There's Something About Mary: Unmasking a Gun Lobby Mole
Mary McFate was a prominent gun
control activist. Mary Lou Sapone was a freelance spy with an NRA
connection. They are the same person. A Mother Jones investigation.
By James Ridgeway, Daniel Schulman, and David Corn
July 30, 2008
http://www.motherjones.com/news/feature/2008/07/mary-mcfate-sapone-gun-lobby-nra-spy.html
This is the story of two Marys. Both are in their early 60s, heavyset,
with curly reddish hair. But for years they have worked on opposite
ends of the same issues. Mary McFate is an advocate of environmental
causes and a prominent activist within the gun control movement. For
more than a decade, she volunteered for various gun violence prevention
organizations, serving on the boards of anti-gun outfits, helping state
groups coordinate their activities, lobbying in Washington for gun
control legislation, and regularly attending strategy and organizing
meetings.
Mary Lou Sapone, by contrast, is a self-described "research
consultant," who for decades has covertly infiltrated citizens groups
for private security firms hired by corporations that are targeted by
activist campaigns. For some time, Sapone also worked for the National
Rifle Association.
But these two Marys share a lot in common—a Mother Jones
investigation has found that McFate and Sapone are, in fact, the same
person. And this discovery has caused the leaders of gun violence
prevention organizations to conclude that for years they have been
penetrated—at the highest levels—by the NRA or other pro-gun parties.
"It raises the question," says Paul Helmke, the president of the Brady
Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, "of what did she find out and what
did they want her to find out."