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Denny Zartman

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Posts posted by Denny Zartman

  1. 2 hours ago, Lance Payette said:

    I'm beginning to think you are considerably nuttier than I had given you credit for being.

    Hey Lance? I'm going to be completely serious here. From your posts on other threads, it appears that part of the reason you're debating on this forum is for the fun of it, for the intellectual exercise, and to rile up the CT's. If I've mischaracterized your reasons, I apologize. While I appreciate having a loyal opposition and a vigorous examination of all the evidence from every perspective possible, I confess that I'm not inclined to spend my time debating with you if you're not going to debate with me in good faith. Please, either stop with the personal insults, or, if you truly think I'm nutty, please just put me on ignore. Thanks.

    2 hours ago, Lance Payette said:

    Ruth Paine "put Oswald at the scene of the crime"?  Ya think?  Ruth Paine, on a tip from a neighbor,  helped the husband of a penniless couple whose wife was living with her find a temporary minimum-wage job at a business that no one at the time could possibly have known or anticipated that JFK would be passing in front of weeks later.  Ruth Paine "kept evidence at the home"?  Ya think?  Ruth Paine allowed the penniless couple to store their crap in her garage, precisely as I am doing right now for a friend with no idea as to what is in the boxes

    You keep saying that they're "penniless" as well, when that's also not true. In his three wallets, Oswald had a total of $183.87 on November 22, 1963. That's not penniless.

    You have no evidence that Ruth Paine took other poor people into her home to live. You have no evidence that Ruth Paine cold-called any other businesses and got someone else a job anywhere at any time.

    2 hours ago, Lance Payette said:

    Ruth Paine "kept evidence at the home"?  Ya think?  Ruth Paine allowed the penniless couple to store their crap in her garage, precisely as I am doing right now for a friend with no idea as to what is in the boxes

    I have to note that here you don't deny the fact that Ruth Paine kept evidence at her home, including the alleged murder weapon and an expensive camera that this, according to your description, "penniless" couple was somehow able to purchase despite the camera having a serial number that indicated it wasn't for retail sale, and that the Dallas police actively tried to hide.

    2 hours ago, Lance Payette said:

    "That the U.S. government now officially believes was a probable conspiracy"?  Ya think?  You know perfectly well, or at least I hope you do, that (1) the HSCA had a "Mafia" focus from the day Blakey and his team were assembled, and (2) the 'probable conspiracy" nonsense was a last-minute throw-in to the HSCA report and was based on an acoustics analysis that has been thoroughly discredited.

    If the conclusion of the HSCA report was based on an acoustics analysis that you honestly believe has been "thoroughly discredited", then instead of debating someone online that you find "nutty", perhaps you should using your time writing to an American congressperson or another government official and urging them to support a new investigation. Until the official stance of the US government is changed, the unpleasant fact will remain: the US government currently opines that the JFK assassination was probably as a result of conspiracy.

    (And let's be perfectly honest here. The only reason that it's "probably" instead of "definitely" is that the HSCA couldn't rule out the possibility that two assassins working independently of each other just happened to choose the same six second window of time to shoot at JFK. Given the sheer number of coincidences that LN's accept unquestioningly, I wouldn't be surprised to find that many of them accept that as well.)

    2 hours ago, Lance Payette said:

    In the interests of time, I must stoop to quoting Wikipedia:  "As recommended by the HSCA, the Justice Department reviewed those findings through the FBI's Technical Services Division and by contracting the National Academy of Science, which specially appointed the Committee on Ballistic Acoustics (CBA). Both the FBI and CBA analyzed the acoustic data and BBN's scientific methodology and concluded that their findings were mistaken.  Although there has been some recent back and forth between different researchers, the HSCA's acoustic analysis is widely considered to be discredited."

    "Widely considered to be discredited" is not the same as "thoroughly discredited."

    2 hours ago, Lance Payette said:

    Come on, don't patronize me and other intelligent readers with this sort of nonsense and fluff.

    In my opinion, facts are not nonsense and fluff. I believe facts are essential to untangling this case and trying to discover the truth about what happened. You have not refuted a single assertion of fact that I've made in this thread. You're trying to argue your way around their significance and the conclusions a reasonable person could infer from those facts, but you can't deny the facts themselves.

    2 hours ago, Lance Payette said:

    If there is ANY PIECE of evidence that clearly and unequivocally shows Ruth Paine to be someone other than precisely who she claimed to be, tell us about it.  You won't because you can't.

    Here you go.

    Quote

    Buddy Walthers took part in the search of the home of Ruth Paine. Walthers told Eric Tagg that they "found six or seven metal filing cabinets full of letters, maps, records and index cards with names of pro-Castro sympathizers."

    https://spartacus-educational.com/JFKpaine.htm

  2. 30 minutes ago, Joe Bauer said:

    Jim D., Joseph McBride, Larry Hancock, Walt Brown, Vince Palamara, Kirk Galloway, Ron Buhlman, newbie Denny Zartman and so many others ... and of course in his own special category...Doug Caddy.

    Sorry to intrude, but I had to say that I'm damn honored to be included on that list of names.

    And I should say that in my opinion you enhance the forum and don't detract from it at all.

    Much appreciated, Joe.

  3. 5 minutes ago, François Carlier said:

    I thought so, you're delusional !

    This thread is about George de Mohrenschildt, you claim it's not about George de Mohrenschildt, and you're calling me delusional?

    7 minutes ago, François Carlier said:

    Sorry, there's nothing I can do.

    On this we agree.

    10 minutes ago, François Carlier said:

    You know perfectly well that the "probable conspiracy" idea came from the flawed acoustic evidence studies that were completely debunked later.

    Sure, whatever you say. Unfortunately, until it is changed, the position of the United States government still stands to this day: JFK was probably killed as a result of a conspiracy. Don't like it? Write a congressman.

    13 minutes ago, François Carlier said:

    The truth is that Ruth Paine is a honest woman who had NOTHING whatsoever to do with the Kennedy assassination. She never set up anyone. Period.

    Ruth Paine set Oswald up with his job at the TSBD. Ruth Paine had evidence at her home that the Dallas police tried to hide. You can not provide any evidence whatsoever to the contrary.

    You don't know Ruth Paine and neither do I. She certainly did have something to do with the Kennedy assassination, as the accused assassin's family and the murder weapon were kept at her home along with an expensive camera that the police actively tried to cover up and that you can only continue to ignore. Instead of continuing to think uncritically, why not ask why the Dallas police department would feel the need to even try to cover up that camera?

    Paine got the accused assassin his job at the TSBD, placing him at the scene of the crime. The accused assassin denied the crime and claimed to be a patsy. It seems that true critical thinking would demand one examine the circumstances placing the accused assassin at the scene of the crime, and there is no person, including Oswald himself, that was responsible for placing Oswald at the scene of the crime other than Ruth Paine.

    23 minutes ago, François Carlier said:

    You have no evidence whatever. But you don't seem to care, as long as you have your imagination !

    You really seem to know nothing at all about critical thinking. There is plenty of circumstantial evidence. Courts convict people on circumstantial evidence all the time. And you have not countered a single piece of the circumstantial evidence I've cited. You only continue to claim it doesn't exist. I'm not the one being delusional.

    28 minutes ago, François Carlier said:

    I'll tell you what : I like to debate about conspiracy theories. I enjoy exchanging arguments.
    But someone who seems happy to spend his time smearing the name of a decent woman doesn't deserve one minute of my time.
    So go ahead, and keep smearing honest people, but please, from now on, leave me alone !

    I will accept your admission of defeat in this debate. We'll end it here. I'll do my best to refrain from responding to your posts in the future. Thank you for the interesting conversation.

  4. On 12/14/2018 at 10:05 PM, Lance Payette said:

    Ernst Titovets, whose intellect and professional credentials (acquired later) would put de Mohrenschildt to shame, found Oswald extremely interesting and likable.

    If that's true, why didn't the WC identify Titovets as one of Oswald's friends?

    On 12/14/2018 at 10:05 PM, Lance Payette said:

    The reasonably sophisticated Ziger family practically adopted him. 

    If that's true, why didn't the WC identify any member of the Ziger family as one of Oswald's friends?

    On 12/14/2018 at 10:05 PM, Lance Payette said:

    I don't find it unlikely at all that oddball de Mohrenschildt would have been attracted to oddball Oswald in small doses or have had empathy for the plight of the penniless couple.

    For goodness sake, why do you keep saying this? You might not find it unlikely, but de Mohrenschildt himself said he wouldn't have contacted Oswald in a million years had it not been for the encouragement of a man in the CIA.

    On 12/14/2018 at 10:05 PM, Lance Payette said:

    I likewise don't find Ruth Paine suspicious in the slightest.

    Paine was the key factor in putting the man accused of the assassination at the scene of a crime for which the accused claimed he was a patsy and that the US government now officially believes was a probable conspiracy. Paine also kept evidence at her home, including the alleged murder weapon and an expensive camera that was not available for retail sale, and that the Dallas police actively tried to cover up. If you don't find any of that suspicious, I wonder what you would find suspicious.

    On 12/14/2018 at 10:05 PM, Lance Payette said:

    for God's sake, does all of the dot-connecting necessary to bring poor old Ruth and Oswald's employment at the TSBD into the web of conspiracy MAKE ANY SENSE AT ALL?  No, it does not unless you are literally drunk on Conspiracy Kool Aid.. 

    I don't think it's that hard to understand. de Mohrenschildt and Paine were Oswald's handlers. Moore made it clear that de Mohrenschildt might get assistance in Haiti if de Mohrenschildt debriefed Oswald about the USSR. de Mohrenschildt introduced Paine to Oswald. Paine took in Marina and the children because she knew Oswald was always likely to return to them, so that made it easier to keep tabs on him.

  5. On 12/14/2018 at 6:45 PM, François Carlier said:

    Second of all, I said something about Ruth Paine, not about George de Mohrenschildt. So please let's stick to the topic, namely Ruth Paine.

    The topic of this thread is George de Mohrenschildt.

    On 12/14/2018 at 6:45 PM, François Carlier said:

    Even if you prove that Ruth Paine was a mean-spirited woman (which she was not) and a rapist or a killer herself or a mafia boss or a CIA agent, you still haven't proved that she set up Oswald.
    In other words, you have no evidence whatsoever that Ruth Paine was part of a conspiracy to set up Oswald.

    I have plenty of circumstantial evidence, topped by the fact that she cold-called the TSBD and got Oswald a job there a week and a month before the assassination. CIA man Moore encouraged de Mohrenschildt to meet Oswald. In de Mohrenschildt's own words "I would never have contacted Oswald in a million years, if Moore had not sanctioned it." de Mohrenschildt, a globetrotting socialite with connections to French, German, and American intelligence, encouraged Oswald to move to Dallas. de Mohrenschildt introduced Oswald to Paine, a woman whose husband and brother in law held high security clearances, whose father was suspected of working for the CIA, and whose sister straight up worked for the CIA. Paine takes in Oswald's wife and kids, had the alleged assassination rifle in her garage, had an expensive spy camera that wasn't for retail sale that the Dallas police actively tried to cover up, and, as I said at the beginning of this paragraph, Paine cold-called the TSBD without Oswald's knowledge, and Paine got Oswald his job there.

    Paine set up Oswald. Paine set Oswald up with a job at the TSBD.

    There is a clear line from CIA man Moore, to intelligence connected de Mohrenschildt, to CIA connected Ruth Paine, that brings Oswald to Dallas Texas and puts him inside the TSBD on November 22, 1963.

    You seem to believe all this happened innocently.

    This is what I'm talking about when I talk about credulous. I assume you believe one can walk through a thunderstorm and not get wet as long as one walks between the raindrops.

    I looked through much of Paine's testimony. I could find no other instance in her life where she had taken in a young family and let them live in her home. When exchange students came in from the Soviet Union, she didn't take them in. Do you have any evidence that Paine had taken a needy person or family and allowed them to live in her home done before or after, or are you completely comfortable that, with the Oswald's, this was just a unique, innocent event?

    According to Roy Truly, he had never talked to Ruth Paine before she cold-called Truly. Let's also note that Paine called the TSBD without Oswald's knowledge. Do you have any evidence that Paine had called up businesses before and found any other needy unemployed person a job, or, again, are you okay with the fact that this was another innocent and unique event?

    The current official position of the government is that JFK was probably assassinated as a result of conspiracy. If a conspiracy was probable, it only makes sense to consider the circumstances that led Oswald to be at the scene.

    This isn't a case of "I knew a friend in college that later committed a crime, does that make me responsible?" What kind of critical thinking is that? This is a case of a probable conspiracy. If you had a friend in college that was later accused of committing a crime and she said she was being set up to take the fall for the crime, and it turned out that YOU were the one responsible for your friend being at the scene of the crime on the day the crime was committed, you better believe that you're a suspect. In what world would you not be a suspect?

  6. 20 hours ago, Lance Payette said:

    many conspiracy theorists seem extraordinarily willing to follow these false leads and give credence to pretty obvious wannabes and crackpots.

    I have to disagree with you somewhat here, or at least argue that this behavior is not widespread and shared equally by both sides. For example, very few serious CT'rs believe that George Hickey Jr. shot JFK by accident. That's a theory that has gotten a fair amount of media coverage due to Mortal Error and JFK: The Smoking Gun, but again, from what I've seen, few serious CT'rs endorse it. On the LN side, it seems that whenever I'm on an online forum and the subject of the JFK assassination comes up, invariably someone will suggest the possibility that Oswald was actually intending to kill Connally, a theory I find fairly ridiculous.

  7.  

    20 hours ago, Lance Payette said:

    They are the most fun and the most engrossing (well, perhaps not as much fun as the ones that involve aliens),  but they are completely at odds with the reality of Oswald the man from his youth to his death and are based almost entirely on wild speculation. 

    14 hours ago, Lance Payette said:

    Once he was arrested, I think he was crafty enough to realize he'd be a much bigger historical figure with a sympathetic attorney like Abt and a two- or three-month trial where he could strut his political and social philosophy.  OR (see, I'm flexible!):  (2) The assassination was the ultimate establishment of his credentials as a bona fide Marxist and Castro supporter, and he would thereafter waltz to Cuba as a hero of the revolution.

    Since we're trying to stay away from wild speculation, what documented behavior are you basing this belief that Oswald was saving his reasons for killing JFK so that he could deliver a political polemic at his trial, or delaying taking credit for the actions that he thought would bring him fame in Cuba?

    If killing JFK would make Oswald a hero in Cuba, why did Castro initially respond to the news of JFK's killing by saying it was very bad?

  8. 44 minutes ago, W. Tracy Parnell said:

    Speaking for myself, I don't like to see people wasting time with conspiracy theories and that is my prime motivation. I was an agnostic when I first read Lifton's book and open to the idea of conspiracy. But I never saw anything to win me over. After Posner's book and the "Image of an Assassination" DVD came out and I could see the two men reacting to the same shot for myself I was convinced.

    Yes, the case is solved for me, but after spending years studying a subject you tend to maintain an ongoing interest even though I have tried to quit a few times. The JFK case is also a good "jumping off point" to a general study of post World War 2  America.

    Denny, I was going to answer a few of your questions but Lance beat me to it and I agree with everything he said. JFK got a place in history by becoming a war hero, Senator and President. LHO didn't want to wait around and shooting JFK did it instantly for him.

    Interesting post, Tracy. Thanks for sharing your thoughts.

    I appreciate you attempting to save others from wasting their time on conspiracy theories, but unless I'm mistaken the current position of the US government is that the JFK assassination was probably a conspiracy. So, those who believe it was probably or definitely not a conspiracy are on the wrong side of the official position and are (in my opinion) arguably the ones that are wasting their time, not conspiracy theorists.

    Even the WC did not say that there wasn't a conspiracy, only that they could find no evidence of one. Members of the WC expressed doubt in the single bullet theory, which most of us seem to agree is essential in advocating the theory of a lone assassin. Lyndon Johnson himself said he wasn't able to completely dismiss the possibility of conspiracy.

  9. 4 hours ago, Lance Payette said:

    I can understand the appeal of elaborate conspiracy theories.  If the JFK assassination were my consuming hobby or quasi-religion, the Lone Assassin explanation would have no appeal.  I'd want an endless stream of mysteries and puzzles to sink my teeth into.  The Lone Assassin explanation is superficially less plausible than many conspiracy theories and certainly no fun as a hobby or religion.

    I get what you're saying here. I've thought that about those researchers who are into Jack the Ripper. It's no fun for them if the case is solved, so there's equal enthusiasm for knocking down other theories as there is for promoting one above the others. But there Lone Assassin theory supporters who I assume find it fun because they keep coming back to argue a case that, for them, is already settled.

  10. Hi Lance,

    That's a good post with a lot of points worthy of consideration and discussion. I agree with a few of them.

    It seems to me there are people on the Lone Assassin side that are just as determined to continue debating this subject as are people who favor the idea of conspiracy. I find that strange, because for those on the Lone Assassin side there is nothing left to be investigated. As far as Lone Assassin supporters are concerned, the case is solved. Yet there are those still determined to debate the details again and again. I don't know what drives them. At least those on the conspiracy side are still ostensibly investigating unresolved issues and have some excuse to keep pursuing the case and debating the fine points.

    If I recall correctly, the idea of a benign cover-up was promoted by Newsweek the year Oliver Stone's JFK came out. So you're right in that a benign cover-your-ass cover-up was not exactly a new idea, but I believe the theory has been out there long enough to say that it's probably been given an adequate amount of attention.

    In my view, the problem with that theory is that it still doesn't explain a few important things. What about the instances of foreknowledge, like the Odio incident? What was Oswald's motive? Why didn't Oswald have a getaway plan? If Oswald was truly acting alone, why did some people receive death threats against their families ordering them to keep quiet?

    I'll try to address some of your other points in future posts.

  11. 17 hours ago, David Josephs said:

    post this for Denny....  the probe proved the wounds were not connected... that and there not being any channel thru the upper torso left by a .25" bullet

    Thanks David. Your statement is just true. From what I know, there is no medical evidence that indicates the bullet went through the body. I'm hoping Paul can provide it.

    Humes could feel the end of the opening with his finger. Testimony from Jenkins and Knudsen indicate probes were also used. I've never heard of a single X-Ray or any other medical examination that indicated a bullet pathway. From what I understand, after Humes probed the wound, there was confusion in the autopsy room as to where the bullet went. When they doctors were alerted to the discovery of CE 399 in Parkland, they concluded that the bullet must have worked its way out of the shallow back wound during cardiac massage. To the best of my knowledge, the doctors at the autopsy did not conclude that the bullet traveled through the body and exited the throat.

    Where is the medical evidence that shows us that there was a bullet hole that was tracked from point A on his back to point B on the front of his throat? What is the medical explanation for Humes saying he could feel the end with his finger, if the bullet hole did indeed traverse the body? I hope Paul can explain this.

  12. 4 hours ago, Paul Baker said:

    It's interesting, isn't it? That, when the 'bodged' autopsy helps to lend a modicum of weight to the tenuous arguments of a conspiracy theorist, then - in that respect at least - it wasn't bodged at all. Bodged in some respects yes, not in others.

    Three shots fired (heard by vast majority). One shooter (seen by a few). Bullet wound victims reacting simultaneously to an external stimulus (check out that Z film if you've never seen it). Shooter in perfect alignment with the victims and their wounds. No other weapons or ammunition found. It's kind of obvious. No amount of picking holes around the general periphery can really detract from any of that. I've read your book Jim, and that is its basic theme: avoid the facts at all cost and inject doubt. And I guess I must have somehow missed your theory that betters that of the WC, which surprises me, because I would have found that most interesting.

    You are of the opinion that it's likely that no shots were fired from the sixth floor of the TSBD on that day, so who knows what you really believe. I'm not even sure that you know.

    Excuse me, Paul,

    The doctors at the autopsy probed JFK's back wound. Humes could feel the end of it with his finger. Unless you can provide evidence otherwise, the single bullet theory ends there.

    Please. Where is your medical evidence that JFK's back wound was tracked through JFK's body and to the front of JFK's throat?

  13. On 12/12/2018 at 4:16 AM, Paul Baker said:

    Again, Jim. You've written nothing. Why do you keep doing that? All of this time you waste doing absolutely nothing, it's quite incredible.

    There is the single bullet theory, which is the best fit for the available evidence, as far as I know. So this 'stupid' question has to be asked again, I'm afraid. What is the alternative explanation? You don't have one, so you must rely on conjecture and suppositionevidence was mishandled or faked or whatever. All you're doing is attempting to discredit the theory, without providing a coherent alternative explanation, using 'evidence' that isn't evidence at all; that has essentially been woven out of whole cloth. While that approach might work in a court of law to plant doubt in the minds of a jury, it has no meaning whatsoever in what is laughingly referred to as a 'research community'.

    So Jim, what is the alternative explanation? Most people heard three shots, JFK and Connally reacted simultaneously to being shot, witnesses saw just a single shooter, no other bullets were found, and so on, so it would have to fit in with all of that real evidence. Good luck! I'm eager to read it.

    Pardon me, Paul. I hope you don't mind me jumping in for a bit.

    Didn't Dr. Humes probe the hole in JFK's back and then say that the distance traveled by the bullet was a short distance because he could feel the end of the opening with his finger? Didn't almost every doctor and nurse at Parkland that saw the front neck wound before the tracheostomy say that they thought that wound appeared to be one of entrance and not of exit? Do you have a medical source that indicates that JFK's back wound was tracked through the body and to his neck?

  14. Hi Vince,

    I just finished listening to your interview. It was excellent, and sure didn't feel like 90 minutes. I had not heard about Thomas Shipman before, and that was a fascinating story. I'm getting Who's Who In The Secret Service for myself for Christmas. I look forward to reading it. It's great to read your posts on this forum and to have the opportunity to benefit from your expertise.

    Thanks!

  15. 11 hours ago, David Andrews said:

    I could see the DeMohrenschildt-Oswald friendship happening under innocent terms, given a quixotic man-of-the-world type who -  if for no other reasons than intellectual curiosity and pity - took a shine to a former defector who was a similar duck out of water in Dallas,.  However, I have no belief that GDeM was innocent and uninterested.

    It couldn't happen under innocent terms because they didn't casually meet. The only reason De Mohrenschildt and Oswald were ever introduced to each other was because Dallas CIA domestic contacts man J. Walton Moore wanted it to happen.

    According to the Warren Commission, George De Mohrenschildt was the only person even close to being Oswald's friend. They wouldn't commit to even that, saying only that Oswald may have respected De Mohrenschildt a bit. Otherwise, Oswald had no friends, at least as far as they could determine.

    If Oswald were really and truly the type of genuinely sympathetic human being that could innocently engender a friendship with a sophisticated stranger, don't you think that he have happened on at least one or two other friends in his life, even if by accident? Oswald didn't make friends with anyone at any of the places he worked. Oswald wasn't even able to develop a friendship with Buell Wesley Frazier, despite riding in his car alone with him regularly.

  16. 10 hours ago, David Von Pein said:

    ALBERT E. JENNER JR. -- Give me your impression of him [Lee Oswald] at that time--your first impression.

    GEORGE DeMOHRENSCHILDT -- The first impression and the last impression remain more or less the same. I could never get mad at this fellow.

    MR. JENNER -- Why?

    MR. DeMOHRENSCHILDT -- Sometimes he was obnoxious. I don't know. I had a liking for him. I always had a liking for him. There was something charming about him, there was some--I don't know. I just liked the guy--that is all. .... You know, he was very humble with me. He was very humble. If somebody expressed an interest in him, he blossomed--absolutely blossomed. If you asked him some questions about him, he was just out of this world. That was more or less the reason that I think he liked me very much.

    Quote

     

    In late 1961— De Mohrenschildt could not pinpoint the date— he said had a lunchtime meeting in downtown Dallas with one of these connections; J. Walter Moore. Moore steered their conversation to the city of Minsk, where, as Moore seemed to know even before he told him, De Mohrenschildt had spent his childhood. Moore worked for the CIA's domestic contact service in Dallas. He told De Mohrenschildt about an ex-American Marine who had worked in an electronics factory in Minsk for the past year, Lee Harvey Oswald, who was returning to the Dallas area. Although no specific requests were made by Moore, De Mohrenschildt gathered that Moore would be appreciative to learn more about Oswald's activities in Minsk.At this time, he was extremely busy trying to arrange for Papa Doc Duvalier, the Haitian dictator, to approve his oil exploration deal in that country. Some help from the U.S. Embassy in Haiti would be greatly appreciated by him, he suggested to Moore. Although he recognized that there was no quid pro quo, he hoped that he might receive the same sort of tacit assistance that he had previously received in Yugoslavia. "I would never have contacted Oswald in a million years, if Moore had not sanctioned it," he explained to me "Too much was at stake."

    When Oswald arrived in Dallas, De Mohrenschildt paid a visit to his house because, he explained to me, he "assumed that was what Moore wanted."

     

    http://www.edwardjayepstein.com/diary/dem.htm

    De Mohrenschildt did not become friends with Lee Harvey Oswald on a whim or by accident. De Mohrenschildt was encouraged to meet Oswald by CIA domestic contacts man J. Walton Moore, and that is the only reason De Mohrenschildt ever met Oswald, according to De Mohrenschildt himself. 

  17. 5 hours ago, François Carlier said:

    Oh no….. not again !
    Ruth Paine was just a kind woman who happened to know the man who killed Kennedy.
    Trying to implicate her or insinuating that she had foreknowledge or that she did something on purpose before the assassination is as shameful as it is ludicrous and wrong.
    Ruth Paine was as much involed in a conspiracy as Jackie was !
    I am amazed that there are still (a few) people who dare cite her name in 2018. When conspiracy theorists plunge so low, you know that they have ZERO thing of substance to say.

    François,

    Sure. Ruth Paine was an average Dallas housewife who 1. just happened to have a husband and brother in law with high level military clearance, who 2. just happened to have a sister who straight up worked for the CIA, who 3. just happened to be acquainted with a globetrotting socialite with intelligence connections to three countries, who 4. just happened to speak Russian, who 5. just happened to get on the telephone herself, dial up the TSBD, and get Lee Harvey Oswald a job there one month and one week before the assassination, who 6. just happened to have had Oswald's belongings at her home, including the alleged murder weapon and an expensive miniature spy camera with a serial number that indicated it wasn't for retail sale (and that the Dallas cops tried to cover up and call a light meter for totally innocent reasons.)

    François Carlier, you say in your bio that you're interested in critical thinking, but you seem to be very credulous when it comes to Ruth Paine and the JFK evidence in general. You really believe that all those things cited in the above paragraph are just coincidences? You believe that Lee Harvey Oswald was some sort of nutty, violent, unstable loner with delusions of grandeur, but that he also had such an absolutely charming and winning personality that people like Paine and de Mohrenschildt were just irresistibly attracted to him and driven to help him out in every way possible?

    Ruth Paine certainly did do something on purpose before the assassination. Ruth Paine took in Lee Harvey Oswald's family. Ruth Paine allowed Oswald to keep the murder weapon at her home. Ruth Paine got on the telephone, Ruth Paine cold-called up the TSBD and Ruth Paine got LHO a job in a building that overlooked the motorcade route.

    You can't deny the facts. CIA domestic contacts man J Walton Moore encouraged French, German, and American intelligence connected upper class socialite George de Mohrenschildt to meet Oswald. "I would never have contacted Oswald in a million years, if Moore had not sanctioned it." de Mohrenschildt convinced Oswald to move his family to Dallas. de Mohrenschildt introduced Oswald to Ruth Paine, a woman whose sister was in the CIA and whose husband and brother in law both held high level military clearances. Ruth Paine got Oswald his job at the TSBD, and had some of his belongings at her home, including a spy camera that the police actively attempted to cover up.

    How much more blatant does a pattern have to be before a person can reasonably find it suspicious? 

  18. In one of the first conversations I ever had with anyone about the assassination, my friend said "Guys like George de Mohrenschildt don't just 'make friends' with guys like Lee Harvey Oswald." If we believe the Warren Commission, de Mohrenschildt, a high-society man with connections to German, French, and American intelligence was possibly LHO's only friend.  

    CIA domestic contact service man J. Walton Moore tells de Mohrenschildt to make contact with Oswald. de Mohrenschildt later says "I would never have contacted Oswald in a million years, if Moore had not sanctioned it."

    de Mohrenschildt convinces Oswald to move to Dallas. de Mohrenschildt introduces Oswald to Ruth Paine, average Dallas housewife that just happens to have CIA and high level military connections herself.

    Ruth Paine helps Oswald get a job at the TSBD a month and a week before the assassination.

  19. I just finished reading "I Heard You Paint Houses" (2016 paperback edition), and I think there are some portions worthy of further discussion that weren't fully touched on in the posts above.

    This is my breakdown of the portions of the book I think are most relevant to the JFK assassination:

    Frank Sheeran, a labor union official, worked for Russell Bufalino, (Mafia boss of the Northeastern Pennsylvania Bufalino family from 1959 to 1989) and labor union leader Jimmy Hoffa. Sheeran had a criminal career from 1945 to 1975, including multiple murders. Sheeran claims to have murdered Hoffa in 1975.

    Pg. 119 – Sheeran says he met Jack Ruby several times. Sheeran says that he saw Ruby in the company of Sam Giancana (the boss of the Mafia’s Chicago Outfit from 1957–1966), and Paul “Red” Dorfman (the head of the Chicago Waste Handler's Union and a member of the Chicago Outfit.)

    Pgs. 128 – 129 – Sheeran describes meeting Carlos Marcello’s (Mafia boss of New Orleans) pilot David Ferrie (initially the central figure in New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison’s 1966 JFK investigation.) Sheeran says that some time before the 1961 failed Bay Of Pigs invasion of Cuba he was told by Hoffa to drive a truck to Baltimore, Maryland, and meet Ferrie at a landing strip at the Harry C. Campbell concrete plant. A group of soldiers loaded military uniforms, weapons, and ammunition onto Sheeran's truck and Sheeran drove the weapons to Orange Grove, Florida. According to Sheeran, Ferrie told him to deliver the weapons to E. Howard Hunt., even describing Hunt’s large ears. Sheeran says he delivered the weapons to Hunt and a group of anti-Castro Cubans.

    Pgs 162 – 163 – Sheeran says that a few days before the JFK assassination he was told by Russell Bufalino to go to a restaurant in New York, New York. At the restaurant Sheeran was given a duffel bag of what he assumed to be rifles and was instructed to take the bag to David Ferrie at the concrete plant landing strip in Baltimore, Maryland. Sheeran says that he did as instructed, delivering the bag to Ferrie and another man that Sheeran declined to name but recognized as a member of New York’s Genovese crime family.

    Pgs 241-242 – Sheeran claims that in October 1974 Jimmy Hoffa gave Sheeran more details about Sheeran’s November 1963 mission to Baltimore, Maryland. Hoffa allegedly told Sheeran:

    - The duffel bag contained high powered rifles intended for the JFK assassination

    - The rifles were replacements for rifles that were in the trunk of a Ford Thunderbird that was totaled in a drunk driving accident

    - Ferrie was delivering the replacement rifles

    - Actual police officers, and conspirators posing as police officers, were part of the assassination

    - Policemen friends of Jack Ruby were originally intended to kill Oswald, but somehow Ruby “bungled” it, and had to take care of Oswald himself

    - Ruby feared being tortured and murdered if he failed to kill Oswald

    - Mob bosses Carlos Marcello, Sam Giancana, and Santo Trafficante Jr. (Mafia boss of Florida and Cuba) were involved in the assassination

    - Says that all the conspirators were also involved in the Bay Of Pigs

    Pgs 332 – 335 – Author Charles Brandt questions Sheeran about why so many people were involved in the killing of Jimmy Hoffa. Sheeran responds that it is essentially a precautionary measure for the assassins. A single assassin would themselves be killed after the assassination just to keep things quiet, but when multiple assassins are used in a hit, the conspirators are not likely to have all the assassins killed.

  20. 11 hours ago, Joe Bauer said:

    Roy and Steve, Mrs. Johnson's testimony is very suspicious in it's blatantly hostile attempt to paint Mrs. Roberts in a negative and bad credibility light...

    This whole post was well-said, and a excellent defense of hardworking people like Roberts.

    What kind of attention-getting or exaggerated story is that anyway? If Earlene Roberts was truly the type who wanted to exaggerate a detail to get attention, doesn't it seem logical that Oswald would be the subject? Imagine the attention she would have gotten if she told the world that Oswald passed by her muttering a confession to killing JFK and his intent to kill a policeman next.

  21. Hi Jim,

    That was quite enjoyable to listen to, thanks very much for the heads up. It gave me a lot to think about.

    I have to look into Ralph Leon Yates, and I wasn't aware that the rifle was paid for with an uncashed money order. That's interesting.

    I was surprised that there was someone else thought the Johnson/Hoover telephone call felt staged. It's something I've always suspected.

  22. 18 hours ago, James DiEugenio said:

    I really did not like that either Joe.  In fact, I was a bit surprised that Vince took that path.

    That is why I decided to reply at length and as fast as I could.  I thought the critical community reply to Posner was not strong enough.  Or immediate enough.

    So after actually reading the whole thing, and taking copious notes, I determined his book was really an argument made by length, and by invective.  I was really surprised at how little there was that was new.  The other thing is, I could detect no evidence that Vince actually left his office the whole time he worked on it.  And that is  bad in my view.  Its always better when you talk to people in their own environment, and sometimes that leads you to others who are nearby.

    On the up side, if Bugliosi's cinder block was their last gasp, then its like Chaplin and his cannon.  Big build up, and the cannonball rolls out of the barrel and hits the ground right below.

    Hi James, I quite like "Reclaiming Parkland" and I'm grateful that you did the work to write a detailed rebuttal against Bugliosi's book. Thanks.

    To me, Bugliosi's book read like something he mostly dictated into an audio recorder and barely bothered to edit. There's so much focus on himself and attacking conspiracy theorists that if I were a neutral reader I would wonder about Bugliosi's objectivity.

    And his reasoning is so circular it's almost ridiculous. It's basically "we know Oswald is guilty because we know Oswald is guilty, and we know that anything we can't explain can be explained in a way that's consistent with Oswald's guilt, because we know Oswald is guilty" rephrased a thousand different ways.

  23. 12 hours ago, Jim Hargrove said:

    Indeed!  He played the starring role of The Patsy!  And to do so successfully, he clearly had to follow orders.  The question I've always wondered is, What kind of story was he told to do the things he did that day.

    Wasn't it David Atlee Phillips that said the people he was with were told they were on a mission to prevent the assassination?

    I don't believe Oswald was the lone assassin, but it's obvious (at least it was and is to me) that Oswald was involved in the machinery of the conspiracy. I don't know what role Oswald believed he was playing, but you're correct, the conspirators certainly considered him part of the plot since he was to be the patsy.

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