mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-12-29 09:16:21 -05:00
1030 lines
62 KiB
XML
1030 lines
62 KiB
XML
<xml><p>Path: uuwest!spies!mips!spool.mu.edu!olivea!sgigate!odin!ratmandu.esd.sgi.com!dave
|
|
From: dave@ratmandu.esd.sgi.com (dave "who can do? ratmandu!" ratcliffe)
|
|
Newsgroups: alt.conspiracy.jfk,alt.conspiracy,alt.activism
|
|
Subject: "The Guns of Dallas" by L. Fletcher Prouty
|
|
Keywords: conspiracy is only effective as long as the trick is a secret
|
|
<info type="Message-ID"> 1992Mar27.161114.26346@odin.corp.sgi.com</info>
|
|
Date: 27 Mar 92 16:11:14 GMT
|
|
Sender: news@odin.corp.sgi.com (Net News)
|
|
Organization: Silicon Graphics, Inc.
|
|
Lines: 1028
|
|
Article-I.D.: odin.1992Mar27.161114.26346
|
|
Nntp-Posting-Host: ratmandu.esd.sgi.com</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> the reason for the assassination was to control the power of the presidency.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> ----------------------------</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The following appeared in the October, 1975 issue of "Gallery," a porno
|
|
magazine which billed Fletcher Prouty as the "National Affairs Editor."
|
|
Some people feel there is no credible way to justify associating oneself
|
|
with such exploitative and demeaning media. Fletcher Prouty has told me
|
|
that since the Ballentine paperback edition of "The Secret Team" was
|
|
"disappeared" soon after it came out in February of 1974, it was very
|
|
difficult for him to find publishers who would print his writings (from
|
|
9/74 to 7/75 he was able to get 7 articles published in "Genesis" (another
|
|
porno magazine), and from 9/75 to 6/78 he got 14 articles printed in
|
|
"Gallery)". Up until the Ballentine paperback was squelched, he had been
|
|
published in the likes of "The Nation," "The New Republic," (including
|
|
cover-story features), and "Air Force Magazine." It is a telling
|
|
indictment of the reality of the lack of public access to the mainstream
|
|
corporate press, that a man like Fletcher Prouty--who served in the Air
|
|
Force for 23 years, rose to the rank of Colonel, was a briefing officer in
|
|
the Pentagon from 1955 thru 12/31/63, serving also as Focal Point Officer
|
|
(liason) between the DOD and the CIA, first in the Headquarters of the Air
|
|
Force (1955 to 1960), where he set up and then ran the structures that
|
|
supplied Air Force logistical (military hardware) support for CIA
|
|
clandestine operations world-wide, then in the Office of the Secretary of
|
|
Defense (1960 into 1961), and then in the Office of the Joint Chiefs of
|
|
Staff (1961 thru 12/31/63) where he ran the same support for all branches
|
|
of the military--that a man possessing such critical first-hand experience
|
|
and knowledge of the mechanisms, methodogy and factual history of CIA
|
|
covert operations in this seminal period, would find his writings and
|
|
analysis of these important issues essentially barred from the most
|
|
generally accessible publications. As long as the conglomerate press in
|
|
this country continues to increasingly restrict the range and variety of
|
|
points of view being published, writers will resort to certain types of
|
|
publishers they would not choose to go to if they had a better alternative.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> _______________________________________________________________________</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> THE GUNS OF DALLAS
|
|
(c) 1975 by L. Fletcher Prouty
|
|
Reprinted here this one time only with permission by of the author</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The shocking nature of what you are about to read in this article
|
|
makes it imperative that you be aware of some of the credentials
|
|
and experience of the author.
|
|
From 1955 to December 31, 1963, Col. L. Fletcher Prouty was the
|
|
Focal Point (liason) officer between the Pentagon and the CIA.
|
|
During 1962 and 1963 he was Director of Special Plans (clandestine
|
|
operations) in the office of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
|
|
In 1971 he was the president of the Financial Marketing Council,
|
|
Washington, D.C.
|
|
He is the author of numerous articles and of "The Secret Team,"
|
|
published by Prentice Hall (1973) and Ballantine Books (1974).
|
|
</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> This article included a great deal of photograhic evidence of the events
|
|
in Dealey Plaza. The photographic research was by Richard E. Sprague.
|
|
Unfortunately, I will only be able to include the text in this post.
|
|
However, the captions are included in square braces, and an asterisk
|
|
character, `*', delimits pictures not seen by Warren Commission.
|
|
--ratitor</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> ________________________________________________</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> How was the Warren Commission kept
|
|
from investigating and seeing evidence?
|
|
This is the real issue.
|
|
This is a crime to top the crime.
|
|
________________________________________________</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> As we prepare now to celebrate the beginning of the third century
|
|
of the founding of this country, we wonder if we live in the land
|
|
of the free. We wonder if at least we still have a government of
|
|
the people and by the people. Certainly, it is no longer a
|
|
government for the people. The sound throughout the land is ugly:
|
|
there is frustration, hate, and fear. We must act while there may
|
|
still be time.
|
|
There is a grave conspiracy over the land. The people have come
|
|
alive because of Vietnam and Watergate; but they have scarcely
|
|
scratched the surface. A President and a Vice-President have been
|
|
forced to resign. A President has been shot to death. Two
|
|
Presidential candidates have been shot, one of them killed. Many
|
|
of the President's men have been forced to leave, some have gone to
|
|
jail; others are still under indictment.
|
|
Yes, history has been made by a series of murders, but not
|
|
enough has been done to solve them. The trial of Watergate was the
|
|
trial of the cover-up. There has been no trial about the real
|
|
crime of Watergate. There has been no trial of the big power
|
|
behind Watergate. The Hunts, Liddys, McCords, and the Cubans were
|
|
not drawn into that drama solely for their own interests. They
|
|
were working for someone much higher up. They were all pawns, just
|
|
like Nixon was. This is a game for the biggest stake of all--
|
|
absolute control of the government of the United States of America;
|
|
and, with control of this government, control of the world. And
|
|
yet the real crime underlying all of this has not even been
|
|
identified, stated, and charged. The real criminals still walk the
|
|
streets, run their corporations, control their banks, and pull
|
|
strings throughout their political and financial machines.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> This control mechanism did not start in 1972 with Watergate. It
|
|
began, in a tentative way, in the Korean War era, when the military
|
|
and the executive branch found out how easy it was to fool the
|
|
Congress and the American public. And with that recognition,
|
|
power-hungry and money-mad industrialists began to usurp more and
|
|
more power. And when those rifles crackled over Dealey Plaza, in
|
|
Dallas, Texas on November 22, 1963 and John F. Kennedy's brain was
|
|
splattered across the road, they had made their move into the big
|
|
time. They took over control of the President and of the
|
|
Presidency. The man they had killed was no longer a problem and
|
|
they had made certain that his successor, Lyndon Johnson, heard and
|
|
remembered the sound of those guns. It is the sound of those guns
|
|
in Dallas, and their ever-present threat, which is the real
|
|
mechanism of control over the American government.
|
|
It is possible now to reconstruct the scenario of that day, and,
|
|
with new information, to show why the murder of JFK may properly be
|
|
called the "Crime of the Century." If we the people of the United
|
|
States do not demand its resolution this year, it will stand in the
|
|
way of a free election in 1976. It will doom a third century of
|
|
democratic government in this country.
|
|
Almost everyone who has taken the time to do any reading and
|
|
thinking about that crime knows by now that John Kennedy was killed
|
|
not by a lone assassin, but by a group of hired "mechanics." Let's
|
|
look at some of the hard facts of this murder and put to rest once
|
|
and for all the "cover-up" report of the Warren Commission.
|
|
The Warren Commission categorically stated that Lee Harvey
|
|
Oswald was the killer of JFK and that he acted alone. The Warren
|
|
Commission says that Oswald fired three shots, only three shots,
|
|
from the sixth floor of the Texas School Book Depository Building
|
|
and that his lair was at a window, number one from the right
|
|
(eastern-most on the south side) on that sixth floor. (See photo
|
|
1. [NUMBER 1. The Texas School Book Depository Building. Arrow
|
|
points to window from which Oswald supposedly shot Kennedy. (photo
|
|
by Willis.)])</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> If one breaks this contrived Warren Commission story, then the
|
|
fundament of the "lone assassin" theory is undermined. Break this
|
|
weak theory and you are confronted immediately with an awareness of
|
|
the existence of a massive conspiracy. And we are equally
|
|
convinced that this group hired at least four expert "mechanics"
|
|
(assassins). This group wielded control over elements of the
|
|
Dallas police, the Sheriff's office, the FBI, the Secret Service,
|
|
and the CIA. This great cabal had control high enough in
|
|
government, or at least in the councils of government, to be able
|
|
to influence the travel plans of the President, the Vice-President
|
|
and a Presidential candidate (Nixon), and all members of the
|
|
Kennedy cabinet. They were powerful enough to have orders issued
|
|
to the Army, and they were able to mount a massive campaign to
|
|
control the media during and after the assassination. They were
|
|
able to have Jack Ruby kill Oswald and to transfer jurisdiction of
|
|
the murder from Texas and then to effectively control the outcome
|
|
of the Warren Commission review.
|
|
Then as soon as JFK was dead, they began an even larger campaign
|
|
to cover up that crime forever. Penn Jones, the tenacious editor
|
|
of the Midlothian, Texas, "Mirror," has devoted his life to
|
|
"researching the hell" out of this conspiracy. He has a list of
|
|
some eighty-five people who, because they knew too much or got too
|
|
close, have died sudden and unnatural deaths since the JFK murder.
|
|
This great cabal had seen to it that Vice-President Lyndon
|
|
Johnson was in the Kennedy procession, and they saw to it that he
|
|
heard those hired guns, that he saw Kennedy die, and that he lived
|
|
through that terrible nightmare of the trip back to Washington on
|
|
Air Force One. From that day on, LBJ never again was that self-
|
|
confident, swash-buckling, free-wheeling Texan. Before he died,
|
|
LBJ told his old friend Tom Janos that he knew Oswald had not
|
|
killed JFK alone.
|
|
The American public is now ready enough to have the cloak torn
|
|
from the lies about the Kennedy murder and the cover-up; but the
|
|
American public has not had the guts to face the fact of the
|
|
massive conspiracy that arranged for that murder and which to this
|
|
day perpetuates its cover-up.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Many of us have been convinced, as a result of careful and
|
|
detailed study that the first of these glass barricades, the Warren
|
|
Commission report, is a lie. And, we are equally convinced that
|
|
the cover-up of the murder can be smashed and the conspiracy
|
|
exposed. But if we don't act now, there will be consequences.
|
|
These will begin with either the cancellation of elections in 1976
|
|
or with elections that will be a total sham. For who will dare run
|
|
against the candidate of the conspiracy? Will it be Wallace with
|
|
his wounds and from his wheelchair, or another Kennedy, or Ed
|
|
Muskie, who was badly roughed up in 1972, or George McGovern, who
|
|
was twice scheduled for assassination in 1972?
|
|
Who, unless he sells his soul to the cabal, can face those hired
|
|
guns?
|
|
Today, our country is being run by a President and a Vice-
|
|
President who have not been elected to office. This is merely a
|
|
process to condition the American public.
|
|
Let's begin here by breaking apart the whole fabric of the
|
|
lone-killer thesis. On November 28, 1963, less than one week after
|
|
Kennedy's death, the Secret Service, the agency closest to the
|
|
scene, reported that three shots were fired. The Secret Service
|
|
said that the first hit the President, the second hit Governor John
|
|
Connally of Texas, and the third struck the President. There were
|
|
no other shots according to the Secret Service. *The Secret
|
|
Service was wrong*!
|
|
On December 9, 1963, the FBI reported that three shots had been
|
|
fired and that two hit the President and that one hit John
|
|
Connally. The FBI says there were no other shots. The FBI was
|
|
less specific than the Secret Service. *The FBI was wrong*.
|
|
Then, much later, on September 27, 1964 (ten months after the
|
|
crime), the Warren Commission issued its report along with twenty-
|
|
six huge volumes of random data. This report states that there
|
|
were three shots. *The Warren Commission was wrong*.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> According to the Warren Commission, the first shot, the "miracle
|
|
bullet" designed and dreamed up by one of its lawyers (Arlen
|
|
Specter), is one of the most fascinating contrivances of our
|
|
generation. Forced to account for a series of unrelated events,
|
|
Arlen Specter came up with a weird solution. He says the first
|
|
bullet hit JFK, passed through the muscle of his upper back exited
|
|
from his lower throat, traveled a few feet in the air, changed
|
|
course, and entered Connally's back, plunged through his body,
|
|
broke about five inches of one of his right rib bones, came out
|
|
again, and then slammed into his right wrist, where it broke two
|
|
more bones, exited again, and then pierced his thigh and ended its
|
|
strange journey embedded in his thigh bone.
|
|
An interpretation of this thesis, based on photographic and
|
|
medical evidence, means the bullet would have had to have made a
|
|
right and upward turn upon leaving JFK's throat, paused in midair
|
|
for more than two seconds, made a left and steep downward turn as
|
|
it entered Connally's back, made a right and upward turn as it left
|
|
Connally's chest, passed through Connally's wrist in the direction
|
|
backward from the way his wrist was facing, made another left and
|
|
downward turn, then wound up in Connally's left thigh.
|
|
Right here we see the brazen, "To Hell with the Public"
|
|
character of the Commission report. Can you imagine some lawyer,
|
|
even the persuasive and imaginative Specter, selling that bullet
|
|
and its bumble-bee flight to any jury of intelligent Americans?
|
|
The Commission was stuck with a "three bullet" crime because the
|
|
Secret Service and the FBI had both reported three bullets, because
|
|
there were only 6.8 seconds of shooting[1], as proven precisely by
|
|
a film of the event made by Abraham Zapruder, and because the
|
|
character who planted the shells at the "Oswald lair" had only put
|
|
three there. Furthermore, if they were going to stick with the
|
|
"lone assassin" solution, they were faced with the hard task of
|
|
making it appear feasible that Oswald alone could have gotten off
|
|
just three bullets in 6.8 seconds, let alone four, five, or six.
|
|
The Zapruder movie film, which shows the entire scene from
|
|
beginning to end, became invaluable as a master clock of the whole
|
|
affair. It established a foolproof chronology of the crime. It is
|
|
not too difficult to determine precisely when (what frame of the
|
|
movie film) the first shot was fired; and it is equally simple to
|
|
determine exactly the elapsed time until the last shot was fired.
|
|
So, unless the Commission could accept that there might have been
|
|
other gunmen who fired during the same 6.8 seconds--and this the
|
|
Commission categorically denied--it was going to have to show that
|
|
Oswald could have fired three bullets from that sixth-floor window,
|
|
and that he performed this feat in super-marksmanship time of 6.8
|
|
seconds. It is significant to stress here that the supposed murder
|
|
weapon was a cheap Italian Mannlicher-Carcano mail-order rifle, a
|
|
single-shot, bolt-action antique.
|
|
Another complication crept into the Commission's connivance.
|
|
One of the bystanders at Dealey Plaza that day was a man named
|
|
James Tague. He was hit by a fragment of concrete knocked off the
|
|
curb by a bullet that had hit a curbstone near where he stood.
|
|
(See photo 2. [NUMBER 2.* James Tague, on the far right, with cut
|
|
on face after he was hit by a fragment of concrete that was knocked
|
|
off the curb by errant bullet. (photo by Allen.)] ) He reported
|
|
his injury to a hospital. So there was another man on record as
|
|
having been hit during these same 6.8 seconds. This forced the
|
|
Commission to accept that one bullet, the second by their count,
|
|
missed both JFK and Connally. This complicated their task.
|
|
Remember, neither the Secret Service nor the FBI has accounted for
|
|
that "missed" bullet and there were only three shell cases and no
|
|
clips at Oswald's window. They both had said that three shots were
|
|
fired and that two hit JFK and one hit Connally. The FBI later
|
|
found the nick in the curbstone, took a section of it back to their
|
|
labs in Washington, analyzed it, and decided that a bullet had
|
|
indeed hit the curb.
|
|
The Zapruder film makes it abundantly clear that the top of the
|
|
President's head was blown off and the skull and brain spattered as
|
|
far as thirty-seven yards away by a third shot. Thus the
|
|
Commission gives the "official" version: three shots. The third
|
|
shot, the missed second shot, and none other than the contrived
|
|
"Specter Miracle Bullet"--the first shot. (See photos 3,4,5.
|
|
[NUMBER 3. Z-313, showing impact and explosion of third shot, which
|
|
killed Kennedy. NUMBER 4. "The Miracle bullet." Commission
|
|
exhibit 399: a portion was sliced from for FBI spectrographic
|
|
comparison with other bullet fragments. The results were never
|
|
released. NUMBER 5.* X-ray of fragment of the "miracle bullet"
|
|
still in John Connally's thigh. This fragment is larger than any
|
|
piece missing from the "miracle bullet."])
|
|
As if this were not fantasy enough, and as if this were not
|
|
carrying their "To Hell with the Public" role far enough, the
|
|
Commission reports that this same miracle bullet was found forty-
|
|
five minutes later in the Parkland Hospital more than three hectic
|
|
miles from the scene of the murder. It was on a stretcher which
|
|
"somebody" presumed Connally had been lying on.
|
|
This is the stuff of the Commission solution and this is what we
|
|
have been asked and forced to believe for the past eleven years.
|
|
Any ballistics expert worth his gunpowder would shrink from the
|
|
task of developing the theory of that bullet. Pictures of that
|
|
undamaged bullet show it as clean as a brand-new slug. It looks as
|
|
though it had hardly been fired at all, let alone having traveled
|
|
through two men, broken three bones, and lodged in a fourth. [3]</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> ____________________________________________________________________
|
|
| How the Zapruder Film Created a Time Clock |
|
|
| for the Assassination in Dealey Plaza |
|
|
| |
|
|
| Abraham Zapruder's camera was running at a determinable |
|
|
| speed: 18.3 frames per second. The camera had a |
|
|
| governor control, so its speed was constant. Each frame |
|
|
| of the film was 1/18th of a second apart. Since John |
|
|
| Kennedy appeared in every frame of the relevant sequence |
|
|
| of the film, the FBI was able to plot on a surveyor's map |
|
|
| of Dealey Plaza, Kennedy's exact position at each frame |
|
|
| number. This "map" perfectly coordinated two functions: |
|
|
| time and place--where Kennedy was at each moment, within |
|
|
| 1/18th of a second accuracy, and a distance error of no |
|
|
| more than 7.3 inches. The Zapruder film was used to |
|
|
| determine the speed of the President's car, the elapsed |
|
|
| time between events, especially between the first and last |
|
|
| shots (6.8 seconds), and the timing of events in the |
|
|
| background. --Richard E. Sprague |
|
|
| |
|
|
| Z denotes Zapruder film and frame number. |
|
|
|___________________________________________________________________|</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> I have worked with the CIA and military officials in testing
|
|
special rifles. I have seen countless bullets fired into gelatin
|
|
and paraffin to simulate body hits on humans. I have seen goats
|
|
shot under controlled conditions to show what impact will do. In
|
|
my own experience, admittedly limited, I have never seen an
|
|
undamaged slug, no matter what substance it had been fired into,
|
|
except when fired carefully into cotton.[4] But even then there
|
|
are scars, lines, and even deformity. The "Specter Miracle Bullet"
|
|
does not even show that much damage.
|
|
There is no point in dwelling on this in more detail here except
|
|
for the most important fact that, if any of the major Commission
|
|
conclusions are shattered, then the whole house of cards comes down
|
|
and the whole Commission solution is exploded. And because this
|
|
solution is wrong, then Lee Harvey Oswald was not the lone
|
|
assassin, and because he was not the lone assassin, there was a
|
|
conspiracy.
|
|
This incredulous miracle bullet, then, is the key to opening the
|
|
whole can of worms. Let's look at bullet Number Two, the one which
|
|
hit a curb and injured bystander James Tague. The Secret Service
|
|
and the FBI ignored it and the Commission passed over it lightly.
|
|
Now, if you were told that the assassin missed the President and
|
|
that the bullet hit a curb; and if you were told that the assassin
|
|
fired from high above from the sixth floor, you would not have been
|
|
wrong to have concluded that this errant bullet hit the curb on the
|
|
far side of the street beside the President's car. *Wrong*!
|
|
This bullet hit the curb on the far side of the next street and
|
|
more than twice as far away as the car was from the sixth-floor
|
|
window. The President's car was traveling down Elm Street, and
|
|
Tague was standing on Main Street. If that bullet was fired by
|
|
Oswald in the first window, then he missed JFK by twenty-one feet
|
|
on the right and thirty-three feet overhead and the shot went 260
|
|
feet rather than ninety feet. This is a fantastic and unbelievable
|
|
miss for a man who was supposedly able to fire the "Specter Miracle
|
|
Bullet" on his first try and then to knock the entire right side of
|
|
the President's head off with his third shot after pumping two
|
|
bullets into that ancient single-shot rifle in 6.8 seconds!
|
|
It is much more plausible to believe that this missed shot was
|
|
fired from a point much lower down and on a line with the nick on
|
|
the curbstone and the President's head. In other words, a near
|
|
miss. This would have placed the gunman's lair somewhere in the
|
|
adjacent Dal Tex Building, perhaps under the second-floor fire
|
|
escape. This establishes a second lair, a second gun, and a second
|
|
"mechanic." (See photo 6. [NUMBER 6. (Commission's Shaneyfelt
|
|
Exhibit.) Lyndal Shaneyfelt, the FBI's ballistics and photographic
|
|
expert, took this picture from the spot where the shot that missed
|
|
hit the curb. By sighting back to the sixth floor window, the
|
|
degree of miss can be seen. By sighting directly over JFK's
|
|
position, the top of the white car in the center lane, anyone can
|
|
see where the shot came from: the second floor window of the Dal
|
|
Tex building. See Altgen's photo, number 8.])
|
|
It is not hard to find another shot that Oswald could not have
|
|
made. The Zapruder film clearly fixes the time of the first shot
|
|
at frame Z-189. Also, the Zapruder film clearly fixes the location
|
|
of the car--and thus the President--at Z-189. (See photo 7.
|
|
[NUMBER 7. This is Z-189. JFK was slowly waving his right hand to
|
|
the crowd.]) There were broken white lines on the road and it can
|
|
be shown exactly where the car was at the time of each shot by its
|
|
position relative to these lines. Knowing this, it is possible to
|
|
draw a line from the precise position of the President at Z-189 up
|
|
to the Oswald "lair." In this process, another unexplained
|
|
oversight of the Commission is discovered. There is a huge oak
|
|
tree in front of the Book Depository building. In November 1963
|
|
that tree was so large that it made it impossible for anyone to
|
|
have lined up a shot from the Oswald window at the President at
|
|
Z-189.[5] (See photos 8,9. [NUMBER 8. The Altgens photo. The
|
|
building in the rear with a fire escape is the Dal Tex building.
|
|
NUMBER 9. The Secret Service reenactment photo from the sixth floor
|
|
window taken two weeks after the assassination through Oswald's
|
|
actual telescopic lens on his rifle. This would have been his
|
|
exact view of the limousene and JFK's head in the crosshairs at
|
|
Z-189.]) The earliest time a shot could line up with the President
|
|
was at Z-210. At that time the tree was no longer in the way.
|
|
What did the Warren Commission think? Apparently, nothing. It
|
|
ignored the tree. (See photos 10,11. [NUMBERs 10, 11. Two pictures
|
|
confirming that a shot struck JFK at Z-189. Compare photo number 7
|
|
with number 10. Picture number 10 is Z-190. JFK's right hand
|
|
snaps slightly forward in 1/18 second. From here until he goes
|
|
behind sign (Z-204) JFK's right hand drops steadily and begins to
|
|
clench into a fist. This motion continues until Z-225, after he
|
|
comes out from behind the sign. Conclusion: a shot struck JFK at
|
|
Z-189.])
|
|
Who then fired at Z-189? Was it the mechanic who missed later,
|
|
and hit Tague? This is impossible. (See photo 12. [NUMBER 12.*
|
|
This is Phil Willis' fifth photo, showing JFK approaching sign;
|
|
Zapruder in background on grassy knoll pedestal, camera at eye.
|
|
Willis said he snapped photo in reaction to hearing first shot.
|
|
Photo was sanpped at Z-202, confirming Z-189 was time of first
|
|
shot. A similar photo taken by Hugh Betzner confirms the timing of
|
|
this shot.]) The trajectory of that first bullet did not
|
|
correspond to a line from the President to that lair. In fact, the
|
|
medical evidence, statements from the doctors at Parkland Hospital,
|
|
as well as other evidence indicates that the shot came from the
|
|
front. So there had to be a third mechanic.
|
|
At this point it is important to make certain that we have laid
|
|
all of this out with reasonable credibility. I have been working
|
|
on this problem since 1963. Many others have been working that
|
|
long doing very specialized and very detailed work. (See photos
|
|
13-16. [NUMBERs 13-16. This series of frames from the Zapruder
|
|
film show that JFK's right hand is still falling and clenched as he
|
|
emerges from behind the sign (up to frame Z-225). Note the drastic
|
|
change in his position: hands, head, elbows, shoulders, and arms
|
|
(between Z-225 and Z-227) in just 2/18 of a second. This indicates
|
|
a second shot striking him in the back at Z-225.]) One of the best
|
|
of these investigators is Richard Sprague, a most experienced
|
|
computer technician and photographic analyst. We know of at least
|
|
510 photographs taken either before, during, or after the shooting
|
|
--all within the space of one hour. Sprague has accounted for
|
|
seventy-five photographers on the scene, thirty of whom were
|
|
professionals from newspapers, television studios, and photographic
|
|
agencies. Other men, such as R.B. Cutler, Ray Marcus, Josiah
|
|
Thompson, David Lifton, Fred Newcomb, and Jones Harris, working
|
|
both independently and together with Sprague, have done the most
|
|
professional work on this case. Ed Berkeley[6] published much of
|
|
this work in his magazine "Computers and Automation," notably in
|
|
the May 1970 and October 1973 issues.
|
|
It is astounding to learn that in their entire work the
|
|
Commission was permitted to see only twenty-six of these pictures,
|
|
and that the FBI limited its examination to some fifty of the 510.
|
|
The Commission principals interviewed only four of the thirty
|
|
professional photographers and saw only about a dozen of their
|
|
several hundred photographs. Here was evidence enough to arouse
|
|
the interest and curiosity of any investigator. How could all of
|
|
this vital, most essential evidence have been kept from the
|
|
Commission? Today, one of the members of this Commission is
|
|
President of the United States. He is an intelligent and
|
|
experienced man. How could it have been arranged so that men such
|
|
as Gerald Ford did not have the chance to see all of these
|
|
photographs? In all there were more than 25,000 frames of pictures
|
|
exposed within that crucial hour at Dealey Plaza. (This includes
|
|
the frames of movie camera film, some of which have been so vitally
|
|
important when studied frame by frame.) (See photos 17-20.
|
|
[NUMBERs 17-20. This sequence of Zapruder frames shows that the
|
|
final and fatal shot striking JFK at Z-313, which caused an
|
|
enormous explosion, drove his head and upper body back and to his
|
|
left until he bounced off the rear seat cushion at Z-321. The
|
|
acceleration back to the left in the first two frames following
|
|
Z-313 have been calculated by Josiah Thompson in "Six Seconds in
|
|
Dallas" at more than 75 feet per second per second. The shot
|
|
came from the grassy knoll, right to front.])
|
|
Consider what real professionals can do with such evidence. It
|
|
is possible to build a time-phased chronological moving panorama of
|
|
all events on Dealey Plaza from five minutes before the murder to
|
|
ninety minutes after it. Sprague and his associates have done
|
|
this. It reveals some amazingly accurate sequences. For example,
|
|
there is the "umbrella" man. (See photos 21-23. [NUMBER 21. View
|
|
of umbrella. (Photo by Willis.) NUMBER 22.* View of umbrella,
|
|
Z-227. NUMBER 23.* Umbrella man. Note that umbrella is folded.
|
|
(Photo by Bond.)])
|
|
As the President's car rounds the corner from Houston Street
|
|
turning left onto the fatal Elm Street, pictures show a man near a
|
|
road sign, right next to where the President was killed. This man
|
|
is holding a closed umbrella in a walking-cane position. It was
|
|
high noon and no rain. No one else at Dealey Plaza had an
|
|
umbrella. As the shots are fired, this man is seen in several
|
|
pictures with his umbrella open and over his head (some sort of
|
|
signal). Then other pictures show him later with the umbrella
|
|
lowered to his side. Although everyone else runs from the scene
|
|
and races around in the excitement, the umbrella man stays there
|
|
calmly, looking around. He is one of the last to leave the scene.
|
|
This man shows up on a number of photographs. His actions
|
|
certainly do arouse suspicion, and yet the Commission did not see
|
|
these pictures, did not know about this strange man. He was never
|
|
queried or identified in any way. This is no ordinary oversight.
|
|
This is a strange and dangerous subversion of justice. Who did
|
|
this? How could such evidence have been withheld from the Chief
|
|
Justice of the Supreme Court and other singularly respected men who
|
|
were serving with him? It begs credulity to attribute such gross
|
|
errors to oversight. How was this Commission kept from
|
|
investigating and "seeing" such things? This is the real issue.
|
|
When you arrive at this question you are facing the issue of
|
|
conspiracy. A conspiracy that took over right from the beginning
|
|
and began to control action even within the chambers of the
|
|
Commission. It is ridiculous to say that all of the Commission
|
|
members were that dumb. They were not. It is ridiculous to say
|
|
that they did not have the authority to demand more assistance,
|
|
more facts, more investigation, and more results. For too long,
|
|
people have attributed such failings to the Commission. If you do,
|
|
then you make the Commission part of the conspiracy. It is much
|
|
more logical to recognize that the conspiracy controlled the
|
|
Commission, too.
|
|
The single-bullet theory is overly contrived, especially when
|
|
one is attempting to solve a major crime such as the murder of a
|
|
President. Consider the following:</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> * The fact that the Secret Service and the FBI both
|
|
state three bullets were fired, but account for no
|
|
miss.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> * The fact that the Commission states that three
|
|
bullets were fired, including the near miss.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> * The fact that the Warren Commission missed the
|
|
back-to-left motion of JFK's head (see photos).</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> * The fact that only three members of the Commission
|
|
ever saw the Zapruder film in motion.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> * The fact that the Warren Commission missed seeing
|
|
the evidence of three separate bullets hitting JFK
|
|
and a fourth hitting Connally; and then
|
|
disregarding the "umbrella man."</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> All of the discrepancies, one after the other, stagger the mind.
|
|
Of course, the umbrella man could have been a perfectly innocent
|
|
guy, why not find out?
|
|
Then there was the "communications man." Photo Number 24
|
|
[NUMBER 24. Note first large figure on the right. He is the
|
|
"communications man."] shows a man across the street from the
|
|
umbrella man. This man was in the crowd near Houston and Elm
|
|
Streets at the time of the shots. The photo shows a two-way radio
|
|
in the man's left hip pocket with a wire dangling down. This wire
|
|
is an antenna. What did the Warren Commission say about this? Not
|
|
a word. They did not see the pictures. This man is known. He is
|
|
James Hicks, currently in an insane asylum. (See photo 25. [NUMBER
|
|
25.* James Hicks, the "communications man."])
|
|
There is no need to trace each error and oversight in the
|
|
twenty-six volume report which was thrown together by the staff of
|
|
the Commission. Once one sees the hand of the conspiracy and the
|
|
evidence that Oswald was made the patsy and then murdered to cover
|
|
his true role, it does not take too much deduction to see that the
|
|
whole thing was the work of a major conspiracy and that the cover-
|
|
up has been an even more weighty threat to our freedom. (See
|
|
photos 26,27. [NUMBER 26. Oswald holding rifle. Photos found in
|
|
Oswald's garage the day after the assassination. NUMER 27.* These
|
|
two photos are enlargements of the two photos found in the garage.
|
|
The line where Oswald's real head was glued onto the two photos of
|
|
another man's body at the chin line can be seen. A whole series
|
|
of mistakes was made by the team who did this work. One of the
|
|
most obvious is the way the shadow under Oswald's nose in the two
|
|
photos tilts with his head. This shows that the same head photo
|
|
was glued on at two different angles. These fake photos taken
|
|
with a camera that didn't belong to Oswald were accepted as totally
|
|
valid by the Warren Commission and the FBI. Marina Oswald was
|
|
forced by the assassination team to testify that she took these two
|
|
photos.])
|
|
Why an assassination conspiracy in the first place? Once you
|
|
decide that it was not the work of a lone nut, then there is no
|
|
turning away from the next step. Why was the President killed and
|
|
who would want to do it? These questions must be faced, cost what
|
|
they may, and then having faced them, they must be resolved. This
|
|
is what we have a government for. Individuals cannot subpoena,
|
|
cross-examine, or pursue for the sake of justice. It is up to an
|
|
honest government to do this. But why has the government for all
|
|
of these long years avoided this essential work? This conspiracy
|
|
has the power--in the face of public apathy--to control
|
|
investigation and prosecution, or the lack thereof.
|
|
I said earlier that it is now possible to trace the scenario of
|
|
this master plot. I'll try as best one man can and I'll leave it
|
|
to you to see how far you can go along this road with me. I'll say
|
|
right now that the more we know about this, the more we begin to
|
|
think of *today's* problems and the *less* we think of the JFK
|
|
murder; but it takes an understanding of one to face squarely the
|
|
issue of the other.
|
|
Kennedy had been in Miami in September 1963. Prior to that, a
|
|
Miami police informer had uncovered the existence of a plot to kill
|
|
JFK either in Miami or in some other city. The Miami police, in
|
|
accordance with good practice, turned this information over to the
|
|
FBI and the FBI informed the Miami Police that they had turned that
|
|
information over to the Secret Service. When JFK went to Miami, he
|
|
was well protected to and from the airport because he traveled by
|
|
helicopter. This was the beginning of the plot and from that time
|
|
on the FBI and the Secret Service should have been on maximum
|
|
alert. Why weren't they? Who pulled them off the job? Certainly
|
|
not Oswald. Certainly not Castro. Certainly not Khrushchev.
|
|
Before that time, plans were being made to have Kennedy visit
|
|
Texas "for political purposes." In accordance with this plan,
|
|
Eugene Zuchert, then Secretary of the Air Force, had suggested,
|
|
perhaps unwittingly, that JFK should visit San Antonio and make a
|
|
speech at the opening of an Air Force medical facility at Brooks
|
|
Air Force Base. With this first step planned, someone else
|
|
suggested that JFK should visit Fort Worth. A bitter multi-
|
|
billion-dollar contest over the award of the TFX (F-111) airplane
|
|
had ended with the contract being given to the General Dynamics
|
|
Corporation's facility in that city. The idea was that it would
|
|
make good sense for Kennedy to make political hay out of the "good
|
|
will" that Fort Worth might have for the President. JFK went from
|
|
San Antonio to Fort Worth.
|
|
Considering Texas politics, it would not have been right for the
|
|
President to go to Fort Worth and not go to Dallas; so plans were
|
|
made for the President to mend fences there, too, and there were a
|
|
lot of anti-Kennedy fences in Dallas at that time. This was done
|
|
despite the warnings from Miami and the Miami police. Jerry Bruno,
|
|
Kennedy's advance man, went to Dallas. Kenneth O'Donnell, another
|
|
Kennedy aide, worked on the trip, too. But somehow, after their
|
|
initial work, the plans were changed. By whom? Who selected that
|
|
unusual and devious route around Dealey Plaza? It was not Bruno or
|
|
O'Donnell.
|
|
Then things began to get complicated. Someone decided that the
|
|
Vice-President, Texan Lyndon B. Johnson, should go to Dallas with
|
|
the President, and that he and his friend John Connally should be
|
|
in the procession with Kennedy and other Democratic bigwigs. Also,
|
|
someone else saw to it that another useful tool--Richard M. Nixon-
|
|
-should be in Dallas that day. Indoctrination and near-complicity
|
|
is an excellent form of discipline, spelled BLACKMAIL. Here we
|
|
must stop and begin another analysis.
|
|
The Secret Service was founded on June 23, 1860. It is an old,
|
|
proud, and highly professional organization. I have traveled to
|
|
foreign countries and have worked in support of the Secret Service.
|
|
I am familiar with its operating procedures. I am familiar with
|
|
what is called "Protection" in its most elaborate sense. I was at
|
|
the Cairo Conference and the Teheran Conference, both in 1943. I
|
|
participated in actions designed to safeguard the lives of the
|
|
chiefs of state who attended those conferences. I traveled to
|
|
Mexico City during the tenure of President Eisenhower as part of a
|
|
mission to prepare for the security of his visit there. I was in
|
|
Lima, Peru in 1964 while that city went through more than three
|
|
months of preparation for a de Gaulle visit by the famous
|
|
"gorillas" whose skilled work kept Charles de Gaulle alive in the
|
|
face of repeated attempts on his life.
|
|
Because of my familiarity with these highly skilled and
|
|
meticulous organizations, I have been doubly concerned over some of
|
|
the events that did not take place in San Antonio, Fort Worth, and
|
|
Dallas during and before the visit by Kennedy in 1963. This is of
|
|
extreme significance. It is hard to teach an old dog new tricks.
|
|
It is even harder to keep an old dog from doing his old tricks.
|
|
How could it have happened that the Secret Service, contrary to
|
|
all good sense and all professional "Protection" practice,
|
|
permitted the President and the Vice-President to be in close
|
|
proximity in the same city, in the same procession? This is
|
|
unheard of. The Secret Service dates back more than a century and
|
|
they had never permitted that to take place before. Why this time?
|
|
Here we must go back to our scientific and systematic perusal of
|
|
the thousands of pictures available about this incident. One of
|
|
the most remarkable and important pictures taken of the entire
|
|
25,000 was one taken by James Altgens, a professional photographer
|
|
from the Associated Press. (See photo 8.) By cross-referencing
|
|
this remarkable photograph with the Zapruder film chronology, it is
|
|
possible to determine that this picture was taken 3.6 seconds after
|
|
the first shot was fired and 3.2 seconds before the last shot.
|
|
This is very important. This picture clearly shows JFK
|
|
beginning to clench his fists. It shows Jackie's gloved hand
|
|
holding his left arm just above the wrist (she begins to sense
|
|
something is wrong). It shows Connally sitting directly in front
|
|
of JFK just beginning to turn to the rear as if to see what the
|
|
trouble was. Then it shows a carload of Secret Service men
|
|
immediately behind the Presidential car, and save for three of
|
|
those eight men, one would say that they were, at that moment,
|
|
unconcerned and more or less unaware that anything was happening.
|
|
The three men are looking to the rear either because they had been
|
|
looking to the rear, as they are supposed to do at all times, or
|
|
because they may have heard something from that direction.
|
|
But then events in the third car show something quite startling.
|
|
The third car was the Vice-President's automobile. The driver and
|
|
Lady Bird Johnson are smiling and unconcerned at 3.6 seconds into
|
|
the assassination; Lyndon and his bodyguard are sitting in their
|
|
seats in this photo, but are partially obscured by the edge of the
|
|
car on the left.
|
|
Then we look at the fourth car in the procession. This was the
|
|
Secret Service car following the Vice-President. Here we can see
|
|
that a Secret Service agent by the name of Jerry Kivett has already
|
|
opened the door of that car and that he is preparing to jump out--
|
|
all by 3.6 seconds.
|
|
This one indelible record of a fragment in history tells a truer
|
|
story than all twenty-six volumes of the Warren report. It is
|
|
possible to place the first shot at Zapruder film frame 189 and the
|
|
Altgens photograph at Z-255. It is interesting to note that nearly
|
|
one half of the background of the Altgens photo is filled with that
|
|
huge oak tree we mentioned earlier. It has keen carefully
|
|
researched that a rifleman in the Oswald window could not possibly
|
|
have shot at the President through that tree and thus could not
|
|
have fired at the President until at least Z-210. In fact, under
|
|
the prevailing physical conditions, no one could have fired from
|
|
that window. (See photos 28,29. [NUMBERs 28, 29. Two photographs
|
|
showing that no one could have fired any shots from the sixth-floor
|
|
window and that the cartons in the window were arranged to look
|
|
like a sniper's nest three days after the assassination. Photo
|
|
number 28 is the official photo of the sniper's nest taken by
|
|
Dallas police photographer Robert Studebaker. It was probably
|
|
taken on November 25, three days later. Photo number 29* was taken
|
|
by "Dallas Morning News" photographer Jack Beers at 3:30 P.M. on
|
|
the day of the assassination. The most important thing the photos
|
|
show is that the real position of the boxes at the time of the
|
|
shots did not allow enough space for anyone to be in a firing
|
|
position.]) As important as this Altgens photograph is, it was
|
|
found that it had been severely cropped when it was tucked into the
|
|
Warren report. Why did someone go to that trouble? Here again is
|
|
the tricky hand of the conspiracy reaching into the Commission
|
|
chambers.
|
|
We have wandered a little because of the extreme importance of
|
|
that Altgens photo. Our objective was to show the seriousness of
|
|
the Secret Service oversight in permitting the President and Vice-
|
|
President to be under the same guns.
|
|
These were not the only oversights. I have always been
|
|
concerned about the failure of the Secret Service to act in
|
|
accordance with their long-established and highly professional
|
|
standard operating procedures on Kennedy's Texas trip. We know
|
|
that the Secret Service does not have the numbers to permit it to
|
|
cover every possible avenue and angle of danger; but what we also
|
|
know is that over the years it has keen the practice of the Secret
|
|
Service to call upon trained elements of the Armed Forces and other
|
|
technical assistance to flesh out their strength in compliance with
|
|
"Protection" policy.
|
|
In 1963 there was in Washington, D.C. the 113th Army
|
|
Intelligence Unit, which was highly trained for this purpose. A
|
|
counterpart of this unit was the 112th at 4th Army Headquarters at
|
|
Fort Sam Houston, Texas. The 112th had a detachment, the 315th, in
|
|
San Antonio. Its commanding officer, among others, complained
|
|
bitterly that his unit was not used in protection along with the
|
|
Secret Service after he had keen told that the services of his unit
|
|
would not be needed. On more than one occasion he called his
|
|
headquarters and called Washington to correct this "oversight."
|
|
Like the old dog, he and his men had keen well trained and they
|
|
were ready to go into action. It takes strong and deft control
|
|
from the top to keep a unit out of the action for which it has been
|
|
trained.
|
|
After the assassination, some of the men of the 112th dug into
|
|
the unit's files and found that they had note cards on a Lee Harvey
|
|
Oswald in Dallas, Texas. I do not know what other records they
|
|
had; but failure to utilize this unit and its files was part of
|
|
the conspiracy and an indication of how far up the hand of the
|
|
conspirators went.
|
|
Not only did the Secret Service disregard experienced and
|
|
qualified assistance from the Armed Forces, but they did not act in
|
|
accordance with their own time-tested regulations. I recall, when
|
|
we walked down Avenida Reforma in Mexico City before Eisenhower's
|
|
trip, being told that if we found a place where Eisenhower could
|
|
not be properly protected, the Secret Service "manual" stated that
|
|
the "President's car must maintain not less than 44 mph until clear
|
|
of any danger zones." I joked with the Secret Service officer
|
|
about the "44 mph." Why not "45 mph" or "50 mph." He answered
|
|
that tests had determined that a car traveling 44 mph was going
|
|
fast enough to guarantee all but 100 percent assurance that the
|
|
President would be safe. It was Secret Service men working under
|
|
the provisions of the same manual who let the President's car creep
|
|
around that corner at Dealey Plaza at 8-9 mph. Why?</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> ____________________________________________________________________
|
|
| Army Aid to Help Protect President Kennedy Was Refused |
|
|
| |
|
|
| Trained U.S. Army Intelligence Units were told their |
|
|
| assisstance was not needed in Dallas during the JFK visit. |
|
|
| William McKinney, a former member of the crack 112th |
|
|
| Military Intelligence Group at 4th Army Headquarters, Fort |
|
|
| Sam Houston, Texas, has revealed that both Col. |
|
|
| Maximillian Reich and his deputy, Lt. Col. Joel Cabaza, |
|
|
| protested violently when they were told to "Stand Down" |
|
|
| rather than to report with their units for duty in |
|
|
| augmentation of the Secret Service in Dallas. McKinney |
|
|
| said, "All the Secret Service had to do was nod and these |
|
|
| units [which had been trained at the Army's top |
|
|
| Intelligence school at Camp Holabird, Maryland] would have |
|
|
| performed their normal function of Protection for the |
|
|
| President in Dallas." |
|
|
| The 315th, the Texas unit which would have been involved |
|
|
| if its support had not been turned down, had records in |
|
|
| its files, according to McKinney, on Lee Harvey Oswald. |
|
|
| The 315th had a Dallas office and its records were up to |
|
|
| date. |
|
|
| McKinney added that, "Highly specialized classes were |
|
|
| given at Camp Holabird on the subject of Protection. This |
|
|
| included training designed to prepare this army unit to |
|
|
| assist the Secret Service. If our support had not been |
|
|
| refused, we would have been in Dallas." --L.F.P. |
|
|
|___________________________________________________________________|</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Also, as we looked up at the high buildings on Mexico City's
|
|
main street, he told me that agents would check and secure each
|
|
floor and each window of each building. This is not as big a job
|
|
as it may seem. The Secret Service knows the exact timing of the
|
|
movements of the President and they see to it, using radios and men
|
|
on rooftops, that his progress is covered all the way. This is
|
|
their business and they are good at it.
|
|
But in Dallas, for some strange reason, someone picked a
|
|
dangerous turn in the road. The procession passed slowly to the
|
|
right, and then it turned slowly to the left, and all of the time
|
|
the President's car was right under hostile windows. How simple
|
|
and how correct it would have keen for Secret Service men, aided by
|
|
all of the Armed Forces required, to have checked those buildings,
|
|
to have sealed any unused floors (such as that famous deserted
|
|
sixth floor), and then to have shut all of the front windows.
|
|
Then, by placing a radio-equipped man in the Plaza, all he would
|
|
have had to do was to watch if a single window opened. If it did,
|
|
he would call to the man on the roof and have someone dispatched to
|
|
check that window, and with that same call he would have alerted
|
|
the whole force, especially those with the President's party.
|
|
This chronology and theme need not be pursued further here.
|
|
What is important is to point out that trained and experienced
|
|
organizations such as the Secret Service and the Army were somehow
|
|
given instructions not to take part. In bureaucratic terms alone
|
|
this is hard to do. Each organization fights for its prerogatives
|
|
and for its role. Yet someone ordered them to stand down. The
|
|
power to keep units from operating automatically would have to have
|
|
been extreme and must have originated close to the top. Someone
|
|
had to put out the word to the Secret Service and through them to
|
|
the Army; and then that same power was able to rebuff repeated
|
|
attempts to right that wrong.
|
|
Recognition of this fact leads to the delineation of the origin
|
|
and source of the conspiracy, which was strong enough to directly
|
|
influence the role of major government organizations even before
|
|
the President was shot. I have spoken with men of these units.
|
|
Many had keen trained at Fort Holabird, the Army's top intelligence
|
|
school. There can be no interpretation of this suppression of the
|
|
forces created to protect the President other than that it was a
|
|
part of the whole conspiracy.
|
|
Turning once more to the infallible evidence of press
|
|
photographs, we find an excellent picture of the Texas Book
|
|
Depository Building taken by Thomas C. Dillard. ( See photos
|
|
30, 31. [NUMBER 30.* Photo by Dillard shows black men on floor
|
|
beneath the one from where Oswald supposedly fired. NUMBER 31.
|
|
This enlargement of the Dillard photo was used by the Warren
|
|
Commission in connection with the testimony of the black men in the
|
|
fifth-floor windows. However, the Warren Commission did not
|
|
realize that the photo was taken within 3.5 seconds after the fatal
|
|
head shot and therefore showed that the witnesses--who said they
|
|
saw a rifle sticking out of that window after the fatal shot--were
|
|
imagining things. Nor does the original Dillard photo show any
|
|
rifle or anyone holding a rifle in any window of the building 3
|
|
seconds after the last shot.]) In the procession, he was in camera
|
|
car number three. He took the picture only three seconds after the
|
|
shooting, about ten seconds after the first shot. In this one
|
|
picture one can see which windows were open and which were closed
|
|
at that time. Actually, the Commission severely cropped this
|
|
picture before it went into the report; however, Richard Sprague
|
|
was able to obtain a copy of the full original. Again, why did the
|
|
Commission see a cropped photo rather than the full original?
|
|
The importance of this picture is that it shows how easily and
|
|
how effectively the role of the Secret Service can be performed
|
|
when it is done correctly and in accordance with "Protection"
|
|
doctrine. An agent or an Army man placed properly in the Plaza
|
|
could have observed all of the buildings around the Plaza and all
|
|
of their windows.
|
|
Further evidence of the hand of the conspiracy is found
|
|
immediately after the shooting. Security on the scene was almost
|
|
nonexistent. Photographic evidence, including the famous "tramp"
|
|
photographs, show that ten men were "arrested" at Dealey Plaza. No
|
|
record of these arrests exists and there is none in the Warren
|
|
report.
|
|
In the case of the "tramps," those three men who were rounded up
|
|
on orders of Police Inspector J. Herbert Sawyer (the man in charge
|
|
of security activity at Dealey Plaza), we find a sequence of
|
|
astounding actions. A Sergeant D.V. Harkness was ordered to stop a
|
|
freight train and remove the men. Harkness arrested the three men
|
|
and turned them over to policemen Marvin Wise and Billy Bass, who
|
|
marched them all the way from the west side of the Book building,
|
|
around the north side of the Plaza, and into the vehicle entrance
|
|
of the Sheriff's office. Few people realize this entire procedure
|
|
took place almost on the steps of the Sheriff's office. While Wise
|
|
and Bass were marching these men to the Sheriff's office, William
|
|
Allen, George Smith, and Jack Beers of the "Dallas Times Herald,"
|
|
the Fort Worth "Star Telegram," and the "Dallas Morning News," took
|
|
several pictures of them. Their remarkable pictures show clearly
|
|
that Wise and Bass took them to the Sheriff's office. Yet Harkness
|
|
and Sheriff Harold Elkins couldn't remember that there were any
|
|
other policemen with Harkness. This is utterly ridiculous in the
|
|
face of so many clear pictures. Why was this done? And why
|
|
weren't these amazing pictures shown to the Commission so that it
|
|
could order the men before them. And worse still, there is
|
|
absolutely no record anywhere that these men were booked that day.
|
|
There are no "blotter" records at all. The men have simply
|
|
vanished. (See photos 32-35 [NUMBERs 32-35.* Policeman with
|
|
"tramps." None of these pictures were seen by the Warren
|
|
Commission.]).
|
|
I have been given a list of the names of these men. Also, the
|
|
pictures show three policemen. Did the Sheriff, or someone in that
|
|
office, spirit them away? And why did the Sheriff, who had all of
|
|
these men in his custody, permit them to get away within minutes of
|
|
the time that the President of the United States had been shot and
|
|
killed on his doorstep? These are tough questions, but let's go a
|
|
bit further. Why didn't the all-powerful Warren Commission--which
|
|
included the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, the former
|
|
Director of Central Intelligence, the man who is now our President,
|
|
etc.--why didn't they have an opportunity to see these pictures?
|
|
The photos would have led them to ask these questions and then to
|
|
demand answers.
|
|
It is this type of grossly irrational action that leads any
|
|
concerned and level-headed person to conclude that a massive
|
|
conspiracy had taken over and was strong enough during 1964 to
|
|
control the Warren Commission. No one can buy the idea that the
|
|
Warren Commission was that incurious, that inexperienced, and that
|
|
stupid. Having gone this far, it is not a long step to realize
|
|
that this same cabal has been able to control these things for the
|
|
past eleven years. This is the greater crime.
|
|
I happened to be far away in New Zealand at the time of JFK's
|
|
murder. I was on my way to breakfast (the crime occured at
|
|
6:30A.M. on the 23rd of November there) with a member of Congress
|
|
from Ohio. As soon as possible, we purchased the first newspaper
|
|
available--the "Christchurch Star." It is amazing to re-read the
|
|
front page of that paper today and find all of the detail, the
|
|
remarkable detail, about Lee Harvey Oswald, about his service in
|
|
the Marine Corps, about his living in Russia, about his Russian
|
|
wife, and then the full scenario of the crime.[7]
|
|
Then one begins to wonder--understanding full well the
|
|
capability of modern-day communications and reporting--who it was
|
|
that was able in so short a time to come up with such a life
|
|
history of so obscure a twenty-four-year-old "loner." Even the
|
|
Dallas police had not charged him with any crime by the time that
|
|
paper had hit the streets. In the crime scenario it states that
|
|
two Dallas cops, J.D. Tippit and M.N. McDonald, had chased Oswald
|
|
into a theater and that Tippit was shot dead "as he ran into the
|
|
cinema." Who fabricated all of that news? Who was at the right
|
|
place at that moment to flood the whole world with all of this news
|
|
about Lee Harvey Oswald, when even the Dallas police weren't too
|
|
sure of their man, they said, because he carried two identities
|
|
(Oswald and Alek Hidell) in his pocket. (See photo 36. [NUMBER
|
|
36.* Oswald is arrested.]) Actually fifteen policemen, one of them
|
|
the Chief of Police for Personnel (a man who had never made an
|
|
arrest before), and an FBI man stormed the theater in that strange
|
|
episode, and Tippit did not. He was dead outside.
|
|
All of this proves that the American people, in their desire to
|
|
be "loyal," can be had. For eleven years we have been fed this
|
|
pap. The Warren Commission report is trash. Because it is trash,
|
|
the Warren Commission either was part of the conspiracy, and as
|
|
part of the conspiracy they used their report to cover and
|
|
obfuscate the crime, or they, too, had been put under the control
|
|
of that powerful cabal.
|
|
I prefer to believe the latter. I have known some of the men of
|
|
that Commission and I have known about many others. There was not
|
|
an ignorant or stupid man on that Commission. So they may have
|
|
been persuaded that the better part of discretion was to put out
|
|
the report "to soothe the public." But is that the way to solve a
|
|
crime or to prevent others? Did that Commission agree, nobly, to
|
|
let a whole team of criminals walk the streets? This is a big
|
|
question.
|
|
By the end of 1964, LBJ was President and he was being carried
|
|
along on the crest of a surging wave called Vietnam. Few people
|
|
have ever been able to understand our involvement in Vietnam. It
|
|
may be that clearing up the mystery of Dealey Plaza will help to
|
|
clear up the mystery of Vietnam. By 1968, Lyndon Johnson had had
|
|
all that one man could take of his ordeal. Uncharacteristically,
|
|
he announced that he was through and that he would "devote his time
|
|
to ending the war."
|
|
Then the guns rang out again. Martin Luther King was shot dead
|
|
on a motel balcony in Memphis and again we have had doubtful
|
|
treatment about that crime. Hardly had the dust, the flames, and
|
|
the seething anger settled over the country when Bobby Kennedy was
|
|
ambushed in Los Angeles. It was becoming harder and harder to get
|
|
good men to run for President. Then out of the wreckage of 1968
|
|
came Richard M. Nixon, the man who had been kicked around but who
|
|
was ready when called. He became President because his real
|
|
opposition had recently been buried in Arlington.
|
|
After a defeat in the mid-term elections during that winter of
|
|
our discontent in 1970-71, Nixon faced a panel of reporters on an
|
|
ABC broadcast in January 1971. When asked why he had been unable
|
|
to bring the country "the lift of a driving dream" he had promised
|
|
during the New Hampshire primaries, Nixon--in one of his rare human
|
|
moments--looked at the reporters and then mumbled, "When you have
|
|
inherited nightmares you are unable to bring the country the lift
|
|
of a driving dream." A few years later that lonely, abused and--
|
|
quite properly so--captive man won one of the strangest elections
|
|
this country has ever seen, and then was driven from the White
|
|
House by a nightmare of tapes spun by someone with the power to
|
|
plant tape recorders in the White House without giving the
|
|
President a switch that would at least enable him to turn them off
|
|
when he swore at his brood of worldbeaters.
|
|
It is fitting to note that Nixon's own prosecutors were from
|
|
among the old gang who worked with the Warren Commission, and that
|
|
he was replaced as President by a man who was the most vociferous
|
|
member of the Warren Commission and who had the best attendance
|
|
record at the Commission's meetings. All of these things are not
|
|
random. All of these things did not just happen accidentally. We
|
|
are caught up in this maelstrom and we must rise and rend this
|
|
cloak. Like the great magician, conspiracy is only effective as
|
|
long as the trick is a secret. We have the knowledge, we have the
|
|
facts, we have the desire, and we have the power. It is now up to
|
|
the American people to throw off this dreaded bondage. We have
|
|
work to do. We want free elections in 1976 and we want to begin a
|
|
glorious new century of the free.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> [1] Even the tests which "prove" it could have been done in 5.7 seconds are
|
|
faulty. The shots in Dallas were not fired evenly; this is proved by
|
|
the Zapruder film and by the Commission's own figures--Zapruder film
|
|
frames 186-215-313. Tests were made with a "clip" of three bullets.
|
|
No clip was found in the Book Depository Building.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> [2] The Warren Commission allowed even less time; according to their
|
|
report, the elapsed time was 5.7 seconds.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> [3] X-rays show a piece of the bullet is still in Connally's thigh bone,
|
|
yet there is no fragment that size missing from that bullet.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> [4] It is entirely possible that some technician did fire that bullet in
|
|
this manner from that gun in order to obtain a "laboratory perfect"
|
|
ballistics specimen. Then, when some eager conspirators' accomplice
|
|
got it, he "planted" it as the "Miracle" bullet.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> [5] This is a highly technical point. Strangely, in its manipulations,
|
|
the Commission "notes" that a "gap occurred in the leaves of the tree
|
|
at Z-186," then says nothing. If there was this split-second gap,
|
|
then the gun would have had to have been aimed and fired in that
|
|
split second (about 1/20th of a second), and the Zapruder film tree
|
|
would have to confirm that possibility. It does not!</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> [6] Edmund C. Berkeley is the publisher of the magazine "People and the
|
|
Pursuit of Truth," Newtonville, Mass.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> [7] First news reports that day said, "There were three bursts of gunfire
|
|
from automatic weapons." These reports were nearly correct.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>--
|
|
daveus rattus </p>
|
|
|
|
<p> yer friendly neighborhood ratman</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> KOYAANISQATSI
|
|
|
|
ko.yan.nis.qatsi (from the Hopi Language) n. 1. crazy life. 2. life
|
|
in turmoil. 3. life out of balance. 4. life disintegrating.
|
|
5. a state of life that calls for another way of living.
|
|
</p></xml> |