The Smith-Obassy Videotape Caper:
All the Bad Actors in One Place
Summary. In late 1985-early 1986, a "POW rescue" caper
developed around claims made by Mark Smith, Major, US Army (retired) that he had a
videotape showing several live US POWs. Before this phony story ended, it involved a
large group of bad actors and fools, including Smith, Senator (then representative) Bob
Smith, Billy Hendon, Ted Sampley and an international criminal, Robin Gregson. This
is a long and bizarre story -- here it comes.
First, the actors
The main characters in this story are a who's-who of dumbasses surrounding the MIA
issue. They are:
- Mark Smith, Major, US Army, (Retired). If you are not familiar with Mark Smith,
you can read about him here.
- William "Just Call Me Billy" Hendon, former member of
Congress.
- Senator Bob Smith (R, NH); at the time of this caper Smith was
a Representative.
- Ted Sampley, publisher of a third-rate "veterans"
newspaper; claims to be a former Special Forces trooper.
- And others who will pop up in the telling of this story.
Now for the story
Late 1985
Mark Smith and a sergeant who worked for him in Korea named McIntyre had, by this time,
returned to the States with their claims of having discovered information about live US
POWs being held in Southeast Asia. The short version of the story is this.
Smith and McIntyre were assigned to the Army's Special Forces Detachment - Korea, which
did some training in Thailand. While in Thailand, they picked up several of the phony stories about US POWs that are rampant around the refugee camps
in Thailand. They reported these tales to Army intelligence and were told that the
stories were bogus. This did not deter Smith -- he proceeded to produce an
"operations plan" for rescuing these POWs; his plan was tossed out by his
commanding general. Meanwhile, Smith returned to the States and was retired from
active duty; the whole story is told at this link.
Smith kept coming up with "live POW" tales, one came from a Laotian who told
Smith that he was on his way to pick up two US POWs and he would sell the men to Smith for
a few million dollars. Reluctantly, the US Defense Intelligence Agency invited Smith and
McIntyre to come to Washington for debriefing. At that point, DIA told these two
that their stories were bogus. Smith and McIntyre, however, were invigorated by
their trip to D.C. as it confirmed their own self-importance.
In September 1985, Smith and McIntyre filed suit against Ronald Reagan, Casper
Weinberger, George Schultz, and other US officials, accusing them of failing to act to
rescue known US POWs. The suit was later dismissed but at the time it was filed, it
was a major social event in the MIA "activist" cult. Sampley tried to
generate public awareness of the suit -- he called several journalists, telling them that
because of information developed by Smith and McIntyre, the Army's Delta Force had been
put on alert to rescue POWs. Sampley followed this up with "leaks" to
reporters that Special Forces had rescued US POWs who were being debriefed in Thailand.
It was all horseshit.
"John Obassy"
In December 1985, Smith announced that he had an affidavit from an international
businessman, using the pseudonym John Obassy, stating that he had firsthand knowledge of
US POWs in Laos. Obassy claimed that he had been in Laos in October 1985 where he
had observed thirty-nine Americans working as slaves in a gold mining operation.
Here is what Obassy had to say:
QUOTE
"Each person had at least three armed guards on them. . . . I personally spoke
with these people, who confirmed to me that they had been left behind . . .They were
afraid to leave their sanctuary areas in Laos. . . . My true identity has been made known
to the attorney who took this affidavit, Mr. Mark L. Waple, and to a United States
Congressman."
END QUOTE
Waple is still an attorney around Fayetteville, NC where he has a lucrative
ambulance-chasing practice, encouraging soldiers to sue and bring other actions against
the Army. The Congressman was Billy Hendon.
In January 1986, Smith and McIntyre appeared before a Senate committee where they
stated they had positive proof of US POWs and that they would deliver this proof to the
Committee on Veterans Affairs within a week. While they did not disclose their
proof, Sampley let slip stories that the proof was a videotape showing US POWs. The
tape was said to be in the possession of Obassy who was in either Southeast Asia or the
Middle East. Smith admitted that he had seen only portions of the videotape and that
he had not seen any portions that showed US POWs.
Meanwhile -- and I do not want to get ahead of this story -- analysts within the DIA
Special Office for POW-MIA Affairs got on the case. Within 24 hours of Smith's
announcement about the videotape and his revelation of the name "John Obassy,"
we had discovered "Obassy's" true identity and we were on the trail of the
videotape.
Smith Reports on the Tape
Congress was not amused and told Smith to put up or shut up. Smith set out to
find the videotape.
Smith gave this description of how he managed to view the videotape. First, he
claims to have attended a "secret international summit" at the Cactus Hotel in
Cyprus, then he went to East Beirut where he finally saw the videotape at a secret Israeli
Mossad headquarters in Beirut, accompanied by Mossad's chief of intelligence for Syria and
Lebanon. ( No, I have not been drinking and, no, I am not making this
up. This is exactly what Smith told Congress. ) Smith said
the opening scenes of the tape showed Obassy talking with senior Vietnamese officials,
along with officials from an unnamed third country. The Vietnamese were then shown
leading troops into northern Laos where they linked up with Pathet Lao troops.
Smith stated: "They came together and then I saw them put the prisoners on
the road and start marching them down the road."
He described a group of American and Korean POWs: "They were handcuffed, had
ankle shackles with bars between the ankles, had to march in step because each had a steel
collar around their neck with rags wrapped on their necks to prevent further injury.
Between the necks of each prisoner was a wooden pole which was about four feet long
-- long enough to prevent the prisoners from reaching out to touch the prisoner in front
or behind. Each was handcuffed."
Smith continued by saying that the men were being forced to dig trenches in a gold
mining operation. In spite of their outdoor work, Smith said they had pale skins and
were clean shaven. Smith also claimed that the Americans were guarded by another
American who wore a blue hat and sunglasses. Smith further reported that there were
about a thousand other POWs spread out along a road, carrying various tools and cooking
utensils.
All this is included in a memo that Smith gave to Billy Hendon who passed it to Bob
Smith. On January 27, 1985, Hendon and Smith (Bob) took their information to the
White House where they gave it to Vice-President George Bush. They also delivered a
memo from Mark Waple to President Reagan. Waple said Obassy would allow the US
government to view the tape only after he had been "convinced of our sincerity."
Waple asked for a meeting between himself, Reagan, McIntyre, Mark Smith, and
Hendon. VP Bush pointed out that Waple had just filed suit against Reagan -- Waple
wrote that he was willing to hold in abeyance the suit. Bush sent the whole mess to
national security advisor John Poindexter and asked that he have someone look into it.
Unknown to Smith, Smith, Hendon, and Waple, Poindexter passed the letters and memos to
Army Colonel Dick Childress, Director of Asian Affairs on the NSC, who turned to DIA.
We told Dick what we had discovered about "Obassy," about his true
identity, and about the non-existent videotape.
The Rescue Plan
After not hearing from the White House for a month, in late February 1985, Waple sent a
second letter to Reagan. This one sounded like something out of a cheap movie plot.
In this letter, Waple stated that for $4.2 million, cash, Obassy would release the
videotape.
Obassy wanted Smith, Smith, Hendon, and Senator Dennis DeConcini to take the cash to LA
International Airport where they would be directed to a waiting commercial airliner.
There would be no other passengers and one of the pilots would be selected by Mark
Smith. Waple said that the rest of the crew could be selected by the US government
-- he assumed they would all be "agents," which was fine "as long as they
are under deep civilian cover." ( Wipe that grin
off your face -- I AM NOT MAKING THIS UP. ) The plane would
fly to Southeast Asia, with their destination being provided after they were airborne.
Upon landing in SEAsia, the passengers would be taken by helicopter to another
undisclosed location, to view the video. If the Americans were satisfied, they could
then buy the videotape, along with other unspecified "evidence." Waple
wanted an immediate response and gave a deadline of March 3.
It Gets Really Bizarre
Representative Bob Smith called the Director of DIA, LTGEN Leonard Perroots, USAF.
He was not available so Smith talked with Army Brigadier General Jim Shufelt, my
boss. Smith repeated the deal and asked for a meeting in Hendon's office. In a
few days, a meeting was held in Hendon's office attended by: Hendon, Smith, Smith,
Generals Perroots and Shufelt, and the DIA General Counsel. Hendon opened by telling
everyone that he had great confidence in Mark Smith and he knew that Smith was telling the
truth.
One of the generals asked what would happen if the US did not pay the money.
Smith answered that the POWs would be released regardless (!!) but in a way to embarrass
the US. Then, Mark Smith and Hendon both claimed that -- get this -- they knew the
names of the US POWs shown on the videotape but would not reveal the names. At that
point, Perroots and Shufelt both expressed disgust that a member of Congress (Hendon) and
a former POW (Smith) would withhold such valuable information. ( I
should point out here that neither Smith nor Hendon has ever revealed the names of the
POWs they "know" are being held. )
While Perroots and Shufelt recognized a scam, they decided to go along. $4.2
million was placed in escrow in the Bank of Singapore.
The Senate Committee Calls Smith's Bluff
Finally, the Senate Veteran's Affairs Committee got busy. To this point, here is
what had transpired:
- Mark Smith and McIntyre had ignored repeated requests to present the evidence that they
had promised -- not just the videotape, but also photographs, maps, etc.
- The affidavit by LTC Bob Howard, Smith's former commander, had been a bust. Howard
said that while he believed Smith and McIntyre had seen evidence on POWs, the
"evidence" was all based on secondhand information.
- The Committee staff was privately expressing disbelief about the entire videotape story.
Smith and McIntyre were subpoenaed to appear on March 15; they did not show and the
hearing was cancelled. By this time, McIntyre had dropped out of the affair, telling
DIA interviewers that the information he and Smith had was "not much."
Mark Smith missed the meeting because, on March 15, he, Bob Smith, Waple, and Hendon
were in Singapore where "John Obassy" was being held in jail on fraud charges --
he had been convicted of conspiring to cheat a local businessman out of $40,000.
Hendon bailed him out with money supplied by Ross Perot.
Finally, Obassy, Waple, Hendon, and Smith traveled to Fayetteville, NC where Obassy
permitted Waple and Hendon to see the tape -- but not the portions showing POWs.
"Obassy" Exposed
About this time, Susan Katz-Keating got in on the act. Keating was a reporter for
the Washington Times who started out as something of a true believer in live US
POWs and a government cover-up. However, the deeper she dug, and the more she
associated with the likes of Smith, Smith, Hendon, Waple, and Sampley, the more she
realized that this was a vast mythology -- she had a total about-face and set about
exposing the scams. ( Read her book Prisoners
of Hope. )
Within 24 hours of the videotape story surfacing, DIA analysts had determined the true
identity of "John Obassy." Now, Keating reached the same conclusion --
independently -- and she blew the whistle on him in a Washington Times article.
"John Obassy" was actually Robin Gregson.
Gregson was a British citizen, a con man well known to British and Thai police and on the
Interpol watch list. He worked on the fringe of the illicit drug and gem
trade. In addition to the conviction in Singapore, he had been convicted of fraud in
1984 and was the subject of an active international warrant for fraud. He was in the
US, not to deliver a videotape, but to hide from Thai police.
When Keating exposed Gregson/Obassy in the Times, Billy Hendon called her,
shouting that she had signed a death warrant for US POWs. Keating told me later that
she received a lot of hate-filled phone calls from "activists," including Ted
Sampley and some family members.
Obassy/Gregson, in a message delivered through Mark Smith, claimed that he was so upset
at having been exposed that he burned the videotape. None of the confederacy of
dunces -- Smith, Hendon, Smith, Waple, Sampley -- expressed any concern over Gregson's
destruction of what would have been certain evidence of US POWs, instead, they attacked
Keating for exposing Gregson. Later, in a totally bizarre turn of events, Mark Smith
claimed that he had the tape after all and would deliver it to the Senate Veterans'
Affairs Committee.
The tape emerges -- or does it?
Events had caught up with the bullshit artists. Smith, Smith, Hendon, Waple,
Sampley, Gregson/Obassy -- the whole crowd now had to find some answers. The Senate
Committee set a hearing for June 25, 1986, 9: 00 a.m. The room was packed with the
usual suspects. Jack Bailey, retired USAF lieutenant colonel, himself a major scam artist, buzzed around the room telling folks that he had
seen the tape -- at least he was sober for the hearing. At ten minutes past nine,
Chairman Frank Murkowski announced that Mark Smith had not appeared and could not be found
-- he adjourned the meeting, issued a subpoena for Smith and directed the US Marshals
Service to find Smith and bring him in. In his comments to the audience in the
committee room, Murkowski said: "Gregson has refused to provide anything.
Whether Major Smith ever had anything at all is something my colleagues and I should
consider." ( Perceptive man. )
"Lightweight Stuff"
Smith did not ignore the second subpoena, this one served by a couple of US Marshals.
He and McIntyre appeared at the next hearing, a few days later -- finally they were
to produce their evidence. And they did. They produced:
- A National Geographic map of Southeast Asia, showing Vietnam,
Laos, Cambodia, Thailand, and parts of Malaysia and Burma. On the map were
drawn circles, each encompassing approximately 100 square miles. Smith stated that
these were general areas where his sources told him US POWs might be located.
- Photocopies of three photographs. These photographs
depicted one and two men. The men were smiling, dressed in jeans and short-sleeved
shirts, wearing sunglasses. They were standing on the bank of a large river, their
backs to the river. There was no sign of restraint or guards. One photo showed
one of the men holding a rifle and smiling for the camera. Smith said: "These
photographs were provided to me by a source in Thailand and depict, according to the
source, who I consider to be reliable, Americans who were left in Southeast Asia at the
conclusion of the Vietnam War." And he said it with a straight face.
Members of the Committee were not impressed or amused. Senator Alan Simpson (R,
WY) was pissed: "I've never seen such lightweight stuff in my life. I
don't know what you're up to, but I can tell you it's not savory." At that
point, Smith got red in the face and invited Simpson outside to settle it man-to-man.
Simpson laughed at him.
In a final effort to salvage something, Smith claimed that he could get the original
photos plus some classified POW files that he claimed he stole from the Army. He
never delivered a thing.
A few weeks later, the lawsuit was dismissed.
Epilogue
And so the tale is told -- and it's not a pretty one. Please allow me to
philosophize for a few paragraphs.
The caper demonstrated US government efforts and abilities
This caper demonstrated that the US government is willing to go to any ends to track
down a story, no matter how wacky, in the possibility that it is for real. Within 24
hours of Smith surfacing the Obassy alias, DIA analysts had determined Obassy/Gregson's
true identity and within 72 hours we were certain that there was no videotape or it was a
faked job, produced in Thailand. Still, consider what we did:
- Met with Smith, Hendon, Waple, and Smith every time they wanted a meeting.
- Put $4.2 million in escrow in a Singapore bank as requested by Obassy/Gregson.
In spite of the fact that we felt early on that this was a scam, we played it out to
the end.
Who did these idiots think they were dealing with?
This caper also demonstrates just how stupid Mark Smith, Billy Hendon, Bob Smith, Mark
Waple, Ted Sampley, and the lot of them are. Did they think that we would not check
out their stories? Did they think that US government agencies would not talk to each
other?
- I'll say it again: Within 24 hours, we knew Obassy/Gregson's true identity.
- When Smith told his story about traveling to Cyprus, then to Lebanon and meeting with
Israeli Mossad agents, CIA went to Mossad to confirm the story. Mossad reported that
none of their people knew anything about this affair. They knew Gregson's name only
because he was on various international watch lists.
- One of the people involved in this caper was talking back channel to DIA and he told us
that the whole story was nonsense.
We -- DIA and CIA -- fed everything we knew and discovered to the NSC, the White House,
Murkowski and his committee, and to each other. Thus, when Smith, Hendon, Waple,
Smith, et al talked with anyone on the government side, the person they were talking with
knew the facts and knew that what they were hearing was bullshit. Murkowski went
into the hearing knowing that there was no tape and that Smith had no evidence.
Hendon's bar bill
I cannot conclude this story without telling about Hendon's bar bill. Hendon,
Mark Smith, Bob Smith, and Mark Waple went to Singapore. They returned and Hendon
and Bob Smith asked for a meeting with LTG Perroots, Director, DIA. Hendon told
Perroots that he had seen parts of the videotape, that "Obassy's" information
was good -- then Hendon gave LTG Perroots his receipts and asked that DIA pay for the
trip. Hendon wanted us to pay -- for everyone -- air fare, hotels, meals, the
works. He even included his almost $1,000 bar bill ($350 for one evening) --
not bad for three days. General Perroots handed it back to Billy, suggesting that he
have Congress pay for it.
What does this prove?
One can argue -- as some have -- that Mark Smith, Hendon, Bob Smith, and the like had
no way to judge if Gregson's story was true -- they did the right thing in bringing their
information to DIA, White House, and the Senate. True. But let's look at how
they did this:
- They constantly played "I've got a secret." Every meeting with them was
like a game of hide-and-seek; they never volunteered information, it had to be pried from
them.
- Consider the Smith-Hendon claim that they knew the names of the men in the video but
they would not reveal the names. Does no one see anything wrong here? These
are supposed to be men who care about families, yet, they did everything possible to jerk
families around.
- Even when they were shown that their information was bogus, they kept pressing it.
Mark Smith had been told time and again that the information he picked up in
Thailand was phony -- yet he kept peddling it, claiming that he was a lone hero fighting
against the bureaucracy.
When your information is shown time and again to be false, when everything you do
involves shadowy characters with criminal backgrounds, when reasonable people with no
reason to doubt you determine that your "evidence" is "lightweight
stuff" -- when all that happens over and over, anyone with half a brain -- if
he or she is honest -- can't help but do some self-examination. And that's the
nub of the matter -- if one is honest. Mark Smith, Billy
Hendon, Bob Smith, Ted Sampley -- none of these and none of many others in what I call the
"MIA cult" are honest. It's a game to them. It's a way to get in the
spotlight. There is always an audience out there who will listen in rapt, worshipful
attention to a Mark Smith or a Billy Hendon spout his foolishness -- and that's what it's
about. They give not one damn about missing men -- they want someone to watch them.
It shows up everywhere.
- Ted Sampley can't get an audience any other way so he carries
out a vendetta against John McCain.
- Earl Hopper is a sad old geezer but when he tells his tale
about his son's loss, he is a star.
- Dave Murray of New Jersey, Bob Necci with his Advocacy and
Intelligence Index -- all are little men with little minds but they have figured out how
to get attention. Never mind that they spread lies and misrepresentations -- it gets
them their 15 minutes.
- Billy Hendon is a loser -- but he used the MIA issue to keep
himself employed and to keep the donations rolling in. Ditto for Red McDaniel, Bill
Bell, Jack Bailey, and the like.
This videotape caper took place in 1985 - 1986 -- a long time ago. Nothing has
changed, except that the size of their audience has dropped dramatically. Still, these
clowns learned that they could command attention and in the following years, they played
it for all it was worth.
December 5, 2000
|