Frank Camper

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Joseph Franklin Camper Jr (born 1946) is a former soldier, self-described mercenary, author, and owner of a paramilitary training camp near the Black Warrior River in western Jefferson County that has been linked to terrorism.

Camper was deployed to Viet Nam in 1965 and served with the 4th Infantry Division's Long Range Reconnaissance Patrol (LRRP) during the Vietnam War. Afterward he worked as a mercenary, and possibly as a covert agent. He claims to have infiltrated leftist groups on behalf of the FBI, including a stint posing as a military trainer for the Alabama Black Liberation Front. He also claimed to have trained local forces in Saudi Arabia and Panama, and to have carried out covert operations in El Salvador and Guatemala. For at least some time in 1979 he was officially employed as a mechanic by Saudi Arabian Airlines.

By 1980 Camper and his wife, Mavis were residing in Dolomite. That year Camper began operating a "Recondo" (reconnaissance/commando) training program, which he called "The Mercenary School" with Robert Lisenby in South Florida. He said he was motivated, in part, by fear of a Communist threat to the United States from Mexico, and with frustration over what he perceived as deficiencies in U.S. military training. He advertised the program in Soldier of Fortune magazine. In March 1981 Camper, Lisenby and a group of armed students in camouflage were arrested on the Hollinswood ranch in Citrus County, two miles from the Crystal River Nuclear Power Plant during an exercise. They were charged with trespassing and fined. Camper was held overnight and returned to Alabama. In 1981 he testified against Lisenby, whom he had accompanied to Miami in an alleged murder-for-hire scheme involving rival drug gang leaders.

Camper soon relocated the recondo program to 77-acres of land he leased in western Jefferson County and also opened a gun store in Hueytown. He claimed the bunker attracted people from all walks of life who were interested in learning survival and fighting skills. The cost for a two-week course was $350. He applied for recognition as a private school from the Alabama Department of Education, but was rejected.

Some individuals who sought training from Camper have been involved, or alleged to be involved, in a range of criminal and terrorist activities. Four Sikh extremists trained there in 1985 and were suspected of involvement in the downing of Air India Flight 182 over Ireland in 1985, killing 329 people, and in a failed plot to assassinate Indian prime minister Rajiv Gandhi. Another group of Merc School graduates, associated with Louisiana KKK leader David Duke, were arrested in New Orleans in April 1981 before they embarked on an alleged plot to overthrow the Dominican government.

Camper claimed his training program was strictly practical and non-political. Critics have labeled him a "right wing redneck" and characterized his Merc School as an "extended paintball game". He tipped off federal officials to a plot to smuggle weapons into Nigeria and testified against the defendants at trial. He also claims to have assisted the FBI in the capture of the Sikh conspirators in New Orleans before Gandhi's arrival.

Camper is also a prolific author, having published several pulp novels, as well as training manuals and non-fiction accounts of his activities.

On May 21, 1986 Camper was arrested at his home in Hueytown for aiding two California women in a plot to plant bombs in the cars of disgruntled employees at a school they operated. Camper was convicted and sentenced to serve 14 years in prison, while his associates William Hedgcorth, Paul Johnson and James Cuneo received sentences ranging from 5 years to 18 months. Camper's then-girlfriend, Lee Ann Faulk, was also charged with conspiracy, but was acquitted at trial.

Camper's arrest gave Alabama Attorney General Charles Graddick just cause to shut down the school.

Camper was assaulted at Leavenworth State Prison in 1987 and injured by scalding water. His attorney, [[Bill DelGrusso], claimed that the assault was motivated by CBS "60 Minutes" segment on him that depicted him as a government informer.

In July 1988 Camper testified in a public hearing before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, during which some details of his cooperation with the FBI were confirmed. One of the charges against him was reversed on appeal and he was released in December 1991 after serving 5 1/2 years. He returned to Birmingham with his wife and became involved in computer sales, opening a shop named ABC Computers.


Publications

  • Camper, Frank (1979) The Mission. Manor Books. ISBN 0532172434
  • Camper, Frank (1980) Sandcastles. Manor Books. ISBN 0532231325
  • Camper, Frank (1986) Mercenary Operations Manual. Desert Publications. ISBN ISBN 0879472413
  • Camper, Frank (1988) L.R.R.P.: The Professional. Dell Books. ISBN 0440200091
  • Camper, Frank (1989) MERC: The Professional. Dell Books. ISBN 0440202159
  • Camper, Frank (1989) Special Operations. Dell Books. ISBN 044020302
  • Camper, Frank (1990) The Mercenary. Japan: Namiki Shobo ISBN 4890630112
  • Camper, Frank (1990) Long Range Recon Patrol. Japan: Namiki Shobo ISBN 4890630139
  • Camper, Frank (1991) Covert Operations. Japan: Ashai Sonarama ISBN 4257033045
  • Camper, Frank (1991) Special Operations Group. Japan: Ashai Sonarama ISBN 4257033258
  • Camper, Frank (1992) Shamal. Japan: Ashai Sonarama ISBN 425703338X
  • Camper, Frank (1993) High Seas Security. Loompanics Inc. ISBN 1559501022
  • Camper, Frank (1994) Live to Spend It: A Mercenary Guide for the 90s Delta Press. ISBN 0879470720
  • Camper, Frank (1997) The MK/Ultra Secret. CS Publishing. ISBN 1889149020
  • Camper, Frank (1999) Mindbenders. Zinn Communications. ISBN 9780935016659

References