Tag: CONSPIRACY

  • A Conspiracy Primer


    “I must frankly confess that the foreign policy of the United States since the termination of hostilities has reminded me, sometimes irresistibly, of the attitude of Germany under Kaiser Wilhelm II … It is characteristic of the military mentality that non-human factors (atom bombs, strategic bases, weapons of all sorts, the possession of raw materials, etc.) are held essential, while the human being, his desires and thought – in short, the psychological factors – are considered as unimportant and secondary … The general insecurity that goes hand in hand with this results in the sacrifice of the citizen’s civil rights to the supposed welfare of the state.”

    –Albert Einstein, The Military Mentality


    I am not a conspiracy theorist. Sometimes people label me that way. Many of my friends get labeled that way, and some of them might be – but some of them clearly aren’t. In order to know for sure, we would have to know what is meant by the term.

    Now the term ‘conspiracy theorist’ is meant to be dismissive, obviously. It’s a term used to put borders on thought, to reassure, to identify aberrant patterns in individuals and create distance between us and them. You call someone a ‘conspiracy theorist’ to put them down or accuse them of being an intellectual outcast without having to think hard about it. Talking heads on television often identify someone as a ‘conspiracy theorist’ when they want to indicate a clear separation: “Well, that sounds like conspiratorial thinking to me,” or “If I may sound like a conspiracy theorist for a moment …” or “I don’t want to get into conspiracy theory, so let’s take another topic …” The term is used, in essence, like profanity. It tends to connote ‘stupid,’ but also ‘outrageous,’ and – most importantly – not to be taken seriously. That idea you just had puts you on the outside. You are being stupid and outrageous. People aren’t going to like you if you keep thinking that way.

    CONNOTATION

    Let’s look at the term profanity. We all know what it means: bad words. Sometimes we say they are “curse” words, which gives them a slightly magical evocation. So: words that are intended to express strong disrespect or to invite the gods to visit heinous things upon someone. As the Woody Allen joke goes, “I told him to be fruitful and multiply, but not in those words.” Bad language. When we visit the origins of the word “profanity,” we find that it derives from the Latin “profanus,” which means “outside the temple.” There is a sense in which anything that is not sacred is profane – that is, not specifically holy – but the broader and more common definition is an insult to that which is sacred. That which cannot be done within the temple.

    Now I find that fascinating, and I say that the term ‘conspiracy theorist’ is a kind of profanity, because it fulfills the precise intent of its original meaning. When you call someone by that term, you are indicating that they are outside the temple. We are inside the temple and holy and sacred, and you are outside with the profane. The term is a psychological attack meant to marginalize the speaker of the improper thought.

    However, this is only one-half of the equation. The other half is that the term imbues the speaker with psychological reassurance and power. It is like saying, “By saying what you have said, you have proven yourself to be outside the norm, and I have hordes of people who will agree with me.” It is powerful bandwagon thinking. For human beings, whose social instincts are so strong that they carry over into the digital and beyond, this type of thinking is not only motivated but receives immediate reward. It is like being inside the Dallas Cowboys football stadium and making disparaging remarks about the Washington Redskins. The crowd will reassure and happily agree with you in solidarity.

    When this power is given over to television networks and beat reporters and those who provide opinions in voice and print, there is an incredible foundation laid to support the ‘sacred’ premises against the ‘profane’ ones. This is precisely why symbols are used – the flag itself, “old glory,” the “founding fathers,” and so on – to promote a dedication to certain ideas that shorts-circuits our reason. We hear certain concepts and are granted a pass from thinking about such unpleasantness. That guy is a conspiracy theorist.

    If the association becomes strong enough and the evocation powerful enough, the end result can be people dismissing anyone who disagrees with the position of the state. Which is precisely the point. And when this happens, otherwise intelligent individuals can make statements like “I support our troops in time of war,” when of course a war means that troops will die. That is the point of war – and indeed, the point of troops, but that is an argument for another day. For the moment, we only need to understand that the term ‘conspiracy theorist’ has force only in a context of the need for reassurance within the confines of the State.

    We also should understand that this state of affairs is in some sense necessary. All over the world, at any given moment, the United States is murdering or torturing people somewhere in the name of democratic ideals. Reading William Blum’s Killing Hope is one of the most distressing, but important, things one can do for oneself, even if it feels like losing part of one’s soul. In fact it is one of the bumps on the road to saving it.

    If the state did not provide a mythology and a process of identification of what is sacred and what is profane and a clear demarcation between party invitees and those to be excluded, the government – any government, for they tend to act in similar ways – would be untenable for most people. Psychologically, most human beings cannot simply tell themselves, “I value my comfort over the lives of millions of others, no matter how atrocious their conditions, because I can lose myself in electronic distraction and temporary entertainments.” I think – and this is pure speculation on my part – that most people are aware of this truth, in the back of their minds, but do not acknowledge it. Ursula K. LeGuin’s famous short story “The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas” deals with this very topic. Those who see the horror that gives them their happiness either block it and remain happy, or are haunted by it and walk away.

    “The goal of modern propaganda,” writes Jacques Ellul, the author of the marvelous book Propaganda, “is no longer to transform opinion but to arouse an active and mythical belief.” Exactly – because belief does not require evidence. One cannot be allowed to question one’s own house, one’s own fathers. They know best.

    This type of thinking, for example, underlies the present Edward Snowden case. Snowden leaked documents showing, among other things, that the National Security Agency was not only spying on Americans but also on the European Union. This isn’t news to anyone who researches this sort of thing, but it has caused a sensation in the media. The reason Snowden leaked the documents was because of the disconnect between having faith in one’s country and seeing things that he thought were obviously wrong, by a different standard. That is, he used his intellectual judgment. Democrats John Kerry and Nancy Pelosi, among many others, lined up against Snowden, but some of the most telling remarks came from the Republican Lindsey Graham: “This government has been corrupted. They don’t have a real legislature. All institutions of democracies have been diminished in Russia, and when people do that inside their country they are not generally inclined to follow the rule of law outside their country … Putin’s handling of the Snowden issue is only the latest sign that Russia is backsliding when it comes to democracy and the rule of law.”

    Graham uses the evidence that Russia isn’t immediately doing what the United States wants it to do in order to denote a failure of democracy.

    In fact, the reason the media take the situation so seriously is that it breaks down one of the walls of government. To quote Mel Brooks’ character in Blazing Saddles, “We’ve got to protect our phony baloney jobs, gentlemen!” Prior to Snowden, anyone who argued that the NSA spied on every American in Orwellian fashion could be successfully labeled a paranoid conspiracy theorist. Not so anymore.

    CONTENT

    We’ve talked about how the term ‘conspiracy theorist’ is really just a kind of profanity, of insult and separation which protects and reassures the user of the term. And that is one reason I don’t like it. There is a secondary reason, however, that has to do with the words themselves: conspiracy and theorist.

    It can’t mean anyone who concludes, based on some evidence, that a conspiracy exists, because that would mean every District Attorney in the country is a conspiracy theorist. (They are, by the literal meaning.) So is Vincent Bugliosi, because the book that made him famous, Helter Skelter, posits an elaborate conspiracy theory in which Charles Manson was able to control other people to such an extent that they murdered in the name of creating a racial war. (Manson, the most notorious mass murderer in America, was never proven to have physically killed anyone himself.) Bugliosi may have been right, or not; that’s a subject for another essay. However, it is unquestionably a conspiracy theory.

    But that’s not what people mean, really. What people mean, beyond the psychological content discussed before, is an elaborate story: The use of evidence to posit an explanatory description. David Icke thinks that many people, including members of the Royal Family, are a kind of space lizard. He has written many books to that effect. There are many people who believe “the Jews” control everything – mostly Nazi types like Henry Ford, who received the highest award a non-German (the Grand Cross of the German Eagle) can receive from Hitler himself. The head of IBM, incidentally, got one too – see Edwin Black’s brilliant book IBM and the Holocaust.

    So I am definitely not a conspiracy theorist in this sense either. I don’t have a particular premise that I am attached to with regard to historical events. One has to look at whatever the evidence suggests and go from there. For example, in the Kennedy case, which is enormously complex, my emphasis has always been on proving the negative. That is, I cannot identify precisely who was the shooter who killed John F. Kennedy. However, I know – to a moral certainty, to coin a phrase – that it wasn’t Lee Harvey Oswald.

    The evidence is overwhelming. I’ve discussed some of it in previous writings, and many others have done brilliant work on the case. Of all the theories of what happened in Dealey Plaza on November 22, 1963, Oswald-as-the-shooter is the least likely. He was a mediocre shot, using a poorly designed low-velocity weapon, with a scope that was offline, shooting through Texas Live Oak trees at a tough angle, missing with the first shot but then deadly accurate the second and third times (just think about that for a second). He also used a bullet that created multiple wounds through skin and bone of two individuals but somehow emerged undamaged. He did all of this, by the way, while failing to leave any fingerprints on the weapon. Once arrested, he proceeded to vigorously protest his innocence before being shot to death by a local hood, Jack Ruby. Ruby, who had ties to the Dallas police and shot Oswald to spare Jackie Kennedy the indignity of a trial for her husband’s assassin.

    The story is idiotic. And this doesn’t even scratch the surface.

    Countless books have been written on the subject, some of them excellent, detailing the medical and photographic oddities and all the bizarre contextual information pointing in one singular direction: Oswald didn’t do it. The only reason you would believe this story – the absolutely only reason you might find it plausible on an intellectual level (that is, you weren’t being paid to promote a specific view) – is because of the psychological factors. Oswald-as-shooter is within the temple. Anyone-else-as-shooter is outside the temple.

    If this were a question of logic, we would conclude that of course conspiracies exist. High finance would be impossible without them, as would certain government operations. It’s a fact of modern life, and anyone who dismisses it is operating within the dichotomy illustrated here. That doesn’t mean that everything’s a conspiracy. That doesn’t mean we should believe everything. We go where the evidence takes us, parental controls be damned.

    There was a conspiracy in the Kennedy assassination, but I am no conspiracy theorist.

  • John McAdams, JFK Assassination Logic: How to Think about Claims of Conspiracy – Three Reviews (3)


    I must admit that I was flattered when Jim DiEugenio asked me if I would provide a review of John McAdams’ latest published piece of horse …oops, I mean his book. But once I finally made my way through it, I felt drained, empty, discouraged about the human condition in general, and of the hopeless plight of shameless propagandists in particular. I felt like I’d just been robbed of precious hours of my life. Hours that I will never get back again.

    That’s why I believe that everybody who reads this mess should band together and enter into a class-action suit against John McAdams. The charge? Theft.

    We demand those hours back, John.


    Once I began reading, I emailed Jim that one can’t review something this bad. How can one review disinformation, omissions, half-truths, and innuendoes? It can’t be done. And since McAdams likes to base most of his arguments on a false premise, you end up having to review something that begins and ends with distortions. This is not a book. It’s a campaign.

    Take the liner notes, for example: “This book gets in the thick of all the contradictory evidence and presents an intriguing puzzle to be solved.” Yep, McAdams sure piles it on thick, alright. “The solution, in each case, involves using intellectual tools [my emphasis].” Now, if you flip to the back cover, you’ll see endorsements from Dave Reitzes and Gary Mack. I have to admit that, for once, McAdams finally comes clean and hits a bull’s-eye here; because between himself, Reitzes, and Mack…we do indeed have three of the biggest tools ever involved in the JFK assassination case.

    McAdams even cites Mack as a source of “sanity.” It’s interesting how he keeps referring to Gary Mack as a “conspiracist researcher”. Come on, John…Gary Mack – a conspiracist? Since when? Certainly not since he took on his six-figure position as Head Ringmaster at the Sixth Floor Big Top Circus. What with their belief in the “Single Bullet Theory” and their bookstore featuring tomes like Case Closed.

    Or how about this passage from the Preface: “While I can’t deal with the vast array of minor issues surrounding the assassination, there is one big issue that I won’t cover: Lee Harvey Oswald’s character or personality. It’s certainly possible to paint a compelling picture of Oswald “the striver” who wanted to be somebody important; of Oswald “the violent fellow” who beat his wife and shot at another person, Gen. Edwin Walker; of Oswald “the actor” who liked to play spy games; of Oswald “the deceiver” who lied quite readily when it served his purposes; and of Oswald “the callow Marxist” who became enamored of the Soviet Union and later, when he was disillusioned with Russia, of Fidel Castro’s Cuba.

    And, most importantly, I won’t deal with Oswald the loner and malcontent.”

    Thanks for not talking about those things, John.

    Lowlights

    Allow me to highlight some of the lowlights of this “book”.

    Chapter 1: The Frailty of Witness Testimony

    Just check out some of the headings in this chapter. “WACKY WITNESSES”; “FALSE RECOLLECTIONS”; “BEWARE OF AD HOC ASSUMPTIONS”; “ABSURD THEORIES”; “INTERPRETING WITNESS TESTIMONY: JUST WHAT DID THE WITNESS SAY”. In his plan to show how inaccurate people’s recollections are, McAdams presents a litany of important-sounding words like “science,” “data,” “outlier,” “model,” “noise,” and “signal”. Let me put this into plain English for you. Basically, it comes down to this: John McAdams and his co-propagandists are correct about the JFK assassination. Everybody else is unreliable and/or nutty. Simple enough for you?

    As an example of an “Ad Hoc Assumption,” McAdams cites the Chicago plot. Well, sort of. You see, if you can believe it, he never actually mentions Abraham Bolden – the man who just happened to be the central character in the whole event. Does McAdams not know who Abraham Bolden is? Maybe McAdams should put down his copy of Posner and start paying attention to facts for a change. For how one can deal with the Chicago Plot and never mention Bolden is a trick even Posner would have difficulty with. For without the heroic Bolden we likely would have never heard of the Chicago Plot. And this is the guy who titles his book how to think logically about claims of conspiracy. Talk about chutzpah.

    Realistically, I think the reason McAdams brought the whole thing up was so that he could take advantage of a cheap opportunity to slam author James Douglas, who discussed that topic in his laudable book, JFK and the Unspeakable. (McAdams’ book, on the other hand, is more like JFK and the Unconscionable.)

    Chapter 2: Problems of Memory

    Hey, wait a minute — am I reading John McAdams’ book here, or watching a Michael Shermer slide presentation? In his “Preface” McAdams even slips in mention of Bigfoot and UFO’s — two of Shermer’s favorite diversions. McAdams uses this chapter to further lay the groundwork on his theory about how people commonly “misremember” events, or “connect the dots incorrectly”.

    McAdams’ strategy is not a new one — it involves attacking all of the witnesses; they are either weird, shady, unreliable, unqualified, possess bad memories…or are crazy. Or liars. Everyone else must have “misremembered”. Thank goodness we have the likes of McAdams, Mack, Reitzes, and Dave Perry to set us straight on the facts. After all, you would never, ever, ever see someone of Gary Mack’s unimpeachable integrity put out a TV re-creation of the assassination which places Jackie in the wrong position in the limousine, would you? Oops, I guess for Inside the Target Car Mack must have “misremembered” where Jackie was sitting.

    Speaking of “misremembering”…I suppose McAdams misremembered his real name when he was seen carousing around the 1995 COPA Conference using the assumed name of “Paul Nolan: Jet Propulsion Expert”?

    McAdams is a master of omissions. For example, he might well mention the name of autopsy technician Paul O’Connor. O’Connor was the autopsy technician whose task it was to remove the president’s brain. But what he’ll neglect to mention is that O’Connor found there was no brain present.

    Likewise, he might well mention the name of Jean Hill. Jean Hill and Mary Moorman were snapping Polaroids in Dealey Plaza — photos that were aggressively snatched from Hill’s coat pocket by an “agent” (who instinctively picked the correct pocket).. The photos were eventually returned to her. Well, sort of. One of the photos taken by Hill and Moorman was a shot aimed at the TSBD. When this photo was returned, all of the background had been scratched out obliterating any and all details which might have been revealed in the building.

    On page 31, paragraph 1, McAdams quotes the Warren Commission thusly: “Meanwhile, Oswald had received his Mannlicher-Carcano rifle from Klein’s Sporting Goods with the scope already mounted.” Thus the author tells us two things. First, even though the Warren Report has been thoroughly and completely discredited in every aspect, he still uses it as if it is credible. Second, that he will ignore all the holes punched in that sorry report in order to not tell the whole story to the reader. This is a perfect example. The problem with the quote is a rather serious one: according to the HSCA testimony of Mitchell Westra (2/20/78), a Klein’s gunsmith, Klein’s did not mount scopes on that model of rifle. (McAdams must have misremembered…or connected the dots incorrectly…or relied on the dubious information provided by unreliable witnesses.

    Further down the page, McAdams comments on the veracity of one “Mrs. Gertrude Hunter”. McAdams says of Hunter: “Finally, since her family members were aware of her tall tales, ‘they normally pay no attention to her’.” Hmm…he said practically the same thing about witness, Ed Hoffman. Sounds like Mrs. Gertrude Hunter and Ed Hoffman must come from the same family! The “reliable source” that McAdams references here? Are you sitting down: Ruth Paine. (Actually, citing Ruth Paine as a reliable source is much better than who he usually relies on throughout the course of this book: the Warren Commission.)

    To go through this book and count all of its individual inconsistencies would be akin to swimming through the Atlantic and keeping tabs on all the spineless jellyfish floating around. It’s no secret that the JFK case is rife with disinformation, red herrings, or false witnesses (“plants”). McAdams himself just happens to be a prime source of the disinformation. In other words, this book is more of the same old, same old. Did anybody really expect anything different? I sure didn’t.

    What this book actually is is an admission on McAdams’ part that he has grown weary of debating people like Jim DiEugenio and Tom Rossley. Why bother with such hard work when you can simply write down your smoke screen and cart it out unchallenged by such nuisances as a moderator…or fact-checking. It actually is nothing more than a published version of the alt.conspiracy.jfk website. In other words, the good professor couldn’t muster the energy or resources to really do some new work to sustain his old arguments.

    Chapter 4: Witnesses Who Are Just Too Good.

    Sounds like a pretty fair-minded and even-handed chapter title to me. Don’t forget — McAdams assures us at the beginning of the book that he is simply here to provide a public service by acting as an arbiter of truth and justice. And who does he go after in this chapter? Only what many consider to be some of the most important players in the entire case: Jean Hill, Roger Craig, Dr. Charles Crenshaw, and Madeleine Brown. (He also goes after Judy Baker, but Ms. Baker, whatever her story, was not a key player, and I therefore won’t waste any time on her for the purposes of this review.)

    After an almost two-page long assassination of Jean Hill’s character, integrity, and memory, he then goes on to add insult to injury by claiming that Hill says she saw a “little dog” in the presidential limousine. McAdams volunteers that there was a bouquet of flowers present between the President and Mrs. Kennedy that Hill might easily have mistaken for a dog: “a small poodle perhaps”. In fact, when John and Jackie arrived at Love Field, an adoring admirer gave Jackie a doll which was a replica of “Lambchop” – of “Shari Lewis and Lambchop” fame. This doll rode beside Mrs. Kennedy during the entire motorcade.

    This was the “doll” that Hill saw. But surely McAdams must have known this, right? If not, he must have misremembered. Is it conceivable that Gary Mack — McAdams’ “voice of sanity” — wouldn’t have known this either? Perhaps Mack misremembered too. And so did Reitzes? No they did not. McAdams is just exercising his noted propaganda technique of keeping crucial facts from the reader in order to bamboozle him about a certain issue or witness.

    Maybe Mack misremembered the presence of the doll at the precise time he also forgot Jackie’s location in the limousine for his “JFK and the Target Car”? A curious deja vu strikes me about McAdams’ mention of this “little dog”. In fact, this is the second time I’ve seen that “little dog” reference thrown at me.

    To show you how old this canard about Hill is, consider this. I first began trolling the dreaded IMDb website a few years back in order to compile research on the astounding level of disinformation that exists in the JFK case – and particularly at the site for the movie “JFK”. One of the first of the many disinfo artists I would eventually encounter posed to me the following question in his campaign of (attempted) deception. He wrote something to the effect of: “Did you know that Jean Hill said she saw a little dog in the limousine? A dog! That’s ridiculous! Everybody knows that there was no dog in the limousine! Surely Hill is a nut.”

    Hmmm…now, you wouldn’t know anything about that, would you, Mr. McAdams?

    Most new books on the assassination strive to offer something new. This book simply attacks each and every important witness, or piece of evidence that points to a conspiracy. To sharks like John McAdams, these people are an easy meal. Many are women, most are average citizens without much money or legal recourse. And even though many have since passed on, they are still a staple menu item for scavengers like John McAdams and his crew.

    McAdams begins his section on Roger Craig with the sentence: “Roger Craig was everywhere in the wake of the assassination.” Is this supposed to be sarcasm, John? Craig had two important pieces of evidence to testify to: 1.) Seeing a man who looked like Oswald escape the Depository and jump in to a Rambler, and 2.) Being on the sixth floor when the alleged murder rifle was found. So according to the author, being outside and inside the Texas School Book Depository is being “everywhere”. McAdams then goes on to make reference to “anal-retentive conspirators”. What McAdams neglects to point out is that Roger Craig was elected the Dallas Sheriff’s Department “Officer of the Year” in 1960. Seymour Weitzman — the deputy who recognized that the rifle was a Mauser — just happened to have operated a sporting goods store, and was very familiar with weapons (a fact which McAdams omits).

    How does McAdams explain Roger Craig’s testimony? “Given previous discussions regarding witness testimony, Craig’s claim to have seen Oswald run down the grassy slope and get into the Rambler could easily be an honest misperception…Thus Craig may have put two and two together but come up with the mistaken conclusion.” There’s McAdams dazzling us with his how-the-brain-makes-mistakes wizardry again. Shades of Michael Shermer all over again. Like Shermer, what the author leaves out is that 1.) This testimony is partly corroborated, and 2.) There are photos now that seem to bear this out. (See the CD to John Armstrong’s Harvey and Lee.)

    The author on Charles Crenshaw: “Charles Crenshaw was one of the many doctors in Emergency Room (ER) One at Parkland Hospital who worked to save President Kennedy’s life. Although a junior and bit player, he was indeed there. Thus, especially if one believes that physicians are particularly sober and reliable people, he should have been a good witness.” (Italics added)

    Well, thank goodness the doctor was indeed there. The part about Crenshaw being “only a junior and bit player” is another McAdams attempt at cheap discreditation.

    I’m having a hard time keeping up the façade of providing an honest review of an honest book for the simple reason that this is not an honest book. And I’m only on page 69! So why does McAdams attack Crenshaw? Because Crenshaw noted a couple of disturbing things.

    When treating Kennedy he noticed a small bullet hole of entrance to the front of Kennedy’s throat; when treating Oswald, he said that none other than newly sworn in President Lyndon Johnson phoned him in the operating room. Johnson demanded from Crenshaw that he obtain a “death-bed” confession from the mortally wounded Oswald. Of course, Oswald would never again regain consciousness and such a confession would never be obtained. Crenshaw’s story is corroborated by the switchboard operator, Phyllis Bartlett, who received LBJ’s call and directed it into the room where Crenshaw was administering to Oswald. McAdams doesn’t mention this.

    McAdams then again practices his “misremembering” when he fails to tell readers that Madeleine Brown’s story of a big party at the home of Clint Murchison the night before the assassination was in fact corroborated by cook and seamstress, May Newman. Newman even conversed about the event with one of the chauffeurs. McAdams’ summation of Madeleine Brown (and others like her): “To a degree, they may have been manipulated by conspiracy researchers who asked leading questions and gave subtle clues as to what sort of testimony worked in gaining credibility and further interest. To maintain that interest, of course, it’s desirable to give better and better testimony.”

    Question for the author: What “conspiracy researcher” existed on the 22nd when Craig came into police HQ and said he saw the arrested man, namely Oswald, jumping into a car in Dealey Plaza?

    Further on in this chapter, on page 75, under the innocuously-titled heading: “WHY DOES ANYBODY BELIEVE THESE PEOPLE?”, the author says: “But the majority of people who watch movies like JFK, read conspiracy books available at chain bookstores, or view purported documentaries such as The Men Who Killed Kennedy on television are not seasoned and knowledgeable researchers. Thus they are exposed to these bogus accounts but not to their debunking. And increasingly, sober and knowledgeable conspiracy-oriented researchers find themselves allied with lone assassin theorists in unmasking such witnesses to both the hard-core believers, who will accept them, and the innocent neophytes.”

    There’s McAdams using that word “sober” again. Leave it to McAdams and Mack to “debunk” things honestly for the rest of us; McAdams with his bogus website…and Mack with his bogus museum and TV shows. Combined, the awesome forces of these two beacons of truth, justice, and the American way is not unlike the raw, unleashed powers of a dynamic super-hero…“Mack-Adams!”

    Oh, and how does McAdams end this chapter? With mention of the Holocaust. Subtle touch, there, John. The apt comparison today though would be this: With the releases of the ARRB, to deny a conspiracy in the JFK case should group one with those who deny the Holocaust.

    And this guy is a college teacher?

    Chapter 5: Bogus Quoting, Stripping Context, Misleading Readers.

    Nice title John, but shouldn’t you have reserved it for your autobiography? In his preface, McAdams says the following: “Everybody knows that writers, newscasters, and producers of documentaries can mislead their audiences by leaving out certain information…” (John, I especially like the lat four words there.) In the second paragraph of Chapter 5, he elaborates. “Everybody knows and pretty much accepts that advocates selectively present information that serves their purposes, but it’s all too easy to forget that book authors and video producers are advocates too. And it is sometimes hard to grasp how radically selective advocates are prone to be. An author would not present the testimony of a witness and willfully omit parts that show the witness to be insane, would he? A director of a documentary would not produce something that puffs witness accounts she knows to be contradicted by reliable evidence, would she?

    Yes, he or she would”

    Hear, hear, John! Right off the bat I can think of two “authors” and “producers of television documentaries” who come to mind.

    McAdams’ next target is Jack Ruby — specifically about how Ruby tried and tried in vain to be taken out of Dallas so that he could give a full accounting of his inclusion in the plot to kill President Kennedy…and Oswald. How does McAdams describe Ruby? “Ruby’s addled brain seemed to go from obsession to obsession…We have to remember that many thoughts were going through Jack Ruby’s addled brain.” McAdams goes on to add that Ruby was a “huge sycophant,” a “wannabe,” and a “hapless schlub.” Again, this indicates just how much McAdams is caught in a time warp. These are the kinds of words that were used to discount Ruby by pro Warren Report authors in the sixties and seventies e.g. Ovid Demaris. This was all later dispelled by the work of Seth Kantor and the House Select Committee on Assassinations. Today we know that Ruby had telling and important links to the Mafia, the Dallas Police, and the CIA. And that an Oswald double was looking for Ruby the night before the assassination! (Armstrong, p. 789) In the face of all this new information, the above is McAdams’ scientific way of painting an unbiased, accurate picture of a person so that others can judge his/her testimony fairly and objectively.

    Chapter 6: Probability: Things That Defy The Odds.

    It is well known that Guy Banister’s office was located at 544 Camp Street in New Orleans. David Ferrie also happened to be a frequent visitor. Leaflets handed out by Oswald were stamped with that 544 Camp Street address. The building was located on the corner of Camp and Lafayette Streets.

    How does McAdams try and wiggle his way out of this one? He says that Banister’s office was only accessible if you entered from the Lafayette Street entrance, number 531. According to McAdams, the fact that they were the same, exact, identical building is merely a complete coincidence and not in any way related. Oswald must have simply picked that building at random when searching for an address to stamp on his leaflets! No joke. We are supposed to forget about all the people who saw him inside Banister’s office.

    At the time, Oswald worked at the Reilly Coffee Company, not far from the Camp Street building. Or, rather, according to McAdams, he was “employed” there, since he “reportedly did little work”. (But John, I thought you made it clear that you weren’t going to pick on Oswald!)

    On Bannister and Ferrie: “No doubt, the men seem extremely sinister to people steeped in the conspiracy literature and to people who have seen the move JFK or documentaries like The Men Who Killed Kennedy. But how the men have been portrayed stems from their (rather slight) connection with Oswald and his use of their address.”

    Rather slight? That reminds me of filmmaker Robert Stone referring to the “magic bullet” as being “not quite so pristine”. McAdams then begins to bail out the pair by doing nothing less than the equivalent of breaking out a string quartet. “Banister and Ferrie were not, in fact, terribly sinister people.” (Can you hear those violins?) But what about all of the sightings of Ferrie and Oswald together? “They all lacked credibility.” But here’s my favorite. There is a photo of Oswald and Ferrie standing mere feet away from each other when both were members of the Civil Air Patrol. McAdams’ explanation? “The photo doesn’t prove that they ever met or talked to each other, but only that they were in the organization at the same time.”

    Sure John.

    This points out a recurrent technique that McAdams uses: he steals without accreditation. That above silly rejoinder is taken straight from Pat Lambert’s book, False Witness. Some other examples of this pattern: McAdams using the Chris Mills essay “Flight of Fancy” to explain Oswald’s flight from London to Helsinki—without telling the reader that Mills’ essay was labeled as fanciful. Or his use of the word “factoids”. This is stolen from a debate at the time that JFK came out with Fletcher Prouty and Dan Moldea among others. The moderator used the word to label facts that he felt were tangential to the actual murder case. McAdams stole the term, and then expanded it to include all evidence exculpatory of Oswald—period. That is even the mismatching of shells and bullets in the Tippit murder!

    Jim Garrison doesn’t fare much better. According to McAdams, the fact that Clay Shaw was gay was a “big factor in Garrison’s belief that Clay Shaw was a conspirator.” McAdams must know something the rest of the world doesn’t. If so, I wish he’d ante it up. The way that Garrison got onto Shaw is clear. He wanted to know who called Dean Andrews the night of the assassination and asked him to go to Dallas to defend Oswald. Most people would consider that rather relevant and important information. Andrews knew that ‘Clay Bertrand’ was a pseudonym. But he would not tell anyone who asked him—and this included Garrison, Tony Summers, and Mark Lane—what the man’s real name was. He told all of them that he feared bodily harm if he did divulge that information. So Garrison sent his investigators into the French Quarter to try and find whom Bertrand actually was. If you go through his files—something McAdams has not done—you will see that they found about eleven sources that pegged Shaw as Bertrand. It later turned out that even the FBI knew this, and that Shaw’s name popped up in their own inquiry in December of 1963! (William Davy, Let Justice Be Done, pgs. 191-94)

    Garrison’s investigation also succeeded in uncovering a phone call that was placed by the attorney of Carlos Marcello to a female acquaintance of Jack Ruby’s, Jean Aase (Jean West). West accompanied another associate of Ruby’s, Lawrence Meyers, to Dallas on November 20, where they all met at Ruby’s Carousel Club. However, according to one of McAdams’ staunchest and most reliable “researchers,” the origin of this call is “far from clear.” The “researcher” in question? Dave Reitzes. Par for the course for this book.

    Chapter 7: More On Defying The Odds: The Mysterious Deaths.

    What McAdams does here is to base an entire chapter on what was one researcher’s own personal figure of 103 so-called “suspicious” deaths surrounding the JFK case. According to McAdams’ rationale, why would the conspirators have stopped at 103? Why not go for a thousand? Or a million? Nobody can ever know for sure the number of people who were sacrificed in order to maintain the cover-up.

    But even if it were only one person that died, that would have been one too many. Of course, it wasn’t just one. Many, many people met untimely deaths as the direct result of what happened on November 22, 1963. Naturally, he doesn’t mention each and every person who is on the list…he doesn’t have the time to get into all of them.

    McAdams then provides his own list of other people who were in some way involved in the case, and poses the question: Why weren’t these people killed? Why wasn’t this person killed? Or that person? Or, how about that other person? Surely, the conspirators wouldn’t have left all of them alive if the information they possessed was considered somehow “dangerous,” would they?

    Consider what the author is suggesting: That somehow it is supposed to be odd that some people were left alive with valuable counter-information about the JFK case! In other words, if those nutty conspiracy theorists are right, well heck, the CIA or FBI should have killed every single one of those contrary witnesses.

    Uh professor, wouldn’t that be kind of giving the game away? Kind of high risk as they say.

    But anyone who does not find the circumstances of the deaths of say David Ferrie, George DeMohrenschildt, William Sullivan, Sam Giancana, John Roselli, and Dorothy Kilgallen rather odd and curious, well, then I would say they don’t know how to think about conspiracies. (Click here for an interesting piece on the Kilgallen case http://www.midtod.com/new/articles/7_14_07_Dorothy.html)

    Chapter 8: Did People Know It Was Going To Happen?

    There are numerous instances of people who claimed foreknowledge of the JFK assassination. If a person can predict an event which involves other people, and which turns out to be true, days before it happens, that person is either clairvoyant…or they have inside information of a conspiracy. At least that has been my experience. Of course, I could have connected the dots incorrectly…or misremembered.

    Joseph Milteer is one such person. Milteer was taped telling a police informant, William Somersett, that JFK would be assassinated in Miami during his visit to the city in the upcoming weeks. He gave information which so closely mirrored the actual killing that it was chilling in its similarity. He said the President would be shot from an office building overlooking the motorcade; that a high-powered rifle would be used; that the rifle would be disassembled and taken up in pieces; that a patsy would be picked up soon afterwards to throw off the public; and that the plot was currently in the works.

    Pretty good description of what ultimately unfolded in Dealey Plaza, right?

    Enter McAdams.

    On Milteer: “Where Milteer is concerned, he described the most generic assassination scenario possible: ‘From an office building with a high-powered rifle.’ He later added that what Milteer had provided was an “unspecific scenario”.

    Unspecific scenario? Generic assassination? Can the man be serious? When other time in American history has such a murder scene been promulgated?

    What does McAdams say of the police informant, William Somersett? According to McAdams, federal authorities had decided that Somersett was “’unreliable,’” having “’been described as overenthusiastic, prone to exaggeration, and mentally unstable.’” Further, according to McAdams: “They also determined he had ‘furnished information bordering on the fantastic, which investigation failed to corroborate.’”

    Uh John, this info was in FBI hands prior to the assassination. Yet they did nothing to act on it. Therefore, don’t you think they are trying to smear the messenger for making them look bad and allowing the president to be killed? I mean did not J. Edgar Hoover do that kind of thing many times? Yet, John, it wasn’t Somersett who painted the assassination scenario on tape for all to hear. It was Milteer. McAdams leaves both those pertinent facts out.

    Then there’s Rose Cheramie. Cheramie claimed to have heard two men scheming about a plot to kill President Kennedy. She was thrown out of a car, and later recalled her account to both a state trooper and to hospital personnel. Here’s how the ever objective, non-advocate McAdams introduces her. “Rose Cheramie was a prostitute with a long arrest record.” Again, McAdams is hard at work killing the messenger.

    Further, her credibility problems are “massive”; she made “a series of ridiculous statements”; she had a history of providing “information” to various law enforcement agencies. McAdams then goes on an incredible and lengthy character attack on Cheramie. She was arrested many times on differing charges, used myriad aliases, and tried to take her own life.

    Who does McAdams defer to on this issue? You guessed it, his so-called New Orleans/Garrison expert, Dave Reitzes. If a witness’ value in this case can be measured by the ferocity of the attack upon him or her by Warren Commission diehards, then McAdams and Reitzes understand just how important Cheramie is to the JFK case. The character and credibility assault goes on for about two pages. Some of it is just silly. For instance, McAdams repeats the John Davis tenet that Cheramie told someone the two men she was with were “Italians or resembled Italians.” He then mentions that the HSCA found out that a Garrison investigator located the bar she attended with them and the bartender identified one of the men as a Hispanic. If you can believe it, McAdams then uses this to attack Cheramie. As if a person of Italian heritage has never been confused with being Hispanic! (And one should note here, for a professor, McAdams is really poor at checking original sources. The newly declassified files on the Cheramie case reveal that she was not thrown out of a car. She got into an argument at the saloon she was in with the two men and they forcibly abandoned her there. See the HSCA deposition of Officer Francis Fruge of 4/18/78))

    He then tries another technique. He says that there were dozens of threats against Kennedy at the time. So the essence of her story really does not matter much since, again, it’s not detailed enough. (Note here the inconsistency with his attack on Milteer.) He can say this because he does not mention the second man with Cheramie—Emilio Santana—and does not describe the first man with her, Sergio Arcacha Smith. They were not just “Hispanic”. They were anti Castro Cuban exiles living in New Orleans in 1961 and 1962. Smith and Santana were closely involved with the CIA and Smith worked on the Bay of Pigs operation. Smith had reportedly moved to Dallas at the time of the assassination. Further, they were both suspects in the Garrison investigation. And Smith was a suspect in the investigation of Richard Case Nagell. (Which we will soon discuss.) So by not informing the reader of this, McAdams leaves out the fact that the Cheramie’s testimony provides a link between the setting up of Oswald in New Orleans in the summer of 1963 and the denouement of that plot in Dallas in November. Further, the unadulterated record, as uncovered by the House Select Committee on Assassinations, does not support the charge of her just handing out “information”. The information she gave out on her last case, when she heard the two men discussing the death of Kennedy, all this checked out as accurate. (The Assassinations, edited by James DiEugenio and Lisa Pease, p. 227) Further, more than one person vouched for the so-called “ridiculous statements” she made about the impending murder of President Kennedy. The list of corroborators included doctors, nurses and interns. (ibid, pgs. 226-27)

    So in other words, as pertains to the facts of this case, what McAdams and Reitzes do here is in the worst tradition of advocacy journalism. They raise a chorus of sound and fury that is, at best, tangential, at worst, superfluous. In other words, none of it alters the fact that she heard that Kennedy would be killed in advance of the murder and that there were multiple sources for that. The two then eliminate the part of the declassified record that actually is important in forensic terms and gives her testimony a valuable context. Namely that the anti Castro Cubans hated Kennedy, and these two were in league with the CIA, which is a (the?) prime suspect in the conspiracy.

    And let us end this discussion with what most people would consider a rather important piece of testimony. State Trooper Fruge, who first encountered Cheramie and then was recalled by Jim Garrison, posed a rather pertinent query to the HSCA. He asked them if they had discovered the maps of the Dealey Plaza sewer system that Smith had in his apartment in Dallas in 1963. (ibid, p. 237) Does it get any more corroborative or suspicious than that?

    And finally, there’s the case of Richard Case Nagell. Nagell was a former military man who ended up being a double agent, working for both the KGB and the CIA. While working for both agencies, he uncovered a plot to assassinate the president. He went to numerous locales in his quest: including Los Angeles, Miami and finally New Orleans. The plot he eventually discovered was, well, kind of similar to Garrison’s concept. It involved Guy Bannister, Sergio Arcacha Smith, David Ferrie, and Clay Shaw. And it featured an Oswald double named Leon Oswald. He said he had a tape of Smith and Carlos Quiroga manipulating Oswald in New Orleans in the summer of 1963. (ibid) Nagell was told by the KGB to warn Lee Harvey Oswald of this. Why? Because they had heard of such a plot brewing in Mexico City and they strongly suspected that the conspirators would try and pin the blame on the Russians. Which of course ended up being a correct assumption. Eventually, fearing for his safety as a result of being involved with such a plot, he managed to get himself arrested by entering a bank and shooting bullets into the ceiling. He then patiently waited until the police came to take him away, thereby removing himself to the safety of a jail cell.

    Enter McAdams.

    Says McAdams of Nagell: “A secret internal CIA document describes him as ‘a crank’ because he is mentally deranged’ and noted he never worked for the agency.”

    Are you all starting to get the picture now? As I noted in my review of Chapter 2, according to John McAdams, everybody who ever figured in the JFK assassination who had evidence that pointed to a conspiracy is either insane, crazy, unqualified, shady, bogus, criminal, a prostitute, a drug addict, or a liar. This includes doctors, surgeons, nurses, decorated policemen and military personnel, and even average mothers and fathers who just happened to take their small children to see a presidential motorcade.

    Yawn. Sure John.

    Chapter 9: Signal And Noise: Seeing Things in Photos

    McAdams says he saw the guys on the TV show Mythbusters shoot a bullet into a dummy. The dummy moved back only a couple of inches and then fell to the ground.

    McAdams’ conclusion? “Thus it seems that any movement ‘back and to the left’ actually proves nothing.”

    John, dummies are not people. And what you just did here is not exactly inscrutable detective work worthy of getting an audition for Scotland Yard. Why did you not look for pictures of actual people being shot? Gil Jesus found some. Guess what? They all went backward from the origin of the shots. Uh, even your friend Gary Mack’s simulation experiment Inside the Target Car showed this. But somehow, McAdams can’t bring himself to admit this or do actual legwork. Which is one reason why hardly anyone in the research community takes him seriously outside his own forum.

    McAdams ends this chapter by saying that unless one possesses a “disciplined approach” when evaluating photos, or even the sightings and perceptions of ear witnesses in Dealey Plaza, that “intellectual havoc can ensue.”

    Too bad he didn’t take his own advice.

    Chapter 12: Too much Evidence of Conspiracy

    Several people noticed a bullet hole in the presidential limousine from the time it sat parked at Parkland Hospital. The bullet passed cleanly through the windshield from the front. This list includes a reporter, a student nurse, two motorcycle cops, and others.

    Enter McAdams.

    On page 193 in a section titled “CAN WE GET BEYOND THE NOISE,” McAdams refers us to an article by Barb Junkkarinen, Jerry Logan, and Josiah Thompson. He says this article “destroys the notion that there was a through-and-through bullet hole in the windshield of the presidential limo. Such a hole would, as noted, clearly imply a conspiracy, but the evidence is against it.”

    What McAdams fails to tell the reader is that the article in question (“Eternal Return: A Hole Through the Windshield”) doesn’t even mention the name of George Whittaker Sr.! Whittaker was the glass expert and technician at Ford Motors in Detroit who worked on the presidential limousine. Whittaker possessed 30 years of experience working with glass, including how glass reacts when hit by bullets. Whittaker noticed a clear through-and-through bullet hole which went from front to back. He and his colleagues were ordered to use the windshield as a template for a replacement windshield. They were then ordered to destroy the original windshield.

    After Whittaker’s death, a signed letter was found among his possessions where he again made mention of the bullet hole he found that day. What he, the nurse, and the others saw was a clean bullet hole which penetrated fully from front to back. It wasn’t a crack. It wasn’t a fragment. It wasn’t a spider-web splinter.

    Again, McAdams goes on to thank, among others, Dave Perry, and Gary Mack, who McAdams says has “been a voice of sanity in too many ways to list here.”

    Again, this shows the author’s over-reliance on the work of others, his penchant for cherry picking and his failure to deal with contrary evidence that counters his ordained agenda.

    Chapter 15: Putting Theory into Practice: The Single Bullet Theory

    This from the section titled “KENNEDY’S THROAT WOUND” on page 223:

    “If the location of Kennedy’s back wound is controversial, both the location and the nature of the throat wound are subject to controversy. Conspiracists frequently insist that the throat wound was actually one of entrance. And they do indeed have some evidence for this. In the first place, the Parkland doctors seemed to believe that it was an entrance wound…” (Italics in original.)

    Wait a minute John. I have to stop you, just like I would a thief in the night.

    In 1963, Dallas, Texas led the nation in gun-related crimes. The doctors at Parkland were extremely experienced with, and knowledgeable about, the nature of bullet wounds. So if any of them originally said it was an entry wound, it was an entry wound. And Malcolm Perry, among others, said that in a press conference the day of the assassination.

    What does the author leave out? That this evidence was so devastating to the official story that 1.) the Secret Service lied to the Warren Commission about having a transcript of this press conference, and 2.) Secret Service agent Elmer Moore admitted later that he had badgered Perry into making his story more equivocal for the Warren Commission. Most people would think this important information.

    On page 225 in the section titled “Unqualified Autopsy Doctors” McAdams says that “Bethesda was chosen as the site of the autopsy by Jackie Kennedy on the plane returning from Dallas to Washington. The president’s aide, Admiral Burkley, told her that the autopsy needed to be at a military hospital for ‘security reasons,’ and added, ‘Of course, the President was in the Navy.’ Jackie responded with ‘Of course’ and ‘Bethesda.’’

    That hardly sounds like Jackie Kennedy chose the autopsy site. It sounds like she was simply agreeing with a decision which had already been made.

    On the issue of why Kennedy’s body was whisked out of Dallas for an autopsy at Bethesda: “But what about the Parkland doctors? Surely they had seen a lot of gunshot wounds, and their opinions should carry some weight. But actually no, they carry virtually no weight.”

    McAdams then relies on a tried-and-true favorite tactic of his: to paint the Parkland doctors as a bunch of stumbling, bumbling, incompetent nincompoops and know-nothings; a veritable staff comprised of Abbott and Costello, The Three Stooges, Charlie Callas, Jonathan Winters, and Mr. Bean — all running around the hospital to the theme song from The Benny Hill Show.

    Bethesda it is. We know those “qualified” pathologists are going to do nothing less than a rip-roaring job on the President in what was to be the autopsy of the century, right? Well John, it didn’t turn out exactly like that. McAdams conveniently neglects to inform the reader about just how badly botched that autopsy was…of how it was performed by inexperienced pathologists…of how it was directed and controlled, not by medical protocol, but by admirals and generals shouting out directions of what to do and what not to do.

    How bad was it? Michael Baden, a man McAdams bows down to, once wrote that Kennedy’s autopsy was the exemplar for botched autopsies.

    Chapter 16: Thinking about Conspiracy: Putting It All Together

    Just listen to McAdams’ opening line. “It’s doubtlessly clear to the reader by now that I believe Oswald killed Kennedy, and most likely did it by himself.”

    Did I read McAdams correctly there? I mean, he was doing such a grand job of being unbiased, thorough, and impartial that I really hadn’t yet made up my mind on where he stood.

    In the section titled “A LARGE CONSPIRACY ISN’T PLAUSIBLE” (Pg, 248), McAdams says: “The first and most obvious principle is that a very large conspiracy simply isn’t plausible. It’s simply a matter of probabilities. ..There are plenty of reasons why a plotter might defect. He might have an attack of conscience (although if he had much of that he would not have been part of the plot)….”

    Again, this points our just how hackneyed this book is. This is an argument that Warren Commission defenders have used ad nauseum since the beginning. It ignores two things that defeat it: 1.) People in this case did talk. To list just a few: Mafia consort John Martino, CIA advisor Gary Underhill, CIA agent Richard Case Nagell. Although he does not name them, the HSCA later found out that the two men who talked in the presence of Cheramie were Emilio Santana and Sergio Arcacha Smith.

    Please note: this indicates a plot between the CIA, the Cuban exiles and the Mob. In other words, its very similar to what Tony Summers proposed in his book Conspiracy. You know, that kind of unwieldy plot that is not plausible.

    But secondly, there have been conspiracies and cover-ups that did remain secret, at least for a time. To name just a few: the plot to assassinate Hitler, the secret radiation experiments on Americans, the giant conspiracy to run guns to the Contras while bringing back cocaine to America. This last may have remained forever secret to Americans if a young Contra volunteer had not knocked CIA pilot Eugene Hasenfus out of the sky with a shoulder launched missile launcher. When Hasenfus was captured he had a notebook on him. It was traced back to the secret Central American CIA Ilopango air base run by officer Felix Rodriguez. This unraveled a truly colossal conspiracy and cover up which eventually included the CIA, the Pentagon, President Reagan, Vice-President Bush, the Secretary of Defense, the Secretary of State, several wealthy American families, and the Mossad.

    Are we to believe that a college professor of political science forgot about all this? Maybe he misremembered?

    Let me add one more thing on this stale and trite “Unwieldy plot” issue in addition to the two points made above. What people like McAdams and Reitzes like to do is to take the JFK case and consider it in isolation. Therefore, they leave out say a man like Craig Watkins. Watkins is the first African American DA in Dallas. Because he was not a member of the country club set there, he decided to look back at, among others, the prosecutorial techniques used by the regime run by DA Henry Wade and Will Fritz. The two men responsible for the JFK case in Dallas in 1963. Testing these so-called “cold cases” with modern DNA technology, what were the results? Well, it turns out that ramrodding suspects into convictions with questionable evidence and testimony was rather par for the course with these two men. So far the Watkins inquiry has released 29 falsely accused convicts from prison on trumped up charges. And the review is not over yet. So far from being an “unwieldy plot” germane only to the JFK case, the questionable techniques used to pin the murder on Oswald was more like Standard Operating Procedure for Fritz and Wade. Laid in this context, the world view of America is reversed from McAdams Land: America is not all Mom, Apple Pie and Baseball with Oswald as the Black Hatted Villain. In fact, it may be just the reverse. For what kind of law enforcement agency puts that many innocent people behind bars?

    But, of course, it’s worse than that. Because the other investigative body on the JFK case was the FBI. And I think we all know today just how bad J. Edgar Hoover was in his prosecutorial zeal. All of us except John McAdams. There have literally been reams of pages in scholarly books that expose how Hoover framed suspects in high profile cases. And we all know of course that Hoover detested the Kennedys, especially RFK. And most us know that Oswald very likely was an FBI informant. Something that Hoover would never ever ant to reveal since it would permanently mar the image of the Bureau, something he propagandized the public into thinking was flawless. When we all know today, it was far from that. All of us except John McAdams.

    Therefore, when looked at as the compromised and corrupt bureaucracies they provenly were, the idea of some “unwieldy plot” disappears. In framing Oswald the people who investigated the case for the Warren Commission were doing what was considered by them to be standard in a murder case. And they had been doing it for years. In fact, to NOT do it would likely get them in trouble with their superiors. It is incredible that in this day and age Professor McAdams does not understand this. Yet this is the Ozzie and Harriet world that he exists in. He seems unaware that as writers like Jim Hougan and Don DeLillo have pointed out, that ersatz American veneer was shattered on November 22, 1963.

    In his final page (thank God!), titled “ANY ROOM FOR CONSPIRACY?” guess what position McAdams takes? Good guess. According to McAdams, choosing the “sensible” theory (that which sides with Oswald being the lone assassin) “doesn’t allow you to demonize your political enemies.” (Yep, he forgot about all the character smears he just used.)

    So who wants to demonize anybody? It wasn’t me who wrote a book that tries to tell mature, intelligent readers that they are incapable of “connecting the dots” properly, or that they’ve “misremembered” an event, or that they are all victims of “noise,” or “false memories”.

    McAdams likes to warn us about how “noise” clouds our perceptions. He should know, he’s directly responsible for a great deal of it.

    Well, after this debacle who is up for the next whitewash…Gary Mack? Dave Reitzes? Dave Perry? By the way, what happened to Dave Von Pein? I didn’t see any mention of him in your book. One thing is for sure — you needn’t ask Vincent Bugliosi for his participation in this charade any longer. I have a hunch that he now realizes what a monumental blunder he committed (both personally and professionally) by whipping up that doorstop book of his. Bugliosi asking Jesse Ventura to turn off the camera during his interview on Jesse’s Conspiracy Theory spoke volumes.

    And now … I’m off to take my “little pink dog” for a walk.


    Reviews of John McAdams’ book JFK Assassination Logic by
    Pat Speer
    David Mantik
    Gary Aguilar

  • John McAdams, JFK Assassination Logic: How to Think about Claims of Conspiracy – Three Reviews (2)

    John McAdams, JFK Assassination Logic: How to Think about Claims of Conspiracy – Three Reviews (2)


    Comes now yet another book to chastise Warren Commission skeptics for muddled thinking about John Kennedy’s assassination, JFK Assassination Logic. This time the author is a quirky, staunchly anti-conspiracy, political science professor who teaches at the Jesuit college, Marquette. The author declares his intent on the first page of the preface. “This is not a book telling you what to think about conspiracy theories,” he writes, “Instead, it provides advice on how to think about conspiracy theories … In this book, I will show the reader how to evaluate conspiracy theories.” (emphasis in the original) (p. ix).”

    Right off the bat, John McAdams displays a trait that skeptics find both common and infuriating among Warren Commission loyalists – blatant dishonesty. Those prefatory sentences couldn’t be more misleading. No one could read the book, or be familiar with McAdams’ writings, and not realize what the professor really intends. Namely, to show that, once readers have learned from him how to think about Kennedy evidence, they’ll ineluctably know what to think: there was no conspiracy.

    This book is not for the uninitiated. To readers with scant knowledge of the JFK case, the book will come off as hopelessly obscure, painfully pedantic and punctilious, and woefully mired in factual minutiae that mostly clouds a clear and simple understanding of the myriad controversies. But to those who need no explanation when things like “399,” the “Stemmons Freeway Sign,” “Z-frame 313,” and the like pop up, McAdams’book should be a great hit, regardless of whether they swear by, or at, the Warren Commission.

    Warren Commission fans will embrace it because it endorses what they’ve always wished to believe: their fundamental faith in imperfect national authorities and investigative institutions has not been misplaced, and that disbelievers are overly suspicious, paranoid, gullible fools who are only too willing to believe almost anything about the “evil guvmint.” Skeptics, on the other hand, will delight in it for its abundant, unintended irony: in page after page, chapter after chapter, McAdams systematically and continuously flouts the very rules of fact and logic that he, clearly no logician (as David Mantik has shown), endlessly condemns skeptics for breaching.

    Among the transgressions McAdams finds most disturbing are the twin sins of selective presentation of evidence, and the “embrace of” what McAdams calls, “evidence that’s not too reliable.” (p. x) “Everybody knows that writers, newscasters, and producers of documentaries can mislead their audiences by leaving out certain information,” he writes, adding, “The reader of this book may be dismayed to discover how often these omissions happen.” (p. x)

    Though knowledgeable skeptics may be dismayed by the common practice of selective presentation of, and omission of, evidence, they will scarcely be surprised by it. Of course some skeptics are guilty. But such practices are at least as common among Warren Commission defenders, including McAdams, as they are the authors of Warren Report itself and other officials who’ve defended the original verdict. This fact is so firmly established by informed skeptics, as well as other government investigators, that it easily qualifies as what McAdams calls “hard data.”(p. x)

    The clear pattern of evidence manipulation by government officials and government-favored witnesses (to say nothing of the Warren loyalists who defend them, the professor from Marquette among them) largely explains both the widespread disbelief in the Warren Commission’s conclusions, as well as the mountain of critical literature that has been published during the past nearly five decades. This book is a graduate-level course on how to reach pre drawn conclusions by none-too-deftly cherry-picking witnesses and evidence that support a “patriotic,” pro-Warren Commission verdict, while sedulously ignoring, when not misrepresenting, witnesses or evidence that challenges it.

    The constraints of even an overly long review such as this allow but a small sampling of the myriad tortures to which McAdams subjects JFK fact and logic. Given the limitations, this review will focus on how the professor treats witnesses who support the Warren Commission as opposed to those who challenge it. More than one-third of his book is devoted to discrediting pro-conspiracy witnesses, which he does by either citing inconsistencies in their accounts, or by proffering confounding evidence. By contrast, he gives pro-government witnesses virtually a complete pass.

    But in no case does McAdams acknowledge that minor inconsistencies are common, even among good witnesses whose credibility is confirmed by their accurate recall of important, salient events.[i] Nor does he show the slightest skepticism about the trustworthiness of conspiracy-refuting official accounts, whether from the FBI, the CIA, dubious police reports or questionable witnesses, especially those of paid, pro-government experts.

    His selective faith in anti-conspiracy accounts is so consistent, and so defies the sordid history of the CIA, the FBI and many police actions, both in that era and even now, that it seems that McAdams’s real ambition is a “patriotic” one: he isn’t just defending the Warren Commission in particular, but instead the government and its investigative agencies, generally. After reading even the first few pages, one can’t help but think that McAdams’ real message is, “Don’t trust witnesses; trust instead government officials, their official statements, and their official reports.” This is particularly true regarding Kennedy’s controversial autopsy evidence.

    Preferred Witnesses: Government Experts and JFK’s Autopsy Evidence

    For example, regarding Kennedy’s all-important medical autopsy evidence, on page 147 the professor drops what he likely regards as the coup de grace on skeptics: “Two blue-ribbon panels of scientists – one appointed by Attorney General Ramsey Clark in 1968 and another working for the Rockefeller Commission in the mid-1970s – concluded that two and only two bullets hit Kennedy, both from behind, and inflicted wounds entirely consistent with a lone shooter in the Texas School Book Depository.” In other words, two different panels of government-paid/appointed experts confirmed the government’s original medical/autopsy findings. That’s it. Case closed. Who but a fool could doubt them?

    While McAdams is indeed right that two separate groups of nationally recognized authorities essentially rubber-stamped the Warren Commission’s medical/autopsy conclusions, as did the Forensic Panel of the House Select Committee in the 1970s, nowhere does he admit that both official investigations were established in a way that all but guaranteed a pro-government verdict. Nor does he admit that the officials themselves had glaring conflicts of interest and that both groups of experts made so many serious mistakes – uniformly with an anti-conspiracy slant – that one can’t help but cast an obelisk eye at their conclusions.

    The Clark Panel

    As I’ve elsewhere shown, the Clark Panel made a number of obvious, serious errors, many of which the House Select Committee later corrected.[ii] A explanation for why the Clark Panelists had stumbled so badly may have emerged in an article in the 1977 issue of the Maryland State Medical Journal. Baltimore Medical Examiner and Clark panelist, Russell Fisher, MD, explained partly what had motivated the Attorney General to convene the panel in the first place: he said that Clark “became concerned about some statements he’d seen in the proofs of the not yet published book by Josiah Thompson, Six Seconds in Dallas … [Clark] decided to get a panel of people together to look at [the autopsy evidence], independently of all other investigations … The result of this panel review was that we found some minor errors in [JFK’s autopsy] protocol, such as the site of the entrance wound as being just above the external occipital protuberance … .” The Clark Panel Report was released, Dr. Fisher said, “partly to refute some of the junk that was in [Thompson’s] book.”[iii]

    Sensitive to the Attorney General’s desire to refute Thompson’s theory of a shot from the right front, the Clark Panelists delivered: two shots from the rear. The report was initially suppressed. It was subsequently released just prior to Jim Garrison’s trial of Clay Shaw. Only years later, after the House Committee’s forensic panel had had another look, could it be publicly seen how sloppy the Clark Panel had been. The following is a partial list of the errors these ‘blue-ribbon scientists’ made. [Additional information on the Clark Panel can be found in my multi-part, on-line essay, “How Five Investigations Into JFK’s Medical/Autopsy Evidence Got It Wrong.”[iv]]:

    1. The Clark Panel judged that both lateral X-rays were “left lateral,” meaning that both were shot with the X-ray beam shooting from the right side toward the left side of JFK’s head, which was placed downward, flat against the X-ray film. Wrong. As was immediately apparent to me, a non-radiologist who looks at skull X-rays with some regularity, as well as to the HSCA’s radiologists, one of JFK’s X-rays is left-lateral, the other is right-lateral.

    2. The Clark Panel said that, among the “minor errors” JFK’s pathologists had made was claiming that the fatal bullet struck JFK low in the rear of the skull, near the external occipital protuberance (EOP). In fact, they said, the fatal bullet had actually struck JFK fully 10-cm higher. They also said that the X-ray trail of bullet fragments that the original autopsists said had gone from low in the rear, near the EOP, toward the front of JFK’s skull, was wrong too. The actual trail, the Clark Panel said, aligned with the 10-cm higher, entrance wound they picked. Wrong. As this author discovered for himself, and as the HSCA later determined, and as anyone looking even at the lateral skull X-ray as published by the HSCA can see, the actual fragment trail did not align with the higher entrance wound they picked; it was at least 5-cm higher than that.[v]

    3. The Clark Panel said there were no bullet fragments visible on the left side, or the lower portion, of JFK’s skull X-rays. This was evidence, they said, of a sole shot to JFK’s head, arriving from above and behind to the right, and striking the top, right portion of Kennedy’s skull. Wrong. As the HSCA later determined, and as confirmed by me and David Mantik, apparent bullet fragments are visible both on the left side of JFK’s skull and on its “lower portion.” ( No surprise, McAdams repeats this error on page 180.)

    4. The Clark Panel said X-rays showed retained bullet fragments in Kennedy’s neck. Wrong. As the HSCA, David Mantik and this author determined, the X-rays at the National Archives show no bullet fragments in JFK’s neck, only X-ray artifacts that look like fragments. (A simple comparison between two different X-ray projections, which radiologists routinely do, makes this abundantly clear, except to Clark’s ‘blue-ribbon’ expert.)

    5. The Clark Panel said that autopsy photos revealed that there was a “a well defined zone of discoloration of the edge of the back wound, most pronounced on its upper and outer margin, (which) identifies it as having the characteristics of the entrance wound of a bullet.” The site of this so-called “abrasion collar” – toward the upper edge of the back wound signified that the bullet was traveling downward when it struck the President, as if from Oswald’s perch. Misleading. As the HSCA later found, and this author confirmed, the abrasion collar is more visible toward the lower edge of the wound than the upper, suggesting, as the HSCA later concluded, that the bullet was traveling upward when it struck.

    The Rockefeller Commission

    Regarding the ‘blue-ribbon-ers’ of the Rockefeller Commission, one scarcely knows where to begin. One can start by pointing out that Vice-President Nelson Rockefeller appointed as executive director of the Commission, David Belin, a former Warren Commission counsel, and an anti-conspiracy bulldog. Because of his clear conflicts of interest, Belin pledged to absent himself from the JFK aspects of the wide-ranging probe into CIA lawlessness and abuses. But, as I’ve elsewhere shown from the record, he did not keep his promise; he immersed himself substantially in JFK matters.[vi]

    Another holdover was Warren Commission ballistics expert, Dr. Alfred Olivier. As I’ve previously pointed out, it was regarding his “duplication tests” that the Warren Commission said that “an extensive series of tests were conducted by the Wound Ballistics Branch of the U.S. Army.” These experiments, the Commission said, “blew out the right side of the (test) skull in a manner very similar to the head wounds of the President.”[vii]

    oliver skull

    Using Oswald’s rifle, appropriate ammunition and human skulls, Olivier undertook to duplicate JFK’s wounds. Describing Commission Exhibit # 862 – a photograph of a blasted skull from his tests – Olivier testified, “This particular skull blew out the right side in a manner very similar to the wounds of the President  … We found that this bullet could do exactly – could make the type of wound that the President received.”[viii] As anyone (but Warren loyalists, perhaps) can see, Olivier’s blasted test skull looked nothing at all like JFK. Whereas JFK’s forehead and right eye socket were fully intact, the right forehead and eye socket of Olivier’s skull were completely blasted away. This performance apparently earned him a coveted spot on Rockefeller’s team.

    The other members of the team fell under a cloud when Pittsburgh coroner, Cyril Wecht, MD, JD, charged that, “the Commission has set up a panel of governmental sycophants to defend the Warren Report.” In a May 5, 1975 press release, Wecht charged that “all the members of the panel appointed by the Rockefeller Commission have strong ties to the federal government and close professional relationships with individuals who have formerly participated in studies defending the Warren Report.”

    Wecht emphasized Belin’s Warren Commission roots. Wecht also charged that, “The (medical) panel itself is made up of people who have been associated with the Baltimore Medical Examiner’s Office, the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Department of Radiology, and the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology, three facilities which either supplied the members of the original autopsy team or from which selected members of a previous panel had been appointed by the Justice Department in 1968 (the Clark Panel) to defend the Warren Report.”[ix] Their subsequent performance more than justified Wecht’s concerns.

    As I explored in my multi-part essay, “How Five Investigations into JFK’s Medical/Autopsy Evidence Got It Wrong,” Rockefeller’s “experts” made myriad, obvious errors, errors obvious even to non-physicians,, including some of the same mistakes the Clark panelists had made. Though beyond the scope of this review, interested parties are encouraged to read it. It almost goes without saying that, despite the fact that error tends to be random, going one way one time, and another the next time around, amazingly, all of the errors of David Belin’s patriotic underlings favored the government’s lone gunman scenario.

    The bias of the panel was perhaps best exemplified by the remarks of panelist Robert R. McMeekin, MD, the Chief of the Division of Aerospace Pathology at the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology: “The motion of the President’s head is inconsistent with the shot striking him from any direction other than the rear.” [x]In other words, against known evidence, common sense, and even his fellow panelists, McMeekin said that JFK’s rearward jolt is proof the shot came from behind. No authority but McMeekin has ever taken this position. Fellow panelist Werner Spitz, MD, for example, rightly concluded that, “It is impossible to conclude from the motion of the President’s head and body following the head shot, from which direction the shots came.”[xi] Similarly, Panelist Fred Hodges, MD said that, “The motion of the President’s head as shown in the Zapruder film does not indicate the direction of the shot in my opinion … .”[xii]

    Although we later learned from the House Select Committee about the many errors of the professor’s “blue-ribbon” experts, even the HSCA was far from faultless. [In my on-line essay, I similarly take a hatchet to the medical/autopsy findings of the House Select Committee.[xiii]]

    The point to be emphasized is not that the men who worked on the Clark Panel, the Rockefeller Commission and the House Select Committee were not recognized authorities. They were. Nor is it that they were less than perfect. No one is. It is rather that, in interpreting clues to the murder – the trail of bullet fragments on the X-rays, the location of the bruising on the abrasion collar in JFK’s back wound or the snapping of JFK’s skull – the government’s experts invariably found that the evidence supported the government’s original conclusion: Oswald did it. Or at least that the shots emanated from Oswald’s alleged position, above and behind. Their errors are plain as day. No advanced degree or university appointment is required to see them. Thus, expert opinion from government-appointed “blue-ribbon” experts is not always as hard, or as reliable, as the John McAdamses of the world would have you think. Who, after all, paid these fiddlers? Perhaps more importantly, who choose them, and why?

    Just as McAdams sedulously ignores the peccadillos of witnesses who say what he wants to hear, he just as sedulously goes hammer and tong after witnesses who say what he doesn’t want to hear.

    Debunking Pro-Conspiracy Witnesses

    A case in point is the publicized account of the deaf mute, pro-conspiracy witness Ed Hoffman. He described seeing two men behind the fence atop the grassy knoll, including one who he believed had fired at JFK. McAdams refutes Hoffman by proffering a very selective version of events. McAdams claims that it wasn’t until June 28, 1967, almost four years after the fact, that Hoffman finally “contacts the Dallas office of the FBI, and tells of two men whose actions he thinks suspicious” (p. 260). He then gives the FBI’s unflattering report of an agent’s 1967 interview with Hoffman.[xiv] To discredit him further, he cites unflattering remarks by other witnesses, including some from Hoffman’s father. But McAdams doesn’t tell the whole story, not even close.

    McAdams never lets on that Hoffman had great difficulty conveying what he’d seen to others because his writing ability was poor and because almost no one in those days could translate sign language. Nor does McAdams admit that Hoffman did not wait until 1967 to describe what he’d seen on the day of the assassination. Right after the shots rang out, Hoffman said he went to the Dallas Police Department and to the Dallas FBI office to try to describe what he’d seen, only to be rebuffed because no one could understand the deaf mute.[xv]

    Hoffman said he also told his father on the day of the assassination. But his father didn’t want him going public for fear of what might happen. Nor does McAdams mention that Hoffman tried to tell his pro-conspiracy story again a few days later, on Thanksgiving. This time to his uncle Robert Hoffman, a Dallas Police Detective who vouched for his nephew’s “character and truthfulness.” To back up the Bureau, McAdams similarly cheats the reader by not telling that Hoffman believed that the FBI agent who interviewed him in 1967 was hostile, tried to bribe him, and that what the FBI reported officially was false.

    While it’s unknowable whether the FBI agent did correctly understand Hoffman, or treat him shabbily, the professor shows the sort of “academic” he is by taking the Bureau’s account at face value and withholding substantial contrary evidence, including the witness’ side of the story. This, though it’s pretty clear that FBI agents knew what their boss, J. Edgar Hoover, wanted. As the House Select Committee put it (though you’ll look in vain for it in McAdams’ book) , “It must be said that the FBI generally exhausted its resources in confirming its case against Oswald as the lone assassin, a case that Director J. Edgar Hoover, at least, seemed determined to make within 24 hours of the of the assassination.”[xvi] Other witnesses described the same sort of pressure Hoffman described.

    Witness Wilbyrn Litchfield swore that the FBI had pressured him to retract his claim he’d seen LHO at Ruby’s Carousel Club.[xvii] Robert Oswald said the FBI threatened to deport Marina Oswald if she didn’t cooperate. [xviii] (Given Hoover’s fixation, one would have to be a real Warren loyalist to be confused about what the Bureau meant by “cooperate.”) Since these witnesses are not government officials or recognized authorities, Warren loyalists’ general response is to either ignore them or smear them, a la McAdams, and, a la McAdams again, to just take FBI evidence as gospel. But it is not so easy to dismiss credible government officials’ casting doubt on the Bureau:

    • Congressman Tip O’Neill recounted in his book Man of the House, that JFK special assistant Ken O’Donnell was riding in the car behind JFK’s and “told the FBI what I (O’Donnell) had heard [two shots from behind the grassy knoll fence], but they said it couldn’t have happened that way and that I must have been imagining things. So I testified the way they wanted me to. I just didn’t want to stir up any more pain and trouble for the family.” Dave Powers, another JFK aide who rode in the limo with O’Donnell, said he too heard shots coming from the area of the grassy knoll,[xix] not that you’d know it by anything the FBI or the professor ever reported.
    • The HSCA’s chief counsel, Robert Blakey, was an experienced criminal investigator and prosecutor. “What was significant,” Blakey has written, “was the ability of the FBI to intimidate the Commission, in light of the bureau’s predisposition on the questions of Oswald’s guilt and whether there had been a conspiracy. At a January 27 [1964] Commission meeting, there was another dialogue [among Warren Commissioners]:

      John McCloy: … the time is almost overdue for us to have a better perspective of the FBI investigation than we now have … We are so dependent on them for our facts … .

      Commission counsel J. Lee Rankin: Part of our difficulty in regard to it is that they have no problem. They have decided that no one else is involved … .

      Senator Richard Russell: They have tried the case and reached a verdict on every aspect.

      Senator Hale Boggs: You have put your finger on it.[xx]

    • The HSCA laid the Bureau’s testiness about alternatives to Oswald squarely at the Cappo’s feet. “It must be said that the FBI generally exhausted its resources in confirming its case against Oswald as the lone assassin, a case that Director J. Edgar Hoover, at least, seemed determined to make within 24 hours of the of the assassination.”[xxi] (The Bureau’s ability to prove is legendary. It proved that Nixon was innocent of Watergate after what then-Attorney General Richard Kleindienst, with unintended irony, described as the greatest (FBI) effort since the assassination of President Kennedy.[xxii])
    • Retired FBI agent Don Adams recently claimed that he was assigned to Dallas shortly after the assassination and that he was pressured by his superiors to not follow leads that would lead away from Oswald, to keep mum about his suspicions it might not have been Oswald, and that some FBI files had been destroyed and tampered with.[xxiii]
    • Finally, apparently not even the Warren Commissioners themselves were free from Hoover’s abuse. The Senate Select Committee discovered that Hoover had deployed one of his favorite dirty tricks to deal with the Warren Commission. “[D]erogatory information pertaining to both Commission members and staff was brought to Mr. Hoover’s attention.”[xxiv]

    These are just established, inconvenient facts. The Bureau successfully leaned on numerous witnesses to confirm Hoover’s conviction of Oswald. Predictably, McAdams does not deign to include “unpatriotic” nuggets such as these, including those sworn to under oath, admitted by government officials, or written as official conclusions, against the interests of the government itself, by government investigators – nuggets that show that the official investigative agency entrusted with solving the Crime of the Century could abuse truth as aggressively as any of the wacky conspiracists McAdams condemns.

    Similarly, the professor also spares his readers other, contextually useful tales from the Bureau in the 1960s. For example, on July 28, 2002, AP reported revelations concerning long-suppressed horrors from the mid-1960s, “For more than 20 years, FBI headquarters in Washington (e.g. J. Edgar Hoover) knew that its Boston agents were using hit men and mob leaders as informants and shielding them from prosecution for serious crimes including murder.” It also reported that a known murderer was allowed by the FBI to go free, “as four innocent men were sent to prison in his place.”[xxv] Etc.

    Setting aside for the moment the Bureau’s scabrous history under Hoover, and whether it’s sensible to credit the disputed account of as biased a source as the FBI on what Hoffman and other pro-conspiracy witnesses may have said, it’s worth noting something else McAdams withholds about the deaf mute: at least some of what he said was independently corroborated.

    Echoing Hoffman’s early account that he’d seen two men behaving suspiciously behind the fence overlooking the grassy knoll was a railway worker, Lee Bowers. The man had a commanding view from his perch atop the signal box of the area behind the grassy knoll from which he observed two men.[xxvi]

    Both the FBI and others reported that Hoffman claimed that, at the time of the shooting, he’d seen “a puff of smoke in the vicinity of where the two men” were standing behind the fence.[xxvii] Though McAdams uses a well-positioned Dealey Plaza witness, Sam Holland, to discredit part of Hoffman’s story (p. 15), he omits the fact that Holland, like Hoffman, had also said he saw smoke issue from atop the grassy knoll. (Moreover, like Hoffman, Holland also said that the FBI had falsified his own testimony.[xxviii] As usual, McAdams doesn’t mention this.)

    Smoke coming from the grassy knoll atop Dealey Plaza is an obstacle to those who assume the absence of a grassy knoll gunman. (On his website, McAdams dismisses this by falsely, if hilariously, claiming that “modern firearms don’t let off big puffs of smoke when they are fired,”[xxix] as if either Hoffman or Holland, or any of the other witnesses, had said they’d seen “big puffs of smoke.” “Big puffs” or no, many modern firearms do in fact emit smoke, including, although it’s likely irrelevant, Mannlicher Carcanos, as Douglas DeSalles, MD and Stanford Linear Accelerator physicist, Art Snyder, Ph.D., proved when they fired Mannlicher Carcanos in shooting tests.[xxx])

    If Hoffman and Holland had been the only witnesses claiming they’d seen smoke, it’d be worth the attention McAdams gives it in his book: none. But in 1967 Josiah Thompson reported, “In all, at least seven people standing on the overpass saw smoke in the area of the parking lot and the stockade fence.”[xxxi] Thompson further noted that two Dallas Deputy Sheriffs had “independently reported being told by a witness or witnesses that smoke had been seen near the corner of the stockade fence.”[xxxii] That would seemingly take the number up to at least nine. “Then,” as author Anthony Summers pointed out, “there were the witnesses who actually claimed to have smelled gunpowder in the air. There were six of them, all either distinguished public figures or qualified to know what they were talking about.”[xxxiii] Among them were the mayor’s wife, Senator Ralph Yarborough, Congressman Ray Roberts.

    Fifteen credible witnesses saying they’d either seen or smelled firearms-associated smoke at ground level in Dealey Plaza at the moment JFK was felled is an inconvenient obstacle for Warren loyalists, one that McAdams surmounts by entirely omitting it from his book. Instead, he goes after a deaf mute who was almost certainly misunderstood, a witness he crafts of straw by selecting and eliminating evidence that makes it easy to take him out at point blank range. Only Warren loyalists can fail to see the irony in how the punctilious professor has squarely placed himself among “advocates (who) selectively present information that serves their purposes.” (p. 77)

    I highlight Hoffman because McAdams does. He is one of six witnesses discussed in a section entitled, “Witness Testimony of a Grassy Knoll Shooter?” (p. 13) Given that Hoffman was the very first witness McAdams presented, one might expect that Hoffman’s account was a core portion of the conspiracy canon. It isn’t. While authors Jim Marrs,[xxxiv] Bill Sloan[xxxv] and James Douglas give Hoffman a sympathetic ear, which this author encourages readers to examine for themselves, one will find Hoffman’s story in virtually none of the respected works of skeptics. It’s in none of the pro-conspiracy books published (unlike McAdams’s book) by university publishing houses. (All university-published books about the JFK case are pro-conspiracy.)

    When not slashing deaf mutes, McAdams goes after witnesses who described Kennedy’s injuries in a way that challenged the government’s conclusions, particularly those I’ve cited. Since official evidence – autopsy photos and the autopsy report – show that Kennedy had a gaping wound to the antero-lateral portion of his skull (the right-front side of his skull, in front of his ear), McAdams takes pains to refute witness statements that this author compiled that suggest otherwise.

    JFK’s Fatal Wound – Selecting and Eliminating Evidence

    The professor writes,

    “The tour de force of selectively using testimony to reach a particular conclusion can be found in an essay by Gary Aguilar, who claims to have examined the testimony of forty-six witnesses to Kennedy’s wounds at Parkland Hospital and Bethesda Naval Hospital. Aguilar claims that forty-four of them saw a wound to the ‘back of the head,’ contradicting the autopsy photos and X-rays and suggesting a shot from the grassy knoll … To reach this number, however, Aguilar has to be massively selective in the testimony he uses and quite tendentious in how he interprets it.” (p. 28)

    McAdams showcases the statements of Clint Hill as his first example of my tendentiously abusing evidence. He writes, “Clint Hill was the Secret Service agent who ran to the presidential limo after the shooting started and huddled over John and Jackie Kennedy on the wild ride to Parkland. Aguilar quotes him (correctly) as telling the Warren Commission that he saw a “large gaping wound in the right rear portion of the [president’s] (sic) head.” Aguilar interprets this statement as supporting his position (that JFK had a rearward skull wound) despite its vagueness. But Hill told National Geographic, in a TV special titled Inside the U.S. Secret Service, that there was a ‘gaping hole above the right ear about the size of my palm.’ (p. 29) ‘Above his right ear’ implies parietal bone and is consistent with the autopsy photos and X-rays.”

    McAdams never mentions that I prefaced my witness compilation with, “It was not the author’s intent to list every comment ever made by every witness, but rather to gather the earliest, presumably most reliable, accounts for consideration and comparison.” That aside, apparently McAdams considers me massively selective and quite tendentious because I failed to include in my 1994 essay statements that Hill (may have) made to National Geographic in 2004. (I’ve not been able to get a copy of the video to verify McAdams’ assertions. For what it’s worth, in his new book, Mrs. Kennedy and Me, Hill has again described JFK’s skull damage as involving the upper right rear of the head.[xxxvi])

    But McAdams is correct that I offered Hill as a witness who said JFK’s skull damage was rearward. I did so because Hill’s meaning seemed clear enough in the full quote I cited, from which the professor took only a snippet. Here’s what I originally wrote, a longer Hill quote:

    “The right rear portion of his head was missing. It was lying in the rear seat of the car. His brain was exposed …There was so much blood you could not tell if there had been any other wound or not, except for the one large gaping wound in the right rear portion of the head.” (WC–V2:141)

    Though McAdams doesn’t tell, I quoted more than just that. In the same essay, I also quoted Hill’s own 11/30/63 statement, in which he said that he “observed another wound (in addition to the throat wound) on the right rear portion of the skull. (WC–CE#1024, V18:744)” Perhaps there are readers who could read all that I wrote and yet agree with McAdams that I was wrong to believe that by “right rear,” Hill actually meant right rear. Nevertheless, by omitting much of what I wrote, McAdams has placed himself squarely among “advocates (who) selectively present information that serves their purposes.”

    McAdams also takes aim at Bethesda autopsy technician, Jerrol Custer, who author David Lifton reported had said that, “the rear of the President’s head was blown off.” As David Mantik perfectly put it, McAdams “cites Jerrol Custer’s much later recall of the skull wound as being more accurate than his earlier description (which violates the rule that earlier reports are to be privileged over later ones). In any case, Custer’s wandering recollections for the Assassination Records Review Board (ARRB) raise deep doubts about his (later) memory. McAdams has again employed special pleading, i.e., selecting evidence favorable to his side and ignoring the rest. (For a photo showing Custer demonstrating the occipital wound, see The Killing of a President by Robert Groden (p. 88).”[xxxvii]

    Next, McAdams writes, “Aguilar quotes Doris Nelson, a Parkland nurse, as having been asked by conspiracy authors Robert Groden and Harry Livingstone whether the autopsy photo showing the back of the president’s head as being intact was accurate.” (p. 29) A quick check shows that’s not what I wrote. Rather, I said that the Boston Globe’s Ben Bradlee, Jr. had asked her, according to Groden and Livingstone.

    Citing p. 454 of High Treason, I wrote, “As Groden and Livingstone reported, however, journalist Ben Bradlee, Jr. asked her , ‘Did you get a good look at his head injuries?’ Nelson: ‘A very good look …When we wrapped him up and put him in the coffin. I saw his whole head.’ Asked about the accuracy of the HSCA autopsy photographs she reacted: ‘No. It’s not true. Because there was no hair back there. There wasn’t even hair back there. It was blown away. Some of his head was blown away and his brains were fallen down on the stretcher.’”[xxxviii]

    This amusingly tendentious distortion aside, the professor “refutes” Nelson by sending readers to a photo apparently taken by an interviewer for Life Magazine. In it, Nelson seems to be holding her hand over the right side of her own head, apparently demonstrating JFK’s wound. But McAdams doesn’t explain, either in his book or in his on-line writings, why Nelson specifically rejected the wounds in an official autopsy photograph that Ben Bradlee, Jr. had showed her. Nor does he even mention other evidence we have from Nelson.

    In his marvelously comprehensive, on-line compilation, Vince Palmara quotes the following from authors Groden and Livingstone, “Nurse Nelson drew a picture of the head wound, mostly in the parietal area, but well towards the rear of the head. Her drawing conflicts strongly with the official autopsy photograph. When she saw that picture she said immediately, “It’s not true…There wasn’t even hair back there. It was blown away. All that area (on the back of the head) was blown out.”[xxxix]

    Though Nelson is indeed holding her hand over the right side of her head in the photo, she also apparently drew a diagram McAdams doesn’t mention that showed a large defect involving both the right side and the rear of JFK’s head, consistent with the vast majority of other witnesses. The professor brandishes Nelson’s photo as the definitive proof of where she really believed the skull wound was – solely on the right side of JFK’s head. Thus a witness demonstrating JFK’s head wound in a photo settles it. Unless it goes the wrong way. Then, you never hear about it.

    The professor pocket vetoes 18 photos on pages 86, 87 and 88 of Robert Groden’s The Killing of a President:18 separate witnesses, including seven physicians, demonstrate JFK’s skull damage by placing their hands on the right rear of their own skulls. While most include the right side, above the ear, they all show that the area behind JFK’s right ear was also damaged. None point to damage in front of the ear. The photo of Charles Carrico, MD, for example, has him placing his own hand exactly where he described the wound to the Warren Commission and the HSCA, the top right rear portion of his head. The caption reads, “There was a large – quite a large – defect about here (pointing) on his head.”

    McAdams feels strongly about Carrico. He takes after me for including him among my witnesses to a rearward head wound, and also for my not mentioning that Dr. Carrico had drawn a diagram for the Boston Globe that depicted a wound on the right side of Kennedy’s head. I confess I was unaware of that diagram when I wrote my compilation in 1994, but the doctor’s early descriptions seem clear enough. And Carrico’s later vacillations seem clear enough, too.

    In my compilation, I wrote that Carrico had said, “(the skull) wound had avulsed the calvarium and shredded brain tissue present with profuse oozing…..attempts to control slow oozing from cerebral and cerebellartissue via packs instituted… .” (CE 392–WC V17:4-5)

    Arlen Specter asked him, “Will you describe as specifically as you can the head wound which you have already mentioned briefly?”

    Dr. Carrico: “Sure. This was a 5- by 71-cm (sic–the author feels certain that Dr. Carrico must have said ‘5 by 7-cm’) defect in the posterior skull, the occipital region.”

    In an interview with Andy Purdy for the HSCA on 1-11-78, Dr. Carrico said, “The skull wound “…was a fairly large wound in the right side of the head, in the parietal, occipital area. One could see blood and brains, both cerebellum and cerebrum fragments in that wound.” (emphasis added). [xl]

    I added: “Despite a fifteen-year consistent recollection, like several other Parkland physicians, Carrico’s memory seemed to undergo a dramatic transformation when confronted by author (Gerald) Posner. On March 8, 1992 Posner reported Carrico said, ‘We saw a large hole on the right side of his head. I don’t believe we saw any occipital bone. It was not there. It (the location of the skull defect) was parietal bone…’.[xli] Both Posner and Carrico would have done well to have reviewed Carrico’s prior testimonies and affidavits before conducting interviews.”

    Of course the professor shields his readers from this inconvenient information.

    Thus, McAdams doesn’t lay a glove on, nor does he even address, the very essence of my inquiry. Namely, that, as I wrote, “despite over 40 witnesses’ having given opinions on the subject, not a single witness’ earliest account acceptably described the anterolateral skull/scalp defect in JFK’s autopsy photographs. Why not? Second, while 45 of 46 witnesses were correct, JFK’s skull wound was on the right side, how could 44 wrongly agree the wound involved the skull’s rear, yet no one recall that it was where it should be – based on photographs – toward the front? In other words, if error is random, and if these authentic images prove the witnesses to have been in error, how could so many experienced witnesses, viewing the body in two very different locations, have been able to accurately identify on which side of JFK’s skull the wound was, yet be universally wrong the wound was more rearward than toward the front?”

    This puzzle is particularly pesky given the fact that, as established authorities such as Elizabeth Loftus[xlii] and others[xliii][xliv] have shown, with the professor blithely ignoring them, studies prove that witnesses tend to be very good at accurately recalling “salient” details of witnessed events, the simple location of wounds certainly qualifying as “salient” to the treating doctors in Dallas and other credible witnesses.

    Though McAdams ignores or dismisses most of early accounts of the doctors about where JFK’s skull damage was, he positively gushes over the anti-conspiracy implications of their early remarks about his throat wound. Referring to the low location in the neck given for that wound by resident physician Malcolm Perry, MD, and by Kennedy’s senior treating physician, neurosurgery professor Kemp Clark, McAdams writes, “these assessments come from admission notes of November 22, 1963 … long before any of the doctors could have learned of any controversy over the issue and ‘regularized’ their testimony.”

    By now, readers will scarcely be surprised to learn that McAdams doesn’t apply the same standard regarding what these same witnesses said about JFK’s head injuries. In the same, ‘unregularized,’ admission notes,[xlv] brain surgeon Kemp Clark said that, “There was a large wound in the right occipitoparietal region … Both cerebral and cerebellar tissue were extruding from the wound.” (WC–CE#392) By hand, Dr. Clark also wrote, “… There was a large wound beginning in the right occiput extending into the parietal region … .” (Exhibit #392: WC V17:9-10) In his 11-22-63 note, Dr., Perry described the head wound as, “A large wound of the right posterior cranium…” (WC–V17:6–CE#392)

    And so it goes. Line after line, paragraph after paragraph, page after page, McAdams trudges tirelessly onward, selectively using testimony to reach a particular conclusion. Though readers may find that it’s perhaps a bit short on fact, and a tad thin on logic, JFK Assassination Logic more than compensates by being wonderfully long on misguided patriotism.


    NOTES

    [i] Witness evidence: “Minor inconsistencies between witnesses regarding things such as time, speed and distance, all of which are affected by subjective assessments, will usually have a limited affect on reliability unless glaringly different. Minor differences on details can in fact enhance, rather than detract, from the credibility of the witness as too much similarity will suggest collusion.” http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Canadian_Criminal_Evidence/Credibility_and_Reliability Canadian Criminal Evidence

    http://www.history-matters.com/essays/jfkmed/How5Investigations/How5InvestigationsGotItWrong_4.htm

    [ii] http://www.history-matters.com/essays/jfkmed/How5Investigations/How5InvestigationsGotItWrong_3.htm
    [iii] Blaine Taylor, The Case of the Outspoken Medical Examiner. Maryland State Med. J., March, 1977, p. 65-66.
    [iv] http://www.history-matters.com/essays/jfkmed/How5Investigations/How5InvestigationsGotItWrong_3.htm
    [v] See: http://www.history-matters.com/essays/jfkmed/How5Investigations/How5InvestigationsGotItWrong_3.htm
    [vi] http://www.history-matters.com/essays/jfkmed/How5Investigations/How5InvestigationsGotItWrong_4.htm
    [vii] http://www.history-matters.com/essays/jfkmed/How5Investigations/How5InvestigationsGotItWrong_1b.htm
    [viii] http://www.history-matters.com/essays/jfkmed/How5Investigations/How5InvestigationsGotItWrong_1b.htm
    [ix] http://www.history-matters.com/essays/jfkmed/How5Investigations/How5InvestigationsGotItWrong_4.htm
    [x] IBID.
    [xi] IBID.
    [xii] IBID
    [xiii] http://www.history-matters.com/essays/jfkmed/How5Investigations/How5InvestigationsGotItWrong_5.htm
    [xv] Bill Sloan. JFK – Breaking the Silence. Dallas Texas: Taylor Publishing Company, 1993, p. 22-31.
    [xvi] The Final Assassinations Report–Report of the Select Committee on Assassinations, U.S. House of Representatives. New York: Bantam Books edition, 1979, p. 150.
    [xviii] http://www.history-matters.com/archive/jfk/wc/wcvols/wh1/html/WC_Vol1_0211b.htm
    [xix]Man of the House, by Thomas P. “Tip” O’Neill Jr., p. 178. O’Donnell was riding in the Secret Service follow-up car with Dave Powers, who was present and told O’Neill he had the same recollection. http://www.maryferrell.org/wiki/index.php/JFK_Assassination_Quotes_by_Government_Officials
    [xx] [xx] In: R. Blakey and R. Billings. Fatal Hour–The Assassination of President Kennedy by Organized Crime. New York, Berkley Books, 1992, p. 29. This testimony was also published in: Mark North in: Act of Treason. New York, 1991, Carroll and Graf, p. 515–516.
    [xxi] The Final Assassinations Report–Report of the Select Committee on Assassinations, U.S. House of Representatives. New York: Bantam Books edition, 1979, p. 150.
    [xxii] Fred Emery. Watergate–The Corruption of American Politics and the Fall of Richard Nixon. New York: A Touchstone Book for Simon & Shuster, 1995, p. 217.
    [xxiii] http://www.fox8.com/news/wjw-news-don-adams-president-kennedy-assassination-story,0,6504699.story
    [xxiv] In: Final Report of the Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations, Book V, p. 47. Also cited by: Curt Gentry. J. Edgar Hoover–The Man and His Secrets. New York: W. W. Norton & Co., 1991, p. 549.
    [xxv] http://truthinjustice.org/blood-bargain.htm
    [xxvi] 6H287-288
    [xxvii] http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/JFKhoffman.htm Federal Bureau of Investigation report on the testimony of Ed Hoffman (25th March, 1977)
     
    On March 25, 1977, Richard H. Freeman, Texas Instruments, Semi-Conductor Building, Richardson, Texas, telephone number 238-4965, home address 2573 Sheli, Frisco, Texas, telephone 377-9456, telephonically advised Special Agent (name deleted) that he knew sign language and has communicated with Virgil E. Hoffman, a deaf mute who is employed at his building at Texas Instruments. Mr. Hoffman communicated with him by the use of sign language and Hoffman was concerned that the FBI perhaps did not fully understand what he was trying to communicate. Hoffman communicated the following information to Mr. Freeman:

    Hoffman was watching the motorcade of President John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963, at Dallas, Texas. Hoffman was standing on Stemmons Freeway watching the presidential motorcade, looking in an easterly direction when the motorcade sped away and headed north on Stemmons Freeway. Hoffman communicated that this must have been right after President Kennedy was shot. Hoffman saw two men, one with a rifle and one with a handgun, behind a wooden fence, approximately six feet in height, at this moment. This fence is located on the same side of Elm Street as the Texas School Book Depository building but closer to Stemmons Freeway. Since he is deaf, he naturally could not hear any shots but thought he saw a puff of smoke in the vicinity of where the two men were standing. As soon as he saw the motorcade speed away and saw the puff of smoke in the vicinity of the two men, the man with the rifle looked like he was breaking the rifle down by removing the barrel from the stock and placing it in some dark type of suitcase that the other man was holding. The two men then ran north on the railroad tracks by actually running on the tracks. Hoffman was standing approximately 75 yards from this fence. This fence was at approximately the same height or level as the ground floor of the Texas School Book Depository building.

    On March 28, 1977, Virgil E. Hoffman accompanied Special Agent (name deleted) to Stemmons Freeway, also known as Interstate Highway 35 North, Dallas, Texas.

    Hoffman communicated that he was driving a 1962 Ford Falcon on November 22, 1963. He parked his car on the west shoulder of Stemmons Freeway at the northbound lane near the Texas and Pacific Railroad overpass that crosses Stemmons Freeway. He could not see the presidential motorcade as it was proceeding west on Elm Street toward the Triple Underpass. He saw the motorcade speed up as it emerged on Stemmons Freeway heading north. His line of vision was due east looking from Stemmons Freeway toward the Texas School Book Depository building. The two men he saw were behind the wooden fence above the grassy knoll north of Elm Street and just before the Triple Underpass. He indicated he saw smoke in that vicinity and saw the man with the rifle disassembling the rifle near some type of railroad track control box located close to the railroad tracks. Both men ran north on the railroad tracks.

    He tried to get the attention of a Dallas policeman who was standing on the railroad overpass that crosses Stemmons Freeway, but since he could not yell, he could not communicate with the policeman. He drove his car north on Stemmons Freeway after the motorcade passed him in an effort to find the two men, but he lost sight of them.

     
    [xxviii] Josiah Thompson. Six Seconds in Dallas. New York: Bernard Geis Associates for Random House, 1967, p112.
    [xxix] http://mcadams.posc.mu.edu/hoffman.htm
    [xxx] Personal communication.
    [xxxi] Josiah Thompson. Six Seconds in Dallas. New York: Bernard Geis Associates for Random House, 1967, p. 121.
    [xxxii] IBID, p. 119.
    [xxxiii] Anthony Summers. Not in Your Lifetime. New York: Marlowe and Co., 1998, p. 27.
    [xxxiv] Jim Marrs, Crossfire.
    [xxxv] Bill Sloan. JFK – Breaking the Silence. Dallas: Taylor Publishing Company, 1993, p. 10ff.
    [xxxvi] Clint Hill, Mrs. Kennedy and Me. New York: Gallery Books, 2012, pp. 290-291, 305-306.
    [xxxvii] http://kennedysandking.com/john-f-kennedy-reviews/mcadams-john-jfk-assassination-logic-how-to-think-about-claims-of-conspiracy
    [xxxviii] http://www.assassinationweb.com/ag6.htm
    [xxxix] http://www.assassinationresearch.com/v4n2/v4n2part1.pdf
    [xl] http://www.assassinationweb.com/ag6.htm
    [xli] Gerald Posner, Case Closed. New York. Random House, p.311.
    [xlii] Elizabeth F. Loftus. Eyewitness Testimony. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1996, p, 25 – 28.
    [xliii] Loftus, Elizabeth F. Eyewitness Testimony. Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1996, p. 25 – 26. “Items that were highest of all in salience (“salience” being determined by the witnesses themselves) received accuracy and completeness scores of 98. Those that were lowest in salience received scores below 70.” Please note that an item judged not to be salient at all, i.e. “Salience category 0.00,” was still accurately recounted 61% of the time. See also the study to which Loftus refers, Marshall, J, Marquis, KH, Oskamp, S. Effects of kind of question and atmosphere of interrogation on accuracy and completeness of testimony. Harvard Law Review, Vol.84:1620 – 1643, 1971.
    [xliv] Elizabeth Loftus, James M. Doyle. Eyewitness Testomony: Civil and Criminal, Second Edition. Charlottesville: The Michie Company, 1992.
    [xlv] http://www.assassinationweb.com/ag6.htm


    Reviews of John McAdams’ book JFK Assassination Logic by
    Pat Speer
    David Mantik
    Frank Cassano

  • Citizen Wilcke Dissents

    Citizen Wilcke Dissents


    Back in 1968, Mark Lane wrote a book called A Citizen’s Dissent. That book chronicled his attempts to publicly contest the findings of the Warren Report—on both radio and television—both in America and abroad. Last year, Frank Cassano wrote a fine review of Michael Shermer’s abominable and lamentable documentary “Conspiracy Rising“. That review was one of the best things Frank has written for CTKA and should be read by anyone who has not yet done so.

    No one has done more good work on Shermer, and the threat he poses to truth and democracy, than Frank has. Apparently, Shermer has been able to get his disgraceful documentary syndicated in Europe, at least in Germany. A faithful follower of CTKA watched it. Brigitte Wilcke then did what a responsible and free thinking citizen would and should. She protested the broadcasting of this show on the public airwaves.

    But Brigitte actually went even beyond that. She did a moment-by-moment critique of the entire show! That analysis extends out to 18 pages. That was too difficult to translate into English. So Brigitte translated the exchange of letters between herself and the station chief; in which she, as a citizen of her country, vociferously protested the pollution of her airwaves by Shermer’s propaganda. The executive replied, and we include that reply here, and her rebuttal also.

    We post it not just because of the fine points she makes. But because this is the kind of thing we hope we can convince everyone to do in the future. Let the gatekeepers know how fed up you are with this cheap propaganda. That can only happen if we follow Brigitte’s excellent example and make it multiply by the thousands.

    ~ Jim DiEugenio


    From a fellow reader:

    I want to thank you for taking the time to post Brigitte’s letters and the responses from the news station. It is very encouraging to see someone take a stand against this documentary, especially someone as far away as Germany! I nearly spit out my freshly ground coffee when I read the station’s response, which basically seemed like it could be summed up as Dr. Bellut saying the documentary wasn’t really about the Kennedy assassination and was instead about conspiracies in general and thus any inaccuracies in facts about the incident didn’t really matter. I was also quite surprised to see him say that there was no proof to any of the theories and that it “persistently disrupt[s] public trust in the government.” I would have expected Dr. Bellut to keep his personal opinions to himself on the matter and respond more objectively. Again, thank you Brigitte for your resolve and determination and Jim for making public this information.


    Conspiracy Rising Title

    CLICK ON IMAGES TO ENGLARGE

    page 1 page 2 Bellut page 1 page 2
    Letter to TV Board 1
    Letter to TV Board 2
    Response from TV Board
    Response to TV Board 1
    Response to TV Board 2
  • Jesse Ventura’s Conspiracy Theory on JFK


    I: Introduction

    CTKA has some respect for Jesse Ventura and his book, American Conspiracies, co-written with Dick Russell. As for Ventura’s series Conspiracy Theory, I agree with Jim DiEugenio that it certainly “is what it is” and that Ventura is likely under a lot of pressure to put eyes in front of the screen. And TruTv was brave enough to run the show. But let’s not romanticize them here. Their courage has a more practical application: The channel itself is obsessed with rather unstimulating and seemingly staged “reality” television shows such as Party Heat and Ma’s Roadhouse and Full Throttle Saloon. Once we accept that the channel’s viewers are largely male, hormonal, and not likely to be reading, say, JFK and the Unspeakable nor Ventura’s latest book anytime soon, it’s pretty easy to figure out that the bottom line is ratings, advertising, and cash.

    Ventura has said that the series itself is there to entertain and for people to make up their own minds about what they have viewed. That’s all well and good. But his work with Russell would have been a far more stable and rewarding platform to start from. If we are going for “entertainment,” then I have to ask, “When did Russell’s work with Ventura ever become boring or a flop with the wider public?” American Conspiracies, like his other work with Ventura, Don’t Start the Revolution without Me, is a best seller. Jesse Ventura’s a cult hero. He’s popular. So favorable ratings would seem a given: middle-America finds him an extremely interesting figure. Indeed, Ventura turns heads around the world—hence the potential for overseas sales of the show are enormous.

    Why, then, pitch the program to the lowest common denominator? I feel the show preaches far too much to an often ill-informed captive conspiracy market. As a result, it actually alienates more people than it could potentially motivate. It’s not Conspiracy Theory (a title I dislike intensely—as I do not consider myself in any way a “conspiracy theorist”). Its title should instead be either Preaching to the Converted or Opportunity Lost. Indeed, the show loses it with its think-tank scenes.

    It’s readily apparent that the show’s talent spotters, Tara-Anne Johnson and Christine Scowley, couldn’t cast a net in a goldfish pond. Because one has to wonder when looking at the show’s “investigators’ ” bios: How on earth did these people ever get cast as “investigators?” Indeed, I posit that none of Ventura’s researchers—both on- and off-camera—actually know very much about what research into hidden political agendas really entails. I mean in this series they have even called David Icke and Alex Jones “experts” on certain topics. I doubt it.

    Jesse Ventura is an ex-Navy Seal, pro-wrestler, author, actor, and a former mayor and governor. He is, by all accounts, a street-wise guy. As a producer, host, and star of the program then, why didn’t he have, say, an ex-detective, historian, or a tough investigative journalist on his show as (at least) one of his investigators? I don’t buy there being too short a turnover time for this sort of thing. Good professional research is straightforward, not convoluted, and thus time-saving. You consult with people who know their stuff and then you go ahead and make the show. It’s pretty simple.

    As a result, the think-tank group-talk scenes are as inauthentic as the researchers themselves. In fact, they make for some of the lamest television I have ever seen. As Tom Jeffers explains:

    The only thing I hate about his show is when they all get together in the board room and someone tries to play devil’s advocate. It just seems too planned and contrived. Otherwise, keep on Jesse! (Tom Jeffers: Murder Solved, November 20th 2010)

    What’s scary is that the bright spark who thought these scenes a “cool” idea probably thought the opening scene to the Kennedy episode was also a brilliant stroke. I disagree, and will explain why soon enough.

    Now, speaking of mood setting, I realize my introduction has been a little heavy-handed. So I assure the reader that Ventura does bring some positives to this particular episode. Do they outweigh the negatives? Well that’s a good question and it’s going to be answered at the end. But hold tight. It’s a wild ride. In particular, the first seven minutes, which Ed Wood couldn’t have directed better.

    II: “Ron,” the Mark Felt of the New Millennium

    What’s astounding about the graphics and the preview is that it’s almost three minutes (2:43) before any meaningful dialogue is heard. I liked how Ventura let people know about the importance of the assassination. And he is correct, the JFK case is indeed the “grand-daddy of them all,” since it’s where doubts about our government got started. But this is the sole bright spot here. The bridge scene that followed was so ill-conceived that I had to get some objectivity on it. So I proceeded to show the scene to a number of non-assassination minded friends and family (five people total). And they all replied (without suggestion on my behalf) that the bridge sequence was “staged,” “lame,” “funny,” and “cheesy.”

    “Ron,” a man in ailing health, met Ventura on a bridge overlooking what seemed like a freeway (his idea of a secret location). Now there are numerous CCTV cameras around overpasses; in particular, ones near major roads. Furthermore, any motorists coming by on the bridge would have seen those involved as camera crews. To cap it all off, Ventura and “Ron” stood directly under two rather bright, large, and ornate street lights. Where did Ventura’s common sense go here? “Ron,” who appears to be wheelchair-bound, claimed he was given his information while he was working on a film about the assassination. It was handed over by a young CIA operative who wanted the truth out. The stunning revelation from this young man? The CIA and Nixon were involved with the lads from Operation 40, and they killed President Kennedy.

    “Ron” is clearly an amateur when it comes to secret locations. And his “secret documents” weren’t very convincing either. For one, Ron’s source had clearly redacted parts of the front page before he had given it to him. Thus, it looked like Ron’s friend had in fact censored “the truth” for him.

    The likely reality is that Ron’s buddy in the CIA was a narrative creation, and that these documents were just a badly cobbled together batch of photo-copied or printed Freedom of Information (FOIA) documents. In one shot, we can clearly see that one of the sheets is a House Select Committee on Assassinations (HSCA) letter to Thomas Downing, apparently discussing the appointment of its first director Richard Sprague—which has nothing to do with Richard Nixon and Operation 40. Nor does the Oswald backyard photo that can clearly be seen in another shot. My favorite top-secret government document, however, is one that can be seen at 5:32 entitled, “The Guns that Killed Kennedy,” which is one of the most up-front releases from the CIA I have ever seen.

    This strongly suggests that “Ron” is a narrative creation himself, and, in all likelihood, a researcher. Who this shoddy researcher-turned-thespian really is, aside, when Ventura declares to his board that “These documents link the killing of JFK to Watergate,” the damage has been done. For, as we have seen, the documents as seen and revealed prove nothing of the sort.

    Luckily, Ventura seems to change track around the 7:22 minute mark. Instead of going along with Ron’s idea that Nixon was involved in the Kennedy hit, he insists instead that Nixon was set up for Watergate. Okay, fine. He was indeed set up. But he then goes off the rails by speculating that Nixon was dethroned because of his digging into the Kennedy assassination. This leads him into very dangerous waters of the type discussed in CTKA’s reviews of John Hankey’s JFK 2. (Please see The Dark Legacy of John Hankey and JFK 2 Updated.)

    There is simply no evidence that Nixon ever asked CIA Director Richard Helms for the documents pertaining to Operation 40. But there is evidence that Nixon wanted documents pertaining to the Bay of Pigs well before Watergate broke out. Helms delivered the files in question to Nixon on October 21, 1971. But these files were not Nixon’s only concern. He also requested files on the assassinations of Trujillo in the Dominican Republic in May of 1961 and Ngo Dinh Diem circa November 1963 in Vietnam. (David Frost’s interview with Richard Helms 22nd – 23rd of May 1978)

    Why did Nixon want these files? Perhaps to see if there was some possible incrimination of himself in these three theatres prior to Kennedy’s assassination. Or he could have been trying to find dirt on members of the Democratic Party in those events. As mentioned before, Ventura doesn’t go that far. But it needs to be pointed out that a few deluded people like “Ron” have regularly pushed the Nixon-killed-Kennedy angle. But if this was so, then why, Dear Ron, did Nixon wait until 1971 to procure them? He was inaugurated in 1969. Furthermore, it is rumored that Helms didn’t give Nixon all of the available files. Why would Helms not give him those documents? Maybe because it was his—not Nixon’s—role he was likely afraid of divulging.

    Another important and often overlooked aspect by the “Nixon in on it” lobby is the meeting H. R. Halderman refers to in his book, The Ends of Power. This happened on the 23rd of June, 1972. It is referred to as the infamous “Bay of Pigs” meeting between Helms and Haldeman in the White House. Helms was told by Halderman that if the FBI didn’t call off their investigation into Watergate, it could bring up the whole “Bay of Pigs” thing. Haldeman later believed that the phrase was code for the “Kennedy assassination.” Helms lost his composure and after calming down instructed his counterpart, deputy General Vernon Walters, to do what Haldeman requested—which, by the way, ended up hurting Nixon during the Watergate scandal.

    Two things here: It was Helms who was clearly worried, not Nixon. Furthermore, Nixon stated, “Well, we protected Helms from one hell of a lot of things.” (Stanley Kutler, Abuse of Power, pg 68) Prior to discussing the Bay of Pigs, however, Nixon vastly underestimated Helms, who had many other methods at his disposal to bring Nixon down: the CIA-controlled news media for one, and willing CIA collaborators—Katherine Graham, Ben Bradlee and Bob Woodward at The Washington Post—for another. He also had top FBI officials on his books as CIA informants. And he had inside men on Nixon’s espionage unit (Howard Hunt and James McCord). In fact, the question arises: Had Helms really had been playing Nixon all the way along?

    Now, let us cut to the chase: What is the proof of a connection between Nixon and Operaiton 40? There has never been any credible evidence of this adduced by anyone. Further, the general feeling amongst researchers is that the Kennedy assassination was enacted likely by an amalgam of individuals. It was not an Operation 40-led initiative, nor could it be called Operation 40. (Larry Hancock, Someone Would Have Talked, p. 372) We also have, for starters, very little real idea of who the assassins were. And I challenge anybody to tell me that Ventura’s investigators are on par with Jim Douglass, David Talbot, Jim Garrison, and Anthony Summers, who looked extensively into anti-Castro Cuban activities and don’t even bother to mention Operation 40 in their works. Gaeton Fonzi looked closer into it than most. He mentions Operation 40, but he never mentions nor hints that this group took out the President; nor does Larry Hancock, who speculates that some members may have been involved. The information about Operation 40’s nefarious murderous dealings from some of its purported members (Marita Lorenz, Gerry Hemming and E Howard Hunt) should be taken with a massive chunk of salt. Hence, I advise caution.

    As for Operation 40 being the masterminds of the Watergate break-in, this is a real stretch of logic. Two of the Watergate team’s leaders, James McCord and Gordon Liddy (who was ex-FBI) were never members of Operation 40. McCord kept an autographed picture of his boss Richard Helms on his desk and is considered the one responsible for purposefully getting the burglars caught by amateurishly taping a door—twice. In fact, the group they presided over was called “the plumbers” and were part of CREEP (Committee to Re-elect the President). Thus, when Ventura says “All of the Watergate burglars were involved in Operation 40” —implying they were all hand picked and selected by Nixon himself, he is badly mistaken. For example, Nixon never actually hired Hunt; it was actually Charles Colson. (Jim Hougan, Secret Agenda, p. 33) In fact, evidence indicates that Nixon didn’t even know that Hunt was on his staff until it was too late.

    Ventura never should have strayed this far. It’s “too much, too soon” and the show is far too short. Nixon and Watergate are deeply complex and deserve their own well-investigated documentary. There are definitely some ties between the Kennedy assassination and Watergate. But to do justice to that subject would take a show perhaps twice as long as this one—with consultants the stature of, say, Jim Hougan, and with information beyond reproach. It was not something to be appended capriciously to a show on the JFK case and is clearly something Ventura’s people did not have the experience, knowledge and acumen to grasp.

    III: Jesse Recovers via Osanic and Prouty

    Up until now things were not looking good. But, seemingly out of nowhere, Ventura finally gets on the board. And by the 7:50 minute mark he really needed to hustle.

    Ventura suddenly states that he is off to see Fletcher Prouty. Of course, Prouty is deceased. But thanks to the many hours of taped interviews by Len Osanic, the Colonel speaks from the grave and offers a ray of hope in the darkness. Though it’s far too brief, Prouty (one of the most misrepresented and misquoted critics in research history, by both pro-conspiracy and lone-nut advocates) is used properly, straight, and to the point this time around. Prouty tells it like it is: Oswald was a US agent and the protection of the president that day was pathetic. Both true assertions. Ventura could have scored more points here. But he has to make the silly call that “Fletcher Prouty backed those CIA documents.” No he didn’t. I have little doubt that had Prouty seen them he would laughed himself silly. But hey, Ventura’s finally got points on the board. And with a click of a bolt-action Mannlicher-Carcano, he’s off to Dallas to score even more.

    Ventura is now in the company of his assistant Alex Piper in Dealey Plaza. Since Colonel Prouty’s cameo, Ventura seems rejuvenated. After a nice run-down of Dealey Plaza and how the events there inspired him “to always question authority,” we next encounter the remarkably well-preserved but decidedly nervous-looking Bill Newman. This was a great little segment and explained how much of a con-job the Commission was by not contacting Newman for his version of events, particularly when has was so close to the action. In addition to being a credible witness, the clincher as to why the Commission didn’t want him is that Newman never thought the shots he heard came from the depository.

    Ventura lurches a little at 13:33 when he says Johnson set up the Warren Commission. He did so in name, but it was actually Eastern Establishment figures Eugene Rostow and Joseph Alsop (both known CIA assets) that applied pressure to Johnson and got him to form the Commission. Johnson was reluctant and had wanted the investigation carried out in Texas. (Donald Gibson in The Assassinations, pgs. 3-17) But it’s a nice return when he mentions that Ford on his deathbed admitted the CIA “had destroyed or withheld critical evidence” (Gerald Ford: Foreword, pg XXII Warren Commission Report. 2004). Ventura then quickly discusses the joke of the “magic bullet theory” and Arlen Specter‘s work on it. It was also good that he mentioned Ford’s admission that he altered the placement of the wounds to conform to Specter’s representation of what happened. This was all done with a minimum of fuss.

    Though the extremely quick editing throughout the show was slightly annoying, there were some nice technical elements in this segment. The camera set-ups and cutting of juxtaposing pictures of Newman in relation to Kennedy and the car were very well done. Another goody was the brief transposition of the Moorman Knoll photo taken in 1963 with Dealey Plaza of today. It was an oddly haunting image in a show that tried too hard to provide a sense of the sinister. Ventura even succeeds in making Piper look interesting as he explains the “back and to the left” motion and the potential shot from the knoll. Thus, even if he had overlooked having a brief chat with Dealey Plaza talisman Bob Groden, Ventura scores another palpable hit.

    The big guy is on a roll.

    IV: Off to see The Wizard

    At around 15:26 he’s off to see the “Woeful Wizard” of Dealey Plaza, Gary Mack, in the Sixth Floor Texas School Book Depository Museum. Ventura does well explaining to the audience that the proprietors advocate the lone gunman theory. He doesn’t do so well when Mack explains the reason why the window is sectioned off like it is.

    The whole thing about this corner of the building’s historical integrity is a joke. There are numerous accounts of the crime scene being contaminated, nay, changed around after the shooting. Here’s another stinker: The boxes we see in the enclosure haven’t been in place there since 1963. They are in fact duplicates. The window frame was actually removed once-upon-a-time, and there’s even a debate about the current one’s authenticity.

    If Jesse hadn’t been taken in by Mack’s charm-offensive, he really could have torn him up. As it stands, however, the original wooden floor line and Mack’s enduring quest for authenticity gets funnier and funnier—and more hypocritical—the more I think about it. Thus, I have to give Ventura a point here. In fact, Mack gave it to him on a platter.

    At 16:06 Ventura now goes on the range to take on some hay bales. The irony here is that, unlike Gary Mack and his nefarious recreations, Ventura admits that his targets are stationary. Thus, his honesty in the shortcomings of this experiment earns him a point here. But Ventura makes a bit of a mistake also. Oswald actually had 5.6 seconds to perform the shooting. However, Ventura by adding close to an extra second to make it 6.3 seconds aids Oswald’s cause. And it’s actually an interesting mistake, as Ventura doesn’t even get anywhere near the bungled time, let alone the official 5.6 seconds.

    Here, it would have been good to include an independent marksman or two. The reality is that an experiment of this magnitude really deserves an entire show. But it was good that Ventura mentioned the failed experiments by the military for the Warren Commission. Thus, in spite of the problems, I think Ventura did well enough and scores a few good points here once more. But again, he could have done better. Ventura tends to make mistakes when bad researchers are lurking around. He would have been better served with higher-quality people.

    It’s 18:50 now, and we return to the “Wiz” Gary Mack (the magical conjurer of tricks like Inside the Target Car for the History Channel—real name: Larry Dunkel) in the depository. For Mack’s sake, Ventura explains his Mannlicher-Carcano target practice tests, expresses his serious doubts as to Oswald’s miraculous marksmanship, and then asks the Wiz: “You’re the curator of this museum, so naturally you have to follow museum policy. Let’s pretend we’re not here. Let’s pretend you and I are sittin’ out havin’ a “cold one.” What’s your position at that point?” Mack admits that in his quiet times (when he’s not sitting on his wand) he has suspicions that “there’s more to it than Oswald.”

    Ventura scores again, but it’s really no different to what Mack and Dave Perry have said to numerous other people involved in research over the years. That being the HSCA concluded that there was a probable conspiracy in the assassination of John F. Kennedy.

    V: Oswald’s Route

    We are now more-or-less halfway through at 20:05. It was bumpy at the start, but it hasn’t really been too bad thus far. There are some nice graphics showing where and how Oswald got to his rooming house at North Beckley after the assassination. But I think Ventura, after some good stuff in discussing the frailty of the Oswald description, fails to raise the bar here. He could have briefly mentioned the dubious manner in which it came about not to mention—as Tony Frank pointed out at JFK Lancer—that Oswald’s description was similar to one given to the CIA a month before his rise to infamy:

    Back on October 10, 1963, after CIA Headquarters received a report that someone using the name Lee Oswald contacted the Soviet Embassy, a cable to the CIA’s Mexico City station informed them that there is a 23-year-old defector named Oswald, who has “light brown wavy hair,” is “five feet ten inches” tall, and weighs “one hundred sixty five pounds.”

    Ventura also never entertains recreating and timing the distance that Oswald had to walk from Beckley to 10th and Patton. As explained by John Armstrong below, these calculations make it extremely difficult to make it to Tippit’s death scene in the time that Tippit was first reported killed. The following would have been a fun exercise (in line with his recreation of Oswald’s purported shooting attempt, and need not have taken up much time at all):

    If Tippit was shot as early as 1:10, “Harvey Oswald” could not possibly have run from his rooming house to 10th & Patton…in 6 minutes. In addition to this time problem, not a single witness, in heavily populated Oak Cliff, saw anyone resembling Harvey Oswald after the Tippit shooting (except Mrs. Roberts and those at the Texas Theatre).

    In order for the Warren Commission to assert that Oswald killed Tippit, there had to be enough time for him to walk from his rooming house to 10th & Patton—about a mile away. The Warren Commission and HSCA ignored [Helen] Markham’s time of 1:06 PM, did not interview T. F. Bowley (1:10 PM), did not ask Roger Craig (1:06 PM) and did not use the time shown on original Dallas police logs. Instead, the Warren Commission (1964) concluded that Oswald walked that distance in 13 minutes. The House Select Committee on Assassinations (1978) determined the time was 14 minutes, 30 seconds. Both concluded Oswald was last seen at the corner of Beckley and Zang at 1:03 PM. Either of their times, 13 minutes or 14 minutes and 30 seconds, would place Oswald at 10th & Patton at 1:16 PM or later. The time of the Tippit shooting as placed by the Commission,1:16 PM, contradicted the testimony of Markham, Bowley, Craig and the Dallas Police log. Another problem for the Warren Commission to overcome was the direction in which Oswald was walking. If he was walking west, as all of the evidence suggested, he would have had to cover even more ground in the same unreasonably short period of time. The Dallas Police recorded that the defendant was walking “west in the 400 block of East 10th.” The Commission ignored the evidence—5 witnesses and the official Dallas Police report of the event—and said he was walking east, away from the Texas Theater.

    Now some have complained that Ventura takes it as a given that Oswald performed the execution of the policeman. I don’t see it that way. Ventura makes the point that Oswald, after shooting Tippit, dumped his shells as if leaving a trail of breadcrumbs. While he may have needed clarity on this issue, I think he is implying here that Oswald was either stupid or someone else did it to frame him. The Tippit shooting has so many oddities in it that we can’t blame Ventura for not going into them all, e.g., like Oswald’s dropping one of his three wallets that day at the crime scene, and the shells discovered being described as coming from an automatic handgun, or the descriptions of more than one assailant at the scene. These are the tip of the iceberg. And considering what Ventura has “jam packed” into the show thus far, he’s provided a decent overview of events. Yet one can’t help but think that he could have done more in Oak Cliff had he not wasted those precious minutes at the start.

    Ventura and Piper’s journey takes them to a newly revamped Texas Theater, where they meet Jim Marrs, author of the best selling Crossfire. We are now around 22:26 seconds into the action and it already feels like we have covered some distance in that short time. And I must admit, that takes skill. Ventura has given a remarkably concise overview of the day’s events, which, in a small way, makes up for the lost opportunities presented with the Tippit shooting. Marrs’work and his associates outside of his JFK field in the late nineties may raise a few eyebrows nowadays, but he still makes for a good interview. And what he speculates about Oswald’s purpose in the theatre— meeting with a contact to find out what was going on—generally meets with wide agreement. As do his accusations that Oswald was some kind of low-level CIA operative. The stuff about Oswald at Atsugi in Japan, his Russian defection, and George DeMohrenschildt has aroused suspicions for years. Many, including myself, consider DeMohrenschildt to have been Oswald’s handler until George was instructed to offload him into the wolf’s lair, i.e., Ruth and Michael Paine, along the CIA-associated and extremely conservative White Russian community.

    Ventura’s narration and scripting in this part of the show flows nicely, and he sells the idea that if anybody knew or suspected Oswald’s CIA connections it was his widow Marina, who, at 24:16, we now encounter on the phone. While Ventura does well in this segment, one feels there’s a bit of the theatrical in the air because of Marina’s plea for safety about her daughters limiting what she can say. Marina’s daughters actually made public appearances in the early nineties and explained their lives and their suspicions of the official version. June, the eldest daughter, can be seen discussing the topic at the 30th anniversary, and having a little go at Gerald Posner. While Rachel Porter has also gone public.

    After Ventura met with Marina, he also seemed to hype up Marina Oswald’s coming forward about her belief in a conspiracy and her belief in Lee’s innocence on his show. However, she voiced suspicions before this, and rather frequently, as in this discourse with Jack Anderson in 1988. She also said the same kind of things to Danny Schecter in his documentary Beyond JFK: The Question of Conspiracy, and also—as Tony Frank pointed out on the Lancer Forum—on The Oprah Winfrey Show on the 22nd of November, 1996. (This interview was transcribed by the late Rich DellaRosa.)

    But cutting Ventura some slack, Marina has not spoken for a long time, and he does have a show to sell. His asking Marina about Oswald’s ties to the CIA met with an affirmative; his asking her about her ties to the KGB (which she emphatically denied) was a goody; and her feelings about DeMohrenschildt’s ties to the agency were handy to have on the record.

    There was also one controversial and rather complex aspect of the case that I felt Ventura handled quite well. In fact, it was perhaps my favorite part of the show. This was the case of Marina Oswald steadfastly saying that she took the controversial backyard photos. Now, I, for one, advocate for their being at least some element of fakery in the pictures, in particular the image featured on the cover of Life magazine. However, I actually enjoyed Ventura’s different take on Marina Oswald and the photos. Because whether those particular photos are faked or not, it’s forgotten that the issue of their authenticity clouds other, perhaps, more important issues.

    Namely, that Oswald, as shown by Ventura and Marrs, was clearly busy posing as a communist for a good part of his later life. When, quite clearly, he was not one at all. Now, if by some extremely slim chance the photos are genuine, who or what motivated Oswald to pose in them, in his get-up, with two ideologically opposed leftist publications, thus incriminating himself anyhow? This sort of double-ended, measured, and responsible take on an extremely controversial piece of secondary evidence was a nice touch on Ventura’s part. Rather than creating an argument or giving a direct answer, he gave the viewer something to ponder. And, though I disagree, I congratulate him for putting it out there as he did.

    VI: Russ Baker’s Road to Nowhere

    Ventura is really gliding at this point. But all glory is fleeting, particularly when you don’t really have genuine JFK investigators on your staff. Thus, around the 28:00 mark Ventura’s “wet behind the ears” research team did him in. June Sarpong calls Ventura—and bang!—we are in Russ Baker land. The issues surrounding every single thing Baker discussed in this show concerning Bush’s involvement in the assassination have been investigated in depth by Jim DiEugenio in his telling review of Baker’s extremely poor book, Family of Secrets, and indirectly by myself in my essay, The Dark Legacy of John Hankey. Needless to say, Ventura’s golden offensive now turns into a retreat.

    Baker’s statement that Bush had forgotten where he was that day is extraordinary, and I can’t recall Baker making any such claim in his work, Family of Secrets. Furthermore, I could find no statement or source with George Bush ever making that comment, bar Paul Kangas (yet again). And Kangas is one of the worst offenders in terms of serial Bush disinformation. For example, he once again provided absolutely no sources for the following 1991 diatribe in his piece, The Nixon-Bush Connection to the Kennedy Assassination:

    On the day of the assassination Bush was in Texas, but he denies knowing exactly where he was. Since he had been the supervisor for the secret Cuban teams, headed by former Cuban police commander Felix Rodriguez, since 1960, it is likely Bush was also in Dallas in 1963. Several of the Cubans he was supervising as dirty-tricks teams for Nixon, were photographed in the Zagruder film [sic]

    Anybody who can call it the “Zagruder film” and later on say that George’s father’s name was “Preston” rather than “Prescott,” and that “Preston” was running his 1960 campaign (which is utterly bizarre, since Bush first ran for the Senate against Ralph Yarbrough in 1964 and not even Baker says his father was running this campaign then), is someone any real researcher would avoid like the plague. Baker clearly has not checked the veracity of Kangas’ work, and thus clearly is not a genuine researcher. His modus operandi is to angle for the sensational. The “forgetful Bush” story is used to make it out as if George was sneaking around Dallas that day. This is as ludicrous as his reasoning behind the Parrott memo, as Jim DiEugenio writes:

    … First of all, if you were a covert CIA operator in on the Kennedy plot, would you announce in advance that you would be in Dallas to give a speech on the evening of 11/21? Further, would you put that announcement in the newspapers? Well, that is what Bush did in the Dallas Morning News on 11/20.

    At the actual time of the assassination, Bush was in Tyler, Texas. The author says he made the FBI call about Parrott to establish an alibi. This makes no sense. Why? Because Bush already had an alibi. As Kitty Kelley established, the vice-president of the Kiwanis Club—a man named Aubrey Irby—was with Bush at the time of Kennedy’s murder. Along with about a hundred other people. For Bush was about to give a luncheon speech at the Blackstone Hotel. He had just started when Irby told him what had happened. Bush called off the speech. (Baker, p. 54) Question for the author: With about 101 witnesses, why would you need a phone call to establish your alibi?

    The author then writes that Bush told the FBI he would be in Dallas later on the 22nd, and that he would be staying at the Sheraton that night. Baker finds it suspicious that he did not stay the night as he said he was going to. Or as Baker writes in his full Inspector Javert—or John Hankey—mode: “Why state that he expected to spend the night at the Dallas Sheraton if he was not planning to stay?” (p. 59) Well Russ, maybe he was planning to. But because he later realized that Dallas would not be a real good place to campaign in that night, he changed his mind. I mean don’t you think the populace was mentally preoccupied? (review of Baker’s, Family of Secrets, section III)

    As for the Bush/DeMohrenschildt links, the world of oil is a small one. Bush drilled for it and DeMohrenschildt was a geologist who tried to find it. The two then crossed paths. If Bush was so involved in the case and so worried about his connection with DeMohrenschildt, then why is there a public record of their correspondence? Surely, if Bush was concerned about it he wouldn’t have contacted him in any way and he would have found some way to destroy this type of incriminating record. Once again, let’s refer Mr. Baker back to DiEugenio’s wrecking ball:

    Bush made two replies to the 9/76 missive by the Baron. One was to his staff, which had forwarded the letter to him. These are rough bullet notes saying the following: that he did know DeMohrenschildt, that the Baron got involved with dealings in Haiti, that his name was prominent in the Oswald affair, that the Baron knew Oswald prior to the JFK murder, at one time DeMohrenschildt had money, Bush had not heard from him in years, and he was not sure what his role was in the JFK matter. (Baker, p. 267)

    On the whole this is accurate. But Baker takes issue with the last two points. Concerning the first, he says that Bush was in contact with the oil geologist in 1971, and that DeMohrenschildt had written Bush a note when he became GOP County Chair in 1973. Bush may or may not have gotten that note. If he did not, he had not heard from him in about six years. Concerning the last, if Bush was not in on the JFK plot, then in 1976, that was a quite defensible stance.

    Bush wrote the Baron a brief letter back saying he sympathized with his situation. But although there was media attention to his case, he could not find any official interest right then. He then said he wished he could do more, and then signed off. Considering the fact that Epstein and Oltmans were likely working off the books for Angleton, his observation about “official interest” was probably correct. Thus ended the Bush/Baron relationship. Almost like he knows he has very little here, Baker tags on some meandering scuttlebutt about a man named Jim Savage who delivered the Baron’s car to him in Palm Beach on his return from Amsterdam. It’s another of his Scrabble type name association games: Kerr-McGee, the FBI, Sun Oil, even the Pew family. ([Family of Secrets,] pgs. 275-277); (ibid; Section IV)

    But Baker isn’t finished with his performance. At 30:00 he states categorically that “the Baron” had said the following in his correspondence to Bush:

    “Perhaps I have been indiscrete in talking too much about Lee Harvey Oswald”…… Six months later George DeMohrenschildt was dead.

    I could not find this quote in the record. On the first page of his letter to Bush, DeMohrenschildt, briefly mentions he has been “behaving like a damn fool since my daughter died” and he has “tried to write stupidly and unsuccessfully about Lee Harvey Oswald and must have annoyed a lot of people.” It’s abundantly clear he is under duress at this time and the major cause of stress is not his writing about the case, it’s the death of his daughter. And he’s likely mentioning that those people who are annoyed were the ones wanting to give them his story.

    Because what Baker also ignores here is the people he was “annoying” were Willem Oltmans and author Edward Jay Epstein. These two were suspected intelligence assets of James Angleton, who was applying pressure to a slowly unraveling DeMohrenschildt. Of the two, Epstein had the more overt contact with Angleton and was the last person to see DeMohrenschildt alive. I would love to see if Baker could establish a close working relationship between Bush, Epstein, Oltmans, and Angleton—for any amount of money.

    Finally, as for the purported photo of Bush outside the Texas School Book Depository, if George was so high up the “monkey chain,” then why would he allow himself to be photographed in broad daylight outside of the alleged crime scene in the middle of an election campaign? Was he going for the insider’s who-shot-JFK minority-vote? Wouldn’t he be in radio contact at a safe-house or in a nearby building? This picture has been examined at JFK forums like Spartacus Educational from every angle and enlargement. It has met with universal disapproval of being Geroge H. W. Bush. Ventura takes a hit here. And it was wholly unnecessary. It’s also not cushioned by the impact of knowing that he’s going to end his show with none other than Saint John Hunt (as alluded to in his think-tank discussion meeting about the three tramps in which he named E. Howard Hunt as the “old tramp”). Ventura needs something to happen now, and it’s the last chance he’s really going to get.

    VII: Vince gets Minced

    After Baker’s lamentable appeareance, Ventura’s documentary now heads into its final quarter. Next up is Vincent Bugliosi. If Ventura nails it, he stands a good chance of weathering the storm whipped up by Hunt. If Ventura stumbles here, if he actually uses the documents provided by Ron (Fetzer), if he calls in Baker, or if he evokes Hunt, the party really is as good as over. Thankfully, when 33:10 rolls around, Ventura is out of the clutches of Baker, et al. He doesn’t even mention them in any way, shape, or form. Instead, he talks to Vince in an assertive yet polite fashion. And Bugliosi doesn’t handle it very well at all.

    For an extremely long time now, Bugliosi has been using the argument that the CIA or The Mob would be groggy to hire Oswald as a gunman. The point never properly asked of Bugliosi in any interview I’ve seen of him before is: “What serious person maintains he was even a shooter?” And Ventura’s point that he was a perfect patsy troubled Bugliosi greatly. In fact, Ventura was confirming for the world what researchers had known for a long time: namely, that Bugliosi can’t handle what he dishes out. Because when Bugliosi states that there is no evidence that Oswald was tied to the CIA or The Mob, Ventura shoots back the name of George DeMohrenschildt. And now Bugliosi starts to falter seriously. Just imagine if the scope had been widened further. The list of CIA affiliated suspects in Oswald’s life could fill pages. Indeed they have (The Paines anyone?). Vince asks the cameras to be shut off as Ventura has barely slipped into first gear.

    This is the sort of direct questioning that Tom Hanks, Bill Paxton, Steve Colbert, Alex Jones (yes, Alex Jones), and numerous other media demagogues have avoided with Bugliosi. Ventura shamed them all. In fact, he shamed an entire media state. In light of Hanks’ upcoming production of Bugliosi’s Oswald-did-it work, this is pure gold. And Bugliosi’s eventually asking for the camera to be turned off put Ventura back in the driving seat after the Baker debacle.

    What’s remarkable about all this is that by Bugliosi giving up the goose so quickly and in such a manner against Ventura, one can now see why he has never fronted up for a debate with heavyweights like Gary Aguilar and Jim DiEugenio, who (more than once) have both agreed to debate Bugliosi in a one-on-one moderated debate.

    Ventura’s outing of Bugliosi was so complete, a Bugliosi fan on YouTube wrote:

    Come on Vince WTF? I almost bought your book. I won’t now. You’re a crock of bull.

    Beezy2127

    VIII: On the Hunt for a Useful Idiot

    It is now 35:20 and we are into the last eight or nine minutes of the show. Prior to this you may recall that Ventura has picked out E. Howard Hunt as one of the three tramps of lore. There are some major problems with this. The other pictures depicting the tramps reveal he actually looks little like Hunt at all. Mark Lane never used the photos of Hunt in the Liberty Lobby trial in 1985 because he felt Hunt looked too old (amongst other things I shall discuss shortly). Plus the real identities of the tramps apparently were uncovered by Ray and Mary LaFontaine in one of the few interesting pieces of information they espoused in their below average book, Oswald Talked.

    Ventura’s insistence on using Hunt, his son, and the tramps issue has a major bearing on current research and some of the more prominent talking heads in its circles. This is furthered by the fact that Ventura managed to use people like Baker and Jim Fetzer in his documentary. So when Ventura falls for someone like Saint John Hunt, an interested party fresh to the situation may think that: a) All researchers are like this; b) Ventura has somehow seriously slipped up; c) Researchers cannot agree on anything; d) I’m going back to sleep.

    Hence the issue of Saint John Hunt is a very cloudy one. Indeed, an increasing number of people regard his story as calculated toxic smog. And like acid rain, Hunt hits the ground running. According to “our hero,” the Watergate burglars were going for a safe that contained evidence of Nixon’s role in Operation 40. If you skipped the entries about Nixon and this group you may want to revisit it about now, as Hunt is talking nonsense. Operation 40 was a pure CIA operation that was embedded secretly inside the Bay of Pigs plans—so much so that it would not be known to any president or vice-president. As is the idea of Operation 40 touring the world and killing people deemed dangerous to interests of the United States. There is no evidence Operation 40 operated outside of Cuban Operations in any way, shape, or form.

    But further, Ventura’s BS detector, which is usually pretty good, must have been turned off at this point. He never thought to ask the obvious question: “What the heck would Operation 40 plans be doing in the offices of Spencer Oliver or Larry O’Brien at the Democratic National Committee HQ?”

    E. Howard Hunt’s “confessional” naming of the villains has some exciting little pieces in it, and the names of Morales and Phillips (deservedly) raise some eyebrows. But they had done so well before Saint John ever wandered into town. Hunt’s old man then names Johnson at the top of a list. Of course, it’s just his opinion (like we really needed another one from him). He presents no real evidence for his claim. Furthermore, for those that had studied Hunt, Sr. for a long time, it was no surprise to them he’d give a garbled account of events. For instance, in a version of the story, he actually said that Frank Sturgis had invited him in to the plot but he declined. How Sturgis ever got mixed up with LBJ is never made clear. Nor is the fact that—as was made clear by Watergate—Hunt was Sturgis’ superior. Why would Sturgis reveal such a rogue operation to someone above him in the formal chain of command?

    Public opinion on Hunt in research circles has swung rather dramatically against him since those halcyon days in April 2007 when Rolling Stone‘s Erick Hildegard’s favorable article, The Last Confession of E. Howard Hunt, pushed Hunt onto the national stage. The following comments I found make for some revealing reading, in particular, Larry Hancock’s observation of the Hunt &amp Son / Kevin Costner charade:

    I shall not mince words. The LBJ “mastermind” characterization ranks as the most simple-minded, dangerous-to-the-truth hypothesis in the history of Kennedy assassination investigations. It is tantamount to proclaiming that a welder designed the Petronas Towers.” ~Charles Drago: Deep Politics Forum 20th November 2010

    As far as Howard Hunt’s confession goes, I don’t know if he is trustworthy. Without proof, his confession is meaningless; yet Ventura made it seem like the case was solved because Hunt said so. I did enjoy Ventura tearing lone nut theorist Bugliosi a new one. ~Matthew De Luca: JFK Lancer Forum 21st November 2010

    The national security establishment is properly deemed a RICO enterprise, using any appropriate asset beneath the 1948 statutory cloak of plausible denial. To the extent Saint John participates in the Art and Arts of E. Howard Hunt, he may be fulfilling his father’s intelligence operative strategy as much as merely sexing up his book for profit. ~Phil Dragoo: 19th October Murder Solved Forum 2010

    I never believed that Hunt would jeopardize himself by dressing as a tramp. He had no need to “get his hands dirty”. He wasn’t that type of guy. He was the type that had others do the dirty work while he drank his cognac and smoked his Cubans. ~Tom Jeffers: 19th October Murder Solved Forum 2010

    With opinions like this, it was clearly folly for Ventura to make E. Howard Hunt out to be a tramp and then portray Saint John Hunt be some kind of “fearful whistleblower.” For those of you who have read CTKA’s expose on Alex Jones and his poor understanding of the Kennedy assassination, Saint John Hunt’s line below is the most hilarious thing I have seen in the show—trumpeting anything from “Ron,” Baker, and the Wiz:

    The more sunlight that comes on to this, the more exposure I get in telling my story, puts me in a greater level of danger. … [sound of gunshot]

    This is coming from a man who made national headlines and has been pitching and selling his father’s “rehashed” story (not to mention nude images of his wife) over the Internet for the better part of some three years. Hence, his fears about exposure seem about as sincere as his father’s confession. JFK Lancer’s Larry Hancock provided the best outline of the problems facing Hunt, his credibility, and the style of show Ventura uses as a vehicle:

    Unfortunately most of you (and none of the TV audience) were there at the Lancer Conference where David Giamarco presented for almost two hours on his and Kevin Costner’s multi-year odyssey with Hunt that was the precursor to this story. In the end, after spending immense amounts of time with Hunt they became completely negative on his whole story and could get nothing from him that would substantiate his sketchy outline of a plot. I’ve tried to deconstruct this particular tangent in the new edition of Someone Would Have Talked, but it’s such a good fiction tale, evil Johnson and insanely jealous former husband Cord Meyer, combine to kill JFK that it sells. ~Larry Hancock; JFK Lancer Forum, 23rd November 2010

    IX: Conclusion

    Ventura ends the show with a breakdown of the presidents that followed JFK. It’s unclear why he does this. Does he truly believe all were involved? He was decidedly tepid with Nixon in the beginning. Had something changed? It’s no big deal Bush and Ford held senior positions, and it’s no big deal Ford made Bush the head of the CIA. It’s implied that they had somehow earned their place at the table via their roles in the Kennedy assassination. Well, I don’t know how much these two actually have to be grateful about. Ford inherited a doomed administration while George’s tenure at the CIA and his perceived cozy relationship with America’s elite dogged him for the rest of his political career.

    Thus, in the end, it’s a very close call on this show. The silly introduction and the use of the likes of Russ Baker, “Ron,” and Saint John Hunt contributed in handicapping important parts and episodes. As did the production, pitch, and approach of the show itself. That is, the very fast-paced, moving camera style that has been so pervasive since the advent of MTV—and which Fox has made a staple of TV shows everywhere. Needless to say, Len Osanic and many of the show’s supporters are correct: For all its problems, it was a far better attempt at getting to the truth than anything thrown at us from the Discovery or History Channels in recent years. Furthermore, there were no lame Mob-did-it angles, nor did Ventura indulge in the Zapruder film and body alteration guff. Ventura, crippled by a poor investigative staff, was still able (through sheer force of personality alone) to pull it out of the fire. Prouty’s, Newman’s, and Marrs’ cameos were timely, and Ventura interacted well with all of them. Ventura’s shooting practice was both entertaining and enlightening. And “The Wiz’s” doubts about the official line on Oswald (not to mention his fascination for sixties-era wooden flooring) were fascinating, especially in light of his official duties.

    Ventura’s handling of Marina Oswald, though a bit “fluffy,” brought out her suspicions of DeMohrenschildt and Oswald’s ties to the agency. Adding to this, Ventura handled the question of the backyard photo well. Vince Bugliosi’s reclaiming histrionic implosion on camera—perhaps the highlight of the program—will live long in the memory. As will Ventura’s closing statement about not being allowed to film in Arlington, and his condemnation of the single-bullet line.

    The real question harks back to the beginning of the essay and Dick Russell. Had Russell been involved, I have no doubt Ventura’s margin of success would have been wider. In fact, it probably would have been quite good. Why he was not involved means either one of two things. He wasn’t approached, or he didn’t like the direction they were taking with it. I know for a fact that John Armstrong declined to appear because of the show’s deficiencies. Why did the producers settle for a mere pass when it could have been “top of the class?”

  • Michael Shermer Strikes (Out) Again: Review of Michael Shermer’s CBC documentary, Conspiracy Rising


    “In every case, the chance for complete information is very small, and the hope that in time researchers, students, and historians will be able to ferret out truth from untruth, real from unreal, and story from cover story is at best a very slim one. Certainly, history teaches us that one truth will add to and enhance another; but let us not forget that one lie added to another lie will demolish everything. This is the important point…Consider the past half century. How many major events – really major events – have there been that simply do not ring true? How many times has the entire world been shaken by alarms of major significance, only to find that the events either did not happen at all, or if they did, that they had happened in a manner quite unlike the original story? The mystery behind all of this lies in the area we know as ‘clandestine activity’, ‘intelligence operations’, ‘secrecy’, and ‘cover stories’ used on a national and international scale. It is the object of this book to bring reality and understanding into this vast unknown area.”

    – Colonel L. Fletcher Prouty, Colonel, U.S. Air Force, The Secret Team


    It has been several decades since those words were written by the late-great Mr. Prouty. This goes way back when to before there existed cell phones, Twitter, Facebook, 24-hour news cycles, and most of all, the internet. What Prouty originally described as being a “vast unknown area” has become infinitely vaster, infinitely more secretive…yet infinitely more widely known about and exposed for all the masses to question in their minds. It’s a dichotomy of wooly mammoth proportions. It has become the 10,000 lb. elephant in the room; everybody knows it’s there, but nobody dares point it out. Especially not our media organizations.

    But wait how does that make sense? How can something become more widely known yet remain a secret at the same time? It’s largely a matter of being able to see the forest for the trees. (And what with so much clear-cutting going on in the world, the big picture has never been clearer.) In previous decades, we didn’t know that any such huge covert element even existed. At least now we know. That, in my opinion, is great progress. Not only is the Emperor not wearing any clothes, the fig leaf he uses appears to be embarrassingly tiny! But in this case, the Emperor is not any one single person. It’s a group effort; a movement.

    How do we know the elephant exists in the room? Well, that’s pretty simple: because never before have we experienced such a full-force onslaught of disinformation, propaganda, and censorship as we have is recent years. Yes, I said censorship. When media organizations and individuals alike are expressly ordered to not publish or report on certain stories, and they respond, instead, by carting out the typical smoke screen cover story…that is censorship.

    When other parties are called in to disseminate false or inaccurate information, distorted evidence, or unfactual information over top of it, this amounts to a clever game of mop-up. Censorship sets you up with the jab, and the disinformation campaigns knock you out with the big right hand uppercut. It’s that uppercut that keeps you down on the canvas and in la-la land. These mop up efforts come in the form of books, blogs, newspaper articles, TV documentaries, film documentaries, and of course, bogus museums.

    If you ever doubted for a second that the American rightwing was in complete charge, you can now put that question to rest. There are so many things that point to this all-out take-over that it’s downright chilling. The military and all of its various secret government agencies are bigger, stronger, richer, and more powerful than ever before. They are now the caboose that runs the locomotive.

    I don’t know of many left-wing military “hawks” or if such an animal even exists; the Kennedys have been vilified, while Reagan has been resurrected and glorified; corporations, CEOs, and billionaires have never had it better. Again, I don’t know of too many Wall Street executives who would be caught dead supporting a Democrat, or even an independent. Simply put, it goes against their own best interests. Why pay a tax rate of 35%, 25%, or even 1%…when you can get away with paying no taxes at all! Why be forced by pesky unions to pay your workers $20/hr, including job security, overtime, and pension provisions…when you can close down your plant, send those jobs to China, and pay someone $20 a week!

    I found the following statement in Michael Shermer’s CBC documentary Conspiracy Rising, quite telling. The statement was: “conspiracy theorists threaten democracy”. And, in fact, this is one of the strongest, most explicit themes in the show. In fact, I don’t think I have ever seen this message made so clearly. Namely that the rise of conspiracy thinking can and will lead inevitably to the rise of Nazi terrorism as with the Klan or as in Germany itself. Not kidding at all, this is what the show depicts. See, I’d say the rise of this kind of thinking and digging for facts threatens fascism – which explains the heavy handed efforts at disinformation and propaganda we’ve been witnessing of late. Of which this show, and Shermer himself, are prime examples.

    This is no accident; no mere blip. This is the way that power brokers and money men have restructured the system, and they like it this way. But they can’t do it on their own. They need help, in the way of relief pitchers. A mop-up crew.

    The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) began in 1936 as CBC radio. One of its main objectives was to provide important news and information to people who lived on the outskirts of this massive country of Canada. People who lived out on the far coasts, or up north in the Yukon, were more-or-less cut off from the rest of society, unlike those who lived in the bigger cities to the south e.g. Toronto and Montréal. It was the CBC who would keep these people in touch, first with radio, and later in the early 1960’s, with television. It was a way of unifying the country by keeping all citizens in touch.

    As a Canadian, I continue to seek out the CBC when I’m after accurate, in-depth journalistic pieces. Or even the BBC. But I sure as hell don’t seek out any of the American outlets. What’s the difference? Well, on the CBC, you might hear the journalists asking: “Have Bush and Cheney started two phony wars for profit and power?” By contrast, on a typical American news channel, you would hear: “And President Bush was seen wearing a handsome grey suit today as he was exiting Air Force One. It was a beautiful suit. I think I’ll go out today and buy myself one just like it. And now…let’s have a weather update!”

    It can be argued that the American media only see things in black or white…but at least Bush’s suit contained some shades of gray. Better than nothing.

    Now, let us fast forward to a headline in the Huffington Post, dated December 14, 2010: “My Day in Dealey Plaza: Why JFK Was Killed by a Lone Assassin” by Michael Shermer.

    Now also on that day appeared in this blog in bold headlines: “Michael Shermer making documentary about ‘conspiracy theories’ for CBC”.

    Oh, and just for the hell of it, here’s yet another article of Shermer’s which appeared in the Huffington Post: “9/11 ‘Truthers’ a Pack of Liars”.

    Now, this is the same Huffington Post which told Jesse Ventura in no uncertain terms: “We don’t do 9/11.” Yet they let Michael Shemer get away with a title like that? The almost humorous irony here is that in his documentary under discussion, Shermer actually complains that the new media, the Internet, can lead to the fatal Fascist disease of conspiracy thinking. Well, that sure won’ t happen at Huffington Post, not with Michael Shermer and Arianna Huffington around.

    Well, gee willies, Shermer sure gets a lot of exposure on the Huffington Post, doesn’t he? I mean, it’s almost like they’re seeking him out! I wouldn’t be surprised to see the following notice on their website.

    “This is an open standing offer to Michael Shermer. We will print whatever you want, whenever you want! Our loyalty is not to our readers, or to journalism, or to our share holders our main concern is to make sure your message gets out to the world! We won’t edit your stuff…hell, we don’t even have to read it. We’ll just print it as is. Will you please call us, Michael? Pretty please? Pretty please with sugar on top?

    Sincerely,

    Your friends at the Huffington Post

    Now, in that spirit, here are some upcoming articles we might expect.

    “Michael Shermer eats an apple!”
    “Michael Shermer ties his shoelaces!”
    “Michael Shermer goes out grocery shopping!”
    “Michael Shermer gets a tan!”

    Let’s get back to the pitching analogy. The “team” needed a mop-up crew, and who could they get? Well, Dave Reitzes was away being McAdams’ New Orleans expert; Von Pein was being benched for using growth hormone. Not on himself but on his fried chickens; John McAdams? we can’t get him because he’s working on a book so who’s left? Gary Mack? Nope, we can’t get Mack – he’s just plain exhausted from trying to cut down that large tree on Elm Street which blocks the view from the 6th floor window. So who’s left? The coach now escorts Michael Shermer to the mound.

    “Steeee-riiiikkke!”

    Shermer knows how to throw strikes. Well, if truth be told, we’ll never know if any of these guys can or not. Because if they ever balked, or had their pitches belted out of the park, the New Media, that is the Daily Beast or Huffpo would not note it. They’d just turn around and let Michael write an article in the Huffington Post, or come out with a book, blog, or television documentary to tell you that the ball never actually exited the park for a home run, that it was all a misunderstanding; an optical illusion; that the sun was in peoples’ eyes; that they actually struck the guy out. “You see, everybody only thought they saw a home run.” Obviously, those 35,000 fans in attendance, not to mention all of the dozens of news cameras strategically located around the park, were mistaken. They misremembered. It was a “flashbulb” memory completely unreliable. You know just like the Zapruder film! And by the way, Shermer uses that analogy of Flashbulb Memories in this documentary, just like Posner did to criticize that good documentary The Lost JFK Tapes. And Posner did that where? In The Daily Beast. Before they canned him for being a plagiarist. When in fact, he was much worse. He was a liar.

    Lie goes to the runner. Oops, I mean tie.

    Shermer’s “Flashbulb Memories” theory got me wondering. My father died in 1983 of a brain aneurysm. I have many great memories of my father. Or at least I think I do. Because according to Michael Shermer, I can’t really be sure that my father ever existed. Michael tells me that my memories are unreliable. Was that my father…or some neighbour who just kind of sort of resembled my father? Michael, can you help me with this? Was that really my father I remember, or was my brain playing tricks on me? Have I misremembered? Can you help me to connect the dots?

    The CBC “documentary,” titled Conspiracy Rising is just another orchestrated disinformation campaign much like McAdams’ recent book. No difference. Well, there is one difference. The show was hosted, presented and narrated by Ann-Marie MacDonald. Unlike the vast majority of pieces put out by the CBC, where the reporting is done in a straight-up, well-researched and impartial manner, Ms. MacDonald does a surprising thing very unbecoming of a “serious journalist”. She puts inflections in her voice so as to impugn the object at hand that is to be ridiculed.

    And the ridicule is non-stop, in every direction. From the choice of talking heads—Jim Angleton’s pal Chip Berlet no less—to the swirling of topics in a blender—Marilyn Monroe meets Roswell meets 9-11 meets JFK meets faked moon landing meets death of Diana meets world trade agreements meets Obama’s birth certificate meets David Icke’s reptile people, etc. As if they are all equal in importance and standard of proof adduced.

    Now whom does Shermer trot out to be the representative of the conspiracy side? Well remember who Shermer is. Would he use say John Newman on the JFK case? Or Mike Ruppert on 9-11? Nope. That would be fair. He wants to be unfair and ridiculous. So he brings in the overbearing, non-discriminating demagogue Alex Jones. And then to top if off, Shermer inserts the “Oh it’s all psychological, people need conspiracies to support themselves from facts they cannot accept stuff.” Its all been said before by Shermer. And this is just a cheap rehash. Except the danger of fascism angle has never been more virulent as it is here.

    The show couldn’t resist but to levy the same old tried-and-true “tin foil hats” remark when referring to people who suspect a conspiracy. Shermer even says he’s challenged people who believe in UFO’s to produce evidence and how they can’t respond. Fricking UFO’s and aliens, Michael? Michael, why don’t you challenge people in the JFK community? Michael? Are you there? Where’d he go?

    But is this a wholesale sell-out by the CBC? I doubt it. More likely, it’s a reflection of how the CIA itself operates; where the left hand doesn’t know what the right hand is doing; where individual agents go about their assignments in a bubble, not knowing what other agents are doing or even if there are other agents.

    But clearly, somebody at the CBC was receptive to Shermer’s advances; someone at the CBC had either already been aware of, or had been made aware of Shermer’s ongoing mission; otherwise he wouldn’t have gotten the gig…and the CBC wouldn’t have forked out the necessary budget allotment. Right? Clearly, someone at the CBC decided that this was bigger than any one individual; that it was the continuation of a team effort.

    Now, if you ask me who first phoned who to get the process rolling, I can’t say. But it is striking how Shermer continues to get the red carpet treatment from various news organizations. Isn’t it?

    “Michael Shermer making documentary about ‘conspiracy theories’ for CBC”. Very interesting announcement from the Huffington Post, no less. This is the same Huffington Post who refused to carry Jesse Ventura’s articles about 9/11. Then there’s Mark Lane, who can’t find a publisher for his book. Jesse Ventura sees episodes of his “Conspiracy Theories” pulled. “The Men Who Killed Kennedy” gets banned for all time by A&E. L. Fletcher Prouty’s “The Secret Team” gets mysteriously “unpublished” overnight by the CIA. Oliver Stone gets personally maligned, and his film JFK gets mercilessly slammed by the media…before it’s even released!

    No problems here. Or as Leslie Nielson would say with the building burning behind him, “Nothing to see here.”

    (Ever smiling)Michael Shermer begins by saying that people just can’t accept the fact that a great man like the president of the United States could be killed by a nobody such as Oswald.

    Not so, Michael; your premise is incorrect. Oswald was a somebody. In fact…he was super-human! Because according to Shermer’s logic (but more importantly, according to the president’s wounds) Oswald shot at JFK from behind him on the 6th floor, then he ran out and shot him in the throat from the front, then he ran over and shot him from the grassy knoll, then he ran back into the TSBD and had a Coke all within a few short seconds! With that type of speed Oswald could have made mince meat out of unworthy pretenders like Usain Bolt or Jesse Owens. Or The Flash. Or The Roadrunner.

    (Ever Smiling) Michael Shermer is always fond of theorizing about how people are prone to “misremembering” events, and how they are incapable of “connecting the dots properly”. Well, this just exposes how Shermer must obviously have done precious little research into the assassination. Because if he had, he’d know that Oswald was a radar operator for the U2 spy flight missions. Radar operators often use Morse code which is made up of a series of dots and dashes. So in other words…it was Oswald’s job to literally connect the dots properly! Take that, Michael!

    For shame, Michael! At least Mack, McAdams, Reitzes, and Von Pein are up to speed on the facts of the case. Of course, the fact that their life’s mission appears to be to subvert, mangle, misrepresent, and conceal those facts is altogether a separate issue. Come on, Michael…get in the game! A team only wins if every player puts out 110%! No team wants a teammate out there that the rest of the team has to carry.

    Just take a look at who Shermer consults in any of his puppet show/slide presentations available on the internet, or even on this documentary. Does he speak with Jim DiEugenio? Mark Lane? the Dallas doctors? Jim Douglas? David Mantik? Abraham Bolden? No, no, no, no, no, and no. The list goes on. Instead, Shermer invariably seeks out the expertise of a freelance “tour guide” in Dealey Plaza and tourists! Is this where you go to get your facts, Michael? But of course, (Ever Smiling) Michael Shermer prefers it that way. It allows him to make a mockery out of the whole thing, without having to answer tough questions. Or any questions at all, for that matter.

    He slips in, makes a mockery, and slips out again but seldom without his trusty cameraman nearby filming the whole thing. If Shermer could ever dispel even one of the dozens of proven facts that blow the Warren Commission fairy tale out of the water it would be so refreshing. Perhaps then he might be taken seriously. But as you’ll notice…he never once does this. Not once. Not a single time. Never. It is not in his mission statement. Ka-ching! Your check is in the mail, Michael.

    In my original review of Michael Shermer, I suggested the title of his magazine should be changed from Skeptic to Denier But now I think it should be changed to “Septic”. That’s because every time one of these disinfo artists has a bowel movement (inevitably disguised as a book, article, blog, slide show, museum, or documentary)…the rest of us are reduced to having to review, well, a bowel movement! It’s not unlike sorting through your dog’s stool with a stick when you think he may have swallowed a foreign object. And I don’t mean a “pink poodle” either, Mr. McAdams: this excrement leaves a pile of Brontosaurus proportions.

    But back to the documentary for a second. If you’ve noticed, I’ve spent very little time talking about it. That’s because it’s not worth talking about! There’s one thing that did give me great laughs. And that is when Shermer tells us that what conspiracy theories do is give us a dopamine hit! Aw, come on, now, Michael! Like it’s not enough that our brains don’t work and we can’t remember things properly – are you now telling us that we’re dope addicts too! Sheesh! The show even ends with “quiz”. Just answer the questions to see if you, too, are well, a conspiracy theorist!

    You won’t be surprised to know that Gary Mack offers up his opinion in this show. Mack says: “I’ve long believed, personally, that there was more to it than Lee Harvey Oswald. I just can’t prove it. And I don’t know anyone who can.”

    WRONG!

    Gary, allow me to present a list of FACTS that ARE proveable.

    • JFK was shot in the throat from the front
    • The “stretcher bullet” arrived at FBI HQ before the FBI agent delivered it
    • The most botched autopsy in history was conducted by inexperienced pathologists and was directed and controlled, not by medical protocol, but by military personnel who were yelling out orders of what to do and what not to do
    • The president’s brain was and is missing
    • The man who took the photos of Kennedy’s brain says he did not take them
    • Oswald was seen on lower floors during the time of the shooting
    • The condition of CE 399
    • Most of the Dallas doctors could not recognize the head wounds that they were later shown as having been the same as they had originally witnessed and treated
    • Several people expressed foreknowledge of the assassination
    • There were fake “agents” in Dealey Plaza
    • The Zapruder film

    And that’s only a partial list. I’m sure Gary would have little difficulty fleshing it out…to about ten times it’s current size. Just one of the items on that list would be sufficient to prove that Oswald was set up. But to have literally dozens and dozens? That sort of stuff just doesn’t happen in the real world. But this ain’t the real world we’re talking about here. Remember what I said earlier? It’s a review of the latest in a series of bowel movements. Hey, somebody’s got to do it. And Jim DiEugenio asked me to. Maybe he’s anti-Canadian? Whoops, another conspiracy theory.

    By Mack saying, “I’ve long believed, personally, that there was more to it than Lee Harvey Oswald. I just can’t prove it. And I don’t know anyone who can.” is just Mack taking the chump’s way out. Mack assures us that the case can’t be proved. Even though he surely know better. So what does Mack do instead? He uses this as justification to go ahead to put out KNOWN FALSITIES about the case! That’s like an paleontologist saying: “Well, all we have here are dinosaur bones … but we have no actual living dinosaurs. So, therefore, dinosaurs don’t exist.”

    I must give full credit to Gary, however. In Jesse Ventura’s Conspiracy Theory television show, Jesse asked Mack if he could imagine himself prognosticating about the JFK assassination over a beer a proposition that Mack enthusiastically accepted. This surely must have been gut-wrenchingly difficult for Mack. He was probably thinking to himself: “Beer? What’s with the beer? Everybody knows I prefer three shots.”

    From 1964 until 1968 there was a television show called “The Man from U.N.C.L.E.” It was all about spies, counterspies, secret agencies, disinformation, mercenaries for hire, double-agents, people in high places mounting wide-spread propaganda campaigns, and intelligence gathering. Contrary to popular belief, the original working title was not “The Man from D.U.N.K.L.E.” And I got that straight from Wikipedia – John McAdams’ own personal fiefdom!

    As you all know, McAdams cites Mack as being his “voice of sanity,” so  I don’t think McAdams would have steered Mack wrong about this. However, Gary very nearly did figure in another popular show from the 60’s – “McAdams’ Family”. Who could ever forget that memorable theme song with the snapping fingers?

    “They have a 6th Floor muse-um

    But nobody does believe ‘em

    It’s Reitzes, Mack, and Von Pe-in

    McAdams’ Family!”

    To see this one, click below.

    http://www.disclose.tv/action/viewvideo/91169/Conspiracy_Rising___Full_Documentary_/

    The most uplifting part of this whole exercise was certainly not the documentary itself, but the comments log beneath the show as seen above, and the CBC trailer here:

    http://www.cbc.ca/doczone/episode/conspiracy-rising-1.html

    There are dozens of pretty fantastic and excellent posts down there. What it proves, beyond a reasonable doubt, is that nobody not Michael Shermer, not Gary Mack, and not even the CBC is fooling anybody with this type of shameless propaganda.

  • JFK and the Majestic Papers: The History of a Hoax, Conclusion



    Part 7: Conclusion

    We have covered some extensive ground with JFK and MJ-12. We effectively started out in Hollywood, journeyed into space and then returned to Dallas. So how to summarize all of this within a page or two was always going to be a challenge. But at least I hope the reader has learned the following:

    1. The Monroe-JFK-MJ-12 documents, which the Woods’ back to the hilt, are fraudulent. Yet they still persist in championing their authenticity, even after the original owner, Timothy Cooper, disowned them as a prank. Jim Marrs, author of Alien Agenda and one of the few JFK researchers to ever entertain the Monroe-JFK-MJ-12 document/s, has been very inconsistent in his appraisal of them. Marijane Grey proves conclusively that Monroe was not obsessed with the Kennedys, nor did the diaries she kept throughout her life contain anything more than appointments and brief details, which makes a mockery of her being murdered for any of her personal writings.
    1. In the research notes I assembled, and in an earlier draft, I hoped to show that JFK had no particular interest in UFO’s. The remaining JFK-MJ-12 documents, like the Monroe-JFK-MJ-12, are also hoaxes. In particular, the celebrated ‘Scorched/Burnt Memo’ which supposedly laid the grounds for Kennedy’s assassination. Kennedy’s disinterest in the topic may have come from finding out about Dulles’ games, or Dulles could have even shot the breeze when the relationship was more cordial. Red herrings and ‘pitfalls’ in the case were discussed with looking into Cabell and Prouty on the topic of UFO’s. Bar some interesting links between Oswald, the J Reilly Coffee Company and NASA that Jim Garrison discovered and the fact that Dulles’associate and UFO philanthropist and disinformation conduit Arthur Young was Michael Paines stepfather there’s really nothing to see here folks.
    1. Perhaps the most fun part of the series was coming across the Woods’ hilarious replies about Cooper’s failed lie detector test, and then coming to grips with how deluded the Woods really are. Why they never thought (like a good many ufologists did) to compare Colby’s actual handwriting with the document in question is beyond me. That they hired remote viewers to find out about how truthful Cooper was should be beyond anybody.
    1. Linda Moulton Howe and Bob Wood were always going to have a party. Sure enough the two trashed the house, and further each other’s credibility permanently with their utterly inept examinations of the tell-all ‘Scorched/Burnt’ and ‘Colby’ memos.
    1. A curious predicament has befallen Ufology, those hunting for scam artists and hoaxsters are also trying to weed out the disinformation from the very chaff these schemers lay. Indeed the ersatz efforts and wild discourse have helped mask and convolute the role of individuals like Collins and his underlings like Doty and Cooper– who helped Hollywood out on their next big venture. All the while they have attempted to embroil two very well-known and highly suspect individuals, Allen Dulles and James Angleton, with all manner of UFO tomfoolery, which is counter to the reality of what Dulles himself created.
    1. Guss Russo, long time ‘Lone Nut’ ambassador, got caught up with UFO’s but inadvertently got caught with pants down. Denying any and all forms of CIA malfeasance in the JFK case (and their spreading of disinformation) has been his and his partners’ (Dave Perry and John McAdams) main aims in the disinformation game. As has been aligning the Kennedy assassination with Ufology. Yet Russo was quite happy to hang out with some of Ufology’s worst, and in doing so discuss US intelligence playing games in the UFO field.

    What’s ironic is that Russo and his buddies, bar one or two barbs hurled at Marrs for entertaining the JFK-MJ-12 documents, were just as bad as he was and never saw the need to castigate or investigate the Collins, Doty and Cooper, the people behind the documents. The reason for doing so is remarkably transparent. To oust these people would be an admission that at least one US intelligence agency was running a disinformation campaign aimed at trivializing the Kennedy assassination in the aftermath of Stone’s film JFK. For in exposing these assets in the former, they ran the risk of exposing themselves in the latter.

    In Preamble I, I briefly discussed the bad blood existing between the DIA and CIA and their disputes over the USAF. There is a possibility that in muddying the waters of the Kennedy assassination that the documents do seem to have one or two jabs at the CIA within them. CIA disinformation rarely, if ever, implicates themselves in anything. It’s usually, Johnson, Mob, Cuba, not to mention the classic Kennedy had blowback coming to him for something. But then again it could still be CIA all the way, or some sort of ‘fruity’ salad all outputting the BS.


    Organic Self Sustaining Disinformation, the Best Kind.

    While trying vainly to wrap this whole thing up I consistently found myself going over my notes and returning to points I made at the very beginning of this exercise.

    In the Preambles one will note how I discussed the CIA’s playing both sides of the UFO equation, effectively marginalizing those voices asking the real questions about the CIA’s manipulation of UFO’s e.g. Leon Davidson. In Parts I till now you would have seen this initiative mutate into associating UFO’s with JFK researchers. But it failed to divide assassination researchers over a JFK-UFO link, nor have the two groups ‘joined at the hip’. After the film, they merely planted their usual little disinformation seeds on both sides of the Kennedy debate, while sending an invitation for Ufologists to join it. They then sat back and watched as an assortment of UFO crazies, new age pseudo leftists, and the Libertarian right grew into weeds effectively burying the much smaller Kennedy research base with their own vivid imaginings. The free market, which appealed to and exploited these appetites, has long been exploited by the CIA and its rival agencies. The UFO detour into the Kennedy quadrant was simply a detour for this longstanding operation and was achieved with relative ease. The hype surrounding the X-Files is a case in point as Coppens writes in his article ‘Alien Overlords’

    The drive that the government – and specifically the CIA – is involved in an “alien cover-up” was paramount throughout the 1990s, popularised by the existence of “The X Files”, which in the eyes of the UFO community seemed to “validate” them.

    While I wholeheartedly agree with Coppens that it gave Ufologists a ‘voice’ (and a lousy one at that), the X-Files article he linked it too was extremely poor. It lacked any of Coppens skeptical analysis in his previous articles and exemplified why he contributes to Nexus and is friends with the likes of David Hatcher Childress. Coppens praises the courage of the shows of director Chris Carter and their pioneering qualities (despite his mentioning of Doty’s consultancy in the show). Now the X-Files pioneered something alright, but it wasn’t ‘positive’. Furthermore, the X-Files didn’t spark the ‘conspiracy’ subculture; it was Stone’s JFK. And evidence suggests this ‘subculture’ was created purely as a reaction to Stone’s film in an attempt to conflate the Kennedy assassination (a stand alone event wholly unrelated to UFO’s) with all manner of tabloid fantasies.

    Now, I don’t buy this ‘lighten up it’s only a show’ line. Programs like the X-Files and others have subverted real inquiry into real issues for purely entertainment and disinformation purposes. (And it culmianted in silliness like Men In Black.) Stories based around fake UFO abductions, which were apparently covered on the show, albeit as an aside, yet The X-Files hammered Aliens as real most of the time. It their audiences look for truth in carefully marketed and designed myths, and quite clearly put the idea out there that anybody thinking such a thing, or that Kennedy was killed by the ‘Cancer Man’ in the Storm Drain must be a fan of the show or a ‘conspiracy theorist’. The large amounts of people who have told (note ‘told’, most X-Files UFO types never ask serious researchers anything) me of this last ludicrous idea is considerable. I have even had someone tell me in all seriousness the cancer man ‘did it’.

    Films like Z, The Parallax View and JFK were never intended for this sort of thing. Costa Gavras, Alan Pakula and Stone took big commercial risks in presenting such ugly, fearful and most of all, real, views of the world we live in. The individuals in their films saw conspirators as faceless and sinister ‘gods’ whose only goal was control of control itself. In The X-Files we can see that the elite conspirators are doing so in a ruthless yet benign fashion to bide time in preventing an imminent Alien invasion of Earth (which was the major plot arch of the series).

    If that premise isn’t selling the hoary old ‘elites know best’ ‘have a plan’ or they do what they do ‘for the common good’, I don’t know what is. People also forget that the series was a fantastic advertisement for the FBI, and they aided in the show’s development.To this endI’ll give the reader a quote discussing one of the nineties most undeserving heroes, namely The X-files creator, Chris Carter from page 83 of Greg Bishop’s book Project Beta: The Story of Paul Benewitz, National Security, and the Creation of a Modern UFO Myth (thanks to Steve Snider for bringing it my attention):

    After the final season of the show, X-Files producer Chris Carter was reportedly spotted at the Los Angeles FBI shooting range. Which makes one wonder who was courting whom?

    Contrast Carter’s hassle-free ride he received in the press for his shows, with what Stone got after JFK. There were no reports of Stone hanging out at the FBI shooting range after JFK’s run in the theatres ended. Hence it’s safe to say I think the question of who has more ‘manna’ is pretty darn obvious. Kennedy’s death won’t lead anyone to little green men, but it may lead us to the man whom, in large part likely helped create them, Allen Dulles. Who probably would have been something of a fan of X-Files. After all, he was part of that Elite the show depicts as benign.

    Thus we return to the problems discussed at the very beginning of this essay. Why are there balanced debates about the greatest questions of our time ‘is there a God’ and/or ‘are we alone out there’. Yet Tom Hanks jumps on board the Bugliosi ‘lone nut’ band wagon and Leonardo DiCaprio gets involved in Lamar Waldron’s lame and unfounded conspiracy musings? Neither initiative brings any balance to the table, nor valid discussion. If life ‘out there’, is such a concern for the CIA, why have they tried to associate and mock serious JFK researchers as being aspiring Ufologists since the sixties. And why whenever something concerning the assassination and/or other important events gets notoriety, UFO’s suddenly get bandied around in the press?

    The big lie that X-Files spouted was that the ‘Truth is out there’. The reality is that the ‘Truth is really within us’. Once we strip away the hype from the myths we can see who is behind them, and if their points are worthy of pursing or not. Ultimately, when it comes down to conspiracy, I am an ardent advocate of the late Carl Ogelsby’s comment with regards to the Kennedy assassination: “We must be careful of running off into the ether of our imaginations.”In particular nowadays, when it is precisely our imaginations that are being targeted by intelligence inspired, consumer driven conspiracy nonsense like the JFK-MJ-12 hoax. The ‘Truth’ in matters of conspiracy is usually far stranger, yet more banal, than the fiction.


    Special Thanks

    During the course of this project two people who would have been rather interested in its outcomes CH and TS passed away. I didn’t know either as well as I would have liked and found out about their interests in SETI and UFO’s respectively much too late. CH whom I met through his associates CM and GH had in fact given myself a lot of support over the ten years I’ve known him in various endeavours. With particular relevance to this assignment my very good friend and now draft editor for much of my CTKA work JS lost her brother TS, a person also deeply interested in the UFO field. What added to the sadness was that they both witnessed the famous Kaikoura light shows of the seventies as children, which left an indelible imprint on them. My thoughts and feelings go out to CM, GH and JS for their loss, not to mention, a big ‘thanks’ for all their help.

  • JFK and the Majestic Papers: The History of a Hoax, Part 6



    Part 6: Gus Russo “Phone Home”

    “Fly me to moon let me play among the stars.”

    ~ Frank Sinatra, 1964; ‘It Might as Well Be Swing’


    I agree with Robert Hastings that ‘Reality Uncovered’ (a well-known moderate UFO site) and its co-founder, Ryan Dube, deserve accolades for exposing some of the shenanigans of Collins and his crew. In particular with regards to Angleton and more recently with regard to Doty’s backing of the utterly asinine Project SERPO, not to mention their toughness concerning hoaxers and cheats. I also like their line, which appears to be that ‘yes there may well be extra-terrestrials but there’s too much garbage in the way to see it clearly at the moment’.

    But I also agree with Hastings: they have picked up some rather nasty fugazys along the way. One ‘fugazy’ is Gus Russo, who seemed to have charmed his way into their midst back in 2007. It’s hugely ironic that a poster by the name of Mike Jamieson, whose moniker is ‘Clearly Discerns Reality’ makes the following comment about Russo’s upcoming appearance on the site:

    Isn’t this GR an investigative reporter with fringe theories on JFK’s death, etc?

    In his rather uniquely misguided way, our dear Mr. Jamieson is correct. Gus Russo is indeed an advocate of ‘fringe theories’. Like the magic bullet for starters. That Oswald was an agent of Castro for two, and the utterly unproven ‘theory’ that Castro had JFK killed because of his brother Robert’s against Fidel.

    That Ryan Dube (co-founder of the site with Steve Broadbent, and a sensible guy) bought into the Russo charm offensive and his ‘zany’ theories, enough to promote them in his follow up post to Jamieson, this is a prime example of what happens to even the most discerning in ufology circles. Their scope is simply too big. The broader one’s scope in any research becomes, the more one opens themselves up to all manner of untruths in some other sphere like the Kennedy assassination. (Or perhaps myself in venturing into the UFO one.)

    With a bit of delving prior to Russo’s appearance, Dube (whom we shall return to in a bit) would have seen that Gus Russo is a man who had been so badly discredited in the JFK fold by groups like CTKA, that he had to find a new home chasing ubiquitous false leads (or endorsing them for his nefarious purposes) like the Aviary. Hence, I advise, any Russo cynic to have a read of these excellent articles by Jim DiEugenio ‘Who is Gus Russo’() and ‘Inside the Target Car: Part Three() which will give the reader some important background as to Russo’s dabbling in and around the Kennedy assassination up to 2003.

    Russo’s debut turn in the ET arena began with an interesting article about government assets currently circulating around the UFO field. This paid some attention to Richard Doty and his ongoing contacts in US intelligence circles. However, his version of the modern day ‘Aviary’ made no mention of Cooper and only gave a small mention to Collins as Doty’s co-author. In so doing, Russo, who made his bones in the ‘JFK’ delta, inexplicably avoided any mention of the fake JFK-MJ-12 documents, an area one would think a researcher like himself would have tried to unravel, or at least should have while they were in their heyday.

    Instead, Russo dismissively calls them the “MJ-12 documents of old” without a second glance. Okay, Russo may well have been moving forward from his embarrassing foray into JFK, and his article on Doty does hit the target (not very hard when considering the bloated and slow moving blimp that Bob Hastings, Don Ecker, Greg Bishop, Pilkington, Greenwood, Dube and others helped make Doty into), and he did let slip an inkling of a CIA link to Doty. But if Russo had truly moved on from JFK, why then did he suddenly use Doty in comparison to Jim Garrison. When Garrison’s investigations had nothing at all to do with UFO’S, and Garrison was anythign but an intelligence asset:

    Nonetheless, much the same way that reporters speculated about the fraudulent New Orleans DA Jim Garrison forty years ago, there remains a group of UFO bloggers who continue to opine about Doty: “He must have something.”

    I mean, considering the ET zone Russo is delving into wouldn’t he have been better off comparing Doty to people like Bill Ryan, Richard Dolan, David Wilcock, Dick Hoagland, David Icke or our dear George Adamski and their followers in the naïve ‘He must have something’ stakes? Speaking of George, well Gus, there’s a very high possibility that Allen Dulles thought he had something at least. What’s also extremely dishonest is that Russo also failed to mention in his article that Garrison’s case, while far from being perfect (a case Garrison and his advocates have never denied), was fed all manner of ‘disinformation’ from numerous people very similar to the ‘unhinged’ Doty, Cooper and Collins. Namely Fred Crisman, Bernardo De Torres, Bill Boxley and Gordon Novel.

    Russo also ignored the famous and very real document concerning CIA use of its media assets in wake of the Garrison trial. This isn’t Nexus Magazine buffoonery, nor MJ-12 type musings: this is the ‘real deal’. If you want to find out more about Operation Mockingbird (which this document was part of) I suggest you check out what Bill Kelly wrote().


    Hypocrisy and Dishonesty

    Thus Russo’s article was not only guilty of ignorance, it was a piece of hypocrisy. By 2007 he was now more than prepared to discuss government sponsored individuals floating around spreading chaos in the UFO field. But heartily deny their very existence in the Kennedy field. It’s also indicative of Russo’s messiah complex, that while he’s now allowed to speculate about all manner of space related ‘funkiness’, he once derided well known Warren Commission and HSCA medical evidence critic, Dr. Cyril Wecht’s appearance on the infamous Ray Santilli ‘Alien Autopsy: Fact or Fiction’ special in 1995 on FOX. Russo’s comment (seen below) was inspired by Wecht unleashing a well-deserved tirade upon Russo at the 1993 ASK conference in Dallas. Russo, in his extremely lame and dishonest reply to DiEugenio’s original article on him ‘Who is Jim DiEugenio’ described Wecht’s passion for aliens under the heading ‘Close encounters of the foulest kind’:

    What made the event even more surreal was the fact that while he was screaming, my escalator had reached the second floor, so those below only saw the good doctor screaming at the ceiling. He was eventually coaxed outdoors, where it was thought by some he was on the verge of a stroke. If he indeed suffered permanent damage, it would explain why, four years later, Wecht was seen on TV calling the most ludicrous rubber dummy a possible space alien (“Alien Autopsy” on Fox.)

    Well, as we have seen, it was actually two years later not ‘four’ but considering Russo’s penchant for inaccuracy, well who knows? The funny thing is that Wecht never called it a possible ‘Space Alien’ in the show. Fearing I had missed something I asked Dr. Wecht himself about his comments on the show. His first reply back to me would make Shakespeare himself blush:

    Gus Russo is a cowardly, vicious, dishonest, unethical, opportunistic piece of shit.

    Wecht in a subsequent email described how he was asked by a Fox Producer to do the show and how he was instructed to focus on the ‘purported’ autopsy. In regards to this he made the following comment:

    I recall saying that – “the body shown and subjected to dissection was quite different from any human body I have ever seen or autopsied”. I stated that the Fox investigative reporter should attempt to learn more about the film – who made it? where? when?  etc. – Where did the “body” come from?

    Now I’ve watched the show and I can confirm Wecht’s comments, as I’m sure you, the reader, can. Indeed, even Wikipedia, which grinned at the (proven) fraudulent cases brought against him by pro-Bush Republicans in his had to comment:

    Noted forensic pathologist Cyril Wecht, who considered the autopsy procedures in the film to be authentic but stopped short of declaring the being an alien.

    Wecht himself was once again not shy in coming forward:

    I never stated that I believed it was an “alien”, or that I believe in “aliens”. 

    It also appears that Wecht, like myself and the majority of other people, believes that the abundance of galaxies in the universe make the chances of other life forms exceptionally high. As to his belief in whether or not Aliens have visited Earth his answer was as non-committal as mine back in the Introduction:

    At the same time, inasmuch as there are billions of galaxies in outer space, I do think it is supreme intellectual arrogance for someone to categorically deny the possibility of some form(s) of life existing in one of those galaxies. How can we possibly know that?

    So Russo, in misrepresenting Wecht, has, like his forbear Ed Epstein, tried to lump a well-known figure in the JFK nexus into the ‘UFO’s are real’ community without their say so. You may recall that previously Gus Russo’s friend John McAdams had implied Prouty’s insanity with a mere statement on the issue. There’s certainly a pattern here, indeed a fine tradition likely started by James Angleton (Dulles heir apparent in the UFO stakes). And Russo and others are certainly keen on continuing it in a big way. We can clearly see that he’s also guilty of conjoining Garrison and his advocates with a paid government disinformationist Richard Doty and his cabal of UFO train wrecks. When was Garrison ever a paid disinformation spreader Gus? What agency was he hooked up to? Surely you don’t believe the ludicrous idea of Novel’s that Garrison was a stooge of the FBI wanting to destroy Lyndon Johnson and the CIA (well at least that’s one version of his silly tale). To think Russo still has the nerve to call someone like myself or Jim Garrison ‘nuts’, after what we will see below, is delusional.


    Gus Calling Orson – Come in Orson

    Now, Russo’s article was inspired by his friend Dan Smith. Smith was/is close friends with a confirmed CIA scientist, Dr Ron Pandolfi. Pandolfi has been floating around the UFO scene since the mid-nineties and been an influential figure in spreading all manner of UFO disinformation. Yet Smith still boasts that he feeds him some information occasionally (). Mr. Smith is also very caught up in a sort of Christianity meets UFO sort of delirium (another all too common occurrence in UFO circles). In fact he’s gone one better than Tim Cooper and claims he is the second coming of the Messiah. Because he was apparently in touch with ‘Pandolfi’ whom Reality Uncovered once called ‘one of the few true government insiders’ Dube and Broadbent once entertained the notions of Smith (). Yet to their credit, Reality Uncovered has since fully discarded Russo’s hero Smith as a reliable source (showing a level of humbleness and introspection seldom seen in UFO circles). They also have come across the fact that Ron Pandolfi had been buddies with Novel (an individual they have rather stubbornly denied has had any genuine intelligence connections for a long time). In the midst of all this Pandolfi apparently attacked Dube and his site for asking direct questions of Novel’s credentials. ().

    If Reality Uncovered’s turnaround on Smith and Pandolfi wasn’t bad enough for Russo, he really crossed the Rubicon in 2008. According to Gary S. Bekkum, a longtime advocate of the absurd Serpo hoax, Russo (who appears to have been a friend of his) really is searching for that ‘mind altering close encounter’:

    Furthermore, according to Russo’s source, not only is NSA currently involved in fringe science involving mind-bending psychic intelligence collection, but their psychics have run into a mental firewall. Specifically Russo mentioned “an unknown extra-terrestrial source.

    Now wait a minute: hadn’t Russo, some years earlier, tried to falsely accuse Cyril Wecht as some kind of ‘UFO nut’? And wasn’t Russo now hanging out with a staunch protagonist of the very ‘Serpo’ hoax that Reality Uncovered had effectively decimated and that he himself had congratulated them for uncovering? Indeed, Reality Uncovered has done a number of pieces in critique of Bekkum Russo’s article. So Gus Russo, as we can see, is clearly an unrepentant conspirahypocrite. While criticising numerous figures in the JFK cavalcade for their implicating ‘unhinged’ individuals like Gordon Novel and Dave Ferrie in the Garrison case, he’d been playing ‘hide the sausage’ with a bunch of people no respectable ufologist in their right minds would go near and whom RU have since disowned. In fact RU has since distanced themselves from Russo as Dube explained to myself:

    About Russo – I have to be honest, I’ve never trusted the guy. He interviewed me for the piece that he wrote for Dan Smith, but his association with the likes of Gary Bekkum, who is essentially insane, always causes me pause. I remember looking over his work on JFK, but never followed it closely enough to know what his part was or where he fell within the field of JFK researchers … .

    Unbeknown to Dube it appears that Gus Russo (who makes jest of this oh so simple meeting in ‘Who is Jim DiEugenio’) was indeed part of a very real non-flake JFK ‘Aviary’ and in 1994 wined and dined with no lesser CIA luminaries than ex head of the agency Bill Colby (the real Bill Colby not some invention of Cooper’s), Ted Shackley, chief of the notorious Miami Station at the time of the assassination and well known media asset Joe Goulden, a close friend of the deceased David Phillips (). These are serious guys that make the supposed higher-ups in the Aviary nexus (depending on whom one reads) look like kittens. One of Russo’s old school friends, Dave Perry, was behind a dubious hit piece on Jim Marrs in 2001 in Dallas Observer. () And it’s here we encounter a rather troubling question and one which goes to the very heart of the fake JFK-MJ-12 documents. 


    Grand Master Perry & The Art of Encirclement

    Not many people who read the Robert Wilonsky piece in Dallas Observer on Marrs knew that Wilonsky and Dave Perry went back some ways. And Perry, of course, was never a fan of Marrs work. Nor did they realize that Perry isn’t considered a member of the ‘real’ research community. Or that Perry’s mission since he moved to Dallas seemed to be to discredit the local faction of writer/researchers on the JFK case there. I also doubt that people know how low the ‘lone nut’ side is prepared to stoop.

    For it appears that Perry, Wilonsky and Gary Mack (of the Sixth Floor Museum) were prepared to use Wilonsky’s mother as bait in an attempt to confuse the medical accounts at Parkland Hospital. And also make use of her associations with Jack Ruby’s old synagogue as a lure so they could conflate JFK researchers with charges of anti-Semitism (). Now, did this have nothing to do with the fact that fringe conspiracy books, one by Jim Fetzer (who has been accused by David Lifton of having anti-Semitic tendencies ) and Mark Piper (the Jews run the world) had been prevously been published?

    People reading Gus Russo’s article on Reality Uncovered wouldn’t know that while Perry (who is also exceptionally close friends with the CIA/FBI affiliated Hugh Aynesworth) was out there heckling Marrs over his views on remote viewing as espoused in his book Alien Agenda. At around the same time Gus Russo, his best buddy, was likely dabbling around in the very same fields Marrs had looked into (and perhaps doing it with aliens to boot). Now talk about a classic Dulles type of encirclement operation. As if this wasn’t bad enough, Dave Perry reveled in publishing updates on the bogus Cyril Wecht civil trial on his website, but then deleted them without a trace after the trial was deemed null and void.

    Dave Perry is a quite clever guy. And many believe a key strategist in Kennedy related disinformation. And considering his more hardened approach to new (and poor) research in the JFK sphere, the work he has done, makes the likes of ufology’s bogey men like Doty, Collins and Cooper look utterly primitive.

    At the time the first JFK-MJ-12 documents broke in 1992 many established JFK researchers were far too busy in the wake of renewed interest in the case to pay much attention to rumours, in particular those emitting from the crank ridden UFO crowd. There was good (and bad) research to be done, organizations to be formed, websites built, earth-based disinformation to fight (often resulting from the aforementioned bad research), people like Russo to be ousted, and findings of the ARRB to observe. Individuals running the gamut from Bob Groden, Steve Gerlach, Dan Ratcliffe, Len Osanic, Mike Griffiths, John Judge, Walt Brown Jim DiEugenio, Deborah Conway, Charles Drago, Lisa Pease, John Kelin and Rex Bradford are just but a sampling of the web presences we have who were all part of the maelstrom of the nineties.

    Despite the bad blood in some spheres of ‘Kennedy space’, stemming from this phase, the majority of researchers mentioned above would have agreed with the study under discussion some 15 years ago. Had Marrs seen more critical activity concerning the JFK-MJ-12 documents there’s every chance he may not have touched them with a barge pole, or been more openly critical of them. But being critical of the research community at the time was rather awkward. Individuals like Perry, Russo and McAdams effectively owned the critique and discourse surrounding many of the dubious claims being made, and respected figures like Marrs weren’t criticized for their inanity with MJ-12 because of a fear of being associated with the likes of Perry, Russo and McAdams. This is the beauty of a counter-intelligence operation in its classic form. One in which people disguised as sincerely seraching for the truth are actually not.


    ‘Ask The Question Dammit!’

    This is where Gus Russo’s and Dave Perry’s actions become ever more suspicious.
    Wilonsky’s (Perry-inspired) jibes at Marrs for advocating the Monroe-JFK-MJ-12 document in the Dallas Observer masked something deeper. And to borrow from Oliver Stone, ‘uglier’. Perry, like all of his lone nut brethren– McAdams, Dave Reitzes, David Von Pein and others–when he’s not distorting and smearing more complex and credible individuals like Mark Lane, Wecht and Prouty, these people built up their score cards by cracking onto easy ‘Doty’ like ‘crank’ targets e.g. Judyth Baker, Madeliene Brown. Yet not once did they ask the most valid question concerning Marrs’ delving into the ‘crank’ ridden JFK-MJ-12 milieiu………

    Jim, how on earth could you trust anything coming from guys like Doty, Collins and Cooper, considering the involvement of Doty and Collins with US intelligence disinformation campaigns in the mid-eighties, not to mention after Bill Moore openly discussed his role in the infamous MJ-12 campaign at the 1989 MUFON conference in Las Vegas which caused a huge stir?

    This question, or more to the point, the lone nut fraternity’s unwillingness to answer it, is where, for me, the charade collapses. Because in asking this question they would have readily acknowledged that people with verifiable links to US intelligence were wittingly spreading disinformation linking UFO’s with the JFK assassination. This denial is the very thing their careers in the Kennedy disinformation game has been based upon.

    By not askign this, were they actually encouraging the propagation of the phony Majestic Papers? I hasten to add that there is no evidence of this as yet and I’m not holding my breath, though it would certainly be within the scope of Russo’s CIA chums he dined with.

    To my knowledge what you are reading here is one of the first in-depth looks into the scam surrounding the JFK-MJ-12 memos anywhere, and it will be interesting to see if anything floats to the surface as a result. But if Coppen’s article ‘The Alien Overlords’ is anything to go by, one gets the feeling it’s a hell of a lot bigger than the likes of Dave Perry, Gus Russo and John McAdams. The CIA may have started the whole thing back in the forties. And I have no doubt were involved in the nineties; but if Greg Bishop’s detailing of Benewitz is anything to go by, numerous agencies were likely involved in the dissemination and propagation of the JFK MJ-12 lie. There are so many facets to the campaign that was run they Russoo and Perry may been involved anywhere.

    But whatever their location, I strongly suspect Russo and Perry were indeed involved.

  • JFK and the Majestic Papers: The History of a Hoax, Part 5



    (with Larry Hancock)

    Part 5: A Very Sad Attempt at Making a Rabbit-Hole

    “There’s a Starman waiting in the sky. He’d like to come and meet us. But he thinks he’d blow our minds.”

    David Bowie, 1972: ‘Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars’


    A Declaration of Speculation

    Try as I might, I feel the final stages of this journey are a bit of a let down. Part of the problem is that I’m now delving into an area a number of people far more knowledgeable and interested than myself have discussed and researched at length. The other part is that even after their excellent work uncovering the scammers involved as seen here at VISUP there is still a lot of speculation floating around. Indeed speculation is the key word herein. The problem I have had with making anything more out of the contacts and higher ups in the infamous Aviary rumour mill is that the ‘Aviary’ represent a nebulous mismatch of half-truths and myths self-fueled by those who were directly involved in it like Robert Collins and or ‘Rick’ Doty (the more well known of the two). The MJ-12 documents were indeed a counter intelligence operation. Counter intelligence operations are specifically designed to sow confusion and create what in intelligence terms is ‘a legend’, a background story; and part of the MJ-12 legend was the Aviary .


    Unstable and Unusable?

    In light of Timothy Cooper’s antics, I can understand the opposition to what I am about to propose about Bob Collins (or Condor if you go by his Aviary namesake). Don Ecker commented that he found Collins to be more or less ‘unhinged’ in his Paracast interview with Robert Hastings (Don Ecker, Paracast May 24th 2009). Though Ecker never actually said it, the inference could well be “How could such an individual/s be in control or involved in any ongoing operation.” In fact this seems to be a debate many people have about myriad individuals within the UFO sphere, and the arguments seem to be rather black and white. But when dealing in counter intelligence operations, to steal a line from Jim Garrison, “black is white, and white is black” and thus it’s all very much a shade of grey.

    In Preamble I we saw that the CIA, well before any official involvement in disinformation campaigns, had clearly made use of the mass media via the manipulation of figures like Adamski and Crisman, and quite likely assets like Arthur Young (and lord knows how many others); plus the willingness of media assets like Ray Palmer and C.D. Jackson to cooperate. Yet it is not well understood that deceptive and boisterous individuals with minimal credibility like Palmer, Crisman, and Adamski make for excellent foils in counter intelligence. As do more gentle individuals like Young.

    It’s often forgotten (or not realized) that US intelligence agencies like the CIA backed killers like Osama Bin Laden, and Mobutu Sese Seko. And their allies (namely Britain’s MI5 and Israel’s Mossad) aided the rise of ‘Mr Charisma’ himself Idi Amin to advance the cause of Democracy in their respective Third World enclaves. If this is all recalled, we see that American intelligence uses what we would term ‘unhinged’ individuals as a matter of fact.

    But these guys of course were higher functioning individuals of the ‘unhinged’ variety, right? The agents themselves are ‘straight as arrows’. Well, forget about that one as well. If you have read anything by Jon Ronson or watched his documentaries based on his book Them: Adventures with Extremists and The Men Who Stare at Goats (not the awful movie), or anything from Adam Curtis, one would see things aren’t all what they are cracked up to be in the world of special agents. If Joseph Trento ever did anything good in his examinations of the Agency, his exposure of the high incidence of burn out, stress, and alcoholism rife in cold war era intelligence work was a valuable contribution. For example: Bill Harvey, James Angleton, Dave Morales, and David Phillips.

    The careers of legendary CIA operatives like Bill Harvey, James Angleton, Dave Morales and David Phillips were all blighted with alcohol. These were likely the controllers of slightly unhinged, kooky, yet ultimately patriotic figures like, say Dave Ferrie, Guy Banister, and Clay Shaw, and more loud mouthed individuals like Gerry Hemming, Frank Sturgis and Fred Crisman. This is all apropos of our disucssion of the lineage of Timothy Cooper.


    That Crazy Cat Cooper?

    Timothy Cooper’s father Harry did photographic work for the USAF, which may have been of a classified (non UFO) nature. And he could well have indirectly brought his son Tim to the attention of Air Force Intelligence (Larry Hancock email 2011). Though this may not be significant, it’s a possible toe hold. Doty himself had rather strong familial connections to intelligence work via his father and his uncle as well.

    The real question is this: Did Cooper Jr., like say Kerry Thornley, then don a madman’s cap as a sort of cover for himself to fit in with the scenery? Despite what the Woods said in their misguided defence of Cooper, he clearly lied about being involved with other people. In the same way he also lied to Bob Hastings about Friedman and the Woods forcing the documents upon him, not to mention how he received them. In an odd twist, Cooper’s claims against Friedman correspond to a baseless accusation that Friedman himself had cooked up the first batch of documents some months later .

    It appears that if Timmy has his eyes on the prize for such rubbish then he’s not the wayward Paul Benewitz type duped by others (like Bill Moore), an image he played up to at the end. The fact that Cooper has dropped out of all circulation nowadays is also an indication that he had enough sense to get the ‘hell out of Dodge’. His phony pronouncements and profligate lying certainly make him worthy of being co-opted or exploited for any counter intelligence disinformation operation going – whichever way one looks at it.


    Captain Condor and his Chain of Command

    Now what cannot be doubted in all of this is that Robert Collins was involved in a US intelligence disinformation operation hawking false documents pertaining to relate to
    MJ-12 in the eighties. What’s never been sufficiently asked till now is what role Collins played in the JFK-MJ-12 palava, because I think there’s a very good chance that he was the hidden hand on the ground floor behind it. It also appears that he’s been higher up the chain of command than he has let on. Also, far too many people seem to ignore the subject of rank and the formal command structure when dealing with Collins and Doty.

    In Gregory Bishop’s Project Beta: The Story of Paul Bennewitz, National Security, and the Creation of a Modern UFO Myth Collins is briefly described as an employee in the DIA (Defence Intelligence Agency). Now that makes quite an impression doesn’t it? (Bishop, p. 212) However, Larry Hancock pointed out to me in the blurb to his book Exempt from Disclosure that Collins is merely described as:

    Robert M. Collins, Author, Writer, Consultant and Editor: A former Air Force Intelligence Officer (Chief Analyst in theoretical Physics) at the Foreign Technology Division (FTD, Air Force Achievement Award)

    Now I’m more than inclined to go along with a reliable source like Bishop than Collins. But in saying that, there are some complications worth mentioning that may trip people up. Collins’ close pal Doty, spent some time in Europe and during his time there, according to Gus Russo, was known to no lesser than ‘two’ former Directors of the CIA before their ascensions. Now while Russo never actually says Doty was or is involved with the CIA, it’s odd that he never bothered to ask if his good pal Collins had links to the agency as well. But as we’ll see in my next part, this type of selective investigation is standard for Russo.

    I really can’t be bothered in entering into any debate about how high up Collins went. That’s just adding fuel to the fire he himself has lit. But let’s clarify the point that Doty was, and has always been, Collins’ underling (a fact a number of people struggle greatly with). Doty has never been regarded as anything more than a ‘Sergeant’ in the AFOSI (Airforce Office of Special Investigations); more commonly referred to as OSI. MUFON themselves investigated the group and named ‘Doty’ as Collins middleman . The insinuation here seems to be that Collins could have been the Colonel to whom Doty deferred. Now that’s a step up from Captain – if indeed it is Collins, because whatever rank Collins truly held, be it Captain, or a Colonel in the DIA or OSI or whether these were covers for some contract CIA roles, if we put this into the era of the JFK-MJ-12 documents, we can see that Collins is Alpha, Doty is Beta, Cooper is Gamma.


    JFK-MJ-12 Connections between Collins, Cooper and Doty

    What the following is largely based upon is the work of Robert Hastings. Hastings had Collins and his pals in his crosshairs a long time before anybody else did. Thus I advise anybody interested in Hastings and Don Ecker’s comments on Collins to listen to this interview.

    After trying to foist more fake MJ-12 documents on the terminally trusting ‘JFK expert’ Linda Moulton Howe, circa 1987, Collins remarked that he had been in touch with a certain Bill Moore for years. Now if one checks in on any history of MJ-12, be it Coppens, or more advanced treatises like Bishop’s or Pilkington’s, you will see how important a role Moore played in the original MJ-12 setups. Clearly, Collins was likely more involved in a ‘behind the scenes capacity’ with the first batch of MJ-12 documents than has been reported.

    But I’m going to stop right there with Collins and the first batch. As I have said, this whole Aviary thing is a mess no matter how you view it, and I don’t want to add any more to the gibberish Collins and Co. have spouted. If Collins was deeply involved at this stage (and in all probability he was) he was still answerable to some other feathered friends higher up in the DIA (and possibly CIA), food chain. The problem is, of course, that there are a number of different conclusions out there and it’s a very real mess. And not just for researchers. It’s actually very hard to discern who is in control of much of the modern day disinformation concerning UFO’s and MJ-12. As Leon Davidson pointed out long before any rifts became apparent there was, and remains, very real tension between the CIA and the DIA, with organisations like the USAF and their intelligence network caught up in the middle of it all. (This point will be discussed briefly at the end of the next section.)

    What is of interest to the ‘right here and now’ however is that according to Hastings, Collins was at Kirtland AFB by 1987 working in the Sandia National Laboratory. Doty by all accounts was there also. Collins left what seems his cover job in 1988, the very same year Doty also left the Air Force. If you recall from Parts 2 and 3, Doty and Collins left at the very same time that Cooper’s interest in the Kennedy assassination bloomed with his supposed FOIA requests.

    While this is all rather neat and tidy, there is a problem with creating any kind of linkage between Collins and Cooper prior to or shortly after JFK. Simply put folks, there is no evidence of contact until around 1999-2000, when Collins was openly promoting Cooper’s musings about Monroe’s DOD ID card. By this stage Cooper certainly knew Collins and indeed seemed very familiar with him. Collins critical analysis of Marrs conversation with the dubious Bill Holden about UFO’s also indicates an interest in Kennedy on his own behalf, not to mention the links to JFK assassination stuff on one of his webpages. Indeed, it also seems that Cooper was very familiar with the legend of the ‘Aviary’.

    For instance, Cooper has written elsewhere:

    When I learned about Bill Moore and his “aviary” sources who were really OSI agents. Unlike yourself and others Moore was taken in by EBE’s.

    Now Extra Biological Entities’ aside, if someone knows about Moore, and the Aviary then the likelihood of them not hearing the names of Collins and Doty being associated with it by, say 2000, are next to impossible. Or are we to believe that the ‘OSI agents’ in truck with Moore were not Collins and Doty and that Cooper boldly investigated this as well? While one could say that Cooper or someone else could have picked up on this information via the internet. It’s also very safe to say that Cooper surely knew whom he was dealing with at this stage. Because within months of S-1’s warning about Moore he was busy ‘horsing around’ with Collins with the aforementioned Monroe DOD ID. Which is ironic, because it’s right back with dear Norma Jean, where we find them all.


    Doty and Dolan do Hollywood

    The addition of JFK to the entire quagmire is totally tangential, based on the political agendas (and hugely paranoid world views) of some of those initially promoting it (Ride a Pale Horse) and separately on JFK’s market value – when you throw JFK into the mix of anything you reach out to a brand new audience. Take a look at the genesis of the TV series Dark Skies to appreciate that (total garbage but really fun TV).
    (Larry Hancock 2001)

    The key link to Cooper and Collins is, of course, their misunderstood pal Dick Doty’s sauntering around Hollywood. If Doty knew of or was promoting the second batch of papers as early as, say, 1992 or 1993, then there’s a fair chance that it was he, rather than the more reclusive Cooper (who seemed to have emerged in public much later) who helped sell the Monroe-JFK-MJ-12 line to people like Milo Speriglio. But most importantly people like Chris Carter of the X Files who he apparently was a consultant for between 1994-1996 (Greg Bishop, Project Beta, page 83), and Richard Dolan’s buddy Bryce Zabel of Dark Skies, whom I believe was also in contact with Doty at the time.

    If so, just how much of a conspirahypocrite is Dolan? Well check this out for size – in Michael R. Schuyler’s article Richard Dolan’s Tinfoil Hat; a General Systems Theory of Conspiracy Dolan already has a curious history with Doty:

    He tells the story of Doty recruiting William Moore into intelligence work against Paul Bennewitz, and comes to the conclusion that Doty was the likely origin of the MJ-12 documents sent to Moore and Jaime Shandera. In other words, he exposes Doty as a disinformation agent……….Yet a few pages later Dolan uses Doty as a source for a story about a briefing to Bush 1 relating to plans for UFO disclosure. (p. 565) He has a nice little disclaimer at the beginning of the story, but then tells it with the same relish as every other story. You’re left scratching your head saying, “Wait, I thought Doty was one of the Bad Guys!

    Fret not Mike. There’s solid evidence that Doty was indeed good pals with Dolan’s buddy Bryce Zabel. According to Phil Coppens, dear old Richard Doty was an advisor on the show he produced Taken in 2002. Yes, Dolan and Zabel, like the Woods, are all connected up in the same foul smelling stench. This means, of course, there’s an extremely high chance that Doty would have been in contact with his old pal Collins ‘by proxy’ at this point, and considering Doty’s previous history with Moore and Benewitz, he didn’t just stumble over Cooper’s new documents, he was, to use an English phrase, ‘likely, well in on it’.

    For the record I emailed both Dolan and Zabel asking about their relationship with Mr Doty and also challenging them to an organised debate between myself and Jim DiEugenio on Black Op Radio. Unsurprisingly these brave heroes of the truth never replied. Nor do Jim and I anticipate they ever will. The conveniant excuse will likely be that they are now too busy. Both are involved with a film called ‘Majic Men’ set for 2012. It will be fascinating too see whom the consultants for the show will be and whether they’ll be crass enough and try and once again tie the Kennedy assassination into this movie about Stanton Friedman and the race between himself and a rival to bust the story of Roswell. Needless too say I do hope concerned readers send them emails asking were and why they are hiding (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1719048/).

    Another link which gives us a hint as to Collins hand in all of this is that from 1992 onwards James Angleton featured heavily in Cooper’s fantastical documentation. Word had it that Collins had actually edited Cooper’s bizarre Nexus Magazine article about Angleton. However this had been conveniently erased from all other internet postings of the article. Thus I despaired of finding it. That was until I happened upon the aptly named ‘Chemtrail Central’ forum (you can get the tone of the conversation). An individual called ‘nsasucks’ has put the entire article in a post dated the 2nd of May 2001 (http://www.chemtrailcentral.com/ubb/Forum1/HTML/000389-4.html). Near the top we can clearly see that underneath the embarrassing ‘majestictim’ email address is Collins editing credit. Indeed, thanks to Bob Hastings relentless pursuit of Cooper I can also go further with confirmations. In Cooper’s apochryphal letter to him in 2009 he mentions that in Collins woeful ‘Exempt from Disclosure’ that Collins had edited his Angleton, Nexus article used in the book.

    My only inclusion in the book amounted to Collins taking a speculative piece I wrote for the internet back in 1999 about James Jesus Angleton, which he unilaterally edited into the book and was not a co-author of in any real sense.

    But as we have seen previously, with Cooper’s goofy idea that a ‘Hebrew Bible’ was recovered from a crash site at White Sands, Angleton was clearly not the only ‘angle’ Cooper covered in Collins’ book. Furthermore, Hastings had not even asked Cooper if Collins was a co-author in any real sense. So why did a liar like Cooper even bring it up? When there is ample and overwhelming evidence that Collins had been involved with the article and Cooper prior to 2005 when his book was published. The inference is that Collins and Cooper did indeed co-author that particular Nexus article and likely the asinine Dulles one. Both the Angleton and Dulles articles were highly sympathetic to the two men. Indeed, Cooper and Collins seem to have gone so far as to make Angleton out to be a patsy of MJ-12:

    On a final note, the legend of James Jesus Angleton and his “wilderness of mirrors”, as he often referred to his daunting task of protecting vital state secrets, faded into obscurity on May 11, 1987. But the secret that went with him re-emerged almost precisely the day he died. Perhaps Jim was not the real bad guy in the counterintelligence game. Maybe he was its victim?

    At the time of reading this, I naively thought the article was quite possibly the most bizarre Angleton disinformation I had ever read. That was until I came across a fantastic article on the ‘Reality Uncovered’ site describing how the Collins, Doty and Cooper fell in with an individual claiming to be the Grandson/Nephew (depending on the version you hear from them) of Jesus Angleton himself. In Collins’ book there is also a small tract explaining how the Miami Angleton’s father had worked for Jesus. The clincher is that this was the exact same job that Cooper’s father had also worked in. Their job was apparently attempting to teleport rats! This was apparently with Great Grand Daddy Angleton’s full knowledge.


    Are they ‘Schill’ Working for US Intelligence?

    As far as Collins involvement in officially sanctioned UFO-JFK disinfo today, though it goes against my better judgement, I’ll say ‘I agree’ with a number of commentators that’s probably not the case now. Collins was probably cut loose to do his own thing, quite likely at the same time that Cooper bailed on him and Doty, or even well before. Playing it even safer, Cooper continuing work with Doty, in the form of his book, was less part of an operation than a cashing in on the havoc they themselves had wreaked for the better part of thirty odd years together.

    I want to reiterate the fact that I know perfectly well that Collins is ‘not the be all and end all’ of disinformation in the UFO nexus, and quite clearly in the first batch of MJ-12 documents in the eighties he had higher ups he was answerable to. Likely so in his foray into the Kennedy field. But let’s not assume that the same people behind his work in the eighties were actually involved in his second stint. If he were contracted out (and yes this does happen in intelligence circles) it’s likely he would have had a very different set of masters. But once again, this is where I’ll tread carefully. Without definitive proof of this at the present time one could just say ‘Collins and his cronies innocently collaborated together to cash in on the JFK buzz and conned a number of people’. But a critical link to Collins and his crew’s involvement in a broader agenda is the lack of investigation into the JFK-MJ-12 documents in the JFK zone itself, not to mention the lack of interest shown in discrediting them by old pals Gus Russo, John McAdams and Dave Perry.

  • JFK and the Majestic Papers: The History of a Hoax, Part 4

    JFK and the Majestic Papers: The History of a Hoax, Part 4



    Part 4: Lunacy, Loyalty, and Failed Lie Detectors

    “Ladies and Gentlemen, welcome aboard the star ship Boney M for our first passenger flight to Venus.”

    ~ Boney M, 1978; ‘Night Flight to Venus’


    Knock on Wood

    Let us return once again to those unfortunates the Woods, who in many ways are almost as big a stars of this essay as Timothy Cooper is. Because unless I am very much mistaken it is they, not their little urchin ‘Pip’ Cooper who have actually been pumping the UFO-JFK stuff too all and sundry over the years, inspiring people like Dickie Dolan to leap into the fray. After asking around it appears that the Woods are in fact very well liked. In particularly the Dad ‘Bob’ thus, a number of people are likely to be highly upset with the following. But spare me the tears please. The Woods themselves have asked for this. If they aren’t conmen in my mind they are utter ‘crackpots’. And while their credentials in the fields of physics and mathematics are impeccable, for all their obvious intellect they have clearly not put 1+1 together as far as Cooper and the Kennedy assassination is concerned.

    Indeed, the Woods are the 21st Century version of Arthur Young. But at least Young seems to have had the good sense to realize he had been manipulated by the CIA in some way.


    Wood I lie to you Baby?

    In 1999 at about the same time as his JFK-Lancer-Snoop memoranda came out. Mr Cooper failed a lie detector test, as the ‘Saucer Smear’ site explains.

    We hear that researcher Bob Durant is hopping mad at Tim Cooper and the Woods because of an incident that began when the four of them were on a radio show together last January. “Smear” readers will recall that Bob and Ryan Wood are the father & son team that has been pushing the “new” MJ-12 documents, and Tim Cooper is their principal source. Durant challenged Cooper to take a lie detector test regarding his claims and he agreed to do so. The test was given last April 18th by a polygraph expert chosen by the Woods, but unfortunately Cooper flunked it anyhow. Worse, the Woods tried to avoid telling Durant the outcome of the test, even though he had paid for part of it!

    The Woods comeback against the failed test is now something of a legend in UFO circles. They claimed that the questions which Cooper failed (those dealing with his sources) were because he knowingly kept the identifications of his sources secret; not to mention that ‘this was a good thing’. TO further this, on their webpage introducing the argument surrounding the authentication of the documents the third section is titled ‘Critic’s arguments are often speculative’

    Now if the above statements by the Woods weren’t speculative enough for you let’s examine the speculation involved in their ‘Ten Reasons Why Tim Cooper is NOT a Provenance Problem’. Which successfully places them in the league of the all time great conspirahypocrites.

    1. He did not seek out publicity for himself. In fact, he gave away documents and publicity to Tim Good with the “Hillenkoetter to Military Assessment of the Joint Intelligence Committee memo of 19 September 1947.”

    Yes Cooper was extremely coy with publicising his ‘Majestic Tim’ email address and his comments with regards too Angleton and the Monroe-JFK-UFO stuff wasn’t he? Did he grow in confidence from 1992 onwards? It appears so. Its also interesting to note that in point 4) We can see that Good deemed the document Cooper fobbed off too him to be a fraud. Is it any wonder he wasn’t jumping around talking about it?

    2. If Bob and Ryan Wood did not visit him, talk with him, become his friend and ask for documents they would still be in Cooper’s attic gathering dust. This shows that Cooper is not seeking recognition for his alleged forgery, which is a characteristic action of forgery criminals.

    It’s bizarre enough the Woods seem to be writing this in third person, it’s another to say that Cooper was not seeking recognition, thus the Woods logic here is remiss. Prior, to their encountering Cooper as we have seen he had also contacted the aforementioned Good and Stanton Friedman, who was dubious of the claims and asked the Woods to check Cooper out for him. Which as you have seen already, was rather a big mistake on Friedman’s part. We have also seen that an intermediary of Cooper’s (discussed in Part V) had likely contacted Speriligo, in Hollywood at the same time.

    Another question for the Woods is why would Cooper have to promote his documents to them if they were keen to befriend him and get his documents off of him in the first place? Aren’t the Woods supposed to be objective investigators? An investigator isn’t there too gain trust and make friends. The endowment of trust and legitimacy is theirs to bestow upon the investigated. This ‘minor’ detail seems to have escaped them at the time. In much the same way as this rather incredible statement, in his 2009 email to Bob Hastings in which Cooper describes himself as an:

    Unwitting dupe in this charade (I must confess I was willing to be led into believing it by Friedman and the Woods).

    It’s one thing to say that he now believes the MJ-12 documents he had were fake. It’s another thing to slander Friedman, the ‘doubting Thomas’ of MJ-12’s second coming, and the Woods, that it was they who‘led’ him into believing in the documents’ authenticity.

    3. Tim Cooper has a skeptical attitude. He did not openly embrace the documents nor did he have the time to verify the details that have been partially checked by Wood & Wood and others.

    Cooper’s ‘skeptical’ attitude (or total lack thereof) were seen in his take on Monroe’s diary and her DOD ID in Part I. This article (which I found by typing Cooper’s ‘Majestic Tim’ email into a basic Google search) is an unsourced quasi religious UFO rant from the man, which touched briefly on how the MJ-12 Documents back up Biblical prophecy. . Now let us return briefly too Cooper’s bio on the Majestic Documents site also touched on in Part I. Here it is detailed that Cooper’s interests lie in ‘military history, intelligence practices’ but most importantly ‘Biblical textual research’. The most curious thing here is that on page 5 of one of the last documents Cooper was ever sent we see mad ramblings from a source called S-1 (Source 1) about MJ-12 being ‘Majestic Jehovah-12’, after Christ and the apostles. Cooper then finally topped himself with a contribution to a book entitled Exempt from Disclosure: The Black World of UFO’s one of the more maligned books in genuine research circles.

    We also hear from Tim Cooper a bit in this book and he has some interesting titbits. One was about a crash in 1948 or 1949 at White Sands in which Tim Cooper’s father Harry Cooper, a AF Msgt, says a very ancient Hebrew Bible was recovered from crash site. Code breakers at the NSA succeeded in breaking the Hebrew Bible Code and the information was given to MJ-12. The Hebrew Bible was thought to be the key to understanding the UFO/Alien phenomena.

    How this failed to set off alarms for the Woods is unfathomable. That numerous other tripwires should have gone off when Cooper told them his initial interest in conspiracy was piqued by the Kennedy assassination has me thinking it must have been a pure fluke that the Woods never hooked up with Marshall Applewhite, Raoul from the Raellians or had David Icke join their document authentication team.

    Tim says he was with his father on November 22, 1963, watching television about the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. Timothy told Bob Wood that there were tears in his father’s eyes when Harry Cooper said, ‘They really did it.’ That led Timothy to become very interested in the Kennedy assassination. Timothy Cooper started putting in Freedom of Information requests back in the late 1980s for information about the Kennedy assassination. At the same time, Timothy began to ask about UFOs. Timothy had put in FOIA requests too about fourteen different government agencies for everything they had about the Kennedy assassination and UFOs.

    An important figure here is Harry Cooper, Timmy’s dad. Harry, a Master Sergeant in his day is, judging by the actions of his spawn, a guy I wouldn’t put much trust in. On Bob Collins ‘Peregrine Communications site’ we can see that Cooper Sr. provided his son with (wait for it) a medal and a certificate from Curtis Le May for his work on UFO’s. And in the same commendation it congratulates Harry for…

    His exemplar knowledge of film processing and printing techniques.

    Now, considering it’s the first I’ve ever heard of LeMay handing out certificates for individuals working on a UFO assignment anywhere, we have to consider what one would do with a certificate from a likely classified operation. Mounting and framing it for decoration in the study or living room would certainly be a problem, and putting it in a CV for a job would be out of the question. One would also think that anyone in their right mind would raise an eyebrow to the potential for forgery of the certificate, considering Cooper Sr’s talents and his son’s proclivities.

    But for the umpteenth time, the lunacy of the Woods’ trumps itself yet again (and trust me these guys are still just warming up). If one scrolls down the page in which Harry Cooper’s ‘certificate’ is described, under the list of contributors to Peregrine Communications (the Peregrine is of course a Falcon, which was Collins’ ‘pal’ Doty’s Aviary codename) both the Woods are listed as major contributors to Collins’ studies and his book Exempt from Disclosure, their association with Collins may well have changed since then. The Woods’ failure to acknowledge the circuitous nature of Cooper’s interest in the Kennedy assassination, the information he received, what he peddled, the rants he made, articles he wrote, the company he kept, not to mention that Collins has a website linking all manner of outdated Cooper JFK conspiracy gibberish linked to his home page . All this means that, at the very least, the Woods have no qualities of discernment.

    4. Despite claims of forgery by Tim Good, Dr. James Black (a forensic typewriter specialist) was unable to conclude that the documents in question were typed with the same typewriter, only that the make and model are the same. Any of the tens of thousands of typewriters are suspect.

    The typewriter is merely inconclusive. It has not been proven or disproven and one could go either way. I tend to think it proves fraudulence. You, the reader, may not. For what it’s worth, this little technicality hardly saves him.

    5. Tim Cooper is just one of many sources of the Majestic documents that mutually re-enforce the content of the Cooper originated documents. Cooper is NOT the linchpin to dismissing the government paper trail of UFO and ET complicity.

    This comment is quite astounding. That Cooper is just one source is common knowledge. While the fact there are more sources clearly shows what an abysmal failure the fellows involved in MJ-12 would have been in throwing a surprise party. They’re also saying that he confirms his own documents and is not the ‘linchpin’ to dismissing the paper trail. But if Cooper is not the key to solving it all then who is? For since Cooper walked out on them in 2009 there’s been slim pickings MJ-12 wise.

    6. There is clear evidence in the form of postage meters, original envelopes, and postmarks showing that many of the documents Cooper received did in fact travel through the mail. Furthermore, two were postmarked “Langley Virginia” (CIA headquarters postage meter) and Ft. Meade, FOIA office.

    Postmarks are easy enough to forge. In particular when naïve people want to believe in what’s been delivered to the exclusion of all other possibilities. The funny thing is that Cooper could easily have sent these off to other people to be repackaged and sent back. Or someone at Langley conjured up some stuff for him to disseminate for a giggle. Of course these concepts require a little more abstract thought than the Woods are capable of.

    7. Several researchers have commented to Wood & Wood that Cooper’s writing style is inconsistent with the leaked documents. Although anecdotal, forensic linguistics is being applied to definitely conclude that Tim did or did not write any of the documents in question.

    This is a real doozy. There are numerous similarities and themes in Cooper’s documents, writings and his appalling research work. One needs not to do an in-depth investigation on him. I also sincerely doubt that people like the Woods, who also employed ‘remote viewers’ to check into the authenticity of Cooper’s claims (see number ten) will ever find the truth of the matter. What they really should have done was employ a handwriting expert (or a number of them), in particular with regards to the ‘similarities and themes’ found on the letter sent to Cooper by Thomas Cantwell in 1999, and in an extremely unlikely document in which William Colby writes about Angleton from November 12 1963 (which is appended here). It appears to my eyes that Cantwell, Colby and Cooper are all the same person. Furthermore Colby’s handwriting and signature on the document is not comparable to Colby’s informal printing style. I also hasten to add that if anybody who is an accredited document and signature analyst would like to pass judgement, please contact CTKA and an update will ensue.

    Colby handwriting scam

     

    8. Cooper’s failed lie detector test is consistent with him protecting his in-person document sources — the CIA archivist, the legionnaire, and Thomas (Cy) Cantwheel.

    It’s also very consistent with him denying that he created them isn’t it? Because we once again hit a familiar problem: ‘secrecy’. The amount of different people who contacted Cooper with information once again jeopardizes the covert nature of this highly sensitive operation. How unlikely is it that some random recipient recieves numerous top secret files from multiple sources for one, and how odd it is that none of them knew they were doubling up? Note also that Salina Cantwell (Thomas Cantwell’s daughter), a well known fable in MJ-12 lore like her father, also claimed to work for Angleton. Thus that makes it four sources of their top secret documentation-or insight. Three of them are from the CIA, and two are father and daughter whistle blowers who both worked in arch paranoic James Angleton’s office. There’s no evidence of Angleton having a family working for him in his enclave whatsoever, furthermore it doubles the chance of a security leak. And if you believe that Angleton, a man meticulous to the point of psychosis would do such a thing, you’d believe anything.

    9. No one has admitted, or come forward claiming authorship.

    Why would they when a whole crop of incompetent upper echelon figures couldn’t wait to get their names in or on the memos, even going so far as signing them for other people. Weren’t these self incriminating ingrates the authors themselves?

    10. Although of speculative value, high quality remote viewing (psychic) assets have targeted Tim Cooper and the documents and concluded the documents are predominately real and Cooper is not a forger. In fact, there seems to be multiple origins of documents feeding to Cooper.

    I had to read this comment numerous times toreally let this sink in. If they were really suspicious of Cooper, wouldn’t a private detective charting his movements be somewhat more efficient? Previously, I stated that Tim Cooper signed two affidavits stating that he was not the author of the materials he received, nor did he know who sent them. In article six of the second affidavit it states:

    That he and others have performed and are now performing due diligence to locate, identify, and bring forward the person AKA THOMAS CANTWHEEL or establish his true identity and credentials.

    But as Bob Greenwood and Robert Hastings comment:

    So Cooper was receiving ostensibly classified government documents in his personal PO box, illegally. He was also receiving improperly prepared materials in his mailbox, subverting post office fees without postage due. If Cooper was walking out of the post office with the documents in hand, and saying nothing, he was breaking the law (that is of course if they were genuine).
    Did Cooper report the illegal ‘mailing’ to the postmaster or box line clerk at the post office, exercizing “due diligence” to locate the perpetrator, Mr. Cantwheel? After all, Cooper could have gone to federal prison for Mr. Cantwheel’s alleged actions. How did Cooper know he wasn’t being set up for a sting by accepting the papers without question? None of this seemed to have been a concern to him.
    Cooper had a PO box. It was a locked box. Only he could get into it, unless he handed out his key to others, inviting abuse. One can’t hand a stack of papers to a clerk to put into a PO box for free. They must be in a mailing container with postage. If the clerk didn’t do this they would be fired. What mail clerk would repeatedly put classified government documents into a customer’s mailbox from a stranger for free, knowing full well that the postal inspection service is always trying to catch illegal acts like this?
    Cantwheel was said to approach 90-years-old. Did he break into the post office repeatedly and plant the documents, raising the question again: Did Cooper report the illegal activity to the post office? If not, why not? Only someone who knew they weren’t going to get into trouble would approve of this going on, and that would be because this story-line never happened. So where is the documentation of Cooper’s reporting a “crime” to the post office? By Cooper’s own words promoting MJ-12, he was outwardly committing a crime if he believed the documents were genuine. If he didn’t believe they were genuine, he was committing fraud.

    It is now 2011, the affidavits were written way back in 1999. Cooper gave up the ghost of MJ-12 ten years later in 2009. Likely without ever trying to find the identity of the individuals who sent him the documentation. Not that any of this concerns the Woods or Linda Moulton Howe, who cashed in her chips big time in light of the renewed interest in the Kennedy MJ-12 links. In so doing she also cashed out of any credibility she may have had.