Showing posts with label JFK assassination. Show all posts
Showing posts with label JFK assassination. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 06, 2013

Did Mississippi U.S. Senator James O. Eastland Help Plan the Kennedy Assassination?

U.S. Senator James O. Eastland was also a cotton planter in the Mississippi Delta.

In my new book The Plan, I've written quite a lot about the late Mississippi U.S. Senator James O. Eastland. This new book is historical fiction and Eastland is one of the "real" people I've used to tell the story of two lawyers, "Clinton Moore" and "Joe Means."

In the following chapter, Moore is going back in time, examining some of the papers he's collected over the years that show Eastland's dark past. Moore is trying to figure out who killed his friend, Means. Both men had been involved in trying to solve cold cases of the civil rights era, including the assassinations of President John F. Kennedy and Dr. Martin Luther King.

You might be surprised, after reading this chapter, when you start searching Sovereignty Commission files for yourself. At the end of this chapter is a link that will help you get started. Susan

What are your thoughts? Do you think that Eastland might have been involved in some way in the assassination of the president?

Chapter 17  
I close my eyes and pull up images of Big Jim Eastland. He’s standing on a flag-draped bandstand in a little Delta cotton town, giving a rousing Fourth of July speech, his ignorant words peppered with racial slurs. Kids sit around the stage as white parents stand behind them, arms folded across their chests.
William Faulkner never came close to developing a character that looked and behaved like the real Senator James O. Eastland. Faulkner didn’t have the guts. Even without such a mythical image to spark my imagination, I’ll always remember this power-hungry man—how he looked, talked, and smelled.
The senator’s two-thousand-acre Doddsville plantation, near Parchman prison, wasn’t far from Clarksdale. Occasionally we would see each other—even shake hands—at government meetings or similar occasions when he was home to pump up voters and keep tabs on his family business. The old goat was practically my neighbor until he died of pneumonia in 1986.
It was Mollie’s relationship with Eastland’s plantation secretary that proved lucrative in discovering one of the senator’s deepest secrets. Mollie, June Grey, and I had gone to high school together. One day, the two women accidentally bumped into each other at the Drew Town Bank where Eastland was a member of the board. Though a powerful U.S. senator, he remained on the decision-making body of this small community institution. Eastland had a time-honored reputation of keeping his fingers in every pot—and this included Drew.
Mollie’s chance meeting with June led me to some of the most vital information I held, bless her heart! My secret Eastland files became more voluminous than any others over the years, mostly because of Mollie’s sleuthing.
“You won’t guess who I ran into,” she informed me one Monday morning, after plugging in the coffee pot, ready to give it a go. “Remember June Grey? The nice girl at Clarksdale High?”
Few other kids had shown kindness to black students back then, as Brown I and Brown II threw public schools into full integration. June tried making up for the hatred that often confronted us as most, but not all, white kids left for the private academies named after civil war generals. June’s family was poor, and she was stuck attending school with us! In this rare case, poverty was the equalizer—June was humble enough to accept half a sandwich from my lunch sack when her family was struggling to survive.
“Sure, I remember her. So how is she doing?” Mollie poured herself a cup of coffee, before it percolated, and came into my office to fill me in on her meeting.
“Where’s mine?” I asked, before she sat down.
“You always pour it out and then go begging to Walker with your empty cup. Why should I waste this good coffee on you?”
That sounded fair enough, so I motioned for Molly to take a seat and continue with her story. She was right about Walker, and I planned to walk over to The Grill in the next ten minutes—cup in hand.
“I was in the Drew Bank Saturday morning to make a deposit,” said Mollie, “and June walked in. After twenty years, I still recognized her! Same short brown hair and tiny figure! She was delivering bank records for the Eastland plantation. And get this—she’s the old man’s private secretary when he comes home from Washington. Her daddy started managing the Eastland plantation after we graduated from high school, and he got her the job. We recognized each other right away, and we went out for coffee after she finished her bank business.”
This was interesting news. I began to see how I might profit from it, as Mollie continued with her story.
“You won’t believe this: June says Eastland calls her in for important meetings. She takes notes, and when the visitor leaves she reads her notes to Eastland, and he recites them back. Once he has them memorized, he tells June to burn the notes!”
That was amazing. The old man was too shrewd.
 “Listen Clint, I think June will be our friend,” Mollie continued. “She already knew you were back in Clarksdale. She followed what went on with Jo Etha’s murder, but said she never approached you when you were in Drew. She knew the situation was bad and felt it was best to stay away. She didn’t want to cause you any more problems than you already faced. But working for Eastland, she has to know what goes on in Mississippi. Maybe she’ll help with our cold cases.”
I did a double take when I heard Mollie mention cold cases.
“Our cold cases?” I stopped her right there and cautioned her to be careful about getting into matters over her head. I wasn’t specific, but I’d seen that cheerleading gleam in her eyes and should have known she’d been going through my boxes.  
I guessed it was time to let her in on more of what I’d been doing. We worked closely together on everything else. She was a smart woman, and I trusted her. It wasn’t appropriate or fair to keep her in the dark, so we talked for another hour.
I ended up telling Mollie even more than I’d planned to reveal, details on some of the evidence I’d already collected on the murders of Emmett Till and others. I told her, for instance, about a murdered service station attendant, Clinton Melton, and his wife, Beulah, from Glendora, the same town where Till’s body was dumped into the Tallahatchie River four months earlier. Both were killed when a relative of one of Till’s murderers went into a rage over the amount of gas that Melton had pumped into his car.
“You can’t get involved in these cold cases Mollie. It’s dangerous for you to know what I am doing, and what I’ve collected. But we can work together in a small way, and I do trust you to know about what I am doing. It is critical that you spend most of your efforts with my day-to-day practice. This frees me to work on church projects and all of this other stuff.”
I knew that she understood what I was revealing about my work on cold cases, and she likely saw through my attempt to guilt induce her to keep on task. But it also was evident to me that Mollie already had been working in my boxes. Mostly because I’d discovered color tabs and detailed file notes in several of my files—and in her handwriting! Not in every box, but I was seeing more and more clues of her involvement in the Eastland and Till files, especially after she began visiting with our old friend, June. Mollie’s attention to Till’s murder in a plantation shed outside of Drew made sense, because Eastland, of course, had collected intel on this internationally reported murder that occurred in his own backyard.
Mollie and I had a lengthy visit that day. I thanked her for the organization skill that I’d discovered in these files, and we agreed that it helped me tremendously. But I said nothing about Joe or my conclusion that he’d been murdered. I still believed that could be dangerous information for Mollie to have.
We developed an open understanding of my secret records collection from this discussion and defined her limited role in what I was doing. Eventually, I told her about Ann at the Sovereignty Commission.
“Don’t ever ask for a detailed message from Ann—she calls herself Sharon, by the way. If she calls, give her the church number, and if I’m not there, let her know I will get back to her.”
The Eastland files became voluminous and were giving me plenty of documents to sort through. The senator exercised vast control over the Mississippi Delta and the U.S. Senate—and regions of the world—for over four decades. Eastland knew people in every agency of government and used them as personal spies. Schooled as a lawyer, Eastland served fewer years than the state’s junior senator, but was still known as Mississippi’s senior senator because he held the most power—as chair of the United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary for over twenty years, then President Pro Tempore of the senate during his last six years of office.
More than once in my Texas law school days professors would refer to the records of my state’s senators when picking out the worst civil rights case examples. Usually, I wanted to dive under my desk. Each had pushed embarrassing legislative agendas.
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Order The Plan HERE (eboook)
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In my first pass through these files, I found a small intriguing article clipped from the New Orleans Times-Picayune. I couldn’t remember clipping this myself and had never read it before. It had to be something Mollie received from June. The date stamp was hard to read, but I noticed the news article was dated 1956, seven years before President Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas. The gist was that a former chief counsel for Sen. Joseph McCarthy's House Un-American Activities Committee, HUAC, accompanied by a private detective, had traveled to Eastland’s district office in Greenwood to confer with the senator for more than three hours. Afterward, Eastland’s counsel described the conference as "completely satisfactory."
This meeting might not sound like much, but here was the kicker: the detective turned out to be Guy Banister, a former FBI agent who personally knew Lee Harvey Oswald—JFK’s supposed assassin. Banister and the chief counsel had worked together through Eastland’s very secret Senate Internal Security Subcommittee or SISS, sometimes called SISSY.
Recently declassified documents show that Oswald did intelligence work for this committee, as well as for the office of Naval Intelligence, or ONI. Banister would later be associated with Oswald and the assassination through his New Orleans detective agency and SISSY.
I had interesting confirmation of this from an old law school classmate of mine, now a full professor at NYU. Dr. Dan Bell sent me a packet of papers from what he called a recent successful mining expedition. Included were declassified FBI documents showing both Oswald and Banister had contracted to do intelligence work for SISSY clear back in the late 1950s, and with the  knowledge of the special counsel, Bobby Kennedy.
This revealed much about Oswald—who he really was—and perhaps could lead to the identity of the secret planners of the president’s assassination. It definitely was worth digging through the rest of my Eastland files to see what else was there.
If this newspaper clipping was a fascinating find, later, after digging some more, I found a whopper. Whenever the senator made short visits home to Mississippi, he often brought powerful friends with him. In a buried folder, I came across a typewritten note from Mollie about a confidence shared between herself and June.
I read it once quickly and went over it again. It was one hell of a note. I don’t know why Mollie didn’t come to me and talk about what she’d learned from this conversation. Maybe she was uncomfortable in telling me she had been cleaning up these files, although we’d agreed she could organize the Eastland stuff. That was so like her, to quietly do her job and protect my back. But Mollie also had a stubborn streak, and once she got started working on anything, it was best to keep out of her way and let her do her thing.
Meeting with Mollie for lunch, several months after Eastland died, June had shared this story about her old boss and J. Edgar Hoover. According to Mollie’s note:
“June said that she believed Eastland carried critical information about the JFK assassination to his grave, ‘but he wasn’t directly involved’—June’s quote.”
June told Mollie that Eastland liked inviting important people as plantation guests. One weekend in Fall of 1963, a week before Kennedy was assassinated, Eastland was hosting a visit by FBI director, J. Edgar Hoover. June overheard them talking as they sat on the veranda, according to Mollie’s note:
“Hoover told Eastland what was about to happen—the president was going to be killed. June told me that she witnessed this conversation from a close distance. She said the FBI director said there was nothing that he could do to stop the assassination. June heard him say it was already in motion. We’ll have to sit back and watch, were Hoover’s exact words.”
It was terrifying to hear that Eastland and Hoover knew what was about to take place, yet did nothing to stop it. There was no reason why June would have made up such a story.
By now, thanks to Mollie, I’d sorted into a pile at least one hundred Eastland-generated documents, with topics ranging from the murders of Emmett Till and Medgar Evers to the presidential assassination, the killing of the three Freedom Summer civil rights volunteers, and the assassination of Dr. King. This put the senator at the top of my A-list.
It hadn’t been long since he’d died, and there could be someone lurking in the Delta, or possibly in Washington D.C., who needed to protect the old man’s secrets and his questionable reputation.
Did Joe get in the way with important Easland information he’d kept to himself? I couldn’t answer my own question.  But, I had more boxes to search.
* * *
Order The Plan HERE (eboook)
Search the Mississippi Sovereignty Names and Folders Here.
http://mdah.state.ms.us/arrec/digital_archives/sovcom/#basicname



Monday, February 25, 2013

As Long as Kennedy is in power -- (Mississippi and JFK)

In June of 1963, the University of Mississippi must decide whether or not to block the entrance of a second black student to the University of Mississippi (Ole Miss). But "so long as the Kennedy's are in power, situations like this will have to be endured..." notes an investigator for the Mississippi Sovereignty Commission. Did he know anything about the upcoming assassination? Most of the Commission's investigators had ties to the FBI, so it's a fair question.

Check out this report --

 http://bit.ly/X8FIT3

http://mdah.state.ms.us/arrec/digital_archives/sovcom/result.php?image=/data/sov_commission/images/png/cd01/005634.png&otherstuff=1|75|0|12|1|1|1|5481|



Friday, January 01, 2010

Mississippi & JFK: Links

John Bevilaqua has been investigating the Kennedy assassination and Wickliffe P. Draper for almost 20 years. He offered some interesting observations in Dec. 09 on deeppoliticsforum.com, including the following ...

"Sam Crutchfield was also the attorney of record for the Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission during the period when Wickliffe P. Draper provided secretive funding to the MSC using his J. P. Morgan trust fund account as documented by recent Pulitzer Prize winning author, Doug Blackmon in a Wall Street Journal article published on June 11, 1999.

"Three of the four major funds transfers from Draper to the MSC occurred either right after the assassination of Medgar Evers, Jr., in Mississippi in June 1963, just before the bombing of the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church, in Mobile, Alabama, in September of 1963, killing several choir girls, or just before the murders of the Freedom Riders: Chaney, Schwerner and Goodman in Philadelphia, Mississippi in June of 1964.

"Draper was linked to the Medgar Evers, Jr. murder via Senator James Eastland, from Mississippi, who headed up the Draper Genetics Committee for the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee. Evers' killer was KKK and NSRP member, Byron DeLa Beckwith, who was visited often in jail after he was arrested for the murder of Medgar Evers, Jr. by Maj. Gen. Edwin Walker who had organized and led the riots at Ole Miss when James Meredith attempted to enroll there as the first Afro-American student.

"Maj. Gen. Edwin A. Walker was specifically named by Jack Ruby, who shot Lee Harvey Oswald, in his Warren Commission testimony as being directly involved in the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.

"Byron DeLa Beckwith whose middle name was only one word and pronounced like "delay" and not like "day-lah" was also a close friend of Joseph A. Milteer a racist leader in both the KKK and The National States Rights Party (NSRP), who predicted the exact way that JFK would meet his ultimate demise a few weeks before the assassination actually occurred: "...from a tall building with a high-powered rifle."

"This statement was made by Milteer and secretly tape recorded by Willie Somersett, an informant for the City of Miami Police Intelligence Division. This intelligence gathering incident was arranged by Lt. Gracey Lockhart from that department while Somersett and Milteer were attending a Congress of Freedom convention in Indiana.

"The Congress of Freedom was started in the early 1950's by Willis A. Carto with financial support from Wickliffe P. Draper. Conventions of the COF featured rabble-rousing, hate filled and vitriolic anti-Kennedy speeches made by Dr. Revilo P. Oliver who was later referred to in the novel, The Manchurian Candidate, by Richard Condon in 1959. Some of his bombastic, vindictive and hate filled tape recorded anti-Kennedy speeches can be heard at this white supremacist website: http://www.revilo-oliver.com."
* * * * *

Here are some Mississippi Sovereignty Commission files that support some of what this well-known (and controversial) JFK assassination scholar says:

http://mdah.state.ms.us/arrec/digital_archives/sovcom/result.php?image=/data/sov_commission/images/png/cd07/051254.png&otherstuff=6|70|0|105|1|1|1|50529|

http://mdah.state.ms.us/arrec/digital_archives/sovcom/result.php?image=/data/sov_commission/images/png/cd12/113710.png&otherstuff=97|15|0|15|2|1|1|112453|

http://mdah.state.ms.us/arrec/digital_archives/sovcom/result.php?image=/data/sov_commission/images/png/cd12/113710.png&otherstuff=97|15|0|15|2|1|1|112453|

http://mdah.state.ms.us/arrec/digital_archives/sovcom/result.php?image=/data/sov_commission/images/png/cd12/113717.png&otherstuff=97|15|0|17|2|1|1|112460|

http://mdah.state.ms.us/arrec/digital_archives/sovcom/result.php?image=/data/sov_commission/images/png/cd12/113719.png&otherstuff=97|15|0|17|3|1|1|112462|

These links and others were used to support what I wrote in Where Rebels Roost:


Both researchers (Tucker and Blackmon) met by coincidence in Jackson, Miss. while looking into boxes of Sovereignty Commission files newly released to the public.

“Blackmon was the only national reporter that I know of who seemed interested in Draper,” Tucker said.

Blackmon, searching for bottom line information, and after looking through the treasure trove of ledgers, invoices and correspondence recording the commission’s finances, reported that

"[R]ecords show large transfers of money by Morgan on behalf of a client who turns out be a wealthy and reclusive New Yorker named Wycliffe Preston Draper. Mr. Draper used his private banker to transfer nearly $215,00 in stock and cash to the Sovereignty Commission for use in its fight against the Civil Rights Act. The entire budget for the effort amounted to about $300,000.

"Adjusted for inflation, Mr. Draper's contributions would be worth more than $1.1 million today. The Sovereignty Commission files do more than simply document one man's role. They show that some of the most virulent resistance to civil-rights progres in the 1960s was supported and funded from the North, not just the South. The files also highlight the ethical issues that confront an institution like Morgan Guaranty, the private-banking unit of J. P Morgan & Co., when it is drawn, even unwittingly, into a client's support for repugnant causes.

"When Mr. Draper died in 1972, Morgan was an executor of his estate, overseeing distributions totaling about $5 million to two race-oriented foundations. The primary beneficiary was the Pioneer Fund, an organization Mr. Draper helped found and which became known in recent years for funding research cited in "The Bell Curve," a book arguing that blacks are genetically inclined to be less intelligent than whites or Asians. In his will, Mr. Draper instructed that after his death, the Pioneer Fund use Morgan for financial advice; the fund did so for two decades.xxv

"Embedded within Sovereignty Commission files was a note to Erle Johnston regarding a phone call from Satterfield, and instructing Johnston to send a telegram to “Mr. Rossiter” in the Trust Department of Morgan Guaranty in New York. “Satterfield had a call from Draper’s attorney Weyher about the telegram” regarding stock transfers and sales, and “the banks need to be advised what action to take.”xxvi

"Most of the money supporting Mississippi’s fight against the 1964 Civil Rights Act, so it turned out, came from outside of Mississippi, from a Northern neo-Nazi, racist “philanthropist” with a focused racist agenda.xxvi

"Satterfield and others used these funds for putting together an impressive marketing campaign that emphasized a mix of speeches, publicity, direct mail, newspaper advertising, radio and television advertising, ghostwritten editorials and pres releases."
* * * * *

Spending a little more time, lately, I found some more interesting files that relate to these topics... focusing on Satterfield, who died on 5 May 1981 from a self-inflicted gunshot wound. Satterfield headed the Mississippi Bar and for two terms headed the National Bar Association.

http://mdah.state.ms.us/arrec/digital_archives/sovcom/result.php?image=/data/sov_commission/images/png/cd01/005556.png&otherstuff=1|74|0|7|1|1|1|5404|

http://mdah.state.ms.us/arrec/digital_archives/sovcom/result.php?image=/data/sov_commission/images/png/cd07/051239.png&otherstuff=6|70|0|100|1|1|1|50514|

http://mdah.state.ms.us/arrec/digital_archives/sovcom/result.php?image=/data/sov_commission/images/png/cd10/076396.png&otherstuff=99|36|0|36|1|1|1|75424|

http://mdah.state.ms.us/arrec/digital_archives/sovcom/result.php?image=/data/sov_commission/images/png/cd10/081485.png&otherstuff=99|50|0|15|1|1|1|80446|

http://mdah.state.ms.us/arrec/digital_archives/sovcom/result.php?image=/data/sov_commission/images/png/cd10/082062.png&otherstuff=99|51|0|15|1|1|1|81020|

http://mdah.state.ms.us/arrec/digital_archives/sovcom/result.php?image=/data/sov_commission/images/png/cd11/084130.png&otherstuff=99|67|0|5|1|1|1|83072|

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Searching for Information on John D. Sullivan



Cold weather is great for reading books. And I've been holed up for the past week doing just that while trying to learn more about John D. Sullivan, a Vicksburg, Miss. private detective and former FBI agent, who "committed suicide" Oct. 23, 1966, three years after the assassination of JFK.

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El tiempo frío es grande para los libros de la lectura. Y para la última semana intenta aprender más sobre Juan D. Sullivan, un Vicksburg, Mississippi detective privado y agente anterior de FBI, que “suicidio confiado” Oct. 23, 1966, tres años después del asesinato de JFK.Por coincidencia, el Sr. Sullivan fue un empleado de Guy Banister de Nueva Orleans y Banister fue un empleado de FBI
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Sullivan, who often performed contract work for the Mississippi Sovereignty Commission, died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound following a hunting accident -- shooting himself in the groin with a rifle and then bleeding to death(no kidding).

By coincidence, Mr. Sullivan had been working under contract for Guy Banister of New Orleans.

For those who do not recall Banister, this former FBI agent in 1963 began working for Mafia criminal defense lawyer G. Wray Gill and Gill's client, Carlos Marcello.

Marcello was the New Orleans-based Godfather of the American Mafia Family whose operations were centered in Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and Texas.

Bannister's involvement with Marcello centered on attempts to block Marcello's deportation, ordered by Robert F. Kennedy.

"Upon being named Attorney General by his brother, RFK had his agents arrest Carlos Marcello and deport the Godfather to the country of his alleged birth, Guatemala. Literally dumped into the jungles of South America, Marcello somehow fought his way out of this dilemma, possibly with the help of pilot David Ferrie, and soon returned to the United States. Once back home in the swamps of Louisiana, the Godfather reportedly vowed Vengeance against the Kennedys, uttering the following Sicilian curse: "LIVARSI NA PIETRA DI LA SCARPA!" (rough translation: "Take the stone from my shoe!")."

Did Sullivan know too much? Some who were close to the Mississippian believe this is so.

Anyone out there with information on Sullivan? Pictures?


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Early Sov Comm report on Clarksdale filed by Zack J. VanLandingham

Landingham was a retired FBI agent.

Sullivan running for Cohoma County Sheriff

Sullivan had frequent contact with U.S. Senator James O. Eastland

Soon after the Kennedy assassination, Sullivan suggested the Sovereignty Commission hire Guy Bannister [sic] to beef up the commission's work.

When Sullivan died, the Sovereignty Commission wanted his records ...

Oops, Mrs. Sullivan "burned" his files ...

Spying on the Mennonites for the state's General Legislative Investigative Committee

Thursday, December 04, 2008

Who Planned JFK's Assassination?



In his fascinating book on the JFK assassination, Michael Collins Piper writes in Final Judgment that Carlos Marcello "has become a favorite target for JFK assassination researchers who like to claim that 'The Mafia Killed JFK'."

But Piper asserts that Marcello was only "one cog" in the Meyer Lansky Syndicate. "[Marcello's] key placement in New Orleans -- scene of much of the pre-assassination planning -- makes him the perfect fall guy...There's a lot more to the Marcello story that meets the eye."
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Here's an interesting Marcello link in the Mississippi Sovereignty Commission Files.

*Final Judgment: The Missing Link in the JFK Assassination Conspiracy

Tuesday, December 02, 2008

Who Killed President John F. Kennedy? Civil Rights Activists Blamed Segregationists

o

Who killed President John F. Kennedy? In Mississippi, members of the Jackson Movement, an organization constantly spied on by the Mississippi Sovereignty Commission, put out a report after the death of JFK listing segregationists and "Communist Hate Team" as part of the "long list of murderers."

Here is a link to the Commission's record -- a copy of the Jackson Movement Report ...

The Jackson Movement also wrote of the murder of Medgar Evers, Mississippi's first NAACP Field Secretary. Sovereignty Commission spies frequently spied on and harassed Evers.

In this Sovereignty Commission 1959 record, agent Zack Van Landingham informs his boss on the current activities of Evers and others.

Here is a link to the above picture/flyer written about President Kennedy the San Diego Patriotic Society (blaming communists and the ACLU for Kennedy's murder.) Or click directly on the picture to bring up the record.

Sunday, November 23, 2008

JFK. Parkland. Trauma Room One.


Chief anesthesiologist for 33 years at Parkland Hospital, M. T. Jenkins, M.D., led the medical efforts to revive President John F. Kennedy. Jenkins' daughter, Christie Jenkins, shares the story told by her father -- a version that contradicts that of Dr. Charles Crenshaw, a gunshot expert, also a member of the treatment team on that fateful day, Nov. 22, 1963.

Crenshaw tells his own version in Trauma Room One: The JFK Medical Coverup Exposed

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Ready to look at the Mississippi Sovereignty Commission's Kennedy records?

Go to the Mississippi Sovereignty Site and search for
Kennedy, John Fitzgerald
Also John F., John, Jack
Also Jacquie and Jacqueline

Here is one record, under Jack Kennedy, to get started. A minister has written to the Sovereignty Commission complaining about the president.

The letter, written to director Erle Johnston, is dated Nov. 21, 1963

JFK Assassination Tour: Where Lee Harvey Oswald Was Shot By Jack Ruby


Where the trail ends?

Lee Harvey Oswald was shot and killed as he walked through the area behind the brown doors,across the street.Some believe Jack Ruby was acting strictly out of anger, something for which Ruby was known. Further, Ruby had left his small dogs waiting for him in his car -- pets he always took to work. Would he have brought the dogs with him if he knew he would be arrested?

But what about Ruby' documented Chicago mob affiliations?

That's one of many topics discussed by retired FBI agent M. Wesley Swearingen in To Kill A President: Finally---An Ex-FBI Agent rips aside the veil of secrecy that killed JFK and in FBI Secrets: An Agents Expose

The author served in the US Navy and holds a BA from Ohio State. Swearingen received the California Attorneys for Criminal Justice President's Award for Courage, Commitment, Unswerving Faith and United Effort to overcome racism.
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Search Sovereignty Commission files for Jack Ruby files here
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Meanwhile, here's a Sovereignty Commission link on the assassination of Robert F. Kennedy

JFK Assassination Conference: Where Oswald Questioned



Old City Hall where Oswald was questioned on the third floor.
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Was Oswald ever in Mississippi?

Letter to the Sovereignty Commission by University of Mississippi professor

Follow up memo to FBI

Both documents were found in the Mary Ferrell archives.

JFK Assassination Tour: Following the Trail?


Location and spot where this photo of Lee Harvey Oswald with his rifle; the photograph was purportedly taken by Marina Oswald of her husband and appeared on cover of LIFE Magazine Feb. 21,1964.
This spot was another Dallas residence for the Oswald family.
But where did the other shooters come from? Chicago? France?
And is this photo for real or is it just another attempt to manufacture the Oswald story?

Was there a connection between Oswald and Jack Ruby? Here's an article posted in the Sovereignty Commission files that explores this question.

A Dallas Apartment Where Oswalds Once Lived

The Texas Theatre


Theatre where Lee Harvey Oswald was arrested within the hour of the shooting of JFK. Oswald's eye- witnessed killing of Officer Tippit took place about one mile away from the Texas Theatre, about 30 minutes before he was arrested.

JFKConference: Taking a Tour of Landmarks



The Dallas rooming house where Lee Harvey Oswald lived.

What was the extent of the CIA's involvement with Lee Harvey Oswald? Why was Oswald's file tampered with before the assassination of John F. Kennedy? And why did significant documents from that file mysteriously disappear?

Oswald and the CIA: The Documented Truth Anout the Unknown Relationship Between the U.S. Government and the Alleged Killer of JFK

Day 3 JFK Conference: RFK Assassination


Larry Hancock, key JFK researcher and author of "Someone Would Have Talked" says in Robert Kennedy's murder, conspiracy aspects are very possible but in his research found no MKULTRA contacts. Hancock recently published a study of the RFK assassination titled "Incomplete Justice" in conjunction with the Mary Ferrell Foundation.

Someone Would Have Talked: The Assassination of President John F. Kennedy and the Conspiracy to Mislead History

Saturday, November 22, 2008

Jim Marrs, author of Crossfire speaks on JFK Assassination



Crossfire: The Plot That Killed Kennedy


JFK remembered: Dallas Nov. 22, 2008


Why JFK on a Mississippi Sovereignty Commission page? In these files are records on John F. Kennedy, Martin Luther King, Robert Kennedy, Allen Dulles, J. Edgar Hoover, Lee Harvey Oswald, Guy Bannister, John D. Sullivan, James Eastland, and others.

Take a look for yourself at http://mdah.state.ms.us/arlib/contents/er/sovcom

JFK: The grassy knoll

The Overpass



Where did the shots come from and where did they hit? How many shots were fired?

Which Building?



Numerous controversies surround findings of the Warren Commission. Take a look at http://historymatters.com
This photo shows the Texas School Book Depository,left, and the DalTex building, right. Where did the shots come from?