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<xml><p>From: dona@bilver.uucp (<ent type = 'person'>Don</ent> Allen)
Newsgroups: alt.conspiracy
Subject: <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent> Text: Echoes of Conspiracy - INTRO
<info type="Message-ID"> 1991Dec26.194623.19758@bilver.uucp</info>
Date: 26 Dec 91 19:46:23 GMT
Organization: W. J. Vermillion - Winter Park, FL
Lines: 46</p>
<p>-----------------------------------------------------
<ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent> Text file: "Echoes of Conspiracy" INTRO
-----------------------------------------------------</p>
<p>All this continued discussion on Oliver <ent type = 'person'>Stone</ent>'s movie, "<ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent>" has
prompted me to look through my collection of text files and see
what I could find. I found this piece, done by <ent type = 'person'>Paul L</ent>. <ent type = 'person'>Hoch</ent> in
1986, which was on a Conspiracy Sig section of a BBS a few
years back. It's being posted in 4 parts.
I've glanced through it and am presenting it for your perusal,though
I'm *not* making any claims as to it's conclusions. Rather, I leave
it to you, the reader, to judge for yourself whether or not it has
merit.
Comments are welcome, flames to me are in-appropriate as I didn't write
the article. Take it or leave it for what it's worth :-)</p>
<p>File lengths (excluding header,sig and part designation):
---------------------------------------------------------</p>
<p>eoc1.txt - 41392 bytes
eoc2.txt - 40344 bytes
eoc3.txt - 39752 bytes
eoc4.txt - 41050 bytes
-----
162538 bytes - Total </p>
<p>---------------------------------------------------------
Note: Thanks to jxxl@taurus.cs.nps.navy.mil (<ent type = 'person'>John</ent>),
geb@speedy.cs.pitt.edu (<ent type = 'person'>Gordon Banks</ent>), and acm@ux.acs.umn.edu (Acm) Peter
Kauffner for their lucid comments on this thread. I've enjoyed all
of their postings. </p>
<p>Happy Holidays to all!</p>
<p><ent type = 'person'>Don</ent></p>
<p>
--
-* <ent type = 'person'>Don</ent> Allen *- InterNet: dona@bilver.UUCP // Amiga..for the best of us.
USnail: 1818G Landing Dr, <ent type = 'person'>Sanford Fl</ent> 32771 \X/ Why use anything else? :-)
UUCP: ..uunet!tarpit!bilver!dona - Why did the JUSTICE DEPT steal PROMIS?
/\/\ What is research but a blind date with knowledge. <ent type = 'person'>William Henry</ent> /\/\</p>
<p>From: dona@bilver.uucp (<ent type = 'person'>Don</ent> Allen)
Newsgroups: alt.conspiracy
Subject: <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent> Text: Echoes of Conspiracy - EOC1.TXT
<info type="Message-ID"> 1991Dec26.194825.19833@bilver.uucp</info>
Date: 26 Dec 91 19:48:25 GMT
Organization: W. J. Vermillion - Winter Park, FL
Lines: 626</p>
<p>*EOC1.TXT*</p>
<p>------BEGIN PART 1/4---------------------------------------------------------</p>
<p>ECHOES OF CONSPIRACY February 28, 1986
Vol. 8, #1 <ent type = 'person'>Paul L</ent>. <ent type = 'person'>Hoch</ent></p>
<p><special>"Reasonable Doubt":</special>
Henry <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>'s book should be in your local bookstore now, although it did
not reach some of the big chains quickly. The official publication date was
January 27. (Holt Rinehart Winston, 555 pp., $19.95)
I am too close to the case (and to the book) to judge "Reasonable Doubt"
as a whole, rather than by assessing each piece of evidence as new or old, and
each argument as familiar or unfamiliar, persuasive or implausible.
We will see what the reviewers and publicists do with a book which claims
that it is not pushing a specific solution to the mystery of the <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent> assass-
ination. So far, I have seen no ads and only the reviews listed below.
<ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>'s reluctance to endorse a single solution is particularly under-
standable in light of the history of his involvement in the case. Exposure to
the legendary <ent type = 'person'>Ed <ent type = 'person'>Epstein</ent></ent> and then to a volunteered "confession" could make
anyone wary of anybody's solution. The beneficial result of that introduction
is that <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> was very willing to look at the work of critics who could provide
hard facts and careful analysis. Even the jacket copy says nice things about
the buffs, and nothing about who killed <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent>.
Understandably, <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> is not optimistic about the chances for a resolution:
"The seeds of neglected evidence sown across the landscape in the wake of the
assassination have matured into a jungle of powerful contradictions. Nourished
by solid information, each promising theme contends with other themes. The
entanglement has become so impenetrable that no single theory, no final
answer, can break free to stand unchallenged as a solution...." (P. 429)
<ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> endorses <ent type = 'person'>Jim Lesar</ent>'s suggestion of a special unit in the Justice Depart-
ment, with specific Congressional funding, patterned after the anti-Nazi
Office of Special Investigations.
Since I don't think I know who killed <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent>, <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>'s approach generally
appeals to me. I think the book does a good job of reflecting the ambiguity of
much of the evidence, and the variety of plausible explanations.</p>
<p><special>A new perspective on the murder of J. D. <ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent>:</special>
<ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>'s most striking new evidence, surprisingly, does go directly to the
question of "who did it" -- but in the <ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent> case. He does not overemphasize
it, but it is a lead which raises the same kind of basic challenge to the
integrity of the Dallas evidence as <ent type = 'person'>David Lifton</ent>'s work does to the Bethesda
evidence.
<ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> persuaded me that <ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent> was in Oak Cliff an hour after <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent> was shot
to take care of some very personal business. <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> talked to a woman who had
an affair with <ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent>. She thought she was pregnant by <ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent>; the timing
suggests that she may have just learned this on November 22. This was a
problem not only for <ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent>, who was married, but also for the woman. She had
recently been reconciled with her ex-husband, who was previously jealous
enough to follow her and <ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent> around Oak Cliff at night.
<ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>'s exposition reflects the kind of caution that lawyers would be
expected to encourage. For example, he does not name the woman, whom I will
refer to as <ent type = 'person'><ent type = 'person'>Rose</ent>tta <ent type = 'person'>Stone</ent></ent>. Her name is available to anyone with access to the
HSCA volumes who can ignore a typo in <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>'s footnote and find the <ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent>
material in Vol. 12. (Or see "Coverups," 12/85) Her name has been known to
some critics for years. <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> credits <ent type = 'person'>Larry <ent type = 'person'>Harris</ent></ent> with finding her, prompted
by an anonymous 1968 letter to <ent type = 'person'>Jim <ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent></ent> which <ent type = 'person'>Gary <ent type = 'person'>Shaw</ent></ent> obtained.
(<ent type = 'person'>Rose</ent>tta was not named in that letter, but described as a waitress who worked
with <ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent> at Austin's Barbecue.)
It is not clear if <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> believes that he and <ent type = 'person'>Harris</ent> have discovered why
<ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent> was killed, or merely why he was in Oak Cliff. He seems persuaded by
other evidence that <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> did not do it.
The jealous husband and <ent type = 'person'>Rose</ent>tta "both deny any knowledge of <ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent>'s
death other than what is in the official account." (P. 168) <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> does not go
into detail, but I doubt that he accepted Mr. <ent type = 'person'>Stone</ent>'s denial at face value.
8 EOC 1 -2-</p>
<p> <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> does quote a retired DPD officer who "asserted flatly and without
prompting that he believed <ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent> was killed as a result of a volatile
personal situation involving his lover and her estranged husband. He added,
`It would look like hell for <ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent> to have been murdered and have it look
like he was screwing around with this woman.... Somebody had to change the
tape.... Somebody had to go to the property room and change those [cartridge]
hulls and put some of <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>'s hulls in there....'" Other DPD officers
reportedly share these beliefs.
The book contains a brief discussion of the implications of this account.
"The purpose [of the alteration of evidence], perhaps, would be twofold:
to seal the case against <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> [in the <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent> case] by showing irrevocably his
capacity for violence and to wrap up the case of <ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent>'s murder without
disgracing him, his family, and the unborn child. And, of course, there would
be an outpouring of grief [and financial support - PLH] for a police comrade
slain by the presidential assassin." (P. 168) I would emphasize that if such
relatively innocent tampering can be confirmed, the question of tampering with
the evidence against <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> in the <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent> case has to be raised with new intensity.
This area seems ripe for additional investigation, official or unofficial.
For example, what can we now make of the sighting (near the <ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent> murder
scene) of a license plate number traced back to a friend of <ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent>, Carl
<ent type = 'person'>Mather</ent>? (12 HSCA 37) The HSCA apparently failed to reach a conclusion, but if
you ignore the claim that <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> was in the car, the story -- and <ent type = 'person'>Mather</ent>'s
nervousness when interviewed by <ent type = 'person'>Wes Wise</ent> -- might be significant.
<ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> reviews the familiar evidence on <ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent>'s problematic presence in
Oak Cliff, and the radio instructions which sent him there. He interviewed
R. C. <ent type = 'person'>Nelson</ent>, supposedly instructed to go to Oak Cliff at the same time, who
seemed puzzled by <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>'s questioning and reluctant to talk. Dispatcher Murray
Jackson "stoutly denied knowledge of any fraudulent manipulation of the tapes
in order to provide an excuse for <ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent>'s being so far away from his assigned
district at the time of his death," but his account seems unsatisfactory to
me. (Pp. l62-3)
Before I knew about <ent type = 'person'><ent type = 'person'>Rose</ent>tta <ent type = 'person'>Stone</ent></ent>, I argued that the messages in question
didn't sound right. In November 1981, I raised this issue in a letter to Dr.
<ent type = 'person'>James <ent type = 'person'>Barger</ent></ent>. (#1986.1, 2 pp.) If tampering with any of the recordings could
be shown, the timing problem in the acoustical analysis resulting from the
"hold everything secure" crosstalk match might have to be reconsidered.
I suggested that both the tone and wording of two key messages were in
the "formal mode" which one would expect only in important messages -- or in a
later re-creation. "You are in the Oak Cliff area, are you not?" seemed
significantly more formal than "What's your location?", "Are you en route to
Parkland, 601?", and similar inquiries recorded that day; it resembles "You do
not have the suspect. Is that correct?", where the "formal mode" is expected.
Similarly, "You will be at large for any emergency that comes in" contrasts
with "Remain in downtown area, available for call" and "Stand by there until
we notify you."
This kind of analysis has been of evidentiary value in at least one other
case, involving a tape (released by <ent type = 'person'>Larry Flynt</ent>) purportedly of a conversation
between <ent type = 'person'><ent type = 'person'>John</ent> De Lorean</ent> and FBI informant <ent type = 'person'>James <ent type = 'person'>Hoffman</ent></ent>. <ent type = 'person'>Jack <ent type = 'person'>Anderson</ent></ent>
reported that psycholinguist <ent type = 'person'>Murray <ent type = 'person'>Miron</ent></ent> was able to establish that the tape
had been faked. (24 May 84, SFC, #1986.2) In addition to the anomalously
unresponsive content of "<ent type = 'person'>Hoffman</ent>'s" remarks, his "speech cadences... `are
consistent with those to be expected from one who has rehearsed or is reading
from a script.'" <ent type = 'person'>Anderson</ent> described <ent type = 'person'>Miron</ent> as a "longtime FBI consultant."
The Justice Department should certainly sponsor that kind of analysis of the
<ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent> messages.</p>
<p><special><ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent>'s physician believes in a conspiracy:</special>
There is a second very provocative piece of new evidence, resulting from
<ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>'s 1982 phone call to Adm. George <ent type = 'person'>Burkley</ent>. He said "that he believed that
8 EOC 1 -3-</p>
<p>President <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent>'s assassination was the result of a conspiracy." He
subsequently refused "to discuss any aspect of the case." (P. 49)
As <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent>'s personal physician, and the only doctor present at Parkland and
the Bethesda autopsy, <ent type = 'person'>Burkley</ent> was in an especially crucial position. He did
not testify to the <ent type = 'person'>Warren</ent> Commission (which published his contemporaneous
report containing basically no medical details, CE 1126.) He did give five
interviews to <ent type = 'person'>William Manchester</ent> (the last one in July, 1966). Manchester
recently told me that <ent type = 'person'>Burkley</ent> did not then believe there had been a conspi-
racy. However, <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> notes that in a 1967 oral history interview, <ent type = 'person'>Burkley</ent> was
asked if he agreed with the <ent type = 'person'>Warren</ent> Commission on the number of bullets that
hit <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent>; he replied, "I would not care to be quoted on that." The HSCA
interviewed <ent type = 'person'>Burkley</ent> at least once, generating in addition an outside contact
report and an affidavit -- all unpublished and unavailable.
Along with the <ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent> evidence, the <ent type = 'person'>Burkley</ent> assertion of conspiracy calls
for intense examination by the Justice Department and, I hope, by some
reporters. (For my letters to Assistant AG <ent type = 'person'>Stephen Trott</ent>, ask for #1986.3
[1 Feb 86, on <ent type = 'person'>Burkley</ent>] and #4 [2 pp., 4 Feb 86, on <ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent>].)
<ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> devotes only a few pages in a "grab bag" chapter to Lifton's thesis,
but there is some interesting speculation in an area where <ent type = 'person'>Burkley</ent> might know
crucial facts. (Incidentally, much of the "classical" critique of the single
bullet theory and other aspects of the medical and physical evidence in <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>'s
earlier chapters seems obsolete. The SBT is implausible but supported by a
surprising amount of HSCA evidence; if it is wrong, tampering on a Liftonesque
scale must have taken place, and we need to either pursue Lifton's argument or
come up with another scenario. Studying the flaws in the official inves-
tigations is not likely to produce progress in this area.)
<ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> concludes that "Lifton builds a powerful case" that <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent>'s body was
separated from the ceremonial motorcade, and that his "evidence is equally
strong on the point that <special>something</special> happened to the wounds on the body between
Dallas and Bethesda. However, his sinister interpretation of what might have
happened does not have the strong supportive evidence found for his basic
points." (P. 427)
<ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> suggests that "the Secret Service and other powerful elements in the
government might have felt an overwhelming necessity to examine the body for
evidence at the soonest possible moment," given fears of a conspiracy. "It
does not seem unreasonable that these circumstances could have coalesced into
an overriding concern for national security that demanded the President's body
be placed on an autopsy table as soon as humanly possible -- without awaiting
the folderol of transporting the body through the streets with the family and
public at hand. Moreover, it does not seem unreasonable that certain security
people in the government were appalled that the official autopsy was going to
be conducted at the whim of the family and by Navy brass with pitifully little
experience in forensic pathology."
When I saw this speculation in <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>'s draft of this section, it struck me
as plausible and well worth pursuing. The perspective of people who realized
that the body might provide conclusive evidence of a conspiracy should be
taken into account (and I don't think it generally has been).
Certainly an "innocent national security autopsy" does not explain away
Lifton's evidence indicating changes to the wounds, and Lifton can discourse
at great length (and with considerable persuasiveness) against such a hypo-
thesis, which I raised with him in general terms long ago.
At the very least, however, <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>'s analysis might lead us to new infor-
mation about what key people really think happened to <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent>'s body before the
Bethesda autopsy. I have assumed for years that there must be some expla-
nation going around in official and family circles, and I was surprised that
none surfaced after "Best Evidence" was published.
<ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>'s manuscript led me to check the record on the authorization of the
autopsy. Is it possible, I wonder, that the record significantly minimizes
Jacqueline <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent>'s opposition to an autopsy? If the opposition was very
8 EOC 1 -4-</p>
<p>strong or more prolonged than is generally assumed, I have no trouble
believing that someone decided to go ahead with an "inspection" regardless.
<ent type = 'person'>Burkley</ent>'s own account noted that, while kneeling before <ent type = 'person'>Jackie</ent>, he
"expressed [the] complete desire of all of us and especially of myself to
comply with her wishes, stating that it was necessary that the President be
taken to a hospital prior to going to the <ent type = 'person'>White</ent> House. She questioned why and
I stated it must be determined, if possible, the type of bullet used and
compare this with future material found." (CE 1126, p.6) This makes more
sense if you insert a few words: "her wishes to go directly to the <ent type = 'person'>White</ent>
House, but stating...." In his oral history interview, <ent type = 'person'>Burkley</ent> said that
<ent type = 'person'>Jackie</ent>'s decision to go to Bethesda was arrived at "after some consideration,"
which might mean it took a while to convince her.
It is not unfair to read <ent type = 'person'>Burkley</ent>'s comments critically, with the
suspicion that he was minimizing <ent type = 'person'>Jackie</ent>'s reluctance to authorize an autopsy
or even his own knowledge of alternative plans. As late as the 1967 oral
history interview, he took the <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent> family line on <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent>'s adrenal and back
problems, describing <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent> as an "essentially normal, healthy male," with above-
average "vigor and vitality."
Kenneth O'<ent type = 'person'>Don</ent>nell testified that "we didn't tell her [<ent type = 'person'>Jackie</ent>] there was
to be an autopsy." (7 <ent type = 'person'>WCH</ent> 454-5) Evidently the matter was discussed with her
in terms of going to a hospital to remove bullets.
Restrictions during the Bethesda autopsy have been dealt with in some
detail by both the HSCA and Lifton. The HSCA did not publish anything about
earlier restrictions -- e.g., <ent type = 'person'>Jackie</ent>'s resistance to the whole idea of even a
limited effort to remove the bullets. The HSCA may well have gathered
relevant evidence.
One reason <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>'s hypothesis appeals to me is that concern for <ent type = 'person'>Jackie</ent>'s
feelings -- since her wishes were essentially bypassed -- might explain why
there was no quasi-official detailed rebuttal to Lifton's book. I would be
glad to share more of my thoughts on this hypothesis with reporters or anyone
else in a position to work on it.</p>
<p><special>More highlights of "Reasonable Doubt":</special>
The chapters on <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> in New Orleans and on the questions relating to
intelligence agencies are particularly good.
Neither the HSCA nor its case against the Mafia gets a lot of attention.
I generally like <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>'s analysis of <ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent>, but I am not impressed by his
treatment of <ent type = 'person'>Blakey</ent> and the HSCA.
The detailed citations, including many to unpublished FBI and CIA
documents, add to the value of the book as an overview. There are also many
references to <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>'s own interviews.
Some interesting hypotheses were already familiar to me (and some got to
<ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> through me), but I'm particularly pleased to see them in wider circulation.
For example, <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> explores the idea that <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> was (or thought he was)
working on behalf of Sen. Thomas Dodd's investigation of mail-order firearm
sales. This was suggested by Sylvia Meagher ("Accessories," p. 194) and
pursued in detail by <ent type = 'person'>Fred Newcomb</ent>. It might explain <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>'s peculiar weapons
purchases. (P. 300 ff.)
In this context, <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> also reports some of my old analysis of a <ent type = 'person'>Klein</ent>'s
Sporting Goods ad in <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>'s possessions, torn from a magazine which was
found in Adrian <ent type = 'person'>Alba</ent>'s garage -- after a mysterious stranger, claiming to be a
friend of <ent type = 'person'>Alba</ent>'s, showed up on the morning of November 23rd to "borrow" some
magazines. (P. 297)
<ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> also reports <ent type = 'person'>Larry Haapanen</ent>'s observations on the official concern
about Commie influence in the <ent type = 'person'>Clinton</ent> civil rights drive, and its possible
relevance to <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>'s alleged presence there. (See 3 EOC 7, pp. 3-5.)
The book also includes quite a few interesting points which were
completely new to me. For example:
A Naval Intelligence officer at the Moscow Embassy says he thought that
8 EOC 1 -5-</p>
<p><ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> was being handled for the CIA by someone in the Naval Attache's office.
(P. 243)
There is some new information from <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>'s old interviews (for "Legend")
of some of <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>'s Marine associates. One such person told <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> that he had
been recruited for intelligence work when he left the Marines. (P. 243)
SA <ent type = 'person'>Vince Drain</ent> believes the palmprint on the rifle was faked. (P. 109)
There is a more-plausible-than-most story of a telephone warning by <ent type = 'person'>Ruby</ent>
to <ent type = 'person'>Billy Grammer</ent> of the Dallas Police. <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> notes that if <ent type = 'person'>Ruby</ent> was really
under Mafia pressure to kill <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>, it would make sense for him to try to
abort the transfer with such a phone call. (P. 407)
A technical examination done for <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> suggested that the curbstone at the
location of the Tague shot may well have been patched. (P. 138)
<ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> interviewed alleged <ent type = 'person'>Marcello</ent> and <ent type = 'person'>Ruby</ent> associate <ent type = 'person'>Harold Tannenbaum</ent>,
who was not as dead as the HSCA thought. He denied any Mafia connections.
(P. 180)
<ent type = 'person'>Billy Joe Lord</ent>, who shared <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>'s cabin on the boat to Europe, added
little of substance about <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>, but told of a peculiar interest in him by
someone in France. <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> suggests this could have been a KGB check to see if
U.S. intelligence was talking to people who had been associated with <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>.
(P. 207)
Louise Latham of the Texas employment office made some odd comments,
suggesting that she sent <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> out for a job more than once. <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> seems
suspicious of her husband's "post office" career. (P. 221)
<ent type = 'person'>John</ent> <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>'s widow told Henry <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> that he had admitted being drunk and
trying to call <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> in jail. (This should take care of that story.)
(Pp. 244-5; cf. 2 EOC 7, p.5)
<ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> speculates that the KGB's interest in the <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>s may have been to
establish Marina as a sleeper agent. (Might that explain the allegedly
anomalous friendship between the <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>s and the DeMohrenschildts?) (P. 240)</p>
<p><special>And now for something completely different:</special>
It's... Chapter 12, "The Confession of Robert <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>."
At least, I think it's completely different.
I find <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>'s story too incredible to be worth summarizing here.
Whenever I hear about meetings involving the speaker, <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>, <ent type = 'person'>Ruby</ent>, <ent type = 'person'>Ferrie</ent>,
and <ent type = 'person'>Shaw</ent>, I reach for my skepticism. In fact, any story involving Clay <ent type = 'person'>Shaw</ent>
starts with two strikes against it. <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> makes a point of the alleged
uniqueness of <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>'s claim of direct involvement (pp. 348-9), but what
strikes me is the similarity of so many elements in his story to others we
have heard over the years.
I do not believe <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>'s story has anything like the same level of
plausibility as even the most speculative allegations elsewhere in the book.
My impression is that this chapter fails to reflect the critical judgment
which <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> applied to the more familiar evidence in other chapters.
The chapter both starts and ends with descriptions of <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent> as a
psychotic, alcoholic, violent criminal. A long footnote (p. 351) describes
aspects of his "confession" as "flagrantly preposterous" and delusional.
Certainly <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> can't be accused of hiding all the flaws in <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>'s story.
Some of <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>'s justification for devoting a chapter to <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent> is mild
enough. He grants that "By any standard, [he] is a terribly sullied witness."
However, "in the absence of a full revelation of facts by government agencies,
it would be irresponsible not to present <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>'s story." (P. 383) As a
reader, I would have settled for an appendix or a long footnote.
Fortunately, <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>'s name does not appear outside this one chapter.
But this confession is what got <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> into his own research on the case, as he
explains in the introduction. (P. 7) It must have colored his approach to
the evidence he later encountered. His personal experience in dealing with
the FBI on this matter certainly contributed to his very negative evaluation
of the official investigations of the <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent> case. That is, <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> learned that
8 EOC 1 -6-</p>
<p><ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>'s was definitely not the best of the conspiracy allegations which
were not taken seriously.
The publisher's handout (#5, 5 pp.) does devote a paragraph to "the most
shocking revelation of all" in the book, alleging that "<ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent> presents...
a convincing case that he could have been involved with a group that murdered
the president." As is all too common in a publisher's supplementary material,
the other specifics mentioned in this handout fail to reflect the general
coherence and scope of the book. They include some familiar questions which
the book does not claim to answer. (For example, why did <ent type = 'person'>Humes</ent> burn his
notes? The book just reviews the old evidence; <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> called Dr. <ent type = 'person'>Humes</ent> about
Lifton's book, but he would not discuss details. [Pp. 42, 427]. Similarly,
"what government official permitted [Souetre's] deportation?" See p. 419;
<ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> doesn't seem to know.) Unfortunately, this handout may discourage
reviewers from focusing on the important new information.
It would be disappointing if many readers and reviewers dismiss the whole
book because of this one chapter. On the other hand, if any official
investigators, or many reviewers or EOC readers, seem to be taking <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>
seriously, I will be glad to jump into any debate on the details.
One structural problem is that the bad <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent> story has the same
relationship to the rest of the book as the good story about Mr. &amp; Mrs.
<ent type = 'person'><ent type = 'person'>Rose</ent>tta <ent type = 'person'>Stone</ent></ent> does to the <ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent> chapter: each appears towards the end, each
is fairly heavily qualified (and many readers won't be able to tell how much
of the caution is <special>pro forma</special>), and there is not the detailed followup or
evaluation of the new material that I would like.
Disclaimers aside, there are signs that <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> has taken <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent> very
seriously at some point. (Some of his language suggests that his conclusions
were rewritten and somewhat weakened.) For example, "In the end, [his]
claims... could not be substantiated to the point that no doubts about the
veracity of his confession remained." (Intro, p. 8-9) The chapter itself has
a slightly less disturbing formulation: "In the final analysis it is not
possible to prove that the <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent> confession is true." I think it is
possible to conclude, from <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>'s presentation, that the confession is false.
<ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>'s fallback justification is more defensible, although I do not agree with
it: "However, it is possible to show that there is, at least, every reason
for the FBI to investigate <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>'s leads vigorously." (P. 389)
Another example of hedging which gives <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>'s account more support
than it deserves: "A careful reading of <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>'s account cannot lead to
any certain conclusion as to who killed <ent type = 'person'>John</ent> F. <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent>. It is perhaps
significant, however, that when one considers those who may have wanted
<ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent> dead -- Cuban exiles, <ent type = 'person'><ent type = 'person'>Fidel</ent> <ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent></ent>, fanatical right-wing oil men,
renegade elements of the intelligence services, the mob -- they all play roles
in this remarkable story." (P. 390) I would turn this observation around:
almost all the plotters in the most popular conspiracy theories play roles in
<ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>'s account.
Unfortunately, the section of this chapter entitled "A Final Assessment"
includes a recounting of some of the familiar old evidence which allows <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>
not to dismiss <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent> entirely, but which in fact supports any number of
conspiracy theories. The existence of such evidence is indeed crucial to a
final assessment, but only in combination with a very skeptical approach to
<ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>.
My guess is that <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>'s alcohol-soaked brain became incapable of
distinguishing between what he remembered happening to him, and what he had
heard about the <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent> case. I wonder if a psychiatrist familiar with the crim-
inally insane would tell us that this particular kind of delusion is common.
In any case, the omission of a professional psychiatric opinion of
<ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>'s story, by someone familiar with the kind of details on the <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent>
case which have been publicized, is a conspicuous deficiency in this chapter.
As noted in my comments on <ent type = 'person'>Blakey</ent>'s book, there may well be no signif-
icance to a claim by <ent type = 'person'><ent type = 'person'>John</ent>ny <ent type = 'person'><ent type = 'person'>Rose</ent>lli</ent></ent> that he "knew" there was a shot from the
8 EOC 1 -7-</p>
<p>grassy knoll. (3 EOC 3, p. 3) I have no trouble believing that <ent type = 'person'><ent type = 'person'>Rose</ent>lli</ent> or
some member of his family (or Family) heard <ent type = 'person'>Mark <ent type = 'person'>Lane</ent></ent>'s lecture (if not
<ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent>'s scenario) and was convinced. (Everyone has heard <ent type = 'person'>Lane</ent>, it seems.)
Admittedly, it is a little harder to picture <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent> in a public library,
reading "Accessories After the Fact." Still, anyone living in Baton Rouge at
the time of the <ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent> investigation would be exposed to a regular flow of
details about the mysteries of the case. (P. 379)
I think the most likely explanation for <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent> is not simply a hoax
but a basically genuine delusion, supplemented by the prospect of financial or
other benefits.
<ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> says that, if <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>'s confession is a hoax, "then there is a
fascinating story to be told about such an extraordinary scheme." (P. 351)
True enough, and even if it is a delusion which <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent> himself never
understood, there should be an interesting story about how and why <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> (and
the Reader's Digest) took it seriously enough to pursue.
<ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> does not discuss the Digest's original interest in the project, or
its decision not to publish the book. (See 6 EOC 2, p. 6.) <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> told me
that the new editor-in-chief was not completely persuaded that the thrust of
the book was correct. In fact, the book does not identify <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> or the two men
to whom the book is dedicated as Reader's Digest employees. (Why, the reader
might wonder, was <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> doing interviews for <ent type = 'person'>Epstein</ent>'s "Legend"? [P. 7]) Was
the Digest ready to publish the <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent> story in one of the three excerpts
which were to appear starting in the June 1984 issue, using more of the
confession and fewer of the doubts? There may well be a story buried here.
Although it is hard to take the confession seriously enough to really
worry about its impact if the Digest had endorsed it, any allegations
involving <ent type = 'person'>Fidel</ent> or <ent type = 'person'>Raul <ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent></ent> have a potential for serious mischief.
In 1974, the brother of <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>'s original Cuban contact showed him photos of
material "apparently... exhibited in <ent type = 'person'>Raul <ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent></ent>'s den." (Pp. 380-1) This
included photos of <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>, <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>, <ent type = 'person'>Ruby</ent>, <ent type = 'person'>Ferrie</ent>, and <ent type = 'person'>Shaw</ent>/Banister, with
X's over the faces of the deceased and a question mark for <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>. Oh,
and also the Czech rifle which had been used, mounted, with a plaque reading
"<ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent> 1963." The best I can say about this fantasy is that <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>
might have thought -- if he was thinking at all -- that the Reader's Digest
wanted to hear it.
I have many specific objections to <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>'s analysis. For example, he has
the same problem as the HSCA with the claim that <ent type = 'person'>Shaw</ent> was associating with
<ent type = 'person'>David <ent type = 'person'>Ferrie</ent></ent> and <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>. The stories (of <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>, and of the <ent type = 'person'>Clinton</ent>
witnesses) are much more plausible if it was <ent type = 'person'>Guy Banister</ent>, not <ent type = 'person'>Shaw</ent>. The HSCA
wrote around the witness-credibility problem, concluding that <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> had been
seen with "<ent type = 'person'>Ferrie</ent>, if not Clay <ent type = 'person'>Shaw</ent>." (HSCAR 145) Similarly, <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> talks
about <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent> being with <ent type = 'person'>Ruby</ent> and the man he believed was Clay <ent type = 'person'>Shaw</ent>. (Why
not "<ent type = 'person'>Shaw</ent> and the man he believed was Jack <ent type = 'person'>Ruby</ent>"?) (Pp. 363, 381)
If I had any reason to find <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>'s story credible in the first
place, I would do a thorough search of published sources to see where similar
elements appear. For example, <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> notes that <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>'s claim to have
driven <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> from New Orleans to Houston fills in a gap in the official
account of his travels. I would start by testing the hypothesis that Easter-
ling read about this problem. I certainly would not treat this as "perhaps the
most significant point of confirmation for <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>'s story." (P. 369)
Likewise, what about the coincidence between <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>'s claim that he
was to wait for <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> in Monterrey, Mexico, and the allegation by <ent type = 'person'>Don</ent>ald
Norton that he delivered $50,000 to "<ent type = 'person'>Harvey <ent type = 'person'>Lee</ent></ent>" in that city? (RD, p. 367;
Brener, "The <ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent> Case," p. 195) Or the similarity between <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>'s
firing test (with coconuts!) and a test-firing scene at the beginning of
"Executive Action" (the book, if not the movie)?
Not surprisingly, the points which <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> could even try to verify had
little direct connection to the assassination. Discovering (even with
difficulty) that there was a fire like one <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent> described does nothing
8 EOC 1 -8-</p>
<p>to support his claim that he was picking up <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> nearby. The story of Igor
Vaganov (Esquire, 8/67) is a useful reminder that there were many odd things
going on in Dallas in November 1963 which had nothing to do with the <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent>
assassination.
<ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent> may well have been up to something, perhaps criminal, perhaps
with some Cubans. Even it if could be established that he knew <ent type = 'person'>Ferrie</ent> or some
other person who has been named in the assassination controversy, which
in itself would not be unusual, the odds would still be high that his
"confession" was nothing but a delusion.</p>
<p><special>Reviews of "Reasonable Doubt":</special>
6. 22 Nov 85 (Pub Wkly) Brief and mostly favorable. "The prose is a
bit breathless at times," but "the components of [the] mystery are laid out
with notable clarity." The theory of a "Cuban conspiracy" involving an <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>
impostor "does not seem so outlandish after [<ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>] produces a likely candidate
[<ent type = 'person'>Thomas Eli <ent type = 'person'>Davis</ent></ent>, I suppose] and a witness whose testimony, though `terribly
sullied,' provides an abundance of plausible detail."
7. 23 Feb 86 (NYT Book Review) "<ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> and others?" asks reviewer Adam
<ent type = 'person'>Clymer</ent>, a veteran reporter who is now an assistant to <ent type = 'person'>Abe <ent type = 'person'>Rose</ent>nthal</ent>. A fairly
short and quite positive review of <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>'s "compelling yet fundamentally calm
analysis." <ent type = 'person'>Clymer</ent> likes <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>'s critical analysis but non-conspiratorial
evaluation of the old investigations. "Original research is not what commends
this book," and the reviewer mentions none, except for the "psychotic drifter"
<ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>. He endorses the book's least credulous comments on that story:
"<ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> does not take this source as a touchstone. Instead, he argues that Mr.
<ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>'s story ought to be given official attention."</p>
<p><special>More details about <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> in Mexico:</special>
"The <ent type = 'person'>Lobster</ent>" has reprinted almost all of the Afterword from the U.S.
paperback edition of Tony <ent type = 'person'>Summers</ent>' "Conspiracy." <ent type = 'person'>Summers</ent> reported significant
progress in his search for <ent type = 'person'>Maurice Bishop</ent>, and prepared additional information
for articles in the London Observer. "Unfortunately," notes <ent type = 'person'>Steve <ent type = 'person'>Dorril</ent></ent>,
"owing to continuing legal difficulties with <ent type = 'person'>David <ent type = 'person'>Phillips</ent></ent>, they were never
officially published. Much of the material appears now in [the] Afterword and
the following notes (which are the responsibility of The <ent type = 'person'>Lobster</ent>.)" [#1986.8,
4 pp., from issue #10; the Afterword alone was previously listed as #1981.314]
<ent type = 'person'>Dorril</ent>'s notes include much information which seems to come from a good
HSCA source, if not from the HSCA's Mexico City staff report (which, <ent type = 'person'>Summers</ent>
revealed in 1983, he had "had sight of"; see 6 EOC 1, p. 1). For example:
"We understand that the [HSCA] confirmed that [journalist <ent type = 'person'>Hal] Hendrix</ent> was a
CIA contract agent."
"A number of <ent type = 'person'>Phillips</ent>' colleagues... have indicated that the <ent type = 'person'>Phillips</ent>/
`Bishop' identity `holds water.' They include the Naval Attache in Cuba."
Incidentally, <ent type = 'person'>Gary <ent type = 'person'>Mack</ent></ent> reports that <ent type = 'person'>Phillips</ent> has threatened to sue <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>.
(Coverups, 12/85) So perhaps I should emphasize that, whether or not <ent type = 'person'>Phillips</ent>
was Bishop, I am not inclined to believe Antonio <ent type = 'person'>Veciana</ent>'s story that he saw
him with <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>.
<ent type = 'person'>Dorril</ent> gives the real names of "<ent type = 'person'>Ron Cross</ent>," "B. H.," and "Doug Gupton."
"Cross" allegedly helped set up the DRE (but not Bringuier's N.O. chapter).
The CIA man in charge of surveillance of the Cuban consulate in Mexico
City recently was the director of the Berlitz School in Madrid. (On <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>'s
alleged contact with Berlitz, see "<ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> in New Orleans," pp. 344 and 348,
and "Conspiracy," p. 318.)
"In a long memorandum or manuscript [Winston] <ent type = 'person'>Scott</ent> refers to `a photo of
<ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>.' Three CIA officers claim to have seen it [the memo? the photo?]
whilst two others claim to have heard of it." <ent type = 'person'>Phillip Agee</ent> is among the five,
all named. (I'll pass up the opportunity to list unfamiliar people here. Any
reporter who wants to make a test case out of those CIA names is welcome to do
so. I hear that "The <ent type = 'person'>Lobster</ent>" is developing a reputation in the U.K. for
8 EOC 1 -9-</p>
<p>naming sensitive names.)
A named CIA officer "is believed to have told an untruth to the HSCA"
about the 1 Oct 63 photo of the mystery man. The 10 Oct 63 teletype to CIA
headquarters about this "was, in fact, doctored, according to evidence devel-
oped by the HSCA investigators." (This sounds like what Counsel <ent type = 'person'>Sprague</ent> was
going on about in 1977; I have still seen no evidence to support this claim.)
<ent type = 'person'>Virginia Prewett</ent>, a journalist whom <ent type = 'person'>Summers</ent> found from a clue provided by
<ent type = 'person'>Veciana</ent>, "was a CIA asset handled by <ent type = 'person'>Phillips</ent>." The five CIA "disinformation
agents" in Mexico City (four run by <ent type = 'person'>Phillips</ent>) and two other agents of <ent type = 'person'>Phillips</ent>
are named by "The <ent type = 'person'>Lobster</ent>."
This is clearly very important material, but I'm rating it only two stars
as a reminder to be careful: just the fact that the HSCA staff believed it
and it got locked up for fifty years doesn't make it all true.
In the case of <ent type = 'person'>Phillips</ent>-as-Bishop, at least, there is evidence that some
CIA people were trying to mislead the HSCA. As with the <ent type = 'person'>Nosenko</ent> case, the
HSCA may have bumped into issues of great sensitivity inside the CIA, where
selected facts were passed around for the purpose of making one faction or the
other look bad. (For example, one can be skeptical of the account of <ent type = 'person'>Angleton</ent>
making off with a photo of <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>.)
Although I am inclined to trust the HSCA staffers who specialized in the
CIA investigation, I have many problems with what I know about the unpublished
and published investigation in other areas, and I know that some HSCA sources
doubt some conclusions of the Mexico City staff report.</p>
<p><special><ent type = 'person'>Jim <ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent></ent> -- on the bench and off the wall:</special>
In October 1985, <ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent> told <ent type = 'person'>Ted <ent type = 'person'>Gandolfo</ent></ent> that he was working on a new
book, entitled "A Farewell to Justice." He said that "there is no question in
my mind that it is the absolute and ultimate truth down to the last detail
about the <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent> assassination," but that he can not get a publisher "because
they are controlled by the CIA." (This is from the first issue of <ent type = 'person'>Gandolfo</ent>'s
newsletter, "Assassination U.S.A." Write him at 1214 First Ave., NYC 10021,
or ask me for information.)
<ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent> sent a long letter to <ent type = 'person'>Louis Sproesser</ent>, a buff who inquired about
this book. [#9, 30 Dec 85, 3 pp.] The book is "completed" and being
considered by a publisher. <ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent> has been working on it for four years.
<ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent>'s rhetoric has not softened over the years, and I'll be very
surprised if his critical attention to the facts has improved.
Judge <ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent> asserts (on Court of Appeal stationery) that "Anyone who
wishes to understand the assassination, must appreciate at the outset that the
deep involvement of the Agency in the President's assassination requires that
it give the maximum reinforcement to the two major false sponsors which it has
created: Organized Crime and <ent type = 'person'><ent type = 'person'>Fidel</ent> <ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent></ent>.... If the author [of a book] so
much as infers that Organized Crime or <ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent> were behind what so plainly was
an <special>Agency project</special>.... then one has in his hand the typical product of one of
the Agency's stable of hungry scribes."
<ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent> also disputes allegations that Organized Crime is behind him.
"While I lay no pretense to being the epitome of virtue, with regard to
connections with organized crime I think that you can safely place me as
having approximately the same such connections as <ent type = 'person'>Mother Theresa</ent> and Pope
Paul." Obviously the CIA's disinformation machinery is at work, he says.
(Is <ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent> dropping a hint about various popes? And this "<ent type = 'person'>Mother Theresa</ent>,"
usually known as "<ent type = 'person'>Teresa</ent>" -- is she related to Vinnie <ent type = 'person'>Teresa</ent>?)
In particular, <ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent> complains that a recent book "by a dashing
Englishman (one of the Agency's more accommodating prostitutes) refers to `a
secret meeting'" between <ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent> and <ent type = 'person'><ent type = 'person'>John</ent> Rosselli</ent>. "The `author's'
complicity in this attempted discreditation is underscored by his having had
the book published without ever troubling to learn that I have never even seen
<ent type = 'person'><ent type = 'person'>John</ent> Rosselli</ent> in my life..."
The reference is to p. 498 of "Conspiracy," by Tony <ent type = 'person'>Summers</ent> (who is,
8 EOC 1 -10-</p>
<p>indeed, sort of dashing), which accurately asserts that the CIA found such a
meeting "particularly disturbing." <ent type = 'person'>Summers</ent> quotes (but does not cite) an HSCA
staff report by <ent type = 'person'>Mark Flanagan</ent>, which in turn refers to an unpublished page of
the CIA Inspector General's Report. The allegation of a <ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent>-Rosselli
meeting also appears on page 118 of the IG Report, which is published. (See
10 HSCA 190-1 (note 55), 4 HSCA 146-7.)
As usual, there is a trace of validity in <ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent>'s complaint. The IG
Report is obviously not an unimpeachable source, even if endorsed by an HSCA
staffer. But <ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent>'s overall certitude doesn't seem to need much anchoring
to reality.
<ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>'s book includes a rather good discussion of the <ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent> affair, and
of the subtleties of the interactions between <ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent>, the real New Orleans
evidence about <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>, and the vulnerability of Clay <ent type = 'person'>Shaw</ent> due to his
apparently irrelevant CIA links and homosexuality.
If any of you want to spring to <ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent>'s defense, here is my $64
question: at the time he arrested Clay <ent type = 'person'>Shaw</ent>, what serious evidence did he
have that he had in fact conspired with anyone to kill <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent>?</p>
<p> <special>Subscription information:</special> There were only 3 issues of EOC last year.
The mimimum rate for a paid subscription is $0.05 per page plus postage, or
$1.96 for 1985 in the U.S. and Canada. For postage to Europe, add $0.48 per
issue; to Australia, $0.60. Payment must be in U.S. currency; please make any
checks payable to me, not to EOC.</p>
<p> <special>Credits:</special> Thanks to S. <ent type = 'person'>Dorril</ent> (#8), G. Hollingsworth (6,7), H. <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> (5),
R. Ranftel (7), and L. Sproesser (9).</p>
<p><special>More press coverage of <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>'s book:</special>
The following items arrived as this issue was being completed. They are
from the Chicago Sun-Times, 9 Feb 86. (Thanks to J. Gordon.)
10. "Who killed <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent>? Not <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>, book claims" [2 pp., with a big
page-one headline] Apparently based on an interview of <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> by William Hines.
<ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent> "had ample reason to want <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent> dead, <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> said.... Revenge was
clearly <ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent>'s motive to mount a counter-assassination campaign, and
organized crime in the U.S. was his avenue of attack." A <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> quote is
singled out for emphasis in large type: "My feeling is that some combination
of Cuban interests and organized crime in this country pulled off the
assassination. How they did it, I don't know."
Is that reasonable? I doubt it. The book doesn't allege that, much less
make a case for it. Even if <ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent> was in control of Cubela, <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> concluded,
"that does not yield a clear answer to the ultimate question of whether <ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent>,
as a desperate act of self-preservation, brought about the assassination.
Today, all that can be said is that whatever his connection, if any, <ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent> was
better served than any other leader in the world by [<ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent>'s] death." (P. 345)
Mafia involvement in a <ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent> plot has been advanced from time to time,
notably by <ent type = 'person'><ent type = 'person'>Rose</ent>lli</ent> and by <ent type = 'person'>George Crile</ent> (who focused on the <ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent>-Trafficante
relationship; 5 HSCA 308-11). In their book, <ent type = 'person'>Blakey</ent> &amp; <ent type = 'person'>Billings</ent> rejected this
theory, "because all the reasons that militated against <ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent>'s striking at
<ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent> by himself could be applied to his doing it in conjunction with
gangsters." (P. 156) They also made the first of many obvious counter-
arguments: that <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>, "a known leftist, pointed squarely at <ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent>."
11. "A Startling Confession" [3 pp.] A long article by <ent type = 'person'>Jim Quinlan</ent>.
"According to <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>, the center of this historical storm was Robert Easter-
ling...." Except for a reference to <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>'s mental state, this article
applies no critical judgment to his account.
12. A photo of <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>, and a sidebar on his secluded office in Redeye, Va.
13. Photos accompanying #11. [3 pp., routine]</p>
<p>*From Illumi-Net BBS - (404) 377-1141* [ <ent type = 'person'>Don</ent>'s note: I doubt this BBS is
still up ].</p>
<p>---END-----------------------------------------------------------------------</p>
<p>--
-* <ent type = 'person'>Don</ent> Allen *- InterNet: dona@bilver.UUCP // Amiga..for the best of us.
USnail: 1818G Landing Dr, <ent type = 'person'>Sanford Fl</ent> 32771 \X/ Why use anything else? :-)
UUCP: ..uunet!tarpit!bilver!dona - Why did the JUSTICE DEPT steal PROMIS?
/\/\ What is research but a blind date with knowledge. <ent type = 'person'>William Henry</ent> /\/\</p>
<p>From: dona@bilver.uucp (<ent type = 'person'>Don</ent> Allen)
Newsgroups: alt.conspiracy
Subject: <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent> Text: Echoes of Conspiracy - EOC2.TXT
<info type="Message-ID"> 1991Dec26.194933.19897@bilver.uucp</info>
Date: 26 Dec 91 19:49:33 GMT
Organization: W. J. Vermillion - Winter Park, FL
Lines: 617</p>
<p>*EOC2.TXT*</p>
<p>-----BEGIN PART 2/4-----------------------------------------------------------</p>
<p>ECHOES OF CONSPIRACY July 17, 1986
Vol. 8, #2 <ent type = 'person'>Paul L</ent>. <ent type = 'person'>Hoch</ent></p>
<p><special>Quotation of the day:</special>
"An interesting theory can always outrun a set of facts," according to
psychologist A. <ent type = 'person'>Holliday</ent>, at a 1959 conference on LSD therapy chaired by Dr.
<ent type = 'person'>Paul <ent type = 'person'>Hoch</ent></ent>, CIA consultant and "opinion leader."
From "Acid Dreams: The CIA, LSD, and the Sixties Rebellion," a new book
by Martin A. <ent type = 'person'>Lee</ent> and Bruce Shlain (Grove, $12.95). A fascinating social
history, particularly the chapters on the CIA's early interest in LSD.
("Funny and irreverent" - WP)
There are a few references to <ent type = 'person'>John</ent> and Robert <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent>, but nothing new on
the <ent type = 'person'>Mary Pinchot <ent type = 'person'>Meyer</ent></ent> story. If people like <ent type = 'person'>Meyer</ent>'s friend <ent type = 'person'>Angleton</ent> knew of
her dabbling in drugs with <ent type = 'person'>Leary</ent> and apparently with <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent>, did it matter? I
wonder, but the book avoids speculation along such lines. There is no mention
of "Did <ent type = 'person'><ent type = 'person'>Lee</ent> Harvey</ent> <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> Drop Acid?," the article co-authored by ex-AIB'er
<ent type = 'person'>Lee</ent>. (5 EOC 1, p. 4) (#1986.14: Publisher's press release, consisting of
advance comments by Ginsberg, Stockwell, Krassner, et al.)</p>
<p><special>Forthcoming TV coverage:</special>
In November, Showtime will present four hours of "The Trial of LHO," with
<ent type = 'person'>Vincent <ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent></ent> for the prosecution and <ent type = 'person'>Jerry <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent></ent> for the defense. (Ed
Bark, DMN, 21 Jun 86, reprinted in Coverups, 6/86 [#15].) An earlier report
by <ent type = 'person'>Jerry <ent type = 'person'>Rose</ent></ent> identifies the producers as London Weekend Television. (See
2 3D 3.21; that is, The Third Decade, Vol. 2, #3 [Mar 1986], p. 21) Although
there are risks in having lawyers present the case, this should a good show.</p>
<p><special>The 22nd anniversary:</special>
16. 22 Nov 85 (Fredericksburg, VA "Free Lance-Star") "<ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent> questions
persist" A summary of what has and hasn't happened since the HSCA report, by
guest columnist (and buff) Harry Nash. "The simple fact is that Justice, like
many agencies of government over the years, would like for the question to go
away. If you think the reason is just 'bureaucratic', think again. The
murders [of <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent> and <ent type = 'person'>MLK</ent>] did not occur in a vacuum. <ent type = 'person'>William Faulkner</ent> (in
another context) said it best: 'The past isn't dead; it isn't even past.'"
This is the only anniversary article I recall which dealt with the
ongoing controversy over the assassination. Were there others? (I have the
original version of the widely publicized account of how the WC damaged the
<ent type = 'person'>Hoover</ent>-<ent type = 'person'>Warren</ent> relationship; it should be in the next EOC.)</p>
<p><special>The RFK case:</special>
17. 5 Mar 86 (LA Herald-Examiner) "RFK slaying report lacks all the
facts" [2 p.] Quotes <ent type = 'person'>Paul <ent type = 'person'>Schrade</ent></ent> and Greg <ent type = 'person'>Stone</ent>, who said that "what is
important is the 97% of material which remains withheld." The commission
asked Mayor <ent type = 'person'>Bradley</ent> to form a committee to develop standards and a schedule
for release of the remaining material. This advisory panel has been set up.
People interested in encouraging fuller disclosure should get in touch
with <ent type = 'person'>Stone</ent> or <ent type = 'person'>Phil <ent type = 'person'>Melanson</ent></ent>. There is much concern about the processing of
the remaining material. The summary report itself costs $150 ($0.10/page!)
plus postage, and is probably not worth it. For earlier coverage of the
release process, see 7 EOC 3, p. 1.
18. 5 Mar (NYT) "Summary of Report Released...." "Critics said the
commission's report contained nothing that was not published in [Robert
Houghton's] 1970 book...." <ent type = 'person'>Stone</ent> tells me that it is worse than that;
published information has now been deleted.
19. 5 Mar 86 (LAT) "Summary of Police Probe Says <ent type = 'person'>Sirhan</ent> Acted Alone"
[3 pp.] Page one, but hardly news. "Release of the 1,500-page summary [on
March 4] did little to mollify critics...." <ent type = 'person'>Schrade</ent> accused the police
commissioners of "arrogance" and challenged Chief <ent type = 'person'>Gates</ent> to explain the
trajectory of the bullet which struck him.
8 EOC 2 -2-</p>
<p> 20. 5 Mar (SFX) "RFK murder probe is 'a P.R. gesture,' victim
complains" [2 pp.] Also quotes Prof. <ent type = 'person'>Melanson</ent>.
21. 4 Mar [25 pp.] Partial transcript of the board meeting, including
comments by critics.
Other March 5 reports, mostly from wire services: #22, USA Today
(incomplete copy); #23, AP; #24, Hartford Courant; #25, SFC (from LAT),
[2 pp.]; #26, Detroit News.
27. 6 Mar (LAHE) Editorial, "A call for public disclosure"
28. 9 Mar (Dubin, Phila. Inquirer) "RFK summary sharpens demands for
all files" [2 pp.] A rather good summary, including comments from <ent type = 'person'>Stone</ent> and
<ent type = 'person'>Schrade</ent> (whose doctor called it "crazy to think that <ent type = 'person'>Sirhan</ent> acted alone").
29. 16 Mar (Providence Journal) "Assassination and gun control: RFK
report puts spotlight on protection of president" [3 pp.] Primarily an
interview of <ent type = 'person'>Melanson</ent>.
30. 28 Mar (LAT) "<ent type = 'person'>Sirhan</ent> Denied Parole; Crime's 'Enormity' Cited"
A staff psychiatrist described him as "generally rehabilitated."</p>
<p><special>"Reasonable Doubt":</special>
31. 20 Apr 86 (Boston Herald) "<ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent>'s death: Let's find the truth"
An op-ed piece by Henry <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>, directed at Boston Congressional candidate
Joseph P. <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent>. "The bond of silence that began with Robert <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent> has
remained inviolate. Indeed, the members of this illustrious family are among
a tiny minority of Americans who have not vigorously debated this important
issue.... In a recent profile of Joe <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent> in Life Magazine, he is quoted
as saying that it is time for his campaign 'to take the initiative on
something.'... If Joe <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent> fully accepts the simplistic official version
of <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent>'s death, then let him say so." (Reprinted in 2 3D 4.4.)
32. (Same paper, same date) "Joe <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent> urged to reopen <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent> probe:
Author cites conspiracy theory" (but not <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>) A page-two news story
based on an interview of <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>. Joe <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent> was not available for comment; his
campaign manager said he may make a statement. (As far as I know, he has made
none, and nothing has come of this.)
33. 16 Feb 86 (WP Book World) [2 pp.] Reviewer <ent type = 'person'>Anthony <ent type = 'person'>Lukas</ent></ent> notes
that <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> "is most convincing in his meticulous dissection of [the WC]
scenario," but "less persuasive when he seeks to assemble an alternative
scenario. Everyone in his story has a purpose.... There is little room for
chance.... And the only major piece of new evidence [<ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>'s testimony]
is singularly unconvincing." <ent type = 'person'>Lukas</ent> concludes that, until there is access to
the secrets <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> believes to be still locked up, "anything and everything is
possible." I don't think he is being sarcastic; perhaps <ent type = 'person'>Hougan</ent>'s revisionist
analysis of Watergate, which <ent type = 'person'>Lukas</ent> took seriously (#1984.180), influenced his
perspective on the <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent> case.
34. March 86 (3D) A nine-page "review essay" by <ent type = 'person'>Jerry <ent type = 'person'>Rose</ent></ent>, positive
in general but with several points of disagreement. (You should have your
subscription copy, so I won't describe it further here.)
In response, <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> has written a letter to <ent type = 'person'>Rose</ent>, challenging readers to
name another "detailed, on-the-record account of personal involvement in a
successful conspiracy." Perhaps such a distinction can be drawn, but in my
opinion the similarities between <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>'s story and many others far
outweigh the differences.
35. Mar 86 (Coverups) "Significant Doubt about 'Reasonable Doubt'"
<ent type = 'person'>Gary <ent type = 'person'>Mack</ent></ent> considers the book "one of the most disappointing and misleading
'major' works" on the case. I disagree with some of the specific points <ent type = 'person'>Mack</ent>
disputes - e.g., the <ent type = 'person'>John</ent> <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> phone call, and <ent type = 'person'>Harrelson</ent> as the tall tramp -
and I have no problem with the book leaving out the backyard photos, the
umbrella man, and even the acoustics. In any case, <ent type = 'person'>Mack</ent>'s specifics do not
establish his most serious criticism, that the book was "very carefully,
cleverly constructed" to build a case that <ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent> did it, and to give the
8 EOC 2 -3-</p>
<p>impression that it completely covers the major open questions. I didn't get
that impression from the book; if the Justice Department or many reviewers
were to respond that way, I would reconsider.
36. Jun 86 (Coverups) Reporter <ent type = 'person'>Johann Rush</ent> recounts his own
impressions of <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>, who was trying to sell his story for money when
Rush talked to him in 1981-83. The records of the alleged "diversionary fire"
show no damage to the building, just a little to some furniture; no hydrant
was used, alleges Rush. [2 pp.]
37. 26 Jan 86 (Cincinnati Enq.) A "must read," but the reviewer
complains (with some validity) that <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> ignored Dr. <ent type = 'person'>Lattimer</ent>'s work on the
single-bullet theory and the head snap.
38. 9 Feb (St. Petersburg Times) "Another dubious conspiracy"
"The conspiracy theorists' main fault is that they, like <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>, deprive <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>
of personality."
39. 16 Feb (Baton Rouge Sun) A short review, mostly negative ("a
rehash"). "The <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent> chapter is riveting, but not worth the $19.95...."
40. 23 Feb (Richmond T-D) A mixed review by a retired member of the
Foreign Service. "The endless reporting on <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent> raises the question of
why a well-regarded journalist should have devoted so much time to 'Reasonable
Doubt.' The surest answer lies in the incredible divergence of the reports
from governmental investigations of the assassination."
41. Mar 86 (Village Voice Literary Supp.) A positive review - even
<ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>'s story "compels attention" - consisting mostly of the reviewer's
favorite old anti-WC arguments. (<ent type = 'person'>Carl Oglesby</ent> is singled out among those who
have previously made "extremely plausible guesses" about the culprits.)
42. 3 Mar 86 (Pub. Wkly) "Challenge, Inc. Continues Two Libel Actions"
Also, <ent type = 'person'>David <ent type = 'person'>Phillips</ent></ent> "is considering a suit" against <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> "for allegations...
that he was '<ent type = 'person'>Maurice Bishop</ent>,' CIA case officer for <ent type = 'person'><ent type = 'person'>Lee</ent> Harvey</ent> <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>."
43. 7 Mar 86 (SFC) "From <ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent>'s Plot To the Botched Autopsy"
"Like the creature from the swamp in a C-grade movie, it [the case] won't be
put to rest." Tantalizing, but "conspiracy is not really explosive news at
this date unless you can name the conspirators," and <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>'s book, like the
HSCA report, "suffers from that deficiency."
44. 10 Mar 86 (Roanoke Times) "'Reasonable Doubt' a lesson for shuttle
investigation" (That is, "be thorough, get it right the first time," unlike
the <ent type = 'person'>Warren</ent> Commission.)
45. 12 Mar 86 My rough handwritten notes on <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>'s appearance on WWCN
radio, <ent type = 'person'>Alba</ent>ny. Does he think that "Mr. <ent type = 'person'>Stone</ent>" killed <ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent>? Here, he says
that he has come up with the person "who probably did." <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> thinks that <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent>
would have "gotten <ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent> out of this hemisphere"; that <ent type = 'person'>LBJ</ent> thought <ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent>
killed <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent>, and got the message, thus deciding to fight Communism in Vietnam
instead of Cuba. Given the evidence on <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent>'s involvement in Vietnam, and the
ongoing pressure against <ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent> under <ent type = 'person'>LBJ</ent>, this is too speculative for me.
46. 23 Mar 86 (Milwaukee Journal) "More doubt on <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent>" Reviewer David
Wrone is critical of the <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent> chapter ("No cub reporter would turn in a
story like this") and of much more. The anti-WC chapters are "solid" but <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>
"cannot evaluate witness testimony" and "is blinded by an anti-Communism"
which "enables him... to portray the murder as the work of <ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent> Communists
[and] the Mafia."
47. Apr 86 (Freedom) [2 pp.] A generally negative review, suggesting
that <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> deliberately played down the possibility of government involvement.
(This monthly magazine, linked to the Scientologists, publishes investigative
reports on various important topics, but unfortunately a substantial part of
what it prints ranges from a bit overdone to quite silly indeed.)
48. 6 Apr 86 (Oakland Tribune) "Volume opens forum to more <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent>
assassination theories" [2 pp.] A favorable review by <ent type = 'person'>Jonathan Marshall</ent>, now
the Trib's editorial page editor, focusing on <ent type = 'person'>Burkley</ent>, <ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent>, and suppression
of evidence by federal agencies. "Worst of all, however, was the decision of
8 EOC 2 -4-</p>
<p>the [HSCA] to put a 50-year seal on most of the thousands of pages of
documents it assembled. 'The irony of the situation... is clear,' noted
Berkeley-based assassination scholar <ent type = 'person'>Paul <ent type = 'person'>Hoch</ent></ent>. 'The congressional
investigators who broke the <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent> case wide open and reversed the official
government verdict have left us with more material withheld than ever
before.'" (4 EOC 5.1)
"The assassination deserves whatever study it still receives. For even
if the conspirators are never identified, much less caught, careful analysis
of the crime and its aftermath will continue to shed light on the many
political pathologies that rippled outward from the center of the
assassination itself."
49. 13 Apr 86 (Phila. Inquirer) A review by <ent type = 'person'>Jean <ent type = 'person'><ent type = 'person'>Davis</ent>on</ent></ent>, author of
"<ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>'s Game." (5 EOC 4) On the whole, she is not overly negative:
"Anyone who has followed the controversy will probably want to read the latest
round in the debate. Whether one agrees with them or not, conspiracy books
like this one are seldom dull."
"It is not unusual... for conspiracy theorists to make their attacks on
the <ent type = 'person'>Warren</ent> Report sound utterly convincing - until they try to explain what
<special>really</special> happened. Then some sticky questions inevitably arise. For instance,
why does all the physical evidence point to <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>'s rifle and to no other
weapon?... If a better rifle was used, where did its bullets go?... <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>
provides a novel explanation.... Readers who prefer complex solutions to
simple ones will find much to admire in <special>Reasonable Doubt</special>." (She might be
wrong about any given area of evidence, but she does have a point.)
<ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>'s confession "has the dreamlike quality of a delusion....
[He] seems to have been working for everyone on the conspiracy theorists' list
of Top Ten Suspects.... It seems not to have occurred to <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> that <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>
could have gotten many of his ideas from reading earlier books about Dallas."
(<ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> certainly did think about that explanation, but, indeed, you wouldn't
know that from the book itself.) "Sadly, <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>'s confession sounds like
an unconscious parody of the theories presented there."
50. 22 Apr 86 [3 pp.] A letter from <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> to the Inquirer, defending
his handling of the neutron activation analysis and noting that <ent type = 'person'><ent type = 'person'>Davis</ent>on</ent>'s book
was not, as the Inquirer said, "a critical examination of conspiracy theories"
but, in <ent type = 'person'><ent type = 'person'>Davis</ent>on</ent>'s publisher's words, "an anti-conspiracy book about <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>'s
assassination of President <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent>." <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> also says "I accept Miss <ent type = 'person'><ent type = 'person'>Davis</ent>on</ent>'s
attack on the credibility of Robert <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>."
51. 19 Apr 86 (Montreal Gazette) A positive review by <ent type = 'person'>Brian <ent type = 'person'>McKenna</ent></ent>,
who directed two CBC documentaries on the <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent> case. He notes <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>'s work on a
report of <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> handing out FPCC literature in Montreal, and regrets that
<ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent> may have taken <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> away from "more fertile trails." "In his
graceful and diplomatic treatment of the lonely work of the critics, <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>
refrains from the poisonous backbiting that has so divided many of the best
ones over the years." (Reprinted in Coverups, June 1986)
52. (Same paper, date, and author) "How careers like <ent type = 'person'>Dan</ent> Rather's were
built on [the] <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent> assassination" Rather told <ent type = 'person'>McKenna</ent> in 1978 that he
personally believed there was a conspiracy, but despite the HSCA he allegedly
continues to reflect the lone-nut view, and was among those who vetoed a
potential story by "60 Minutes" based on Lifton's evidence. Quite far out for
a sidebar (a far-out-bar?): "What this suggests is that like many high U.S.
officials in every branch of government, Rather's career and the official
story are welded together." <ent type = 'person'>McKenna</ent>'s brings up Rather's erroneous
description of the Zapruder film, and the WC's "printing error" resulting in
transposed frames (both of which I accept as non-sinister mistakes).
53. 25 May 85 (Jackson, MS Clarion-Ledger &amp; News) "Book explores
confession in <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent> assassination" [2 pp.] <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>, who used to work for the
Jackson News, met with two FBI agents "who had examined <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>'s file.
'The whole tone was, one of, "Listen, you're a fairly sensible fellow, how can
8 EOC 2 -5-</p>
<p>you get taken in by this man?" And my position was I'm not being taken in by
him. I'm trying to find out the full story. I don't understand why you folks
haven't taken a more vigorous interest in the man,' <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> said.... Attempts to
contact the FBI about <ent type = 'person'>Easterling</ent>'s story were unsuccessful." (#53a: an
accompanying review, not noteworthy.)
There is some interesting information on <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> (rather than on the case)
in the following articles from Virginia papers, which are mostly profiles
based in part on interviews:
54. 16 Feb 86 (<ent type = 'person'>Dan</ent>ville Register) [3 pp.; photo: #54A]
55. 9 Mar (Richmond T-D) [2 pp.]
56. 10-12 Mar (Lynchburg News) [5 pp.] Also quotes <ent type = 'person'>Ed Tatro</ent>.
57. 16 Mar (Roanoke Times) [2 pp.]
A few more reviews, short and/or not particularly noteworthy: #58 (19
Jan), Fort Wayne Journal; #59 (23 Jan), Macon, MS Beacon; #60 (16 Feb),
Anniston, AL Star; #61, Detroit News; #62 (24 Apr), Daily Express (UK).</p>
<p><special>More thoughts the murder of Officer <ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent>:</special>
Several people have challenged me to explain how <ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent>'s affair might
have actually played a role in the events of November 22. Indeed, it would be
quite a coincidence if he happened to be the victim of a killer with a
personal grudge just when <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> was in the vicinity. Such things do happen -
that's why they are called coincidences - and it is plausible that the DPD
would have used the dead <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> to clear up an unsolved crime. But a more
complex scenario may make more sense. <ent type = 'person'>Joanne Braun</ent> speculates that <ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent>'s
problems may have caused him to go to some unsavory characters for help, for
example to get some money which his wife would not know about, and that he may
have gotten entangled with, and in debt to, some hypothetical conspirators,
who then set him up as they set <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> up. Also, <ent type = 'person'>David Lifton</ent> reminded me of
the eyewitness evidence suggesting that <ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent> had been waiting for someone
coming from the same direction as <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>. (Ramparts, Nov 66) And of course
<ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent>'s affair might explain only why he was in Oak Cliff.</p>
<p><special>Judge <ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent> responds (and <ent type = 'person'>Hoch</ent> dissents):</special>
<ent type = 'person'>Ted <ent type = 'person'>Gandolfo</ent></ent> sent <ent type = 'person'>Jim <ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent></ent> part of 8 EOC 1, and sent me a copy of
<ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent>'s reply. (Letter of 14 Apr 86 to <ent type = 'person'>Gandolfo</ent>, #1986.63; quoted almost
in full here.)
The Judge had "nothing to say concerning [<ent type = 'person'>Hoch</ent>'s] comments about me.
<ent type = 'person'>Frank</ent>ly, I found them to be incoherent."
"I cannot guess as to the origin of his emotional hang up [sic] about me.
In any case, I will not attempt to reply to him in a similar vein...." Some
of my earlier research on the assassination was "quite competent. Moreover --
in view of the solid front presented by the federal government in its cover-up
of the assassination -- it seems to me childlike for one assassination critic
to attempt to dis-credit another publicly." (I suppose calling Tony <ent type = 'person'>Summers</ent>
"one of the [CIA's] more accomodating prostitutes" doesn't count.)
"One statement of <ent type = 'person'>Hoch</ent>'s, however, does concern me enough to require a
comment. He refers to the 'vulnerability of Clay <ent type = 'person'>Shaw</ent> due to his apparently
irrelevant C.I.A. links and homosexuality.' Mr. <ent type = 'person'>Hoch</ent> should go straight to
the bathroom and wash his mouth with soap."
"Throughout our trial, in everything I have ever written and in every
public statement I have ever made -- I never once have made any reference to
Clay <ent type = 'person'>Shaw</ent>'s alleged homosexuality. What sort of human being is Mr. <ent type = 'person'>Hoch</ent> that
he is impelled to so gratuitously make such a reference in a newsletter which
he widely distributes to the public? For all his faults or virtues, <ent type = 'person'>Shaw</ent> is
dead and unable to defend himself from that kind of off the wall canard. No
matter how virtuously <ent type = 'person'>Hoch</ent> might couch it, a smear is still a smear."
I will let you decide if my reference (or <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>'s) was gratuitous. Out
here, referring to someone's homosexuality stopped being a canard years ago;
8 EOC 2 -6-</p>
<p>at least, it's not as serious as charging someone with conspiring to kill <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent>.
Does <ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent> now think <ent type = 'person'>Shaw</ent> was involved in the conspiracy which led to
<ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent>'s death? If so, the reference to "all his faults or virtues" is
remarkably mild.
In 1969, J. <ent type = 'person'><ent type = 'person'>Edgar</ent> <ent type = 'person'>Hoover</ent></ent> himself called me "a smear artist", for
suggesting that there may have been an undisclosed relationship between <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>
and the FBI. [#64, 2 pp.] So <ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent> is in good company.
As for my question in 8 EOC 1 about <ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent>'s case, asking what evidence
he had when he arrested <ent type = 'person'>Shaw</ent>: The most enthusiastic answer came from
<ent type = 'person'>Gandolfo</ent>, who said, "Did't you know that <ent type = 'person'>Shaw</ent> was connected with Permindex,
which just happens to be one of the most efficient assassination organizations
around?? Didn't you know that <ent type = 'person'>Shaw</ent> was CIA?" Also, <ent type = 'person'>Shaw</ent>'s friend <ent type = 'person'>Ferrie</ent> was
CIA and there is Russo's testimony. That is, of course, exactly the sort of
evidence which I did know about but which does not relate to my question.
<ent type = 'person'>Gandolfo</ent> also promised to expose me as "just a CIA coverup bastard" in
his newsletter, to which I do not subscribe. Does anyone out there want to
send me a copy?
The best semi-serious answer came from <ent type = 'person'>Robert Ranftel</ent> and <ent type = 'person'>Jim Lesar</ent>, who
sent me an FBI letterhead memo dated March 2, 1967, the day after <ent type = 'person'>Shaw</ent>'s
arrest. (#65, 2 pp.) The memo, discussed in <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>'s book (p. 281), notes that
one of <ent type = 'person'>Shaw</ent>'s alleged homosexual contacts said on March 19, 1964, that <ent type = 'person'>Shaw</ent>
was into S&amp;M. On February 24, 1967, two sources reported that they thought
<ent type = 'person'>Shaw</ent> had "homosexual tendencies," and two sources (possibly the same ones)
indicated that <ent type = 'person'>Shaw</ent> was <ent type = 'person'>Clay Bertrand</ent>, who allegedly contacted <ent type = 'person'>Dean Andrews</ent> on
<ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>'s behalf. Unnamed FBI sources are not necessarily reliable, but in any
case none of this evidence even suggests that <ent type = 'person'>Shaw</ent> conspired with anyone to
kill <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent>. Sorry, but the prize for my $64 question remains unawarded.
Incidentally, <ent type = 'person'>Lou Sproesser</ent> pointed out a problem with the <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>-HSCA
hypothesis that Banister, not <ent type = 'person'>Shaw</ent>, was with <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> and <ent type = 'person'>Ferrie</ent> in <ent type = 'person'>Clinton</ent>.
Marshall J. Manchester testified at the <ent type = 'person'>Shaw</ent> trial that he checked out the car
and that <ent type = 'person'>Shaw</ent> said he was from the Trade Mart. (NYT, 7 Feb 69, 2 pp., #66)
Manchester is not necessarily credible, but this shows that untangling the
<ent type = 'person'>Clinton</ent> story by believing just some of the testimony is not easy.
While I was in the mood to discredit my fellow critics, I came across a
letter from <ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent> to "Freedom" (May 1986, #67) which is worth some
attention. It offers a rare opportunity to scrutinize <ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent>'s analytical
work in an area where the evidence is accessible and not crucial.
I think the buffs should keep in mind that what got many of us into the
case in the first place was the demonstrable inadequacy of the <ent type = 'person'>Warren</ent> Report -
for example, conclusions and summaries in the Report which did not even
adequately reflect the published evidence, much less what was not published.
In my own case, at least, the inference was that any investigation which was
so clearly unreliable on details could certainly not be trusted to get the
difficult and uncheckable answers right.
These days, assertions by <ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent> and his ilk tend to get accepted into
the mythology of the case if they sound plausible, without much detailed
scrutiny. It is not easy to deal with most such claims. For example, no
matter how exaggerated <ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent>'s (or <ent type = 'person'>Sprague</ent>'s) comments about the HSCA staff
and investigation under <ent type = 'person'>Blakey</ent> seem, and how implausible their conclusions
about what was behind the HSCA, most of the rebuttal evidence is known only to
HSCA people, and everyone who dealt with the HSCA knows their investigation
was inadequate in many ways - at least in many small areas. So, it is hard to
argue against the conclusions of <ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent> or <ent type = 'person'>Sprague</ent> (either <ent type = 'person'>Sprague</ent>, in fact)
without seeming to defend certain indefensible aspects of the HSCA's work.
Likewise, when implausible things are said about <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> in New Orleans
(by the HSCA) or about Cuban exiles, one may be reluctant to be properly
critical if one believes, as most of us do, that those areas probably are
central, and that someone might well have come up with new and important
8 EOC 2 -7-</p>
<p>(but unverifiable) evidence.
So I have no qualms about taking a close look at <ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent>'s charge that
the <ent type = 'person'>Warren</ent> Commission may have relied on a CIA asset to solve one evidentiary
problem. <ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent> wrote that an earlier "Freedom" article on <ent type = 'person'>Hemingway</ent> "may
have contributed to the identification of a possible CIA 'asset.'" In about
1961, Dr. <ent type = 'person'>Howard Rome</ent>, a Mayo Clinic psychiatrist, gave <ent type = 'person'>Hemingway</ent> shock
treatments. In September 1964, Rome gave the WC an analysis of <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>, which
"would appear to have been obtained and inserted just prior to the printing
deadline in order to mask one of the major holes still remaining in the
official fiction: <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>'s motivation. The thrust of Dr. Rome's evaluation
was that <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>'s spelling problem was not inconsistent with his having
murdered the president of the United States." In Wesley Liebeler's words,
"the frustration which may have resulted [from <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>'s reading-spelling
difficulty] gave an added impetus to his need to prove to the world that he
was an unrecognized 'great man.'"
<ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent> does qualify his factual conclusion (enough to make it
nonlibelous?): "One cannot ignore the fact that it is just possible that Dr.
Rome might have been functioning all along primarily as an agency 'asset.'"
Then he takes off again: "Those men who function clandestinely as CIA assets
will do anything and help destroy anyone for a share of the CIA's cornucopia.
To give but one example, consider how successful the media and 'journalistic
author' assets have been in giving life to the two remaining scapegoats in the
<ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent> assassination -- <ent type = 'person'><ent type = 'person'>Fidel</ent> <ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent></ent> and organized crime."
It is the jump to such a broad allegation which justifies attention to
<ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent>'s comments on the Rome matter. His analysis is, basically,
unsupported by the evidence <ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent> himself refers to, and to some degree
contradicted by it. Some terse one-word assessments spring to mind, but I
don't want to be told again to wash my mouth out with soap.
The details are not interesting enough to reproduce here, but I'll send
my analysis to anyone who wants it, at no charge. (#68, 3 pp.) If very few
people ask for it, I'll probably draw some inferences from that.
One question for the third decade (and for <ent type = 'person'>Jerry <ent type = 'person'>Rose</ent></ent>'s journal as well)
is how to deal with the survival of myths about the assassination other than
the <ent type = 'person'>Warren</ent> Commission's. That is, what is the role of "scholarly research"
when many of the people still interested in the case are sure that the head
snap proves there was a shot from the front, that the single-bullet theory is
a joke, that the HSCA's primary goal was to hide the truth, or that <ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent>
solved the case with the arrest of Clay <ent type = 'person'>Shaw</ent>?
The April and May 1986 issues of "Freedom" include a long article by
<ent type = 'person'>Richard E</ent>. (critic) <ent type = 'person'>Sprague</ent> and two "Freedom" staffers, "The Ultimate Cover-
up," focusing on the CIA, the HSCA, <ent type = 'person'>Ruby</ent>, and mind control. (There are also
parts of a long series by Fletcher Prouty on the CIA, dealing with the
assassination in the May issue.) Each issue is $1.50 from 1301 N. Catalina
St., Los Angeles, CA 90027. Certainly many of the details are correct, and
maybe some of the big charges are, but I do not think these articles
consistently meet essential standards of exposition and logical argument.</p>
<p><special>The supporters and friends of <ent type = 'person'>Paulino Sierra</ent>:</special>
What follows is essentially the complete text of a letter I sent to the
Justice Department on May 13, 1986. Once again, an assassination lead brings
us back to the hidden history of the <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent> administration's war against
Cuba.
In connection with the Justice Department review of the report of the
House Select Committee on Assassinations, I would like to bring to your
attention one area in which the report was incomplete. I believe that the
published information may be unfair to one of the named individuals, Paulino
Sierra Martinez.
Mr. Sierra is mentioned on page 134 of the HSCA report, which states that
8 EOC 2 -8-</p>
<p>a certain "arms deal was being financed through one <ent type = 'person'>Paulino Sierra</ent> Martinez by
hoodlum elements in Chicago and elsewhere." A staff report on the organi-
zation he headed (JGCE, the Junta del Gobierno de Cuba en <ent type = 'person'>el Exilio</ent>) is
published in Vol. l0, pp. 95-103. This HSCA report appears to be based
entirely on a review of existing documents (mostly from FBI and CIA files).
The HSCA's information relating to Sierra is summarized in a book by HSCA
staff members Robert <ent type = 'person'>Blakey</ent> and <ent type = 'person'>Richard <ent type = 'person'>Billings</ent></ent>, "The Plot to Kill the
President." The Sierra material takes up a substantial part of the chapter
entitled "Cuban Exiles and the Motive of Revenge."
<ent type = 'person'>Blakey</ent> and <ent type = 'person'>Billings</ent> said that a "background check [on Sierra] stimulated
our interest in a Cuban exile - Mafia connection that just might have had a
bearing on the assassination."
Sierra reportedly said that he had backers who would provide a large sum
of money - $30 million - to finance an invasion of Cuba. "Sierra was saying
publicly that it [the money] was being donated by U.S. corporations whose
assets in Cuba had been expropriated.... According to several sources, the
real benefactors were members of the underworld, whose gambling interests in
Cuba had indeed been expropriated by <ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent>.... There were other indications
that organized-crime figures were behind the Sierra plan...." By June 1963,
the FBI in Chicago concluded that Sierra was "a con artist."
<ent type = 'person'>Blakey</ent> and <ent type = 'person'>Billings</ent> said that they "were able to document in detail
Sierra's activities and his apparent connection, or that of his backers, to
organized crime," but that "the relevance to the assassination remained
undetermined." (P. 174)
My colleague Peter Dale <ent type = 'person'>Scott</ent> and I studied the HSCA's Sierra material in
some detail when the report was published. At first, <ent type = 'person'>Scott</ent> (like <ent type = 'person'>Blakey</ent> and
<ent type = 'person'>Billings</ent>) was interested in the apparent connections between Sierra and
various people whose names had become familiar in the <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent> assassination
controversy. (For example, Antonio <ent type = 'person'>Veciana</ent>, <ent type = 'person'>Gerry Patrick Hemming</ent>, and Rich
Lauchli.) <ent type = 'person'>Scott</ent> found additional possibilities for links between Sierra's
associates and <ent type = 'person'><ent type = 'person'>Lee</ent> Harvey</ent> <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>.
<ent type = 'person'>Scott</ent> came to doubt <ent type = 'person'>Blakey</ent>'s belief that organized crime was the dominant
force behind Sierra's Junta. <ent type = 'person'>Scott</ent> interviewed a number of the principals,
including Sierra. (Sierra's employer, <ent type = 'person'>William Browder</ent>, essentially supported
Sierra's account of the formation of the JGCE.) Sierra was displeased that
the HSCA had depicted him in such a sinister light, and that he had not been
interviewed by the Committee or its staff.
Sierra specifically objected to the implication that he was working in
opposition to the policy of the Federal government. According to <ent type = 'person'>Blakey</ent> and
<ent type = 'person'>Billings</ent>, "Sierra told the exile leaders that he spoke for a group of American
businessmen in Chicago who wanted to join forces with them to overthrow
<ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent>, with or without the approval of the U.S. government." (P. 174)
<ent type = 'person'>Scott</ent> found a published reference to Sierra which indicates that he was
indeed coordinating some of his actions with the U.S. government at a high
level.
In his biography of Robert <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent>, <ent type = 'person'>Arthur <ent type = 'person'>Schlesinger</ent></ent> discussed an anti-
<ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent> operation in Central America involving Manuel Artime. "Hal Hendrix of
the <special>Miami News</special> supposed [this operation was] managed either by CIA or, 'on a
hip pocket basis,' by the Attorney General [Robert <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent>] himself." Luis
<ent type = 'person'>Somoza</ent>, "son of the thieving Nicaraguan dictator," tried to learn of the
attitude of the U.S. government toward that operation. <ent type = 'person'>Somoza</ent> "was soon
telling Carribean notables that he had received a 'green light' from Robert
<ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent>...."
<ent type = 'person'>Schlesinger</ent> noted that a State Department official said that <ent type = 'person'>Somoza</ent> had
not in fact gotten that approval, when <ent type = 'person'>Somoza</ent>'s claims were repeated to him in
a meeting in August 1963.
<ent type = 'person'>Scott</ent> was able to obtain a memorandum concerning that meeting under the
Freedom of Information Act.... (Memo by <ent type = 'person'>John</ent> H. <ent type = 'person'>Crimmins</ent>, Coordinator of
8 EOC 2 -9-</p>
<p>Cuban Affairs in the State Department, August 17, 1963)
The man who repeated <ent type = 'person'>Somoza</ent>'s claims was <ent type = 'person'>Paulino Sierra</ent>, who said that he
had been in touch with <ent type = 'person'>Somoza</ent>, who had offered him a site for a base. "Sierra
and <ent type = 'person'>Rivero</ent> said they had to know what truth there was in <ent type = 'person'>Somoza</ent>'s assertion
about U.S. support for him before deciding whether to accept his offer or to
go it alone." (<ent type = 'person'>Crimmins</ent> memo, p. 2)
Sierra and his associate, Felipe <ent type = 'person'>Rivero</ent>, described themselves as
"[d]evoted... to the United States and conscious of the need to do nothing
that would run counter to U.S. policy." (P. 4) Sierra "emphasized again the
desire of his supporters not to operate contrary to U.S. policy." (P. 6)
Prior to the meeting, the Attorney General's office informed <ent type = 'person'>Crimmins</ent>
that "the Attorney General had been talking to <ent type = 'person'>Enrique Ruiz <ent type = 'person'>Williams</ent></ent> and that,
as a result, Dr. Sierra would be calling [<ent type = 'person'>Crimmins</ent>] for an appointment."
<ent type = 'person'>Williams</ent>, also known as Harry <ent type = 'person'>Williams</ent>, is generally considered to have been
Robert <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent>'s principal liaison with the anti-<ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent> Cuban community.
In his phone call, Sierra apparently suggested that <ent type = 'person'>Williams</ent> was a "mutual
friend" of himself and <ent type = 'person'>Crimmins</ent>.
It is possible, of course, that this contact with the government was an
attempt by Sierra to provide a cover for his true motives. However, <ent type = 'person'>Scott</ent>
believes that the operations of the Junta may have been part of the policy of
"autonomous operations" against Cuba, which was formally approved in June
1963. While the <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent> administration was openly cracking down on the most
prominent anti-<ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent> groups operating in the U.S., it was also encouraging
deniable operations abroad.
According to the HSCA, State Department counsel <ent type = 'person'>Walt Rostow</ent> "proposed a
'track two' approach to Cuban operations to parallel regular CIA-controlled
Cuban teams." The U.S. "would provide general advice, funds and material
support," but "would publicly deny any participation in the groups[']
activities." "All operations had to be mounted outside the territory of the
United States." (10 HSCA 77)
In contrast, <ent type = 'person'>Blakey</ent> and <ent type = 'person'>Billings</ent> emphasized that when Sierra came on the
scene in Miami just a month earlier, in May 1963, "the exile movement was in
disarray: the United States had just stopped funding the Cuban Revolutionary
Council; U.S. law enforcement agencies were cracking down on guerrilla
activities; and factions within the exile community were politically
polarized...." (P. 171)
<ent type = 'person'>Blakey</ent> and <ent type = 'person'>Billings</ent> noted that Sierra was "virtually unknown (his only
mark of public prominence was that he had formed a Cuban lawyers association
in Chicago)...." (P. l7l) After talking with Sierra, <ent type = 'person'>Scott</ent> concluded (with
support from documents at the <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent> Library) that Robert <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent>'s office
was worried about the many Cuban exile professionals who were doing menial
work in the U.S., and directly encouraged the formation of such organizations.
That is, Sierra's previous public activity may be not an exception to his
relative obscurity but a clue to his key sources of support.
As <ent type = 'person'>Schlesinger</ent> noted, the record of the mid-1963 anti-<ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent> efforts
based in Central America "is unusually murky." Someone in the CIA got the
<ent type = 'person'>Crimmins</ent> memo, although its existence is not reflected in the CIA material
quoted by the HSCA. <ent type = 'person'>Blakey</ent> and <ent type = 'person'>Billings</ent> quoted a CIA memo dated two days
before the assassination of President <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent>, whose author reportedly found
it "curious that Sierra had for so long managed to hold a position in the
exile hierarchy: 'Perhaps his mysterious backers are providing him with
sufficient funds to keep the pot boiling....'" (Pp. 173-4)
To improve the historical record, I think that the Justice Department
should at least perform a more complete file review than reflected by the
published HSCA material.
In addition, any surviving principals should be allowed to respond to the
HSCA's charge that the JGCE may have been a tool of organized crime.</p>
<p>8 EOC 2 -10-</p>
<p> 69. Excerpts from <ent type = 'person'>Schlesinger</ent>, "Robert <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent> and his Times."
70. <ent type = 'person'>Crimmins</ent> memo, 17 Aug 63, 6 pp.
In an informal interview published in "<ent type = 'person'>Lobster</ent>" (#1985.99), Peter <ent type = 'person'>Scott</ent>
apparently gave <ent type = 'person'>Robin Ramsay</ent> his "three-hurricane theory" of the
assassination. That expression, from <ent type = 'person'>Mark Allen</ent>, derives from a powerful
alcoholic drink popular in New Orleans, after three of which any buff will
tell you what he <special>really</special> thinks happened in Dallas.
"I think that the <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent>s really had started a new type of Cuban exile
movement against <ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent>, the chief element of which was that there would be
money to go anywhere else they liked, in the Caribbean, to find their bases.
They would get money for training and they would get a green light, but it
meant the Cubans got out of the U.S.... And I think this operation was
penetrated from the very beginning. This may be the key to the assassination,
in fact. [Ramsay: Penetrated by whom?] First of all by the CIA because they
wanted to know what was going on, for a minimum. But this was another slap at
them: the <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent>s doing what they were supposed to do. And they, that is
the CIA, were being accused by <ent type = 'person'>Bobby</ent> <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent> of having dealt with organized
crime people. And I think the first thing the CIA did was to get Cubans into
the operation who quickly turned round and started dealing with organized
crime figures. This was the so-called Junta.... The CIA files on this
operation, the Junta, make it look more and more like an organized crime
operation from beginning to end. The House Committee, rather foolishly,
without interviewing anybody, put the contents of this file into Vol. 10 of
its report as if it were all fact. Now, what a perfectly invulnerable vantage
point to have shot <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent> from, if you used the assets of that operation to
kill him. That would explain <ent type = 'person'>Bobby</ent>'s sense of paralysis, because it was his
operation."
Based on what I know at the moment (i.e., not counting all the material
from <ent type = 'person'>Scott</ent> which I have forgotten), the possibility of relevance to <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> or
the assassination is intriguing, but it seems so tentative, indirect, and
speculative that I don't want to offer a further opinion at the moment.
In any event, the Sierra story says something interesting about the HSCA
investigation. Putting it as generously as possible, it suggests that
<ent type = 'person'>Blakey</ent>'s expertise in finding organized crime links had the effect of a filter
in a case where obscure links also pointed in other directions. This problem
differed from those the HSCA faced with <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> and <ent type = 'person'>Ruby</ent>, where most of the
alternative interpretations were well known in advance. I am not saying that
the organized-crime angle was definitely absent, but the actual situation
regarding Sierra was both more complicated and more interesting than the
<ent type = 'person'>Blakey</ent> &amp; <ent type = 'person'>Billings</ent> version indicates.
Peter <ent type = 'person'>Scott</ent>'s half of the unpublished 1980 book "Beyond Conspiracy" dealt
in part with the milieu of the Chicago Junta, and related matters. Although
the manuscript was set aside after Pocket Books decided not to publish it, we
have not forgotten about it and still hope to get the information out in due
course.</p>
<p><special>Credits:</special>
This issue of EOC is dedicated to the memory of my mother, Dr. Cornelia
<ent type = 'person'>Hoch</ent>-Ligeti, who died in May at age 79, after a long career in medical
research. (WP, 31 May, p. B6)
Thanks to T. Cwiek (#49), T. <ent type = 'person'>Gandolfo</ent> (63), G. Hollingsworth (30),
H. <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> (37-42, 44, 49-50, 53-60), F. Krstulja (19, 22), P. Lambert (19),
M. <ent type = 'person'>Lee</ent> (14), H. Livingstone (51-2), B. <ent type = 'person'>McKenna</ent> (51-2), G. <ent type = 'person'>Mack</ent> (15, 35-6),
J. Marshall (18, 20), P. <ent type = 'person'>Melanson</ent> (27, 29), J. Mierzejewski (26, 61), H. Nash
(16), R. Ranftel (33, 41, 65), M. Reynolds (41), J. <ent type = 'person'>Rose</ent> (34), M. Royden (62),
P. <ent type = 'person'>Scott</ent> (69-70), G. <ent type = 'person'>Stone</ent> (17-8, 21, 28), E. Tatro (31-2), and D. Wrone (46).
And thanks to L. Iacocca and Cheerios for the address labels.</p>
<p>*From Illumi-Net BBS - (404) 377-1141* [ <ent type = 'person'>Don</ent>'s note: I doubt this BBS is
still up ]</p>
<p>---END-----------------------------------------------------------------------</p>
<p>--
-* <ent type = 'person'>Don</ent> Allen *- InterNet: dona@bilver.UUCP // Amiga..for the best of us.
USnail: 1818G Landing Dr, <ent type = 'person'>Sanford Fl</ent> 32771 \X/ Why use anything else? :-)
UUCP: ..uunet!tarpit!bilver!dona - Why did the JUSTICE DEPT steal PROMIS?
/\/\ What is research but a blind date with knowledge. <ent type = 'person'>William Henry</ent> /\/\</p>
<p>From: dona@bilver.uucp (<ent type = 'person'>Don</ent> Allen)
Newsgroups: alt.conspiracy
Subject: <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent> Text: Echoes of Conspiracy - EOC3.TXT
<info type="Message-ID"> 1991Dec26.195034.19962@bilver.uucp</info>
Date: 26 Dec 91 19:50:34 GMT
Organization: W. J. Vermillion - Winter Park, FL
Lines: 613</p>
<p>*EOC3.TXT*</p>
<p>---BEGIN PART 3/4-------------------------------------------------------------</p>
<p>ECHOES OF CONSPIRACY October 31, 1986
Vol. 8, #3 <ent type = 'person'>Paul L</ent>. <ent type = 'person'>Hoch</ent></p>
<p><special>The acoustical evidence:</special>
One reason for questioning the authenticity of the DPD Dictabelt is the
presence of certain messages relating to Officer <ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent>. Basically, the
following exchanges are suspect because of their content, the formal tone of
transmissions 590 and 592, and the apparent absence of the expected reaction.
(See 3 EOC 7.2. The message numbers and the transcriptions are from the
<ent type = 'person'>Kimbrough</ent> transcript.)
389. [Disp.] 87, 78, move into central Oak Cliff Area.
390. [78 (<ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent>)] 78, I'm about <ent type = 'person'>Kiest</ent> and <ent type = 'person'>Bonnie</ent> View.
391. [87 (<ent type = 'person'>Nelson</ent>)] 87's going north on Marsalis on R. L. Thornton.
392. [Disp.] 10-4....
588-589 [Disp.] 78. [78] 78.
590. [Disp.] You are in the Oak Cliff area, are you not?
591. [78] <ent type = 'person'>Lancaster</ent> and Eighth.
592. [Disp.] You will be at large for any emergency that comes in.
583. [78] 10-4.
I sent my analysis to Prof. <ent type = 'person'>Murray <ent type = 'person'>Miron</ent></ent>, a psycholinguist whose work on
another case was described in 8 EOC 1.2. The following is from a letter I
sent to the Justice Department on September 16, 1986, describing his
independent analysis, which provided some support for my own work:
"Prof. <ent type = 'person'>Miron</ent>... has not yet prepared a formal report, but he has provided
me with the following conclusions: 'Our preliminary findings... suggest that
the communications directed to Officer <ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent> are anomalously at variance with
the other transmissions of the tape record.... The transmissions to <ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent>
are quite stilted. They have the appearance of transmissions made more for an
audience's benefit than those for which the intent is to convey instructions.
The query regarding <ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent>'s current position is rhetorical rather than
questioning.'"
"Prof. <ent type = 'person'>Miron</ent> emphasized to me that his analysis does not preclude a quite
innocent explanation for the anomaly. The messages could have been added to
the recording after the fact, or they might have been made in 'real time' but
sound anomalous because the persons involved knew that something unusual was
going on."
"For example, if <ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent> was taking time to attend to personal business
(as suggested by Mr. <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>'s book), a dispatcher might have covered for him by
assigning him to the Oak Cliff area, with his voice betraying his knowledge
that the assignment was not routine but somehow designed to keep <ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent> out of
trouble. (This is clearly speculation, of course.)"
"Even alteration of the recording after <ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent>'s death could have been
motivated by nothing worse than a desire to protect his reputation."
"On the other hand, the rebuttal of the HSCA's acoustical analysis by the
Ramsey Panel rested in part on the belief that the police would not tamper
with important evidence."
The rest of this letter [#71; 4 pp., including my 1981 letter to <ent type = 'person'>Barger</ent>
on these messages] mostly repeats information from EOC (e.g., 7 EOC 2.2), with
one other new point:
"Mr. <ent type = 'person'>Todd <ent type = 'person'>Vaughan</ent></ent> sent me a copy of a letter from the National Archives
to him, dated March 2, 1982. [#1986.72] In response to an inquiry about the
disposition of the Dallas Police Dictabelts, Mr. <ent type = 'person'>George Perros</ent> told <ent type = 'person'>Vaughan</ent>
that the Justice Department, since receiving that evidence from the HSCA, has
'returned it to the Dallas Police Department, according to an official of the
Justice Department.' I hope that you did keep copies; in any event I think
you really should get the originals back."
Unfortunately, it is very unlikely that anyone will do anything with
this; my letters to Justice are not even routinely acknowledged these days.
As far as I know, the JD has neither finished nor abandoned its long-overdue
review of the HSCA report.
8 EOC 3 -2-</p>
<p><special>London Weekend Television program:</special>
73. 31 Jul 86 (NY Post) "23 year[s] later, <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> goes on trial"
Twenty-five witnesses recently appeared before TV cameras (and a judge and
jury from Dallas) in London. They included medical, forensic, and ballistics
experts, and some eyewitnesses; several were not called by the <ent type = 'person'>Warren</ent>
Commission. The verdict is being kept secret. Edited highlights will be
shown on two nights, around November 22.
<ent type = 'person'>Harry Chandler</ent>, director of program development at Showtime, said that
some of the witnesses "had a real tough time on the stand. It was
fascinating. There were matters brought up which were not considered by the
<ent type = 'person'>Warren</ent> Commission, matters relating to the body of the President and his
wounds. The jury saw a version of the Zapruder film... which was enhanced...
and there was information in the stills I was unaware of."
"<ent type = 'person'>Said</ent> prosecutor [<ent type = 'person'>Vincent]</ent> <ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent>: 'In the future, this is the
document that researchers into the assassination will want to get their hands
on.' Defense attorney [<ent type = 'person'>Gerry] <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent></ent>: 'It doesn't matter who won the case.
The American people are the winners here.'" <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> is good at dramatically
presenting the innocence and virtue of his clients - probably not the best way
to get at the historical truth about <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>, but we'll see.
I hope that LWT will be able to make available any information which was
too complicated for TV but of potential value to researchers. Letters to
Showtime can't hurt.
74. 16 Jul 86 (AP) General comments by a LWT spokesman. The program
"would be 'a documentary exercise, not a dramatized reconstruction.'" It
"would be modeled on the company's recent mock trial of... King Richard III."
75. 16 Jul 86 (AP) Comments by U.S. District Judge <ent type = 'person'>Lucius Bunton</ent> (a
cousin of <ent type = 'person'>LBJ</ent>), who was to play the judge (trying the case under present
federal law, not 1963 Texas law).</p>
<p><special>Also on TV:</special>
I missed "Yuri <ent type = 'person'>Nosenko</ent>, KGB" on HBO in September. Would someone like to
give us more information than these clippings?
76. 31 Aug 86 (NYT) The story is told "from the perspective of the CIA
agent [in the Soviet Bloc Division, under <ent type = 'person'>Angleton</ent>] who virtually scuttled his
own career by insisting that Mr. <ent type = 'person'>Nosenko</ent> was a Soviet double-agent sent to
spread disinformation." British playwright <ent type = 'person'>Stephen <ent type = 'person'>Davis</ent></ent> said he "spent six
months trailing around after people from the intelligence community who were
centrally involved."
77. 5 Sep (LAT) A very favorable review. <ent type = 'person'>Davis</ent>' best guess: <ent type = 'person'>Nosenko</ent>
was a disinformation agent whose "job was to be dangled in front of the CIA in
Europe, but... he was not supposed to defect.... The central mystery is why
the CIA went to such extraordinary lengths to rehabilitate <ent type = 'person'>Nosenko</ent>, as if he
had been trustworthy. I think the case is unresolvable."
78. 5 Sep (UPI) The 90-minute program is "fascinating... history."
79. Sep 86 (Cable Guide) [2 pp.] "<ent type = 'person'>Davis</ent> spent a year researching the
script with the help of Edward Jay <ent type = 'person'>Epstein</ent>." The Russian emigre actor who
played <ent type = 'person'>Nosenko</ent> thinks he was a real defector. <ent type = 'person'>Davis</ent> concluded that "every way
you turn it around you find it's like a Rubik's Cube that won't ever quite
work out." Not a bad analogy for the whole <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent> case.</p>
<p><special><ent type = 'person'>Worthy</ent> organizations:</special>
If you did not get a letter from AARC in mid-August, please ask me for a
copy. (#80, 2 pp., no charge) This includes a "special plea for permanent
members" from <ent type = 'person'>Bud Fensterwald</ent>. The primary goal is not to get the membership
fees, but to demonstrate a substantial degree of public support when
approaching private foundations - the few which are willing to become involved
with such a controversial topic. Institutional memberships would be
particularly appreciated.
8 EOC 3 -3-</p>
<p> Item #80 also includes a progress report, dated August 1. Among other
things, Jeff Meek's massive index of (mostly) published <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent> material has been
computerized. I am now on the Board of Advisors, not the Board of Directors.
"The Third Decade" (see 6 EOC 4.4) needs (and deserves) more subscribers.
I have a descriptive form letter from FAIR, "Fairness &amp; Accuracy in
Reporting." [#81, Sep 86, 2 pp.] The director of this new progressive
counterpart to AIM is <ent type = 'person'>Jeff Cohen</ent>; fellow AIB veterans <ent type = 'person'>Marty <ent type = 'person'>Lee</ent></ent> and <ent type = 'person'>Bob Katz</ent>
are also involved. FAIR has been involved "in the effort to expose and
counteract ABC's pending 12-hour miniseries, 'Amerika.'"</p>
<p><special>The saga of <ent type = 'person'>Earl</ent> and <ent type = 'person'>Edgar</ent>:</special>
A story on the <ent type = 'person'>Warren</ent> Commission got a lot of newspaper play on the day
after Thanksgiving last year - remarkable, even though that was, as usual, a
slow news day. As noted in the NYT's news summary (#82, 29 Nov 85), the <ent type = 'person'>WCR</ent>
"apparently ended a long political alliance between [<ent type = 'person'>Warren</ent> and <ent type = 'person'>Hoover</ent>],
according to Government documents just released. The commission criticized
the FBI for what it called its 'unduly restrictive view of its role in
preventive intelligence.' Mr. <ent type = 'person'>Hoover</ent> said the criticism was unjust."
The story itself appeared on page 32, with a Durham (NC) dateline, as a
"special to the NYT" with no authorship indicated. (#83, with photos) The
article seems rather unfocused. (It does not even specify what 1300-page file
had been released under FOIA; it was the FBI's file on <ent type = 'person'>Warren</ent>.)
Among other things, the dispute got <ent type = 'person'>Warren</ent> dropped from <ent type = 'person'>Hoover</ent>'s list of
favored correspondents, although he had been there on a first-name basis.
The NYT story derived from an article in the Durham Morning Herald by
Durham lawyer <ent type = 'person'>Alexander Charnes</ent> (aided by a grant from the Fund for
Investigative Journalism). [#84, 24 Nov 85, 3 pp.] Experts quoted include
<ent type = 'person'>Harold <ent type = 'person'>Weisberg</ent></ent>, who "believes that <ent type = 'person'>Warren</ent> knew that the FBI was withholding"
but "felt that it was his 'national duty to preserve tranquility,'... and
therefore... did not press the FBI." (Charnes noted that some of his
information came from previously released documents which <ent type = 'person'>Weisberg</ent> had.)
<ent type = 'person'>Warren</ent> biographer <ent type = 'person'>Edward <ent type = 'person'>White</ent></ent> said that "the chief justice really believed,
given what they were investigating, that the FBI and CIA would cooperate with
the commission."
The rift is not news to us; it was mentioned in some of the press
coverage of the 1977 FBI release. Charnes' account emphasizes how closely
<ent type = 'person'>Hoover</ent> cooperated with <ent type = 'person'>Warren</ent> in previous years.
The topic of the FBI-WC interaction (expecially on the question of what
the FBI knew about <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>) has long been a special interest of mine. It was
the subject of a draft manuscript which I put together in 1972, in those pre-
Watergate days when I thought what we had to do was persuade some people, with
detailed arguments based on WC documents, that just maybe the <ent type = 'person'>Warren</ent>
Commission (without being part of a conspiracy) had blown it. That manuscript
is quite out of date, of course. Now I often find myself trying to convince
people that the original investigation was not simply a complete and
deliberate coverup. The released FBI documents tend to support my original
analysis - although the FBI's hostility was far worse than I could infer from
the WC files. The manuscript did serve some purposes; among other things, I
think it led the HSCA to uncover much of the story of the deletion of the
Hosty entry from the FBI listing of <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>'s notebook. (HSCAR 186) If you
did not see that 1972 manuscript long ago, please let me know if you are
interested. (98 pages, each two reduced pages of double-spaced clean
typescript; index included; cost (including postage): $6 or less, depending
on the number of requests received by January 1, 1987.)</p>
<p><special>A break from clippings (for the rest of this issue, at least):</special>
Current clippings are generally less interesting than, e.g., old
8 EOC 3 -4-</p>
<p>clippings and the HSCA volumes. What are people interested in reading about
in EOC, or getting copies of? (My <ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent> analysis [#1986.68] generated just
one request for a copy.) What about new FBI and CIA documents, or my old
files of WC documents?
I would particularly like to hear from the people who have been helpful
by sending me clippings, especially if you feel I have incurred an obligation
to list them in EOC, or to otherwise preserve or disseminate them.
I just drifted into doing a newsletter; should I drift back to reading
documents, or to some other projects? Do we collectively have the computer
power, the time, and the interest to divide up work on indexes, lists of
clippings and documents, and chronologies? I would appreciate help with these
difficult questions. In the meantime, some documents, more or less from the
top of the pile on my desk.</p>
<p><special>From the <ent type = 'person'>Warren</ent> papers:</special>
As noted in 7 EOC 3.10, some of <ent type = 'person'>Warren</ent>'s files at the Library of Congress
have been released.
In March 1974, <ent type = 'person'>Alfred <ent type = 'person'>Goldberg</ent></ent> (the WC's staff historian) interviewed
<ent type = 'person'>Warren</ent> about the Commission's work. The transcript [11 pp.] is #85;
correspondence about it is #86 [2 pp.] <ent type = 'person'>Warren</ent> took <ent type = 'person'>Goldberg</ent> up on his offer
to make changes; according to his secretary's letter, he "expressed
reservations to me about the wisdom of including the material concerning the
personal and political views of certain members of the Commission.... He has
never made any comment about the difficulties he may have encountered with the
other members, and after reading what he had told you he felt it would be
better if those portions were not included."
Of course, the passages marked for deletion are the most interesting.
"The Department of Justice sent a young man over to the Commission to act as
liaison with them. He was very critical of me from the time he came over to
us. <ent type = 'person'><ent type = 'person'>Lee</ent> <ent type = 'person'>Rankin</ent></ent> as Chief Counsel was in a very delicate position." This
reference is probably to <ent type = 'person'>Howard Willens</ent> (age 32), who was listed as liaison
with the Justice Department, and who can be rather difficult, I am told.
<ent type = 'person'>Warren</ent> may also have been thinking of <ent type = 'person'>Charles Shaffer</ent> (age 31), who (according
to <ent type = 'person'>John</ent> <ent type = 'person'>Davis</ent>' book) was detailed to the WC by RFK to keep an eye on <ent type = 'person'>Hoffa</ent>-
related leads.
There are other deletable tidbits on personnel matters, and other fairly
interesting comments. For example, Sam Stern's report on the SS and FBI was
not thought to be "objective or logical" (his work was actually quite good);
the story of <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> in Alice, Texas, held up the Report (news to me, if true);
there were "no special problems from <ent type = 'person'>Hoover</ent> and the FBI"; and the testimony of
the autopsy doctors was the "best evidence" on the wounds.
<ent type = 'person'>Warren</ent>'s files include a nonsubstantive response to Wesley Liebeler's
memo of November 1966, in which he recorded <ent type = 'person'>David Lifton</ent>'s observation of the
"surgery of the head" remark in the <ent type = 'person'>Sibert</ent>-O'<ent type = 'person'>Neill</ent> report. (See "Best
Evidence," Ch. 10.) In a short note to <ent type = 'person'>Rankin</ent>, dated 12 Dec 66, <ent type = 'person'>Warren</ent> said
that what <ent type = 'person'>Rankin</ent> told "<ent type = 'person'>Liebler</ent>" in his letter of 1 Dec "was correct and in the
right tone. I believe that many people who were somewhat enamored by <ent type = 'person'>Lane</ent> and
<ent type = 'person'>Epstein</ent> are finally becoming disillusioned." (#87)
Speaking of the <ent type = 'person'>Warren</ent> Commission staff, "Professional men who wear bow
ties to the office are distrusted by almost everyone, says image consultant
<ent type = 'person'>John</ent> Molloy. Attorneys traditionally avoid putting a bow tie wearer on a jury
because they believe the wearer is not likely to be moved by sound argument."
(#88, UPI, 28 Dec 85)
Also from the <ent type = 'person'>Warren</ent> papers: a letter from the publisher of "Six Seconds
in Dallas" to <ent type = 'person'>John</ent> <ent type = 'person'>McCloy</ent>, urging him to do the right thing [#89, 5 pp.];
<ent type = 'person'>McCloy</ent>'s draft response, saying that he was not impressed [#90, 16 Jul 69,
3 pp.], and an exchange of letters between <ent type = 'person'>McCloy</ent> and <ent type = 'person'>Warren</ent> [#91, 3 pp.], in
which <ent type = 'person'>Warren</ent> agreed with <ent type = 'person'>McCloy</ent> but suggested that he not send the letter.
8 EOC 3 -5-</p>
<p><special>CIA interest in identifying the Mexico Mystery Man:</special>
Last November, the CIA released eleven documents to <ent type = 'person'>Bud Fensterwald</ent> in
connection with his FOIA request for records relating to efforts to identify
the Mexico Mystery Man (MMM), the man whose description (taken from Embassy
surveillance photos) was attached to <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> in October 1963.
The new documents are among 54 which "relate to a theory explored in 1977
that a particular foreign national might be the 'unidentified man.' That
individual had been a target of CIA intelligence interest for many years for
reasons unconnected with the <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent> assassination." (From #92, CIA to
Fensterwald, 29 Nov 85, 2 pp.)
The substance of this material interests me less than the fact of the
CIA's interest. The suspect's nationality is withheld, but I would guess he
is Russian or Cuban. I see no reason to assume that he was thought to be a
KGB or DGI covert operative, rather than (say) someone involved in "innocent"
diplomatic or technical activities of interest to the CIA.
The basic CIA analysis is a "memorandum for the record," dated April
1977. (#93, 12 pp., with much deleted) Oddly, the author seems to take
seriously the "<ent type = 'person'>Saul</ent>" story in Hugh Mc<ent type = 'person'>Don</ent>ald's book, "Appointment in Dallas."
(Although I found little credible in that book, Mc<ent type = 'person'>Don</ent>ald and his purported
friend, <ent type = 'person'>Herman Kimsey</ent>, were interesting people.) Over half of this memo
tallies "striking parallels between the backgrounds of '<ent type = 'person'>Saul</ent>' as given in
Mc<ent type = 'person'>Don</ent>ald's book and [deletion]." (Only the published half of these parallels
is not deleted.) After noting that "Mc<ent type = 'person'>Don</ent>ald said he believes '<ent type = 'person'>Saul</ent>' was
telling true story," the CIA author wrote "I do too."
This memo seems to have been prompted by the fact that "On 17 March 1977,
[deletion] recognized photographs of the unidentified man as [deletion]."
(#94 records a request of March 11 to show an MMM photo to an unnamed
subject.) Mc<ent type = 'person'>Don</ent>ald's Indenti-Kit composite of <ent type = 'person'>Saul</ent> is said to "bear a
striking resemblance to the photos of [deletion]." (Speaking of striking
resemblances, anyone who is not convinced that they sometimes occur by
coincidence, not conspiracy, should have a copy of my #95, including a photo
of <ent type = 'person'>Zbigniew Brzezinski</ent> looking rather like the MMM. I will not entertain
conspiracy theories involving Brzezinski.)
Items #96 (25 &amp; 29 May 77, 3 pp. in all) relate to a photographic
comparison which concluded that, within the limitations of poor photo quality,
the two subjects "could very likely be the same person."
Another memo, also dated only April 1977, seems to be a summary of the
theory. (#97, 3 pp.) Practically everything of substance is deleted.
This information may have been made available to the HSCA. <ent type = 'person'>Scott</ent>
Breckinridge was instructed to review this material and make it available to
<ent type = 'person'>Blakey</ent> and <ent type = 'person'>Gary Cornwell</ent> "if appropriate." (13 Jul 78, #98) The author of
this memo tried to maintain some distance from the theory. "Although the
material contained in the attached folder is entirely theoretical and does not
constitute an official file or position of this Division or Agency, it may be
of interest to... the HSCA." If made available, it would be "with the
understanding that it is a theoretical unofficial research undertaking." The
folder contains "informal and preliminary research based on a <special>theory</special> that
[deletion] might be identifiable with" the MMM.
What do we know about the CIA researcher who pursued this hypothesis?
Only that she "undertook to research the theory that [deletion] might be the
unidentified man as a result of the indepth study she conducted as the
[deletion] of this Division's efforts to determine if there could have been
Cuban complicity in the <ent type = 'person'>John</ent> F. <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent> assassination." (From #98)
What an interesting effort for the CIA to undertake during the HSCA
probe. I assume it was not done to absolve <ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent>. Why was it done, at least
in part, "unofficially," and by someone who took the <ent type = 'person'>Saul</ent> story seriously?
What else did she and her colleagues believe? Can anyone tell us more about
this in-depth CIA study? I guess it was related to the Task Force Report
8 EOC 3 -6-</p>
<p>prepared in response to the Schweiker Report. (HSCAR 108, 10 HSCA 156)
The memos, as released, do not say much about possible Cuban involvement.
The second April 1977 memo asks three questions, including "Could [deletion]
be '<ent type = 'person'>Saul</ent>'?" and "Could [deletion], therefore, be mystery man who boarded plane
in Mexico City for Havana on 22 November 1963?" (Cf. HSCAR 117) (The third
question is deleted.)
Related released documents: #99, 4 pp. The CIA list of 40 documents on
this subject (dated 12/62 through 7/78, mostly withheld) is #100, 3 pp.</p>
<p><special>Nazis and other anti-Communists:</special>
Former Justice Department official <ent type = 'person'>John</ent> <ent type = 'person'>Loftus</ent> made some noteworthy
comments in his House testimony on a GAO report on Nazi war criminals in the
U.S. (For more on <ent type = 'person'>Loftus</ent>, see 6 EOC 4.10.) In a list of 29 areas which he
could talk about only in executive session, he included "17. Nazi connection
with covert assassination programs" and "19. <ent type = 'person'>Warren</ent> Commission files
involving Nazi recruitment programs."
Does anyone know what this might be about? <ent type = 'person'>Larry Haapanen</ent> suggested that
CD's 597, 8l7, 1096, and 1544 might be related. CD 1096 (6 pp.) appears to be
a routine review of a French book entitled "Fascists and Nazis Today," which
speculated that right-wing Hungarian refugees were under close FBI
surveillance; this book came to the Commission's attention because it was
mentioned in the NYT. CD 597, described as a BND [West German Intelligence]
file, came to the WC from the FBI. According to CE 3107 (to which CD 1544
relates), CD 597 is a routine-sounding unsupported allegation of a pre-
assassination reference to <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>. CD 597 could be the material forwarded by
the WC to the CIA, whose reply, CD 817 (CIA #660-833), was described (in the
uncensored CD list) as relating to allegations concerning <ent type = 'person'>Anton Erdinger</ent>. The
CIA indicated that the subject matter was so peripheral to the WC's work as to
call for no further investigation.
<ent type = 'person'>Loftus</ent>' testimony is #1986.101 [17 Oct 85, House Judiciary Committee
Serial 39, 8 pp.] Among other interesting points, he noted that several of
the most famous KGB moles in England were involved with Nazi immigration into
the U.S., and he said that "the Nazi groups which we imported from the British
[were] riddled with communist double agents." (P. 90)
<ent type = 'person'>Loftus</ent> also alleged that "in 1944, the Eastern European fascist leaders
began to defect back to the British and were reorganized into a new front
group called ABN (the Anti-Bolshevic Bloc of Nations)." (P. 89)
In 1959, the secretary-general of the American Friends of the ABN was
Spas T. Raikin. He is now a history professor at East Stroudsburg University,
in Pennsylvania; his letter on the history of the oppression of his fellow
Bulgarians recently appeared in the NYT. (#102, 10 May 86)
As a volunteer for Traveler's Aid, Raikin talked with the <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>s on
their return from the USSR. (Peter <ent type = 'person'>Scott</ent> discovered Raikin's interesting past
connection to ABN; see "The Assassinations," p. 366, or "The Dallas
Conspiracy, p. II-23.) I know of no actual evidence that his contact with
<ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> was other than routine.
Raikin apparently was the conduit for a claim by <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> that he went to
Russia with the State Department's approval, either to work as a radar
specialist or to serve with the Marine Corps at the Embassy. (CD 1230, p. 3;
26 <ent type = 'person'>WCH</ent> 12; <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>'s claim is erroneously reported as a fact known to HEW in CD
75, p. 461, and <ent type = 'person'>Summers</ent>, p. 217.)
Most probably <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> himself was trying to mislead people about his stay
in Russia. I wonder, however, if Raikin might have had an interest in
portraying <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> as an agent of the State Department, rather than (say) as a
loner, or as an agent of another intelligence agency? (Just speculating.)
.CP 6
8 EOC 3 -7-</p>
<p><special>Book news:</special>
<ent type = 'person'>Kitty <ent type = 'person'>Kelley</ent></ent>'s new book on <ent type = 'person'><ent type = 'person'>Frank</ent> <ent type = 'person'>Sinatra</ent></ent> ("His Way," Bantam, $21.95) is
rather political, with quite a bit on the <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent>-Exner-Giancana-<ent type = 'person'>Sinatra</ent>
nexus. I think there is some new information, much of it apparently based on
allegations by <ent type = 'person'>Peter <ent type = 'person'>Lawford</ent></ent> (who would not talk about <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent>'s "broads").
For example, <ent type = 'person'>Lawford</ent> "formally approached his brother-in-law by making an
appointment to see the attorney general in his office at the Justice
Department. There <ent type = 'person'>Lawford</ent> begged <ent type = 'person'>Bobby</ent> to listen to <ent type = 'person'>Sinatra</ent>'s pleas for
Giancana. Robert <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent> intended to make <ent type = 'person'>Frank</ent>'s mobster friend the Justice
Department's top priority in Chicago and curtly told <ent type = 'person'>Lawford</ent> to mind his own
business." (P. 293)
Notre Dame professor "Paul <ent type = 'person'>Blakey</ent>" (then a JD lawyer) told <ent type = 'person'>Kelley</ent> about
an opposing attorney who indicated an acquaintance with the then-Attorney
General, RFK; <ent type = 'person'>Blakey</ent> was told that, from electronic surveillance, it was known
that the attorney "had <ent type = 'person'>Sinatra</ent>'s money in West Virginia and that it was mob
money." (P. 530(n))
"FBI records indicate that when in 1961 Carlos <ent type = 'person'>Marcello</ent>... had become one
of <ent type = 'person'>Bobby</ent> <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent>'s targets for deportation, the New Orleans don contacted
Santo Trafficante... who in turn called <ent type = 'person'>Frank</ent> to use his influence with 'the
President's father' on <ent type = 'person'>Marcello</ent>'s behalf." (P. 295) This story has appeared
(with little emphasis) in the <ent type = 'person'>Blakey</ent>-<ent type = 'person'>Billings</ent> book (which does not specify
that a contact with <ent type = 'person'>Sinatra</ent> was made; p. 242) and at 9 HSCA 70 (which does not
specifically refer to <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent>'s father).
Years after the <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent> assassination, "when [<ent type = 'person'>Sinatra</ent>] learned that <ent type = 'person'>Lee</ent>
Harvey <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> had watched <special>Suddenly</special> a few days [sic] before shooting the
President, he withdrew the 1954 movie in which he played a deranged assassin
paid to kill the president. He also forbid the re-release of <special>The Manchurian
Candidate</special>." (P. 328; cf. 1 3D 6.13, noted at 7 EOC 3.9)
In a column prompted by the book, W. Safire called <ent type = 'person'>Reagan</ent>'s award of the
Medal of Freedom to <ent type = 'person'>Sinatra</ent> "obscene." [30 Sep, #103] In 1975, Safire had
strong words about the <ent type = 'person'>Sinatra</ent>-Exner-Giancana story (<ent type = 'person'>Davis</ent>, pp. 740-1); I
don't know if the Church Committee took up his challenge to question <ent type = 'person'>Sinatra</ent>.
There is a provocative sentence in <ent type = 'person'>Dan</ent> <ent type = 'person'>Moldea</ent>'s new book on <ent type = 'person'>Reagan</ent>, MCA,
and the Mafia, "Dark Victory." In a discussion of <ent type = 'person'>Joseph Hauser</ent>, "a convicted
insurance swindler who... allowed himself to be used as the hub of several FBI
sting operations... that yielded a pending indictment against [Trafficante]
and the bribery conviction of Carlos <ent type = 'person'>Marcello</ent>...," <ent type = 'person'>Moldea</ent> asserts that "Hauser
had also received thinly veiled admissions on tape from <ent type = 'person'>Marcello</ent> during...
BRILAB... that he had been directly involved in the assassination of <ent type = 'person'>John</ent>
<ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent> twenty years earlier." This unfootnoted claim is contrary to what I
recall from earlier reports, which were along the lines of <ent type = 'person'>Blakey</ent>'s assertion
that even though <ent type = 'person'>Marcello</ent> admitted his Mafia membership, he "pointedly refused
to discuss" the assassination. (<ent type = 'person'>Blakey</ent> &amp; <ent type = 'person'>Billings</ent>, p. 242)
Can anyone clarify this issue for us? One reason for my skepticism is
apparent overstatement in some other references to the <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent> case. <ent type = 'person'>Moldea</ent> says
that <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> "had close ties with the Carlos <ent type = 'person'>Marcello</ent> Mafia family in New
Orleans, particularly with <ent type = 'person'>Charles <ent type = 'person'>Murret</ent></ent>, a top man in <ent type = 'person'>Marcello</ent>'s Louisiana
gambling network. <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> had also been seen by numerous witnesses meeting
with <ent type = 'person'>Marcello</ent>'s personal pilot just days before he murdered the president."
While <ent type = 'person'>Murret</ent>'s importance to <ent type = 'person'>Marcello</ent> and his closeness to <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> are
debatable, the claim in the subsequent sentence is news to me. Also news to
me in part, and disputable in part: that "many of those on the panel [i.e.,
the <ent type = 'person'>Warren</ent> Commission] had been directly involved with the CIA in the CIA-
Mafia plots to murder <ent type = 'person'><ent type = 'person'>Fidel</ent> <ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent></ent> - which the <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent> brothers had no
knowledge of until May 1962, at which time they ordered them stopped." Who on
the WC besides Dulles? (See <ent type = 'person'>Moldea</ent>, pp. 234-5, 338-9; #104 [2 pp.])
I have also read "Alias <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>," by W. R. Morris and R. B. <ent type = 'person'>Cutler</ent>, and
"<ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent>: The Mystery Unraveled," from the Liberty Lobby's "Spotlight."
8 EOC 3 -8-</p>
<p>(#105: ad from "Spotlight" for the book [107 pages for $6.95]; see #1985.102
for one chapter.) I would prefer not to have to say more about these books,
so I won't, at least in this issue.
I have some relatively routine reviews of the <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent> book, and a few of the
<ent type = 'person'>Davis</ent> book (which is now out in England, and will appear next March in a
German edition with new material on <ent type = 'person'>Marcello</ent>). The first part of "Best
Evidence" has been out in Japan for some time now, and you can have a sample
page to impress your friends. (#106, with drawings of the head wound)
If you are interested in the problems facing authors of serious
nonfiction, I recommend "Publishers wary of lawsuits: Libel Lawyers Wield
Blue Pencils on Books." (#107, LAT, 26 Jun 86, 3 pp.)</p>
<p><special>KAL 007:</special>
Three months after the KAL disaster, while the press was noting the
twentieth anniversary of the <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent> assassination, the government was seemingly
commemorating it with a major coverup, arguably the biggest in twenty years.
On the occasion of the publication of Seymour <ent type = 'person'>Hersh</ent>'s new book, "The
Target is Destroyed," Time magazine drew a different parallel: "Like the
<ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent> assassination, the KAL incident has created a cottage industry of
conspiracy theorists.... <ent type = 'person'>Hersh</ent>'s explanations [excerpted] in the <special>Atlantic</special>
seem far more convincing. They involve no conspiracies or even any evil
intent on either side. Yet that is hardly reassuring. It is in some ways
more frightening to be reminded just how fragile sophisticated military
systems are and how frail their human operators can be." (#108, 1 Sep)
A valid enough conclusion, but I think it is a misreading of <ent type = 'person'>Hersh</ent>'s book, and
even more so of his evidence, to call his account nonconspiratorial.
# 109 is a favorable review and good summary by J. Nance. (28 Sep, SFC)
<ent type = 'person'>Hersh</ent>'s main point is "the mishandling of intercepted electronic intelligence
by the <ent type = 'person'>Reagan</ent> administration.... He paints a fascinating picture of how an
outraged government seized on the worst possible interpretation of the
earliest intelligence reports and jumped to the conclusion (without adequate
evidence) that the Russians had indeed indentified the target as a civilian
airliner," although Air Force Intelligence knew promptly that they had not.
There are indeed parallels to the <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent> controversy. <ent type = 'person'>Hersh</ent>' appearance on
TV in SF was very deja vu, reminiscent of the <ent type = 'person'>Lane</ent> - <ent type = 'person'>Belli</ent> encounters of 1964.
<ent type = 'person'>Hersh</ent> was cast into the <ent type = 'person'>Belli</ent> role, arguing against allegations that KAL 007
was on a spy mission, partly with facts and partly by asking if people could
really believe that our CIA would send 269 people to certain death. The role
of <ent type = 'person'>Mark <ent type = 'person'>Lane</ent></ent> was taken by Melvin <ent type = 'person'>Belli</ent>, of all people, who is representing the
families of some victims. <ent type = 'person'>Belli</ent> acted old and lawyerly. The direct
involvement and intensity supplied by Marguerite <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> in 1964 was provided
by the mother of one of the victims. To my surprise, the studio audience was
very conspiratorial, and I found myself sympathizing with <ent type = 'person'>Hersh</ent>.
There is, of course, very little hard evidence available. The argument
about whether 007 could have been off course by accident is reminiscent of the
acoustical analysis. It is even more technical, and looks to me like an
argument among experts, unresolvable by laymen. For its flavor (with somewhat
out-of-date information), see the rather nasty exchange between M. Sayle and
D. Pearson (#110, NYRev, 25 Apr and 26 Sep 85, 27 pp.)
<ent type = 'person'>Hersh</ent>'s <ent type = 'person'>Arlen Specter</ent> is airline pilot <ent type = 'person'>Harold <ent type = 'person'>Ewing</ent></ent>, whose "single-bullet
theory" is a detailed reconstruction of the chain of errors and omissions
which could have put 007 on the course it took. Remember, I'm inclined to
believe the SBT, so that is not a putdown - but if you believe <ent type = 'person'>Ewing</ent>'s account
you may never want to fly again.
<ent type = 'person'>Hersh</ent>'s <ent type = 'person'>Angleton</ent> is General <ent type = 'person'>James Pfautz</ent>, the head of Air Force
Intelligence. He is not as peculiar as <ent type = 'person'>Angleton</ent>, but almost as heavy. The
book, however, does not speculate on the possible importance of the split
represented by someone of his rank going public with his dissent.
8 EOC 3 -9-</p>
<p> One parallel drawn by "Time" and others is basically misleading - the
allegedly nonconspiratorial nature of <ent type = 'person'>Hersh</ent>'s "innocent" explanation. Indeed,
<ent type = 'person'>Hersh</ent> seems to treat the ideology of <ent type = 'person'>Reagan</ent> and his crew as an external,
almost extenuating, factor. (They rushed to judgment "in what amounted to
good faith...." [P. 249]) The story of how the Air Force version was
discounted emphasizes normal inter-service bureaucratic infighting and
personal conflicts.
With the same facts, someone could make what happened sound like a very
substantial conspiracy. <ent type = 'person'>Hersh</ent> does tell us that a general requested a phony
report justifying provocative action against Russia, but was turned down
(p. 74), and that a hardline deputy to <ent type = 'person'>William <ent type = 'person'>Clark</ent></ent> discussed military action
against Cuba (p. 122-3). The government's insistence on "look[ing] the other
way when better information became available" (p. 249) is arguably at least as
bad as planning a covert action which unpredictably failed. I don't find that
alternative as implausible as <ent type = 'person'>Hersh</ent> tried to make it sound when arguing with
the conspiracy buffs. The government's anti-Soviet campaign based on false
intelligence undeniably did endanger many innocent people, albeit obviously to
a lesser degree than using an airliner on an intelligence mission.
For a moderately conspiratorial view, see the book "<ent type = 'person'>Shootdown</ent>," by Oxford
professor R. W. <ent type = 'person'>John</ent>son. (#111 [2 pp.] is his own summary, from the London
Telegraph (18 May 86), as reprinted in Intelligence/Parapolitics.) Before
reading the <ent type = 'person'>Hersh</ent> book, I found "<ent type = 'person'>Shootdown</ent>" quite plausible in concluding that
KAL 007 was probably being used as a passive probe, in the reasonable
expectation that the worst that could happen was that it would be forced to
land. <ent type = 'person'>Hersh</ent> did not completely convince me that <ent type = 'person'>John</ent>son was wrong.
<ent type = 'person'>John</ent>son, in contrast to <ent type = 'person'>Hersh</ent>, is emphatic about how extreme - and how
besotted with covert operations and dubious information - the <ent type = 'person'>Reagan</ent>ites are.
After all, they have given us the Contras, the plot against the Pope, Grenada,
Libyan hit squads, and Star Wars. <ent type = 'person'>John</ent>son's distance from an American
perspective is occasionally off-putting, but more often helpful.
<ent type = 'person'>Hersh</ent>'s debunking of more conspiratorial accounts is often persuasive,
but not always. For example, his suggestion that the Russians planted a phony
black box, and that the crash site can be located in Russian waters from the
testimony of Japanese fishermen who turned up with gasoline-soaked notes more
than 30 days later, may be true, but the book doesn't deal with <ent type = 'person'>John</ent>son's
detailed arguments about the search for the black box.
<ent type = 'person'>Hersh</ent> has no indexed reference to the KCIA (whose alleged connections to
KAL get much attention from <ent type = 'person'>John</ent>son). More relevant to his own story, <ent type = 'person'>Hersh</ent>
does not (I think) refer at all to Korean COMINT capabilities, or to the
presence or absence of US COMINT facilities in Korea. In my mind, this leaves
a gap in his assertion that he came across no indication of any prior or real-
time knowledge of a mission involving KAL 007, and that he would have done so.
The book certainly doesn't give the impression that the story was in any
sense handed to <ent type = 'person'>Hersh</ent>, or that he is a friend of the intelligence community.
For example, he throws in an apparently gratuitous disclosure of the location
of some NSA facilities. (P. 47n) There are many other juicy details. But
one has to wonder if what he learned represents a major ongoing split within
the government. People talked to him, and he got things using FOIA. Was that
just because he is a good reporter?
The existence of dissenting positions in the intelligence community is
not a completely new story; some newspapers reported on it in 1983 (pp. 177,
265), and there was a bit of a flap when a witting <ent type = 'person'>Pierre Trudeau</ent> revealed
some of what he knew in October 1983.
I wonder about the timing of a decision by "a senior military
intelligence officer" to give <ent type = 'person'>Hersh</ent> his "first account" of the abuse of COMINT
in this case "late in 1984." [P. xi] Did the people in the intelligence
community who knew the story wait until the 1984 elections were out of the way
before spilling the beans? As with Watergate and <ent type = 'person'>Epstein</ent>'s "Legend", the
8 EOC 3 -10-</p>
<p>disclosure of important information may itself be a bigger part of the real
story than the casual reader (of "Time," and even of this book) would think.
This is in EOC because we all should be interested, not just because of
the parallels with the <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent> case. The case is in the courts and will not just
go away. There seems to be a network of 007 buffs - are any EOC readers in
touch with them?
Readers of the Grassy Knoll Gazette are familiar with Bob <ent type = 'person'>Cutler</ent>'s
analysis, according to which KAL 007 was not shot down by the Russians, but
destroyed by an on-board explosion at the same time the Russians shot down a
U.S. military plane. <ent type = 'person'>Cutler</ent> has published a book, titled "<ent type = 'person'>Explo</ent> 007." If you
are willing to keep <ent type = 'person'>Occam</ent>'s Razor sheathed, and if you trust <ent type = 'person'>Cutler</ent> to have
convincingly eliminated all simpler explanations, you should read that book;
I haven't.</p>
<p><special>Queries from readers:</special>
Q77. According to P. Maas' book on <ent type = 'person'>Ed Wilson</ent>, in 1964 the CIA helped get
Wilson a job as an advance man in <ent type = 'person'>Humphrey</ent>'s VP campaign, in connection with
his assignment to "Special Operations." (P. 24, #112) On the assumption that
the capitalization is not a typo, can anyone tell us about such a CIA unit?
Q78. Can anyone provide a copy (or photocopy) of "Lucky Luciano," by
Ovid Demaris (Monarch Books paperback, 1960, 148 pp.)?
Q79. Does anyone have an FBI document describing a test, prior to
November 29, 1963, of the firing speed of <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>'s rifle?</p>
<p><special><ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent> again:</special>
Speaking of theories of Cuban involvement (as we were on page 5): in his
March 16 speech on Contra aid, President R. <ent type = 'person'>Reagan</ent> closed with an anecdote
from <ent type = 'person'>Clare Booth Luce</ent>, who recently spoke of an encounter with <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent>. She said
that history has time to give any great man no more than one sentence.
<ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent> asked what she thought his would be. "'Mr. President,' she answered,
'your sentence will be that you stopped the Communists - or that you did not.'
Tragically, <ent type = 'person'>John</ent> <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent> never had the chance to decide which that would be."
(#113, NYT, 17 Mar 86)
It sounds like <ent type = 'person'>Reagan</ent> was just one word away from blaming the Communists
for <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent>'s death. ("Tragically" could have been "ironically" or "of course" or
"it is no coincidence that.") (See 6 EOC 3.6 for <ent type = 'person'>Reagan</ent>'s 1979 suspicions.)
The case may not be quite as dead as it seems.
For a different perspective, see "One Thousand Fearful Words for <ent type = 'person'>Fidel</ent>
<ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent>," a pre-invasion 1961 poem by S. F.'s <ent type = 'person'>Lawrence Ferlinghetti</ent>. "It looks
like Curtains for <ent type = 'person'>Fidel</ent>/ They're going to fix his wagon/ in the course of
human events.... History may absolve you, <ent type = 'person'>Fidel</ent>/ but we'll dissolve you
first, <ent type = 'person'>Fidel</ent>." This copy [#114, 4 pp.] bears the rubber stamp of the S. F.
chapter of the Fair Play for Cuba Committee, with genuine phone and P.O. box
numbers.</p>
<p><special>Late news:</special>
<ent type = 'person'>David <ent type = 'person'>Phillips</ent></ent> is to receive "substantial" damages in a settlement of a
libel suit against the London Observer, over excepts from <ent type = 'person'>Summers</ent>' book
"Conspiracy." ("Challenge" press release and clips, #115, 2 pp.)</p>
<p><special>Credits:</special> Thanks to M. <ent type = 'person'>Ewing</ent> (#115), B. Fensterwald (80), J. <ent type = 'person'>Goldberg</ent> (73),
L. Haapanen (101), G. Hollingsworth (77-8, 105), M. <ent type = 'person'>Lee</ent> (81), D. Lifton (106),
P. <ent type = 'person'>McCarthy</ent> (83), J. Marshall (102), S. Meagher (84), J. Mierzejewski (79),
G. Owens (76), R. Ranftel (85-7, 89-94, 96-100, 107, 110), P. <ent type = 'person'>Scott</ent> (104,
112), E. Tatro (74-5), and T. <ent type = 'person'>Vaughan</ent> (72).</p>
<p>*From Illumi-Net BBS -- (404) 377-1141* [ <ent type = 'person'>Don</ent>'s note: I doubt this BBS is
still up ]</p>
<p>---END------------------------------------------------------------------------</p>
<p>--
-* <ent type = 'person'>Don</ent> Allen *- InterNet: dona@bilver.UUCP // Amiga..for the best of us.
USnail: 1818G Landing Dr, <ent type = 'person'>Sanford Fl</ent> 32771 \X/ Why use anything else? :-)
UUCP: ..uunet!tarpit!bilver!dona - Why did the JUSTICE DEPT steal PROMIS?
/\/\ What is research but a blind date with knowledge. <ent type = 'person'>William Henry</ent> /\/\</p>
<p>From: dona@bilver.uucp (<ent type = 'person'>Don</ent> Allen)
Newsgroups: alt.conspiracy
Subject: <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent> Text: Echoes of Conspiracy - EOC4.TXT (end)
<info type="Message-ID"> 1991Dec26.195226.20027@bilver.uucp</info>
Date: 26 Dec 91 19:52:26 GMT
Organization: W. J. Vermillion - Winter Park, FL
Lines: 618</p>
<p>*EOC4.TXT*</p>
<p>-----BEGIN PART 4/4-----------------------------------------------------------</p>
<p>ECHOES OF CONSPIRACY December 8, 1986
Vol. 8, #4 <ent type = 'person'>Paul L</ent>. <ent type = 'person'>Hoch</ent></p>
<p><special>Showtime show trial:</special>
Among EOC readers, access to Showtime cable TV seems scarcer than
interest in the LWT production, "On Trial: <ent type = 'person'><ent type = 'person'>Lee</ent> Harvey</ent> <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>." I was able to
see the program, so it seemed like a good idea to get this issue out as soon
as possible. It is less edited than usual; my allocation of space probably
does not accurately reflect the relative importance of the various witnesses,
or of the program as a whole.
The mock trial used real lawyers, real witnesses, and no script. Five
and a half hours were broadcast on November 21 and 22. (An additional 18
hours will reportedly be shown next January, or maybe it will be just 12 and a
half hours.) There were 21 witnesses in all - 14 called by prosecutor Vincent
<ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent>, seven by defense lawyer Gerry <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent>. There were nine "November 22"
witnesses (six who were in Dealey Plaza, two on the <ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent> case, and one from
Bethesda); four people who knew or investigated <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> and one who knew <ent type = 'person'>Ruby</ent>,
and seven people who testified to or participated in the HSCA and <ent type = 'person'>Warren</ent>
Commission investigations. Not much documentary material was used in the
trial, other than the Zapruder film and some 1963-64 film clips.
High points, in my opinion, for viewers already familiar with the case:
<ent type = 'person'>Ruth Paine</ent> talking about <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>, Ed <ent type = 'person'>Lopez</ent> on his HSCA investigation of <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>
in Mexico, Paul O'<ent type = 'person'>Connor</ent> on the circumstances of the autopsy.
Low points: the cross-examination of <ent type = 'person'>Ruth Paine</ent>, <ent type = 'person'>Jack <ent type = 'person'>Anderson</ent></ent> as a
commentator, conspiracy witness <ent type = 'person'>Tom Tilson</ent>, <ent type = 'person'>Cyril <ent type = 'person'>Wecht</ent></ent>'s testimony on the
single-bullet theory, the trial as a fact-finding vehicle, and Gerry <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent>
(who came across like <ent type = 'person'>Mark <ent type = 'person'>Lane</ent></ent> imitating <ent type = 'person'>Sam Ervin</ent>).
Prior to the filming, I talked with (and consulted for) some of the LWT
people, primarily producer <ent type = 'person'>Mark Redhead</ent> and researcher <ent type = 'person'>Richard <ent type = 'person'>Tomlinson</ent></ent>.
They had a good understanding of the subtleties of the case, and of the
limitations imposed by the trial format. Unfortunately, those limitations
were more apparent in the final program than the new insights and information
they developed. In real life, I am told, there is more of a fact-finding
process in the work of trial lawyers than the jury ever knows. The LWT effort
might look much more productive after we see the outtakes (or if there is a
book or long article - I have heard nothing about one.) LWT definitely got
some interesting comments from potential witnesses who were not even mentioned
in the final version.</p>
<p><special>Summary and commentary:</special>
The first evening's segment (three hours) comprised the prosecution case.
It was the basic WC-HSCA evidence against <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>, presented in a rather
straightforward way by <ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent>.
<ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent>'s presentation included relatively little that offended me,
except for a few things like some comments in his opening statement about
<ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> as a Commie (which <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> pounced on). <ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent> was much worse on
"People are Talking" in S.F. in mid-November, where he dredged up Joseph
<ent type = 'person'>Goebbels</ent> and the "big lie" to bash the critics with. <ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent>'s trial
presentation did tend to refer more to what "the critics" had said than to "my
opponent," and he tried to discredit <ent type = 'person'>Wecht</ent> by calling him "the darling of the
conspiracy buffs."
Opening statements followed a brief introduction by <ent type = 'person'>Edwin Newman</ent>,
including some stock footage. The stated aim of the show was to restore the
rights of <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> to a trial, and of the American people to see justice done.
The London set looked like a courtroom, with a jury brought over from Dallas,
an apparently working court reporter, and an audience of actors.
<ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent>'s real record was one acquittal in 106 felony prosecutions, and
<ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> had not lost a jury trial in 17 years; at some level these guys were
clearly playing for keeps. This may have led to strategies aimed at winning,
rather than at, say, coming up with newsworthy new evidence or good TV.
8 EOC 4 -2-</p>
<p> <ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent> began his opening statement with negative comments about
conspiracy buffs. A frameup is a "preposterous" idea; <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> was a "deeply
disturbed and maladjusted man" and a "fanatical Marxist."
<ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> said that when he started work on this trial, he thought <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>
(generally referred to as "<ent type = 'person'>Lee</ent>") was guilty, but he was now convinced that we
have been carrying a "national lie" with us. At the end of the trial, the
jury would still want to know why <ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent>, representing "this huge polithera
[sic] of power in this country" had still not come forward with the whole
truth, and would therefore have to return a "not guilty" verdict.
By and large, the prosecution witnesses repeated their earlier
statements, often by saying "yes" to <ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent>'s leading questions. I suppose
that was like a real trial, and it certainly kept the proceedings from
dragging, but in many cases this limited the opportunity to judge the demeanor
of the witness. I'm not sure anything came out in direct testimony which we
didn't already know, but if it did, we would have trouble judging whether it
was a real subtlety or one introduced by <ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent>'s paraphrasing.
First witness: <special><ent type = 'person'>Buell <ent type = 'person'>Frazier</ent></ent></special>, slightly graying. He lives "here in
Dallas." He said that <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> was the only employee missing at a roll call.
<ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> opened with a little joke, and bugged <ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent> by mispronouncing his
name. He led <ent type = 'person'>Frazier</ent> to say that <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> was nice, liked kids, was not a
madman, and had not previously lied to him.
The real issues involving <ent type = 'person'>Frazier</ent>, particularly his interrogations by the
police, did not surface. (LWT had been referred to Chapters 10 and 11 of
George O'Toole's book "The Assassination Tapes.") Of course, all my comments
about what was not done are subject to revision when we see the rest of the
testimony next year.
<special><ent type = 'person'>Charles <ent type = 'person'>Brehm</ent></ent></special> described what he saw of the shooting. To <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent>, he
conceded that he had called himself an expert on those few seconds. The
Zapruder film was shown, to make the jury experts too. <ent type = 'person'>Brehm</ent> argued a bit
when <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> described the head snap in exaggerated terms. <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> carried on
about the direction tin cans move in when hit by rocks, and he was reprimanded
for his theatrics. There's a mind-bender. If a witness misbehaved, would he
be cited for contempt of television? (And sentenced to watch "Dallas"?)
<special><ent type = 'person'>Harold <ent type = 'person'>Norman</ent></ent></special> was led through his description of hearing the shots and
falling cartridge cases on the next floor up. <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> aptly noted that <ent type = 'person'>Norman</ent>
did not try to escape from the armed man in the building, and <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent>
inscrutably suggested that what he heard could have been other metal objects
dropping. <ent type = 'person'>Norman</ent> seemed a bit evasive, or perhaps just understandably puzzled
by the whole exercise. Oddly, he indicated that he had resisted the efforts
of the FBI to put words in his mouth, on the question of whether what he heard
was "above" or "right above" him. <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> tried (inadequately) to clarify the
issue of when employees were freed to leave the building.
Sheriff <special><ent type = 'person'>Eugene <ent type = 'person'>Boone</ent></ent></special> described the sniper's nest, and his discovery of
the rifle, saying that "Mauser" was used as a generic term. Typically, <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent>
did not really cross-examine <ent type = 'person'>Boone</ent> about what he had said, but used his
testimony as a way of presenting his own speculation. <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> suggested that
the gun was meant to be found, and that the cartridge cases were found in
positions inconsistent with ejection to the right from the rifle.
As in a real trial, I guess, <ent type = 'person'>Boone</ent> didn't get to point out that
cartridges can bounce, and he played along with <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent>'s resurrection of the
old Mannlicher - Mauser identification problem. <ent type = 'person'>Boone</ent> conceded that he was
not able to identify the rifle as the one he found, just in the sense that it
did not have his marks on it. Having testified that he found no powder burns
on the foliage on the knoll, he conceded that there were none on the sixth
floor either.
Officer <special><ent type = 'person'>Marrion <ent type = 'person'>Baker</ent></ent></special> described his encounter with <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> on the second
floor. <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> emphasized that <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> did not seem excited.
<special><ent type = 'person'>Ted <ent type = 'person'>Callaway</ent></ent></special> told of seeing <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> run past his used-car lot with his
8 EOC 4 -3-</p>
<p>pistol, and of checking <ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent>'s pulse and calling in on his radio. On cross,
<ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent> objected to <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> cutting off <ent type = 'person'>Callaway</ent>'s responses, but was
overruled. I wonder if anyone got to sit down with these witnesses and have a
decent session of questioning without playing by legal rules, and if a record
of such conversations will ever become available. If not, that would be a
real loss.
About an hour into the show, there was the first exchange I found
potentially valuable. <ent type = 'person'>Callaway</ent> conceded that Capt. <ent type = 'person'>Fritz</ent> said before the
lineup that they wanted to wrap up the case on <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>, and linked him to <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent>'s
murder, but <ent type = 'person'>Callaway</ent> said he had asked first. He continued to defend the
handling of the lineup (e.g., the clothing worn) and the validity of his
identification: "I could have made it, sir, if they had been 'nekkid.'"
<ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent> called <ent type = 'person'>Frazier</ent> back, to identify <ent type = 'person'>Billy <ent type = 'person'>Lovelady</ent></ent> standing in the
doorway a few steps in front of <ent type = 'person'>Frazier</ent>. <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> had gotten <ent type = 'person'>Callaway</ent> and <ent type = 'person'>Baker</ent>
to say that the man in the <ent type = 'person'>Altgens</ent> photo resembled <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>. <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> tried to
make an issue of <ent type = 'person'>Frazier</ent> not having identified <ent type = 'person'>Lovelady</ent> before. This is a
good example of muddying up the facts on what really is a non-issue.
<special><ent type = 'person'>Jack Brewer</ent></special> (known to us as <ent type = 'person'>John</ent>ny Calvin Brewer) told of seeing <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>
outside his shoe store, and of his role in the capture of <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>. Did we know
that the police briefly held a gun on him? Good testimony from a human-
interest viewpoint, but we did not learn how Brewer felt about jumping into
that dangerous situation. To <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent>, he conceded that <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>'s odd behavior
was consistent with being a <ent type = 'person'>patsy</ent>, that a policeman struck <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>, and that he
did testify that he heard someone say "Kill the President, will you" - but he
does not know who, or even if it was a policeman. (It did not come out that
he told <ent type = 'person'>David Belin</ent> that it was "some of the police," and that he thought he
"had seen him [<ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>] some place before. I think he had been in my store
before." [7 <ent type = 'person'>WCH</ent> 6, 4])
After a "break," during which <ent type = 'person'>Ed Newman</ent> retraced <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>'s route, <special>Cecil
<ent type = 'person'>Kirk</ent></special> testified about his HSCA photo analysis, primarily of the Zapruder film
and the backyard photos. <ent type = 'person'>Kirk</ent> had better graphics capabilities this time -
stop action video, and a light pen (as used for play analysis in football
games). This production reportedly cost about $1 million; the HSCA spent only
about $5.5 million investigating the <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent> and <ent type = 'person'>MLK</ent> cases.
<ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> suggested, in a patronizing and artificial way, that the sudden
stop of the running girl (<ent type = 'person'>Rose</ent>mary Willis) may have been caused by her mother
- she presumably did have one, right? - calling her name. <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> tried to get
<ent type = 'person'>Kirk</ent> to admit that he could not detect a CIA or KGB fraud; he stood his
ground. I remain impressed by <ent type = 'person'>Kirk</ent>. I really believe that many of the HSCA
panelists would have been delighted to come up with evidence of conspiracy.
(That has been said about the WC staff too, but there I have strong doubts.)
An odd bit of role-playing: <ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent> objected to the playing of a 1964
clip of <ent type = 'person'>Connally</ent> talking about the shots, when he must have realized that it
was good television and would not be passed up.
Dr. <special><ent type = 'person'>Charles <ent type = 'person'>Petty</ent></ent></special> testified about the HSCA pathology panel, attributing
the head snap to a neuromuscular reaction. Cross-examination was dreadful -
did you ask the FBI or the CIA "to produce the brain of the President?" Even
expert witnesses don't get to talk. The HSCA public hearings were usually a
lot better than a real trial, imperfect as they were. (Remember "I just have
one more question, Mr. <ent type = 'person'>White</ent>. Do you know what photogrammetry is?" [2 HSCA
344]) <ent type = 'person'>Petty</ent> looked authentically and appropriately amused by the antics of
the lawyers.
<ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent> and <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> seemed genuinely puzzled by the panel's observation
that the photos and X-rays contradicted the autopsy surgeons on the location
of the head entry wound. (7 HSCA 129) <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> erroneously introduced this as
a conflict between the photos and the X-rays, and the real issue here (which
the HSCA was unable to resolve) was totally obfuscated.
HSCA firearms expert <special><ent type = 'person'>Monty Lutz</ent></special> described a re-enactment he did for
8 EOC 4 -4-</p>
<p><ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent> this May, getting three hits in 3.6 seconds once, and two hits the
other four times. <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> noted that this was not an exact duplication. He
made this point in such an obnoxious way that his success with juries both
surprises and disturbs me.
<special><ent type = 'person'>Vincent <ent type = 'person'>Guinn</ent></ent></special> testified about his neutron activation analysis. The
cross-examination (reproduced on p. 9) was in some ways typically awful.
<ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> emphasized that <ent type = 'person'>Guinn</ent> had not examined 28 additional bullet fragments
which were "found" in the head. (In fact, they were "found" in X-rays.) The
erroneous implication that 28 other fragments were removed and then ignored
just slipped by. (Or was that my inference, not <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent>'s implication, as Mark
<ent type = 'person'>Lane</ent> used to say?) <ent type = 'person'>Guinn</ent> wasn't allowed to say what he knew on that point.
Insofar as there is a real inauthenticity issue, i.e. in the context of
Lifton's evidence, it was not pursued in any meaningful way on the air.
The next witness was a surprise to me, and a new face: former FBI
documents expert <special><ent type = 'person'>Lyndal <ent type = 'person'>Shaneyfelt</ent></ent></special>. He gave straightforward testimony about
the <ent type = 'person'>Klein</ent>'s order form for the rifle and <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>'s diary and letters, with a
reading of the sections indicating the most hostility to the U.S. <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent>
played the innocent: "Well. Do you realize what you've been used for here,
doctor?... to smear my client, isn't that right?" Presumably used to this
sort of thing in real life, <ent type = 'person'>Shaneyfelt</ent> did little but answer the questions.
Reading from 8 HSCA 236, <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> noted the expert testimony that the diary was
written in only a few sittings. <ent type = 'person'>Shaneyfelt</ent> stood up to him on his use of
microfilm copies for analysis.
<ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> suggested, hypothetically, that assuming <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> was working for
"the CIA or for the Army Intelligence or for the Navy Intelligence," he might
establish his loyalty by sending anti-American letters through the censored
mail. A confused double hypothesis: an agent wouldn't ordinarily keep a
diary, but he wanted his to be read. <ent type = 'person'>Shaneyfelt</ent> conceded that it was a "fair
assumption" that the CIA and FBI can create good forgeries.
A bit of real-life drama emerged in the testimony of <special><ent type = 'person'>Nelson</ent> <ent type = 'person'>Delgado</ent></special>, now
a chef in Arkansas. He and <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> were both "130%" pro-<ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent> in the Marines.
He agreed with <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent>'s description of his (previously reported) fears that
the FBI would get him, and <ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent> wondered - without probing the reasons for
his fears - if <ent type = 'person'>Delgado</ent> didn't think that the FBI would have gotten him if they
really wanted to. <ent type = 'person'>Delgado</ent> said he was "just old news" now, and revealed that
he had indeed been shot in the shoulder.
The last government witness - on the stand for about 25 minutes - was
<special><ent type = 'person'>Ruth Paine</ent></special>. Wasn't this her first extended public appearance? It was
interesting to see her in person, but the constraints of the format were
overwhelming. She was trying to be precise, thoughtful, and fair, and
apparently found talking about <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> a difficult experience; the lawyers were
busy acting like lawyers. For example, <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> asked if she were a CIA or KGB
agent, ridiculing her (as she noted) for laughing at the first question. He
badgered her about the coincidences involved in her studying Russian (to work
for US-USSR friendship), befriending Marina, having the gun in her garage, and
getting <ent type = 'person'>Lee</ent> the TSBD job - all, it seems, to make the point that she now knows
how <ent type = 'person'>Lee</ent> would have felt about being (falsely) accused. Dreadful. Why she sat
still for this, I don't know. She did say that she hoped to show "for the
historical record" that a "very ordinary person" like <ent type = 'person'>Lee</ent> "can kill the
President without that being something that shows on them in advance."
A discussion with <ent type = 'person'>Ruth Paine</ent> on her own terms could have been very
illuminating. There are many questions she has apparently not been asked -
about her previous interrogations, for example. I'm sure that even the buffs
with suspicions about her relationship with the <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>s could come up with a
list of questions which could be asked in a productive and non-hostile manner.
I hope she doesn't think <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> is a typical critic; I think some of us should
write to her and apologize.
If <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent>'s whole case really were typical of what the critics have to
8 EOC 4 -5-</p>
<p>offer, it would be time to retire. My reaction to <ent type = 'person'>Mark <ent type = 'person'>Lane</ent></ent> in 1964 was that
all those little points must add up to something; my reaction to <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> is
quite the opposite. His ability and inclination to suggest doubts about
whatever a prosecution witness said told me less about what happened in Dallas
than about how lawyers work.
The first defense witness was <special><ent type = 'person'>Bill Newman</ent></special>, who described seeing <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent>
and <ent type = 'person'>Connally</ent> hit. It was established that there was room for doubt in his
opinion of the direction of the shots, since (when he was excited and upset)
he signed a statement saying the <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent> had stood up in the car.
<ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> called <special><ent type = 'person'>Tom Tilson</ent></special> of the DPD to tell his story about someone who
looked just like <ent type = 'person'>Ruby</ent> (whom he knew) throwing something into a car just past
the knoll, right after the shooting. Tilson then followed him but the license
number he called in was apparently not pursued, and Tilson's copy was lost.
Sure. <ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent> didn't get Tilson to recant on the stand, but his story
certainly didn't look plausible when he was done.
<ent type = 'person'>Earl</ent> Golz's article on Tilson does not suggest that he thought the man he
chased was <ent type = 'person'>Ruby</ent>. (#116, 2 pp., DMN, 20 Aug 78, just six days before the HSCA
interviewed Tilson; see also 12 HSCA 15-16, or "Conspiracy," p. 82.) Golz's
most provocative statement (given <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>'s account of funny business in the
<ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent> case) is that Tilson was close enough to <ent type = 'person'>Tippit</ent> to be a pallbearer.
Of all the conspiracy witnesses around, why would <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> want this one?
I fear he really chose to suggest that <ent type = 'person'>Ruby</ent> was running around Dallas, on the
knoll with a gun and planting a bullet at Parkland. That is hardly a leading
hypothesis for a conspiracy involving <ent type = 'person'>Ruby</ent>; the only advantage seems to be
that one can exploit it, in a very naive way, to incorporate some of Seth
Kantor's testimony and at the same time cast doubt on <ent type = 'person'>Guinn</ent>'s.
The testimony of Dr. <special><ent type = 'person'>Cyril <ent type = 'person'>Wecht</ent></ent></special> generally resembled his HSCA appearance,
in tone as well as content. <ent type = 'person'>Wecht</ent> still takes a hard line on the question of
how he could be right and the rest of the HSCA panel wrong, suggesting the
"subconscious" influence of their government grants and appointments. In the
program's second gratuitous reference to nudity, <ent type = 'person'>Wecht</ent> asserted that he was
the only panelist with "the courage to say that the king was nude and had no
clothes on."
In response to <ent type = 'person'>Wecht</ent>'s best point - the condition of CE 399 - <ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent>
did not bring up the test firings by Dr. <ent type = 'person'>John</ent> Nichols (and later by Dr. <ent type = 'person'>John</ent>
<ent type = 'person'>Lattimer</ent>), where shooting this ammunition into a block of wood left the bullet
in good condition. (<ent type = 'person'>Lattimer</ent>, p. 271-2) That's not the same as a comparable
bullet from a real shooting, but it should be noted.
I cannot defend <ent type = 'person'>Wecht</ent>'s use, in attacking the single-bullet theory, of
the same schematic diagram he presented to the HSCA (1 HSCA 341). It is an
unfair representation of what the government now claims CE 399 did. One can
debate the SBT trajectory, but one must now start with the results of the
HSCA's trajectory analysis. There may be minor errors on that work, but the
SBT path is clearly not as implausible as <ent type = 'person'>Wecht</ent> presented it. <ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent> scored
a point by asking where the <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent> bullet went if it did not end up in
<ent type = 'person'>Connally</ent>, but he did not bring up the HSCA's trajectory work.
Perhaps the most impressive defense witness was hospital corpsman <special>Paul
O'<ent type = 'person'>Connor</ent></special>, one of the important Bethesda witnesses in Lifton's "Best Evidence."
He described the removal of <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent>'s body from a body bag, the "constant"
interference by Dr. <ent type = 'person'>Burkley</ent> (apparently on behalf of the family), and the
condition of the head, which left no need for the procedure he usually
performed to cut the skull and very little of the brain to be removed.
<ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent>'s cross-examination produced one dramatic moment. First he
established that the surgeons did "most of the mundane jobs" usually done by
the technicians, but O'<ent type = 'person'>Connor</ent> insisted there was no brain to remove. If this
was so shocking, <ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent> wondered, why didn't he tell the HSCA? He seemed
genuinely surprised when O'<ent type = 'person'>Connor</ent> said he had been "under orders not to talk
until that time."
8 EOC 4 -6-</p>
<p> Unfortunately, issues relating to these orders were not pursued on the
air. O'<ent type = 'person'>Connor</ent>, who was nervous, referred to getting permission from the HSCA
to talk to Navy brass, and also indicated that the HSCA had not asked the
right questions. The sequence of events is unclear: <ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent> referred to an
hour-and-a-half interview with the HSCA; I think the volumes cite only an
"outside contact report" (which was often based on a phone call) dated June
28, 1978, but that does not preclude an earlier interview. The 1963 orders
not to talk were not modified until March 1978, when permission to talk with
the HSCA was reluctantly given. (Best Evidence, p. 608)
The broadcast did not mention the <ent type = 'person'>Sibert</ent>-O'<ent type = 'person'>Neill</ent> report or the other
indications of head surgery. <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> seems to have used O'<ent type = 'person'>Connor</ent>'s evidence
only to establish the absence of the brain, without much of a scenario to
explain it. O'<ent type = 'person'>Connor</ent>'s interpretation was not brought out; Lifton's book said
he basically believed the <ent type = 'person'>Warren</ent> Report.
<ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> also brought up the missing brain with <ent type = 'person'>Wecht</ent> and <ent type = 'person'>Petty</ent>, and in
connection with the Zapruder film. As with his version of a <ent type = 'person'>Ruby</ent> conspiracy,
the missing brain is representative of but not really central to the mysteries
of the medical evidence. <ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent>'s presentation of the HSCA investigation of
RFK's probable role in the post-autopsy destruction of a brain may have unduly
lessened the impact of O'<ent type = 'person'>Connor</ent>'s testimony.
Former FBI SA <special><ent type = 'person'>James Hosty</ent></special> was called as an adverse witness. It was
valuable to see him, but I don't recall much new information in his testimony
on <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>'s note, the information "withheld" from him about <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>'s Mexico
trip, and other matters. (<ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent>'s grasp of the evidence seemed imperfect; he
indicated at first that a page had been removed from <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>'s notebook
itself.) It was <ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent> who got Hosty to say that he was not suggesting
Soviet consul <ent type = 'person'>Kostikov</ent> was involved in the assassination.
Hosty thinks the Mexico mystery man was assumed to be <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> because
prior wiretap information suggested - at the time - that <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> was going to
come over to pick up his visa. Where has this explanation been dealt with?
The next witness was HSCA researcher <special>Edwin J. <ent type = 'person'>Lopez</ent></special>, barely recognizable
as a short-haired and properly attired lawyer, talking about <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> in Mexico.
(His style during the HSCA investigation was informal; see p. 211 of Gaeton
Fonzi's article on the HSCA, 2 EOC 10.2.) Like O'<ent type = 'person'>Connor</ent>, <ent type = 'person'>Lopez</ent> did not
provide many facts the buffs did not already know, but he probably made quite
an impression on the viewing audience. His personal conclusions were that
<ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> was in some way associated with the CIA, and was a <ent type = 'person'>patsy</ent>.
<ent type = 'person'>Lopez</ent> concluded that there had been an <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> impostor for all the
Embassy visits - partly on the basis of his review of CIA photos taken from
three sites. He specified that the surveillance was around-the-clock,
contrary to <ent type = 'person'>David <ent type = 'person'>Phillips</ent></ent>. [The Night Watch, p. 124; cf. <ent type = 'person'>Summers</ent>, p. 384]
<ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> noted that, in a real trial, <ent type = 'person'>Lee</ent> could have demanded production of the
still-classified 280-page HSCA report on Mexico. On cross-examination,
<ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent> let <ent type = 'person'>Lopez</ent> talk a bit, and managed to effectively touch on some of the
evidentiary difficulties with his conspiratorial conclusions.
The final defense witness was <special><ent type = 'person'>Seth Kantor</ent></special>, whose testimony provided a
pretty good summary of the basic issues relating to <ent type = 'person'>Ruby</ent>, whom he knew.
<ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent> raised some of the standard non-conspiratorial rebuttals. I don't
recall any facts which are not in Kantor's book on <ent type = 'person'>Ruby</ent> or the HSCA volumes.
In terms of factual information alluded to, Kantor, <ent type = 'person'>Lopez</ent>, and O'<ent type = 'person'>Connor</ent>
certainly deserve more space in EOC than all the prosecution witnesses put
together. However, we have not heard <ent type = 'person'>Lopez</ent>' evidence - he said he was still
bound by his secrecy oath. The fact that <ent type = 'person'>Lopez</ent> went public with his personal
conclusions is significant, in any case. On the whole, the evidence involved
in the defense case was better than <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent>'s presentation of it.
I am told that the taped testimony included three additional witnesses,
and that three more were flown to London but not used. (I do not know the
names of those witnesses.)
8 EOC 4 -7-</p>
<p> <ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent>'s closing arguments were effectively delivered and generally
straightforward. He did not push a "no conspiracy" argument, but alleged that
<ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> was "guilty as sin." He could have been much worse; he cited <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>'s
defection to the USSR not as evidence of his serious political beliefs, but as
one indication that he was "utterly and completely nuts" and "bonkers," as one
must be to shoot the President. He noted that <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> kept his cowboy hat on
the table and didn't put it on anyone as a conspirator.
There were certainly holes in <ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent>'s argument - when he asked, for
example, if there was such a sophisticated conspiracy, why frame a poor
marksman who had a $19 rifle? That one can be answered. In general, I don't
think an uninformed viewer got a good sense of the political context of the
assassination. <ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent> said <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> was too smart to say the FBI or CIA
killed <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent>, which would sound "downright silly," and he asserted that neither
the CIA nor the Mafia had "any productive motive whatsoever" to do so.
<ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> propped a photo of <ent type = 'person'>Lee</ent> in a chair, and said that <ent type = 'person'>Lee</ent> would
probably say he was scared and could not explain a lot of the evidence.
<ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> would tell him to just trust the jury. Of course, he emphasized that
each juror had to dispel all his reasonable doubts. (Neither lawyer was about
to abandon successful techniques for this very special case, which is why
<ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> had to argue with <ent type = 'person'>Kirk</ent> about the running girl, for example.) <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent>
dragged up all the "coincidences" involving <ent type = 'person'>Ruth Paine</ent>, and various other
alleged coincidences. He said that the only firm truth in this case is that
the "closet" of hidden evidence is still locked.
<ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> closed with a melodramatic metaphor in which a bird in a child's
hand represented <ent type = 'person'>Lee</ent>'s fate in the jury's hands. The speech's distance from
the hard facts reminded me of <ent type = 'person'>Garrison</ent>. At this point, if I had been a juror,
<ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent>'s style would have led to me decide that some of the doubts he had
planted were not really "reasonable" and could be ignored. One small
consolation is that the lawyers did not get a lot of money for appearing on
the program - just a lot of publicity.
While waiting for the verdict, we heard a discussion involving defense
lawyer <ent type = 'person'>Alan <ent type = 'person'>Dershowitz</ent></ent> and two men who could well have been witnesses, former
AG <ent type = 'person'>Ramsey <ent type = 'person'>Clark</ent></ent> and <ent type = 'person'>Jack <ent type = 'person'>Anderson</ent></ent>.
<ent type = 'person'>Anderson</ent>'s self-promoting remarks argued for a verdict of guilty as part
of a conspiracy. Among other things, he claimed that he began digging into
the CIA after the assassination, and that he found that the CIA had recruited
Mafia killers to get <ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent>. <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> killed <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent> "little over three [sic]
months" after <ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent>'s "warning" interview with <ent type = 'person'>Dan</ent>iel Harker of the AP, "and
we've had plenty of testimony showing [<ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>'s] links to the <ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent>
movement." <ent type = 'person'>John</ent> <ent type = 'person'><ent type = 'person'>Rose</ent>lli</ent> was killed by Trafficante's people because he gave
<ent type = 'person'>Anderson</ent> details of <ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent>'s involvement. <ent type = 'person'>Anderson</ent> also talked about an
immediate briefing of RFK by McCone. He also said that <ent type = 'person'>Hoover</ent> "made a public
statement" to the effect that he was "under pressure to finger" <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>. As a
guide to <ent type = 'person'>Anderson</ent>'s reliability, note that he referred to the acoustical
evidence as if the HSCA's results had not been seriously challenged.
Does <ent type = 'person'>Anderson</ent> have some sort of first-amendment immunity against being
properly questioned? His 1967 column suggesting that <ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent> had retaliated
against plots pushed by the <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent>s was certainly an event in the
controversy, not just a description of it. (<ent type = 'person'>Ed Newman</ent>, at least, did
challenge his <ent type = 'person'><ent type = 'person'>Rose</ent>lli</ent> story.)
If anyone wants to transcribe <ent type = 'person'>Anderson</ent>'s comments, or other parts of the
program, I can provide an audio tape.
Among other things, <ent type = 'person'>Ramsey <ent type = 'person'>Clark</ent></ent> suggested that the <ent type = 'person'>Castro</ent>-did-it theory
is CIA disinformation. He praised the <ent type = 'person'>Warren</ent> Commission for doing a
"marvelous job," and alleged that RFK had no doubts about FBI or CIA
involvement. The issue, he thinks, is how we can keep our idealism without
succumbing to "irrationality and to violence."
<ent type = 'person'>Dershowitz</ent> emphasized the importance of maintaining the integrity of the
8 EOC 4 -8-</p>
<p>fact-finding process. Even more than <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent>, he would have emphasized that
the process had been tampered with. <ent type = 'person'>Clark</ent> said that sort of thing happens all
the time. <ent type = 'person'>Dershowitz</ent> thought <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> got some new facts out, and showed the
advantages of the adversary process. <ent type = 'person'>Clark</ent>, correctly, disputed that.
<ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> and <ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent> made a few general remarks to the TV audience, mostly
on the value of the mock trial.
The jury's verdict: guilty. On the question of conspiracy: seven no,
three yes, two undecided.
There was also a telephone-poll verdict, provided by an unspecified
number of viewers who saw at least part of the defense case and thought giving
their opinion was worth fifty cents: 14% guilty, 86% not guilty in the West,
15% and 85% in the East. That is generally consistent with the 1983 Gallup
poll often referred to by <ent type = 'person'>Hurt</ent>, and with Fensterwald's poll of "experts."
(#1984.36, #1984.166-7) Newman thought the variance of the two verdicts was a
"remarkable" state of affairs. (For my sentiments about polls of the general
public, note item #126 below.) Newman said that the unavailable evidence, if
relevant, should be made public, in light of the "continuing disquiet."
How I would have voted? In a real trial, not guilty (unless the rest of
the jury was unanimously not guilty, in which case I might have taken the
opportunity to hang the jury and get some more facts out the next time
around); in a mock trial, based just on what was aired, guilty and conspiracy.
But, as with my limited real-life trial experience, my strongest opinion was
that at least one of the lawyers should be locked up. Despite my bias against
<ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent> for his prior comparison of some buffs to Dr. <ent type = 'person'>Goebbels</ent>, I think he
did an acceptable and often persuasive job on the air.
The credits included special thanks to Tony <ent type = 'person'>Summers</ent> and <ent type = 'person'>Mary Ferrell</ent>.
The copyright is held by LWT.</p>
<p><special>Clippings:</special>
117. For 15-16 Nov 86 (<ent type = 'person'>Seth Kantor</ent>, Cox papers and NYT service)
[3 pp.] "Despite the impact of the testimony, the realistic trial is
dominated by the hand-to-hand courtroom combat" of <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> and <ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent>, who
"do not like each other, on and off camera." A good pre-broadcast overview,
with a few quotes from the witnesses.
118. 9 Nov 86 (LAT) "<ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> goes on trial" [4 pp.] An amusing account
by <ent type = 'person'>Bill Bancroft</ent> of Dallas, who worked as a researcher for the program.
<ent type = 'person'>Norman</ent> was hard to locate; <ent type = 'person'>Amos Euins</ent> was afraid to participate; a judge who
looked like one was not easy to find; some "jurors" (deliberately chosen to be
under 35) were (understandably) suspicious of the LWT offer. (One checked
Bancroft's credit rating.) There was much tension during the filming. "All
18 hours are scheduled to be shown on Showtime in 1987."
119. Nov 86 (Cabletime) This Showtime ad does not mention LWT, but
does use the dreaded "d" word: "Innocent or guilty? You decide after
watching this docu-drama of the controversy behind the <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent> assassination."
120. 21 Nov 86 (SF Examiner) "<ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> inherits his day in court at
last; a goose teaches a boy to be a man" (Two separate items.) "In a curious
way, this massive program elevates the 'People's Court' genre while degrading
both the reality and the mythos behind legendary 'Inherit the Wind' court
battles." TV critic <ent type = 'person'>Michael <ent type = 'person'>Dougan</ent></ent> is more generous to <ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> than I can be:
he "transfixes the jurors (and, I suspect, many viewers) with his intense
magnetism, his down-home demeanor, his unflappability and confidence." But
<ent type = 'person'>Dougan</ent> sees the basic problem: "Where 'On Trial' disappoints is in the
implied promise that this may be a ground-breaking investigation, bringing
fresh evidence - or, at least, perspective - to the fore.... Alas, most of
the time is devoted to rehashing old arguments...."
121. 16 Nov (Schneider, NYT) "Bringing <ent type = 'person'><ent type = 'person'>Lee</ent> Harvey</ent> <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> to 'Trial'"
The "main weakness", <ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent> said, was the time limitation on cross-
examination and closing statements.
8 EOC 4 -9-</p>
<p> 122. 19 Nov (AP) "<ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent> case put to a jury" [2 pp.] Researcher
<ent type = 'person'>Tomlinson</ent> said the program "produces no new evidence" and is not "the final
word on who killed <ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent>." O'<ent type = 'person'>Connor</ent>'s "dramatic" testimony is noted.
123. 4 Nov (LA News in NY News) "TV gives <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> his day in court"
<ent type = 'person'>Spence</ent> is "best known as the flamboyant lawyer who won a multi-million-dollar
verdict in the <ent type = 'person'>Karen Silkwood</ent> case." (I am told that the Law Enforcement
Intelligence Unit played a role in that case; to get some idea of why I am
interested in the LEIU, and the possibility that it knew about <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>, see the
documents listed in EOC for 16 Jun 79.) "The lawyers were chosen not only
because of their visibility but also because... 'We wanted people who would
take this seriously.'" <ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent> "combed through" the WC and HSCA volumes,
"and 'all the books by the conspiracy buffs.'" (Did he talk to any of us?
Not that I know of.)
124. 22 Nov (LAT) "<ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> Skeptics' Night in Court" "If the emotions
aren't genuine, then these witnesses are among the world's best amateur
actors. The posturing is by lawyers, not witnesses, proving that real people
telling real stories are far more compelling and believable than characters
speaking dialogue."
Speaking of flamboyant lawyers whose style didn't cut it in this case:
125. 23 Nov (Wice, Hartford Courant, in SFC) "The Botched Trial of
Jack <ent type = 'person'>Ruby</ent>" [3 pp.] "A lawyer less concerned [than Melvin <ent type = 'person'>Belli</ent>] with his
public image probably would not have gambled his client's life on an
implausible [epilepsy] defense." The press, prosecutor, and judge didn't do
so well either, making "a mockery out of due process of law."
126. 3 Nov (SFC) In a poll at four named colleges, 30% of the 1000
responding students said they believed that "aliens from outer space visited
Earth in ancient times." About the same fraction believe in <ent type = 'person'>Bigfoot</ent> and
Atlantis. More than half "said they are creationists." So let's not take our
85% in the <ent type = 'person'>JFK</ent> case too seriously.
127. 20 Nov 86 (Corry, NYT) A good critique of the lawyers' styles and
the witnesses' demeanor; quotable, but I'm short on space and time.</p>
<p><special>An excerpt:</special>
The entire broadcast cross-examination of Prof. <ent type = 'person'>Vincent <ent type = 'person'>Guinn</ent></ent>:
GS: Well, I'd rather cross-examine Mr. <ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent> than the doctor, since
he's the one that's given all the testimony. [Judge: But the doctor's on the
stand.] Doctor, will you answer my questions, nice and simple, yes and no,
like you did for Mr. <ent type = 'person'>Bugliosi</ent>?
VG: Wherever that's possible, yes, sir.
GS: Here's a picture of the skull, X-ray of the skull, of the President.
And what we see are an artist's drawing of the fragments that were seen in the
X-ray. I understand that you examined only two of the 30 fragments that were
found in the skull; is that correct?
VG: There were only two that were delivered to me, I'm not sure...
GS: (Interrupting) Please, is that correct? [VG: That is correct.]
You did two. [Yeah.] Only two. And do you know which two? [No.] And so do
you know what the composition is of the other 28 fragments found in his brain?
VG: Yes.
GS: Have you checked them?
VG: No, but I know what they are.
GS: Well, have you examined them, put them through the neutron
activation analysis?
VG: They were not available, the other pieces.
GS: Thank you. Now, doctor, did you analyze the large copper fragment
that was found in the limousine?
VG: No, this was only an analysis of bullet lead.
GS: I'm gonna ask you once more, Dr. <ent type = 'person'>Guinn</ent>, did you analyze the large
copper fragment that was found in the limousine? [VG: No.]
8 EOC 4 -10-</p>
<p> GS: Are you aware of the fact, doctor, that dishonest evidence can be
honestly examined? [VG: Of course.]
GS: That means that an honest examination can be made of evidence that's
been manufactured or planted. [VG: It's always possible, yes.]
GS: Your testimony isn't to be interpreted by the jury that you find
that this is honest evidence, is it?
VG: I cannot say; I have no reason to doubt the authenticity of the
evidence; [VG ignored GS's interruption: No, but you can't say one way or the
other, can you?] it came to me in the original FBI containers with their
designations on them, and in all appearances the specimens matched what was in
the <ent type = 'person'>Warren</ent> Commission report description of them. I have no reason to doubt
that they are completely authentic; they were brought to me from the National
Archives by a man of the National Archives.
GS: I'm understanding that, sir, but you're not testifying to this jury
that you can vouch for their authenticity, are you?
VG: No, you never can do that, in any criminal case.
GS: Your testimony isn't to be interpreted to mean that you know that
the bullet parts that you examined actually came from the body of the
President? [VG: No way, unless I were the surgeon.]
GS: And you just examined what they gave you, isn't that true, doctor?
VG: Correct. [GS: Thank you, doctor.]</p>
<p><special>Postscripts relating to Tony <ent type = 'person'>Summers</ent>:</special>
The "settlement" referred to at 8 EOC 3.10 did not involve any admission
or court ruling that <ent type = 'person'>Phillips</ent> had been libeled. It seems safe to assume the
the potential cost of going to trial resulted in a settlement. The Observer
conceded that the <ent type = 'person'>Summers</ent> extracts "could have been read to suggest that Mr.
<ent type = 'person'>Phillips</ent> was himself involved in a conspiracy relating to the assassination
and in the suppression of evidence about it," and "accepted that there was
never any evidence to support such a suggestion." The case involved not only
excerpts from "Conspiracy" but subsequent articles in the South China Morning
Post based on <ent type = 'person'>Summers</ent>' research, as distributed by the Observer.
"Goddess" is out in paperback (Onyx, $4.95), with a substantial new
chapter (45 pages) on various aspects of the Monroe-<ent type = 'person'>Kennedy</ent> story.</p>
<p><special>Queries and comments:</special>
Q80. WBAI's anniversary program featured <ent type = 'person'>John</ent> <ent type = 'person'>Davis</ent>, <ent type = 'person'>David Lifton</ent>, and
<ent type = 'person'>Phil <ent type = 'person'>Melanson</ent></ent>. Can someone provide a tape?
Q81. Investigations of <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent>'s activities in New Orleans turned up
several references to Tulane (where some FPCC handbills were found, for
example) and (I think) one or two to Loyola. Does anyone know of any
references to LSU at New Orleans (now the University of New Orleans)? That
was the downtown public college, and at least as likely a place for <ent type = 'person'>Oswald</ent> to
do his work as the two major private colleges. (I know of only 10 HSCA 127,
which says that <ent type = 'person'>Guy Banister</ent> checked out Cuban students at LSUNO for the CRC.)
I have again gotten far behind in my correspondence, and I expect to
catch up now that the case is quiet again - unless someone comes up with a
photo of Col. North on the grassy knoll. (I'm being sarcastic only about the
tendency of a few conspiratorialists to link some of the mysterious old
evidence to whoever emerges in the newest scandal. Some aspects of the latest
disclosures certainly have roots in the Cuban issues of 1963, and we should
not be surprised if some of the newly prominent names can be linked to people
who have been mentioned in the assassination controversy. Peter <ent type = 'person'>Scott</ent> has
already come up with some interesting ideas along these lines.)</p>
<p><special>Credits</special>: Thanks to B. Fensterwald (#116), J. <ent type = 'person'>Goldberg</ent> (127), G. Hollingsworth
(122, 124), S. Kantor (117), P. <ent type = 'person'>Melanson</ent> (118, 123), G. Owens (121),
R. Stetler, and G. <ent type = 'person'>Stone</ent> (118).</p>
<p>*From Illumi-Net BBS - (404) 377-1141* [ <ent type = 'person'>Don</ent>'s note: I doubt this BBS is still
up ]</p>
<p>---END OF ARTICLE---------------------------------------------------------------</p>
<p>--
-* <ent type = 'person'>Don</ent> Allen *- InterNet: dona@bilver.UUCP // Amiga..for the best of us.
USnail: 1818G Landing Dr, <ent type = 'person'>Sanford Fl</ent> 32771 \X/ Why use anything else? :-)
UUCP: ..uunet!tarpit!bilver!dona - Why did the JUSTICE DEPT steal PROMIS?
/\/\ What is research but a blind date with knowledge. <ent type = 'person'>William Henry</ent> /\/\
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