepare, Townley, speaking of General Contreras, stated "There were meetings
          between him (Contreras), his Excellency (President Pinochet) and the Italians in Spain
          after Franco died. Also the Italians carried out numerous acts of military espionage
          against the Peruvians and Argentines not only in Europe, but also in Peru and
          Argentina."  
          In his 8/23/79 letter to
          Etchepare, Townley stated "I haven't spoken about the Italians. I have no idea where
          they are nor where they have been nor do I care to know! ALFA got mixed up with various
          people to do business in Argentina. Some of them had very bad backgrounds whom Argentine
          law enforcement agencies were seeking. Among other        
                                
                                   
                     -3-  | 
            | 
         
        
          | things they tried
          to cash a check from Luis Felipe for $25,000, also they owed several thousand dollars
          including a $40,000 debt to Daniel, also he was mixed up in dirty deals in Spain...."
          "The problem with the Italians is serious, very serious! Mamo got married to them
          some time back and he married them in a manner much more indissolvable than with the
          Cubans. For your information, Pinochet had a meeting with Mamo and ALFA in Spain some time
          back. ALFA can be much more embarrassing for Mamo and the government in the long run than
          perhaps the Cubans. One thing obviously is that ALFA doesn't have anywhere to go and you
          know that as well as I do. Ask Chico or Don Cristian who ran ALFA about it."  Propper and Branch identified
          "Daniel" as Albert Spaggiari, a French master criminal who is a member of the
          OAS and also active in fascist activities in France. According to Propper and Branch,
          Spaggiari was arrested for the July, 1976, $10 million robbery of the Societe Generale
          Bank in Nice, France.  
          In Townley's 8/29/79 letter to
          Etchepare, Townley indicated that he was attaching a clipping from a local Denver,
          Colorado, area newspaper (the actual newspaper clipping was not attached to the copy of
          Townley's letter provided to the FBI by Propper and Branch). In his letter, Townley
          commented as follows: "I ask the question is it or is it not? This is the style of
          Daniel...." "I am very sorry about ALFA, whatever happened happened and the
          reasons which brought him problems. Sometime back he told me how much he wanted to get out
          of everything. He wanted to find himself an island or some other sanctuary without having
          to worry about his responsibilities toward his people."  
          Propper and Branch made
          available a copy of an article which appeared in the 8/21/79 issue of the "Rocky
          Mountain News" captioned "Tunnel Builders 'Robbed' of Rich Haul in France,"
          which they claimed was the article attached to Townley's 8/29/79 letter. The article
          described the arrest by French law enforcement authorities of a group of bank robbers who
          were tunneling into the Left Bank branch of the Societe Generale in France. The article
          compared this attempted bank robbery with the 1976 robbery of the Societe Generale branch
          in Nice, which was masterminded by Albert Spaggiari.  
          Townley made reference to
          "Daniel" in one additional communication, presumably to Etchepare, which was
          undated and bore the heading "SIGO CON COMPUTACION." In this     
                                  
                        
                                                    
          -4-  | 
            | 
         
        
          | communication,
          Townley requested information as to what happened to "Daniel."  In another communication, Townley
          informed Etchepare that Enrique Arrancibia traveled from Buenos Aires, Argentina, to
          California during the Fall of 1977 on banking business for ALFA.  
          According to Propper and Branch,
          both ALFA and "Daniel" conducted operations on behalf of DINA.  
          VIII. Internal DINA
          Intrigues:  
          Based on the content of several
          of Townley's letters, it appears that CNI requested Townley and his wife to provide any
          derogatory information that could be used against General Contreras. Townley expressed his
          reluctance to provide such information and provided Etchepare with the identities of
          former DINA personnel who had detailed personal knowledge of irregularities and
          illegalities committed by Contreras and other DINA officials. In his 4/26/79 letter to
          Etchepare, Townley provided the following such individuals:  
          Lima I      
                               
            Garza  
          Hermes                        
              Claudio 
          Halcon  
          In the above letter, Townley
          informed Etchepare that Colonel Valdivieso stole money from DINA accounts. Townley also
          informed Etchepare that Sonia, last name not mentioned, Valdivieso's DINA secretary,
          helped him to organize a network of secretaries within DINA who reported everything coming
          to their knowledge to Valdivieso. In the same communication to Etchepare, Townley also
          suggested that Valdivieso and Contreras were involved in extorting money from ITT in
          Chile, as well as the Racal Company in England in connection with contacts participated in
          by these companies for the purchase of equipment at the "Blogueo de Maipu."  
          IX. Townley's Concern
          Regarding the Assassination of Chilean Army General Carlos Prats and his Wife, Carmen, in
          Buenos Aires, Argentina on 9/30/74 and the Attempted Assassination of Former Chilean Vice
          President Bernardo Leighton and his Wife, Anita, in Rome, Italy, on 10/6/75:  
          Retired Chilean Army General
          Carlos Prats Gonzalez and his wife, Carmen, were assassinated in Buenos Aires on 9/30/74,
          when a bomb was detonated underneath their car as they approached their residence. At the
          time of his assassination, General Prats had been critical of the Pinochet Government for
          interfering in the Chilean                
                                   
                                   
                                   
               -5-  | 
            | 
         
        
          | constitutional
          process and allegedly he was writing a book documenting his criticisms.  Former Chilean Vice President Bernardo
          Leighton and his wife, Anita, were shot several times in a downtown Rome street on
          10/6/75, as they approached their residence on foot. Leighton is a prominent member of the
          Chilean Christian Democratic Party and at the time of his attempted assassination in 1975,
          was an outspoken critic of the Pinochet Government.  
          In numerous communications,
          which are listed below, Townley expressed concern that the "Italians" and the
          "Argentines" would submit Letters Rogatory seeking information from him
          concerning the Prats assassinations and the attempted assassination of the Leightons.
          Townley expressed fear that the "Italians," specifically ALPHA, and General
          Contreras would provide information concerning the attempted assassination of the
          Leightons which would contradict what Townley might say in responding to Letters Rogatory
          from the Italian Government, thereby placing Townley in the position of perjuring himself.
          Townley expressed similar concern that unidentified elements of one of the Argentine
          security services and Enrique Arrancibia would furnish information concerning the Prats
          assassination, which would contradict what Townley might say in responding to Letters
          Rogatory from the Argentine Government, thereby placing Townley in the position of
          perjuring himself. Townley concluded that the solution to his dilemma would be to take the
          Fifth Amendment in responding to Letters Rogatory from the Italian and Argentine
          Governments. However, Townley noted that by taking the Fifth Amendment, guilt on his part
          would be implied.  
          The letters in which Townley
          mentioned his concern over Letters Rogatory from the Italian and Argentine Governments
          concerning the Leighton and Prats matters are listed below:  
          Letters to Gustavo Etchepare
          dated 6/23/78, 11/25/78, 4/18/79, 4/26/79, 6/4/79, 6/16/79, 6/22/79, 7/5/79, 8/13/79 and
          8/23/79. Letter to General Hector Orozco dated 11/24/78.  
          With regard to Enrique
          Arrancibia, this individual is a former DINA agent, who resided in unofficial exile in
          Buenos Aires as a result of his participation in the assassination of Chilean Army Chief
          of Staff, Rene Schneider. He was arrested by members of the Argentine Intelligence Service
                             
                                 
                                 
               -6-  | 
            | 
         
        
          | shortly
          after Townley's expulsion from Chile to the United States in 1978 and charged with
          espionage against the Argentine Government.  X. "Project Andrea"  
          Refer to FBI letter to the
          Administrator, Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), dated 12/9/81, and accompanying
          memorandum for complete details. Supplemental data follows.  
          In his letters, Townley
          suggested to Etchepare that the gas storage cylinders, which had been rented by DINA from
          a company in the United States, be purchased outright in order to avoid any additional
          problems involving the payment of rental charges to the company in the United States.
          Townley requested Etchepare to secure the serial numbers from the gas storage cylinders in
          Chile in order that the rental company in the United States might be provided this
          information, since the rental company had requested this data. Townley informed Etchepare
          that his father, J. Vernon Townley, should be provided with the serial numbers of the gas
          storage cylinders and that Townley's father, in turn, would provide this information to
          the rental company in the United States.  
          Townley mentions "Project
          Andrea" and matters related thereto in the following communications:  
          Letters to Gustavo Etchepare
          dated 4/26/79, 5/9/79, 5/29/79, 6/4/79, 6/29/79, 8/13/79 and 9/2/79.  
          XI. Activities of Virgilio
          Paz in Northern Ireland during 1975  
          In an undated letter to Chilean
          President Pinochet, Townley advised that photographs of British concentration camps in
          Northern Ireland were taken by Virgilio Paz as part of a DINA assignment.  
          According to Propper and Branch,
          the photographs taken by Paz in 1975 were to have been utilized by the Chilean Government
          at the United Nations in the United States in order to discredit the British Government
          for its alleged violation of human rights in Northern Ireland. Propper and Branch advised
          that the photographs taken by Paz arrived too late to be utilized by the Chilean
          Government at the United Nations and the photographs subsequently appeared in an article
          in "El Mercurio," a Spanish language daily newspaper published in Santiago,
          Chile.                        
                                  
                                   
                -7-  | 
            | 
         
        
          | XII. Visit by Guillermo Novo
          Sampol to Chile in 1976  Based
          on information provided by Propper and Branch concerning an alleged planned kidnapping to
          be carried out in Buenos Aires, Argentina, during the Summer of 1976 in which the Cuban
          Nationalist Movement was to play a role, Townley was interviewed concerning this
          allegation on 10/20/81 by SAs Cornick and Scherrer. Townley previously furnished
          information during 1978 which indicated that Novo Sampol had visited Chile during the
          Summer of 1976; however, Townley stated that Novo's visit was not related to the Letelier
          assassination and did not involve a violation of United States law.  
          During interview with Townley on 10/20/81, he
          advised that Novo Sampol visited Santiago, Chile while Virgilio Paz was in Chile during
          June or July, 1976. Townley advised that Novo Sampol agreed to commit the Cuban
          Nationalist Movement to participate in the kidnapping of an unrecalled President of a
          Dutch bank in Buenos Aires, Argentina. According to Townley, civilian members of the State
          Secretariat for Information (SIDE), one of the Argentine intelligence services, had
          developed the Dutch banker's secretary as a source and utilized information provided by
          her to make tentative plans to kidnap the Dutch banker and hold him for ransom. Townley
          explained that the Dutch banker and his secretary were having an affair and customarily
          spent several hours during weekday afternoons together at the same hotel, thereby assuring
          the civilian members of SIDE of a definite location from which the Dutch banker could be
          kidnapped. Townley reported that the SIDE civilian members believed it would be necessary
          to assassinate the Dutch banker's driver, who customarily waited for his employer at the
          hotel where the assignation customarily took place. Townley advised that Novo Sampol
          provided $6,000 from the Cuban Nationalist Movement, which was forwarded to the civilian
          members of SIDE in Argentina as the Cuban Nationalist Movement's share toward the
          operational expenses for the kidnapping operation. Townley stated that Novo Sampol, after
          returning to the United States, forwarded a stock of paper to Townley in Chile, which was
          utilized to print pamphlets in the name of "Grupo Rojo" (Red Group), a
          nonexistent Argentine Marxist terrorist organization which the civilian members of SIDE
          created in order to utilize this group to claim credit for the kidnapping of the Dutch
          banker. Townley advised that the "Grupo Rojo" pamphlets were printed in Chile
          and forwarded to the civilian members of SIDE in Argentina, where they were subsequently
          distributed in Mendoza and Cordoba                
                                   
                    -8-  | 
            | 
         
        
          | in connection with
          bombings carried out by the SIDE civilian members. Townley noted that the purpose of
          utilizing the "Grupo Rojo" pamphlets in claiming credit for the bombings in
          Mendoza and Cordoba was to create the impression that the "Grupo Rojo" was a
          viable Marxist terrorist organization. Townley stated that Novo Sampol agreed to arrange
          for the pickup of the ransom for the Dutch banker in Europe and dispatched two
          unidentified Cuban Nationalist Movement members to establish necessary contacts in Europe
          to receive the ransom. Townley recalled that the ransom for the Dutch banker was to be
          paid in diamonds. Townley advised that the SIDE civilian members procrastinated in
          carrying out the kidnapping and indicated that the kidnapping never took place. Townley
          recalled that Novo Sampol traveled to Chile on a Braniff International Airways flight and
          returned to the United States via LAN-Chile. Townley advised that Novo Sampol utilized his
          true name to perform this travel; however, Townley arranged that Novo Sampol's entry into
          Chile and his departure not be entered into the records of the Chilean International
          Police in order to avoid the existence of documentation of Novo Sampol's travel.  XIII. Interview with Michael Vernon
          Townley by Special Agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation in Washington, D.C., on
          10/20/81:  
          During the interview with
          Townley by Special Agents of the FBI on 10/20/81 in Washington, D.C., Townley refused to
          provide any information concerning DINA operations, sources or methods that were mentioned
          in his letters, which were provided by Propper and Branch. Townley cited his agreement
          with the United States Government dated April 17, 1978, which required that he only
          furnish information to the United States Government relevant to violations of United
          States law or offenses committed in United States jurisdiction. Townley noted that he
          refused to answer any questions concerning DINA operations, sources or methods during the
          trial of the three Cuban defendants in the Letelier assassination, which took place in
          U.S. District Court, Washington, D.C., during early 1979, based on his agreement with the
          United States Government. Townley noted that his position was upheld by the presiding
          Judge and that he was not required to provide such information.      
                              
                                   
                                   
              -9-  | 
            | 
         
        
          | INDEX  El Gerente -- CNI Director General
          Odlanier Mena.  
          El Indio -- CNI official Colonel
          Jeronimo Pantoja Henriquez.  
          Garza -- Former DINA agent Jose
          Fernandez Schilling.  
          GAT -- Grupo de Amigos de
          Townley (Code name for CNI financial support to Townley and his family).  
          Caballero -- Former DINA
          Director General Juan Manuel Contreras Sepulveda.  
          Andrea -- Code word for Chilean
          Government's nerve gas project.  
          Frank G. -- Francisco (Frank)
          Gutay, U.S. citizen of Uruguayan origin. Owner of the American Business System Company in
          Georgia. He was an associate of Townley's in a computer company.  
          Mamo -- General Contreras.  
          Tavo -- Gustavo Etchepare.  
          Gustavo -- Gustavo Etchepare.
           
          Victor-Victor -- Former DINA
          official Colonel Vaniel Valdivieso.  
          Los Picas or El Pica --
          Attorneys.  
          Contacto Regular -- Term for
          Townley's DINA "cut-out" Gustavo Etchepare.  
          Ximena or Jimena -- Secretary of
          Townley's U.S. Attorney Seymour Glanzer.  
          Roxana -- Townley's former DINA
          Secretary Maria Rosa Alejandra Damiani Serrano.  
          Walter -- Damiani's boyfriend or
          husband.  
          El Chico -- Former DINA official
          Colonel Raul Iturriaga Neuman.  
          Franco -- Generalissimo
          Francisco Franco, former ruler of Spain who died in 1975.  
          Sam -- Townley's dog.  | 
            | 
         
        
          | Luis Felipe --
          Former DINA Agent Enrique Arrancibia Clavel.  Pato -- Townley's son-in-law.  
          Susie -- Townley's step-daughter
          Susana Earnst.  
          La Flaca -- Etchepare's wife.
           
          ALFA -- Italian terrorist
          Stefano Delle Chiaie, aka Alfredo di Stefano.  
          Daniel -- Corsican terrorist and
          OAS member Albert Spaggiari.  
          Esteban -- Townley's DINA driver
          and aide.  
          Hermes or H. -- Eugenio Berrios,
          a chemical engineer who worked with Townley on Project Andrea and was also engaged in a
          parallel project for the Chilean Army.  
          Cuviches or Cubiches -- Members
          of the Cuban Nationalist Movement.  
          City of Martin -- Buenos Aires,
          Argentina.  
          Ches -- Argentines.  
          Los viudos -- Letelier's widow
          Isabel Letelier and Ronni Moffitt's widower Michael Moffitt.  
          mi viejo -- Townley's father, J.
          Vernon Townley.  
          El Servicio -- DINA or CNI.  
          El Fiscal -- Former Assistant
          U.S. Attorney Eugene M. Propper.  
          Manuel or Manuel A. -- Townley's
          Chilean Attorney Manuel Acuna.  
          Javier -- Virgilio Paz Romero.
           
          Pinocho -- Chilean President
          Pinochet.  
          Cacho Acevedo -- Possibly
          identical to former DINA officer Captain Hugo Acevedo Godoy.  
          Sonia -- Secretary to Former
          DINA official Colonel Vaniel Valdivieso. Sonia apparently ran a network of secretaries
          within DINA and assisted Valdivieso in gathering data on other DINA officials.  
                                   
                                   
                                   
                                 
                -2-  | 
            | 
         
        
          | Miranda C. --
          Sergio Miranda Carrington, General Contreras' attorney.  la pelota del otro lado -- Former Legat,
          Buenos Aires, Calvin C. Clegg.  
          Fernando -- Fernando Cruchaga,
          former LAN-Chile Station Manager, New York City.  
          Los vecinos -- The Argentine
          Government.  
          Cafe rojo punto verde kilo or
          cafe rojo verde kilo (CR VK) -- Secret support fund for the Townley family in Chile.  
          Chris -- Townley's son.  
          Brian -- Townley's son.  
          Armando -- Former DINA officer
          Captain Armando Fernandez Larios.  
          Enrique A. -- Former DINA agent
          Enrique Arrancibia Clavel.  
          Weck -- James Weck, an attorney
          and family friend of the Townleys.  
          Pros. or Pro. -- Prosin Limited
          bank account maintained by Townley at the Southeast First National Bank, Miami, Florida.
           
          Ken -- Kenneth Enyart - alias of
          Townley.  
          Andres W. -- Andres Wilson -
          alias of Townley.  
          Los Gringos -- The Americans.
           
          Alfa echo -- Alfredo Etcheberry,
          Chilean attorney representing U.S. Government in Chile.  
          The identity of the following
          individuals and the meaning of the following code names and code words were unknown to
          Propper and Branch and are being listed for reference purposes only.  
          Canario -- Identity unknown.
          Apparently involved in a computer business in Santiago, Chile at the University of Chile
          with Townley.                      
                                   
                                  
                                   
                            -3-  | 
            | 
         
        
          | Gaviota -- Identity
          unknown. Apparently involved in a computer business in Santiago, Chile at the University
          of Chile with Townley.  Lobo
          -- Identity unknown. An apparent DINA agent who had contact with Anital Lipthay, another
          DINA agent.  
          Roberto Smith or Roberto S. --
          Identity unknown. Appears to be connected with CNI and telephonically contacted Townley's
          sister in Westchester County, New York during 1979.  
          Honorato -- Identity unknown.
          Possibly was a TV reporter.  
          DAS -- Identity unknown.
          Possibly was a DINA agent.  
          Eugenio -- A DINA agent who was
          a contact of ALFA.  
          Freddy -- Identity unknown. Was
          a DINA agent who apparently was aware of details of bank accounts maintained in the U.S.
          by General Contreras.  
          Don Cristian -- Identity
          unknown. Was the DINA control officer at DINA Headquarters who ran ALFA.  
          LIMA I -- Identity unknown. Was
          a DINA agent who was aware of irregularities in the operation of DINA committed by General
          Contreras.  
          Elias -- Identity unknown. May
          possibly have been a DINA agent. Apparently the investigation of Chilean Military
          Prosecutor Hector Orozco was damaging to his interests.  
          There are numerous other code
          names, code words and phrases in Townley's letters to which it was impossible to render
          any interpretation or meaning.                
                                   
                                   
                            -4-  | 
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