Senin, 19 November 2018

669 Data, Facts, and Timeline about the JFK Assassination (Part 6 of 7)

669 Data, Facts, and Timeline about the JFK Assassination (Part 6 of 7)

Shalom.

I want to live on earth as in heaven. I know you want to live on earth as in heaven too. Together we want to live on earth as in heaven.

If all human beings want to live on earth as in heaven, then evil will wane quickly. And that's when peace comes down to earth.

Matthew {6:10} Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done in earth, as [it is] in heaven.

I am happy. You are happy. All humans will be happy. :)

669 Data, Facts, and Timeline about the JFK 

Assassination (Part 6 of 7)


By Richard Nata


Power and Business Trillions of Dollars Make JFK Must Be Killed: 669 Data and Timeline Proving It by [Nata, Richard]

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669 Data, Facts, and Timeline about the JFK 

Assassination (Part 6 of 7)


So, happy reading.


Facts About the JFK Assassination:
1.     1.      On November 26, 1963, Lyndon Johnson signed national security resolution no. 273, which completely reversed Kennedy's plan for a withdrawal from Vietnam, and committed the U.S. to a War in Vietnam. The most bizarre part of this story is that the Document that Johnson signed was drafted on November 21, 1963, the day before Kennedy was assassinated. Johnson then increased troops from Kennedy's 16,000 to 550,000 in the next five years.
2.      On November 26, 1963, President Johnson issued National Security Action Memorandum 273 (NSAM 273), a modification of American policy in Vietnam. Although the memorandum had already been drafted by adviser McGeorge Bundy at the request of President Kennedy, Johnson added some changes. Most notably, the memo "for the first time introduced the word 'win' into the U.S. goal." The declaration read that "It remains the central object of the United States in South Vietnam to help the people and Government of that country to win their contest against the externally directed and supported Communist conspiracy," which, one historian observes, "unmistakably obliged the United States to deeper responsibilities that would lead to war."
3.      On November 26, 1963, Jack Ruby was formally indicted by the grand jury of Dallas County, Texas, for the murder of Lee Harvey Oswald. He would be found guilty of murder on March 14, 1964, and sentenced to be executed in the electric chair, though an appeals court would reverse the conviction in 1966 and remand the case for a second trial. Before he could be retried, Ruby would die from lung cancer on January 3, 1967.
4.      On November 26, 1963, the U.S. Federal Reserve Bank began the removal of silver certificates from circulation, starting with the discontinuation of the one dollar notes. After a dramatic increase in the U.S. Department of the Treasury's supply of silver dollars in one month, Secretary Douglas Dillon would announce on March 25, 1964, that the certificates would no longer be exchangeable for anything other than regular bills of the same denomination.
5.      On November 26, 1963, During a meeting between President Johnson and Soviet Vice-Premier Anastas Mikoyan at the White House, made while Mikoyan was in town for John F. Kennedy's funeral, the President assured the Soviet envoy that the United States would not invade Cuba during his presidency. Two days later, however, Johnson instructed CIA Director John A. McCone to develop policies that were "more aggressive," including a possible May 30, 1964 invasion.
6.      On November 26, 1963, On the same day, Cuba issued Law 1129, directing all Cuban men between the age of 16 and 44 to register for military service, effective December 1. Teenage boys would enter military schools beginning in April 1964.
7.      On November 27, 1963, President Lyndon B. Johnson addressed a joint session of Congress in his first major speech since being sworn in as President of the United States and pledged that he would not leave from the programs that had been started by his predecessor, John F. Kennedy. In what would become known as his "Let Us Continue" speech, he urged Congress to pass legislation for a tax cut and a civil rights bill. "All I have I would have given gladly not to be standing here today," Johnson told Congress, calling Kennedy "the greatest leader of our time... struck down by the foulest deed of our time." Reminding his listeners that Kennedy had said "let us begin" in his inaugural address, Johnson added, "Today in this moment of new resolve, I would say to my fellow Americans, let us continue... Let us here highly resolve that John Fitzgerald Kennedy did not live— or die— in vain."
8.      On November 27, 1963, the Fuerzas Armadas de Liberación Nacional (FALN), a group of leftist revolutionaries in Venezuela, kidnapped Colonel James K. Chenault, the deputy chief of the U.S. Army mission in Caracas, as he was being picked up at his home by the mission chauffeur.; Colonel Chenault would be released, unharmed, by the FALN gunmen on December 5.
9.      On November 28, 1963, on Thanksgiving Day, President Johnson issued an Executive Order the immediate renaming of the space center at Cape Canaveral, in Florida to "Cape Kennedy", then told the nation about it as part of a televised address. In addition, the President noted that the cape itself "shall be known hereafter as Cape Kennedy". The day before, at Johnson's request, the United States Board on Geographic Names had approved the renaming of the peninsula, which had first been identified as "Cabo Cañaveral" by explorer Juan Ponce de León. Despite protests from the residents of the city of Cape Canaveral, Florida, the order affected only the cape itself and the federally-owned property, rather than the town. Florida Governor Farris Bryant told critics on December 5, "The people of Florida, in the year 2063, will look back and understand what President Johnson has done and will approve." However, the old name would be restored less than ten years later, on October 9, 1973, at the request of Florida Congressman Lou Frey, Jr.
10.  On November 29, 1963, just one week after Kennedy's assassination, Johnson issued an executive order to rename NASA's Apollo Launch Operations Center and the NASA/Air Force Cape Canaveral launch facilities as the John F. Kennedy Space Center. Cape Canaveral was officially known as Cape Kennedy from 1963-1973.
11.  Robert Kennedy was the Attorney General of the United States and an expert at investigating and solving crimes, along with the president’s widow, Jacqueline Kennedy, both sent a friend of the family named William Walton to Moscow, to tell Premiere Khrushchev and the Kremlin that they did not blame the Russians.
12.  Artist William Walton — a friend of the First Lady — went to Moscow on a previously scheduled trip a week after JFK’s murder. Walton carried a message from RFK and Jackie for their friend, Georgi Bolshakov, a Russian diplomat who had served as a back-channel link between the White House and the Kremlin during the October 1962 crisis:

RFK and Jackie wanted the Soviet leadership to know that “despite Oswald’s connections to the communist world, the Kennedy believed that the president was felled by domestic opponents.”

This was what Jackie and RFK said privately one week after the tragedy in Dallas. They later publicly endorsed the findings of the Warren Commission.

And then the Soviet Union did a thorough investigation to find out who really was responsible for JFK's assassination. And after 21 months they determined that it was Lyndon B Johnson who arranged for Kennedy's murder.

In September of 1965, the KGB informed its staff in New York City that LBJ had killed Kennedy.
13.  On November 29,1963, a meeting took place between the FBI and the CIA.
14.  On November 29, 1963, 5 days after the assassination, FBI director J. Edgar Hoover wrote a memo naming George Bush as a CIA officer.

J. Edgar Hoover wrote a memo and he titled the subject heading “The Assassination of President John F. Kennedy.” Hoover reported that on the day after the murder of President John F. Kennedy the bureau of the FBI had briefings with two individuals." Captain William Edwards of the Defense Intelligence Agency;" and "Mr. George Bush of the Central Intelligence  Agency."

J. Edgar Hoover writes a memo to the Director of the "Bureau of Intelligence and Research Department of State." He is afraid that "Mr. George Bush of the Central Intelligence Agency" and "Captain William Edwards of the Defense Intelligence Agency," may try to capitalize on the present situation by launching an unauthorized raid against Cuba with their Anti-Castro group, believing that the assassination of President John F. Kennedy might give them the perfect opportunity to invade Cuba by blaming JFK's assassination on Castro and the Russians. 
15.  President LYNDON B. JOHNSON, by Executive Order No. 11130 dated November 29, 1963, created this Commission to investigate the assassination on November 22, 1963, of John Fitzgerald Kennedy, the 35th President of the United States. The President directed the Commission to check all the facts and circumstances surrounding the assassination and the later killing of the alleged assassin and to report its findings and conclusions to him.
16.  By Ms order of November 29 establishing the Commission, President Johnson sought to avoid parallel investigations and to concentrate fact-finding in a body having the broadest national mandate. As Chairman of the Commission, President Johnson selected Earl Warren, Chief Justice of the United States, former Governor and attorney general of the State of California. From the U.S. Senate, he chose Richard B. Russell, Dèmocratic Senator from Georgia and chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, former Governor of, and country attorney in, the State of Georgia, and John Sherman Cooper, Republican Senator from Kentucky, former county and circuit judge, State of Kentucky, and U.S. Ambassador to India. Two members of the Commission were drawn from the U.S. House of Representatives: Hale Boggs, Democratic U.S. Representative from Louisiana and majority whip, and Gerald R. Ford, Republican, U.S. Representative from Michigan and chairman of the House Republican Conference. From private life, President Johnson selected two lawyers by profession, both of whom have served in the administrations of Democratic and Republican Presidents: Allen W. Dulles, former Director of Central Intelligence, and John J. McCloy, former President of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, former U.S. High Commissioner for Germany, and during World War II, the Assistant Secretary of War.
17.  The president named Chief Justice Earl Warren as chairman of the President's Commission on the Assassination of President Kennedy, which became better known as the Warren Commission. 
18.  On November 29, 1963, President Lyndon Baines Johnson appointed Dulles as one of seven commissioners of the Warren Commission to investigate the assassination of the U.S. President John F. Kennedy. The appointment was later criticized by some historians, who have noted that Kennedy had fired him, and he was, therefore, unlikely to be impartial in passing the judgments charged to the Warren Commission. In the view of journalist and author Stephen Kinzer, Johnson appointed Dulles primarily so that Dulles could "coach" the Commission on how to interview CIA witnesses and what questions to ask, because Johnson and Dulles were both anxious to make sure that the Commission did not discover Kennedy's secret involvement in the administration's illegal plans to assassinate Castro and other foreign leaders.

In 1963, after his dismissal as the director of the CIA, Allen Dulles writes a book called The Craft of Intelligence – with the help of E. Howard Hunt. In this book Allen Dulles mentions that he was in Dallas weeks before the assassination, and that Al Ulmer, the foreign-based CIA coup expert was in Texas visiting with George Bush and E. Howard Hunt, both top Dulles CIA operatives and covert operations specialist, and it was confirmed by E. Howard  Hunt’s own son that both his father and George Bush had been in Dallas; – until supposedly George Bush leaves town either the night before or on the very day of the assassination and places his covering alibi phone call from Tyler, Texas.
19.  Johnson had appointed men like John J McCloy and Allen Dulles to the Warren Commission. John J McCloy was the president of the World Bank and High Commissioner for Germany after the War and had helped to pardon and release many Nazi mass murders from prison. He was also friends with Hitler and shared a box with Hitler and Herman Goering at the 1936 Olympics, and he was in contact with Rudolph Hess during the War. Allen Dulles was the first Director of the CIA and he was in charge of “Operation Paper Clip,” where they smuggled Nazi war criminals into the United States to use their evil talents in the Cold War against Communism. LBJ appointed men like these as the heads of the Warren Commission to help cover up the truth about what really happened that day, and who was responsible for the assassination of John F. Kennedy. These men purposely tampered with and destroyed vital evidence, rewrote people's testimonies, and allowed only those witnesses that would collaborate their crazy lone gunman story to testify. 
20.  At the first meeting of the LBJ-appointed Warren Commission, McCloy spoke for the global elite when he said that it was of paramount importance to “show the world that America is not a banana republic, where a government can be changed by conspiracy.”

This secret society of powerful Illuminati bankers, drug runners, and corrupt politicians who killed Kennedy have Nazi/Fascist ties and connections to both the Nazi-run CIA, the Mafia, the Occult, and the U.S military industrial complex. These men also have a very powerful influence over the mainstream media and our judicial system and are fully capable of blocking any real investigation of the facts, as they have done with the twin towers—whether by the government or the press—right up to this very day. Journalist John Loftus reported that George H.W. Bush had 41 ex-Nazis working for him in the White House during his presidency.

The Illuminati Banksters is made up of 13 to 15 satanic worshiping blue blood families which include: Rothschild’s, Kuhn; Loeb; Lehman; Rockefeller's; Sachs; Warburg; Lazard; Seaf; Goldman Schiff; Morgan; Schroeder; Bush; Harriman... Their Illuminati, Nazi, One World Agenda calls for the establishment of a National Socialist World Government.

After World War II, nearly 3000 crack Nazi S.S. agents were brought to the U.S. and given new identities and positions within the American corporate empire, most of these positions being part of the so-called Military-Industrial Complex. This super top secret operation was called Project Paperclip. This was implemented with the help of the Rockefeller's and Nazi sympathizers within the U.S Intelligence agency.

It was quite a feat to create a Nazi-run Intelligence agency in America without the American people who hated the Nazis from even knowing about it. It was even more of a feat for the CIA to carry out a partial fascist coup d’état of the American government in 1963 by killing the President.
21.  While serving on the Warren Commission, Ford secretly gave information about the committee’s investigation into JFK’s assassination to the FBI.

In late 1963, President Lyndon B. Johnson appointed Ford to the Warren Commission investigating John F. Kennedy’s assassination. Ford later co-authored a book about the commission’s findings, titled “Portrait of the Assassin” (1965). Years later, documents came to light revealing that Ford opened a private channel of communication with the FBI, then run by J. Edgar Hoover, about the commission’s independent investigation.

In 2008, two years after Ford’s death, the Washington Post reported that among the 500 pages of the FBI’s previously confidential file on the former president were memos revealing that Ford approached the FBI to offer them confidential information about the proceedings of the commission, including the fact that several members of the commission doubted the FBI’s single-gunman theory (in which Ford was a strong believer).
22.  Every element of the famous Single Bullet Theory (derided as the “Magic Bullet theory” by conspiracists) has been controversial, and none more than the level of the entry wound in Kennedy’s back.

Conspiracists have incessantly claimed the bullet entered too low to be consistent with the Single Bullet Theory.

Thus it may seem especially sinister that Warren Commission member Gerald Ford “moved” the wound upward when he marked up a draft of the Warren Commission Report.

Conspiracists have seen this as blatant evidence that Ford was participating in a “cover-up,” concealing the true nature of the wound to implicate Oswald and conceal a conspiracy.

George Michael Evica of JFKlancer.com calls Ford’s correction a “terrible fiction.” Robert Morningstar, another conspiracy theorist, says Ford is responsible for “the most significant lie in the whole Warren Commission report.” Anthony Marsh accuses Ford of performing “verbal plastic surgery,” moving the wound through the draft report edits.
23.  Literally, at the very moment, JFK was being assassinated in Dallas on 11-22-63, Don Reynolds was testifying in a closed session of the Senate Rules Committee about a suitcase of $100,000 given to LBJ for his role in securing a TFX fighter jet contract for Fort Worth’s General Dynamics.
24.  In an article published in the South Florida Sun-Sentinel on December 4, 1963, James Buchanan, a former reporter for the Pompano Beach Sun-Sentinel, claimed that Frank Sturgis had met Lee Harvey Oswald in Miami, Florida shortly before Kennedy's assassination. Buchanan claimed that Oswald had tried to infiltrate the International Anti-Communist Brigade. When he was questioned by the FBI about this story, Sturgis claimed that Buchanan had misquoted him on his comments about Oswald.
25.  From its first meeting on December 5, 1963, the Commission viewed the Executive order as an unequivocal Presidential mandate to conduct a thorough and independent investigation. Because of the many rumors and theories, the Commission concluded that the public interest in ensuring that the truth was ascertained could not be met by merely accepting the reports or the analyses of Federal or State agencies. Not only were the premises and conclusions of those reports critically reassessed, but all assertions or rumors about a possible conspiracy, or the complicity of others than Oswald, which has come to the attention of the Commission, were investigated.
26.   On December 13, 1963, Congress enacted Senate Joint Resolution 137 (Public Law 88202) empowering the Commission to issue subpoenas requiring the testimony of witnesses and the production of evidence relating to any matter under its investigation. In addition, the resolution authorized the Commission to compel testimony from witnesses claiming the privilege against selfincrimination under the fifth amendment to the U.S. Constitution by providing for the grant of immunity to persons testifying under such compulsion. Immunity under these provisions was not granted to any witness during the Commission's investigation.
27.   The Commission took steps to get the necessary staff to fulfill its assignment. J. Lee Rankin, former Solicitor General of the United States, was sworn in as general counsel for the Commission on December 16, 1963. Additional members of the legal staff were selected during the next few weeks. The Commission has been aided by 14 assistant counsel with high professional qualifications, selected by it from widely separated parts of the United States. This staff undertook the work of the Commission with a wealth of legal and investigative experience and a total dedication to the determination of the truth. The Commission has been assisted also by highly qualified people from several Federal agencies, assigned to the Commission at its request. This group included lawyers from the Department of Justice, agents of the Internal Revenue Service, a senior historian from the Department of Defense, an editor from the Department of State, and secretarial and administrative staff' supplied by the General Services Administration and other agencies.
28.   On the night of New Year’s Eve, December 31, 1963, at the Driskell Hotel, Lyndon Johnson and Madeleine Brown, one of his longtime mistresses, had an interesting conversation. Madeleine asked LBJ if he had anything to do with the JFK assassination. Johnson got angry; he began pacing around and waving his arms. Then LBJ told her: it was Dallas, TX, oil executives and “renegade” intelligence agents who were behind the JFK assassination. LBJ later also told his chief of staff, Marvin Watson, that the CIA was involved in the murder of John Kennedy.
29.  According to an F.B.I. source, a bizarre meeting Mr. Lane had with a Polish journalist in January 1964 saw wild conspiracy theories tossed around, including a ridiculous claim in a far-right Italian newspaper that J.D. Tippit, the Dallas police officer killed by Oswald shortly after Oswald shot Kennedy, was the real presidential assassin — and that Jack Ruby had killed Mr. Tippit.
30.  William C. Sullivan, who was the third-ranking FBI official after Hoover, wrote in a Jan. 30, 1964 memo to Assistant FBI Director A.H. Belmont that Oswald "was never (sic) FBI informant, was never paid money for information, was never assigned any symbol number." The memo was in response to allegations brought up before one of the commissions investigating the killing that Oswald was on the FBI's payroll.
31.   The official investigation found that Lee Harvey Oswald, acting alone, shot Kennedy and Connally from a warehouse window at the Texas School Book Depository that overlooking the president's motorcade route.
32.   The Warren Commission concluded that "three shots were fired [from the Texas School Book Depository] in a time period ranging from about 4.8 to in excess of 7 seconds."
33.   The Warren Commission found that the shots that killed Kennedy and wounded Connally were fired from the Italian 6.5mm Carcano rifle owned by Oswald. Deputy Sheriff Eugene Boone and Deputy Constable Seymour Weitzman both initially identified the rifle found in the Texas School Book Depository as a 7.65 Mauser.
34.   Dallas District Attorney Henry Wade told the press that the weapon found in the Book Depository was a 7.65 Mauser, and this was reported by the media. But investigators later identified the rifle as a 6.5mm Carcano.
35.   The Warren Commission concluded that all the shots fired at President Kennedy came from the sixth-floor window at the southeast corner of the Texas School Book Depository. The Commission based its conclusion on the "cumulative evidence of eyewitnesses, firearms and ballistic experts, and medical authorities," including on-site testing, as well as analysis of films and photographs conducted by the FBI and the US Secret Service.
36.   The Commission ultimately concluded that Oswald acted alone, but three of its members disagreed, namely Senators Richard Russell, Sherman Cooper, and Louisiana Congressman Thomas Hale Boggs Sr.
37.   The following Warren commission members later rejected the lone gunman theory:
Richard Russell, Senator and former Warren Commissioner: “We have not been told the truth about Oswald.” – Whitewash IV, by Harold Weisberg, p. 21.

Hale Boggs, Majority Leader, and former Warren Commissioner: “Hoover lied his eyes out to the Commission – on Oswald, on Ruby, on their friends, the bullets, the guns, you name it…” – Coincidence or Conspiracy?, by Bernard Fensterwald Jr. and Michael Ewing, p. 96. The quote comes from an unnamed aide to Congressman Boggs. The book also quotes Bogg’s wife, Lindy, through a colleague, as saying “He wished he had never been on it [the Commission] and wished he’d never signed it [the Report].”

John Sherman Cooper, Senator and former Warren Commissioner: “On what basis is it claimed that two shots caused all the wounds?… It seemed to me that Governor Connally’s statement negates such a conclusion. I could not agree with this statement.” – The Zapruder Film, by David Wrone, p. 247. Cooper was commenting on a draft of the Warren Report. Wrone is citing the papers of J. Lee Rankin, wherein Cooper’s written comments appeared.
38.   Chief Justice Earl Warren’s team investigated for 10 months before producing an 888-page report concluding that both Oswald and Ruby had acted alone.
39.   The Warren Commission's 888-page final report was presented to President Johnson on September 24, 1964, and made public three days later, saying one shot wounded President Kennedy and Governor Connally, and the last shot hit Kennedy in the head, killing him. The Commission also concluded a third shot was fired but made no conclusion whether it was the first, second, or third shot fired. The Warren Commission concluded that Lee Harvey Oswald fired all three shots.
40.   The Warren Commission, and later the House Select Committee on Assassinations, concluded that one of the shots hit President Kennedy in "the back of his neck", exited his throat, continued on to strike Governor Connally in the back, exited Connally's chest, shattered his right wrist, and embedded itself in his left thigh. This conclusion came to be known as the "single bullet theory."
41.   This conclusion was supported by previous investigations from the FBI, the Secret Service, and the Dallas Police Department.
42.   The Commission also indicated that Dean Rusk, the Secretary of State; Robert S. McNamara, the Secretary of Defense; C. Douglas Dillon, the Secretary of the Treasury; Robert F. Kennedy, the Attorney General; J. Edgar Hoover, the Director of the FBI; John A. McCone, the Director of the CIA; and James J. Rowley, the Chief of the Secret Service, each independently reached the same conclusion on the basis of information available to them.
43.   The findings of the Warren Commission are still being debated.
44.   The Warren Commission determined that three bullets were fired at Kennedy. One of the three bullets missed the vehicle entirely; another bullet hit Kennedy, passed through his body and then struck Governor John Connally; and the third bullet was the fatal head shot to the President. Some claim that the bullet that passed through President Kennedy’s body before striking Governor Connally—dubbed by critics of the Commission as the "magic bullet"—was missing too little mass to account for the total weight of bullet fragments later found by the doctors who operated on Connally. Those making this claim included Connally’s chief surgeon, Dr. Robert Shaw, as well as two of the Kennedy autopsy surgeons, Commander James Humes, and Lt. Colonel Pierre Finck.
45.  John Connally was not hit by the same bullet as Kennedy, contradicting the Warren Commission's findings.
46.  Nellie Connally (wife of Governor John Connally) who also sat in the president's car next to her husband, through her book "From Love Field: Our Final Hours with President John F. Kennedy," insisted that her husband was hit by a bullet different from the one on Kennedy.
47.   In 1964, Robert H. Jackson of the Dallas Times Herald was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Photography for his image of the murder of Lee Harvey Oswald by Jack Ruby.
48.  President Lyndon B. Johnson believed Kennedy was behind the assassination of the South Vietnamese President Ngo Dinh Diem weeks before his death and that Kennedy’s murder was payback. Diem and his brother were killed on November 2, 1963, after a coup by South Vietnamese generals.

Lyndon Johnson, president: “I’ll tell you something about Kennedy’s murder that will rock you… Kennedy was trying to get Castro, but Castro got to him first.” – from How CIA Plot to Kill Castro Backfired, 2 Aug 1976, by Harry Altshuler, quoting Howard K. Smith interview of LBJ.
49.   Johnson apparently said in the spring of ’64, ‘I don’t think we can win in Vietnam and I don’t think we can get out.’ You can have all the military power in the world, but if you can’t win the thing politically, then you’re not going to succeed.
50.   On August 4, 1964, when presidents Johnson lies to make a war. Lyndon Johnson interrupted TV broadcasts shortly before midnight to announce that two US ships in the Gulf of Tonkin had come under fire in international waters, and that in response to what the president described as this “unprovoked” attack, “air action is now in execution” against “facilities in North Vietnam which have been used in these hostile operations.”

The Americans launched 64 bombing sorties, destroying an oil depot, a coal mine, and a significant part of the North Vietnamese navy. Three days later, both houses of Congress passed a joint resolution authorizing “the president, as commander-in-chief, to take all necessary measures to repel any armed attack against the forces of the US and to prevent further aggression.” Within three years the US would have 500,000 soldiers in Vietnam. Even today, the Gulf of Tonkin resolution remains the template for presidential war-making.
51.   Robert Kennedy had not been satisfied with the Warren Commission’s investigation of the assassination.
52.  Robert Kennedy said to Johnson: "Why did you have my brother killed?"

Robert Kennedy also suspected the CIA and the Cubans, asking both CIA director John McCone and his Cuban friend Enrique “Harry” Ruiz Williams if their people were responsible for his brother’s murder. RFK said: “One of your guys did it.”
53.  Robert Francis "Bobby" Kennedy (RFK) became a senator from the state of New York in 1964.
54.  On August 4, 1964, The New York Times reported that JFK's 98-year-old grandmother, Mary Josephine Fitzgerald, was not told of the assassination. The  title: Mrs. John F. Fitzgerald Is Dead; Kennedy's Grandmother Was 98; Widow of Honey Fitz, Boston's Ex‐Mayor, Was Hot Told of President's Assassination.

Mrs. Fitzgerald last saw President Kennedy on Nov. 6, 1962, Election Day, when he came here to vote and payed her a surprise visit at her home.
 “Hi, Gram,” he greeted her. She reached up and kissed him and said, “Jack.”
The two sat in her bedroom and talked about their family.
55.  In facts, the Warren Commission didn't get the full cooperation of federal agencies during its investigation. In light of those allegations, the U.S. House of Representatives created the House Select Committee on Assassinations in 1976 to reopen the investigation. The committee found "a high probability that two gunmen fired" at the president. That claim was based on a Dallas police radio-transmission tape on which some said that four or more shots could be heard being fired in Dealey Plaza, according to the JFK library. 
56.  Warren Commission from 1963-1964, United States House Select Committee on Assassinations (HSCA) from 1976-1979 and other government investigations concluded that Kennedy was killed by Lee Harvey Oswald.
57.  In 1964, Robert F. Kennedy was widely considered an impeccable choice to run as Johnson's vice presidential running mate but Johnson and Kennedy, however, had never liked one another and Johnson, afraid that Kennedy would be credited with his election as president, abhorred the idea and opposed it at every turn. Kennedy was himself undecided about the position and, knowing that the prospect rankled Johnson, was content in refusing to eliminate himself from consideration.
58.  Connally's Doctor said this; "There is No way the magic bullet did all the damage to Connally without fragmenting! And there were some fragments taken out of Connally. If you have a pristine bullet in one piece and Fragments that means two separate bullets! Proving that Connally and the Warren Commission Report both are nothing but lies! 
59.  In March 1965, Harold Feldman wrote that there were 121 witnesses to the assassination listed in the Warren Report, of whom 51 indicated that the shots that killed Kennedy came from the area of the grassy knoll, while 32 said the shots came from the Texas School Book Depository.
60.  On March 15, 1965, Johnson speech before a joint session of Congress, “This is the richest and most powerful country which ever occupied this globe,” he said. “The might have past empires is little compared to ours. But I do not want to be the President who built empires or sought grandeur or extended dominion.

“I want to be the President who educated young children to the wonders of their world.

“I want to be the President who helped to feed the hungry and to prepare them to be taxpayers instead of tax‐eaters.

“I want to be the President who helped the poor to find their own way and who protected the right of every citizen to vote in every election.

“I want to be the President who helped to end hatred among his fellow men, and who promoted love among the people of all races, all regions, and all parties.

“I want to be the President who helped to end war among the brothers of this earth.”

These were Lyndon Johnson's aims, but few of them were to be achieved. Less than two years after that fateful day in Dallas when John F. Kennedy was shot, and less than a year after, he had been chosen President in his own right, Mr. Johnson found himself trapped in a remote, bloody and incredibly costly war that, it seemed, would never end.
61.  In 1966, J. Edger Hoover who had previously wired taped the Russian embassy discovered that the Russians knew all about Johnson and their successful "coup d'état." And Hoover ended up writing an official report, which was distributed to the heads of the FBI, and to President Johnson saying: "Our source added that in the instructions from Moscow, it was indicated that "now" the KGB was in possession of data purporting to show President Johnson was responsible for the assassination of the late President John F. Kennedy."

Hoover wrote to LBJ about this in a memo that was not declassified by the US government until 1996:
“On September 16, 1965, this same source [an FBI spy in the KGB] reported that the KGB Residency in New York City received instructions approximately September 16, 1965, from KGB headquarters in Moscow to develop all possible information concerning President Lyndon B. Johnson’s character, background, personal friends, family, and from which quarters he derives his support in his position as President of the United States. Our source added that in the instructions from Moscow, it was indicated that “now” the KGB was in possession of data purporting to indicate President Johnson was responsible for the assassination of the late President John F. Kennedy. KGB headquarters indicated that in view of this information, it was necessary for the Soviet Government to know the existing personal relationship between President Johnson and the Kennedy family, particularly between President Johnson and Robert and “Ted” Kennedy.”
62.  In 1966, Jack Anderson begins writing stories suggesting that Johnny Roselli is in some way linked with the assassination. Others like Carlos Marcello, Santo Trafficante, and Sam Giancana are accused of being in the plot.
63.  $100 U.S. Notes were issued in 1966 during the Johnson administration.
64.  The lone gunman theory works until 1966.
65.  In 1966, Esquire magazine credited Harold Feldman with "advance the theory that there were two assassins: one on the grassy knoll and one in the Book Depository." Jim Marrs also wrote that the weight of evidence suggested shots came from both the Grassy Knoll and the Texas School Book Depository.
66.  Jim Garrison begins his investigation into New Orleans and the Kennedy assassination. Garrison becomes interested in three people: Guy Banister, David Ferrie, and Clay Shaw. These men may, or maybe not, have been involved in the assassination. The problem for David Morales and David Atlee Phillips is that all three men have been associated with the CIA and anti-Castro Cubans. Any public trial might well expose important facts about the case.
67. Garrison adds the following: “At least one man arrested immediately after the shooting had come running out of the Dal-Tex Building and offered no explanation for his presence there. Local authorities hardly could avoid arresting him because of the clamor of the onlookers.
He was taken to the Sheriff’s office, where he was held for questioning. However, the Sheriff’s office made no record of the questions asked this suspect, if any were asked; nor did it have a record of his name. Later two uniformed police officers escorted him out of the building to the jeers of the waiting crowd.
They put him in a police car, and he was driven away. Apparently this was his farewell to Dallas, for he simply disappeared forever.”
68.  On February 22, 1967, less than a week after the New Orleans States-Item broke the story of Jim Garrison's investigation. Ferrie was found dead in his apartment. Two unsigned, undated typed letters were found at Ferrie's apartment: The first, found in a pile of papers, was a screed about the justice system, beginning with "To leave this life is, for me, a sweet prospect." The second note was written to Al Beauboeuf, Ferrie's friend to whom he bequeathed all his possessions. Garrison said he considered Ferrie's death a suicide, but added: "I am not ruling out murder." Garrison's aide, Lou Ivon, stated that Ferrie telephoned him the day after the story of Garrison's investigation broke and told him, "You know what this news story does to me, don't you. I'm a dead man. From here on, believe me, I'm a dead man...."

Ferrie's autopsy was performed by Orleans Parish coroner Nicholas Chetta and pathologist Ronald A. Welsh. They concluded that there was no evidence of suicide or murder and that Ferrie died of a massive cerebral hemorrhage due to a congenital intracranial berry aneurysm that had ruptured at the base of his brain. Upon learning of the coroner's findings, Jim Garrison said, "I suppose it could just be a weird coincidence that the night Ferrie penned two suicide notes, he died of natural causes." On March 1, 1967, Garrison had Clay Shaw arrested and charged him with conspiring to assassinate President Kennedy.

Jack Wardlaw, then with the now-defunct afternoon newspaper, the New Orleans States-Item, and his fellow journalist Rosemary James, a native of South Carolina, co-authored Plot or Politics, a 1967 book which takes issue with the Garrison investigation. Wardlaw won an Associated Press award for his story on the death of David Ferrie.
69.  On March 1, 1967, New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison arrested and charged businessman Clay Shaw, head of the International Trade Mart in New Orleans, with conspiring to assassinate President Kennedy, with the help of Oswald, David Ferrie, and others. Garrison believed that Shaw was the man named as "Clay Bertrand" in the Warren Commission Report. Garrison said that Shaw used the alias Clay Bertrand in New Orleans' gay society.
70.  During the trial, which took place in January–February 1969, Garrison called insurance salesman Perry Russo[citation needed] as his main witness. Russo testified that he had attended a party at the apartment of anti-Castro activist David Ferrie. At the party, Russo said that Lee Harvey Oswald (who Russo said was introduced to him as "Leon Oswald"), David Ferrie, and "Clay Bertrand" (who Russo identified in the courtroom as Shaw) had discussed killing Kennedy. The conversation included plans for the "triangulation of crossfire" and alibis for the participants.

Garrison believed that the men were part of an arms smuggling ring supplying weapons to the anti-Castro Cubans in a conspiracy with elements of the CIA to kill Kennedy. The trial of Clay Shaw began in January 1969 in Orleans Parish Criminal Court. The jury acquitted Shaw.

On March 1, 1969, Shaw was found not guilty on all charges after the jury deliberated for less than one hour. Despite his acquittal, Shaw's reputation and the public image never fully recovered.

A heavy smoker most of his life, Clay Shaw died on August 15, 1974 (aged 61) about 12:40 AM at his residence, 1022 St. Peter Street. The death certificate was signed by Dr. Hugh M. Batson, with the cause of death listed as metastatic lung cancer. Shaw was buried in Woodland Cemetery in Kentwood, Louisiana.

At the time of his death, Shaw was engaged in a $5 million suit against Garrison and members of an organization, Truth and Consequences Inc., that financed Garrison's investigation. As Shaw had no surviving relatives, the United States Supreme Court dismissed the suit in 1978.
71.  Jim Garrison said anti-Communist and anti-Castro extremists in the CIA plotted the assassination of Kennedy to keep up the tension with the Soviet Union and Cuba and to prevent a United States withdrawal from Vietnam.
72.  New Orleans D.A. Jim Garrison, who in 1967 brought Clay Shaw to trial for the assassination of President Kennedy, stated in the documentary The Men Who Killed Kennedy, "[Oswald] was employed by the CIA and was obviously drawn into a scapegoat situation and made to believe ultimately that he was penetrating the assassination. And then when the time came, they took the scapegoat—the man who thought he was working for the United States government—and killed him real quick. And then the machinery, disinformation machinery, started turning and they started making a villain out of a man who genuinely was probably a hero."
73.  Garrison later wrote: “John Kennedy was eliminated by forces desiring the continuation of the Cold War – an artificial conflict draining the assets of and greatly changing, for the worst, the character of our nation. The clandestine arm for those Cold War forces was the Central Intelligence Agency.”

During the trial of Clay Shaw in 1969, New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison challenged the single-bullet theory with evidence from the Zapruder film, which he claimed indicated that a fourth shot from the grassy knoll was responsible for Kennedy's fatal head wound.
74. It’s a statement from Roger Craig, winner of the deputy of the year award for Dallas in 1960, and one of the most honest men working that day in Dallas. He’s an amazing and heroic fellow, worthy of all the time you could take looking into his background and character. And here, in the following passage, he is describing a conversation he had with Jim Garrison, and he says,
“Jim also asked me about the arrests made in Dealey Plaza that day. I told him I knew of twelve arrests, one in particular made by R. E. Vaughn of the Dallas Police Department. The man Vaughn arrested was coming from the Dal-Tex Building across from the Texas School Book Depository.
Vaughn, arrested Bush.
The only thing which Vaughn knew about him was that he was an independent oil operator from Houston, Texas. The prisoner was taken from Vaughn by Dallas Police detectives and that was the last that he saw or heard of the suspect.”
Garrison wrote his paragraph about Bush’s arrest in 1988. Deputy Craig’s article was written in 1971 and posted in 1992. But the significance of these paragraphs was discovered last week. There hardly was an internet in 1992 when Craig’s article was posted. And for 19 years, no one noticed that this phrase, “independent oil man from Houston”, is a very unique description of Bush.
75.  On March 4, 1967, the Italian left-wing newspaper Paese Sera published a story alleging that Shaw was linked to the CIA through his involvement in the Centro Mondiale Commerciale (CMC), a subsidiary of Permindex in which Shaw was a board member. According to Paese Sera, the CMC had been a front organization developed by the CIA for transferring funds to Italy for "illegal political-espionage activities" and had attempted to depose French President Charles de Gaulle in the early 1960s. American journalist Max Holland said that Paese Sera's allegations connecting Shaw to the CIA were what led to Garrison to implicate the CIA in a conspiracy to assassinate Kennedy.
76.  In 1967, Josiah Thompson examined the statements of 64 witnesses and concluded that 33 of them thought that the shots emanated from the Grassy Knoll.

Thompson stated that the Commission ignored the testimony of seven witnesses who saw gun smoke in the area of the stockade fence on the grassy knoll, as well as an eighth witness who smelled gunpowder at the time of the assassination.

According to Josiah Thompson, Oswald was in the Texas School Book Depository during the assassination, but it is "quite likely" he was not the shooter on the sixth-floor.

There was a photo showing that Oswald was in front of the entrance of the Texas School Book Depository during the assassination. OSWALD STANDING IN THE DOORWAY OF THE SCHOOL BOOK DEPOSITORY.
77.  From Robert Kennedy and His Times by Arthur Schlesinger (1978): “In 1967, Marvin Watson of Lyndon Johnson’s White House staff told Cartha DeLoach of the FBI that Johnson “was now convinced there was a plot in connection with the assassination. Watson stated the President felt that CIA had something to do with this plot.” (Washington Post, December 13, 1977).
78.  In March of 1968, months before his death, RFK joined the race for the 1968 Democratic presidential nomination.

RFK refuse to be “surrounded by security” because he was afraid of being spied on by the FBI, RFK wanted to “engage and touch the crowds.”

“Do you know what I think will happen to Bobby if he is elected president?” Jackie Kennedy told Arthur Schlesinger at a party on April 2, 1968, according to Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis: The Untold Story by Barbara Leaming (which Kennedy also cites). “The same thing that happened to Jack. There is so much hatred in this country, and more people hate Bobby than hated Jack. That’s why I don’t want him to be president.”

Robert Kennedy ran on a platform of racial and economic justice and social change. He won the Indiana and Nebraska primaries in May but lost the Oregon primary.

His assassination happened on the same day he won the California primary.

Shortly after, on June 5, 1968, Robert F. Kennedy was assassinated.

He was killed shortly after giving a speech celebrating his victory in the 1968 presidential primaries in California in front of the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles, California.

He was shot by Sirhan Bishara Sirhan while attempting to exit through the hotel’s kitchen. Some believe there was a second gunman, perhaps a security guard; others suggest that the CIA was behind his killing.
79.  Why was Robert Kennedy also killed? If Robert succeeds in becoming a President, the conspiracy to kill JFK will be revealed.
80.  “I SHALL not seek, and I will not accept, the nomination of my party for another term as your President,” Lyndon Baines Johnson told a startled nationwide television audience the night of March 31, 1968.

After he left the presidential office in January 1969, Lyndon B. Johnson returned to his Texas ranch, where he died of a heart attack at age 64 on January 22, 1973.
81.  In 1968, the Ramsey Clark Panel examined various photographs, X-ray films, documents, and other evidence. It concluded that Kennedy was struck by two bullets fired from above and behind him: one of which traversed the base of the neck on the right side without striking bone, and the other of which entered the skull from behind and destroyed its right side.
82.  On October 20, 1968, Jacqueline Kennedy wed the Greek shipping magnate Aristotle Onassis, whom she had known for several years. They were married on Onassis' private island.
83.  After the JFK assassination, there were dozens of witnesses who would need to be bribed, blackmailed, co-opted, ignored, institutionalized, threatened or murdered to keep the ‘lone gunman’ story straight.  Roscoe White, along with the aforementioned dirty mortician/embalmer John Liggett and LBJ goon Mac Wallace likely were assigned to the ‘JFK Witness Elimination Team’ to take care of those who would not go along with the Media and Warren Commission’s version of events.
84.  Until 1970, the investigation into Kennedy's murder had many problems due to the many witnesses who suddenly died mysteriously. The murder of witnesses was carried out by “JFK witness elimination team.”
85.  In 1970, Chuck Colson, who was special counsel to Nixon, called E. Howard Hunt up with an invitation to join the president’s Special Investigations Unit as a kind of dirty-tricks consultant. He signed on. He really thought he was going places.
86.  Roscoe White left the police force and was employed by a company called M & M Equipment. On September 23, 1971, White and a fellow worker, Richard Adair were both badly burnt in an industrial fire. Adair recovered but White died the following day.

Reverend Jack Shaw said White told him ‘the explosion was no accident,’ and that, ‘he saw a man running from the fire,’ before he died in 1971.

Insurance investigator David Perry found no evidence of foul play. The accident was apparently caused by Roscoe taking a welding torch too close to an inflammable liquid.
87.  In September 1971, Roscoe White to his pastor, Jack Shaw: "Kennedy has been a pretty good president, but he has to die. He didn’t carry out his own orders. If I don’t carry out my orders, I’ll have to die, too." On his deathbed, Roscoe White admitted to his pastor that he had killed several people under contract for the CIA in the USA and abroad.
88.  ‘‘I was Mandarin, the man behind the stockade fence who fired two shots." – Roscoe White’s diary.
89.  The 29-year-old Ricky White said that his Father was part of a CIA plot to kill the President. Roscoe White was a CIA operative working as a Dallas Police officer, and the Dallas Police department did verify that Roscoe White was employed by them at the time. Ricky White had found a diary that had belonged to his father in a footlocker in his grandfather's house when his grandfather died. The notes inside the diary detailed Roscoe White's involvement in the assassination, and that he had plotted with Lee Harvey Oswald and Jack Ruby to kill the President.

The diary also indicated that Ricky White's mother Geneva White had worked for the Dallas Night Club owner Jack Ruby and that Mrs. White had overheard her husband and Jack Ruby discussing the assassination plot.

The diary indicated that Oswald was part of the plot, but he did not fire any of the shots. Ricky White told reporters that his father had set up on the Grassy Knoll behind a big tree and a picket fence. Other CIA operatives set up on top of the County Records building and the sixth floor of the Texas School Book Depository.   

The diary also states that Roscoe White and Oswald had plans to escape together after the assassination and go to Red Bird Airport in south Dallas. Their diver was J.D. Tippit, who did not know anything concerning the plot. While driving the two in south Dallas, Tippit heard radio reports of the assassination and suspected that his two passengers were involved. Oswald became agitated and jumped out of the car, White got out of the car and shot Tippit with a pistol when Tippit told him he would have to take White downtown for questioning. Ricky White says that the diary (which he claims was taken by the FBI) states: "I killed an officer at Tenth and Patton."
90.  "The diary said after my father shot the President he handed his 7.65 Mauser to the man standing beside him, hurled over the fence, took the film from the military man, whirled around the fence and went through the parking lot." – Ricky White, 1990.
91.  Ricky White went on to accuse the FBI of stealing the diary from him while they investigated the matter so that he could not present it to the public.
92.  The green book or the witness-elimination book, as it came to be called…was some sort of ghoulish scrapbook, apparently compiled at random and embellished with numerical code and hieroglyphics. Inside the front cover was his father’s (Roscoe White’s) name and serial number, and the words “players or witnesses.” Pasted to each page were old newspaper photographs. Some were easily identifiable—Ruby, Oswald, Jack, and Robert Kennedy—but others were faces without names. ..Written below (one) picture were the words, “Big Mouth you talked after all.” On another page was a copy of the famous Mary Moorman photograph, taken at the instant the president’s head was blown open. An X drawn across a spot behind the stockade fence marked the place where Mandarin would have stood. Below the picture was these words: “Mandarin kills K uses 7.65 Mauser in the assassination.”‘– Gary Cartwright, ‘I was Mandarin,’ Texas Monthly, 1990.
93.  According to columnist Jack Anderson, Johnny Roselli told him that mob leaders had ordered Jack Ruby to kill Lee Harvey Oswald because they were afraid he might crack and reveal their part in the conspiracy to kill President Kennedy. The three Mafia bosses associated with the Kennedy assassination: Sam Giancana of Chicago, Santo Trafficante of Florida, and Carlos Marcello of New Orleans.
94.  Jack Anderson, Nixon's arch enemy in the media, had revealed Nixon's connections with Johnny Roselli who shot at Kennedy from the Dal-Tex Building.

The Washington Post reported that E. Howard Hunt was ordered to kill the columnist Jack Anderson in January 1972, and the plan allegedly involved the use of poison. Liddy admitted that he and Hunt had "examined all the alternatives and very quickly came to the conclusion the only way we're going to be able to stop Anderson is to kill him. And that was the recommendation approved by Nixon.
95.  Richard Nixon said, "Both Johnson and I wanted to be president, but the only difference was I wouldn’t kill for it.”
96.  On the tape, recorded in May of 1972, the president Nixon confided to two top aides that the Warren Commission pulled off "the greatest hoax that has ever been perpetuated." Unfortunately, he did not elaborate. But the context in which Nixon raised the matter shows you just how far Nixon was willing to stoop in his efforts to become president, even if it involved assassinating his political adversary John F. Kennedy. Nixon also pardoned organized crime figures after the government had spent millions of dollars to put them in jail.
97.  On the Watergate tapes, June 23, 1972, which is often referred to in the media as the "smoking gun." Nixon is talking to his chief of Staff H.R. Haldeman discussing how to stop the FBI from investigating into the CIA's Watergate burglary. They were worried that the investigation would expose the connection between the Watergate break-in, and the "Bay of Pigs thing."

In H.R. Haldeman's book "The Ends of Power," he reveals that Nixon always used code words when he was talking about the 1963 murder of JFK. Haldeman said Nixon would always refer to the assassination as "the Bay of Pigs."
98.  Nixon’s former chief of staff, H.R. Haldeman reviled in his memoir “The Ends of Power,” that the Watergate Burglaries were tied to the Murder of John F. Kennedy. That Nixon had attempted to force the CIA to assist him in thwarting the investigation into Watergate, by threatening to expose the CIA'S role in the Kennedy Assassination. And “that in all of those Nixon references to the Bay of Pigs, He was actually referring to the Kennedy assassination.” And anytime Nixon referred to "the Texans," he meant George Bush. Sr. Haldeman writes: "In fact, I was puzzled when he [Nixon] told me, 'Tell Ehrlichman this whole group of Cubans [Watergate burglars] is tied to the Bay of Pigs.' After a pause, I said, 'The Bay of Pigs? What does that have to do with this [the Watergate burglary]?' But Nixon merely said, 'Ehrlichman will know what I mean,' and dropped the subject." This was Nixon's way of telling Haldeman to tell Ehrlichman that the Watergate burglars were tied to Kennedy's murder.
99.  Several illegal activities were undertaken by President Nixon's secret agents E. Howard Hunt and G. Gordan Liddy which involved murdering people when need be. For example the planned assassination of newspaper columnist Jack Anderson, Nixon's arch enemy in the media. Anderson had revealed Nixon's connections with Johnny Roselli who shot at Kennedy from the Dal-Tex-Building.

Johnny Roselli was the head liaison between the Mafia and the CIA and had close ties to the three Mafia bosses associated with the Kennedy assassination: Sam Giancana of Chicago, Santo Trafficante of Florida, and Carlos Marcello of New Orleans.
100.                According to columnist Jack Anderson, Roselli told him that mob leaders had ordered Jack Ruby to kill Lee Harvey Oswald because they were afraid he might crack and show their part in the conspiracy to kill President Kennedy.

On July 1976, shortly before Johnny Roselli was to be questioned by the Senate Intelligence Committee, his body was discovered floating in an oil drum, in Dumfoundling Bay in Miami. He had been strangled and stabbed, his legs had been sawed off and stuffed into an empty oil drum along with the rest of his body. It is believed that Roselli was killed by someone working for Trafficante because he was talking too much about the Kennedy assassination.

The Washington Post reported that E. Howard Hunt was ordered to kill the columnist in January 1972, and the plan allegedly involved the use of poison. Liddy admitted that he and Hunt had "examined all the alternatives and very quickly came to the conclusion the only way we're going to be able to stop Anderson is to kill him... And that was the recommendation approved by Nixon.

To be continued.


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