Music Alright guys, welcome to this latest episode of Blood Money.
So this is a different kind of episode, not our traditional interview style.
Our own Corinne Clifford was actually in Dallas, Texas at this conference where a gentleman named James File has come forward.
Actually, he's come forward for the last 34 years claiming that he was basically the main assassin behind the grassy knoll in Dallas, Texas on November 22nd, 1963.
He claims that he is the actual assassin of JFK. Now, this particular episode was basically filmed at this conference.
The audio is not that great.
It's a little bit shaky.
It's sometimes hard to understand, James, especially since he's quite old.
And he does sometimes slur his speech.
So apologies about the quality, but we thought this is a very important episode to get to because, frankly, this man claims he killed JFK. What bigger story is there than a guy saying, I'm the guy who killed JFK, and he brings forward a lot of information that makes it sound like, you know what, maybe he did have some insider knowledge.
So we don't know if this man killed JFK. He claims he killed JFK. He has a lot of details about November 22nd, 1963.
He has a lot of details about working for the CIA and being recruited by George Bush, our former president George Bush, the man that became president in 1988.
George Bush Sr., basically.
So, anyway, hope you guys enjoyed this episode.
Again, apologies about the quality audio, apologies about the camera movement and stuff, but there's a lot of important information in this episode, so we thought it's very important to bring it to you.
Enjoy this Blood Money episode and I'll see you all on the next episode.
Thank you. They never looked at me twice.
They ran by me looking for somebody on the grass, you know.
Tell them about when you went to the junkyard with Lee.
Lee and I went out to the junkyard, and we sort of calibrated the weapons for Charles Nicoletti.
And I also took a couple of shots with Park Remington Fireball, and the scope calibrated on that.
Some woman sitting there, she I see two teenagers out in the junkyard shooting a weapon.
I went back to the room, cleaned it up, and got ready.
I had the weapons secured.
The weapons were ready to go.
When Chuck got there, we were going to do the job.
Everything was ready and set.
You've got the two primary shooters.
You have never seen this photograph before.
The top is the I Call Jeans photograph.
It's very famous. If you look through the windshield of the presidential limo, Kennedy already has his hands up.
He's been hit in the back.
I'm turning to his right a little bit.
The shot where the red arrow is, the open window underneath, there's a spotter on the fire escape.
Those fire escapes don't exist on that building anymore.
And they've planted two big trees that block the windows where the shots came from, which I find kind of coincidental, you know.
But tell them about Chuck and the room and all that stuff.
Okay. A lot of people think I selected the room.
I did not pick the room with the doubts.
The morning I talked to Chuck, I told him it would be a good one.
So two weeks prior to that, Eugene Helberating come in from California, from the West Coast, and he knew people in that building.
He got that room in there and they moved the people out.
They told him they were going to redecorate the room.
They put a dry cloth in.
They put in, you know, there's things you can stand on to do a paint job and everything.
Only Eugene Helberating had the key to that room.
Nobody else had a key to it.
That morning, he walked Chuck.
And Johnny Roselli into that room.
Johnny, he walked into the room, locked the door behind them when they went in there.
They didn't want nobody walking in on them.
He walked over the wall where the telephone was hanging at, and he got on the phone, he just picked it up and kind of held the receiver down, you know, keeping the phone shut off, and he stayed in that motion.
When the firing had all stopped and everything was over with, he let the phone hang, went over to The door let Chuck and Johnny out.
He escorted him out of the building through the sad door at that time in that building.
Then he went back up and hung the phone back up.
And as he was walking out and leaving, he had stopped for questioning.
He was not arrested. He was stopped for questioning.
And then they wouldn't know who he was.
And they called and showed the identification and everything.
And they went and talked to the people.
They said, yeah, that he was there.
They visited with him.
And that was about it.
So the morning that Chuck, Nicoletta and I walked to Blazic, He asked me, Jimmy, what do you think the best places are?
I told it enough that I told him the best place would be the second floor in the Daltech building.
Next place I told him the backup shooter should be on the Gracing Hall.
And he says, okay, I want to ask you a question.
They're sending a board team in.
Johnny don't want to go against the CIA, so he's not going to be a backup shooter.
Would you back me up? I told him I'd be happy to back him up.
And he said, well, what weapon will you use?
That's why I used the fireball.
He said, it only has one shot.
And I said, I only need one shot.
Because you're only going to give me a last second shot if you don't have to hit the target.
And because we're going for a headshot, and they wanted it from behind.
Because they wanted to try and frame Lee with it, I guess.
But, anyway, I went up on the rest, you know, Johnny went there, and I said, I was in prison at the time.
Right now, when they did the first interview, and they asked me about it, I said I was the only man behind the fence, because I had no way of knowing if Lansdale was still alive or not.
Because I went to prison back in 1991, and got released in 1976, or 2016.
And I didn't know that he was there.
But General Lansdale was grounds coordinator that day at D.E. Plattsdale.
Tell them about Wolfman and the ammunition he provided for you.
But I did several jobs with General Lansdale before the plaza.
Also, Wolfman, his real name was George Calori.
He's dead. And he died about...
I talked to him.
I called him on the phone. I told him, this guy, Joe West, wants to talk to you.
And he said, let me think about it.
Well, he went to the doctor and I called him back a week later.
He said he was in perfect health and everything.
We talked on the phone for probably 20 minutes.
You know, just Rick BS in other words.
And so, John, I mean, Flora was called Wolfman.
He drilled out the rounds for me, sealed them with wax.
He loaded it with mercury.
And the mercury round, I'm using a tangible bullet anyway.
And with the mercury in there, it will explode inside the head once it gets in there.
I wanted a sure kill shot if I have to shoot.
And I've only got one shot.
He made me six rounds.
I don't need one. But he was always joking with me.
I didn't need more than that. You ain't that good.
Anyway, we used to shoot every...
We'd shoot probably $100 a week up in ammunition back then.
We shot against a lot of police officers and everything else.
All right. So with Nicoletti and Roselli in the office that had been prepped ahead of time on the second floor of the Deltex building, You're on the Grassy Knoll.
Frank came around to say a few things to you?
General Lansdale. I know, Lansdale, but Frank never did?
No. Okay, but you saw Frank.
I saw Frank. George Bush was there.
George Bush was there.
Okay, and a bunch of other people.
And the slide memorandum dated George Bush on where he was leaning against the school book depository and had one foot prop up there against the wall, knitted on the ground.
Okay, so this is probably as good a time as any to talk about from when you were behind the fence and the motorcade is coming, just a minute or two before, you know what I mean? Flo, tell the story through the shot.
Right before that, George Bush.
I had known George Bush from the Bay of Pigs when he was a Brutal oil company.
Also, George Bush was a recruiter working for the CA at that time.
George Bush recruited Luis Posada, Corrales, and myself.
We were the first two put into Operation 40, which was supposed to be an intelligent group and together intelligence.
That was the cover story the money we got for it from Congress.
What actually was 40 was a worldwide assassination group, and we went a little bit about Nobody could get away from us.
And there's quite a few people in Operation 40, all professional killers.
And I made my mark in Laos on Operation Mobile White Star.
My 17th birthday, before I turned, I went there July 10th.
I shipped out of Fort Bragg, North Carolina.
Got there. When I got there, before I turned 18, in January the 24th, I had a confirmed record of confirmed kills.
Not firefights. Confirmed kill of officers and things like that.
18 was the total count.
And that was before I was 18.
That's why Lansdale wanted me on the grass and all.
The proper shot, if they would have been on the sixth floor, would have been when they come off of Main Street to make the right end turn into Houston.
Then he's got his profile of Jed F. Kennedy, and then he could have shot him.
But they didn't do that.
They waited. And they waited too long because there's no way they could see the car from the sixth floor, and then going down, he'll get his brother away.
Next of all, from that...
Let's see.
Let's get this right. The limo turns on Houston.
Yeah, the limo turned on Houston.
And then it turned to the left-hand turn now.
That was the only...
You're not going to use it anyway. Yeah.
That was the only...
I got this over here on my jacket.
You gotta excuse me at times, I get confused a little bit.
I'm 82. This is going to be my last trip to Dallas, believe me.
Won't be here next year. Anyway, it turns on to Elm Street.
People are all standing on the sidewalk and Kennedy's sitting on the right-hand side.
They claimed they had a shooter on the fourth side on the other side of the plaza, but the shooter would never be over there.
For some reason, he'd be shooting through too many people to get to his target.
And the shooter always knows where his target's going to be sitting.
If you're a politician, you want to meet people, you want to shake their hands, snap their hands as you go by, and that's where Kennedy would be sitting, on the outside of limousine like that, on the floor right on the side.
I got them together. I looked through the scope right before they turned onto Elm Street.
I had been following the crowd, watching the crowd, been looking for bulges under the jacket, bulges behind the jacket where they could stick a weapon underneath the belt on the back of the pants.
Been looking for ankle weapons and everything else.
Anything with a bulge would be very important to me because after I took the shot on Kennedy, they would be the next victim at that point.
I wasn't taking no chances.
And I followed the scope.
I watched the scope. Frank Sturgis was there.
George Bush was there. Several people I knew and probably 22 different humans were there that I knew that was there.
And it was like, oh, homie for me.
And anyways, time come.
I put the, uh, Kennedy back in the scope.
They come down Elm Street. Now, a lot of people, six people claim, out of all the people there, six people claim the limo stopped.
And someone called me just a couple days before I come to Dallas.
And they said, they didn't believe the limo stopped.
And I said, I'm saying it didn't stop.
He said, these people are right there and they saw it.
I said, yeah, they weren't looking through the scope.
I've got Kennedy in the scope.
I've got him in the crosshairs.
If the limo had stopped, I would have had to stop moving the scope.
I said, I never stopped moving the scope.
The limo slowed down to about one mile per hour, maybe a half mile per hour.
But the limo kept moving.
I kept him in the crosshairs.
And I'm not changing my story for nobody.
So all the people that didn't see me, I'm probably looking through a scope besides Nicoletti.
And that limo never stopped.
So when the sun got down there, I wasn't counting the shots as one, two, three, four.
I was counting a miss, miss, miss, miss.
And this time, I got to take my shot.
Otherwise, I'm going to get part of the jackie, too, maybe.
So it's worth not to hit anybody in the limo, but JFK. I took the shot, and when I left there, I'm walking right by, but first I took the weapon, checked the cartridge, the brass, stuck it in my mouth, bit down on it, put the weapon in the briefcase, closed it up, stood it up, I took my jacket off.
I had my jacket turned inside out because the inside liner was like a red and black plaid.
This way it looked like a railroad worker.
The pedora was stuck inside the jacket sleeve.
And I got a piece of chalk and I had been walking around the rail yard waiting and I was writing on the box cart, not knowing what I'm writing, just writing numbers.
And I looked not suspicious.
So as I walked over to the fence, This one lady, I forget her name right now.
She was sitting at a Dodge.
She worked at the school book depository.
She was eating a sandwich.
She was peeking up over the dashboard, watching me as I walked her up there in the front.
She watched me take the gun out, and Beverly Oliver, known as the Bushelator, she actually saw me take the shot, left the lady with either a Dodger or a Punisher, one or the other.
Not a Dodger, an Oldsmobile or a Punisher.
Beverly Oliver was about 40 feet to my left at her table.
She saw me take the shot.
After the shot was taken, it was pretty well ended.
It took me less than a half, maybe half a minute to do everything, change my coat, put it back on with the pop linen material outside.
Back in the early 60s, they had their material called pop linen, like a shiny gray.
Put the pedora on.
In the original, the old life magazine, Someone made a picture.
You could see the fedora, and it's a famous photo.
And she's a man's head, but she couldn't recognize who he was, but was through the tree branches and the leaves and showed the man walking away.
And that was actually walking away.
And then when I got through the fence, that's when the cops ran on both sides of me looking for somebody in the grass, you know, back there and over in the roadway yard.
I just kept walking, and then I walked in.
We got started up the street, about one-third of the way out by the book depository.
George Bush was standing there leaning against the wall, but one foot up against the wall.
We made no comment to each other.
We just looked at each other and I walked down.
I got to the car.
Johnny Roselli, Charles Nicoletti.
Johnny Roselli was in the back seat.
Charles Nicoletti was in the right passenger seat.
The car they got in.
It was a burgundy color, 63 Chevy Supra, you know, Impala.
And we had the large engine in it.
327, four barrel, all of that.
And the car had been reworked.
We had gun compartments inside the car, placed the whole grenades and whole other things.
And we went from there.
Tell them about what was on the dashboard.
On the dashboard where I'd burnt the car and like it was no parking area that had a curtain sign made up.
I carried those all the time.
I would lay the sign up on the dashboard and call that official business.
And that way the cops would never bother you.
No more than you hear me on the ground and handcuff me.
Drove me away from there.
Stopped, took the handcuffs off.
What are you nuts? You can't hit the FBI. You can't walk up and try to knock them out.
I thought, well, what can I say?
But anyway, somebody got in the vaccine.
Jumped out. Went to the Golden Horns restaurant in the parking lot.
He met someone. They got in the vaccine.
A couple of guys there. It had to be two to come to get the back seat.
One got in the front seat, one got in the back seat.
And while Chuck was talking to the guy with the rag, the guy shot him right in the back of the head at the pace of the skull with a small caliber of weapon.
So the marble would roll around in the skull like marble in a tin can through the brain, scramble it.
He fell over the steering wheel, and the job patently left.
And the car was still running, but his foot, I guess, went down the gas and got it wide open.
The car caught on fire.
It started burning up with Chuck Still in it.
And they managed to get him out.
Got the body out, took him to the hospital.
And that was the end of that, yeah.
And I never did find out who killed Charles Nicoletti.
But if I would have found out, you can believe me, they would have been buried.
You want to talk about the secret murder ledger and the FBI's relationship with you over that?
Yeah. Well, right after all that happened, at the coffee cup restaurant, They had 1213 West Lake Street, and the other one was 1105.
That was my social club.
And the social club had the pool tables in there.
The guys would come there to the private club.
They'd shoot poo, make cart together, gamble, whatever.
No problems. Well, they stayed late.
This particular night that I was there, I called up the coffee cup and thought that I would bring some hamburgers and fries and some Cokes and drinks.
Going to get it ready. Gorilla was working for me at the restaurant that night.
He said, hey boss, can I bring him down?
I said, no, you can't bring him down.
Come and get him. You stay in the restaurant and watch everything.
And put red pinball machines in the restaurant.
There's another young place.
And as I walked up to the corner to cross the street to get to the coffee cup, the car pulled up and did like a Hollywood stop.
The car rocked. Next thing I saw was a can come out the window and they sprayed her.
I was out before I hit the roundup.
When I come to, I was shackled, chained, tied at the water pipe or something, and stripped.
And I went through about, I'm going to say, close to probably two days of a torture session with the FBI. They made me scream, they made me yell, and everything else.
And it never broke me.
It's one of the proudest moments of my life.
And you'll read that section right there in the book where they've written an FBI agent purified That I had been captured and tortured.
But like he said, I took no part in the torture.
But it was one of the proudest moments of my life because he admitted that the FBI never broke me to speak of any crime that I had been involved in.
All right.
The next picture is going to be, we've already seen it, but that's the blown up picture.
We're talking about Nicoletti.
He was in that room where the little small window was open where the red arrow is.
And once again, we're going to tell you where you can get this entire presentation.
Johnny was in the room with him, Johnny Roselli, and Charles Nicoletti were in that room.
It was prepared earlier by Eugene Hale Brady from San Diego.
He was standing outside the door.
The door was locked. I've grilled James about this because I'm a gun guy.
Roselli's weapon was some kind of We're chambered in.30-06.
Jimmy shot JFK with a.221 fireball.
The government story is, and the magic bullet is a 6.5 millimeter.
JFK was not shot with any 6.5 millimeter weapons of any sort.
One was a.30-06.
One was a.221 fireball.
I had Kennedy right there in the temple.
That right temple is where I got Kennedy.
The back of the head is completely blown out.
And even in the film, you can see all the blood and brain stuff in the air.
All right. You want to talk about your life starting, you're born in January?
About your military training and the operations you can talk about?
First, I want to take a little drink water right here.
I'm not used in the test tube, but I am what they call a test tube baby.
They made it together the way they wanted it.
And then they answered it to my mother.
She carried me for nine months.
I was born. And I would sit back to Oakland, Alabama.
And I was there. And when time come for delivery, they couldn't get me the Navy doctor in time.
So Dr. Watkins, he had a place right up the highway from us, up the road lowways.
And he come down to deliver me.
Anyway, my birth certificate registered deceased at birth.
And When I come out, when I was born, I didn't have a name.
I was born with a number, just like to give you in prison, you know.
But the number started with an X and it went on and continued.
I don't remember all the number. But anyway, that's how it started.
And so I lived there in Alabama until I was about five years old, I guess.
And Les Sutton got out of the military, out of the Navy.
My mother went to California with him.
They got married. Then they drove to California.
They got my sister and me, and we went back to California to live for a short time out there.
Unless something was still the boulder down, hauling some pipes in there for them and everything else.
It was a confusing life.
My first stop in Chicago, we got off in Chicago in 48 and 49.
I just wanted what my mother had done to me because the snow was right all the way up to my bottom end, you know?
And I was freezing to death and I couldn't believe it was that cold.
But I wasn't used to that kind of cold in California.
But my mother took me always to the Navy doctors.
Navy doctors examined me.
And we went to it. And I was age 8 when they took me to Camp Hero.
By the time I was age 10, I was already about 35 to 40 feet.
I could throw a knife, put a human target on the wall, and I was in the kill zone every time.
I was a group that started, 14 of us graduated.
And I went to the Army on my 17th birthday.
I took my basic training at Fort Lindenwood, Missouri.
I took my AIT, which is advanced infantry training.
I took there to Fort Hook, Louisiana.
When I stood out there, I had a sign on the wall one day when I come in by joining the airborne.
So I've signed up for the Airborne.
They sent me the Ford Bragg V-Cut Motors, went to Ford Bragg 82nd Airborne, and I never looked back after that.
But July the 10th is when we shipped out of Ford Bragg and we went to Laos.
That was why I was the way I was.
And just like my Jocko, he's a Navy SEAL team member, interviewed me a few nights ago.
Not to think of me as a villain, but to think of me as more as a hero.
He said, I did the same thing he did, and I'm called a hero, or he's called a villain.
He just followed orders and did the jobs he was assigned to.
And Jocko explained to him about it.
He was in one class, I was in another class.
His class was to fight and do another army.
My class was to do whatever they asked me to do.
And that was the difference.
How about the Bay of Pigs?
Bay of Pigs? The Bay of Pigs was designed to fill from the front.
And first day, we had a good landing at the Bay of Pigs, and they changed it at the last moment to Chianos Bay, which was nothing but swamp.
And they didn't want to win because the CIA, let alone all of us, even the Cuban, we did not know that the CIA was in bed with Castro.
But when we moved Batista, I shouldn't say, they moved Batista, which was before me, right there, because he wanted two big a slice of pie of the drugs.
Because they processed all the drugs here on the Isles of Wright.
The island is just off of Cuba.
Anyway, he had to go, but he still had to go.
They put Castro in.
Castro right away, the mob wanted Castro in, because they were going to get their casinos back and everything.
They got Castro in.
He told the mob, no, you can get your casinos back.
He shut them all down.
The story was there was going to be an uprising in Cuba.
They'd take it over and everybody would get everything back and they'd have their home again.
That was not the case. Cuba was to be shut down.
There was no longer any tourists going into Cuba.
They did not want any journalists in there writing about the heroin.
The heroin came in from the Golden Triangle, was processed on what used to be the Isles of Rife.
Castro renamed the Isles of Youth.
Once the heroin was processed, it was traveled across the Yucatan and from the edge of Cuba.
The Yucatan was only 45 miles.
It went west through the Yucatan into Mexico.
Took a right-hand turn and headed for the United States.
And at that time, it picked up the name Mexican Love.
Hey Jimmy, let everybody know what happened in Laos and then how you got recruited into the CIA. I'm not going to talk about what happened in Laos.
Well, don't talk about that, but just people know you were in Laos and then you were in the CIA. We're talking about Laos in 59.
I did not know Laos was a CIA operation.
I thought it was a regular Army operation going on.
And, uh, like I said, I got one there.
I wound up at the hospital.
Boom. They walked me out.
And, uh, I went to the Big Up Pigs, Prairie Sturgis, first one I met.
And that was what David Alley Phillips introduced me to.
And there it expanded, it started to train the people.
In fact, the Cubans were lied to by the CIA. The Cubans, I think it was an operation of 2506.
They had them on the ship, and they were riding them around on a boat in the Gulf of Mexico.
Because they did not want them to be involved, because those people were too important to have their lives just wasted on something they could not succeed.
And history will tell you, a lot of people were executed right there.
Cubans went to prison and everything else.
I mean, a lot of them was like brothers to me, because we worked together, we trained together, we ate together, you know, and everything else.
And one of the favorite hangouts, we used to go to Miami, we used to go to Flagner's Chile.
Eat Chile at Flagner's Chile.
Great. We all had a good time.
And I learned a lot with them.
Just everybody got lied to.
I was lied to until 1977.
We were on our way to Chile to assassinate Castro giving a speech.
And Michael Townley, me, two of the young humans, we flew in to Peru, La Paz.
We rented a car. We were driving down through the Alcone Desert.
And the one kid got to the side, took him to the hospital.
So Michael Bernatone tells me, well, this job's off.
We're not going to pull this one. And I thought, what are you nuts?
I cannot shoot both of them.
He got me by the sleeve and pulled me off to the side and told me, you don't understand, I'm not going there to go cast or I'm going there to kill them.
And I says, why? Well, Michael Bernatone worked for the CIA. Michael Bernatone was also a lieutenant colonel in the D.I.N.A., the secret police in Chile.
And I said, what the hell are you talking about?
He said, I'll be a hero with the police in Chile, with Castro, and with the CIA. And I said, I still don't understand what's going on.
And he said, we've been in bed with Castro all along.
And I looked at him, what are you talking about?
He said, They don't want advising there.
They don't want things to happen. They want to keep it the way it is.
Everything is being processed there.
The opium from Laos?
No, not from Laos.
From the Golden Triangle.
I was shocked.
I couldn't believe it all. I didn't know.
What I just heard just blew my mind.
Next of all, So they had to abort the mission because the young guys were the target.
Right. And then he was going to look like a hero.
They were going to kill the young guys.
What about who recruited you into Operation 40?
And that's after Bad Pigs.
That was George Bush.
Like I said, he was a recruiter for the CIA. He was doing the prison.
And we went through that before. That was supposed to be a human intelligence.
On the ground humans is what they call intelligence.
We'd gather that. But cover story for the CIA. Because you don't go before Congress and tell them you want to build an assassination team.
What our job was, the world assassination group.
How about your relationship with Chuck and the driving race cars?
Chuck chose me for his driver because he was in the same town I was.
I was racing stock cars at the time in North Lake, Illinois.
And we'd go out there and Chuck watched me drive, and when he picked up the new car we were going to use for a gun car, he asked me, would you like to, after the race was over and everything, got me and said, take me for a ride in the car.
So I got in the new car, I'm driving, and I said, he said, now come on, open up, I got to see what you can do.
So I said, okay. So I had Chuck just about screaming by the time I stopped and making the full turns and the 180s.
Anyway, Chuck told me he said, you want to go to work for me?
And I said, meaning who?
He said, you know, put the outfit.
And I said, what do you want?
He said, I want you for a driver.
And I started out as his driver, wound up also with a body gun of his.
And I told him, yeah, he offered me $500 every two weeks.
The envelope I'd get was $500 on it.
I mean, back then, if you got an envelope for two weeks with $100 from your regular job, you was doing darn good.
So I felt like I was on top of the world at that point.
So I went to work driving with Chuck, and things along pretty good.
I used to take him out to the gun club where he could shoot.
He asked me one day, he says, you want to shoot him?
And I says, yeah, if you don't mind.
And he says, here. He says, now I'll get my gun.
So I went out to the car, got my house under the front seat, brought it in.
And he laughed at me. He says, you can't do nothing with a.45.
I told him, watch. I opened up.
When I got there, he was amazed with it.
And I knew Sam and Johnny Rosali already from down in the Bay of Pigs.
And Sam Gene kind of used to refer to the three abs, even though he was number two man in lock, he referred to the three abs as three amigos.
And he got upset because the CA never gave me his, I'd get out of jail free card.
And anyway, Chuck and me a couple of days later, we were over in what used to be called the Armory, it was a restaurant.
And they've got all kinds of wiretaps to prove that it was going to hit Kennedy.
They knew it, but they couldn't use it against them except for their own intelligence to try and stop us.
At that time, they thought it was going to be in Chicago.
But the armory is now called Charlie's Restaurant.
And every time I go up to Chicago, we stop in there.
My wife, she tried to eat, you know, have a few things.
Some of the pictures gave them one of our books.
And they were just...
We had a lot of fun with it, yeah.
Tell them what was in your pockets at the Grassy Knoll.
When I left the Grassy Knoll, I had my.45 on my right side, and I had a hand grenade in my left pocket.
My briefcase was in my right hand.
If anybody tried to stop me, out comes the grenade.
When that comes out and yells, grenade real loud, people are going to start running, and I fire a couple of shots.
Just hope they're not in the line of fire.
Just hope they don't get in the way of what I have to do.
Tell them about Lansdale's boxcar.
Oh, the boxcar that he had on the railroad tracks built with explosives that the tramps were sitting in.
I could never understand why three intelligent men would actually sit in a boxcar with explosives.
But if we needed that and I had to use a diversion to get out of there, they said the explosives would automatically be detonated in the railroad yard.
Could you clarify, was Lansdale next to you for the shot?
Not for the shot, no.
He was there prior to the shot to see if I was on station.
Lansdale walked out to me.
He said, hello.
How's it going? How's it going?
He said, are you going? Get everything ready.
I said, I'm on station. When I said I'm on station, that means I'm ready, block loaded, do what I got to do.
So we talked for a second, and then he said, I'm going to make another stop.
He says, Chuck, all right?
And I said, yeah. And he said, I got to go see.
So he went around there to check on Chuck, make sure he was on the station.
But they wanted this to go down real smooth.
Fletcher Prouty, he was my commanding officer on Operation Mobile White Star.
Prouty had been sent halfway around the world.
He'd been sent to New Zealand because they knew he wouldn't go along with the plan.
He's not like Lansdale.
He'd break every rule to get the job done.
Fletcher Prouty was a man that would not bend the rules or break the rules or disgrace a unicorn.
Two things real quick.
Tell him... I want to make a point.
When he was born, his birth certificate was...
He ceased at birth.
He later got a birth certificate.
Remember, his stepfather was named Sutton.
So when he shot John F. Kennedy, his name was James Earl Sutton.
People called him Jimmy.
His nickname is...
Sandman.
Tell them why. Well, in the zone trial in this case, before I got to 50 years to go to prison, one of the ladies raised me in, they wanted to know why I was called Sandman.
The judge said, answer. And the guy that was standing at that point, not the head of me, he told him, he said, well, he put people asleep.
And that was it.
So I got him there. And this guy told him how I would go out.
I would go out at dusk and lay in the elephant grass, sawgrass, whatever would be available, wherever we was at.
And I would leave my weapon behind and just carry my knives with me.
And I would go to the field and I would take out 8 to 10, be a con that night.
And the dawn would come.
I'd give a whistle and they would come out and once they could identify with me, help me carry the bodies back in.
We'd lay the bodies on the barbed wire and the concertina wire around the fire base.
Pour a fuel oil on them, set the bodies on fire.
And that was why they called me the Sandman.
Tell them how you got paid through the United Fruit.
Okay. And the name and all that stuff.
They sent the money from United Fruit to Miami's Northwest Bank, First Bank there, and under the name of Colonel Felter.
The money under Colonel Felter was sent To my bank in Broadview, Illinois, so my family could live on it, under the name of James Files.
It would be a positive James Files.
So that way, the CA United Proof, everybody could be kept out of the circle.
And they couldn't trace me back to any one of those companies.
In your lifetime, though, you had about 33 passports that identified you as different people, and when you got arrested for the chop-shot deal and they searched your house, tell them what they found.
They found 18 of the passports, and each one of the passports had my face on it, but each one was stamped MIA, Missing in Action, or KIA, Killed in Action.
That way, Congress could never call me before them.
One of the things I couldn't understand about Tosh Bromley, he testified under his real name before Congress half a dozen times.
I like Tosh. He's a great guy.
But you don't do things under your real name.
I took a different identity each time.
I can see we're going to run long.
I hope everybody is willing to stay longer.
Tell them about your connection to Barry Seale.
Barry Seale? And Meena, Arkansas.
They made a movie about him called American-made.
American-made, yeah. Barry Shields was, uh, him and Lee both come out of the CAPS program.
That was the, uh, Civil Air Patrol.
And, uh, Lee was a pretty good pilot.
Tosh was a very good pilot.
Barry Shields was the best I have ever seen.
He should have been born with, uh, he's cousin to The Verge.
He should have had wings on his back.
But we flew ammunition, weapons, different things, hospital supplies.
clothing to the rebels in the Central Hemisphere, which is Central America, and the Southern Hemisphere, which is South America.
We used Central and Southern Hemisphere without giving names.
If anybody wanted to figure out, they could, but we didn't say the name, which we'd be valid in court.
And we would apply drugs on the way back.
We flew into Mena, Arkansas, and I had flown many trips into Arkansas, some with Barry, some on my own.
Meena, Arkansas was the drum drop capital of the world, right there.
Tell them some of the people you met at the airport there.
Well, one of them. I'm used to landing my plane, going for lunch, somebody, and other guys have picked me up.
I opened the corridor one day and there's Hillary Clinton.
And I asked her, what the hell are you doing here?
She said, I'm checking on you.
The person I asked her, I said, you want me to kill Bill?
You want Bill to kill me? And I'm looking at the Arkansas State Trooper that's the captain in the front seat.
She said, oh, don't worry about him.
I own him. So when we had lunch together, we talked.
She said, why are you here?
She said, I've been following your career.
She said, I've got a lot of connections.
She says, and you've lived a very interesting life and so forth.
And I said, well, I said, I'm not going to talk about it.
She said, I don't expect you to be in violation of the NDA. It's an undisclosure act.
We at lunch went back, the plane had been lifted down and put the plane on the Lake Step, Arizona.
Tell her your relationship with Hillary when she was young.
She was a lot younger than me.
Four years younger than me.
But I'm like 15, 16 years old.
I got a motorcycle. 58 Ford retractable hardtop and I thought she wanted to go up a motorcycle ride and I wouldn't take her.
Her mother and dad come and say, oh you can take her for a ride since she wants a ride.
I took her for a ride a couple of times.
We went out for dinner once in the Ford Convertible and never had enough relationship with it.
Never even kissed that girl. One reason was their families, they lived next door to the people that I used to deliver.
Like every weekend, I'd take the family that money.
She lived in the Chicago area.
She lived in Park Ridge. And he was upper class in the outfit.
So you don't make the outfit look bad by bothering somebody else's daughter.
So I made it very plainly, very clear.
I said in the car, I'm on this side.
Never even kissed her one time.
That probably wasn't too.
Every now and then we get a new guy in and I'd have a fight.
I probably had probably 50 fights, but I would stay open over the years.
I'm talking about not just arguing, but I'm talking about knock down drag outs and I put them down in a heartbeat.
I ran the JC games there for the blind children where the money was donated to them and I was in charge of the JC's.
And one night there, Christmas Eve and I, we're running Christmas Eve to give the guy something to do, you know.
And we've got a little different games going.
We've got gin rummy games going, pinnacle games going, you name it, checkers, chess.
And somebody stole something out of the bag and took up front of the cell with it.
And I went and asked him. I called up with him.
I slapped him around a few times.
Then I went back out there.
Everybody had already left one of the lockdown, but these guys were gangbangers.
And they looked at me and they said, man, that's one of our guys.
You can't do our guy that way.
And I said, the hell I can't.
And they looked at me and they told me, yeah, you've got to deal with us.
No problem. I laid out half a dozen of them in about two minutes.
And all the officers were inside the control center watching through the window.
And when they got through, they opened the truck on the window.
They could come out and say, yeah, come on out.
And so the next day, the captain, she'd come by herself, she said, she called me a nasty name, and she says, you couldn't wait till the day to do this.
She said, I talked to all the officers, and they told me it looked like a cheap kung fu movie.
Tell me about your martial arts stuff and Bruce and your play there.
I started out at an early age in martial arts.
I learned about In the Core East.
The agency has taught me some of the martial arts.
But I learned the best part of it.
It's in the Core East.
And that's a martial art that is strictly designed all blows for killings.
It's an aggressive martial arts.
And I've got flying too near the United States.
So anyway, when I come back home again, when we got back there, I took more training.
Staten Street, but it's a farm in Langley, Virginia.
Then when I got back to Chicago, I come in.
And that's where I met Bruce Frechick.
He was like nine years younger than me.
And he was 17 at the time.
And I went to the one dojo.
This kid had pretty good moves on him.
And he was on the mat. So I went until he got through with his mat, with his session.
And I woke up and I said, how often do you train here?
And he said, oh, I work here part time.
I said, better yet, come on.
So I took him and things got kind of rough after that.
He used to accuse me of trying to kill him of beating him to death every time we went out.
You know, he was limping around the sewers and things.
I tried not to hurt him. But anyway, he became like an adopted brother to me.
He adopted him as a little brother, a smaller brother.
And he's the one that's in the hospital right now where they just read him his last rites.
But like I said, he booked over 900 visits to Stateville to visit me.
found on anything at the school book depository window was Mack Wallace's fingerprints. Okay, you can get this picture offline if you want just look up Google images Mack Wallace. He's a former Marine, good shooter, apparently book smart but no common sense kind of guy.
He killed a lot of people for Johnson.
Johnson was going to be indicted for murders, the Bobby Baker, Billy Esty stuff.
Johnson was going to be indicted for murders, if you didn't hear what I said.
Nine counts of murder.
The Life magazine, the week after that, Kennedy's picture on it, the week before that, Was the Bobby Baker, I guess, the cover of Life Magazine saying, hey, guess what's going to happen to Johnson?
At the airport, a lot of people know that there was a fight between Kennedy and Johnson about who was going to ride in the presidential limo.
And they were yelling at each other.
Johnson wanted Ralph Yarbrough, the senator from Texas, who he hated, in the seat in front of Kennedy.
He wanted Conley, who was kind of a friend of his I guess, and Nellie back to be, not to be harmed, back in the limo.
They called it the Queen Mary, the big Cadillac, with him.
So when they get around to Dealey Plaza and they're going down Elm Street and Conley gets shot, I believe that Conley was shot by Mack Wallace from that window.
He was supposed to, he was going to be killing Ralph Yarborough, but he didn't know.
Back then they didn't have cell phones and pagers.
So when he was told You know, the plan was for him to be there.
When the motorcade left the airport and Connelly and Nellie were sitting in front of Jack and Jackie, he didn't know.
Nobody could call him on a pager and say, hey, it's off.
Connelly's with, you know, so he's there thinking he's going to kill Ralph Yarborough.
I think that's how Connelly got shot.
I think you could prove it in court.
There's other evidence that I'm not going to bring up today, but His fingerprint, they knew he was there.
I saw some of you shake your heads when I said, you know, they knew Mack Wallace was in that window, not Lee Harvey Oswald.
So, but part of their team, with Nicoletti in the Daltex building and Jimmy on the grassy knoll, he would have had no knowledge about this.
And that's the way compartmental operations go down.
The mission I flew for the agency on the border of Iran back in 1987, I had a rescue team that was set up that was flying off the The barges in the Persian Gulf.
I didn't even know it.
Years later, I'm with a bunch of these CI guys, Basel Bas and other people I'm not going to name, at my home.
And we start talking about something.
And he goes, you know, you were handpicked for that mission.
And I said, why? And he goes, well, he said, I was your rescue team.
I said, I didn't know I had a rescue team.
And he said, yeah, we were on the brown, on the barge out there in case you were shot down or something.
But we had to put you up there for bait because we didn't know if they had missiles Anyway, so that happens.
But things are compartmentalized.
That's the way you keep something secret.
You know, the Hell's Angels say three can keep a secret if two are dead.
And that applies to the Kennedy assassination.
David Ferry. David Ferry did not like him.
He was not included.
He was no relative or no friend of my friend, Gordon Ferry.
No relation whatsoever.
But David Ferry didn't like him.
I was at Stateville when Warden called me to his office on a Sunday morning, and he told me, he said, if somebody on the phone wanted to talk to you, and they told me who they were, and they said they wanted to fly to Stateville, according to Jim Garrison's investigation.
And they said they wanted to talk to me about David Perry, because I had described exactly where the aneurysm took place in his brain to kill him.
And I'd explained that they'd used a fingernail file that had been used.
And they told me they wanted to come talk to me about all of that.
And I said, save your jet fuel.
I'm not talking. I'm at the warden's office.
All right. Eugene Hale Brady in the office.
In the office? Like I said, he locked Chuck in.
He left Chuck and Johnny out.
And where Eugene goes, I liked Eugene.
He was no problem. He was good.
So he's the guy that guarded the door in the sniper's nest, the second story of the Daltex building.
And they prepped that room in like, you know, a couple weeks in advance, moved the furniture out because they were going to paint the room.
He was the one who detained in question.
Yeah, he was. He actually was.
Yeah, he was arrested and detained in question.
I guess he didn't tell him anything.
Eugene wasn't arrested.
He was only detained in question.
Okay. There's a difference between arrested and being detained.
Okay, J.D. Tibbett.
We've talked about him a lot already.
I've been detained. Do you want to say anything else about J.D. Tibbett?
Uh, no. Good guy.
John C. Grady was with him.
They served together in World War II. John C. Grady was the historian for the 82nd Airborne and had a letter from it and everything, yeah.
Yeah. So, anyway.
Good guy. I'll just ask you a question.
What was Johnny Lalo doing while What was that?
What was Gary Marlow doing on 10th Street?
On 10th Street? That's where he just happened to run into Tippett.
He was going to kill Oswald.
He went to kill Oswald. Sam Giancana sent him to kill Oswald.
There were two people sent to kill Oswald.
That's right. Yeah, but they didn't know.
Sam didn't know about the other what?
Tibbet was sent to kill Oswald No, no, he just ran into Gary Milo He didn't run into the other guy.
They were both sent to kill Oswald, but they didn't know.
Gary and the Raven had parked his car.
It's just a little ways from Oswald's boarding house.
Oh, I see what you're saying. They bumped into each other.
He got out of the car. He left his car there because he didn't want to drive his car up in front of the boarding house.
Shoot somebody, walk out and get in his car and drive away.
So that's 0.9 of the mile.
Pardon me? That's 0.9 of the mile.
Correct. But basically when Marlow ran into Tippett, Tippett got out to shake his hand because they were good friends.
My friend, Artis Menzel, my husband, Bill, was supposed to be on that beat, and he got called to a wreck, and he was typically all there, and watched Marina, Jimmy, and Rachel, but when he got there, there was no wreck, but by then, they had already dispatched Tippett to Pender Pat.
No matter that. All right.
President Kennedy. You want me to just read through this stuff?
You can just read through it, yeah. All right.
The Mafia elected JFK, 1960.
You know, there were a bunch of Get him in.
That was a mafia deal with his dad, Joe Kennedy.
JFK refused to back the CIA on the Bay of Pigs.
We told you about the...
It's never really, I don't think, been released.
That's probably one of the secrets we're releasing today.
The CIA assassinated the British general against JFK's orders and threatened...
JFK threatened to splinter the CIA into a thousand pieces.
Then he fired the three officials, Dulles, Bissell, and General Cabell.
He ordered the troops out of Vietnam.
His brother, Robert, attacked organized crime.
They were going to dissolve the Federal Reserve.
I think they had these new notes.
They were called Red It was popular in New York about it.
And that was considered some of the most top secret information that could be released.
That's why Maryland's a broke guy killed.
JFK found, and he was the kangaroo court, you know, he was found guilty for high treason.
That's Operation Zipper.
Right. You know, Gordon's going to talk about it.
We're running late, but we're, we've only got 10 more slides and go pretty quick.
You know, one thing I want to say about this, I always saw it now.
The people here that watch Newsmax, You may have seen the show, they've been running it pretty regular on TV, Who Killed Kennedy?
And they've got my mug shot under the same picture that's on the book there.
It's the one they used on Newsmax.
And then they said, after I went through several things, the FBI had deemed me non-credible.
They said they had reached out and talked.
Some of the guys had contacted them and they said they worked with me as an advisor in Vietnam.
And they say after the Bay of Pigs, they developed a great dislike for John F. Kennedy and this Routon Newsmax television.
They've been running this show every so often.
Somebody printed up, wanted for treason, little leaflets that were distributed and posters that were put up in Dallas right before the assassination.
I don't know who did it. I've heard a couple different stories about who they claimed to do it.
John C. Grady.
John C. Grady, great guy.
He was a historian for the 82nd Airborne.
He'd come to Statesville, I think it was three times he'd come there, and sit and talk with me and study.
He went and looked for my records.
He found part of my records in the archives of St.
Louis. And there's just a little bit there, and he got down what he could out of it.
And then he went back, oh, six, eight weeks later, and the folder was empty, and his note was on it, no further information available.
Alright, Zach Shelton.
Zach Shelton. He is an FBI agent.
He was the one that busted me on my hijacking ring because I was running a hijacking ring out of Chicago for his dollar.
Alright, Lee Harvey Oswald.
He was Marine Intelligence. He was an asset with the FBI and the CIA. He spent five days with James.
We've already talked about him escorting you around, I guess.
Want to go into any more of that?
Okay. He was targeted by Tibbett and Gary the Raven Marlowe.
Both were trying to kill him, we believe.
And Gary and Tibbett ran into each other and Gary shot Tibbett.
And it's just a freak situation, really.
And in the film, one of the pictures, one of the witnesses described, they shot Tibbett, had a black wavy hair.
We also have brown pen here.
All right, so Jack Ruby, you want to talk about him some?
No, I'd stay about him.
Okay. He had trouble in Chicago and got sent to Texas.
Now, there's somebody in this audience named Charles Billups, and this would be a perfect time for you to say about Two or three sentences about what this picture shows.
And especially that police officer's left hand.
Tell us, Charles, what he told you.
I talked to that guy at the appointment.
Speak up. James LaValle.
I talked to... I talked to...
I'm a detective, Jim LaValle, before he passed.
LaValle passed three years ago in a nursery home.
He trained me a while.
I asked him this question.
I said, you holding Oswald in the pants?
I said, why won't you reach around and get the gun?
He said, don't be an asshole.
It's not designed for me to save his life.
I'm holding him still so we can take it.
He's ready to talk.
I'm going to shut him up.
That's what he told me.
There you go. So Lavelle is holding him up straight, so he knew Deruby was going to shoot him.
There's a lot of secrets in this briefing right here.
All right, David Attlee Phillips.
You got anything to say about him?
Yeah, he's a real nice guy.
Always in assignment with me.
We did everything up.
I called him every morning, except when I was on assignment board.
I'd call him at He'd answer the phone.
I'd call the service number, give him my code.
They would pass that call and no matter where David Adley folks was at in the world, they would reach him on the phone and answer the phone.
He'd say hello. I'd say hello and he'd say, hey, it's a nice day.
It's a good day. Enjoy the day.
Take the day off. And we'd never say anything about, you know, contracts such as that.
And if I had to be somewhere in a hurry, he would say, go to the airport.
Your ticket is waiting for you, you know.
When you made the phone call, where did that first phone call go to?
Went to Langley. From Langley, then it was transferred into him, and I would talk to him, and like I said, he would tell me, take the day off or go get my ticket at the airport.
I would go to the plane, get on it, and there'd usually be somebody on the plane that would give me a portfolio, and the job that they wanted done, they would give me the portfolio, and I'd just take it, put it over to the side of me, and we wouldn't discuss things on the plane.
He didn't want people to hear it.
And I'd get up to find wherever it was going, and then I'd go to get a motel room, and I'd study the portfolio.
And once I had everything packed inside my brain, I used to be storing the portfolio so there'd be no evidence lying around.
He called him after you shot Kennedy?
David L. Phillips was in town.
He was at the Texas Theater.
I was always to meet him if things went wrong.
I was to meet him, and they'd play him.
I never let nobody go.
Figure out my extraction plans.
I make my own plans.
I just don't trust people. But I learned.
He's already talked about the payment out.
Brief files 10 days later.
If you want to repeat that.
Okay. I met David Fulks at Midway Airport in Chicago.
And Midway's just like basically, you know, Sister Avenue is the main fraction of it.
But as you turn to the right, go up to 63rd and Lawler, there's a gate there, and we had a hangar there that was especially for the CIA. And that's where I gave my briefing to David Phillips.
And then when David Phillips first learned about the mercury and the round that I used, and shortly thereafter, he was, matter of fact, Phillips was shocked when he found out.
Then he called it The brain got lost or went missing.
About a week after, a couple weeks after that.
And I was told also that Kennedy with Jeff Geek, he hadn't been buried yet, but I was told that he was going to be buried with him.
Mercury in it would be buried at sea.
How about this weapon?
Where'd you get the one you had?
I got that one from David Alley Post. He got a thousand fireballs.
$500 was made for the FBI. $500 was made for the CIA. And at that time, they'd gone on the market, but it hadn't been on the market yet.
But when it went up for sale, it was valued at $99.
That's what they sold for, retail.
And it's no telling where they went to, because if the agency wanted them to build that weapon and they designed it, Remington's not going to build But if you're going to get Remi to do a production run, you'd probably have to have at least a thousand built and pay them a cup in advance.
And then they sold 5,000 to the public, or there were not 4,000 of the 5,000 went to the public in 63, the first year.
And about every year after that, I have a list of the serial numbers of every one that was made.
And I know the year they're made and all that kind of stuff.
Phillips told you that they put him in the sea at that meeting?
No, not then.
I said... He told me, I told him that, I said that mercury, see mercury never goes away.
So they knew they couldn't bury the body.
That's what he said, they'll bury him at sea.
Maybe this would be a good time to let everybody know what happened to your firewall and the rest of the mercury.
I had a short federal term I had to go do and while I was doing that short federal event, matter of fact I was Trucking cars over our cars in El Paso and sending them into Mexico.
That's what I got time for.
Went with my wife's aunt and uncle and left a brief piece there and they put it under the bed and they went out and their nephew found the brief piece.
He broke into the house that day looking for something he could sell or pawn to go buy drugs with.
He's walking around Round Lake Beach, Illinois.
He's shooting birds out of a tree with a mercury round.
He's blowing tree branches off of the tree.
He got arrested. They took the gun.
They confiscated it.
He had to go to trial.
They wanted to know where he got to come.
And he said, I've been told.
He said, I don't know for sure.
He said, it belongs to somebody in their family.
Family member is doing time now.
He said, he's a mafia hitman.
And so the cops really got all excited about it.
They even wanted to talk to me later on.
I refused to talk to them about it.
But when I gave my first interview, which was a confession of assassin, I talked about it.
About 50 FBAs, they landed in Round Lake Beach, Illinois, Round Lake Park, Round Lake, Illinois, Round Lake Heights, some of the Round Lake, some of the other.
Anyway, they was looking for the fireball.
They found a written report where the fireball had been, and it had been in possession of the 40th custody, but the fireball wasn't there.
So evidently, the officer running the evidence room, the evidence locker, when he retired, he took the gun home with him.
When he found out the FBI was looking all over for that gun, he panicked, and it's probably in the bottom of some lake up there, because he would lose his pension, and he would go to jail probably for stealing out of the evidence locker.
Alright, let's go on to Ed Lansdale.
And the bullets. The rest of the bullets.
The rest of the bullets. Those are the ones that kid had been using to shoot birds out of trees.
He only had five of them.
Ed Lansdale. Ed Lansdale.
Ed Lansdale, I met him.
I've been to Scotland, an Air Force base there.
And the only thing I met at that time was training manuals and things like that for weapons.
I'm sitting on the floor, back against the wall, and somebody walked up and kicked my foot, and I'm ready to get up and take somebody apart.
And I look up, and here's this guy in uniform with all this salad on his flowers.
So I got him saluting.
And he said, I hear you're a cowboy.
And I said, you might say that.
Back then, they called a lot of the agent guys.
The agency got filled out for these cowboys.
And we'd wear like cowboy boots of diamonds in the hats and everything, you know.
I think if people wouldn't know who we were.
So, he took me over to the supply room, got me an Air Force captain's uniform, and we were working out to the planes.
We were taking two planes from the Air Force that day.
He was going to fly one, I was going to fly the other one.
We got on most of the planes, and he turned around and said, you can't fly, can't you?
And that was the first time I'd ever met Lansdale.
And I said, now's a hell of a time to ask me.
So, after that, Lansdale and me got along really great, and I pulled several operations for him, and two of them, like I said, It's a fireball under assassination and it had the two marks on it before I ever got to put Kennedy on it.
I don't want to leave this too much because you lived for a while doing an operation and you lived in a base in Texas.
I won't get into that.
Governor Ann Richards was a great woman, I will say that.
Because I was the one that put her into power in a way.
She had a couple of problems that wouldn't go away.
I made them go away. The next couple of slides I'm going to skim through really quickly because we're running really late.
But this is Ed Lansdale with the red arrow pointing at me.
He's walking past the three trams saying, like, you know, good job, guys.
And I don't know who these two police officers were, but if the people that they're leading are not handcuffed, He's walking just like, not even paying attention to them.
He's in front of them with a shotgun, like he's going quail hunting or something.
And the guy behind him has got it like at Port Arms holding, you know.
They never were arrested.
There's no record of any briefings of them, or even what their names were.
They were in the boxcar.
They escorted them away from the area so they could leave.
The other thing too, remember the assassination was at 1230, and look how long the shadows are.
This happened much later.
This wasn't right after the assassination.
See how long the shadows are?
The shadows at 1230 would have been straight above.
But the front guy is Charles Rogers.
Tell them about Charles. Charles Rogers, I don't know if anyone knows about him, read about him or anything else, but he was a complete nut job.
And after the assassination, he actually killed his mother and father, cut him up and put him in the freezer.
It's considered an unsolved murder now, but it's called the Icebox Murders, if you want to look it up.
But his dad had forged paperwork and borrowed a bunch of money on his house and cheated him out of some money.
But also, it's rumored that his parents found out that he was involved in the JFK assassination in some role, that he was there, and he killed him to shut him up.
Also, your smallest tramp there was Chauncey Holt.
He was the one that worked for the mob, bookkeeper.
He also worked for the CIA, and he's the one that ran the floating press.
A floating press is what we might have six IDs here.
Maybe there's three of us out in the field in different parts of the world working, but each one of us is using that ID. And if somebody accuses somebody of so-and-so, oh no, Iron Man was here to take the other guy, and they would say he was in this other country.
He couldn't have been there. This is where we think some of the rumors that Lee Harvey Oswald had doubles.
You know what I mean? Where this came from.
And from a profile, Chauncey Holt looks a lot like Roy Rogers.
Okay, Tosh Plumlee.
Tosh Plumlee. One more thing, too, about Chauncey Holt.
A lot of people, everybody I just know who Bugsy Siegel was.
He built the Flamingo in Vegas to get his circuit.
He's also the guy that took up Bugsy Siegel.
Yeah, Chuncey Holt took up Bugsy Siegel.
Tosh Plumbly. He's a good pilot.
Not as good as Barry Shield, but he was good.
I like Barry. I like Chuncey, or what's the name?
I like Tosh.
Good guy, but sometimes he would drink a little too much and he'd talk a little too much about things that shouldn't be talked about.
The old saying, let sleeping dogs lie.
What did the abort team?
Tell them about the abort team.
The abort team was there only for one reason, to make the CIA look good.
If the head goes bad on Kennedy, then the, I was going to meet David Ailey Brooks at the Texas Theater.
It goes good if we get out of town.
But they weren't there to abort anything.
No, they weren't there to abort anything.
They were there only if needed to do it.
Then they could claim they were heroes.
stay safe in these life if we didn't get the job done.
All right, oops, skip the slide.
This is the most important guy probably, come on Jimbo.
George Herbert Walker Bush.
Thank you.
I like George Herbert Bush, one of us out in the field.
I liked him at the point of where he was director of the CIA and all that.
And he'd come out and he shook everybody's hand and told a group of us, if you need anything at all, no matter where you are, if it could be moved by an airplane, you will have it in 48 hours.
I guarantee you that.
And George Bush never let us down.
How he was as a president, I won't say.
I don't know if he was good or bad, but to supply us in the back, this in the building, to have our backs, he was always there.
You've already mentioned this, but there's the pictures up here with you leaning against the school book depository.
I can't see that one too good.
It's all the way on the other side.
That was me imitating George Bush leaning up against the school book depository.
That's the position George Bush had the day I walked out of Dealey Plaza.
He walked around to the getaway car.
He walked right past George and that's what he was doing.
That's the position he was in.
And the other picture, this picture, this was taken at Dealey Plaza.
And you can see the picture of him taken later in life.
It's pretty obvious that it's All right, Alan Dulles.
I've got nothing to say about him.
Okay. Director of the CIA. He was also ran United Fruit.
United Fruit was a cover company for the CIA. That's, I guess, where we got all our banana wars from.
He was a lawyer for Sullivan and Cromwell.
A lot of his clients were Different interests in foreign countries and things like that.
Early on, he was in Operation Ajax.
That was the coup in Iran.
He was in Operation PB Success.
It was a coup in Guatemala.
He funded the mercenary Armavia, United Fruit.
And how many total mercenaries at the peak do you think United Fruit had?
Between the agencies, they were part of the agency.
But amongst all the parties put together, You could raise 10,000 mercenaries one night and have them on the ground the next day.
All right. The big thing about the reason he got fired by John F. Kennedy was he lied to him about several things, but one was the dilemma he put him in over the Bay of Pigs.
But the other big one was they were asked by the British intelligence to kill a Try a popular British general or an important guy in their press or whatever.
So they decided the easy way was to get rid of him.
Well, Allen Dulles told them not to do it, but the team did it anyway.
We went around and got the job done.
So the bottom line was, and also Alan Dulles was at the farm in from the 22nd to the 25th of November. That's Camp Perry right outside Williamsburg, Virginia. I don't live too far from there. But it's just a, it's a, it's a training facility. You can look at it on Google Earth. They've got a bunch of racetracks there and they've got a bunch of mock-ups that they use for training.
They've got another facility in North Carolina that's similar.
But he was there during the Kennedy assassination event at Camp Perry.
That's a CIA facility.
But he had been fired like two years earlier.
He wasn't in the CIA anymore.
How in the world is he at Camp Perry?
But he was appointed as one of the key members for the Warren Commission, which is really the cover-up, right?
Did he go to Oxford University?
What? Did he go to Oxford University?
I don't know where he went to school.
I know, I think one of his first assignments was like Switzerland, and he was really renowned for, he was kind of a woman, ladies' man, so to speak.
Apparently he had like a hundred affairs or something like that.
One other thing I'd like to say, Charles Nicoletti was killed at the Golden Orange March 29th, 19 to 77.
That night, earlier that morning, they killed George Smith right here in Dallas.
The Morning Shield? Yeah, the Morning Shield.
He was killed the same day.
Same day. One of the other people that was fired by President Kennedy was an Air Force General named Charles Cavill.
And he was kind of linked to misleading Kennedy over.
He was kind of like the head guy with involved with the bad pig stuff at the JCS, Joint Chiefs of Staff, all right?
And guess who his brother was?
The mayor of Dallas, Texas.
Who changed the route from going straight down Main Street to the luncheon they were going to to make the turn to go on Houston and Mayor Earl Campbell?
Secret Service agent Lawton.
Let me cover this one.
And this is real quick.
I don't know if Gordon's going to talk about it, but three times, this is on video, this guy was one of the new agents.
About 30% or so of the US presidential detail was changed.
They were transferred to other offices before, you know, a while before the Kennedy assassination The regular driver...
Dory left.
I forget the name that he told me already.
But the regular driver that was going to drive the Kennedy limo in Dallas was apparently backed out of the deal.
And he was killed at Camp David about a month before the assassination.
But they put in the guy, his name was Greer, and he was not a Secret Service agent.
He was a Secret Service uniform division chauffeur, and he ran stuff.
He would go get errands. He'd pick up food and stuff like that for the White House kitchen.
And on a few occasions, he drove the president around Washington, D.C. on little short trips and stuff like that.
But he was not a gun carrier.
There's this rumor out there that he turned around and the chauffeur killed him and all that, but it's baloney.
Okay, the mayor, the Warren Commission.
Can you comment real quickly on a lot and what he's set up with or when he died?
Are you talking about a lot of the Secret Service thing?
They drove off and left him there.
What's the deal? He thought that he was going to be riding on the President's limo, but nobody was.
I don't know what his statement was.
Look, when you work for the government and you sign the NDAs about not talking about stuff, when you write a book And I did some stuff for government agencies in the Persian Gulf in 1987.
I flew missions that, and I didn't even know how much I was hanging out when I was flying these missions.
But, you know, we did intelligence collection missions on the border of Iran during Operation Prime Chance.
And we captured an Iranian-Milane ship.
And we were blowing up their oil rigs and doing all kinds of stuff.
But if it's something at the time that would jeopardize American, you know, national security, you just don't talk about it.
Surprise, right? This is a slide that just shows that riding in a convertible limo wasn't really a new thing.
It had been done before. Everybody thinks about, hey, why did they take the top off the thing?
You know, gosh, that's never happened before.
But presidents have ridden in open vehicles before.
Kennedy actually did it in San Diego in June of 1963 in the same Lincoln.
J. Edgar Hoover, you want to talk about him?
No, nothing to say about him.
Hoover State was, he was tied up with the mob.
He publicly said there was no such thing as organized crime in America, not under his FBI. But he vacationed twice a year on the mob's money.
He helped plan Operation Zipper, the CIA plan to kill Kennedy he was involved with.
But he actually had to talk to Lyndon Johnson more than one occasion and explain to Johnson, no, we're not gonna kill you too.
Johnson was petrified he was gonna be shot the same day.
Right after the assassination, Lyndon Johnson just happened to have a federal judge waiting in the airplane to swear him in.
Okay, well, he got sworn in.
Shortly after that, he appointed J. Edgar Hoover, the director of the FBI, for life.
That's never been done before or since.
Hoover was supposedly poisoned to death.
He was one of the ones, like Port Doss, that I think it's his official thing, says he died of a heart attack or something.
Lyndon Johnson. As far as I'm concerned, he wasn't too bright.
And then he was his hitman, Mack Wallace.
This is where Mack comes into play.
There's a little bit of speculation here, but go ahead.
Mack, he just didn't think things.
He would be told to do something, and he would do it.
You could have a little narrow walkway, a six-floor building, and tell him to go get something off of it, and he'd walk at them.
He did not even think about it.
But Mack didn't think things out.
And I won't get into all the details, but one of the LBJ's pilots that flew around was doing a lot of talking.
And he told Mike Wallace to get rid of the guy.
Johnson told him. Yeah, Johnson, yeah.
And LBJ, yeah.
And anyway, so I'm doing a little work down here in Texas for the outfit for organized crime.
And I get a call.
I got to go out to a certain ranch, pick things up, clean it up.
And when I got there, I looked at my call and asked him what happened.
I'd already talked to the LBJ. And he said, I told Mac to shoot the plank, plank, plank, so-and-so, and said, you see the mess I'm in?
And so I walked over and I told Mac, I said, what the hell are you doing?
I said, why didn't you have the pilot fly the plane to another place and land it?
Mac could not fly. He wasn't a pilot.
And he said, I was told to get rid of him.
And I just shook my head.
He shot the pilot before he got it off the ranch.
That's why I've got not much to say about Mike Wallace, except he makes a box of rocks look smart.
Jim, who's the guy in the background that I'm just winking at?
He had to go to court. He had something like 17 or 18 court dates, I guess.
And he had made a deal with the judges that give Barry's, you know, halfway housing, you know, attorney books, let him go.
And the judge and, uh, Because he had to refuse to.
And he said, no.
He said, this man is going to the halfway house.
So they told him, you're giving the man a death sentence if you put him in the halfway house.
People want to kill him.
And the judge says, that's his problem.
That's not my problem. He's going to the halfway house.
They put Barry in the halfway house.
Barry was still there as he pulled in and parked in the halfway house.
And that's the film that they showed on 60 Minutes.
Where he took over 100 rounds in the Cadillac.
And I couldn't figure out, they should have had enough power to walk him out of there.
At times, I think they actually wanted very soon because he knew too much and he had already testified in all these different courts and they tried to help him out and he didn't get up on it.
And so the best thing was probably to kill him.
One of the C-123s was shot down by a Russian-made servant.
You might remember that if you don't.
One of my classmates from the Citadel, Basel Bas, who spent many years with the CIA. He runs the Association for the Recovery of Children right now.
Great guy. He was a Marine officer with me, and then he served in Gitmo.
Anyway, he was down there with Gene on this operation with the agency.
And after Gene got shot down, his mother used to mail him packages with food and stuff like romaine noodles and all that stuff.
And Boz told me that they ate all of Gene's food after he was shot down.
And then he was freed not long after they negotiated and got him loose.
Gene was released and all that, but he told them right when he got shot down.
He was supposed to keep his mouth shut. And this is pretty well-known history.
Ollie North was down there at the time and all of that.
While Jim's taking a bathroom break, I'll go ahead and keep going.
This is Porter Goss. He was one of the guys in the Operation 40.
The point about this is he was an Operation 40 member.
It was an unusual situation.
There was a number of people around 1971-72 that were poisoned.
Porter Goss was one of them.
J Edgar Hoover was one of them, but he died.
What was it by who?
I couldn't say.
But, uh, he, they, whoever it was, they thought maybe he was, they were trying to silence certain people.
But J. Edgar Hoover, I think they said that he...
I forget the official story of how he died.
Heart attack. Yeah, heart attack or whatever.
But he supposedly was poisoned.
Porter was the mayor of He became the director of the CIA. And then I think, I'm not sure how long he was the director, but it wasn't long.
Let's see, it says he was a congressman in Florida from 89 to 2004, and he was the 19th DCI. So two years, only two years, but something came out that he was part of Operation 40 or that And then he was hired for like millions of dollars to be a lobbyist for Turkey.
Frank Sturgis, famous paramilitary officer, he was present on the Dealey Plaza on the Grassy Knoll.
He was arrested later.
He was one of the Watergate burglars.
And James, like you said, he knew that the first team that went into the Watergate was gonna be arrested.
And then the second team in went in and did what they needed to do.
I don't understand that, cuz if you can get in there, I don't know why you would just go in and do it and leave.
But it had something to do with getting Richard Nixon thrown out of office.
It was a soft coup, kind of like the Russia thing against Trump.
Why was it intentional to arrest the first two?
Well, if you've got the plumbers from the White House staff are arrested stealing stuff from The thing was, Nixon was pushing the CIA to tell you what we're telling you today.
You see what I'm saying? I tried to get this public when I was a stage trooper in 1999.
You know, some synodal graduate who served in the Marines as a pilot and then became a Virginia State trooper after I served in Iraq and realized, I said, well, we're going back and it'll probably last 10 or 20 years and I don't want to be part of it.
You know, so I just quit.
I mean, I had a great career going and I just said, I'm not doing this anymore.
I'm not gonna be part of this whole game.
And I said, maybe I could serve society as a state trooper and protect property, protect lives instead of blowing stuff up and killing people.
That's my art, I'm a sheepdog, if you know what that means.
All right, so Frank was an Italian, not a Cuban.
His real name was Frank Angelo Fiorini.
Supposedly he had links with the mob, but he was a big security advisor.
He worked with Fidel Castro.
There's a picture of him sitting with Fidel Castro in Cuba.
The CIA recruited him because he had those close connections, and he became a paramilitary guy for the CIA, and he was involved in the Bay of Pigs and eventually was arrested at Watergate.
He got interviewed by Geraldo Rivera on TV years ago, and Geraldo asked him, were you at Dealey Plaza with JFK? They say that you're linked to that.
And he said, no, I was at home, and I can prove that.
But it's a lie. He was here at Dealey Plaza.
What was his role? A bunch of the Cubans were here.
E. Howard Hunt was here.
Who? E. Howard Hunt.
Yeah, E. Howard Hunt was here.
E. Howard Hunt, he was a very senior, very famous guy.
A lot of people identify Chauncey Holt, the third guy of the three tramps.
A lot of people say he's E. Howard Hunt.
He's not. He was there, but he was involved in a lot of CIA operations that involved coups.
They're planning the assassination of John F. Kennedy.
He was one of the Nixon's plumbers and was arrested at Watergate and was part of the plan to throw Nixon out of office.
One of the things they did was his wife, Dorothy, and another woman, James can tell you who this was, is the agency decided they knew they had her phone tapped, but they also had the pay phone that was near her home tapped, and she was communicating with a woman And E. Howard Hunt,
when they left him in prison, left him hanging in prison after the Watergate thing, he had a briefcase full of dirt on the CIA. Just like Robert Crowley saved the Operation Zipper letters and released those to somebody after he died.
But E. Howard Hunt had stuff that he was going to use in case they ever left him hanging.
And his wife worked for the CIA too.
And he told Dorothy on the phone, bring the black briefcase to Chicago and you need to take it to so-and-so.
And the switch was going to be, there were identical black briefcases.
She was going to sit next to the other woman that had the other briefcase and they were going to put it in the luggage or carry-on.
And then when they got off, they were going to switch the bags and get off.
Well, the agency put bladders in the fuel tanks of that airplane.
It was United Airlines Flight 553.
When you inflate a bladder inside a fuel tank, the fuel gauge will read that the tank is full, but it's not.
And on short final to Chicago, that airplane ran out of fuel and crashed.
It killed almost everybody on board except for one CIA guy that was in the back of the plane that Jimmy, I forget his, he'll tell you the guy's real name, but they called him Look online, the 1953 CIA Assassination Manual.
It says the easiest way to kill somebody, bump them on the head, they're unconscious.
You throw them out of a high window, you know, and onto concrete, not into water, not off a bridge.
It specifically says it. But just look it up.
1953 CIA Assassination Mail.
Above 75 feet, you wound them.
And then when they hit head first, The concrete covers up the wound that you made when you hit him in the head, right?
So, Frank Hansen, the guy in the MKUltra program, they threw him out of a hotel in New York and killed him.
The biggest one, though, was the member of the Majestic 12, Admiral Forrestal.
He was taken into custody and taken to whatever it is, the 12th floor or whatever.
We talked to him. They said he'd gone mad and all that, but he wanted to make the alien stuff and the Roswell stuff public about Majestic Dwell.
And they just banged him on the head and threw him at the window and killed him.
Antonio Viciano, he was one of the Cuban exiles and a CIA mercenary that was part of the Bay of Pigs operation.
Jimmy did a bunch of operations with him.
They had a thing called Alpha 66 and David Atley filled Lee Harvey Oswald's controller.
He used the alias Maurice Bishop.
That was one of his aliases.
And they had two plots to kill Castro.
I mean, he'd done some things with Lee Harvey Oswald and Phillips, and he was one of the Cuban exiles that was in Dealey Plaza that Jimmy talked about.
He said it was like old home week.
He was also an employee.
United Fruit. Bob Dylan was friends with George Kalora, Wolfman.
After he hadn't put a song out in 20 years, after George Kalora died and other years passed, Bob Dylan wrote a song called Murder Most Foul.
You need to go on YouTube and listen to it.
It's got a bunch of coded information about the JFK assassination.
Right after the assassination, I was already back at the Lamplighter Motel.
And, uh, Mesquite, right?
Mesquite, in Mesquite, Texas.
And somebody knocked on the door, and I opened the door, and I looked, and I saw him there.
And I said, what the hell are you doing here?
And he says, I come to give you this right.
The raven always in the habit of giving me his weapons that he had used, and I'd give him to Wolfman, and Wolfman would recondition him, change the burrows, whatever had to be done.
He says, there's no sense throwing away a good weapon when I can change it, alter it, and they can never tie it to a crime.
I said, okay. I'd always take the weapons back to Wolfman.
So the raven brought me his that morning to get there.
I said, I don't want it. You tell me you just burned a cop and you're going to give me the weapon?
You get rid of it. I don't want it in my possession.
I got enough problems.
And so that's the only time I see me.
I didn't even let the raven in the room.
Tell me what he did.
Which one? Tippett.
Oh, Tippett. Oh, raven is the one that killed Tippett.
Where the sign is. My wife, she had a picture of the raven.
She's got it handy now.
He was the one that shot and killed Tippett.
Tell him the story why it happened.
Tippett was killed for the simple reason.
He come to the Bay of Pigs.
He worked down there in the military.
He worked with intelligence.
When he got through there, he was a thaliscope.
He's still a cop. Now that we're taking, we used him on the Bay of Pigs.
This is a picture of the Raven right here.
Anyway, the Raven knew J.D. Tippett.
They used to go out and have a few drinks together, did a few things together, and they became pretty good friends.
Well, the Raven's order was not to let anybody know you've been in Dallas.
You see anybody recognize them, you know what you've got to do.
So, Tibbett never pulled his gun when he got out of the car.
But when the Raven guy walked over to him, he just shot him at four blanks right there.
And even though it was a friend, it was something that he had to do because he wasn't supposed to be recognized as being in Dallas that day.
He was there strictly for work for cleanup, in case there was something that had to be done.
And so Sam had sent Raven in his cleanup.
Not the CIA, but Sam Giancana himself.
Tell them specifically what Gary told you at the hotel when he came in and told you what he'd done.
No, he said he burned a cop.
He didn't know who he was.
Well, he knew who he was. Yeah, he knew who he was.
He had to burn a cop. He didn't go into any long details about it.
He just said, I had to burn a cop.
And that's when he offered me the weapon.
But he didn't want to stay there any longer than I wanted him there.
They did not want us to be together there.
But the Raven knew Tippett.
Yeah, they knew Tippett. Like I said, they were good friends in Florida.
They had a few beers together.
They had dinner together.
It's just natural. You want for somebody, you make a friend.
Operation 40. This photograph at the Hotel Luma.
This is important. Alright, so in the 22nd of January 1963, there was this meeting.
This is a hotel. There is a Hotel La Luna that's not the same one.
Not 1963. That's what the photo in the online says.
When was it? Late 62.
62. Okay, so there's the eyewitness.
Online it says that picture was taken.
Excuse me, one reason.
The reason I'm going to carry it up is this.
November 22, 1963.
That was right here in Dallas. No, no.
22nd of January. Did I say November?
I thought you said November. No, no, no.
January. Okay. That would be correct.
Online, it says that this occurred the 22nd of January, 63.
I don't have any idea.
I was five years old. All right.
So, he was recruited into Operation 40 by George H.W. Bush.
Where did that occur?
That occurred on a country down there.
In Louisiana.
That's where they had the base that trained the Bay of Pigs guys.
They had the big raid and they went to there and they trained there.
We had the armory close to us there and we had an easier way in and out.
Let me ask you a question. Do you want to talk about that?
The photo we made there was a deuce and a half in the back of it.
I think there was about 16 of us in there.
And it showed pictures clearly.
We went there with training, come out of a deuce and a half, take security on the perimeter.
The people that jumped out, that's just George Bush himself, that time he was there.
I jumped out.
Seymour jumped out. Hershey, he jumped out.
Seymour jumped out. And me, Harvey Oswald.
And quite a few of the people jumped out.
Jerry Hemingway, Jerry Hemings, he jumped out.
He was also one of the mercenaries with us.
Good guy. And every one of us, he jumped out of the truck, hit the ground, come up, grown.
We got the rifle at the security, and our head's facing this way, back at the TV camera.
So this video was in the possession of the First team was betrayed.
And six of the seven guys that were arrested and tried were all CIA guys, including Frank Sturgis and everything.
Can you say anything about sitting in the car?
First of all, it broke my heart to betray Frank Sturgis and not say a word and had him set up to be trapped and go to jail.
I didn't like that. There's one part I didn't like, but I couldn't say nothing.
Tell them who you were sitting in the car with.
Who betrayed him? Who betrayed him?
I betrayed Frank Sturgis because I couldn't tell what was happening, that they were being used and being set up as a team who was going to be arrested.
But they were the first team in.
Barry Seals, I'm in the car with him.
He asked me, was I going in with the second thing?
And I said, not unless you want somebody shot, I said, no burden.
If you want me to shoot somebody, I go in.
Anyway, the second team went in.
They were the ones that taped the lock on the doorlight, so security could see it.
And he got the second. The first team was trapped.
The second team got in and out, got the tape back, and we was clear.
The second team, and on the subject of the tape, Barry Seals, the night he was killed in his Cadillac at Van Roos, it was only even on 60 Minutes.
They parted into it over 100 times, I guess.
But when Barry saw the hit team coming, he just laid his head down on the steering wheel, and they just shot the hell out of it.
Next of all, with that tank, it was in Barry Seale's trunk that night, and whoever it was that was doing the shooting that went there, he got the tape back.
So he lost the tape again.
And ours was the third or fourth time the tape had been stolen.
That was the last I've heard of it.
And nothing such. This is another coup.
This is how they threw Nixon out.
This was a tape that they could use for blackmail on people in Congress.
Like George Bush.
George Bush is the one that needed that tape.
George Bush wound up becoming the president.
Do we know who else is in the photo?
Pardon me? Who else is in the photo?
Yeah, I'll show you a couple of them.
Seymour Hersh? I think that looks like Posh Plumlee.
He said they Mary Seal, the CIA pilot.
Future DCI, Director of Central Intelligence, Porter Goss.
Any other two? I don't think you remember those.
They're Cubans, right? No, I don't remember all of them.
So anyway, and this is going to be a point at the end, but I'll go ahead and make it.
People say, why should we believe James Files?
Well, if he's with Operation 40, before the Kennedy assassination, with guys that became the Director of Central Intelligence, and in another picture I'm going to show you, he was with the team that killed Che Guevara in Bolivia.
If you can't believe who he is or any of this story, I mean, is anybody willing to stand up in this room right now and say, you think he's making this up?
You know what I mean? This man's got COPD and he's dying.
This is really a miracle.
You're listening to a deathbed confession, really.
He's already said right now in this room, I probably won't be here next year.
I said I won't be here next year.
Well, I mean, I hope you're still alive though.
Where was this picture taken?
What? Where was this picture taken?
The hotel boomer in Mexico City.
E. Howard Hunt was the chief of station for the CIA in Mexico City at the time.
We're good to that. Okay. Yeah.
But if you... Go ahead.
Did June's qualify again why it was count?
It was just like a freak accident.
Gary Marlow knew him.
They were friends. They were drinking buddies.
But Sam Giancana had told him, nobody is supposed to know you're in Dallas.
Here's what you didn't tell him.
Marlow was supposed to kill Tippett.
Okay, yeah, you're missing that point.
He was sent, Tibbet was sent by Sam Giancana, not the CIA, but by the mob.
You mean Marlowe? Yeah, I'm sorry.
Gary Marlowe was sent by Sam Giancana to kill Officer...
No. Lee Harvey Oswald.
I'm sorry. So when he goes to kill Lee Harvey Oswald, he's been told that Lee is going to go to his house, get his pistol, and walk to the booth theater.
And he's going to kill him while he's walking, right?
Well, apparently, I don't know if it was a coincidence that Tippett was sent, but maybe the Dallas police...
He was just driving a bike.
Yeah, but I wonder if maybe he was sent.
It's awful coincidental that he was on the same route.
Maybe the Dallas police had sent him and he was going to be the hero.
They had to kill him. You know what I mean?
He's the patsy, right?
But Gary was walking down the street.
Tibbett pulls up and gets out and goes, hey buddy, what the hell are you doing here?
And Gary just draws his gun and kills him because he was not allowed and there was nobody.
And it's a weird environment.
This whole mercenary CIA stuff is...
You know what I mean? If I was one of the teams trying to kill Charles de Gaulle, And you knew me and you walk up on the street and you say, hey Jim, what are you doing here today?
And I look at you and you're some guy I went to high school with.
You know what I mean? You're not supposed to know I was there.
You know what I mean? One of my classmates from the Citadel was undercover in Central America when I was in Honduras.
And I was sent a message and they said, this special forces captain was working.
And if you see him, don't walk up to him and call him.
I was just at his house that long ago.
And I said, you know, they sent me a message and I could call you Russ Wilson, you know, They wanted to close the case in a hurry.
Oswald never shot nobody that day.
Yeah, they wanted to kill him before he got out of the building.
But that's not why Giancana wanted him dead.
No, no. Giancana wanted him dead because it was connected.
Oswald knew that, you know, Jimmy was...
The five-day tour. Yeah, the whole five-day tour before the...
Yeah, but he was a patsy.
They just wanted him dead, and they were going to say, hey, case closed.
All right, very sealed.
I was just about to say everything about him, except they left him where they killed him.
And he still has suitcases buried in me in Arkansas with money in them that they've never found.
People are out there with their metal detectors looking for him.
All right, so they gave me an island stop.
Wolfman was an expert gunsmith for the outfit, and he designed a wooden hand grip for me with the finger grips on it.
And this here is the round I take.
I don't know if everybody can see it or not.
Just start passing around if people want to see it.
You can look online. That's not a.22, it's a.222, but it's the same size as the.221.
The bullet is actually .223 caliber, you know, and it's the same thing that's in a .223 Remington, the 5.56x45, and the M16 round. It's the same, it's a .22 bullet, and they weigh different weights from, you can get them as light as 35 grains, and I own some that are 90 grains.
But this is a pistol that was made by, designed by Wayne Leak at Remington Arms, and it was designed for the CIA as an assassination weapon, actually.
David Atlee Phillips approached Remington and got one of the leaked papers.
There were 13 prototypes made in 1962, and the last serial number is 1013.
After that, about 5,000 of these were made in 1963.
And if you could find a...
This one is a much later one.
It's got about seven.
You'll see them with all kinds of different scopes on them.
High and low-powered. They're best with kind of a low-powered scope.
Jimmy had a three-power scope on his.
And George Kalora, the guy Wolfman...
Put a wooden stock on his.
Tell them how many times you'd use this weapon before and after.
Just general numbers. I used that one for two assassinations in two different countries before Kennedy.
Kennedy was the third one used with it.
Tell them about the debrief of David Atley Phillips.
Okay, first of all, they did find a shell casing from the weapon, the one that I left on the big fence.
Yeah, she's talking about pieces of the bullet, though.
I know. I understand. They found my teeth marks on me.
And they sent it to the forensic lab.
They had it checked. And they said, yes, there was a forensic lab.
Dentation marks. And dentation with teeth marks.
Tell them about your dentures.
But they couldn't prove that it was my teeth because in 1969, we was overran.
And I was on firebase at Branderville.
In Vietnam. And we were fighting for our life when we got overrun.
And I had all of my teeth knocked out.
I don't have a single tooth in my head.
Both upper and lower plates are full plates.
I had three teeth left that they didn't knock out.
But Shackley came up and he ran the operation.
William Ted Shackley ran the Phoenix program in Vietnam.
He come all the way up to the name where I was in the hospital and they screw in my teeth.
The doctor said, you only got three teeth left.
And Shackley says, take them out.
You don't need them for identification.
So they called my last three teeth he took out.
But I had part of my gum and teeth hanging up down the side of my face while I was still fighting.
I had a.45 in my left hand.
I had a machete in my right hand.
And I was going for everything I could get.
There would have been pieces of the mercury and the jacking for the bullet.
Around there, you know, because probably parts of it went out the top of his head, but there would have been mercury in the car.
And my understanding is there's mercury on her dress, and we know we can verify, and I don't know if Barbara's the one, and you might chime in.
Tell them about the wristwatch and the mercury on the wristwatch.
Yeah, it's really, really critical.
Everybody needs to read the book called The Inheritance by Christopher Fulton.
But that's not his real name.
We know that. There's some reason to believe he is Robert Kennedy's illegitimate son.
And he became the owner of the Cartier watch that JFK was wearing on his left wrist in the limousine.
He inherited it.
And it makes sense he would inherit it because the watch originally went Robert Kennedy, and he was Robert Kennedy's illegitimate son.
That explains the title of the book, The Inheritance.
Later, Christopher Fulton, that's not his real name, sold it for about a million dollars to read about that at the end of the book to JFK Jr., who might have been wearing it when he went down in the plane assassination.
Everybody has to read that book.
And the importance of the watch is that it still had mercury on it.
And the Department of Justice over multiple administrations put that man through hell because he would not give up the watch.
He finally gave it to JFK Jr.
So there's mercury is found on JFK's watch, okay?
Now the magic bullet theory, okay, was that a 6.5 millimeter bullet that was fired through the Okay.
There's no mercury in that bullet.
And the one that they said was the one.
It wasn't even damaged. It was fired into a barrel of water so they could recover it and say, oh, it came out of this barrel, right?
So how is mercury on JFK's watch and on Jackie's dress?
They can't fire a high velocity bullet.
Yeah. The car can't.
Mine like her car can't.
Yeah. Yeah. One important part about that, that mercury would be inside the skull.
Jeff Cate was buried at sea.
He's not at Arlington. Next of all, the mercury realm in the brain, the brain went missing just a couple of weeks there after the assassination.
So why? It had mercury in it.
It was saturated with mercury.
But how did they find out about that?
Tell them about it. I gave a debriefing 10 days later after the assassination at Midway Airport.
Midway up where we had a hangar there for the CIA that was located on the side of the airport.
It's 63rd and Lawler.
They're in Chicago. And I gave mighty reason.
We had big old tape machines like that and stuff that David Phillips put it on.
And that was the first time that David Phillips had even heard that I had used a special mercury round.
And he was stunned at that point.
And Because he knew the mercury never goes away.
Mercury is always going to leave its race.
And so that's why the brain went missing.
And then they decided they had to get rid of the body as well.
You were the only person in that, by the picket fence, that was shooting at all?
I was the only one. So there's a photograph of a cloud of smoke that's drifting.
That's from the fireball, right?
We used a different type gunpowder back then.
Also, there was no badge running.
If they saw a piece of white light shining through the tree leaves, they claimed it was a poisonous badge reflected.
Had I seen a man on his knees with a rifle in his hand, as soon as I hit Kennedy, the.45 would have come out and he would have been gone.
He would have been dead less than five seconds of Kennedy.
The beautiful Chevrolet, was that your car?
No, it was Chuck's car. He got that one.
Okay, and you came in that car, but you left?
I left in that car. What car did you come in?
I drove them down here and I brought the weapons.
We had the gun racks behind the top part of the back seat.
We had gun racks where we could place rifles in there, shotguns.
We had compartments under the dashboard.
It was the same car.
Everything was set up on an office.
You drove it from Chicago.
Those were not your cigarette butts by the picket fence, correct?
You got to throw a couple of them down, yeah.
He smoked in 63.
He stopped smoking in 69.
The last drink I had and the last cigarette I had was in Vietnam in 1969.
Okay, so you were smoking behind the picket fence?
No, I was over in the road when you were smoking.
I'm over there smoking one.
I threw it down, put a couple down there.
And like I said, I believe it was in Nashville.
That parking lot was all muddy back then.
I wiped the mud off the bottom of my feet on the bumper.
In the back. Can you tell me, do you have any proof that you were working with at the CIA by?
Payable records? No, I was paid by United Group.
I was paid by United Group.
The CIA does not hurt people to go out and kill and amend them a paycheck.
You were paid by who?
United Group. United Group.
United Group?
United Fruit. United Fruit.
Okay. And one more question.
Do I regret what I did?
No, I don't. I regret the kids had to grow up without a father.
But I don't regret the job that I did.
Why? Because I consider it another job that was well done.
I'm here. Jim. Go ahead.
Three things. First of all, you mentioned about the lady eating her lunch.
Yeah. From where you were standing behind the fence, where would that have been?
She was just behind me and to my left.
So she was still more in the corner?
Well, I'm looking over the fence.
She's in the car, looking over the top of the stairs with the dashboard while eating her sandwich.
But she watched me walk across there, but I was checking to see who was in the parking lot.
I want to know what's around me.
I want to know my environment. So when you walked away, was she still there?
She was still there, but she was down in the middle of the seat looking up.
She saw it happening. She slid down the seat like this, but she watched it.
I have to thank my wife.
It's a picture of it. She just died here about two to three years ago.
You're kidding me. I have never heard that until it's been bad.
This is the lady that was sitting behind the picket fence in her car eating her lunch.
She worked at the Dallas. She's just sitting there eating her lunch and she usually does.
She didn't want to eat in the building and she's in her car.
And she saw James Files take that shot.
You go ahead and explain, Jimmy.
She watched me take the fireball out of the gate, put it up on the fence, and she actually watched me all the way through.
The barring and the execution of John F. Kennedy.
Now then, the Busca lady, who was Beverly Oliver, wonderful lady, great person.
I know her personally. We've had dinner together and everything.
She was 40 feet to the other side of the steps.
And if she was the other side of the steps, you know, she wants to know.
I didn't know her before that.
But prior to that, a couple of years ago, Dallas here, We took a poster over.
It shows, when I got out of prison in 2016, they had me on the big film in the cinema theaters overnight, for one night only.
I shot JFK. I went to give her a folder for I Shot JFK. And I walked over to Pam's third to tell her who I was.
And she said, I know who he is.
And she used to grab me and help me.
And she said, and she told her, she said, I stood right here.
She said, I watched you take that shot.
They tried to make me change my mind.
And they wouldn't print what I wanted to say.
And she said, but I know you're the one.
You shot it. And she is still alive to this tape.
And I was hoping she'd be able to make it this week while we're here.
And I'm still hoping to see her while I'm in Dallas.
What's her name? But this lady's name was Constance Pearl Shea Taylor.
She was born in 1924 and she died in 2016, but she's the one that was sitting in the car right by the fence.
Why have you not been murdered for exposing this?
I got out of prison in 2016 and within that first 30 days there had been three attempts right there made on my life alone.
I've had a car drive by me.
I was on the sidewalk and the car was in the same lane going out.
I saw the gun come out the window.
The only defense I had was I turned it.
I went like that and the bullet bounced right off the brick wall right next to me.
The reason I threw my arm up was to lock the shield, rather slow it down to stop it, before it hit my lungs and my heart.
He was run over, he was on a motorcycle.
I've been ran over, had my right ankle broke.
If you're not sorry about the assassination of JFK, then why are you confessing this to us?
Well, I tell a lot of people, truth needs to come out, and I turn my life around, and My wife gets mad at me every time I say it.
I believe in God by the joke, and I always say, hey, I ain't killed nobody since I've been out of prison.
I wouldn't let them save me in prison, because in prison, you're going to fight, you're going to kill, you're going to do what you have to do to survive.
Them attacking me and me going to prison the first time, I believed it was over this, and I believed it was the government trying to do it, and it wasn't.
At that time, it was Hillary trying to get me killed because Bill Clinton was running for president of the United States, and I'm the only one that knew about the things, a lot of the stuff that happened in Arkansas that could testify.
Most of the people in Arkansas, Hermena, are dead and flew in and out of there.