But the end thing that happened was that I wrote a nice letter, and found out the name of the manager of the club. Because I knew protocol. I knew you can’t go and just really mess everybody up. And I sent a letter saying, “Is this normal?” to the club manager. But I sent copies of the pictures and the letter to the wife of the general commander of the base, and the wife of the Commandant. I was helping the wives. See, I thought in the real world this is what you do.
But what happened was I went home and the wives were meeting there. And I told them what I had done. And Carolyn Millice said, “Oh no, you didn’t do that, did you!? George won’t get promoted!” You know, he was trying to make general. But Louis Buehl had already died. He wouldn’t have made general anyway because of Sue. I had already found out about that. But I didn’t know that at the time. But Charlotte Moore, whose family is better educated, and she’s kind of the leader of the pack because she’s more rational than the rest of the wives, she said, “Kay, thank you very much. We appreciate what you did for us.” And then all the rest of them kind of went along. They are like little puppets too. But then I found out from Brooks West that I was flagged, that General Gray had me marked as a troublemaker.
So after that, no more stories while my husband was drinking. He was having to balance them and me. I think he was challenged by me because he knew that I was a free spirit. He didn’t understand Christ. He didn’t understand what my boundaries are, because he was a little bit intimidated by my sense of freedom and my openness, which comes from a complete understanding of where Christ is in my life. And I follow in his footsteps. But I’m a free spirit because I’m created independently, as we all are.
And my husband never had that ability to be free from the time he was a teenager, and the Saudis were beginning to pile into the Russell House at the Hun School in Princeton, which is the school which my husband was in for four years on scholarship. He never saw his parents in eight years.
Now think about this. His parents were shipped to California -- I believe strategically -- so that they could control his mind. He was too poor to fly out there. I think he did go one time when he was ROTC on a flight that took him forever and a day to get out there. But he had an uncle later on who bought a house in Princeton when he was in college. So he had a little bit of nurturing. And this uncle became his father. And this uncle’s two sons [became his brothers], and the next door neighbor became his wife. He knew he had to marry because of what he had gone through, and I think it was so shameful and so hard on him that he married practically on graduation day from Princeton University, where he had four years in ROTC. And he was in the Cap and Gown Club, which as I mentioned before, is an intelligence football kind of scholarship club.
But what’s interesting is my uncle, who was in intelligence -- Ben Delaney -- went through exactly the same hoops. I was thinking when I met my husband -- and it probably was God in many ways -- I thought, “Isn’t it amazing that Uncle Ben, who was the football quarterback star for Princeton the one year when they won the whole national thing, that he went to the Hun School? His father and mother were both killed, or something happened to them. And I think they were a fairly well to do, prominent family. He was handsome, wonderful, and just a neat man. So he went on scholarship to the Hun. He was in Cap and Gown. He played on the football team. He wasn’t a cheerleader; my husband was a cheerleader. But they were in exactly the same pattern: ROTC scholarship; they left ROTC; they were dependent on the government, on the intelligence community; selling weapons to whatever country -- I know the country. In other words, they were doing work for the JOINT under the table all these years.
[Pastor Strawcutter] And directly under whose instructions were they selling these weapons? Do you know that?
[Kay Griggs] Yeah, well, it’s an Israeli Zionist group in New York.
[Pastor Strawcutter] Mossad?
[Kay Griggs] Well yeah, but everybody thinks “Mossad” like they think “CIA.” CIA is just sort of a bogus thing. It’s really army intelligence that does just about everything. They run a lot of the psychological profiling, which is done at Quantico with the FBI. It’s all a very small group. It’s Harvard professors connected with Tavistock and Dar es Salaam. There’s a sexual perversion group in Vienna, and one in Colorado. I think that little girl was part of that experiment. Jon Benet Ramsey. Her parents are involved in that program.
This wasn't the CIA, he said. The CIA was a showboat civilian agency. These were the professionals, the military, the combined intelligence arms of the United States Army, the United States Navy and the United States Air Force. Together, they formed the largest and most discreet intelligence agency in the world; 57,000 people operating out of Arlington Hall, Virginia, and Bolling Airforce Base, Washington, D.C., on a budget five times bigger than the CIA's. No restrictions, no oversight -- and nobody even heard of it. Why? Because it didn't make mistakes. And because the director reported to the joint chiefs of staff, who didn't tell anybody anything they didn't have to know. And that included the Secretary of Defense.
-- The Trail of the Octopus (EXCERPT), by Donald Goddard with Lester Coleman
[Pastor Strawcutter] Somebody at a high level is protecting them. And it’s the same thing that you are describing about the military. If you’re in the clique, you can get away with murder.
[Kay Griggs] Absolutely. Literally murder. I used to be set up by the State Department. My husband, who had power in the State Department through both Caspar Weinberger and his whole crowd: Caspar Weinberger, George Bush, [William] Colby, [William] Casey, and my husband were in that clique. He was in the Princeton Marine Corps clique. Senator [Chuck] Robb, [John] Warner – they are all marines. Pat Robertson. All 4th marines. I mean, they are all involved in this. They are running everything.
[Pastor Strawcutter] You’re talking about the 700 club Pat Robertson?
[Kay Griggs] Uh huh. There is a power thing there. And it’s all male. It’s all white. They know the murders are all going on. They are surgical. They are strategic. They are political.
But what I was going to tell you is I was used, because I was the most gullible in high school, and I’m very, very spiritual, and I love people. And I was driven to meet all these people from all over the world for some reason. So they would feed me people because they knew I would react. It’s kind of like Monica and Bill: I think they put Monica in there to have something on Bill. That’s my own feeling. Sarah McClendon feels the same way.
[Pastor Strawcutter] And Linda Tripp was there to guide the situation.
[Kay Griggs] Absolutely. Of course. Linda Tripp was Delta Force. Linda Tripp was trained by Carl Stiner, who is in the diary with my husband. Carl Stiner is called a “snake.” And he tried to trip up Schwarzkopf. I mean, he was trying to take the whole Iraqi thing over because they had been baiting, using the Israeli rogues in Turkey, and having little zigzag wars. It’s all to sell weapons. It’s all about weapons sales; it’s all about drugs; it’s all about funny money. And [General Charles C.] Krulak, who is the Commandant of the Marine Corps -- his father is Victor Krulak -- worked with this Russian-Czechoslovakian double agent who worked with [General Alfred M. Gray] Al Gray, who was enlisted at that time, and rose right up to the top, because they were involved with Boucher[sp?] and this whole crowd that was trying to pick fights.
And they were army and navy together: JOINT. And George calls them the members of “the firm.” I’ve also heard “the brotherhood.” They are very close. And it’s a small group, and it’s very hierarchical.
I had Caspar Weinberger’s bodyguard farm me when I was at Sarah McClendon’s.
[Pastor Strawcutter] “Farm” you?
[Kay Griggs] “Farm” – that’s a term where they are doing profiling on me. Women are hard to profile because -- we’re very easy if you understand women, and I think they need more women in human intelligence because we’d solve a lot of these problems like overpopulation, or whatever it is, very quickly. Because we’re the ones who teach the men how to talk, how to communicate; we think on 20 levels at once; we’re very spiritual; we’re very practical, all at the same time. And they make mistakes by pegging women as “crazy” when really they are very anxious to solve problems. They are just very frustrated to see a lot of whacko things going on that don’t need to be going on, but the guys don’t see it.
So with my husband, and so forth, I was used. They profiled me. They knew I loved international people, because I had already demonstrated that. And there was a group of sexual psychologists, psychiatrists from Vienna who came over. I have pictures of them. I was their escort. George was already gone, and I was intrigued that they were still sending me people. There’s a whole range of psychiatrists who studied sexual perversion at Harvard, Yale, Johns Hopkins, and this Colorado group, and Dar es Salaam, where they trained the Black African terrorists. They train them in interrogation. They train the JAGs in interrogation methods and so forth.
And a lot of these guys got their experience in Vietnam. Intentionally, they took these little boys. That’s what they are doing in Bosnia right now. They are training future leaders in perversion.
The British have a school that George was working with in Indonesia for a year. My husband was setting up -- there was already a program in East Timor, a little place there in the mountains, that had been set up by the Australians during World War II. It was involved with Burma and some of the killings that were going on in China and so forth that T. Parker Host, this man who now controls my husband with Bob Edwards.
This is how they got together: I knew T. Parker Host when I was the assistant director of the Virginia Center for World Trade. I was the first woman on the board of the Foreign Commerce Club. I was very involved politically, and I was having a ball. And I met T. Parker Host through someone else. I was a chairman of a board of all these international shippers and brokers. I was just sort of a glorified secretary, public relations person. T. Parker Host was the Finnish consul, and at one time he had been the Norwegian consul, the Icelandic consul. I thought he was a really nice guy, because he was outgoing. He seemed Virginian. I didn’t know that much about him.
But it turns out he has one shipping agency when I meet him in 1985. He knows my husband’s profession instantly, because he brags about being with the Mobs. You see, the Mob runs the Port of Norfolk. I mean -- it’s terrible to say -- the bankers [at the top of the pyramid], and then they have – no, I can’t say that. No. The ports are run by, it’s a homosexual hierarchy. And in Norfolk, it’s Walter Chrysler, Hornthal, you know they have the rich ones [at the top of the pyramid], and then they get the little ones in by introducing them to the big guys. It’s like George met Einstein. Einstein was in that little ring that the Saudis were in. It was very elite. Camus, and Albert Einstein was in that little Princeton ring before he died. George – they partied together.
Anyway, so the Norfolk crowd runs the Port. It’s very organized and so forth. And I knew the person who was running the Maritime Association Shipping Agency. He was a very nice man who was that way. But I didn’t know it. I went out with him. I didn’t like him very much. He’s a very nice person, and completely homosexual. But he liked me, and I thought he was wonderful. He’s a very nice guy. Well his best friend was T. Parker Host. He lived with him for a while.
Well, I didn’t think anything about Parker, because he’d been married and had a couple of sons. And I thought, “Well, this is just a guy who moved away from Newport ___ for some reason and settled in Norfolk. I thought it was unusual he didn’t have any friends. But it wasn’t because of that. It was because Parker had some questionable associations with Mob figures, with assassins. He was in the Burma Special Operations Command. He liked living a dangerous life. And he bragged about it to others. My husband and he gravitated toward one another. And I thought it was wonderful, because my husband didn’t seem to have any friends. So I sort of fixed him up with Parker. Well, Parker is the one who did me in. Parker plotted and it’s a long story, but basically, and this sounds petty, but I wouldn’t go out with him. It was just that he wasn’t my type. He’s boorish; he’s loud; he’s kind of rude.
So what happened is that because my husband is so close to Bush and McFarlane and Scowcroft, and all these guys, Parker started getting in with my husband’s friends and cultivating them. And he goes from having one shipping agency to dotted all over the place. He goes from being a democrat in petty little Virginia politics, and being the Icelandic-Finnish consul, to having big shipping deals going through Iceland and Finland and Norway. My husband is setting up deals in Moss, Norway, and I was the President of the Sister City Association. I was being used, while my husband was setting up shipment places, and transshipment places. I was witnessing all of this. It all came back to me boom, like that.
But Parker, it was so interesting. We had a hearing with my husband the very day George Bush was in town and my husband was in town. My home was broken into while I was in court. Very strategically I was called by a marine colonel named Jack, who is very involved with the Maritime Shipping business, and he knew that I know a lot about that, he called me and invited me as a guest of his to attend the George Bush huge banquet, with John Warner, while my house was being robbed. My car was sabotaged that day. And guess who introduced George Bush? T. Parker Host. Now he made it to the bigtime.
[Pastor Strawcutter] Now Alexander Haig, he rose from nothing to big dog overnight. That’s because he’s in the club.
[Kay Griggs] He’s a friend. And of course he’s in the club. Now how he’s in the club is that Heinz Kissinger -- I have a firsthand story from Bob who was there in Cambodia with Heinz, Henry. His real name is Heinz Kissinger. Now Haig was an army –
[Pastor Strawcutter] So George Bush, I mean, all these people who rise up through the ranks are in the same club. No wonder, you know, I saw a little TV clip one time where a reporter was asking George Bush and others about the Order of the Skull and Bones. All these guys we're shocked that somebody mentioned the term and they just would not discuss it all. And the reporter said, ‘I understand that as part of the oath you don’t discuss it?’ And George just flat out said ‘It's just not to be discussed,’ and that was the end of the subject. I mean, if this really got out that these guys are all inducted because they’ve got some sort of homosexual…
[Kay Griggs] Right, indoctrination or induction. They have to do that. They do that in a coffin. And it's even now coming into the military totally. The chiefs do that. They put them in the coffin. They do the bowling ball trick.
[Pastor Strawcutter] Okay, you've got to explain this. What happens when you get in the coffin? Why do you get in a coffin?
[Kay Griggs] Oh, when you get your eagles -- that's a German thing you know -- it's what the German high command did. And most of them had the boyfriends and stuff, the krups[sp?] and all of that. It is a German thing that they say goes back to Greece. And it's all the male Marine looking men that they do it with, you see. So now the chiefs have to do that. What they do is they get -- George said it's like a zoo -- they get everybody really drunk, and they sometimes call it "dining in." "Shellback" is another time that they do it. Not everybody does it, but the ones who do it, if they're young, they get right up to the top.
[Pastor Strawcutter] Okay, what actually do they do? They've got a coffin, they get inside ...
[Kay Griggs] Anal sex. Oh, that! They put them in the coffin and they do things.
[Pastor Strawcutter] Okay, they perform things on each other?
[Kay Griggs] Yeah, while they're all around there going drunk and ...
[Pastor Strawcutter] I see, so there's a guy in the coffin ...
[Kay Griggs] Yeah, and he's the one who is the ...
[Pastor Strawcutter] ... recipient of all the acts?
[Kay Griggs] Right, right.