Dark Journalist - JFK Assassination 58 Years of CIA Deep State Lies! Aired: 2021-11-23 Duration: 02:34:30 === JFK Assassination Conspiracy (04:26) === [00:00:03] Hello, everyone. [00:00:04] This is Dark Journalist with a special series of episodes and documentaries for you on the 58th anniversary of the JFK assassination. [00:00:13] As we know, the CIA continues to cover up the records pertaining to this event that changed history and delivered a psychic shock to a generation. [00:00:21] Recently, Judge Napolitano was quoted as saying that former President Trump was so shocked by what he saw in the CIA records that he allowed them to be delayed. [00:00:31] Now, the Biden administration is making sure. [00:00:33] That they never see the light of day. [00:00:35] Professor Peter Dale Scott will join us with his five decades of research on the murder of President Kennedy and its connection to the deep state CIA and the mysterious continuity of government Doomsday Network. [00:00:48] That will be followed by my documentary, Agent Oswald, the CIA Patsy, and finally, my most recent documentary, X Protect Aerospace UFO File Assassins. [00:00:58] Please join us now. [00:01:07] After the Kennedy assassination, Truman had a very appropriate response to it. [00:01:12] He said, I never intended the CIA to get into the kinds of things they did. [00:01:18] And I think Alan Dulles or somebody flew out to Independence, Missouri to get him to back down on that statement. [00:01:27] And he didn't. [00:01:28] But it was the mass media who are part of the deep state, they sort of massaged what Truman said. [00:01:38] Really said that he didn't know what he was talking about, even though he was the president who had signed the act. [00:01:45] But yes, you think that Truman wrote that editorial in direct response to the Kennedy assassination and the CIA's involvement? [00:01:52] I do. [00:01:53] Yes, I do. [00:01:55] And I'm not sure how much he knew, but I think he was deeply troubled, and he was right to be deeply troubled. [00:02:02] And by the way, I don't say the CIA killed Kennedy. [00:02:05] I say that there was a deep state conspiracy to kill Kennedy. [00:02:10] And it involves the fact that the CIA, eight weeks before November 22nd, when Kennedy was killed, had opened a counterintelligence operation built around the name of Lee Harvey Oswald. [00:02:28] And when they keep saying that Oswald was a loner who wanted to be recognized, the real fact of the matter was the CIA wanted Oswald to look at a loner because I didn't say Oswald was involved in the operation, I said his name was involved. [00:02:46] But the CIA obviously had to go to great lengths to make sure that that fact did not come out in the Warren Commission hearings. [00:02:56] And as I've said in a published article, Helms perjured himself before the Warren Commission to conceal the fact about that counterintelligence operation. [00:03:08] So the CIA, in a sense, was covering up because it had no choice. [00:03:14] It doesn't mean That there were people in the CIA, and I'll name one of them, Angleton, James Angleton, head of counterintelligence. [00:03:24] I'm pretty sure he was involved in the conspiracy, but the hard core of the conspiracy may have been elsewhere. [00:03:32] I wouldn't be surprised if it had been somewhere in some small agency of the Pentagon, for example. [00:03:38] The CIA was behaving almost as if they were embarrassed, and if the CIA was going to plan the whole thing by themselves, I don't think they would have designated a culprit who was sitting in their files from eight weeks earlier. [00:03:53] So that's, you know, these things get very deep. [00:03:57] The Kennedy assassination was a plot that was piggybacked on top of another plot. [00:04:05] And you go down, finally, you get a plot that was legitimate. [00:04:09] But the people who did the legitimate plot should not be blamed for what happened in the piggyback plot. [00:04:16] And that's exactly my analysis of 9 11. [00:04:19] I just gave a talk last month about the murder of Massoud in Afghanistan on September 9th, a man. === Deep State Plots Exposed (08:16) === [00:04:30] Who wanted American assistance in fighting the Taliban and American money, but was resolutely opposed to the introduction of American troops in large numbers into Afghanistan? [00:04:44] One quick thing is you mentioned in relation to Kennedy something about a group called the Circle. [00:04:52] Oh, yes, I did. [00:04:54] This is very interesting to me. [00:04:55] I'd like to hear about it. [00:04:57] Well, it's usually Le Circle in French. [00:05:01] Because I think the people who first put it together were French, sometimes called Le Cercle Pinay, P I N A Y, after a French right wing French prime minister, former prime minister. [00:05:15] They're a group of businessmen. [00:05:20] Well, David Rockefeller was the chief American representative. [00:05:25] The David Rockefellers of Europe, plus former heads of intelligence in Europe, Put together this group, and I never saw the document. [00:05:36] But the first man to write about the circle said there is one of their own documents. [00:05:43] In one of their own documents, the circle took credit for the election of Teresa, but no, not Teresa, Margaret Thatcher. [00:05:53] Margaret Thatcher, thank you very much. [00:05:56] Well, it's risky for 91 year olds to be talking live. [00:06:00] You're doing great. [00:06:03] And they took credit for it. [00:06:05] And what I threw out, it interested me that they normally had all of their meetings in France or England. [00:06:14] In 1963, they had one in America. [00:06:19] And the place they chose for their meeting is Pocantico, which is the huge suburban residence of the Rockefeller family. [00:06:28] And David Rockefeller was there. [00:06:32] And again, I was told that. [00:06:34] That one of the agenda items was the problem of America. [00:06:42] That is to say, the problem of John F. Kennedy. [00:06:45] That's all I can say about the circle. [00:06:48] But I will add to it a personal anecdote, which David Talbot attaches a great deal of importance to. [00:06:57] In 1963, I came to Berkeley in 1961, and I really knew almost nobody. [00:07:03] Most of the people I looked up were Poles. [00:07:06] Because I had just been a Canadian diplomat in Poland and I met a lot of people who said, Oh, you should look up so and so in America. [00:07:18] One of the people I didn't look up but who looked me up was a right wing Polish colonel. [00:07:24] He said, You should come to this nice dinner that's being given by the head of the Hoover Institution in Palo Alto. [00:07:34] The Hoover Institution is. [00:07:38] There's nothing quite like it. [00:07:40] It is all kinds of former right-wingers, thinkers, politicians, etc., end up in one way or another connected to the Hoover Institution. [00:07:51] I went to that dinner. [00:07:52] The head of the Hoover Institution at that time was another Canadian. [00:07:57] And this is the summer of 1963. [00:08:03] And what astonished me was that there was really almost only one topic of conversation. [00:08:09] And it was what are we going to do about Kennedy? [00:08:13] What are we going to do about Kennedy? [00:08:16] That in itself, I think, is interesting. [00:08:20] It was really interesting. [00:08:21] And I don't know what to make out of it. [00:08:23] David Talbot made more out of it than I do. [00:08:27] Is that there was, if you can believe, a Russian Jesuit there. [00:08:31] What do I mean by a Russian Jesuit? [00:08:33] A man who was dressed like an Orthodox priest, but who was actually what we call a Uniate. [00:08:40] That there are some parts of the Orthodox Church, this is the root of Ukraine's problem, that Eastern Ukraine is Orthodox, responsible to Moscow. [00:08:51] Western Ukraine is what we call Uniate, Orthodox Christians whose allegiance is to Rome. [00:09:00] And this man was one of those unions. [00:09:02] I'd run into them in Warsaw, by the way. [00:09:05] They were a presence there. [00:09:06] In fact, I met the head of the union church in Ukraine in Warsaw. [00:09:11] I think there was Western CIA influence and all of that, which may or may not be relevant to what I'm about to say. [00:09:19] But this Russian Orthodox calmed the audience and said, stop talking about all this. [00:09:30] Is going to take care of it. [00:09:32] I did hear those words and I don't know what they meant. [00:09:37] David Talbot thinks that he knows what they meant that the old man was Alan Dulles. [00:09:44] Well, it's true. [00:09:45] People did call Alan Dulles the old man. [00:09:48] People call J. Edgar Hoover the old man. [00:09:51] Almost any major organization, the head of it is going to be the old man. [00:09:57] It's less likely, I think, to be the chairman of the Joint Chiefs because those people come and go every two or For years, so I would almost rule them out. [00:10:07] Absolutely. [00:10:09] But anyway, for what it's worth, that did help get me interested in the Kennedy assassination. [00:10:17] Not as much as the fact that Kennedy, when the Pentagon Papers came out, I found there was something. [00:10:24] They repented all the most important documents except one. [00:10:28] And to me, the most important of all, the one I really wanted to see, was National Security Action Memorandum 273. [00:10:38] Its date of passage was November 26, 1963, four days after the assassination. [00:10:47] And it was pretty clear, as you reconstruct, there were only bits and pieces of it all over the Pentagon papers, never the whole document. [00:10:57] But I reconstructed it from the bits and pieces. [00:11:00] And finally, it got declassified by somebody who phoned me about it, who was working on the House on assassinations. [00:11:08] The House Committee on Assassinations got it declassified. [00:11:11] And by golly, it was pretty much what I had said, except there was another part in it about Cambodia, which would have fed my argument, but I wasn't mentioned in the Pentagon papers, so I didn't know about it. [00:11:24] It completely reversed. [00:11:25] The main thing was Kennedy was going to withdraw troops from Indochina. [00:11:33] He was going to. [00:11:35] In fact, he authorized an initial withdrawal of 1,000 by the end of 1963. [00:11:42] And the coded language of 273, by the way, is authorized by National Security Action Memorandum 263 of October 22nd, and then quietly and very craftily nullified by 273. [00:12:04] And the first page of 273 was given to the New York Times and the Post and published, and it said, Our intentions remain the same. [00:12:15] Well, of course, the intention to withdraw, nobody in the government was planning to keep them there forever, not then. [00:12:22] But, no, the intentions remained the same. [00:12:26] But they were not going to withdraw troops. [00:12:28] On the contrary, 273 had laid the first plans for escalation of the Vietnam War. [00:12:37] This is dated four days after the assassination, and it was approved two days after the assassination. [00:12:44] Oswald was not even murdered yet. === Suspension of Government Rules (15:25) === [00:12:47] That's how closely on. [00:12:49] It all followed. [00:12:50] So that is the deep state that I've always been most worried about that America is the most aggressively military power in the world. [00:13:04] Right. [00:13:04] And is causing all kinds of problems overseas and is impoverishing and starving millions of people overseas by its policies. [00:13:14] That's what we have to deal with. [00:13:17] Right. [00:13:17] We'll still have the NDAA that will come up and Republicans and Democrats will sign that together. [00:13:23] For almost a trillion dollars every year. [00:13:26] There's no problem gaining consensus when it comes to the American defense budget because that is the real money that is the feeding trough for politicians in the American political system. [00:13:39] Absolutely. [00:13:41] Professor, finally, a definition, about a two minute definition of continuity of government, so that somebody could understand how this other system could come in on this. [00:13:55] Normal democratic republic system and take over? [00:13:59] Well, it's hard to define something that's so secret that nobody who's talked about it publicly has ever seen it. [00:14:08] And the people who have seen it don't talk about it publicly. [00:14:12] And that, I think, may explain why Gary Hart, when he's very worried about emergency powers, he surprisingly doesn't say anything about COG, though he knows about them. [00:14:22] I listened to a radio broadcast in which the interviewer asked him, What about COG? [00:14:29] And then Hart did say, yes, he knows that there's COG. [00:14:33] I think the price of any knowledge about COG is that your lips are sealed. [00:14:40] And that means it's really impossible for me to define, but I can quote what people who have had some knowledge of them and accurately talked about them. [00:14:56] They focus on three things. [00:14:58] Well, I'll go back to a man called Alfonso Chardi. [00:15:03] Who wrote the original story way back in 1987 in the midst of Iran Contra in the Miami Herald? [00:15:11] First of all, he used the phrase suspension of government. [00:15:15] Jack Anderson, even earlier, also used the same phrase suspension of the government. [00:15:21] And then they focus on three things. [00:15:24] First one is military government or its equivalent. [00:15:32] It won't be military government, of course, but it would be the use of the armed forces or of, I shouldn't say the armed forces, of armed forces in ways that we haven't seen. [00:15:45] And there's suspension of habeas corpus. [00:15:48] And again, the press has never covered the way Muslims were manhandled and abused after 9 11, almost a thousand of them. [00:15:56] Were detained. [00:15:57] I talked to one of them. [00:15:58] He wasn't even a Sunni Muslim, he was a Shia Muslim, in other words, a part of his land that nobody has accused of being behind 9/11. [00:16:08] He was tortured. [00:16:09] He said there was blood in his urine, he was an academic. [00:16:13] He was an academic and they rounded him up and they were going after everybody. [00:16:18] Now that isn't happening now, I think, but the provisions for the suspension of habeas corpus which, after all, is mentioned obliquely in the constitution, And the plans for suspension of them are in force and I think would be used if you have large scale violence, even if it's a violence that doesn't threaten the overthrow of the government. [00:16:42] And the third one has to do, I think, with, well, I'm less sure about the third one, but I think I've written, I don't even remember what I've written, but I think I say it's controlled information or something like that. [00:16:55] Yes. [00:16:56] If that's true, that would help explain why it is that nobody talks about the continuity of government and why. [00:17:03] It's possible that Congress does review it in some kind of pro forma way, but they're not allowed to tell us. [00:17:10] And when the very beginning, first time that ever came up in Congress was in the Iran-Contra hearings, and Jack Brooks is a congressman from Texas, and he referred to the Chardy story and he said, Mr. North, I understand you've been involved in plans for the suspension of the American Constitution. [00:17:31] An amazing thing happened then. [00:17:33] The chairman banged his gavel. [00:17:36] And then Oliver North's lawyer, a civilian, jumped up and said, We can't talk about that here. [00:17:44] A civilian lawyer not in the government said, We can't talk about that here. [00:17:49] Incredible. [00:17:50] And they didn't talk about it. [00:17:51] And the chairman, Daniel Nui, a decent man, a Democrat from Hawaii, a very decent man, I'm not accusing him of anything in the government, but he said, We can't talk about this here. [00:18:05] And if we're going to do this, we'll have to do so in secret session. [00:18:09] And there is no record that there ever was such a secret session. [00:18:13] There may have been. [00:18:14] But so it sounds as if what Shardy had said was on the money. [00:18:21] And then look at the behavior of the New York Times. [00:18:23] The New York Times printed every word of the Iran Contra hearings. [00:18:27] So they printed this exchange of remarks about suspension of the American Constitution. [00:18:36] They didn't write a news story about it, it wasn't worthy of discussion. [00:18:42] Has all the news that's fit to print. [00:18:44] The New York Times suspension of the Constitution was obviously some news that wasn't fit to print. [00:18:51] Unbelievable. [00:18:52] That's what we've been living under. [00:18:54] We live under a Constitution that's living under something else continuity of government. [00:19:01] And we have to find out what continuity of government is. [00:19:04] And I'm sorry, Dan, I can't define it because I've not I or no one who's talking at any length has ever seen it. [00:19:14] Why is it called the Doomsday Network? [00:19:17] The Doomsday Network was an actual network that was set up as part of the implementation of COG planning. [00:19:30] So, if the government is decapitated, you have to have a second network. [00:19:37] And we have that network. [00:19:39] And I have argued, it takes too long to explain here, but I've argued A, that that network is part of the implementation of the Kennedy assassination. [00:19:52] And that the biggest, biggest, one of the biggest omissions of what went to the Warren Commission that we got the police tapes on both channels from the Dallas police, we got the tapes from the Dallas sheriffs, but we didn't get the tapes from the White House communications agency that were being used by the Secret Service in some of the cars that were in the motorcade. [00:20:18] And I argued for the release of those, and we got a review board in 94. [00:20:26] I don't know if they said anything. [00:20:31] Anyway, and then also I argued quite independently, forget now the Kennedy assassination, I've argued more cogently that COG planning and COG telephone conversations, which never reached the 9 11 Commission, and which they admit never reached the 9 11 Commission, that that was an integral part of the planning. [00:20:59] For 9 11. [00:21:00] I'll just give you one example. [00:21:03] Everybody knows that Bush stayed out of Washington for six hours. [00:21:12] And that meant that the head next in charge of the command system was Rumsfeld. [00:21:21] Rumsfeld and Cheney are unaccountable for about 20 minutes before the last plane goes down. [00:21:29] And all we know about Cheney was that he was in some other secure area. [00:21:34] Talking by telephone, tapes which were not given to the 9 11 Commission because I'm certain he was using the Doomsday Network. [00:21:45] That was the term used by the people who set it up. [00:21:49] Doomsday was the atomic attack, the Doomsday Network was what would go into thin air. [00:21:55] But it was used on 9 11 beyond a shadow of a doubt. [00:22:00] And that's why Cheney went with about 90 people to whatever they call that rock. [00:22:06] Mountain in Maryland, which is all tunneled out underneath, and he lived there for three months doing things, drafting, I think, the Patriot Act and drafting plans for homeland security, planning for what do they call the project. [00:22:24] Anyway, they set up internment camps. [00:22:26] We have internment camps in this country that are mostly dusted off from World War II, but they were reactivated, and there are plans for their use if we ever have another anti-war movement. [00:22:40] Yes, COG is suddenly relevant again, but we have a lot of people talking about the substance of them, like Gary Hart about these secret powers, yet he doesn't mention COG. [00:22:51] I think when he was a senator, he probably saw them and his lips are sealed. [00:22:57] Yes, absolutely. [00:22:58] And this other effort, the kind of Arkan articles, are more like spin from the deep state. [00:23:04] Well, I use the Arkan articles, but he doesn't go anywhere with them. [00:23:09] No, they've been helpful to me in the American deep state. [00:23:13] I cite some of his articles. [00:23:15] He shows how it goes way back, as Gary Hart also says, go back to Eisenhower. [00:23:22] But, you know, I've seen what some of those early things are. [00:23:27] They're very sensible and they're very limited. [00:23:30] They're nothing like this idea that you can go after, but they use it in the 80s. [00:23:37] We know how they use it in the 80s. [00:23:39] They used it to surveil and round up peaceful protesters against. [00:23:46] The Contras. [00:23:47] Anyone who didn't protest the Contras was missing his civic duty, I think. [00:23:52] The Contras was, again, there may have been good Contras, I don't know. [00:23:57] But the idea that you were helping a group to bomb villages, and you remember there was an American down there who was a victim. [00:24:07] He was showing villages how to get clean water out of their wells, and they killed him. [00:24:13] And these were people that we were supporting. [00:24:16] To kill Americans. [00:24:24] It was an ugly aspect of American policy. [00:24:26] And again, believe me, I know America is not all ugly. [00:24:30] I live here. [00:24:31] I love this country. [00:24:32] I love its constitution. [00:24:35] Absolutely. [00:24:36] And well, part of that is for people to understand things like continuity of government and the state. [00:24:44] Yes. [00:24:45] And not in the way that they're being presented through the media and these kind of sized down versions of. [00:24:51] The deep state might be a good thing, or continuity. [00:24:54] There's some left wingers who've almost fallen into that trap. [00:24:58] I won't name names, but people I consider personal friends that come very close to that. [00:25:05] Exactly. [00:25:07] It's the kind of bizarre thing where we need a much better understanding of these things that you've spent decades bringing forward. [00:25:15] I feel with the deep state, with continuity of government, there's more research, there's more background to what you've put forward on it versus this kind of flimsy. [00:25:25] Media buzz version of the deep state. [00:25:28] It's sort of required in the media to dumb down any references to these things. [00:25:36] And to deal with that, we have to deal with the international deep state in which oil companies play such a big part. [00:25:43] And Russia, being a big oil producer, oil and gas producer, plays such a big part. [00:25:49] Much more research into all of that kind of thing. [00:25:52] But research is only a little bit of the task. [00:25:55] And being out there on the streets when necessary is a big part of the task, too. [00:26:00] And so we all have to be ready to do that. [00:26:03] The oil companies kind of get a free ride these days. [00:26:06] There's not a lot of deep stories about them. [00:26:09] They've kind of. [00:26:11] You know, because oil companies take out ads in newspapers. [00:26:15] Newspapers are not going to take up a position where they lose ads from oil companies. [00:26:21] Yes. [00:26:22] Wow, fascinating. [00:26:24] Professor, it's been great to have you today. [00:26:26] Fantastic information. [00:26:29] I still refer everyone to American Deep State, which is. [00:26:33] I think your greatest book, but there's so many leading up to it. [00:26:37] That's the one. [00:26:38] Here we go. [00:26:40] I first mentioned the deep state in 2007. [00:26:44] I introduced the term deep state about America. [00:26:48] I was very ambivalent about it and said so, I think, in American War Machine, because in some ways it's a bad term, a state is something organized, it's a structure. [00:26:58] The deep state is something not much less organized, it's quite chaotic, and it's not a structure. [00:27:04] And that's why I say now in the latest definition I did, I don't know if I can find it in time, but I say that the deep state is best defined negatively as the sum of all those powers that have political clout that are not covered and limited by the US Constitution, [00:27:30] including the power to kill, including the power to down an airplane, as Walter Ruther, the head of the Of the American auto workers was killed after he received a series of death threats. [00:27:45] Those are the kind of. [00:27:47] I say that the deep state involves, along with the NSA and the CIA, it involves the overworld and the underworld. [00:27:59] And the overworld, we know, our historians have told us how the overworld has used the underworld. [00:28:06] Henry Ford wanted to break, he wanted to stop the unionization of his. === Bobby Kennedy Phase Three (09:23) === [00:28:12] Workers by the auto workers. [00:28:14] And so Joe Adonis, who was a leading mob figure, had control of all the dealerships on the East Coast. [00:28:22] And that meant that Joe Adonis in the underworld was part of the deep state. [00:28:26] And I think whoever killed Kennedy, I don't know where they came from, they may have come from overseas. [00:28:32] But they were part of the deep state in a way. [00:28:36] It's interesting because you did mention two things there in relation to the deep state, in relation to that communications network. [00:28:43] And it was Winston Lawson, the Secret Service agent during the Kennedy assassination, who had set up the route. [00:28:50] And he was one of the people who used that emergency network. [00:28:52] Yes. [00:28:53] And he also gave false, he gave a false report of what was happening. [00:28:59] And I draw attention to that in the politics of the death of JFK. [00:29:04] Yes. [00:29:05] That is fascinating. [00:29:06] And you wrote a follow up book to that, which was the first deep state action against the White House, Dallas 63. [00:29:13] Yeah. [00:29:15] That's right. [00:29:16] So there's more information on that there. [00:29:18] The last thing I'll say about that, which is interesting, is John Dean, you also picked out of that COG emergency planning basket, and there he was associated with the deep event of Watergate. [00:29:32] Yes, and so was, of course, James McCord, who was the leader of the team of burglars who went into Watergate. [00:29:42] Watergate, for me, doesn't just mean all Nixon's. [00:29:46] Abuses of power, it means a break in. [00:29:50] And it's so interesting to me, we still don't know the truth about that break in, but we do know that the leader of the break in, James McCord, ex CIA, was part of a special army group that was dealing with continuity of government. [00:30:08] Yes. [00:30:09] And there again, those figures come up just like in 9 11, Cheney and Rumsfeld are right there and they're plugged into that COG history. [00:30:19] Frank Sturgis, one of the burglars, was one of the people arrested in the Watergate, which started off the whole of Watergate. [00:30:28] I had already written about because of his role in connection with the Kennedy assassination. [00:30:34] Right. [00:30:36] And that is fascinating because no one knew that he was going to show up as this figure in the break in. [00:30:43] But there you had the book, and the book was from 1969. [00:30:48] The book I'm talking about was never published The Dallas Conspiracy. [00:30:52] I wrote it in the mid 70s. [00:30:54] Well, I finished it about 72 or so. [00:30:58] I mean, I could tell you a fascinating story about that, but I'm not going to because I think we've dealt with enough. [00:31:05] There's no question. [00:31:06] There's no question. [00:31:07] Although I will say about the Dallas conspiracy, do you feel like that information got out in other parts of your work? [00:31:15] Or is that. [00:31:15] Oh, yes. [00:31:17] I mined it for Depot and the death of JFK. [00:31:20] Okay. [00:31:21] It was a year I was about to get married, and my wife objected to my spending so much time at my computer. [00:31:28] But I did quickly part about the Secret Service agent, the White House committee. [00:31:38] That was taken from the Dallas conspiracy. [00:31:41] Ah, I see. [00:31:42] Thank God that's in there. [00:31:44] That is fascinating, I have to say. [00:31:46] And it gives us a better understanding because an example is kind of worth more than an overview in a sense because it gives us an idea okay, here's this guy. [00:31:55] He's in the heart of this and he's setting up the travel route for the president through Dallas where he gets assassinated. [00:32:01] Okay, I'm going to tell you another personal anecdote and don't attach too much importance to this. [00:32:07] The Dallas Conspiracy was originally three chapters of the book The War Conspiracy, which came out in 1972. [00:32:16] But the publishers, Bob Smeril, said those chapters should be another book. [00:32:22] Don't put them in this book. [00:32:24] And I accepted that advice and developed them as a separate book. [00:32:29] It only came to my attention later. [00:32:32] That the legal counsel to in house legal counsel to Bob's Merrill at that time was William Harvey, who had been in the CIA at the time of the Kennedy assassination and was suspected by many people at the time of having been involved in the Kennedy assassination because of his very demonstrable connections to the mafia and his personal connection to John Roselli, who he was seen. [00:33:02] Talking to in Washington in the summer of 1963. [00:33:07] All of that, all I give you that as a bit of background of just how complex and intricate and undefinable the workings of the deep state are. [00:33:21] Incredible. [00:33:22] I have to ask you, Professor, and I didn't even think of this did Howard Hughes ever show up as a major feature in your research? [00:33:30] The organization did. [00:33:32] The man himself, I think, was heavily under drugs. [00:33:36] The organization absolutely is a major figure in the Bobby Kennedy assassination. [00:33:42] Jack Anderson sat in 1967 and did a column that was published in full in the San Francisco Chronicle and not published in full in the Post, where he raised the question that the CIA plots against Castro might have backfired. [00:34:03] And this is what Bobby Kennedy was worried about that they might be responsible for his brother's murder. [00:34:10] That story did not, that part of his story, it's the third section of his story, didn't run in the Washington Post. [00:34:18] And I believe that the man who killed it was Bobby Kennedy. [00:34:22] And that they, this is what I've always called a phase three story about the Kennedy assassination. [00:34:30] Phase one story is Russia did it, Cuba did it, and then you had a phase two story was. [00:34:38] Lee Harvey Oswald was a disgruntled loner who wanted fame. [00:34:43] But he didn't want fame very much because when they kept saying, Are you accused of the candidacy? [00:34:49] He said, No, sir, I have not been accused of that. [00:34:53] I've got it. [00:34:54] We said in search for fame. [00:34:56] And then phase three was this is a very embarrassing story because Bobby Kennedy's own operations are involved, which I don't rule out because the CIA penetrated his operations. [00:35:11] He did have operations and they were penetrated immediately by the CIA. [00:35:17] And I believe that when John McCone went out to Hickory Hill, Bobby's home, on the afternoon of November 22nd, and talked to Bobby for an hour, And I don't think it was ever taped. [00:35:31] We don't know what no one was ever asked about it. [00:35:33] We don't know what was said. [00:35:35] I think that Bobby Kennedy was given the phase three story as I define it because shortly after that he talked to a man who was in charge of his operations and according to a journalist who was there said one of your boys did it. [00:35:54] Wow. [00:35:55] And he could only have known that if he had heard it from McCone. [00:35:58] And McCone would only know what the CIA had told him. [00:36:02] And I would not count on the CIA to tell them the truth if they were in their own way involved. [00:36:09] But that's the phase three story. [00:36:10] Now I'm bringing this up because in 1967, when all kinds of things were about to happen, Bobby Kennedy's about to come out against the war, and suddenly Jack Anderson runs a column which raises this phase three possibility. [00:36:30] And then in 1970, in the early years of the, I'm not going to date them, But the early years of the Nixon administration, Jack comes back to this theme. [00:36:44] And I know enough about Watergate to know that the Jack Anderson columns were responded to very vigorously in the Nixon White House. [00:36:56] And one man said, don't go too far there because who knows what skeletons in the closet might come out. [00:37:05] But it's all part of the story of setting up the plumbers. [00:37:09] And the break into Ellsworth's psychiatrists. [00:37:13] The continuity of all these different deep events, let everyone remember when you have an event that's of major importance and the media cannot talk about it honestly, it may be important enough to produce a commission of investigation, but you can count on the fact that the commission will not investigate it properly. === Warren Commission Deception (03:17) === [00:37:35] The 9 11 commission actually said the only people who were allowed to look. [00:37:40] At the COG aspects, were the president and the vice chairman and the vice chairman and the director, Philip Zerico. [00:37:48] The commission was not allowed to see the CIA documentation, and it was obviously relevant. [00:37:57] Thank you for joining us for this fascinating discussion with Professor Peter Dale Scott. [00:38:24] Stay tuned for Agent Oswald, the CIA Patsy. [00:39:09] Born in New Orleans in 1939. [00:39:13] For a short length of time during my childhood, I lived in Texas and in New York. [00:39:18] Then I entered the United States Marine Corps in 1956. [00:39:23] I spent three years in the United States Marine Corps, starting out as a private, working my way up through the ranks to the position of buck sergeant, and I served honorably, having been discharged. [00:39:37] Then I went back to work in Texas. [00:39:40] and have recently arrived in New Orleans with my family, with my wife and my child. [00:39:49] I worked in Russia. [00:39:51] I was under the protection of the, that is to say, I was not under the protection of the American government, but that is, I was at all times considered an American citizen. [00:40:05] I did not lose my American citizenship. [00:40:17] You know, sometimes history gets it wrong, and this is certainly true in the JFK assassination. [00:40:22] The recent media circus around the 50th anniversary of this event proved that there are still powerful forces committed to keeping the truth on this subject hidden. [00:40:30] These forces have desperately tried to put the genie back in the bottle, but they can't. [00:40:35] Over 70% of Americans don't believe in the official story of events. [00:40:39] They know the media had a hand in this deception. [00:40:42] Seasoned researchers have brought forward compelling evidence that there was far more to this story than was revealed. [00:40:48] But the corporate media would like to take us back to when the Warren Commission was the last word. === Magic Bullet Theory Flawed (02:52) === [00:40:53] A lone assassin, a magic bullet, and no questions asked. [00:40:57] In this program, we're going to present real facts that show Lee Harvey Oswald was not the assassin of President Kennedy, and that he was, without a doubt, an intelligence asset for the CIA. [00:41:08] We'll start by examining the key elements that were used to portray Oswald as the lone assassin by the Warren Commission. [00:41:15] We're all aware that Oswald is supposed to have performed the shooting by using a Manliker Carcano rifle. [00:41:21] But what has been suppressed is that there was a different rifle found at the scene by an alert sheriff's deputy named Roger Craig. [00:41:28] Craig's compelling testimony begins here. [00:41:38] And Boone was ahead of me by about eight feet. [00:41:43] And there were a stack of boxes just at the head of the stairwell going downstairs. [00:41:52] And Boone looked over into it and said, Here it is. [00:41:56] Here's the rifle. [00:41:57] So I immediately went over beside him and looked over, and there was a rifle. [00:42:02] But we didn't touch it until Captain Fritz and Lieutenant Day from the ID department of the Delaware. [00:42:08] Police Department got there. [00:42:09] Now, Captain Fritz was the chief of homicide. [00:42:12] Lieutenant Day was from the Identification Bureau. [00:42:16] They got there and took some pictures of the rifle. [00:42:24] And then I believe Dave pulled the rifle out and handed it to Captain Fritz, who held it up by the strap on it. [00:42:38] He held it up by the strap and asked if anyone knew what kind of rifle it was. [00:42:45] Well, by this time, Deputy Constable Seymour Weitzman had joined us. [00:42:52] And Weitzman was a gun buff. [00:42:57] He had a sporting goods store at one time. [00:42:59] He was very good with weapons. [00:43:02] And he said, It looks like a Mauser. [00:43:05] And he walked over to Fritz. [00:43:07] And Captain Fritz was holding the rifle up in the air. [00:43:10] And I was standing next to Weitzman. [00:43:13] Who were standing next to Fritz, and we weren't any more than six or eight inches from the rifle, and stamped right on the barrel of the rifle was 7.65 Mauser. [00:43:28] And that's when Watchman said it is a Mauser and pointed to the 7.65 Mauser stamp on the barrel. [00:43:36] Craig's shocking testimony about the rifle being a different model than Oswald's Manliker Carcano threatened to bring down the official version of events. === Planted Evidence Revealed (03:11) === [00:43:45] He was soon fired from the Police department on a pretext and found himself the target of a witness elimination program. [00:43:52] Several attempts were made on his life and he became disabled. [00:43:56] Finally, in May 1975, he was found with a shotgun blast to his chest. [00:44:01] The ruling was suicide. [00:44:06] The single magic bullet theory was the life raft the Warren Commission clung to in order to accuse Oswald of being the lone assassin. [00:44:13] This bullet that supposedly caused seven wounds and was still in pristine condition has become a Punchline in popular culture for describing something absurd. [00:44:22] Yet without it, there is no case against Oswald as the sole shooter. [00:44:26] Dr. Cyril Wecht, a respected forensic pathologist who's worked on such high level cases as the O.J. Simpson trial, gives us his reasoning for coining the term the magic bullet. [00:44:41] The single bullet theory, which I described a long time ago as the magic bullet theory. [00:44:46] I'm currently sitting directly in front of the president. [00:44:48] The bullet is coming now and it's going right from up downward. [00:44:52] From right to left and from back to front. [00:44:55] Comes out, exits the president's neck. [00:44:57] Here's Connolly. [00:44:58] The bullet in midair stops, comes back about 18 inches, and hits John Connolly behind the right armpit. [00:45:05] Not the left armpit, not the left shoulder, behind the right armpit. [00:45:09] It goes into his chest, pierces the lung, destroys four inches of the right fifth ribbon. [00:45:15] Connolly is a big bone, six foot four Texan, destroys four inches of the bone, exits from below the level of the nipple. [00:45:22] When you look at the Zapruder film, you'll see John Connolly holding a white Stetson hat like This here's the hat right here at this level, and at that point, he's been shot, and the bullet has emerged below the level of the nipple. [00:45:35] The bullet comes out then and moving downward, it swings upward and comes up and around and hits in the back of his wrist, produces a comminuted fracture of the radius, one of the two large bones that come from the elbow to the wrist. [00:45:48] Comminuted means a fragmented fracture, exits from the front of the right wrist, moves down into a left thigh, and the bullet that Tomlinson, the maintenance man, found at Parkland Hospital under the stretcher, which on the night of the autopsy was from the president's back, which the next day was from the president's neck, five months later is from Conley's left thigh. [00:46:06] You with me? [00:46:08] I hope it hasn't been too long a day. [00:46:10] You have to be mentally agile to keep up with his bullet. [00:46:14] Dr. Jeremy Gunn, the general counsel for the Assassination Record Review Board, shares Dr. Weck's view. [00:46:22] The bullet would have been completely deformed, but Commission Exhibit 399, the magic bullet, has almost no damage to it at all. [00:46:29] So that, to me, is just not believable that Commission Exhibit 399 did all of that damage. [00:46:37] Even if one bullet could have done it, it was not Commission Exhibit 399. [00:46:41] And that's really the linchpin for what the Warrant Commission was finding. [00:46:47] There's a strange twist to how this bullet was found in this archive clip. [00:46:51] The bullet was found here in this area and not on that stretcher. === Another Man in Dallas (15:34) === [00:46:57] That's the stretcher I took off the elevator. [00:47:00] The stretcher he took off the elevator was Connelly's, so Tomlinson found the bullet on a different stretcher not connected to the case. [00:47:07] This led critics to claim the bullet was planted. [00:47:11] Was the bullet planted? [00:47:12] The strange encounter by a Dallas reporter at Parkland Hospital may give us a clue. [00:47:17] There was a group of nurses and doctors standing around with a lot of concern, and Jack Ruby came up to me. [00:47:27] He said something to the effect that, isn't this just terrible? [00:47:32] And he looked as if he was extremely distressed. [00:47:35] I shook hands with him, and it was very clear to me who I had talked to and who I had called by name and who had called me by name and who I had shaken hands with and everything. [00:47:47] But when the Warren Commission report came out, They said that probably under the stress of everything that was going on, that I most likely was confused and that I talked to Ruby at the police station several hours later. [00:48:05] I was dismayed when I picked up my copy of the Warren Commission report and discovered what they had decided about my testimony. [00:48:14] And among other things, I immediately began to wonder who else they had talked to, who they chose not to believe, and why. [00:48:33] Victoria Adams worked in the Texas School Book Depository building. [00:48:37] Her testimony about being on the stairs when Oswald was assumed to have been rushing down them posed a problem for the Warren Commission. [00:48:44] Author Mary Ernest tells us her story. [00:48:48] The scenario is that in its 888 page report, her story was reduced to only two paragraphs. [00:48:58] In a nutshell, what she did was following the shots, the third shot, she and a co worker. [00:49:05] Who were on the fourth floor of the building, they were employees there, left that window and ran out through the rear office door and down the back stairs. [00:49:16] It was a very innocent act. [00:49:18] She didn't realize the significance of it. [00:49:20] As soon as she brought up the fact that she had run down the stairs seconds after the final shot, moments after the final shot, then they were all ears. [00:49:30] That seemed to bother them. [00:49:32] She said she couldn't understand why. [00:49:34] But they continually asked her about those questions. [00:49:38] When the Warren Report was issued, it dismissed her, even though it didn't do any of the time tests that it had done on other people involving the escape of Oswald. [00:49:53] It didn't even mention in the Warren Report that another woman had accompanied her down the stairs. [00:50:00] Her name was Sandra Stiles. [00:50:01] And then they turned left onto Elm Street. [00:50:05] And as it got just past the turn, we heard the three shots coming from we didn't know where. [00:50:13] So we went down the stairs to the second floor, out the back door, and around the west side of the building, around to the front, where we encountered a motorcycle policeman who asked us where we came from. [00:50:29] And we told him the fourth floor, and he said, Go back the way you came. [00:50:33] So we immediately went back up the stairs and back up to our office, except for my staff. [00:50:39] My co worker, I didn't see or hear anyone else on the stairwell that day. [00:50:45] I did not see Lee Harvey Oswald at all or hear any sounds to indicate that there was anyone else on the stairwell at the same time. [00:50:57] Officer Marion Baker rushed into the depository building and encountered Oswald only 90 seconds after the shooting in the second floor coffee room. [00:51:06] He describes what happened here. [00:51:10] As we came out on the second floor, I saw through a doorway, a window in this doorway, a man moving. [00:51:22] So I went over and opened up the door, and this man was walking away from it. [00:51:27] And the next room I later found out was a coffee room. [00:51:32] I called to the man, and he turned around, and Mr. Trudy was there beside me. [00:51:37] I asked him if he knew this man or if he worked there. [00:51:40] He said, Yes, he does. [00:51:42] He was calm, ordinary, you know, he didn't look excited or anything like that. [00:52:00] The so called evidence the Warren Commission produced was never subjected to the legal standards of a murder trial. [00:52:05] Instead, they relied on projecting the idea that Oswald was guilty in the court of public opinion. [00:52:11] The best example of this was the so called backyard photos that purported to show Oswald with the alleged murder weapon. [00:52:17] Now, of course, we know just how easy it is to alter a photograph. [00:52:21] Therefore, as evidence, it's of no value. [00:52:25] Judge Jim Garrison weighed in on a key piece of evidence that suggests Oswald was not the shooter. [00:52:30] And the paraffin tests would show whether or not you fired a rifle. [00:52:34] The results were available before the end of the day. [00:52:37] They showed that Oswald had not fired a rifle. [00:52:40] But the way that that was handled was it was announced to the world that the paraffin test showed that he had fired a rifle. [00:52:46] Chief, we understand you have the results of the paraffin test which were made to determine whether Oswald had fired a weapon. [00:52:52] Can you tell us what those results show? [00:52:54] I understand that it was positive. [00:52:56] The fingerprints on the boxes added up to the fingerprints of a large number of policemen. [00:53:05] One unidentified man, and no fingerprints of Leon's. [00:53:09] The evidence in this case had a tendency to suddenly change when it was required that no loose ends be left hanging. [00:53:15] For example, Dallas police initially reported that they'd found only two bullet shell casings and gave them to the FBI. [00:53:21] When the Warren Commission used the same report in their findings, the number magically changed to three spent shells instead of two. [00:53:28] A pattern we've seen before getting the evidence to match the preordained conclusion, not using the real evidence to reach a real conclusion. [00:53:37] When it came to fingerprints on the rifle, we can observe this pattern again. [00:53:41] The rifle held no fingerprints of Lee Oswald, and this looked bad to investigators trying to link Oswald to the shooting. [00:53:47] The rifle was sent to the FBI for further analysis, and still nothing. [00:53:51] Then, after a few weeks, it was announced that a smudged palm print was discovered on the rifle, and suddenly it matched. [00:53:59] Oswald's mortician shares some insight on this matter. [00:54:03] I had gotten to the funeral home with his body, something in the neighborhood of 11 o'clock at night. [00:54:09] And it is a several hour procedure to prepare the remains. [00:54:13] And after this time, someplace in the early, early morning, agents came. [00:54:21] Now, I say agents because I'm not familiar at the moment with whether they were Secret Service or FBI or what they were. [00:54:30] But agents did come. [00:54:32] And when they did come, they fingerprinted. [00:54:37] And the only reason that we knew they did, they were. [00:54:39] Carrying a satchel and the equipment, and asked us if they might have the preparation room to themselves. [00:54:47] And after it was all over, we found ink on Lee Harvey's hands showing that they had fingerprinted him and palm printed him. [00:54:59] We had to take that ink back off in order to prepare him for burial and to eliminate that ink. [00:55:06] Obviously, with no chain of evidence for the rifle and mysterious visits to Oswald's corpse, the palm print appears to be another false entry in the record. [00:55:14] And would not stand up to any normal legal standard. [00:55:16] But we must ask ourselves if the palm print was faked and a different rifle was found on the second floor and the magic bullet was just an absurd device to make Oswald look guilty, then what would have happened had he lived and gone to trial? [00:55:29] Dr. Jeremy Gunn gives us his view. [00:55:32] I think that if Oswald had gone to trial and a judge had properly applied the rules of evidence and a jury had made finding of facts based upon the law, Oswald would have been found not guilty because most of the Evidence the Warren Commission used would not have been admissible in a trial against Lee Harvey Oswald. [00:56:01] One of the fascinating things about the official story is the number of people who promoted it that didn't actually believe it. [00:56:07] Now, the question can be asked why should we? [00:56:10] President Johnson, who appointed the Warren Commission, is a good place to start. [00:56:15] I can't honestly say that I've ever been completely relieved of the fact that there might have been international connections. [00:56:24] You mean you still feel that there might have been? [00:56:27] Well, I have not completely discounted. [00:56:36] That would seem to indicate that you don't have full confidence in the Warren Commission report. [00:56:42] No, I think the Warren Commission study, and I think, first of all, it's composed of the ablest, most judicious, bipartisan men in this country. [00:56:52] Second, I think they had only one objective, and that was the truth. [00:56:56] Third, I think they were competent and did the best they could. [00:57:00] But I don't think that they or me or anyone else is always absolutely sure of every Thing that might have motivated Oswald or others that could have been wrong. [00:57:19] Johnson and Warren Commission member Richard Russell discussed how they both rejected the magic bullet theory shortly before the Warren report was published. [00:57:28] The Commission believes that the same bullet that hit Kennedy hit Connolly. [00:57:34] Well, I don't believe it. [00:57:35] I don't either. [00:57:36] Governor John Connolly, who was wounded with President Kennedy, also rejects the magic bullet theory. [00:57:42] I know a little something about. [00:57:44] Firearms and a little something about velocity of bullets and the speed of sound as compared to it. [00:57:50] And I know when I hear a shot and I have time to turn and react and not only turn one direction but attempt to turn in another direction before I feel the impact of anything, I know that bullet wasn't in transit that long. [00:58:05] That's all there is to it. [00:58:06] Nobody ever convinced me otherwise. [00:58:12] Dallas Police Chief Jesse Curry. [00:58:14] Who handled the initial investigation tells us why he doesn't believe the official version of events put forward by the Warren Commission. [00:58:23] But just in my mind, and by the direction of the blood and brain from the president from one of the shots, it would just seem that it would have to be fired from the front rather than behind. [00:58:39] I can't say that I could swear that I believe there was one man or one man alone. [00:58:44] I think that there's a possibility there could have been another man. [00:58:51] Oswald's wife, Marina, whose pressured testimony was used to convict Oswald in the public eye, now believes he was innocent and was manipulated to take the fall. [00:59:01] Lee wasn't guilty of the crime that he was convicted of. [00:59:08] Well, he was convicted by only one committee. [00:59:11] He never had a trial. [00:59:13] The Warren Commission pinned not only the murder of the president to Lee Oswald, but also the shooting of a police officer named Tippett. [00:59:20] But what did Oswald have to say in answer to these severe charges? [00:59:23] I really don't know what the situation is about. [00:59:26] Nobody has told me anything. [00:59:29] I'm accused of murdering a policeman. [00:59:33] I know nothing more than that. [00:59:34] I do request someone to come forward to give me a legal assistance. [00:59:40] Did you kill the president? [00:59:42] No, I've not been charged with that. [00:59:45] In fact, nobody has said that to me yet. [00:59:48] The first thing I heard about it was when the newspaper reporters in the hall. Asked me that question. [00:59:53] You have to. [00:59:54] Nobody said what. [00:59:55] Sir? [00:59:55] You have to. [00:59:55] Nobody said what. [01:00:03] In the early investigations of researchers like Mark Lane, [01:00:33] the subject of Oswald's relationship with the CIA kept coming up. [01:00:37] His high security clearance, his proximity to covert operations, led New Orleans DA Jim Garrison to investigate his intelligence connections, and he found that they were many. [01:00:48] If you, the people of the United States, will learn the truth that the president was assassinated by men who were once connected with a central intelligence agency, of course. [01:01:00] This might reflect on the dignity of the CIA. [01:01:04] But I happen to believe that our form of government is strong enough to survive the truth. [01:01:10] I am trying to tell you that there is no question, as a result of our investigation, that an element of the Central Intelligence Agency of our country killed John Kennedy, and that the present administration is concealing the facts. [01:01:24] There is no question about it at all. [01:01:26] That is your opinion. [01:01:27] No, it is not. [01:01:29] I know it, and if you will just wait, you will see that history will support this. [01:01:33] If you just keep in mind who profited most from the assassination and then ask yourself some questions who appointed the members of the Warren Commission and who runs the CIA, which has concealed a tremendous amount of evidence? [01:01:51] Garrison was relentless in his pursuit of the intelligence connections to Oswald and the JFK assassination. [01:01:57] With public interest surging in his investigation, he would charge Clay Shaw, a New Orleans businessman with ties to Central Intelligence. [01:02:05] With conspiracy in the assassination. [01:02:07] Garrison's case was covertly damaged by CIA operatives. [01:02:11] From there, media interest turned into a steady effort to discredit him and portray his efforts as grandstanding. [01:02:18] Years later, long out of the spotlight, Garrison would never waver from his core beliefs. [01:02:23] Lee Harvey Oswald killed no one at all. [01:02:28] So the point is, it wasn't a question of being alone or with anybody. === CIA Operatives Targeted Oswald (14:54) === [01:02:31] He had nothing to do with the assassination. [01:02:33] He was employed by the Central Intelligence Agency. [01:02:35] And it was obviously drawn into a Scapegoat situation and made to believe ultimately that he was penetrating the assassination. [01:02:45] And then, when the time came, they took the scapegoat, the man who thought he was working for the United States government, and killed him real quick. [01:02:54] And then the machinery, disinformation machinery, started turning and they started making a villain out of a man who genuinely was probably a hero. [01:03:21] Oswald's activities in the summer before the assassination were linked with his work for a shadowy figure who was formerly with the FBI named Guy Bannister, whose office at 544 Camp Street was a focal point of anti communist activity. [01:03:37] It was an old antiquated building on the corner of Lafayette and Camp, right near Lafayette Square. [01:03:46] And Bannister had his office there. [01:03:50] I had been in it on occasion. [01:03:52] And I went in there one time with Lee to view some arms that they had brought from an old blimp base. [01:04:02] Certainly not pro Castro. [01:04:03] He's an ex FBI agent from New York who is violently anti Castro and working to overthrow Castro. [01:04:15] If Lee Harvey Oswald is connected to Bannister, then the pro Castro activity seems to be a sham. [01:04:22] Yes, I saw them once in the Mancuso's restaurant on the ground floor of the infamous 544 Camp Street building. [01:04:30] This is sometime during the summer of 1963. [01:04:32] I went across the street to get a cup of coffee, which I did, and there were Bannister and Oswald sitting together at a table chatting with each other. [01:04:41] Guy Bannister's office served as headquarters for something that we later found out was called Operation Mongoose, and they had amassed huge stockpiles of weapons and ammunition that were constantly being brought in and out of Guy Bannister's office. [01:04:58] I came across the fact that Oswald, a private in the Marines, had taken a Russian examination, and I knew the privates did not take Russian examinations unless they were connected with intelligence. [01:05:10] So that caused me to be curious about 544 Camp, which was the address stamped on one circular that they gave out one time before, obviously, Bannister told them, Lee, no more addresses. [01:05:22] It turned out that was a side address of Guy Bannister's private detective agency. [01:05:28] Well, I went down there to look at it. [01:05:30] Well, this is the address which Lee Oswald gave for his first Fair Play for Cuba pamphlets. [01:05:37] Now, this building, 544 Camp Street, is the building in which Guy Bannister had his office on the side. [01:05:44] Guy Bannister, of course, is the most militant, the most militant right wing, extremely conservative, anti communist individual in the city of New Orleans. [01:05:56] There is simply no question about the fact that the Riley Coffee Company was a nesting place for. [01:06:03] Lee Oswald. [01:06:04] He was put here. [01:06:04] This was his CIA assignment. [01:06:07] In other words, as I pointed out before, his immediate superiors in Dallas and his immediate superiors in the CIA in New Orleans are involved in the assassination. [01:06:16] Not might be, they are involved. [01:06:20] And consequently, the impression was created on his part that he was following orders and he just had to stay at the Riley Coffee Company until the time came when he was to penetrate the right wing operation here. [01:06:34] I used to be in the FBI. [01:06:36] I knew people in naval intelligence, and they were either across the street, around the corner. [01:06:40] The whole intelligence community was there, and right in the middle of it was Guy Bannister having Oswald sheepdip as a communist. [01:06:52] He was employed by the Central Intelligence. [01:07:04] Colonel Fletcher Proudy served as Chief of Special Operations for the Joint Chiefs of Staff and liaison for the military and CIA during JFK's presidency. [01:07:13] Now, in the case of Lee Harvey Oswald, he was in a unit, a Marine unit, which was tied up with the U 2 program with CIA activities. [01:07:23] His relief from active duty, as you'll recall, is something that happened in a few hours one day. [01:07:30] I don't think that was a normal change. [01:07:32] I think that was another one of these sheep dipping operations. [01:07:35] Proudy's suspicion was piqued when he was sent to New Zealand during the time of the assassination. [01:07:40] While there, he came across an early report of the tragedy and something else detailed information about the alleged assassin, Lee Harvey Oswald, hours before he was actually charged with the crime. [01:07:53] Very interestingly, it gave the whole biographical story of this young man, Lee Harvey Oswald. [01:08:00] And of course, we read every word of that, including inside the thing, a whole bunch of it on the inside page, plus a picture. [01:08:05] Of Oswald in a nice business suit, white shirt on, necktie on. [01:08:10] Have you ever seen a picture of Oswald dressed like that? [01:08:13] Of all, when I got back to the States, I kept looking through newspapers everywhere to find a picture of Oswald in a business suit, but that's what had been sent by radio photo somehow to the newspapers around the world before the police in Dallas had arranged him. [01:08:30] I took that paper home and I, through my resources in the Joint Chiefs of Staff, I made phone calls and checked things out. [01:08:37] That information that appeared in that paper about Oswald's biography and everything, all of that part of it, had been written and sent before the police in Dallas had arraigned the man. [01:08:49] How could a reporter be working on just some 24-year-old boy and have the story all ready to go if he didn't know from the police who they had charged with the crime? [01:09:01] So ever since then, I've been building up more and more information to see these things that were manufactured as a cover story ever since that murder. [01:09:11] And of course, the biggest cover story is the Warren Commission report. [01:09:21] Lieutenant Colonel Dan Marvin, former Green Beret, recalls how during his training for special operations involving assassination, he was given unusual insights into the murder of JFK by his CIA instructors. [01:09:34] Marvin describes here how Oswald's true role was revealed to the special operations recruits. [01:09:41] On the John F. Kennedy situation, that was brought to our attention as a classic example of the way to organize a complete program to eliminate a nation's leader. [01:09:56] While pointing the finger at a lone assassin. [01:09:58] It involved also the cover up of the assassination itself. [01:10:03] We had considerable detail. [01:10:05] They had a mock layout of the plaza in that area and showed where the shooters were and where the routes were to the hospital. [01:10:15] I don't remember where those were now. [01:10:18] They had quite a bit of movie film coverage, it seemed like, you know, thinking back to that time, and some still photos of the grassy knoll and places like that. [01:10:29] They told us that. [01:10:31] Oswald was not involved in the shooting at all. [01:10:34] He was the patsy. [01:10:35] He was the one that was set up. [01:10:38] We did, myself and a friend of mine, form a very distinct impression that the CIA was involved in Kennedy's assassination. [01:10:45] During a coffee break, we overheard one of the CIA instructors say to the other, things really did go well in Daily Plaza, didn't it? [01:10:55] Or something to that effect. [01:10:57] And that just reinforced or really added to our suspicions. [01:11:01] And we really felt before the end of the training was over that. [01:11:05] One of those instructors may have been involved himself in the assassination of John F. Kennedy. [01:11:42] Oswald always seemed to be handled by someone behind the scenes as he worked on high-security bases like Itsugi in Japan, or in his apparent defection to the Soviet Union. [01:11:53] Let's take a look at some of these handlers. [01:11:55] We'll start with George de Mornchild, who JFK researcher Joan Mellon has just completed a new book on. [01:12:02] Well, George de Mornchild was actually born in Russia. [01:12:05] His family left at the time of the Bolshevik Revolution and went to Poland, and eventually, George de Mornchild came to the United States in 1938. [01:12:14] By himself. [01:12:16] By 1957, he was working for CIA in the International Cooperation Administration, which is something like what they call AID today. [01:12:26] It was a CIA front. [01:12:29] And along the way, CIA enlisted George de Morenschild to keep tabs this is his word keep tabs on Lee Harvey Oswald, who had returned from the Soviet Union and was living in Dallas and also in Fort Worth. [01:12:43] And so de Morenschild took Oswald under his wing, took him to parties. [01:12:48] Introduced him to people who really kept a watch on him. [01:12:51] And it was very dangerous for DeMornschild to do this, as it turned out later, because what it meant after the assassination of President Kennedy, that CIA had knowledge of Oswald before the assassination, something that they have not admitted to this day. [01:13:07] As time went by, DeMornschild seemed to express some remorse for having helped the Warren Commission portray Oswald as the lone assassin. [01:13:16] I actually believe that he was a very sincere person, and with me, he was. [01:13:20] Extremely sincere because I treated him almost like a son of mine, you know, he could have been a son by his age or as a soldier in my regiment. [01:13:32] This pattern continued, and de Mornschild was starting to sound like he was exonerating Oswald more and more. [01:13:39] I remember talking to him and looking at the cover of Life magazine, which has the picture of President Kennedy, and he commented how handsome he was, how young, how attractive. [01:13:53] Again, I think this appealed to him, and every time he spoke about President Kennedy, he spoke kindly of his effort to improve the racial relations in the United States. [01:14:07] And from that point of view, he definitely had love and respect for President Kennedy. [01:14:13] As the 70s dawned and congressional investigations started new JFK murder probes, Desmond Schiltz started to complain to friends that he felt he was under surveillance. [01:14:23] As fate would have it, he was old friends with then CIA Director George H.W. Bush, a future president. [01:14:31] He wrote Bush telling him that he was being harassed by murky groups. [01:14:35] Quote, Maybe you'll be able to bring a solution into the hopeless situation I find myself in. [01:14:42] My wife and I find ourselves surrounded by some vigilantes, our phone bugged, and we are being followed everywhere. [01:14:49] We are driven to insanity by this situation. [01:14:52] Tried to write stupidly and unsuccessfully about Lee H. Osborne. [01:14:56] And must have angered a lot of people. [01:14:59] Could you do something to remove this net around us? [01:15:02] This will be my last request for help. [01:15:06] The circle of intrigue had tightened around to Mournschild, and when the subpoena came for him to testify before Congress, he was found dead in his Florida home. [01:15:54] David Atlee Phillips was the CIA's chief of all operations in the Western Hemisphere at the time of the assassination. [01:16:01] Phillips cultivated anti Castro groups and specialized in creating covert paramilitary units. [01:16:07] One of these units was called Alpha 66. [01:16:09] The leader of that unit, Antonio Vessiana, is on record saying that Phillips, using the pseudonym Maurice Bishop, was working with Lee Harvey Oswald. [01:16:19] I surely have been over in Dallas in a meeting of 10 or 15 minutes with Mr. Maurice Bishop in Dallas at that time. [01:16:29] And you feel certain that Oswald was working with or associated with American intelligence? [01:16:35] Well, at least he was associated with Maurice Bishop. [01:16:39] And if Maurice Bishop was an intelligence service in the United States, I don't doubt that he was working with him. [01:16:50] Though Vesciano was harassed and even shot for his testimony, he came out on the 50th anniversary of the JFK assassination and gave this statement Maurice Bishop, my CIA contact agent, was David Attlee Phillips. [01:17:03] Phillips or Bishop was the man I saw with Lee Harvey Oswald in Dallas in September 1963. [01:17:11] I had an affinity for Cuba. [01:17:13] The Cuban people are marvelous. [01:17:15] I'd seen what was going on there. [01:17:18] And many of the participants in the Bay of Pigs were on that landing force because I have known them personally in Cuba. === Oswald Recruited by Intelligence (15:41) === [01:17:25] Phillips died in 1988, but he left behind a strangely confessional, unpublished manuscript, a novel about a CIA officer who trained Oswald. [01:17:35] I was one of the two case officers who handled Lee Harvey Oswald. [01:17:39] After working to establish his Marxist bona fides, we gave him the mission of killing Fidel Castro in Cuba. [01:17:45] I helped him when he came to Mexico City to obtain a visa and when he returned to Dallas to wait for it. [01:17:50] I saw him twice there. [01:17:51] We rehearsed it many times. [01:17:52] In Havana, Oswald was to assassinate Castro with a sniper's rifle from the upper floor window of a building. [01:18:03] One last Phillips confession was related by his nephew, musician Sean Phillips. [01:18:08] To JFK researcher Gary Buell. [01:18:11] In an email, Sean wrote how his father, Jim, pressed David Attlee as he was dying for the truth. [01:18:17] Quote, Jim knew at this point that David was in some way seriously involved in this matter, and he and David argued rather vehemently. [01:18:25] Finally, as David was dying of irreversible lung cancer, he called Jim, and there was apparently no reconciliation between them. [01:18:32] As Jim asked David pointedly, Were you in Dallas on that day? [01:18:37] David said, Yes. [01:18:40] And Jim hung up the phone. [01:18:56] E. Howard Hunt was best known as one of the Watergate burglars in the scandal that brought down the Nixon presidency. [01:19:02] He was also the CIA chief of covert action during JFK's presidency. [01:19:07] Before he died, he shared information with his son, St. John Hunt, that the CIA had participated in the JFK assassination. [01:19:15] He refers here to three agents' involvement William Harvey, David Attlee Phillips, and Cord Meyer, plus a surprise mastermind of the entire operation. [01:19:26] Now that David Phillips apparently met with Oswald in Mexico City before the assassination, you've said that Bill Harvey may very well have recruited a French or Corsican gunman to shoot, and you've also said that Cord Meyer had a motive in that his wife was having an affair with John F. Kennedy. [01:19:49] I heard from Frank that LBJ had designated Cord Meyer. Jr. to undertake a larger organization while keeping it totally secret. [01:20:05] I think that LBJ settled on Meyer as an opportunist, like himself, a parent, and a man who had very little left to him in life ever since JFK had taken Cord's wife as one of his mistresses. [01:20:31] Three CIA officials who had, let's say, the means, motive, and opportunity, you know, or some connection to kill Kennedy. [01:20:41] That's true. [01:20:44] I could just visualize Harvey and LBJ forming a kind of a thieves compact between them. [01:20:56] There was nobody with the leverage that LBJ had. [01:21:04] No competitor. [01:21:05] He was the vice president and if he wanted to get rid of the president then he had ability to do so by corrupting different people in CIA. [01:21:22] And he had to do it with the limitations of CIA because there was no other group that honored, if I could use that term, honored the clandestine. limitations the way CIA did. [01:21:40] They could do something, turn their back on it, and move on to something else. [01:21:45] It was not like a military. [01:21:48] There was no accounting in that sense. [01:22:09] Creating a legend by utilizing lookalikes to build a character profile is an established intelligence method. [01:22:16] In Oswald's case, shady CIA-related assets were involved in building a picture of him that would later be used to portray him as unstable or even as a fanatic. [01:22:25] Too often there are reports of Oswald in two places at once. [01:22:29] Even FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover in 1960, three years before the assassination, wrote a memo that suggested someone may be using Oswald's identity. [01:22:39] When the CIA sent pictures of Oswald visiting the Mexico City Cuban embassy, the figure was so different from the Oswald the world would all see just two months later that they had to retract the report and claim they were mistaken. [01:22:52] Then they claimed the photos were destroyed, and finally that the cameras were broken on the day that Oswald visited both the Cuban and Soviet embassies. [01:23:01] Former CIA director Richard Helms claimed in a PBS interview to be baffled by all of the discrepancies. [01:23:09] It's my recollection that at the time of Oswald's presence in Mexico City, there was something wrong with some of the cameras that we were using. [01:23:17] We were trying to fix it. [01:23:18] But the fact remains that there are no photographs of Lee Harvey Oswald taken while he was in Mexico City at that time, and I can't explain 100% why not. [01:23:27] Although Helms claimed this to be the case, the CIA station chief in Mexico City, Wynn Scott, kept a diary that clearly stated they had photos of Oswald, or someone claiming to be him, at the embassy during his visit. [01:23:43] Persons watching these embassies photographed Oswald as he entered and left and clocked the time spent on each visit. [01:23:52] That's fine for Winscott to say, but he has no evidence to demonstrate it, and he couldn't produce the photograph, so what is he talking about? [01:24:01] Helms found himself in denial mode once again when Warren Commission counsel David Slawson came forward and said the CIA had played tapes for him of Oswald recorded at the Cuban embassy. [01:24:12] The CIA's official position was that all the tapes had been destroyed. [01:24:17] Just under the normal course of business, that after the tapes had been transcribed and the material was put on paper, then the tapes were routinely erased and used again. [01:24:27] They said to us, it was Winscott, that would you like to listen to the tapes of this particular one? [01:24:33] I can't remember now whether it was a wiretap or a bug. [01:24:37] So they played a little bit of it for us. [01:24:38] Could be that the one that we were offered the opportunity to listen to was the only one that hadn't been destroyed. [01:24:46] Now, even that, just one not having been destroyed. [01:24:50] Would show that Mr. Helms' statement was incorrect. [01:24:54] The key question is this If Oswald had been at these two embassies demanding an exit visa, then why would the CIA destroy the tapes and photos of his visit? [01:25:03] Unless it was not Oswald, but a double who had visited these embassies and had been sent by someone who was trying to incriminate Oswald as a communist six weeks before the assassination. [01:25:16] In the mid 90s, former director Helms continued his denial tour, but in one interview, he was caught off guard. [01:25:22] By local CBS reporter Richard Bernstein on the CIA's true role in the assassination. [01:25:28] This is their encounter. [01:25:30] And I am simply saying this on television because I would like the American public to understand that the CIA was not involved in that assassination, regardless of what anybody says. [01:25:41] I tell you, we checked up on it later, not only at the time, but then we checked out when the Warren Commission was sitting and so forth, to be sure that nobody had been in Dallas on that particular day. [01:25:51] You did that in November of 1963? [01:25:54] Of course. [01:25:55] Why did you do that? [01:25:56] Had anybody accused the CIA at the time? [01:26:01] So, who asked you to check where your own agents were? [01:26:03] We did that on our own. [01:26:04] Why? [01:26:05] Well, because I just thought it was a wise thing to do. [01:26:07] Why? [01:26:10] Because under the circumstances, you would have thought that it would be a nice thing to know if we had had any people. [01:26:18] It might have been very useful if we had people in Dallas on that particular time. [01:26:22] They might have been able to contribute something to this. [01:26:24] They might have been in the crowd watching the. [01:26:27] Is that why you checked, or did you check because you thought maybe some of your guys might have been involved? [01:26:31] I did not think that anybody was involved. [01:26:33] And don't try and make me say it. [01:26:35] Was there a feeling that there was reason to be scared of the fact that the President of the United States was that mad at the? [01:26:41] We were unhappy, but there's nothing we could do about it. [01:26:44] What would you suggest that one do under the circumstances? [01:26:46] Well, you know what people have suggested you did under the circumstances. [01:26:49] What was that? [01:26:50] You had the president killed. [01:26:52] Well, that's ridiculous. [01:26:54] Absolutely untrue. [01:26:57] Emphatically. [01:27:00] Can you prove that? [01:27:02] How would you expect me to prove it? [01:27:54] Judith Ferry Baker was a young advanced science student recruited out of high school by experts in cancer research to join their medical program in New Orleans. [01:28:04] She discovered that her two superiors, renowned Dr. Elton Oshner and his assistant, Dr. Mary Sherman, were involved in an anti communist intelligence operation to develop a cancer weapon to use against foreign enemies. [01:28:16] It was in this nexus of associations that she met Lee Harvey Oswald, who she says was working for the CIA. [01:28:23] I caught up with Judy to ask her about her time in New Orleans in 1963 with Lee Oswald. [01:28:31] Now, Judy, let's start from the point where you're in New Orleans and you realize what the program you've been recruited into is about. [01:28:39] Here I am in a secret project that's being sponsored by people who are connected with the CIA, and the objective is to kill Castro. [01:28:49] I understand why they recruited you into this program because of your cancer expertise. [01:28:54] Why did they want Lee Oswald? [01:28:56] Lee Oswald is a wonderful associate for this because, first, nobody's going to consider him having anything to do with biological weapons. [01:29:04] Second, he is really one of ours, but he can pose, and he will later that summer, as pro Castro so that he can dirty himself up to like he looks like he's communist so he can go down there and safely take the biological weapon to Mexico City. [01:29:19] So he's working for the CIA? [01:29:21] Absolutely. [01:29:21] Also for the FBI. [01:29:23] For both of them. [01:29:24] Now, you were both placed at the Riley Coffee Company, and you helped Lee maintain the visage that he was there when most of the time he wasn't. [01:29:31] I'm clocking him out at 5 o'clock, 5 o'clock, 5 o'clock, right on the nose because I am the Vice President, Secretary, and I can just get right in line in there and get that. [01:29:41] Sucker, you know, stamped because I am an efficient person. [01:29:45] So he's got all these precise clockouts. [01:29:46] He's not there. [01:29:48] Right. [01:29:48] So he's off working with Guy Bannister or posing as a Marxist. [01:29:52] Now, you had a close relationship with him. [01:29:55] Did he ever tell you how his intelligence work led him to New Orleans in 1963? [01:30:01] He wouldn't tell me a lot of things. [01:30:04] But finally, he said he couldn't because it would. [01:30:07] Be dangerous. [01:30:08] So on the 27th of July, he tells me they're not letting me advance in the company. [01:30:13] There's something the matter, and he's afraid they're going to end up using him, killing him off. [01:30:18] They'll use him somewhere because he's expendable. [01:30:21] Finally, he gave up and told me, and he started confiding me from then on. [01:30:26] Okay, you've mentioned the company. [01:30:27] So that is the CIA you're referring to? [01:30:30] He called it the company, the CIA. [01:30:31] He was borrowed by the CIA from the ONI, and he went through rigorous training and One of the people he worked with, in fact, had a nervous breakdown and couldn't take the pressure. [01:30:43] They were training them against MKUltra, against being able to be hypnotized and things like that, against being able to be brainwashed. [01:30:51] And this one guy had a nervous breakdown. [01:30:52] They shot him. [01:30:53] They killed him because he was far deep in the program. [01:30:57] They said it was a suicide, of course. [01:30:58] Now, Oswald seemed to be incredibly cool under pressure. [01:31:02] Well, that's why he had been trained. [01:31:04] And he was incredibly cool. [01:31:06] And he said, even he's on record as saying, I've been trained to handle soft interrogations and hard ones. [01:31:13] Yeah, back up any of that. [01:31:15] He could take it. [01:31:16] So they could not break him. [01:31:18] They have to kill him because eventually he's going to say something. [01:31:22] He can't say, again, I can't say he's CIA or anything like that because they would have killed, executed all his contacts. [01:31:34] Now, you met and worked with David Ferry, who was a CIA contract pilot and also Oswald's instructor in the Civil Air Patrol when he was in his teens. [01:31:43] Can you tell us about him? [01:31:45] He's an intelligent man. [01:31:47] They loved him. [01:31:47] They, you know, a gifted pilot, linguist who could speak many different languages, intelligent, scientifically trained. [01:31:55] And of course, he's advertising himself in the directory as Dr. David Ferry, psychologist. [01:32:01] He works with Dr. Heath and others that are involved in the CIA. [01:32:06] They were interested in David Ferry in New Orleans because he had a lot of friends in the French Quarter, you know, that were involved with, well, they believed in Santeria, they believed in voodoo, and we're talking then about zombies. [01:32:20] CIA was looking into all kinds of chemicals, mind altering chemicals. [01:32:25] I mean, a zombie is kind of interesting. [01:32:28] What were the drugs that they used? [01:32:30] David Ferry knew the people that were involved with things like that. [01:32:33] So that's how he basically originally got involved. [01:32:36] Of course, all the pro warn commission writers who said that Oswald did not know Ferry and could not have were proved wrong when the photo of them together in the Civil Air Patrol was found. [01:32:46] Oswald entered the Civil Air Patrol in New Orleans at the age of 15. [01:32:51] He was in David Ferry's unit. [01:32:53] Ferry may have been the crucial link to how Oswald was recruited by intelligence groups. [01:32:58] Of course, this is the same David Ferry who was associated with Guy Bannister and charged by Jim Garrison for conspiracy in the JFK assassination. === David Ferry Crucial Link (04:55) === [01:33:07] Garrison showed clear links between Ferry, Bannister, and Oswald. [01:33:11] But a strange thing happened on the way to trial. [01:33:14] Ferry was found dead in his apartment. [01:33:44] Oswald was first charged with shooting Officer Tippett after the assassination. [01:33:49] Then suddenly, he was also charged with the murder of President Kennedy. [01:33:53] His detention was unusual. [01:33:55] No legal counsel, no records kept of his long interrogation. [01:33:59] With his intelligence training, it dawned on him that he was being set up as the scapegoat of the century. [01:34:05] I don't know what this is all about. [01:34:09] I work in that building. [01:34:17] Naturally, if I work in that building, yes, sir. [01:34:27] No, they're taking me in because of the fact that I live in the Soviet Union. [01:35:06] Looking back, it's obvious that Oswald had to be eliminated for the plan to work. [01:35:12] He knew too much and was in too deep. [01:35:15] The man selected for the hit was mafia connected gun running nightclub owner Jack Ruby. [01:35:21] Ruby later claimed that hidden forces were behind the assassination of JFK. [01:35:26] The world will never know the true facts of what occurred, my motives. [01:35:36] The people that had so much to gain. [01:35:40] And have such a material motive for putting me in a position I'm in will never let the true facts come above board to the world. [01:35:52] Now, these people are in very high positions, yes? [01:35:56] We can [01:37:19] clearly see in the testimony of people like Judy Baker and in the exhaustive research by investigators, that Lee Oswald was not the lone assassin as portrayed by the Warren Commission and the media. [01:37:30] The evidence against him was hollow, and his innocence appears obvious. [01:37:35] We can also see that Oswald was an intelligence asset of some kind, and that the CIA has done their best to cover up their relationship with him. [01:37:43] And they have had help over the years. [01:37:45] The major media companies have obstructed the truth in this case and slandered those who have brought forward compelling facts. [01:37:51] Let's remember that in 1979, the House Assassination Congressional Committee found a probable conspiracy in the assassination of John F. Kennedy, but the media never followed up on it. === JFK RFK MLK Connections (04:39) === [01:38:02] Now, after 50 years, we as Americans need to set the record straight. [01:38:07] The whole world is watching and waiting. [01:38:10] I'm Dark Journalist. [01:38:11] Thank you for joining me, and I look forward to seeing you soon. [01:38:46] Thank you for joining us for Agent Oswald, the CIA Patsy, on the 58th anniversary of the JFK assassination. [01:38:55] Please join us now for the fascinating documentary, X Protect Aerospace UFO File Assassins, that delves deeply into aerospace connections to the JFK and RFK assassinations. [01:40:32] This is Dark Journalist. [01:40:33] In my investigations into political assassinations, I found something absolutely incredible. [01:40:38] That the covert forces behind the assassinations, right down to the patsies that they selected, were directly associated with advanced technology and the UFO file. [01:40:48] Now, I've referred to this as X technology because of an obscure naming mechanism called X steganography that is utilized when it is moved through various government agencies. [01:40:58] I found evidence for a group that we will call X Protect that employs lethal means to hide the secret X technology. [01:41:05] In the UFO file. [01:41:07] Now, X Protect exists in the shadowy corridor where the intelligence community meets with secret aerospace defense contractors. [01:41:14] I'm going to present breakthrough evidence that will show clearly that the assassinations of JFK, RFK, and MLK, which changed the ruling structure of America and the world, were directly connected to X Protect. [01:41:27] The impact on our lives economically, geopolitically, technologically, psychologically, and even spiritually from these events cannot be overstated. [01:41:36] This information has been hiding in plain sight for decades. [01:41:39] The startling revelations around their activities and the direct correlation between the UFO file assassins and the X technology will be revealed here for the first time in great detail and will change our understanding of history forever. [01:41:53] The facts and testimony presented will be unmistakable. [01:41:57] Let's get started. [01:42:12] By 1947, billionaire Howard Hughes had carved out a unique space for his company, Hughes Aircraft, setting records and snapping up the lion's share of government military contracts. [01:42:22] Born in 1904, Hughes had come a long way since both of his parents had died, leaving the 19 year old the sole heir to a massive fortune built by his father at Hughes Tool Company in Texas, which patented an innovative rotary drill bit that revolutionized oil drilling during the Texas oil boom. === Hughes UFO Mystery Deepens (08:00) === [01:42:41] Hughes would go on to become a fantastically successful movie producer. [01:42:45] Running RKO Studios and even directing the controversial favorite The Outlaw, featuring Jane Russell. [01:42:51] But his real love was aviation, and he had become legendary with his spectacular flying successes, like his flight around the world in three days, and also some bizarre entries, including the reconnaissance aircraft, the XF 11, which Hughes crashed flying low into Beverly Hills, but survived. [01:43:09] There were also what appeared to be spectacular failures, like the Hughes H 4 Hercules, the so called Spruce Goose, a massive flying boat. [01:43:17] Unlike anything seen before it, there were rumors that Hughes was keeping a major secret so competitors couldn't discover what he was working on. [01:43:26] An innovation so great it would change aviation forever. [01:43:29] The spiraling rumors and Hughes' enemies got so out of hand that Hughes had to testify before a Senate committee investigating the lack of transparency around his secretive plans and designs. [01:43:40] When Senator Brewster realized that he was fighting a battle against public opinion, a losing battle, he folded up and took a run out powder. [01:43:52] In 1948, Hughes created the Aerospace Group with a vision of conquering space travel. [01:43:57] According to reports, he was spurred on in part by seeing some unusual debris when he was called into Roswell in mid 1947 to observe the strange material. [01:44:08] Roswell would become the first known UFO crash when residents reported seeing unusual lights in the sky, and a rancher named Mac Brazzle told authorities about a large scale debris field scattered on his ranch from a crash craft of some kind. [01:44:21] Intelligence officer Major Jesse Marcel from the 509th. Atomic bomb group was the first to see the wreckage. [01:44:28] He described a mysterious metal that wouldn't bend or burn, along with strange markings that resembled Egyptian hieroglyphics. [01:44:36] It was not anything from this earth that I'm quite sure of, because being an intelligence officer, I was familiar with just about all materials used in aircraft and our air travel. [01:44:48] This is nothing like that. [01:44:51] It could not have been. [01:44:53] The army covered up the crash, explaining it away as a weather balloon, but a select Group of aviation specialists were called in to view the UFO crash remains, according to several accounts from retired military personnel. [01:45:05] Hughes was asked for his expertise, but reportedly attempted to take over the entire operation of examining the UFO wreckage. [01:45:13] Hughes was asked to leave the project. [01:45:15] The legendary aviator had imparted to a flying friend that he had observed UFOs before for many years. [01:45:21] Bruce Morgan, the son of Hollywood film star Yvonne DiCarlo, who dated Hughes in the period between 1946 and 1948, recalls how her cousin, Kenneth Ross McKenzie, a pilot in the Canadian Air Force who flew with Hughes, described his fascination with these unknown craft. [01:45:39] Her cousin Ken Ross McKenzie, who was in the Canadian RCAF, took flights with Howard Hughes. [01:45:46] And during that time, when they were up at altitude flying around, Howard Hughes had some kind of kinship with Ken because when they were alone in that plane, the conversations got very personal about why Hughes was interested in these strange crafts. [01:46:00] He said, I'm a designer and I want to know. [01:46:03] There was very little looking out of the window at night, as most pilots will tell you, but what did come through sometimes, like big flashing beacons and the speed of them, as Hughes related, he said, I'm an aircraft designer. [01:46:17] I don't know where this stuff is from, but I sometimes get envious as we're working on things. [01:46:22] Whoever the hell is up here using this is way ahead of me. [01:46:26] And he wanted to know about design, and he figured, well, this has got to be the cutting edge if these things are going that fast. [01:46:33] And Hughes talked about this stuff and then wanted to show Yvonne something. [01:46:37] Morgan relates how Hughes wanted to show Yvonne DiCarlo something that had crashed in an area outside of Las Vegas. [01:46:44] The area was called Rose Wells. [01:46:47] Morgan describes what happened here. [01:46:50] And he's taking Yvonne up in their plane, in his plane, personally. [01:46:53] And they go up to what I think was Reno, to a place called the Mapes. [01:46:57] Now, the time standard we're talking about here is somewhere between 1946, 1946, and it couldn't be later than 1949 because at that point she was involved with the Prince of Iran, Abdurraza Pahlav. [01:47:09] So, It had to be before 49. [01:47:12] And sometimes her and Hughes would be in several places in Hollywood. [01:47:16] And he was always the odd guy out, but always invited because he was interesting. [01:47:21] On this occasion, they went up to a place and spent three solid days together. [01:47:26] So after three days of all things must come to an end, and he says, I want to show you something interesting on the way back. [01:47:33] And he started to make calls because you have to shift over to get to the 95 to get to the area which was designated in the phone call as Rose Wells. [01:47:42] Which is on very old maps, but nowhere now. [01:47:46] What he conveyed to her was that there had been a crash and there was something interesting. [01:47:50] And she said, Oh, sure. [01:47:51] And as she started packing, she started to get feelings. [01:47:55] And what she told me as to why she even remembered this was that she said, I suddenly realized if I saw what he was going to show me, I would never get it out of my mind. [01:48:08] And she said, Let's go back to Hollywood. [01:48:10] Now, why this story got told years later is the following She's sitting long. [01:48:15] Past normal retirement, maybe a few more years to live, and she's watching a documentary on Bob Lazar describing his adventure on looking at the inside of a UFO. [01:48:26] Specifically, I think it was called the Sport Model. [01:48:29] And he stuck his head in and he described his feelings, but more than anything else, what Yvonne keyed in with was when he said, I didn't feel like I belonged there. [01:48:39] And she suddenly realized, she said, I believe he's telling the truth. [01:48:43] And it made her remember and then tell me about this event with Hughes. [01:48:47] Because of what Lazar said, she said, I remember this. [01:48:50] And I remember thinking, I don't want to see this. [01:48:53] She could already feel something about this. [01:48:56] And maybe, who knows, maybe she could even visualize it in her mind because the whole family on the DiCarlo side was psychic. [01:49:02] And she said, If I see this, I'll never get it out of my mind. [01:49:06] Years later, DiCarlo would reflect on her relationship with the mysterious aviator. [01:49:12] Did you have a fling with Howard Hughes? [01:49:16] That was more than a fling, it was a romance for about three years. [01:49:20] Oh, he was wonderful then. [01:49:22] Yeah. [01:49:22] He taught me how to fly. [01:49:24] He wouldn't marry me, so I gave him up. [01:49:28] The strange destination that Hughes wanted to bring DiCarlo to, called Rose Wells, was eventually removed from official maps of the area. [01:49:37] But Morgan found these examples showing exactly where it was. [01:49:42] The one that I showed you was the oldest. [01:49:45] That goes back to like 1911, you know, really old. [01:49:49] Then it disappears, and what you get around it is the area of Pahrump, where Ard Bell was, so that people know well, where is this? [01:49:57] You're north of Indian Springs, you're south of Mercury, and you're on the 95, and you're looking off to your left if you're going north, which means it's on the west side of the highway. [01:50:08] And it's not that far off, but it has disappeared as a stated place on the map. [01:50:15] UFO crash sites disappearing off maps, a strong desire to replicate. [01:50:20] The UFO X technology that he had witnessed during his own flights. [01:50:25] Hughes had gone deep into the UFO mystery, and soon other covert forces would be looking to use that fact to their advantage. === Thane Eugene Caesar Unmasked (12:52) === [01:50:41] Robert Mayhew was a CIA operative involved in black ops and assassinations since the 1940s. [01:50:47] He joined the Hughes organization in 1954 and became a chief aide. [01:50:52] Controlling Hughes' Nevada operations. [01:50:55] From the start, he cast a dark shadow with his web of CIA connections over all of Hughes' activities. [01:51:01] In 1975, he confessed to the church committee investigating CIA atrocities that in 1960 he had met with mobster Johnny Rizzelli on behalf of CIA director Alan Dulles to assassinate Cuban leader Fidel Castro. [01:51:15] Dulles was fired by JFK in 1961 for attempts to draw the U.S. into a war with Cuba. [01:51:22] Mayhew's role in the assassination of Senator Robert Kennedy in 1968. [01:51:27] Can now be revealed. [01:51:28] John Meyer, the number two man in the Hughes organization, has put on record that Mayhew carried out the assassination. [01:51:37] I'm John Meyer, former advisor to the recluse billionaire Howard Hughes. [01:51:42] Among my acquaintances at that time were members of the Nixon family, Vice President Hubert Humphrey, head of the FBI J. Edgar Hoover, Paul Schrade, who was shot at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles, along with Robert Kennedy. [01:51:58] Harry Evans, who was six feet away from Kennedy when he was shot, and numerous others that are pertinent to this tragic event. [01:52:09] The Hughes Organization was involved in the assassination of Robert Kennedy in 1968. [01:52:17] Meyer witnessed some of the most important operations of the Hughes Organization in the 1960s. [01:52:22] Seeing them become involved in Robert Kennedy's assassination was a devastating shock to him. [01:52:28] Coming into the 1968 Presidential election, President Lyndon Johnson had withdrawn from the race when Senator Robert Kennedy had entered. [01:52:35] Kennedy, who had served as Attorney General in his brother John F. Kennedy's administration and had become a senator after President Kennedy's assassination, was the odds on favorite to win against Republican challenger Richard Nixon. [01:52:48] Nixon, who had lost his previous bid for the presidency in 1960 to John F. Kennedy, was a longtime Hughes crony. [01:52:56] It was well known that Hughes had even given Nixon's brother, Don Nixon, a huge loan to start a chain of fast food restaurants. [01:53:04] And that in return, Nixon had used his powers as vice president to get Hughes Aerospace to be run through Hughes Medical Institute as a charity and therefore not subject to taxation, saving Hughes untold millions of dollars and clearing the way for massive black project space development. [01:53:22] To this day, the IRS has kept all the records of its dealings with Hughes on this matter completely secret. [01:53:29] John Meyer had met with Robert Kennedy shortly before his death, and Kennedy had told him he knew about what had happened regarding the Hughes Medical Institute. [01:53:36] Institute and was going to expose it. [01:53:39] The enmity between RFK and Hughes was all Mayhew needed to put his assassination plan into action. [01:53:46] Meyer kept a diary from his Hughes days that he released in a book called Age of Secrets. [01:53:51] The book was heavily censored with almost no coverage and was essentially buried. [01:53:55] The crucial breakthroughs in the diary reveal the hand of the Hughes organization through Robert Mayhew in the assassination of Senator Robert Kennedy in Los Angeles at the Ambassador Hotel on June 5th, 1968. [01:54:09] My thanks to all of you, and now it's on to Chicago and let's win there. [01:54:31] Senator Robert Kennedy died on June 6, 1968, at 4 44 a.m. [01:54:37] Had he not been assassinated, most political experts agree he would have easily beaten Richard Nixon and won the presidential election. [01:54:45] Mayhew, Hughes, and the CIA couldn't afford to have a Kennedy back in the White House. [01:54:51] The X technology they had been secretly cultivating with Hughes Aerospace couldn't be revealed. [01:54:56] X Protect would need to risk exposure to keep the UFO file in their hands. [01:55:09] The outline of a complex and targeted plot to prevent Senator Robert Kennedy from becoming president is clearly laid out in John Meyer's diary. [01:55:17] He was seeing through the players of a dangerous game. [01:55:20] An excerpt reads October 25th, 1969. [01:55:24] My friends and I were taken to the president's yacht all day. [01:55:27] We also visited the president's beach house. [01:55:30] On the yacht, I sat stunned as Don Nixon, after many drinks, started talking about the RFK assassination. [01:55:36] His brother being in Texas when JFK was assassinated. [01:55:39] And Bob Mayhew telling Don about Bob's conversation with Don in Las Vegas. [01:55:44] Mayhew took credit for the RFK murder. [01:55:46] The ones that sat around the table with their mouths open were shocked. [01:55:50] There was more. [01:55:51] Than Eugene Caesar was a security guard that had been hired only three days previously by the Ambassador Hotel. [01:55:58] He was directly behind Senator Kennedy when he was shot that night. [01:56:02] In the confusion of Sirhan Sirhan shooting his gun some five feet in front of Kennedy, witnesses also saw Caesar draw and fire his gun. [01:56:11] Caesar would change his story several times about what happened that night, claiming he never fired a shot. [01:56:16] The police never tested his gun. [01:56:18] Well known LA County Coroner Thomas Noguchi did an autopsy on Senator Kennedy. [01:56:23] It showed that he had been shot at point blank range in the back of the head, about one inch from his right ear. [01:56:29] In other words, if I press my fingers in the back, it's about three inches away from the senator's ear. [01:56:39] Since Sirhan was identified by witnesses as being five feet in the Front of Kennedy, Naguchi's findings indicated that Sirhan was not the assassin of Robert Kennedy. [01:56:49] Whoever it was had to be directly behind him. [01:56:52] The person behind Kennedy was Thane Eugene Caesar. [01:56:56] Meyer's diary excerpt. [01:56:58] June 13, 1968. [01:57:01] Listening to the radio where they were discussing the RFK assassination and who was shot, etc., they mentioned Thane Caesar, who was a security guard at the hotel working for ACE Guard Security and was also employed by Lockheed Aircraft. [01:57:15] I remember Thane from his trips to Vegas, where he was meeting with numerous gaming people and was introduced to me by Jack Hooper, an associate of Bob Mayhew. [01:57:25] June 14th, 1968. [01:57:28] Bob Mayhew called and told me to come over to his house at 8 30 p.m. that evening, and I did. [01:57:33] He was furious and wanted to know why I was checking up on Thane. [01:57:36] I was stunned at his anger, and he said to me that if I kept discussing this matter, he would see that I was no longer around the Hughes operation. [01:57:45] He then told me that he was responsible. [01:57:47] For all security matters in Nevada, and he would personally handle the Paul Schrade convalescence at the ranch. [01:57:53] June 15, 1968, 8 a.m., received a call from Jack Hooper, who told me that he was speaking with Bob Mayhew, and I was never to mention his name or Bell Air Patrol. [01:58:04] He told me Mayhew wanted to speak to me after we spoke, and I called Mayhew 15 minutes later. [01:58:10] Bob wanted to impress upon me that he was in charge of the Nevada operations, and everything I did in Nevada involving Hughes, he was to be informed about. [01:58:20] It's clear from these excerpts from Hughes's aide, John Meyer, that from the outset, Bob Mayhew was worried that Meyer had figured out his role in the assassination of Robert Kennedy. [01:58:30] His inquiries about Thane Eugene Caesar led Mayhew to issue the not so subtle threats and final ultimatum for Meyer to cease looking into this before it was too late. [01:58:40] Mayhew and the CIA forces behind him saw Meyer as a dangerous wildcard as they moved to consolidate the Hughes organization and conceal their crime. [01:58:49] The actions of Ex Protect to preserve the wall of secrecy. [01:58:52] Around covert aerospace programs would change society forever. [01:59:08] Since the John Frankenheimer film The Manchurian Candidate came out in the early 1960s, the clandestine idea of a mind controlled assassin had been in the public mind, although it wouldn't be clear for another decade that the program was in fact entirely real and something the CIA, on record, had destroyed all of its files on concerning its existence. [01:59:28] With his deep CIA history and black ops background, Mayhew had access to the best CIA mind control programmers. [01:59:36] The jaw dropping detail that Mayhew operative Johnny Roselli was co owner of the Santa Anita racetrack that Surhan suggests that Mayhew had Roselli find the patsy to be programmed for the RFK assassination. [01:59:49] Surhan, being introverted and highly suggestible, made an ideal candidate. [01:59:55] Surhan would disappear for months with no contact to family and friends just before his strange appearance at the Ambassador Hotel. [02:00:03] Years later, CIA MKUltra hypno programmer William Bryan would brag to friends that he had programmed Surhan to be at the Ambassador and shoot that night. [02:00:12] Surhan's own note. [02:00:13] Books found after the assassination mention the name of Albert DeSalvo, the infamous Boston strangler who had been coerced into a confession under hypnosis by the very same William Bryan. [02:00:26] You have to have the person locked up physically to have control over them. [02:00:30] You have to use a certain amount of physical torture involved, and there is also the use of long term hypnotic suggestion, probably drugs. [02:00:44] Whatever and so on. [02:00:45] Under these situations where you have all this going for you, like the prison camps and so on, yes, you can brainwash a person to do just about anything. [02:00:53] What I'm speaking about are the innumerable instances that we ran into when I was running the country's brainwashing and anti brainwashing programs. [02:01:02] Sirhan claimed to have no memory after the incident and thought he was out of shooting range. [02:01:06] With Mayhew's strongman, Thane Eugene Caesar, pulling off the murder and Sirhan to take the fall for the crime, the stage was set for Nixon to become president and for Hughes to have the most powerful man in the world. [02:01:19] His efforts to make Hughes Aerospace the future of space travel and defense. [02:01:24] In a chilling final excerpt from Meyer's diary, he tells of Mayhew meeting Nixon's brother Don the morning that it was announced that Senator Robert Kennedy had died. [02:01:33] June 6, 1968, 5 a.m., Bob Mayhew called to ask about the Don Nixon meeting and suggested 8 30 for breakfast at the Desert Inn Country Club. [02:01:44] I went to the club. [02:01:45] Mayhew was all smiles, and Don Nixon walks in all smiles. [02:01:49] What followed next. [02:01:50] Had to be seen to be believed. [02:01:52] They embraced each other, and Don Nixon said, Well, that prick is dead. [02:01:55] And Mayhew said, Well, it looks like your brother is in now. [02:01:59] At the time, I did not even know what they were talking about. [02:02:02] Mayhew joked that they should now be calling Don Nixon Mr. Vice President. [02:02:08] In a final twist, Caesar, who would eventually flee to the Philippines, was found to have not only worked at Lockheed Aircraft, but in their elite Skunk Works division, well known in UFO research circles as the hub of exotic technology redevelopment. [02:02:23] Ben Rich, the director of Skunk Works, known as the father of stealth, once said, We now have the technology to take ET home. [02:02:31] According to those who had attended his final lecture, he also said, We had figured out how to do interstellar travel. [02:02:38] He alluded to these technologies being wrapped up in black projects that would never be revealed. [02:02:44] In a letter from July 1986, Rich explained that he believed in both man made and extraterrestrial UFOs, explaining that many UFOs were just unfunded. [02:02:54] Opportunities. [02:02:55] As the head of Skunk Works, Rich was in a unique position to know. [02:02:59] They were the very heart of UFO and X technology development. [02:03:03] How this 26 year old security guard merited such a posh assignment at one of the world's most top secret advanced development programs reflects the deep tentacles of CIA aerospace connections and their darkest secret the lethal unit that protects the X technology inside the UFO file X Protect. === James Earl Ray Patsy (09:14) === [02:03:33] James Earl Ray, the assassin of civil rights leader Martin Luther King in the official version of history, always maintained his innocence after his lawyer had him plead guilty to avoid the death penalty. [02:03:45] Many of the key elements used to portray Ray as the lone gunman completely fell apart in subsequent investigations like the House Select Committee on Assassinations and the 1999 civil trial of Lloyd Jowers. [02:03:57] In the Jowers case, the jury found that government agencies had been involved in the King assassination. [02:04:04] How did Ray come to be used as the patsy? [02:04:07] His extensive travels to Canada, Mexico, and the UK show the fingerprints of intelligence work. [02:04:13] Ray maintained that after he broke out of prison in 1967 for the robbery of a grocery store, he went to Montreal and met a shadowy figure named Raoul, who assisted in getting him work, running guns, and paying him thousands of dollars. [02:04:28] According to Ray, Raoul had asked him on the day of the King assassination to book a room at the New Rebel Motel that had a great view. [02:04:35] Of the Lorraine Motel where King was staying. [02:04:37] He then told him to purchase a rifle that Raul could show to a new arms buyer. [02:04:42] At the time of the shooting, three witnesses identified Ray over a mile away from the scene of the crime at a gas station. [02:04:49] Ray's personal effects were intentionally left at the motel along with the rifle that Raul had asked Ray to buy. [02:04:56] Raul had been running Ray for nearly a year, gained his trust, and then the time had come to use him as the patsy for the MLK assassination. [02:05:04] Years later, when pressed about Raul and interviewed, Ray still seemed reluctant to reveal too many details. [02:05:11] This is the man that you knew as Raoul. [02:05:13] Yes. [02:05:14] And you met him where? [02:05:15] Canada. [02:05:16] Up in Canada. [02:05:17] You just met in a saloon or? [02:05:19] It was a saloon in a waterfront area of Montreal. [02:05:22] You never became good friends then? [02:05:25] No, I wasn't. [02:05:26] Good friends. [02:05:28] Just business. [02:05:31] Ray would add sometimes that Raoul also operated out of New Orleans, and they would often meet there for Raoul to give him new assignments. [02:05:39] The late DA of New Orleans, Judge Jim Garrison, who brought the only trial in the death of President John F. Kennedy against CIA businessman Clay Shaw, got an interesting lead on Raul, Jules Rico Campbell. [02:05:53] In the early part of our investigation into John Kennedy's murder, one of the most interesting individuals we encountered was Jules Rico Campbell. [02:06:03] We learned from him about his relationship as, you might say, spear carrier for the CIA here in New Orleans. [02:06:12] His relationship with David Ferry and Clay Shaw, who were considerably more than spear carriers, who were involved here in New Orleans with the New Orleans end of the murder of John Kennedy, and about Jules Rico Kimball's trip to Montreal, a town where he seemed to be knowledgeable, but we weren't able to get much more than that. [02:06:33] But in the final sum of things, spear carrier or not, Jules Rico Kimball was a small load, but a rich one with a few specks of gold. [02:06:47] Most useful in giving us insights into the role of the covert intelligence operation, the murder of John Kennedy. [02:06:55] Worked for the government, the CIA, for quite a few years. [02:06:59] They updated the invasion to the assassination of President Kennedy. [02:07:03] Kimball explains how his intelligence work led him to Montreal. [02:07:07] I had a contact there, and I would visit up there. [02:07:12] At that time, the CIA was working, Quebec, you know, was free. [02:07:17] Canada, which was the French trying to take over there. [02:07:20] And I had done a couple of jobs. [02:07:23] According to Kimball, the jobs he is referring to were two assassinations on behalf of the CIA. [02:07:30] See, CIA bail back anybody as long as they can put a man on the inside. [02:07:35] During this 1989 interview with a British film crew, Kimball dropped a major bombshell. [02:07:40] He was borrowed from the CIA by the FBI, and an agent took him to meet James Earl Ray at the Atlanta airport to fly him to Canada. [02:07:50] Yeah, Mr. Tony took him up. [02:07:52] Tony had to pick up, go to Atlanta to Charlie Brown Airport, and this guy would meet me there. [02:07:59] And I went there, and I stayed there. [02:08:03] He asked me, Was my name Kim? [02:08:09] I took him to a place on Mount Royal Street, which is in Montreal itself. [02:08:15] And I had a contact there. [02:08:17] It was a CIA trunk and a villain. [02:08:20] And I got him his fake identification. [02:08:25] Kimball set Ray up with CIA contacts who gave him the identity of Eric S. Galt. [02:08:30] Ray lived close by in Montreal to the real Eric. [02:08:34] S. Galt, a military contractor working in aerospace for Union Carbide with a high security clearance. [02:08:40] Only a major intelligence official would have access to Galt's identity to supply it to Ray. [02:08:55] In fact, it's now proven that Kimball was found to have been in Montreal when Ray was there. [02:09:01] Kimball said he also flew Ray out of Montreal after the MLK assassination. [02:09:06] According to Kimball's revelations, Ray was being moved around by covert agencies. [02:09:11] And as we can see, Galt was clearly connected to secret aerospace activities. [02:09:15] Garrison made the point that Kimball, in any case, had proven to be an excellent source. [02:09:25] Turned out to be true without exception. [02:09:28] There was no dissembling. [02:09:30] The only, in retrospect, I can see from going through his whole file here, the only information that is not true is what had been planted in his mind back at that time towards the end of his service for the CIA here in the city, the covert operations, is where they have planted in his mind the idea that he was really working for the. [02:09:57] Ku Klux Klan or the white citizens or something like that, which is kind of a standard operating procedure for intelligence agencies before they dismiss somebody after they've performed things. [02:10:07] But in the final analysis, Kimball himself never lies. [02:10:13] When pressed if he was the elusive Raoul in Ray's story, he agreed that he was and added, They call me Rico. [02:10:23] So, would you say that at least for the Canadian part of Ray's story, you were Raoul? [02:10:32] Ray had been carefully put into the position of being the patsy by covert intelligence operatives. [02:10:38] Attorney William Pepper, who represented Ray at the Lloyd Jowers trial and wrote extensively on the case, learned from Ron Adkins, the son of mafia figure Russell Adkins Sr., that the warden of Missouri State Penitentiary was paid $25,000 to allow Ray to escape in 1967. [02:10:57] According to Ron Adkins, The money had been delivered to his father by FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover's right hand man and rumored lover, Clyde Tolson, who Ron knew as Uncle Clyde. [02:11:09] This allowed Ray to be on the outside to become a pawn of a clandestine assassination plan connected directly to an aerospace defense contractor. [02:11:27] Before that April 4th, 1968, rendezvous with Destiny, Ray had been led by Raoul to Beverly Hills. [02:11:35] Here he would work extensively with a master hypnotist named Xavier von Koss. [02:11:39] He also had plastic surgery done on his nose. [02:11:42] He started calling himself Eric Starvo Galt. [02:11:45] Beverly Hills seemed like an odd place to be for a low level criminal like Ray. [02:11:50] Ray would meet with no less than eight psychologists during his time in Los Angeles and actively consult with Scientologists. [02:11:57] He was seen during this period. [02:11:59] Obsessively reading Psycho Cybernetics by Dr. Maxwell Maltz. [02:12:03] The book was based on a cognitive behavioral technique by psychologist Prescott Leckie and the theories of physicist John von Neumann, an early proponent of quantum mechanics, who, according to physicist Robert Sarbacher, was in charge of the highly secretive UFO file. [02:12:19] Ray was out of place in Beverly Hills, but the reasons for him being there became clear when it was later found that he'd made a series of calls to Lytton Industries, a shadowy military contractor who had their headquarters right. [02:12:32] In the heart of Beverly Hills. [02:12:33] The president of Lytton Industries, Charles Tex Thornton, had spent a decade with Hughes Aerospace. [02:12:39] He had taken the knowledge from his years with Hughes to develop some of the first ever spacesuits, eventually creating a major space division. === Lytton Abduction Incident (05:55) === [02:12:47] The company would become one of the first conglomerates and would often land in the headlines in connection with corruption cases. [02:12:54] They also reveled in the unusual location of Beverly Hills, not a traditional place for a military contractor. [02:13:02] Their eccentricities extended to their headquarters. [02:13:05] The old MCA Hollywood building, reimagined in even more posh style, with a treasure trove of Hollywood collectibles like Shirley Temple's shoes, the stairway from Gone with the Wind, and extensive movie memorabilia from The Wizard of Oz. [02:13:21] When Thornton headed up Lytton Industries, he made a series of purchases for the company, including Ingalls Shipbuilding, who ran major shipyards in Pascagoula, Mississippi. [02:13:30] Ray had claimed in a job application to have worked in this shipyard, giving the name of Lytton Industries and stating he was a former employee. [02:13:38] He also told the manager of a rooming house that he was on vacation from Ingalls Shipbuilding in Pascagoula. [02:13:44] Ingalls Shipbuilding would be in the center of a worldwide controversy when a major UFO abduction case was reported by two employees of its F.B. Walker division in Pascagoula in October 1973. [02:13:58] When Charles Hickson and Calvin Parker would claim they were abducted by robot like beings into a large craft, the beings would paralyze them and perform examinations using very sophisticated technology. [02:14:10] The craft was described as 40 feet wide with blinking blue lights. [02:14:14] Calvin Parker describes what happened. [02:14:17] It landed behind us. [02:14:19] We turned around, stood up, turned around, looked, and it must have been the door that opened where all the bright lights came out of. [02:14:27] They came out of the craft and they came and picked us up. [02:14:32] When they got us, they grabbed us by the shoulder right there. [02:14:37] And that's when I felt the injection. [02:14:42] And two got a hold of. [02:14:44] Me and one got a hold of Charlie and they took us inside. [02:14:48] They did an examination. [02:14:50] So when they examined us, we were probably in there. [02:14:54] I'm going to say 45 minutes. [02:14:55] I'm not real sure. [02:14:56] I didn't have a watch or nothing at the time. [02:14:58] They put us back out at the same place we were, facing the water, and I was froze. [02:15:03] I was standing there facing the river with my arms stretched out like that. [02:15:08] I couldn't move them. [02:15:10] I mean, I took a minute just to get them freed up. [02:15:14] And that's when I heard. [02:15:15] Charlie calling me in the back. [02:15:17] He was down on the ground. [02:15:18] I mean, he said he lost control of his legs. [02:15:21] Then we turned around and faced the craft, which is sitting right about here. [02:15:25] Then the light just disappeared, the bright light disappeared. [02:15:30] It picked straight up and went up a little ways, then it just disappeared like lightning. [02:15:36] I mean, it was gone. [02:15:41] The beings themselves are quite unusual, even for the alien abduction phenomena. [02:15:46] Given the hundreds of cases on record, the possibility must be entertained that this was a genuine alien encounter with a UFO. [02:15:53] The strangeness of the Lytton Industries connection, however, Casts a peculiar light on the entire incident. [02:15:59] The spacesuits that Litton was making at the time closely resemble the kind of stiff robotic description of these aliens. [02:16:06] Later, the term military abductions or my labs would come to be known as actions covert wings of military and intelligence would take to simulate an abduction scenario. [02:16:17] A witness who saw the craft hovering would later describe a large splash taking place before the craft lifted off and left. [02:16:24] After the splash, she looked down into the water and she saw one of the peculiar figures. [02:16:29] Swim away from the scene, under the water, just as the light was shooting up in the air. [02:16:34] There's no question that Hickson and Parker were greatly disturbed by the incident. [02:16:38] They were both highly credible and even passed lie detector tests to further substantiate their story. [02:16:43] World class UFO experts like J. Allen Hynek came forward to attest to the sincerity of their account. [02:16:50] They maintained they were abducted and never changed their story for over four decades. [02:16:55] But what really happened to them? [02:16:56] And who was the wizard behind the curtain manipulating the strings? [02:17:00] The presence of a notorious assassin in the same shipyard only a few years earlier raises the specter that Lytton Industries was somehow testing out the X technology and using a standard abduction scenario as a cover for this highly secretive operation. [02:17:15] A little known report from the same Pascagoula shipyard area, just three weeks later, follows the activities of an officer trying to track peculiar lights seen under the water, further corroborating that some program was being tested at Pascagoula. [02:17:30] It was noted by the Coast Guard that a large nuclear facility. [02:17:34] Operated by Lytton Industries for the U.S. Navy, it was close by to both incidents. [02:17:46] Had the aliens returned? [02:17:48] Was it Lytton trying out X technology re engineered from UFOs? [02:17:52] Or all of the above? [02:17:54] The Pascagoula UFO case is a web of strange connections, including the fact that Calvin Parker's father had previously worked at Area 51 for the Atomic Energy Commission. [02:18:04] Did this make Parker a more attractive target for the abduction scenario, either by covert groups or an alien intelligence? [02:18:11] Charles Hickson walked away from the experience with a profound sense of global awakening about off world civilizations. [02:18:18] And even reported continued experiences with the beings. [02:18:21] Lytton would thrive with their flagship company, Ingalls Shipbuilding, for many years before Lytton and its technology was sold to Northrop Grumman in 2001. [02:18:31] Their years of black budget aerospace defense contracts setting the stage for a massive space infrastructure completely kept from the public behind a wall of secrecy with the help of X Protect. === X Protect Technology Threat (15:14) === [02:18:43] Back in 1963, a president saw the dangers that could arise from this unchecked power structure and would give his life fighting it. [02:18:51] Thank you. [02:19:01] Lee Harvey Oswald, the accused assassin of President John F. Kennedy, was portrayed by the FBI as a radical Marxist who hated America and got a lucky chance to shoot the president when JFK's motorcade went by the window of Oswald's new job at the Texas School Book Depository. [02:19:18] The Warren Commission, a team of political insiders put together by President Johnson, who assumed the presidency when JFK was assassinated, was told their job was to shut down any questions about the involvement of the CIA or any possible conspiracies. [02:19:33] Former CIA Director Alan Dulles, who had been fired by JFK, was brought in to oversee all intelligence connections to the case and suppress them. [02:19:41] What was the government so worried about? [02:19:43] After all, Oswald had been eliminated only two days after being accused of shooting JFK by Jack Ruby, a strip club owner linked to organized crime. [02:19:52] During the brief time he was in custody, Oswald claimed he was innocent and was being set up as a patsy. [02:19:59] I don't know what this is all about. [02:20:06] I'm working my time. [02:20:20] The problem for the Warren Commission was Oswald's involvement with the CIA and the highly secretive X Protect wing that operated in the interest of intelligence and aerospace groups to protect the exotic X technology in the UFO file. [02:20:33] The first issue was if Oswald were to be portrayed as a communist, they would need to explain his work. [02:20:38] During the summer before the assassination, for the right wing former head of the Chicago FBI office, Guy Bannister, in New Orleans, Bannister's office at 544 Camp Street was a focal point of anti communist activity, and he was often referred to as to the right of Attila the Hun. [02:20:55] How would a communist leaning leftist who had lived in the Soviet Union find himself working with Bannister? [02:21:01] When leaflets that Oswald had been handing out were discovered with Bannister's address on them, more witnesses came forward to say Oswald had worked for Bannister. [02:21:10] A series of strange deaths followed these revelations, and these connections were kept out of official investigations. [02:21:16] The New Orleans district attorney, Jim Garrison, had come across these curious links when putting his case together against Clay Shaw in the JFK assassination. [02:21:25] He knew Bannister from his FBI days and began to realize that Oswald had been set up. [02:21:31] Lee Hartley Oswald killed no one at all. [02:21:35] So the point is, it wasn't a question of being alone or with anybody. [02:21:39] He had nothing to do with the assassination. [02:21:41] Garrison believed that Bannister was the key to unraveling what was really behind the JFK assassination. [02:21:47] Bannister's background in the FBI reveals the curious fact that he originated the X Files, creating the name identification for UFO cases that he investigated for the Bureau. [02:21:57] When Bannister died shortly before the Warren Commission was released in 1964, federal officials destroyed all of his files. [02:22:04] However, a small set of file names were preserved by his wife, who eventually gave them to a local library. [02:22:11] The file names give us an idea of what Bannister and his private detective agency. [02:22:14] Front was really pursuing. [02:22:16] One bombshell item of interest listed below the JFK assassination was Dinosaur Space Warcraft. [02:22:23] This project, officially the Boeing X 20 Dinosaur, was originally conceived in Nazi Germany. [02:22:30] One of the paperclip scientists brought over to create an X series of space planes was Walter Dornberger, who was a general in the SS and Werner von Braun's superior in the Nazi rocket program. [02:22:40] Dornberger was originally slated to face death at Nuremberg for crimes against humanity. [02:22:46] By using inhumane methods on his slave labor population building the V 2 rockets. [02:22:52] After his release and move to America, Dornberger had landed the post of vice president of Bell Helicopter in 1952. [02:23:00] Dornberger's understudy at Bell was a promising engineer named Michael Payne, the son of the inventor of the Bell helicopter, Arthur Young. [02:23:07] Payne and his wife, Ruth, hosted Lee Harvey Oswald and his Russian wife, Marina, at their home in Irving, Texas. [02:23:14] Most of the incriminating evidence against Oswald, including the controversial backyard photo supposedly showing Oswald holding a rifle and a pistol, Along with communist literature, which photo experts have repeatedly shown were tampered with, seemed to indicate the plan for making Oswald the patsy started very early. [02:23:32] On November 23, 1963, the day after the assassination, Irving police captain Paul Barger reported that a telephone repairman had overheard a male voice, presumably Michael Payne, speaking from the Payne household in a telephone call, saying he did not feel Oswald was responsible. [02:23:50] And he further stated, We both know who is responsible. [02:23:56] Researchers later claimed the info had come from an FBI wiretap of Payne's phone, but he was never questioned about it. [02:24:02] Dornberger was at the very core of the X technology program, and his greatest achievement, the X 15, still holds the record for a manned space plane set 60 years ago. [02:24:13] The presence of Oswald at the home of Ruth and Michael Payne, with their deep connections to Dornberger, shows the tentacles of aerospace interests reaching into the major assassinations. [02:24:24] Far from being the drifter and loser that the Warren Commission had portrayed him as, Oswald had actually been stationed at a high security position in Atsugi, in Japan, during the development of the secret U 2 plane. [02:24:36] In the summer before the JFK assassination, Oswald, while working at the Riley Coffee Company, which was a CIA front, was telling his fellow employees that he was going to work for NASA, which was why he was moving to Texas. [02:24:49] When New Orleans DA Jim Garrison inquired about Oswald's fellow employees at Riley, he learned the odd fact that most of his co workers had gone on to jobs at NASA. [02:24:59] Or other aerospace companies. [02:25:01] During the height of Garrison's investigation into Clay Shaw and the JFK assassination, he got in touch with Warren Hinkle, the publisher of Rampert's magazine, telling him it was urgent that they speak immediately. [02:25:12] Hinkle's account follows. [02:25:14] This is urgent, Jim Garrison said. [02:25:16] Can you take this in the mailroom? [02:25:17] They'd never think to tap the mailroom extension. [02:25:20] Garrison began talking when I picked up the mailroom extension. [02:25:23] This is risky, but I have little choice. [02:25:25] It is imperative that I get this information to you now. [02:25:28] Important new evidence has surfaced. [02:25:30] Those Texas oil men do not appear to be involved in President Kennedy's murder in the way we first thought. [02:25:36] It was the military industrial complex that put up the money for the assassination. [02:25:40] But as far as we can tell, the conspiracy was limited to the aerospace wing. [02:25:46] I've got the names of three companies and their employees who were involved in setting up the president's murder. [02:25:51] Do you have a pencil? [02:25:52] I wrote down the names of the three defense contractors. [02:25:55] Garrison identified them as being Lockheed, Boeing, and General Dynamics. [02:26:00] And the names of those executives in their employ. [02:26:03] Whom the district attorney said had been instrumental in the murder of Jack Kennedy. [02:26:07] I said that I had everything down, and Garrison said a hurried goodbye. [02:26:10] It's poor security procedure to use the phone, but the situation warrants the risk. [02:26:15] I wanted you to have this in case something happens. [02:26:17] The investigation trail led Garrison directly to the aerospace companies developing the X technology in the UFO file. [02:26:24] His arrest of Clay Shaw was a shot across the bow. [02:26:27] It would eventually be revealed that Shaw had been a CIA asset and had a murky trail of associates, including David Ferry. [02:26:35] A CIA pilot who had worked closely with Guy Bannister. [02:26:39] Ferry was also an expert hypnotist. [02:26:41] Garrison discovered that Ferry had been Oswald's squad commander in the Civil Air Patrol when Oswald was only 15. [02:26:49] The grooming of Oswald by Ferry and intelligence services had paid off when he was selected as the patsy for the JFK assassination. [02:26:57] Garrison was planning to bring Ferry to trial for conspiracy. [02:27:00] Instead, Ferry died mysteriously and left behind type suicide notes. [02:27:05] Garrison's case against Clay Shaw collapsed. [02:27:08] The CIA had worked overtime behind the scenes to undermine it, according to Victor Marchetti, an assistant to CIA Director Richard Helms. [02:27:16] The media would also be used to demonize Garrison's efforts at revealing the truth. [02:27:21] When Garrison's Shaw trial was over in 1969, a mysterious document appeared, leaked by an unknown insider who called himself William Torbitt. [02:27:30] The document revealed a previously unknown government division called Defense Industrial Security Command, or DISC, which was described as a NASA security division headed by former Nazi rocket scientist Werner von Braun. [02:27:44] The Torbitt document identified the following individuals as DISC agents Guy Bannister, Clay Shaw, David Ferry, Lee Harvey Oswald, and Louis Mortimer Bloomfield. [02:27:57] Bloomfield had headed up Permindex, a CIA front world trade company that specialized in assassinations and was based in Montreal. [02:28:06] The earliest blueprint for a group linked directly to X Protect had been revealed in the mysterious Torbitt document. [02:28:13] President Kennedy's desire to open the UFO file and share it with the Russian government for purposes of a joint moon mission, as demonstrated in National Security Action Memorandum 271 and his November 12th memo to the director of the CIA. [02:28:27] Kennedy had struggled his entire presidency with the out of control intelligence community to reassert presidential power over their unconstitutional actions. [02:28:36] He mused to aides in private that he was going to smash the CIA into a thousand pieces and scatter it to the wind. [02:28:42] A major piece of this effort was reasserting control over the UFO file that had been lost at the end of the Eisenhower administration. [02:28:50] E. Howard Hunt, the CIA super spy, best known as the coordinator of the Watergate burglars, revealed to his close friend and attorney for the Watergate 7, Douglas Caddy. [02:29:00] The nature of the desperate struggle between JFK and the CIA over the UFO file. [02:29:05] Caddy revealed to me what Hunt told him in this interview. [02:29:09] And then we walked out, and on the street there, I thought, well, this is the last time I'll see Howard. [02:29:14] I'm going to make one more stab, okay, seeing if I can get something here, you know. [02:29:19] And I said, well, Howard, why was John Kennedy assassinated? [02:29:24] He said, why was John Kennedy assassinated? [02:29:28] He said, John Kennedy was assassinated. [02:29:31] Because he was about to give our most vital secret to the Soviets. [02:29:35] About to give our most vital secret to the Soviets. [02:29:38] And I was stunned by that. [02:29:40] I mean, John Kennedy, our president, Soviets, and I never even thought about, heard about such a thing. [02:29:46] And I said, Well, what was that? [02:29:48] And at that point, he leaned forward and looked right in my eyes, direct in my eyes, and he said, The alien presence. [02:29:56] And he reached out and shook my hand and then turned and walked away. [02:30:00] And that was the last time I saw Howard Hunt. [02:30:02] It didn't mean that much to me. [02:30:03] I knew it was important, but it did not mean that much. [02:30:05] There's no way I could, in the alien presence, I was not really familiar with that either, you know. [02:30:12] But I remembered it. [02:30:13] I knew it was important. [02:30:14] This breakthrough revelation from a top CIA officer to his friend in private gives us the real mandate of X Protect. [02:30:22] Any official, even the president, who wants to reveal the true nature of the X technology in the UFO file must be eliminated. [02:30:30] They've used this protocol for decades. [02:30:32] But their attempts to conceal their actions have at times taken an unexpected turn. [02:30:38] George Joannettis had been a pivotal figure in CIA psychological warfare operations during his long career. [02:30:44] His work was so secret that it's an accident of history that we even know his name. [02:30:48] Journalist Jefferson Morley uncovered it when looking at an intelligence front group called the DRE back in the Kennedy era, when Joe Annides created the Oswald Project, the ultimate psychological warfare operation. [02:31:01] When the House Select Committee on Assassinations convened in the late 70s, the CIA, at risk of exposure, turned to their best psychological warfare officer, Joe Annides, to keep their role in the assassination hidden. [02:31:14] For his efforts, Joe Annides was awarded the Career Achievement Medal. [02:31:17] His records have never been released. [02:31:19] The CIA has spent millions in legal fees concealing his past. [02:31:24] The man who gave Joe Annettis his medal may give us a clue to the role he played in relation to X Protect. [02:31:31] Bobby Ray Inman, then the deputy CIA director, had a career that was just as mysterious as Joe Annettis was. [02:31:38] He was one of the few government officials who discussed UFOs openly. [02:31:43] He went on record saying that recovered vehicles or alien craft were in the possession of the government. [02:31:48] He even claimed to have some expertise in the area of UFOs after he retired. [02:31:53] He said he was aware of a program to indoctrinate the public about UFOs and was quoted as saying the following that he, quote, understood who was behind the technology in the crafts, unquote. [02:32:06] These are major statements by someone who served in such positions as NSA director and deputy director of the CIA. [02:32:13] Inman would eventually wind up on the board of XE, a mercenary outfit used in covert warfare. [02:32:19] When we look at Joe Annettis and Inman, we can see the impact of X Protect on our policies that lead us right up to the present with battles over the UFO file continuing and spilling over into private enterprise. [02:32:30] The X steganography of SpaceX and Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin show that these groups are ready to unleash what has been in development since Hughes Aerospace started down the road of immense secrecy. [02:32:42] The Trump administration creation of the Space Force as the sixth branch of the armed services is also an attempt to pull the X technology. [02:32:50] Back under presidential control. [02:32:53] X Protect has thrived in secrecy and have utilized the X technology in the UFO file at the public's expense for decades. [02:33:00] The world at large has not had access to the UFO information that's been withheld by a vast power structure sitting in the strange partnership between the CIA on one side and the aerospace defense contractors on the other. [02:33:13] It is, in fact, a covert government that has usurped the public overt government and put in place the perfect storm of a global control grid that's being built with no oversight. [02:33:24] But lots of unlimited dollars thanks to the missing trillions at the Pentagon, HUD, and NASA. [02:33:31] X Protect has been there every step of the way, and now we hear from the same partnership between the CIA and the aerospace defense companies that UFOs are a threat and must be added to an already bloated defense budget. [02:33:43] And the New York Times runs stories with CIA officials claiming they will give the public UFO disclosure. [02:33:49] That soft disclosure means that X Protect is in a position to roll out the X technology, which means the world is a more dangerous place than ever before. === Exposing Covert Control (00:32) === [02:33:58] As we remember those who have fallen while fighting X Protect, we must remember we can move our culture forward by destroying the wall of secrecy erected by these covert organizations. [02:34:08] The only way we can do it is to expose X Protect and the lethal means that they've used to control every aspect of society. [02:34:15] In the final analysis, if we are to understand the power structure on planet Earth, we must understand X Protect and hold them accountable for their actions. [02:34:23] The whole world is watching and waiting. [02:34:26] I'm Dark Journalist. [02:34:27] Thank you for joining me, and I look forward to seeing you soon.