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Apr 29 2009, 05:06 PM
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Super Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Admin Posts: 14081 Joined: 16-December 03 From: Worthing, Sussex Member No.: 7 |
Alexander Irwin Rorke, the son of Alexander Rorke, a Manhattan district attorney, was born on 9th August 1926. After graduating from St. John's University he attended the Georgetown University School of Foreign Service.
During the Second World War Rorke served as a military intelligence specialist in the U.S. Army. He was responsible for the security of five German provinces and participated in the first postwar roundup of Communist agents in the Allied military zones of Germany. After the war Rorke married Jacqueline Billingsley, the daughter of Sherman Billingsley, the owner of the New York Stork Club. Rorke became a freelance newsman. According to a declassified FBI document, Rorke began working for the CIA in 1960. His contact officer was Commander Anderson of the United States Navy who was assigned to the CIA office in New York. Rorke later joined Frank Sturgis, in attempts to overthrow the government of Fidel Castro in Cuba. On 19th December 1961, Rorke and Sturgis, who was known as Frank Fiorini at the time, were involved in a CIA operation that included dropping over 250,000 anti-Castro leaflets on Cuba. Rorke was later interviewed by the FBI about these anti-Castro activities. The FBI report on this interview stated: "Rorke advised that in the event Fiorini would be arrested for his anti-Castro activities, he, Rorke, having good connections with a well-known newspaper chain, will make plenty of trouble for those involved.For the information of the Bureau, the newspaper chain, will make plenty of trouble for those involved." Rorke and Geoffrey Sullivan made several flights over Cuba, including a bombing raid on a refinery area near Havana on 25th April 1963. Later that year Rorke began working for Luis Somoza, former president of Nicaragua. Jacqueline Rorke said her husband told her he was going to Mangua to see Somoza about opening an export-import business, but that he and Sullivan filed a flight plan in Fort Lauderdale for Panama. After refueling at Cozumel, they changed the flight plan to make Tegucigalpa, Honduras, their destination. Rorke and Sullivan and a passenger identified as Enrique Molina Garcia, took off from Fort Lauderdale, Florida on 24th September, 1963. Later that day their aircraft disappeared while flying over Cuba. According to a statement released by Sherman Billingsley: "They were last seen when they were kidnapped or captured and are being held by the agents of an unfriendly government or, possibly, by that government itself." Rorke was declared legally dead in 1968. This interesting statement is to be found in a brief biography on the web by D C McJonathan-Swarm. His plane, flown by commercial pilot Geoffery Sullivan, disappeared on 24 September 1963 enroute to Cuba just two months before the Kennedy assassination. His father-in-law, Sherman Billingsley, held a press conference at the Stork club offering a $25,000 reward for his return with that of his pilot. It was rumored that the CIA was involved because of his friendship with and allegiance to Kennedy. In 1975 the CIA described him a "former witting collaborator (relationship terminated)." J Edgar Hoover wrote "No. I do not want in any way to get involved in this....H" on papers pertaining to correspondence and inquires by Billingsley.
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Apr 29 2009, 05:15 PM
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#2
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Super Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Admin Posts: 14081 Joined: 16-December 03 From: Worthing, Sussex Member No.: 7 |
Havana Journal (25th July, 2007)
An American woman has sued Cuban leader Fidel Castro, alleging he caused the wrongful death of her pilot father after he was shot down over Cuba and imprisoned in 1963 while on a covert mission. Sherry Sullivan filed her lawsuit in May in Waldo County Superior Court, but the judge delayed action until last week while considering how to serve papers to the defendants, who also include Castro’s brother Raul, the Cuban army and the Republic of Cuba. The judge decided to send a certified Spanish translation of the suit to Cuba by registered mail, but has yet to receive proof of its delivery to the parties named. The lawsuit alleges that Geoffrey Francis Sullivan, who was 29 at the time, was captured after being shot down and that he died while being held in a Cuban jail for political prisoners. His daughter contends that Fidel Castro had “intentionally, unlawfully and with complete disregard for human life” caused Sullivan’s imprisonment and eventual death. No formal record of the death was ever recorded. The Social Security Administration has declared that Sullivan is dead, and the Department of Veterans Affairs has listed him as missing in action. “I don’t have any actual proof that my father was executed, but I believe he was,” Sullivan told the Bangor Daily News. The lawsuit says Geoffrey Sullivan and New York newspaperman Alexander Irwin Rorke Jr., who was believed to be a CIA operative, took part in numerous anti-Castro operations in the three years leading up to their disappearance. The last known sighting of the pair was when they took off from Mexico on Oct. 1, 1963, in a twin-engine Beechcraft. A month earlier, Sullivan and Rorke allegedly had taken part in a bombing run over Cuba, an act that received widespread news coverage and identified both men as being involved. Sullivan, 52, said she has devoted her life to “uncovering the truth” about her father, but was stymied in her repeated attempts to gather information from government agencies. She has more than 100,000 pages of documents related to the case, she said. Her suit states that she “has credible information from a variety of independent, identified, sources that her father was captured and held by Fidel Castro and the government of Cuba” in violation of international law. The suit says Castro and his co-defendants are liable under a 1996 U.S. law that allows victims of states identified as sponsors of terrorism to sue for damages. In recent years, Castro’s regime has been repeatedly sued in American courts. The damages are generally to be paid from Cuban assets frozen by the Kennedy administration. |
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Apr 29 2009, 05:30 PM
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Super Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Admin Posts: 14081 Joined: 16-December 03 From: Worthing, Sussex Member No.: 7 |
Rorke says his CIA contact was Commander Anderson of the U.S. Navy. I wonder if this was George Whelan Anderson:
http://www.arlingtoncemetery.net/gwanders.htm |
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May 6 2009, 08:09 AM
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#4
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Super Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 5034 Joined: 20-October 05 Member No.: 3667 |
Rorke says his CIA contact was Commander Anderson of the U.S. Navy. I wonder if this was George Whelan Anderson: http://www.arlingtoncemetery.net/gwanders.htm Rorke takes off on Sept. 24, 1963 for Nicaragua and vanishes. Then there's this Sept. 30, 1963 document that "Has been removed and placed in the Special File of Records Branch." http://www.maryferrell.org/mffweb/archive/...amp;relPageId=2 I'd also point out that Adml. George Whelan Anderson, Jr., suspected as being the "Commander Anderson" in the Sturgis/Rorke file," was also "president of the Metropolitan Club in Washington D.C." According to Gregory Douglas, in his book Regicide, the Metropolitan Club in Washington was one of the places where the JFK assassination conspirators met for lunch and to plan Operation Zipper. http://www.metroclub.org/default.aspx? p=DynamicModule&pageid=235855&ssid=89149&vnf=1&ns=true |
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May 6 2009, 05:36 PM
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#5
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Super Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Admin Posts: 14081 Joined: 16-December 03 From: Worthing, Sussex Member No.: 7 |
Rorke says his CIA contact was Commander Anderson of the U.S. Navy. I wonder if this was George Whelan Anderson: http://www.arlingtoncemetery.net/gwanders.htm Rorke takes off on Sept. 24, 1963 for Nicaragua and vanishes. Then there's this Sept. 30, 1963 document that "Has been removed and placed in the Special File of Records Branch." http://www.maryferrell.org/mffweb/archive/...amp;relPageId=2 I'd also point out that Adml. George Whelan Anderson, Jr., suspected as being the "Commander Anderson" in the Sturgis/Rorke file," was also "president of the Metropolitan Club in Washington D.C." According to Gregory Douglas, in his book Regicide, the Metropolitan Club in Washington was one of the places where the JFK assassination conspirators met for lunch and to plan Operation Zipper. http://www.metroclub.org/default.aspx? p=DynamicModule&pageid=235855&ssid=89149&vnf=1&ns=true This seems to me that this is an important development. George Whelan Anderson, Jr was Chief of Naval Operations in charge of the US blockade of Cuba during the Cuban missile crisis in 1962. Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara, viewed Anderson's behavior during the crisis as one of "mutiny". JFK agreed with McNamara and he brought an end to a service career that many had believed would lead to his appointment as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. JFK forced him from office and then appointed him as Ambassador to Portugal. |
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May 7 2009, 11:38 AM
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Super Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Admin Posts: 14081 Joined: 16-December 03 From: Worthing, Sussex Member No.: 7 |
This seems to me that this is an important development. George Whelan Anderson, Jr was Chief of Naval Operations in charge of the US blockade of Cuba during the Cuban missile crisis in 1962. Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara, viewed Anderson's behavior during the crisis as one of "mutiny". JFK agreed with McNamara and he brought an end to a service career that many had believed would lead to his appointment as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. JFK forced him from office and then appointed him as Ambassador to Portugal. According to David Kaiser's book, Ameican Tragedy: “The Secretary of Defense (McNarmara) was having a difficult spring, but seemed to be riding higher than ever. He was struggling from Congress over his refusal to authorize a new manned bomber, and his award of the contract to build the TFX fighter plane to General Dynamics instead of Boeing had become the subject of a congressional investigation. He had just secured the President’s agreement to relieve Admiral George Anderson as chief of naval operations, apparently because Anderson refused to tailor his TFX testimony to McNarmara’s specifications, and to reappoint Air Force Chief of Staff LeMay for just one year. According to Anderson, McNamara had stated that the TFX dispute was the greatest crisis of his career, and that he had to be proven right, no matter what happened.” (page 201) Kaiser argues that: “Anderson convincingly argued (in his JFK oral history testimony) that events during the Cuban missile crisis were not the reason he was relieved. According to McGeorge Bundy’s recollection, McNamara wanted to remove both Anderson and LeMay, but had to choose between them.” (page 525) See the following thread for the connections between the TFX Scandal and the assassination of JFK: http://educationforum.ipbhost.com/index.php?showtopic=6250 |
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May 12 2009, 10:24 PM
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![]() Super Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 1366 Joined: 12-October 07 From: USA - Land of the free and home of the brave. Member No.: 6199 |
Finally struck me. The Light Dawns on Marblehead. There was a very distinct link between Frank Sturgis and Charles Willoughby which
I should have noticed many years ago but I did not realize that there was such a strong relationship between Rorke and Sturgis even though they were both active in South Florida anti-Castro intrigues. And Rorke's work on Charles Willoughby's Anti-Communist Liaison - Committee of Correspondence is easy to overlook or forget because he was the least important of the leadership there. Damn. The fact that Rorke was missing or dead before the JFK hit also made me cross him off some lists or ignore him. People used to ask me where was the link between this high level Morris and Willoughby crowd and the South Florida Soldiers of Fortune and I always drew blanks. Oh well. No one is perfekt. Alexander Rorke was one of the handful of people heading up Charles Willoughby's Anti-Communist Liaison - Committee of Correspondence along with Rev. Billy James Hargis, Edward Hunter ("Brainwashing") and that White House correspondent, a woman, whose name escapes me now... Sarah McClendon perhaps? She actually approached me during a Washington, DC JFK conference when Al Gore, Jr. was speaking at the same hotel, with someone who attended the Providence conference when I presented on Willoughby: "Looking for Hate in all the Right Places." Another story on Willoughby was later printed in HighTimes Magazine under a smokescreen. (Pun intended.) He steered her in my direction. (No pun intended.) And she then quizzed me over lunch about why I thought Willoughby was a principal in the JFK plot. I had no idea who she really was at that time and I just gave her the standard published story lines including the Dick Russell informant's reference. She was just on an intelligence gathering mission, I concluded a few years later when I read her obituary. She was known for her long rants and difficult questions at White House Press Corps news conferences. She was basically a right-wing wacko and nutball who had to be humored for decades by various Presidents. JFK stopped calling on her because of her wacked-out and embarrassing questions and she hated him for it apparently. She worked for some small dry gulch tumbleweed-swept right wing Texas newspaper and met Willoughby and Morris through the Dallas John Birch Socieity apparently. Why they picked her for their Anti-Communist Liaison - Committee of Correspondence is beyond me. Any ideas? Does she deserve a distinct thread on Spartacus? She is on Wikipedia, I think. Can't say for sure. |
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Aug 22 2009, 04:50 AM
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#8
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Super Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 5034 Joined: 20-October 05 Member No.: 3667 |
Report from TF in Florida, on a court's ruling that Rorke's partner's daughter wins the case because it was ignored by Cuba. But read down to the last response, by Peter Tabor, son of the legendary Robert B. Tabor. And Frog, that wasn't an eagle, that was a Predator Drone taking your picture - BK
One of our ‘South Florida Research Group’ members has been successful in suing the Cuban Government, and now will await the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow. This has been an ordeal for Ms. Sullivan. Her dad was honored by the Governor of Maine a few years ago, when he designated Geoffrey Sullivan special recognition, and conducted a full Military Honor Ceremony with Native American Music and Traditional Honor Guards with rifle salutes. I was proud to be a part of the audience, where an American Bald Eagle flew over the ceremony, adding to the emotional mood of the day. Only one Bangor TV Station recorded the event, however. Frog Miami Herald 21 August 2009 BLOG: http://miamiherald.typepad.com/cuban_colad...arded-21m-.html Daughter of missing flyer is awarded $21M A Maine court has found the Cuban government responsible for the death of a U.S. Air Force veteran whose plane may have been shot down over the island in 1963 while carrying out a covert mission, The Bangor Daily News reported Thursday. Maine Supreme Court Justice Jeffrey Hjelm awarded Sherry Sullivan, the daughter of Geoffrey Sullivan, $21 million in damages, plus interest. Geoffrey F. Sullivan was 29 when he disappeared after taking off in a twin-engine Beechcraft from Cozumel, Mexico, on Sept. 24, 1963, with a man believed to have been a CIA operative and gun runner for anti-Castro activists. At the time, there were rumors that Sullivan was captured when the plane crashed in Cuba and that he was imprisoned for some time thereafter. Sullivan's daughter sued the Castro brothers and Cuba in May 2007. According to Hjelm, "the government of Cuba failed and refused to provide any information." Last week, Hjelm issued a default judgment in favor of the daughter. To read The Daily News' account, click here. ---Renato Pérez Pizarro. ************************************************************************ 8/20/09 Maine woman wins lawsuit against Cuba $21 million awarded in death of father By Walter Griffin BDN Staff BANGOR DAILY NEWS FILE PHOTO BY LINDA COAN O'KRESIK Sherry Sullivan looks through some government documents about her father, Geoffrey Sullivan, who disappeared on September 24, 1963 during a flight to Honduras. BELFAST, Maine — A Maine court has found the Republic of Cuba guilty of the wrongful death of an American veteran believed to have been shot down while on a covert mission over the island decades ago. In finding in favor of Stockton Springs resident Sherry Sullivan, Waldo County Superior Court Justice Jeffrey Hjelm granted her damages of $21 million plus interest. Sullivan is the daughter of Geoffrey Sullivan, whose plane is believed to have disappeared over Cuba in October 1963. “I’m just overwhelmed,” Sullivan said Wednesday. “It was never about money; it was to find out what happened to my father. The answer to finding my father is not what I got.” Sullivan filed her suit against Cuba in May 2007. Also named were former President Fidel Castro, President Raul Castro and the Cuban army. Those names were dismissed without prejudice by Hjelm because it could not be determined whether they were ever served the documents. The Swiss Embassy in Havana served a copy of the suit to the Cuba Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Sept. 22, 2008. Cuba never responded to the suit leading Justice Hjelm to issue his default judgment on Aug. 10. Justice Hjelm ordered that a pre-judgment annual interest rate of 5.99 percent be added to the $21 million along with a post-judgment interest rate of 6.40 percent for every year the Cuban government fails to pay the damages. Damages have been paid to other litigants from Cuban assets frozen by the U.S. government shortly after the Castro revolution in 1959. According to The Associated Press, at the end of 2005, approximately $270 million in Cuban assets were frozen in U.S. bank accounts. Hjelm found that Sullivan suffered through years of uncertainty, not really knowing what happened to her father and not knowing whether he was alive or dead. He found that Cuba repeatedly ignored her requests for information. “This uncertainty has devastated Ms. Sullivan’s life,” Hjelm wrote. Geoffrey Francis Sullivan was 29 years old when he disappeared. He was an Air Force veteran and held a commercial pilot’s license. He also served in the Army National Guard where he met Alexander Irwin Rorke Jr., a New York newspaperman, who was believed to be an operative of the Central Intelligence Agency who ran guns to Cuba. The last known sighting of Geoffrey Sullivan was when he took off from Mexico in a twin-engine plane accompanied by Rorke. A month earlier, Sullivan and Rorke had allegedly taken part in a bombing run over Cuba in a refurbished B-25 bomber. That daring act received widespread newspaper coverage at the time, and both men were identified as being involved. The official story was that their plane disappeared somewhere over Central America, but Sullivan believes he was held in a Cuban jail for at least a decade and later executed as a spy. She was 5 years old when her father disappeared and has been investigating his fate for decades. The Department of Veterans Affairs has listed Sullivan as “missing in action.” Her father was an ardent Cold War warrior, and Sullivan over the years has gathered thousands of pages of documents from that era, many of which were submitted with her suit. In his ruling, Justice Hjelm cited reports of witnesses that seemed to place Sullivan in Cuba. Included was one from the U.S. State Department of “rumors” from Cuban refugees that Rorke and Sullivan crashed in Cuba and that one died. In addition, an American detained in Cuba in 1969 told authorities he heard Sullivan’s name mentioned by Cuban military police. Another American imprisoned in Cuba reported that he was detained in a cell next to Sullivan. Hjelm found that despite those documents and many other requests filed by Sullivan over the years, “The government of Cuba has failed and refused to provide any information.” He also found that Maine and federal law provided him with the authority to rule on the suit against a foreign government. Sullivan said similar suits filed by victims of the Cuban Revolution under anti-terrorism statutes have proved successful in courts in Florida and elsewhere. She said she was unsure when she would collect her award, but that it had taken others up to three years to collect frozen Cuban assets. If she does receive the money, she said, it will be used to help her daughters and grandchildren and to keep searching for the truth of what happened to her father. In the meantime, Sullivan will continue to press the U.S. and Cuban governments for information about her father. “I never, never once asked for money. I was in court asking for information, either from this government or the Cuban government, and I just can’t get it done. I’m still determined to get to the truth,” she said. “The money will surely make life easier for everybody. It will give me more funds to travel and interview people. I’ve done this investigation on a dime all these years.” ************************************************************************* Guidelines for posting on bangordailynews.com Bangordailynews.com is pleased to offer a forum for readers to react to our stories, discuss them and provide additional information. We are reluctant to delete comments, but do reserve that right for those who abuse our forum. For more on using this site, please see our terms of service. Comments 17 comments on this item This is just discusting. You attack another country, and you disappear and they pay you cash for your mercenary acts. It is just like maine to continue to give away other peoples money. No physical evidence just rumors and inuendo. No wonder every person with their hand out comes to Maine. That away judge. If after 46 years the US government wont release any documents if there ever was any to release you just gave the cash away. On 8/20/09 at 7:35 AM, quink2495 wrote: R the infoman apparently information isn't your strong suit, since if you READ the article the lady never asked for any money, the judge decided to award her some anyway. She wanted INFORMATION which she still hasn't gotten. Yes, the U.S. would probably not give information to the families of people who attacked it covertly, or would at least give it out sparingly, but it has been long enough that most of it should be. The law grants judges leeway to dispatch a case how they see fit, and all Cuba had to do was say "Hey, that guy attacked us, we imprisoned him, he died" and that would have probably been close to the end of it. On 8/20/09 at 7:48 AM, JoePlum wrote: Well, judges don't make awards that aren't asked for, so even if money wasn't a priority for Ms. Sullivan, her lawyers must have included a request for money damages in the original complaint. To me, the more interesting question, which was not discussed in the article, is whether Ms. Sullivan has some sense of interconnectedness and compassion for Cubans' dilemmas, in addition to her own understandable sense of loss. On 8/20/09 at 7:53 AM, Telefunkinu47 wrote: \ Got to agree, quite the BS here.. So what the hell difference does it make if this guy went missing in Cuba, Iraq, Afghanistan or wherever. Take your pick! OMFG! Only in America!! On 8/20/09 at 8:39 AM, theinfoman wrote: I see that Quint 2495 does not know the law. You don't get what you don't ask for. It was court shopping through and through. When someone says its not about the money then they should imediately make a motion to the court that the judgement is satisfied. But we all know how the cash really feels. Well we will use it for this and that. Oh and here is another one for you Quint 2495. Never has the freezing of assets against a government hurt the government it has always and will always hurt the people who paid the taxes to put it there. Almost forgot lawyers who make the best lobster feed might try to tell you they did it for the cause (which i am waiting to hear next) but they will take the cash too seeing as it was awarded. 8 million for thier 40 percent and all of their costs after they get t heir fee. Its all about cash. On 8/20/09 at 8:53 AM, jersk9 wrote: I have to agree with infoman. What kind of precedence is this. Now, theoretically, every person who is caught spying can have a lawsuit claim. They knew what they were doing and getting into. You play the game you pay the price. On 8/20/09 at 9:54 AM, tabitham84 wrote: Wow. I am all for this woman searchng for information about her dad, but.. he was serving in the military.. if she can be awarded this money, (which doesnt get awarded unless it was asked for b/c it needs to be put into court documents), what is stopping any other family out there for the wrongful death of their husbands, sons, fathers, brothers, sisters, wives, daughters, and etc, from sueing the pants off Iraq, and Afganistan. I think it's just a little greedy, and a reason for Cuba to retaliate and want to attack America for freezing their accounts. Kinda stupid in my opinion for this woman to be awarded any money. If she does get the, how about she give up the search for information, donate the money to a VERY needy cause, and let her father rest in peace. He served our country, and she should be damn proud and remember him as a soldier who did his job. On 8/20/09 at 10:27 AM, berquis wrote: A person can sue Cuba if their family member, who was millitary personnel and knew that they could get killed, died there? Honestly? On 8/20/09 at 12:15 PM, DavidReed wrote: Sounds like most of these comments are made by people who are just peeved they didn't think of it first. I hope Ms. Sullivan finds what she's looking for. -David On 8/20/09 at 12:20 PM, JonAlbrecht wrote: I appreciate the woman's sufferring, but ....Every one here makes a lot of assumptions. The only facts appear to be that people saw him take off from Mexico and that he previously bombed Cuba in violation of how many laws. No one know whether he flew to Cuba or somewhere else. They just know he didn't land in Mexico. This case should have been thrown out. On 8/20/09 at 12:21 PM, ralphmcdevitts wrote: jeolousy is ugly. On 8/20/09 at 12:41 PM, Telefunkinu47 wrote: Class envy???? LOL...... Only in America. On 8/20/09 at 2:46 PM, ronaldo82k wrote: Lets sue the Germans for WWII, the Russians from the cold war and the Bermuda Triangle for all the planes and ships that have disappeared over the years. All that money can fix our economy. On 8/20/09 at 3:43 PM, blueskiesaboveme wrote: Does this have anything to do with the Bay of Pigs? On 8/20/09 at 5:34 PM, PeterTaber wrote: While I can empathize with Ms. Sullivan in her distress over the unanswered question of her father's fate, it's hard to make much sense of Justice Hjelm's ruling. I have as personal an axe to grind as she but I hardly think I deserve to profit monetarily. In 1963, my father, the eminent guerrilla warfare expert and partisan of the Cuban Revolution, Robert B. Taber, was in Oriente Province witnessing the misery that people like Mr. Sullivan visited upon the Cuban people. (Two years earlier at the Bay of Pigs he was severely wounded when mercenaries like Mr. Sullivan took part in in a now-legendary fiasco of an invasion that ended in their humiliating and well deserved defeat.) In Oriente Province, people like Mr. Sullivan carried out bombing raids upon innocent civilians and dropped weapons and other military supplies to U.S.-supported thugs on the ground. It was there also that people like Mr. Sullivan conducted biological warfare operations from the air intended to wipe out Cuba's swine in order to deprive its people of much needed protein. These were covert activities involving the very same kind of non-military actors that our government today refers to as terrorists. These were international war crimes for which the United States has never been brought to justice. Indeed, much of the relationship of Cuba with respect to the United States has been that of a victim to a bully. In 1898 the U.S. stepped in and robbed the Cuban people just as they were emancipating themselves from Spain. For the next six decades our country exploited the Cuban people at every turn, taking their land, dominating their economy, imposing a constitution that allowed American forces to invade at will, turning Havana into a brothel and putting in place some of the most ruthless dictators the Western Hemisphere has ever seen. How ironic that when people our government today calls terrorists -- people like Mr. Sullivan -- are captured, it imprisons them at Guantanamo, a prime piece of Cuban real estate the U.S. saw fit in 1898 to help itself to for all time. Justice Hjelm's absurd monetary award ruling is just more of the same. Peter Taber Searsport On 8/20/09 at 8:40 PM, daniels wrote: I guess I need to vent...these comments are made by the same 20 (maybe) people, sitting in their subsidized housing, smoking thier Pall Mall cigarettes that I help buy, and don't have a clue. When you start producing, not consuming, then start passing judgement. This post has been edited by William Kelly: Aug 22 2009, 04:52 AM |
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Aug 22 2009, 06:26 PM
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![]() Super Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 1366 Joined: 12-October 07 From: USA - Land of the free and home of the brave. Member No.: 6199 |
Report from TF in Florida, on a court's ruling that Rorke's partner's daughter wins the case because it was ignored by Cuba. But read down to the last response, by Peter Tabor, son of the legendary Robert B. Tabor. And Frog, that wasn't an eagle, that was a Predator Drone taking your picture - BK One of our ‘South Florida Research Group’ members has been successful in suing the Cuban Government, and now will await the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow. This has been an ordeal for Ms. Sullivan. Her dad was honored by the Governor of Maine a few years ago, when he designated Geoffrey Sullivan special recognition, and conducted a full Military Honor Ceremony with Native American Music and Traditional Honor Guards with rifle salutes. I was proud to be a part of the audience, where an American Bald Eagle flew over the ceremony, adding to the emotional mood of the day. Only one Bangor TV Station recorded the event, however. Frog Miami Herald 21 August 2009 BLOG: http://miamiherald.typepad.com/cuban_colad...arded-21m-.html Daughter of missing flyer is awarded $21M A Maine court has found the Cuban government responsible for the death of a U.S. Air Force veteran whose plane may have been shot down over the island in 1963 while carrying out a covert mission, The Bangor Daily News reported Thursday. Maine Supreme Court Justice Jeffrey Hjelm awarded Sherry Sullivan, the daughter of Geoffrey Sullivan, $21 million in damages, plus interest. Geoffrey F. Sullivan was 29 when he disappeared after taking off in a twin-engine Beechcraft from Cozumel, Mexico, on Sept. 24, 1963, with a man believed to have been a CIA operative and gun runner for anti-Castro activists. At the time, there were rumors that Sullivan was captured when the plane crashed in Cuba and that he was imprisoned for some time thereafter. Sullivan's daughter sued the Castro brothers and Cuba in May 2007. According to Hjelm, "the government of Cuba failed and refused to provide any information." Last week, Hjelm issued a default judgment in favor of the daughter. To read The Daily News' account, click here. ---Renato Pérez Pizarro. ************************************************************************ 8/20/09 Maine woman wins lawsuit against Cuba $21 million awarded in death of father By Walter Griffin BDN Staff BANGOR DAILY NEWS FILE PHOTO BY LINDA COAN O'KRESIK Sherry Sullivan looks through some government documents about her father, Geoffrey Sullivan, who disappeared on September 24, 1963 during a flight to Honduras. BELFAST, Maine — A Maine court has found the Republic of Cuba guilty of the wrongful death of an American veteran believed to have been shot down while on a covert mission over the island decades ago. In finding in favor of Stockton Springs resident Sherry Sullivan, Waldo County Superior Court Justice Jeffrey Hjelm granted her damages of $21 million plus interest. Sullivan is the daughter of Geoffrey Sullivan, whose plane is believed to have disappeared over Cuba in October 1963. “I’m just overwhelmed,” Sullivan said Wednesday. “It was never about money; it was to find out what happened to my father. The answer to finding my father is not what I got.” Sullivan filed her suit against Cuba in May 2007. Also named were former President Fidel Castro, President Raul Castro and the Cuban army. Those names were dismissed without prejudice by Hjelm because it could not be determined whether they were ever served the documents. The Swiss Embassy in Havana served a copy of the suit to the Cuba Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Sept. 22, 2008. Cuba never responded to the suit leading Justice Hjelm to issue his default judgment on Aug. 10. Justice Hjelm ordered that a pre-judgment annual interest rate of 5.99 percent be added to the $21 million along with a post-judgment interest rate of 6.40 percent for every year the Cuban government fails to pay the damages. Damages have been paid to other litigants from Cuban assets frozen by the U.S. government shortly after the Castro revolution in 1959. According to The Associated Press, at the end of 2005, approximately $270 million in Cuban assets were frozen in U.S. bank accounts. Hjelm found that Sullivan suffered through years of uncertainty, not really knowing what happened to her father and not knowing whether he was alive or dead. He found that Cuba repeatedly ignored her requests for information. “This uncertainty has devastated Ms. Sullivan’s life,” Hjelm wrote. Geoffrey Francis Sullivan was 29 years old when he disappeared. He was an Air Force veteran and held a commercial pilot’s license. He also served in the Army National Guard where he met Alexander Irwin Rorke Jr., a New York newspaperman, who was believed to be an operative of the Central Intelligence Agency who ran guns to Cuba. The last known sighting of Geoffrey Sullivan was when he took off from Mexico in a twin-engine plane accompanied by Rorke. A month earlier, Sullivan and Rorke had allegedly taken part in a bombing run over Cuba in a refurbished B-25 bomber. That daring act received widespread newspaper coverage at the time, and both men were identified as being involved. The official story was that their plane disappeared somewhere over Central America, but Sullivan believes he was held in a Cuban jail for at least a decade and later executed as a spy. She was 5 years old when her father disappeared and has been investigating his fate for decades. The Department of Veterans Affairs has listed Sullivan as “missing in action.” Her father was an ardent Cold War warrior, and Sullivan over the years has gathered thousands of pages of documents from that era, many of which were submitted with her suit. In his ruling, Justice Hjelm cited reports of witnesses that seemed to place Sullivan in Cuba. Included was one from the U.S. State Department of “rumors” from Cuban refugees that Rorke and Sullivan crashed in Cuba and that one died. In addition, an American detained in Cuba in 1969 told authorities he heard Sullivan’s name mentioned by Cuban military police. Another American imprisoned in Cuba reported that he was detained in a cell next to Sullivan. Hjelm found that despite those documents and many other requests filed by Sullivan over the years, “The government of Cuba has failed and refused to provide any information.” He also found that Maine and federal law provided him with the authority to rule on the suit against a foreign government. Sullivan said similar suits filed by victims of the Cuban Revolution under anti-terrorism statutes have proved successful in courts in Florida and elsewhere. She said she was unsure when she would collect her award, but that it had taken others up to three years to collect frozen Cuban assets. If she does receive the money, she said, it will be used to help her daughters and grandchildren and to keep searching for the truth of what happened to her father. In the meantime, Sullivan will continue to press the U.S. and Cuban governments for information about her father. “I never, never once asked for money. I was in court asking for information, either from this government or the Cuban government, and I just can’t get it done. I’m still determined to get to the truth,” she said. “The money will surely make life easier for everybody. It will give me more funds to travel and interview people. I’ve done this investigation on a dime all these years.” ************************************************************************* Guidelines for posting on bangordailynews.com Bangordailynews.com is pleased to offer a forum for readers to react to our stories, discuss them and provide additional information. We are reluctant to delete comments, but do reserve that right for those who abuse our forum. For more on using this site, please see our terms of service. Comments 17 comments on this item This is just discusting. You attack another country, and you disappear and they pay you cash for your mercenary acts. It is just like maine to continue to give away other peoples money. No physical evidence just rumors and inuendo. No wonder every person with their hand out comes to Maine. That away judge. If after 46 years the US government wont release any documents if there ever was any to release you just gave the cash away. On 8/20/09 at 7:35 AM, quink2495 wrote: R the infoman apparently information isn't your strong suit, since if you READ the article the lady never asked for any money, the judge decided to award her some anyway. She wanted INFORMATION which she still hasn't gotten. Yes, the U.S. would probably not give information to the families of people who attacked it covertly, or would at least give it out sparingly, but it has been long enough that most of it should be. The law grants judges leeway to dispatch a case how they see fit, and all Cuba had to do was say "Hey, that guy attacked us, we imprisoned him, he died" and that would have probably been close to the end of it. On 8/20/09 at 7:48 AM, JoePlum wrote: Well, judges don't make awards that aren't asked for, so even if money wasn't a priority for Ms. Sullivan, her lawyers must have included a request for money damages in the original complaint. To me, the more interesting question, which was not discussed in the article, is whether Ms. Sullivan has some sense of interconnectedness and compassion for Cubans' dilemmas, in addition to her own understandable sense of loss. On 8/20/09 at 7:53 AM, Telefunkinu47 wrote: \ Got to agree, quite the BS here.. So what the hell difference does it make if this guy went missing in Cuba, Iraq, Afghanistan or wherever. Take your pick! OMFG! Only in America!! On 8/20/09 at 8:39 AM, theinfoman wrote: I see that Quint 2495 does not know the law. You don't get what you don't ask for. It was court shopping through and through. When someone says its not about the money then they should imediately make a motion to the court that the judgement is satisfied. But we all know how the cash really feels. Well we will use it for this and that. Oh and here is another one for you Quint 2495. Never has the freezing of assets against a government hurt the government it has always and will always hurt the people who paid the taxes to put it there. Almost forgot lawyers who make the best lobster feed might try to tell you they did it for the cause (which i am waiting to hear next) but they will take the cash too seeing as it was awarded. 8 million for thier 40 percent and all of their costs after they get t heir fee. Its all about cash. On 8/20/09 at 8:53 AM, jersk9 wrote: I have to agree with infoman. What kind of precedence is this. Now, theoretically, every person who is caught spying can have a lawsuit claim. They knew what they were doing and getting into. You play the game you pay the price. On 8/20/09 at 9:54 AM, tabitham84 wrote: Wow. I am all for this woman searchng for information about her dad, but.. he was serving in the military.. if she can be awarded this money, (which doesnt get awarded unless it was asked for b/c it needs to be put into court documents), what is stopping any other family out there for the wrongful death of their husbands, sons, fathers, brothers, sisters, wives, daughters, and etc, from sueing the pants off Iraq, and Afganistan. I think it's just a little greedy, and a reason for Cuba to retaliate and want to attack America for freezing their accounts. Kinda stupid in my opinion for this woman to be awarded any money. If she does get the, how about she give up the search for information, donate the money to a VERY needy cause, and let her father rest in peace. He served our country, and she should be damn proud and remember him as a soldier who did his job. On 8/20/09 at 10:27 AM, berquis wrote: A person can sue Cuba if their family member, who was millitary personnel and knew that they could get killed, died there? Honestly? On 8/20/09 at 12:15 PM, DavidReed wrote: Sounds like most of these comments are made by people who are just peeved they didn't think of it first. I hope Ms. Sullivan finds what she's looking for. -David On 8/20/09 at 12:20 PM, JonAlbrecht wrote: I appreciate the woman's sufferring, but ....Every one here makes a lot of assumptions. The only facts appear to be that people saw him take off from Mexico and that he previously bombed Cuba in violation of how many laws. No one know whether he flew to Cuba or somewhere else. They just know he didn't land in Mexico. This case should have been thrown out. On 8/20/09 at 12:21 PM, ralphmcdevitts wrote: jeolousy is ugly. On 8/20/09 at 12:41 PM, Telefunkinu47 wrote: Class envy???? LOL...... Only in America. On 8/20/09 at 2:46 PM, ronaldo82k wrote: Lets sue the Germans for WWII, the Russians from the cold war and the Bermuda Triangle for all the planes and ships that have disappeared over the years. All that money can fix our economy. On 8/20/09 at 3:43 PM, blueskiesaboveme wrote: Does this have anything to do with the Bay of Pigs? On 8/20/09 at 5:34 PM, PeterTaber wrote: While I can empathize with Ms. Sullivan in her distress over the unanswered question of her father's fate, it's hard to make much sense of Justice Hjelm's ruling. I have as personal an axe to grind as she but I hardly think I deserve to profit monetarily. In 1963, my father, the eminent guerrilla warfare expert and partisan of the Cuban Revolution, Robert B. Taber, was in Oriente Province witnessing the misery that people like Mr. Sullivan visited upon the Cuban people. (Two years earlier at the Bay of Pigs he was severely wounded when mercenaries like Mr. Sullivan took part in in a now-legendary fiasco of an invasion that ended in their humiliating and well deserved defeat.) In Oriente Province, people like Mr. Sullivan carried out bombing raids upon innocent civilians and dropped weapons and other military supplies to U.S.-supported thugs on the ground. It was there also that people like Mr. Sullivan conducted biological warfare operations from the air intended to wipe out Cuba's swine in order to deprive its people of much needed protein. These were covert activities involving the very same kind of non-military actors that our government today refers to as terrorists. These were international war crimes for which the United States has never been brought to justice. Indeed, much of the relationship of Cuba with respect to the United States has been that of a victim to a bully. In 1898 the U.S. stepped in and robbed the Cuban people just as they were emancipating themselves from Spain. For the next six decades our country exploited the Cuban people at every turn, taking their land, dominating their economy, imposing a constitution that allowed American forces to invade at will, turning Havana into a brothel and putting in place some of the most ruthless dictators the Western Hemisphere has ever seen. How ironic that when people our government today calls terrorists -- people like Mr. Sullivan -- are captured, it imprisons them at Guantanamo, a prime piece of Cuban real estate the U.S. saw fit in 1898 to help itself to for all time. Justice Hjelm's absurd monetary award ruling is just more of the same. Peter Taber Searsport On 8/20/09 at 8:40 PM, daniels wrote: I guess I need to vent...these comments are made by the same 20 (maybe) people, sitting in their subsidized housing, smoking thier Pall Mall cigarettes that I help buy, and don't have a clue. When you start producing, not consuming, then start passing judgement. Hey, good news for Sherry on both scores. I spoke with her in the mid 1990's about other possibilities leading to the deaths of her father and Rorke, but they were just speculations. One theory of mine was that Frank Sturgis took some of the hollow cinder blocks forming the "fence" separating our house from his little Cuban exile "safe house" in Grapeland Heights in Miami, then stuffed them with explosives and gave them to Sullivan and Rorke to be used as homemade "bombs over Havana". I caught Sturgis stealing cinder blocks twice and the 2nd time I gave him nasty bastidge hell, and threatened to call the police if any more cinder blocks disappeared. And I was only about 15-16 at the time but yelling from inside my bedroom castigating him through an open window, so I could pretend that I was anyone I wanted to be. My voice was pretty deep for a teeny bopper when I wanted it to be. Called him every Spanish cuss word I knew from "pinga" to "maricón" and everything else in between. He just quietly and angrily put the cinder blocks back without even looking up at me. My thought was that whenever 2 of those cinder filled blocks were knocked against each other, sparks were generated and flew a few feet at night. If a load of these were in the plane and they toppled over or banged into each other, the homemade explosives might have ignited and caused the plane to burn, or explode then crash on Cuban soil. Sherry was willing to consider that possibility instead of Cuban artillery gunners being so good that they could shoot a plane out of the sky without help from Russian technology. Either way her father apparently survived and was in Cuban prisons for an extended period. Hope she gets her funds from the $270 million plus interest of frozen Cuban funds. |
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Oct 23 2009, 09:25 PM
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New Member ![]() Group: Validating Posts: 6 Joined: 5-November 04 From: Maine Member No.: 1848 |
This is Sherry Sullivan, daughter to Geoffrey Sullivan who disappeared with Alexander Rorke in 1963. My father and Alex had a secret meeting by driving from Waterbury Connecticut to somewhere along the coast, perhaps New Haven area. This occurred in the summer of 1963. They first drove to a mansion with guarded gates, went inside, then were escorted onto a boat for a secret meeting at sea. I've done some researching on who may have owned this type of property at that time. It must have been someone high up in the ranks. Any thoughts on this subject would be appreciated. My new email is sassully@roadrunner.com
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Oct 24 2009, 12:25 PM
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Super Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 5156 Joined: 9-December 04 From: Europe Member No.: 2082 |
This is Sherry Sullivan, daughter to Geoffrey Sullivan who disappeared with Alexander Rorke in 1963. My father and Alex had a secret meeting by driving from Waterbury Connecticut to somewhere along the coast, perhaps New Haven area. This occurred in the summer of 1963. They first drove to a mansion with guarded gates, went inside, then were escorted onto a boat for a secret meeting at sea. I've done some researching on who may have owned this type of property at that time. It must have been someone high up in the ranks. Any thoughts on this subject would be appreciated. My new email is sassully@roadrunner.com The book Cloak and Gown or some of the books and papers on Skull and Bones might give mention of some of the spooks in the New Haven area who fit the details you might have. A few of the Yale profs were recruiters. Did either Rorke or your father go to Yale or have a good friend who did? Yale has always been spook recruitment central. |
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Oct 24 2009, 10:51 PM
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![]() Super Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 1366 Joined: 12-October 07 From: USA - Land of the free and home of the brave. Member No.: 6199 |
This is Sherry Sullivan, daughter to Geoffrey Sullivan who disappeared with Alexander Rorke in 1963. My father and Alex had a secret meeting by driving from Waterbury Connecticut to somewhere along the coast, perhaps New Haven area. This occurred in the summer of 1963. They first drove to a mansion with guarded gates, went inside, then were escorted onto a boat for a secret meeting at sea. I've done some researching on who may have owned this type of property at that time. It must have been someone high up in the ranks. Any thoughts on this subject would be appreciated. My new email is sassully@roadrunner.com Hi Sherry, Good to see you on this forum. The person who comes to mind who was living on or near the coast in Connecticut at that time is none other than William F. Buckley, Jr. the founder of Young Americans for Freedom and a member of one of the first American families ever to call on the U.S. military to bail them out of a sticky situation when their properties had been seized by a foreign power. In his case, Pantapec Oil was seized by the Mexican government when Pancho Villa was very active in that region and Gen. John J. Pershing went after them with a full expeditionary force. I have actually traced the history of the following persons and their involvement in that infamous Pancho Villa campaign which set the standard for various military interventions in the ensuing years. 1) Major General Charles A. Willoughby as a young Army officer who later made his immense fortune by using his knowledge about the start of the ending Korean War to profit immensely on the international soybean futures market. He and H. L. Hunt had cornered the soybean market just weeks or months in advance of the Korean War then Willoughby dressed a company of South Korean regulars in North Korean uniforms on some ruse and had them shot dead in order to use that as justification for the outbreak of the Korean War. All this is documented in The Origins of the Korean War Volumes I and II by a professor from Northwester whose name escapes me now. (Prof. Bruce Cumings, is the spelling I think with one M.) 2) William F. Buckley Jr.'s father William F. Buckley, Sr. who lost millions when Pantapec Oil was expropriated. Richard Condon wrote about Buckley by referencing: "...that fascinating young man who wrote about man and God at Yale." In fact the title was God and Man at Yale. Condon really meant: "...that FASCIST bastidge, William F. Buckley, Jr. from Yale." 3) George Otis Draper, the cousin of Wickliffe Preston Draper who lived in nearby Hopedale, MA (Wickliffe was also the 1st cousin of Andrew Preston who started The Boston Fruit Company which later became United Fruit which had holdings not only in Cuba but throughout Central America and the Caribbean islands.) United Fruit originated the concept of "The Banana Wars" which resulted in at least 5 military interventions after World War One. Both the Forbes, the Drapers, the Prestons, the Cabots and the Dulles brothers were MAJOR stockholders in United Fruit of course and when Castro took over Cuba United Fruit lost millions of dollars worth of properties. Regards, John |
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Oct 24 2009, 11:09 PM
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![]() Super Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 1366 Joined: 12-October 07 From: USA - Land of the free and home of the brave. Member No.: 6199 |
This is Sherry Sullivan, daughter to Geoffrey Sullivan who disappeared with Alexander Rorke in 1963. My father and Alex had a secret meeting by driving from Waterbury Connecticut to somewhere along the coast, perhaps New Haven area. This occurred in the summer of 1963. They first drove to a mansion with guarded gates, went inside, then were escorted onto a boat for a secret meeting at sea. I've done some researching on who may have owned this type of property at that time. It must have been someone high up in the ranks. Any thoughts on this subject would be appreciated. My new email is sassully@roadrunner.com Hi Sherry, Good to see you on this forum. The person who comes to mind who was living on or near the coast in Connecticut at that time is none other than William F. Buckley, Jr. the founder of Young Americans for Freedom and a member of one of the first American families ever to call on the U.S. military to bail them out of a sticky situation when their properties had been seized by a foreign power. In his case, Pantapec Oil was seized by the Mexican government when Pancho Villa was very active in that region and Gen. John J. Pershing went after them with a full expeditionary force. I have actually traced the history of the following persons and their involvement in that infamous Pancho Villa campaign which set the standard for various military interventions in the ensuing years. 1) Major General Charles A. Willoughby as a young Army officer who later made his immense fortune by using his knowledge about the start of the ending Korean War to profit immensely on the international soybean futures market. He and H. L. Hunt had cornered the soybean market just weeks or months in advance of the Korean War then Willoughby dressed a company of South Korean regulars in North Korean uniforms on some ruse and had them shot dead in order to use that as justification for the outbreak of the Korean War. All this is documented in The Origins of the Korean War Volumes I and II by a professor from Northwester whose name escapes me now. (Prof. Bruce Cumings, is the spelling I think with one M.) 2) William F. Buckley Jr.'s father William F. Buckley, Sr. who lost millions when Pantapec Oil was expropriated. Richard Condon wrote about Buckley by referencing: "...that fascinating young man who wrote about man and God at Yale." In fact the title was God and Man at Yale. Condon really meant: "...that FASCIST bastidge, William F. Buckley, Jr. from Yale." 3) George Otis Draper, the cousin of Wickliffe Preston Draper who lived in nearby Hopedale, MA (Wickliffe was also the 1st cousin of Andrew Preston who started The Boston Fruit Company which later became United Fruit which had holdings not only in Cuba but throughout Central America and the Caribbean islands.) United Fruit originated the concept of "The Banana Wars" which resulted in at least 5 military interventions after World War One. Both the Forbes, the Drapers, the Prestons, the Cabots and the Dulles brothers were MAJOR stockholders in United Fruit of course and when Castro took over Cuba United Fruit lost millions of dollars worth of properties. Regards, John Of course, there was always Sherman Billingsley, who was Alexander Rorke's father in law as I recall. He owned The Stork Club in Manhattan but lived on the shore in Connecticut as well as far as I can determine. The Buckley's were from Darien which had miles of beachfront property. Could have been either one of them your father visited or even someone else. More likely to have been Billingsley but it could have been that Fascist bastidge Buckley, too. http://www.acontinuouslean.com/2009/03/02/...club/#more-6452 |
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Oct 25 2009, 01:45 AM
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Super Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 3233 Joined: 8-April 04 From: The Gold Coast, Australia Member No.: 624 |
This is Sherry Sullivan, daughter to Geoffrey Sullivan who disappeared with Alexander Rorke in 1963. My father and Alex had a secret meeting by driving from Waterbury Connecticut to somewhere along the coast, perhaps New Haven area. This occurred in the summer of 1963. They first drove to a mansion with guarded gates, went inside, then were escorted onto a boat for a secret meeting at sea. I've done some researching on who may have owned this type of property at that time. It must have been someone high up in the ranks. Any thoughts on this subject would be appreciated. My new email is sassully@roadrunner.com Hi Sherry, May I suggest you check out Wilbur Baldinger? James |
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Oct 25 2009, 08:30 AM
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![]() Super Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 1366 Joined: 12-October 07 From: USA - Land of the free and home of the brave. Member No.: 6199 |
This is Sherry Sullivan, daughter to Geoffrey Sullivan who disappeared with Alexander Rorke in 1963. My father and Alex had a secret meeting by driving from Waterbury Connecticut to somewhere along the coast, perhaps New Haven area. This occurred in the summer of 1963. They first drove to a mansion with guarded gates, went inside, then were escorted onto a boat for a secret meeting at sea. I've done some researching on who may have owned this type of property at that time. It must have been someone high up in the ranks. Any thoughts on this subject would be appreciated. My new email is sassully@roadrunner.com Hi Sherry, May I suggest you check out Wilbur Baldinger? James Hi James, Long time no hear. Or long time no here, either. Would you please send Sherry an eMail to sassully@roadrunner.com with your contact information? She has some really old photos with some unidentified suspects and/or perps which she would like you to review and then circulate through back channels as privately as possible among some of your contacts and friends. Can you tell us more about this Wilbur Baldinger character you mentioned? Turns out that Sherman Billingsley used to pay Sherry's father in cash for his piloting duties, and the Billingsley Connecticut home was somewhere between Darien and New Haven on the Connecticut coast. Billingsley owned The Stork Club in Manhattan but lived in Connecticut apparently. I am still trying to track down the address of his former residence. He apparently owned a yacht as well. There is an actor named Billingsley still alive today also from Connecticut who might be Sherman's son. Sherry thinks that it is pretty likely that Sherman Billingsley's home and yacht were the usual destination of both Alexander Rorke, Billingsley's son-in-law, and Geoffrey Sullivan on their Connecticut road trips. Thanks, John B |
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