 Card number four, Adolfo, Adolfo Calero, Adolfo Calero, Cook, Contra Leader, Adolfo Calero, A graduate of Notre Dame and Syracuse Universities and a CIA informant since 1963, Adolfo Calero was manager of Coca-Cola's Managua branch at the time of the Nicaraguan Revolution. He remained in Nicaragua and became a vocal critic of the Sandinistas. In 1982, the CIA asked for Calero's help again. He joined the political directorate of the FDN, C-Card number three, becoming its leader and chief spokesman. The FDN's freedom fighter image was suffering due to his Samo Sistas heritage and Calero who had been part of the middle class opposition to Samozas in the 1970s restored that image. Calero controlled the FDN's bank accounts. When Congress cut off military aid to the Contras, he began working with Oliver North. As the Contras chief fundraiser, he often spoke to privileged private groups like NEPL, C-Card number 15 and WACL, C-Card number 7 and to representatives of foreign governments such as Taiwan and Chile. He met with Enrique Bermudez and other Contra leaders to assess their needs, provided disinformation to North and oversaw the disbursement of money and equipment to the Contras. When charges were made that Calero was enriching himself and other Contra leaders through sweetheart deals, North took over the FDN's bank accounts. Thereafter, Calero's $200,000 a year salary was paid by Richard Secord and Albert Hakim's operation. The enterprise, C-Card number 19 and 20, Calero remains the political leader of FDN up to 1988, that is. C-Card number four, Coca-Cola, Coca-Cola, Coca-Cola, Coca-Cola, now we know Washington Wall Street.