JFK Assassination Plus General Discussion & Debate > JFK Assassination Plus General Discussion And Debate
The Warren Commission Sham
Charles Collins:
Another snip from “History Will Prove Us Right” by Howard Willens, page 408:
The process by which the commission put together its report provided one of the most convincing, although rarely explained, bases for the accuracy of its facts and the undeniable support for its conclusions. After four months of basic investigation by staff, the commission approved a proposed outline of the report at its April 30 meeting. From then through mid-September, the members received a steady flow of memos, reports, and drafts. The members consistently focused on how their conclusions on the seventy-two questions would be expressed and how the evidence to support them would be most effectively explained. Throughout the commission’s work, Warren and Rankin talked at least two or three times each week about the investigation, schedule of witnesses, interagency problems, and much more. As should be evident, there was no “rush to judgment” here. The commission supervised Rankin’s handling of the investigation on a regular basis and considered every part of the report carefully during the three months from mid-June to mid-September.
Again, if you want to know more details about the Warren Commission and how they functioned, read Willens’ book along with other books, and writings by people who were actually there and knew what went on during the investigation. Belin and Spector both have written excellent books that address these things.
Jake Maxwell:
--- Quote from: Lance Payette on March 28, 2025, 06:24:45 PM ---No one is going to argue that Hoover was a saint. For purely personal reasons (i.e., LBJ was a friend and there would be no forced retirement, as well as his disdain for JFK and RFK), I'm sure he shed no tears after the assassination.
HOWEVER, it is entirely possible to put a different spin on your facts. Because of the state of relations with Russia and Cuba, and Oswald's obvious connections to both, the public leaping to a conclusion of conspiracy and demanding retribution (and the military being only too happy to provide it) was a very legitimate fear. It is not at all implausible that this was an immediate fear on the part of LBJ (as he said it was) and that he would convey this to Hoover (as he did). LBJ used this fear to convince Earl Warren to head the WC (and reportedly brought Warren to tears in so doing).
The Katzenbach memo and Hoover's statements just days after the assassination can be viewed in this non-conspiratorial light: It was important to convince the public that Oswald had acted alone to forestall any public outcry about a conspiracy - not to mention the fact that the evidence did tend to suggest he had, and he was dead anyway. Katzenbach specifically expressed concern in his memo because the public outcry was already starting. I tend to believe this is what the "wrap it up and convince the public stuff" was all about.
Are you aware that in documents released in 1977 Hoover (who died in 1972) was revealed to have expressed deep concern about a possible conspiracy. He didn't doubt the LN scenario as far as Dealey Plaza was concerned, but he was very concerned that Cuba was involved. The FBI had received letters - hoaxes, as Hoover suspected - pointing toward Cuban involvement. This NY Times article summarizes the documents: https://www.nytimes.com/1977/12/08/archives/hoover-was-certain-oswald-was-killer-fbi-files-dont-dispute-finding.html.
I quote:
"Two weeks after John F, Kennedy's death, J. Edgar Hoover was convinced that Lee Harvey Oswald had killed the President, but he wondered whether Oswald had had help from secret conspirators in Cuba, according to bureau files released today. The documents show that Mr. Hoover had concluded within hours of Kennedy's death that Oswald had fired the fatal bullets. But the agency later obtained letters written to Oswald from Cuba, and those messages raised the questions about conspiracy that linger to this day."
"Because of the letters and the difficulty in checking their validity, Mr. Hoover, Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, said, 'I urged strongly that we not reach the conclusion Oswald was the only man.'"
...
"But on Dec. 12, Mr. Hoover confided to his chief aides that he was troubled by the conspiracy questions and was unsure how to resolve them. Reporting on a conversation with a caller, he wrote: 'I said I personally believe Oswald was the assassin; that the second aspect as to whether he was the only man gives me great concern; that we have several letters ... written to him from Cuba referring to the job he was going to do, his good marksmanship and stating when it was all over, he would be brought back to Cuba and presented to the chief."
"Some of the F.B.I. memos suggest that Nicholas deB. Katzenbach, then the Deputy Attorney General, was putting pressure on the bureau for a prompt public announcement that Oswald, acting alone, was the assassin. Three days after the assassination, he wrote the bureau to express concern about the growing rumors of conspiracy and said that it was important to satisfy the public that Oswald was the assassin and that no conspirators were still at large."
I believe there was (1) an immediate "public face" that Oswald was the lone assassin for the reasons stated above, (2) lingering concern about a possible conspiracy as described by the NY Times; and (3) a more legitimate investigation by the time of the WC, perhaps with a predisposition toward the LN scenario. I don't think the situation is as black-and-white, good-vs.-evil as CTers would like to make it.
--- End quote ---
Yes, as an attorney I'm sure you know there are multiple ways to spin facts, as attorneys do every day.
While we're looking at motives and intent, consider this spin:
LBJ was a bully and loved his political power, and he knew that JFK and brother Bobby had solidified power in the White House, likely for years to come. His bullying, threats and characteristic intimidation are most likely what brought Warren to tears, if that happened.
Hoover was no saint as you say, and disliked JFK.
It is unwise to trust much of what either said in public or private.
A plot to kill JFK was hatched and masterminded by some powerful figures, most likely including Hoover.
Oswald was one of several potential patsy's on site in Dallas... perhaps even their number one pick. If they could just pin it on him alone, Kennedy's political power and their fear of being exposed for conspiring to kill our president, would go away.
The SPIN comes from Hoover and LBJ and Katzenbach and all who claim their "quick" and sorry "investigation," if you can even call it an investigation at all... was to avert a war with any other nation. Hogwash! They were trying to save themselves.
Suggesting that they had concern for US citizens calling for war and retribution, is simply a COVER, that a good attorney should easily point out.
As the 1976 Senate Committee states, Hoover was not concerned with the truth of the matter, or with national security, but with the reputation of his agency. SO, that is why he put pressure on his bureau to quickly pronounce Oswald guilty... and likely put pressure to see him eliminated. Dead men don't talk.
It's the players in Kennedy's murder who do all the spinning.
And, I would think most any attorney would easily dismantle Specter's single bullet theory... a specious argument designed, no doubt, to mislead and contain the assassination to one person, Oswald.
Royell Storing:
--- Quote from: Lance Payette on March 28, 2025, 12:41:57 PM ---You actually cannot see that you are making no sense?
Alyea was a respected local photographer. He had utterly no agenda to lie about anything. He insists the lunch remains were, in fact, found on the 5th floor, which just happens to be where BRW first said he ate lunch. He suggests the officers' heard an erroneous newscast saying the 6th floor, put this in their reports, and then maintained the fiction. If true - and we'll never know, but Alyea was credible and adamant - your "facts" go poof. Moreover, as Bugliosi points out, the totality of the descriptions apart from Alyea do not place the remains where you would like them to be but rather where BRW subsequently said he left them.
In addition, as Bugliosi points out, the lunch remains, even if on the 6th floor, are of no clear significance. You are doing exactly what Bugliosi described - assigning significance to an inconsistency in the evidence while being unable to explain why it is significant. Contrary to your narrative, the WC did not ignore the inconsistency but attempted to resolve it and then left it in the record for all to see. The HSCA likewise failed to see the significance you now see. As a reasonably sane and rational individual, it is difficult for me even to hypothesize any particular significance. And yet, this nothingburger is your lead story for the WC being a sham!
I see from your posts that your involvement in the JFKA amounts to a few months. To borrow your pet term, are you "desperate" for attention, desperate to be a player in the Conspiracy Game? I have a difficult time believing, since I do see intelligence in your posts, that you actually cannot see the absurdity in ones like I have quoted here. "No bearing," "irrational," "desperate," "zero uncertainty," "fact" - come on, you know every one of these statements is false.
In what corner of the LN narrative does this silly issue fit? Wouldn't the WC and the LN community presumably have preferred a consistent narrative with the lunch remains either being found on the 5th floor or where BRW subsequently said, at some distance from the SN? Why would the "sham" WC not have simply cleaned up the issue instead of leaving it for all to see? Like so many CT efforts, yours just makes no sense at all, and you seemingly don't care.
--- End quote ---
With respect to the confusion over whether the chicken bones were discovered on the 5th or 6th floor, You have to consider that this confusion is due to the cattywampus layout of the TSBD. The general assumption is that when you walk UP those steps to enter the building, you are then on the 2nd Floor. That's WRONG. You are then on the 1st Floor. There is also a Basement within this building. The 1st Floor of the TSBD is technically Not at "ground level". The windows running along the TSBD exterior are also misleading. This is why there is sometimes confusion over a shooter firing from the 5th or 6th floor window. This is how Oswald managed to simply walk out of the building. Oswald Knew his way around that building/maze. I believe the strange construction of this building is why Law Enforcement did Not "secure" the TSBD for at least 2 hrs following the Kill Shot. The Dallas Police Dept had no idea regarding the nooks and crannies that ran throughout this building. Just look at the utter confusion of DPD Officer Baker when he entered the TSBD. He needed Roy Truly to take him by-the-hand and lead him to the freight elevator/stairway.
Lance Payette:
--- Quote from: Jake Maxwell on March 29, 2025, 01:10:43 PM ---LBJ was a bully and loved his political power, and he knew that JFK and brother Bobby had solidified power in the White House, likely for years to come. His bullying, threats and characteristic intimidation are most likely what brought Warren to tears, if that happened.
Hoover was no saint as you say, and disliked JFK.
It is unwise to trust much of what either said in public or private.
A plot to kill JFK was hatched and masterminded by some powerful figures, most likely including Hoover.
--- End quote ---
I would simply say, bear in mind that anyone involved in the JFKA was risking certain EXECUTION. Do we really think the Vice President of the United States and the Director of the FBI were going to risk ending their 50-year careers that way?
Yes, I know all about compartmentalization, yada yada. The fact is, any "mastermind" was risking execution and putting his fate in the hands of some pretty low-level clucks who, at least according to most conspiracy theories, were world-class bunglers. Once any link in the chain failed, it was eventually going to lead to the top.
LBJ and Hoover? Possible, of course, but it seems extremely unlikely to me.
Jake Maxwell:
--- Quote from: Lance Payette on March 29, 2025, 06:55:26 PM ---I would simply say, bear in mind that anyone involved in the JFKA was risking certain EXECUTION. Do we really think the Vice President of the United States and the Director of the FBI were going to risk ending their 50-year careers that way?
Yes, I know all about compartmentalization, yada yada. The fact is, any "mastermind" was risking execution and putting his fate in the hands of some pretty low-level clucks who, at least according to most conspiracy theories, were world-class bunglers. Once any link in the chain failed, it was eventually going to lead to the top.
LBJ and Hoover? Possible, of course, but it seems extremely unlikely to me.
--- End quote ---
Hoover was FBI Director for decades... he most likely had enough in his files to blackmail anyone... He wasn't scared of execution and that is ridiculous to suggest.
Hoover felt insulated, most likely... AND to boot... just pull it off, Hoover, and your good friend is now president, and in a position to pardon you of anything...
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