Tag: CONSPIRACY

  • Reflections on the 60th Anniversary of the Murder of President John F. Kennedy

    Reflections on the 60th Anniversary of the Murder of President John F. Kennedy


    The “Sixty Years’ War” is a term typically used by some historians to designate a period extending roughly from the French and Indian War, beginning in the mid-1750s, up to a climax in the War of 1812. There is some disagreement among this; notably, Canadian historians are more apt to give more emphasis to the French and Indian War, although all of these sequential conflicts are essentially colonial disputes over lands that already had Native inhabitants. No surprises there.

    November 22, 2023 is a marker in what has been a different kind of Sixty Years’ War, a war of propaganda and interpretation in which the stakes are not merely historical truth but the shape of future instruction. Oliver Stone memorably referred to his 1991 film JFK as a “counter-myth,” and while one might quibble about that verbiage, to my mind it evokes the counterculture and what that was supposed to represent – the dissent away from frozen attitudes about 1950s America. It is not “my country, right or wrong,” but rather right and wrong dependent on our own intellectual and moral responsibilities.

    The failure of the United States government to produce a coherent investigation in the JFK assassination forced certain individuals to fill the void. The earliest critics – people like Vincent Salandria, Sylvia Meagher, Ray Marcus, Harold Weisberg and many others – started out as amateurs but over time became experts in this new field of study, unpacking state-sponsored domestic murder. The CIA, for its part, labeled this “conspiracy theory” and its adherents “conspiracy theorists.” The major media organizations got the (literal) memo and followed suit. In doing this they became, as in the title of Meagher’s excellent book, Accessories After the Fact. And they have maintained this position, with remarkable consistency, ever since.

    In the teeth of overwhelming opposition, this field of study grew. Researchers emerged in each new generation, dedicated to pursuing truth both in this case and expanding the curriculum as new assassinations emerged: Malcolm, Dr. King, Bobby, and so many others.

    Looming behind all of this activity was “the files,” the last remaining documents that the intelligence agencies have had decades to destroy and/or alter. Some hope remained that one could glean items of interest. One of the supposed selling points for some researchers regarding a potential Trump presidency was that, as an outsider, he might “release the files.” However, most sensible researchers understood that there was a miniscule possibility Trump would follow through, despite his assertions to the contrary. Surely, then, with the election of Joe Biden, an Irish Democrat would finally release these near-60-year-old documents. Of course, he not only didn’t do that, he sealed the matter completely, in an effort to remove the whole debate from consideration.[1] And so it goes, as Kurt Vonnegut used to say.

    The latest salvo in this Sixty Years’ War is the expected barrage of nonsense emerging from establishment sources – would it be a ten-year anniversary without another National Geographic special? Or the History Channel? Of course not. And then the usual “new revelations,” in which the major media will glom onto any conspiracy theory – so long as it isn’t the right one. The most recent is Paul Landis, who has made a variety of conflicting assertions over the decades, now reveals that he found a bullet – strongly resembling CE 399 – in the back seat of Kennedy’s limousine and transferred it to the stretcher himself. As researcher Richard Bartholomew points out in his discussion of the story, the only real question is whether this constitutes an admission of guilt on the part of Landis.[2] And as the author rightly points out, Landis’s new testimony is not needed to kill the Single-Bullet Theory, as Arlen Specter’s elaborate ad hoc bit of nonsense was dead before it ever made it into print. Gibberish is not best contested with additional gibberish. Or, to paraphrase my mentor John Judge, jumping into a fight between two skunks is both generally inadvisable and stinky.

    Speaking of John Judge, for me personally that was the great takeaway from the 50th anniversary, as this marked the last Coalition on Political Assassinations conference. Standing outside in the sleet and cacophony, with Alex Jones leading a gang of idiots on the streets of Dallas, John struggled to lift his booming voice above the din. We lost him early the next year. More recently, earlier this year, the distinguished Kenn Thomas, creator of Steamshovel Magazine, left the ranks. A remarkable and fascinating researcher, he was always very kind and went out of his way to help the Hidden History Center and lent his support to John’s work. We also lost Daniel Hopsicker, author of Barry and the Boys and Welcome to Terrorland, who also did some fine work although I didn’t always agree with his conclusions. And JFK researchers felt the loss of David Lifton, an individual whose work is highly valued in some circles. And there were others, of course, as the inevitable years toll on, as more witnesses, researchers, and other figures pass from the scene. Anniversaries by their nature are natural times for reflection, and we all have much to reflect upon.

    BOOKS AND FILMS

    There have been several highly researched books written in the run up to the 60th anniversary, including titles by veterans Vince Palamara (Honest Answers About the Murder of John F. Kennedy) and Dr. Cyril Wecht (The JFK Assassination Dissected). There were also a couple of books by relative newcomers to investigation literature that made a great impact: one by Monica Wiesak, called America’s Last President, and another by Greg Poulgrain, called JFK V. Dulles: Battleground Indonesia. Both of these latter books share a reflective character, as reassessments of historical analysis that sift through old evidence while deriving new conclusions. In particular, there is much in the way of overturning the assumptions that so many academic historians have previously brought to this material.

    Those assumptions go beyond the JFK assassination and to the attitude regarding conspiracy in general. A good example of this can be found in the beginning of FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover’s origin story. In the years 1919-1920, the U.S. Attorney General Mitchell Palmer oversaw an attempt to deport radical leftists from the country. It was known as the “Red Scare” and the A.G.’s actions would become known as the Palmer raids. The Palmer Raids made a great impression on the young Hoover, who would later dedicate much of his life to fighting supposed Communists. Interestingly, Hoover would deny the existence of the Mafia, an actual criminal conspiracy, while chasing a largely invisible Communist conspiracy.

    In October 1962, both The Nation magazine and Time reported former FBI agent Jack Levin’s observation that out of the 8500 members of the Communist Party, 1500 were FBI agents, which meant that “the FBI [was] the largest single financial supporter of the Communist Party.”

    While Hoover’s FBI was busy funding Communists, the Mob built Las Vegas.

    The focus on how the government affects the media and its attitudes about the Kennedy assassination, and conspiracies in general, is taken up by two other recent books: Political Truth, by Joseph McBride, and Burying the Lead, by Mal Hyman. Professorial and clear-headed analysis can be found in both of these works as the authors perform a deep dive into how information has been disseminated and controlled in alphabet networks and their attendant newspaper organizations. There are gems littered throughout both these books. Hyman shows how there were occasionally individuals who wanted to report on the Kennedy assassination and developed solid leads in many cases, but were unable to get them through their editors. He cites the attempts, for example, of Anthony Summers to get both the New York Times and the Washington Post to notice his work. For his trouble, Summers received total silence from Tom Wicker and a flurry of expletives from Ben Bradlee.[3] (Summers seemed to have gotten the message, for in intervening years he changed the title of his book Conspiracy to Not in Your Lifetime, with a similar bowdlerization of the content.) Meanwhile, McBride tells a similar story as Hyman, but from the perspective of an insider, having been a journalist himself working for such entities as The Nation magazine. McBride also draws a connection from the initial coup d’etat in November 1963 to the more recent January 6th attempted coup, stating that one could argue that every presidency since the Kennedy assassination has been “illegitimate.”[4] That is, until that murder is solved, our hands will never wash out that damned spot.

    Even now, the media continues on its merry way, desperately trying to hide a stack of bodies under a tattered blanket. The QAnon phenomenon is blamed, but more importantly blended, with serious researchers to smear all with the same epithets. It is a moronic enterprise, only successful with the least curious among us. Just to take one example, the idea that, say, Peter Scott and the assorted QAnon idiots have anything in common in cognition is a leap into pure fantasy. Trying to group them together is both desperate and despicable.

    Most recently, a pair of sensational documentaries appeared in the last couple of years. Oliver Stone and Jim DiEugenio’s JFK Revisited: Through the Looking Glass, appeared in both two-hour and four-hour versions, as well as a beautiful book featuring transcripts of the interviews. There were two excellent decisions made in the presentation. One was to get as many mainstream academic historians as possible to remark on the truth about Kennedy’s motives and presidency, foreign policy and attitudes about self-determination, to maximize the credibility of the presentation. The other was to focus on revolutionizing the understanding of the whole history of the United States after World War II, which to my mind is absolutely key. The other documentary to come onto the scene was Max Good’s The Assassination & Mrs. Paine, which is not only brilliant in its own right but serves as a perfect partner for the Stone/DiEugenio work. Good obtained unprecedented access to Ruth Paine and her answers to his ever-polite questions is utterly fascinating. Good also got the late Vincent Salandria to agree to go on camera and participate in extensive interviews, so that the film also serves as a document for any researcher to get a glimpse into Salandria’s reasoning and the reason why he was so admired as a person by so many, including myself.

    FINAL THOUGHTS

    Aeschylus wrote that “God is not averse to deceit in pursuit of a just cause.” Plato, in the Republic, discussed the necessity of the “noble lie” to unite societies together. Both men were correct. However – and here we see the results of our discontinuity all around us – when you cannot get the people to agree on the preferred lies, or accept that the cause is just, the entire system is threatened. It becomes harder and harder for the citizenry to just accept a Manichean understanding of the world in which we are the Good Guys and anyone we don’t like are the Bad Guys, whether they be working-class Russians, Vietnamese peasant farmers, or whichever Latin Americans we have decided are our enemy this week. The lies, and the absence of a just cause, is unsustainable as rot sets in.

    It seems to me that we are in the middle of a sea change in the culture, in which a great many people are starting to wake up to these facts and to the central lie at the heart of all of these investigations: the government isn’t opposed to conspiracy. It just wants control of which conspiracies everyone takes seriously.

    Another decade brings another spike in interest and flurry of activity in the ongoing saga of the John F. Kennedy assassination. Sixty years have now gone by, but one thing remains the same: lies and obfuscation from the usual sources, attempting to bury the serious gains in research with endless red herrings. However, at the heart of this is what both Vincent Salandria and E. Martin Schotz called the “false mystery,” the drowning in irrelevant details of what is a frankly obvious state crime. I do not believe it to be an exaggeration to say that the failure to resolve that crime has resulted in the collapse of the republic, as the United States continues shakily moving forward like a train that is on fire. We may be able to ramble along for a little while longer, but it seems increasingly clear that if the flames are not put out, destruction is certain.

    NOTES

    1.
    https://www.dallasobserver.com/news/biden-washes-his-hands-of-jfk-assassination-records-16962174

    2.
    Bartholomew, Richard, “Many Theories & Single Bullets: False Beliefs of JFK’s Assassination,” https://bartholoviews.substack.com/p/many-theories-and-single-bullets

    3.
    Hyman, Mal, Burying the Lead: The Media and the JFK Assassination (TrineDay: Waterville OR, 2018/2019), 290.

    4.
    McBride, Joseph, Political Truth: The Media and the Assassination of President Kennedy (Hightower Press: Berkeley CA 2022), 214.

  • So, What about this Conspiracy Business Anyway?

    So, What about this Conspiracy Business Anyway?


    Well, that’s as good a way as any to start.

    All over the Internet, and for years previous to its genesis, conspiracy theories have been used to explain complex issues which many times are more simply explained as random events, disjointed sets of circumstances, and just plain serendipity. Many times, these conspiracy theories take on a malevolent character: things are the way they are because of the Jews, Blacks, atheists, Christians, and so on. Things would sure be a lot better if it wasn’t for some of those “Others!”

    Yet today we hear more and more of such ideas. Why? Many psychologists claim that it is because of the stress and the overall complexity of modern life. People harken back to a simpler time—a time when life was slower, things seemed more stable, and there were more “absolutes” in people’s lives. It has gotten to so bad that many analysts are starting to propose the idea that conspiracies, in actuality, are very few and far between. The website on which this essay is published takes a more open view with respect to conspiracies—particularly in regard to political conspiracies.

    I

    As a relatively new contributor to Kennedysandking.com, let me tell you first who I am—or maybe who I am not. I am not a ballistics expert. I am not a doctor/medical expert. I am not an expert researcher who visits the National Archives in Washington D.C. or any other major repository of documents—secret or otherwise. I am simply a guy who has an intense interest in politics, history, philosophy, and various and sundry aspects of the sciences and the humanities.

    With that out of the way, what about this conspiracy business? More and more people nowadays seem to ascribe to one or another of various and sundry conspiracy theories—from the serious minded to the thoroughly ridiculous. As an educated layman, I get the following type responses to questions I raise concerning the “official versions” of many of the scenarios discussed on this website from the so-called experts, educators, and “mainstream media types.”

    You say that the Kennedys and King were murdered as part of a conspiracy? That’s ridiculous—how could something that complex be covered up for so many years without someone at the very pinnacle of the conspiracies coming clean or telling all? Or: do you realize how many people it would take to cover up such a conspiracy or group of conspiracies: tens of thousands or maybe even millions?

    In this essay, I plan to explain why I believe that, in fact, on some occasions—and, in particular, in the cases of the Kennedys and Martin Luther King, that the scenarios presented on this website are substantially correct and why such arguments about the large number of people necessarily involved or no one involved coming clean are not valid.

    It Would Take Too Many People to Carry Out a Political Assassination in the USA without Someone Spilling the Beans

    Is the above statement really true? Has a conspiracy been carried out and largely covered up for decades without anyone “spilling the beans?” I contend that despite the propaganda to the contrary, it indeed has happened in the past in the USA.

    Let us take a look at the radiation and drugging experiments carried out in the United States between 1943 and 1973 coordinated by the US government and private industry. A good source for this is the book entitled The Plutonium Files: America’s secret medical experiments in the Cold War by author Eileen Welsome. In that book, Welsome investigates the case of 18 people deliberately exposed to plutonium by the US government and elements of the private medical establishment. These experiments were carried on at such institutions as prisons, schools for the developmentally disabled, and even maternity clinics.

    One example of such an institution was the Fernald School in Massachusetts. Founded in 1848 and originally called “The Fernald School For The Feeble Minded,” this school not only was involved in a eugenics program (a topic to be discussed later in this essay), but it also was the site of an ugly, dark, secret experiment involving elementary school children. Without their knowledge or the knowledge of their parents, they were fed radiation laced food and milk to determine the absorption rate of iron and calcium. The entities involved were Harvard University and MIT along with The Quaker Oates Company. Quaker Oats was going to use the data collected by these experiments in advertising its cereal. For a more detailed example of this experiment see this page from Massachusetts Creepy.

    Another example from Welsome’s book was the experiment on pregnant women at Vanderbilt University in Tennessee in the 1940’s. Again, these women were not told exactly what they were being fed. In fact, the researchers told them that they were part of a clinic that was meant for poor undernourished women and that the health drink they were being fed was to benefit their developing fetuses. Actually, these health drinks contained radioactive iron oxide contents 30 times those of normal environmental exposure. This was another example of researchers trying to test the absorption rates of iron. Initially, the researchers thought that these health drinks did not contain any harmful amount of radioactive iron, but follow-up studies showed that at least three children died from this exposure. (For additional information about this experiment see this AP News article).

    In other sections of her book, Welsome discusses experiments performed by the military on soldiers involving radiation exposure. There are numerous examples therein. In addition, The Atomic Heritage Foundation website has numerous examples—some where the soldiers knew about the exposure and some where they did not. (Click here for details)

    In addition, while researching this subject separate from Welsome’s book, I found numerous YouTube videos concerning the issue. A general search using such terms as: “radiation experiments”, “US military and radiation experiments”, and “human radiation experiments” will display numerous such videos.

    Finally, for a brief period of perhaps two or three weeks in the summer of 1994, this information hit the mainstream media. The ABC TV network program Nightline did one program concerning the issue. On this program, a research scientist who had been directly involved in the experiments was confronted with a declassified document that he had written stating, “The contents of this research must be kept highly classified because to the general public, such experiments would sound too Buchenwald-ish.” His clumsy reply was something like, “Well I don’t know what everyone is so upset about this for, we obtained valuable research information and after all not too many people died.”

    Because of the moderate coverage by the media, a House of Representatives committee investigated these experiments for a few months and issued a report months later. They actually established a telephone hotline called “The Radiation Research Health Line” which people could call and report any suspicious type experiences and/or related health issues and the experts assigned to this project would investigate to see whether the caller was unknowingly involved in the experiments. (Click here for details) This “Health Line” was not publicized very often and with the sea change in congress—wherein, for the first time in 40 years, the Republicans took both houses of congress in the midterm 1994 elections, the line was discontinued early in 1995.

    II

    While these experiments eventually saw the light of day in the mainstream media, it took a full fifty years for even this somewhat limited exposure to occur. In the final report, the congressional committee determined that at least thirty-five thousand civilians and tens of thousands of military personnel were involved in these experiments. Some of the material is still classified and there is evidence that much more has been destroyed. While we do know substantially more about such experiments, we do not know the exact number of people involved at the governmental and private sector level. But with even the limited exposure, common sense tells us that a huge number, perhaps thousands of researchers and government officials over a half century, had to be involved!

    So, what does such an example do to the argument that something as horrific as a political assassination would take too many people and would be too easily exposed? I dare say it diminishes greatly if not vitiates such an argument. Remember, the people keeping the secrets concerning these medical experiments were not covert intelligent operators and were most certainly not trained in psychological warfare and black operations. One might pose the question: how much more likely would it be for a large conspiracy to be covered up by people who were trained in such operations?

    Let us move to another conspiracy of sorts. One might say that this was actually a conspiracy that was hiding in plain sight. This is the field of eugenics. Hundreds of thousands of people were forcibly sterilized in the United States in the period roughly from 1920 to 1970. This really wasn’t a conspiracy in the same sense as the radiation experiments discussed above. But nowadays, if you ask people about this phenomenon, many of them will think you are an extreme conspiracy theorist. It’s a topic that was not discussed openly in public during its heyday. But it is something that people in the medical field knew of and largely approved of during that roughly half century.

    Basically, eugenics grew out of a convergence of early scientific knowledge about genetics and the long-held belief in white supremacy. In the early days of genetics, some scientists believed that it would be simply possible to breed a superior race of human beings by eliminating the “defectives” within the gene pool. This error in early genetics—which was later debunked by the increased research of the twentieth and twenty-first century in combination with the preconceived notions about Northern/Western European genetic superiority—was the basis for this program.

    A good source that gave extensive accounts of this program is the CBS TV film from 1982 entitled: Marian Rose White. This movie was based on the true-life story of a California woman named Marian Rose White who was committed to a school for the “feeble-minded” in 1934 and, though she had no real mental defect, was sterilized against her will. The Institution in Sonoma County, California, was part of a group of United States hospitals and schools for “the feeble-minded” that sterilized over three hundred thousand people in the middle decades of the twentieth century. (For another good source about this school, see this article from the Press Democrat Newspaper online)

    This institution, along with several other institutions in such places as Virginia, North Carolina, and Georgia, were actually used as models by the eugenics and master race proponents of Nazi Germany in the 1930’s. At the Nuremberg trials, one of the defenses offered to the defendants was that such practices as eugenics and forced sterilization were already being done in the USA when the Nazis came to power.

    Another good source about the eugenics program in the USA is the book entitled: Imbeciles: The Supreme Court, American Eugenics, and the Sterilization of Carrie Buck by Adam Cohen. In this book, Cohen traces the development of the eugenics movement in the late nineteenth century and catalogs the court decisions that allowed for the practice of forced sterilization to become accepted by the medical establishment of the time.

    By examining the case of Carrie Buck—a Virginia resident—Cohen describes the arguments pro and con which were presented at the time, as well as the slow but steady approval by state and federal courts of this tragic attempt to create a more perfect race through sterilization. Cohen points out the kind of stereotypes that were used to promote eugenics practices. Not only did some of the scientists promote the idea of sterilizing mental defectives, but also promoted the ideas that the population of the “lesser ethnicities” such as darker skinned races: Blacks, Italians, Hispanics, and so on, should be subjected to such eugenics practices. There you have the total fusion of white supremacy and genetics.

    Again, this eugenics movement wasn’t a conspiracy in the classic sense of the word. But it was largely not discussed in public, was carried on for the better part of fifty years, and is seldom discussed today by people in general. If you go to a local social group and bring up the topic, many people won’t believe it or will accuse you of being an extremist of some sort.

    My point is that this grotesque activity went on for decades, was more or less approved of, and is almost never brought up to students in classrooms below the college level. In addition, there seems to be a current attempt to remove all such discussions of past wrongs carried out in the name of discredited beliefs of the past. However, it did happen and can be included in a discussion of large numbers of people being involved in reprehensible acts that are shoved under the rug so to speak and are largely ignored in the context of promoting American Exceptionalism.

    III

    Now let’s move to another conspiracy of sorts: the big tobacco cover-up. If you are a smoker, you are obviously aware of the warning appearing on the packs of cigarettes stating the known health risks of using this product. Of course, this wasn’t always so. The first major federal governmental involvement in the hazards of smoking appeared in 1964 with the surgeon general’s report listing the possible risks and diseases associated with smoking. But for decades, cigarette company executive, after cigarette company executive, testified before state and federal committees defending the effects of their products and labeling the critics as alarmists, radicals, and extremists. When the first lawsuits were brought in the 1990’s, various media outlets including ABC’s Nightline and CBS’ Sixty Minutes showed little snippets of cigarette company executives answering such questions as: “Do you believe cigarettes are addictive.” And receiving replies such as: “No, I don’t believe cigarettes are addictive.”

    Yet freedom of information requests by people in the medical and legal communities were eventually able to obtain individual reports as far back as the early 1950’s wherein company executives were warned about the extreme addictive nature of cigarettes and their long-term health effects. Even worse, when it came to the types of additives used in production, one cigarette company scientist even used the phrase “a cigarette is a nicotine delivery system; the more nicotine included in the cigarette the more addictive the product and the higher the sales.” So, the companies “punched up” cigarettes, giving them more nicotine and thus more of an addictive character.

    When criticism of cigarettes as a major health hazard began exploding in the press in the 1960’s, cigarette companies began propagandizing to the effect that there were actually healthy cigarettes. One company even used in their TV commercials the phrase: “This is the cigarette doctors recommend.” Finally, after decades of lawsuits, exposés and governmental investigations, cigarette companies were forced in 2006 to admit all. The conspiracy was blown wide-open and the companies were forced to publicize their deception and pay substantial amounts of money to make amends. (One good source among many for information about this issue is the website “Truth Initiative” )

    Doesn’t this prove that such a large conspiracy will eventually be disclosed? You might jump to that conclusion. But in this case, it took almost seven decades. With the tremendous amount of information available to health professionals and governmental officials, it still took that long. Again, the businesspeople who covered up this conspiracy were not black operators, psychological warriors, or assassins trained as career intelligence agents. Yet, they still succeeded for a very long time. I contend that career intelligence operatives with almost limitless resources could act in concert and keep such a conspiracy secret for even longer.

    Did It Really Take Thousands of People to Carry Out the Assassinations of the Sixties?

    My answer to the above question is a resounding no. Let me explain what I mean.

    To analyze the assassinations of the 1960’s, and in particular the JFK assassination, you must make a clear distinction about the actual assassination itself and the cover-up that followed. I do believe that the assassination of JFK resulted in a massive cover-up involving hundreds, if not more people and numerous public and private entities. I could go into great detail as to why I believe this, but this website does a more than ample job of it. Here are just a few highlights for those too busy or time constrained to do massive research on this and other sites.

    Let us use some examples from one of the earliest critical books about the Warren Commission, but one that has sources directly inside that body. As Edward Epstein notes in his book Inquest, some members “conceived of the Commission’s purpose in terms of the national interest.” Allen Dulles noted that the atmosphere of rumors and suspicions was obstructing the workings of government, especially in foreign policy. Consequently, Dulles figured that one of the main tasks of that body was to “dispel rumors.” John McCloy declared that it was very important to “show the world that America is not a banana republic, where a government can be changed by a conspiracy.” Congressman Jerry Ford stated that “dispelling damaging rumors was a major concern of the Commission.” (Epstein, The Assassination Chronicles, p. 54)

    But perhaps the most devastating indictment of the credibility of the Warren Commission was not really known until the Assassination Records Review Board went to work in 1994. At that time, the Board declassified the memorandum written by Church Committee investigator Gaeton Fonzi upon his first interview with Sylvia Odio, which occurred on January 16, 1976. During that interview, she related her post Warren Commission testimony meeting with attorney Wesley Liebeler:

    He (Liebeler) kept threatening me with a lie detector test, even though he knew I was under tremendous stress at the time. But one thing he said, and this has always bothered me, he said to this other gentleman, I don’t remember his name, he said, “Well, you know if we do find out that this is a conspiracy, you know that we have orders from Chief Justice Warren to cover this thing up.”

    Fonzi was, quite naturally, surprised. He asked Odio, “Liebeler said that?” She replied with, “Yes sir, I could swear on that.” (Probe, Vol. 3 No. 6)

    With this kind of bias, the facts of the case were malleable. Gerald Ford knew that placing the JFK back wound where the autopsy face sheet located it would make for a dubious trajectory for the Single Bullet Theory’s exit through the president’s neck. So, in the draft of the Warren Report, with the stroke of a pen, he moved it up to the neck area. Does that sound like someone interested in getting to the bottom of the truth about the assassination? (Gerald McKnight, Breach of Trust, pp. 174–75) It was also revealed that Ford, when US president, gave the game away to French president Valery Giscard d’Estaing. When the Frenchman asked him about his work on the Commission, Ford replied that Kennedy’s assassination was not the work of one man, “It was something set up. We were sure it was set up. But we were not able to discover by whom.” (JFK Revisited: Through the Looking Glass, by James DiEugenio, p. 176)

    The idea that an alleged communist like Oswald might have killed JFK for Castro, was promoted from the very night of the assassination by the CIA associated Cuban exile group, the DRE. (ibid, p. 234) Yet sitting member and dominant figure on the Warren Commission, Allen Dulles—who was part of direct and prolonged attempts to assassinate Fidel Castro—sat silent and revealed nothing about CIA subterfuge with the Cuban exiles. It was more than a decade later that accurate information began to emerge about such plots before the Senate’s Church Committee.

    IV

    Now let’s briefly examine the mainstream media’s early reporting on the JFK assassination. To understand the cover-up and/or unwillingness to challenge the emerging story, it is necessary to examine what we learned very early on—the afternoon of the assassination and within a few days after.

    At the first news conference held after JFK was pronounced dead at Parkland Hospital in Dallas, emergency room doctor Malcolm Perry described the throat wound as an entrance wound. (Ibid, p. 121) A few hours after that, JFK’s personal physician Admiral Burkley described the head shot as: “a simple matter of a gunshot through the brain.” Malcolm Kilduff, the press spokesman, pointed to his right temple while eliciting this statement. (Ibid, p. 17) And NBC newsman Chet Huntley repeated this at about 1:40 PM on network television. For a few weeks after, the mainstream media did not contradict this. But as the story about Oswald being the only shooter took hold, and the idea that only three shots from behind the car were fired, the mainstream media began trying to fit the proverbial square peg into the round hole. Some prominent media sources began explaining the early reports of Perry and Burkley mentioned above by explaining that the reason for this apparent anomaly was that the president turned almost totally around to wave at some supporters in the crowd—thus exposing his front to the shooter from behind. (See Paul Mandel in Life magazine of December 6, 1963)

    There’s a major problem with this scenario. The Zapruder film, which Life magazine actually had at the time, shows nothing of the sort. JFK was not at all facing backwards when the shots hit him. Not even close. While the film itself was not shown to the general public until 1975, media sources had to know about this. Yet as mentioned above, some mainstream media sources proceeded with this “JFK was facing backward” scenario anyway.

    In the issue of October 2, 1964, Life magazine published photos from the Zapruder film. That issue was largely dedicated to the newly published Warren Report. to As Jerry Policoff and Robert Hennelly later explained, the magazine went through three different incarnations, in order to conceal the president’s head moving rapidly rearward. This technical overhaul necessitated quite expensive alterations, like breaking and resetting printing plates twice. Both photos and captions were changed so as to camouflage indications of a frontal shot. (See the Village Voice, March 15, 1992) Years later, when the film was shown to the public, it was obvious what Life had done.

    I could go on and on about the cover-up by the Warren Commission and about early naivete/cover-ups within the mainstream media. But it would be better served for visitors to this site to do a bit of investigation of the site itself. But why early on was so much of the MSM promoting this incorrect and deceptive scenario of a lone assassin shooting three times from behind? I think the subject can be explained by examining the phone calls between the new president Lyndon Johnson and prospective members of the Warren Commission.

    Phone calls recorded on dictabelts collected by the Johnson library and released over the years show that both Supreme Court Chief Justice Earl Warren and Senator Richard Russell were reluctant to serve on the commission for a variety of reasons—both personal and professional. LBJ was able to convince them to serve by making subtle references to Lee Harvey Oswald’s visit to Mexico City and national security issues, like the threat of atomic war. This seemed to scare/prompt both Russell and Warren to participate. (See DiEugenio, p. 92)

     

    A thorough examination of these unsubtle references to Oswald in Mexico City reveal that early on, the CIA and FBI promoted the idea that Oswald had been in contact with Valery Kostikov—a supposed master of black operations and assassinations in the western hemisphere for the KGB. And that the revelation of which might lead to complications that would provoke a nuclear war between the US and USSR. In fact, there was ample proof of the effectiveness of this motif on view in 1964. At that time, Mark Lane was part of a debate in Beverly Hills with three other lawyers. The event was recorded, with thousands in attendance. Noted liberal lawyer A. L. Wirin stated:

    I say thank God for Earl Warren. He saved us from a pogrom. He saved our nation. God bless him for what he has done in establishing Oswald was the lone assassin. (Lane, Plausible Denial, p. 52)

    When Lane asked the famous liberal attorney if he would still say that if Oswald was innocent, Wirin replied affirmatively.

    As the above example shows, this clever plan by the plotters was able to scare the then “liberal establishment” in Washington and the mainstream media to promote the cover-up. Once the cover-up was promoted by the MSM—even with subsequent revelations contradicting the official scenario—a certain inertia set in. Imagine the fall out if sacred media icons such as the Washington Post, New York Times and mainstream TV networks had to admit that they were snookered into believing a clever lie; that they totally blew their investigation of the greatest political crime in US history—the conspiratorial assassination of the president. It would have destroyed their credibility for decades, if not permanently.

     

    V

    What about the actual assassination itself? While it is possible that it did involve a large number of people, I contend that it isn’t necessary to have had a large number of people. Based on what I have read on this site, as well as a large number of books associated with the JFK assassination, a relatively small number of people could have carried out the assassination itself.

    It is well established at this point that JFK had made a number of political enemies in high places within both military and the CIA. After the Bay of Pigs debacle, JFK fired three sacred cows in the CIA: Allen Dulles, Richard Bissell, and Charles Cabell. He privately blamed the CIA for misleading him and, in fact, perhaps sabotaging him early on with respect to the Bay of Pigs. He angrily swore to “smash the CIA into a thousand pieces and scatter it to the winds.” (Lane, p. 93)

    His unwillingness to invade Cuba during and after the Bay of Pigs affair, his reluctance to increase involvement in Vietnam, and his subsequent attempt to achieve a détente with the USSR and Cuba angered members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, such as Air Force General Curtis LeMay, Joint Chiefs Chair Lyman Lemnitzer, and also veteran black operator Colonel Ed Lansdale. After the successful resolution of the Missile Crisis, White House tapes reveal that while the president was in the room during a meeting with the Joint Chiefs, one general can be heard saying words to the affect that this is: “another Munich.” (DiEugenio, p. 184)

    With such enemies as Lemnitzer, LeMay, and Lansdale in the military, and the remaining allies of the dismissed Dulles, Cabell, and Bissell, such as William Harvey, James Angleton, David Phillips, and Richard Helms, this cadre of JFK haters would have provided a nucleus of those in high places with significant experience in covert operations and assassination planning to have attempted and succeeded in orchestrating the murder of JFK.

    Now as for the “meat and potatoes” of the assassination as it was carried out on November 22, 1963, in Dallas’ Dealey Plaza, just how many people would it have taken? We are talking about what military intelligence and the CIA would generally call technicians. This term refers to those who actually follow orders, position themselves, and do the shooting and clean-up afterwards.

    The late Jim Garrison—the DA in New Orleans who was the only man in history to actually bring a trial against anyone for the assassination of President Kennedy—thought that it wouldn’t have taken any more than 10 or 15 people on the ground at Dealey Plaza. His basic scenario was: three shooters with an assistant on a radio in communication with either each other (two ways radios) or with someone on the ground along the motorcade route to coordinate the affair; and a few more people—perhaps as few as five to do a clean-up. By clean-up, I mean to collect obvious evidence such as extra bullets or bullet fragments, people with photographs that might give a bird’s eye view of things better left unknown to any investigators and so on. (Garrison lightly sketched in such a scenario in his Playboy interview of October, 1967)

    In fact, there were numerous reports of people representing themselves as Secret Service agents demanding films and photographs after the assassination, as well as agents arresting and interrogating people afterward. These individuals have never been identified or accounted for despite numerous inquiries and investigations. (Henry Hurt, Reasonable Doubt, p. 110; Michael Benson, Who’s Who in the JFK Assassination, p. 423, p. 189)

    What about involvement of the Dallas Police and Dallas County Sheriff personnel? There could have been some involvement, but for the most part, the officers on the ground were probably following orders as to just how much security to provide and how to proceed in the aftermath of the assassination. Perhaps this was influenced from Washington. On one of the dictabelt recordings there is a talk between Johnson assistant Cliff Carter and Dallas authorities. Carter can be heard saying words to the effect that: You have your man, don’t you? We need this thing to be tied up before too many rumors spread about a possible communist conspiracy. (DiEugenio, p. 92) There is obviously tremendous pressure being applied from Washington in what, by any estimation is a serious crisis and it would be understandable that Dallas may have been a victim of this pressure. While it is likely that Dallas officials like Mayor Earl Cabell could have provided some logistical support for the conspirators by altering the motorcade route, we simply don’t know enough about the exact planning of the itinerary of the Dallas trip to state definitively whether or not Mayor Cabell was a willing conspirator or perhaps a dupe of the conspirators.

    Some people in Dallas and the Secret Service made statements that, for example: JFK wanted motorcycle riders to ride behind the presidential car rather than alongside of it—thus giving the shooters a clearer shot at the president. On YouTube, there is even a film of a Secret Service agent ordered to reluctantly jump off the back of the limousine, raising his hands in puzzlement. There are also disputes about the bubble top, both the secret service and the Dallas authorities were supposedly told that JFK wanted the bubble top removed. As expert Vince Palamara has shown, we know that that was untrue.

    Could the Secret Service have been involved directly in the conspiracy? This is indeed a plausible scenario. But just how many people would it take? I believe it could have been a limited number—perhaps just the chief of the Secret Service in Washington, James Rowley, or maybe even the local on ground head of the Secret Service who was traveling with the presidential party in Dallas, Roy Kellerman. One of such people might have told the rest of the agents something like: ‘JFK wants the bubble top removed;” or “JFK wants the Dallas police to stand down or show less of a presence.” Remember, these agents are very much like a military contingent. This is not a democratic organization. They just follow orders.

    VI

    The same could be said of the autopsy doctors. Were all of them actively involved in the conspiracy itself? I doubt it. These doctors were military doctors under orders. They may have been simply told that the nation’s national security is at stake and again they may have just followed orders. In fact, one of the doctors present at the autopsy, Dr. Pierre Finck did testify at the trial of Clay Shaw that a general was directing the autopsy. When he was queried about this to the effect of the nature of this direction, he continued and he added:

    Oh yes, three were admirals, and when you are a lieutenant Colonel in the Army you just follow orders, and at the end of the autopsy we were specifically told as I recall it, it was by Admiral Kenney, the Surgeon General of the Navy…we were specifically told not to discuss the case. (Transcript, 2/24/69)

    Thanks to writer Rob Couteau, there is further evidence of the doctors involved in the cover up. For afterwards, they called Perry and asked him to change his story that very night or they would find a way to discipline him. (See article “The Ordeal of Malcolm Perry”, by James DiEugenio)

    Same thing with the FBI. Only in the discredited and baseless piece of fiction, Nomenclature of as Assassination Cabal, are they given direct responsibility for the assassination. As John Newman has shown, J Edgar Hoover was mystified by the evidence he was getting from Mexico City. And he later called it a false story. (Newman, Oswald and the CIA, p. 635) Keep in mind that Hoover was approaching seventy years of age and later reports are that he was becoming less and less competent near the end of his life. He may even have been an innocent dupe of the Oswald in Mexico City scenario and acted to participate in the cover-up as a defender of national security and the World War III scenario.

     We can go through a check list of commonly named suspects.: David Rockefeller and the business community, Organized Crime, Lyndon Johnson, Cuban exiles. The JFK administration had many, many enemies who they were rubbing the wrong way. We can then argue one way or the other on each. The exiles hated JFK for his perceived backing out of the Bay of Pigs and his second refusal to invade Cuba during the Missile Crisis. There were rumors that LBJ might be gone in a second administration. We also know that Wall Street was not happy with what President Kennedy did during the Steel Crisis. Everyone and their mother knows that Bobby Kennedy was hounding the Mafia, especially the likes of Sam Giancana and Carolos Marcello, since the fifties. We could also argue that there was a cross pollination of the plot between certain elements of these vectors of power. In fact, some authors, like the late Bill Turner, did argue a triangular plot: the CIA, Mafia, Cuban exiles. But the point I wish to make is that although a relatively small hit team could have pulled off the murder, as I have shown, larger conspiracies are not at all uncommon.

    For those of you not familiar with William Shakespeare, the great British playwright wrote a series of works generally referred to by scholars as “The Histories.” These plays are Shakespeare’s dramatizations of significant historical events from his own era back to the classical (Greek/Roman) era. One of these plays was titled Julius Caesar. This is the story of the assassination of Julius Caesar and is based loosely on ancient writings about Caesar. Caesar was assassinated in the Roman senate by his enemies. This, in turn, provoked a long, complex civil war after which Caesar’s stepson, Octavian, eventually won out; defeating both the original plotters, and his own allies: Lepidus and Mark Antony.

    Author Donald Gibson has helped point out an intriguing parallel in the two cases. In the lead up to Caesar’s assassination, according to the play, Caesar had been repeatedly warned by a soothsayer “Beware of the Ides of March.” This is the day in 44 BCE on which Caesar was eventually assassinated. Now the title of an article in Fortune magazine uses such a reference. While it doesn’t actually say: “Beware of the Ides of April,” its reference is a bit perplexing. Why not just title it: “Kennedy Wrong on Steel” or perhaps “Kennedy Jawboning a Threat to Free Enterprise.” People who were interviewed in the article were not just steel executives but also prominent Wall Street bankers and businesspeople. They all expressed outrage at Kennedy’s “jawboning” and worried that he was rapidly leading the US toward a dictatorship. (For an extensive article on the issue, visit this page on Ratical.org entitled: “Fortune’s Warning to President Kennedy: Beware of The Ides of April”)

    What this shows is that there was a real disdain at the top of the Power Elite against Kennedy. These kinds of people had connections throughout other sectors of our society. And that was the key point. This scenario is probably the more likely scenario rather than a massive business plot. Elements of the national security structure including the CIA and military intelligence knew of the general dislike of JFK by the business community and knew that if they pulled something off, they would receive little if no opposition from the economic power structure. And that men like Hoover and LBJ would fall in line and help in the cover up.

    Now, let me again further my point about large conspiracies This time in the blatantly political arena. We all recall the Watergate scandal. Over sixty people were tried and later convicted. What about the Iran/Contra affair? In this one, two presidents were clearly involved: Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush. And it was the latter who pardoned other higher ups in the trail of perfidy. And as many writers have noted—including two who have passed on, Gary Webb and Robert Parry—the cocaine part of that affair was never officially uncovered. But they proved that it undeniably existed. (See Webb’s book, Dark Alliance. Also click here over how the CIA watched over Webb’s downfall)

    Let me add one more example of a large conspiracy. One that was not even really well-hidden. Everyone should be watching the congressional January 6th hearings. Or at least view them on You Tube. Clearly, much evidence was kept from the second impeachment trial of Donald Trump, because today we can now see how wide and deep the plotting was to stop Joseph Biden from winning an electoral college victory. It went on for months. And it employed at least two dozen people both inside and outside the White House. It was also multi-leveled. It involved lawyers visiting state legislators, phone calls and visits to state voting officials, the gathering of thousands of Trump zealots in Washington, the stowing away of weapons nearby etc. The end game of this planned insurrection was that a total of nine people died, and over 140 were injured. Even today, key people have refused to testify, like Mark Meadows and Steve Bannon. Why?

    VII

    The evidence is rather convincing: large conspiracies have existed throughout time. Different aspects of our society have existed within them. The latest example being street provocateur Ali Alexander and very likely, White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows. In the JFK case, all that was needed was someone or, maybe two, who had access to some of these sectors. A commonly named example would be Allen Dulles. He and his close friend James Angleton could have then focused on certain areas for the plot: Tampa, Chicago, Dallas. And they could have picked susceptible fall guys like Gilberto Lopez, Thomas Arthur Vallee, and the perfect one, Lee Oswald. If the great amount of circumstantial evidence which exists does point to major involvement of Oswald in US intelligence, then this is the missing piece of the puzzle which, when manipulated properly, would have given the conspirators their major tool to carry out and, in particular, cover-up the assassination. They scared the ‘liberal establishment’ into going along with the cover-up to avoid nuclear war.

    Let me add one more common complaint: Well, wouldn’t someone have talked? Maybe, but maybe not. But my point should really be that there has been a whole book written about this subject: Larry Hancock’s Someone Would Have Talked. In that book Hancock details the stories of two men who did say something about the plot to kill JFK: Richard Case Nagell and John Martino. Dick Russell has written a long book on the former called The Man Who Knew Too Much.

    Here is the point: large conspiracies do exist and, yes, people have talked in the JFK case. I could also add that David Phillips told his brother he was in Dallas on the day of the assassination. (Russell, p. 272)

    Conclusion

    In his book entitled The Secret Team, former Pentagon/CIA liaison Fletcher Prouty mentions just that: a secret team that could be used to carry out multiple deep cover operations such as assassinations, psych wars, and other black op/disinformation operations. He concludes, in this and other writings, that the JFK assassination, and other events in the USA, could have been a simple application of the covert operations used by American intelligence to destabilize foreign governments being brought in and utilized within the borders of the US itself. Remember, during the same time period of the assassinations, the FBI was running dozens of covert intelligence programs to destabilize such activist groups as anti-war, civil rights, black militants, and women’s rights organizations. The CIA, with Operation Chaos, also carried out a similar group of intelligence operations in the US. These are the signature methods used by US intelligence operatives in foreign countries: eliminate or neutralize the leadership and use covert operations to divide and destabilize political parties that supported the assassinated/neutralized leaders.

    In closing, it was not necessary for hundreds or even thousands of people to have been directly involved in planning and implementing the assassinations of major center-left US politicians and activists in the 1960’s. It is also possible that only a few dozen people may have actually taken part directly in the assassinations themselves. With the fear of the communist menace dominating the culture and media of that time period in general, and the fear of a world ending in nuclear incineration in particular, both the powerful and the weak were likely lulled into a sense of security/normality by the official explanations of those tragic events. Thereafter, a huge amount of government officials and media managers—down to Paul Mandel and A. L. Wirin—took part in the cover up.

    While many people nowadays believe that JFK was probably killed by a conspiracy, the other assassinations receive less exposure. Many people have little or no opinion about those events. People want to believe that their country is more or less right-minded and that its basic foundations are not corrupt and that, while there may be some significant problems we all face, the truth will eventually win out and things will progress as they should. That is why many people cannot get their heads around the idea of either a large secret government within the US national security structure or that such an element of the power structure could pull of a series of assassinations and manipulations in an ongoing manner and whose effects exist in major ways to this very day. I hope that this essay can serve to educate and inform the public as to just how realistic and plausible these scenarios are.

    Finally, and most importantly, the events of the 1960’s marked a watershed in history by which all events which followed were greatly affected. Unless we finally get to the bottom of these events, including the major assassinations of that era, we can never truly understand how we got to where we are today.

  • The Kirknewton Incident

    The Kirknewton Incident


    Did a US Air Force Security Service Member Intercept a Communication

    Predicting the JFK Assassination?

     

    The time is October 1963. The place is an Air Force Base in Kirknewton (Scotland), located approximately 11 miles west of the capital city, Edinburgh. A US Air Force (USAF) Security Service member is carrying out his regular duties at the base. Although it is in the United Kingdom, the base is currently under the control of the USAF Security Service. His duties include monitoring and reporting intelligence communication traffic to his supervisors. They then relay this information on to the National Security Agency (NSA) Headquarters in Fort Meade, Maryland. The individual’s name is David Christensen.

    Christensen is listening to communications coming out of Lisbon, the capital of Portugal. Suddenly, he eavesdrops on a link between Lisbon and Tangier (Morocco) that mentions a high-ranking figure in organized crime and the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. Recognizing the importance and gravitas of such an intercept, he immediately informs his supervisors, confident in the knowledge that they will pass the information up the chain of command.

    Christensen had done his duty. He was relieved. He may even have felt that because of the important content of the intercept, it would have been given Critical Intelligence Communications status, otherwise known as CRITIC. Such messages should be alerted to the President and other senior government officials within minutes, if possible.

    A few weeks later, when Christensen heard the news of President Kennedy’s assassination in Dallas on 22 November 1963, his heart sank. His life then followed a similarly low trajectory. As he said himself, in a letter he wrote in May 1978, to a fellow officer who served with him at the RAF Kirknewton base, “it really broke me up after Nov. 22, 63 especially when I had it all beforehand.” We will return to this letter shortly.

    Was David Christensen destined to become another accidental witness to history, having had prior knowledge of the JFK assassination, alerting the appropriate authorities who then did nothing and failed to protect the President?

    This is his story and how it was eventually brought to the attention of the House Select Committee on Assassinations (HSCA) in 1978.


    David Christensen and RAF Kirknewton

    David Frederick Christensen was born on 26 January 1942 in the midwestern town of Dickinson, North Dakota. He grew up on a ranch near the town of Halliday, which was about 40 miles north east from the town of his birth. Christensen graduated from High School in Halliday in 1960 and married that same year. The young Christensen quickly joined the USAF and in 1961 was sent overseas to the RAF Kirknewton base in Scotland.

    The small town of Kirknewton has a population of just over 2,000. During World War II, a military airfield was built about a mile south of the town by the British Royal Air Force (RAF). Unsurprisingly, it was named RAF Kirknewton.

    The base began life as a grass airfield in late 1940. Its initial purpose was to provide a home for the 289 Squadron in November 1941. The 289 Squadron was an anti-aircraft operation unit who eventually relocated to another base around six months later. RAF Kirknewton was then used for a variety of purposes, including a short stint as a Refresher Flying Training School, which helped to prepare inactive pilots for postings to operational training units.

    In 1943, there was some hope that the RAF Kirknewton base would replace the RAF Findo Gask station, when that base became unserviceable. Findo Gask was situated 50 miles north of Kirknewton. That hope quickly evaporated however when RAF Kirknewton did not obtain the necessary clearance to build runway extensions, probably because of dangerous crosswinds in the area.

    From the 1950s onwards, RAF Kirknewton was no longer used for aviation and in early 1952, the base was handed over to the USAF Security Service––the intelligence branch of the USAF. RAF Kirknewton then began a new life as a strategic US intelligence listening station that was used by the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and NSA to eavesdrop on military and commercial naval traffic, with priority given to Soviet radar. The Cold War was really heating up at this point. Personnel at the base included radio operators, linguists, and analysts––many with Top Secret and higher security clearance.

    The planning for this phase in the life of RAF Kirknewton actually began in August 1951 at the Brooks Air Force Base in San Antonio, Texas when the 37th Radio Squadron Mobile (RSM) was activated. This unit was then selected to move to the UK and into the RAF Kirknewton base.

    Ironically, President Kennedy’s last official act as President was at the Brooks Air Force Base on 21 November 1963, when he opened and dedicated the new Aerospace Health Medical Centre there.

    Around May/June 1952, the first personnel arrived in Scotland (via a three month stay in Bremerhaven, Germany for background investigations and security clearances). These first arrivals referred to Scotland as the “land of the heather, the moors, Scotch whiskey and the kilt.”

    The 37th RSM began formal operations at Kirknewton in August 1952 and by the following month the base had grown in size, with around 17 officers and 155 airmen in post. During its first year, RAF Kirknewton was used to evaluate antenna configurations, with the aim of determining the most effective configuration for intercepting Soviet communications and radar signals.

    The formal transfer of RAF Kirknewton from the British air ministry to the USAF had already taken place by 27 March 1953. Two years later, the 37th RSM was re-designated as the 6952nd RSM, but there was no change to the original mission.

    At the peak of its activity, RAF Kirknewton housed 17 officers and 463 airmen. Over 2,000 personnel served during the lifespan of the base. Towards the end of its life as a listening station, the base was even responsible for maintaining security over part of the hotline established in 1963 between Washington and Moscow, as the cable route passed through the area. The base was handed back to Britain in 1967.

    In James Bamford’s book, The Puzzle Palace (Penguin Books, 1983, page 270), we get an insight into the type of work Christensen would have been performing at Kirknewton. An unnamed former employee explained his routine at the base:

    Intercepted telegrams came through on telex machines. I was provided with a list of about 100 words to look out for. All diplomatic traffic from European embassies was in code and was passed at once to a senior officer. A lot of telegrams––birthday congratulations for instance––were put into the burn bag. I had to keep a special watch for commercial traffic, details of commodities, what big companies were selling, like iron and steel and gas. Changes were frequent. One week I was asked to scan all traffic between Berlin and London and another week between Rome and Belgrade. Some weeks the list of words to watch for contained dozens of names of big companies. Some weeks I just had to look for commodities. All traffic was sent back to Fort Meade in Washington.

    As “all traffic was sent back to Fort Meade in Washington” you would have thought that an intercept referring to the assassination of the President would have been given priority treatment and not “put into the burn bag” with birthday messages!


    Christensen’s Letter and Subsequent Investigation

    Earlier, I referred to a letter David Christensen wrote to an ex-colleague in May 1978. The recipient of his letter was Sergeant Nicholas Stevenson, who served two tours of duty at RAF Kirknewton. The second tour was between June 1962 and June 1965, so he was based there at the same time Christensen said he picked up the Lisbon/Tangier intercept. We can see here a typed copy of the letter provided to the HSCA by the NSA in 1978 (click here to see the original handwritten version of Christensen’s letter).

    Unlike his alert to senior officers in October 1963, Christensen’s letter to Stevenson did not fly under the radar. It was quickly brought to the attention of US government agencies and eventually the HSCA, led by Chief Counsel G. Robert Blakey.

    When Christensen wrote the letter, he was in a Veterans Hospital in Sheridan, Wyoming. Stevenson was based at Corry Field, Florida.

    An earlier public release of the letter contained many redactions. This is what two of the pages looked like––clearly there were concerns about the content:

    Once Stevenson had read the letter, he alerted the USAF Security Service, who in turn notified the Office of Special Investigations (OSI). An OSI agent, based at the Lowry Air Force Base in Colorado, was assigned to contact Christensen, and interview him about the letter. This interview took place on or around 1 June 1978.

    A letter dated 2 June 1978 from Paul Fisher (Chief, USAF Security Service) provides an insight into what was discussed between the OSI agent and Christensen. Fisher’s letter was addressed to James Lear, Director of the NSA (click here to see Fisher’s letter). He wrote that the purpose of the interview with Christensen was to determine the names of any other individuals he may have contacted. He went on to state that “Mr. Christensen has a long history of alcoholism, family problems and now wants to see a cleared psychiatrist as he attributes all of his problems from Oct 1963, per the OSI agent. In addition, he has indicated to the OSI that he now fears for his life.”  

    The government agencies at this point clearly seemed to be more concerned about who else Christensen may have talked to about the letter, rather than the actual claim made about the JFK assassination and organized crime. Christensen’s health and personal problems were also highlighted, a common tactic when trying to undermine someone’s credibility.

    This illustrates that if Christensen did intercept a message in October 1963 predicting the JFK assassination, and tried to raise the alarm or alert authorities, then it had a very profound and damaging effect on his life. Something similar happened to Eugene Dinkin, Ralph Leon Yates, and Abraham Bolden to name just a few (click here for more on Eugene Dinkin).

    On 7 September 1978, Daniel Silver (General Counsel, NSA) wrote to the FBI about the letter and provided them with a typed copy. Silver indicated that the FBI may wish to bring the matter to the attention of any Committee of the Congress. The HSCA had already been investigating the JFK assassination for two years by then (click here to see Silver’s letter).

    Interestingly, Silver also corroborated a central claim made in Christensen’s letter about what was going on at the RAF Kirknewton base in October 1963.

    Silver wrote that “the information contained in Mr. Christensen’s letter that the Air Force Security Service was intercepting international commercial communications at Kirknewton, Scotland in 1963 is correct, as is the assertion that the station monitored communications links between Lisbon and other parts of the world.” As we will discuss later, other facts raised by Christensen in his letter can also be corroborated.

    The HSCA were indeed made aware of Christensen’s claim and on 8 November 1978, Chief Counsel Blakey met with a representative of the NSA to discuss further. The memorandum written up from this meeting confirmed that Christensen had been committed to “a mental institution” because of the October 1963 intercept. Blakey posed several questions to the NSA including what their capability was to retrieve communications from Kirknewton from the time period in question, and whether Christensen really was working for the USAF at the time and doing the kind of work consistent with “intercepting commercial communications.”

    Blakey followed this up on 15 November 1978 by writing to Harold Brown who was then Secretary of Defense under President Jimmy Carter. Brown had also worked in the Defense Department under Robert McNamara during JFK’s time in the White House.

    On the same date, a memorandum of understanding was also drawn up and signed by both Blakey and John Kester, who was the Special Assistant to the Secretary and Deputy Secretary of Defense. The purpose of the memorandum was in relation to the Defense Department’s agreement to release Sergeant Stevenson to be interviewed by the HSCA. It included the restrictions placed on them in this regard, such as that it be limited in scope to the allegations made by Christensen, no classified information would be disclosed by the HSCA without the written consent of the Defense Department, and that Stevenson would be accompanied at the interview.

    What is also interesting about the memorandum of understanding was an error in the original typed copy. As we can see, it referred to “the allegations of David F Christensen of involvement by the Government of Cuba in the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.” This was then scored out, initialed and corrected to readof certain individuals.”

    Click here to see the full memorandum of understanding.>

    There is no record that Christensen made any allegation that the Government of Cuba was involved in the JFK assassination. I’m sure this mistake was just an honest clerical error!


    The Interview with Sergeant Stevenson

    The interview with Sergeant Nicholas Stevenson took place on 17 November 1978 in the Senate Intelligence Committee room. Two HSCA staff members conducted the session. They were Gary Cornwell and Kenneth Klein. Stevenson was accompanied by a legislative liaison officer from the USAF. Others in attendance included Eugene Yeates, Chief of Legislative Affairs at the NSA.

    I have been unable to find a verbatim account of what was discussed but a summary of the interview was subsequently written up by Klein that day (click here to see Klein’s report) and by Yeates in a memorandum dated 21 November 1978 (click here to see Yeates’ memorandum).

    At the meeting, Stevenson confirmed that he had known Christensen for a number of years and recognized other names in the letter. He added that he could not rule out that such a message was picked up at RAF Kirknewton but felt it would have been more widely known at the base and be the probable subject of a CRITIC. We have seen previously that this relates to a piece of Critical Intelligence Communications which should be treated with the utmost urgency and importance. Stevenson denied any specific knowledge of the allegation made concerning organized crime and the assassination of the President.

    HSCA investigator Cornwell suggested to Stevenson that he call Christensen to find out the name of the figure in organized crime. Stevenson replied that he was unwilling to do so. In Klein’s report, it is stated that the lawyer representing Stevenson, stated that “such a phone call could only be arranged through the Department of Defense.”

    It has always puzzled me why the HSCA did not pursue more vigorously the name of the organized crime figure mentioned in Christensen’s letter. The memorandum by Eugene Yeates stated that “the staffers remain particularly interested in determining the name of the individual who Mr. Christensen believes relates to the assassination” and ended with the words “If the Committee is able to determine a specific name, the staffers indicated that they would probably initiate a specific inquiry to NSA to again search our materials.”

    There is no available information that I have yet been able to find that the HSCA made any serious further efforts to determine the identity of the individual. Despite what Stevenson’s lawyer said, I would have thought the HSCA would have moved heaven and earth to find out the name of the organized crime figure, particularly as Chief Counsel Blakey was pointing the figure of suspicion for the assassination at organized crime. I also realize at the time (November 1978) that the HSCA and their Congressional investigatory mandate was due to run out at the end of the year. I accept that they may have had higher priorities to pursue at the time, such as the acoustical evidence from the Police Officer’s dicta-belt, that recorded the shots in Dealey Plaza.

    Author, Larry Hancock, did speak to Sergeant Nicholas Stevenson for his excellent book Someone Would Have Talked (JFK Lancer Productions & Publications, 2010 edition, page 367). Stevenson told Hancock that “he was unable to discuss the subject because of two brain operations which had totally eliminated all of his past memories.”

    On 21 November 1978, Eugene Yeates wrote a further letter to confirm that the NSA had “made a thorough search of all records” pertinent to the allegation made by Christensen and that “no communications or information relating to the Committee’s request” had been located. This letter was only released in full in November 2017 under the JFK Records Collections Act 1992 (click here to see the letter).

    Another document only released in full at this time was from Harold Parish of the NSA. His memorandum was dated 2 January 1979. In it, Parish outlines the scope of the search conducted by the NSA to find materials relevant to the Kirknewton incident. He concluded that the NSA had “done all reasonable things to locate the reported intercept with negative results.” Just before concluding this, he also admitted that the search only really consisted of a look through three boxes from 1963 containing unidentified materials. There were nearly 10,000 products on file from January through November 1963 that would take a minimum of four weeks to go through (click here to see the memorandum).

    The reality of the search is underlined by another memorandum dated 13 December 1978, this time by C. Baldwin of the NSA (click here to see the memorandum). Baldwin’s memo confirmed “that a review of the documents in these three unidentified boxes would constitute a reasonable effort to find the alleged record” and that the “latest date in the box was 1962.” We know Christensen’s intercept was made in October 1963.

    Baldwin’s memo goes on to state that Mr. Sapp of the NSA “requested that an additional search be made of materials dated later than 1963” but that after reviewing the listing of such boxes, “nothing on the list merits such a search.”  

    It is clear to me that the NSA’s response, that they had made a “thorough search” to locate information relating to Christensen’s allegation, was disingenuous at best and a complete fabrication at worst. It also makes me wonder why these documents were hidden from public view for nearly 40 years if there was nothing to see. I appreciate that time is precious for government agencies but maybe in the near future, I’ll get the opportunity to make a more “thorough search” of these materials. I look forward to that day.


    The Lisbon and Tangier Link

    The intelligence agencies and HSCA seemed to have closed the book insofar as David Christensen’s allegation was concerned.

    You will recall that he mentioned that the link picked up was between Lisbon and Tangier. We have seen that the NSA confirmed that they were indeed listening to communications between Lisbon and other parts of the world at the time Christensen was based at RAF Kirknewton.

    Lisbon and Tangier are only about 275 miles apart. They are both interesting places to research. Both are port cities with easy access to North Africa, Southern Europe and a gateway to the Atlantic.

    Lisbon was known as the Capital of Espionage during World War II, largely because Portugal was officially neutral during that bloody conflict. Like its neighbour Spain, Portugal was ruled by a fascist dictator for decades. Antonio de Oliveira Salazar held power from 1932 until 1968. But because of the country’s neutrality during the war, Lisbon became a haven for spies. Intelligence agents from the allies and axis countries all converged on Lisbon.

    After the war, many organizations continued to take advantage of Salazar’s anti-communist dictatorship. These included CIA-NATO sponsored “Gladio” stay behind units, set up allegedly to defend Western Europe from a possible Soviet invasion, but who ended up inflicting murder and terrorist attacks on their own populations to instill fear, and frame political opponents. James Earl Ray also spent around ten days in Lisbon just before his arrest in London in June 1968 for the alleged murder of Martin Luther King Jr.

    Tangier was an important trade centre and international zone from 1924 until it was integrated into Morocco in 1956. It was also a place where spies met and even the setting for part of a James Bond film in the 1980’s! Bond author, Ian Fleming, was a friend of JFK’s. Smuggling was a popular pastime, if we can describe it as that. There were also several alleged sightings of Lee Harvey Oswald in Tangier, but I am sceptical of their authenticity. I could write a separate article about this subject alone! 

    An interesting character who we do know was in Tangier was Thomas Eli Davis III. He was an associate of Jack Ruby and in the gun running business, which included Cuba. In fact, it is reported that Ruby’s first lawyer, Tom Howard, asked his client whilst he was awaiting trial for Oswald’s murder if there was anybody who could harm his defence if it came out at the trial. Ruby mentioned Thomas Eli Davis.

    Davis was arrested in Tangier on 8 December 1963 for trying to sell two pistols to raise money. What concerned the Moroccan police more though was that Davis also had in his possession a cryptic, unsigned letter in his handwriting that mentioned Oswald and the Kennedy assassination. It is likely though that the reference to Oswald was a Victor Oswald, an arms dealer that Davis met in Madrid around November 1963.

    Another, and possibly more interesting bit of information about Davis, is that he was in custody in Algiers, Algeria on the day of the JFK assassination for running guns to the violent Organisation Armée Secrète, commonly known as the OAS. The OAS were opposed to Algerian independence from France (which was won in March 1962) and had tried to assassinate President De Gaulle on numerous occasions because of his stance on Algeria. They also had a station in Madrid.

    According to author Seth Kantor, Davis’s release from custody in Algiers was facilitated by a CIA asset with the cryptonym QJ/WIN (The Ruby Cover-Up, Zebra Books, 1978, page 45). This mysterious individual was part of the ZR/RIFLE Executive Action assassination programme led by William Harvey, who hated Kennedy and Castro. Could Harvey’s programme have diverted its attention towards JFK?

    Anti-Castro Cuban refugees were also known to have left their country of birth and made their way to Tangier because of the Castro revolution.

    The connection between Lisbon and Tangier may not therefore have been as benign as one may originally think. It does not seem unreasonable that communications and intelligence chatter could have been picked up around October 1963 that included talk of the imminent assassination of JFK.


    The Figure in Organized Crime           

    Earlier in the article, we saw the letter that Christensen wrote in 1978. He wrote that “the man’s name most mentioned was number 4 in a certain branch of organized crime at the time. Was number 2 last year.”

    You don’t need to have the detective powers of Sherlock Holmes or Jessica Fletcher to work out that the person mentioned in the intercept therefore had to still be alive in 1977, the year before the letter was written––and was the number 2 man in that branch of organized crime.

    When we talk about organized crime and the JFK assassination, there are three names that generally come top of most people’s lists. They are Carlos Marcello from Louisiana, Sam Giancana from Chicago and Florida kingpin, Santo Trafficante Jr. All are on record as wishing harm on President Kennedy, and his brother Bobby, and all had the means, motive and opportunity to do so.

    Giancana though was brutally murdered himself in June 1975, so this would appear to rule him out as the person in the letter. Other high-profile Mafia figures who have been linked with the JFK assassination over the years include Joseph Civello (Dallas), Jimmy Hoffa (Teamsters Union), Johnny Roselli (CIA/Mafia Castro hits) and Antoine Guerini (Marseille Mafia).

    They were also all dead by 1977 (or in Hoffa’s case had disappeared). Antoine Guerini’s equally notorious brother, Barthélemy, was sentenced to twenty years in prison in 1969 and died in 1982. Suspected grassy knoll shooter, Lucien Sarti, was also dead, killed in a Mexico City shoot out in 1972. So, it is most unlikely that the man’s name mentioned in the letter, and who was number 2 in a certain branch of organized crime in 1977, could have been any of these men.

    It seems credible that the branch of organized crime mentioned in the letter could have been the lucrative heroin drug smuggling trade––going through Marseille and into North America. The so-called French Connection. It was thriving in the early 1960s and therefore under intense scrutiny by some government agencies. Montreal was a key city in this drugs corridor, as they made their way from Europe to the USA. This makes Paul Mondolini a potential suspect. He was alive in 1977.

    This is, of course, all speculation and it is easy to throw names around without any specific corroboration. As well as drug trafficking, there are many other “branches” of organized crime including murder and assassination. The list of potential candidates could therefore be very long. But I do not think it takes us much further forward to throw other names into the mix without evidence.

    What we do know for sure is that there was an opportunity for the HSCA to find out the name of the person in Christensen’s letter, but they either didn’t have time or did not believe it worthy of further investigation. The NSA didn’t help with their poor excuse of a search for relevant records and information. Could they have been worried about where it might lead them?


    An Officer and a Gentleman

    It’s easy to forget that within all this talk of the JFK assassination, organized crime figures, and Cold War paranoia, that the whole Kirknewton incident really revolves around one man––David Frederick Christensen.

    Only he really knows the whole story and may have taken his secrets to the grave. Christensen died on 22 December 2008. He was 66 years old and rests forever at the Halliday Cemetery in North Dakota.

    Some may say that he made the whole story up, perhaps to engineer some medical and financial assistance he may have been looking for from government. What happened between October 1963 and May 1978 (when he wrote the letter to Stevenson) is also a mystery. Who else did he tell about it? Was pressure brought to bear on him to keep quiet? These questions remain unanswered for now and require further investigation.

    What we do know is that it rarely ended well for people who bravely put their heads above the parapet and tried to sound a warning about the possible assassination of JFK.

    For those who doubt Christensen’s story, it’s worth reflecting on some of the other points mentioned in his 1978 letter.

    He included the names of other officers who served at RAF Kirknewton, such as Prater, Harley, and Hendrickson. A review of the alumni at the USAF RAF Kirknewton website confirms the existence of such named individuals who served there. The Berkely Bar in Edinburgh was an established drinking establishment for serving military personnel at the time. He had indeed married a girl call Marlene Burr in 1960 and they were later divorced. He refers to some people as 202s and 203s. A 202 was a Radio Traffic Analyst and a 203 a Language Specialist––work consistent with the RAF Kirknewton base at the time. Could the outfit in Texas have been a reference to the Brooks Air Force Base in San Antonio?

    Amongst all these facts, I find it extremely unlikely that Christensen would then have thrown in a wild accusation about an intercept that mentioned the assassination of President Kennedy, unless it really did happen.

    As we all continue to research different aspects of the JFK assassination, maybe more about the Christensen story will be revealed. It’s a pity more of the documents and details about the HSCA investigation were not released until after his death. We may have been able to find found out a lot more if they were released earlier.

    What we should never lose sight of though is that David Christensen was a human being who served his country with distinction and received an honorable discharge. He was trusted with high security clearance and is not just a name to be read in documents.

    He had two sons and six grandchildren––a family man. He enjoyed playing card games and worked in the oil business when he left the Air Force. And his life was profoundly affected following Kirknewton. As he said himself––“it really broke me up after November 22, 1963” and “it cost him a divorce and everything from his wife.”

    Until evidence is presented to the contrary, perhaps we should also start referring to David F Christensen as another forgotten hero as far as the JFK assassination is concerned.

    We must keep searching for the truth.

    As JFK said himself once, “Things do not happen. Things are made to happen.

  • James Moore, JFK, and QAnon

    James Moore, JFK, and QAnon


    James Moore is the chief business commentator and a regular columnist for the British online newspaper The Independent. The day before Valentine’s Day, Moore penned an article called “JFK’s assassination greased the wheels for QAnon and Covid-Deniers.” This was the sub-title to this column:

    The same type of thinking fuels the Kennedy conspiracy theories and the venomous fiction concocted by extreme right-wingers, that we see today. It needs to be laid to rest.

    You have to wonder, did Moore crib his column from the piece that Steven Gillon wrote for the Washington Post? Gillon’s was published on the 57th anniversary of President Kennedy’s assassination and made much the same false equivalency argument that Moore does here. (Click here for my discussion of this)

    Gillon was wrong on every point he made in his faux comparison. QAnon is not something that say, Mark Lane, would have gone within a mile of if he were alive. To compare the arguments in the two cases is simply bizarre. The initial critics of the Commission, like Mark Lane and Harold Weisberg, showed that, although the MSM accepted the Warren Commission’s work, they should not have. Because contrary to what reporters like Tom Pettit of NBC and Walter Cronkite of CBS trumpeted, the Commission had not proven its case that Lee Harvey Oswald was the lone gunman who killed President Kennedy. Yet, on the evening of the issuance of the Warren Report, both CBS and NBC, with those two reporters, stated to an unsuspecting public that the Commission had done just that.

    So here is the question I would like to post to both Gillon and Moore: How did those two men read 888 pages of the Warren Report—which was not subject indexed—and put together a broadcast show in less than 24 hours? The answer is they could not have. These two programs were in production well before the report was even issued. Therefore, what the rational reader can conclude is that both CBS and NBC were leaked the Commission’s findings well in advance of publication. And they made some kind of implicit or explicit agreement not to challenge those findings in return for the information. In fact, at the end of the CBS program, Cronkite made the stunning statement that it would be hard to imagine that a more thorough inquiry could have been done.

    In fact, it was even worse than that. For we later learned from film director Emile de Antonio and journalist Florence Graves that CBS instructed their on-camera witnesses to parrot the Commission’s conclusions. (Florence Graves, Washington Journalism Review, Sept/Oct, 1978) Documentary director de Antonio saw the outtakes from the 1964 CBS program. When a witness was asked where the shots in Dealey Plaza came from, and they replied with “the knoll area”, they were asked the question again. Only the take where the witness finally said, “the Texas School Book Depository” was shown to the public. De Antonio later told Graves, “The interviewer was more like a prosecuting attorney leading a witness to support the state’s case.” Graves found out that the CBS production was actually months in the making. (Click here for details)

    I would like to ask Mr. Moore: Is this your idea of journalism? Would you go along with such an illicit and unethical scheme to endorse an official story for the British government? Would you instruct a witness to change his story on camera? Would you produce a program endorsing a report months before that report was even published? Because that is what happened with the Warren Report.

    Recall, this was in the early period of the controversy. People like Weisberg were writing that the Commission had not proved its case beyond a reasonable doubt. It was way before the declassifications of the Assassinations Record Review Board (ARRB). What those declassifications revealed, and what authors like Gerald McKnight proved in Breach of Trust, was that there was no case against Oswald at all. The FBI, Secret Service, and CIA fed the Commission an incomplete and faulty record. The Commission accepted and published it. With the new information available after 1998, critics like McKnight, and several others, could finally prove the fraud in the Commission’s performance—to a legal standard.

    Such is not the case with QAnon. That movement has little or nothing to do with investigatory data or a court room legal standard. QAnon was begun by an anonymous poster at the 4chan website in late 2017. That website was often characterized as being extremist and racist. Who the man who started it really was, we do not know. He claimed to be a high ranking military officer. This person announced that Hillary Clinton was going to be arrested. It was part of a scenario that depicted a grand battle going on: good vs evil. President Trump and his Pentagon advisors were working to take down a global alliance of Satan worshiping pedophiles. That alliance included politicians, Hollywood celebrities, and figures in the media.

    According to QAnon, the battle will end with two great apocalyptic events. The first is The Storm, which will result in mass arrests of thousands of people; it will be a day of reckoning. The second event is the Great Awakening, the day everyone will realize that QAnon was correct. This will be the opening of a new utopian era. (Click here for details)

    Many commentators believe that the birth of QAnon was preceded and perhaps derived from the whole Pizzagate imbroglio. That resulted in an attack on Comet Ping Pong Pizza in Washington DC by a man named Edgar Maddison Welch. This occurred in December of 2016. Welch had a rifle, a handgun, and a shotgun. That fruity incident was based on similar themes: namely that the Clinton campaign was running a child molestation ring right out of the basement of the pizza shop, which had no basement. Promoters of this bizarre scenario were Donald Trump backers like Alex Jones, Michael Flynn, and his son Michael Jr. The motivation probably being that it went after Hillary Clinton. Mr. Welch actually thought she was murdering children. (See Huffpost, story by Hayley Miller, 12/16/2016; Esquire 7/24/20, article by Michael Sebastian and Gabrielle Bruney)

    There is no cognitive/intellectual relationship between what people like Mark Lane, Gerald McKnight, or Harold Weisberg did and Mr. Welch’s beliefs or what the backers of Pizzagate or QAnon do. The latter are mythological concepts. The former are based upon data and evidence. JFK writers can today demonstrate that the Commission was wrong on many key points. What can QAnon show? Another pizza shop with a child porn ring in the basement?

    As I pointed out with Gillon’s rubbish, in its historical origins, again there is no relationship between QAnon/Pizzagate and critics of the Commission. The followers of the former stem from over a decade prior to Mark Lane’s Rush to Judgement. The QAnon troop are mostly successors to the anti-government, pro-gun, rightwing militia corps. It was these groups that helped create the John Birch Society and helped found its sister association, the Minutemen. From the election of Ronald Reagan, the GOP has drifted more and more to the right, especially during the Bill Clinton presidency. At that time, party leaders like Rush Limbaugh advocated for every conspiracy theory out there about the Clintons: Whitewater, Vince Foster, the Rose Law Firm. None of which two Republican special prosecutors could convict him over. I might also add that Limbaugh, in February of 2020, dismissed CV-19 as being as innocuous as the common cold. (Rolling Stone, 2/17/2021, article by Bob Moser) This intellectually unmoored, anything-goes attitude eventually allowed QAnon to spread into the modern elected GOP (e.g. Marjorie Taylor Greene and Lauren Boebert). In my view, it was this anti-intellectual, ahistorical, politically packed attitude that led to the Insurrection of January 6, over another Limbaugh/Trump myth: a stolen election. As a consequence, eight people died—five were killed, three took their own lives. No such pattern exists for the critics of the Warren Commission, because the critical community is not fundamentally political and not based on a spurious, ethereal, ideological belief system.

    This leads us to the key sentence in Moore’s screed. He writes that “The Kennedy conspiracy has become a respectable conspiracy theory. Almost.” The idea that Kennedy’s murder was caused by a conspiracy is today not a theory. It is a forensic fact. And because of the Assassination Records Review Board (ARRB), we can show that in a number of ways with the so-called “hard evidence” (i.e. the ballistics and the autopsy). We can also demonstrate that previous inquiries were simply wrong in these aspects. And show why they are wrong.

    Moore scores Oliver Stone’s 1991 film JFK on this point. He does so using a sleight of hand trick. He says that JFK posited a combination of nine different organizations that wanted Kennedy killed. He actually includes groups that, after about six viewings of the film, I still don’t see (e.g. pro-Castro Cubans, the Russians, Hoover’s FBI, and the Mafia). What the film really says is that a combination of the Power Elite and the military schemed to kill Kennedy over his policies in Vietnam and Cuba. Most of the other groups are mentioned in passing, or posited as a part of the cover up.

    But Moore’s kind of trickery obscures the point of the film. The film was trying to show that, almost three decades later, we did not really know who killed Kennedy. As everyone recalls, except perhaps Moore, the end title card to the film said one reason for this was because the files of the HSCA were still classified over a decade after they closed shop. Why? This is a question that Moore does not want to deal with. Neither does he want to deal with what those files revealed once they were declassified. If he did, the problems with his lousy column would be exposed.

    Moore writes something just as bad just a couple of sentences later. He actually states that there is really not much reason for questioning the JFK case. Why? Because the doubts are only “backed by little more than the feeling that one man simply couldn’t have, on his own, changed history as Oswald did.”

    In other words, those 2 million pages of ARRB declassified documents, their inquiry into the medical evidence, the work of scientists and physicians like Dave Mantik, Cyril Wecht, Randy Robertson, Mike Chesser, and Gary Aguilar, all of this new writing, evidence, and analysis amounts to a feeling?

    Moore then doubles down. He now says that with all the declassifications, plus the studies by ballistics experts and physicists, all of these have concluded that the fatal bullet came from Oswald, which exposes him as a charlatan. Does Moore not know that Vincent Guinn’s Neutron Activation Analysis—the test that the HSCA relied upon to seal its case against Oswald—has now been exposed as “junk science”? (Journal of Forensic Sciences, July 2006, pp. 717–28) How about ballistics? Gary Aguilar, Tink Thompson, and John Hunt have shown that the Magic Bullet, CE 399—the Commission’s keystone of their case against Oswald—has no chain of custody to it. Thus, it would blow up in a prosecutor’s face at trial. (The Assassinations, edited by James DiEugenio and Lisa Pease, pp.282–84; and click here) This lack of knowledge further exposes Moore as indulging in ignorant quackery.

    Yet, near the end of Moore’s Comedy of Errors, he again says that both the JFK case and QAnon lead people down the same rabbit hole. Not so. With QAnon, there is no end to the rabbit hole; since it is at best a myth, at worst a hoax. In the JFK case, by following the best that has been written of late, one can find some definite evidentiary conclusions. Moore is either unaware of them or does not want to mention them, since it would blow up his column.

    The column ends the only way it could. Moore endorses Gerald Posner’s “exhaustively researched” book Case Closed. Well, if one wants to read what was essentially a rerun of the Warren Report, fine. But the remarkable thing about that book is that it was written before the creation of the Review Board. So how could it be “exhaustively researched”? The major part of Posner’s footnotes relied on the volumes of the Warren Commission. Meaning it could have been written in 1965 or ’66. Posner endorsed the Single Bullet Fantasy, which we know today did not happen. (Click here for details) We also know that there is a problem with the interviews Posner did. Some of the people who he says he interviewed do not recall talking to him. (Probe Magazine Vol. 5 No. 5, p. 14)

    Further, in the original edition of Case Closed, Posner wrote that there was no credible evidence that Oswald knew David Ferrie, a major character in the film JFK. (See p. 148) In fact, Ferrie had told the FBI he did not recall Oswald. (Commission Document 75, p. 286) Within weeks of the publication of that book, PBS Frontline produced a photo of the two men standing together at a Civil Air Patrol barbecue. In the declassified files of the HSCA, there was further evidence via affidavits of CAP members who recalled the rightwing, CIA associated Ferrie with the alleged communist Oswald at meetings. (Op. CIt. Probe Magazine, pp. 15–16)

    To top it off, we now know through at last three sources that, within days of the assassination, Ferrie was visiting and calling people to recover evidence that linked him to Oswald. (Ibid, p. 17) This included both his library card and the above-mentioned picture. In other words, far from not knowing Oswald, Ferrie was involved in the act of obstruction of justice in order not to incriminate himself in perjury. This is a rabbit hole?

    So much for Mr. Posner. And also Mr. Moore.

  • Murder Orthodoxies: A Non-Conspiracist’s View Of Marilyn Monroe’s Death

     

    Don McGovern has transformed his fine book about Marilyn Monroe’s death into a web site. This is the best, most complete, and most up to date treatment that there is of the subject. It is a first rate antidote to the likes of Donald Wolfe, Anthony Summers, and Robert Slatzer. Not only does he expose the myths, he shows how they started. Strongly recommended.

  • Steven Gillon: Mark Lane Equals Donald Trump?

    Steven Gillon: Mark Lane Equals Donald Trump?


    On the 57th anniversary of President John Kennedy’s death, historian Steven Gillon was given a platform to write an opinion piece relating to Kennedy’s assassination, except he did not write about John Kennedy’s presidency; nor did he address any new facts about his assassination. The title of his column for the Washington Post was: “The Tie Between the Kennedy Assassination and Trump’s Conspiracy Mongering.” Gillon was going to comment on the refusal of President Trump to concede the election and the failure of his lawyers to turn his loss into a legal victory.

    As a lead in to his real subject, Gillon wrote:

    …conspiracy theories have a long history in right-wing politics. But tempting though it may be to chalk conspiracies up as a conservative phenomenon, the truth is more complicated.

    In itself, that statement is an historical humdinger, because what Gillon is trying to do is not just sweep the right-wing QAnon under the rug; which would be quite a magic trick in and of itself. But when he only alludes to the fact that “conspiracy theories have a long history in right-wing politics”, he is trying to somehow neuter the entire ultra-conservative movement that sprung up against President Dwight Eisenhower, because of his perceived mild reaction to the Cold War. To give that movement the back of one’s hand is both irresponsible and ahistorical, because it morphed and mushroomed into the pernicious and frightening far right force we live with today.

    That began with the pure force of the second Red Scare. In large part, this was caused by Richard Nixon as a member of the House Unamerican Activities Committee (HUAC). That committee was designed to pursue Nazi espionage activities in America, but the HUAC was quickly sidetracked by conservative Republicans. It now explored any kind of suspected domestic communist infiltration. Nixon used that committee to advance the questionable case of journalist Whitaker Chambers against former State Department employee Alger Hiss. Nixon, and FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, used an array of questionable tactics both in congress and then at two trials. At the second trial, Hiss was convicted of perjury. He could not have been convicted for espionage simply because Chambers had so many liabilities as a witness. Plus, as we have come to learn, the typewriter produced at the trial was the wrong machine. (There has been a flurry of recent books on this case that show just how unethical the Nixon/Hoover case was e.g. Joan Brady’s America’s Dreyfus.)

    It was this case that added great torque to the second Red Scare of the fifties. This resulted in the faux senate investigations of Senator Joe McCarthy and his chief counsel Roy Cohn. Robert Kennedy was an attorney on the committee, but resigned after he saw what Cohn was really up to. He later returned as counsel for the Democrats. And it was through his efforts, plus the exposure of McCarthy on national television by Edward R. Murrow, that brought an end to the McCarthy/Cohn demagoguery.

    But there can be little doubt that a certain part of the Republican Party found the McCarthy/Cohn movement politically useful. The constant refrain of innumerable communists infiltrating 1.) the State Department, 2.) the Pentagon, 3.) the CIA and 4.) even the White House, this created a climate of fear, loathing, and paranoia. When this was turned on the Democratic Party, it could be used for political impact e.g. the slogan that the Democrats lost China.

    It was this emotional, almost pathological, anti-communist appeal that led to the rise of the John Birch Society (JBS) and its affiliated rightwing groups e.g. the Minutemen. The founder of the John Birch Society wrote a controversial book called The Politician. In the original draft of the manuscript, Robert Welch tried to insinuate that somehow President Eisenhower was really a kind of Manchurian Candidate, that is, he was a communist plant. (D. J. Mulloy, The World of the John Birch Society, pp. 15-16)

    Welch’s view of the worldwide communist plot is depicted in The Blue Book of the John Birch Society:

    Communism, in its unmistakable present reality is wholly a conspiracy, a gigantic conspiracy to enslave mankind; an increasingly successful conspiracy controlled by determined, cunning, and utterly ruthless gangsters, willing to use any means to achieve its end. (Mulloy, p. 3)

    But that was just the beginning of Welch’s accusations. Welch thought water fluoridation was a communist plot. The JBS thought the civil rights movement was run out of Moscow. For that reason, they ended up opposing John Kennedy’s civil rights bill. Their legal pretext was the doctrine of states’ rights. (Mulloy, p. 110) In that respect, it should be noted that both Fred Koch and Harry Lynde Bradley were early promoters and members of the JBS. (Mulloy, p. 9) Fred Koch was the father of Charles and David Koch. Bradley was a co-founder of the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation. These present clear and powerful ties to the GOP establishment of today, which, for whatever reason, Gillon wants to air brush out of the picture.

    It is significant to note that, through their publishing house, Western Islands, the JBS sponsored writers like Gary Allen. Allen propagated the idea that both the American government and the USSR were actually controlled by international bankers and financiers like David Rockefeller and Armand Hammer. Allen and the JBS saw the United Nations as a kind of front for this group to create a world government. Professor Revilo Oliver, a contributor to the JBS magazine American Opinion, wrote a two part essay about the Kennedy assassination for that journal. It was called Marxmanship in Dallas. (See Warren Commission, Vol. 15, p. 732) It turned out that some of the information Oliver used for that rather wild piece came from Frank Capell. Capell was another far right journalist and professional Red hunter who helped create the pernicious mythology about Robert Kennedy being involved in the “murder” of Marilyn Monroe. (Click here for details) Robert Alan Greenberg, in his book Enemies Within: The Culture of Conspiracy in Modern America, describes some of what Revilo Oliver thought about the murder of President Kennedy:

    The conspirators had become impatient with Kennedy when his efforts to foment domestic chaos through the civil rights movement and “economic collapse” had fallen behind schedule. (Greenberg, p. 110)

    By 1960, the JBS had become a fairly powerful political force that was threatening to enter the mainstream of the Republican Party and the conservative movement. It posed such a threat that, as Welch got further and further out in his conspiracy thinking e.g. Adam Weishaupt and the Illuminati, he sustained a series of attacks from first, the new publisher of the Los Angeles Times, Otis Chandler in 1961, then from William F. Buckley in his magazine The National Review. (February 13, 1962) In November of 1964, on the eve of the election, historian Richard Hofstadter wrote an article for Harper’s, “The Paranoid Style in American Politics”. This much misrepresented essay was really about how the McCarthy movement had influenced Welch and how, in turn, that had impacted the rise of Barry Goldwater.

    Although many observers thought that the defeat of Goldwater would end the JBS, that was not really true. It exists to this day. (Click here for their website) Note that they greet the viewer with the slogan “America Needs Patriots.” This is how its influence has stayed alive: through the birth of the Patriot Movement and the growth of armed militias, for Robert DePugh, who founded the Minutemen, was originally associated with the JBS. This group was militaristic and featured training camps with caches of arms. DePugh later formed something called the Patriotic Party in 1966. President Kennedy criticized both groups in a speech in November of 1961. (Mulloy, p. 43)

    Many commentators have noted that today’s militia groups are powerfully influenced by far-right conspiracy theories. D. J. Mulloy once wrote that, “The embrace of conspiracy theories by militia members is the most well-known and most thoroughly documented aspect of their ideological and rhetorical concerns.” (American Extremism, p. 169) As Mulloy writes, the themes of these theories center around an international cabal which is intent on disarming Americans and creating a formal One World government. A member group, the National Alliance, published what many consider to be the keystone piece of literature of the movement. The Turner Diaries has sold over half a million copies. Reportedly, after the Oklahoma City bombing in 1995, Tim McVeigh had a copy of that book when he was pulled over for speeding in a vehicle with no license tag.(The Medusa File II, by Craig Roberts, p. 130)

    In these anti-government/pro-gun circles, President Trump is depicted as a hero: exposing and expelling a Satan worshipping international pedophilia ring based in Washington. QAnon is also reminiscent of the JBS because of its not so lightly veiled anti-Semitism. (Revilo Oliver was expelled from the JBS when his anti-Semitism got too obvious.)

    Everyone, except maybe Gillon, knows that the QAnon movement is tied to the modern GOP. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, a former member of the group, is a Republican representative in Congress. So is Lauren Boebert of Colorado. (Click here for details) After Trump lost the election, QAnon followers began to send the bizarre claims of Trump election attorney Sidney Powell across the web. A movement follower was quoted as saying that Powell was “our attorney doing God’s work to preserve our Republic.” QAnon had to do this since the group was expecting Trump to win in a landslide. (CNN Business, 11/24/20, story by Donie O’Sullivan)

    But it’s even worse than that. Lisa Nelson, an employee of the sprawling Charles Koch political network, met with a group of conservative activists back in February of this year. She told them that, although she wanted Trump to win in the fall, they had already been working with three attorneys on how to dispute the election results if he lost. She specifically mentioned how to foul the electoral college. This talk is captured digitally. (Crooks and Liars, 11/23/20, story by Susie Madrak) And we all can understand by now that President Trump’s complaints about Jeff Bezos and his influence over the USPS was a pretext. Trump knew that the Democrats were most likely to use mail in ballots than Republicans. Once Trump installed Louis DeJoy as Postmaster General, he went to work disposing of high-speed automatic sorting machines in states where mail in ballots would be impacted. (Click here for details)

    Furthering this concept is the fact that certain key state legislatures would not allow mail in ballots to be counted on the day of the election. They had to be counted afterwards. This gave the White House an interval in which to create a controversy about election fraud. (USA Today, 11/4/20, story by Katie Wedell and Kyle Bagenstose) Trump cooperated with this by going on TV on November 5th and saying there should be doubts about continued counting of the ballots. He said, “They’re trying to rig an election and we can’t let that happen.” (Raw Story, November 9, 2020, “Has Donald Trump had his Joe McCarthy moment?”)

    But that is not all. On his twitter account, Trump has cross posted the rather weird ravings of actor Randy Quaid. This was part of an attempt by the president to attack Fox News and Tucker Carlson, because, on his show, Carlson kept asking Powell for her evidence of vote fraud. In other words, Trump was even losing Fox News. In one of his videos, Quaid talks about a day of reckoning coming, which is similar to QAnon and their idea about the Storm: the day when Trump will root out the Washington pedophilia ring. (NBC News, 11/24/20, story by Minyvonne Burke)

    In the face of all this discernible evidence about how the dispute over the election was foreseen and planned for by forces on the right, how does Gillon confront it? He doesn’t. He ignores it. Who does he blame for this instead? A man who has been dead since 2016: Mark Lane.

    The way he explains controversy within the Republican party is by saying that it was all really caused by the critics of the Warren Commission, beginning with Mark Lane back in 1966. I‘m not kidding. Gillon writes that, beginning with Lane’s book Rush to Judgment, an entire “conspiracy culture” arose in America “that now permeates every aspect of American society.”

    This is an historian? I have just pointed out how the rise of the so-called giant communist conspiracy preceded Mark Lane’s book by a decade. But Gillon has to discount that in order to create his phony argument. He then, of course, adds in Oliver Stone’s 1991 film JFK as contributing to all this disbelief in our government and institutions.

    I have to inform Gillon about the following: the assassination of Malcolm X, the war in Vietnam, the murders of Martin Luther King and Robert Kennedy, Watergate, the colossal Iran-Contra scandal, the CIA/cocaine scandal, the heist of the 2000 election in Florida, the 9/11 attacks, the debacle of the Iraq War, our prolonged involvement in Afghanistan, the heist of the 2004 election in Ohio, the rise of ISIS, the near collapse of the world economy in 2007–08, the bombing war on Gaddafi, and Operation Timber Sycamore in Syria. Steve, these are not attributable to Mark Lane. If many Americans are frustrated with the way our government works, they have a lot of good reasons to feel that way. And this is what Trump was suggesting with his Make America Great Again slogan.

    It is also logical to think that, since many people are fed up with this sorry trail of folly, they voted for a perceived outsider like Trump in 2016. In fact, if the powers that be in the Democratic Party would have not worked against him, another outsider, socialist Bernie Sanders, likely would have won the Democratic nomination that year.

    What makes Gillon’s argument even more nonsensical is this: Trump does not think the JFK case was a plot. One only has to look in the pages of Michael Cohen’s book Disloyal, to understand that. Trump and his pals at the National Enquirer used a phony relationship between Ted Cruz’ father and Lee Harvey Oswald to defeat the Texas senator in the GOP primaries in 2016. Obviously that could only have an effect if one assumes Oswald was the killer the Warren Commission says he was. Somehow Gillon missed that important point also.

    Gillon is a scholar in residence at History Channel. If you know what he did there at the 50th anniversary of Kennedy’s death, it helps explain his rancidly over the top column. In 2013, Gillon co-produced a documentary—with the liberal use of recreations—called Lee Harvey Oswald: 48 Hours to Live. All one needs to know about this program is that, in addition to Gillon, two of the other talking heads were the late Gary Mack and Dale Myers. Myers was the guy who, in 2003, got on national TV and said that the single bullet theory was not a theory but a fact. In other words, he was telling the public that something that never happened—and could not have happened—actually occurred. Gillon put this guy on his show.

    The result was predictable. This program was made 15 years after the Assassination Records Review Board closed its doors. One would think that a “scholar-in-residence” like Gillon would utilize at least some of the massive amount of new information made available by that body. Wrong. In the face of a veritable flood of new documents and interviews—which altered the calculus of the JFK case—this program was nothing more than a regurgitation of the Warren Report.

    This helps explain why Gillon wrote what he did on November 22nd. People who back a lie as big as the Warren Report are always eager to attack those who know just how utterly false their position is. This helps explain why Gillon ignores the real reason why Trump’s claims of electoral fraud can prosper in the modern GOP, because followers of QAnon and the militia movement are daily stoked and amplified. Due to Ronald Reagan’s striking down of the Fairness Doctrine and Equal Time provisions of the Federal Communications Act, plus the liberalization of ownership laws under Bill Clinton, the Right has been able to create a giant communications network. It exists in television (Fox, OAN, Sinclair Network, Newsmax), in radio (iHeart and Cumulus), and in print, both online and newspapers (Newsmax, New York Post, Washington Times). The reach of this network is nothing less than staggering in scope. It’s hard to believe Gillon is not aware of it, since he worked for Rupert Murdoch and Fox News for two years.

    Now that we know a little more about Gillon, it helps explain his vituperative column for the Washington Post. The professor definitely has a dog in this fight. And that is something a real historian should not have.

  • Edward Curtin’s Seeking Truth in a Country of Lies

     

    Edward Curtin is a former college instructor in Massachusetts. His insightful and valuable writing has appeared at Global Research and Countercurrents. His anthology includes essays on the JFK and RFK cases, 9/11, Robert Kennedy Jr.’s book American Values and Allen Dulles, among others topics. Joe Green offers more below.

  • All in the Family: Charlotte and Jonathan Alter

    All in the Family: Charlotte and Jonathan Alter


    Charlotte Alter is a correspondent for Time magazine. She is the daughter of longtime MSM scion Jonathan Alter. Jonathan was one of the first to suggest after 9/11 that torture might have to be used since it works. He also worked on the Periscope column for Newsweek which defined what the Conventional Wisdom (CW) was on major issues. Charlotte also appears on Sirius/XM and sometimes writes for the New York Times. Here is a link to her article in Time which got her a spot on MSNBC with Chris Hayes.


    September 15, 2020

    Hi Charlotte:

    I read your recent Time article and caught your segment on the “All In with Chris Hayes” show. Please don’t lump JFK assassination researchers in with Q-Anon.

    Let me ask you some questions:

    Have you done any research into the JFK assassination?  Or are you “impenetrable” and “impervious” when it comes to facts regarding the assassinations of the 60’s?

    That “Conspiracy Theory” label is awfully convenient to throw around when you want to dismiss topics that are uncomfortable, that you know little about, or that may not be as beneficial to your career to address seriously and impartially, so:

    Which “official version” do you believe:

    1. The Warren Report from 1964 that said Oswald acted completely alone, or
    2. the findings of the US House Select Committee on Assassinations (HSCA) from 1979 which determined that there were multiple shooters (and yes, one from the Grassy Knoll)?

    Do you think that multiple shooters could be firing at the president at the same time, and that it could still not be a conspiracy? i.e., Are you a Coincidence Theorist?

    Have you read the Warren Report, or anything from its accompanying 26 volumes of hearings and evidence?

    Have you read the HSCA Report?

    Have you read any of the hundreds of books on the assassinations of the 60’s, either pro- or anti-conspiracy?

    Have you read any of the thousands of documents released by the Assassination Records Review Board (ARRB)?

    Do you know what the ARRB is or how it came into being?

    Are you aware that the ARRB was created by an Act of Congress, signed by the President?

    Can you explain why the Secret Service protection around JFK was uncharacteristically weak in Dallas, despite previous credible threats on his life during trips to Miami, Chicago, and LA?

    Certainly that could not have been an “inside job”, right?

    Do you think that conspiracies can ever exist?

    Are those who believe that Watergate was a conspiracy just “theorists”?

    Do you believe the entire King family are Q-Anon-style conspiracy nuts, because they unanimously believe that James Earl Ray was innocent of killing MLK Jr.?

    Do you believe that RFK Jr. is a Q-Anon-style conspiracy theorist because he believes that Sirhan Sirhan is innocent of killing his father? (I would guess that he’s looked into the facts of this case a bit more than you have.)

    I would expect that like most MSM’ers, you will handle these questions by not responding and tell yourself that you simply have no time for such nonsense. In that case, maybe you could try to answer them for yourself to prove that real journalists “do their research” before they spout off on TV.

    Maybe you might start to see where this “disdain for the mainstream media” comes from? Personally, I have to agree with Bob Dylan when he said If I want to find out anything I’m not going to read Time Magazine, I’m not going to read Newsweek, I’m not going to read any of these magazines, because they just got too much to lose by printing the truth, you know that.

    Regards,

    Wayne