Category: John Fitzgerald Kennedy

Reviews of books treating the assassination of John F. Kennedy, its historical and political context and aftermath, and the investigations conducted.

  • Paris Flammonde, Assassination of America: The Kennedy Coups d’Etat


    The used book scalpers must be a little distraught with the release of Paris Flammonde’s The Kennedy Coups d’ Etat, a mammoth revision of Flammonde’s earlier classic, The Kennedy Conspiracy (Meredith Press: New York, 1969). For years, used copies of that long out-of-print volume were being hawked by book resellers for hundreds of dollars. Now with the release of a revised and massively expanded Kennedy Conspiracy the prices for the earlier work could begin to descend from those stratospheric heights.

    That earlier tome was subtitled “An Uncommissioned Report on the Jim Garrison Investigation,” and indeed was the only contemporary study to portray New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison and his assassination inquiry in any kind of positive, objective light. However, calling Flammonde’s newest work a revision of that previous report is hardly doing it justice. Rather, it is an epic three-volume expansion (a fourth volume consisting entirely of an index is on the horizon) modifying his earlier book while collecting new material on the JFK and RFK assassinations to add context. Indeed, in what has to be the longest subtitle in this field, Flammonde’s full title reads: Assassination of America. The Kennedy’s Coup d’Etat. The End of an Era, and Examination of the Jim Garrison Investigations, and the Effects on the Growing Totalitarianism in the Expanding Hegemonic American Empire. Adding further to its already hefty girth, Flammonde has included 30 appendices, covering everything from biographies of the numerous Warren Commission critics to a virtual encyclopedia of major (and some minor) figures in the case. Add in the hundreds of illustrations, documents and photographs and the three books total over 1,400 pages.

    Volume 1 is titled “The Deaths in Dallas” and includes introductions by Cyril Wecht, William Turner and Jim Marrs, numerous chapters on Oswald, Ruby, Tippit and other familiar personae, as well as chapters devoted to the ballistic, medical and graphical evidence. Although there appears to be little in the way of new, primary research directly attributable to Flammonde, he nonetheless makes good use of much of the latest developments and evidence in the case.

    The second volume “The Masques of New Orleans,” is essentially the revision and expansion of The Kennedy Conspiracy, focusing on the Garrison investigation and the subsequent trial of Clay Shaw. As with Volume 1, Flammonde uses much of the latest research in the field (including this author’s) to enhance his previous groundbreaking investigation. Flammonde spent months (years?) in New Orleans interviewing numerous witnesses and principals associated with the Shaw case and doing much “on the ground” (and groundbreaking) research. Indeed, that “older” information still stands on its own and seems remarkably fresh despite the passage of 40 years. For example, Flammonde’s treatment of the shady Swiss/Italian “trade organization”, PERMINDEX/Centro Mondiale Commerciale, was state of the art in 1967. It still stands the test of time today and begs for further research into that firm’s connections to numerous political murders.

    Marshalling all of this new (and old) information, Book 3, “Barren Harvest,” has Flammonde theorizing as to who had the means, motive and opportunity to commit this regicide. As previously noted, this volume closes out with the numerous appendices that cover 30 different subjects — some of the best being a history of the Old Catholic Church (which Ferrie and others had connections to), as well as numerous invaluable reference tools.

    Paris Flammonde, who spent years in radio and television production (he was the longtime producer of the popular, long-running Long John Nebel Show), is part of a vanishing breed — a cultured intellectual whose wit and intellect is reflected in his prose.

    The work is not without its fair share of errors, omissions and typos and could have used a good proofreader. (For instance, researcher and author Jim Marrs is frequently referred to as “Bill Marrs,” and the cover calls the work a “Projected Encyclopedic Narrative.” Since the work is now published, it doesn’t make much sense to call it “projected.”) Also, the aforementioned writing style may put off some of the more academically inclined readers, but these are nitpicks that in no way detract from the overall significance of this fine work.

    All of this notable discourse comes at a cost, though. The hefty price tag of $125 could put off the more budget-minded, but in terms of value received for your money, it’s a bargain.

  • Joan Mellen, A Farewell To Justice


    In the JFK assassination community, few works have been labored over longer or been more keenly anticipated than Joan Mellen’s new volume on the late New Orleans DA Jim Garrison, A Farewell to Justice. Mellen reportedly worked on the book for several years. When it was first announced, it was to be a full-scale biography of Garrison and published by a major university press. But on its long voyage to completion, these terms were altered. If you go through the book and count the number of pages that are purely biographical, it comes to about 25. So it is not in any way a biography. Also, the publisher is not NYU Press but Potomac Books. Reportedly, the book got so long that the original publisher opted out.

    This last brings up my first criticism of the book. Many complain today about the lack of editing in the publishing business. And because of the cost cutting pressures, it has become a serious problem. The Kennedy field is no stranger to bloated, turgid, off-balance books e.g. the original version of The Man Who Knew too Much, Ultimate Sacrifice, and many of the efforts of Harry Livingstone. (Ironically, Garrison’s On the Trail of the Assassins was beautifully edited.) Mellen’s book is a hardcover edition. Which means it was expensive to produce. To defray costs it appears to have been whittled down. Not with a scalpel, but a carving knife. There is no way not to describe the book as poorly produced even on the simplest level. As many commentators have noted, the footnotes are out of sync with their proper placement. (And beyond that, some rather controversial claims are not annotated at all, a point I will refer to later.) Even the Table of Contents is off. For example, Chapter 13 is listed as beginning on page 204. It begins on page 205. Further, the book, to say the least, is not well written. Consider this sentence from Chapter 12, p. 187:

    Put in contact with Shaw’s defense team by Walter Sheridan, Miller went on to serve as the liaison between Shaw’s lawyers and Richard Lansdale, a lawyer in Lawrence Houston’s.

    That abrupt and startling fragment would make any sophomore English major wince. But further, as Publisher’s Weekly has noted, Mellen’s overall grip on the narrative is something less than controlled, let alone masterly. It confuses an already complex case with “shifting timelines, authorial voices and locations with seeming little cause.”(As we shall see, this is not an unfair criticism.) The net result is that one does not come away from the book feeling as one has looked at a delicately painted mosaic of the Garrison investigation, a burnished portrait. The result to me seems blocky, and oddly, at the same time, amorphous — both in its overall design, and within its chapters. It is true that many books on the JFK case suffer from similar failings. But Mellen is a tenured professor of English, who teaches creative writing and has published many previous books that were better written than this one. So I assume, and hope, the fault was with the editor.

    Before getting to what I see as some of the book’s serious problems, let me list what I see as its clear, and less clear, achievements.

    1. She pinpoints when Garrison’s curiosity was piqued about the JFK case. It was not with the legendary 1966 plane flight with Russell Long. It was when Garrison picked up the 1965 issue of Esquire with the article on the Warren Commission by Dwight MacDonald. Another source was former Warren Commissioner Hale Boggs. This explains why there are so many memoranda in the Garrison files from throughout 1966. (And if memory serves me right, one or two from 1965.)
    2. Her work on the VIP Room incident at the Moisant Airport appears to be quite solid. Added to the previous work of Joe Biles and Bill Davy, it seems to me to be just about an accomplished fact that Clay Shaw signed the ledger of the Eastern Airlines waiting room as Clay Bertrand. Therefore, by his own hand revealing that he used the alias that Dean Andrews said he did when he phoned Andrews and asked him to defend Oswald.
    3. Her discussion of the famous Clinton/Jackson sighting of Oswald, Shaw and David Ferrie is the longest I have seen and contains some new and interesting details. For instance, it appears that Oswald actually did register to vote, but his name was later erased. And the FBI knew about the incident and about his subsequent attempt to find employment at a hospital in the area and they deliberately covered it all up.
    4. Her writing on the September, 1967 hatchet job in Life magazine accusing Garrison of being in bed with the Mafia is detailed and specific. She names Dick Billings, David Chandler, Jim Phelan, Robert Blakey, Aaron Kohn, and Sandy Smith as all cooperating on the slander. She states that the whole purpose of the two-part piece was to slam Garrison. Like Tony Summers and Davy, she produces evidence showing that Sandy Smith was, in essence, an employee of the FBI. And that Life drove a wedge between Garrison and his political ally Gov. McKeithen by threatening to do the same to him unless he gave Chandler a job in state law enforcement, thereby keeping him out of the D.A.’s clutches.
    5. Her elucidation of the things that William Wood (aka Bill Boxley) snookered Garrison into doing is quite instructive. This includes the indictment of Edgar Eugene Bradley (which the DA came to regret) and the near naming of Robert Lee Perrin as one of the snipers in Dealey Plaza. These were prime pieces of misinformation according to Mellen.
    6. Mellen’s work with former HSCA New Orleans investigators allows her to write several illuminating pages on how Bob Buras and L.J. Delsa were deliberately circumscribed by Chief Counsel Robert Blakey into limiting their investigation into the many leads Garrison was willing to provide the HSCA. It also shows how Blakey’s clear bias on the case created divisions in the ranks of the staff.<
    7. The file David Ferrie called “The Bomb” is minutely described by two people who saw it, Jimmy Johnson and Clara Gay. It is hard after reading their descriptions not to conclude that Ferrie had some advance knowledge of how the actual circumstances of the assassination in Dealey Plaza were going to occur. Her evidence is interesting but much more equivocal on a loan Shaw made to Ferrie to fly to Dallas a few days before the murder.
    8. She writes six well documented pages on David Ferrie’s activities with the Civil Air Patrol. As Delsa told me in 1994, it appears that one of Ferrie’s objectives was recruiting young men, including Oswald, for future consideration in the military. Another appears to be referring them to Clay Shaw for both professional and personal reasons.

    The above is certainly an estimable list of achievements. Standing alone, they would be valuable contributions. The problem is they do not stand alone. They are part of a much larger volume. Altogether the above accounts for significantly less than 20% of the book. If the rest of the more than 80% of the work would have been just bland regurgitation from other books e.g. Garrison’s own book, or Bill Davy’s fine work, that would have been one thing, and the book would have still been commendable.

    Unfortunately, that is not the case. The rest of the book seems to me to be sloppily composed, not proofread for errors of fact, loaded with controversial tenets, in large part assumptive, ideologically biased, has many weighty yet unsupported claims, exhibits a trustworthiness that goes beyond naivetè, and (I believe) deliberately leaves out important details to shape people and events in a certain way. These are serious criticisms. I believe they are merited. Especially for a veteran writer who was producing what was supposed to be a definitive book.

    As I noted earlier, the book suffers from a wobbly structure that consists in part of the shifting of time frames, locations, and viewpoints. For instance on pages 60-61 we begin with Oswald’s Canal Street arrest in 1963; we then go to Francis Martello’s testimony about Oswald’s FBI interview while in custody; we then flash forward to 1967 and David Ferrie — who is not in the Martello report — being interviewed by John Volz of Garrison’s staff; then she describes Garrison requesting the FBI file on Ferrie; and then she mentions the FBI wiretapping of Garrison’s office. All of this jumping around in the space of about five paragraphs. At times, with certain characters like Ferrie and Thomas Beckham she actually tries to place us inside their heads, revealing their thoughts, while having them refer to themselves in the third person: “He is sick, Ferrie says. As a result of rumors of my arrest, I’ve been asked to leave the airport, he says.” (p. 103) At other times she presents a decades old interview in the present tense, throwing in bits of novelistic detail. Consider this interview of Carlos Quiroga by Frank Klein:

    “Well, he [Banister] didn’t have anything to do with arms,” Quiroga says. Then he smiles. Klein thinks: He smiles involuntarily or smirks when he is not telling the truth. (p. 99)

    At times she adapts an omniscient viewpoint. On page 98, she has Banister employee Bill Nitschke looking at a picture of a Cuban who he identifies as Manuel Gonzalez. She then writes, “He was in fact looking at a photograph of longtime CIA operative David Sanchez Morales.” The problems here are that 1) She does not reference the photo 2) She does not footnote the conversation so we can crosscheck it 3) She does not indicate the evidence for her being right and Garrison being wrong about the photo identification 4) Morales never came up in the Garrison inquiry. (Morales’ nickname, “El Indio,” did come up but we do not know that it applied to Morales in this context, or if the photo was of him.) Perhaps the assertion is correct, but it would need more backup than she provides. As I said earlier, the careless and inconsistent use of these near-novelistic devices make it hard to follow an already difficult case. The Garrison investigation of the Kennedy murder is not the killing of the Clutter family in Kansas. And Mellen is not nearly the writer Truman Capote was.

    Then there is another organizational problem: the misnamed chapters. Chapter 5 is titled “The Banister Menagerie,” yet it begins with Andrew Sciambra’s interview of Clay Shaw in 1966. Or consider pages 60-62 which discuss David Ferrie’s association with Oswald, the FBI and Jim Garrison, Sergio Arcacha Smith, and informants in Garrison’s office like Bill Gurvich and Tom Bethell. These come at the end of a chapter entitled, “Oswald and Customs.” Chapter 10 is titled “A Skittish Witness” referring to Richard Case Nagell. Yet only five pages of the chapter, less than a third of its length, actually deals directly with Nagell. Chapter 21 is called “Potomac Two Step,” apparently referring to the charade of the 1976-1978 congressional inquiry into Kennedy’s death. Yet, only a few pages of this chapter discuss the House Select Committee on Assassinations. Most of the HSCA material is in the following chapter entitled “The Death of Jim Garrison.” Again, this betrayed to me a writer with a weak grip on her narrative. (In fairness to Mellen, this may have occurred in the editing process.)

    In addition to the book’s clumsy editing, questions arise about the proofreading. Proofreading does not require exquisite expertise. It just means having someone with an affinity for the subject ask pertinent questions. That didn’t happen here. There are too many errors of fact and interpretation. As Patricia Lambert has pointed out, Mellen seems to have misinterpreted CIA files on one John Jefferson Martin with Banister assistant Jack Martin. So Mellen turns Jack Martin into a CIA officer. I have seen these documents and I agree with Lambert: the two are not the same person. On page 92, she says that an FBI informant told Garrison that rightwing segregationist Joseph Milteer had phoned him from Dallas on the day of the assassination. Jerry Rose, who thought Milteer was in on the plot, produced documents showing that Milteer was not in Dallas that day. On page 105, she discusses David Ferrie’s disclosures to Lou Ivon, first conveyed to Oliver Stone’s researcher Jane Rusconi and depicted in his film. But what she lists here goes beyond not just what Ivon told Rusconi, but to my knowledge, what he told anyone else. On page 169, she writes that not just the CIA, but the Special Group Augmented, Task Force W, the Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board, the FBI and the NSA all knew about the Castro assassination plots in the early sixties. This is an amazing assertion. To say the least, there is much documentation to the contrary. On page 181, she writes that David Atlee Phillips died before Jim Garrison could reach him. Phillips died in 1982. Garrison’s inquiry was effectively ended almost ten years earlier. And there is no evidence that Garrison knew about him at that time.

    Mellen seems confused about the results of the HSCA. After relating the famous Victor Marchetti Spotlight story about the CIA cutting loose Howard Hunt in a “limited hangout,” she adds something to twist that story around. She says Marchetti was mistaken. The CIA’s real scapegoat was Shaw. She then offers the HSCA Report as evidence this was so. She writes in her typical mangled syntax:

    The report calls Shaw a “limited hang out, cut out” to play a role in the conspiracy, the very terms Victor Marchetti had been told were being applied to Hunt … Shaw, the Committee decided was “possibly one of the high level planners or “cut out”to the planners of the assassination.” (pgs 355-356)

    This is another amazing assertion. As anyone who has read the HSCA Report knows this language is not found anywhere in that volume about anyone. And definitely not Shaw. The HSCA cooperated completely with the CIA and identified Shaw as a businessman who cooperated with them, as thousands of others did, by consenting to interviews upon their return from abroad. The report even disguises his presence in the Clinton/Jackson incident by at first saying Shaw was there, and then (p. 145) that Ferrie was there with Oswald, “if not Clay Shaw” thereby smudging the identification. A page later the report lists more evidence of relations between Oswald, Ferrie and Banister, with Shaw notably absent. The report also says that they could not relate any conspiracy to the government. What Mellen seems to be doing here is quoting from a document that was declassified many years later. It was written by HSCA counsel Jonathan Blackmer and was not in the report. It was declassified by the ARRB and first used by Bill Davy in his book Let Justice Be Done (1999, p. 202) where he made the distinction clear. It is hard to believe that Mellen did not read that book and its footnotes, especially since she wrote a jacket blurb for it.

    Then there are what I see as failures of omission, or incompleteness. There is very little new offered on the trial of Clay Shaw. Even in the way that the CIA deliberately obstructed the case. Yet there have been many new documents declassified in this regard, some of them very interesting, especially in regards to James Angleton. This was disappointing since it would reveal the extraordinary lengths the Agency was willing to go to subvert the DA and protect Shaw.

    There is no real chapter that concentrates on the role of the media in the destruction of Garrison. Bits and pieces are scattered throughout without any cumulative effect or focus. Mellen once told me she would have a separate chapter on James Phelan. It’s not here. Neither is there any real vivisection of Hugh Aynesworth, or Edward Epstein. Again, I see this as another missed opportunity to show just how threatened the power structure was by Garrison. To be fair to Mellen, it may have fallen victim to the editing knife. I hope so.

    Then there are New Orleans matters which she explores but not to fruition. In discussing the alleged “child molestation”charges aired by Jack Anderson she attributes their circulation to Layton Martens. After doing some work on this issue with Garrison’s son Lyon, I came to the conclusion that Shaw’s lawyers were involved. Mellen does not even mention them. She discusses the book Farewell America and rightly labels it a fraud. But she seems to end that affair with Garrison investigator Steve Jaffe and Herve Lamarre (one of the book’s authors). But the story is much richer and more interesting than that. Garrison eventually discovered that the book was an elaborate and laborious charade that was worked on by more than just Lamarre. And that Lamarre (under the authorial pseudonym of James Hepburn) was basically a front man in a complex shell game designed for the sole purpose of confusing and delaying his inquiry. Which it did. When all the leads are followed — which Mellen does not seem to have done– it is difficult not to detect the hand of James Angleton in the pie. Again, this may have been an editing decision.

    A curious aspect of the book is the author’s insistence on enumerating in detail several sexual anecdotes. From my experience, there is more sex in this book than the entire library of JFK books combined. Jim Garrison always thought that to discuss Clay Shaw’s homosexual escapades would be out of bounds personally and, for him, unprofessional. Though he had more than one report on this in his files, he never used them to violate Shaw’s privacy. Mellen goes ahead and describes them in rather graphic detail (pgs. 119-124). Including an incident with Shaw “and two colored males on the patio naked and using wine bottles on each other.” (p. 119) But that is not all. Very early in the book, by about page 35, we have been treated to anecdotes about homosexual fellatio, orgies, Garrison’s philandering, and the DA’s favorite sexual practices. On page 101, she excerpts a letter Ferrie wrote describing a dirty movie: “…some dude fucking this broad … he got his nuts jerking under her knee, she blew him, he fucked her in the ass twice…” Mellen saves the capper in this regard for the end. On page 382 we get a description, in her words, of “the shape of Garrison’s genitalia.” I don’t understand what these strained and rather tawdry episodes contribute to the book or why the author was so insistent on including them in a volume that is, ostensibly, about the murder of President Kennedy.

    Let’s jump from the low to the high, from the sexual to the scholarly. Mellen has laid out her footnotes, not in the classic, older way of putting them on the page. Nor has she done it in the later, more common way of superscripting a number next to the sentence and then placing the note at the rear of the book. What she has done is put the notes in the back but equated them with a page and a line. As I said earlier, this is problematic for her since by about page 185 the footnotes do not correspond to the page they are referring back to. So one has to work to match the reference to the page and line. But often that work is in vain, since many important pieces of information are not footnoted at all. And when I say many, I do not mean just several. Nor do I mean a dozen. I would estimate that, at least, about 45 major passages are undocumented. For instance, on page 41, she writes that Garrison learned from a source that Ferrie’s library card had been found on Oswald, but that it had been destroyed. On the same page, she writes that Oswald’s cousin, Marilyn Murrett, worked for the CIA. Three pages later, she takes us into Garrison’s mind while the DA is interviewing Ferrie two days after the assassination. Garrison asks himself why a minor homosexual would have a relationship with Jack Wasserman, Carlos Marcello’s attorney. She adds that this was more intriguing since the Warren Commission concluded there was no “real Mafia motive” in the assassination. So in the space of four pages, there are four pieces of rather important information — which includes Garrison’s thoughts — that should have been annotated but were not. And I am not hunting and picking. On page 135, she writes that the mysterious European business association Shaw was tied to, the Centro Mondiale Commerciale, was by our own government’s admission, a CIA front. Again, this is not sourced. And again, I have read a lot about the CMC and I have never seen this particular claim noted, let alone substantiated. About 100 pages later she writes that Walter Sheridan briefed Johnny Carson for his interview with Garrison. Again, this is quite interesting yet there is no source for it.

    I could go on like this for several pages. I am not saying that everything in a book has to be footnoted. But when one is presenting important things as fact, and it is new information, then at least most of that new information should be footnoted just to establish trust and rapport between the author and reader. Especially if the writer is a university professor and knows the rules of scholarly research. This is a serious failing that strikes at the heart of the book’s credibility.

    I want to segue here to what I see as another failing of the book: her judgment about certain important personages swirling around the Garrison investigation. She spends a great deal of time on Walter Sheridan. There is no doubt that Sheridan had an important role in the Garrison case, and is a complex and fascinating figure in his own right. But I believe her portrait of him is shortsighted. She clearly implies (p. 187) that Sheridan’s infamous NBC special was handed to him as an intelligence agent assignment. I thought this at one time also. Exploring the point, I got documents out of the UCLA library that showed that Sheridan worked for NBC for a number of years. That he produced at least seven documentaries, some of them nominated for awards, and some of them themed around rather attractive liberal causes. So while I agree that it is probably true that Sheridan got the assignment through his intelligence ties, it is not as cut and dried as she portrays it. And in another related, recurrent theme she chalks up Sheridan’s eagerness to wreck Garrison to Robert Kennedy. Yet, about 150 pages later, she has Sheridan still trying to wreck Garrison, this time on tax evasion charges. But by this time, Bobby Kennedy is dead. So who was directing Sheridan then?

    The issue of who Sheridan really was and what master he served is not an easy question to answer. But there is a hint of this in an interview New Orleans P. I. Joe Oster gave to the HSCA. In discussing Guy Banister’s early days, he named a curious working partner he had. It was Carmine Bellino, who would later become a chief investigator for Bobby Kennedy’s Justice Department. This is a very interesting fact which is not in the book. In her haste to blacken RFK, an issue I will deal with later, Mellen discards things like pointed migrations, complex motivations, and multiple allegiances.

    Same thing with Gordon Novel. Novel was an associate of Sheridan who infiltrated the Garrison inquiry, wired his offices, and then supplied the fruits of his work to NBC. In fact, Novel told the press in advance that Garrison would be disposed of like trash via the NBC special. How close was he to the CIA? He wrote letters to Richard Helms at this time reporting on Garrison’s actions. When Garrison subpoenaed him for the grand jury, Novel fled New Orleans to Ohio where he was safe housed by the CIA and protected by the governor from being extradited back to New Orleans. He admitted under oath that he employed multiple lawyers who were remunerated by government agencies. His superiors then asked him to sue Garrison over the DA’s impressive interview in Playboy. During his deposition, he gave out some very interesting information about his history with the CIA going back to the Bay of Pigs, and his New Orleans association with people like Ed Butler, Sergio Arcacha Smith, and David Ferrie, among others. The CIA gave him a rigged polygraph which Novel then used to smear Garrison to, what he admitted were, CIA associated journalists. He was a friend of CIA arms specialist Mitch Werbell, and his electronic wizardry led him to meet Charles Colson during the Watergate scandal. They discussed Novel creating a degaussing gun that would erase the Watergate tapes that eventually brought Nixon down. Around 1976, Novel reportedly got in contact with the HSCA and wanted to talk.

    Mellen leaves almost all of the above out and introduces Novel, on page 65, as a serious witness to the Garrison inquiry. At times she states that the White House and Sheridan, not the CIA, were actually behind his pernicious and well-protected maneuverings. And what I have synopsized above is not a third of what I could say about Novel. But clearly, it would have an effect on how the reader views him in relation to the Garrison inquiry and the Kennedy assassination. Mellen’s foreshortened version reveals a lack of perspective, curiosity, and insight. And let us be blunt: gullibility. (This last is a compelling issue which I will deal with later.)

    Then there is the use of documents and how they relate to character portraits. I have already mentioned the apparent confusion about Jack Martin. About Kerry Thornley, she has stated in public, and repeats here, that Thornley received training in chemical and biological warfare. When I first heard this at the Duquesne 40th Anniversary JFK Conference Mellen gave it so much weight that I thought perhaps Thornley was part of the MK/Ultra program (something he actually claimed to be later in life). She repeats the charge in the book. But Stu WExler described this doucment to Larry Hancock. Hancock explained that many of his fellow soldiers in the military from that decade of the sixites were given the same training; it was quite common during the Cold War. So much for MK/Ultra. Then there is the document she uses in relation to Thomas Beckham. The document itself is not presented in the book. Instead, she quotes from it and paraphrases it. If taken at face value it says that Beckham received special instruction in espionage techniques, in small arms training, and was given a psychological dossier by a combined intelligence force of the government. But what Mellen does with this document in relation to Beckham, Oswald, Garrison, and the JFK case is, in my view, sheer hyperbole. She says that this document proves that 1) Beckham was to be used as an assassin; 2) he was to be a back-up assassin in case the Oswald-as-patsy scenario did not come off; 3) that it reveals ample foreknowledge of the JFK assassination by the government; 4) It proves that those who plotted to kill Kennedy had been grooming an innocent man for a very long time, and 5) that Garrison had uncovered parts of this plot in the Clinton/Jackson incident. (page 374)

    My reaction to all this, as I wrote in the margin of the paragraph which contains these claims, is a simple: “What the F?” From the way I read this document (combined with what I have learned about U.S. intelligence) I surmised there must have been dozens of men each year who got this kind of training. (Which is beautifully demonstrated in the first part of the David Mamet film Spartan.) How she can directly relate this document to the JFK case, to Oswald’s particular role, to a particular agency in charge of the murder, in a particular time frame, these claims all escape me. (Let alone the Clinton/Jackson incident, since as I can see, Beckham was not a part of that and perhaps not even cognizant of it.) Its not that you cannot make this claim with any documents in this case. For instance, there are certain documents pertaining to Mexico City, which I believe are pretty incriminating about Oswald: what he did there, how he was impersonated, and the CIA’s role in that charade. But I did not see that here.

    This relates to her use of Beckham throughout the book. She has clearly relied on him as the spine of the work. Thomas Beckham has been around for a long time. In fact, his name appears in the first positive study of Garrison, Paris Flammonde’s The Kennedy Conspiracy way back in 1969. Garrison was interested in him because of his relationship with Fred L. Crisman, an utterly fascinating character from the Pacific Northwest who Garrison thought was a high level intelligence operative. At the time of the HSCA Garrison wrote an interesting four-page memorandum on Beckham and his relationship to Crisman. The HSCA tracked him down and he did more than one long interview with them. These interviews were declassified by the ARRB early on and a number of people saw them as early as 1994-1995. Gus Russo tracked him down for the 1993 PBS special on Oswald. According to Russo (who Mellen, as we shall see, trusts in other areas) Beckham took back what he said. He told him that he told the HSCA New Orleans investigators what he thought they wanted to hear. He even told him that he cheated on his HSCA polygraph examination, which is how he passed it. Now he has gone back to his HSCA version for Mellen and she takes him at face value with no questions asked. And further, takes the document he has not just at face value, but exalts it to a degree that is, I believe, unwarranted.

    The point is this: many people were exposed to the Beckham evidence before Mellen (e.g. Larry Hancock). Some of them were specialists in the Garrison investigation. None of them have gone as far as she has with him i.e. to make him the centerpiece of a book on the DA. To take just one reason among many: it is hard to corroborate a lot of what he says. Which does not necessarily mean he is not credible. It just means that a more judicious person would not stake her book on a guy like him. In fact, she is the first. I predict she will be the last.

    Which brings us to Gerry Patrick Hemming. Like Beckham, Hemming has been around for a long time. Unlike Beckham, he has talked on the record to many authors and researchers, some of whom I have had questions about e.g. Gordon Winslow. I would have thought he would have gotten everything out of his system on this matter in the nineties when he talked at length to Tony Summers (for a videotape documentary), John Newman, Mark Lane, and Noel Twyman. (Reportedly, Twyman flew him to his home in San Diego for a three-day marathon interview.) His discussions for those four men included inside information on the relationship between James Angleton and Oswald, musings on the possible role of David Morales in the assassination, Guy Banister’s quest for a JFK assassin, and his slight caviling, but ultimate agreement on the “assassination caravan” story as related by Marita Lorenz to Mark Lane. I, and probably others thought that, after thirty years, Hemming was finally tapped out. I was wrong. He has new bits to tell Mellen. One new angle is information on Sylvia Odio. He says he knows who sent the Cuban visitors to see her (p. 87). Like many things in the book, it is not revealed how he knows this. On page 277, Hemming has more insight into Odio. He apparently had a relationship with her in Cuba. Mellen, unaware she’s swimming with sharks, uses Lawrence Howard as a corroborator on this. This is where I began to get suspicious. Because it reminded me of a tactic used by Wesley Liebeler and the Warren Commission on Odio. Namely make her into some kind of “loose woman”so doubts would be raised about her character and credibility. (Mellen does not note this striking parallel even though the HSCA was fully aware of it.)

    The other untapped line of new knowledge by Hemming is about Bobby Kennedy. According to Hemming, RFK met with Oswald in Florida face to face. (How Hemming could have forgotten to say this previously is a complete mystery.) To offer some sort of credence to a wild story, Mellen adds, “The story recalls the scene in the Oval Office witnessed by attorney F. Lee Bailey.”(p. 201) Unfortunately, I couldn’t find a scene in which Bailey was even at the White House in this book. So in addition to the bald assertion by Hemming, Mellen adds a bald parallel by Bailey.

    And the use of Hemming in relation to Odio and RFK really leads to a much larger issue in this book. Mellen is out to rewrite 1) The Odio incident 2) The history of the Castro assassination plots, and 3) Bobby Kennedy’s apparent reluctance to find out the truth about Dallas. To say that she indulges in a rather questionable revisionist history here is much too mild. This is a radical, sensational revisionism. Let’s analyze her rewriting of the Odio incident as a representative sample of what she is up to.

    The outline of Sylvia Odio’s story is well stated in Sylvia Meagher’s classic book, Accessories After the Fact. (Meagher found Odio and her story so compelling she titled her chapter on it, “The Proof of the Plot.”) The incident was further detailed, with new corroborating evidence, in the nineties by Gaeton Fonzi in his fine work, The Last Investigation. Fonzi investigated Odio for the HSCA and he chronicled a lot of his work in his book. In 1993 PBS, in their aforementioned special, interviewed some of Fonzi’s witnesses on camera. The witnesses, including a priest, all bolstered the story told by Sylvia and her sister Annie. So the incident has not just survived the test of time. For most objective people it has been enriched and fortified by further inquiry.

    But not for Joan Mellen. According to her, for 25 years, Meagher, Fonzi, the HSCA, and PBS got it wrong. First of all, Odio somehow overlooked a rather important and salient detail. Oswald, or his double, did not arrive at her door with the two Cubans. He was already at her house! But alas, if Sylvia Odio was wrong about this, so was her sister Annie who was there. And then so were her four corroborating witnesses including people you usually don’t dissemble with e.g. a priest and her psychiatrist. The logic that Mellen uses to try and enforce her bizarre and baffling revision of this is weird. She says that if Odio was able to identify Oswald, then why could she not identify the two Cubans? Well, maybe because Oswald was apprehended and his face was plastered all over television and the newspapers so she could see it? And the Cubans who were escorting him were not apprehended, were not even really looked for by the Warren Commission who tried to brush the whole thing under the rug? If they were never looked for or found, how could she identify them?

    Why does Mellen reject that rather obvious and simple argument? Because again, she has done what no one else did in forty years. Not Fonzi, not PBS, not the HSCA. Through Hemming, she found out who the two Cubans were who visited Odio. (Odio recalled them as Leopoldo and Angelo.) Hemming introduced her to one Angelo Murgado, a Miami Cuban who loved the Kennedys so much he changed his last name to Kennedy (a curious point I will address later). And Murgado/Kennedy told Mellen who Leopoldo was. Hold on to your hats here. Leopoldo was Bernardo de Torres. Yep, the guy who infiltrated Garrison’s investigation and may have been involved in the killing of Eladio del Valle. The guy who was good friends with CIA arms specialist Mitch Werbell. The man who allegedly had photos of the assassination he once thought of selling to Life. The man who was so in bed with the CIA that he later sold arms to South American countries and reportedly got involved in CIA drug trafficking in the eighties. Now right off the bat, this would seem to be a bit puzzling for an obvious reason. Fonzi and the HSCA had picked out Bernardo as a prime suspect for the assassination and they had a plant in his Cuban circle of friends. They even brought him to Washington for an executive session interview. So clearly, Fonzi was familiar with what he looked like. And clearly, as Fonzi writes, he spent many hours with Odio going over her descriptions of the two men. Yet it never struck that blunderbuss Fonzi that Leopoldo was right there in front of him, ripe for the picking. (In Fonzi’s book, p. 111, the Odio sisters give a description of “Angel.” If you compare it with the Mellen description of Murgado, and the photos and description of de Torres, both here and elsewhere, you will see why Fonzi never had his “Eureka” moment.)

    It would seem to me that what Murgado/Kennedy is trying to do is shift responsibility for Oswald from the CIA backed, right-wing Cubans to the leftist, Kennedy backed Cubans (JURE), of whom Odio was allied with. Mellen apparently shuts her eyes to this so she can then not ask the question: Well, if Odio and JURE were associated with Oswald before the assassination–to the point of him being her house guest–why on earth would Odio identify him? Dodging the questions completely, she can then write that if Oswald was with the Cubans driving to Dallas, or if he was already there at the Odio apartment, “the meaning of the incident remains the same.” (Page 381) If the meaning was the same then why did Murgado/Kennedy make a point of getting Oswald out of the car and into the house? Is Mellen really unaware of the significance of this switch? If she is she either has not done her homework on this important issue or she is incredibly careless with what she writes.

    But Murgado/Kennedy is not done. (Let’s call him MK for short from here on in.) He reveals to Mellen just how he knows all this stuff, and why he was with Bernardo at Odio’s house than night. (Although he never reveals how he has escaped detection all these years. And the uncurious Mellen apparently never asked.) See, he and Bernardo were part of a kind of “special team”of Cubans employed by RFK. For what pray tell? Well MK says that they had a dual purpose. One was to try and kill Castro. The other was to patrol around and be on the lookout for plots to kill President Kennedy. One might then have thought, well they did a Keystone Kops kind of a job since one of the “Kennedy protectors,” de Torres, may have been in on the plot to kill him. And RFK must have been pretty stupid to have people like de Torres, MK, and as MK says Manuel Artime around him to protect his brother. Why? Because all these guys were veterans of the Bay of Pigs disaster. Meaning that, like Dave Morales, they were all dyed-in-the-wool CIA loyalists. Consequently, all of them blamed the Kennedys for that debacle. And all of them stayed in the employ of the CIA afterwards. In fact, Artime was Howard Hunt’s Golden Boy, the man who Hunt wanted to replace Castro if the Bay of Pigs succeeded. Further, the CIA and their hard right Cubans had planned to never let the Kennedy Cubans, e.g. Manuelo Ray of JURE, take any power in Artime’s Cuba. They devised a secret operation inside the Bay of Pigs called Operation Forty, which sponsored death squads to eliminate all the Ray/Kennedy Cubans and then chalk it up to accidents, friendly fire, casualties of war etc. MK and Mellen want us to believe that RFK would not know that the very people he was involved with despised him and his brother for ending their dream of a retaken Cuba. This is especially hard to swallow since RFK sat on the secret Taylor Commission that interviewed witness after witness involved in the planning of that so-called “perfect failure.” Reportedly, he and JFK came to the conclusion that the CIA had designed the operation to fail, that they counted on JFK then escalating it with American forces, and when he did not, they blamed the failure on him, covered up their duplicity in the press, and told the Cubans JFK had lost his nerve. Clearly, when Fonzi describes the outburst Morales has at the drop of JFK’s name, and how Morales mentions the bloody revenge they extracted in retaliation for the Bay of Pigs, this is illustrative of the Cuban veterans resentment of Kennedy.

    How could RFK not be aware of this if, for example, I am? In my earlier research days when I did a lot of interviews, I talked to several Cubans. I decided that I would not talk to any more afterward since in every discussion I had about the Kennedys they all blamed JFK for the failure of the Bay of Pigs. Some of them in quite bitter terms. So it would follow then that the actual veterans of that operation would especially despise the Kennedys. And as de Torres may have done, took the sentiments one step further into an act of murderous vengeance. (So why would Murgado change his name in honor of him?)

    Why does Mellen not ask these obvious questions? Why did she not do her homework on this issue? All this information is in the literature today. In fact, there is one rather slim volume that explains the Bay of Pigs fallout in eyewitness detail. And it is not by a “Kennedy idolater” — a smear term which Mellen likes to employ apparently so she does not have to argue the facts, or defend her rather dubious and comical crew of witnesses. That book is called Give Us this Day. It is written by Artime’s friend and sponsor, Howard Hunt. A man who, like de Torres, is suspected of being involved in the JFK assassination. Hunt details all of his disputes with the Kennedys over the Bay of Pigs, how he disliked Ray and thought if the Kennedys installed him in Cuba, it would be “Castroism with out Fidel.” In other words, Ray was a Communist and the Kennedys were backing another Castro. Does Mellen not think that MK, de Torres, and Artime got that message from the Spanish speaking Hunt?

    Hunt was also involved in setting up Sergio Arcacha Smith in New Orleans as head of the CRC. Like the effortlessly gulled Gus Russo, Mellen believes Smith was also a Kennedy friendly Cuban who was actually buddy-buddy with RFK. This is the guy who worked for the Batista government for decades, who made a fortune in industry, who saw it all come to nothing when Castro took over. A man who was personally jetted out of Cuba by the CIA and set up in New Orleans with CIA allies like Ed Butler and Guy Banister. A man who was later identified as one of the two Cubans who threw Rose Cheramie out of the car as they were driving to Dallas discussing how to kill Kennedy. Who according to Richard Nagell was involved in the setting up of Oswald in New Orleans, and who according to Officer Francis Fruge, may have had maps of Dealey Plaza in his apartment in Dallas where he was living at the time of the murder. It is hard to measure who the better indictment in this case would be against: Smith or de Torres. But according to Mellen and MK, they were both “good friends” of RFK.

    I pondered throughout how Mellen could believe such people without reservation. People who some investigators — like Fonzi, Ed Lopez, and the late Al Gonzalez — have thought were actually suspect in the case. It was not until her last chapter that I began to understand why. Her agenda, in large part, coincides with theirs. Mellen was once married to Ralph Schoenmann. And in fact, when her book came out, her former husband did a three-hour radio interview with her on WBAI in New York. Schoenmann was the man who once wrote that Bobby Kennedy was in charge of the 1965 CIA coup in Indonesia against Sukarno. That he ran the operation from a navy ship off the coast. Since RFK was out of the White House and in the Senate at the time, I noted that this irresponsible charge was almost certainly false. But it is part of Schoenmann’s view of America and the JFK case. He sees no important difference between the Kennedys, the Eastern Establishment, and the Power Elite. To him the assassination was a struggle between the Eastern Establishment and the new oil barons of the southwest, or as Carl Oglesby has termed it, The Yankee and Cowboy War. And Schoenmann, against reams of contrary evidence– e.g. Richard Mahoney’s excellent book JFK: Ordeal in Africa — considers the Kennedys part of the Eastern Establishment. Since Mellen’s book is about Jim Garrison, who ended up rejecting Farewell America, she could not quite view it that way. But, like her former husband, she spares no opportunity to carve RFK — if not JFK– into tiny pieces. Looking through my notes, and then the marginalia I wrote in the book, I have little problem writing this next sentence. The book is a hatchet job on RFK; one aimed right between his shoulder blades. And it is hard to believe that it was not planned that way. Especially since, as noted above, she never doubts anything these Cubans and their allies like Hemming tell her, no matter how wild, no matter how illogical, no matter how unsupported. Any time she can take a shot at him, she does. At one point, she writes that Bobby was always given to hero worship of brutal men (p. 187). Really. Like, for instance, Cesar Chavez? And for her there is never a less than sinister reason why RFK could doubt Garrison, or be uncertain about what to do about the death of his brother: the deep melancholia he sank into after JFK’s death, the humiliations LBJ inflicted on him, the naked disdain Hoover felt for him personally. Incredibly — or rather, with Mellen, predictably — these are never even mentioned, let alone given any consideration. At one point she writes that it was RFK who told the family they should not make waves about a conspiracy to kill JFK (p. 344). Yet according to a man who was at this meeting, Peter Lawford, it was Teddy who voiced that sentiment. Bobby was the one who wanted it out in the open for a family discussion. This episode, which I noted in Probe Magazine, will be expanded upon in David Talbot’s upcoming book about RFK. Which, unlike Mellen’s work, promises to be responsible, balanced, and inductive in method. That is, its conclusions will flow from the evidence, and not vica-versa.

    To exemplify just how far her anti-Kennedy rage reaches, let me cite two egregious examples. She uses the notorious Louisiana right-winger and segregationist John Rarick (p. 173) to relate a story about the sad Kennedy sister Rosemary. Previously, it had been reported that she suffered from mental retardation and the family had her institutionalized. Misdiagnosed, she had a lobotomy. Since then the Kennedys have always been in the forefront of special rights for the mentally afflicted. Well, Rarick says that is all wrong. She was misdiagnosed alright. She really was a kleptomaniac who consistently wrote bad checks. (A Kennedy who was hard up for money?) And instead of sending her to one of the better institutions in the northeast, she was sent to Angola in Louisiana which, by some reports, houses much of the pathological prison population of the area. What does Rarick have to support this story? Records that have now conveniently disappeared. And what on earth does it have to do with Garrison’s inquiry? Then on page 200, she drags in the Bernie Spindel tapes. Spindel was a surveillance technician who worked for Jimmy Hoffa. Previously, the only tapes he ever had about the Kennedys were the mythological Marilyn Monroe tapes, which were investigated by the NYPD and found to be apocryphal. (Spindel was in trouble with the law and he was using this blackmail bluff as a bargaining chip.) Now, Mellen uses Kennedy enemy and proven liar Spindel as having “tapes and evidence about the Kennedy assassination that he wished to make public.”Of course, like the MM tapes, these are never revealed. (I wonder why.). With the use of Spindel and Rarick, Mellen descends into the netherworld of the likes of The Clinton Chronicles. And again, this is a book that is supposed to be about Jim Garrison and his inquiry into the John Kennedy murder. If she had not been so single-minded in her near-pathological obsession with Bobby she could have written more and better stuff about Garrison e.g. the chapter on Phelan or the media. And it would have been a better book. As with the discredited John Davis, if I were to go into every dubious accusation she makes about the Kennedys, that in itself would take a small book.

    So, for me, it’s not surprising that in her (unconsciously satirical) final chapter she willingly uses people like MK and Beckham. They help her fulfill her preplanned double arc, namely to support Garrison, and dig a pitchfork — to the hilt– into RFK’s back. In her eagerness to do so she ignores the facts that 1.) Today, you don’t need Beckham to support what Garrison did. There is an abundance of other evidence in that regard, and 2.) The whole story about why RFK remained inactive about his brother’s death is a subtle, shaded, and complex one. And having the likes of Bernardo de Torres pal talk to you about it after he’s made you dinner is not a good way to approach it.

    In sum, the book was a huge disappointment for me. Reportedly, Mellen spent seven years on it and over 150, 000 dollars. So, quite naturally, like others, I was expecting at least a worthwhile effort. If it was not going to be definitive, it would now be at least the best book on Garrison. But that’s not true. Bill Davy’s book is still the best book in the field. Unlike Mellen’s work it is both clearly written and well organized. Further, he does not make statements he cannot support and does not serve as a willing and eager conduit for disinformation from people with obvious agendas. Like covering up their suspect roles in the conspiracy to kill President Kennedy.

  • Gerald Posner, Case Closed


    This review appeared in The Journal of Southern History 6 (February 1995), pp. 186-188.

    This electronic version is from http://www.assassinationscience.com/wrone.html


    Case Closed: Lee Harvey Oswald and the Assassination of JFK. By Gerald Posner. (New York: Random House, 1993. Pp. xvi, 607. $25.00, ISBN 0-679-41825-3.)


    Gerald Posner argues that the Warren Commission properly investigated the assassination of JFK. He claims to have refuted the critics, purports to show what actually occurred, and asserts simple factual answers to explain complex problems that have plagued the subject for years. In the process he condemns all who do not agree with the official conclusions as theories driven by conjectures. At the same time his book is so theory driven, so rife with speculation, and so frequently unable to conform his text with the factual content in his sources that it stands as one of the stellar instances of irresponsible publishing on the subject.

    Massive numbers of factual errors suffuse the book, which make it a veritable minefield. Random samples are the following: Pontchartrain is a lake not a river. The wounded James Tague stood twenty feet east, not under the triple underpass. There were three Philip Geracis, not one; he confuses the second and the third. A tiny fragment, not a bullet, entered Connally’s thigh. The Army did the testing that he refers to the FBI. None, not three, commissioners heard at least half the hearings. The Warren Commission did not have any investigators. Captain Donovan is John, not Charles, and a lieutenant. The critics of the official findings are not leftists but include conservatives such as Cardinal Cushing, William Loeb, and former commissioner, Richard Russell.

    Posner often presents the opposite of what the evidence says. In the presentation of a corrupt picture of Oswald’s background, for example, he states that, under the name of Osborne, Oswald picked up leaflets he distributed from the Jones Printing Company and that the “receptionist” identified him. She in fact said that Oswald did not pick up the leaflets as the source that Posner cites indicates.

    No credible evidence connects Oswald to the murder. All the data that Posner presents to do so is either shorn of context, corrupted, the opposite of what the sources actually say, or nonsourced. For example, 100 percent of the witness testimony and physical evidence exclude Oswald from carrying the rifle to work that day disguised as curtain rods. Posner manipulates with words to concoct a case against Oswald as with Linnie Mae Randle, who swore the package, as Oswald allegedly carried it, was twenty-eight inches long, far too short to have carried a rifle. He grasped its end, and it hung from his swinging arm to almost touch the ground. Posner converts this to “tucked under his armpit, and the other end did not quite touch the ground”(p. 225). The rifle was heavily oiled, but the paper sack discovered on the sixth floor had not a trace of oil. Posner excludes this vital fact.

    To refute criticism that the first of three shots (the magic bullet) inflicted seven nonfatal wounds on two bodies in impossible physical and time constraints, he invents a second magic bullet. He asserts that Oswald fired the first bullet near frame 160 of the Zapruder film, fifty frames earlier than officially held, and missed. The bullet hit a twig or a branch or a tree, as he varies it, then separated into its copper sheath and lead composite core. The core did a right angle to fly west more than 200 feet to hit a curbstone and wound Tague while the sheath decided to disappear. The curb in fact had been damaged. He omits that analysis of the curb showed the bullet came from the west, which means the bullet would have had to have taken another sui generis turn of 135 degrees to get back west with sufficient force to smash concrete, which he pretends was not marred.

    He asserts proof of a core hit because FBI analysis revealed “traces of [sic per reviewer] lead with a trace of antimony” (p. 325) in the damage. What he omits destroys his theory. He does not explain that a bullet core has several other metallic elements in its composition, not two, rendering his conclusion false. He further neglects to inform the reader that by May 1964 the damage had been covertly patched with a concrete paste and that in August, not July, 1964, the FBI tested the scrapings of the paste, not the damage, which gave the two metal results.

    He says the second shot transited JFK’s neck and caused the nonfatal wounds striking Connally at Zapruder film frame 224 where Connally is seen turned to his right, allegedly lining his body up with JFK’s neck, thus sustaining the single bullet explanation. He finds proof that a bullet hit then in Connally’s lapel that was flapping in that one frame as it passed through. But he does not conform to fact. Wind gusting to twenty miles per hour that day ruffled clothing. And, there is no bullet hole in the lapel but in the jacket body beneath the right nipple area.

    Posner crowns his theory with the certainty of science by using one side of the computer-enhanced studies by Failure Analysis Associates of Menlo Park that his text implies he commissioned. The firm, however, lambastes his use as a distortion of the technology that it had developed for the American Bar Association’s mock trial of Oswald where both sides used it.

    Posner fails. I believe that irrefutable evidence shows conspirators, none of them Oswald, killed JFK. A mentally ill Jack Ruby, alone and unaided, shot Oswald. The federal inquiry knowingly collapsed and theorized a political solution. Its corruption spawned theorists who tout solutions rather than define the facts that are locked in the massively muddied evidentiary base and released only by hard work.

  • Gerald Posner: Did He Get Anything Right?

    Gerald Posner: Did He Get Anything Right?


    posner toon

    Prior to the 30th anniversary of President Kennedy’s assassination, relatively few people had heard of or purchased the books by attorney Gerald Posner. Then in 1993, a tsunami of publicity announced the coming of the volume that would finally silence all of the doubts about and critiques of the Warren Commission. Entitled, rather pretentiously, Case Closed, it was published by major publisher Random House, and it was accompanied by a publicity machine that started with a featured spot on an ABC newsmagazine where– Posner was served up softballs by Lynn Scherr; and a cover story in U.S. News and World Report, which, somehow, could not find one major fault in the book (as we shall see that is an amazing negative accomplishment.)

    Posner’s was clearly meant as an unmitigated, no holds barred, almost venomous prosecution brief against Lee Harvey Oswald. No doubt was expressed, no slack was cut, no ambiguity fit in to Posner’s work. How could it considering the title? This was doubly confounding to skeptics since at the time his book was published, the Assassination Records Review Board had not begun its work yet. There were literally millions of pages of documents no one had seen so how could Posner be so sure he was correct? As we shall see, he wasn’t sure and he had to be corrected. But that has not altered his opinion of anything. When major evidence changes, yet the prosecution insists it was correct, then clearly an agenda is in place, and justice is not part of it. This is why we have judges to overrule overly zealous prosecutors.

    One of the notable things about Posner’s book is how much of a personal attack it is upon Oswald. Who does he rely upon for much of this personal vitriol? None other than Priscilla Johnson… Another source is Ruth Paine. Another is John Lattimer. As the reader can see from other profiles, these are not the most unbiased or credible sources. Posner just used them indiscriminately. He also used Hugh Aynesworth. In the profile on this site of Aynesworth, we mention the “attempt’ by Oswald to do away with Richard Nixon. We showed how this was probably foisted on Marina Oswald by Aynesworth sometime in 1964. We also showed why not even the Warren Commission could accept it. Guess what? Posner did. In the paperback edition of his book (p. 119) he treats this episode straightforwardly, without reservations. The tell-tale sign that he got it from Aynesworth is that he uses the same newspaper heading that Aynesworth gave to his friend Homes Alexander for his 1964 article. Alexander noted in 1964 that an article in the Dallas Morning News featured a story that was headed “Nixon Calls for Decision to Force Reds out of Cuba”. This is precisely the story that Posner uses. He then adds that Nixon was not in Dallas “the day” Marina said he was, implying that Marina was off by a day or two when she was actually off by nearly seven months. He also discounts the fact that there was never any announcement of Nixon arriving around this time by saying that there was an announcement that Johnson was and Oswald confused the two. Finally he argues that Marina was strong enough to keep Oswald barricaded in the bathroom by bracing herself against the opposite wall. This is ludicrous to anyone who has ever met Marina. She is positively petite, actually dainty, being a little over five feet tall and, at the time of the assassination and probably about 120 pounds. Posner never notes the Alexander/Aynesworth column, the then association between Aynesworth and Marina, Aynesworth’s mercenary and clearly ideological aims, or Marina’s plight and later recantation of much of what she said when she was under the influence of Aynesworth and Priscilla Johnson. He could have done all of this. He mentioned none of it.

    Posner is just as bad and irresponsible on the medical evidence as he is about Oswald. In the chapter entitled “He Has a Death Look” he uses people like Michael Baden to discredit the doctors in Dallas who say they saw a large hole in the rear of Kennedy’s head. Posner is intent on getting rid of that hole because it would give strong evidence of there being a shot from the front of Kennedy’s car. In fact, he admits this himself about the hole in the back of the head: “If true, this not only contradicted the findings of the autopsy team but was evidence that the President was probably shot from the front…. (ibid. p. 307) He then spends pages trying to discredit the doctors and attendants at Parkland Hospital who say they saw this hole. The agenda being that if he does so, there will be no evidence for it left.

    But the problem for Posner was that he spoke too soon. When the ARRB declassified the House Select Committee on Assassinations medical files, we found out something Posner did not know and had not bothered to query about. (Understandable, considering what he was trying to do.) The doctors who examined the body in Bethesda, and who had it most of the night, agreed with the doctors in Dallas about the wound in the rear of the head. In fact, nearly as many witnesses at Bethesda agreed with the witnesses at Parkland. Gary Aguilar tallied them all up and it now comes to over 40 witnesses, fairly equally distributed between the two locations. So Posner’s thesis, which he spends over six pages developing, is undermined by the new files. So much for his title.

    Then there was the pronouncement in his book about there being no evidence that connected Ferrie with Oswald (p. 426) This was simply wrong as we show elsewhere. But when Posner was confronted with a photo of the two together, he had a hard time swallowing it and so he tried to weasel out of it by saying that it probably came from Jim Garrison’s office and that the DA had been shown to have doctored two other photos. This is in keeping with his penchant in smearing personages when the evidence turns against him. The problem here is that 1.) Garrison never had the photograph in question, and 2.) There is no evidence of him altering photographs.

    Finally to show how indiscriminate and undiscerning, how cynical Posner is about what his audience knows, toward the end of his book he quotes Robert Blakey, Chief Counsel of the HSCA, about what was in the classified files that he helped lock up for over 50 years: “I know everything in those files, and there is no smoking gun in there. People who expect major revelations will be disappointed. Everything of importance got into our report.” (ibid p. 469) This is an amazing quote for Posner to use on several counts:

    1. Just five pages earlier, Posner spent a long section on his book discrediting Blakey and his conclusions about a Mafia conspiracy. Now he trots out the man he just discredited as an authority on what he did not reveal.
    2. Blakey has just told him that he “knew everything in those files”. Posner does not challenge the statement. Yet, even at the time Posner’s book was written the National Archives had estimated that there were about two million pages of classified files they had to work on declassifying. The actual number turned out to be even higher. Yet Posner does not question the astounding claim that Blakey read all this stuff and still-15 year later– “knew everything” in it.
    3. It was Blakey’s report that covered up the point above about the Bethesda doctors agreeing with the Parkland doctors on the wound in the rear of Kennedy’s head. A tenet that their own (hidden) documents and interviews contravened. The two major authors of the Final Report were Blakey and Richard Billings.
    4. It was Posner himself who wrote, as we have seen, that this wound placement would constitute evidence that Kennedy was hit from the front. Meaning the fatal shot came from there and Oswald could not have fired it.

    Without exaggeration, today, almost every page of Case Closed abounds with quotes, comments, or deductions as flatulent as this one. To go through the entire book and correct them all, as I have here, would literally take a volume longer than Posner’s original work. Yet as we show here, in our links, the critiques of his indefensible book abound on the Internet. Yet, Jennings and Obenhaus either never bothered to look them up, or they were never interested. Which is worse according to a journalist’s credo?

  • How Gerald Posner Got Rich and Famous: Or, Bob Loomis and the Anti-Conspiracy Posse


    Although Gerald Posner had written several books prior to 1993’s Case Closed, he had never achieved any kind of broad notoriety, broadcast exposure, or large sales prior to that book. And although there had been other Warren Commission volumes circulating at the time, e.g. Jim Moore’s Conspiracy of One, none ever became nearly as famous, or infamous, as Posner’s. Why?

    The answer is: Robert Loomis.

    To understand who Loomis is and how far his reach extends in the publishing business, one must go back and study the origins and sad end of one of the very best books written on the Robert Kennedy assassination. That book — The Assassination of Robert F. Kennedy — was written by Bill Turner and Jonn Christian and was published in 1978 by Random House. The book had been a special project of Jason Epstein, one of the more literate, intelligent, and creative editors on the publishing scene. The book that emerged was an excellent one in the field. Epstein was quite content with the result. He wrote attorney Vincent Bugliosi, who played a feature role in the book, “I hope you are as pleased as we are with the way it turned out. The jacket looks great, but more important is the tough case that is made between the covers.” And Epstein had plans for a good publicity campaign, which never really materialized.

    In an unexpected reversal the book, for all intents and purposes, was withdrawn from circulation. No paperback rights were sold. Random House used the possibility of a lawsuit by an organized crime figure mentioned in the book as the excuse. But the book had already been vetted by Random House’s lawyers for libel and the lawsuit never was filed. When a friend of Turner’s, Betsy Langman, called Epstein about the book’s reversal of fortune, he replied, “I don’t want to talk about it.”

    But someone at Random House did know what happened to the book. He was the man who had shepherded Robert Houghton’s previous book on the case, entitled Special Unit Senator, through Random House. Houghton had been in charge of the secret investigation of the RFK case inside of LAPD. An investigation that, by any objective standard, was a complete and shameful cover-up of the true facts of that murder. Houghton’s sponsor at Random House was named Robert Loomis. Loomis had told others that the Turner/Christian book had been withdrawn and burned. When alerted to the possibility of a lawsuit, he brushed it off cavalierly with words to the effect of: “So what?”

    Perhaps no other person in the publishing world has been more vigilant against any real investigation of the assassinations of the sixties, or of exposes of conspiracies in general, than Robert Loomis. Another client of his was the late James Phelan. Phelan was always friendly with the intelligence community and was exposed in the nineties as having done journalistic assignments for the government, like informing on Jim Garrison to the FBI. In the seventies, he did a book for Loomis entitled Howard Hughes: The Hidden Years. There had always been rumors and indications that Hughes had been working closely with the CIA, so many were interested as to what had happened to the eccentric millionaire in his later years and the odd circumstances of his death. Loomis made Phelan’s book a top secret project for Random House. Only Loomis and one other person at the firm knew about it. All dealings between New York City, and Naples, California (where Phelan rented a cottage to write the book) were done either in person or by hand-delivery. There was no mail or phone contact. The two mains sources for Phelan were two lower level employees in the Hughes empire.

    Phelan’s book is pretty much worthless today. It basically set the rather deceiving model of the bizarre lifestyle of the long-haired fruity Hughes who got more and more neurotic as time went on. None of the intricate ties between Hughes and the CIA, for example, in regard to the use of an island for Cuban exile training, or, another example, his connection to the Watergate scandal is touched upon. Phelan wrote another book for Loomis called Scandals, Scamps, and Scoundrels, an anthology of essays which includes a section on the JFK case which is basically a rehash of his anti-Garrison writings that had appeared in 1967.

    In the nineties, four more books emerged dealing with Oswald and the Kennedy assassination, Kennedy’s presidency, and the death of Martin Luther King. All were sponsored by or directly related to Loomis and his clients. All received a lot of hype, which the Turner-Christian book did not. Loomis sponsored Case Closed for Random House. He apparently knew Posner through an earlier effort of his entitled Hitler’s Children. As one can clearly discern through reading the footnotes, Posner’s Kennedy assassination book was a rush job that was done in the wake of the furor surrounding Oliver Stone’s 1991 movie JFK. Posner told Jim Marrs after a debate in Dallas that Loomis approached him about the book at that time and told him he would have the cooperation of the CIA on the project. This explains how Posner got access to KGB turncoat Yuri Nosenko, who was put on a CIA retainer in the late seventies. The book was timed for release on the 30th anniversary of JFK’s death which explains why it was such a clear hurry-up job. (See attached articles for a chronicle of only some of the many, many errors is this hapless book.) Loomis also commissioned Norman Mailer’s concoction of a book Oswald’s Tale, done with longtime FBI informant on the Kennedy case Lawrence Schiller. Mailer tried to make the case that the book was warranted by his access to some of the Russian files on Oswald that he had access to from the newly formed government of Belarus. Yet, according to John Tunheim of the ARRB, there is an approximately five foot high stack of documents that no one has seen on Oswald. Not even the ARRB. Mailer got nowhere near the majority of these files. Predictably, Mailer’s book presented the probability of the case against Oswald as the lone assassin.

    Further on into the nineties, Posner came out with another book on an infamous assassination of the sixties. This one was on the Martin Luther King case. It was called Killing the Dream and also made the same single-minded case against James Earl Ray as Posner did against Lee Harvey Oswald. He told one interviewer: “There is no question. Ray was the shooter. That’s how I see the evidence, how anybody objective has to see the evidence.” To put it mildly, this is a rather gross overstatement as can be seen by reading any credible book on the King murder, like say Harold Weisberg’s Frame-Up or Ray’s own Who Killed Martin Luther King? Let us not forget that in the only two real trials of this case, the jury decided for conspiracy; namely the HBO mock trial in 1993, and the civil trial held in Memphis by the King family vs. Loyd Jowers in 1999.

    Finally, let us consider Seymour Hersh and his embarrassment of a book on the Kennedy presidency, The Dark Side of Camelot. Hersh is a darling of the so-called liberal print media. People like Jacob Weisberg and Eric Alterman defended his career and his awful book when it was being attacked in so many quarters when it came out in 1997. These commentators, and just about everyone else, ignored the fact that Hersh’s career has always been quite questionable in his relationship to the CIA and his reliance on sources there. Also, that from the beginning Hersh’s book publishing career has been advanced by Bob Loomis. This whole rather strange career with Loomis and the questionable judgments and maneuvers Hersh has done in that career are examined in The Assassinations: Probe Magazine on JFK, MLK, RFK, and Malcolm X (pgs. 364-373).

    If one calls Loomis’ office one will learn from his secretary that he spends a lot of time in Washington D.C., even though Random House’s main offices are in New York. This probably began because his former wife Gloria had once worked for the CIA. She was the personal secretary to none other than James Angleton, the legendary counter-intelligence chief of the Agency for 20 years. He is also the man who many writers and researchers, like John Newman and Lisa Pease, believe was handling the Oswald file in the CIA. This undisclosed fact would then explain how Posner got the CIA clearances to talk to people no one has access to. It also helps explain why Loomis does what he does. But wouldn’t it have been more honest to the reader of Posner’s book if he would have explained that it had been commissioned by someone whose former wife had worked for the man who was probably running Oswald as an intelligence agent?

    Did Posner make a Faustian deal with Loomis? A quid pro quo in political parlance? Consider the similarities between these two quotes dug up by attorney and longtime Kennedy researcher Roger Feinman: “All the conspiracy theories have undermined the public’s belief in the government, and that, to me, is a crime.” (Bob Loomis, Publisher’s Weekly, 5/3/93) “But I also think that the conspiracy theorists have made us lose faith in government.” (Gerald Posner, Dallas Morning News, 11/21/93).

    Coincidence or conspiracy?

  • Posner in New Orleans: Gerry in Wonderland


    Listening to the media accompaniment surrounding the release of Gerald Posner’s 600 page volume Case Closed, one was reminded of the trumpet blare which sounded when the Warren Report was released 29 years ago. Reading US News and World Report, a usually staid and reserved publication, one would have expected an investigatory effort worthy of Scotland Yard or the Mossad. What emerges after all the sound and fury is an effort more comparable to the Dallas or Los Angeles Police Departments.

    Before getting to the main focus of this essay, one needs to comment on some general matters regarding Mr. Posner and his book. Reportedly, like John McCloy and Allen Dulles, Mr. Posner is a Wall Street lawyer. Based on three interviews with sources who read his previous book on Mengele, Posner whitewashed that notorious Nazi’s ties to the Hitler regime before his McCloy-aided escape to South America after World War II. This may help explain Posner’s quite questionable use of sources.

    About the first half of Case Closed deals exclusively with the life and careers of Lee Oswald. Like the Warren Commission and the five volume FBI report on the assassination, Posner’s focus is on Oswald and it is in extreme close-up since it is always easier to portray a man as a lone nut if you draw him in a virtual vacuum.

    But to rig the apparatus even further, Posner uses the most specious witnesses imaginable in his single-minded prosecutorial proceeding. Scanning his footnotes for the first ten chapters, a rough approximation would estimate that about 75% of them originate from the Warren Commission volumes. In turn, many of these citings come from the testimony of Marina Oswald who, as lawyer Posner must know, could not have testified at Oswald’s trial. Also, Posner never reveals to the reader how Marina was abducted and then stowed away at the Inn of the Six Flags Hotel and how she was virtually quarantined while she was being threatened with deportation. Posner never points out any of the problems and inconsistencies with her Warren Commission testimony, which even some of the Commission members had reservations about, and which a skillful defense lawyer would be able to exploit to great advantage.

    If that were not enough, Posner quotes liberally from the testimony of both Ruth Paine and George DeMohrenschildt, two people who — to say the least — have questionable motives in this case and both of whom have direct and indirect ties to the CIA. Again, Posner ignores those ties and actually states that DeMohrenschildt had no connection to American intelligence (p. 86), when the CIA admitted those connections over 15 years ago. Posner also uses Oswald’s “Historic Diary” against him when everyone, even Edward Epstein, admits that it was not a “diary” at all, but was composed in 2 or 3 installments, probably as part of Oswald’s cover as an espionage agent.

    Finally, Posner quotes liberally from the work of Priscilla Johnson McMillan, the newspaper correspondent who interviewed Oswald in Russia, then helped the Warren Commission find Oswald’s tickets to Mexico after the FBI could not. She then locked up Marina Oswald for 13 years with a book contract until Marina and Lee, the mother of all “Oswald-did-it” books, appeared in 1977. The working papers of staff lawyer David Slawson reveal that even the Warren Commission suspected Ms. McMillan had ties to the CIA.

    This is all prelude to what the author does when his book reaches the locale of New Orleans. Posner seems all too aware that the city and Oswald’s actions there in the summer of 1963 pose a serious threat to the main thesis of his book. Perhaps this is why his bibliography lists all of Harold Weisberg’s books except Oswald in New Orleans. For to admit that Oswald was associating with clandestine operatives like Clay Shaw, David Ferrie and Guy Banister poses a big problem for a man intent on painting Oswald as a demented communist zealot. Consequently, Posner shifts into a denial mode and sustains it by any means necessary.

    For instance, Posner begins Chapter 7 by stating that, according to Marina, Oswald was home early every evening for the couple’s entire stay in New Orleans. Posner has often stated that he had access to the late Jim Garrison’s files. If he did he would have found out that Oswald stayed overnight on more than one occasion in a room adjacent to the French Quarter restaurant, “The Court of the Two Sisters.” The room was arranged by a mutual friend of Shaw and Ferrie. Posner mentions that Oswald worked at Reily Coffee Company while in New Orleans but leaves out the facts of the Reily family’s connections to Cuban exile groups and the peculiar coincidence of Oswald’s colleagues being transferred from Reily to the NASA complex at nearby Michaud Air Force Base. Posner states that Oswald’s expenditures of nearly $23.00 on pro-Castro leaflets was not exorbitant even though it was about one-sixth of what he was making per month, or the equivalent of a man making $3,000 per month spending about $500 on political flyers.

    On page 157, Posner writes that the altercation between Carlos Bringuier and Oswald on Canal Street in August of ’63, which resulted in Oswald’s conspicuous arrest, was not staged. Yet he never asks the logical followup question: if it was not staged then why did Oswald write about it days in advance? Of William Gaudet, one of the CIA agents who escorted Oswald on his strange tour of Mexico, Posner writes that he had no relation to the case outside of being next to Oswald when in line to buy a tourist card for south of the border. He adds that Gaudet was a “newspaper editor.” Posner does not write that the newspaper Gaudet edited was a right wing propaganda sheet about South American politics, that one of his reporting duties was supplying infomation to the CIA, that one of the men he worked for earIy in his career was a business associate of Shaw’s, and that Gaudet had a virtually rent-free office in the International Trade Mart which was provided to him by Shaw.

    Posner frequently uses character assassination when he finds testimony contrary to his thesis. Orest Pena had stated to Harold Weisberg that he had seen Oswald at his bar, the Habana. That tavern was a frequent watering hole for Ferrie, Bringuier, Shaw, and other militant Cuban exiles. Posner states (p. 167), that Pena recanted his story at his first FBI interview and vacillated before the Warren Commission. Posner does not state that Pena was visited by both Bringuier and FBI agent Warren DeBrueys and warned about his official testimony. Posner tries to finish off Pena by adding that he was later charged with managing prostitutes out of his establishment and was aided in his legal defense by “leading conspiracy buff Mark Lane.” What he faiIs to add is that his legal problems came about after his testimony before the Warren Commission and that the charges were so weak they never came to trial.

    Posner’s most breathtaking balancing act relates to Oswald’s relationship with Ferrie and Banister. On page 143, he states that the many Civil Air Patrol cadets who testified to Oswald being in Ferrie’s CAP before he joined the Marines must be either mistaken or lying since Ferrie was thrown out of the CAP in the mid-fifties when Oswald was supposed to be in his unit. Posner’s blinders keep him from telling the reader that, at this time, Ferrie formed his own CAP unit in Metairie and it was this unit that Oswald was a member of. This information is available in the invaluable Southern Research Company investigation of Ferrie commissioned by Eastern Airlines during his dismissal hearings. These papers are on file at the AARC. Posner states he spent many hours there. Did he skip the Ferrie file? On page 428, Posner states that “there was no evidence that connected Ferrie and Oswald.” In Garrison’s files it is revealed that Ferrie stated this himself to two people — Ray Broshears and Lou Ivon. He also told them he worked for the CIA. If Posner needs further evidence of the Ferrie-Oswald friendship he should ask Gus Russo, whom he credits in his acknowledgments. Russo found a photo of the two together from a friend who knew the pair in Ferrie’s CAP.

    Posner’s efforts to keep Oswald away from 544 Camp Street have a touch of the ludicrous about them. He tries to discredit the reliability of every witness that places Oswald there: Delphine Roberts and her daughter, David Lewis, Jack Martin, Oswald himself and the HSCA. He portrays Roberts as off her rocker and says she now states she lied to Tony Summers in the late 70’s about Oswald being in Banister’s office. She says today that Summers gave her some money to appear on camera for a TV special and this is why she said what she did. Posner ignores the following: 1) Roberts told her story to Summers before he even mentioned anything about a payment; 2) on her own and without any promise of money, Roberts told essentially the same story to Earl Golz of the Dallas Morning News in a story that ran in December of 1978; and 3) her story about seeing a “communist” outside the office leafletting the area, telling Banister, and him laughing and saying that he was one of them is partly corroborated by an interview with a third party in Banister’s office at the time. Again this is in the Garrison files that Posner says he had access to.

    In his desperation to discredit anyone associated with either the Garrison or the HSCA investigation of the New Orleans part of the conspiracy, Posner occasionaly winds up swinging at air. On page 138, he writes that Gaeton Fonzi was the HSCA investigator on the issues of Banister, 544 Camp Street, and David Ferrie. He smears Fonzi and the validity of these reports by saying “he was a committed believer in a conspiracy.” Fonzi’s name does appear on the reports in Volume X of the House Select Committee appendices. But in those reports related to the New Orleans part of the investigation his name appears along with the names of Pat Orr and Liz Palmer. If Posner would have talked to any of these people before smearing Fonzi, he would have found out that Fonzi only edited the New Orleans reports. Orr and Palmer did the actual field investigations and original writing in these sections, something that Fonzi has no problem telling anyone. I know of no books, articles or interviews by Orr or Palmer which would show them to be a “committed believer in a conspiracy.” In fact, both have reputations for reserved judgment and objectivity.

    Posner’s depiction of the Clinton episode in the late summer of 1963 and which connects Shaw, Ferrie and Oswald epitomizes his stilted, fundamentally dishonest approach. He obtained some of the original memorandums made by the Garrison probe into the incident and attempts to show that since the eyewitness testimony does not jibe, then the witnesses are lying and therefore Garrison coached them into telling a coherent story at the trial. First, let us note that it is Posner in his section on Dealey Plaza who writes that eyewitness testimony to the same event often differs (funny how his standards constantly shift). Second, I would like to know if Mr. Posner asked Shaw’s attorneys — lrvin Dymond and Bill Wegmann — how they got these memos. But more to the point, Posner either doesn’t know or doesn’t think it important to inform the reader that the incident under discussion took place in two different towns. Oswald was first seen in Jackson, about 15 miles east of Clinton. Two of the witnesses who testified at the Shaw trial saw Oswald, or a double, in Jackson and in a different car than the one that appeared in Clinton later. Henry Palmer, one of the witnesses who talked to Oswald in Clinton — and it was Oswald there — interviewed him away from the voter ralIy, and did not get a good look at the car which contained Shaw and Ferrie. Oswald’s last appearance in the area was at the hospital back in Jackson where two personnel secretaries took his application for a job.

    What Posner does with all this is worthy of a cardsharp. By implying that all the elements — the car, the passengers, the rally, the witnesses — are in one place at one time, he tries to cast doubt on the witnesses and aspersions on Garrison’s use of them. It would be the equivalent of having a couple drive a different car into a service station, having a different car leave and go to another station, and then the original car returns with only the husband driving. Would we expect the two sets of witnesses to see the same thing? On the contrary, if they did we would have doubts about them. If this tactic would have seemed effective, wouldn’t Dymond and Wegmann have used it at the trial? Posner lists the transcript of the Shaw trial in his bibliography. If he really read it he would say that Dymond’s cross-examination of these people was quite gentle, he barely touched them. And when he tried to get tough, it backfired.

    Posner writes of Clay Shaw that no one knew him as Bertrand (pp. 430, 437). I have been about half way through Garrison’s files and related FBI files. There are 11 different references to Shaw as Bertrand. Posner passes out the old chestnut about Shaw being only a lowly “contract” agent who “like thousands of other Americans” was interviewed by the Agency about his foreign travels (p. 448). Posner does not state that Shaw filed 30 reports with the CIA over a six year period, that this relationship likely extended beyond the time period recognized by the CIA; that Shaw’s connections to the European front organizations Permindex and Centro Mondiale Commerciale are, to say the least, suspect, that in the August 1993 CIA release made available at the National Archives, a document reveals that Shaw had a covert clearance for a top secret CIA project codenamed QKENCHANT.

    This is too long to explore other related matters that Posner mangles. But let me briefly mention three of the “mysterious deaths” that Posner tries to set us straight on. On page 496, Posner insinuates that the death of Mary Sherman was neither mysterious nor relevant and that “she was killed in an accidental fire.” Like John Davis, he lists the year of her death as 1967. Mary Sherman died on July 21, 1964, the same day that the Warren Commission began taking testimony in New Orleans. Posner could have checked the local newspapers on this because her death made headline news for days after. To this day her case is listed as an unsolved murder by the New Orleans police. There was a small fire in her apartment and some smoke, but they were certainly not the cause of death. Her severed arm probably had more to do with it; along with her discarded yet blood-drenched gloves (think about that one), and also the hack marks made from a butcher knife on her torso.

    In the same section, Posner writes that there is no source for the claim that Gary Underhill was a former CIA agent, and “no corroboration that he ever said there was CIA complicity in the assassination.” I hate to plug my own work, but in Destiny Betrayed, Posner would have learned there are several sources for Underhill’s wartime OSS career and his later CIA consulting status, including Underhill himself. As for his accusations about the CIA and the murder of JFK, he related them quite vividly to his friend Charlene Fitsimmons within 24 hours of the shooting. She then forwarded a letter to Jim Garrison relating the incident in detail.

    On the same page in which he discusses the Underhill case, Posner describes the murder of Mary Meyer in two sentences: “Mary Meyer (murdered) was allegedly one of JFK’s mistresses. Except for her reported liaison with the President, she was not associated with any aspect of the case.” Posner does not include Katherine the Great by Deborah Davis in his bibliography. If he would have read it he would have learned that Mary Meyer had been married to former CIA counterintelligence officer Cord Meyer. That several acquaintances stated that Kennedy was quite taken with the pretty and bright Meyer. And that since she had been married to a CIA officer, he confided in her about his plans to reorganize the Agency in his second term. Needless to say, the poor wretch accused of her murder was acquitted on weak evidence.

    I have only dealt with a small part of Posner’s work. I am sure if other specialists critiqued it they could come up with similar summaries in other fields of evidence. Suffice it to say that when an author evinces these kinds of tendencies, all exculpative of the CIA, all incriminating of Oswald, one has the right to question his bona fides. Posner is this year’s version of the Breo and Lundberg show. And again the media has heralded him without a critical eye. Upon scrutiny, his work, like JAMA’s is revealed to be a sham, maybe worse. And as with JAMA, two people are contemplating lawsuits against Random House and Mr. Posner. No doubt, the press will ignore the progress and revelations of those lawsuits.

    For the rest of us, the ones who care enough to be serious, the struggle to reopen this case continues. No matter how many Moores, Breos, and Posners come down the trail, we must never lose sight of that aim. Perhaps then we can swear in Mr. Posner and ask him who exactly were the CIA confidential sources he consulted and why — 30 years after the fact — they still demand anonymity?

  • The Posner Follies: Fast and Loose with the Witnesses


    Using Testimony Known to Be False

    In a debate with David Scheim on National Public Radio, Gerald Posner admitted including in his book, Case Closed, an interview with Dallas entertainment writer Tony Zoppi, an interview which Posner knew contained false information.

    1. Tony Zoppi told the HSCA in 1978 that he talked with Jack Ruby at the Dallas Morning News building on Friday morning, not long before the assassination of President Kennedy.
    2. HSCA later learned that this information was probably false. Confronted with this, Zoppi admitted his account was a fabrication.
    3. Nonetheless, Posner included the Zoppi statements in his book.
    4. When Scheim confronted Posner with this during their radio debate, Posner admitted that he knew the information was false, but that had included it because it was dealing with a crucial issue.
    5. In fact, Posner used the Zoppi statements in a effort to show that Jack Ruby was calm and was not in the emotional state one would expect of one who was involved in any assassination plot against the President. This was, of course, central to Posner’s thesis that Ruby became involved only after the assassination–and then only out of emotional turmoil.

    “Phantom” Witnesses

    1. Posner appeared before the Conyers Subcommittee on Government Operations in fall of 1993. At that time, he stated that he had spoken with Drs Humes and Boswell, who had performed President Kennedy’s autopsy, and that these two men now agreed that they had erred in parts of their autopsy report, notably in locating an entry wound in the back of Kennedy’s head 4 inches too low. Posner told the Congressional committee that Humes and Boswell thus now agreed with the depiction of the wounds seen in the autopsy photographs and X-rays.
    2. Dr. Gary Aguilar spoke with Dr. Boswell on March 30, 1994. At that time, Dr. Boswell denied ever having spoken to Gerald Posner.
    3. On pages 324-325 of Case Closed, Posner put forth his theory that a first shot from Oswald in the TSBD window nicked the branch of an oak tree, separating lead core from copper jacket,with the core striking a pavement of Main Street and producing fragments which nicked spectator James Tague in the face. Posner includes three citations from interviews with Tague. In these, Tague is reported as having told Posner that he does not know which shot produced the fragments which nicked him–hence Posner’s hypothesis is possible.
    4. What Posner does not cite in Tague’s 1964 Warren Commission testimony. There, Tague says that he thinks that it was the second or third shot which struck him, although he is not sure. Far more important (and totally ignored by Posner) is Tague’s statement under oath that he thought the shots came from the grassy knoll and not from the TSBD!
    5. Dr. Aguilar talked with James Tague in late April, 1994. Tague denied that he ever spoke with Gerald Posner. (Recall that there are 3 citations based on an alleged interview with Tague in Case Closed.)
  • Gerald Posner, Case Closed – The Art of Misrepresenting Evidence


    How many books have been written on the Kennedy assassination? In announcing the publication of seven new books on the subject this fall, Publishers Weekly put the total at over four hundred. Too high? No, too low, way too low, according to Gerald Posner, who opens his book Case Closed by telling us it’s over two thousand! This startling figure, if it can be believed, indicates how deeply President Kennedy’s death has dug into our nation’s psyche. The mystery and drama of a charismatic president gunned downed in the arms of his wife fascinates and haunts us. It has become, as the trailer to the movie JFK advertised, the story that will not go away. It is part of our mythology.

    Indeed, Oliver Stone has said that by blending fact with fiction he was trying to create a mythology to counter the Warren Commission’s. With the success of JFK and the deluge of new conspiracy books as the thirtieth anniversary nears, it was inevitable that at least one major publisher, in this case Random House, would put its prestige behind the lone assassin theory. Posner resolves the greatest murder mystery of our time, we are told on the book’s jacket.

    Not surprisingly, mainstream media has greeted the book with the same unquestioning acceptance it did the Warren Report twenty-nine years ago. U.S. News and World Report devoted half an issue to it. It has been heralded around the nation in major newspapers and magazines as the authoritative work on the assassination, supplanting the role once played by the Warren Report. Posner has appeared unchallenged on TV and radio talk shows, a stark contrast to the rough going Stone got from the mainstream media even before his film opened.

    Case Closed is nothing more than a rehash of the Warren Report; same evidence, same conclusion dressed up with computer simulations and even bolder speculations passed off as scientific certainty. Posner’s work shows a simple, unquestioning faith in the evidence gathered by the Warren Commission. It is riddled with misrepresentations of evidence. On one issue alone, whether witnesses saw a puff of smoke on the grassy knoll during the assassination, Posner manages to make five misrepresentations of the evidence, all on one page. So here we go again, another round of claims and counterclaims on the question: Was there a conspiracy to assassinate President Kennedy?

    Posner Claim:
    “Railroad workers on the overpass could not have seen puffs of smoke from rifle fire on the knoll, because modern ammunition is smokeless, it seldom creates even a wisp of smoke.” (Case Closed, page 256)

    Evidence:
    Posner’s claim is easily disproved by visiting a rifle range. Just watch people shoot. Puffs of smoke will be seen all over the place. Even a government investigation conceded that “modern weapons do in fact emit smoke when fired.” ( House Select Committee on Assassinations, Report, 1979, page 606)

    Posner Claim:
    “Edward Jay Epstein in Inquest, writes ‘Five of the witnesses on the overpass said they had also seen smoke rise from the grassy knoll area.’ Epstein’s citation lists only four names, three of which do not support the proposition that the smoke resulted from gunfire”. (Case Closed, page 256)

    Evidence:
    There are seven well-documented witnesses who claim to have seen smoke on the knoll. They are S. M. Holland (who testified before the Warren Commission (6H243), James Simmons and Richard Dodd (both interviewed by Mark Lane in the film Rush to Judgment), Walter Winborn and Thomas Murphy (both interviewed by me in May 1966), Austin Miller (who wrote a statement to the Dallas Sheriff’s Department on November 22), and reporter Ed Johnson (who wrote for his paper the next day. “Some of us saw little puffs of white smoke that seemed to hit the grassy area in the esplanade that divides Dallas’ main downtown streets.” (Fort Worth Star-Telegram, November 23, 1963)

    Posner Claim:
    “James Simmons said [to the FBI] he thought the shots came from the Book Depository and that he saw ‘exhaust fumes’ from the embankment.” (Case Closed, page 256)

    Evidence:
    This is indeed what two FBI agents claim Simmons said to them in March of 1964. (22H833) This FBI report, however, is a fabrication. One of Posner’s main flaws, which he shares with the Warren Commission, is his unquestioning reliance on hearsay reports of FBI agents. Many witnesses contradicted what was in their FBI reports, and Simmons was one of them. Simmons told Mark Lane in a filmed interview, “It sounded like it came from the left and in front of us towards the wooden fence. And there was a puff of smoke that came underneath the trees on the embankment… It was right directly in front of the wooden fence.” Simmons told the FBI agents when they visited him that he had seen a “puff of smoke on the knoll.” Evidently, they chose to hand in a false report instead. (The film Rush to Judgment)

    Posner Claim:
    “Austin Miller ‘thought the smoke he saw was steam. . . . There was a steam pipe along the wooden fence near the edge of the Triple Underpass…’ If there was smoke, it is most likely that Austin Miller was right, and it was from the pipe.” (Case Closed, page 256)

    Evidence:
    Not quite. Posner does not accurately represent what Austin Miller said. In a sworn statement to the Dallas Sheriff’s Department on November 22, Austin Miller said, “I saw something which I thought was smoke or steam coming from a group of trees north of Elm off the Railroad tracks.” (19H485) When he was questioned four and a half months later by Commission counsel David Belin, he was not asked one question about the smoke or steam he observed. The steam pipe that Posner refers to can been seen in the film Rush to Judgment. It is over 100 feet away from the point on the knoll where smoke was observed by seven witnesses. No one reported smoke or steam at the location of the steam pipe. If a steam pipe had been the cause of smoke at the site of the steam pipe or on the grassy knoll, one would expect the steam or smoke to have been seen again. No such sightings occurred. Posner has a tendency to misrepresent what the witnesses said. He criticizes another author for listing Victoria Adams as a witness who picked the knoll as the origin of the shots when she actually described the shots as coming from the vicinity of the Book Depository. (Case Closed, page 237) Adams did no such thing. She was looking out of a fourth floor window of the Book Depository when the shots were fired. She testified, “And we heard a shot, and it was a pause, and then a second shot, and then a third shot. It sounded like a firecracker or a cannon at a football game, it seemed as if it came from the right below [the knoll] rather than the left above.” She then ran out of the building and over to the knoll in the direction she believed the shots came from. (6H388)

    Posner Claim:
    “Clemon Johnson [another railroad worker] saw white smoke but told the FBI that it ‘came from a motorcycle abandoned near the spot by a Dallas policeman.’” (Case Closed, page 256)

    Evidence:
    The railroad workers saw a puff of smoke right after they heard the last shot. There was no motorcycle on the knoll at that time, as clearly shown in photographs taken by a witness, Wilma Bond, after the assassination. (Life magazine, November 24, 1967)

    Posner’s presentation of the evidence of the assassination is deceptive and contrived. He is so confident of his arguments, so disdainful of the questions that have been raised, that he is disposed to make any argument, no matter how fatuous or fabricated, that a lone assassin killed Kennedy. To say otherwise, in light of the overwhelming evidence, he tells us in the last line of Case Closed, “is to absolve a man with blood on his hands, and to mock the President he killed”.

    In his preface, Posner explains why the public has been particularly receptive to conspiracy theories in this case. (Case Closed, page ix) One reason he gives is that “public receptivity to the theories is also fed by suspicions that politicians lie and cover up misdeeds.” (Case Closed, page x) But hasn’t recent history, from Vietnam to Watergate to the Iran- Contra scandal, given the most innocent among us reason to be suspicious? To read Case Closed is to descend into a world understood from the most naive perspective of how people behave and how governments work.

  • Shame On You, Sy, for the Awful Book on JFK


    Seymour Hersh, The Dark Side of Camelot
    Little, Brown and Co.; 1997; 498 pages, $26.96

    In an interview given on publication of his alleged expose of John F. Kennedy’s private life and public policies, the famed investigative reporter Sy Hersh said he wanted to make “a big score” and retire.

    To this end the Pulitzer prize winner has prostituted his nation’s history and, at the same time, sustained the intelligence and military forces that bitterly opposed JFK — those who among other infamies sunk us in Vietnam and who tried and failed to initiate nulcear war over Cuba. Hersh does it with a corruption of scholarship perhaps unequalled in recent times.

    He uses not a single source note, but employs caption notes that refer to many books and no pages, so a reader cannot easily check his truthfulness. Hersh has corrupted the facts. On major issues he is coy, strongly using suggestive language with a statement of fact where none exists. Sources are often made up to fit his perceived beliefs. In addition he relies on interviews with people bitterly opposed to JFK’s policies and usually not identified as such.

    Hersh reviews JFK’s rise to power and then largely concentrates on the foreign policies of his presidency, alleging that the crude principles of his reckless and corrupt personal life — astutely masked during his lifetime by his power and friends — led the United States into one disaster after the other.

    Hersh suffuses the book with putative accounts of JFK’s sex scampers but these are a honey trap to snare a reader into accepting Hersh’s false presentation of his foreign policy — which is the true intent of the book. How bad is Hersh’s scholarship? Consider the Section of THE DARK SIDE OF CAMELOT in which Hersh states that JFK “endorsed” the CIA assassination of Lumumba of the Congo. Nothing could be further from the truth. Since CIA thugs beat Lumumba to death on January 17 and JFK was sworn in on January 20, Hersh must overcome a serious chronologial problem. He does this by baldly asserting Kennedy vigorously supported and emphatically agreed to Eisenhower’s policy to kill the African leader.

    Hersh carries this subterfuge off by only quoting former CIA men who were ideologically opposed to JFK’s policies, by refusing to cite the copious well-known record affirming an opposite interpretation, and by not interviewing the numerous individuals who would have provided a true picture.

    Early in January 1961, Kenedy’s staff and special Congo study group had alerted the CIA that American reactionary policies in the Congo would change and that a JFK emissary had warned Belgium intelligence services not to “liquidate” Lumumba. By February 2, Kennedy had devised a plan for a new Congo policy that would ultimately include Lumumba. He did not learn of the murder of Lumumba until February 13; a famous photograph depicts him receiving the news, his head bowed in anguish.

    Hersh also devotes much attention to “proving” JFK tried to assassination Castro using the CIA and Mafia. In the course of this effort, he asserts that President Kennedy used Judy Exner, a sex partner, to carry cash to the mob bosses to pay for making the hit.

    A key document of the Castro murder attempts is a 1962 Department of Justice memorandum by the CIA’s inspector general Sheffield Edwards. Hersh uses parts of the document in other contexts, but when he comes to the attempts on Castro’s life he carefully omits what it says about them, since the document’s contents would destroy his framing of JFK.

    The CIA-Mafia attempts on Castro began in August 1960 and ended in November 1960, before JFK took office in 1961. Only six people knew of it, all CIA men, and they only orally. No one else knew — not Ike, not JFK — until many months after the fact when the FBI stumbled onto a bungled CIA phone tap for a mobster and it exposed the affair. A shocked Robert Kennedy ordered a complete explanation.

    As it turns out, the CIA had set aside $150,000 for the job, but the Mafia said no and refused to accept any money. EXner could not have carried money, as she told Hersh; there was none to carry and the affair had occurred and was over before he entered office. There were, in fact, no JFK directed or encouraged attempts on Castro’s life.

    Hersh frequently castigates JFK for using private back channels to negotiate a secret deal with Khruschev to end the Cuba missile crisis — a deal Hersh suggests Kennedy pursued in order to improve his standing with the American people. The fact is back channels worked and, after the crisis, the executive branch institutionalized it with direct phone lines and other systems, which later presidents have found to be quite useful. The real reason JFK kept the pact secret was spelled out in Khrushchev’s memoirs, KHRUSHSCHEV REMEMBERS, and in Robert Kennedy’s writings on the subject. It had nothing to do with self-promotion. The Kennedys were intensely afraid of an American military coup d’etat and overthrow of the U.S. govenment accompanied by a launching of a massive nuclear strike against the whole of the communist world. Only through this private method could and did JFK hold the irate military in check.

    It can be argued today that nuclear war was avoided by President Kennedy’s unparalleled action.

    Even in the minor themes of The Dark Side of Cemelot, Hersh perverts our history. He states a high-ranking Navy officer told him that, “at the request of Robert Kennedy”, the notes containing vital information about JFK’s postmortem were not published. By exclusively relying on that prejudiced source, Hersh sustains the generation-old effort of many federal officials to blame the failed inquiry into JFK’s death upon his brother’s refusal to give them access to key medical records.

    But in well-known sources, which were spurned by Hersh, we know RFK by letter gave explicit permission to use all autopsy materials. The same definitive sources also show it was the FBI that, after realizing the materials might hold data incompatible with its invented lone assassin theory, manufactured the libel that Robert Kennedy had denied access.

    Significantly, prosecutors did take the critical notes. They were not destroyed and were, in fact, placed in Navy hands. They were released by the Navy for Arlen Specter, Warren Commission counsel, who used them to examine the autopsy doctors. They were supposed to be part of Exhibit 397 of the Warren Commission, but it does not contain them. They are not in any archive or known agency files. On this serious issue — which genuinely is worthy of discussion — Hersh is embarrassingly silent.

    (reprinted from Capital Times of Madison, WI, 16 January 1998)
  • Patricia Lambert, False Witness


    False Witness: Aptly Titled

    By Jim DiEugenio and Bill Davy

    From the May-June 1999 issue (Vol. 6 No. 4) of Probe


    Following on the heels of Gus Russo’s Live By the Sword, another propaganda tract has been published. False Witness, by Patricia Lambert, is a hit piece on Jim Garrison and Oliver Stone. Curiously, Lambert formerly went under the name Patricia Billings. We can’t help but wonder if she was related in some manner to Dick Billings, the Time-LIFE journalist who actively worked to undermine Garrison’s case, and who had strong ties to the CIA.

    Patricia Lambert has basically taken a stale track and updated it with extremely selective sections from new documents to perform the same function that authors and journalists like Milton Brener, James Kirkwood, James Phelan, and Hugh Aynesworth have performed in the past. Once again, she attempts to portray Garrison’s investigation as a complete fraud from start to finish. Her thesis: every person under suspicion by Garrison was either put upon or persecuted by the deluded DA. This includes David Ferrie and especially Clay Shaw. Therefore, Stone built his film on a foundation of quicksand. Consequently the attacks on the movie were justified as the picture, by necessity, was a false portrait of the JFK case. When one compares the documentation in the book to the bulk of the record, the book’s title takes on new meaning, describing its author instead of its subject.

    Lambert’s caustic attack on Garrison paints him as a child molester and compares him to cult leader David Koresh. This last comparison is key to Lambert’s characterization of Garrison. Otherwise how could Garrison control the likes of Bill Alford, Andrew Sciambra, Numa Bertel, Al Oser, Lou Ivon, John Volz, Richard Burnes, D’alton Williams, Frank Meloche, Lynn Loisel, James Alcock, George Eckert, Sal Scalia, Bill Boxley, William Martin, et. al – all of whom assisted Garrison in his investigation and must have come under his spell. According to Lambert, the answer is simple of course. Garrison was also a Svengali. Oliver Stone is not spared Lambert’s vitriol either. By quoting an out of context interview, he is likened to Adolf Hitler’s documentarian, Leni Riefenstahl. When an author deals in this kind of hyperbole, it only serves to detract from the credibility of the writing. Absent the hyperbolic treatment however, this work is still less than credible. A recent Baltimore Sun review describes it as having “scant historical merit.”

    Patricia Lambert is a longtime friend and colleague of David Lifton who helped him on his manuscript for Best Evidence. Predictably, Lambert begins the book by saying that she was a believer in Garrison at the start of his probe who gradually grew disenchanted with him as his probe expanded and unraveled and finally ended with the failure of the Clay Shaw trial. This approach always leaves us a bit suspicious since, as with Sylvia Meagher, it always leaves out the overpowering attack on Garrison that took pains to ensure his failure. Lambert, working from a stacked deck, ignores that attack and its origins and motive. Therefore, the picture drawn is already skewed and distorted.

    Lambert loads the book with sources who have an agenda. She uses people like Aaron Kohn, David Chandler, Milton Brener, James Phelan, and Shaw’s lawyers without hesitation or qualification. And, of course, she sterilizes the sources by not informing the reader why and how they are compromised. For example, today there are literally dozens of FBI cables between Kohn in New Orleans and FBI HQ in Washington. Most of them explicitly discuss ways to sidetrack or smear Garrison. Lambert uses Kohn, but mentions none of this. David Chandler lived in an apartment owned by Shaw in New Orleans, so how neutral would one expect him to be? Chandler also admitted knowing Kerry Thornley, a character to which we will return at length, as well as to having met Oswald on several occasions before the assassination. Milton Brener represented Layton Martens, a Shaw associate and friend of David Ferrie’s, as well as Walter Sheridan, a man who went to dishonest lengths to attack Garrison. And of course, Shaw’s lawyers can hardly be considered an unbiased source.

    The dodging of this new evidence to whitewash Garrison’s attackers reaches almost humorous dimensions in the case of Phelan. Lambert knows she has a serious problem here since Phelan, with the new file releases, has been revealed to be a longtime FBI informant who informed to the Bureau about Garrison and dropped off documents in Washington which he had gotten from the DA. Further, this is something that Phelan always denied doing, in the apparent hope that these records would never be declassified. This new record on Phelan is either ignored or cavalierly dismissed.

    A perfect example of Lambert’s method appears in a footnote on the subject of Phelan. In a reference to Probe, she writes that an article relating Phelan’s career to former ONI operative Bob Woodward’s, was “so obscure it was incomprehensible.” Attesting to Woodward’s suspicious background, the article’s author, Lisa Pease, quoted a writer who noted that Woodward had attended Yale where the CIA was “encouraged to recruit.” To characterize a four-page article as incomprehensible based upon selectively quoting one sentence is fundamentally dishonest. The evidence that Lisa Pease mounted in her article to show that Woodward was in bed with the intelligence community and that he lied in his book, All the President’s Men, is simply and utterly forceful. And it parallels Phelan’s long career of FBI contacts, his relationship with longtime CIA asset Bob Maheu, and his (and Gerald Posner’s) mentor at Random House, the infamous Bob Loomis. Lambert ignores both the evidence and the parallel. Only an author with a clear agenda could do so. (Anyone interested can read both the Phelan and Woodward articles on the Internet at www.webcom.com/ctka/pr196-starrep.html. Decide for yourself whether it is the article’s comprehensibility, or Lambert’s comprehension, that is the problem.)

    Ferrie the Liberal!

    Like Gus Russo before her, Lambert goes out of her way to whitewash the true record and roles of David Ferrie and Clay Shaw. Her defense of Ferrie is, again, almost humorous. Like Russo, Lambert makes the impossible claim that Ferrie really didn’t hate Kennedy all that much. According to Lambert (no one else is cited), he actually liked JFK’s civil rights and fiscal program. She adds that there is no evidence of Ferrie’s participation in the Bay of Pigs operation. Oops. Newly declassified documents show that Ferrie helped prepare underwater diving teams for that episode, trained anti-Castro Cubans at CIA training camps and then watched films of the debacle with Cuban exile heavy Sergio Arcacha Smith. She even tries to minimize the importance of the discovery in 1993 of the photograph of Ferrie together with Oswald at a Civil Air Patrol barbecue. To quote Lambert, “it established only an overlap of association with that organization, which from the outset was a possibility David Ferrie never denied but didn’t recall.” What does “an overlap of association with that organization” mean? Either Ferrie and Oswald were in the CAP together or they were not. The photo and witness testimony prove this. And are we really to believe that Ferrie would not later remember this previous association? Then why was he at Oswald’s landlord’s the night of the assassination looking for his library card?

    God Bless Clay Shaw!

    Given the preceding, Lambert’s treatment of Clay Shaw is quite predictable. Although it may come as a surprise to the Vatican, any reader of False Witness will find that the Catholic faith has a new addition. In this book, Lambert beatifies Shaw, describing him as “almost saintly.” She even prints the long-exposed canard that Ferrie never knew Shaw (p. 4). Even New Orleans-based reporter and Life magazine stringer David Chandler knew this to be false. Recently, his son told us through the Internet that Shaw had told his father that he did know Ferrie through the homosexual underground, but that Shaw could not admit this since it would be tossing Garrison too big a bone. In addition, there are at least eight other affidavits in Garrison’s files which attest to this fact. Ferrie himself admitted he knew Shaw to his pal Raymond Broshears. Ferrie also admitted this to Garrison investigator Lou Ivon. So Lambert’s attempt to push the clock back on this score is fatuous.

    Incredibly, Lambert also expects us to believe the old deception that Shaw was a liberal who actually liked Kennedy. Again, the evidence shows the opposite. Ferrie told Ivon that Shaw hated JFK. Shaw’s associations with the aging upper class monarchy of Europe would also belie this claim. His ties to the rightwing in New Orleans e.g. to the conservative Dr. Alton Ochsner, and to anti-Castro Cuban exiles, would also indicate otherwise. As Donald Gibson has noted, Shaw’s goal with the International Trade Mart, to open up Latin America to American capitalism, would also seem opposed to Kennedy’s idea of building strong and independent economies there.

    Davis was Bertrand!

    Lambert misses again when she attempts to explain away that ever-so-interesting call Dean Andrews received from a “Clay Bertrand” asking him to represent Oswald after the assassination. As most researchers know, Andrews was in the hospital at the time of the call. Garrison’s detractors like to claim Andrews was on medication at the time and made the whole thing up. However, as Bill Davy proves in his book, Let Justice Be Done, the FBI’s own reports show that Andrews was not given medication until some four hours after he received the Bertrand call.

    Later, after Andrews got himself in hot water with the DA’s office for retracting his original statements, he claimed that he made up the name, Clay Bertrand. Later still, however, he named the “real” Clay Bertrand: Eugene Davis. A New Orleans bar owner and manager who was working two jobs just to stay afloat, the hapless Davis was hardly the cultured and refined Bertrand that Andrews had originally described. Under oath, before the New Orleans Grand Jury and in a sworn statement, a shocked Davis denied ever using the Bertrand alias.

    Also, if Davis were Bertrand, why would Andrews be fearful of his life? When Mark Lane wanted to interview him, Andrews begged off, saying he had been warned by “Washington, D.C.” that he would “have a hole blown in his head if he talked.” Many years later when Anthony Summers interviewed Andrews, the normally loquacious lawyer was still reticent on the subject of Bertrand. Summers wrote, “he [Andrews] has since said that to reveal the truth about his caller would endanger his life, and my own brief contact with Andrews confirmed that the fear is still with him today.” Again, if the lowly Davis were Bertrand, why would “Washington” be threatening Andrews? As the readers of Probe have seen, “Washington” was providing extensive “help” to Clay Shaw.

    Unsurprisingly, Lambert swallows the Davis nonsense hook, line and sinker. Lambert, however, offers one small twist – Andrews was a publicity hound eager to jump on a perceived gravy train by offering to represent Oswald. The Bertrand story would be his entrÈe.

    No one (other than Andrews) ever came forward to claim Davis was Bertrand. Yet the FBI, the DA’s office, investigative reporter Lawrence Schiller, journalist Bill Turner and the New Orleans Police Department all uncovered witnesses who knew of Shaw’s use of the Bertrand alias. In fact, the number of witnesses in the files who are now on record as stating that Shaw used the alias of Clay Bertrand is well into the double digits. To illustrate just how common this knowledge was in New Orleans at the time, consider this anecdote from Ed Tatro.

    Tatro was a young college student who decided to go down to New Orleans to watch the Shaw trial in person. One night he visited one of the bistros in the French Quarter. The New Orleans residents noted his Boston accent and asked him what he was there for. When he told them, the residents started giggling. He asked them what was so humorous. The reply was, “Look, everybody down here knows that Shaw uses the name Bertrand. But that poor devil Garrison can’t prove it to save his soul.”

    Shaw’s lawyers also get kid gloves treatment from Lambert. Irvin Dymond, Bill and Ed Wegmann, and Sal Panzeca are all portrayed as working class heroes who did what they did for very little money. Yet Lambert does not realize that by saying they made a small amount of money – about $30,000 total for three years work – she knocks out another pillar of Shaw’s superficial edifice. For how could Shaw now plead he was bankrupted by Garrison? Shaw made at least this much money on his French Quarter house renovations let alone his salary from the ITM and whatever his funds may have been from the Central Intelligence Agency. If Lambert wants to say the private investigator expenses broke him, what are we to make of that? That finding evidence of his innocence was so difficult that it became a significant financial burden?

    But further, Lambert can actually write that Shaw’s attorneys got no help from the FBI, let alone the CIA. This is a blatant untruth, exposed by dozens of newly declassified documents. Jim DiEugenio used these documents to write a long two-part article on Shaw’s lawyers in Probe (Volume 4 #s 4 and 5) back in the summer of 1997. DiEugenio showed that the Wegmanns were already hooked in with Banister’s apparatus previous to the Shaw prosecution through ONI operative and prominent New Orleans lawyer Guy Johnson. Then, during the two year wait for Shaw’s trial to begin, Shaw’s lawyers got help not only from members of the FBI, who interviewed witnesses for them on the eve of trial, but also from people in the CIA, who actually appear to have talked witnesses out of their stories. This does not even mention the role of former Justice Department heavy Herbert Miller who seems to have worked with both Walter Sheridan and the CIA as a conduit between people like Gordon Novel (infiltrator in the Garrison office) and the Agency. This aspect of the case is expanded upon in Davy’s new book.

    Klansmen and Klan Targets, Working Together!

    As with Andrews, Lambert’s swipe at the Clinton/Jackson witnesses is equally as vapid. In Anthony Summers’ third and latest reprint of Conspiracy, now titled, Not In Your Lifetime, he has added a disclaimer to his Clinton, Louisiana section. The note advises that new research has come to light that will reportedly cast doubt on the Clinton evidence. (This after Summers makes a strong case for the veracity of the Clinton/Jackson people). Since Summers maintains contact with researcher, Paul Hoch and Hoch is generously acknowledged in False Witness, Summers is obviously referring to Lambert’s “evidence.” Note to Tony Summers: Should you decide to reprint Conspiracy for yet a fourth time, you can remove the disclaimer. It isn’t needed.

    In summary, the Clinton incident refers to a sighting of Oswald in the company of David Ferrie and Clay Shaw. Shaw was identified when the town marshall approached him and asked to see his driver’s license. The car was registered to the Trade Mart, and the town marshal later testified that the name given by the man matched the one on his driver’s license: Clay Shaw. Several of the people who saw Oswald in Clinton testified during Shaw’s trial, and were collectively referred to as “the Clinton witnesses.”

    Lambert leads off her Clinton chapter, titled “The Clinton Scenario and the House Select Committee,” with quotes from Shaw’s lawyers that sets the tone for what follows. Sal Panzeca states, rather disingenuously, “I was told that we could discredit these witnesses because Garrison’s men ‘did it wrong.’ That the witnesses were told what to say and they said it.” Yet under cross-examination at the Shaw trial, the defense didn’t even come close to discrediting them. On the contrary, even the usually biased James Kirkwood reported that “the Clinton people had a strong effect on the press and spectators and, one presumed, the jury at the opening of the trial.” Another of Shaw’s attorneys, William Wegmann, is also quoted: “Clinton, that’s Klan country.” And in that quote lies the dark tactic of this chapter – smear the Clinton folk as racist Klansmen to destroy their credibility. (Lambert also says the left-wing Italian journals that divulged Shaw’s PERMINDEX connections are not credible either. Apparently in Lambert’s world only middle-of-the-roaders are to be believed. Or should we say only those who are pro-Shaw?) According to Lambert’s theory (and it is just a theory), town marshal John Manchester and fellow Klansman, registrar Henry Earl Palmer, concocted this conspiracy. Additionally, they brought in non-Klan participants, Reeves Morgan, Lea McGehee, Maxine Kemp and Bobbie Dedon from 10 miles away in Jackson. But incredibly, added to this nest of racist conspirators were two African Americans, Corrie Collins and William Dunn!

    Even Lambert seems confused by this strange mix, writing “Four of those in warring camps that summer (Manchester and Palmer on one side, Collins and Dunn the other) presented a strangely unified front six years later, testifying for Garrison.” Nevertheless, this doesn’t stop Lambert from speculating wildly that the black witnesses were coerced by the Klansmen. Later, she switches gears and again speculates that the silver-tongued Garrison caused their cooperation, suggesting “that susceptibility to Garrison’s rhetoric among Clinton’s black community may have been a factor in their cooperation with him.” These last two statements are literally dripping with racism. In the narrow view of False Witness black folk are too feeble-minded to think on their own, allowing themselves to be manipulated by Garrison’s eloquence and charisma, and are easily bullied by the KKK. This, despite the fact that these African Americans were taking great risks by participating in the Clinton voting drive, asserting the very independence Lambert would deny them. She goes even further by quoting Clinton District Attorney, Richard Kilbourne, who pooh-poohs the whole notion of the Clinton scenario. However, nowhere in Lambert’s “analysis” do we find any mention of Kilbourne’s own racist views, which are quite adequately on display in the documentary work-in-progress, Rough Side of the Mountain. Since Lambert sources the film, we have to assume she’s seen it.

    More wild speculation is thrown into the mix as Lambert quotes a rumor that Garrison was going to run for the Vice-Presidency on the ticket with racist Alabama Governor, George Wallace. Later, Lambert writes that no one heard about Oswald being in Clinton until after Garrison began his investigation. According to witness Lea McGehee, this is false. Not only was he aware of it from his own personal experience, but word of the incident was printed in the Councilor periodical before the Garrison probe started.

    But the centerpiece of Lambert’s chapter are the “shocking revelations” contained in the notes of an investigator named Anne Dischler. First, we are treated to such illuminating and relevant facts that Dischler “has 27 grandchildren, has her own ministry, owns and operates a retail fabric store, is an expert seamstress, bakes her own bread, and can shoot with the best of them.” The “shockers” in Dischler’s notes are anything but – with one exception. According to Dischler she had seen a 3×5 black and white photograph of the black Cadillac taken while the car was parked across from the registrar’s office. Dischler revealed to Lambert, “‘Clay Shaw was in the driver’s seat – it looked like him to me … I remember the white-haired man in the picture and the small face of Oswald. It seems like Oswald was on the passenger side of the front seat but I’m not sure’ … This picture came from the district attorney’s office, she said, perhaps from Sciambra.” Of course since the picture has long since disappeared, this allows Lambert to further speculate that Garrison had expertly manufactured a doctored, composite photograph. At least Lambert gives Garrison credit for being multi-talented!

    Other revelations from Dischler’s notes include a possible additional Caucasian male who was registering that day, Winslow Foster. It has long been known that another white male, Estus Morgan, was in town that day. According to Lambert, someone – she doesn’t know who, of course – just overlaid Oswald’s identity onto the actions of Morgan. There is no credible evidence to back any of this up, as even Lambert concedes: “Who conceived this story is unknown, and precisely how they implemented it is unclear.” According to Lambert, once Garrison got wind that the Clinton story was getting out of hand and that Dischler was getting too close to the truth, he pulled her and Francis Fruge off the case and sent up his evil henchman, Andrew Sciambra, to keep the lid on things. Of course this doesn’t explain what Garrison investigators Frank Ruiz and Kent Simms were doing up there. Again, in a chapter rife with speculation and theorizing, this is yet another absurd hypothesis.

    Lambert’s assault on the HSCA is mercifully short, but still long on speculation. Once again, Garrison just poured on the charm and charisma “winning converts among the [HSCA] staff.”

    Lambert ends her Clinton follies by segueing into her next chapter, an attack on Garrison’s book, On The Trail of the Assassins, calling it one of the “strangest” in the history of American letters. Apparently she has never read her friend David Lifton’s writings. Garrison’s rather quaint notion of a coup d’Ètat pales in comparison to Lifton’s theories about papier mache trees on, and underground excavations below, the grassy knoll, casket swapping and body alteration.

    Lambert, Lifton and Thornley

    We should not be surprised at this point to find that Lambert presents a superficial and deceptive treatment of the Kerry Thornley controversy. She devotes one paragraph to this rather interesting and important aspect of Garrison’s investigation.

    Allow us to fill in what she left out.

    Thornley was a Marine Corps buddy of Oswald’s whose testimony to the Warren Commission was used to portray Oswald as a Communist loner. As Garrison noted in his book, Thornley’s testimony is at odds with other service friends of the alleged assassin, who do not recall him as a committed Marxist. Another important fact about Thornley is that he wrote two books about Oswald, one before and one after the assassination: The Idle Warriors (unpublished until 1991), and Oswald (published in 1965). Both books accomplish the same end as Thornley’s Warren Commission testimony. The 1965 work is a non-fiction tome that reads something like Warren Commission witness Dr. Renatus Hartogs profile of Oswald. Consider this line:

    I’m certain that in his own eyes Oswald was the most important man in the [Marine] unit. To him the mark of destiny was clearly visible on his forehead and that some were blind to it was his eternal source of aggravation (p.19).

    Later in the book, Thornley writes, “Frankly, I agree that the man was sick, but I further think his sickness was, in the long run, self induced in the manner previously outlined.”(p. 69) In the last three chapters of the book, Thornley basically traces the Warren Commission version of the last few days of Oswald’s life. In the last chapter he lays all the blame for the murder at Oswald’s feet, i.e., there was no conspiracy, large or small. In fact, Thornley’s early writings on the case are pretty much indistinguishable from what the Warren Commission pumped out. They are so similar that one wonders if the Commission borrowed its profile of Oswald from Thornley in the first place.

    According to both Thornley and Jim Garrison, the Secret Service swept down on Thornley on November 23rd, and in short order he was on a plane to Washington with his manuscript of The Idle Warriors. Thornley reveals in his later, non-fiction book that he talked to Warren Commission counsel Albert Jenner on a number of occasions about his testimony. According to Garrison, Thornley stayed in the Washington D. C. area for almost a year. He then moved out to California where his parents resided. Ironically he worked at an apartment complex which housed, of all people, CIA-Mafia-Castro assassination plots intermediary Johnny Roselli. Around this time, David Lifton was going through the Warren Commission volumes and noted Thornley’s testimony. He looked him up in person and they became friends. During the early part of Garrison’s investigation, Lifton popped in to help out, and introduced Thornley to the DA. It was this event which marked the beginning of the falling out between Garrison and Lifton. For, from the evidence adduced by the new file releases – all ignored by Lambert – Thornley was a much more suspicious character than the one Lifton has always presented. We think it’s time people find out what the files reveal, and what is not to be found in False Witness.

    First, as should have been apparent from the beginning, Thornley was an extreme right-winger who had an almost pathological hatred of Kennedy. This could have provided a reason for him to do the number he did on Oswald for the Commission. Thornley worked briefly for rightwing publisher Kent Courtney in New Orleans and was a friend of New Orleans-based CIA journalist Clint Bolton. According to an article in New Orleans Magazine, Thornley was also once employed by Alton Ochsner’s INCA outfit, the CIA-related radio and audiotape outfit which sponsored Oswald’s famous debate with Cuban exile leader Carlos Bringuier. According to former Guy Banister employee Dan Campbell, Thornley was one of the young fanatics who frequented 544 Camp Street. Additional facts make the above acquaintances even more interesting. Thornley tried to deny that he knew Bringuier, yet his girlfriend Jeanne Hack described an encounter between Thornley and a man who fit Bringuier’s description to Bill Turner in January of 1968. And as Thornley notes in his introduction to the 1991 issue of The Idle Warriors, he showed his manuscript to Banister before the assassination back in 1961.

    This last point brings up one of the most important issues concerning the whole Thornley episode: his early denials and later reversals. Two memos written by Andrew Sciambra in February of 1968 reveal that Thornley denied knowing Banister, Dave Ferrie , Clay Shaw, and Shaw’s friend Time-Life journalist David Chandler. Garrison, however, had evidence that revealed the opposite to be the case. And years later, on the eve of the House Select Committee investigation, Thornley admitted to knowing all of these shady characters. Then, of course, there was the issue of Thornley’s association with Oswald himself in the summer of 1963. Thornley denied before the New Orleans grand jury that he associated with Oswald in New Orleans in 1963. This seemed improbable on its face since, as noted above, both men knew each other previously and both men frequented some of the same places in 1963.

    But further, consider Thornley’s rather equivocal denial on the witness stand:

    Q: Did she [Barbara Reid] see you with Oswald?

    A: I don’t think she did because the next day I started asking people…

    Q: You don’t think so?

    A: I don’t know whether it was Oswald, I can’t remember who was sitting there with me….

    The above statements earned Thornley a perjury indictment from Garrison. But there was much more. Garrison had no less than eight witnesses who said they had seen Oswald and Thornley together in New Orleans in 1963. And some of them went beyond just noting the association between the two. Two of these witnesses, Bernard Goldsmith and Doris Dowell, both said that Thornley told them Oswald was not a communist. This is amazing since, as noted earlier, the Warren Commission featured Thornley as its key witness to Oswald’s alleged commie sympathies. This indicates that Thornley himself 1) knew the truth about Oswald’s intelligence ties and 2) was probably involved in creating a false cover – a “legend,” in intelligence parlance – for the alleged assassin. On top of these devastating admissions, there is the information from Mrs. Myrtle LaSavia, who lived within a block of Oswald in New Orleans. She stated that she, “her husband and a number of people who live in that neighborhood saw Thornley at the Oswald residence a number of times – in fact they saw him there so much they did not know which was the husband, Oswald or Thornley.” A few weeks ago at the National Archives, Oswald researcher John Armstrong discovered FBI documents which show that other neighbors of Oswald picked out photos of Thornley as a frequent visitor to the Oswald apartment. According to a radio interview Garrison did in 1968, the DA had witnesses who saw Thornley shopping with Marina Oswald. If this is so, not only did Oswald encounter Thornley in New Orleans in 1963, but the two were quite close.

    This apparent closeness may have had a purpose beyond the framing of Oswald as a leftist in the public mind. There are two indications of this. The first is noted by Harold Weisberg in his book Never Again:

    When the New Orleans Secret Service investigation led it to the Jones Printing Co., the printer of the Fair Play for Cuba Committee handbills, and the Secret Service was on the verge of learning, as I later learned, that it was not Oswald who picked up those handbills, the New Orleans FBI at once contacted FBI HQ. The FBI immediately leaned on the Secret Service HQ and immediately the Secret Service was ordered to desist. For all practical purposes, that ended the Secret Service probe – the moment it was about to explode the myth of the “loner” who had an associate who picked up a print job for him. (p. 18)

    What Weisberg does not reveal in this passage is that the guy who picked up the flyers was identified as Kerry Thornley. In an interview with journalist Earl Golz in 1979, Weisberg stated that two employees at the print shop picked out photos of Thornley, not Oswald, when he questioned them about the “Hands off Cuba” flyers. Weisberg secretly taped one of the interviews with the employees. When Weisberg informed Garrison investigator Lou Ivon of this new development, Bill Boxley – a CIA plant in Garrison’s office – tried to distort what had happened. Weisberg pulled out the tape, quieting Boxley. But later, the tape disappeared.

    The other 1963 incident that makes Thornley even more fascinating was his trip to Mexico in July/August. As Jeanne Hack noted in an interview, Thornley was usually a quite talkative individual, but when it came to this Mexico trip, he was quite reluctant to speak about it. According to his 11/25/63 FBI statement, Thornley said “that he made this trip by himself and emphatically denied that Oswald had accompanied him from New Orleans to California or from California to Mexico.” Doth Thornley protest too much? In another FBI memo written the same day Thornley was interviewed, the following statement appears: “Thornley is presently employed as a waiter in New Orleans and has recently been in Mexico and California with Oswald. Secret Service has been notified.” Again, if this is so it is very interesting to say the least. But even if it were so, the Secret Service probably followed up about as vigorously as it did the Jones Print Shop incident.

    Thornley’s behavior during the ongoing Garrison probe was strange, to say the least. As noted above, he told the DA’s representative he never met Shaw, Ferrie, Chandler or Oswald, at least not Oswald in New Orleans. He was a bit hazy on Banister saying that he “may have met Banister somewhere around Camp Street” but he was not sure. His equivocations on Oswald are even more striking. He told Andrew Sciambra the following:

    He also admits that there are some coincidences which have taken place which make it appear that he and Oswald were in contact with each other but he declares that these are only coincidences and that he has never seen Oswald since the days in the Marine Corps together.

    In a later interview with Sciambra, Thornley also denied knowing Bringuier and Ed Butler of INCA, even though he applied for a job at the latter. Every one of these denials turned out to be false and Thornley admitted to them later. But on top of this, there is the apparent element of the protection of Thornley when he became a hot item in New Orleans in 1968. For instance, according to Mort Sahl, Thornley insisted on meeting Sciambra at a curious location for one of their interviews: NASA. Sciambra recalled thinking as he entered the place that if someone like Thornley could command access to such a place then Garrison really didn’t have a snowball’s chance in Hades. Several of Oswald’s cohorts from Reily Coffee had gone to NASA before the assassination. It seems odd that a coffee company would be a training ground for such a scientifically oriented facility. Garrison camp infiltrator Gordon Novel also went there while on the lam from Garrison.

    And then there was the problem of locating Thornley. Garrison investigator and former CIA agent Jim Rose took on that assignment. Through his network of Agency contacts he found Thornley was living in Tampa. The supposedly working class Thornley had two homes in Florida, one in Tampa and one in Miami. He lived at the Tampa residence which, according to Rose’s notes, was a large white frame house on a one acre lot. In addition, he owned two cars at the time. All this from a man who had only been a waiter and doorman up to that time.

    After the Garrison investigation, Thornley slipped into obscurity. But he resurfaced in the late seventies around the time of the House Select Committee on Assassinations. He reappeared as a kind of stoned hippie who had a rather eccentric interest in aliens, Nazis, and the occult. He assembled a long narrative in which he now stated that, “I did not realize I was involved in the JFK murder conspiracy until 1975, when the Watergate revelations made it rather obvious.” The reason it became obvious was that he recognized Howard Hunt as one of the men who recruited him into the plot. In this new mode he even admitted that Oswald had been framed for the crime. Quite an admission from the author of the 1965 book which concluded the opposite.

    At around this same time, Thornley sent Garrison a long manuscript outlining the Kennedy plot as he saw it. This document is in the form of a long affidavit executed while Thornley was living in Atlanta. To anyone familiar with the true facts of the case and Thornley’s suspicious activities, it is a long and involved and deliberate piece of disinformation. In it, Thornley admits that he had met both Ferrie and Banister by the summer of 1962. But yet, they are not the true conspirators. The real ones are people named Slim, Clint, Brother-in-Law, and one Gary Kirstein i.e. nameless, faceless non-entities. (Later, Thornley named one as Jerry M. Brooks, former rightwing Minuteman turned informant to Bill Turner.) Thornley’s communications with the HSCA were frequent as he tried to rivet their attention on his new and improved JFK plot.

    When Oliver Stone’s JFK came out, Thornley was paid to make an appearance on the tabloid program A Current Affair (broadcast on 2/25/92). Some of what Thornley said on camera is worth quoting:

    I wanted to shoot him. I wanted to assassinate him very much. . . . I wanted him dead. I would have shot him myself. I would have stood there with a rifle and pulled the trigger if I would have had the chance.

    Clearly, Thornley’s hatred of Kennedy is virulent. Thornley also had some interesting comments about Garrison. Concerning the DA’s indicting him for perjury, Thornley commented, “Garrison, you should have gone after me for conspiracy to commit murder.” Of course, the conspiracy Thornley is hinting at is the later manufactured one with Slim, and Brother-in-Law etc. He also insisted in 1992 that he had not betrayed his friend Oswald, even though he now thought the case was a conspiracy. Thornley was apparently doing his distracting limited hang-out number for bucks this time around. Thornley died in 1997 of a kidney ailment.

    What is the sum total of the reliable evidence about Thornley available in the new files and ignored by Lambert? First, Thornley lied about his relationship with the intelligence network surrounding Oswald. He knew all of these players. He also lied about not knowing Oswald in New Orleans in the summer of 1963. The question of course is: Why did he lie? And the answer seems to point to some deeper involvement. This seems to imply that the Weisberg investigation of the flyers at Jones print shop and the FBI telex about Oswald accompanying Thornley to California and Mexico have some validity to them. It also suggests that Thornley’s admission about knowing Oswald was not a communist has some weight. That is, Thornley may have known the truth about Oswald all along and may have helped him construct his cover. Garrison went so far as to suspect that it was Oswald’s head imposed on Thornley’s body in the famous backyard photograph. Whatever the truth about Thornley’s possible role in the setting up of a patsy, Lambert’s writing about him – cribbed from Lifton – is too brief, too superficial and ultimately dishonest in what it leaves out. In other words, it is propaganda that deliberately avoids the new evidence. It would also appear that Lifton looked at Thornley with a much too gullible and trusting eye.

    The worst thing about Lambert’s book is that it shows that an old adage by Robert Blakey about the Kennedy assassination seems to be true. Blakey said that after his experience with the House Select Committee, it was his opinion that the JFK case was like a Rorschach test, people saw in it what they wished to see. Lambert’s book is proof positive of this. With all the new material now available at the National Archives on the Garrison investigation, Lambert still decided that she had an agenda to fulfill. And she had to have been aware of this, since she uses only bits to mold it. But, in the main, she ignores the record. Thus her book is hopelessly biased. And her book also bodes ill for Lifton’s long-awaited biography of Oswald. Will Lifton report on the new evidence truthfully and fully? Will he claim his version of the events is more accurate than more primary evidence, as he did with Palmer McBride (see the exchange of letters, pp. 26-27)? Or will he, too, be a false witness to the record?