McMartin Preschool Case another Murder?
 
FBI-CIA Ted Gunderson Claims to Fame. In fact he was a Shadow Government Plant to Obstruct Justice.
 
Feb. 12, 2003
From: TunnelReport@aol.com  Jackie McGuley
To:Stew Webb
 
 
I worked closely with Rick Post in the late 80's. Ted Gunderson was mad because I shared research with Rick, he wanted it all for himself.
Rick was murdered in Mexico at a "medical clinic" I am curious if it was Sierra Clinic.(With ties to Ted Gunderson)
 
 
A Case of Foul Play
Private investigator Richard Post disappeared more than three years ago.
Believed dead, he left a confusing trail of deceit and broken hearts. But as
his wild case heads toward federal court, one of his alleged kidnappers
claims he’s still alive. Will the real story ever be known?
By Kevin Cox
 It was a tough spot, but if anyone could talk his way out of it, it was
Richard Carl Post. Two men posing as Mexican cops kidnapped Post in front of
a Tijuana pharmacy on a summer day in 1998. They took him to an abandoned
house and duct-taped him to a chair in a shower stall.
Post was one of San Diego’s most notorious private investigators—52 years
old, tall and thin, with dark hair and eyes. Handsome, in a rugged, manly
sort of way, Post looked like a private investigator. Like Magnum, P.I.,
without the mustache.
“He could talk a broad out of her skivvies in Main Street,” another private
investigator says of Post.
But on this day, one of Post’s former girlfriends allegedly was also one of
his kidnappers. An affidavit filed in the case by an FBI agent identifies her
as Janet Fleming, and describes what happened next.
“She used pliers and squeezed Post’s fingers as a form of torture,” the
affidavit says. “Then one of the other kidnappers took the pliers, and
pinched Post’s fingernails.” Post screamed in pain through the duct tape and
then was allowed to appeal to Fleming.
“Post asked her why she was doing this to him, and was inquiring if it was
because of the other women. Fleming advised that was not the reason, but it
was simply because he had stolen money from her.”
No one has seen Post since then. His body has never been found. Many doubt it
ever will be. One source believes Post was killed “Mexican style” and parted
out like a stolen car. “He was chopped up, and they weren’t worried about
anybody ever find- ing him.”
With no body, police at first considered Post just another missing person.
His family filed the usual report to open a case with San Diego Police. But
they also had some evidence: love letters from Fleming to Post.
“‘I’m just so deeply in love with you ... you’re all I can think of,’” a
source quotes from the letters. “She was really ... obsessed with him,” the
source says. “But she found out that he really wasn’t romancing her. He was
going after her wallet.”
Post’s attorney, Joseph Dicks, did not respond to interview requests.
Those who knew Post say they’re not surprised he disappeared mysteriously.
“He was pretty well known for being a sleaze guy, hanging around with the
wrong crowd,” says a San Diego lawyer. “I just can’t imagine him coming to a
good end anywhere in life.”
Post’s story offers a different view of San Diego, one that doesn’t show up
in the picture postcards. It’s a story of sex, scams and shady characters.
It’s a story with famous and infamous names: Dr. Deepak Chopra, the
world-renowned author and lecturer from La Jolla, and Svetlana Orgorodnikova,
a convicted Russian spy.
While most private investigators work their cases quietly—they’re private
investigators, after all—Post was always drawing attention to himself.
That’s how he met Chopra. Or more accurately, Chopra’s lawyers. In court
documents, they accuse Post of trying to shake down Chopra. They say Post was
behind a sexual harassment lawsuit against Chopra, filed by a woman named
Joyce Weaver.

A Case of Foul Play pg. 2 of 4
In 1995, Post and Weaver “plotted together to fabricate a lawsuit,” court
documents say. That same year, Chopra’s lawyers accused Post of arranging the
theft of confidential legal documents from their law firm. The lawyers
alleged Post was working for one of San Diego’s largest and most prestigious
law firms—Gray, Cary, Ware & Freidenrich—the same firm representing Weaver.
So Chopra went after Gray Cary—along with Post—in February 1997.
The case dragged on for three years, until Chopra dropped it. By then, he had
prevailed against Weaver, the woman who had alleged sexual harassment. “After
deliberating for less than 10 minutes,” according to court documents filed in
that case, “a jury returned a verdict in favor of Dr. Chopra and all his
companies on all of Weaver’s claims.”
The Weaver case was just one lawsuit involving Post. Court files show more
than a dozen civil cases filed against him—including two divorces and a
paternity suit. There were several judgments against him, including one for
more than $22,000. According to documents filed in that case, Post passed off
a reproduction as an original Diego Rivera painting.
The court files also tell his life story. In the 1970s, he was a construction
worker and a deck hand on a sport-fishing boat. One file notes Post was
“claiming that he was in Army intelligence when he was in the Army ... for a
two-year period of time.”
By 1982, Post was sounding like a real spy. “He has frequently eluded [sic]
... that he works for the Central Intelligence Agency,” according to his
first wife.
Years later, Post told another private investigator an incredible story about
working with the CIA—to kidnap the leaders of a Mexican drug cartel. “The
CIA and I are putting together a, ah, thing,” another private investigator
quotes Post as saying, “to pay off the Arellano brothers’ jet pilot. And
we’re gonna get the Arellano brothers and put ’em on the airplane and gas
’em and bring [them] up here to the United States.”
Some people don’t believe any of it. But they’re cautious about saying so.
They’ll talk about Post, but they don’t want their names used. “He was a
wanna-be, a guy who watched too many Bond movies,” a lawyer says. “He wanted
everybody to think he was the big shot, the mystery guy with the heavy
connections. I don’t buy that s--- for a minute.”
For a secret agent, Post’s life was proceeding in a very public way. In a
December 1991 issue of The San Diego Weekly Reader, Post is quoted
extensively in an article about Satanic cults. He even goes hunting for
Satanists in East County—with a 12-gauge shotgun and a Bowie knife—but
doesn’t find any.
That doesn’t stop him from hinting darkly about vast conspiracies of devil
worshipping. “There are some ‘local elected officials’ involved, but he
won’t name them,” the Reader article says.
“‘I have a feeling that no one is doing anything about it,’” the article
quotes Post as saying. “‘I couldn’t turn my back on it.’”
There are some people who literally swear by Post’s sincerity. In a
deposition filed in Chopra’s case, a female witness describes the day she met
Post.
“He entered my world very softly,” she testified. “And all I can remember
from that time period, in talking with him, is that he was like a little
angel who came to my door, because he was just so kind and so real, and
gentle.
“His energy was just so wonderful. I really, really enjoyed his company, and
I don’t know really what we talked about. I had a very stressful day, and he
was like a gift ... of fresh air.”
Women loved Post, and he loved them. But sometimes, he loved more than one at
a time.

A Case of Foul Play pg. 4 of 4
In 1997, Janet Fleming hired Post to investigate employee theft at her
company. According to documents filed in federal court, “Fleming sold ‘black
boxes,’ machines she claimed emitted electromagnetic waves that could cure a
variety of diseases.”
People across the country were buying them. Prices started at $1,400.
Business was so good there were reportedly several offices around San Diego
to handle the packaging and shipping. In six months, one office did more than
$1 million in sales.
Post took advantage of Fleming, a source says. “He saw the nice little dollar
figure in her eyes, and concentrated on romancing her.”
Fleming was a mystery woman, according to sources. She had at least three
different photo IDs, saying she was 5-foot-8 and 135 pounds, or 5-foot-10 and
170.
The photos are all different, too. According to someone who’s seen them,
Fleming is wearing no makeup, then some makeup. Straight brown hair, then
fluffy and curled. The IDs say she was born in 1958, 1959 or 1963. She also
used at least three different names: Janet Fleming, Kimberly Bailey and
Kimberly Davis.
The feds were finding out a lot about Janet Fleming. The Food & Drug
Administration started investigating her business. Fleming and Post started
getting nervous.
“They were both aware the feds were looking at them,” a source says. “They
had planned to shut down the business ... and take the money and go vacation
someplace. They would leave separately, so his disappearance didn’t seem
unusual. He would go first.”
It was August 1998, and Post did go first. But the feds say he didn’t go
voluntarily. Enter John Krueger, Post’s former friend and partner.
Krueger is thin, with dark hair and eyes, like Post. But he was noticeably
shorter and a lot younger, in his early 30s. His large forehead helped give
him a boyish appearance.
But that was the end of the innocence. FBI agents working the case used an
informant to get to Krueger. He pleaded guilty in October 2001 to plotting to
kidnap Post. He cut a deal with the U.S. Attorney’s office in San Diego and
agreed to testify against Fleming.
An affidavit describes the following sequence of events, recorded in a
conversation between Krueger and an informant. Krueger told Fleming that Post
was stealing from her company and that he was having affairs with other
women. Post was in big trouble, and not just with Fleming. She had given Post
$10,000 to give to a man named Humberto Iribe, who is believed to have ties
to organized crime in Mexico. But Iribe never got the money.
Just before Post disappeared, Krueger arranged a meeting at Horton Plaza
between Fleming and Iribe. Then Krueger says he received a voicemail from
Fleming, telling him Post had been kidnapped.
The next day, Krueger went to Mexico, where he saw Fleming and Iribe sitting
at a table in a restaurant, laughing. Krueger says he confronted them, and
Iribe told Krueger that Post would not be hurt.
The FBI used another informant to trick Fleming. That woman is Svetlana
Orgorodnikova, a Russian spy convicted in the explosive espionage case
involving former FBI agent Richard Miller. The FBI wired Orgorodnikova with a
body recorder. Fleming was recorded saying Iribe told her they had to kill
Post because he had seen their faces. When Iribe asked Fleming what she
wanted done with Post, Fleming said, “Do what you have to do.”
 
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A Case of Foul Play pg. 3 of 4
And Fleming allegedly wanted to make more people go away. On December 22,
1999, Fleming met with an undercover FBI agent at a San Diego hotel. She
believed Krueger and others were trying to kill her. Fleming wanted to kill
Krueger and two other men, and gave the undercover agent $10,000 cash.
“All I know is there are three people out to get me, and it’s a survival
contest,” the federal court file quotes Fleming as saying. “I will do
whatever has to be done to survive. I deserve to live. They don’t.” But Fl
eming told the undercover agent Krueger’s death couldn’t look suspicious,
because the feds would quickly blame her. “If there’s a natural way for John
to have an accident ... this is the way to do it,” she said, according to the
court file.
Then Fleming and the undercover agent talked money. “Ten thousand [was] just
a down payment, and he expected to receive $10,000 per body. [She] agreed,”
according to the court file.
The FBI arrested Janet Fleming and John Krueger in April 2000 for the murder
of Rick Post. Humberto Iribe was arrested in Mexico. If Krueger is good
enough on the witness stand, the deal says the feds will ask the judge to
give him no more than 12 years in prison.
Fleming’s murder trial is scheduled to start June 18 in federal court. Her
attorney, Philip Demassa, says Fleming is the victim in this case.
“She thinks this was all set up by Krueger and Post,” Demassa says. “She
doesn’t think anything happened to [Post].”
Demassa says Fleming was selling machines to cure cancer—he calls them
“biofrequency devices.” And he showed San Diego Magazine a videotape with
testimonial after testimonial from people who say the devices cured them of
cancer and other illnesses.
He acknowledges Fleming made millions of dollars by selling the machines.
“Fleming gave $30,000 to $40,000 a month to Post,” Demassa says. “Post and
Krueger started stealing from her.” Fleming told Demassa that Post stole
1,000 of the devices from her—worth $1.4 million.
“It’s not like he’s destitute and disappeared,” Demassa says.
And if Post is dead, there are lots of potential suspects, according to
Demassa. “He’s an amoral guy. I hate to say anything about someone if he’s
not around, but there’s a serious issue about what’s going on.”
A letter from the prosecutor in the case, assistant U.S. Attorney Barbara
Major, may help prove Demassa’s point. Citing uncorroborated FBI evidence,
Major writes that “in 1997, Mexican authorities suspected Richard Post was
extorting Chinese citizens who were seeking illegal immigration into the
U.S., and that he may have co-opted a Mexican intelligence officer in
furtherance of his extortion scheme.
“The FBI also learned that Mexican authorities wanted to talk to Mr. Post
about these activities, and there was a suggestion that violence might be
used during questioning.”
The U.S Attorney’s office declined to comment on the letter or any other
aspect of the case. Krueger’s attorney was unavailable for comment.
Whatever happened to him, Post was playing a dangerous game. In an April 1999
confidential report on Post’s disappearance, the FBI acknowledges that he was
an informant for the feds, using the code name Jim Green. Citing a San Diego
Police investigation, the FBI report says Post “may have fled with between
half a million and $1 million.”
The FBI cut off the relationship with Post, who became just another former
source. “Given the circumstances ... it is recommended this source be
discontinued, and the file be placed in closed status,” the report concludes.
Demassa says the government has so many problems with its case—like using an
informant who’s a convicted Russian spy—that the U.S. Attorney’s office is
ready to deal. “I’ve heard 20 years,” Demassa says. “I think they’re more
comfortable saying she tricked him down there [to Mexico] than she was
involved in the murder.”
But Fleming won’t take the deal, her attorney says. She claims to have
evidence that Post is still alive.
Most believe that’s highly unlikely. Then again, if anyone can come back to
life, it’s Richard Carl Post.
 
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