Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 93, No. 232, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 18, 1982 Page: 8 of 198
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OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
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ALEXANDRU, Va. (AP) - Edwin Wilson's law-
yers say they will not back away from their claim
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its of failing to register as a R. Lewis refused to issue the subpoenas.
10 tTheodore„Grernbarg,theuasshietaprosscutor-zand
f^srSES14 navenoetteet on the
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up the defense claim that Wilson as a defense.
The verdict "sends out a message that everybody
Vice President has to follow the law, no matter whom he works for
ector, along with for- or worked for," said Greenberg
on deaths
a9! _______________
JERUSALEM (AP) - “I was awfully disappointed," said Herald Price
An Israeli Cabinet mln- Fahringer, Wilson's chief attorney. "Obviously we re
ister testified today he going to appeal and hopefully well prevail in a high-
did not think Defense er court."
Minister Ariel Sharon A federal court jury deliberated slightly more
had authority to order than four hours before finding the ex-CIA agent
Israel’s Lebanese Chris- guilty Wednesday of seven counts of conspiracy and
tian allies Into Beirut weapons violations for smuggling four handguns and
refugee camps on a mis-
sion that turned into a
massacre of Palestini-
ans.
Communicatons Min-
ister Mordechai Zippo-
unsuccessfully to assassinate a Lib- mer CIA deputy director Adm. I
and there is also a Air Force Maj. Gen. Richard Secord.
an M-16 to Libya in return for 18 million. son conspired
Wilson, 54, was found innocent of one charge of yan
interstate transportation of four pistols from North ” J???.*,?
Carolina to his Virginia estate. Hiyan gen ane
The maximum penalty now faced by Wilson, who is
held on $60 million bail, is 39 years in prison and a
$240,000 fine. UK District Court Judge Richard L
Williams set sentencing for Dec. 17.
Wilson still faces three more trials. On Nov. 29, be different rulings'
goes to federal court in Houston for trial on a charge who might back
of shipping 20 tons of plastic explosives to Libya was connected with the CIA, he said.
He also has two trials In the District of Columbia. The defense tried to subpoena.
On Jan. 5, trial begins on federal charges that Wil- George Bush, a former CIA director,
- “22.
-6*K
9 F AA
S_G
butchery.' I asked him to
check, ’through your
channels or through the
men who are with
you.’ "
Zippori said Shamir's
reply was “I hear you."
Zippori said he did not
pursue the matter fur-
ther and heard no more
until Saturday night
when the massacre be-
came known through the
' news media
ri’s appearance before
the judicial Inquiry com-
mission investigating Is-
rael's conduct during
the slaughter tended to
dispute testimony by
Sharon and Prime Minis-
ter Menachem Begin.
Both have told the
commission Sharon's de-
cision to send Lebanese
Phalange soldiers into
the camps on Sept. 16
was based on a June
Cabinet directive to In-
tegrate Lebanese forces
into the fight for Beirut.
Zippori, who is known
as an opponent of
Sharon in policy de-
bates, refused to elabo-
rate during an open ses-
sion of the inquiry.
The question was
posed by commission
member Yona Efrat,
who asked whether the
June Cabinet decision
“constitutes approval
for the entry of the
Phalangists to the
camps’"
Zippori replied: "In
my view, definitely not.
When a defined subject
is brought to the Cabi-
net. the decisions are de-
fined it is true that dur-
ing discussions over
time many questions
were asked — While we
are fighting in Lebanon
the Phalangists are ’
spectators, or as our sol-
diers called them, after-
shave soldiers' — but
that was during the bat-
tles, and I request that
all of this be discussed
separately." .
Though Zippori went
no further in open ses-
sion, he was clearly
challenging the wisdom
of sending Israel's Leba-
nese allies, the Phalange
militias, into the Pales-
tinian camps despite
fears of vengeance kill-
ings after the assassina-
tion of President-elect
Bashir Gemayel, the
Phalange leader.
Sharon and Begin said
their decision to send Is-
raeli troops into west
Beirut after Gemayel’s
death was aimed at pre-
venting chaos and re-
venge-taking. They said
they had not imagined
the Phalangists would
massacre civilians in an
anti-guerrilla operation.
Zippori said he first
heard reports of
“butchery in the camps”
from an Israeli journal-
ist at 11 a.m. Friday
Sept. 17 though there
was no information on
numbers of victims or
that women and children
had been killed.
He said he immediate-
ly tried to call the head
of military intelligence,
Maj. Gen. Yehoshua Sa-
guy, and the chief of Is-
. rael's internal security
• service, whose name is
banned from publica-
tion, but failed to reach
them.
Zippori said he then
called Foreign Minister
Yitzhak Shamir by 11:15
a.m. because he knew
both intelligence com-
manders would be at a
noon meeting in
Shamir's office with U.S.
Special envoy Morris
Draper. •
“I told him, Yitzhakt
information has reached
me that the Phalangists
* Thursday, November 18, 1982
•« -----1-----------
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Standard, Jim. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 93, No. 232, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 18, 1982, newspaper, November 18, 1982; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1848688/m1/8/?rotate=270: accessed November 8, 2025), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.