I will be
soooo happy - and so will you! - when my Achilles heals and I can return to normal (i.e., non-JFKA) life ...
There is a thread at the Ed Forum about Louisiana Congressman (and House Majority Leader) Hale Boggs, one of the JFKA "mystery deaths" if there ever was one. He was a member of the WC and, as CTers would have it, was about to blow the lid off the WR just before he died. (Dorothy Kilgallen would’ve beaten him to it, of course, but she became a "mystery death" seven years before he did.)
Boggs did have substantial doubts about the WR, specifically the SBT. The
Los Angeles Star supposedly had reported on November 22, 1973 that “Boggs had startling revelations on Watergate and the assassination of President Kennedy.” (I wasn't able to trace the
Los Angeles Star thing beyond Mae Brussell, and all other references to it seem to be CT-oriented, so it may be yet another factoid. The only reference that fleshed it out at all said the source was a “former aide” to Boggs, not Boggs himself. Since this is pretty much the foundation of the “mysterious death” speculation, I would think it would behoove we “mysterious death” folks to nail it down.)
There is also all sorts of stuff about Boggs supposedly being the motivation for Garrison’s investigation, with Joan Mellen going so far as to say Boggs told Garrison that Oswald was an FBI informant. Oh, dear. I didn’t wade into
that, although I did see that Boggs’ daughter, the late journalist Cokie Roberts, described Garrison as “100% nuts” and conspiracy theories as “coping mechanisms.”
Anyway, Boggs' small plane went down in Alaska in 1972, shortly after the Watergate thing. He was 58. The pilot had 17,000 hours of flying experience. On board were Alaska Congressman Nick Begich and one of his aides. Boggs was going to campaign for Begich.
Despite one of the most MASSIVE searches in the history of aviation, NOTHING was ever found. It's right up there with Amelia Earhart and young Frederick Valentich (whose small plane was possibly abducted by a UFO in Australia in 1978, but I digress ...).
Normally, I'd say
Who cares? However, I discovered that the case has a major Tucson connection! As a Tucson native, this demanded my attention. Well, not really, except that I am laid up with my ruptured Achilles.
You literally can't make this stuff up: A mere 14 months after Congressman Begich was declared dead, his widow married a Tucson Mafioso "eventually linked to as many as five murders and three bombings, including a 1968 blast outside the Tucson home of retired state Supreme Court Justice Evo DeConcini."
You can read all about it here:
https://tucson.com/news/local/article_57f0c38f-d013-5fde-9e26-b452023f9e6c.html. All the Mafia names in the story were well-known to everyone in Tucson, which was Joe Bananas' territory. Homes and cars and restaurants blowing up was just business as usual. Even the Kon Tiki restaurant that figures prominently in the story was one of my alcoholic parents' favorite haunts. Another of their favorite haunts, Paulos Italian restaurant, actually did blow up while I was in high school. Lasagna was found up to a half-mile away.
The subject of the article is an intrepid reporter, Jon Walczak, who has spent as much time on the Boggs case as any rabid CTer has spent on the JFKA. He completed a multi-part podcast, "Missing in Alaska,"
https://plinkhq.com/i/1569883308?to=page. I have not yet listened to it, but it received rave reviews.
The original story was that Boggs' plane was brought down by a Mafia-placed bomb and that the woman who became Begich's widow (the mother of former Senator Mark Begich) had met with Bonanno prior to the crash, all having something to do with drugs, prostitution, money and the usual Mafia stuff. Alas, Walczak does not believe there was any JFKA connection at all and apparently even doubts the Mafia-bomb story. Anyway, you may find it interesting if you're into the "mysterious deaths" stuff.
One wrinkle occurred to me: Boggs was succeeded in office by his widow, Lindy. She served in office until 1991 and lived to be 97, dying of natural causes in 2013. We "mysterious death" folks can only conclude that her husband never said anything to her about his JFKA bombshell and thus there was no need for her to be whacked or marry a Mafioso or whatever. (Lindy even enthusiastically welcomed the ARRB folks to New Orleans in 1995, when she could’ve saved them a lot of trouble if she’d just shared those dang startling revelations:
https://speakingwhilefemale.co/testimony-boggs/.)
We "mysterious death" folks are also agog at how the conspirators managed to arrange the crash so no remains would ever be found, as opposed to crashing someplace where evidence of the bomb would've been obvious. When they weren’t being the Three Stooges, the conspirators were pretty ingenious, weren’t they?