Approved For Release 2001/04/02 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2400500001 -0 .q 7 , Approved For Release 2001/04/02 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2400500001 -0 Approved For Release 2001/04/02 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2400500001 -0 TASKING SHEET SOURCE NO: DATE: 27 JAN 93 SUSPENSE:-27 JAN 93 -1500 hrs- 1. PROJECT NUMBER: 93-153-70 (CONDUCT OF THIS TASK IS OPTIONAL) 2. METHOD/TECHNIQUE: Method of choice. 3. BACKGROUND: of CIA headauarters on 25 Jan 93. 4. ESSENTIAL ELEMENTS OF INFORMATION: 5. COMMENTS: ---- Optional Coordinates: 5501891263386 Approved For Release 2001/04/02 CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2400500001 -0 ---- Determine the target Personality's current location and his immediate surroundings. Approved For Release 2001/04/02 CIA-RDP96-00789ROO240.05 OOT -0/ SESSION INFORMATION A. TARGET DATA: Task/Target No. :93-153 Session No. :01 B. PERSONAL DATA: Source No. :025 Monitor's No. :N/A Beacon/Sender No. :N/A C. SESSION DATA: Date Task Received :27 Jan 93 session Date :27 Jan 93 Start Time :1:00 Stop Time :2:00 Method Used :ERV Aids/Distractions (Pls) :N/A Pro-session Hunches (AVs) :N/A Date Summary Returned :27 Jan 93 D. EVALUATION DATA: viewer's Estimate :N/A Evaluator's Estimate E. SESSION SUMMARY The gunman who killed and wounded people at the CIA headquarters on 25 Jan 93 is a young caucasian male of medium build with dark hair and dark eyes. He is currently in a relationship, possibly of a marital type, with a dark haired female. The gunman lives near CIA headquarters around McLean, Virginia or just over the border into Maryland. He is located in the suburbs near a wooded area and resides on the second floor of a white structure. This man has been hurt in the past and is now war-like in his actions. He is going to tell people around him what he has done and then will be brought to justice. Approved For Release 2001/04/02 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2400500001 -0 Approved For Release 2001/04/02 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2400500001 -0 I . 11-70P )@/" Approved For Release 2001/04/02 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2400500001 -0 Approved For Release 2001104102: CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2400500001-0 SESSION INFORMATION A. TARGET DATA: Task/Target No. :93-153-P Session No. :01 B. PERSONAL DATA: source No. :025 Monitor's No. :N/A Beacon/Sender No. :N/A C. SESSION DATA: Date Task Received :28 Jasn 93 Session Date :28 Jan 93 Start Time :1:00 Stop Time :2:00 Method Used :ERV Aids/Distractions (pis) :N/A Pro-session Hunches (AVs) :N/A Date Summary Returned :28 Jan 93 D. EVALUATION DATA: Viewer's Estimate :N/A Evaluator's Estimate E. SESSION SUMMARY No further criminal action will be taken by this individual. The gunman operates alone and did not have an accomplj/s@ involved in the shooting at CIA. The personal relationship described in my previous report with a dark haired woman is one of a romantic nature. I believe that someone immediately around the gunamn, who knows him and is a contact or a freind, will d@vulge the necessary information needed to apprehend this individual. In other words, someone speaks up or blows the whistle on him and he is located. Approved For Release 2001/04/02 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2400500001-0 Approved For Release 2001/04/02 CIA-RDP96-00789R00240071)0r0P01 -0 TASKING SHEET SOURCE NO: DATE: 28 JAN 93 SUSPENSE: 28 JAN 93 -1500 hrs- 1. PROJECT NUMBER: 93-153-P 2. METHOD/TECHNIQUE: Method of choice. 3. BACKGROUND: Your Session 01 of 27 Jan 93 is available for your review. 4. ESSENTIAL ELEMENTS OF INFORMATION: ---- Determine if the gunman will be involved in any other criminal acts; if so, describe. ---- Describe any person involved in assisting and abetting the gunman. Describe the scope and nature of this assistance. ---- Describe the details and circumstances of the gunman's apprehension, as applicable. ---- Refine any of the preivous tasking, if necessary. 5. COMMENTS: ---- Optional Coordinates: 5501891263386. Approved For Release 2001/04/02 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2400500001 -0 Approved For Release 2001/04/02 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2400500001 -0 4 @;,S W- Approved For Release 2001/04/02 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2400500001 -0 Approved For Release 2001/04/02 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO24005000 0 SESSION 114FORMATIO A. TARGET DATA; Task/Target No. :93-153-P Session No. :01 B. PERSONAL DATA: Source No. :025 Monitor's No. :N/A Beacon/Sender No. :N/A C. SESSION DATA: Date Task Received :4 Feb 93 session Date :4 Feb 93 Start Time :10:00 Stop Time :11:00 Method Used :ERV Aids/Distractions (PIs) :N/A Pre-session Hunches (AVs) :W/A Date Summary Returned :4 Feb 93 D. EVALUATIO14 DATA: Viewer's Estimate :N/A Evaluator's Estimate :N/A E. SESSION SUMMARY The target personality or gunman that killed the two men and injured three others during the 25 Jan 93 shooting outside of the Langley Park entrance to the CIA is not currently involved in any other criminal action. His immediate environment is near the mountains in an open land area with a wooden f ence and a stream near by in Virginia. His near term activities include hunting and fishing while in hiding or in staying under cover. He is currently in a relationship with a woman and is not planning to leave the area for another seven to eight weeks. His relationship to other people will be his demise or downfall because someone is going to speak up about this individual. Approved For Release 2001/04/02 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2400500001 -0 'Approved For Release 2001/04/02 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2400500001 -0 TASKING SHEET SOURCE NO: DATE:-4 FEB 93 SUSPENSE: 4 FEB 93_ -1500 hrs- 1. PROJECT NUMBER: -93-153-P 2. METHOD/TECHNIQUE: Method of choice. 3. BACKGROUND: ---- The target Personality remains the gunman who killed two men and iniured three others during the 25 Jan 93 shooting outside the Langley Park entrance to the CIA. ---- Your sessions of 27 and 28 Jan 93 are available for review upon request. 4. ESSENTIAL ELEMENTS OF INFORMATION: ---- Describe the nature of the- target personality's current and near-term activities. 5. COMMENTS: -Optional coordinates remain: 550189/263386. Approved For Release 2001/04/02 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2400500001 -0 Approved For Release 2001/04/02 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2400500001 -0 96-153-P Review 025 ---- No further criminal action taken by gunman. ---- A friend will divulge necessary info to apprehend him. 049 ---- This incident is associated with the Persian Gulf. 079 ---- The rifle leads to the killer. ---- He may have money to help him travel. May be paid by terrorists. 072 ---- Gunman wore a brown military-type jacket. ---- Drove a brown/yellow station wagon. ---- Also drove a small white truck (for work). Approved For Release 2001/04/02 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2400500001 -0 CPYR 4 f 1"' A' PW02t .@C IV k-ALA 3U( ME HVe tors R Ta Looking f o''r'" a-'M@-rlsman "Weren't Too Many Shots Wasted,'Source Says CPYRGHT - __ - - .-! .. @sa@d,the gunman fired at least 10, with firearms said proficiency with an By Patricia Davis 6d Bill Miller -'rdundS;,` hitting the 'five victims AK-47 type of weapon, a military as Washington Post Staff Writers Fairfax County's chief prosecutor d others investigating last week's ooting outside the CIA's head- arters said yesterday that they lieve the gunman is a skilled From all the evidence available, is was a very efficient gunman," id Commonwealth's Attorney )bert F. Horan Jr. "He certainly as well armed." "It's obvious to those of us in the isiness, there weren't too many ots wasted," said a source close the investigation. Horan declined to discuss any ev- mce in the incident, but sources tims were CIA employees and the ;4 heo 0 gunman may have a grudge against the CIA, they still have no motive for e shootings. "Some people want to say this is a real crazed wacko as op posed to some cold, calculating hit man or someone with a mission against the CIA," Horan said. "Any conclusiod is pure speculation." ho parked a b more rounds, could come through man, w rown compact station wagon behind one the vic- practice or military training. tim's cars, fired shots as he moved Edward Ezell, the firearms cu toward the front of the lineof traffic rator at the National Museum of American History, said it "was pret waiting to enter the complex, then, continued shooting on his way back ty amazing" that the gunman was to his car. able to hit so many people in such a Two men were killed and three short time. others were wounded by what police The gunman's apparent choice of have described as an AK-47 type of only male targets, bypassing at semia - least two women, showed that he utomatic assault rifle short'% had some skill with the weapon, before 8 a.m. as they sat waiting to Ezell said. He added that the events turn left from Dolley Madison Bou- demonstrated some preparation by levard (Route 123) into CIA head- the gunman, rather than a spur-of- quarters, in Langley. Four of the -vic. the-moment shooting. See SHOOTING, D5, Col. 5 However, some gun experts said it doesn't take a lot of expertise to Hillary Clinton consoles victims@ families at CIA service. Page D5 -shoot someone with a rifle from as 42 711@L CPYRGHT close as three feet. "That's point-blank range," said Hayward Long, owner of the Blue Ridge Arsenal, an indoor firing range and gun shop in Chantilly. skill. That weapon is not all that complicated to use." Long and two other area gun shop officials said skill usually is re- quired when shooting an AK-47 type of weapon at a distance. But others noted that the gunman was firing under stressful conditions, in a burry and moving. They sug- gested he might have prepared for the shooting at a firing range. Law enforcement authorities called the owner of Clark Brothers firing range in Warrenton, Va*' last week to ask if anyone matching the gunman's description had practiced with an assault weapon recently The range, about a 90-minute drive' from CIA headquarters, is open to the public. "It does make you perk up and take notice," said Steve Clark, the oy@ner. "The composite picture is pretty much anybody, unfortunate- ly. I'd like nothing better than to turn in somebody like this." Meanwhile, Nicholas Starr, one of the three men wounded in the , . f shooting, was released from Fairfax Hospital yesterday, 1-1 days after he "From all the evidence available, this was a ve@y ient effic gunman. - Robert F. Horan Jr. commonwealth's attorney, a wouna to his upper arm that s( vered the bone, an artery and-@@h, veins. "He certainly has come Mfii P way" said Art Trask, chief of fttfti ma services. He's in "good 8pirit, Fairfax police and FBI ageat@ some teamed in pairs, continife, wade through the more than tips they have received since.@pp shooting. "There are too many,m( tives here," a source said. 1'W61r just following up every phone tall." FBI officials also are analyzingfir gerprints found at the scene on- cartridge casing and one of . the"'ViH tims' cars, sources said. Police continue to investigm whether a 29-year-old man;."'M chael T.. Murray, charged vit spray-painting CIA-related graffi on streets surrounding Vienna?wo involved in the shooting. Accordin to sources, there is no evideric that he is the gunman, Murray said yesterday t0p.! n was not involved in the sho&in v but he acknowledged that he@'.w u the one who painted graffiti, in.0 ing: the words "CIA," "Crime'--a I ,Police," in December and January "It's a criminal infrastructdie have been trying to expose," Mu ray said. "The best way to tab, down a conspiracy is from the edg( out," he said in explaining whr, Approved For Release 2001/04/02: rmW"TPAfM'WZMPM'24009gngf!orecEs arouna v iew The 60-year-old CIA intelligence Staff writer Robert OHarrow Jr. KAN51 GnKuhtswui 900 1 fad 10 Approved For Releas GIA RDP96 00789ROO2400600001 0 CPYRGHT ates in the case ofMirAimal Kansi, who police say killed two men and wounded three others outside the CL4s Langley D headqua@ters: Oct. 2, 1964: Kansi is born in the provincial capital of Quetta, Pakistan. March 3, 1991: He enters the United States through John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York. Feb. 3, 1"2: Kansi applies for asylum in the United States. Feb. IZ The Immigration and Naturalization Service grants Kansi a one- year work permit, Though it was renewable, Karisi never applied for renewal. Jan. 16, 1993: Kansi buys a Beretta .25-caliber semiautomatic pistol, an East German Makarov 9mm semiautomatic pistol and a Colt AR-15 .223-caliber assault rifle at David Condon Guns in Chantilly. Jan. 22: Kansi buys a Chinese-made Norinco AK-47-type assault rifle and ammunition at the Chantilly gun store, trading in the,AR-1 5. Jan. 25. Five people are shot, two fatally, while sitting in cars at a traffic light outside CIA headquarters in Langley. Jan. 26: A man police believe was Kansi flew from Washington to Pakistan Jan. 28- Kansi's roommate, Zahed Mir, reports Kansi missing to Fairfax police. Mir tells police he last saw Kansi on the day of the shootinga Jan. 30. Kansi calls Mir to say that he will not be returning to their Reston apartment and that someone will come for his belongings. Feb. 6: Mir again calls police and tells them he believes Kansi may have been involved in the shootings. Mir's was among about 2,500 tips police received during the investigation. Feb. 8: Police search the Reston apartment. They find an AK-47-type rifle and several other weapons. A jacket and pants fitting witnesses' descriptions of what the gunman wore also are found, Shards of glass are on some of the clothes; car windows were shot out at the CIA. Feb. 9: Authorities announce that ballistics tests show Kansi's AK-47 rifle is the weapon used in the shootings and that Kansi has been charged with capital murder. Feb. 10: Manhunt spreads worldwide for Kansi. Approved For Rel ings, particularly because he seemed so quiet and reserved. "We're shocked," he said. "You picture some kind of animal of a person. This guy is [apparently] the opposite." Police are not sure how long Kansi lived in Reston. His room- mate, Zahed Ahmed Mir, 39, who reported Kansi missing three days after the CIA shootings, has been renting the apartment since Octo- ItA9C, month. denending search warrant, investigators found an Chinese-made AK-47-style rifle under the couch in the apartment Mir and Kansi shared. They also found a suitcase loaded with bullets and 11 magazines for the assault weapon, the affidavit said. Yesterday, law enforcement offi- cials still sought motives in the CIA shootings, focusing on Kansi's na- tive province of Baluchistan, where the dominant tribes have tradition- aH .!Suex mal 01 Paluem t1loij ilea e p, ,PL,zv Plus .'Pat ,s,uU1s!1Ud PJU- -jns p!esgq Aj!i mt1lotm aq Ili Isuivoe sa,?Je1`1 Imp paulaauo@ PaAkalA.1alUt 9@ ,sp. 112'41 SdOllS JaLi !ueJs1@FI se Ila OIL, 91aqJ alaq UT aAll AUVW 'r, -un lvDj1!Iod pi in in each case ;t attick occi, by the federal government, bed the susi splayed her sh st, whether shk Attacker's Gun Said Fin ermfmt einse 2?frr& C ,,Ud For @ e a:[ 0 In SS Found on Car, Shell CasingryRGHT r CPYR@WING, From Al point." Sources said yesterday that the fingerprints will be most useful if .the., are of sufficient quality to use in a computer screening process, if they are indeed those of the gun- man and if the gunman has been arrested for a felony. The FBI has on its computer only the prints of people arrested for felonies. Mil- lions of others exist in paper files, which must be searched by hand. The CIA has planned a memorill serv ce at its headquarters today for @Iansing H. Bennett, 66, of ton, a physician and intelligence analyst, and Frank Darling, 28, of Reston, who worked in covert op- erations. Security was especially tight again yesterday at all en- tranceg to the comple,% Bennett and Darling were in their cars at a stoplight on Dolley Madison Boulevard (Route 123), preparing to turn into the CIA en- trance, when t 'he gunman suddenly emerged from a car and opened fire shortly before 8 a.m. Monday. Two other CIA employees, Nicholas tarr, 60, and Calvin Morgan, 61, were wounded. They continued to ;how improvement at Fairfax Hos- )ital, where their conditions were ipgraded yesterday to fair. The third injured man, Stephen E. Williams, who was treated for .;uperficial wounds and released qonday, works for a CIA contrac- :or. All were stopped at the light. Franklin said police now believe he gunman stopped his car-de- cribed as a dark, medium-sized utomobile-directly behind Ben- ett's Saab in one of the turn lanes. kfter the shooting, witnesses said, ie maneuvered the car past Beii- iett's and continued east on Route 1.23. Then he vanished, leaving be- ind the victims and dozens of wit- esses, many too shocked to recall By Bill Miller and Robert O'Harrow Jr. Washington Post Staff Writers Fingerprints believed to be. those of the gunman who killed two men and wounded three others outside the CIA's Langley headquarters Monday have been discovered on one of the victim's cars and on a shell casing, sources close to the investigation said yesterday. Based on the size of shell casings left at the scene of the bloody rush- hour incident, investigators also have determined that the gun used Monday was one of a few basic models of the AK-47-type assault rifle. Each carries 10 to 30 rounds of ammunition and is available at local gun stores. inve@@zignt;@,rs ha-ve been canvass- ing gun stores throughout the Washington area in hopes that Mon- day's gunman had bought his weap- )n recently, police said. Although many hurdles remain, aw enforcement sources said the ngerprints, if they match those in I 131 computer files, could provide a 'najor break leading them to a sus- ct, or could at least help them rget or eliminate people who are rought in for questioning. Fairfax County police Capt. Da- fid Franklin, head of the depart- nent's Major Crime Division, de- -lined to discuss any findings yes- e.rday. He said there has been no 'f nal analysis" of the evidence. 14, We've reepived a lot of good eads," Franklin said at a news brief- ng. "All of these leads are being nvestigated. I personally feel that e're making progress, but it's a ;low and tedious process." Franklin said that since the inci- tent, police have received more ban 400 calls with information on he incident via a special 24-hour- -day phone line staffed by inves- here are a lot of people we've given. information about," he "I wouldn't characterize any of See SHOOTING, A12, Col. I Police found at least seven shell 5ings near the cars, including at ist one that yielded a fingerprint, urces said. Authorities said the ell would have been touched as it is being loaded into the gun's clip. was not clear I from dch car t e otheAWORM th @dlice found at least seven shell I`Ms"Or 001-0 V VtY 186 Rea "i n "oer p Vin P, sources said. Authorities said the CPYRGHT shell would have been touched as it was being loaded into the gun's clip. It was not clear last night from which car the other fingerprint was -prints can be entered into the FBI's computerized fingerprint laborato- ry, which has prints from more than 1 25 million people arrested by fed- eral, state and local police depart- ments. Leslie J. Wallace, a for the FBI, said the bureau ;11-,o maintains fingerprints of more than 42 million other people, including all military personnel and other fed- eral employees, some police, and workers in places such as banks that must register prints under fed- eral law. The length of time it takes to identify a fingerprint depends greatly on its clarity, Wallace said, adding, "Under ideal conditions, it can take two to three hours, but it could take up to two to three days or even longer," FBI specialists in computerized fingerprinting were not available to "@,')hin h1mv the comptztai- LIngerprims. But other specialists said the computer reads lines, loops and other fingerprint features and selects potential matches that then must be reviewed visually by tab- oratory analysts. The computer can review millions of fingerprints and select 25 candidates in seconds. One private consultant said that even partial prints or smudges, al- though less desirable, can be en- hanced and run through computers - in a search for a match. Law enforcement sources said the dimensions of the shell casings led them to believe that the gunman probably used one of several basic kinds of semiautomatic military'- style firearms: an SKS, a gas-oper- Those who track cases of rna@ ated rifle with 10 rounds, or a vari- lence said the choice of firearn ation of the AK-47, the most widely vlo used assault rifle in the world, such suggested that Monday's assault w@ as the AKM. Both the AK-47 and well planne.d and that the gunman h? the AKM carry 30-round maga_ a strong mission-possibly, one sall zines. Such weapons have been a war with the CIA. In addition, ti used in other recent multiple shoot- fact that bullets were fired metho@ ings across the nation. icalty into car windows, rather th@ Authorities said they plan to sprayed indiscriminately, indicati: show pictures of the guns to wit- that he knew how to use an assau weapon, they said. nesses in the CIA shooting in hopes ,Mass murderers are looking I of p,inpointing the kind of weapon n un;11,1 glid Iqmp- Ak CPYRGHT -RDP,96-00789ROO Release 2001/04/&' CIA -2 Fox', a criminologist from Northeas ern University. "The goal is to 9, revenge. The more people who ai killed, the sweeter the reveng Nothing is more efficient than a fir rooilolarly a semiautomati came DreDared for battle Approved For Release 200 CPYJRPWHTT 0001-0 AK-47 STYLE ASSAULT RIFLES .1 f a q ore the 1989 U.S. ban on importing Beertain assault weapons, U.S. companies AK47 brought more than 130,000 AK-47 assault rifles and sitnilar weapons into the country each year, according to lite Nationalelssociation oj' Federally Licensed Firearms Dealers. Gun deakrs still may legally sell the weapons. AK-47 AKM SKS AMMUNITION: 7.62mm 7.62mm 7.62mm CAPACITY: 30 munds 30 rounds 10 rounds WEIGHT: 2 pounds 1.4 pounds 1.7 pounds LENGTH: 27.5134.2* inches34.5 inches 40.2 inches MUZZLE VELOCITY:7 10 meters/second715 meters/second735 meters/second FIRING RATE- 600 rounds/minute600 roundstminute600 rounds/minute EFFECTIVE RANGE:300 meters 300 meters 400 metefs MANUFACTURER: Not in productionIn production Obsolete ~ The AK-47 is a compact weapon capable of selective fire. It is supplied in two vc_-rsions, one wit@ a rigid butt and one with a double-strut folding metal butt-stock. ~ The AKM is a modernized and improved version of the AK-47. It is lighter and has a greater muzzle veloc4. When supplied with a folding butt- stock, it is the AKMS. ~ The SKS is a gas-operated rifle of conventional design. This weapon was replaced in military service by the AK-47. NOTE: The AK47 and variatiom have been made in China (type 56), Finland (MGO and M62), Germany (MM, MMS), Hungary, North Korea (type 58), Poland (PMK), Romania and Yugoslavia MO and IM70A). stock folded/stock unfolded SOURCES: XRT Graphics, Jan&s Infantry Weapons M WASHNGMN POST Approved For Release 2001/04/02 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2400500001 -0 *4 W 1 Against Langley Victim Odds., Trauma Team Saved Life, Limb of @)tmr unde1wrair-nuarI7.12-su11ere17:ft-6-spJta1cially with subitantial VICTM8, Moarb- workers put out NO I From 134.,@@, of surgery at,- Fairfaxan- urgent caH MondayGens said. 'If. Hospital -:@bn morning for it's true (St6r] ' 4 suffer"ed at lea Monday. Mor operat- es his entire blood One donors, pecWly those volume, @ organ gan was in the with his men N ) f More i 0-negative blood typele r for exam re min tes migbt h; A t arm. . m @ few @pur. Starr,.)yhQ. . 0, 6 und to his le con-, . u hot wo ing r99 ? ,. ' , ' p or to., times the, m . -.r authorities said ,250 oeople-L@Lfour eant'death." th@ is_ l4gh. @,sent6dto' allov4ng - , @L 1, (D his d6ct di f be": " , - I I .% usual donor pool-showed tMeled .'underwent additionalup, cre- While. praising up s his case the ef orIE4 his cus arm andlodged . , ating a two@hour backuptrauma staff, Trask s his surgery yesterday afternoonat the said them ear. to re-@ Anoth- od Donor Services office Bl dress his wound, Trask. nothing particularly e- ;ke said. o unusuaPRor two er 200 people gave ' men blood Tuesday. were wounded by a gmsman When he recovers, Starran assistant profes- roic in their efforts S who will David Gens to save,@bta fired at close range as @i*4AW have some impairment , life. M sat in his left sor of surgery at "This ha s in the University of ens in trauma WwRen their r cars waiting for a :@;,l arm because one of Maryland's Shock Traumapp I'st Q& its three major Center, almost every day,"i to nerves was severed severely in- he said. ' change and another to savin on id the ke Dolley Madison Two men @ Boevard (Route 123) . nerve is not working, sa that they're usuallyingat at according to g not wo* the y scene, jured people is to while get them to a a third mo- 0 the doctor. good trauma facility the CIA. And they're ot t quickly. usuak i was treated " at CD Arlington Hos- 0 1 - blood loss Starr "Minutes are important,"shot with an AK-47. p, Because of the espe- Q and released. Mmvy-critical of the a@*m 6.64PCapital trustees for appar- Cp a;P a ! as d s i ding by while the compa- in' w w 0 downhilb-The report ac- ip dw d b 1@b trustees of *n-6i taking use !s tri en AM seriously, and of becom- co aned conOtned about the company's F,e djt@ nditio only after they realized n ly 10; 0 y co -I be exposed to legal lia- lity. 6 1 Yeste@@Y, former board chair- an Choiles P. Duvall, current I * Peter J. O'Malley and rr6nt 'ef Executive Benjamin Gi admitted that mistakes the trustees did not Q Q 731 sional collage that was given to Gamble upon his xetirement, though he said he personally, rather than Blue,Cross, paid about $2,800 for a x-e6rement dinner for Gamble. Gi@liani said he has "made thou- sands of decisions@ in his tenure at the company, but "none of them embarrassed me more" than autho@' rizing Payment. for -the collage. Duvall, who left the board Jan. i, called the collage, which featured images of golf clubs, passports and other travel-related items, "a met- aphor for the corporate culture of senior management under Mr. Gamble." Therels@good news for health-conscious cookie o 0 consumers in Wednesday's Post Food section. ty, Q a 731 Q %Uj1S0`J VIU4 U0 0 suoilts ROT" 1091110 n ea* 4 a seq 1 u punj PTIUIIUO@ uouj XIs -japun paV` =Inj J, dn 211IM13 sql )o @ul l @a . e .11pnu juapugdap@. q sa u ST MS PTES 113pap '00Z PaletuP sl&W Ino)UPA aIll -8 autalap p .IBIS supnol SAueduiO3 000 exaj .io4uw 0:) 1 jqnop Olul lvaua5 , ;axp ul iouapuiloo S! lop W&W e juads OSIE XaPPM mipgnsaAul 01 9@W sainumi. St 1noq uoJ QTT"17" *4 (Nil