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10: The Nugan Hand Bank Affair | Did the CIA influence Australian elections?

4/28/202637 min

A man is found dead in his car on a remote New South Wales road in January 1980, a rifle between his legs and a business card in his pocket bearing the name of a former director of the CIA.

Within weeks, his bank — a merchant institution with branches in Chiang Mai, Taipei, Saudi Arabia, and almost nowhere you'd expect an Australian bank to be — had collapsed. Millions were missing. His business partner, a former Green Beret with documented CIA connections, vanished without a trace. And the list of names on the bank's letterhead read less like a board of directors and more like a who's who of American intelligence.

Frank Nugan's death was ruled a suicide. Michael Hand was never found. The money was never recovered. And somehow, despite a royal commission, a congressional inquiry, and decades of investigative journalism, the full story of Nugan Hand Bank has never quite made it into the mainstream. In this episode, Richard Baker and Dr. Nick Coatsworth follow the money — from the heroin fields of the Golden Triangle to the back channels of Cold War geopolitics — and ask whether what collapsed in 1980 was a bank, a front, or something far more deliberate.

- Frank Nugan's death, the scene, the rifle, the business card, and why the suicide ruling has never sat comfortably

- Michael Hand, who he actually was, what the CIA has ever admitted, and how a man simply disappears in 1980

- The branch network, what an Australian merchant bank was doing in the world's most sensitive intelligence hotspots

- The names on the letterhead — Admiral Earl Yates, William Colby, and what their involvement tells us about who this bank was really serving

- The heroin connection, the Golden Triangle, and the long-standing allegation that Nugan Hand was financing covert operations with drug money

- Why Australia's royal commission found what it found, and what it pointedly didn't look for

Some of this is documented. Some remains classified. None of it has ever been fully resolved.

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Join Rich Baker and Dr Nick Coatsworth as they suss it all out.

Contact the show at conspiracycabal@outlook.com.

The Conspiracy Cabal doesn't promote conspiracy theories — we examine them. We search for the kernel of truth in every story, exploring how conspiracies start, why they persist, and what drives people to believe them.

Contact the show at conspiracycabalpod@outlook.com


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Clips

Transcript preview

First 90 seconds
  1. Ross Coulthart· Soundbite0:00

    If you had the opportunity to confront Michael Hand today- Mm ... what would you say to him?

  2. Speaker 1· Guest0:06

    The first thing I'd say is, "Where's my bloody money?" And, uh, then I'd say, "And I'm speaking on behalf of a, a lot of investors who went down the gurgler".

  3. Richard Baker· Host0:20

    Nick, I'm gonna tell you a little story, all right? Ready for bedtime? It's a great story. 4:20 AM in the morning of Sunday, January 27, 1980, police find a man slumped over the steering wheel of his Mercedes Benz on a lonely stretch of road near Lithgow in New South Wales. The 37-year-old had a bullet wound to the head and a military rifle nearby. In his pocket was a business card belonging to a former CIA director. The dead man was lawyer Frank Nugan, and the merchant bank that bore his name, the Nugan Hand Bank, is at the center of an almost unbelievable international conspiracy featuring tax evasion, drug trafficking, bribery, money laundering, an astonishing disappearing act, and alleged links to spy agencies.

  4. Nick Coatsworth· Host1:14

    Welcome, cabalistas. This week on The Conspiracy Cabal, we're taking a dive into what is the mother of Australian scandals, which has so many unanswered questions years later. I'm Dr. Nick Coatsworth, medical doctor and academic.

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