Gary Webb Remembered
Gary Webb, the enterprising investigative journalist who, in 1996, wrote the “Dark Alliance” series for the San Jose Mercury News alleging that links between the CIA and the Nicaraguan contra army helped fuel the crack cocaine epidemic in Los Angeles, has committed suicide.
On Friday he was found dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound to his head in his Sacramento home. Webb was only 49.
I met and interviewed Webb several times and I was deeply pained to hear the bad news.
Webb who had been black-balled by the mainstream press after his series appeared had fallen upon hard times.
Indeed, while his physical suicide took place this week, Gary Webb’s professional life was killed off by his colleagues in the MSM shortly after his controversial series was published. The Washington Post, the New York Times and most notably the Los Angeles Times ganged up on Webb and spent extraordinary resources to discredit him and knock down his story. If these papers routinely submitted our elected officials to the sort of harsh scrutiny reserved for fellow reporter Webb, this world would be a better place.
Webb’s lynching was facilitated by his own editors who refused to stand by him and publicly cast doubt on the same stories they had vetted only recently before.
No question that Webb had over-reached in some of his conclusions and had relied too much on less than reliable sources. But the gist of his story, that the CIA was willing to get in bed with drug traffickers to bolster the Nicaraguan contras was indisputably true.
The L.A. Times went into cold panic when Webb’s story came out in 1996, fearing it has been scooped in its own backyard by a second-rate paper in the Bay Area. Much to its discredit, the Times did nothing to advance Webb’s story with whatever proper course corrections. Instead, it published a lengthy trashing of Webb — led by reporter Doyle McManus. For his take-down, McManus relied heavily — are you ready?— on CIA sources to prove that the CIA would never, I repeat never, stoop to dealing with dealers.
It was a shameful moment of self-serving arrogance displayed by the Times.
And now, even in Webb’s death, the Times obit is something less than charitable. . Webb’s alleged errors are emphasized rather than his courage and his gumption to take on a crucial story that the rest of the media — the Times included””abandoned after the initial drugs-for-guns revelations of Iran-Contra.
Webb, a humble guy from a California conservative military family, never fully recovered from the gang-banging dished out by his pin-striped Establishment Media colleagues. His paper downgraded him to a local beat and he soon quit. When he published a Dark Alliance book a few years later, it was barely reviewed. Webb worked for a stint as an investigator for the California legislature but had spent the last few years scrambling to recover some sort of journalism career””but to little avail.
I’m preparing a longer and more detailed remembrance of Webb for later this week which I will publish in the L.A. Weekly.
Webb’s loss is a tragedy for the family he leaves behind as well as for the increasingly troubled profession of journalism.

December 12th, 2004 at 10:36 pm
One more hard phenomenon for the purveyors of the “liberal-left-wing media” to explain to us.
This has been a bad year of suicides, first Iris Chang and now this.
December 12th, 2004 at 11:07 pm
I’m very sorry to hear about Gary Webb. It’s at least a blessing that you’re going to be doing an obit.
December 13th, 2004 at 12:34 am
Nice obit, Marc. What a sad story.
Steve, a man is dead. Show some class, willya? Try to get off your hobbyhorse for just ONE thread.
December 13th, 2004 at 4:56 am
As a mental health professional I have worked with many, many family members who are left to deal with the results of a suicide. While it is true that a person’s loss of will to live is a tragedy, it is equally devestating to the family. Often, when one is despondent they think their family will be better off without them, that is never the case.
That Mr. Webb was so despondent he took his own life is a tragedy for his family and those that knew and loved him, it is a tragedy for the mental health profession that couldn’t reach out to him, and it is a tragedy because of the people pushing on him that allowed him to reach the conclusion that he was better off dead.
Marc, thanks for bringing this to our attention and for staying on it.
December 13th, 2004 at 6:20 am
No hobbyhorse Michael, simply a comment on how Webb’s career was an interesting challenge to a weak ‘theory’ that many out there have about the media. Sorry your disagreements with my views led you to see it otherwise.
December 13th, 2004 at 8:05 am
Good piece Marc. This is indeed a tragedy.
Michael, far be it for me to defend Steve with whom I often disagree, but I didn’t really find anything wrong in his comments. It echoed a couple of Marc’s comments and frankly, when you compare to the schadenfreude fest that the likes of Glenn Reynolds engaged in after the terrorist murder of Sérgio Vieira de Mello and Arthur Helton in Iraq last year, it was pretty mild.
December 13th, 2004 at 8:18 am
“An American was murdered by an Iraqi because he “looked Jewish” and Professor Juan Cole (perhaps the most over-rated blogger in the world) blames, wait for it, Israel!” Michael Totten
A man is dead, Michael. Show some class. Get off your hobby horse !
December 13th, 2004 at 9:35 am
Ever since I first started reading this weblog back during the campaign, this is the first posting by Mr. Cooper (hopefully no relation to D.B.) that I take strong exception to. I read Webb’s stuff on the Dark Alliance website that included both the original series and additional material and was quite frankly unimpressed. It was just a lot of sound and fury signifying nothing. In Webb’s dark and stormy nightmare world, there was very little actual evidence that the CIA was engaged in drug smuggling.
Having said that, I’m open to the idea that the U.S. Government is not the most honest organization and that the CIA in particular is prone to corruption. However, you need hard evidence and just because Webb came from a “conservative military family” does not mean that neither he or his editors are immune from the temptations of the Almighty Pulitzer.
Its true that the L.A. Times is an awful newspaper. However, just because the LAT denounces it, does not necessarily mean that either the deunuciation or the motives behind it are faulty.
Finally, if Marc Cooper or anyone else here wants to read a really good book about very real corruption involving drug smuggling with very possible CIA connections, then get yourselves a copy of The Boys on the Tracks by Mara Leveritt.
December 13th, 2004 at 9:38 am
Add to anonymous’ thoughts, the gloating across the board conservative and liberal alike when Arafat died…Ya’d have thought I was gloating about Webb’s tragic choice to kill himself.
December 13th, 2004 at 9:48 am
I’ve long heard of Webb’s allegations but never really understood the core of them. If anyone can provide a) the gist of what he charged the CIA with and b) the gist of what the rebuttle was I’d be interested in seeing it. Thanks.
December 13th, 2004 at 10:25 am
I’m sure someone else can post a more complete take on Webb’s allegations, but the core of it was that CIA operatives were very comfortable (knowingly) funding operatives who were deeply involved in the cocaine trade, and that some of that money (buckets full) — and a blind eye — helped those drug operators to import cocaine.
Webb was eviscerated for not providing proof that “the CIA was dealing drugs” which, as I recall, was never his actual claim. Although some say there were some over-reaching conclusions in his work, what was mostly attacked and “disproved” was a charge that he never made.
The fury of the well-orchestrated media backlash was awesome — and largley based on anon CIA sources — while his reporting was largely accurate.
Very sad.
December 13th, 2004 at 2:01 pm
Very, very sad. Because a person’s tragic death overrides my feelings about treatment by the media, I’ll just limit my comments and say that I’m sorry for the emptiness or hurt that he must have felt.
I’m very sorry for the family. I’m also sorry for you, Marc, as you knew him. Webb deserved better than reaching such a low point that no one could save him.
Maybe there’s a lesson in this to either not hurt others or maybe to extend a hand. I just hope that those who need the lesson will know it.
December 13th, 2004 at 2:30 pm
Robert Parry on Gary Webb…
http://www.consortiumnews.com/2004/121304.html
December 13th, 2004 at 2:51 pm
Almost any suicide is a tragedy, and this is one. Not having read his material or known him, I won’t otherwise comment on his death.
The side thread on CIA/narcos kicks off some related issue.
Right now, Afghanistan is producing huge amounts of opium/heroin. It always has.
We have a situation where if we let the drug war set our policy, we destroy all the social and geopolitical progress we have made there, as the place would rapidly return to worst-case warlordism and then probably the Taliban would regain power if we tried to eradicate the trade.
So at the very moment, the CIA is working with people who are supplying, ultimately, much of the heroin in Europe and to a lesser extent in the US. And I’m glad they are doing it, because the alternative is worse.
Note also that after the rules from the Clinton administration on dealing with shady characters, usingthese folks by the CIA became bureaucratically impossible (technically possible, but only a fool would try). That meant a potential significant loss of intelligence on happenings in Afghanistan at a very critical time.
I don’t want to say that this is equivalent to the Contra/Cocaine issue nor start an argument on that. Not on a topic about the death of a human being. I just want to point out that sometimes real choices are very hard.
I also am quite uncomfortable with the “war on drugs” but the citizenry wants it with a huge majority. I think the war on drugs is dangerous to our national security by creating totally amoral, rich, powerful and well structured underground operations which can be used by terrorists; also, it complicates our relations with producing countries and often really screws up those countries. Finally, as far as I can tell, it is futile.
As a side not on the Contra-Cocaine affair, I recently went to an interesting speech by Felix Rodriguez on that and other subjects. I wonder where he fits in the pantheoon of villains on that issue.
December 13th, 2004 at 3:15 pm
Very high, John.
December 13th, 2004 at 3:28 pm
Steve Glass and Jayson Blair were protected by their colleagues and superiors while irrefutable evidence they were utter frauds kept mounting, and even in exile they still enjoy a certain celebrity.
The moment that mere allegations were made about Gary Webb’s CIA-contra story, his peers INSTANTLY threw him under the bus.
December 13th, 2004 at 4:02 pm
Excellent point Andrew.
December 13th, 2004 at 5:10 pm
What about Judith Miller? She still has a job for fucks sake.
December 13th, 2004 at 6:16 pm
One question for Marc – why did he get attacked by the MSM?
The story sounded like just the kind of thing they would have loved to use againt Reagan and then Bush I (I don’t remember exactly when it came out).
Most of the MSM is not exactly friendly with CIA covert action folks.
So I don’t understand it.
This is NOT an argument by the way, I’m just curious.
December 13th, 2004 at 9:54 pm
Most of the MSM is, at most, critical of technical violations of norms or laws that the CIA might commit. They have little interest in going much deeper than that. Webb did. He paid a price. The reality of the MSM is it is owned and run by the same class of people that the CIA protects around the world, that they should resent, then, a devestating account of how the CIA did that in a manner that revealed the dirty reality of the CIA is really of no great surprise at all.
And that they should find events like the Scott Peterson trial so much more interesting than such topics is even less of surprising in nature.
December 13th, 2004 at 11:22 pm
I had two theories on that one. First is basically what Steve is saying above: the MSM did not want to confront how deep the lies and double-dealing might go.
Second is that the LA Times did not want to start another riot.
December 14th, 2004 at 3:24 pm
Marc, I think you were being kind in your characterization of the LA Times obituary. It virtually ignored the numerous awards he had received, noted his Pulitzer Prize in about the 14th paragraph, and felt compelled to include a morsel about his being fired from his position on the CA State Assembly oversight committee for not showing up to work. Btw, on the last point, I seriously doubt that Webb, who was an intense worker, would ever be seen as a slacker on the state dole. It is bad journalism, I think, and I know it is seriously heartless to do a hit piece in an obituary of a man who committed suicide.
While I do not know the children, I was friends at one time with Sue Bell and certainly with Webb. There are many things about this event that upset me. Like many who knew a suicide, I think that, well, if I had spoken to him sometime in the last 4 years, maybe I could have….This is pretty silly if not narcissistic, but it’s something one thinks. I have talked to a couple of others who knew him and Sue in their teens and early 20s in Indiana, where we all lived, and even the rightist friend agreed that there was no way in hell that Gary Webb was ever less than 100% honest. I realize that the criticism is that he was not as rigorous in his standard of proof as he should have been, but my feeling is that if you are dealing with shadowy entities like the contra militarists and CIA agents who consult with, direct and, yes, fund such entities secretly, you sometimes have to go with your gut. If the editor doesn’t want to back you, that’s a different matter.
Gary was a different guy. The last time we spoke (at a funeral in Indianapolis we both flew to attend from California for my aunt, his high school guidance counselor and in loco parent), we argued about guns. We all used to go to a place in Southern Indiana and “whale away”, but he retained more of a fondness than I did. He used to say, “I’m with the Greenpeace Liberation Army…we shoot hunters.” He was a fierce, aggressive guy, not the sort of passive-aggressive sort that many journalists are. In my experience Gary Webb was not the kind of guy who was easy to pigeonhole.
Finally, I am finding this difficult. I cannot guess how the family is dealing with it. I feel very bad for them, and I feel bad for a lot of us because it sure feels like the CIA and what you call MSM have defeated yet another challenger.
December 14th, 2004 at 3:47 pm
Michael: Thanks for your passionate and heartfelt rememberance of Gary. I can’t say that he was a friend, but I did meet with him several times and found him to be the genuine article. I’m sorry for your loss as well. He came by the L.A. Weekly back in the Spring and there was some back and forth about the Weekly hiring him… so Im plagued with a bit of the same guilt you are experiencing.
You are absolutely correct about the L.A. Times obit. I reached the same conclusion yesterday and I spent today writing my formal obit for Gary based completely on countering that miserable piece from the Times. I wrote 1500 words on it that are currently being edited. They will be posted Wednesday early evening.
Thanks again for your contribution. MARC
December 15th, 2004 at 10:38 am
Thank you for the nice response. A couple of things I see missing in even the positive internet comments about Gary and his death concern the diversity of the topics of investigate reports and, for people like me commenting on Webb the person, his sense of humor. I suppose if there is one generality one may make about suicides, they are having trouble summoning their sense of humor…so it is not surprising that people meeting him in the last few months or even years (post-97) wouldn’t see it. Still, he was a funny guy and generally sustained sufficient distance from his subject matter to laugh at the scammers and pols and such he skewered.
On the former subject, he won his first awards for his investigations of organized crime in the Kentucky coalfields in his first real job on the Kentucky Post. He later gained greater notice for his investigation into organized crime in Cleveland for the Plain-Dealer. I know we tapped him for a source when my cousins and I were looking to go into the “video jukebox” business in about 80 or 81. I gave him the name of the Cleveland guy we were going to meet, and he told me immediately he was in charge of org. crime supported bingo games, providing the cards. So we weren’t so surprised when a gun was brandished in the negotiating give-and-take that day.
This stuff took a lot of courage to pursue. Think about the Dark Alliance research in its entirety–shadowy Central American rightist militia, the CIA’s shadowiest spooks, and the young gentlemen who conducted the rather free-wheeling drug trade among the Crips, Bloods and their suppliers. No aspect of this story came without serious risk attached. It may be fair to infer that Webb felt that he was living on borrowed time. One can only imagine what it would be like to be married to that, or to be the child of that. And then for the tight coil that Gary was to lose the tautness on a long wide slow spiral down….I am very sad. And I am remembering what a great couple Gary and Sue were. True and enduring childhood sweethearts.
Well, I’ve ruined my morning’s work…hard to get back to the business of writing yet another motion to compel yet another corporate defendant to conform to the rules of civil discovery.
Once when I was suing Willie Brown and the CA Assembly in a sexual harassment and retaliation case, Gary was sort of looking over my shoulder throughout. He told me no lawyer could lose this case. But I did (I swear there is an explanation). I don’t think he ever really respected me as a lawyer so much after that. He was not easy on people and surely not on himself.
December 15th, 2004 at 1:18 pm
It is pathetic that the smear job by “journalists” against Gary Webb continues even after his death. For example, that “fired for not showing up for work” crack was an utter lie. Webb worked in the Office of Constituent Services of Herb Wesson, Speaker of the House. Wesson was term-limited out of office. The new speaker, Fabian Nunez, cleaned house when he took office in February and fired all of Wesson’s staffers in favor of his own staffers loyal to himself. Webb certainly didn’t show up for work — but AFTER he was fired, not BEFORE he was fired!
But then, what can we expect from the same suspects who trashed Webb in the first place other than yet more lies and libels against a good man?
- Badtux the Freedom-loving Penguin
December 15th, 2004 at 3:57 pm
This is pretty much what I figured. It goes without saying that the “Office of Member Services” that answers to the Speaker of the Assembly is a pretty political place. Webb’s job was to investigate abuses in all aspects of state government, including the Assembly. It is reasonable to conclude that an aggressive person in that chair is going to be seen as a threat by a newcomer like Nunez. It might have been more than that. Note that Gary was one of the “typical Americans” that BBC-America followed throughout the 2004 campaign. Webb identified himself as a “nonvoter and responsible anarchist” or something like that. Also contributed a great line from his son watching the debates: “He said they looked like Bert and Ernie…I wish he hadn’t because it was hard to watch after that…”
Can anyone substantiate the reason that Webb was no longer with the OMS? If so, I would like to use such fact to operate on the LA Times.
December 15th, 2004 at 5:17 pm
Bad Tux and Michael: Thanks for great posts that so elevate the level of comments here. Michael, I will try to find out what happened at OMS… I remember reading something somewhere when Gary lost the job. My recollection — and it is only that– is that it was a routine change made by a new speaker.
December 17th, 2004 at 11:46 am
You good folks may wish to play the 2-hour interview with Gary Webb on the Closer Look radio program hosted by Michael Corbin in November 2002.
Gary was an extremely good guest who impressed everyone with the detail and balance of his answers and his Pulizer-winning investigative work for the SJMN and in his book Dark Alliance.
Listen in with RealAudio at:
Hour 1 — http://www.4acloserlook.com/realaudio/112402a-webb.ram
Hour 2 — http://www.4acloserlook.com/realaudio/112402b-webb.ram
It is my understanding that there are now questions about the ruling of “suicide” in Webb’s death, due to the presence of multiple gunshot wounds. Anybody know if there’s truth to this?
December 13th, 2004 at 9:33 am
Weekend notes
Updated through the weekend, newest at the bottom • Mayor Jim Hahn and councilman Bernard Parks both opened their 2005 campaign headquarters on Saturday. Hahn’s (photo provided by his campaign) is on Wilshire in the Miracle Mile, Parks’ on Ma…
December 14th, 2004 at 5:56 pm
More Tomorrow
It’s been a long and tiring day, so I’m going to take it off. I will have my thoughts on Judge Guzmán’s indictment of Pinochet, but I urge you to read Marc Cooper’s
March 12th, 2005 at 6:18 pm
God Help Me, I Don’t Want To Live Any More
This article was originally posted on my old site in December 2004. However, in light of the recent death of Hunter Thompson, and the increasing interest that his suicide caused, I thought it appropriate to re post it. So, here…
September 22nd, 2005 at 5:52 am
Suicide — The Savage God!
I have a good friend in the blogosphere, Kit Jerrel who writes at Euphoric Reality, a political blog from the right, as I am. Recently, a good friend of hers died at his own hand and she is understandably devastated by the news, by the sense of betraya…
September 26th, 2005 at 7:34 pm
Suicide — The Savage God!
I have a good friend in the blogosphere, Kit Jarrell who writes at Euphoric Reality, a political blog from the right, as I am. Recently, a good friend of hers died at his own hand and she is understandably devastated by the news, by the sense of betray…
—
July 23rd, 2006 at 4:33 pm
Descriptions of poker pubs their atmospheressaw
July 24th, 2006 at 4:59 pm
Betting Bettingbaseball handicapping baseball handicappingbaseball picks baseball picks
August 2nd, 2006 at 4:11 pm
sports picks sports picks
sports picks free sports picks free
September 12th, 2006 at 7:13 am
football betting vxq football betting vxq http://winning-football-betting.blogspot.comvxq
August 16th, 2010 at 10:33 pm
cool picxxs