Tag: JFK ASSASSINATION

  • 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

  • Ron Rosenbaum Fires the First Salvo, Part 2


    Rosenbaum Whitewashes Angleton


    In Part 1 of this article we detailed the rather systematic way in which, in 1983, MSM journalist Ron Rosenbaum did all he could to demean the Warren Commission critics and cheapen any real investigation into the JFK case. That article, “Still on the Case’ was penned for Texas Monthly, which, for decades, has provided a welcome outlet for writers who cover-up the JFK case.

    Just a month before that, in October of 1983, Rosenbaum did a rather curious, actually bizarre essay about James Angleton. On April 10, 2013, from his perch in Slate, he more or less recycled his 1983 essay and coupled it with a cover story about Lee Harvey Oswald. One written by a former intelligence analyst that blamed JFK’s murder on Oswald and indirectly, Fidel Castro. A tall tale that would bring a wink and a nod from Angleton’s ghost. Which seems to be something Rosenbaum is very interested in doing. But which today, with what we know about the fruity Angleton, simply will not fly. And it is very hard to think that Rosenbaum is not aware of it. Which makes it even more puzzling as to why he tries to get away with it.

    I

    Before trying to answer the question about Rosenbaum’s bona fides, let us do two things. Let us review who Jim Angleton was, and then review Rosenbaum’s writings about him. That will provide the scaffolding to properly approach his 2013 essay.

    During World War II, Hugh Angleton pulled some strings and got his son out of the infantry and into counter-intelligence work in the OSS. This division was called X-2. Stationed in London, Jim rose to man the Italy desk for the OSS. (Tom Mangold, Cold Warrior, p. 38) Late in 1944, he was transferred to Rome, and became the top counter-intelligence chief for Italy. He had a high clearance and shared in the Ultra Secret, the breaking of the German spy code. Angleton stayed in Italy after the war. He developed connections with other spy services. And because he has met Allen Dulles there, he helped Dulles rig the 1948 Italian elections to prevent a likely communist victory. As Christopher Simpson noted in his book Blowback, this was done from the offices of the Dulles brothers law firm Sullivan and Cromwell. Angleton worked with the Dulles brothers, Foster and Allen, plus Frank Wisner, and Bill Colby. (Simpson, p. 90)

    Allen Dulles and Angleton had become great friends in Italy. Therefore, when the CIA was formed in 1947, Allen used his considerable influence to make sure Angleton was part of it. And Angleton brought in another friend he met in Italy, Ray Rocca. (Mangold, p. 45) Rocca would serve as Jim’s close assistant until the end of his career in 1975. Angleton was responsible for collection of foreign intelligence and liaisoning with other intelligence agencies. He eventually took over the CIA’s Israeli desk. And he became involved in Wisner’s attempt to roll back Soviet domination in East Europe.

    It was when Dulles became Deputy Director in 1953, and then Director in 1954, that Angleton began to carve out his Counter-Intelligence domain. As Tom Mangold notes in his book, it is not really possible to exaggerate the impact Dulles had on Angleton”s career. As he writes, “his sponsorship of Angleton and his staff was the key factor in the untrammeled growth of Angleton’s internal authority.” (ibid, p. 50) In fact, after the war Angleton was thinking of taking a job under his father with NCR. But it was Dulles who insisted he stick with intelligence work. (Ibid) It was the freedom that Dulles gave Angleton that allowed the CI chief to essentially build his own arm of the Agency. A branch that would eventually number close to 200 persons. But more importantly, it would allow him to work both outside of anyone’s purview and outside any legal restrictions. When Dulles was fired by President Kennedy, Angleton’s power was now protected by Richard Helms who was Director of Operations, then Deputy Director, and then DCI from 1962-1973. In other words, Angleton worked without regulation or review for two decades. (Ibid, pgs. 51-52) As we shall see, this was a blunder of titanic proportions. One which the public was not made fully aware of until 1991. Four years after Angleton had passed away.

    II

    After Britain’s intervention in the Russian Civil War, the NKVD (precursor to the KGB) decided to begin a long-term internal subversion project against England. One which had tremendous potential for long term profits.

    The idea was to recruit spies at the upper class, elite institute of higher learning, Cambridge. The most famous group recruited was later termed the Cambridge Five. This consisted of Anthony Blunt, Guy Burgess, Donald McLean, John Cairncross, and, most importantly to our story, Kim Philby. All five of these men ended up in high positions in the British government, serving in either MI5 or MI6; the former corresponds to the FBI, the latter to the CIA. The five men were all in position throughout World War II and beyond, well into the beginning of the Cold War. (The film Another Country is based on the origins of this ring and focuses on Burgess.)

    At Cambridge, Philby was a member of the outspoken left which critiqued the Labor Party, a group called the Cambridge University Socialist Society. After a trip to Berlin, where he saw the Nazi persecution of communists, he then navigated over to the Comintern. Further, Philby’s first wife, Litzi Friedman, was certainly a socialist, probably a communist. He met her in Austria where he was trying to help the country resist the German Anschluss, and also aiding the Comintern in enabling communists to escape Hitler. From there on in, Philby did all he could to conceal his leftist sympathies and replace them with a conservative veneer.

    In 1937, as a journalist, he went to Spain and was actually decorated by the fascist General Francisco Franco. On his return to London, he finally became what the NKVD hoped he would: a member of the Secret Intelligence Service, MI6. He worked there along with Burgess.

    Philby was quite good at climbing the ladder. For in 1944 he became chief of the Soviet and communist division. In other words, he could tell Stalin everything the British knew about him. Plus, he was in position to mislead MI6 about Stalin’s plans. He was even in position to know about NKVD defectors who could expose him. Which prospective defector Konstantin Volkov tried to do, but which Philby was in perfect position to stop. And he did. In fact, in 1945, Philby received the Order of the British Empire (OBE) for his intelligence work during the war. The Queen did not know that, at around the same time, the NKVD was secretly honoring Philby for what he was doing for them.

    In 1949, Philby was transferred to Washington. He became the British liaison to the CIA and FBI. Burgess also joined him, and they worked out of the British Embassy. It was there that both of the deep cover spies met James Angleton and William Harvey.

    III

    FBI code breaking analyst Robert Lamphere said about Philby’s position in Washington that he was in “as perfect a spot for the Soviets as they could possibly get a man.” (David Martin, Wilderness of Mirrors, p. 44) For instance, Philby was knowledgeable about the hunt for the spy ring that gave away the secret of the atom bomb. Kim Philby “was aware of the results of the … investigation of Klaus Fuchs.” (ibid) Philby even knew about the upcoming arrests of the Rosenbergs and Morton Sobell. But in spite of that knowledge, the Russians chose to sacrifice the trio rather than run the risk of exposing Philby.

    At this time, 1949-51, one of Angleton’s duties was to be formal liaison to high-ranking foreign intelligence officers. This coincided with Philby’s tour of duty in Washington. Philby later said that the two men would lunch about three times every two weeks and speak on the phone 3-4 times per week. (Mangold,p. 64) Angleton’s secretary would escort Philby into his office and she would then type up the oral dictation Jim made of those meetings into memoranda. (Ibid, p. 65) As Philby said, he cultivated Angleton socially since he thought that, “the greater the trust between us overtly, the less he would suspect covert action.” He then added that he was not sure who gained the most from this complex game-playing: “But I had one big advantage. I knew what he was doing for CIA and he knew what I was doing for SIS. But the real nature of my business he did not know.” (ibid, p. 65)

    What brought it all down was that the FBI found out the Soviets had intercepted a telegram from Winston Churchill to President Truman. They didn’t know who did it, but they knew he worked from inside the British Embassy. (Martin, p. 44) The inquiry then worked its way from the bottom upward. FBI analyst Robert Lamphere was one of the men who had access to the Venona crypts. This was the FBI’s deciphering of the Soviet secret code. The Bureau now began to center on a man named HOMER in the Venona codes. Philby knew who this man was. And he thought he would crack if the CIA or FBI got to him and questioned him. And if he did, that could expose Burgess and himself.

    Guy Burgess had gone from MI6 to the BBC to the Foreign Service. He was living as a lodger in Philby’s Washington home at this time. One night, Philby had a dinner party for Lamphere, Angelton, Harvey and their wives. Libby Harvey got a little tipsy. Burgess was fond of drawing caricatures of people. He drew an obscene one of Libby. Bill Harvey didn’t think it was funny and took a swing at him. Angleton jumped between them. And Philby tried to usher the guests out before any more violence took place. (Martin, p . 48)

    It turned out that the HOMER in Venona was McLean. With that knowledge, Philby knew he had to get McLean out of London before MI5 could act on that information. But it could not appear that he was the one warning him. Therefore, he had put Burgess up to acting outrageously e.g. with Libby. Burgess also pulled the stunt of getting three traffic tickets in one day. And he mouthed off to the officers in all three instances. The combination of these acts finally did the trick. Burgess was recalled to London. McLean had been scheduled to be questioned by MI5 on Monday, May 28, 1951. On Thursday, May 24th, Burgess arrived in England. Once he landed, he told a fellow passenger that, “A young friend of mine in the Foreign Office is in serious trouble. I am the only one who can help him.” (ibid, p. 50) He then rented a car and drove to McLean’s home. Burgess now drove his fellow Cambridge spy to Southampton, where they boarded a cross-channel ship to Saint-Malo. From there they went to Rennes and caught a train to Paris. Neither man was seen in public again until they held a joint press conference in Moscow in 1956. (ibid)

    To this day, no one knows why Burgess left England with McLean. Those were not Philby’s instructions. Until the end of his life, Philby never forgave Burgess for disobeying him. For the fact is that Philby knew about Venona and HOMER. Burgess had been Philby’s lodger, and now Burgess had fled also. This now did what nothing had ever done before: it cast suspicion on Philby himself. Was he The Third Man who had tipped off his two spy friends?

    CIA Director Walter Bedell Smith asked Harvey and Angleton to write up reports of what they knew about Burgess, his ties to Philby, and who they thought Philby was. (Mangold, p. 65) Harvey’s five-pager was an accusatory masterpiece. It was full of hard facts that built a strong circumstantial case that Philby had sent Burgess to aid his fellow Cambridge spy. But it went further. It declared that Philby had also been the one to derail the Volkov defection in order to save himself. Which was true. (Martin, p. 54)

    On the other hand, Angleton’s memo was fuzzy and impressionistic. It noted some oddities about Burgess, but seemed to excuse Philby on the grounds he was unwise in his choice of friends. A CIA officer who saw the report described it as, “a rambling, inchoate, and incredibly sloppy note.” Angleton even told Smith not to tell the British Philby might be a spy since it would damage CIA-MI6 relations. (Mangold, p. 66) Wisely, Smith forwarded SIS the Harvey memo. They used it to, at first, examine and then suspend Philby. But after years of inquiry, Philby did not confess. And they could not find any hard evidence to expose him. Cleared in public by Prime Minister Harold Macmillan, he was later brought back as a low level British agent in Lebanon, where he also served as a reporter. In 1963, MI6 finally put together a substantial case against him. An agent was sent to induce Philby to confess in return for immunity. Philby agreed and asked for time to set his affairs in order. This ended up being an excuse to arrange for his passage to Moscow. It was now certain that Philby was perhaps the highest level Soviet agent to ever operate in London and Washington. And it was also clear that Angleton could not have been more wrong about his friend.

    IV

    That Angleton was tricked by Philby could not really be held against him. Because Philby had done that to many people on both sides of the Atlantic. But the fact that Angleton was still in the dark afterwards, when Burgess and McLean had escaped, that should have been a tell-tale sign to everyone involved. Especially in comparison to the fact that Harvey had been uncannily accurate about Philby and his career. Making the comparison even worse was that, “No one had known Philby better or spent more time with him than Angleton.” (Martin, p. 55) In fact, up to the moment he was recalled to London, Philby was still chumming around with Angleton. Harvey was shocked at this. To the point that he actually thought that Angleton might be a Soviet agent. (Ibid, p. 57) In fact, even in 1952, when Philby was in the process of being thoroughly examined and then suspended, Angleton was still in his camp. He actually told another British intelligence officer that Philby would one day lead MI6. (Mangold, p. 66)

    In 1963, when the master spy had escaped to Moscow, Angleton finally got around to issuing a damage report on Philby. And even that was sketchy and incomplete. (Ibid, p. 67) But further, the real data upon which any accurate damage report would be based was the record contained in the memos of the Philby/Angleton meetings. As we have seen, these had been dictated by Angleton after each instance. These should have been examined by a team of analysts. But Angleton never volunteered those memos to any higher authority. After he was forced into retirement, there was a thorough search of his office. Not a single memo was found. There was evidence, a sign in sheet, of 36 meetings in his office (Ibid) There should have been 36 memoranda discovered. None were available.

    When Angleton became Chief of Counter-Intelligence, he controlled the Philby file. It was locked in a vault next to his office. No one could have stopped him from pilfering from it. Peter Wright of MI5 told biographer Tom Mangold that Angleton burned the memos of those meetings. Wright knew this because Angleton told him about it. Wright wanted them produced for his own investigation. When he asked for them, Jim A. said, “They’re gone Peter. I had them burned. It was all very embarrassing.” (ibid, p. 68)

    Leonard McCoy, who became Deputy Chief of Counter-Intelligence after Angleton left, said that the CIA had all kinds of operations going on at the time in areas like Albania, the Baltics, Ukraine, Turkey and southern Russia. They also had “stay behind” projects in East Europe. Almost all of them were rolled up by the Russians and their allies. McCoy said it was unfair to blame it all on Angleton’s closeness to Philby. But it would also be unfair to say that none of it was caused by that friendship. (ibid) McCoy said that this was a most difficult episode for Angleton to assimilate. Both the personal betrayal and the damage done to the CIA and the USA were owed in part to a man Angleton completely trusted. Consequently, he very seldom talked about it.

    But he did say some words to Wright. Wright said, “Jim was obsessed by Kim’s betrayal … .Can you imagine how much information he had to trade in those booze-ups?” Wright said that Angleton talked about killing Philby. (Ibid, pgs. 68-69) He concluded that, “Jim developed an awful trauma about British spies. Kim did a lot of damage to Jim. A lot of damage.” Cicely Angleton said that Philby’s betrayal hurt her husband, “terribly deeply-it was a bitter blow he never forgot.” In fact, after Philby went to Russia, Angleton thought that Philby was still “maintaining the campaign against Western intelligence from Moscow.” Walter Elder, special assistant to CIA Director John McCone from 1961-65, said that Philby’s betrayal was a very important event in Angleton’s life: “The Philby affair had a deep and profound effect on Jim. He just couldn’t let the Philby thing go. Philby was eventually to fit neatly into Jim’s perception of a Soviet “master plan” to deceive the entire West.” Elder continued in this vein thusly: “Long after Philby’s defection in 1963, Jim just continued to think that Philby was a key actor in the KGB grand plan. Philby remained very prominent in Jim’s philosophy about how the KGB orchestrated the “master plan” scenario.”

    As we shall see, Elder is talking about Angleton’s reception to Major Anatoli Golitsyn of the KGB. A defector whom Angleton-to put it mildly-placed too much trust in. And that misguided trust originated in the paranoia of the Philby betrayal. Angleton bought into Golitsyn’s wild and lurid portrayals of a KGB ‘monster plot’ because it fit the state of mind he was in after Philby’s personal treachery. As we shall see, this does appear to be one way to explain the incredible scenarios that Angleton fell for at the hands of Golitsyn.

    V

    According to Rosenbaum’s 1983 article in Harper’s, all the above is wrong. Why? Sit down please. Because Ron tells us that it was Angleton who was playing Philby. Therefore, all the above was a beautiful act by Jim A. The lamentations to his wife, to Peter Wright, his reluctance to turn over the memoranda which would have shown the information Angleton and Philby shared. According to Ron, Angleton even let all those operations in East Europe, and other places in Central Europe be rolled up. In other words, he got people killed because he was playing up to Philby to get his confidence.

    Then what is one to make of all the honors bestowed upon Philby when he finally fled to the USSR? Continuing and up to his burial with full honors, and a posthumous stamp issued with his name on it. Was that all unearned? Because, according to Ron, Philby was really informing to Angleton all the time he was in the USSR. Even though Angleton, as we have seen, told others at the time that Philby was still leading the KGB “master plan” from Moscow.

    It should be added, the above is just the beginning of the honors Philby won in the USSR. Before his death, he received the Order of Lenin, one of the highest honors a civilian could attain in the USSR. The KGB actually protected him from assassination. At his wake, several KGB agents made commemorative speeches as to his importance. He was then buried in the exclusive Kuntsevo Cemetery, a place where former premier Georgy Malenkov was buried. After his death, he had his plaque placed at the current Russian spy service center, and his portrait is in the Hall of Heroes.

    But according to Ron, those Russkies are just plain stupid. What is Ron’s evidence for the Russians being so dang dumb and honoring a guy who was just a tool of Angleton? If you read Ron’s article in the 1983 Harper’s, as collected in his anthology Travels with Dr. Death, its actually two sources: William Corson and Teddy Kollek. Both say that Angleton was informed of the Cambridge group at the time he knew Philby in Washington. (See Rosenbaum, Travels with Dr. Death, pgs. 23-25.)

    Now, from just the mention of the two names, this is strained even for Rosenbaum. Why? Because Corson was part of a circle of intelligence officers and reporters who worked with Angleton! After he left the CIA, that particular circle also included former Agency officer Robert Trumbull Crowley, and journalist Joseph Trento. Corson was a Marine in Vietnam who worked with the Southeast Asia Intelligence Force. There he became close with the CIA. Crowley and Angleton were friends and colleagues in the Agency. Corson wrote a book with Crowley called The New KGB. This book clearly showed the influence of Angleton’s thinking. Because it really was more of a history of the KGB rather than a current dossier on who they were. But further, it said that the Communist Party was not really in charge of the USSR anymore, the KGB was. Therefore, there was no real hope for detente. And “Soviet professions of reasonableness are pretense, a smokescreen behind which Russia under its new KGB masters reverts to harshest Stalinism.” With that in mind, there was little left to do but hold the USSR at “arm’s length and proceed with President Reagan’s Strategic Defense Initiative or “Star Wars” program. (New York Times, July 7, 1985)

    What is incredible about this is that the book was published the year Mikhail Gorbachev came to power! In fact, it was published four months after he became General Secretary. This is how wrong the authors were. And Angleton was right there with them since he was still saying similar things about the USSR at that time. (Mangold, p. 356) Now, in itself, that is something interesting that Rosenbaum does not inform the reader about. For if Philby was really Angleton’s tool, and he was now stationed in Moscow, why would Angleton and his circle still be so wrong about who Gorbachev was? And this was just two years before Angleton’s death. If any such communication existed-and there is no evidence it did-then it indicates Philby was still tricking Angleton.

    What about Kollek? Kollek was a long time Zionist who became the Mayor of Jerusalem in 1965. Angleton took over the Israeli desk in 1949 and was criticized by many for being too favorable to Israel during his tenure. Therefore, when Kollek says in a 1977 book on Anthony Blunt that he passed on the identity of the fifth member of the Cambridge spy ring to Angleton, one has to raise an eyebrow. (Rosenbaum, p. 25) Besides the fact that the “Fifth Man” was not who Kollek says he was, there is the problem that this “revelation” came in 1977 from a friend of Angleton’s. (Just as the “revelation” from Corson came out in 1977.) In other words, just two years after Angleton was fired, his friends now came out with these glimmers that Angleton was really aware of what Philby was doing all along.

    How weak are these excuses? Even Rosenbaum and Angleton have to acknowledge their transparent flimsiness. When Rosenbaum calls Jim A. for a comment on these newly discovered secrets–which arrive about 26 years too late–Angleton replies: “My Israeli friends have always been among the most loyal I’ve had. Perhaps the only ones to remain loyal.” (Ibid) For once Angleton and the author agree on something: His friends are trying to (unjustifiably) redeem him. In fact, Rosenbaum himself admits this may be true. In one moment he writes that, “Needless to say, there will be those among Angleton’s many critics who would say that the whole notion … was carefully planted by Angleton and his allies in an attempt to turn his most mortifying failure-the Philby case-into a clandestine success.” (ibid, p. 26)

    It is reassuring that even Rosenbaum is sometimes able to discern the obvious.

    VI

    Except there is even falsity in that above admission. Because Philby was not Angleton’s “most mortifying failure”. Most people would easily hand that honor to Anatoli Golitsyn. But in his writing on Angleton, Rosenabum has always been reluctant to fully describe just how blind Angleton was to Golitsyn’s fantasies. Or that Anatoli was manipulating Angleton for his own personal gain. Which he was. Golitsin was an ordinary KGB analyst who defected in December of 1961. When asked if he knew of any KGB double agents in Washington, he said he knew none. But he did know one of them in Europe who was codenamed SASHA. (Mangold p. 75)

    Very quickly, Golitsyn showed signs of megalomania. After a few weeks in America, he said he was tired of dealing with low level case officers like Dick Helms. (Who happened to be the number three guy in the CIA at the time.) He wanted to see President Kennedy and Attorney General Robert Kennedy. (Ibid, pgs. 76-77) He also wanted 15 million dollars to direct an organization to begin his plan to overthrow the USSR.

    Golitsyn did not get to see President Kennedy, but he did meet with Director John McCone–more than once. When he was asked to place his ideas about defeating the KGB in writing, he would not. McCone’s assistant concluded that, “Golitsyn was basically a technician. He had no knowledge of Soviet policy or decision-making processes at the high levels.” (Ibid, p. 77) But further, Angleton then got him a meeting with Allen Dulles. When Dulles asked him if he knew of any KGB penetration agent within the CIA, Golitsyn said he did not. (Ibid, p. 78)

    What these two episodes prove is that other people saw through Golitsyn rather quickly and easily. And second, Golitsyn later changed his story about a KGB mole inside the CIA. Yet, in spite of all this, Angleton continued to buy into him for 12 more years.

    Angleton did more than buy into him. He helped create and aggrandize Golitsyn. He violated a cardinal rule about defectors. He gave Golitsyn access to top secret Soviet Division files. He then laid down rules for how other agencies could interview him. This had the effect of letting Anatoli now create his own espionage tales, at the same time he was being at least partially protected by Angleton. But further, in the middle of a military debrief, Angleton arranged for Golitsyn to have an expenses paid two-week vacation to Disneyland. (Ibid, p. 81) But when he returned for the debrief, he was caught dead to rights creating a false story about how the KGB had gained access to a sensitive portion of the US Embassy in Moscow. (ibid) When confronted with this lie, Golitsyn walked out of the debrief. And he did not return.

    This pattern was repeated time after time during Golitsyn’s first year in America. He would be caught making something up, Angleton would ignore it, and he would demand, and get, more access to secret files. Sometimes he would even get access to the files of other agencies, like the FBI.

    But then Golitsyn made a claim that sealed Angleton’s fate. And his eventual disgrace. Anatoli told Jim that he should not listen to any defectors who followed him. Because they would all be fakes sent by the KGB for the purpose of discrediting him. This was part of the Soviet master plan, which also included secret messages in newspaper clippings. (Mangold, p. 87)

    Angleton was not content with allowing Golitsyn to only foul the intelligence networks in America. He then allowed him to do the same in England and France. He then would charge handsome fees for doing so. After seeing their files, he then would finger certain operatives. In England it was Roger Hollis and Graham Mitchell. But he also claimed that Labor candidate for prime minister, Hugh Gaitskell, was killed in order to allow Harold Wilson to take office. Therefore, the natural assumption was that Wilson was really a KGB asset. (Mangold, p. 95) Thus began a whisper campaign against Wilson.

    Armed with files from the CIA, FBI, MI5 and MI6, Golitsyn now pronounced any attempt at detente with the Russians to be useless. He also said that the idea of a Sino-Soviet split was part of the “master plan” to deceive the West. (It had actually begun in 1960 and was in full bloom by 1962) He also said that the idea that Eastern Europe wanted to be free from the USSR, that was also a deception and part of the master plan. And now he reversed himself on a key issue: the KGB had planted domestic agents inside the CIA.

    The more extreme Golitsyn got, the more Angleton liked it. When he returned from England, Anatoli got three gifts from his benefactor. He lent him his own lawyer-accountant, Mario Brod. He gave him a cash reward of 200,000 dollars. (Which would be about a million dollars today.) He then introduced him to a first-class stockbroker, James Dudley. In other words, as Golitsyn began to foul up the CIA’s operations here and abroad, Angleton began to personally reward him in ways that the middle level analyst had never dreamed of. The defector now bought a New York City townhouse and a farm in upstate New York. So the question then becomes: If you were Golitsyn, wouldn’t you also tell your benefactor not to trust any other defectors? If he did, they could endanger Golitsyn’s new status and prestige.

    Which is what happened with Yuri Nosenko.

    VII

    It is difficult to talk about the Nosenko case without referring to Edward Epstein. And it’s difficult to talk about Rosenbaum without mentioning Epstein. For the simple reason that Rosenbaum once wrote that Epstein’s Legend was a groundbreaking piece of work. (Rosenbaum, p. 37) Today, with later, more honest books about Angleton, most would disagree with that assessment. Most people would say that, like what Corson and Kollek did, Legend was a propaganda piece for Angleton. It was published around the same time, and it was a way for Angleton to press his case that William Colby had fired him unjustly.

    In the wake of all the information we have today, Angleton’s complaint against Colby is simply not credible. The truth is Nosenko was one of the most valuable defectors the CIA ever had. His information was much more valuable than Golitsyn’s. And it had very few, if any of the liabilities. Further, he had a much higher batting average. That is, his leads panned out at a much higher rate than Anatoli’s did. (Mangold, pgs. 333-34) But the point is that, by buying into the KGB ‘master plan’, that all other defectors would be fakes, Angleton ignored defectors who had an even higher batting average than Nosenko.

    Just how badly was Angleton tied into Golitsyn’s creed? He tried to discredit Nosenko to others months before he ever appeared in America. (Mangold, p. 169) This is an important fact that Epstein does not reveal in Legend. And neither does Rosenbaum. How did Angleton do this? He showed Golitsyn the record of Nosenko’s first debrief. This was done in Europe with CIA officer Peter Bagley. Bagley was at first impressed with Nosenko. But now the two men targeted Bagley and turned his opinion around on Nosenko. Epstein later admitted that Bagley had been a major source for him when he wrote Legend. (The Assassination Chronicles, p. 552) But as noted above, Epstein never reveals this plotting by Angleton in his book.

    That is a crucial point in the story. Because, as most know today, when Nosenko arrived in America, he was immediately imprisoned. He was then made to undergo intense hostile questioning and a rigged polygraph test. Undoubtedly, part of this was due to the fact that Nosenko actually defected two months after Kennedy’s murder. And he told the CIA that Oswald was not a Russian agent, and the KGB had only routinely surveilled him while he was in Russia. (Mangold, p. 174) This was more poison to Angleton. Because he was the CIA’s liaison to the Warren Commission at the time. And its clear he was pushing the line that Oswald was a Russian agent and the USSR had been behind the plot to kill Kennedy. In other words, Nosenko endangered both Angelton and Golitsyn.

    The basic facts about Nosenko’s imprisonment and torture were presented by Epstein. But Mangold’s book went much further in detail. Suffice it say, his imprisonment went on for five years. It got so bad that Nosenko went on a hunger strike. When he did, the CIA threatened to feed him intravenously. (Mangold, p. 188) For three years, he was not given anything to read. He did not see a dentist. Therefore, his teeth rotted. His second polygraph was also rigged. (Ibid, p. 189) Bagley wanted him to sign a fake confession for purposes of “disposing” of him.

    It wasn’t until Nosenko was imprisoned for three years that the tide began to turn against Angleton. Nosenko was finally given over to CIA officers who were not so influenced by Angleton and Golitsyn, and were not so biased against the man. When Bruce Solie of the Office of Security took over the case he was shocked at what he found. He quickly saw that Nosenko’s replies had often been mistranslated and the polygraph tests had been gamed against him. He also found out that at least six leads given to Bagley by Nosenko had been ignored. When Solie discovered them and passed them on, they all panned out. Some of them led to arrests. (ibid, p. 198) All of this important information was omitted by both Epstein and Rosenbaum.

    But further, Solie found that the reasons given by Bagley for suspecting Nosenko was a false defector were illogical. Nosenko had exaggerated his position in the KGB and lied about certain recall orders. Solie concluded that these kinds of things were commonplace with defectors. The former was used in order to make them more attractive to the CIA, and the latter was done to hurry his exfiltration to the West. (Mangold, p. 197) Solie now gave Nosenko a third polygraph. One that was not done under hostile conditions, nor was it rigged. Nosenko passed. Solie issued a 283 page report saying that Nosenko was a genuine KGB defector. The FBI now took up nine more of his leads. In 1969, Nosenko was finally set free and became a CIA consultant. Every CIA Director after Richard Helms agreed with Solie about Nosenko. In fact, Bill Colby was repelled by what Angleton had done to the man: “The idea that the CIA could put a guy in jail without habeas corpus just scared the living daylights out of me. That kind of intelligence service is a threat to its own people.” (Ibid, p. 203)

    But what is incredible about the Golitsyn/Angleton folie a deux is that it did not stop with Nosenko. It was repeated in the Yuri Loginov scandal. And again, neither Epstein nor Rosenbaum tell their readers about that. Loginov was also a prospective KGB defector. He was problematic to Angleton because, first, he said Nosenko was genuine, and second he said the Sino-Soviet split was real. But, probably even worse, he said that the exposure of a CIA double agent in Russia, Pyotr Popov, was not done by Golitsyn’s alleged mole, but by a mistake in tradecraft the KGB picked up on. (Mangold, pgs. 213-17) Because of this, Loginov was marked as a fake defector. But what Angleton did to Loginov was even worse than what he did to Nosenko. He turned him over to BOSS, the South African intelligence service, as a KGB agent. Without telling them Loginov was working as a double agent for the CIA. But like Nosenko, Loginov would not crack under interrogation. So he was handed over to West Germany and used by them in a spy trade with the Russians. To this day, no one knows for certain what happened to Loginov. There are some reports that he was simply dismissed. There are some reports that he was shot. But Angleton certainly knew that his execution was a probability once he was turned over to BOSS.

    In all, Angleton bragged that he turned back 22 defectors as fakes. The CIA later found that every single one of them was genuine. (Mangold, p. 231) Angleton’s pathological obsession with Golitsyn had paralyzed the CIA’s main mission in the Cold War: to collect reliable human intelligence on what was going on inside the Kremlin.

    The ultimate end game of the Angleton/Golitsyn marriage was codenamed HONETOL. This was the formal search for the mole inside the CIA. The mole which, in 1962, Golitsyn told Dulles did not exist. This search never bore any fruit: the mole was never found. But it ended up damaging, in some cases, wrecking the lives of those who came under suspicion. This occurred when Angleton gave Golitsyn their files. By the time it was finished, over 100 people were investigated. It got so bad that, after Colby fired Angleton, an act of congress was passed so that his victims could seek redress for having their careers stalled or destroyed. (Mangold, p. 277) Those were the lucky ones. Because there were victims overseas who could not seek redress from congress. Again, this tragic facet of the Angleton/Golitsyn union is not noted by either Epstein or Rosenbaum.

    For the truth about Angleton is easy to apprehend today. Books by Mangold, David Wise, and Michael Holzman were not one-sided mouthpieces for Angleton and his pals, as Legend was. Because toward the end, when Angleton and Golitsyn could not find their invisible mole, they turned inward. They now said a former ally against Nosenko, David Murphy, was the mole. Angleton actually flew to Paris, where Murphy was stationed, to warn the SDECE that Murphy was a double agent. (Mangold, p. 299) By the time Angleton was removed from office, he had investigated Prime Minister Harold Wilson of England, Prime Minister Olof Palme of Sweden, Chancellor Willy Brandt of West Germany, industrialist Armand Hammer, diplomat Averill Harriman, Prime Minister Lester Pearson of Canada, and National Security Advisor Henry Kissinger. These were all elements of Golitsyn’s ‘Monster Plot’.

    When Bill Colby took over, he did something unusual with Angleton. He began to review his performance as Counter Intelligence Chief. He later commented, “I couldn’t find that we caught a spy under Jim. That really bothered me.” (Mangold, p. 313) The further he looked the more obvious it became to Colby, “He was not a good CI Chief.” (ibid) For example, Colby could not find one productive operation Angleton was running in the USSR. Angleton’s division was on its own, cut off from the CIA. So much so that it had almost nothing to do with the rest of the Agency. When Colby found out that Angleton had routed all Israeli communications to himself, not to be shared with other Mideast stations, he took him off the Israeli desk. For this had prevented effective communications during the Yom Kippur War. (Ibid, p. 314) Colby also found out that Angleton was actually running agents through a private person, his lawyer Mario Brod.

    That was it for Colby. He called Angleton into his office and gave him three options. He could take another job in the Agency, take early retirement or become a consultant. When Angleton declined all three, Colby cooperated with CIA asset Sy Hersh to expose Angleton’s roles in an illegal mail intercept project and MH Chaos, a huge domestic surveillance program. Finally, in 1975, Angleton was forced out. At least 13 years too late. Unfortunately, Colby allowed Angleton several weeks to clean out his office. Still, when George Kalaris took over, he was surprised at what he discovered. There were dozens of letters from the illegal mail intercept program that had never been opened. (Ibid, p. 327) Angleton had not left behind the combinations to several safes. Kalaris had to have them blown open. To just recover all the hidden files took several weeks. It took three years to integrate them into the Agency’s central filing system.

    When Kalaris got to the HONETOL files on Wilson, Roger Hollis, Armand Hammer and Kissinger he was so ashamed at what was in them he had them incinerated. Kalaris commissioned a complete review of Golitsyn’s record. He found out that less than 1% of his leads had panned out. (Mangold, pgs. 333-34) Meanwhile, Kalaris discovered another source Angleton had ignored. A Russian military officer from the GRU. Kalaris decided to investigate those ignored leads which had been buried by Angleton. This source, code named NICK NACK, scored a perfect 20 for 20. (Ibid, p. 344)

    Kalaris now decided to retire Golitsyn. But he had to get all the files Angleton had given him back. It turned out that Angleton had allowed Anatoli to take FBI files and CIA personnel files to his home! Former CIA analyst Cleveland Cram was brought in to write the history of the CI division. It ended up being 12 volumes long. Cram concluded that Angleton had had a detrimental impact on the CIA. And the Golitsyn years had been a nightmare. (Ibid, p. 345) He also reviewed the literature of the period. He said that Epstein’s book Legend was part of a disinformation campaign. And it gave Angleton and his supporters an advantage by placing their argument forward first, adroitly but dishonestly.

    Angleton never gave up. He told CIA officer Walter Elder that the Church Committee was a KGB plot run by Philby out of Moscow. He was endorsing Goltisyn’s pronouncements into the eighties. Even though each of six predictions he made in 1984 turned out to be wrong. This was the true and sorry record of the man praised by Epstein and Rosenbaum. As a spy chief, Angleton was horrid.

    VIII

    Which brings us to Rosenbaum’s 2013 piece in Slate. Like Angleton, Ron just can’t give up. His New York Times July 10, 1994 essay on Philby was so confused and unwieldy that Rosenbaum seemed to say it was Philby who planted the idea of a mole in the CIA on Angleton. In fact, it was Golitsyn who did so. In that same 1994 piece, he seemed to drop the whole ‘Angleton played Philby’ nonsense. He said Philby had only one master, the Soviet Union. He added that only “die-hard supporters of James Angleton” would persist down the Angleton played Philby path.

    Well, I guess Ron is a die-hard Angleton supporter. He now tries to bring back the idea he discarded in 1994. In an article called “Philby and Oswald” he is ready to revive the old disinfo. His basis is an Epilogue to a recent novel called Young Philby. And what is Ron’s basis for this: an interview the novelist did with Teddy Kollek! Oh my aching back. Let us refer to the wise word of Daniel Wick in his discussion of two books on Philby published back in 1995:

    The evidence overwhelmingly demonstrates that Philby did great harm to the interests of the West and none whatsoever to Soviet interests, and that his treachery caused the deaths of dozens of Western agents while he did nothing that harmed a single Soviet. In the end, pop romantic speculation aside, he was Moscow’s man. (LA Times, January 1, 1995)

    In this same article, Ron tries to push the terrible book by CIA analyst Brian Latell, Castro’s Secrets. I would refer the reader to the ctka review of that book by Arnaldo M. Fernandez. (Castro’s Secrets) Once one does that, one will see that Ron is up to his old tricks again. His major endeavor in all this Angleton and Kennedy stuff is to confuse matters. Here is a guy who can write about the JFK case, “every once in a while something new turns up, a new twist, a declassified document an overlooked defector, a forgotten witness.” I guess Ron missed those 2 million pages of ARRB declassified documents. He sure missed the declassified Inspector General Report on the CIA-Mafia plots to kill Castro. Because Rosenbaum can write in his 2013 article that Castro was under threat from “assassination plots orchestrated by JFK and his brother Bobby.” If Rosenbaum had read the IG report he would have seen that these plots were deliberately kept from the Kennedys by the CIA.

    Would that have made any difference to him? Probably not. Rosenbaum is incorrigible. To the author, he represents all that is wrong with the MSM on both Jim Angleton and the JFK case. He can actually write that Angleton had a “mythic reputation within the intel community as the Master of the Game.” Whatever reputation Angleton had in the intelligence community has been destroyed with the release of new information about himself and his relationship with Oswald. As we have seen, Angleton was a disaster as a CI Chief. He was taken by not just by Philby but by Golitsyn. And as John Newman shows in his book Oswald and the CIA, he was very likely Oswald’s ultimate control agent. (Click here for a review.)

    If Rosenbaum is not aware of any of this, then he is irresponsible. If he is aware of it, then he is executing a whitewash. Either way, the man is irrelevant to the matters he is writing about on this the 50th anniversary of the JFK case.


    Go to Part 1

  • Ron Rosenbaum Fires the First Salvo, Part 1


    Rosenbaum and The Critics


    For all intents and purposes, on April 10th , Ron Rosenbaum kicked off the 50th anniversary battle over the JFK case in the media. He did it from his friendly perch at Slate Magazine. In his article entitled “Philby and Oswald,” he clearly connotes two things. First, he understands that the JFK community is coming very close to a unanimous vote about who Lee Harvey Oswald actually was. And second, a consensus is also gathering about who controlled Oswald, namely James Angleton. These developments – which owe much to the writing of John Newman and Lisa Pease – are very important in the JFK case. With them one can now discard the obsolete portrait of Oswald as painted by the deceitful Warren Commission. Secondly, one can now begin to indicate with authority who had control of Oswald’s files at Langley and the dance that was done with them in October and November of 1963. A dance that now seems all too deliberate. Knowing how crucial this information would be in any coming public debate, Rosenbaum decided to try for a preemptive strike about both Angleton and Oswald.

    To understand why he would do this one needs to know a bit about the history of journalist Ron Rosenbaum.

    I

    After graduating from Yale, Rosenbaum first secured a reporting job at The Village Voice. He left in 1975 and then began regularly contributing to Esquire, Harper’s, High Times, and Vanity Fair. Most recently he has written for New York Times Magazine and Slate. He has also published several books. Some of these have been anthologies of his previously published work. His most celebrated book is probably 1998’s Explaining Hitler. There the author interviewed several authorities trying to explain Hitler’s bizarre psychology.

    After he left The Village Voice, Rosenbaum first entered the JFK field. In July of 1976 he co-wrote an article about the death of Mary Meyer. Meyer was the divorced wife of CIA officer Cord Meyer who was murdered in 1964. This long article showed the hallmarks of what his later writing would be in the field. This included a trust for highly placed sources, a sneering cynicism about President Kennedy and those who thought there was something important about his presidency, and third, a strange, symbiotic relationship with and trust in James Angleton. Concerning the last, it is important to understand that this article appeared about two years after Angleton had been forced out of the CIA – in essence he was fired – by Director William Colby. Further, Angleton had been a person of interest in the Kennedy assassination to the Church Committee and, very soon, would be the same to the House Select Committee on Assassinations. But in spite of this, Rosenbaum and Nobile accepted just about all he said about the death of family friend Mary Meyer at face value. One does not have to abide by the wild schemes of Peter Janney to note that the authors should have been more circumspect about the canned counter-intelligence chief.

    But the 1976 article was really just a dress rehearsal. In November of 1983 Rosenbaum had his opening night gala. And what a bash it was. Texas Monthly has always been out to denigrate the critics of the Warren Commission. Realizing their mutuality of interests, for the 20th anniversary of President Kennedy’s assassination, Rosenbaum stepped up to the plate and smacked it out of the park for them. He penned a long article called “Still on the Case”. Rosenbaum’s essay was a slightly diluted, more concise version of the 1967 Lawrence Schiller/Richard Lewis volume, The Scavengers and Critics of the Warren Report. Except, in some ways, it was even more dishonest than that book. At the beginning of the piece, he appointed himself as the public’s tour guide, nicknaming himself El Exigente: the Demanding One from coffee taster lore. In other words, since he was a “real journalist”, he would be able to tell us what the critical community had actually developed in the 20 years since President Kennedy had been killed.

    The problem with so pompously appointing himself was simple: this was a disguise. Rosenbaum was not out in any way to fairly judge what the developments in the critical community had been for 20 years. He was not really interested in presenting any new information to the public. This is made obvious from the very opening of the article. The first two words in the subhead after the title are “Conspiracy Buffs”. Rosenbaum deliberately does not use the term “critics of the Warren Commission.” Therefore, in a stroke, he elevates the status of the Commission and lowers the status of the critics. He repeats this technique throughout the article. Consider the following usages of the term:

    buff books
    the buff grapevine
    buff biz
    ascendant buff
    buff trend
    buff factionalism
    buff fever
    technobuff
    buff theorists
    buff faith
    buff fratricide
    buff literature
    buff contacts
    second-body buffs
    Dallas buffs

    And I may have missed a couple of other turns. Clearly, from the very start, Rosenbaum was out to belittle any effort to find out the truth about the Kennedy case; but he was also out to caricature those who thought the cause worth pursuing. He jams this message home by using this term, “other assassins”, which he deliberately puts in quotes. Presumably meaning it’s a thought too nebulous to consider. As to other suspects in the case, he refers to them as The People Behind it All. That’s right, all in capital letters.

    II

    Rosenbaum opens the essay with a scene of him with Penn Jones in Dealey Plaza. Penn was demonstrating to Rosenbaum if a shot could be aimed at Kennedy from a manhole cover. This is how The Demanding One begins his search for truth and justice. It further reveals Rosenbaum’s agenda. If one were to ask ten writers to outline the shooting scenario in Dealey Plaza, I would guess that, at the most, perhaps one would say a shot came from a sewer or storm drain. More likely, none would propose that idea. But this is how Rosenbaum achieved his goal for his editors. He took the most extreme ideas in the research community and implied they were representative of that community. Which they were not. Another example Rosenbaum used as being representative was Michael Eddowes’ exhumation of Oswald’s corpse and his attempt to show that somehow the KGB had substituted an agent for Oswald while he was in the USSR. Still another example: Ron Ranftel’s published essay on the Psychedelic Oswald. This article was based on an FBI interview with a New Orleans lawyer who said a man named Oswald asked him about a book he had read by Aldous Huxley concerning the use of psychedelic drugs. If you can believe it, Rosenbaum goes on with this silly angle for two pages. (Rosenbaum, Travels with Dr. Death, pgs. 74-76) This article was so ephemeral that if you Google Ranftel’s name today you will only find it in relation to Rosenbaum’s book. But yet The Demanding One actually wrote that “The Psychedelic Oswald hypothesis offers an explanation, a way of reconciling some of the intractable contradictions he left behind.” No Ron. No one ever believed that. It was a way for you to fulfill your agenda of Reducing It All to Trivia.

    This is further exposed elsewhere by his equating of the critics with the term “deconstruction”. (ibid, p. xv) For those outside the realm of literary criticism, deconstruction refers to the 1960’s theory of criticism related to semiotics. It generally held that an author’s meaning could be divined more from the differences between words than from their reference to things they actually stood for. And that different meanings could be discovered by taking apart the structure of the language used, thereby exposing the assumption that words have a fixed reference beyond themselves. Having dealt in criticism for decades, I have never found this concept very useful. Although I could see how someone could use it in the realm of say films or novels. But in a murder case? Balderdash. The first generation of critics attacked the Warren Commission on two major grounds:

    1. Its main conclusions were not upheld by its own evidence. In other words, the Commission did not prove Oswald was guilty of killing President Kennedy or that Ruby had no help in killing Oswald.
    2. The amount of exculpatory evidence the Warren Report ignored about Oswald was shocking.

    In other words, the critics were not deconstructing text or film images. They were taking apart a criminal case piece by piece. Just as a defense lawyer for Oswald would have if the accused had not been killed by Jack Ruby. But to show just how biased Rosenbaum is, consider this passage from the essay. In describing a plaque outside the Texas School Book Depository set up by the Texas Historical Commission, he says it “still astonishes with its frank rejection of Warren Commission certainty.” Why? Because it refers to Oswald as the alleged killer of President Kennedy. To Ron, this is “astonishing” (ibid. p. 67). To anyone else, it is simply natural since Oswald never had a lawyer, let alone a trial.

    And then there are the howlers in the piece. In the acknowledgements to his anthology book, Travels with Dr. Death, Rosenbaum thanks the dozens of fact checkers at the magazines which published his essays. Including this one. (Which he retitled for its inclusion as “Oswald’s Ghost”.) Well, I don’t know what on earth Rosenbaum is thanking them for, since they allowed him to get away with some incredible errors. Which reveal that the man was either a dilettante or a fabricator.

    One of the methods Rosenbaum uses to ridicule the critics is to refer to certain recurring phenomena in the case with a rubric. The rather see-through intent behind this is to imply: “See that particular thing happened before, years ago, so why is it important now?” So when someone tells him about Carolyn Arnold, and her buried testimony about seeing Oswald downstairs during lunch after he was seen upstairs working, he writes “It isn’t the greatest missing-witness story I’ve heard. Nothing like the classic Earlene Roberts rooming house story.” (ibid, p. 63) Let us examine this passage to see just how gaseous Rosenbaum really is.

    First of all, the main point about Carolyn Arnold’s submerged story is not that it was apparently never given to the Warren Commission. Its not even that it tends to be exculpatory of Oswald. Rosenbaum notes those aspects. The key point about Arnold is this: The FBI changed her statement. In other words, they altered evidence in a murder case. When Anthony Summers interviewed Arnold in 1978, five years before Rosenbaum’s article appeared, she was immediately taken aback by what the report said. The FBI had written that, from outside the depository, she “thought she caught a fleeting glimpse of Lee Harvey Oswald standing in the hallway”. (Summers, Conspiracy, p. 77) Before Summers could even describe why her statement was important, the witness insisted this was not what she told the Bureau. First, she knew Oswald since he had come to her more than once for change. Secondly, she did not catch a glimpse of him from outside. At about 12:15 or later, she went into the lunchroom on the second floor and saw Oswald sitting in one of the booth seats on the right side of the room. Pretty nonchalant behavior for a murderer planning to be upstairs on the sixth floor in about five minutes setting up his boxes as a barricade, piecing together his rifle, loading a magazine, and lining up his target.

    The FBI altered a witness’s testimony in order to strengthen its case against Oswald. That is what is left out by Rosenbaum. And it is crucial. Because it suggests that the main investigative arm of the Warren Commission, J. Edgar Hoover’s FBI, was out to rig the case by making Carolyn Arnold’s identification much less certain than it was. Rosenbaum, striving so hard to be part of the MSM choir, wasn’t going to risk raising the ire of his editors by putting that key point in there. Even if the public needed to be made aware of it in order to understand the whole story behind the Warren Commission debacle.

    But if that’s not bad enough, Rosenbaum now screws up the Earlene Roberts aspect of his passage. Roberts, of course, was Oswald’s landlady at the rooming house at 1026 Beckley in Dallas. Rosenbaum recounts her story about Oswald coming into his room at about 1:00 PM on the 22nd, a police car pulling up and honking, and Oswald then leaving. Rosenbaum says that J. D. Tippit was then shot. He then assumes it might have been Tippit honking at Beckley. (Rosenbaum, p. 65)

    As we shall see, Ron didn’t do his homework on this issue. Roberts said there were two men in the car. Tippit was alone, so it was unlikely to have been him. (Mark Lane, Rush to Judgment, p. 169) But Rosenbaum also leaves out another key point. Roberts said that the last time she saw Oswald he was waiting at a bus stop outside her house. Rosenbaum fails to tell his readers that. Or this: the bus that stopped at that corner was headed the opposite way of the Tippit shooting. (ibid, p. 171)

    But here is Ron’s real howler. Rosenbaum says that Roberts died mysteriously before she was able to give her testimony. (Rosenbaum, p. 66) This is what I mean about thanking his non-existent fact checkers. Because Roberts testified to the Warren Commission on April 8, 1964 at the post office building at Bryan and Ervay Streets before Commission attorneys Joe Ball and Sam Stern. (WC Vol. VI, pgs 434-44) That same year, she appeared on a nationally televised CBS special. Her testimony appears prominently in several early books on the case, including Mark Lane’s best-selling Rush to Judgment. (See pgs. 168-71) Could Ron and his Thankful Fact Checkers really have missed all this? Some Demanding One.

    But El Exigente is not done spilling coffee on himself. Because then there is Ron and his 544 Camp Street Claim. In 1983, the address of 544 Camp Street, and all it conveyed, had been circulated fairly far and wide. First by the Jim Garrison investigation in the sixties. Then by the House Select Committee on Assassinations in the seventies. And then by Anthony Summers in his popular book entitled Conspiracy. That book was first published in 1980, and reprinted in 1981. It was reviewed in the Philadelphia Daily News, New York Post, Cosmopolitan, New York Review of Books, The Village Voice and the LA Times, among others. Summers begins his chapter on New Orleans with the famous Corliss Lamont pamphlet, “The Crime Against Cuba.” He describes it as an evidentiary “time bomb”. Because Oswald had stupidly stamped the address on it as follows: FPCC, 544 Camp St., New Orleans, LA. (Summers, pgs. 286-87) Summers then dutifully describes the problem with this address stamped by Oswald. Namely that there was no Fair Play for Cuba Committee office at that address. But there was an office for Guy Banister there. And plenty of witnesses saw Oswald in that office that summer. (James DiEugenio, Destiny Betrayed, 2nd edition, pgs. 111-113) Therefore, to do an article in 1983 about the state of the research in the JFK case, it would have been difficult not to address this issue about Oswald and Banister.

    Rosenbaum did address it. But in a truly weird way. A way that reveals how deep his commitment was to minimizing the Warren Commission’s perfidy. He writes that the Commission was fully aware of this issue and what it represented. (Rosenbaum, p. 81) According to Ron, the commission staffers were actually writing memos about 544 Camp Street. And when they presented their memos about it “to the harried chief counsel of the Warren Commission, it came back with these words scrawled on it: “At this stage we are supposed to be closing doors, not opening them.” (ibid)

    If the above paragraph about the Warren Commission, Guy Banister, and 544 Camp Street sounds like a fairy tale to the reader, that’s because it is. There is simply no evidence–even at this late date–after the declassification of 2 million pages of documents by the Assassination Records Review Board, that such an internal debate ever happened. And it is hard to think Rosenbaum didn’t understand that in 1983. Why? Because of his usage of the infamous line, “At this stage we are supposed to be closing doors, not opening them.” Everyone who knows anything about this case recognizes that this reply, by Chief Consul J. Lee Rankin to junior counsel Wesley Liebeler, was not made in relation to 544 Camp Street. It was made in reply to questions about the testimony of Sylvia Odio. (Edward Epstein, The Assassination Chronicles, p. 114) Again, where were Ron’s Thankful Fact Checkers? How demanding was El Exigente? The answer in regards to the Warren Commission is: Not Very.

    III

    As we know today, the FBI was very conscious of Oswald being at 544 Camp Street. That’s because some FBI agents, like Regis Kennedy, were actually at the place. (DiEugenio, p. 342) Hoover understood that to fully expose the paradox of a supposedly communist Oswald in the presence of rabid right-wingers in league with the CIA, this paradox would create a colossal problem for the Commission, the media, and the public. Therefore, as both John Newman and Anthony Summers have written, Hoover tried to cover up the fact that there was powerful evidence Oswald was indeed there. For instance, a message from New Orleans agent Harry Maynor to FBI HQ was lined out but still visible. It said, “Several Fair Play for Cuba pamphlets contained address 544 Camp Street.” (DiEugenio, p. 102) Also, when the FBI forwarded its few reports to the Warren Commission on Banister, they used the alternative address of 531 Lafayette Street. (ibid) Again, by leaving this out, Rosenbaum deprives the reader of the important knowledge that the FBI was furnishing duplicitous reports to the Commission. And the reason for that was because Hoover was not at all interested in finding out who the real killers of Kennedy actually were. If Rosenbaum had admitted this, it would have shown what a parody of justice and law enforcement the Commission actually was. And The Demanding One did not want to do that. It would have made the people he was busy caricaturing into real critics. And his editors unhappy.

    The ending section of the essay is in keeping with what has come before it. Rosenbaum makes a couple of contacts with people he esteems as the Wise Men of “buffdom”. They are Paul Hoch and Josiah Thompson. Paul Hoch, as everyone knows, is about as conservative on this case as one can get. And at the time of this article, he really wasn’t a researcher anymore. He was more or less an archivist who put out a rather undistinguished newsletter called Echoes of Conspiracy. Which was just that: a newsletter. It was not a research journal at all. In the sense that he didn’t commission articles on certain subjects in the field. Well, realizing that, Ron gets exactly what he wants from Hoch. After looking over Echoes of Conspiracy, the author writes, “Clippings. There seemed to be no edge, no direction, no sense that any of this was leading to anything.” (Rosenbaum, p. 85) Well, looking at that publication, yes you could say that. You could not say that about say, Probe Magazine in the nineties. That publication was geared to the ARRB and featured many cutting edge pieces based on the declassified materials that Rosenbaum never saw or even mentions.

    He then calls Hoch and tells him, “I get the impression that you’re shifting from being an assassination investigator to something more like a commentator.” Hoch replies, “I think that’s true.” Rosenbaum asks, “But what about solving the case?” And the response is, “I just don’t know. I just don’t know if it’s too late now.”

    If anyone can show me an instance when Paul Hoch was ever trying to crack open the Kennedy case, I would be interested in hearing about it. This is a man who once recommended that Lisa Pease read Carlos Bringuier’s book Red Friday since it had some good information in it. He also once said that he felt that the HSCA was actually improved once Richard Sprague was ousted as Chief Counsel. After a speaking panel in Chicago, which featured Commission counsel Burt Griffin and HSCA Deputy Counsel Robert Tanenbaum, Hoch said he preferred Griffin. This is the man to whom El Exigente asks the question: “What about solving the case?”

    The last interview Rosenbaum does is with Josiah Thompson. Rosenbaum writes that Thompson was a former philosophy professor of his at Yale. What results from this conversation is, again, more or less predictable. Thompson’s book Six Seconds in Dallas had been published back in 1967, sixteen years previous. The only book he had worked on in the meantime was an unpublished anthology with Peter Dale Scott and Hoch called Beyond Conspiracy. Having seen the manuscript, thank God it was never published. It largely bought into the findings of the HSCA. Therefore, as with Hoch, if Thompson did not have any edge, or direction, it was because he was not still on the case. That is clear from one of the first things he tells The Not So Demanding One. Incredibly, Thompson says that the NAA testing done by Vincent Guinn for the HSCA is “very powerful evidence that the single-bullet theory is correct. It absolutely astonishes me, but you gotta look at what the evidence is.” (ibid, p. 88. To be fair to Thompson, he does bring up a question about he provenance of CE 399)

    Of course today we know what others had long suspected. Vincent Guinn’s NAA as applied to bullet lead analysis was a sham. Or as some luminaries call it today, junk science. It has been so badly discredited by two academic teams that the FBI will not use it in court anymore. (Click here for a review.) Rosenbaum then closes the piece with this opinion: If there was any conspiracy, it was probably a Mafia hit. Which, if Rosenbaum was accurate, Thompson himself was leaning toward at the time. (ibid, pgs. 88-89) Rosenbaum confirms this in an update to his essay. Written in 1991, those four paragraphs praise the work of the late John Davis in Mafia Kingfish. He calls this the best conspiracy concept we are ever likely to get. But he finally adds that he is suspicious of conspiracy theories that make Oswald a pawn. He still feels that Oswald was more of a manipulator than a pawn, “if only of his own impersonations.” (ibid, p.91) So for Ron, it was either a Mafia did it or Oswald did it scenario. Although I am a bit confused by the last quoted six words. Does this mean that Oswald had actually tricked Marcello and Trafficante into taking the blame for what he actually did himself?

    IV

    By essentially leaving out authors like Tony Summers, George Michael Evica and their more current efforts, El Exigente had reduced the two decades of research into the JFK case into a morass of eccentricity and confusion. But even more, he had made it so unattractive, so bizarre, and so pointless, that his article would discourage anyone else from entering the field. Which, of course, is what the Texas Monthly has always wanted to do.

    But there were another lacunae in The Demanding One’s work. In his introduction to Travels with Dr. Death, the author writes about the JFK case as such: “And so investigation begets investigation begets re-investigation, and still the ghost of Oswald lurks in the static with that inscrutable smirk on his face…” What he is referring to is the sequence of first, the Warren Commission, then the Church Committee, and finally the HSCA. What he leaves out is what anyone who is familiar with those inquiries knows. The Warren Commission was not an investigation at all. It was controlled by the information given to it by the FBI and the CIA. And since the Commission had no independent investigators, it really had no choice but to go along with those two bodies. Even, as we have just noted, when they were being lied to. There is no better example of this than the Commission’s non-investigation of Oswald’s alleged journey to Mexico City. If El Exigente had interviewed either Eddie Lopez or Dan Hardway-the co-authors of the HSCA’s classified report on that subject-he would have understood that. But there is no trace that he did, or even considered doing so.

    The Church Committee was not an investigation of Kennedy’s murder. It was an investigation of the performance of the intelligence agencies in service to the Warren Commission. And it was quite negative about that performance. Scoring both the Bureau and the Agency for not being fully candid or timely with important information. Like, for instance, keeping the CIA’s Castro assassination plots secret from both the Kennedys and the Commission. In fact, the 1975 Church Committee was the first time that the plots were fully revealed. This was 11 years after the Warren Commission. But as far as the actual facts of the assassination, the Church Committee did not really investigate that aspect. But if El Exigente had talked to the co-chair of that committee, Sen. Richard Schweiker, he would have gotten an earful about 1.) How bad the Warren Commission really was 2.) Oswald’s status as a U. S. intelligence agent, and 3.) A guy named Maurice Bishop who he learned was CIA officer David Phillips, and who had been seen with Oswald in late August of 1963 in Dallas by a prominent Cuban exile official. Again, there is no evidence in the article that The Demanding One interviewed Schweiker, or even considered doing so. And, if you can believe it, after Summers, Evica and the HSCA, there is no mention of Phillips in the entire essay.

    Concerning what he refers to as the “re-investigation”, Rosenbaum is actually referring to the House Select Committee on Assassinations. What’s kind of startling, even for someone as undemanding as Rosenbaum, is that there is no notice in the essay about the split in leadership in that committee. That is, Rosenbaum does not at all describe how the first Chief Counsel, celebrated Philadelphia prosecutor Richard Sprague, was replaced by Cornell law professor Robert Blakey. Most commentators would agree that this was a very important part of the tale. Some would say it was the key part of what happened to the Committee. Or, as Bernard Fensterwald once said, “The House Select Committee sure went all to hell in a hand basket” after this. (The Assassinations, edited by James DiEugenio and Lisa Pease, p. 69) And most chroniclers would agree with that assessment.

    Why? Because Sprague was going to conduct an all out, full court, homicide investigation. Using his own professional investigators, his own experts, with no agreements with the FBI or CIA about what could be withheld from the committee or what was considered out of bounds for investigation or publication. In other words, for the first time, the Kennedy case was really going to be investigated at a federal level. We all know what happened to Sprague. Much like Jim Garrison, he was vilified in the press and infiltrators were sent in to the committee to foul his relationship with Committee chairman Henry Gonzalez. (DiEugenio and Pease, pgs. 59-61)

    What came from Blakey’s leadership was something quite different. As Cyril Wecht has stated, it was a much more controlled operation. It was much more friendly and cooperative with the FBI and CIA. And it was also much more interested in upholding the main findings of the Warren Commission. As we have just seen, the main way Blakey did this was through the now discredited bullet lead testing of Vincent Guinn. Also, there was never any real examination of the three shells at the so-called “sniper’s nest”. Something that has been now brought into serious question. (DiEugenio, Destiny Betrayed, 2nd edition, pgs. 343-44) So when Rosenbaum calls the HSCA a “reinvestigation” he is using that word much more liberally than the facts allow. And, perhaps more importantly, Rosenbaum is not telling the reader why it turned out so poorly. Or that Blakey’s “Mob did It” hypothesis was never accepted by most of the critical community. In fact, it was his fig leaf for disguising what the real findings of his committee were. Which he then tried to classify for fifty years. Until the creation of the ARRB. (For a fuller discussion of why this happened, see DiEugenio, pgs. 325-45, and DiEugenio and Pease, pgs. 51-89)

    In other words, what El Exigente leaves out of his long essay is this rather important fact: There has never been a genuine investigation of the murder of President Kennedy by the federal government. And that is why so many questions abound and why private citizens spend so much time on it. But his editors at Texas Monthly wouldn’t have liked that. Because it would have given away Ron’s game and exposed his El Exigente posturing as a cheap and transparent Wizard of Oz facade.

    But the above is only half the story about Ron Rosenbaum. And one has to understand the other half if one is to fully grasp his opening salvo on the coming November War for America’s historical consciousness. The other half is this: Rosenbaum is one of a vanishing breed. In fact, it’s almost an extinct breed. For he is one of the very few men in America who still admires former CIA Counter-Intelligence Chief James Angleton. In fact, way back in October of 1983, just one month before he wrote his hit piece for Texas Monthly, he penned an all too kind article about the defrocked officer for Harper’s. Right before the 20th anniversary of President Kennedy’s death. Was this just a coincidence? Perhaps. Perhaps not.

    But as we shall see, El Exigente does the same thing with Angleton as he does with the critics. Except in reverse. He hides the worst aspects, softens the weak spots, and covers up the man’s disasters. And, most necessary of all, he completely censors Angleton’s associations with Oswald. In other words, he repeats today in 2013, what he started back in 1983.

    We shall detail how Rosenbaum recycled what he did for 20th anniversary in preparation for the 50th anniversary in Part 2.

  • James DiEugenio, Destiny Betrayed (Second Edition)


    By 1967, Jim Garrison became the Prometheus to the Achesonian Olympus. 

     – Robert Spiegelman 


    I.  Garrison Unbound

    About three years ago, at the Lancer “November in Dallas” conference, Jim DiEugenio gave an address entitled “Historical Revisionism and the JFK Case”, in which he defended his criticism of a few recent theories of the assassination, criticism which some – quite mistakenly, in this writer’s opinion – interpreted as counter to the spirit of free inquiry.  The main point of his presentation was that revisionism should not denote a quest for novelty at the expense of accuracy.  If we are to have any hope of coming to terms with what happened on November 22, 1963, we must take care to remain focused on the evidence.  The reissue of Destiny Betrayed is extremely timely in this respect.  I would fancy that when DiEugenio gave this talk, the need for an updated edition of his 1992 book had already crystallized in his thinking; but as we enter the 50th anniversary year it has become ever more urgent, as his lecture suggested, to revisit the breakthroughs made during the first decade and a half after John Kennedy’s death, and to build on them using the knowledge and insight we have since acquired.  This thoroughly rewritten study does precisely that.

    No single person uncovered as many clues1 in that early period of the JFK investigation as did Jim Garrison.  And it is impossible for the reader not to take away from Destiny Betrayed a sense of indebtedness to those leads. But the reader also cannot help but be impressed by the imposing factual edifice that is erected upon them.  In that same lecture, DiEugenio paraphrased Garrison concerning what an investigator should hope to achieve in this case:  “… a paradigm that would be justified internally by the evidence yet [whose] overall design would fit the shape of the plot.”  This book fulfills Garrison’s prescription by offering an abundance of details – more so than perhaps any other reconstruction of the crime – that fit the players and their activities together into a coherent picture.

    It does so in large part through the constant confrontation of old information with the new.  From the seemingly inexhaustible font of documents declassified by the ARRB have flowed forth revelations in a number of areas explored by the author:  Vietnam, the Bay of Pigs, Mexico City, James Angleton’s role in the setup of Oswald, Shaw and his legal team’s CIA connections, the Clark Panel and HSCA medical cover-ups, the complicity of the media and the federal government in sabotaging Garrison’s investigation – to name just a few highlights from the wide scope of this book.  Further, the author’s own interviews during the mid-90s, his 1994 inspection of the DA’s files (he was the first person outside his staff allowed to copy Garrison’s files), along with the work of John Newman, John Armstrong, Bill Davy, and Jim Douglass, as well as a host of articles published in Probe by others such as Lisa Pease and Donald Gibson: these are all mustered to good effect in support of Garrison’s case.  The corroborative weight of this evidence is quite compelling.  Yet the author never ceases to remind us, as did the twelfth-century schoolmaster Bernard of Chartres, that if we can see farther, it is because we are dwarves standing on the shoulders of giants (and in particular, one giant, jolly and green though he may have been deemed).

    This study not only offers convincing confirmation for Garrison’s hypotheses, but also ratifies Garrison’s more general suspicions concerning the clandestine interference with his investigation, and the direction in which the country was heading.  In preparing this review, this writer had occasion to reread Garrison’s interview given to Playboy magazine in October 1967, and was impressed by the lucidity, force, and uncanny relevance of his final remarks:

    our Government is the CIA and the Pentagon, with Congress reduced to a debating society … We won’t build Dachaus and Auschwitzes; the clever manipulation of the mass media is creating a concentration camp of the mind that promises to be far more effective in keeping the populace in line … I’ve learned enough about the machinations of the CIA in the past year to know that this is no longer the dream world America I once believed in … Huey Long once said, “Fascism will come to America in the name of anti-fascism.” I’m afraid, based on my own experience, that fascism will come to America in the name of national security.

    Recall, this was 1967!2  At a distance of 50 years, where half of one’s readership has no memory of the event, the question of relevance naturally arises; but such relevance is not realized by fishing for links between the assassination and personages responsible for recent political crimes or abuses, as some of the authors criticized in DiEugenio’s lecture do, for these mostly end up having the consistency of gossamer.  As Garrison alerted us, it is to the institutional consequences of the assassination that we must look, because, as Lisa Pease opines in her preface to the book, “the same operational template can be run again” (and indeed has been, repeatedly).  Destiny Betrayed does not bludgeon the reader with this message; it makes the point cogently by showing rather than by telling.

    For a number of reasons, this is not a typical book on the JFK assassination. As DiEugenio himself has declared (see, for instance, his remarks at the beginning of his well-known review of JFK and the Unspeakable), it was already his intention with the first edition to bring assassination research out of the ghetto.  What he had in mind was a broadening of perspective beyond the mechanics of Dealey Plaza or the suspicious goings-on at Bethesda, and this is precisely the manner in which the reader is made to enter the maze:

    The events that exploded in Dallas on November 22, 1963, had their genesis in Washington on a February day in 1947.

    Much as with the traditional novel, one can almost unpack the remaining four-hundred-odd pages from that single opening assertion. The quest for the appropriate context in which to decipher JFK’s presidency and death is one of the principal tasks undertaken by the author.  But his formal choices also transform his engagement with these events from a simple act of sleuthing into a veritable essay in the hermeneutics of history. 

    To illustrate what I mean by this, let me begin by observing that a dialogue of past and present is inscribed in the book through the interplay of narration and commentary. The narrative building-blocks are ordered mainly along chronological lines, leading from the initial post-war articulations of U.S. foreign policy, through JFK’s presidency, the activities in New Orleans and Dallas preceding his death, and the subsequent domestic investigations, to conclude with some reflections about the continuing impact of the assassination and its cover-up on the political climate of the United States today.  This basic organization is, however, selectively adjusted for thematic purposes; for instance, Oswald’s activities in New Orleans (chpts. 5-6) are separated from his return to the U.S. and his final days (chpt. 8) by a flash-back dealing with his early life and defection (chpt. 7), thus lending, by its central position, an explanatory prominence to his intelligence training.  (I should add here that these latter two chapters form the best concise treatment of Oswald I have yet to read.)  The last three chapters also break with the preceding linear progression (more on this below).  But emerging from within this broadly forward sweep are also narrative swirls and eddies where the author interrupts his story in order to indicate a noteworthy nexus which will be handled more fully later, or which involves knowledge we now possess but which was unavailable then.  Far from obscuring or confusing the chain of events, this weaving in and out of strict chronology – and its attendant modulation between points of view – is adroitly handled and lends a sense of continuous integration to the reader’s journey.

    Another narrative technique, related to and often conjoined with the preceding one, is that of the leitmotif.  For instance, we meet a corporation called Freeport Sulphur in the very first chapter with respect to mining concessions in 1950s Cuba.  We return to that company in the context of Garrison’s discovery of a Freeport link between Shaw, Ferrie and Banister (chpt. 10); then again in terms of Gaeton Fonzi’s reinvestigation of those leads for the HSCA (chpt. 15).  And then finally, in the fullest and most crushing context, with that ignoble corporation’s role in the Indonesian coup, related in the penultimate chapter.  Another example of this technique centers on the CIA’s turn to drug-running money after Kennedy defunded Mongoose, which we first read about in Chapter 6, and then again in Garrison’s discovery of the Ruby-Oswald-Cheramie connection (chpt. 10), with further confirmation via reference to Douglas Valentine’s discovery (2004) of the CIA’s infiltration of U.S. Customs, followed by a discussion of the Hubert-Griffin memo (see Section III below), putting Sergio Arcacha Smith, whose name peppers the pages of this book, decidedly in the middle of it all.  Leitmotif is also used with respect to one of the cardinal figures in this story, Bernardo DeTorres.  He is  first discussed in the context of how news of the back channel to Castro was divulged among the Cuban exiles (chpt. 4), then with respect to his infiltration of Garrison’s inchoate investigation (chpt. 11), and then again with reference to his independent discovery by Fonzi through Rolando Otero which led to his wider connection to the probable operational faction of the plot (chpt. 15).

    The artful use of such devices lends to Destiny Betrayed a concern with the intimate connection between meaning and expository process shared by few other books on this subject, the vast majority of which are simply organized by topic.  More specifically, these literary techniques do not serve as mere artifice, extraneously imposed on the material, but emerge naturally from it, as the author winds and unwinds his thread through the Daedalian intricacies of a story that ultimately is revealed to have explicated itself.  For over the retrospective span of the intervening decades, events have indeed disclosed their own significance before our very eyes, not only through documentary releases, but by the repeated pattern of the actions of their protagonists.  One of the theses of the book is that the JFK assassination and the destruction of Garrison were interlocking covert operations, in which some of the same players were involved.  Another theme, which runs in parallel, is that Kennedy’s presidency blocked the progress of economic globalism, which was then restored after his death.  We are made conscious of these relationships, not just through a series of momentary epiphanies, but ultimately through participation in a larger unfolding.  In a profound sense, this book claims that the meaning of November 22, 1963, lies as much in what subsequent occurrences have affirmed as in the case that can be constructed directly from the facts and circumstances of the crime.

    This conviction manifests itself finally in the book’s broadest architecture, one based on recapitulation.  The concluding chapters generate a triad of embedded arches – or perhaps even concentric rings:  the outermost (chpts. 1-4, plus 17) deals with Cold War policy and JFK, echoed by a discussion of foreign policy changes under LBJ; inside that, we have a similar structure (chpts. 5-8, plus 16) addressing the significance of Garrison’s discoveries about New Orleans and Oswald and ending with Mexico City, the importance of which Garrison clearly understood, but the full truth about which was concealed from his view.  This leaves the innermost tripartite (and most drama-like) sequence (chpts. 9-10, 11-13, 14-15) tracing Garrison’s career and entry into the case, the government and media campaign against him, and the actions subsequent to Shaw’s acquittal, including how the same forces deployed against Garrison made a shambles of the House Select Committee on Assassinations. (Chapter 18 completes the composition, serving as a coda to the entire book).

    At the center stands, of course, Jim Garrison, the oracular voice decrying national calamity and a knowing participant in his own professional ruin, whose vindication is as much a part of the story DiEugenio tells as is the exposure of the powers which removed JFK from office.  It is, in fact, this dovetailing of two lives, this fateful encounter of purpose, that gives Destiny Betrayed its dramatic design. The book’s felicitous title, retained for this second edition, suggests an underlying logic impelling actions toward their “dénouement” (the title of the final chapter); a process, to take the author at his etymological word, to be perceived as the untying of a knot.  The book’s title not only implies (somewhat paradoxically) the deliberate theft of what should have been, both in terms of U.S. foreign policy and in terms of bringing (at least one) of the perpetrators to justice; it also hints at how the unraveling of five decades has “betrayed” – that is, revealed – the character of both John Kennedy and Jim Garrison, despite monumental exertions to conceal or distort the truth.


    The Afro-Asian revolution of nationalism, the revolt against colonialism, the determination of people to control their national destinies … in my opinion the tragic failure of both Republican and Democratic administrations since World War II to comprehend the nature of this revolution, and its potentialities for good and evil, has reaped a bitter harvest today—and it is by rights and by  necessity a major foreign policy campaign issue that has nothing to do with anti-communism. 

     – John F. Kennedy, from a speech given during the Stevenson campaign, 1956


    II. JFK, the Cold War Establishment, and Cuba 

    As mentioned in the preceding section, the first four chapters of  the book, along with the penultimate one, raise a fundamental issue:  whether JFK was ever a “Cold-Warrior”, and whether the assassination had any effect on the policies he had been pursuing.  Seriously posing this question has long been anathema to mainstream writers on both the Left and the Right, some choosing to feign perplexity at the so-called “enigma” that was John F. Kennedy.  At the very least we may observe that historians have been burdened by a considerable amount of preconceived baggage regarding what Kennedy’s politics could or could not have been.  Yet I think John Newman put his finger on the crux of the matter in his masterful JFK and Vietnam:  if one concentrates on the rhetorical indirections of his public statements – which JFK felt compelled to practice, for better or for worse, out of fear of vitiating his political efficacy – then one may derive the picture of a man who is mostly in conformity with the ideological matrix of his time.  But as Newman teaches us, that is not the best way to understand his presidency.  For, in the end, it is what he actually did and did not do which tells the more authentic tale.  DiEugenio is not insensitive to the political pragmatist in Kennedy; but speaking of his desire to bolster his anti-communist credentials, especially during the 1960 campaign, the author insists that “below the level of campaign rhetoric, John Kennedy was not simply a more youthful version of Eisenhower” [19]3.  Even James Douglass, with whose marvelous book this one aptly bears comparison (more on this momentarily), can be led astray by this side of JFK into believing that he changed his foreign policy stance in some essential way while he was president. With Destiny Betrayed, I believe we are finally given firmer footing for posing this question properly.

    In order to do so, one must look to origins.  That is where the first chapter, Legacy, begins. From the opening allusion to the request from the British Embassy asking Secretary of State Marshall for aid in quelling insurrection in Turkey and Greece, through the Truman Doctrine, the Marshall Plan, NATO and the National Security Act, we witness the fateful passage from republic to empire as the United States assumes custody of former European colonial interests in the name of containing putative Communist aggression and the Domino Theory.  For DiEugenio, the key which unlocks what follows is this implicit marriage of ideology with economic interest.  Out of that unholy alliance is born, through the midwifery of Allen Dulles, the de facto executive arm of neo-colonialism in the guise of a drastically metamorphosed CIA.  In Dulles, in fact, these two lines – a hard-core view of the Soviet Union (which he shared with Nazi intelligence chief Reinhard Gehlen, whose vast network Dulles, while chief of the Berlin OSS office, helped retain with Gehlen in control), and a globalist perspective held in common with the Rockefeller corporate interests (which he and his brother John served as senior partners at the Wall Street firm of Sullivan and Cromwell) – converged perfectly and literally became one.  To quote DiEugenio, “With Allen Dulles, the acronym ‘CIA’ came to stand for ‘Corporate Interests of America’” [6].  By the time of the Bay of Pigs, so the long buried Lovett-Bruce report tells us, 80% of the CIA’s budget was going to covert operations [49].

    While belief in the necessity of a nuclear deterrent is certainly one component of Cold War ideology, this Dulles-Rockefeller view of the Third World as their own economic protectorate is equally, if not more, critical.  So, too, these two elements should bear at least equal weight when we assess the Kennedy presidency. DiEugenio’s treatment of the assassination plot shares a great deal of ground with that of Douglass’s JFK and the Unspeakable, but it gives us a sharper picture of what made JFK so different from his peers by concentrating much more single-mindedly on this second pane of the Cold War lens. Though Douglass does write incisively about Kennedy’s resistance to the national security agenda in his Cuba and Vietnam decisions, his claim that JFK underwent an Augustinian moment in the garden during the Missile Crisis is, from the wider angle sought by DiEugenio, overstated (and the only feature which mars Douglass’s otherwise convincing treatment of Kennedy).  Rather than conversion, DiEugenio’s chosen trope for JFK’s coming into his own is that of education, which he borrows from Richard Mahoney’s seminal work, JFK: Ordeal in Africa (1984).4  Taking his cue from that study, DiEugenio locates the decisive moment in Kennedy’s 1951 tour of the Far East and his meeting with Edmund Gullion, senior official at the American Embassy in Saigon (and later appointed by Kennedy as Ambassador to the Congo), an encounter which Robert Kennedy said had a major effect on his brother’s thinking [21-22].

    From there the counterpoint between JFK’s views and the actions of the Dulles circle becomes increasingly evident. Kennedy even criticized his own party (Truman and Acheson) for their intellectual indolence in this area. In 1953 he wrote then Secretary of State John Foster Dulles a letter with forty-seven specific questions about what the U.S. aims in Vietnam were, asking how a military solution (including use of atomic weapons) could actually be feasible. While the Eisenhower government secretly conspired to undermine the Geneva accords and have the U.S. assume France’s role in Saigon, Kennedy began to give more speeches about the struggle of African and Asian peoples to throw off the yoke of oppression.  The culminating moment in all this came in 1957 when he defended Algerian independence on the floor of the Senate, much to the disapprobation not only of about two-thirds of the major newspapers, but also of one of the Democrats farthest to the left, for whom he had in fact campaigned in 1956: Adlai Stevenson [22-28].  The author is correct to lament the lack of attention given to this speech in the assassination literature. Where Douglass, with good reason, sees the American University speech delivered in June of 1963 as a pivotal event in JFK’s Cold War diplomacy, DiEugenio is surely also right to consider the Algeria speech the Rosetta Stone for what JFK would later do and not do in the Oval Office.  In fact, it would have been a good idea to excerpt the entire speech as an appendix in order to show just how far out of the mainstream Senator Kennedy was before he became president.

    One of the author’s virtues is his determination to avoid isolating any one foreign policy decision from all the others.  For the total picture eloquently proves Kennedy’s substantial divergence, not just from the Dulles coterie, but also from his own advisers.  It is unnecessary to dwell at length here on what has become familiar since Newman’s 1992 opus, because it has been clamorously confirmed by the ARRB’s declassification of documents:  Kennedy’s plans for withdrawal from Vietnam began in 1962 and were made official in May of 1963.  DiEugenio does a fine job summarizing this “Virtual JFK” material, demonstrating the stark reversal of policy which occurred a mere forty-eight hours after the assassination, and which LBJ strove to disguise [365-371].  What the book adds to all this is a series of before-and-after snapshots from other areas of JFK’s Third-World policy, images which capture the same panorama.

    In the Congo, for instance, Kennedy favored the nationalists against the Belgian and British allies who wished to see the mineral-rich Katanga province secede.  It is more than probable that Lumumba’s assassination was instigated by Allen Dulles to occur just before Kennedy took office [28-29].  President Kennedy thereafter interceded twice with the U.N. to convince them to maintain peacekeeping forces in the region, which they did. Kennedy’s preferences, backed by the U.N., for how to train the Congolese were nevertheless subverted by the Pentagon in its support of eventual dictator Mobutu Sese Seko.  LBJ, on the other hand, clearly allied the U.S. with Belgium, and in 1964 allowed right-wing Rhodesians and South Africans to join in this supposed war on a “Chinese inspired Left”, the economic consequences of which were a tremendous boon to Mobutu and the West but disaster for the Congolese [371-373].

    JFK’s Indonesian policy follows a similar course.  On behalf of Standard Oil and other Rockefeller interests, the CIA had unsuccessfully attempted a Guatemala-like coup there in the late 50s;  Kennedy not only broke with this direction, but went well beyond it, befriending the PKI-allied (i.e., “Communist”) Sukarno, and in a parallel with the Congo, also obtaining U.N. support for the return of West Irian, another mineral-rich region coveted by Euro-American corporations, from the Netherlands to the Indonesians [31-33]. JFK’s Indonesian aid bill was never signed by LBJ.  A chain reaction, begun by LBJ’s siding with the British over the creation of Malaysia, followed by Indonesia’s withdrawal from the World Bank and IMF, finally resulted in a CIA-prompted bloodbath of genocidal proportions foreshadowing Operation Phoenix.  Like Mobutu in the Congo, the new Indonesian government under Suharto brokered mining rights off to the highest bidder [373-375].

    Third in this litany of exploitation unleashed by Kennedy’s death is Laos.  Newman, David Kaiser and others have recounted JFK’s adamant refusal to intervene unilaterally and his support for a coalition government there (this was an even more visibly pressing issue than Cuba in the first months of 1961). The CIA and military consistently undermined this position, particularly through Air America, the CIA’s covert air force. They destabilized the Laotian economy with forged currency and forced the Pathet Lao into retaliatory action, which turned into a civil war responsible for untold decimation.  The economic fruit of all this was an immensely profitable heroin trade [375-377].  One could further include here LBJ’s analogous handling of situations in the Dominican Republic, Brazil, Iran, and Greece.

    This general pattern of reversal is striking enough. But frequently the players involved have a recurring familiarity that is hard to dismiss as coincidental.  For instance, John McCloy is the man who David Rockefeller and the CIA sent in to fix the Brazil situation after Kennedy’s death. Then there is LBJ’s campaign support from Augustus Long and Jock Whitney of Freeport Sulphur, a company with links to Shaw’s International Trade Mart, and which ended up making billions from Indonesian concessions. (Long established a group called the National Independent Committee for Johnson, which included the likes of Robert Lehman of Lehman Brothers and Thomas Cabot, Michael Paine’s cousin.)  But of course, proof of conspiracy does not (and cannot) rest merely at this speculative level.  And while all of this provides a credible background against which to delineate what occurred in Dallas, DiEugenio never claims it as more than that.  From the weight of the evidence, the true catalyst for the assassination still must be considered to be the powder keg of Cuban affairs.

    Which also fits into the foregoing template. The book’s chapters on Cuba are unparalleled in the field.  From their mini-history of Cuba before the revolution, what fairly jumps off the page is the reduction of the island to financial slavery by American corporate interests and Wall Street banking.  This was made possible thanks to Batista’s lifting of taxes, a tremendous negative trade-balance (two thirds of Cuba’s needs were provided by American imports), and a spiraling indebtedness through short-term loans.  We learn that by 1959, American investment in Cuba was greater than in any other Latin American country save oil-rich Venezuela [7-10].  When Castro sets out to rectify this through nationalization of agricultural and mining concerns (like the Moa Bay company), and turns to the Soviet Union in order not to bow to IMF strictures, Eisenhower and the CIA begin to organize against him, recruiting financiers, military leaders and other ex-members of the Batista regime in exile.   It is out of this miasma that the personnel of this drama begins to take shape: the DRE [Directorio Revolucionario Estudiantil], under the auspices of David Phillips; Guy Johnson arranging for Sergio Arcacha Smith’s escape; who joined with José Miro Cardona and Tony Varona into another group which Howard Hunt, authorized to form a Cuban government in exile by Tracy Barnes, augmented with Manuel Artime and turned into the FRD [Frente Revolucionario Democratico] and eventually CRC [Cuban Revolutionary Council] [14-16; 38-39].

    But even more essential is DiEugenio’s exposition of the Bay of Pigs subterfuge. Drawing on several newer books on this topic, along with recently released documents which more than hint at perfidy on the part of the CIA, he outlines how Jake Esterline’s Trinidad plan, originally conceived as a small-scale penetration by a group of guerrilla-trained exiles, morphed into a full-blown D-Day assault under Dick Bissell’s supervision.  It was this mutation, a development that Dulles and Bissell tried to obfuscate, which Kennedy in March 1961 nevertheless saw enough of to ask that it be scaled down.  Dulles clearly understood Kennedy’s reluctance to commit, and tried to use the “disposal problem” (what to do with all these exiles?) as leverage, further offering him entirely false assurances about popular support for an uprising and the ability of the brigade to regroup in the mountains should they get pinned down on the beaches, and all the while denying him vital intelligence and refusing to allow him to inspect the details of the plan.  JFK appears to have committed only because he was convinced of the essentially guerrilla nature of the action.  A new site, the Playa Giron, was in fact chosen because it seemed very unlikely that the landing would encounter resistance there.  Kennedy also added the requirement that any air strikes on the day of the invasion were to be conducted by the Cuban brigade after a beachhead had been secured – that is, from Cuban soil.  He even asked Bissell if the recommended preliminary surgical strikes against Castro’s T-33 fighters were absolutely necessary, and Bissell assured him they would be minimal.  But a CIA memo released in 2005 establishes that Bissell knew from November 1960 onwards that the entire plan was unworkable without the aid of the Pentagon.  That memo was never forwarded to the President’s desk  [34-37; 44-45].

    What happens next is a series of tactical foul-ups followed by efforts to nudge Kennedy into military intervention.  Not all of Castro’s T-33’s were taken out prior to the landing because Castro, who knew the invasion was coming, had dispersed them around the island.  The main forces were crippled by the sinking of two supply ships. The whole operation was very poorly planned, and Castro managed to regain two of the three landing sites by the third day.  At that point Deputy Director Charles Cabell tried to get Victor Marchetti to relay to Kennedy the false story of MiGs strafing the beaches (which Marchetti never delivered).  Kennedy had made clear from the outset his refusal to deploy U.S. military force, but the CIA gave orders anyway to fly bombing missions over Castro’s airfields, which did not occur only because of fog [41].

    Most decisive in its analysis of this episode is a fact which the book makes unequivocal – that Kennedy never withdrew air support, because the so-called D-Day strikes had never been authorized to begin with; they were not part of the revised plan.  McGeorge Bundy reiterated Kennedy’s restriction on them to Cabell the night before the landing, and the next day, he and Bissell tried to argue the point with Dean Rusk.  But when Rusk gave the CIA the chance to phone the White House and request such strikes the morning of the invasion, the CIA declined the invitation.  On the third day, Cabell and the CIA similarly refused to request a naval escort to resupply the brigade with ammunition.  In a conversation with Rusk and Adlai Stevenson the day of the invasion, Kennedy again said he had not approved any such strikes from Nicaragua [44, 46].

    After ordering the Taylor inquiry (during which the Joint Chiefs basically tried to hang all the blame on the CIA) and consulting with Robert Lovett, co-author of the Lovett-Bruce report, who laid bare the true nature of the CIA, convincing him to fire Dulles, along with Bissell and Cabell, it became obvious to Kennedy that he had been snookered. Today we may reasonably share his opinion that the operation was a planned failure aimed at backing him into a corner and coercing him into an all-out invasion.

    It is also patent that a Cuban-driven initiative to oust Castro was transformed into a CIA-controlled enterprise, one with callous disregard for the Cubans themselves, not only in the way they were knowingly turned into so much cannon fodder in a ploy to wrest the island back for American interests, but even in the way the political spectrum of the participants was managed by Hunt so as to exclude the left wing of the exile community, in particular Manolo Ray and JURE – a maneuver which Kennedy challenged by having Bissell explicitly instruct Hunt to include Ray in the CRC; Hunt nominally resigned his position just before the invasion in order to avoid having to deal with him [39-40].  Ray, in fact, was not in favor of the strike-force invasion.  But Hunt and his group had plans of their own.  First, there was the contingency to have the operational leaders imprisoned and the assault taken over by “renegade Cubans”, in case Washington called off further action [47-48]. And then, there was Operation 40, calling for the liquidation of the leftist contingent during the early stages of the takeover of the island [50-51].  After the debacle, this manipulation was given a new, and ultimately deadly, twist:  the incitement of hatred among the Cubans for the Cold War Establishment’s number-one stumbling block.

    And it is another achievement of the book that the author pinpoints how this was done,  because to my knowledge, no one else has.  It was first accomplished by an inflammatory cover story about the so-called cancelled air strikes, a tall tale concocted by Dulles and Hunt. This phony story was reported in Fortune through Dulles’ personal friend Charles Murphy.  The purpose was to take the heat off the CIA by setting the blame for the failure at Kennedy’s door.  Although it was a false story, it nevertheless stirred up hatred among the Cuban exile community for JFK’s supposed “betrayal”.  As CIA anger grew during Mongoose – which William Harvey probably was correct in viewing as the administration’s half-hearted bone tossed to the hard-liners and which was effectively ended by the Missile Crisis – Cuban groups like Alpha 66 were enlisted by the Agency into activities well outside of Mongoose’s purview.  This included raids on Russian ships in the Caribbean, faking an invasion of Cuba, and renewed plans to assassinate Castro.  All these were intended to defeat the no-invasion pledge and to disrupt JFK’s move toward rapprochement [64-66].  Meanwhile, Kennedy’s end-run around his advisors, the CIA and the Pentagon, which he had found necessary in negotiating with Khrushchev, was repeated with Castro. During 1963 there was a sequence of back-channel communications involving journalist Lisa Howard, William Attwood (U.N. aide and former ambassador to Guinea), Cuban ambassador to the U.N. Carlos Lechuga, and French journalist Jean Daniel, with a view to initiating talks on the normalization of Cuban-American relations.  I will not repeat here the full story (or the revealing statement Kennedy made to Daniel about U.S. complicity in Cuba’s enslavement under Batista), but simply stress that the exiles could have gotten wind of this only through their CIA managers, who, despite their having been locked out by Kennedy, had access to the NSA’s wiretaps.  (It is also possible that McGeorge Bundy, who was in on some of these discussions, communicated them to his CIA contacts – he was a friend of Dulles.  Helms also monitored progress in this area, as Douglass has shown.)  Not only did David Morales’s counterintelligence group know of it [71]; as referred to previously, Rolando Otero revealed to Fonzi that he knew of the back channel through Bernardo DeTorres, declaring that at that point, “something big was being planned”.  That this “dangerous knowledge” was held by the anti-Castro Cubans is confirmed by Fabian Escalante’s report of Felipe Vidal Santiago’s statement that the exiles, realizing their cause was doomed, began to hatch a plot to get rid of Kennedy and blame it on Castro.  Vidal spoke with his CIA handler, Col. William Bishop.  Shortly thereafter, a CIA official – very likely David Phillips – addressed a group of exiles in a Miami safe house, saying, “You must eliminate Kennedy” [393].  What is further remarkable about how the evidence for this angle fits together – and once again how symmetrically designed the book is – is revealed earlier [97]:  working independently, Richard Case Nagell also discovered that the Cubans knew of the back channel and that “something big” was in the works.  Attwood’s own fears that news would leak down, through the CIA, to the Cubans, and with dire consequences, appear not to be unjustified.

    III. Many Mansions:  Garrison’s evidence today

    Whatever one may believe about Garrison, it is difficult today to argue that his investigation was marginal.  The early leads he uncovered were all connected with Oswald or Ruby, and demonstrated foreknowledge of, or involvement in, the plot, or at least a concern over Oswald’s arrest.  The sheer number of New Orleans-related incidents is impressive: Rose Cheramie’s story, the Clinton-Jackson incident, 544 Camp Street, Banister thrashing Jack Martin, Clay Bertrand requesting legal assistance for Oswald from Dean Andrews, Ferrie frantically searching for his library card and photos from the Civil Air Patrol, and so forth.  And all of these facts were already known at the time of the first official inquiry, but were “concealed, discounted, or tampered with by the authorities.  And the Warren Commission did nothing with them.  Therefore, they laid dormant for four years,” writes DiEugenio [100].

    A full account of the evidence adduced in Destiny Betrayed cannot possibly be given here.  To do so would mean replicating it nearly page by page, for there is very little fat to trim away.  Moreover, the broad outlines of the conspiracy in New Orleans and Dallas involving the setup of Oswald as patsy is without a doubt already familiar to the present reader.  I think it therefore most useful to pass under review a number of the pieces in the puzzle whose position has been clarified since the DA’s time.  That is, after all, one of the main goals of the book under discussion.  What follows is a short list of fifteen of the more salient points.

    1. In 1993, a photo of Oswald and David Ferrie from the Civil Air Patrol was shown on Frontline.  Let me remind the reader that every newspaper editorial I can recall from 1991-1992 lambasted Oliver Stone’s film by spouting that no such evidence of their acquaintance existed [see DiEugenio’s mini-biography of Ferrie, 82-85].

    2. One of Garrison’s most important findings was Oswald’s presence at Banister’s office at 544 Camp/531 Lafayette Street. Since Garrison, others such as Weisberg, Summers and Weberman have contributed to our knowledge of this node in the conspiracy, but no one tells it with the command DiEugenio has over this material, bringing to it his own field work, enhanced by released HSCA documents and files of the DA’s office (see in particular Chapter 6).  I mention just two points of interest here.  First, he confirms Tommy Baumler’s assertions that Shaw, Guy Johnson, and Banister constituted the intelligence apparatus in New Orleans [209-210; 274-275].  Second, he amplifies Sergio Arcacha Smith’s importance beyond his role in the Rose Cheramie – Jack Ruby drug run.  As Francis Fruge stated to Bob Buras, Smith seems to have been the linchpin between New Orleans and Dallas; maps of the Dealey Plaza sewer system were actually found in his apartment [180-182; 329].

    3. Davy’s and DiEugenio’s legwork has also reinforced Fruge’s and Dischler’s original discoveries about Shaw, Ferrie and Oswald in Clinton-Jackson.  The author cites a large array of witnesses which leave no doubt that Shaw (and not Banister) was there as Oswald stood in line to register to vote.  A sustained discussion of this incident sheds further light on its purpose: to get Oswald a job at the East Louisiana State Hospital (the same psychiatric hospital that Cheramie was later taken to), then switch the records to make it appear he was actually a ward.  Oswald’s familiarity with the names of the doctors may have come through the acquaintance of Tulane Medical School’s chief of surgery, Alton Ochsner, who did LSD and electrode implantation research and was an INCA informant, with both Shaw and Banister; or it could have been through Arcacha Smith [88-93; 156-157; 185-187].

    4. The Oswald chapters make good use of the seminal background research of John Newman and John Armstrong.  I extract here only two nuggets from this very rich vein, having to do with his role as false defector:

      After being given the runaround by CIA and military intel, State Department security analyst Otto Otepka sent Bissell a request for information distinguishing false from real defectors; this got funneled through Jim Angleton to staffers who were told to stay away from certain names; Oswald’s was marked SECRET.  Shortly thereafter, but thirteen months after his defection, the CIA created a 201 file on him.  Had Otepka not inquired, all of Oswald’s files would likely have stayed hidden in the Counter Intelligence/SIG sector under Angleton’s eyes.  Otepka’s safe was later drilled and his career destroyed; he was removed from his post on November 5, 1963 [164-165; see also 143-144].

      Donald Deneselya’s recollection of a CIA debriefing of Oswald in New York was reported on Frontline in 1993, but Helm’s disingenuous denials were there given the last word.  John Newman then found a CIA memo wherein the chief of the Soviet Russia division wrote of such a debriefing as motivated by an “operational interest in the Harvey [Oswald] Story” [149-150].

    5. DiEugenio also casts further light on Oswald’s activities as agent provocateur in New Orleans.    Again, I offer only two of his more telling conclusions:

      From the earliest critiques of the Warren Report (see, for instance, Meagher, Accessories after the Fact), but especially after Harold Weisberg obtained through the FOIA a transcript of the closed-door Warren Commission session discussing Oswald’s potential role as intelligence agent, the claim he was an FBI informant has repeatedly surfaced.  DiEugenio builds a strong case for Warren DeBrueys as Oswald’s FBI handler in New Orleans.  The FBI destroyed the files on Orestes Pena, witness to one of their meetings, just prior to the creation of the HSCA.  It was DeBrueys that Oswald asked to see after his arrest following the leafleting incident. William Walter found an informant file on Oswald with DeBrueys’ name on it.  DeBrueys most certainly knew of Oswald’s association with Banister before the assassination.  FBI agent James Hosty later told Church Committee witness Carver Gayton that Oswald indeed was an informant [109; 158-160].

      The other side of the coin to the FBI’s interest in Oswald is suggested by Hosty’s probable prevarication that he learned Oswald left Dallas for New Orleans in mid-May; Newman has shown there are at least seven instances during this period when the FBI should have known where he was and also about his dealings with the FPCC.  The reason for this sleight-of-hand was that the FBI, which had its own anti-FPCC program, was probably told not to interfere with a parallel CIA-run operation in which Oswald appeared to be a key player.  The existence of such a CIA discreditation program, run by David Phillips and James McCord, was revealed by the ARRB.  This explains why the CIA ordered 45 copies of the first printing of Corliss Lamont’s pamphlet, “The Crime Against Cuba,” in June of 1961; it was either Banister who then requested these from CIA, or someone, perhaps Phillips again, provided them as part of the program he was running with McCord [158-162; also 347-348, 356].

    6. In connection with this CIA-directed anti-FPCC charade, there is evidence that Oswald’s Marine acquaintance, Kerry Thornley – the only one to finger him as a “true believer” –, frequented Oswald and Marina in New Orleans and partnered with him in the leafleting activity.  DiEugenio gives a detailed portrait of this dubious fellow, from his two books about Oswald through his right-wing and intelligence connections, his retraction on the eve of the HSCA investigation of earlier denials made to Garrison concerning his knowledge of Banister, Ferrie, Shaw and the latter’s friend at Time-Life, David Chandler, and his subsequent diversionary yarns about his unwitting involvement in the plot.  Weisberg (Never Again, 1995) tells how the Secret Service was blocked by the FBI from discovering Oswald had an accomplice in New Orleans, and tracked down witnesses identifying Thornley as this person.  Then there is also Thornley’s own curious trip to Mexico City in July/August, just ahead of Oswald’s putative visit there [132; 187-193].

    7. Philip Melanson followed the trail of the ties between the CIA and the White Russian community in Dallas, and more specifically between Dulles and George DeMohrenschildt, who was cleared to meet Oswald through J. Walton Moore, the head of the Dallas CIA office.  Supplementing this discussion with additional information Garrison did not have – drawn in particular from the work of Carol Hewitt, Steve Jones and Barbara LaMonica – DiEugenio makes evident not only the more than casual acquaintance between the DeMohrenschildts and the Paines, but also the numerous links of both Michael’s and Ruth’s families to the CIA and Dulles.  Again, this is a real achievement, since this fascinating information has not appeared in any previous book. Michael’s mother, Ruth Forbes, was close friends with Mary Bancroft, an OSS agent with whom Dulles had intimate professional and personal ties. Michael’s stepfather was one of the creators of Bell Helicopter, while his mother’s family descended from the Boston Forbes and Cabots, executives and board members of United Fruit and Gibraltar Steamship (a CIA front for David Phillips’s Radio Swan).  Ruth Paine’s father and her brother-in-law both worked for AID, another CIA front, and her sister Sylvia Hyde was employed at Langley prior to 1963 as a psychologist.  Both Michael and Ruth were themselves involved in undercover work.  One document released by the ARRB reveals that Michael Paine engaged in infiltration activities at SMU in Dallas similar to those of Oswald; the Warren Commission was aware of filing cabinets found at the Paine residence containing data on pro-Castro sympathizers, which they downplayed in the “Speculations and Rumors” part of the report [193-200].

    8. A “coincidence of cosmic proportions,” as DiEugenio phrases it, is the link revealed by declassified ARRB documents between Robert Maheu, who ran a cover company in D.C. for the recruitment of assassins to kill Castro, and Guy Banister, via Carmine Bellino.  Bellino, who shared offices with Maheu, also partnered with Banister and helped him get started in New Orleans.  Walter Sheridan brought Bellino onto the RFK “get Hoffa” squad.  “It seems a bit ironic that a trusted aide of Robert Kennedy had been the partner of the man who helped set up the fall guy in the murder of his brother,” writes DiEugenio [257-258].

    9. A declassified memo from 1964, written by Leon Hubert and Burt Griffin, stated that “underworld figures, anti-Castro Cubans and extreme right-wing” elements were the most promising leads with respect to a Dallas-based gun-smuggling ring. The memo also suggests that Oswald’s Cuban connections in Dallas were never explored.  Garrison himself was interested in Manuel Rodriguez Orcarberro, the head of the Dallas wing of Alpha 66.  We now know, through Buddy Walthers’ informants, that a group of Cubans met at a safe house at 3128 Harlendale for months up until about a week before the assassination, when they vacated it; Oswald was also seen there [213].

    10. Another declassified HSCA document, a 1977 memo from Garrison to L.J. Delsa and Bob Buras, recounts the story of Clara Gay, a client of Attorney G. Wray Gill whose office David Ferrie shared.  She happened to call Gill right after Ferrie was interviewed by Garrison and the FBI and overheard the secretary deny Gill’s knowledge of Ferrie’s activities. Clara then went to the office, and noticed on Ferrie’s desk a diagram of Dealey Plaza with “Elm Street” on it, which she unsuccessfully tried to snatch in order to turn over to the FBI.  What she recounted to Garrison can be put together with Jimmy Johnson’s claim to have seen a manila envelope, which Ferrie referred to as “The Bomb”, containing a diagram for a Castro assassination, and with the fact that Ferrie had studied the ejection angles of cartridges from various types of rifles.  This suggests that the New Orleans group may have been involved in some of the actual planning of the crossfire, not just Oswald’s framing [215-216].

    11. DiEugenio calls the “most ignored piece of key evidence” a package addressed to Oswald, but bearing a sticker with a non-existent address, which lay around the dead letter section of the Dallas post office unnoticed for twelve days (discussed in Meagher, 63-64).  Surprisingly, the FBI did not apply solvents to the label in order to expose the probable original address beneath.  Inside was a sheet of brown wrapping paper resembling the one recovered at the Book Depository, inside which Oswald supposedly smuggled the rifle into the building.  There were absolutely no latent fingerprints on it.  What is of further interest is the fact that the police found a postage-due notice at the Irving post office for a package sent on November 20 to a Lee Oswald at the Paine’s address, 2515 W. Fifth Street.  Ruth tried to claim this was for magazines; this form is curiously attached to a postage due notice for George A. Bouhe, supposedly one of Marina’s English tutors, and neighbor of Jack Ruby.  DiEugenio surmises that when an attempt to get Oswald’s fingerprints on an incriminating piece of evidence by having him open the package when he went to Irving the evening preceding the assassination failed because of postage due, the non-existent address was applied so as to route the package into oblivion [205-207].

    12. I have already referred to Bernardo DeTorres, who was the first of the Garrison infiltrators. Garrison sent DeTorres to Miami on what turned out to be a fruitless investigation.  Fonzi, Ed Lopez and Al Gonzalez all suspected him of being a conspirator.  He is particularly noteworthy in that he was cross-posted between CIA and military intelligence, and for his link to Mitch Werbell, the arms expert some think designed the weapons used in Dealey Plaza. DeTorres also admitted to having been enlisted [sic!] by the Secret Service to guard Kennedy on his November 1963 Miami trip.  He claimed to an informant of the HSCA that he possessed pictures taken during the assassination [226-228].  I myself wonder if DeTorres was the one who originally leaked news of Garrison’s investigation to reporter Jack Dempsey.  I also wonder, given DeTorres’s coziness with Trafficante, whether the latter’s famous statement that Kennedy would be hit came from the same source.

    13. We now come to one of the “smoking guns” in this case, Mexico City.  Two extremely important documents were declassified by the ARRB in this area: the Slawson-Coleman report and the Lopez-Hardway report. The former shows how the Warren Commission’s investigators obligingly permitted themselves to be guided by the CIA; the explosive content of the latter (which is over 300 pages long) proves why it was censored for fifteen years. (An annex, entitled “Was Oswald an Agent of the CIA?,” has yet to be released.)  A number of authors have more or less successfully navigated this material (John Newman and James Douglass are exemplary), but I recommend Chapter 15 of Destiny Betrayed for the well-lit path it cuts through a murky bit of business.  The long and short of it is that it is doubtful Oswald was even there; but if he was, the appearances at the Cuban Consulate and Russian Embassy were very likely by impostors.  There are, remarkably, no photos of him, despite routine daily takes from CIA surveillance cameras, and the man who spoke with Sylvia Duran does not fit Oswald’s physical description; moreover, this person was reportedly fluent in Spanish, which there is no evidence Oswald knew, but apparently struggled with Russian, of which Oswald had a good command.  But the truly explosive part of the story is what John Newman revealed in his book Oswald and the CIA, and what DiEugenio refers to as “the dog that didn’t bark”. Thanks to the bifurcation of Oswald’s CIA files, the information concerning Oswald’s supposed meeting with Valery Kostikov (in his capacity as head of KGB assassinations) was kept out of his operational dossier, so that the connection between the two would not be made until the very day of the assassination.  Oswald’s undisturbed return to Dallas was further guaranteed by the fact that the FBI’s FLASH warning on him was cancelled on October 9, just hours before the cable from the Mexico City station concerning his visit arrived in Washington.  The story the CIA gave to the FBI about an anti-FPCC campaign in foreign countries may account for this [346-354].  It is not hard to discern here the earmarks of entrapment, which explains Hoover’s immediate cover-up of the FBI’s prior knowledge of Oswald’s activities.5

    14. The post-assassination epilogue to the Mexico City episode is equally scorching in its implications.  It is a cautionary tale that snafus can happen to the most diabolical schemes.  Since a phone call made by Duran to the Russian Embassy did not clearly mention Oswald’s name, a fake call had to be made.  Using a tape of this call was risky, because Oswald had been exposed on the media that summer in New Orleans.  For some reason, Anne Goodpasture, Phillips’s trusted associate at the Mexico City station, sent the tape to FBI agent Eldon Rudd on the evening of the 22nd.  After Hoover was told that the voice on it was not Oswald’s, Goodpasture and Rudd invented a cover story that the tape actually had been routinely erased, a story belied by other sources, and even by the person whom Helms replaced with Angleton as liaison to the Commission, John Whitten.  Luckily, LBJ either did not draw the obvious conclusions from Hoover’s revelations, or decided not to act on them, but instead played along by using this phony evidence of a foreign plot to keep the lid on the investigation.  What was later revealed was that Mexico City station chief Winston Scott had copies of this material, including the tape, in his safe, which Angleton flew down personally to recover when Scott passed away.  All of this newer information serves to endorse Garrison’s opinions as expressed by a memo discovered by DiEugenio. In that memo Garrison wrote that he: 1) Doubts the existence of any photo of Oswald, because it would have certainly appeared in the Report; 2) Asks why consulate employees did not recognize photos of the real Oswald; 3) Notices that Duran’s name is printed in Oswald’s notebook; 4) Wonders why there is no bus manifest for Oswald’s trip; 5) Notes there are no fingerprints on Oswald’s tourist card.  As DiEugenio asserts, Garrison was the only investigator at that stage to recognize the proof of the plot in this Mexican episode [357-364].

    15. The last set of observations has to do with Clay Shaw.  First, Ramsey Clark’s 1967 slip-up to the press about the FBI investigating Shaw in 1963 was based in fact. For the FBI had indeed run a check on Shaw then; it is uncertain whether they ever communicated this to the Commission [388].  Next, and as previously stated, Gaeton Fonzi rediscovered the connection, first uncovered by Garrison, between Shaw, Ferrie and Banister through Freeport Sulphur, Moa Bay and Nicaro Nickel.  Freeport tried to arrange the transport of nickel to Canada from Cuba, with the ore refined in Louisiana. Shaw was on the exploratory team.  When Castro threatened takeover of these concerns, an assassination plot was proposed inside Freeport’s ranks.  Fonzi found that the executive board of Freeport included Godfrey Rockefeller, Admiral Arleigh Burke and the chairman of Texaco, Augustus Long.  Donald Gibson has noted that four of the directors of Freeport were also on the Council on Foreign Relations – as much representation as DuPont and Exxon.  Shaw was not just part of this group, but also of a wider net of globalist concerns such as the International House and the Foreign Policy Association of New Orleans [208-209; 330; 383-384].   On the other side of these corporate connections lay Shaw’s long-time links to CIA.  William Davy discovered from a declassified CIA note that one of the files on him had been destroyed.  In 1994 Peter Vea also uncovered a document in the National Archives dating from 1967 (during the period Garrison was investigating him) giving Shaw covert security approval in the project QKENCHANT.  Victor Marchetti clarified that routine domestic contact service does not require this kind of clearance.  He speculated Shaw was involved in the Domestic Operations Division, one of the most secret subsectors of Clandestine Services, which once had been run by Tracy Barnes, and which Howard Hunt was working for at that time.  We also now possess further confirmation of Shaw’s involvement with Permindex, which had ties to the Schroeder Banking Corporation and thereby with Heinrich Himmler’s onetime network, and which supported the French renegade military outfit, the OAS.  We also know from the declassification process that Shaw’s lawyers had nearly unlimited cooperation from the FBI, the CIA and the Justice Department, and that one of the reasons for their repeated delay tactics was to allow this covert assistance to do its job [383-391].

    It is enlightening to watch as Garrison’s discoveries, transposed through this newer information, are accorded even more strength. It shows how good his and his main investigators’ instincts were, despite the infiltration of his team by CIA plants who tried to lead them astray.


    History may not repeat itself, but often it rhymes. 

    – Mark Twain (attr.)

    It’s Garrison all over again.    

    – Chris Sharrett, HSCA staffer 


    IV. The Rhyme of Two Investigations

    Thanks to declassification, we can now assert with confidence that mass media and government agencies collaborated in a concerted program to sabotage Garrison’s investigation and to damage his reputation so that he would forever after be politically crippled.  We also know that something quite similar occurred when the House Select Committee’s staff started heading down the same path under Dick Sprague’s and Bob Tanenbaum’s able and determined leadership.

    Before addressing this topic, I would like to advert the reader to the chapter presenting Garrison’s biography and early career (Chapter 9).  It is a welcome antidote to the received wisdom about him, which was a product of the lurid portrait painted by the mainstream press.6  I will not deal with that except to state that anyone who reads this material can no longer rationally believe, if they ever did, that Garrison was motivated by pecuniary gain or careerism, or that he was a tool of the Carlos Marcello syndicate with whom he allegedly was in cahoots.  Not always a crusader, and moderate in his political views, Garrison’s consciousness was profoundly altered by the JFK case.

    Garrison made a number of regrettable and costly tactical errors. Not arresting Ferrie earlier had the most conspicuously disastrous consequences.  When the press initially got wind of the investigation, the DA’s reaction was not one of equanimity; he first denied everything, then after no longer being able to deny it, parried the attacks with a bluster about having solved the case which today we may forgive him for but which unfortunately allowed him to play right into the press’s hands [220-224; 260-261].  He was also too trusting when it came to accepting the help of volunteers, which enabled the infiltration of his office.  In terms of the trial itself, his major blunder was not to use all his witnesses.  The number of these who averred that Bertrand was Shaw, for instance, is considerable (see DiEugenio’s review of the DA’s files [290-291]).

    By and large, however, Garrison was undone by forces beyond his control.  Once again, to retrace this story in detail would amount to reproducing the book, so we will concentrate on the larger picture.  But it must be stated here that no one has elucidated this program as clearly or in as much detail previously.  On the basis of interviews and declassified documents, DiEugenio argues that there was a three-stage program to destroy Garrison and his case against Shaw.  First, there were the “singleton” penetrations of his office.  Second, there was a media blitz orchestrated by Walter Sheridan and his intelligence and journalistic assets, such as James Phelan and Hugh Aynesworth, leading up to the NBC special aired on June 19, 1967.  Finally, when Garrison fought back, Angleton and Helms got directly involved [229].

    From CIA documents, the HSCA found that there had been, at one time or another, nine undercover agents in the DA’s office [229].  The first of these, as we already mentioned, was Bernardo DeTorres.  The second was William Gurvich, a local private investigator who offered Garrison his services in late 1966.  Gurvich’s polygraph expert tried to intimidate prosecution witness Perry Russo.  Garrison discovered after several months that Gurvich had been working with Sheridan, and when Gurvich formally defected from the DA’s ranks in June of 1967, he took a copy of Garrison’s master file with him. He later went to work for Shaw’s lawyers. Gurvich may have been recruited by Sheridan,  but the third mole, Gordon Novel, was deliberately put there by Allen Dulles.  Novel was a CIA explosives and electronics expert who had been involved in the Bay of Pigs.  By 1959 he had come to know Ferrie, Shaw and Dean Andrews, and in 1966 he met Dulles.  Once Garrison hired him, Novel started to convene with Sheridan. Novel had direct knowledge of all the principals of Garrison’s case, and Shaw had a phone number of Novel’s in Reno which very few people knew.  When Garrison subpoenaed Novel to testify before the March 16, 1967 grand jury, he fled New Orleans to a safe house in Ohio.  It was at that point that Dulles and Langley inserted Gordon into a network of CIA-friendly journalists, and Sheridan arranged for a phony polygraph test for him to bolster his credibility. On the basis of the latter, Sheridan then launched a propaganda barrage in the major media, furnishing governors and judges justification for ignoring extradition requests and not serving subpoenas originating from the New Orleans DA’s office [230-235].  Sheridan also sent Gurvich to RFK to try to influence his opinion of Garrison. As DiEugenio remarks, what is astonishing is the fact that these three infiltrations began nearly six months before Garrison even accused the CIA of complicity in the assassination [233].

    In terms of the second phase, its impresario, Walter Sheridan, can no longer be taken, as he commonly has been, to be a Kennedy loyalist acting with the sanction of the former Attorney General.  DiEugenio elucidates his true affiliations.  While  at the super-secret NSA, he worked out of the Office of Security, and later as Assistant Chief of the Clearance Division. That  position is roughly analogous to Angleton’s at CIA, and as DiEugenio shows, it is hard to believe they did not know each other.  When he was with the Hoffa squad, the agency they outsourced work to was, according to a Senate investigator, owned by the CIA [256-257].  We have already mentioned his link to Maheu through Carmine Bellino.  From another set of declassified documents we know that Sheridan, through his lawyer Herbert Miller, was in contact with Langley concerning the arrangement of a trip to Washington for Al Beauboeuf, one of Ferrie’s companions on the Houston-Galveston trip the weekend of the assassination. Sheridan’s probable association with Angleton explains his willingness to incorporate the CIA’s perspective into the NBC show he was producing in 1967 [237-238].  Needless to say, NBC, Sheridan’s employer, and its parent company, RCA, had longtime associations through Robert and David Sarnoff with the ONI, the NSA, and the Rockefeller Brothers Fund on foreign policy [255-256].

    Sheridan’s strategy was fourfold:  (1) to “flip” key witnesses; (2) to accuse Garrison of unethical practices; (3) to use allies of Shaw and the CIA to give a very slanted view of the prosecution’s case; (4) to engineer the presentation to look as though Garrison, not Shaw, were on trial.  An affidavit released by the ARRB shows how far he was willing to go in suborning testimony.  Fred Leemans, the final interviewee on Sheridan’s program, signed this sworn statement denying the accusations of bribery he made on the program [240-241].

    Sheridan’s allies in the press also had intelligence ties.  DiEugenio devotes separate sections to both Jim Phelan [243-249] and Hugh Aynesworth [249-255].  He demonstrates their complicity in the cover-up at length, relying in both cases, once again, on recently released documents.  Again, the section on Phelan is a landmark contribution. No one has ever taken this ersatz journalist apart like this before. Phelan’s denials of having communicated with the FBI are clearly disproven by this new information.  The lies he spread concerning Russo’s being drugged, or of Russo’s having retracted his statements to Sciambra – these and other deceptions are now exposed as knowing misrepresentations.  In fact, Phelan also confessed to having tried to convince Russo that he had mistaken Banister for Shaw [309].  Aynesworth’s connections to the CIA have also come out.  We now know that he had an ongoing relationship with J. Walton Moore of the Dallas CIA office, and had applied for a job with the Agency. Another FOIA document obtained by Gary Mack shows Aynesworth informing Hoover and President Johnson of Garrison’s intent to indict the FBI and CIA.  Aynesworth, primed by Gurvich, impeded Garrison’s attempt to interview Sergio Arcacha Smith by suggesting to the Cuban exile that he request the presence of police, along with assistant district attorney Bill Alexander, for an interview with Garrison’s assistant Jim Alcock.  Aynesworth was also in contact with Shaw’s lawyer, Ed Wegmann, through 1971, writing intelligence briefs on Garrison’s witnesses for him.

    The most important revelations to come from declassification, however, have to do with the third stage.  J. Edgar Hoover, according to Gordon Novel, had a counterintelligence operation going on.  He had Garrison’s office under surveillance.  Some of this illegal eavesdropping was certainly being relayed to Shaw’s legal staff via the Wackenhut investigative agency [262-265].  But it is with a September 1967 meeting of Shaw’s lawyers Ed Wegmann and Irvin Dymond with Nathaniel Kossack, an acquaintance of Sheridan’s in the Criminal Division of the Justice Department, that a direct appeal for help went out.  At this point, we see the formation of the “Garrison Group” at CIA, involving Ray Rocca of Angleton’s staff, plus six other high-level officers.  There is no official record of the subsequent meetings, which, according to Victor Marchetti, were moved behind closed doors. But Rocca’s database on Garrison, examined by Bill Simpich, is very extensive [269-271].  One sign of what was going on was the intensified propaganda campaign conducted from early 1968 onward, involving David Chandler, Sandy Smith, Richard Billings and Robert Blakey.  The idea was to smear Garrison by claiming he was tied to the Mafia and Marcello [274-277].  But even more damaging was the subversion of the legal process itself.  Not only were extradition requests (such as for Arcacha Smith) defeated, but subpoenas were thwarted at both ends – New Orleans and Washington – thanks to cooperative judges [271-273].  The documentation mentioned above regarding Sheridan’s collaboration with the CIA showed there was a panel of CIA-cleared lawyers already working in New Orleans, one that was used by Shaw’s lawyers to assign attorneys to Garrison suspects and witnessess, whom they managed to turn;  at this point a clandestine channel was set up directly between CIA and Shaw’s lawyers [277-278].  A final CIA-related penetration also occurred at this time in the figure of William Wood/Bill Boxley. Boxley was responsible for injecting all manner of disinformation into Garrison’s office, from his fingering of Nancy Perrin Rich’s husband as the grassy knoll assassin, to his wild goose chase involving Edgar Eugene Bradley, and his mediation of the Farewell America hoax, whose main sponsor Harold Weisberg discovered to be Philippe de Vosjoli, a double agent who worked for Angleton.  Aside from this waste of valuable time and resources, this low point in Garrison’s investigation is both sad and comically absurd [278-283].

    There were further interventions by federal authorities during the trial itself.  There seems to have been an orchestrated attempt to intimidate witnesses from testifying (for example, Richard Case Nagell and Clyde Johnson).  Another notable intervention involved sending Dr. Thornton Boswell down to clean up the mess created by Col. Finck’s unexpectedly truthful medical testimony.  Boswell had already compromised himself by signing a letter which made it look like the Clark Panel originated from a request he had made. When Boswell revealed his trip to New Orleans to Jeremy Gunn of the ARRB, Gunn memorably wondered:  What was the Justice Department’s jurisdiction in a case between the District Attorney and a resident of New Orleans? [299-305].

    Turning now to the early days of the HSCA: the information passed on to Deputy Counsel Robert Tanenbaum from the Church Committee through Senator Richard Schweiker immediately put them on the trail of CIA collusion.  Tanenbaum organized teams for both New Orleans (L. J. Delsa, Bob Buras, Jon Blackmer) and Miami (Gaeton Fonzi, Al Gonzalez). And their work started to pay off very early on.  What they uncovered were links to the next level of conspirators.  Fonzi identified the Maurice Bishop who was Antonio Veciana’s CIA contact and who Veciana saw with Oswald in Dallas as none other than David Phillips (see The Last Investigation). But, as we have seen, he also traced DeTorres to Werbell and reopened the leads to Freeport Sulphur.  After Fonzi, Delsa, Blackmer, Garrison and others conferred in the late summer of 1977, Blackmer reported: “We have reason to believe Shaw was heavily involved in the anti-Castro efforts in New Orleans in the 1960s and [was] possibly one of the high level planners or ‘cut out’ to the planners of the assassination” [328-332].

    Like Garrison, Sprague recognized he had made some errors of judgment, mostly with respect to how much Congress had his back after the retirement of Rep. Thomas Downing, who had authored the bill to form the House committee upon viewing the Zapruder film [326-327].  But it was no doubt the direction in which the investigation had started to go that brought down the walls around him.  In his book, Fonzi further clarifies that Sprague and Tanenbaum refused to sign any non-disclosure agreements with the Agency, since the CIA was a prime suspect.  From that point on, Sprague was subjected to the same kind of media barrage as Garrison was, even accusing the prosecutor, whose probity was on the same order as Garrison’s, of having mob associates [332-334].  The moment of transition from Sprague to Blakey is also marked by the intriguing death of George DeMohrenschildt.  The author does a fine job in sketching the possible explanations for it; but whether he was hounded by Edward Epstein and Willem Oltmans, or by his own sense of guilt, into taking his own life, or whether he was actually liquidated, the event signals the beginning of the end of the HSCA’s viability [334-338].

    DiEugenio characterizes the second Chief Counsel, Robert Blakey, as exhibiting a “protectiveness towards the CIA”:  he turned over evidence to them and even ignored Agency advice not to use them to clean their own house when their employee Regis Blahut was caught burglarizing the safe containing the autopsy photos.  Blakey, of course, immediately redirected all the committee’s energies into his pet Mafia-did-it theory, making sure that other kinds of leads were not followed, and eliminating or burying some of the evidence which was uncovered.  For instance, he used selective or unreliable testimony to separate Oswald from Banister and Ferrie, and then kept evidence to the contrary classified.  He also severely clamped down on the re-investigation of the Clinton-Jackson incident.  When the New Orleans team polygraphed, at their own expense, a witness supporting Garrison’s claims, Blakey decided to replace them with his own lackeys.  Blakey later admitted that the committee could not find any real underworld links to Oswald other than the extremely thin one through his uncle Dutz Murrett, who actually had gotten out of the bookmaking business in 1959.  One of Sprague’s staff attorneys, Ken Brooten, who resigned in 1977, wrote Harold Weisberg that the committee “had compromised itself to such an extent that their final product has already been discredited” [340-344].  But no matter: the ghosts of 544 Camp Street had successfully been evicted from the halls of the Capitol.


    Human history becomes more and more a race between education and catastrophe.

    – H. G. Wells

    The world’s history is the world’s judgment.

    – Friedrich von Schiller 


    V

    At the end of 1967, Garrison had the following working view of the plot:

    A group at the operational level — the Cuban exiles — with real reasons to want Kennedy dead. A group at the organizational level — the CIA — with resources and experience to plan and execute such an operation.  Both had access to the kind of marksmen necessary to pull off the lethal, military-style ambush in Dealey Plaza.  From this perspective, Oswald’s odd associations with people like DeMohrenschildt, the Paines, and Ferrie fit in.  So did the call from “Bertrand,” and Ruby’s final, culminating murder. [219] 

    In the final chapter of Destiny Betrayed, DiEugenio voices his contention that Garrison “was one step away from the next level of the conspiracy.  This was the real reason for their wanting to stop him” [395].  While in most cases DiEugenio only implicitly signals who the occupants of this level might be (certainly Angleton and Phillips were involved in Oswald’s setup, with very possibly Hunt and Helms monitoring the operational end), he does make one explicit claim:   

    One of the main tenets of this book is that Allen Dulles was one of the top-level active agents in both the conspiracy to kill Kennedy and the disgraceful official cover up of his death.  … Why Lyndon Johnson appointed Dulles to the Warren Commission remains a mystery that has never been satisfactorily solved.  As mentioned in the previous chapter, Johnson had a rather hidden relationship with the Rockefellers, especially Nelson.  As revealed by Donald Gibson in a groundbreaking essay, he was also badgered into creating the Commission by other Eastern Establishment stalwarts like Eugene Rostow, Joe Alsop, and Dean Acheson. [394]. 

    Whether this claim would hold up in a courtroom is of course a moot question; but it is this reviewer’s opinion that the weight of the evidence, circumstantial as it may be, falls on DiEugenio’s side. 

    Destiny Betrayed departs from recent trends in that it does not try to render a totalizing image of the assassination in one epic swoop of a thousand-plus pages, but instead keeps its sights trained on what can be in some manner related to Garrison’s findings.  For example, although DiEugenio does touch on problems presented by the forensic and medical evidence, this occupies only about a dozen pages out of the whole, and arises directly from his exposition of the Shaw trial.  And though what Garrison uncovered in that area was and still is quite extraordinary – namely, that the autopsy was directed by the military chain of command towards pre-established conclusions –, the precise relationship of these orders to those responsible for the operation on the ground is left provocatively suspended.  Similarly, while I believe Garrison had his own misgivings about the role of the Secret Service in Dallas, that aspect of the plot is not explored.  But again, I am sure this was done so as not to lose the focus of the book. 

    For that reason the book is also a tantalizing springboard for further discussion.  One such consideration crossed this writer’s mind while reading the material in the penultimate chapter concerning Johnson’s ramp-up to the Gulf of Tonkin.  As I was reminded of the centrality of the Bundy brothers in this process, my thoughts leapt to Air Force One, en route from Love Field to Andrews Air Force Base, and the famous communiqué from the White House Situation Room (which was under McGeorge Bundy’s control) that the assassination was the work of one person.  Now as DiEugenio notes at the end of his chapter on Mexico City, 

    When Lopez and Hardway digested all these false stories, they discovered that most of them came from assets of David Phillips.  So it would seem that the actual managers of the plot tried to stage an invasion of Cuba in order to head off Kennedy’s attempt at détente with Castro. With his fear of World War III, Johnson put the brakes to this.  In fact, through his aide Cliff Carter, it appears he got the local authorities not to charge Oswald as being part of a communist conspiracy because it could cause World War III. [362] 

    But this point of view may not have been unique to LBJ.  There may have been others who thought it wise to clamp down on the more dangerous element introduced by the players referred to above.  One faction of the plot may have wanted an invasion of Cuba or even an attack on Russia; but another faction, to which the Bundys may have belonged, may have wanted simply to remove JFK, knowing they would eventually get the Vietnam War.  The more radical gambit may thus have been squelched by the “cooler” heads.  I would further point out that both of these conjectured factions link again to Dulles:  Bundy on one side, Hunt on the other.7 

    Over the nearly half century that the assassination has been written about, it has become a commonplace in the literature critical of the official story to conclude with an appeal for truth.8  It is also common to speak of how some large percentage of Americans does not believe the Warren Report, and instead believes in conspiracy.  But what does that belief mean to them?  And what “truth” are we talking about?  The idea that a few underworld figures took care of a president who double-crossed them? That there was a power play, in the manner of some Merovingian palace murder, motivated by the unbridled ambition of a Vice President, as in a latter-day reprise of Macbeth?  The particular truth which books like this one (or Douglass’s) force the citizenry of this country to contemplate is a more difficult one to swallow.  Because it pierces through the mystifications of the high-school civics lesson and all the indoctrination which that entails.  And it does not rely on anecdotal evidence, or the ravings of a senile old man. 

    The author explicitly revisits this rhetorical commonplace when he speaks of how the question of truth (in the sense of the public’s belief) continues to plague our national psyche.  But in so doing he eschews the usual bromides about truth being the daughter of time.  Nor does he engage us with the facile rhetoric of exorcism, the easy promise that we can presently restore the body politic to mythic wholeness by simply casting out this demon.  The stance he adopts in the final pages of this work is more of chronicler than of political advocate.  In relating Garrison’s 1968 warning to Johnny Carson’s audience, he breaks the narrative frame with the urgency of the present tense (“… if they do not demand to know …”), then returns us, through the use of third-person indirect speech, into anticipatory sympathy with them via future-in-the-past (“the country as they knew it would not survive”), but finally ends squarely in the perfect tense which contains the entire moment (“Garrison said … Jim Garrison understood it in 1968”).  The insinuation being that the opportunity for deliverance might actually lie behind us.  For we did not listen to our Cassandra when we were told that indifference would be our nation’s demise.  No doubt, as with Cassandra, it was the powers that be who ensured that most would not take Garrison seriously.  But that is precisely the tragedy of history.

    At the end of his previously mentioned review of JFK and the Unspeakable, DiEugenio wrote that Jim Douglass’ book was the best in the field since Gerald McKnight’s.  The author’s own book has a dual distinction.  It is the best book on Garrison yet written, and it is the best work on the JFK case since the Douglass book.


    Endnotes

    [1] This assessment of course is not meant to diminish the seminal work done by other first-generation critics, most notably Mark Lane, Harold Weisberg, and Sylvia Meagher; Garrison’s contribution, which relied on their painstaking critical evaluation of the Warren Commission Exhibits and Hearings, was to open up new avenues actually capable of leading to a solution of the crime.

    [2] For further reflection on where Garrison was headed with his thinking, see the afterword by Robert Spiegelman to William Davy’s Let Justice Be Done: New Light on the Jim Garrison Investigation(Reston, VA: Jordan Publishing, 1999). It should be noted that one of the first-generation critics, Vincent Salandria, has from the outset been telling us much the same thing.

    [3] Henceforward, square brackets refer, unless otherwise noted, to page numbers in Destiny Betrayed, 2nd ed.

    [4] The titles of the first two chapters of Destiny Betrayed pay tribute to the first two in Mahoney, in reverse order.  The title of Chapter 17 similarly plays off of the titles of the last two chapters, again in reverse order, of JFK and the Unspeakable.

    [5] The proposal by other researchers that Oswald was on a “legitimate” mission in Mexico City which got waylaid by outsiders who knew how the internals of CIA surveillance worked seems rather flimsy from this standpoint. As for the CIA’s FPCC program, whatever it may have been in 1961, by 1963 it seems to have turned into a sham for the benefit of manipulating Oswald and keeping the FBI at bay. Douglass (66 and n. 67; 178-179) suggests that the FBI’s own efforts at discreditation by that time had been so successful that the CIA would have had little to target.

    [6] It is not the purpose of this review to compare this book with the work of Joan Mellen. I would refer the interested reader to DiEugenio’s own appraisals of Mellen’s two efforts, A Farewell to Justice, and Jim Garrison: His Life and Times.

    [7] Today, I would, however, note the following.  A year after writing this review/essay, I attended the AARC 2014 conference. When someone asked if McGeorge Bundy had prior knowledge of the assassination, John Newman said he didn’t think Bundy knew because there is language in NSAM 273 that looks like it was intended for Kennedy, attempting to convince him of a different course of action from NSAM 263.

    [8] Douglass, for instance, ends his book, quite movingly, with an allusion to John 8:32, “You shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free” (perhaps also as a tacitly ironic acknowledgment of the fact that this very motto appears at the entrance of the CIA’s Langley headquarters, placed there by its founders with much the same cynicism, I dare say, as the “Arbeit Macht Frei” inscription gracing the entrance to Auschwitz I).

  • Harrison E. Livingstone, Kaleidoscope

    Harrison E. Livingstone, Kaleidoscope


    Kaleidoscope: A Review of Douglas Horne’s “Inside the Assassination Records Review Board”.[1] The word ‘kaleidoscope’ refers to a cylinder that reflects colorful patterns reflected off of mirrors. That word derives from three ancient Greek words which, when combined translate as: looking at things of beauty. That title is a misnomer for there is nothing very pretty, let alone beautiful, about this book. There are some valid criticisms in the book and Livingstone is to be properly praised for them. He certainly straightens out certain issues that needed to be elucidated in Horne’s very long five volume series. But when one adds up the ratio of good criticism to everything else in the volume, it is not a very good batting average.

    I. The Ugly

    On page 1 of Kaleiodoscope, Livingstone writes, “I’m not used to writing like this….” And its clear from there on that Livingstone never did the preparation that proper criticism entails. Especially if it’s a book length endeavor. It’s not like he didn’t have the time. After all, Horne’s series came out in 2009. Granted, the entire series comes to about 1,800 pages, but between reading, taking notes and filing, that still left him enough time to study exactly what it was he was supposed to be doing.

    Generally speaking, criticism should be formal in its approach, not personal. And this is a big problem with this book. There is no one in the world who despises David Lifton, or his book Best Evidence, more than Livingstone. No one can read Horne’s series without seeing how influential Best Evidence was on Horne. Therefore, Livingstone peppers his book with accusations about Lifton and his association with Horne that, to put it lightly, are not really criticism. Consider some of the following:

    “I’m sorry, but I’d have to vote for a court martial for Douglas Horne. Hanging is too good for Lifton.”[2]

    “Woe onto the JFK research community being led down the garden path by a charlatan, a four-flusher, a flatterer, an intelligence operator, a Pied Pipe [sic] of the children of America and the world with his false presumptions, false evidence and lies.”[3]

    “Horne might possibly, however, find work as a carnival shill and shell game operator.”[4]

    “He [Lifton] can’t stand competition. So we need to put him in a straight (sic) jacket and behind bars to see if that helps him….”[5]

    “The pattern of fraud, alteration of documents, falsification of evidence and deceit in Horne’s book are so large and pervasive that one can speculate on almost any motive.”[6]

    “…Adolph Hitler spelled out in his autobiography the usage and importance of what he called “The Big Lie”. I feel that the usage of this technique is replete throughout Horne’s books….”[7]

    “This was just a small embellishment Lifton added which acquired a life of its own and kept growing until it became a monster like so much else he has done to us.”[8]

    “Had Doug not been bought and paid for by David Lifton, the arch saboteur of the research community, none of this would have happened.”[9]

    “I have never in my life seen so many lies as there are in the first 27 or so pages.“[10]

    “I believe Horne consciously fabricated a hoax, and it is one of the biggest and most destructive in literary history.”[11]

    I could easily have added a dozen more examples. I do not recall seeing anything like this vituperative display since reviews of Vincent Bugliosi’s Reclaiming History. There is nothing wrong in evaluating a book negatively, or in evaluating it and deductively saying something about the author’s ’s intent or personality. But what Livingstone does here can be fairly called self-indulgent. It is so far outside the realms of criticism that it becomes strange and bewildering. In the end, it vitiates the things of value in his book.

    II. The Bad

    Horne
    Doug Horne in Dealey Plaza 

    If Livingstone had limited his personal attacks to just Horne and Lifton, that would be one thing, but he doesn’t.

    As long as I have known Livingstone he has always believed in a Texas based type of conspiracy. As time went on, and he had trouble convincing people of his theory, he decided to resort to unusual measures. So in 1993 he published Killing the Truth: Deceit and Deception in the JFK Case, which was a rather curious effort. As the estimable Martin Hay has stated, this volume qualifies as one of the ten worst books ever written on the JFK case. Up until then, Livingstone had gained some stature through his first two efforts, High Treason: The Assassination of JFK & the Case for Conspiracy and High Treason 2: The Great Cover-Up The Assassination of President John F. Kennedy. (The first was a co-venture with Bob Groden.) But Killing the Truth was an over-the top pastiche. Livingstone did two things to sell his “Texas Plot”. First, he used an unnamed personage who told him just how the Texans had done it. Livingstone called this person “The Source”. If you are going to make an invisible entity the basis for the spine of the book – your inside story on how the assassination happened – then what worth is it to have he or she remain nameless?

    The second thing Livingstone did in this tome was to go after the late Mary Ferrell. He named her as a kind of Texas inspired saboteur in the research community. His basis for this accusation was largely because she was quite conservative politically and worked for a politically connected law firm – facts which there really were no secret about at that time. This is why the acute Martin Hay summed up the book as, “A pathetic waste of time, effort, and paper.”

    Well, though Mary Ferrell is dead, her ghost survives for Livingstone. Today, her pernicious influence lives on through the Mary Ferrell Foundation. The problem with this is that, the MFF is an online entity and has nothing to do with Texas politics, then or now. Before she died, a venture capitalist entrepreneur in the high tech field purchased her book and file collection. He then enlisted Rex Bradford to create a database for thousands of scanned materials to be stored on a Foundation website, accessible to anyone. The MFF, through Rex and several Directors, created the website and realized a goal for Ferrell. As of today the MFF has also digitized the HSCA volumes, the Warren Commission volumes and documents, and files from the Garrison investigation. The Foundation owner was to use some of this high tech equipment to find patterns and leads in the case but it is not known if this was accomplished.

    Why do I bring this up?Because, according to Livingstone, somehow the Mary Ferrell Foundation was a sinister influence on Horne and his work.[12] Livingstone frowns on “anyone having anything to do with anything connected to Mary Ferrell” who “although dead, remains a great threat to the rest of us….”[13] Now, if Mary is dead, and her files, among with many, many others are digitized so they can be readily available to anyone, then how is this a bad thing? Further, how does this have anything to do with Horne’s Inside the ARRB, which is supposed to be what Kaleidoscope is about?

    According to Livingstone, either Mary Ferrell or the MFF has given tens of thousands of dollars to David Lifton. It’s hard to decipher which one. It may be both.[14] Livingstone goes even further by claiming Lifton was probably then loan sharking money to Horne.[15] And, this is how, I guess, the ghost of Mary Ferrell somehow negatively influenced Horne’s series of books.

    Lifton
    David Lifton at the Los Angeles ARRB meeting.

    When I read these accusations I decided to get in contact with Rex Bradford. Rex runs the day-to-day operations of the foundation. He is essentially the Director there and has been for the last few years. I asked Rex what he did for Horne as far as his books went. He replied that he helped Doug with some technical aspects of getting files ready for printing; he aided him in setting up an account at a print on demand book publisher; MFF offers the book for sale (as he does other books); and he has some of Doug’s exhibits for the book at the site. He stressed that, bottom line, Horne self-published the book and that Doug sells it at other venues, like Amazon. Rex also added that the assistance he gave to Horne was at no cost.[16]

    So after listing all this information, which you will not find in Livingstone’s book, where is the influence on Horne of Mary Ferrell and her rightwing cronies – the Dallas money people – who hated Kennedy so much?[17] Especially since it is now nine years after her death, and the foundation is headquartered today in Massachusetts, home of the Kennedy clan.

    I also got in contact with David Lifton about this issue. He assured me that he never got any funds from Mary Ferrell for the writing of Best Evidence In fact, prior to that book’s publication, he had only met Mary once. This meeting was in Los Angeles, not Dallas, and she was with the New York based writer-researcher Sylvia Meagher. Mary and Sylvia both gave him a rather small amount of money since he was going to Washington to copy some documents from the National Archives. The money was to secure copies of what he was getting for them. This was in the mid sixties. He did not meet Mary again until after his book was published.[18]

    Lifton states that his parents supported him in his literary efforts until a contract was awarded to him in late 1978. His manuscript was tendered in 1980. He then met Mary Ferrell for the second time in 1981, after the publication date. All of this leaves Livingstone’s accusations about Lifton being able to “plant the craziness of Dallas via the Mary Ferrell circle of dangerous lunatics…to co-opt us and the nation with their Right Wing dogma – and cover-up or ruin the conspiracy evidence….” through “his minion” Horne, it leaves this all a bit, well, tenuous.[19] If Lifton met Ferrell once before the book was published – and this was in California with Sylvia Meagher – how then could she have exercised such sinister Texan influence on him? How could Ferrell’s “influence” then be transferred to Horne?

    Ferrell
    Mary Ferrell
    (Photo courtesy JFK Lancer)

    Ferrell was known for her great attention to detail and her collection of early government documents on the assassination. It is more probable that Lifton would have stayed in contact with her (and her resources) to enhance his own studies as he has been writing a new book on Lee Oswald for decades. Surely, later in the 1990’s, while working for the Assassination Records Review Board, Horne was guided on where to look for possible records to push for release. After all, that was his job with the ARRB.

    Several times in the book Livingstone states that the financial support for Horne was granted through monies supplied by the MFF to Lifton, who then recycled it to Horne.[20] In another communication from Bradford, he wrote that the Mary Ferrell Foundation is not in the habit of granting subsidies or loans to authors and to his knowledge, which extends back to 2005, none was given to Lifton.[21]

    But despite all of these denials, Livingstone writes later on near the end of the book that one of Horne’s serious problems is the “bad company” he fell in with. He then writes that, “He needs to accept that the JFK “Research Community” is corrupt and that he was corrupted by it.”How did this happen? “Lifton’s task was to catch this fish and reel him in and turn him over to the tender mercies of the Ferrell/Conway crowd, the corrupt and betraying Gary Mack and Jim Marrs set and most of the rest of the Dallas people whose hands he is in now.”[22] Again, this is puzzling, on several counts. “Conway”, I assume is Debra Conway, who owns and manages JFK Lancer. I asked Debra if she had anything to do with Horne’s book. She replied she did not. Besides Horne speaking at her Dallas conference twice, she has had little or nothing to do with Horne’s career in the research community.[23] In a later conversation, Conway stated Ferrell had no control over any MFF funds and could not have directed a loan be given to anyone.

    Also, I don’t understand how Livingstone could call something in Dallas the “Gary Mack and Jim Marrs set”. Many years ago, Marrs used to be friends with Gary Mack. But once Mack flipped sides and started working for the Sixth Floor, their relationship faded away. Today, Jim is a fierce critic of both Gary Mack and his employer The Sixth Floor Museum.

    Finally, Mary has been dead for a decade, with her book and file collection long transferred to Massachusetts. During her time in the research community, Ferrell readily admitted she first began researching the JFK assassination because, as she would say, “Somebody I know [in Dallas] might be involved!”. This was no secret or avoidance of a Dallas plot. So, after all this review, just where is the Dallas influence on Horne that Livingstone finds so repugnant and bracing?

    I spend some time on this because, first of all, I think its necessary to show Livingstone’s failings as a critic. If one is going to be negative and personal in the discussion, then one had better be doing so on solid, relevant grounds. As the reader can see, this part of the book is, to be gentle, a misfire in that regard. But secondly, I think it is important in order to show how untidy Livingstone’s mental discipline is in his building a conspiratorial construct. It would appear to me that the author has reasoned here deductively. He buys into this Texas based plot. Therefore all the perceived evil in the research community must also emanate from Texas. The details are not important; the postulate must be upheld. As we will see, this untidiness also is present in his model of the JFK conspiracy. And I should add, if a writer/investigator cannot put together a rather small group of accessible people, of average means and position into a credible conspiracy model, then why should we trust him to construct a larger network of largely inaccessible people of much greater wealth and power with the ability to conceal their acts?

    Before leaving Livingstone’s peculiar take on Horne, and his place in the research community, its necessary to note the complement to the author’s rather derogatory and demeaning portrait of that small, investigatory circle. (And without detailing all of it. Other people are also dealt with rather coarsely e.g. Gary Aguilar, Harold Weisberg, Chuck Marler and Jim Marrs.) The complement to this rather unseemly picture is the author’s penchant at self-levitation. That is, to elevate his position in the field. He does this in more than one way. He says, for example, that a distinguished ad hoc committee of professors first asked him to work on the case. This included a dean from Harvard and a professor from MIT.[24] These men all knew the author and thought he could crack the case.

    Groden
    Robert Groden

    So I decided to talk to Bob Groden about this point. Groden was the co-author of Livingstone’s first book High Treason. When I emailed Groden about this point, he told me that during the whole time they worked on High Treason together, Livingstone never said a word about such a committee enlisting him into such an endeavor.[25] Livingstone then implies – it’s hard to decipher his grammar at times – that he was elevated to the faculty at Harvard, without a degree.[26] Livingstone does something odd in this particular discussion. After saying that he was “elevated to the faculty without a degree” he compares himself to Henry Kissinger in that distinction.[27] But Kissinger first graduated from Harvard in 1950. He later graduated with a Ph. D. in 1954. It was then that Kissinger joined the Harvard faculty.

    Livingstone also says that another reason he began his JFK studies was from personal communications with Jackie Kennedy and Ted Kennedy. In his words, “Jackie messaged me through her assistant at Doubleday that the photos were false, as did Senator Edward Kennedy through his Secret Service guard, John Libonati”.[28] It would be nice to see some certification of this. Because, as most people know, the Kennedy family was very tight lipped about their feelings in this area. That is, until Robert Kennedy Jr. broke the silence in an interview with Charlie Rose.

    According to Livingstone, “I was completely responsible for drawing Dr. [David] Mantik into the entire issue.[29] David Mantik, M.D., Ph.D., who has made many valuable contributions to the JFK case, especially in the medical field, received his doctorate in physics and practices medicine as a Radiation Oncologist, Since his day job is to examine X-rays, he has done some very important work in that specific area. When I emailed Mantik about this claim he said that what first interested him in the JFK case was watching Oliver Stone’s film back in 1991. After that he picked up Best Evidence, and High Treason and Dr. Charles Crenshaw’s book, since those volumes contained visual depictions and lengthy discussions of the medical evidence. From there he was on his way.[30]

    Nurse Diana Bowron was at Parkland Hospital when President Kennedy was brought there after he was shot. No writer interviewed her for many, many years afterward. To my knowledge Livingstone was the first. According to him, this was not accomplished by simple location work by him and Bowron’s consent. According to the author, “the British government and police chose me and no one else to talk to her. It was a surprise when they called me out of the blue.”[31] It would be nice to see some corroboration for this claim. For instance, a letter, a fax perhaps, a diary entry from across the pond, as to why it was Livingstone who was deemed so worthy.

    Sharing more, Harrison writes, “I had an entire radiology department somewhat at my disposal for years….”[32] He claims that the Baltimore City Police Department donated a team of five men to him.[33] He writes that this happened because major cities in the USA had no trust in Dallas “after the assassination and were running operations on the filthy town.”[34] According to Livingstone, millions of people have read his books on the case. He got so famous, that the fame began to wreck him so he had to leave the country.[35] Then, at the end, he writes that, at times, he has had an investigative team numbering nearly a hundred people ”spanning the nation.”[36] Then, on the very last page, the crescendo is reached: “He is considered by many the principal researcher, investigator and writer in the case.” Well, as we have seen, Martin Hay does not think so.[38] And if Livingstone was considered as such, would he not have been invited to speak at conferences held by Doug Carlson in Chicago, John Judge and COPA in Washington, Debra Conway and Lancer in Dallas, or Cyril Wecht at Duquesne in Pittsburgh?To my knowledge, he has been invited to speak at none of them.

    This marked characteristic of Livingstone’s, the tendency to elevate himself, and to denigrate others is one I cannot recall in any other writer in the field. Certainly not to the extent exhibited by him.

    III. The Questionable

    And some of the work that Livingstone tries to promote in the pages of Kaleidoscope would certainly seem to detract from that claim. For instance, he writes early on that Governor John Connally was hit in the back at Zapruder film frames 285-86. He adds that this is quite clear in the slides made from the film at Life magazine.[39] I do not recall anyone postulating such a late hit on Connally. Most people I know think it took place much earlier. But further, Livingstone states “he was also hit by a shooter in front of the car.”[40] In looking at still frames from the film, this does not seem possible. Since Connally is rotated to the right at these frames, a shot from the knoll area would have hit Connally in the chest. And we know that he was hit in the back. A shot in the back at this point – with Connally turned around at perhaps more than ninety degrees to his right – would seem to originate from the other side of Dealey Plaza. And it appears that Nellie Connally would have been in the line of fire.

    Livingstone also says that he has found the “secret FBI reports” based on the so-called film of the “Babushka Lady”.[41] This was the young woman in a light coat and headscarf filming the motorcade in Dealey Plaza. The Abraham Zapruder film shows she is holding some kind of camera as she is positioned on the grass opposite and across Elm Street from Zapruder. Her film has never been adduced. So for Livingstone to say that he found a reference to it in “secret FBI reports” is an odd claim. In an earlier book of his, Killing Kennedy, Livingstone sourced his “secret FBI reports” to Commission Document 298.[42] I don’t understand how an FBI report can be secret if it appears in a Warren Commission appendix. When one finds the CD, one will see a reference to a film by Orville Nix. Livingstone says that since this film is not represented accurately by the FBI, then the Bureau switched the Nix film with the Babushka Lady’s film. Yet, in this same CD the FBI also misrepresents the Zapruder film. So this seems to me to be something of a stretch. Especially since there is nothing in the FBI reference he uses that would necessitate not producing the film or the name of its owner.

    Oliver
    The Babushka Lady

    Some of Livingstone’s other claims also seem like a stretch. He writes that Jackie Kennedy seems to be painted into the Zapruder film.[43] I assume he means her entire body. But he does not elaborate on this at all, as to the why or how. Dealing more with his suspicions about Zapruder film alteration, he writes that the presidential limousine was fired upon while it turned from Houston to Elm Street. No one I know of, besides perhaps Max Holland, thinks a shot occurred this early. Livingstone writes that there was only “some” military control at the autopsy.[44] This would seem to be contradicted by Kennedy pathologist Pierre Finck’s landmark testimony at the Clay Shaw trial.[45] There, Finck seemed to indicate a lot of direct control by the military. So much so that the Justice Department panicked and wanted to bring down fellow Kennedy pathologist Thornton Boswell to discredit Finck.

    To this day, Livingstone insists that, because the anterior and right lateral x rays are extremely dark on the right, frontside of JFK’s skull, this indicates a blow out to the right side of Kennedy’s face. And since the photos don’t show this, then something drastic is wrong with the pictures.[46] This reveals that Livingstone is not all that familiar with Mantik’s work. In 2003, Mantik cooperated with Cyril Wecht on a long, profusely illustrated essay about the x rays. This fascinating essay partly addressed this specific issue.[47] Both doctors came to the conclusion that although laymen could deduce that the darkness indicated a lack of skull bone, physicians understood this actually indicated a lack of brain tissue.[48] This essay was written and published ten years ago.It’s hard to believe that, in the ensuing decade, Livingstone was never made aware of its existence. Especially since it concerns a pet interest of his.

    There is another relatively recent development in the field the author does not seem aware of. And again, it relates to an area of his special interest. In this case, his suspicion that the Zapruder film has been seriously altered. This is the so-called Full Flush Left (ffl) argument. This was the idea that since picture frames of the Zapruder film spilled over into the intersprocket area of the film, that this somehow indicated the actual original film had been copied, or else it would not align that way. This idea had always been disputed by even those who thought the film was altered, e.g. John Costella.

    In my review of Horne’s series, I addressed this specific issue at length. I noted that Bob Groden wrote to me that using the proper optical printing equipment, doing one frame at a time, this would not happen anyway. Secondly, Josiah Thompson posted at Spartacus Educational back in 2009 that Kodak expert Roland Zavada did produce frames where this effect did appear. Further, researcher Rick Janowitz conducted an experiment with the same type of camera that Zapruder used that day. In his experiment he discovered that you could attain continuous ffl alignment with that camera. Frames from this experiment were placed online at Spartacus by Craig Lamson in January of 2010, at least two years before Kaleidoscope was published. So for Livingstone to argue here, as he does, that Horne did not give him enough credit for the discovery of ffl is weird. One wonders why Livingstone would want to criticize Horne about not crediting him with a now specious argument concerning Zapruder film forgery. Again, this discovery has been online for years, and I dealt with it in my own critique of Horne’s book.[49] It is hard to comprehend why Livingstone would not read a previous lengthy review of Horne before he went ahead and wrote his own. This would indicate a fault in his preparation for this assignment.

    IV. The Careless

    If criticism entails anything, it entails the practice of being fastidious. That is showing a demanding and excessive delicacy about facts, being meticulous in one’s standards of scholarship. The reason for this is obvious. If you do not display this quality in your own work, how can you be trusted to do so in relation to the work of others?

    Late in the book, when discussing Horne’s last volume which deals with a macroscopic view of Kennedy’s assassination, Livingstone writes about Eisenhower’s famous Farewell Address where he warned about the evolving threat of the military industrial complex. Apparently, in his attempt to insinuate Texas into the speech, he writes there that, “It was Texas oil men who bought President Eisenhower’s farm for him near Gettysburg, a good place for Ike to retire, but he knew what they were trying to do to him.”[50] It would be nice to see something like this footnoted, because to anyone who knows anything about Eisenhower it makes no sense. Eisenhower and his wife purchased their Gettysburg property in 1950, while he was president of Columbia University. He was earning a fairly good salary there. Since the purchase price was only $40,000, I don’t think he needed any personal favors from Texas oil men. Especially in light of the fact that two years earlier, Eisenhower had published his military memoir, Crusade in Europe[51]. Just the advance on this book was worth well over a half million dollars. So why would he need to borrow less than a tenth of that for his home? Further, as Blanche Wiesen Cook notes in The Declassified Eisenhower,[52] it was while he was at Columbia that Eisenhower began his studies within the Council on Foreign Relations. He especially studied in economics, and how America could influence Europe through the Marshall Plan. Therefore it would appear that it was the CFR who influenced his worldview, not H. L. Hunt.

    This is a good lead into Livingstone’s direct criticism of Horne. As mentioned, in the last volume of his series, Horne tried to put together a “Big Picture” view of the Kennedy assassination. Generally speaking, this meant why was Kennedy killed and who did it. In my review, I found this part of Inside the ARRB to be rather disappointing. For the specific reasons that I did not think Horne’s view of Kennedy was very sophisticated, and I also thought that some of the sources Horne used for his ideas on who killed JFK were not really sound or credible.

    Livingstone disagrees with me. He thinks that this is the best part of the series. In reading what he says, I think it’s because first, Horne allows for a Texas-based component as part of the plot; and second, Livingstone’s view of Kennedy is as superficial and unenlightening as Horne’s.

    JFK-RFK

    February 28, 1962. At around 5:50 PM JFK met with RFK, Dean Rusk, and LBJ in the Oval Office after RFK returned from a trip to Asia.

    (photo courtesy JFK Library)

    For instance, Livingstone, quoting Horne, agrees that the Kennedy who was killed in 1963 was a substantially different man than the one who entered office in 1961.[53] It’s not exactly clear, but the source for this seems to be former Senator Gary Hart. I like Hart, and voted for him. But I never regarded him as a foremost expert on President Kennedy. And I don’t know why Horne or Livingstone do. There is no doubt that the Bay of Pigs made Kennedy more antagonistic toward the CIA. And the Missile Crisis made him more anxious to hasten a détente with Cuba and the USSR. But to say that the Kennedy who entered office in 1961 was somehow a “Cold Warrior”, this is simply wrong. Because it does not explain why he did what he did his first year in office in places like Congo, Vietnam, Indonesia and Laos.[54] And why, when the Bay of Pigs was failing, he refused to authorize the use of American naval power. Which is what Allen Dulles thought he would do. And, in fact, Dulles was banking on that happening.[55]

    Further, if one is not aware of Kennedy’s evolving view of colonialism in the Third World, then one cannot understand why Kennedy refused to authorize the issuance of combat troops into Vietnam in the fall of 1961. Or why, after the Bay of Pigs failed, Kennedy authorized a White House inquiry into what actually happened. Nor can one understand why and how the Henry Luce controlled Fortune magazine, then hit back at Kennedy for firing Allen Dulles with a ghost written article penned by Howard Hunt.[56] A man’s character and judgment is not molded once he reaches the White House. In large part, it is forged years before he passes through those doors.

    But in addition to this less than complete examination of who Kennedy was, Livingstone then goes along with some of Horne’s most dubious sources in his final book. For instance, Horne relied on the now infamous party at the Murchisons the night before the assassination. And it appeared that Horne used Killing the Truth for some of this.[57] So Horne had to, at least partly, rely on Madeleine Brown. Well, Livingstone is not going to score Horne for using his own book of course. And further since he edited and published Brown’s book, she is fine with him also.[58]

    Because Brown backed the idea of an LBJ plot, Livingstone backed the idea that she was the mother of Johnson’s illegitimate son.[59] In fact, Steven Brown filed a 10 million dollar lawsuit against Lady Bird Johnson in 1987, which was 14 years after LBJ had died. The lawsuit was dismissed about two years after it was filed because of Steven Brown’s failure to appear in court. Why did he fail to appear in court? Probably because he had filed another lawsuit seven years earlier saying that attorney Jerome Ragsdale, not LBJ, was his father!Its not a very good paternity case when you and your mother cannot decide whom the real father is. Yet, both Livingstone and Horne backed this woman.

    Needless to say, Livingstone goes along with Horne’s use of the flaky fraudster Billy Sol Estes also. I won’t detail any more of the problems with these two witnesses. Just click through to this article for a good review of the problems with the ‘Johnson did it’ case. [60]

    As with Estes and author Barr McClellan, Livingstone claims that Johnson was a serial killer. When you use sources like Barr McClellan and Estes, yes you can make fantastic claims of homicide. But then you have to come clean with the problems with those two witnesses. Which, neither Horne nor Livingstone do. And when Livingstone writes on page 415 that “There is strong evidence that Johnson actually ordered Kennedy’s killing….”, that bombastic claim is not footnoted. Then, a paragraph later, he uses Billy Sol Estes to seem to back this up. But then how solid can the indictment be?The answer is: not very.

    What is Livingstone’s ultimate solution to who killed Kennedy?He says it was a consortium of elements from the power structure of America. He actually names the Texas oilmen, LBJ, the CIA, the Pentagon, the Wall Street bankers. This group then hired Secret Service agents and the FBI.[61] Sounds a bit like that famous fantasy the Torbitt Document. Unfortunately, assassination plots are not Agatha Christie novels, e.g. Murder on The Orient Express.As I have always maintained, if everyone killed Kennedy, then no one did. We might as well say that Oswald did it because that “everybody did it claim” is as credible as the Warren Commission.

    Livingstone himself comes close to admitting this when he mentions Secret Service agent Abraham Bolden’s Chicago Plot. He writes that, in light of this, “it would appear that some of the planners could operate on a national level.”[62] But if the Chicago plot had succeeded, would writers like Livingstone then have posited an “Illinois Conspiracy”?

    Livingstone endorses Horne’s use of a questionable declassified document. On page 1492 of Volume 5 of Inside the ARRB, Horne prints a subheading, “The KGB Fingers LBJ: The Ultimate ‘Smoking Gun’ document.”Horne implies the ultimate source is a KGB document. Again, Livingstone says that he also deserves credit for this document since he noted it in High Treason.

    In my review of Horne, I did not mention this alleged KGB report which he declared was such a bombshell. Why? First of all, it’s not a report, and second, the KGB did not write it. This is an FBI memorandum and the title is “Reaction of Soviet and Communist Party Officials to the Assassination of President John F. Kennedy.”[63] The memo is a compilation of Russian and communist sources about the reaction to Kennedy’s murder. Some of the information compiled is actually from the Soviet press. Some of it is not even from Russian sources. It is from Marxist sources in the USA, like Gus Hall and The Worker. The document does source Yuri Nosenko, the KGB defector, but his information is simply about Oswald’s time in the USSR. The closest the memo comes to saying what Livingstone and Horne says it does is that “now” the FBI has a source that says the KGB has information that indicates LBJ was responsible for the assassination of Kennedy. The “now” is December 1, 1966, since the memo was written then. The memo does not name the source of the information, or what the information actually was, what it specifically says, or how the Russians got it. Therefore what is its forensic worth? Realizing this is a problem, Horne and Livingstone say that the document was sent to LBJ as a threat to help Hoover keep his job. In other words, it was one of Hoover’s methods of wielding power over Johnson. The problem with this is that most people understand that since LBJ and Hoover were pals, there really was not much of a threat of Hoover being fired. Allowing for that,in December of 1966, the first wave of critical books and articles were now making an impact in America. This memo appears to be a way to keep tabs on what the communist world abroad was thinking on the subject. Since it was now an issue that could not be avoided. Anyone who can call this memo a smoking gun has questionable powers of textual analysis and evidence evaluation.[64]

    V. The Valuable

    There is another document which Horne very much played up in his book as being another smoking gun. This one was used to back the idea that Kennedy’s body was not really being transferred to Bethesda Medical Center by Bobby and Jackie Kennedy as millions watched on television as they drove across Washington. That particular casket was empty. The body was actually entered into Bethesda at 6:35 PM, not at the later, official time of seven o’clock. Horne referred to this document more than once throughout the book, and each time it was referenced as backing up David Lifton’s theory of body swiping and wound alteration.[65]

    Horne referred to it as the Boyajian report. Roger Boyajian was a Marine Sgt. on duty at Bethesda on the 22nd. He led a small detail of men that day called the Honor Guard.[66] According to Horne, Boyajian wrote a report the next day that proves that it was his detail that actually brought in Kennedy’s casket at the earlier time of 6:35. Therefore Lifton and his body switching idea are upheld. In my review of Horne’s series, I did not mention Boyajian or his report. This was supposed to be dealt with by Gary Aguilar in another review of Horne’s series. Unfortunately Aguilar was going through a long and complicated divorce process that entailed him having to relocate. So he never got around to writing his review.

    Well, Livingstone deals with the issue at length here, and in my opinion he does a good job with it. It would appear that Horne oversold the document and Livingstone uses the opportunity to really pile onto Horne with a lot of invective. I wouldn’t go as far as he does in that regard but let us spell out some of the problems that the document has and that Horne did not elucidate very well.

    First, the actual report does not say that the casket picked up by Boyajian’s men was President Kennedy’s.[67] In the one sentence that deals with the issue it is referred to only as “the casket”. As Livingstone properly notes, this is a serious fault with Horne’s claim. It is hard to believe that if Boyajian knew he was handling JFK’s casket, would he not write that down and specifically note that fact?

    Further, there is a real problem of authentication as this report is not signed by Boyajian and there is no trace in the record as to why he did not sign it. There is a second page to the report that lists the ten men in the detail – none of which signed the document either. What makes it all a bit worse is that when the ARRB questioned Boyajian about whether he recalled picking up Kennedy’s casket, Boyajian couldn’t recall doing so.[68] In fact, he could not recall much at all about that day. And importantly, it does not appear that the report the ARRB had was the original document leading us to question as to whether or not that original was ever filed with the military.[69] All of this seems strange if the casket really was Kennedy’s.

    Additionally, Livingstone shows, if one lives in the area, as he did, it is very hard to understand how Horne could buy into this idea without questions. After all, Horne did live in Washington while working for the ARRB. As Livingstone describes it, the route through downtown Washington from Andrews AFB to Bethesda is about 18 miles.[70] But yet for the Boyajian report to say what Horne declares it says, somehow this transport traversed the 18 miles in about 20 minutes.[71] Unless the driver was proceeding at a continuous 60 MPH on city streets, this does not seem possible.

    AF1

    There was no trap door near where the coffin was located on the return trip from Dallas on November 22, 1963. The square grille in the near foreground was directly under the bathroom in the Presidential suite in 1963. The space where a trapdoor was claimed to have been would have been all the way at the rear of the cargo hold in the middle. In addition, according to Boeing diagrams and blueprints, there are any number of control cables and wires running through the floor down the center aisle which would have precluded any kind of trap door being in that area. Boeing’s diagrams from 1962 (when the plane was placed into service (in October, 1962)) do not show any trap door in the rear of the plane leading to the rear cargo hold. (Photo Courtesy Jamie Sawa)

    As Livingstone explains, Boyajian did not pick up Kennedy’s casket. Bethesda is also a morgue. It did not stop being so just because Kennedy was being transported there that day. Other military men died that day. After all, America was involved in a war. Livingstone interviewed several people who identified another person’s body being delivered to the morgue that day. There was no autopsy done and his body was being stored in the “Cold Room” for burial at Arlington.[72] The weight of the evidence seems to dictate that it was this person’s body that Boyajian’s detail picked up.

    There are other good points that Livingstone develops to counter some of the excesses in Horne’s books. For instance, the issue of Roy Kellerman having blood on his shirt aboard Air Force One does not mean that Kellerman was somehow performing surgery on JFK’s body in a secret compartment. Kellerman helped get Kennedy’s body out of the limousine and onto a gurney at Parkland. [73] And concerning the alleged secret compartment, Livingstone supplies some good photos illustrating the work of James Sawa showing that there was “no trap door leading from the rear baggage compartment up to the rear of the aircraft.” This vitiates one of the earlier theories Lifton had about secret surgery on board Air Force One.[74]

    When I reviewed Horne’s series, I concluded that he needed a tough-minded editor to reduce the size and scope of the book to highlight the good things he had done. Livingstone says the same about Horne.[75] Yet he does not note the irony that this same criticism could be easily applied to Kaleidoscope. This book could effortlessly have been reduced in size by at least one half. Probably even more. And it would have been much more valuable and pointed. What is worse is Livingstone had a valuable model in front of him that he knew about – one that avoided all the conspiracy bantering about the JFK research community. The late Roger Feinman wrote The Signal and the Noise, a long critique of Best Evidence, back in the nineties. [76] It was much shorter than Kaleidoscope. But Feinman avoided most of the pitfalls that Livingstone did not. Livingstone, who much admired Feinman’s work, seemed to forget what made Roger’s critique valuable when he wrote Kaleidoscope.

    Note: The author informs us that there is a newer edition of this book, however, it is not available as we put this article online. When a second edition is available, and if there are any substantive changes, we will do an update to this review. But the first edition has been out for five months and as of this writing is the only version available.

    Update: Since this review appeared, I have been alerted by researcher Martin Shackelford that there were three five figure loans for a total of $165,000 made to David Lifton by the Mary Ferrell Foundation. He saw these listed on the site. And they appeared before Rex Bradford became the director. Mr. Lifton has not replied to my queries about this subject, so I cannot pursue it further.


    [3] ibid. p. 107

    [4] idid. p. 141

    [5] ibid. p. 158

    [6] ibid. p. 181

    [7] ibid, p. 186

    [8] ibid.

    [9] ibid. p. 244

    [10] ibid. p. 377

    [11] ibid. p. 412

    [12] Livingstone, p. 103, for just one example of this accusation; Mary Ferrell Foundation

    [13] ibid.

    [14] ibid, p. 201

    [15] ibid, p. 137

    [16] Email communication from Bradford, 3/29/13

    [17] Livingstone, pgs. 24, 277, 347

    [18] Email communication from Lifton, 3/30/13

    [19] Livingstone, p. 277

    [20] ibid, p. 137

    [21] Email communication from Bradford, 3/30/13

    [22] Livingstone, p. 452

    [23] Email communication from Conway, 3/29/13

    [24] Livingstone, p. 262

    [25] Email communication from Groden, 4/1/13

    [26] ibid, p. 262

    [27] ibid.

    [28] ibid, p. 313

    [29] ibid, p. 360

    [30] Email communication from Mantik, 3/29/2013

    [31] Livingstone, p. 391

    [32] ibid.

    [33] ibid.

    [35] ibid.

    [36] ibid, p. 461

    [37] ibid, p. 462

    [39] ibid, p. 82

    [40] ibid.

    [41] ibid, p. 242

    [43] Livingstone, p. 95

    [44] ibid, p. 258

    [45] DiEugenio, James Destiny Betrayed: JFK, Cuba, and the Garrison Case, 2nd Edition, pgs. 299-306

    [46] Livingstone, p. 360

    [47] Edited by James DiEugenio and Lisa Pease, The Assassinations: Probe Magazine on JFK, MLK, RFK and Malcolm X , pgs. 250-71

    [48] Livingstone, p. 259

    [50] Livingstone, p. 414

    [51] Eisenhower, Dwight D. Crusade in Europe, 1997

    [52] Cook, Blanche Wiesen, The Declassified Eisenhower, 1984

    [53] DiEugenio, p. 431

    [54] ibid, pgs. 28-33

    [55] ibid, p. 47

    [56] ibid, p. 54

    [57] Horne, Volume V, p. 1430

    [59] ibid, p. 264

    [61] Livingstone, p. 433

    [62] ibid, p. 417

    [64] You can read this memo at MFF, Appendix 77 to Inside the ARRB

    [65] Livingstone, pgs. 144-45

    [66] ibid, p. 140

    [67] Document reproduced p. 132; Livingstone’s website.

    [68] Livingstone, p.143

    [69] ibid, p. 144

    [70] ibid, p. 146

    [71] ibid, p. 164

    [72] Livingstone, p. 147

    [73] Livingstone, p. 185, 404

    [74] Livingstone p. 405

    [75] ibid, p. 449

    [76] Roger Feinman, Between The Signal and the Noise: The Best Evidence Hoax and David Lifton’s War Against the Critics of the Warren Commission. http://karws.gso.uri.edu/JFK/the_critics/feinman/between_the_signal/Preface.html

  • 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
  • The Mystery of Red Bird Airport


    Anyone who begins to delve into the Kennedy assassination in Dallas will eventually encounter various references to Red Bird Airport, a small private airfield in the south part of Dallas.

    On November 22, 1963, because of a 1:30PM notice from the FBI to report suspicious activities, a Red Bird tower operator became so suspicious of a certain aircraft that he made repeated calls to the FBI. The plane in question had remained ready for takeoff for some time and departed only after news of a suspect in the assassination capture was announced – it then reversed course from its stated departure path, flying south rather than north.  The FBI number remained busy and the tower operator finally gave up. The plane then returned some time later.

    Red Bird Airport Map South Dallas
    Red Bird Airport was redeveloped with name changed to Dallas Executive Airport

    While the flight itself may well have been innocent, the airport tower notice to the FBI required a response and no reports indicate any similar notice to the Dallas Police, no mention is made of any separate, proactive DPD or Bureau inquiry at airports or airfields. The incident certainly raises questions about any Dallas Police Department inquiries at Red Bird, as well as whether any real DPD effort was made to check private flights out of Dallas on November 22nd.

    On November 29, 1963 the FBI did interview an individual from Red Bird following the assassination, apparently due to a report from local sources.  The individual was Wayne January, operator of an aircraft sales and charter business located at the airfield.  January had remarked to friends about a couple who had inquired about renting a plane for a long distance flight. He recalled he had been suspicious of their intent and ability to pay. After the assassination he also thought there was a resemblance between a third person with them and Lee Oswald.[1] During the FBI interview, January also mentioned that he had been frequenting the Carousel Club, and so the FBI agents spent a great deal of the interview pressing him on a possible connection to Ruby.

    Vince Bugliosi felt it necessary to address the Red Bird Airport topic in his book Reclaiming History.  His treatment of the subject is relatively limited; his overall view seems to be that nothing significant could have happened in or around Red Bird since, according to him, the Dallas police investigated matters there. As his only source for that assumption Bugliosi cites anecdotal information from Dallas Assistant DA Bill Alexander to the effect that, “Will Fritz had sent people out there and turned up nothing suspicious.”[2] Regardless of Bugliosi’s claims, there seem to be no records of a DPD inquiry at Red Bird Airport.  In his own discussion in Reclaiming History, Bugliosi limits his discussion of the episode to Lee Oswald and just one witness.  Regarding the former, he only notes Red Bird as a possible escape route for Oswald.  Namely, that after the Tippit shooting, Oswald could have caught a bus from near that location in Oak Cliff with Red Bird Airport on its route.

    postcard
    Vintage Postcard showing Red Bird Airport and Downtown Dallas

    This incident has been extensively discussed in print by author Matthew Smith, beginning in his book. Bugliosi also delves into the story, taking January to task for apparent inconsistencies over time and an issue with the incident date in the FBI report (July,’63 per the FBI report vs. November 20, per Smith/January).[3]

    Bugliosi wrongly assumes that the DPD visit described by Alexander must have included January, where he failed to mention the incident to the DPD. Since there is nothing to confirm the DPD visit, this is weak criticism. Bugliosi goes on to state that January “invented” the whole incident, calling it a “fabrication”. Bugliosi fails to remark on the fact that January never attempted to promote his story for visibility or profit. He also accuses Matthew Smith of making up additional elements of the story because Smith did not write them about at first. There is no indication that Bugliosi contacted Smith (who is quite alive and still writing in 2013) in regard to this rather serious and slanderous assertion.  If he had, he would have found that there was a perfectly logical and reasonable reason for the delay.

    Setting aside the known effects of time on memory, which Bugliosi does not acknowledge, January is also slammed by Bugliosi for not remembering his own fabricated story. Of course, people who do fabricate stories often take great pains to repeat them consistently. But perhaps a more serious concern is January’s own objection to the initial FBI report, which Matthew Smith first showed him after researcher Harold Weisberg had obtained a copy via FOIA request.[4]

    After viewing the FBI report, January’s first remark was that he had given the FBI an accurate date for the visit – November 20. His second was that such a visit would never have come to be suspicious to him if it had been months and not days before the assassination.[5] The issue over the date inconsistency might also be more credible if we have not seen numerous instances in which witnesses have taken exception to material in FBI reports – reports which are never initially verified by the interviewee (as is often done in standard police statements).[6] This is an issue that Bugliosi does not mention in general, nor does he mention this specific instance in regards to January. Therefore, he is free to call January a fabricator.  And since the reader is supplied with no other frame of reference, he or she has no real alternative except to accept the verdict as handed down by the famous prosecutor.  This inability to frame both sides of the argument, which in his introduction Bugliosi says he will do, is a serious and grievous fault in his mammoth book.

    Beyond all this, there is a much more suggestive incident from Red Bird and Wayne January, parts of which are not mentioned at all by Bugliosi; but one in which certain elements can be totally verified. After numerous visits with Smith, January related an incident which he had previously determined not to share with anyone, based on his original experiences with the FBI and the context of the incident itself. The story involved a series of aircraft sales he had been involved with in 1963 and the last aircraft in the series, handed off at Red Bird on November 22, 1963. He provided Smith with certain information on the aircraft but demanded it be withheld until after his death. His behavior in no way resembles Bugliosi’s claims that he was making up stories for some sort of public attention. Indeed his action shows he was clearly aware of the security aspects of the sales of the particular aircraft in question.  Bugliosi’s failure to dig into this element of January’s information raises questions about how thoroughly he covered material – the aircraft story is mentioned in several of Smith’s books — and to what extent Bugliosi was really looking for balance, given that he makes no mention of discussing January’s various remarks with the individual who would know most about them at this point in time.

    January’s basic story was that Woburn Aircraft was selling the planes and that he was in charge of the work required to hand them off to the new owners. The final plane was being taken by an unnamed individual in civilian clothes (later identified to him as an Air Force officer) and a maintenance technician /pilot. The actual inspection and acceptance of the plane was delegated to the technician, who told January that he had been born in Cuba and was a former pilot with Cubana Airlines. The Cuban was extremely familiar with the aircraft and stated that he had extensive flying time in its DC-3 commercial version.

    While January and the Cuban technician spent long hours that week doing acceptance tests and minor maintenance, they became friendly and had a good deal of time for talk. By Thursday of that week they had discussed the pilot’s participation in support of the Bay of Pigs landings, and also his friends who had died there. The pilot described the Cuban exiles’ pain, embarrassment and anger at being abandoned by the Kennedy brothers.  As they continued to chat, the subject turned to the President’s imminent visit to Dallas. The pilot paused, and then he flatly stated to January, “They are going to kill your President.” He knew for a fact that Cuban exiles were going take their revenge and remove JFK as an obstacle. January challenged him but the Cuban would say nothing more, only remarking that January would see he was telling the truth.

    Matthew Smith describes their dialog in his books but keeping with Wayne January’s wishes, Smith kept his name as the source of the story confidential until after his death.[7]  Smith eventually named January only with his widow’s permission. (Again, Bugliosi leaves all this out so he can claim that Smith actually made up the story later. This way he gets to say, in his indiscriminate and inimitable style, that both Smith and January are fabricators.) Only in 2003 did Smith name January and provide specific information on the aircraft. With that information, the story has been explored in further detail.  With help from a volunteer FAA employee and confirmation from the Houston Air Center, the author obtained the complete paperwork on the aircraft transaction.[8] The aircraft in question was a C-53, the WWII era military transport version of the DC-3.[9]  This documentation proves the transfer of aircraft did happen.

    DC3
    DC-3/C-53 #50 In Flight. After the start of WWII, all former DC-3’s of CNAC had been designated C-53.
    (Photo and Caption Courtesy of Pete Billon)

    The plane had come to Red Bird in January 1963 and was owned by two different companies there during that year. Wayne January was a partner in both companies. At some point that year, the aircraft had been heavily modified, all the seats had been removed from the plane and it had been reclassified with the FAA as a research and development aircraft. We also know that it had been sold to individuals of the Houston Air Center, but paperwork was not actually completed until it was eventually resold outside the U.S. to a company named Aerovias del Sur. The records place that company’s headquarters in Mexico City, however, defunct companies of that name can be found in Cuba, Mexico and Columbia. Further tracing seems virtually impossible.

    Another tack in evaluating January’s overall story of the incident is to look at where such aircraft were indeed being used covertly during the timespan of 1964-1965. Records reveal that the Cuban exile autonomous group initiative supported by Robert Kennedy in 1963 was in the process of buying and leasing a broad variety of equipment, both boats and planes. That effort was led by Manual Artime and records demonstrate that extensive “cut outs” were used to shield its financial activities – and the fact that the U.S. was funding the project. Available records confirm that Artime did lease a similar Douglas transport aircraft until his project was closed down in 1965. Artime’s personnel were all Cuban exiles and his funding, purchasing and leasing were all carried out by CIA staff in a highly covert project designated as AMWORLD.

    Another covert operation involving aircraft and Cuban exile personnel would have been the highly secret dispatch of aircraft and Cuban exile pilots to the Congo, which began in 1963. A joint effort of the American military assistance mission and the CIA, the effort focused primarily on providing B-26 fighter-bombers and Cuban exile pilots. However a number of transport aircraft and technicians were also sent into the Congo in 1964.[10]

    A third option, and one especially interesting in regard to the modifications and R&D recertification of the Red Bird aircraft, is the fact that a variety of covert air assets were being prepared to go into Laos in this period.  In addition, the Air Force was developing the class of modified C-47 gunships eventually known as “Spooky”. The craft were totally stripped internally to allow the mounting of heavy machine guns and cannon.[11]  Development of these gunships was underway in 1964 and the first aircraft were deployed into Vietnam in 1964. Therefore, the aspect of January’s story about the pilot being familiar with certain veterans of the Bay of Pigs is supportable.

    January indicated to Smith that it was his understanding that the series of aircraft being purchased through companies at Red Bird and Houston Air Center were being processed through a series of cut out sales for eventual use in secret government projects. Investigation confirms that such projects and cut out sales were most definitely occurring at that time.  It also confirms that Cuban exiles were very much involved in some of them. Of course, if January had gone to the FBI with such an incident at the time, it obviously would have had security implications as well as a negative impact on his own business. Beyond that, it would have likely done little good, as we have a number of examples from both Texas and Miami that show the FBI was not at all interested in following up on Cuban exile assassination leads; even when they had specific names in hand.[12]

    After 50 years it is virtually impossible to carry Wayne January’s most significant lead to a final resolution. Still, with what has been learned about both January himself, as well as the aircraft sale, it seems rather foolish to write it all off as some sort of fiction. Especially since Wayne January never told anyone but Smith and then only with the promise of total anonymity. If true, it could offer a major insight into the President’s assassination. 


    [1] January gave the date of this incident as November 20; perhaps coincidentally November 20 is the one morning that Oswald was reported as being seen away from the TSBD, seen having breakfast at 10 AM. HSCA Vol, 12, p. 37
    [2] Vincent Bugliosi, Reclaiming History, p. 1037
    [3] Vincent Bugliosi, Reclaiming History, 1038

    [4] Matthew Smith, The Second Plot, 268-274. This incident was actually discovered in response to the Garrison investigation’s FBI inquiries in 1967.

    [5] Personal communications between Hancock and Matthew Smith
    [6] Larry Hancock, Someone Would Have Talked, third edition, 2010, 66
    [7] Matthew Smith, Vendetta, Chapter 7
    [8] Larry Hancock, Someone Would Have Talked, third edition, 2010, 206-207
    [10] Frank R. Villefana, Cold War in the Congo, 70-72
    [12] The Parrot Jungle incident in Miami is an exceptionally egregious example.  Larry Hancock, Someone Would Have Talked, 2010, 62-63
  • Open Letter to Rachel Maddow re Show on Gun Control


    March 29, 2013

    Dear Rachel:

    Many of us, including me, have admired much of your work on radio and television since 2004, when you were perhaps the very best show on Air America. We then followed you as you became a regular guest on MSNBC’s Keith Olbermann’s show and CNN’s Paula Zahn show. Therefore, we were glad when Keith pushed for you to have your own show on MSNBC. You deserved it. You were a great advocate for progressive causes and puncturing MSM shibboleths and sacred cows.

    Which makes it disturbing that you would do what you did on your March 13th program. A common joke among the vast majority who understand the truth about President Kennedy’s assassination is this:

    “You know 85% of the public doesn’t buy the Warren Commission hogwash about Lee Oswald being the lone assassin of President Kennedy. Unfortunately, the 15% who do all work at the New York Times, Washington Post, LA Times, NBC, CBS, ABC, and Fox.” Should we add now, MSNBC?

    Everyone knows that Chris Mathews made his career by attacking Oliver Stone’s films JFK and Nixon. And he spares no opportunity to say that he believes the Oswald myth and to knock anyone who does not. (But he wisely has no one on his show to present the other side as he does so.) We also know that Bill O’Reilly got his position at Fox by agreeing with Roger Ailes that he would drop his JFK investigatory reports he had done for Inside Edition. (Which were actually pretty good.) He now literally lies about the case in his book Killing Kennedy and on his show.

    Most of us thought that we would never see you do something like that. But yet you did use the whole Warren Commission lie about Oswald to promote gun control on March 13th. Many of us agree with the gun control cause especially after Sandy Hook and Aurora. But we would never promote something as bad as the Warren Commission to promote a common good. Especially when it’s not at all necessary.

    We all understand that there is an unwritten agreement when you make it big on TV that you cannot touch things like the JFK case. In other words you can have an open debate with anyone, no matter how far out about anything under the sun. But not the JFK assassination. Fine. Maybe you are uninformed about the facts. Maybe you like your newfound fame and fortune. That is all understandable. But is there an unwritten clause in your contract that you have to go out of your way to promote a lie as big as the Warren Commission? I doubt it.

    As you mentioned on your ill-advised show, this is the fiftieth anniversary of President Kennedy’s death. He was probably the last real Democrat to occupy that office. And he actually proclaimed he was a liberal. A word the right has successfully stamped out of the political lexicon, along with the word conspiracy. If you do visit this topic again later on, let it be in the spirit of free and open inquiry. Tell your bosses that is what you are really about—all the time, on any subject. There are many people who are articulate and convincing about how bad the Commission really was and what happened to this country afterwards. And the thing is, many people want to hear this side of the story: 85% of us.

    Sincerely,

    Jim DiEugenio, CTKA

    {aridoc engine=”iframe”}https://www.youtube.com/embed/prtUkzyO0I0?autoplay=0{/aridoc}

  • “I Don’t Think Lee Harvey Oswald Pulled the Trigger”: An Interview with Dale Myers


    Note: This transcript is from an interview with Dale Myers, conducted back in 1982. At that time I was working as a reporter at WEMU-FM in Ypsilanti, Michigan, a public radio station on the campus of Eastern Michigan University. Myers came to the campus to lecture on the assassination of JFK, and I covered it for the station. We spoke a day or two before the lecture, and an edited version of that interview was broadcast on November 18, 1982.

    Myers was, as the following makes plain, selling conspiracy.


    John Kelin: It’s been close to twenty years since the assassination. Why should people still be concerned about this, at this late date?

    Dale Myers: Oh, well, because the act of the assassination was simply – that’s the thing that opened the window, so to speak. The public got a glimpse of an intelligence covert operation. You know, prior to 1963 we were pretty much in a cocoon, so to speak, as far as how government operates. Since then, of course, we’ve had Watergate, and all the other atrocities of government.

    And so, I guess what people don’t realize is that the assassination has a direct bearing on what is happening today. And we’ve all heard the cliché that history repeats itself. And I guess it’s because people never read history. And so I think it’s important that we understand what happened simply for historical context – not that anybody is going to be prosecuted, or that anybody is ever going to prove, you know, that this guy did this – or whatever.

    John Kelin: What do you hope to accomplish with this lecture?

    Dale Myers: Okay. I was prepared for this question! [laughs]

    The point is not to prove that this person had his finger on the trigger, or that these people were involved – although certainly we’ll cover that area. The point, really, is seeing how certain agencies, or certain government agencies, reacted. This was an extremely tense situation. And there was a tremendous covert operation that was tied directly to the assassination. Not that they were involved, but there’s a direct link between a covert operation that was going on at this particular time. And there were a lot of agencies involved. Military intelligence, the FBI, the Central Intelligence Agency. And how they reacted – and of course the coverup came from that – but how they reacted during this particular situation, with all the pressures they were under, public and otherwise, is important today. If something similar – not to say a shooting or an assassination – but a similar situation, where there’s an immense amount of public pressure, a tense situation where, you know, whether it be covert or not – but where there’s pressure on the agencies – then we have an inkling, or we have an idea, of how they’re going to react.

    John Kelin: What do you think about Lee Harvey Oswald? Could he have done it by himself?

    Dale Myers: Oh, certainly: anybody could have done it by themselves. First off, I don’t think Lee Harvey Oswald pulled the trigger.

    John Kelin: The trigger, or a trigger?

    Dale Myers: Okay … a trigger.

    John Kelin: I mean – you know, if there were two gunmen, could he have been one of them?

    Dale Myers: Exactly. Okay. Well the gun that was fired from the Texas School Book Depository was the gun that fired all the shots that hit any victims. And including the fatal shot. But I don’t think he was the finger that was behind that trigger. Although there’s no doubt that it was his rifle. And to say that he did not pull the trigger does not mean that he was not involved in some way; he obviously was involved. But as far as saying that he was guilty … I find that extremely hard to believe. And I think I’ll show enough evidence to indicate, or that I think I could circumstantially beyond a reasonable doubt, so to speak, prove to anybody else, that he was not the man behind the trigger.

    You know, that’s one thing about this that’s good for myself as far as – it doesn’t get monotonous. In other words, it’s not a ritual where every year I get out and I go through the same tired old facts, and re-hash the same things the Warren Commission did back in 1964.

    John Kelin: What’s new in the investigation?

    Dale Myers: I think the primary thing is the National Academy of Sciences, which came out with the report that refutes, and I would say conclusively, along with them, the acoustics, or ballistics, report that the House Select Committee based their decision that there were two gunmen firing at President Kennedy in 1978 – the Report came out early this year.

    John Kelin: Mm-hmm.

    Dale Myers: And they did their investigation last year. It refutes conclusively, as I say, that there were two gunmen. In other words, the Dallas police tapes that supposedly show that there were four shots fired at the President at such and such a spacing – one from the grassy knoll – is inaccurate. There are no tapes that reveal the shots that we know of.

    So, that changes…

    John Kelin: Everything! That changes everything!

    Dale Myers: Well – yeah, pretty much. That changes your – that changes not only the acoustics, but the trajectories that the House Select Committee did were based on the acoustics. So that throws all that out the window.

    John Kelin: Right. They concluded that there was a conspiracy based on those tapes.

    Dale Myers: Uh … yeah. There was – well, see, there’s a lot of circumstantial evidence. But yeah, they were looking for some – most of their report was based on hard evidence. So when they had this hard evidence of a tape showing two gunmen, then they were pretty confidant that they could write in their Report that there was more than two men, therefore a conspiracy. That is not to say that there was not a conspiracy simply because there’s no tape. It simply means that there’s no hard evidence that we thought we had that shows a conspiracy.

    So, again, that changes the trajectory, and pretty much we’re back at square one, where we were back in 1964. Or at least prior to 78, where there’s really just no hard evidence that there was a man firing from the grassy knoll. Again, there’s a tremendous amount of circumstantial evidence, and I still believe there was someone firing from the grassy knoll. But again, there’s no hard evidence.

    So it changes a lot of things.

    John Kelin: I think, if only for convenience’s sake, a lot of people are inclined to accept the Warren Commission’s findings, in spite of the ’78 report.

    Dale Myers: Sure. That stands to reason. Because again, you know, most people have never read anything on this. The average guy doesn’t do what I do. And that’s not to say that I’m any better than anyone else. It’s just to say that I think I have a responsibility, if I’m going to do this, that I need to disseminate the information. And the more I find out, the more important I think it is to just disseminate the information.

    You know, some people will sit through this lecture, and they’ll still walk away convinced that Lee Harvey Oswald was, regardless of what they hear, that he was the gunman. And that’s fine. But at least I’ve done my job. I’ve said, “Now, okay, here are the facts. You can make up your mind.” And pretty much that’s how I approach the lecture.

    John Kelin: What do you think Oswald was doing at the time the shots were fired?

    Dale Myers: Well, I think that he —

    John Kelin: This is just your opinion, I know…

    Dale Myers: Exactly. Because there were no witnesses to what he was doing, which obviously makes it extremely suspicious. But just as there are no witnesses that give him an alibi, there are also no witnesses that can put him in the window with the gun in his hand. You know, in 1963, Police Chief Jesse Curry said, “This case is cinched. This is the man who killed the President.” Three years later, he told reporters, “We never had any evidence that Oswald was the man in the window.” He says, “We don’t have any witnesses that can put him in that window with the gun in his hands.”

    I think the evidence indicates – and there are a lot of eyewitnesses who saw him immediately before the shots – that he was probably on one of the lower floors [of the Texas School Book Depository building] having lunch.

    John Kelin: Wasn’t he seen on the lower floors just a minute or so after the shots were fired, by a cop and the building foreman?

    Dale Myers: Exactly. That’s an extremely – well, that really is pretty much the alibi. If you’re looking for an alibi that Oswald would have had, that would have been his alibi. And I will go into that in depth in the lecture.

    In fact, I’ve got photographic evidence – because I like to use hard evidence in my lectures as well – I’ve got photographic evidence that indicates that not only is – well, it’s extremely unlikely that Oswald could have been the gunman, based upon that. There are some photographs that were taken that indicate the gunman lingered in the window … it deals with the boxes in the window.

    John Kelin: They were moved?

    Dale Myers: Yeah. The boxes were – well there were always indications that the boxes would have to have been re-stacked … there are photographs that were taken from the outside of the building minutes after the shots, that show a before and after. Immediately after the shots, three seconds after the shots, you see the boxes arranged one way. And there’s a picture taken about a minute later which show the boxes in the window re-arranged. So that means the gunman lingered long enough in the window, and there’s photographic proof, to re-arrange the boxes. And any time delay raises an extreme question of reasonable doubt of whether or not Oswald would have had time to get down to the second floor lunchroom.

    And we’re not even talking about a lot of other factors, that we’ll go into [in the lecture].

    John Kelin: Your area of expertise is J.D. Tippit’s murder?

    Dale Myers: Exactly.

    John Kelin: How does that figure in?

    Dale Myers: Well that’s the amazing thing. Because, you know, that’s one of the most under-researched, the little-talked about – you know, Mark Lane, it was a chapter in his book. Most other writers – Summers, it was a half a page, you know – well, they’re trying to encompass the whole assassination, and it’s really all they could devote. But really, you could write a book on just the murder of J.D. Tippit. And it’s extremely important.

    And I think the best person to quote on that would be one of the Warren Commission staffers himself, David Belin, who of course was one of the prime motivators, a prosecutor so to speak, proponent, of the lone gunman theory, and the fact that Oswald was alone in this whole thing.

    And he said about the Tippit murder, that “The murder of Dallas patrolman J.D. Tippit is the Rosetta Stone of the assassination of President Kennedy.” It’s the Rosetta Stone of the case against Lee Harvey Oswald. In other words, if Lee Harvey Oswald killed J.D. Tippit, in other words if we can prove that, then it stands to reason, and extremely logical, and I would follow his logic, that he also killed President Kennedy. Because we show a capacity for violence. And not only violence in his lifetime, but forty-five minutes after President Kennedy is shot. Okay?

    But also, let’s look at it the other way. If we can prove, or show, that Oswald did not kill J.D. Tippit, then we raise the question of whether or not he murdered President Kennedy. Because we remove the capacity for violence that David Belin used to help the Warren Commission paint the picture of a lone gunman, you know, on Lee Harvey Oswald.

    I think I will be able to show, beyond a reasonable doubt, that Oswald was not the killer of J.D. Tippit. That Tippit’s murder was connected to the assassination of the President. And that the reason Oswald was arrested was because the FBI had advance knowledge of his activities.