The Warren Report: 40 years later

Purple Haze

Literally Stimulated
Joined
Sep 19, 2000
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19,290
Who killed Kennedy, and why?

Does it matter anymore?

This is a good article:

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The mother of all coverups
Forty years after the Warren Report, the official verdict on the Kennedy assassination, we now know the country's high and mighty were secretly among its biggest critics.

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By David Talbot



Sept. 15, 2004 _|_ Once again, we find ourselves in the season of the official report: the 9/11 Commission Report, the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence report, the Schlesinger inquiry on Abu Ghraib, among others. And once again the official version is under fire.

The 9/11 Report has been attacked for leaning over backward, in the spirit of bipartisan unanimity, to avoid pinning blame on the Bush administration for its casual attitude toward terrorist alerts before the calamity and for sidestepping the issue of Saudi involvement. But at least it has won a measure of public respect, due in large part to the vigilance of 9/11 victims' families.

The Senate report on the intelligence failures leading to the Iraq catastrophe has not fared as well, undoubtedly because it lacked the same public oversight. This report went to even greater extremes to keep Bush out of the cross hairs. As Thomas Powers wrote in the New York Review of Books, "No tyrannical father presiding over an intimidated household was ever tiptoed around with greater caution than is the figure of President George W. Bush in the [committee's] fat report."

And the Schlesinger report on Abu Ghraib has quickly earned itself an utterly contemptuous response, eliciting widespread outrage for giving Defense Secetary Rumsfeld and the Pentagon a sweeping pass on the reign of torture at the prison. While the world shuddered in horror at photographs and descriptions of the Abu Ghraib mayhem, James Schlesinger, the former defense secretary picked by Rumsfeld to chair the civilian commission, was considerably less agitated in his response. "Animal house," he blithely called the prison's chambers of violent perversity, a casual assessment that mirrored the forgiving views of Rush Limbaugh, who dismissed the scandal as a frat party gone wild.

So it is only appropriate, in this stormy season of the official version and its discontents, that we observe the 40th anniversary of the Warren Report -- the mother of all such controversies. The vast, 26-volume report was delivered by the commission chairman, Chief Justice Earl Warren, to President Johnson on Sept. 24, 1964. The Warren Report concluded that President Kennedy was the victim of a lone, unstable assassin, Lee Harvey Oswald, who was himself, conveniently, gunned down just two days later in the Dallas police station by mob-connected hustler Jack Ruby. The Warren Commission -- itself the victim of massive fraud and manipulation by the FBI and CIA -- came under immediate fire from critics, with its report being denounced as a government coverup by a growing army of independent researchers. History has not been any kinder to the Warren Report, which has been derided and condemned by everyone from the House Select Committee on Assassinations -- the only other federal panel to exhaustively probe Kennedy's murder, and which found in 1979 that the president was the probable target of a conspiracy -- to Oliver Stone in his explosive 1991 film "JFK" to the History Channel, which routinely airs even the outer limits of conspiracy theories.

Four decades later, the Warren Report is widely regarded as a whitewash, with polls consistently showing that a majority of Americans reject the official version of Kennedy's death. (The Assassination Archives and Research Center will hold a conference to discuss the latest scholarship on the crime in Dallas and the Warren investigation from Sept. 17-19 in Washington. Information is available on its Web site.

But there is one sanctuary where the Warren Report is still stubbornly upheld and where its manifold critics can expect their own rough treatment: in the towers of the media elite. Fresh from assaulting Oliver Stone, not only for his film but for his very character (a media shark attack in which, I must confess, I too once engaged), the national press rushed to embrace Gerald Posner's bold 1993 defense of the Warren Report, "Case Closed," making it a bestseller. ("The most convincing explanation of the assassination," historian Robert Dallek called it in the Boston Globe.) And the 40th anniversary of JFK's murder last November sparked a new fusillade of anti-conspiracy sound and fury, with ABC's Peter Jennings making yet another network news attempt to silence the report's critics. Most of the press lords and pundits in the 1960s who allowed themselves to be convinced that the Warren Report was the correct version of what happened in Dallas -- whether because they genuinely believed it or because they thought it was for the good of the country -- are now dead or retired. But after buying the official version for so long, it seems the elite media institutions have too much invested in the Warren Report to change their minds now, even if they're under new editorial leadership.

One of the great ironies of history is that while the media elite was busily trying to shore up public confidence in the Warren Report, the political elites were privately confiding among themselves that the report was a travesty, a fairy tale for mass consumption. Presidents, White House aides, intelligence officials, senators, congressmen, even foreign leaders -- they all muttered darkly among themselves that Kennedy was killed by a conspiracy, a plot that a number of them suspected had roots in the U.S. government itself. (In truth, some high media dignitaries have also quietly shared their doubts about the official version. In 1993, CBS anchorman Dan Rather, who did much along with his network to enforce the party line on Dallas, confessed to Robert Tannenbaum, the former deputy chief counsel of the House Select Committee on Assassinations, "We really blew it on the Kennedy assassination.")

Thanks to tapes of White House conversations that have been released to the public in recent years, we now know that the man who appointed the Warren Commission -- President Lyndon Johnson -- did not believe its conclusions. On Sept. 18, 1964, the last day the panel met, commission member Sen. Richard Russell phoned Johnson, his old political protégé, to tell him he did not believe the single-bullet theory, the key to the commission's finding that Oswald acted alone. "I don't either," Johnson told him.

Johnson's theories about what really happened in Dallas shifted over the years. Soon after the assassination, Johnson was led to believe by the CIA that Kennedy might have been the victim of a Soviet conspiracy. Later his suspicions focused on Castro; during his long-running feud with Robert Kennedy, LBJ leaked a story to Washington columnist Drew Pearson suggesting the Kennedy brothers themselves were responsible for JFK's death by triggering a violent reaction from the Cuban leader with their "goddamned Murder Inc." plots to kill him.

In 1967, according to a report in the Washington Post, Johnson's suspicious gaze came to rest on the CIA. The newspaper quoted White House aide Marvin Watson as saying that Johnson was "now convinced" Kennedy was the victim of a plot and "that the CIA had something to do with this plot." Max Holland, who has just published a study of LBJ's views on Dallas, "The Kennedy Assassination Tapes," intriguingly concludes that Johnson remained haunted by the murder throughout his tenure in the White House. "It is virtually an article of faith among historians that the war in Vietnam was the overwhelming reason the president left office in 1969, a worn, bitter, and disillusioned man," writes Holland. "Yet the assassination-related tapes paint a more nuanced portrait, one in which Johnson's view of the assassination weighed as heavily on him as did the war."

Critics of the Warren Report's lone-assassin conclusion were often stumped by defenders of the report with the question, "If there was a conspiracy, why didn't President Kennedy's own brother -- the attorney general of the United States, Robert Kennedy -- do anything about it?" It's true that, at least until shortly before his assassination in June 1968, Bobby Kennedy publicly supported the Warren Report. On March 25, during a presidential campaign rally at San Fernando Valley State College in California, Kennedy was dramatically confronted by a woman heckler, who called out, "We want to know who killed President Kennedy!" Kennedy responded by saying, "I stand by the Warren Commission Report." But at a later campaign appearance, days before his assassination, Bobby Kennedy said the opposite, according to his former press spokesman Frank Mankiewicz. When asked if he would reopen the investigation into his brother's death, he uttered a simple, one-word answer: "Yes." Mankiewicz recalls today, "I remember that I was stunned by the answer. It was either like he was suddenly blurting out the truth, or it was a way to shut down the questioning -- you know, 'Yes, now let's move on.'"

His public statements on the Warren Report were obviously freighted with political and emotional -- and perhaps even security -- concerns for Bobby Kennedy. But we have no doubt what his private opinion of the report was -- as his biographer Evan Thomas wrote, Kennedy "regarded the Warren Commission as a public relations exercise to reassure the public." According to a variety of reports, Kennedy suspected a plot as soon as he heard his brother had been shot in Dallas. And as he made calls and inquiries in the hours and days after the assassination, he came to an ominous conclusion: JFK was the victim of a domestic political conspiracy.

In a remarkable passage in "One Hell of a Gamble," a widely praised 1997 history of the Cuban missile crisis based on declassified Soviet and U.S. government documents, historians Aleksandr Fursenko and Timothy Naftali wrote that on Nov. 29, one week after the assassination, Bobby Kennedy dispatched a close family friend named William Walton to Moscow with a remarkable message for Georgi Bolshakov, the KGB agent he had come to trust during the nerve-wracking back-channel discussions sparked by the missile crisis. According to the historians, Walton told Bolshakov that Bobby and Jacqueline Kennedy believed "there was a large political conspiracy behind Oswald's rifle" and "that Dallas was the ideal location for such a crime." The Kennedys also sought to reassure the Soviets that despite Oswald's apparent connections to the communist world, they believed President Kennedy had been killed by American enemies. This is a stunning account -- with the fallen president's brother and widow communicating their chilling suspicions to the preeminent world rival of the U.S. -- and it has not received nearly the public attention it deserves.

Both Khrushchev, who had been working with JFK to ease tensions between the superpowers, and his spy chief shared Kennedy's dark view of the assassination. KGB chairman reacted incredulously to the news that Oswald, a man whom his agency had closely monitored after he defected to the Soviet Union, was the culprit: "I thought that this man could not possibly be the mastermind of the crime." And according to Fursenko and Naftali, "Intelligence coming to Khrushchev in the weeks following the assassination seemed to confirm the theory that a right-wing conspiracy had killed Kennedy." This assessment was shared by the governments of Cuba, Mexico and France, where President DeGaulle, when briefed by a reporter on the lone-nut theory reacted with Gallic skepticism, laughing, "Vous me blaguez! [You're kidding me.] Cowboys and Indians!"

In the years after his brother's death, Bobby Kennedy was overwhelmed by grief. But the common perception that he found it too painful to focus on the assassination is belied by the fact that Kennedy maintained a searching curiosity about critics of the Warren Report, using surrogates like Mankiewicz, Walter Sheridan, Ed Guthman and John Siegenthaler to check out their work and dispatching his former aides to New Orleans to evaluate Jim Garrison's investigation. In fact Kennedy himself phoned New Orleans coroner Nicholas Chetta at his home after the death of key Garrison suspect David Ferrie to question Chetta about his autopsy report. And while Sheridan -- a trusted friend of Kennedy's who had worked closely with him on his Jimmy Hoffa investigation -- famously repudiated Garrison in a 1967 documentary for NBC, RFK apparently still kept ties to the Garrison camp. According to William Turner, a former FBI agent who worked as a Garrison investigator during the Kennedy case, in April 1968 he received a call in the New Orleans prosecutor's office from an RFK campaign aide named Richard Lubic. "He said, 'Bill, Bobby's going to go -- he's going to reopen the investigation after he wins.' I went in immediately and told Jim [Garrison]. He didn't seem surprised."

Bobby was not the only member of President Kennedy's inner circle who believed there was a conspiracy. Presidential aides Kenny O'Donnell and Dave Powers, key members of JFK's Irish Mafia, were in a trailing limousine in the Dallas motorcade. Both of them later told House Speaker Tip O'Neill that they heard two shots from behind the fence on the grassy knoll. "That's not what you told the Warren Commission," a stunned O'Neill replied, according to his 1989 memoir, "Man of the House. "You're right," O'Donnell said. "I told the FBI what I had heard, but they said it couldn't have happened that way and that I must have been imagining things." So not wanting to "stir up more pain and trouble for the family," O'Donnell told the commission what the FBI wanted him to.

Speaking of the FBI, its deeply sinister strongman J. Edgar Hoover might have "lied his eyes out" to the Warren Commission, as panel member Hale Boggs, the Louisiana congressman, memorably told an aide, pressuring and maneuvering the commission to reach a lone-assassin verdict. But again, in private, Hoover told another story. The summer after the assassination, Hoover was relaxing at the Del Charro resort in California, which was owned by his friend, right-wing Texas oil tycoon Clint Murchison. Another Texas oil crony of Hoover's, Billy Byars Sr. -- the only man Hoover had called on the afternoon of Nov. 22, 1963, besides Robert Kennedy and the head of the Secret Service -- also was there. At one point, according to Anthony Summers, the invaluable prober of the dark side of American power, Byars' teenage son, Billy Jr., got up his nerve to ask Hoover the question, "Do you think Lee Harvey Oswald did it?" According to Byars, Hoover "stopped and looked at me for quite a long time. Then he said, 'If I told you what I really know, it would be very dangerous to this country. Our whole political system could be disrupted.'"

Blunt skepticism about the Warren Report was a bipartisan affair, with leaders on both sides of the aisle airily dismissing its conclusions. On a White House tape recording, President Nixon is heard telling aides that the Warren Report "was the greatest hoax that has ever been perpetuated." One of Nixon's top aides, White House chief of staff H.R. "Bob" Haldeman, shared his boss' skepticism. In his 1978 memoir, "The Ends of Power," Haldeman, who "had always been intrigued with the conflicting theories of the assassination," recalls that when the Nixon team moved into the White House in 1969, he felt that they finally "would be in a position to get all the facts." But Nixon, perhaps wary of where all those facts would lead, rejected Haldeman's suggestion.

According to Haldeman, Nixon did play the assassination card in a mysterious way against CIA director Richard Helms, long regarded by Warren Report critics to have some connection to the gunshots in Dallas. Seeking to pressure the CIA into helping him out of his Watergate mess, Nixon had Haldeman deliver this cryptic message -- apparently a threat -- to Helms: "The president asked me to tell you this entire (Watergate) affair may be connected to the Bay of Pigs, and if it opens up, the Bay of Pigs may be blown." This prompted an explosive reaction from the spymaster: "Turmoil in the room, Helms gripping the arms of his chair leaning forward and shouting, 'The Bay of Pigs had nothing to do with this. I have no concern about the Bay of Pigs.'" Haldeman speculates that "Bay of Pigs" must have been Nixon's code for something related to the CIA, Castro and the Kennedy assassination. But whatever dark card Nixon had played, it worked. Haldeman reported back to his boss that the CIA director was now "very happy to be helpful."

Nixon was not willing to publicly reopen the box of assassination demons. But many of them began flying out when the Church Committee started investigating CIA abuses in the 1970s, including the unholy pact between the agency and the Mafia to eliminate Fidel Castro. (The bombshell headlines produced by the Church Committee would, in fact, lead to the formation of the House Select Committee on Assassinations in 1977.)

Among those in Washington who were particularly curious about the revelations concerning the CIA and the Kennedy assassination was George H.W. Bush. As Kitty Kelley observes in her new book about the Bush family, while serving as the CIA director in the Ford administration, Bush fired off a series of memos in fall 1976, asking subordinates various questions about Oswald, Ruby, Helms and other figures tied to the assassination. "Years later, when [Bush] became president of the United States, he would deny making any attempt to review the agency files on the JFK assassination," writes Kelley in "The Family: The Real Story of the Bush Dynasty." "When he made this claim, he did not realize that the agency would release 18 documents (under the Freedom of Information Act) that showed he had indeed, as CIA director, requested information -- not once, but several times -- on a wide range of questions surrounding the Kennedy assassination."

One of the most aggressive investigators on the Church Committee was the young, ambitious Democratic senator from Colorado, Gary Hart, who along with Republican colleague Richard Schweiker began digging into the swampy murk of southern Florida in the early 1960s. Here was the steamy nursery for plots that drew together CIA saboteurs, Mafia cutthroats, anti-communist Cuban fanatics and the whole array of patriotic zealots who were determined to overthrow the government of Cuba -- the Iraq of its day. "The whole atmosphere at that time was so yeasty," says Hart today. "I don't think anybody, Helms or anybody, had control of the thing. There were people clandestinely meeting people, the Mafia connections, the friendships between the Mafia and CIA agents, and this crazy Cuban exile community. There were more and more layers, and it was honeycombed with bizarre people. I don't think anybody knew everything that was going on. And I think the Kennedys were kind of racing to keep up with it all."

Schweiker's mind was blown by what he and Hart were digging up -- there is no other way to describe it. He was a moderate Republican from Pennsylvania and he would be chosen as a vice presidential running mate by Ronald Reagan in 1976 to bolster his challenge against President Jerry Ford. But Schweiker's faith in the American government seemed deeply shaken by his Kennedy probe, which convinced him "the fingerprints of intelligence" were all over Lee Harvey Oswald.

"Dick made a lot of statements inside the committee that were a lot more inflammatory than anything I ever said, in terms of his suspicions about who killed Kennedy," recalls Hart. "He would say, 'This is outrageous, we've got to reopen this.' He was a blowtorch."

Hart too concluded Kennedy was likely killed by a conspiracy, involving some feverish cabal from the swamps of anti-Castro zealotry. And when he ran for president in 1984, Hart says, whenever he was asked about the assassination, "My consistent response was, based on my Church Committee experience, there are sufficient doubts about the case to justify reopening the files of the CIA, particularly in its relationship to the Mafia." This was enough to blow other people's minds, says Hart, including remnants of the Mafia family of Florida godfather Santo Trafficante, who plays a key role in many JFK conspiracy theories. "[Journalist] Sy Hersh told me that he interviewed buddies of Trafficante, including his right-hand man who was still alive when Hersh wrote his book ('The Dark Side of Camelot'). He didn't put this in his book, but when my name came up, the guy laughed, he snorted and said, 'We don't think he's any better than the Kennedys." Meaning they were keeping an eye on Hart? "At the very least. This was in the 1980s when I was running for president, saying I would reopen the (Kennedy) investigation. Anybody can draw their own conclusions."

Hart, of course, never made it to the White House. But another politician who had been deeply inspired by JFK did -- William Jefferson Clinton. And like perhaps every other man who moved into the White House following the Kennedy assassination, he too was curious about finding out the real story. "Where are the Kennedy files?" the young president reportedly asked soon after he went to work in the Oval Office.

And what about the other JFK from Massachusetts, who also met President Kennedy as a young man -- John F. Kerry? If he's elected in November, will he be tempted to launch an inquiry and try to find out what really happened to his hero in Dallas? Hart says he doubts it. "You almost had to go through it like I did with the Church Committee and get all the context. Otherwise, you have to be very careful about falling into the conspiracy category. I at least had some credentials to talk about it. But if Kerry were to bring it up, people would just say he's wacky, he's obsessive." As Hart observes, there are other ways to kill a leader these days -- you can assassinate his character.

And so 40 years after the Warren Report, with the country's political elite still wracked with suspicions about the Kennedy assassination, yet immobilized from doing anything about it by fears of being politically marginalized, and with the media elite continuing to disdain even the most serious journalistic inquiry, the crime seems frozen in place. It is now up to historians and scholars and authors to keep the spirit of inquiry alive.

For decades the only public critics of the Warren Report were a heroic and indomitable band of citizen-investigators -- including a crusading New York attorney, a small-town Texas newspaperman, a retired Washington civil servant, a Berkeley literature professor, a Los Angeles sign salesman, a Pittsburgh coroner -- all of whom refused to accept the fraud that was perpetrated on the American people. Undaunted by the media scorn that was heaped upon them, they devoted their lives to what powerful government officials and high-paid media mandarins should have been doing -- solving the most shocking crime against American democracy in the 20th century. Their names -- Mark Lane, Ray Marcus, Harold Weisberg, Sylvia Meagher, Vincent Salandria, Mary Ferrell, Penn Jones Jr., Cyril Wecht, Peter Dale Scott, Jim Lesar and Gaeton Fonzi, among others -- will find their honored place in American history. It is these everyday heroes, and their successors, whose best work will some day come to replace the heavy, counterfeit tomes of the Warren Report.



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About the writer
David Talbot is Salon's founder and editor in chief.


http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2004/09/15/warren/index.html
 
and you complain about me C & P's?

at least mine are on topic and interesting.

PH, ahve you considered killing yourself, you paranoid loon?
 
Believing there was a conspiracy does not make it so. There were a lot of people who believed in flying saucers, and since the end of the cold war hysteria, there have been no sightings.

Gerald Posner, in Case Closed asks the question: "Why is it hard to believe that a little putz like Oswald could bring down the paragon of American politics" or words to that effect. He says that it is precisely because Oswald was a little nothing that we want to believe something bigger than Oswald brought down the mythical Kennedy.

The evidence supports Oswald as the lone assassin. Oswald first tried to kill the retired General Edwin Walker but missed. Kennedy was the next target that became available.
 
Purple Haze said:
Which one, Barbara?

Of course not. W pulled the trigger. Barb is the Angela Lansbury/ Manchurian Candidate copycat.
 
Wait til forty years from now
when it becomes clear that
Dubya was complicit in the 9/11 attacks.
 
TheOlderGuy said:
Wait til forty years from now
when it becomes clear that
Dubya was complicit in the 9/11 attacks.

I took you off ignore to read this? I didn't think they sold crack to people your age.
 
overthebow said:
Not magic, science.

Science says that one bullet went through Kennedy and Connally, and came out in pristine condition. Sounds like magic to me...
 
Purple Haze said:
Science says that one bullet went through Kennedy and Connally, and came out in pristine condition. Sounds like magic to me...

I don't know if you read Posner's book but it convinced me. Time to move on.
 
yeah
four shots...
no wait..3 shots

and he got down stairs in 90 seconds

and ummmm
back and to the left....
thats a shot from the rear


i worked with a guy who was retired CIA
he said " In 20 years it will come out..It was castro AND the CIA that whacked him"

He was a very plain unassuming man..but he told stories that would curl your hair
you just have no idea what goes on
 
miles said:
Of course not. W pulled the trigger. Barb is the Angela Lansbury/ Manchurian Candidate copycat.

Poppy said he can't really remember exactly what he was doing that day.

....thinks he was in Cuba,....maybe.
 
Tathagata said:
yeah
four shots...
no wait..3 shots

and he got down stairs in 90 seconds

and ummmm
back and to the left....
thats a shot from the rear


i worked with a guy who was retired CIA
he said " In 20 years it will come out..It was castro AND the CIA that whacked him"

He was a very plain unassuming man..but he told stories that would curl your hair
you just have no idea what goes on

Isn't it coincidental that the move to splinter the intel agencies and give one man broad power to close access to all of it is almost unanimous?

Lucky for them it's someone like Goss.

:D
 
ruminator said:
Isn't it coincidental that the move to splinter the intel agencies and give one man broad power to close access to all of it is almost unanimous?

Lucky for them it's someone like Goss.

:D



not mention the fact most of DC saw him as a rich boy, an irish catholic and a the epitome of nepotism by appointing his irish catholic brother attorney general.
not to mention his reluctance to escalate vietnam
poor fuckin bastard
 
Garrison Guilty. Another Case Closed.

Newly opened files reveal that Jim Garrison -the New Orleans prosecutor, Oliver Stone hero and J.F.K. conspiracy hunter- himself conspired to frame an innocent man.

BY GERALD POSNER

The New York Times Magazine, August 6, 1995


EVEN AFTER 2,000 BOOKS AND A MAJOR HOLLYWOOD FILM, conspiracy theorists are still divided over Jim Garrison's 1969 prosecution of the New Orleans businessman Clay Shaw, the only trial that ever resulted from the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. While Shaw's acquittal prompted most historians to conclude that Garrison had abused his powers, supporters of the District Attorney speculated that the original case files might prove otherwise. Now, on the eve of the public release of some of those files, it is finally possible to settle whether the case against Shaw was a fraud.

The problem confronting Garrison when he began his investigation was separating facts from rumors. The assassin, Lee Harvey Oswald, had lived in New Orleans only months before the assassination. But Garrison persisted in following leads even when they were quickly discredited: that an eccentric homosexual, David Ferrie, taught Oswald how to shoot and had visited Texas on the evening of the assassination; and that Oswald, together with some flamboyant homosexuals, had visited a local attorney, Dean Andrews, who claimed his legal bill was paid by a man known only as "Clay Bertrand." Using these assertions, Garrison soon said the plot to kill the President was "a homosexual thrill-killing." (He claimed that Oswald was a "switch-hitter" and that Jack Ruby was gay.)

What Garrison actually discovered should have raised red flags. The source of the Ferrie story was a private investigator, Jack Martin, an alcoholic who had been in prisons and mental institutions. Within a week of the assassination, he confessed to the F.B.I. that he had concocted the account while drunk. Andrews, who had given widely different descriptions of the alleged Clay Bertrand, also recanted his yarn after the F.B.I. failed to find anyone in New Orleans who ever heard the name Bertrand. But in 1966, when Martin and Andrews revived their early tales, Garrison overlooked the inconsistencies, a pattern he repeated throughout the case.

In early 1967, Ferrie, still a suspect, died. Since the case was at a halt, some of Garrison's staff advised that the investigation be dropped. Although Ferrie died of natural causes, Garrison speculated the cause was murder or suicide, and was confident he was on the right track. The only suspect left, though, was the mysterious Bertrand. Garrison had shocked his staff months earlier by telling them he thought Clay Shaw, a prominent businessman and a member of the city's social elite, was Clay Bertrand. The fact that Garrison knew Shaw was a homosexual fit his theory. He was untroubled that Shaw, at 6 feet 4 inches tall and with shocking white hair, fit none of Andrews's descriptions. Instead, he told his staff, the name Clay Bertrand was the key, since homosexuals "always change their last names, but never their first names." A week after Ferrie's death, Shaw was arrested and charged with being part of a conspiracy to assassinate Kennedy.

During the height of the Shaw investigation, there were five five-drawer file cabinets of documents. Today, only one cabinet remains. '"That's all that was here when we took over from Garrison on April 1, 1974," says Harry Connick Sr., the current Distract Attorney. He invited me to examine the files before he was scheduled to send them to the Assassination Records Review Board, a Presidentially appointed group. Louis Iron, Garrison's chief investigator, confirmed to me that the staff pruned the investigatory files before Connick took charge; they feared an abuse of process suit by Shaw, and possible Federal prosecution against Garrison. Even so, these remaining records confirm that the Shaw prosecution was a travesty.


THE DAY AFTER SHAW'S ARREST, FOUR OF GARRISON'S INVESTIGATORS grilled Dean Andrews, the local attorney. In the files, there are 10 pages of handwritten notes about that interrogation. Andrews did not equivocate when asked if Clay Shaw was Clay Bertrand -- "No." Although that answer destroyed the crux of the charge against Shaw, Garrison ignored it. Similar was the handling of a man named Vernon Bundy, in jail for a parole violation. He testified that while he was shooting heroin along the lake one day in 1963, he saw Shaw meet Oswald. At the trial, Bundy identified Shaw from his slightly stiff walk -- "the twisting of his foot had frightened me that day on the sea wall when I was about to cook my drugs." The defense did not shake his basic story.

Looking through the files now, I discovered a March 16, 1967, transcript of an interview between Bundy and three Garrison investigators. In that talk, only two weeks after Shaw's arrest, Bundy described the "Oswald" character as a "real junkie," and said his name was "Pete." Not once in a 12-page typewritten statement did Bundy mention any unusual walk or gait. By the time of his testimony, he had dropped any inconsistencies, and his memory had "improved" favorably for the prosecution.

The most telling abuse shown by the files probably concerns four witnesses from Clinton, La, who were used to holster a sighting of Oswald, Ferric and Shaw. The witnesses gave almost uniform trial testimony, saying that during a Congress of Racial Equality voter-registration drive in the late summer of 1963, a black Cadillac, driven by Shaw, stopped in town. Ferrie and Oswald were passengers. This testimony seemed strong. Yet, the fries confirm suspicions that the witnesses initially gave dramatically conflicting statements to investigators. Some had failed to identify Oswald, Shaw or Ferrie. Others had described the Cadillac as an "old and beat-up Nash or a Kaiser," or instead of three men in the car, they originally said four, or two, or a woman with a baby. Some swore the Oswald look-alike was in a voter-registration line, while a few thought he applied for a job at a mental institution, and another claimed to have cut his hair. Several placed the sightings in October, when Oswald was in Dallas, and two thought Jack Ruby drove the car.

Moreover, the files reveal new information that Garrison's investigators had tried in vain to find support for the alleged sighting. They had combed the Clinton area; more than 100 local residents failed to recall a dark car or strangers in the small town. At a separate meeting of 60 CORE volunteers, investigators explained the story and projected pictures of Oswald, Shaw and Ferric. No one remembered the incident.

But in an era when defense attorneys were not entitled to exculpatory material or contradictory witness statements, it was up to the prosecutor not to proceed with unreliable evidence. Garrison exercised no such restraint. In a March 24, 1967, memo from Lynn Loisel, a prosecution investigator, to Garrison, a potential witness was adamant that Clay Shaw was not Clay Bertrand. That document was hidden not just from defense lawyers but from the rest of the investigative staff. At the top is written: "Do Not DISTRIBUTE! Not clear. Re-interview needed when facts are straightened out."

The excesses shown by the newly opened Garrison files do not stop at prosecutory persecution. They also disclose a previously unknown aspect -- that Garrison secretly taped the conversations of journalists who were critical of him. Jack Martin, the private investigator who had first spun the tale about Ferric and Oswald, recorded most of the conversations. On the tapes and in their transcripts in the files, Martin and others assured people they spoke to that their telephones were not tapped. The surveillance might have been legal under Louisiana law (the consent of one party to the conversation is necessary), but misrepresentations like those from Martin cloud the issue. Other surveillances in the files raise the issue as to whether Garrison's investigators broke the law. When Ferrie's godson was arrested on a narcotics charge, prosecutors offered to drop it if he taped conversations with journalists. Several of Garrison's investigators also unsuccessfully tried to record a meeting, in a car, between two NBC reporters and an unidentified third person. There is no evidence of consent to the recording, nor a court order authorizing the surveillance.
Rumors that Garrison bugged the apartments of some potential witnesses are also confirmed in the files. Journalists like James Phelan, at The Saturday Evening Post, and George Lardner, at The Washington Post, were routinely recorded when they visited the apartments.


THE NEWLY OPENED FILES PROVIDE YET ANOTHER INSIGHT INTO Garrison's personality and motivation. His view of who was in the conspiracy evolved radically, from a small group of homosexuals to members of the "military-industrial complex." A thick folder labeled with his name contained documents and handwritten notes to himself. It included a map of the United States titled "Massive Retaliation Complex, which names potential witnesses or suspects in cities and cross-links them to defense contractors. In a separate memo, Garrison listed people tangentially connected to Oswald (for example, the librarian from whom Oswald checked out books) and wrote their supposed connections to the military-industrial complex.

But theories about the military-industrial complex did not impress the Shaw jury. They took only 45 minutes to return a not-guilty verdict. That meant little to Garrison, who viewed the jury's decision as an over- sight in an otherwise solid case. He later charged Shaw with perjury, an action that an appeals court enjoined him from continuing when it concluded he had acted in bad faith.

When I finished reviewing Garrison's files, I again met with District Attorney Connick. I asked whether Oliver Stone, Whose movie "J.F.K." portrayed Garrison as a lone hero, had ever asked to see Garrison's files. "Heavens no. They did not even ask about them. I don't think they were probing anymore. I had the impression that Oliver Stone knew what he was going to do, had his mind made up and wasn't going to be bothered by the facts. For history, that's a shame."

Did Stone ever ask for your opinion? "Yes, he did," Connick says. "I said I thought it was one of the grossest, most extreme miscarriages of justice in the annals of American judicial history. And Stone said, 'Well, we are going to do the movie anyway,' as if I was suggesting he shouldn't do it. I said: 'Well, do whatever you want to do. I have nothing to say about that. You were asking and I was telling you that it was just a miscarriage of justice. An innocent man was plucked out of somebody's mind and made a defendant in a criminal case.' "
Copyright 1995, Gerald Posner
 
Tathagata said:
not mention the fact most of DC saw him as a rich boy, an irish catholic and a the epitome of nepotism by appointing his irish catholic brother attorney general.
not to mention his reluctance to escalate vietnam
poor fuckin bastard

I found some articles that are fantastic reading about the wide web of relationships between agencies, administrations, families, friends and other assorted cohorts.

Your friend would be probably be proud.
 
Tathagata said:
i worked with a guy who was retired CIA
he said " In 20 years it will come out..It was castro AND the CIA that whacked him"

He was a very plain unassuming man..but he told stories that would curl your hair
you just have no idea what goes on


In which Directorate did he work?
 
overthebow said:
Not magic, science.

Science Fiction maybe. No bullet can hover for a second and a half and make a ninety degree turn.

You're nuttier than squirrel shit if you belief the Warren Commission Report.
 
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