The Spotlight interview with the author, Douglas Bazata, was a real hit for the paper. He swoe to all of it, nothing was or is in Washington DC that does not have the oddest interpretration.
Reprinted from The SPOTLIGHT, October 22, 1979
BY THE SPOTLIGHT STAFF: Douglas Bazata is not the type of man you would usually associate with murder plots. A pleasant, witty and charming gentleman when on his good behavior, his career displays the epitome of the professional intelligence agent whose dedication to the cause he fights for is far greater than the rewards offered.
Bazata began his career in U.S. intelligence in 1926 at the age of 15 and since that time has acquired three or four lifetimes of experience.
He has parachuted and fought behind enemy lines, been wounded by enemy fire eight times (not all of it from a recognized enemy), learned to survive under very harrowing circumstances and been involved in many activities that would provide grist for James Bond.
Now willing to tell the truth about some of the hidden side of recent his-tory, Bazata was interviewed in The SPOTLIGHT’s offices on October 2 about the death of Gen. George S. Patton. Asked why, after all these years, he was finally willing to tell the truth about this matter, Bazata said that he was 69 years old, in poor health and wanted the American people to know the truth.
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