mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-12-25 07:19:31 -05:00
259 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
259 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
<conspiracyFile>Volume : SIRS 1991 History, Article 02
|
|
Subject: Keyword(s) : KENNEDY and ASSASSINATION
|
|
Title : Conspiracy Theories: Doubts Refuse to Die
|
|
Author : Bob Dudney
|
|
Source : Dallas Times Herald (Dallas, Texas)
|
|
Publication Date : Nov. 20, 1983
|
|
Page Number(s) : Special Sec. 11
|
|
DALLAS TIMES HERALD
|
|
(Dallas, Texas)
|
|
Nov. 20, 1983, Commemorative Section, pp. 11
|
|
Reprinted with permission from the author.
|
|
CONSPIRACY THEORIES: DOUBTS REFUSE TO DIE
|
|
by Bob Dudney
|
|
Special to the Times Herald
|
|
Editor's Note: Bob Dudney, a former reporter for the Dallas Times
|
|
Herald, has written hundreds of articles about the investigation
|
|
of President Kennedy's assassination. He has covered
|
|
congressional inquiries on the subject, has interviewed dozens of
|
|
people connected with it, and has examined thousands of
|
|
government documents.
|
|
The shots fired in Dealey Plaza on a sunny Dallas day 20
|
|
years ago still reverberate in a bizarre way: the belief that
|
|
President John F. Kennedy's assassination resulted from a
|
|
conspiracy.
|
|
There is a deep, almost theological assumption by some
|
|
Americans that the President was the victim of conspirators who
|
|
still roam at large. The conclusion is strange because there is
|
|
no solid evidence to support it--and significant reasons to
|
|
believe it is false.
|
|
There is no denying the difficulty of accepting the Warren
|
|
Commission's verdict on the events of Nov. 22, 1963--that a
|
|
down-and-out, 24-year-old ex-Marine named Lee Harvey Oswald, with
|
|
no outside assistance, murdered the most glamorous, powerful man
|
|
in the world at the time.
|
|
But no matter how strong the unwillingness to believe, the
|
|
evidence in the case demonstrates beyond a reasonable doubt that
|
|
there was no plot. Undermining the scores of conspiracy theories
|
|
that have cropped up over the years are three crucial factors:
|
|
- The scientific, eyewitness and medical data establishing
|
|
that Oswald shot Kennedy.
|
|
- The absence of uncontroverted evidence linking Oswald to
|
|
other conspirators.
|
|
- The lack of evidence to suggest that Oswald was
|
|
unwittingly manipulated by others.
|
|
So long as these elements remain unshaken, claims that a
|
|
sinister plot was afoot that November day will amount to nothing
|
|
more than speculation.
|
|
Nevertheless, theories about the active involvement of
|
|
others in the assassination thrive and multiply. Their
|
|
proponents--some skilled and some not, some sincere and some not
|
|
--have produced dozens of books, films and articles that purport
|
|
to reveal the "full" treachery of events in Dallas two decades
|
|
ago.
|
|
In fact, from the volume and variety of conspiracy theories,
|
|
one might conclude that the possibility of a conspiracy had never
|
|
been officially probed. The theories discount thousands of
|
|
documents and millions of investigative man-hours devoted to that
|
|
question by the Warren panel, the FBI and the CIA in 1963 and
|
|
1964; the Rockefeller Commission in 1975; the Senate Select
|
|
Committee on Intelligence in 1975 and the House Committee on
|
|
Assassinations in 1977-1978.
|
|
The list of "suspects" the theories implicate is extensive.
|
|
Among them: The Soviet KGB; anti-Soviet exiles; Fidel Castro;
|
|
pro-Castro Cubans in the United States; anti-Castro Cubans;
|
|
loyalists of slain South Vietnamese leader Ngo Dinh Diem; right
|
|
wing fanatics; left wing Marxists; the Mafia; rogue Texas oilmen;
|
|
labor unions; Southern white racists; the Dallas Police
|
|
Department; the CIA; the FBI; the Secret Service; the Chinese
|
|
communists; reactionary Army officers; and Jewish extremists.
|
|
But it is not enough to demonstrate that some group stood to
|
|
benefit from the murder. Theorists must establish participation
|
|
of two or more people in the murder. This they have not done.
|
|
Each theory alters the nature of Oswald's role in the death,
|
|
but the possible changes are necessarily limited. The principle
|
|
theories are:
|
|
Oswald is innocent: Adherents of this contention maintain
|
|
that law enforcement officials--cynically or through honest
|
|
error--settled on Oswald as the assassin even though there was no
|
|
reliable evidence against him. They say Oswald could have
|
|
exonerated himself at a trial had he not been killed by Dallas
|
|
nightclub owner Jack Ruby.
|
|
Challenging this theory is an abundance of evidence.
|
|
Scientific testing and physical evidence found at the scene show
|
|
that shots were fired at Kennedy's limousine from a sixth-floor
|
|
window of the Texas School Book Depository building.
|
|
Oswald worked in the building at Elm and Houston. He was
|
|
seen leaving it shortly after the shooting. Crates were found
|
|
stacked by the sixth-floor window as an apparent gun brace.
|
|
Oswald's fingerprints were on the crates. The morning of the
|
|
assassination, Oswald was seen carrying a long, paper-wrapped
|
|
object into the building. Wrapping paper found near the window
|
|
bore Oswald's fingerprints.
|
|
A rifle was found hidden between boxes in the building. A
|
|
bullet and the bullet fragments removed from Kennedy, Connally
|
|
and the limousine ballistically matched the rifle. Oswald's palm
|
|
print was found on the rifle. The rifle, purchased from a Chicago
|
|
mail order house, had been shipped to a Dallas post office box
|
|
rented by Oswald. A photograph showed Oswald holding a rifle
|
|
identical to the one found.
|
|
Proponents of this theory retort that all of the evidence
|
|
was fabricated and put credence in Oswald's post-arrest
|
|
declaration that he hadn't killed anyone.
|
|
But claims that the incriminating rifle photo was doctored--
|
|
with Oswald's head superimposed over another man's body--were
|
|
dispelled by Marina Oswald's confirmation that she took the
|
|
picture. And claims that Oswald's rifle was planted in the room
|
|
after the assassination were refuted by ballistic tests that
|
|
showed it fired the deadly shots.
|
|
Given the problems with claims of planted evidence, some
|
|
theorists have argued that there must have been a "planted
|
|
Oswald," or Oswald impersonator on the scene. This contention,
|
|
however, has been difficult to reconcile with the Oswald
|
|
fingerprints and palmprints found on the evidence.
|
|
Two years ago, conspiracy theorists, successfully pressed
|
|
for the opening of Oswald's grave to show it contained an
|
|
imposter--probably a Soviet agent. Subsequent examination,
|
|
however, determined the body was the "real" Lee Harvey Oswald.
|
|
Oswald had accomplices: Faced with the weight of evidence
|
|
indicating Oswald's guilt, quite a few conspiracy theories have
|
|
contended he was only one of those involved.
|
|
Some theories assert that a person or persons helped put
|
|
Oswald in position to shoot the President. They leave unexplained
|
|
why Oswald would need such help. As an employee of the book
|
|
depository, he had easy access to the building. After the
|
|
shooting, according to witnesses' testimony, he sought no help in
|
|
fleeing and left downtown Dallas by city bus and then a taxi.
|
|
Moreover, it would seem unlikely that accomplices could have
|
|
helped get Oswald a job that put him on the motorcycle route.
|
|
Oswald got his job at the depository on Oct. 15. White House
|
|
planning for the President's motorcade route did not begin until
|
|
Nov. 4, and the map of the route was not published until Nov. 19.
|
|
Somewhat more credible is the contention others provided
|
|
secret financing, planning, direction or encouragement for the
|
|
murder that Oswald carried out.
|
|
In this scenario, the chief suspect over the years has been
|
|
the Soviet Union. After all, Oswald defected to Russia in 1959.
|
|
He married a Russian woman, Marina Prusakova, in 1961. He was a
|
|
vociferous Marxist. Even after he returned to the United States
|
|
in June 1962, Oswald had several fleeting contacts with Soviet
|
|
diplomats.
|
|
However, no evidence of Soviet complicity has been found.
|
|
Investigators who combed Oswald's effects discovered no
|
|
unexplained funds, no code books, no messages--nothing to suggest
|
|
a Soviet hand in Oswald's actions. Also, had Oswald been
|
|
recruited as a Soviet agent, the Russians would not have been
|
|
likely to allow him to defect, as he did--thereby exposing his
|
|
relationship with them.
|
|
The other top suspect has been Cuba. Oswald admired Fidel
|
|
Castro; he was a member of the Fair Play for Cuba Committee in
|
|
the United States; he visited the Cuban embassy in Mexico City a
|
|
few weeks before the assassination, seeking a travel visa to that
|
|
country. Because the CIA was backing assassination plots against
|
|
Castro at the time, some speculate that Castro may have
|
|
retaliated through Oswald.
|
|
But, as with the theory of Soviet involvement, there is no
|
|
evidence. At one point, there did appear to be some. A young
|
|
Central American informant told U.S. authorities he saw Oswald in
|
|
the Cuban embassy, talking to two other men, one of whom was
|
|
conversing in Spanish. Later, he said, Oswald supposedly received
|
|
$6500 to kill an important person. Under questioning, however,
|
|
the informant admitted he had never seen Oswald and had
|
|
fabricated the transaction, wishing to stir up American hatred
|
|
for Castro's Cuba. Subsequently, he retracted his retraction.
|
|
Finally, he failed a lie-detector test. Anyway, Oswald did not
|
|
speak Spanish.
|
|
Another account suggesting possible Cuban involvement was
|
|
provided by a Cuban exile who testified before the Warren
|
|
commission. She said two Hispanic men and an Anglo man they
|
|
identified as "Leon Oswald" came to her Dallas apartment 28 days
|
|
before the assassination. She said they spoke vaguely of Cuban
|
|
revolutionary plans before she turned them away. She identified
|
|
Oswald in television film as the man she had seen, but federal
|
|
investigators said they do not believe it was him. They said they
|
|
believe that at that time, Oswald was traveling from his New
|
|
Orleans home to Mexico in his quest for a Cuban entry visa.
|
|
The most publicized theories involving Oswald accomplices
|
|
are those that have featured other gunmen.
|
|
These various versions have assassins firing from other
|
|
windows in the depository building; from the Dal-Tex building;
|
|
from sewer drains, a grassy knoll near Dealey Plaza, the railroad
|
|
bridge over Elm, Main and Commerce streets and the Dallas County
|
|
Courthouse roof; and firing with silencers or automatic weapons.
|
|
The arguments surrounding these claims:
|
|
- One-man, one-bullet: The first shot that wounded Kennedy
|
|
in the neck did not also hit John Connally, as the Warren
|
|
Commission concluded. Rather they were struck by individual
|
|
bullets simultaneously, requiring that there be two shooters. A
|
|
team of experts, including a National Aeronautics and Space
|
|
Administration engineer, conducted an exhaustive study of this
|
|
question in 1978. The panel's conclusion: It is not only
|
|
possible, but almost certain that Kennedy and Connally were hit
|
|
by the same bullet.
|
|
- Filmed accomplices: Photographs of Dealey Plaza taken at
|
|
the time of the assassination show a dim form behind a wall on a
|
|
grassy knoll to the right and in front of the presidential
|
|
limousine. However, investigators found no spent cartridges,
|
|
weapons or footprints in this area. A panel of photography
|
|
experts concluded in 1978 that the images on the film were
|
|
shadows.
|
|
Films and photos also show a man in Dealey Plaza opening and
|
|
closing a black umbrella. Conspiracy theories suggest he was
|
|
signaling gunmen or that some weapon was hidden in the umbrella.
|
|
But at a hearing of the House Assassinations Committee in 1978, a
|
|
mild-mannered Dallas insurance worker identified himself as the
|
|
mysterious "umbrella man" and said he was only trying to harass
|
|
Kennedy.
|
|
- Head movement: The famous Zapruder film of the
|
|
assassination clearly shows President Kennedy's head lurching
|
|
backward when it was struck by the fatal gunshot. If the shot had
|
|
come from behind, conspiracy theorists reason, the impact would
|
|
have driven the President's head forward. Nonetheless, a panel of
|
|
medical experts concluded in 1978 that Kennedy's head wounds were
|
|
caused by a shot from the rear. Moreover, a panel of
|
|
wound-ballistics scientists concluded that the backward motion
|
|
was caused by the sudden tightening of the President's neck
|
|
muscles.
|
|
- Tape-recorded sounds: Sound transmitted through the
|
|
microphone of a motorcycle patrolman in the motorcade, and
|
|
recorded at Dallas police headquarters, shows four noise
|
|
"spikes." At the behest of the House Assassinations Committee in
|
|
1978, three acoustical experts conducted three test gunshot
|
|
firings in Dealey Plaza, compared the sounds and concluded it was
|
|
<data type="percent" unit="%">95%</data> certain that four shots had been fired. The Warren
|
|
Commission had concluded that no more than three shots had been
|
|
fired from the window. The source of the previously unknown one,
|
|
the acoustical experts said, was the grassy knoll area.
|
|
The finding was the first scientific evidence supporting a
|
|
conspiracy theory and stirred an uproar. But it, too, was later
|
|
discounted. Twelve experts assembled by the National Research
|
|
Council reviewed the tapes and concluded the "spikes" were
|
|
actually recorded about a minute after the assassination.
|
|
The Assassinations Committee also grappled futily with the
|
|
prospect of a likely colleague for Oswald. "The question is with
|
|
who," said one member of the now-defunct committee. "If there's a
|
|
conspirator, then who could it have been? We asked ourselves over
|
|
and over: What associates did Oswald have, where was there
|
|
evidence of conspiracy? We found none."
|
|
Oswald was manipulated: These theories suggest that Oswald,
|
|
and perhaps other operatives, were unknowingly influenced in
|
|
their actions.
|
|
There can be only one reasonable candidate to mastermind
|
|
such a project--the KGB. It would have been the only organization
|
|
with the scientific means and the extended access to Oswald. Even
|
|
some Warren Commission lawyers and CIA members briefly toyed with
|
|
the possibility. Because Oswald spent some time in a Soviet
|
|
hospital while residing in Russia, there was the suspicion he
|
|
might have been brainwashed.
|
|
Once again, the problem is that there is no evidence to
|
|
suggest Oswald was brainwashed. Moreover, the CIA believes KGB
|
|
"mind conditioning" techniques at the time were primitive.
|
|
Surely, it is impossible to rule out the prospect of a
|
|
conspiracy in the assassination. The Warren Commission itself did
|
|
not do so. "Because of the difficulty of providing negatives to a
|
|
certainty," the panel said, proving there was no conspiracy
|
|
"cannot be established categorically." However, the panel said,
|
|
"if there is any such evidence it has been beyond the reach of
|
|
all the investigative agencies and resources of the United
|
|
States."
|
|
Twenty years later, that is still the case.</conspiracyFile> |