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Caleros brother-in-law, Enrique Sanchez, and several other close aides were at the time working for the contra organization in Honduras.
As Calero nursed his anger at Bermudez, he began financing an anti-Bermudez campaign in Tegucigalpa, and his aides began meeting for anti-Bermudez bitterness sessions with Fernando, Tono and Rigoberto.
With Calero and associates paying the bills, the plotters rented a suite at Tegucigalpas Alameda Hotel to set up an informal headquarters and on April 16, hammered out a 5-page manifesto on a borrowed typewriter.
Calero told Rosenfeld that he was "unfamiliar with [Meneses'] reputation" as a drug smuggler and that if he had known anything, he would have reported it to authorities.
When interviewed by the OIG in Nicaragua, Calero told the OIG that he was unaware of any alleged involvement in, or prosecution for, drug trafficking by anyone in the Contra organization during his tenure, aside from allegations of occasional personal use of marijuana by troops who came across it growing in the fields.
Calero told the OIG that he believed that he visited Norwin Meneses' house in San Francisco on one occasion sometime between 1985 and 1987, and that the picture of Meneses, himself, and others might have been taken there.