 card number five, William Casey. Mr. Sunflower, I believe. William Casey. Is that it? Is this the face on card? Is it the sunflower from card number one? We see, we see. We see, we see. William Casey. Card number five. Let's focus on this. A little chubby cheeks. CIA director. No, no, it's not the sunflower guy. CIA director. William Casey. Card number five. William Casey, the architect of the Contra War was a shoe dealer in securities who by 1971 had risen through the ranks of Wall Street lawyers to become the chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission. Casey's money and connections helped propel Ronald Reagan, who campaign he managed in 1980, to the White House. C card number 36. Made director of the Central Intelligence Agency, Casey lost no time in implementing the Reagan doctrine, the rollback of communism. In March 1981, President Ronald Reagan authorized $19 million for covert CIA activities against Nicaragua. For the next three years, Casey and his overseer of Central American operations, Duan Duy Calrige ran the Contra War. Casey approved Calrige's plans to mine Nicaraguan harbors and to distribute in an assassination manual. The discovery of these covert actions led to the Boland amendments by which Congress cut off military aid to the Contras. Casey evaded Congress's intent with Operation Elephant Herd, in which the Pentagon provided the CIA with $12 million in surplus military equipment. It was Casey who suggested to Oliver North, C card number 13, that he turn to Richard Secord and the Enterprise for help in 1984, C card number 19 and 20. William Casey was stricken with a seizure the day before he was scheduled to testify before the Senate Intelligence Committee. He died of a brain tumor several months later without having revealed any secrets. Casey.