 Card number 19. Richard Secord. USA. Richard Secord. Look at that salute. Let's get that salute nicely focused. Come on, we want your name in there too. We'll get him like this. Card number 19. Retired Air Force Major General Richard Secord. Retired Air Force Major General Richard V. Secord's specialty is aerial logistics. He learned his trade in southern Asia from 1963 to 1968, flying over 285 combat missions. As the air wing commander for the CIA's secret war in Laos, he was in charge of all tactical air operations. In 1983, Secord resigned under a cloud because of his involvement with Thomas Klein's C-Card number 22 and Edwin Wilson, the renegade CIA officer who was convicted of selling arms to Libya. Soon Secord learned teamed up with his old friend Albert Hakim, C-Card number 20, and started the enterprise, which was part business empire, arms deals, and part military and security operations, covert warfare and intelligence. Second began, Secord began working for Oliver North, C-Card number 13, and the National Security Council 1984 at the behest of CIA Director William Casey, C-Card number 5. Casey called the general a man who got things done. Within two years, the enterprise had five airplanes, two pilots, pilots on contract, two airfields, a boat, a stockpile of guns and military equipment, and numerous shell companies and secret bank accounts, all for the purpose of conducting covert military action for the NSC. The enterprise realized the profit of $16,100,000 on the sale of missiles to Ayatollahomeini. Out of this, Secord, Hakim, and Klein's each took an equal share of 2.2 million dollars as their personal cut. In 1988, Secord was indicted for defrauding the U.S. governments. Iran kicks in here with weapons, right? Richard C. Gord. That's a 2.2 million dollar salute right there. Thank you very much, and the planes and the guns and the airfields and the party.