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Reclaiming History: The Assassination of
President John F. Kennedy
By Vincent Bugliosi
W.W. Norton & Co., New York, NY, 2007. 1612
pages plus CD-rom, $49.95.
Reviewed by Dr. Gary L. Aguilar
“[A]lthough there have
been hundreds of books on the [JFK] assassination,” Vincent Bugliosi
writes in the introduction to Reclaiming History, “no book has even
attempted to be a comprehensive and fair evaluation of the entire
[italics in original] case, including all of the major conspiracy
theories.”1 Indeed, no book has – not even this 1612-page book,
supplemented by a CD-rom containing 958 pages of endnotes – although
not because it is too short.
The gigantic swing that
Bugliosi takes is easily the most ambitious one-person undertaking ever
published on the Kennedy assassination. Bugliosi, the famous Charles
Manson prosecutor, devotes more than 1400 pages of text and endnotes to
“reclaiming” the lost truth as first set forth by the Warren
Commission. He then devotes 900 more pages of text and endnotes to
pounding myriad “conspiracy theorists” whose efforts over the years,
Bugliosi claims, have wrought a grave injustice on the Commission and
performed a “flagrant disservice to the American public.”2
It is not just that
critics have convinced 75 percent of Americans (Bugliosi’s figure3) to
reject the official truth, which he says happens to be the real truth.
These critics, Bugliosi contends, are also responsible for a widespread
loss of faith in once-respected institutions. Such widespread
skepticism, “gestating for decades in the nation’s marrow,” he writes,
“obviously has to have had a deleterious effect on the way Americans
view those who lead them and determine their destiny. Indeed, Jefferson
Morley, former Washington editor of the Nation, observes that Kennedy’s
assassination has been ‘a kind of national Rorschach test of the
American political psyche. What Americans think about the Kennedy
assassination reveals what they think about their government.’”4 To
those who might wonder if more than 1600 pages of text and 900 pages of
endnotes were really necessary, Bugliosi says that the problem is so
severe that nothing less would have sufficed.
Although Warren
Commission skeptics might not welcome this gargantuan new salvo, there
is no denying that Bugliosi’s Herculean effort is an historic and
important contribution. It is valuable not only as a reference for the
myriad facts in the case and for debunking some of the pro-conspiracy
codswallop that has not elsewhere already been debunked (most of it has
been, if one has the time to find it). The book’s use also lies in
demonstrating that it may not be possible for one person to fully
master, or give a fair accounting of, this impossibly tangled mess of a
case. In fact, despite Bugliosi’s pugnacious pummeling, he hasn’t laid
a glove on major elements of the case for conspiracy.
And, regrettably, it
must be said that the most distinguishing characteristic of this book
is its demagogic pugnacity. Bugliosi cleaves the world of opinion
holders neatly in two – sensible Warren Commission loyalists and
conscious evildoers, the “conspiracy theorists.” He allows, however,
for the occasional sincere dupe. Although his prosecutorial,
conclusions-driven style is redolent of Gerald Posner’s in Case Closed,
the last attorney-written book to defend the Warren Commission,
Bugliosi’s endless self-congratulation and his arrogant condescension
make his book far more insufferable.
These traits may have
served Bugliosi well as a Los Angeles County prosecutor where, he
boasts, he won felony convictions in 105 of 106 jury trials. 5 They may
have helped him knock out true-crime books, including his famous book
about the Manson murders, Helter Skelter. But his arrogance is of
little use in untangling the hopelessly conflicted facts in this
44-year old national tragedy. His incessantly hurling slurs such as
“deranged conspiracy theorist,” “crackpot,” “con man,” “kook,” and
“huckster” at virtually all critics inevitably carries a whiff of
buffoonery and anxious self-promotion about it. And that’s particularly
the case when he’s flat-out wrong on the facts.
A typical example is
Bugliosi’s mocking of skeptics who say that Robert Kennedy was, to
borrow from Bugliosi, a “conspiracy theorist.” He counters not with an
informed discussion, but by producing an RFK quotation of support for
the Warren Commission.6 Ironically, in the very week that Bugliosi’s
book premiered, a new best-selling book by David Talbot, Brothers, was
published proffering book-length documentation of something skeptics
have long known and Bugliosi could have known if he had really looked:
While RFK toed the official line in public for the obvious, political
reasons, in private, and until the day he died, he remained active as,
to borrow from Talbot, “America’s first assassination conspiracy
theorist.” 71
But if one peers past
Bugliosi’s conclusions-driven narrative, past his errors of fact and
interpretation and past his snarky, self-congratulatory tone, there is
much to be thankful for in this book. His writing is generally lucid
and engaging and his compilation of facts from disparate sources is a
remarkable achievement and an astonishing boon to all students of the
case. For whether one agrees with Bugliosi or not, he has provided an
almost encyclopedic repository of the innumerable facets of the case,
particularly those useful to Warren Commission loyalists. But this can
be as much a curse as a blessing. For the book is so jammed with
endless, repetitive, and often inessential details — especially those
implicating Oswald — that the general reader may find it impossible to
make out the forest amid Bugliosi’s endless trees.
A few of words of advice
are in order about who should read the book and how to read it. First,
this is probably not a book for novices, because Bugliosi provides so
many peripheral details that one can easily lose the thread or lose
interest in the thread. Second, serious students of the case, and even
casual readers, are advised to read the book with the included CD-rom
running on a computer. For not only is some of the most important
material available only in the CD-rom’s 958 pages of endnotes, but the
endnotes occasionally qualify the text so much that the net effect is
to eviscerate the sweeping generalizations on the printed page. But one
need not read the entire book to find value.
Bugliosi marvelously
chronicles the events surrounding that day in Dallas in a section
entitled “Four Days in November.” It may be the best hour-by-hour
timeline in print. The 300-plus pages he devotes to the events between
6:30 a.m. on Friday, November 22, the day of the assassination, through
Monday, November 25 leave out almost nothing of significance. And his
narrative is strengthened by this section’s lack of invective and
disparagement. He reserves those features for the remainder of
Reclaiming History, turning it into a distracting and tiresome screed
more fit for settling scores than history. Few of the remaining
2000-plus pages are free of his cheap shots, his bitter denunciations,
and his often silly remonstrations. That is not to say his criticisms
are entirely invalid.
For, as with the sinking
of the Maine, the attack at Pearl Harbor, the Gulf of Tonkin incident,
Sept. 11, and the events at Roswell, New Mexico, the Kennedy case has
attracted its share of the febrile-minded. If such people are looking
for a good remedy, then Reclaiming History offers it. Want to know why
Jimmy Files, a 20-year old mafia wannabe didn’t shoot JFK from the
grassy knoll with a Remington Fireball – a .222-caliber, single shot
pistol?8 Want to know why the father of actor Woody Harrelson wasn’t
one of the notorious “tramp” conspirators who were picked up near
Dealey Plaza right after the fact?9 Want to know why Secret Service
Agent George Hickey didn’t accidentally shoot JFK while riding in the
car behind the President’s?10 The answers are in Bugliosi’s book.
But Bugliosi makes scant
allowance for the fact that not all crackpot theorizing arises ex vacuo
from febrile minds. It wasn’t exactly one of Bugliosi’s “kooks” who
kicked off the Vietnam War by spinning the yarn about an unprovoked
attack in the Gulf of Tonkin on August 4, 1964.112 Had the government
not initially reported finding a UFO at Roswell, New Mexico, and then
changed its story – twice – “con men” would have been deprived some of
the juicy grist they used in their mills.123 And, although there may
indeed have been “hucksters” behind the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency’s reassurances that the toxic air at Ground Zero was safe, they
were the sort of official hucksters Bugliosi laments that the public no
longer trusts in the wake of skeptics having scuttled the Warren
Commission’s ship in the public’s mind.134
But it is not just
crackpots who have given up the faith; so also has the government
itself. Two independent teams of seasoned, government investigators
assembled by the Church Committee and the House Select Committee on
Assassinations (HSCA) concluded that, as the HSCA put it, “It is a
reality to be regretted that the [Warren] Commission failed to live up
to its promise.”14 Bugliosi never mentions this finding. Nor does he
mention any of the harshest of the official critiques. Instead he
offers only a few of the milder ones, which he then nitpicks and
dismisses, in order to stand foursquare with the Warren Commission. The
Commission’s key failing was not investigating the murder itself, but
instead handing the job over to the FBI, which, the HSCA determined,
had “generally exhausted its resources in confirming its case against
Oswald as the lone assassin, a case that Director J. Edgar Hoover, at
least, seemed determined to make within 24 hours of the
assassination.”155 The Church Committee also discovered that
“derogatory information pertaining to both [Warren] Commission members
and staff was brought to Mr. Hoover’s attention ... .”166 One can only
wonder if the notorious Hoover might have sought such information as
insurance that the Commission wouldn’t deviate from Hoover’s lone nut
theory – one that exculpated the Bureau and Hoover for not shielding
JFK from a successful plot. Nowhere in Bugliosi’s 2500 pages will you
find any of these official findings.
Bugliosi also withholds
the Church Committee’s most scathing assessments of the Bureau’s
efforts and instead offers a quotation from the committee’s report that
seems to praise it: “The FBI investigation of the Assassination was a
massive effort.”1 Bugliosi omits a more representative, and telling,
assessment that appears on the very same page of the committee’s
report: “Almost immediately after the assassination, Director Hoover,
the Justice Department and the White House ‘exerted pressure’ on senior
Bureau officials to complete their investigation and issue a factual
report supporting the conclusion that Oswald was the lone assassin.
Thus, it is not surprising that, from its inception, the assassination
investigation focused almost exclusively on Lee Harvey Oswald.”177
Bugliosi does not even
once mention what may be the Church Committee’s most important, and
damning, conclusion about how the FBI, CIA, Secret Service, and other
investigative agencies were affected by so powerful a lobby as Hoover,
the Justice Department and the White House, all urging that the focus
be kept solely on Oswald. The Committee wrote that it had “developed
evidence which impeaches the process by which the intelligence agencies
arrived at their own conclusions about the assassination, and by which
they provided information to the Warren Commission. This evidence
indicates that the investigation of the assassination was deficient and
that facts which might have substantially affected the course of the
investigation were not provided the Warren Commission or those
individuals within the FBI and the CIA, as well as other agencies of
Government, who were charged with investigating the assassination.”188
That verdict was reaffirmed in a new book about the CIA, Legacy of
Ashes by New York Times journalist, Tim Weiner, who wrote that, in
their investigation of the Kennedy assassination, the FBI and CIA’s
“malfeasance was profound.”19
In the interests of full
disclosure and before addressing specific evidence, I note that I am
one of the many people Bugliosi consulted while writing Reclaiming
History. He wrote to me on numerous occasions and quotes me in his
book, treating me much more gently than he does most non-believers.
Comparing our pleasant, prepublication exchanges with what ended up on
his cutting room floor was quite an eye opener. To convey to readers
just how selective and conclusions-driven Bugliosi’s book is, and
because of the impossibility of comprehensively reviewing so massive a
book, this review will highlight the bullet evidence – evidence so
central that two of Bugliosi’s most favored sources have called it the
“Rosetta Stone” of the Kennedy case – evidence that, by itself alone,
proves that Oswald did it.20 I hope that my discussion of the bullet
evidence will make clear why this detail-drenched book ultimately
falls, and why the case for conspiracy still stands.
The Bullet Evidence in the JFK Case
Because only three
expended shells were found in the “sniper’s nest” in the Texas School
Book Depository, and because it is accepted that one shot missed, it
follows that, if Oswald did it, he must have done all of it – inflicted
seven wounds in JFK and Governor John Connally – with only two bullets.
Bugliosi insists that the evidence shows precisely that – that two
bullets, and only two bullets, hit their mark in JFK’s limousine, and
both were fired from Oswald’s Mannlicher-Carcano rifle. Bugliosi’s
proof is two-part and straightforward.
First, a bullet, Warren
Commission Exhibit #399, mocked by skeptics as the “magic bullet”
because it was virtually undamaged after an amazing odyssey during
which it supposedly broke three bones in two men, was supposedly found
on a stretcher at Parkland Hospital. The FBI reported that the unique
pattern of grooves etched onto the surface of #399 had been caused by
unique impressions on the inside of the barrel of Oswald’s rifle and so
proved that #399 had been fired from Oswald’s rifle, to the exclusion
of all other rifles in the world. Second, all the fragments recovered
from both victims, JFK and Governor John Connally, were shown by a
sophisticated scientific analysis – neutron activation analysis [NAA] –
to trace to just two bullets. They came either from #399 or from a
second bullet, two large remnants of which were found in the limousine.
And FBI tests proved that the second bullet, like #399, had also come
from Oswald’s rifle.
Reflecting its
importance to the anti-conspiracy community and himself, Bugliosi
devotes great attention to NAA, stating that it confirms that all the
smaller recovered fragments came from one or the other of these two
bullets alone. The small fragments recovered from Governor Connally,
for example, were shown by NAA to have been dislodged from #399, the
stretcher bullet. And fragments removed from JFK’s brain at autopsy
matched the bullet fragments found in the limousine. Thus, Bugliosi
argues, with only two bullets from Oswald’s rifle in play, not only is
there is no need for a third bullet, nor a second assassin, but there
is no possibility of either. Although Bugliosi does a masterful job of
persuasively laying out the NAA case, what he omits cuts the heart out
of his thesis.
Neutron Activation Analysis of Bullet Evidence
First elaborated before
the House Select Committee on Assassination’s re-analysis of Kennedy’s
murder in 1977, NAA is a sophisticated scientific technique. Although
it has since been abandoned because the results of the technique have
been wrongly interpreted in legal cases, NAA had been used by the FBI
and police to identify bullets from a crime scene and to match
recovered fragments to specific bullets. It turns out that the Kennedy
case was the first instance in which NAA was used to make such matches.
The technique involves measuring miniscule levels of “impurities” that
are commonly found in bullet lead; typically, the levels of antimony
(Sb), silver (Ag) and copper (Cu) are measured. Vincent Guinn, an
authority on NAA, put JFK’s bullet evidence to the test for the HSCA
and, against all expectations at the time, testified that NAA seemed
inextricably to tie Oswald to the crime. In recent years, NAA has been
championed by only two individuals – whose work Bugliosi endorses – a
retired atmospheric chemist, Ken Rahn, Ph.D, and Larry Sturdivan, the
coauthors of two papers on the topic in 2004.21229
Drawing on the work of
Guinn, Rahn, and Sturdivan, Bugliosi explains that NAA proved useful in
the Kennedy case only because of an unusual feature of the bullets that
Oswald had used. “When subjected to NAA by Dr. Guinn,” Bugliosi writes,
“all five of the specimens produced a profile highly characteristic of
the Western Cartridge Company’s Mannlicher-Carcano ammunition.”23 That
profile, Guinn had testified, was that with Mannlicher-Carcano (MC)
bullets the amounts of trace components varied between bullets, but
didn’t vary within a single bullet. To understand what he meant, think
of MC bullets as one might think of crayons. Within a box of crayons,
although each individual crayon is only one, distinct color, all the
individual crayons are distinctly different colors. If one took slivers
from different crayons and mixed them up, they would still be traceable
to the crayon of origin because each sliver would retain the color of
the crayon it came from.
Based on Guinn’s work,
Bugliosi argues that NAA showed that the lead from MC bullets and
fragments could be traced the same way one might trace crayons and
their fragments. Just as within a given crayon the color is uniform
throughout, so, Guinn said, NAA showed that the level of antimony is
uniform throughout the lead in each MC bullet. Put another way, NAA can
prove whether bullet fragments came from one or more bullets because
all the fragments from a single bullet have the same trace amount of
antimony – whether they came from the bullet’s head, midsection, or
tail – just as slivers from a single crayon have only one color. But if
they came from two MC bullets, the NAA would show two groupings of
antimony, just as slivers from two crayons would show two groupings of
color. If they came from three MC bullets, the NAA would show the
fragments falling into three groups, and so on. By contrast, in most
other types of bullets, the quantity of antimony does not vary from
bullet to bullet. If they were crayons, they would all be of the same
color.
But “[e]ven more
interesting,” Bugliosi elaborates, “the [NAA] results fell into two
distinct groups … all five specimens had come from just two bullets. …
[T]he large fragment found in the limousine, the smaller fragments
found on the rug of the limousine, and the fragments recovered from
Kennedy’s brain were all from one bullet.”24 The limousine fragments,
in other words, came from the shot that hit Kennedy in the head. But,
Bugliosi continues, Guinn’s “most important conclusion by far, however,
scientifically defeating the notion that the bullet found on Connally’s
stretcher had been planted, was that the elemental composition and
concentration of trace elements of the three bullet fragments removed
from Governor Connally’s wrist matched those of a second bullet, the
stretcher bullet [#399]. The stretcher bullet, then, had to be the one
that struck Connally … .”25
Thus, according to
Bugliosi, the NAA “Rosetta Stone” of the JFK case had established three
central facts. First, the varying levels of trace components detected
by NAA proved that all the fragments came from the type of ammo used in
Oswald’s rifle. Second, the fragments recovered from JFK’s brain and
from the limousine all came from a single bullet. Third, only one other
bullet, #399, could have played a role, and it could not have been
planted because NAA showed that all the remaining fragments – those
extracted from the governor – had come from #399. Thus, Bugliosi tells
us, with NAA’s confirming that only two bullets from Oswald’s rifle
were involved, the possibility of a third bullet and a second gunman
had been excluded scientifically. But, not only can none of these
claims withstand scrutiny, Bugliosi certainly knew of their serious
weaknesses but withheld them from his readers.
Neutron Activation Analysis: Critique
Regarding the first
supposed central fact – that varying trace components prove that the
fragments came from Mannlicher-Carcano lead – one obvious problem with
this claim is that it fails simple logic – it begs the question. In
arguing that the varying levels of antimony in the recovered bullets
and fragments proves that the ammo came solely from Oswald’s
ammunition, Bugliosi has assumed as true that which is in dispute. The
fact that there were varying levels of trace components scarcely
eliminates the possibility of different types of bullets. Rather,
varying levels is precisely what one would expect if different
assassins had fired different types of bullets. 2610 In other words,
despite NAA’s amazing accuracy in measuring trace components, it did
not prove that only one type of bullet had been fired.
Bugliosi’s science isn’t
much better than his logic. In a long endnote, Bugliosi acknowledges
several recent studies that have cast such doubt on the value of NAA in
matching bullets that the technique has been all but abandoned by crime
investigators.27 Yet he writes that, “no one has successfully
challenged the findings of Dr. Guinn in the Kennedy assassination,”28
as if the very studies he cited had not already eviscerated Guinn’s
finding, which, in fact, they had. As is now well known from the very
research that Bugliosi cites, the lead found in MC bullets is not at
all unique or even unusual. In fact, it’s rather common.
As two scientists from
Lawrence Livermore Lab, metallurgist Erik Randich, Ph.D, and chemist
Pat Grant, Ph.D, reported in an article in the Journal of Forensic
Science in 2006 (which Bugliosi cites), “The lead cores of the bullets
[Guinn] sampled from [Western Cartridge Company’s] lots 6000–6003
contained approximately 600–900 ppm antimony and approximately 17–4516
ppm copper (with most of the copper concentrations in the 20–400 ppm
range). In both of these aspects, the ... MC bullets are quite similar
to other commercial FMJ [full metal jacketed] rifle ammunition.” Thus,
the scientists conclude, the JFK bullet fragments “need not necessarily
have originated from MC ammunition. Indeed, the antimony compositions
of the evidentiary specimens are consistent with any number of jacketed
ammunitions containing unhardened lead.” (my emphasis) 2911
Using exquisite
photomicrographs (photographs of enlarged microscopic images) of MC
bullets cut in cross-section as proof, Randich and Grant also
demolished the second and third pillars of Guinn’s case for NAA – that
individual MC bullets have uniform levels of antimony. In fact, like
most jacketed ammunition, the antimony in MC bullet lead
“microsegregates,” that is, it clumps around microcrystals of lead
during cooling, and so variations in antimony from one part of the
bullet to another are to be expected. In other words, the bullets are
not like single-colored crayons, they said, in effect. Instead, if I
may offer yet another metaphor, MC bullets are more like a marbled cut
of beef. Just as the amount of fat in a sliver taken from a single
piece of marbled beef can vary depending on where it is snipped, so too
can the amount of antimony vary in fragments snipped from different
parts of a single bullet. Thus, Randich and Grant not only rebutted the
claims that Bugliosi made regarding Guinn’s original NAA work; they
also upended the published claims made by anti-conspiracists Rahn and
Sturdivan. However, unlike Rahn and Sturdivan, Randich and Grant have
(they have told me) no opinion on the conspiracy question – both remain
entirely agnostic.30
Bugliosi doesn’t ignore
Randich and Grant. He dismisses their paper on the sole basis of a
personal letter (which he reprints in a long endnote) from the longtime
anti-conspiracist, Larry Sturdivan, the very man who came up with the
idea that NAA was the JFK “Rosetta Stone” in the first place!
Unfortunately, like Guinn and Rahn before him, Sturdivan had no
metallurgical expertise.31 So it was no surprise when, in his
“refutation,” Sturdivan repeated Guinn’s apparent error, saying,
without offering proof, that JFK’s bullet fragments were identifiable
as MC shells because they had the near-unique NAA profile typical of
those bullets,32 a profile that the scientists from Lawrence Livermore
Lab say does not exist. “Any number of jacketed” rounds, they said,
would have produced the same NAA profile as JFK’s fragments.
But perhaps the most
telling aspect of this story is how Bugliosi, who endlessly touts his
high standards of scholarship, dealt with these flatly contradictory
analyses. He had to choose between the personal remarks of a
longstanding anti-conspiracy NAA proponent with unremarkable
credentials and those of two conspiracy-agnostic Lawrence Livermore Lab
scientists with superb credentials writing in the peer-reviewed
scientific literature, and he chose the former.
Given the importance
that Warren Commission loyalists have attached to this evidence, a
scholar of any merit would have checked the claims in Sturdivan’s
personal letter with someone in a position to know – if not Randich or
Grant, then some other authority on bullet metallurgy. Bugliosi
apparently didn’t do that, which I discovered only when I contacted
Randich and Grant myself. Both told me that Bugliosi had never once
contacted them – whether about their paper, about Sturdivan’s
“refutation,” or about anything else. And, in rejecting Randich and
Grant to embrace Sturdivan’s conclusions, Bugliosi cites no one but
Sturdivan, who is as demonstrably inexpert as he is interested in
perpetuating NAA as the “Rosetta Stone” of the Kennedy case.
Ironically, it might
have saved Bugliosi considerable embarrassment if he had gotten a
second opinion. For in the very week that Reclaiming History was
released, a second scientific report was published – this one by a team
led by Texas A&M statistician, Clifford Spiegelman, Ph.D, and a
24-year veteran of the FBI Lab, William Tobin, Ph.D – that added
additional doubts to those voiced by Randich and Grant about the
statistical model that Guinn, Rahn, and Sturdivan had used in making
their NAA case. Calling Guinn, Rahn, and Sturdivan’s statistical
analysis “fundamentally flawed,” Spiegelman and Tobin demonstrated
that, properly used, statistical models show that Kennedy’s bullet
fragments could have come from more than two bullets – even as many as
five. Thus, all the pillars undergirding the NAA “Rosetta Stone” have
collapsed. Not only does the historic NAA data not exclude the
possibility of a second assassin, it can’t even prove that all the
fragments came from the MC rounds that Oswald supposedly used.3312
In a recent interview,
Bugliosi was asked about the new NAA developments. “Can you talk about
the new findings on bullet fragments from the scene?” Bugliosi
answered, “These former FBI agents [sic] came up with a statement, and
people are asking around the country about this new story. Here’s how
new it is — it’s in my book. They’re talking about neutron activation
analysis. It was simply corroborative.”3413 Indeed, Spiegelman and
Tobin’s study was corroborative – but of Randich and Grant, in refuting
Bugliosi. And Spielgelman and Tobin’s new study, of course, is not in
Bugliosi’s book.
Warren Commission Exhibit #399 and the Kennedy
case
Bugliosi loses another
big round in a second important controversy regarding the bullet
evidence, this time involving the bona fides of Warren Commission
Exhibit #399. Doubts about the magic bullet have persisted because the
official version had it that, despite breaking three bones in two men,
#399 nevertheless emerged with no damage whatsoever to the business end
of the bullet – the tip – and suffered only a minor flattening of the
base of the slug. Bugliosi tackles the subject by focusing on knocking
down skeptics “who cling to the belief that the stretcher bullet (#399)
was planted” in order to frame Oswald.35
Although there is no
denying that #399’s near-pristine appearance had, at one time, sparked
speculation it had been planted on the stretcher at Parkland, virtually
no one argues that anymore. But what critics argue today instead
represents an altogether more menacing opponent that, despite much
flailing, Bugliosi never manages to land a blow against. New evidence
suggests that the problem with #399 is not that it was planted on a
hospital stretcher, but that it may not be the same bullet that was
found on a stretcher. In our correspondence, Bugliosi and I explored
this issue in some detail, as we will see.
The story begins when
the Warren Commission asked the FBI to chase down #399’s chain of
possession. Records show that the Bureau sent the bullet back and forth
to Dallas in June 1964, filing a report with the Warren Commission on
July 7, 1964, which the Warren Commission published as Exhibit #2011.
The report said that Dallas FBI Agent Bardwell Odum had shown #399 to
the two Parkland witnesses who had first seen a bullet on the
stretcher: Darrell Tomlinson, who discovered it on the stretcher, and
O.P. Wright, the hospital personnel director and former police officer
whom Tomlinson called over to look at it.3614 The report also said that
both had told Odum that, although #399 “appears to be the same one”
that had been on the stretcher, neither could “positively identify” it,
meaning that they had not carved their initials on the bullet found on
the stretcher as positive proof.
But Exhibit #2011 told
an oddly different story about the next two men in the bullet’s chain
of possession. Secret Service Agent Richard Johnsen, who collected the
bullet from Wright at Parkland, and James Rowley, the chief of the
Secret Service, told the FBI that they “could not identify this bullet
(#399) as the one” – the bullet found on the stretcher at Parkland.
Intriguingly, a declassified FBI memo dated June 24, 1964, from the
special agent in charge of the Bureau’s Washington office to J. Edgar
Hoover, told the same story as #2011: Johnsen and Rowley “were unable
to identify” #399.3715 Neither the June 24th memo nor the Bureau’s July
7th report to the Warren Commission explained what they meant by
“unable to identify.” Did the Secret Service agents mean they were
merely unable to “positively identify” #399? Or unable identify it at
all? There are no extant records, old or new, showing that either the
Warren Commission or the Bureau investigated further.
The mystery deepened two
years later when a one-time Yale and Haverford philosophy professor,
Josiah Thompson (then working for Time/Life), interviewed O.P. Wright.
As Thompson described it in his classic book, Six Seconds in Dallas, “I
then showed him photographs of CE 399 … and he rejected all of these as
resembling the bullet Tomlinson found on the stretcher. Half an hour
later in the presence of two witnesses, he once again rejected the
picture of # 399 as resembling the bullet found on the stretcher. … As
a professional law enforcement officer, Wright has an educated eye for
bullet shapes.”38
And there the conflict
lay, undisturbed, until after the passage of the JFK Records Act, when
I requested the complete file of FBI reports on #399. If the FBI’s
report of July 7, 1964 (#2011) to the Warren Commission was accurate, I
was certain that there would be an “FD-302” written by Dallas Agent
Bardwell Odum recounting that the Parkland witnesses, Tomlinson and
Wright, had told him that #399 looked like the stretcher bullet. This
is because 302s are the reports that agents submit after doing field
investigations, and Odum would certainly have sent one in after
tracking down the witnesses who found one of the most important pieces
of physical evidence in the case.
But after petitioning
both the FBI and the National Archives, and after the National Archives
conducted a special search on my behalf, I was informed that there was
no such report in the files. Nor were there 302s of any kind from
Dallas concerning the magic bullet. Worse, in what the National
Archives told me was the complete file, there was only a single report
from the FBI’s Dallas office about #399. It was written on June 20th –
before the FBI’s July 7th report (#2011) that said that Tomlinson and
Wright thought that #399 “appears to be the same one” found on the
stretcher. But the June 20 report said nothing of either Tomlinson or
Wright’s having said that #399 resembled the stretcher bullet.39 In
fact, it suggested precisely the opposite.
The June 20 report was a
formerly suppressed FBI “Airtel” from the head of the FBI office in
Dallas (“SAC, Dallas” – i.e., Special Agent in Charge, Gordon Shanklin)
to the head of the FBI, J. Edgar Hoover. It reads, “For information WFO
[Washington Field Office of the FBI], neither DARRELL C. TOMLINSON, who
found bullet at Parkland Hospital, Dallas, nor O. P. WRIGHT, Personnel
Officer, Parkland Hospital, who obtained bullet from TOMLINSON and gave
[it] to Special Agent RICHARD E. JOHNSON, Secret Service, at Dallas
11/22/63, can identify bullet.”4016 As this was the only Dallas record
on #399, one can only wonder where the Washington office got the
information that they reported to the Warren Commission on July 7, 1964
that Tomlinson and Wright had said that there was a resemblance between
#399 and the stretcher bullet. So what about the field agent, Bardwell
Odum, who is named in #2011 as having heard the Parkland witnesses say
that there was a resemblance?
With Josiah Thompson’s
help, I tracked Odum down in 2002 and sent him the original July 7th
FBI report and the June 20, 1964 FBI Airtel from Dallas. In a recorded
call we had the following exchange:
GA: “[F]rom what I could
gather from the records after the assassination, you went into Parkland
and showed (#399 to) a couple of employees there.”
BO: “Oh, I never went
into Parkland Hospital at all. I don’t know where you got that. … I
didn’t show it to anybody at Parkland. I didn’t have any bullet. I
don’t know where you got that but it is wrong.”
GA: “Oh, so you never took a bullet. You were
never given a bullet … .”
BO: “You are talking about the bullet they
found at Parkland?”
GA: “Right.”
BO: “I don’t think I ever saw it even.”
My first inclination was
to wonder if Odum might have forgotten his trip to the hospital. But if
so, that meant that Odum’s memory was good enough to recall that a
bullet had been found at Parkland but not good enough to remember that
he had carried it around Parkland himself. I re-reviewed the entire
file on #399 and confirmed that Odum’s name was nowhere in it.
Unwilling to leave it at that, on November 21, 2002 Josiah Thompson and
I both visited Bardwell Odum in his home in a suburb of Dallas.
Concerned as to what his age and the passage of 38 years might have
done to the 78-year old’s recall, we were both struck by how very
bright and alert Odum was. To ensure that there was no
misunderstanding, we laid out on a coffee table before Odum copies of
all the relevant documents. We then read aloud from them.
Again, Odum said that he
had never taken a bullet – any bullet – to Parkland to show to
witnesses. Nor had he ever had any bullet related to the Kennedy
assassination in his possession during the FBI’s investigation in 1964
or at any other time. Because a record from the Washington FBI office
seems to prove that #399 had indeed been sent back and forth to Dallas
in the appropriate time frame,4117 we gently asked Odum whether he
might have forgotten the episode. Answering somewhat stiffly, he said
that he doubted he would have ever forgotten investigating so important
a piece of evidence in the Kennedy case. But even if he had forgotten,
he said he would certainly have turned in the customary 302 field
report covering something that important and he dared us to find it.
The files support Odum; as noted above, there are no 302s in what the
National Archives states is the complete file on #399.
To recap, the FBI’s
Washington office advised the Warren Commission on July 7, 1964 that
two Parkland Hospital eyewitnesses, Darrell Tomlinson and O. P. Wright,
had told Agent Bardwell Odum that #399 looked like the bullet that they
had found on a hospital stretcher. No internal FBI records corroborate
that, including the two documents (the June 20th Airtel and the June
24th memo) that touch on #399 and that predate the July 7th report. To
the contrary: the two June documents contradict the July 7th report in
that they say, simply, that neither witness could identify #399.
Then, in 1966, Wright,
who was experienced in firearms, flatly denied that there was a
resemblance, and, in 2002, a suppressed FBI file from the Dallas office
turned up – the only Dallas file that mentioned Wright – saying only
that Wright could not identify #399. Also in 2002, Odum, the FBI agent
who was supposed to have originally heard Wright say that there was a
resemblance, insisted that Wright had never told him that, that he had
never interviewed Wright, and that he had never even seen #399.
Given that this new
evidence suggests that #399 may never have been properly identified and
authenticated, it certainly merits the thousand words Bugliosi devotes
to it.42 But, as with NAA, he dodges the core evidence and instead
delivers a blizzard of facts and sarcastic comments that serves more to
fog the issue than clarify it.
With his trademark tone
of derision and contempt, Bugliosi challenges what he claims is “an
article of faith among conspiracy theorists” – the idea that #399 “was
‘planted’ by the conspirators to frame Oswald.” Although a bullet plant
at Parkland is hardly an article of faith among most skeptics,
particularly in recent decades, it would not have been unreasonable if
Bugliosi had presented his counter to that (outdated) argument, if only
for the sake of completeness.
Bugliosi instead sneers,
“[If] Commission Exhibit No. 399 was never identified and authenticated
as the magic bullet that connected Oswald to the assassination, doesn’t
that necessarily knock out the hallowed belief of most of his fellow
conspiracy theorists that Exhibit No. 399 was … planted to frame
Oswald?” By offering a faux, sarcastic “endorsement” of the new
evidence, he is up to his old tricks, begging the question: he has
assumed #399’s authenticity, which is the very thing the new FBI
evidence raises doubts about. Never once does he even allow for the
possibility that the Bureau might have switched a bullet fired through
Oswald’s rifle for the one that turned up on a stretcher. That places
Bugliosi in the position of having faith in the FBI, whose failings in
the Kennedy case were confirmed by the Church Committee, the HSCA, and
many responsible historians and skeptics, but having no faith in an
individual FBI agent whose reputation is unblemished and whose account
is independently corroborated by both a credible witness on the scene,
O.P. Wright, and by the FBI’s own internal records.
Bugliosi regards Odum’s
repeated assertion that he had never even seen #399 with skepticism,
arguing that, “Unless the July [7, 1964] report is in error as to the
name of the agent who showed Tomlinson the bullet, Odum, almost forty
years after the fact, has simply forgotten.” Bugliosi then acknowledges
that Odum claimed “that if he had shown anyone the bullet [at
Parkland], he would have prepared an FBI report (called a ‘302’),” and
in this connection Bugliosi cites a letter that I wrote to him on
October 13, 2004. 43
Indeed, as I recounted
to Bugliosi in my October 13, 2004 letter, that is exactly what Odum
did tell me. And so where is Odum’s 302 concerning Tomlinson and
Wright? Or, if it was a different agent from Odum, where is that
agent’s 302? Bugliosi doesn’t ask, doesn’t tell. He simply drops the
whole subject of 302s, ignores that Odum’s name is absent from the
FBI’s internal files, and he never acknowledges the likelihood that
either a 302 covering the Parkland witnesses and #399 is missing from
the files, whether written by Odum or someone else, or that the Bureau
never interviewed the Parkland witnesses.
And so, Bugliosi keeps
his gaze willfully averted from obvious questions about #399, such as,
(1) As Odum was able to remember without my prompting that a bullet was
found at Parkland, how was it that, as Bugliosi proposes, it had not
only slipped Odum’s mind that he had held that very slug himself, but
also that it was he who had lugged it around to witnesses at Parkland?,
(2) If Bugliosi’s alternative explanation for Odum’s name showing up in
the FBI’s July 1964 letter is right – that the Bureau wrote down the
wrong name by mistake – then where are the 302s from the agent who
actually did do the Parkland interviews?, and (3) And why didn’t the
SAC’s June 20, 1964 Airtel to D.C. convey the important fact that
Tomlinson and Wright had told Odum (or another agent) that #399 looked
like the stretcher bullet if, indeed, they had originally told the FBI
that? These are just the obvious questions, yet Bugliosi ignores all of
them. And he ignores other inconvenient evidence as well.
How, for example, does
Bugliosi deal with the fact that Wright, as a former deputy chief of
police in Dallas, with considerable experience with firearms,44
insisted in 1966 that #399 was not the bullet he held on November 22?
He doesn’t tell his readers anything at all about it. Even when he
mentions my essay that outlines the visit that Thompson and I paid to
Odum in his home, Bugliosi withholds from his readers a key point of
that essay, namely that Wright’s denial in 1966 is bolstered
considerably by the head of the Dallas FBI office telling Washington in
June, 1964 what certainly sounds like the same thing: that neither
Parkland witness could identify #399. Moreover, Wright’s disavowal of
#399 got another boost in 2002 when Odum told us that Wright had never
told him that there was a resemblance.
There is a particular
irony in this last oversight, quite apart from Bugliosi’s vowing that
he “will not knowingly omit or distort anything” (Bugliosi’s
emphasis),45 and his condemning “the practice of conspiracy theorists
knowingly omitting and citing material out of context.”46 It is not as
if, apart from my essay, Bugliosi would have been unfamiliar with
Wright’s having disowned #399 to Thompson in 1966. For, in Reclaiming
History, Bugliosi mentions Thompson’s book, Six Seconds in Dallas, at
least 50 times, and he even cites the very page in the book (p. 156)
where Thompson points out that Tomlinson and Wright had “declined to
identify” #399.47
The above examples offer
but the merest glimpse of the central problem with Reclaiming History:
history is not being reclaimed, it is being reframed along
anti-conspiracy lines by Bugliosi’s knowingly omitting and citing
material out of context. Examples similar to Bugliosi’s selective
presentation of the bullet evidence abound.
One such example occurs
when Bugliosi attempts to rebut skeptics who claim that Parkland
doctors said that JFK had a rearward skull defect that suggested a
rearward bullet exit (whereas any bullets that Oswald fired would have
exited the front). Bugliosi counters with a quote from one of the
Parkland doctors: “Dr. Charles Baxter testified that the head exit
wound was in the ‘temporal and parietal’ area.”48 The important word
here is “parietal,” which is a skull bone that extends from the crown
of the head, well behind the hairline, toward the very rear of the
skull. When Baxter specified “temporal and parietal,” he was then
reading his own handwritten notes into the record before the Warren
Commission. But nowhere did Baxter say anything about that being the
exit wound’s location. Moreover, as David Lifton first pointed out in
his 1980 book, Best Evidence, although Baxter did indeed say “parietal
and temporal” when he read the notes he’d written on the day of the
murder, that is not what Baxter actually wrote.49 Anyone with a copy of
page 523 of the Warren Commission Report, or access to a computer, can
see that on the day of the assassination Baxter had quite legibly
written that JFK’s “right temporal and occipital bones were missing.”
(my emphasis)5018 A missing occipital bone, or a gaping wound in
occipital bone, would offer evidence that a bullet had entered from the
front and exited through the rearmost occipital bone.
Similarly, Bugliosi
cites the testimony that autopsy witness and medical technologist, Paul
O’Connor, gave at a mock trial of Lee Harvey Oswald in London as
evidence that a bullet hit JFK in the rear of the skull and exploded
out the front. He writes, “I said to O’Connor, ‘You told me over the
phone that this large massive defect to the right frontal area of the
president’s head gave all appearances of being an exit wound, is that
correct?’ O’Connor [replied,] ‘Yes, on the front.’”51 Despite
indicating that he was familiar with what O’Connor had told the HSCA in
1977, Bugliosi withholds it from his readers. The HSCA reported that
O’Connor “believes that the bullet came in from the front and blew out
the top.”52 O’Connor also told the HSCA that JFK’s skull defect was in
the region from the “occipital around the temporal and parietal
regions.”5319 Furthermore, for Sylvia Chase’s KRON television special
on JFK, O’Connor described the wound as an “open area all the way
across to the rear of the brain just like that,” and with his hands
demonstrated the rearward location of the defect. In his 1993 book, The
Killing of a President, Robert Groden reproduced a photograph of
O’Connor with his hand over the backside of his head, demonstrating the
location of JFK’s skull injury.54 Bugliosi discloses none of this to
his readers.
But perhaps Bugliosi’s
most flagrantly selective and misleading citation of morgue witnesses
is that of John Stringer, the Navy photographer who took JFK’s autopsy
photographs. Although Bugliosi admits that there have been problems
with Stringer’s claims over the years, he expresses full confidence in
what the photographer has to say about JFK’s skull injuries. “When I
spoke to Stringer,” Bugliosi writes, “he said there was ‘no question’
in his mind that the ‘large exit wound in the president’s head was to
the right side of his head, above the right ear.’ … When I asked him if
there was any large defect to the rear of the president’s head, he
said, ‘No. All there was was a small entrance wound to the back of the
president’s head.’”55
Bugliosi surely knows,
but withholds from his readers, that Stringer was just as insistent to
author David Lifton in 1972 that the major defect in JFK’s skull was
rearward. The JFK Review Board published as a major medical exhibit a
November 14, 1993 news article by journalist Craig Colgan dealing with
Stringer’s flip-flopping on JFK’s skull wound – an article that
Bugliosi would certainly have seen.5620 Colgan reveals in the article
that, in 1993, Stringer identified his own voice in Lifton’s 1972
recording. Here is the relevant part of Lifton’s interview with
Stringer, as it appears on page 516 of Lifton’s book, Best Evidence:
Lifton: “When you lifted him out, was the main
damage to the skull on the top or in the back?”
Stringer: “In the back.”
Lifton: “In the back?... High in the back or
lower in the back?”
Stringer: “In the occipital part, in the back
there, up above the neck.”
Lifton: “In other words, the main part of his
head that was blasted away was in the occipital part of the skull?”
Stringer: “Yes, in the back part.”
Lifton: “The back portion. Okay. In other
words, there was no five-inch hole in the top of the skull?”
Stringer: “Oh, some of it was blown off – yes,
I mean, toward, out of the top in the back, yes.”
Lifton: “Top in the back. But the top in the
front was pretty intact?”
Stringer: “Yes, sure.”
Lifton: “The top front was intact?”
Stringer: “Right.”
Lifton, to eliminate any
question about what Stringer meant, then asked him if the part of
Kennedy’s head that was damaged was that part that rests against the
bathtub when one is lying back in the bathtub. “Yes,” Stringer
answered.57
Worse, Colgan disclosed
that ABC’s “Prime Time Live” associate producer, Jacqueline
Hall-Kallas, sent a film crew to interview Stringer for a 1988 San
Francisco KRON-TV interview after Stringer, in a pre-filming interview,
told Hall-Kallas that Kennedy’s skull wound was rearward. Colgan
reported, “When the camera crew arrived, Stringer’s story had changed,
said Stanhope Gould, a producer who also is currently at ABC and who
conducted the 1988 on-camera interview with Stringer ... . ‘We wouldn’t
have sent a camera crew all the way across the country on our budget if
we thought he would reverse himself,’ Gould said ... . ‘In the
telephone pre-interview he corroborated what he told David Lifton, that
the wounds were not as the official version said they were,’
Hall-Kallas said.” 5821 Unsurprisingly, Bugliosi says nothing about any
of this.
Hundreds of pages could
be written detailing similar examples of Bugliosi’s omitting or
distorting the evidence. And yet the reviews published in major news
outlets have been favorable. The Los Angeles Times’ reviewer, Jim
Newton, even hailed Reclaiming History as “a book for the ages.”5922
The mainstream media, relying upon reviewers who have no particular
knowledge of the assassination, dependably bow to the official version.
This pattern dates to the release of the Warren Report on September 27,
1964 when New York Times reporter Anthony Lewis falsely reassured the
public, “The Commission made public all the information it had bearing
on the events in Dallas, whether agreeing with its findings or not.”60
Similarly, The Times’ Assistant Managing Editor, Harrison Salisbury,
having read none of the 26 volumes of supporting evidence, nevertheless
announced, “No material question now remains unresolved so far as the
death of President Kennedy is concerned.”61 The lead taken by the paper
of record from day one has been largely followed ever since. Thus, the
national press also gushed over Gerald Posner’s anti-conspiracy book,
Case Closed, a book that was savaged in a prescient review by George
Costello in the Mar./Apr. 1994 issue of the Federal Bar News &
Journal (the predecessor of The Federal Lawyer). I say “prescient”
because there is no small irony in the fact that Costello has found
stout vindication for his criticism of Case Closed from an unexpected,
highly acclaimed expert – Vincent Bugliosi.
In Reclaiming History,
Bugliosi lands a well-deserved barrage of punches on Posner for
distortion and misrepresentation, quoting, among other things, a review
by Jonathan Kwitney for the Los Angeles Times – one of the few negative
reviews besides Costello’s that Posner’s book received.62 Bugliosi
quotes Kwitney’s astute observation that Posner “presents only the
evidence that supports the case he’s trying to build, framing this
evidence in a way that misleads readers who aren’t aware that there’s
more to the story.”63 Bugliosi then hastens to assure readers that he
is no Posner: “I can assure the conspiracy theorists who have very
effectively savaged Posner in their books that they’re going to have a
much, much more difficult time with me. As a trial lawyer in front of a
jury and an author of true-crime books, credibility has always meant
everything to me. My only master and my only mistress are the facts and
objectivity. I have no others. The theorists may not agree with my
conclusions, but in this work on the assassination I intend to set
forth all of their main arguments, and the way they, not I, want them
to be set forth, before I seek to demonstrate their invalidity. I will
not knowingly omit or distort anything. However, with literally
millions of pages of documents on this case, there are undoubtedly
references in some of them that conspiracy theorists feel are
supportive of a particular point of theirs, but that I simply never
came across.”64 Bugliosi’s attempt to cover himself in that final
sentence is obviously inadequate, as this review has shown that he has
omitted numerous significant but inconvenient points that he had to
have come across. Bugliosi, it seems, will always be a prosecutor.
But Bugliosi’s
prosecutorial habits were invisible to the New York Times’ reviewer,
Bryan Burrough, who was so smitten with Reclaiming History that he
wrote on May 20, 2007 that conspiracy believers should henceforth “be
ridiculed, even shunned … marginalized ... the way we’ve marginalized
smokers … [made to] stand in the rain with the other outcasts.”65 His
slur elicited a remarkable reaction in the form of a letter to the
editor published on June 17, 2007. It was remarkable not so much for
the facts it laid out, but because the Grey Lady, which has
consistently backed the Warren report, for once permitted her readers
to see them.
Washington Post
journalist Jefferson Morley, one-time BBC correspondent Anthony
Summers, Norman Mailer, and the aforementioned David Talbot wrote: “The
following people to one degree or another suspected that President
Kennedy was killed as a result of a conspiracy, and said so either
publicly or privately: Presidents Lyndon Johnson and Richard Nixon;
Attorney General Robert Kennedy; John Kennedy’s widow, Jackie; his
special advisor dealing with Cuba at the United Nations, William
Attwood; FBI director J. Edgar Hoover [!]; Senators Richard Russell (a
Warren Commission member), and Richard Schweiker and Gary Hart (both of
the Senate Intelligence Committee), seven of the eight congressmen on
the House Assassinations Committee and its chief counsel, G. Robert
Blakey; the Kennedy associates Joe Dolan, Fred Dutton, Richard Goodwin,
Pete Hamill, Frank Mankiewicz, Larry O’Brien, Kenneth O’Donnell and
Walter Sheridan; the Secret Service agent Roy Kellerman, who rode with
the president in the limousine; the presidential physician, Dr. George
Burkley; Mayor Richard Daley of Chicago; Frank Sinatra; and ‘60
Minutes’ producer Don Hewitt.”66 One could assemble a list of
thoughtful and well-known skeptics that is several times as long as
this one.
With the death of JFK
fading further and further into history, chances are small that yet
another attorney, either pro- or anti-Warren Commission, will step into
the ring and knock down Bugliosi the way Bugliosi did Posner. But one
certainly could: Bugliosi’s ferocious jaw, it turns out, is made of
glass. For, despite the fact he has put out 2500 pages, there aren’t
many that a half-decent boxer couldn’t take a good swing at.6723
* Gary L. Aguilar, MD is
a clinical professor of ophthalmology at the University of California
in San Francisco. He has published widely on the subject of the JFK
assassination and is on the Board of Directors of Washington,
D.C.-based Assassination Archives and Research Center, an organization
that houses the most extensive private collection of records pertaining
to the Kennedy assassination.
Endnotes
1. David Talbot. Bobby
Kennedy: America’s first assassination conspiracy theorist. Chicago Sun
Times, May 13, 2007.
http://www.suntimes.com/news/otherviews/383811,CST-CONT-kennedy13.article
2. Perhaps the most
thorough and best discussion of the manner in which the non-events of
August 4, 1964 in the Tonkin Gulf were manipulated to ensure passage of
the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution is in Edwin Moise, Tonkin Gulf and the
Escalation of the Vietnam War (University of North Carolina Press,
1996).
3. CNN Interactive, U.S.
News Story Page (June 18, 1997).
http://www.cnn.com/US/9706/18/ufo.report/ (“Further confusing the issue
has been the Air Force’s conduct, first in claiming it had the wreckage
of a UFO and then denying it. It contradicted itself again in 1994,
saying that the wreckage was in fact part of a device used to detect
Soviet nuclear tests.”)
4. Jane Kay, Ground Zero
Air Quality was ‘Brutal’ for Months: UC Davis Scientist Concurs that
EPA Reports Misled the Public. San Francisco Chronicle (Sept. 10,
2003). http://www.commondreams.org/headlines03/0910-07.htm (“A UC Davis
scientist who led the air monitoring of the smoldering ruins of the
World Trade Center said dangerous levels of pollutants were swirling
about the site at the same time the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency assured the public that the air was safe to breathe.”)
5. House Select
Committee on Assassinations. Final Assassinations Report, p. 128.
http://www.aarclibrary.org/publib/jfk/hsca/report/html/HSCA_Report_0079b.htm
6. Final Report of the
Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations, Book V, p. 47.
http://www.historymatters.com/archive/church/reports/book5/html/ChurchVol5_0027a.htm
7. U.S. Senate, Final
Report of the Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with
Respect to Intelligence Activities. The Investigation of the
Assassination of President John F. Kennedy: Performance of the
Intelligence Agencies, p. 32.
http://www.aarclibrary.org/publib/church/reports/book5/html/ChurchVol5_0019b.htm
8. Id. at p. 6.
http://www.aarclibrary.org/publib/church/reports/book5/html/ChurchVol5_0006b.htm
9. K.A. Rahn and L.M.
Sturdivan, Neutron activation and the JFK assassination: Part I. Data
and interpretation, Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry,
Vol. 262, No. 1 (2004), pp. 205- 213; L.M. Sturdivan and K.A. Rahn,
Neutron activation and the JFK assassination: Part II. Extended
benefits, Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry, Vol. 262,
No. 1 (2004), pp. 215- 222.
10. Clifford Spiegelman
et al, Chemical and forensic analysis of JFK assassination bullet lots:
Is a second shooter possible? Annals of Applied Statistics , May, 2007.
http://www.imstat.org/aoas/next_issue.html
11. Erik Randich, Ph..D
and Patrick M. Grant, Ph.D, Proper Assessment of the JFK Assassination
Bullet Lead Evidence from Metallurgical and Statistical Perspectives,
Journal of Forensic Science (July 2006), vol. 51, no. 4, pp. 723, 728.
doi:10.1111/j.1556-4029.2006.00165.x. http://www.blackwell-synergy.com
12. John Solomon,
Scientists Cast Doubt on Kennedy Bullet Analysis: Multiple Shooters
Possible, Study Says, Washington Post (May 16, 2007), p. A03.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/05/16/AR2007051601967.html
. See also, Clifford Spiegelman et al, supra note 10.
13. Robin Lindley, Why
Vincent Bugliosi Is So Sure Oswald Alone Killed JFK (Interview).
History News Network. On-line at: http://hnn.us/articles/41490.html
14. Warren Commission
Exhibit #2011. Warren Commission Hearings, vol. XXIV, pp. 411-412.
On-line at:
http://www.history-matters.com/archive/jfk/wc/wcvols/wh24/html/WH_Vol24_0215a.htm
15. A copy of this memo
appears as Figure 6 in Gary Aguilar and Josiah Thompson, The Magic
Bullet: Even More Magical Than We Knew? On-line at:
http://www.history-matters.com/essays/frameup/EvenMoreMagical/EvenMoreMagical.htm.
16. A copy of this memo
appears as Figure 5 in Aguilar and Thompson, supra note 15. Johnson is
the same person as “Johnsen” mentioned four paragraphs above.
17. A copy of this memo appears as Figure 12 in
Aguilar and Thompson, supra note15.
18.
http://www.history-matters.com/archive/jfk/wc/wr/html/WCReport_0274a.htm
19. ARRB Master Set of
Medical Exhibits, MD 64, O’Connor-Purdy HCSA interview (8/29/77), pp.
5-6.
http://www.history-matters.com/archive/jfk/arrb/master_med_set/md64/html/Image5.htm
20. ARRB Master Set of
Medical Exhibits, MD 143, Newspaper Article from Vero Beach, Florida
Press Journal written by Craig Colgan, titled: “Body of Evidence: Local
Photographer Recalls JFK Autopsy.”
http://www.history-matters.com/archive/jfk/arrb/master_med_set/md143/html/md143_0001a.htm.
This article quotes a portion of the interview that follows in the text.
21. Id.
22. Quoted at http://www.reclaiminghistory.com.
23. A collection of
informative essays written by skeptics analyzing aspects of Reclaiming
History is available at http://www.reclaiminghistory.org.
1 Bugliosi, p. 339.
Bugliosi’s supporting reference, # 92, cites, p. 32 of Book V: The
Investigation of the Assassination of President J.F.K.: Performance of
the Intelligence Agencies.
1 Vincent Bugliosi, Reclaiming History. New
York: Norton, 2007, p. xiv.
2 IBID, xv.
3 Bugliosi’s figure, IBID, p. xv-xvi.
4 IBID, xvi.
5 Bugliosi. Flapcover:
“In his career at the L.A. County District Attorney’s office, he
successfully prosecuted 105 out of 106 felony trials, including 21
murder convictions without a single loss.”
6 Bugliosi, 1449.
7 David Talbot. Bobby
Kennedy: America's first assassination conspiracy theorist. Chicago Sun
Times, May 13, 2007. On-line at:
http://www.suntimes.com/news/otherviews/383811,CST-CONT-kennedy13.article
8 Bugliosi, p. 917-919, and endnote, p. 510. .
9 . Bugliosi, p. 906 – 907.
10 Bugliosi, p. 926..
11 I base this on a
suggestion from University of Kentucky historian George Herring. He
advised me that perhaps the most thorough, and best, discussion of the
manner in which the non-events of August 4, 1964 in the Tonkin Gulf
were manipulated to ensure passage of the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution,
which paved the way to war, can be found in: Edwin Moise, Tonkin Gulf
and the Escalation of the Vietnam War. U. North Carolina Press, 1996.
12 CNN Interactive, U.S.
News Story Page, 6/18/97. On line at:
http://www.cnn.com/US/9706/18/ufo.report/ [“Further confusing the issue
has been the Air Force's conduct, first in claiming it had the wreckage
of a UFO and then denying it. It contradicted itself again in 1994,
saying that the wreckage was in fact part of a device used to detect
Soviet nuclear tests.”]
13 Jane Kay. Ground Zero
Air Quality was 'Brutal' for Months - UC Davis Scientist Concurs that
EPA Reports Misled the Public. San Francisco Chronicle, 9.10.03.
On-line at: http://www.commondreams.org/headlines03/0910-07.htm.
[Quote: “A UC Davis scientist who led the air monitoring of the
smoldering ruins of the World Trade Center said dangerous levels of
pollutants were swirling about the site at the same time the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency assured the public that the air was
safe to breathe.”]
14 House Select
Committee on Assassinations. Final Assassinations Report, p. 261. On
line at:
http://www.aarclibrary.org/publib/jfk/hsca/report/html/HSCA_Report_0146a.htm
15 House Select
Committee on Assassinations. Final Assassinations Report, p. 128.
On-line at:
http://www.aarclibrary.org/publib/jfk/hsca/report/html/HSCA_Report_0079b.htm
16 Final Report of the
Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations, Book V, p. 47.
On-line at:
http://www.historymatters.com/archive/church/reports/book5/html/ChurchVol5_0027a.htm
17 Book V: The
Investigation of the Assassination of President J.F.K.: Performance of
the Intelligence Agencies, p. 32.
http://www.aarclibrary.org/publib/church/reports/book5/html/ChurchVol5_0019b.htm
18 The Investigation of
the Assassination of President John F. Kennedy: Performance of the
Intelligence Agencies, Book V, Final Report of the Select Committee to
Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities,
United States Senate, p. 6. On-line at:
http://www.aarclibrary.org/publib/church/reports/book5/html/ChurchVol5_0006b.htm
19 Tim Weiner, Legacy of Ashes, p. 228. New
York, Doubleday, 2007, p. 228.
20 Larry Sturdivan &
Kenneth Rahn, Neutron Activation and the Kennedy Assassination – Part
II, Extended Benefits. Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear
Chemistry, Vol. 262, No. 1 (2004) 215 - 222.
21 Kenneth Rahn &
Larry Sturdivan, Neutron activation and the JFK assassination - Part I,
Data and interpretation. Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear
Chemistry, Vol. 262, No. 1 (2004) 205 – 213.
22 Larry Sturdivan &
Kenneth Rahn, Neutron activation and the JFK assassination - Part II.
Extended benefits. Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry,
Vol. 262, No. 1 (2004) 215 – 222.
23 Bugliosi, p. 814.
24 IBID.
25 IBID.
26 Clifford Spiegelman
et al, Chemical and forensic analysis of JFK assassination bullet lots:
Is a second shooter possible? Annals of Applied Statistics, May, 2007.
On-line at: http://www.imstat.org/aoas/next_issue.html
27 Erik Randich et al,
Metallurgical Review of the Interpretation of Bullet Lead Compositional
Analysis, Forensic Science International, 2002, pp.174, 190).
* Charles Piller &
Robin Mejia, Science Casts Doubt on FBI’s Bullet Evidence, Los Angeles
Times, February 3, 2003, pp. A1, A16. On-line at:
http://centerforinvestigativereporting.org/articles/sciencecastsdoubtonfbisbulletevidence
* Board on Chemical Sciences and Technology,
Forensic Analysis, Lead Evidence, National Research Council, February
10, 2004.
* Los Angeles Times, February 11, 2004, p. A12.
* New York Times, February 11, 2004, p. A17.
* Pittsburgh Tribune Review, November 22, 2003,
p.A3)*
* Erik Randich, Ph.D.
& Patrick M. Grant, Ph.D. Proper Assessment of the JFK
Assassination Bullet Lead Evidence from Metallurgical and
Statistical
Perspectives. J Forensic Sci, July 2006, Vol. 51, No. 4, p 728.
doi:10.1111/j.1556-4029.2006.00165.x. Available online at:
www.blackwell-synergy.com
28 Bugliosi, endnote, p. 435.
29 Erik Randich, Ph.D.
& Patrick M. Grant, Ph.D. Proper Assessment of the JFK
Assassination Bullet Lead Evidence from Metallurgical and
Statistical
Perspectives. J Forensic Sci, July 2006, Vol. 51, No. 4, p 723.
doi:10.1111/j.1556-4029.2006.00165.x. Available online at:
www.blackwell-synergy.com
30 Personal communication with E. Randich and
P. Grant.
31 Bugliosi, endnotes, p. 437, 438.
32 IBID.
33 John Solomon. Study
Questions FBI Bullet Analysis in JFK Assassination. Washington Post,
5/16/07, p. A03. On line at:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/05/16/AR2007051601967.html.
See also: Clifford Spiegelman et al, Chemical and forensic analysis of
JFK assassination bullet lots: Is a second shooter possible? Annals of
Applied Statistics, May, 2007. On-line at:
http://www.imstat.org/aoas/next_issue.html
34 Robin Lindley, Why
Vincent Bugliosi Is So Sure Oswald Alone Killed JFK (Interview).
History News Network. On-line at: http://hnn.us/articles/41490.html
35 Bugliosi, endnote, p. 438.
36 Warren Commission
Exhibit, #2011. Warren Commission Hearings, vol. XXIV, p. 411 – 412.
On-line at:
http://www.history-matters.com/archive/jfk/wc/wcvols/wh24/html/WH_Vol24_0215a.htm
37 Copy of 6/24/64 FBI
memo from “SAC WFO” to “Director” available on-line at
historymatters.com, in: Gary Aguilar &Josiah Thompson,. The Magic
Bullet – Even More Magical Than We Knew? Available on-line at:
http://www.history-matters.com/essays/frameup/EvenMoreMagical/EvenMoreMagical.htm.
See fig. 6.
38 Joshiah Thompson J. Six Seconds in Dallas.
New York: Bernard Geis Associates for Random House, 1967, p. 175.
39 For additional
details, including images of declassified files and information from
the National Archives, see: Aguilar G, Thompson J. The Magic Bullet –
Even More Magical Than We Knew? Available on-line at:
http://www.history-matters.com/essays/frameup/EvenMoreMagical/EvenMoreMagical.htm
40 Memo available
on-line. See:
http://www.history-matters.com/essays/frameup/EvenMoreMagical/images/Slide5-1.GIF
and
http://www.history-matters.com/essays/frameup/EvenMoreMagical/images/Slide5-2.GIF
41 Copy of this memo is
available on line. See: Aguilar G, Thompson J. The Magic Bullet – Even
More Magical Than We Knew? Available at:
http://www.history-matters.com/essays/frameup/EvenMoreMagical/EvenMoreMagical.htm;
or see:
http://www.history-matters.com/essays/frameup/EvenMoreMagical/images/Slide12.GIF
42 Bugliosi, endnote, p. 544-545.
43 Bugliosi, endnote, p. 545.
44 Bugliosi, p. 84.
45 Bugliosi, xxxix.
46 Bugliosi, p. 385.
47 Bugliosi, endnote, p.
427; cites page 156 of Josiah Thompson’s Six Seconds in Dallas. New
York: Bernard Geis Associates for Random House, 1967.
48 Bugliosi, p. 403, footnote.
49 David Lifton, Best Evidence, New York,
Carroll & Graf, 1980, p. 330.
50 Warren Report, p. 523. On-line at:
http://www.history-matters.com/archive/jfk/wc/wr/html/WCReport_0274a.htm
51 Bugliosi, p. 409.
52 O’Connor-Purdy
interview for House Select Committee on Assassinations (HSCA), 8/29/77,
p. 5 – 6.. ARRB Master Set of Medical Exhibits, MD 63. On-line at:
http://www.history-matters.com/archive/jfk/arrb/master_med_set/md64/html/Image5.htm
53 O’Connor-Purdy
interview, 8/29/77, p. 5 – 6.. ARRB Master Set of Medical Exhibits, MD
63. On-line at:
http://www.history-matters.com/archive/jfk/arrb/master_med_set/md64/html/Image4.htm
to
http://www.history-matters.com/archive/jfk/arrb/master_med_set/md64/html/Image5.htm
54 Robert Groden. The Killing of a President.
New York: Viking Studio Books, 1993, p. 88.
55 Bugliosi, p. 410.
56 ARRB Master Set of
Medical Exhibits, MD 143 - Newspaper Article from Vero Beach, Florida
Press Journal written by Craig Colgan, titled: Body of Evidence: Local
Photographer Recalls JFK Autopsy. On line at:
http://www.history-matters.com/archive/jfk/arrb/master_med_set/md143/html/md143_0001a.htm
57 David Lifton. Best Evidence. New York,
Carroll & Graf, 1980, p. 516..
58 Vero Beach
Press-Journal, November 14, 1993, p. 1C-3C. See ARRB MD # 143, on-line
at:
http://www.history-matters.com/archive/jfk/arrb/master_med_set/md143/html/md143_0001a.htm
59 Jim Newton. Los Angeles Times, May, 14,
2007. Quote reproduced at: http://www.reclaiminghistory.com.
60 Anthony Lewis. On the
release of the Warren Commission Report, New York Times, 9/27/64.
Reproduced in: The Report of the Warren Commission on the Assassination
of President Kennedy. New York: New York Times edition, October, 1964,
p. xxxii.
61 The Report of the
Warren Commission on the Assassination of President Kennedy. New York:
New York Times edition, October, 1964, p. xxix.
62 Bugliosi, Introduction, p. xxxvii.
63 Bugliosi, Introduction, p. xxxviii.
64 Bugliosi, Introduction, p. xxxviii – xxxix.
65 Bryan Burrough. Or No
Conspiracy? New York Times, 5.20.07. On line at:
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/20/books/review/Burrough-t.html
66 Letter to the editor,
New York Times, June 17, 2007. On-line at:
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/06/17/books/review/Letters-t-1-1.html?_r=2&oref=slogin&oref=slogin
67 A collection of informative essays written
by skeptics analyzing aspects of Reclaiming History is available at
www.reclaiminghistory.org.
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