Remembering
Those We Left Behind
by Joseph D. Douglass, Jr.
December 18, 2002
As we prepare to send tens of thousands of young men into war against Iraq,
it seems only fitting that we honor and remember those left behind in prior
wars.
Navy Capt. Red McDaniel, who survived 6 years as a POW in North Vietnam, sums
up the issue: "I was prepared to fight, to be wounded, to be captured,
and even prepared to die, but I was not prepared to be abandoned."[i]
This is what happened to over 30,000 American servicemen, beginning in WW
I and continuing through the first Gulf War. With the exception of the Gulf
War, all were left behind in the hands of Communist regimes, whose brutality
exceeded by any measure that perpetrated by the Nazis in World War II.
Little has been said by Washington officialdom to acknowledge the men left
behind. An exception to the rule is Sen. Herb Kohl. After studying the evidence
in 1992, he wrote: "This [Final Report of the Senate Select Committee
on POW/MIA Affairs] demonstrates that the government has not kept its promises
to those who served in Vietnam. Even more disturbing, is the evidence which
suggests 'strongly suggests' that that the government failed to keep its promises
to those who served in World War II, the Korean War, and the Cold War as well."
What lies behind this embarrassing state of affairs is well-connected treachery
and connivance. The directing forces are not easily pin-pointed. Col. Millard
Peck, who ran the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) POW/MIA office in 1989-1991,
explained the problem: "The issue is being manipulated by unscrupulous
people in the Government, or associated with the Government... [they] have
maintained their distance and remained hidden in the shadows... this issue
is being manipulated and controlled at a higher lever, not with the goal of
resolving it, but more to obfuscate the question of live prisoners, and give
the illusion of progress through hyperactivity... any soldier left in Vietnam,
even inadvertently, was, in fact, abandoned years ago... the farce that is
being played is no more than political legerdemain done with 'smoke and mirrors',
to stall the issue until it dies a natural death."
Reviewing the Record
In 1920, shortly after WW I, Russia was hit by a devastating famine. Just
prior, the Russians had denied holding American captives. When the Russians
asked for food and medical assistance, a wise U.S. official gave them an offer
they could not refuse: Release the American prisoners you hold and we will
send you food. Russian officials agreed to return the men when the food shipments
commenced. We started shipping food, and they released 100 men. Then, they
stopped. Although many more were held captive, no more were released; but
the U.S. continued shipping food, ignoring the Russian duplicity. The official
position adopted by the State Department was that no American servicemen were
still held captive. This was a blatant lie.
Following the victory in Europe in 1945, both Presidents Roosevelt and Truman
sent directives to U.S. command in Europe that said there would be "no
criticism of treatment [of American POWs] by the Russians" and that there
would be "no retaliatory action to Russian failure to cooperate,"
which referred to Russian failure to give the United States access to American
POWs in the German POW camps the Russians had captured. As a result, only
the 4,165 American prisoners were released, those from the one POW camp U.S.
officials were "allowed" to visit (at Reisa). The 21,000 American
prisoners in the remaining four German camps taken over by the Russians were
abandoned to the Russians. They were put on trains and shipped to Russia to
lives worse than death. Records were then falsified by U.S. and British intelligence
(31,000 British POWs were also abandoned) in an effort to hide what had happened.
Following the Korean War, Col. Philip Corso was on Eisenhower's White House
staff. He was in charge of the POW issue. In Senate and House hearings in
1992 and 1996, he explained how Eisenhower made the decision to leave the
missing American POWs behind after he, Corso, had explained to Eisenhower
that thousands were missing, that US intelligence knew that hundreds had been
shipped to Russia and China, and that achieving their return would be difficult.
U.S. policy was clear, Corso explained: "We couldn't put pressure on
the Soviet Union or the satellites, we couldn't" they had our prisoners
and we couldn't put pressure on them. That was it. Our policy forbid us from
doing it. If you did it, you were disobeying national policy." In implementing
this policy, U.S. executive agencies -- State, Intelligence, and Defense --
subsequently denied any American POWs were left behind. This is still taking
place today.
In 1973, at the time of Operation Homecoming following the end of the Vietnam
War, President Nixon was told by Secretary of Defense Laird's point man on
the POW issue, Dr. Roger Shields, "Mr. President, we, we do have two
missing for every man who did come home." President Nixon said, "Right,"
and then changed the subject. U.S. policy issued the following day by the
State Department said that no American captives remained in Vietnam.
President Nixon said all our men in Southeast Asia were now home. Both statements
were lies.
Vietnam remains a bitter example of our government's failure to honor its
commitment to those who served our country. There has never even been a full
accounting of those missing. The official numbers of those missing are only
about a third of what they should be. Thousands of the missing are not counted,
including special operations forces, military deployed in civilian garb, those
listed as killed-in-action-body-not-recovered who were not killed but rather
captured, intelligence operatives and administrators, State Department and
AID employees, civilian contractors, and even many so-called deserters who
were missing -- not because they deserted but because they were captured as
in the case of Bobby Garwood.
Similarly, there has been no attempt to identify or count those captured during
the 40-year Cold War. These missing Americans should include not only those
captured while on missions in or over enemy territory but also the hundreds
if not thousands of men and women who were abducted in neutral and friendly
countries and then drugged and taken away behind the Iron and Bamboo curtains.
These captives may number in the thousands, but no one in Washington has cared
enough to even try and add up the totals.
U. S. Government Cover-up
Government officials have lied about those abandoned, hidden information,
swept live sighting of POW information under the rug, and ordered people who
knew what happened to remain silent. First-hand experiences of government
deceit and duplicity are legion and documented by nearly every investigative
reporter who became interested in the POW issue. One by one, dozens of investigators
have become enraged as they witnessed first hand how the government ran roughshod
over honor and principle, and over many of the investigators.
In all cases, the official government position, or policy, has been that no
men were knowingly left behind and, thus, none will be found. This is why
so little has been accomplished in the $100 million per year search for bones.
This archeological search remains a living example of Col. Peck's illusion
of progress through hyperactivity.
At the same time, the unofficial word has been, "Sure we left hundreds
behind, but what do you want us to do, start another war?" Or, "Sure
there are hundreds still captive, but we cannot say anything because it might
mess up our efforts to try and get them back." Or, "Please do not
go public with what you know, it might make matters worse for those still
help captive." Or, as President Reagan told one of his senior staff,
now a member of Congress, "We know that there are hundreds of POWs still
alive. But these guys are leading very different lives. They have local wives
and we just don't want to shed light on them at this point."[ii]
A Particularly Heinous Example
One of the most deplorable, yet representative, examples is what happened
to Bobby Garwood, who was captured when on a mission for a U.S. general in
intelligence. He did not return from the mission, which was only a week prior
to his scheduled return to the States. When he did not return he was simply
listed as a deserter. Evidently no one wanted to tell what really happened
and explain why he was sent into a known hostile region without an armed escort.
Later, U.S. intelligence painted him a deserter and instigated a special forces
mission to assassinate him. Fortunately, it was not successful.
When informed in 1978 that Garwood was still a prisoner, the State Department
discarded the message. Only when Garwood managed to get a second message out
in 1979 was he released. He managed to slip a note to a Finnish executive
who was in Hanoi. The Finn made the note public and Garwood was released to
avoid the embarrassment. Upon his return, the Marine Corps put him on trial
for behavior unbecoming a prisoner of war and seized all his back pay. Then
they rigged the trial and prevented those who could attest to his prisoner
status, such as the former North Vietnamese official Col. Tran Van Loc, from
telling the truth at the trial.
Former POW Col. Ted Guy later explained, "Garwood had to be discredited
so that he would not be believed." Among other things, Garwood had personally
witnessed roughly 100 American POWs still in captivity in Vietnam in 1979,
as reported by the Wall Street Journal's Bill Paul in a feature news story
in 1984.
The head of the Defense Intelligence Agency, Gen. Tighe, tried to stop the
court marshal after Garwood was released. He believed Garwood was telling
the truth and that Garwood should be carefully debriefed because of his valuable
knowledge about missing Americans. But, no one else in the government wanted
to know what Garwood knew, especially the Marine Corps brass. Later, after
he retired, Tighe himself debriefed Garwood and attested to the reliability
and importance of Garwood's knowledge. Then, the government did its best to
discredit Gen. Tighe.
Not a nice story. But it is an excellent and representative example that accurately
characterizes our government's handling of the POW/MIA issue for the past
fifty years. When will it stop? Certainly not until the American people decide
to bring it to an end and not let the government continue to obfuscate the
question of live prisoners, create the illusion of progress through hyperactivity,
and stall the issue until it dies a natural death.
What Happened to our Missing Men?
The efforts within all branches of the executive to attack information that
men were left behind (that is, "debunking" live sighting reports
and related intelligence) and especially information that describes the war
crimes and atrocities the Communists have committed in their use of American
captives has been especially disconcerting. In the process of diverting attention
away from the full truth, numerous stories respecting the fate of the American
POWs have been propagated. First, the men were sent to Chinese and Russia
slave labor camps, or as referred to in Russia, the GULAG. This was the story
before the full brutal nature of the Russian GULAG was revealed in several
books.
Following the Vietnam War, the explanation quietly publicized was that those
missing were only deserters who were now involved in the illegal drug trade
and did not want to come home. On a more benign note, beginning in the latter
days of the Reagan Administration the story was concocted that those missing
had taken wives, were raising families, and did not want to return, or, as
emerged during the first Bush Administration, were living nicely in Russia
in make-believe American towns where they were helping to train Russian spies,
such as is depicted in the novel The Charm School.
All these stories did contain elements of truth, but only a minimal portion.
What they did not tell was the devastating part of the reality, which concerns.
the scale and magnitude of the atrocities our abandoned American POWs suffered
at the hands of the Communists. The brutal, repressive, and inhuman nature
of the Communists leaders was well known, as early as the 1920s. This was
not just the imprint of the Communists who seized control of the government
but the combination of the Communist terror coupled with the Russian culture
as handed down by leaders such as Ivan the Terrible and the intelligence services
of the Czars.
Prisoners were tortured by the thousands. Even worse was the use of prisoners
in medical experiments -- for example, the development of assassination techniques
and work with chemical and biological agents -- that had begun at least by
1928. In the late 1940s U.S. intelligence knew that Russia deliberately built
chemical and biological warfare laboratories near prisons and GULAG facilities
to be near a supply of human guinea pigs. There was also intelligence on the
shipment of American POWs to facilities where these experiments were conducted
during and following World War II.
More details of the horrendous nature of the Russian experiments became known
to U.S. intelligence, military, and political officials early in the Korean
War, as Col. Corso testified to Congressman Bob Dornan's Committee in 1996.
During the Korean War, Corso was on CINCPAC intelligence staff. His responsibility
included obtaining intelligence on captured Americans. Corso explained, "I
received numerous reports that American POWs had been sent to the Soviet Union.
These POWs were to be exploited for intelligence purposes and subsequently
eliminated." He also told about medical experiments that were performed
"Nazi style," about which he was particularly upset. "The most
devilish and cunning were the techniques of mind altering... many of our POWs
died under such treatment... I was getting reports that came from enemy territory
in Korea, that they had some sort of a hospital up there... we sent out agents
to try to get the information and I never did get much information on the
hospital itself." I passed that [intelligence on the mind-control and
other experiments] on to C. D. Jackson [a special assistant to President Eisenhower]
and other administration officials when I was at the White House.
Shortly after the Senate Select Committee for POW/MIA Affairs was established
in late 1991 to investigate the missing American POW/MIAs issue, information
from a top-level Czech official who had defected to the United States in 1968
began to surface. This source, Gen. Maj. Jan Sejna, had been personally involved
in sanitizing the Korean War hospital that Corso (above) had targeted in North
Korea. Sejna explained that the hospital was built for the purpose of conducting
medical experiments upon captured Americans. The Americans were used as guinea
pigs to learn what high levels of atomic radiation did to the human body.
They were used to test the effects of chemical and biological warfare agents
and as expendable subjects in the development of an important new class of
chemical warfare agents: psychoactive drugs for use in covert behavior modification
and influence operations. They were also used as live cadavers upon which
the military doctors could practice various operations such as amputations
and organ removal, all without any anesthesia. Finally, they were used in
graduated torture experiments to determine the limits of psychological and
physiological "stress" the Americans could endure.
Several thousand Americans were killed in these experiments in the North Korean
hospital. Their bodies were cremated. At the conclusion of the Korean War,
roughly 100 Americans who were still of experimental value were shipped to
Russia through Prague. The process continued in Vietnam. Czechoslovakia assisted
the Russians in the development of chemical and biological warfare agents
and psychoactive drugs and in the human experiments conduced in North Korea,
and then Vietnam, Laos and Russia. Sejna himself was an eye-witness to 600
American POWs as they transited through Prague on their way to Russia. Sejna
monitored the Czech participation and the operational results. (Extensive
details provided by Gen. Sejna on the Soviet operations and development projects
that used the American POW guinea pigs are now available in the book Betrayed:
The Story of Missing American POWs, written by this author.)
Punishing the Messenger Who Brings Bad News
At the time his information began to surface in 1992, Sejna had a 20-year
record following his defection in providing valuable information to U.S. and
allied intelligence. The response of the various executive agencies was not
to learn what Sejna knew. Rather, their response was to try and discredit
him, silence him, and bury his testimony. CIA even told the Czech and Russian
intelligence services what he was saying so that they could police up their
own records and sabotage any sources that might confirm or extend his information.
None of this was a case of examining what Sejna had to say and then rejecting
it as not credible. No, in all cases none of those involved wanted to know.
Their only mission was to silence Sejna and discredit him so that no one would
get interested in what he knew.
There was one exception. In 1996, Congressman Bob Dornan asked Sejna to testify
respecting his knowledge before Dornan's House committee, which Sejna agreed
to do. This is when a 1992 DIA memo surfaced. It was signed by DIA director,
Lt. Gen. Clapper. The memo stated that when Sejna's knowledge about what happened
to American POWs began to surface in 1992, Sejna was subjected to a [4-hour
hostile] polygraph, during which he "showed no signs of deception."
Another internal DIA memo surfaced in which a senior official in the intelligence
directorate of DIA offered to help debrief Sejna and corroborate his testimony.
The official had worked with Sejna in the past on several projects, including
one on international terrorism, and knew how open Sejna was and how valuable
the information he had provided over twenty years had been. His offer, needless
to say, was not accepted. Nor did Sejna hesitate in fulfilling his decision
to testify before Dornan's committee about what he knew -- even after he was
threatened three times that he would be killed if he testified. The last threat
came before he left home on the very morning he was to testify. Slightly less
than a year following his testimony, he was dead.
This, too, should come as no surprise. Only people who have tried to surface
the truth have "suffered grief," as Col. Peck explained. There seems
to be a succession of people who became warriors in the search for the truth
only to have received numerous threats, lost their jobs, had their careers
ruined, and ultimately become most disheartened and discouraged.[iii] Alternatively,
never have any of those who lied, including under oath, blocked the release
of information requested under FOIA, destroyed information and files, threatened
witnesses, directed many with personal knowledge to keep silent or lose their
jobs, and all the other nefarious activities encountered by the numerous investigative
researchers ever been punished or held accountable. Only those who tried to
get at the truth have suffered grief.
Even worse, it now appears that various efforts to find and rescue missing
men have been carefully and consistently compromised, sabotaged, or simply
cancelled. This applies to efforts during the Vietnam War as well as after.
In his study of rescue attempts, Code-Name Bright Light, Jay Veith could not
find one example where a prisoner was found and freed. What he found was tremendous
problems in getting intelligence out of CIA, command lack of attention, and,
most disturbing, compromise. Upon review, the long succession of failures
underscores the comment a special forces major gave to Red McDaniel. Following
a talk Red gave on missing POWs, the major and several members of his special
forces team approached Red. "Someone in our government doesn't want those
men to come home," the major quietly told Red. "In the past eighteen
months we have planned two different rescue missions into Southeast Asia.
We knew where the men were. We knew how many men were there. We were ready
to go. We were excited about it. But, at the last minute, both times, someone
cancelled the mission."
The Process Continues
Live-sighting reports and intelligence continues to indicate American POWs
remain captive in North Korea, Vietnam and Laos, China, Russia, and Iraq.
Those still missing and alive could number in the hundreds. Yet only one in
Baghdad is acknowledged and his family went through a ten-year fight just
to get his status changed from killed in action, body not recovered, to POW.
[iv]
Every year more and more of the truth is surfaced as unwitting investigators
become curious and, before they know what is happening, get emotionally involved
because of the horrendous duplicity and deceit levied upon those who were
called to serve their country and upon their wives and families. Each investigator
has been able to recover a bit more of the truth and the evidence grows as
the list of investigative books lengthens.[v]
Today, the basic facts are in evidence:
1.
thousands of Americans were abandoned,
2.
this was not due to accident or lack of intelligence,
3.
the men were subsequently denied,
4.
information on their fate was buried or destroyed,
5.
families of the missing men were lied to and stonewalled,
6.
efforts to recovery POW/MIAs have been little more than a charade, designed
to frustrate public and surviving family interest while waiting for the issue
to die a natural death,
7.
silence respecting the crimes of the Communists is carefully maintained, especially
where economic interest might be adversely affected and,
8.
never let the fate of servicemen left behind interfere with business and commerce.
At the same time, every year it has become increasingly difficult to capture
serious high-level attention because of the growing fraternity of top-level
officials who have become compromised, because of the devastating impact of
the decisions to abandon the men, because of the experience and justified
arrogance of the faceless army of bureaucrats who have maintained the silence,
and because families and investigators have become increasing frustrated and
distant from the suffering of those still captive, comforted by the belief
that most are dead or living new lives with families and don't want to be
disturbed.
The Trials Ahead
In the days following 9-11, we became awakened to a massive new
enemy whose size is hard to judge because it is so diffuse, distributed, secretive,
and because of the politics involved in trying to figure out what countries
and leaders are for us, or against us, in the war. The war ahead will be long
and difficult, as repeatedly all the war cabinet principals have made clear.
With or without Iraq, and whether or not that war that is growing closer is
a repeat of the first Gulf War or something disastrously different, the war
will grow.
For the most part, the new Bush Administration in the war on terrorism has
shown a determination to address problems that have been ignored for the most
part for a good thirty years. President Bush certainly sees himself as a no
nonsense, "can do" President. Thus, while it will be difficult because
of the controlling bureaucracy, officials whose focus is on the developing
war, and the long history of deceit and duplicity that no one wants to expose,
there still may be a window of opportunity in which to encourage a change
in our government's POW/MIA policy and attitude.
The issue of Scott Speicher and others missing from the Gulf War and those
missing from Afghanistan is gradually gathering increased attention in the
press. Additionally, the hard truth, as expressed by Sen. Herb Kohl in 1992
still holds: "If, after all, the government does not keep its promises,
then why should our soldiers honor their pledge to follow orders, even at
the risk of their own lives?"
Aside from the obvious need to find and free those still held captive, there
is an equally compelling reason for re-assessing the whole POW/MIA tragedy.
Navy Capt. Red McDaniel's wife in her book After the Hero's Welcome: A POW
Wife's Story of the Battle Against a New Enemy has captured this reason, which
Red understood so well:
"If our government does not keep its end of the bargain with our fighting
men, it violates one of the principles that made America. We can have the
biggest force in the world but we'll lose the battle if we lose our integrity.
The POW issue is a question about the erosion of our country's fundamental
values. The people Red McDaniel had talked with across the nation understood
this and held fast to the same principles that had pulled him through the
ordeal of Communist captivity. "Dorothy," Red said as he laid down
in bed that night, "we have to keep trying to solve the riddle of the
POWs. For the men in Delta, for all the others who still serve, who want to
believe in their country, we have to keep trying."
Isn't it time for all Americans to stand straight and demand the full release
of all information respecting the men we left behind? Isn't it time to make
the finding and release of all those men who remain captive a task that is
at least as important as finding, capturing, and bringing to justice those
responsible for 9-11? Isn't it time to end the charade and false images of
cooperation and for the American government to start keeping the promises
it made to those it called to serve their country in WWI, WWII, Korea, Vietnam,
the Cold War, the Gulf War, and, looking ahead, in the growing war on terrorism
and terrorist regimes? Else, why would anyone want to serve?
This Christmas holiday season, let us pause and remember those we left behind.
Go out and get one or two of the books of those investigators who have worked
so hard to find the truth that our freedom might be preserved. Read what those
investigators found, the hard truth. Then pass those books to friends and
associates to read. What better New Year's resolution could we as a country
adopt than to bring to an end all the chicanery and charades that has shamelessly
characterized the POW/MIA search process for over fifty years.
Our fight for freedom and the human condition that President Bush keeps emphasizing
in his speeches and interviews has to begin at home. That's where the process
has to start.
Dr. Douglass is a national security affairs analyst and author. His latest
book, Betrayed: America's Missing POWs, is available through book stores (ISBN
1-4033-0131-X) or from the publisher at www.1stbooks.com/bookview/9840 on
the Internet or toll free by phone at 1-888-280-7715.
[i] Sources can be found in Betrayed: The Story of Missing American
POWs by Joseph D. Douglass Jr.
[ii] "Reagan Admitted Hundreds of POWs Left Behind," NewsMax.com,
September 2002, p. 50.
[iii] This is amply documented in the works identified in note 5 below.
[iv] Quoting a Pakistani paper, a Russian paper reports that the number of
Americans missing from the war in Afghanistan has just increased from 40 to
45 following the recent capture of five more American soldiers by the guerrillas.
[v] For a start, see Missing In Action: Trail of Deceit by Larry J. O'Daniel,
"Robert Garwood Says Vietnam Didn't Return Some American POWs" by
Bill Paul in Wall Street Journal, 60 Minutes, "Dead or Alive" produced
by Monica Jensen-Stevenson, We Can Keep You Forever produced by Ted Landreth,
A Chain of Prisoners: From Yalta to Vietnam by John M. G. Brown and Thomas
G. Ashworth, Kiss the Boys Goodbye: How the United States Betrayed Its Own
POWs in Vietnam by Monica Jensen-Stevenson and William Stevenson, An Examination
of U.S. Policy Toward POW/MIAs by Foreign Relations Republican Staff, The
Bamboo Cage: The Full Story of the American Servicemen still held hostage
in South-East Asia by Nigel Cawthorne, After the Hero's Welcome: A POW Wife's
Story of the Battle Against a New Enemy by Dorothy McDaniel, Missing in Action:
The Soviet Connection produced by Ted Landreth, Americans Abandoned produced
by Red McDaniel, Numerous Newsday articles by Sydney H. Schanberg, Soldiers
of Misfortune: Washington's Secret Betrayal of American POWs in the Soviet
Union by James D. Sanders, Mark A. Sauter, and Cort Kirkwood, Moscow Bound:
Policy, Politics and the POW/MIA Dilemma by John M. G. Brown, The Men We Left
Behind: Henry Kissinger, the Politics of Deceit and the Tragic Fate of POWs
After the Vietnam War by Mark Sauter and Jim Sanders, Last Seen Alive: The
Search for Missing POWs from the Korean War by Laurence Jolidon, Left Behind
and One Returned radio interview tapes produced by Dr. Stanley Monteith, The
Medusa File by Craig Roberts, Leading the Way and Everything We Had by Al
Santoli, Why Didn't You Get Me Out by Frank Anton, Spite House: The Last Secret
of the War in Vietnam by Monika Jensen-Stevenson, Code-Name Bright Light George
J. Veith,: One Day Too Long: Top Secret Site 85 and the Bombing of North Vietnam
by Timothy N. Castle, Trails of Deceit by Larry O'Daniel, Korean Atrocity:
Forgotten War Crimes by Philip D. Chinnery, Left Behind and One Returned radio
interview tapes produced by Dr. Stanley Monteith, and Betrayed by Joseph D.
Douglass, Jr.
© 2002 Joseph D. Douglass, Jr.
December 18, 2002
Joseph D. Douglass, Jr., Ph.D., is a defense analyst, author of The Soviet
Theater Nuclear Offensive and co-author of CBW: The Poor Mans Atomic
Bomb and America the Vulnerable: The Threat of Chemical and Biological Warfare.
His most recent books are Red Cocaine: The Drugging of America and Betrayed:
The Story of Americas Missing POWs.
Copyright © 1997-2002 James J. Puplava Financial Sense
is a Registered Trademark
P. O. Box 1269 Poway, CA 92074 USA 858.486.3939"
DISCLAIMER:
The content of this message is the sole responsibility of the originator.
Posting of this message to the AII POW-MIA Archives© list does not show
AII POW-MIA endorsement. It is provided so you may make an informed decision.
AIIPOWMIAI is not associated in any capacity with any United States Government
agency or entity, nor with any non-governmental organization.
COPYRIGHT NOTICE: In accordance with Title 17 U. S. C. Section 107, any copyrighted
work in this message is distributed under fair use without profit or payment
to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information
for nonprofit research and educational purposes only. [Ref. http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
]