The New JFK Show # 274 Charles Cabell - Jim Fetzer, Larry Rivera, Gary King
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Welcome to the new JFK Show, number 274.
Tonight, we're counting down the top 10 discoveries by Larry Rivera, and last week was Earl Cabell, and this week it's Charles Cabell.
So we're going to go ahead and turn the screen over to Larry, and I'm going to make you host.
Here you go, Larry.
Yeah, I learned more about Earl Cabell last week on our own show than And I can say, I mean, I always knew the basics and stuff, but he was a real snake in the grass.
That was pretty disgusting.
Yeah.
You know, where he's inside the operating room, emergency room, and he's, his role in all this, and Jim, what do you think about this?
Of course, if he was this Obviously the brothers knew each other very well and they would have been in contact with each other during the day probably all day on the 22nd of November.
Am I right?
So, I mean, they may have made a, you know, prior agreement not to communicate on the 22nd, because that would be too suspicious, but they had it all this planning.
I have no doubt that they were both deeply involved in all of this.
It was their backyard and exactly what he needed to do to get the body out of Dallas and into Bethesda.
And that was to get a JP there ASAP.
And him and his role, you know, he has a specific role in the scheme, you know, and it's to get it.
Now, we know, based on Douglas Jackson's manuscript and his memoir of the night of the day and the night of the assassination, that that's what Earl Cabell was actively involved in doing.
So, you know, along with what we talked about, you know, Earl Rose being You know, the coroner and everything and that having precedence over everything else.
And then the thing about the hospital administrator coming up to Douglas Jackson saying, Hey, the body belongs to the justice of peace.
So, you know, get that guy over here as soon as possible.
You know, and Douglas Jackson in his innocence turns away the first one, you know, that arrives and says, look, I don't know anything about this.
The president's not dead.
So you must know something I don't.
That's that's the gist of this whole thing here, Jim.
So now we have the hierarchy and moving on to Charles and maybe you can fill us in on what who Charles was, you know, the brother and everything, you know, before we get into.
Well, he was a deputy director with Richard Bussell of the CIA, and he was a very prominent Air Force lieutenant general.
He was an icon of the intelligence field.
And an ally of Alan Dulles, whom JFK would retire with ceremony, not outright fire, but it was in effect giving him the boot with the ceremony.
With Bissell and Campbell, it wasn't so decorous and got them out pretty promptly.
After we had the review of what had happened with the Bay of Pigs with Bobby and Maxwell Taylor.
Yeah, and something that JFK inherited from the Eisenhower administration, which he had absolutely nothing to do, and having to deal with that right off the bat as soon as he becomes president.
That's right.
Nixon had been the point man on the Bay of Pigs, right?
But George H.W.
Bush appears to have been the actual planner and supervisor of the incursion.
It just so happens that we have among the new documents, uh, a very special one.
And since this is a countdown, you know, we figure, you know, before the 22nd of November, we'll go ahead and review some of these documents.
The ones, the two cases that we're going to, because we have to do like a two for one today so that we can, you know, finish on time, you know, uh, in November.
have to do two things.
You know, the first is the Cabell thing.
And the second one is, amazingly, you know, not too many people know or are aware of Regis Blahout.
And he was the fellow who got involved with the HSCA in 1970, in the late 70s.
And he was found out to have gone into the safe of the HSCA and rifled through the safe and gotten his hands on the autopsy photos, on the JFK autopsy photos, which at the time on the JFK autopsy photos, which at the time were supposed to be, you know, originals, okay, which the HSCA was working with.
And this was supposed to be the Holy Grail.
And And then all of a sudden, you know, his fingerprints are all over the photos.
And the safe has been compromised and blah, blah, blah.
And this went on for more than a year.
You know, and it's very interesting what happened.
We'll talk about this, you know, later on.
But first, we'll do a screen share.
How truly outrageous that is, Larry.
Well, okay.
Everything about JFK is mucked up one way or another.
Okay.
You guys, can you see this direct connection?
Okay.
So, uh, this is one that I have, you know, been promoting for a while and, and it's just outrageous because if had, uh, Jim Garrison, uh, had this particular one, it probably would have changed his entire approach and the entire, uh, you know,
Dynamics of the Clay Shaw trial, you know, and it just just so happens that right after you go ahead.
I mean, this is very short, you know, we're not going to I mean, it may have changed the dynamics.
I still believe the whole thing was rigged and doomed to fail.
I don't know if the outcome of the trial would have made a difference, but much more incrimination.
That's for sure.
Well, you know, one thing that's surprising is that this was published in the media, so it's not like this did not have any visibility, because a press release was put out by
Jesse Core, who was, who worked directly under Clay Shaw, and later on, in fact, Joe Mellon mentions in her book that Jesse Core was CIA.
However, she does not give any type of attribution at all, you know, she just says it, you know, she just blurts it out in her book, you know.
You know, but the other evidence, you know, on Jesse Corr is very compelling on his relationship with the FBI as an informant.
And now this one here, where, you know, obviously involves him and Clay Shaw, and where, I mean, the connection is pretty obvious, you know.
And so let's go ahead and kick it off here, General.
General Charles Chappell was a recipient of a soiree thrown in his honor by Clay Shawn as Deputy Jesse Corr in New Orleans, right after the unsuccessful Bay of Pigs.
Jesse Corr was also an informant for the FBI.
Special Agent Warren C. DuBrois then provided the FBI with an FPCC flyer made by Lee Oswald while he was leafletting in downtown New Orleans.
I would say, Larry, this might have been planned if it had been a success.
Oh, absolutely!
It's all in the book.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
Jesse Corr.
Was part of the sheep dipping of Oswald.
There's no doubt about it.
And you're going to see here now, you know, where he is the one going back and forth.
In the book, you know, I do, I give a lot more detail, you know, on this, you know, but he was on the day of the assassination, he's calling the FBI, you know, and he's saying, Hey, this is the guy that was on, on, uh, the, uh, the, uh, television debate there with bring gear and, you know, all that mess, you know, uh, So, and he's calling the FBI to tell him, hey, you know, remember me?
I'm the guy that, you know, came up with the flyer, you know, the Fair Play for Cuba Committee flyer, you know, on Lee Oswald.
So, he's there feeding the FBI information, you know, at the same time he's one of Wanda Brew's favorite informants in New Orleans, and for not just a couple of months, I'm talking about for years, all right?
So, and this is the press release that we found, and this is When you're talking about a new document, this is it right here.
And this just came out of the blue.
I'd have to go and look and see exactly what file it came from.
But it's a press release.
Yeah, this has him as a four-star.
This has him as a four-star, and I was just noticing that earlier photo had four stars.
New Orleans.
Deputy Director Charles B. Campbell of the CIA, a veteran pilot and full general in the U.S.
Air Force, will address New Orleans Foreign Policy Association Wednesday, May 9th at 8.30 p.m.
in the grand ballroom of the Sherwood Charles Hotel, C.C.
Walter, president of the Foreign Affairs Group, announced today.
General Capital's subject will be communist science, Walter said.
But what would that be?
What would that be?
I mean, out of all the subjects, if I were to define that, you know, what is the definition of that?
That's a hell of a good question, Larry.
That's what these guys do.
A membership meeting will precede the CIA's second-in-command's talk, scheduled for 8 p.m.
No, no, no, before that, before that, I'm sorry to interrupt, Jim, a membership meeting, notice at the top, you know, it's the Foreign Policy Association, who is the organization under which this is being done here, all right?
Yeah.
So this is, this is like, maybe like a, a, Yeah, some kind of spook association there in New Orleans, you know, but I mean, this is heavy because you got to read through the lines here, you know, on what you're seeing here on the screen here.
Yes, yes, yes.
Membership meeting will proceed.
The CIA second-in-command's talk scheduled for 8 p.m.
The half an hour business session will be concerned with election of officials, officers for the coming year, as well as proposals to change the name of the organization to underline its wholly local character.
Clay Shaw, program chairman, will introduce Campbell.
Wow.
Wow.
I'm sure he told Jim Garrison he had no idea who the guy was. - CIA?
Oh wait a minute, Permendix?
Oh man, this guy's born in Dallas, Texas.
Hey, what do you think Don Fox would say about this one?
Yeah, I know.
I love it.
Born in Dallas, Texas in 1925, Cabell is a member of a distinguished Southern family.
His name is known in literature, war, and government.
Earl Cabell, Brother of the general is now mayor of Dallas.
And whom we talked about last week.
Indeed, the Cabell brothers' grandfather, Brigadier General William L. Tiger Cabell, was mayor of Dallas around the turn of the century, like his mayor grandfather, who was graduated at West Point in 1850.
Wow.
These guys go deep back.
Were these guys the elite or what?
General Carlsby Cabell was also commissioned into the Regular Army from the National Military Academy.
Local historians also note the fact that General W.L.
Campbell, sometime Confederate cavalry commander in Arkansas, was with General P.G.T.
Beauregard, a supervisor of the Louisiana State Lottery.
Campbell Lottery, is that right?
Campbell served in 1893 to 1907.
Just to mention real quick, the Beauregard statue had been removed like a couple years ago.
Yeah, yeah, I know, I know.
Right there at the front of City Park.
Beautiful, beautiful statue.
Big old horse with, you know, the general on top and they picked it up with an alligator.
Maybe the impression that these cowboys might have been, you know, like on the confederate side, you know, maybe?
Oh yeah, of course.
But this taking down of these statues is part of a cultural Marxist takedown of a society.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
I understand that.
Now they're doing away with private property in Louisiana as of January 1st.
It's absolutely in Illinois.
It all depends on- They took down every single statue in New Orleans except- Right.
It all depends on who rules.
Gary, it all depends on who rules at the time.
It all depends on who rules at the time.
What statue is left, Gary?
Andrew Jackson.
They took down Robert E. Lee.
It was right in the middle of the city, called Robert E. Lee Circle.
It so diminished the aesthetic interest of the city by removing those wonderful works of art.
The name of the street, Robert E. Lee Boulevard, is now Alan Toussaint, who's a piano player.
And I'm sure black.
No, he actually wasn't.
It's just all about, you know, everything has to be about some horror player.
Yeah, this is the woke society.
Commissioned a second lieutenant in 1925, General Charles Campbell, served for five years with the 12th Field Artillery at Fort Sam Hewison, Texas.
He applied for pilot training, won his wings in 1931, becoming a flying instructor.
After squadron and school assignments during the 1930s, as well as duty with the old Air Corps, Experimental Engineering Division, Cabell was sent to England as an observer with the Royal Air Force.
1941, he was ordered home for assignment as chief of the photo unit.
In the office of the Chief of the Air Corps, soon he became Chief of the Advisory Council to the Commanding General of the Army Air Force.
During World War II, while successively Commander of the 45th Combat Bombardment Wing of the Eighth Air Force in England and Director of Operations and Intelligence of the Air Force Strategic Air Force in Europe, Campbell was advanced from Colonel to Major General
Being decorated in the meanwhile with a Distinguished Service Medal, Legion of Merit, Distinguished Flying Cross, Bronze Star Medal, and... I stopped there because the rest of the document is illegible, but it sort of gives you an idea of the importance of this Cavill family, obviously, you know, within military circles.
And so, and going back, when you... They were a family you didn't want to go up against.
Exactly, that's what I was going to say.
You know, and then you combine that with the mayor and notice that the granddaddy had been mayor of Dallas at the turn of the century.
I mean, these guys were Dallas.
Now, I think had JFK seen this before going to Dallas, I think he would have said, hey, wait a minute, I'm not going to...
Henry Gonzalez was telling him not to go and he said, don't worry, Henry, the secret service has assured me that everything's all set.
Yeah, this is, this is the one that was all set.
All right.
So, so, uh, you know, uh, in, in, in bringing out the importance of the document, because we're going to move on to this Jesse core thing, which, It's what's getting teased out from this document.
We know the importance of Jesse Corr.
So then we go, okay, who was Jesse Corr?
And what was his role in, you know, setting Lee Oswald up in the summer of 1963?
And Jesse Corr obviously had a lot to do with that.
And Jesse Corr, by association, works for Clay Shaw.
So, Here's the connection, right?
You know, from one individual to another.
Any comments on that?
It gives me goosebumps if Jim Garrison would have had this information.
And you know, you might be right.
It could have changed everything.
It would have.
There's no doubt about that.
Well, he would have seen it wasn't just Clay Shaw.
Clay Shaw was an asset of the CIA, and then all the pieces started to fall into place.
And with all the other situations that he was going through with all of his extraditions being denied, you know, Jim and Gary, and with all the situation of his office being bugged, and with the Walter Sheridan fiasco, you know, Where Bobby Kennedy sends him to New Orleans to almost put a stop to this thing.
Where Jim Garrison doesn't even know why this is going on.
Why would Bobby Kennedy want to put the brakes on the investigation of Clay Shaw?
And I was, I just mentioned Don Fox because Don Fox, you guys know how hot he's always been, you know, for the Permendex thing and how Clay Shaw and everything, you know, so, and he would have had a, he would, I don't know.
Clay Shaw was more decorated than Charles Cabell.
Yeah.
He's in the French, he's got more medals and, and don't forget he was, what, von Braun, the great Rocket scientist.
He was arrested by no one other than Clay Shaw.
When we did the Restless Pena research, you know, where Jesse Corr, Public Relations International Trademark, New Orleans, and he's one of the informants for Warren DeBruyne, you know, and then that whole thing, you know, with Lee Oswald and Warren DeBruyne in New Orleans, you know, where we now know That Warren DeBruyne was Lee Oswald's handler, and he went with Lee Oswald to Dallas before the assassination, all right?
And here is the actual Hands Off Cuba Fair Play for Cuba Committee leaflet that was received by the FBI, signed at the bottom, you know, right here, received by Jesse Core, okay?
And I would have to go back, And show you guys.
I wonder if you could ever get your hands on an original Fair Play for Cuba pamphlet.
I wonder if they're out there.
Hey, check out eBay.
Yeah.
So the next one is, we're counting down.
I think this might be eight.
Yeah, we've done 10, nine.
This is eight.
Okay.
And Regis Blahut, who was a CIA officer.
And this guy in 1979, as you can see here, he went and he, they found his fingerprints.
And first of all, they detected that a safe belonging to the HSCA had been compromised, had it opened, had been opened.
And what they did was they went and they dusted and for fingerprints, and then they went and they took fingerprints from Everybody who was even within, you know, 20 feet of that safe.
Look at the absurd story they give.
It was simply a matter of curiosity.
Just broke into the safe because they were curious what they had.
What bullshit!
I mean, give me a break!
And note the date of all this because the timing is also very important.
In relation to the final publication of the final report?
No, and also the actual meeting of Blakey, Bob Blakey, with, at that time, the head of the CIA, because this merited, you know, a meeting with, hey, the top dog up there, you know, and at the time was Stanislaw Turner.
And so, but the reason these are important documents, and these are the new Newly released, newly, we're already five years after that, you know what I mean?
It's new, it's not new anymore, but it has to do with the information that came out of that meeting, of those meetings between Blakey and Stansfield-Turner, you know, where I don't want to give it away, but, you know, the whole, how this whole thing happened, you know, regarding this, these documents that this guy had no business whatsoever right even going near you know
they're claiming he had the right to be in the room when it was all nonsense i mean yeah yeah that's rubber up here is just transparent larry yeah yeah and uh he had this is uh maybe you know why you know uh later on later on with the arrb the cia has been a lot more forthcoming you know and releasing documents you know and say hey you know what the hell you know go ahead you know
and and but this is the mid the late 70s where the cia was you know standing you know very strongly you know on this uh and the joanini's thing had happened and blah blah blah So anyway, George Lardner, You know, of Washington Post fame.
And if you want to quickly go through this, you know... Sure, sure.
CIA probe into rifled files.
George Lardner, Jr., Washington Post staff writer.
The Central Intelligence Agency investigation of the rifling last year of a congressional committee's files by one of its officers was aimed primarily at getting the CIA off the hook.
And notice that this is a year later.
This happened in 78.
And now is when the Washington Post is starting to report on it.
They investigated it to get it out of themselves, not to find out whether anybody else was involved, said one knowledgeable source.
The Washington Post reported yesterday the most sensitive files of the House Assassination Committee had been rifled last summer by a CIA liaison officer who had been assigned to help the committee.
Why would they need that?
Why would they need that?
They wouldn't need it.
The CIA would want it to cover their own... Exactly.
As a condition.
As a condition, of course.
The CIA wanted CYA.
The CIA responded by saying that the officer in question, Regis Tate Blackett, had been dismissed.
CIA spokesman Herbert Heptune said the agency was satisfied.
The incident had been simply a matter of curiosity and all those...
Right, right, right.
That's how the CIA operates.
Their agents just do anything they want out of curiosity.
Sources close to the committee sharply disputed the CIA's assertions.
One said, the circumstantial evidence is overwhelming that more than curiosity was involved.
CA Officer Blayhook, the source said, went into a room where he wasn't supposed to be without one of our officers being present.
There, the source said, he opened a safe, pulled out a drawer, he took a ring binder notebook out of the drawer, he ripped a plastic case out of the notebook, and he took a picture out of the plastic plate.
He fled when he heard a noise, and then he lied about it.
So what picture did he take, Larry?
Do we know what picture?
Of the autopsy photos.
Yeah.
Well, just as one.
Was it one of the autopsy photos?
Well, it must have been more, you know, because this is what this whole thing is about.
It's about the autopsy photos, the supposed originals that supposedly the HSCA had.
Obviously, we know.
Do we have any idea which actual photographs these were?
It might be mentioned here.
It might be mentioned.
According to the same source, both CIA Director Stansfeld Turner and CIA Deputy Director Frank Carlucci were informed bluntly by the committee's chief counsel, Gene Robert Blakey, of what the committee regarded as the shortcomings of the CIA inquiry.
This is full of shit!
Here to deny this, a telephone interview yesterday also denied the CIA conducted a short-sighted self-protective investigation.
We did check outside and inside, the agency said.
Of course.
To also maintain that Blayhood had every right to be in the room where the safe was located.
But the point was not unless he was accompanied by a representative of the HSEA.
Right.
Period.
So it's clear that Blakey was in the ride and the agency was covering its own tail.
I don't think there's any doubt.
And the interesting thing and the point of this whole presentation here is how Blakey goes up the ladder and then he gets splattered, you know.
The rifle safe, that's where we're at, the bottom.
The rifle safe was reserved for...
Physical evidence from the Kennedy assassination and at the time contained at least the grisly autopsy photos.
To your point, like you were asking what you were asking.
Yeah, but I want to know what photos these were.
The safe contained CIA records and other materials that Blayhook was supposed to safeguard was in another room sources said.
Committee staffers discovered the incident one afternoon last July after a committee lawyer had gone into the room with Blakey's permission to inspect some of the autopsy photos.
He left the room briefly to speak with Blakey and returned to discover one of the notebooks he had not touched was out of place.
If it were just curiosity, why would you have to take photos out of an unused book in order to see them?
Why not just look at them, one source said.
As for Blakey, sources said he had always been paranoid about the possibility some of the gruesome Kennedy autopsy photos might get out and destroy the committee's reputation.
Why would he be paranoid if they were fakes?
No one who has seen these photos would have any doubt that they should not be made public, one source said.
One thing that would have done us, the House Assassination Committee in, would have been for those photos to be publicly released.
We were never satisfied that someone else wasn't involved.
Well, it was the CIA for crying out loud.
Of the CIA's investigation, one source said all they investigated was whether he, Blahut, had any connection with the agency in doing what he did.
They asked Blahut on a polygraph examination whether he had any connection with the agency in doing what he did.
And he passed when he said he didn't have any connection.
But they didn't ask whether someone else had authorized him to do it.
Very superficial, in other words.
And what is Blahut going to say, you know, obviously?
Yeah, Turner enunciated the agency's view yesterday in one of his director's notes to all CIA employees.
Quote, a media report today suggested there was something sinister involving the agency and the FASA House Assassination Committee.
I want to assure you that this is simply not the case.
Oh, I'm relieved.
Oh, I'm so relieved.
Our investigation revealed an error in judgment.
Yes, yes, an error in judgment.
By a contract employee missing an extra E. As a custodian for the CIA material with a committee, he acted alone and out of curiosity was this.
This is just bullshit.
Now he's a contract employee.
That's just a ridiculous story.
That's ridiculous on his face.
So, you know, so this goes on, you know, a couple of, you know, on this whole issue here.
But it's how it was resolved, okay, is what the new information that has come out pertaining to this case of Lahoud going through the HSCA safe.
And the staff was pretty pissed off, you know, because they realized that this guy, what he did was such a rape.
You know, for lack of a better word, you know, and that they wanted, you know, retribution.
They wanted something done.
And the thing is that as Blakey goes up the ladder, he realizes, you know, that that's not going to happen at all.
How low he is on the ladder.
Yeah.
And that's this Blahut thing.
It doesn't matter if it did happen.
Yes, it happened.
So what?
That's the point of this whole thing, you know, and so what are you going to do about it, you know?
So this is a contact information.
Contact the report.
July 14, 1978.
This is a year before those articles.
Yeah, and it's about... Yeah, and this is an actual interview with LeHoude.
This is one of the documents, and we'll move on to the others.
They're very interesting stuff here.
On this date, Gary Cornwell and myself spoke with Regis Bahut in Gary's office.
Mr. Bahut stated the following.
One, he lied to us in our conversation of July 13th when he stated that on the second occasion he looked through the black loose leaf.
Yeah, it should be loose leaf, yeah.
Yeah, Loose Leap Binder.
Yeah, he put it back on the windowsill after reading it.
He told us the truth was that while he was looking through the book, it dropped on the floor.
He said when it dropped on the floor, some of the pages came out of the book.
He became frightened that someone would enter the room at this point, so he opened the black safe Which contains the autopsy books and placed a black loose-leaf binder in the page which had fallen out into the top part of the safe.
Prior to him opening it to put in the book, the safe door had been completely closed.
That is, not ajar.
Although it was not locked.
He said he opened it by pressing down on the handle.
Yeah, that's what you do.
He stated he did not recall whether the top part of the save... Uh-oh.
Okay.
This is, uh... Okay, that was Blahut.
And now, this is the one with Turner.
And this is where both of them meet.
I mean, they meet with Turner about the situation of Blahut.
Both Blakey and I met with DCI Turner, DDCI Carlucci, and Fred Hitz at the Office of Legislative Counsel at 8 a.m.
in Turner's office.
Blakey initially noted that he had come at Chairman Stokes' request to discuss with Turner a recent security violation which had been discovered by the committee.
Blakey began by describing to Turner the nature of the Kennedy autopsy pictures, the restrictions under which the committee had acquired and possessed them, the security precautions, Samarit's name, limited access, log record, utilized to safeguard them, and the possible motives that might exist for someone unlawfully removing them from the committee.
Lanky next described the circumstances and details of the committee's discovery made on 6-23-78 that the autopsy...
Photos and the investigation which the staff thereafter conducted, including the identification of all those persons who had access to the security space where they were located, the fingerprinting process and results, and ultimately the question of Regis Bahut, the CIA employee who was in the security space on that day.
Finally, Blakey recalled his Turner statement made to Blakey and Cornwell on February 4th, 1978, to the effect that if the committee found any impropriety or wrongdoing on the part of any CIA employee, he should personally look into it and get to the bottom of it.
Blakey stated, Yeah.
Blakey stated that the chairman had been told of Turner's comment on February 4th, 1978, and now requested that Turner conduct a further investigation of Behoot Ladder.
Blakey stated the committee felt such an investigation was necessary for the following reason.
One, the committee had spoken to Behut on three occasions, July 11, 13, and 14, about his knowledge of the tampering with the autopsy photos, on two of which, by Behut's own subsequent admission, he had lied about significant details, and by Behut's own subsequent admission, he had lied about significant details, and on the last of which, by independent evidence, Behut had
Two, Behut's action were deliberate, as evidenced, by the fact that Behut had opened the committee safe, in which the photos were stored, and on the first two interviews with the committee, he lied about having done so.
Three, there's only one possible innocent motive for Behut's handling and viewing of the autopsy photos.
Richard Abner.
Yeah, with that being personal curiosity.
And the evidence unequivocally shows that personal curiosity was not the motive.
A page was ripped out, a photo was removed with a plastic sheet, and the log showed the photo book in question had not been removed from the safe by the committee staff since September of 1977.
And Behut's story about his handling of and access to that photo book on June 23, 1978 is patently unbelievable.
And Most significantly for prior to at least two of the three occasional what was interviewed by the committee staff.
He spoke with his supervisors at the agency.
And after each of those conversations, he told lies to the committee about his involvement.
Of course.
Turner said he'd already looked into the matter and handed us a report, which had been written.
Turner suggested Blakey and Cornwell go read the report, not take a copy with him from the building and also look at who it's.
Oops, sorry.
That was it.
Okay.
I mean, this is bad.
Even Turner is clearly complicit in this deception.
That's the Blahut case there.
Sorry, you know, I had to put this up, you know, up there real quick.
Sorry, Gary.
We're catching up.
You've now done the 10th, the 9th, the 8th, and the 7th.
Yeah, and now we go to 7th.
Next one, next will be seven.
Yeah, next will be seven.
And as you know, they'll get a little bit crazier, you know, as we, you know, move on, you know, to the... I would think this is probably good enough for tonight, would you not?
Yeah, we're good.
We're good.
About the rest... We go through a lot to bring this JFK Show to you folks, but we did it.
And we're going to go ahead and close it on that.
Larry?
Excellent work again.
Can't wait till next week for number seven.
And we hope to have Phil Nelson very soon.
Maybe next Wednesday we'll have an extra show with him.