JFK Assassination Forum

JFK Assassination Discussion & Debate => JFK Assassination Discussion & Debate => Topic started by: Anthony Frank on June 06, 2021, 08:47:38 AM

Title: President Kennedy Was Not The Only One They Killed
Post by: Anthony Frank on June 06, 2021, 08:47:38 AM
A 1961 CIA study on “Soviet Strategic Executive Action” states that the KGB endeavored to “remove the threat to Soviet interests posed by certain members of Western governments, sometimes arranging for the dismissal of such persons from public office, at other times even having them ‘eliminated’ physically.”

A 1964 CIA memorandum on Soviet “Executive Action” states that beginning in 1953, the Soviet KGB’s “executive action component” was assigned to “carry out ‘special action tasks’ such as sabotage and political murders.”

The memorandum goes on to say that one of the KGB’s “main target areas” for “political murders” is the United States, and it states, “Soviet intelligence is doubtlessly involved in incidents that never become officially recognized as executive action, such as assassinations which are recorded as accidents” or “suicide.”

After KGB infiltration of the CIA was exposed in 1984, some of the KGB officers admitted that during their quest to control the government, their KGB colleagues killed President Kennedy and killed thirteen Members of Congress over the course of twenty-six years from 1957 to 1983, with twelve of the Congressional deaths recorded as “accidents” and “suicides.”

During the first eight years of the KGB’s killing campaign, they killed President Kennedy and they killed five Members of Congress.

Three Members of Congress died in traffic “accidents” spaced out over the years 1957, 1959, and 1965, while one Member of Congress died in an alleged “suicide,” and one Member of Congress died in an airplane “accident.”

In one of the three traffic “accidents,” the KGB had a train engine crash into a Congressman’s car.

In another “accident,” they cut off a Congressman’s car and ran it into an elevated train pillar.

And they killed a Congressman by running him down with a tractor-trailer.

In the space of eight years, three Congressmen were killed by way of a train engine, an elevated train pillar, and a tractor-trailer, and these are the only traffic “accidents” in which Members of Congress have been killed since 1951.

After airplane “accidents” became the KGB’s preferred method for killing Members of Congress in 1972, they killed five Members of Congress in four separate airplane “accidents” in less than four years. They also killed a Congressman with a shotgun in an alleged “suicide” during that time, making for a total of six Members of Congress dying by “accidents” and “suicide” in less than four years.

Five years after the KGB was exposed, renegade CIA officers began their own “executive action” program and used four separate “accidents” to kill four Members of Congress during the Presidency of CIA officer George H. W. Bush.

The KGB officers also tried to assassinate President Reagan, and they had plans to assassinate Presidents Johnson, Nixon, and Ford.

Specific details of all the aforementioned “accidents,” the exposure of the KGB officers, and plans to assassinate United States Presidents are contained in “DESTROYING AMERICA: The CIA’s Quest to Control the Government.” Click the link.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07V9JT65Y
Title: Re: President Kennedy Was Not The Only One They Killed
Post by: Gerry Down on June 06, 2021, 03:08:21 PM
The KGB officers also tried to assassinate President Reagan, and they had plans to assassinate Presidents Johnson, Nixon, and Ford.

So the KGB were going to keep assassinating US Presidents as they came into office one after another?
Title: Re: President Kennedy Was Not The Only One They Killed
Post by: Mark A. Oblazney on June 06, 2021, 03:19:04 PM
So the KGB were going to keep assassinating US Presidents as they came into office one after another?

That's correct, and then the pinks could manage the planet properly
Title: Re: President Kennedy Was Not The Only One They Killed
Post by: Anthony Frank on June 07, 2021, 05:05:11 AM
So the KGB were going to keep assassinating US Presidents as they came into office one after another?

They were planning to assassinate LBJ on October 31, 1964, three days before the 1964 Presidential election. Their objective was to have Senator Barry Goldwater, who was both a CIA officer and a KGB asset, elected to the Presidency.

The main reason for wanting CIA officer Barry Goldwater in the Office of President was that he would be the KGB’s foremost asset in exacerbating the very tense racial situation of the 1960s. Toward that end they had Goldwater, who had voted for civil rights legislation in 1957 and 1960, aligning himself with Southern Democrats in support of segregation in 1963, details of which are in my book.

Goldwater’s newfound support for segregation was well established by the Spring of 1964. The New York Times, reporting on an 18,000-strong Goldwater rally at Madison Square Garden in May 1964, stated, “The Negro choir that had been hired to sing The Battle Hymn of the Republic had to overcome a rebellion in its ranks,” with one singer stating, “I can’t help feeling strange here tonight because I know how Senator Goldwater stands on civil rights.”

Another singer, who “had to sing baritone” because of “desertions,” complained, “It’s like singing for the Ku Klux Klan.”

The KGB envisioned that the assassinations of Presidents Kennedy and Johnson in less than a year, followed by Goldwater’s election to the Presidency, would seem like nothing less than a conspiracy to seize power and support segregation at the crucial juncture of 1964. They also envisioned using the long tentacles of the CIA to stir up violent political and racial turmoil in the wake of “segregationist” Barry Goldwater seizing power.

The fact that the United States had been embroiled in a civil war over the rights of African-Americans 100 years earlier was undoubtedly not lost on the KGB officers. KGB officers inside the CIA were very focused on promoting racial violence and rioting during the 1960s, hence, the assassination of President Kennedy in 1963 and the intended assassination of President Johnson in 1964, which was to be followed three days later by the election of KGB asset and renegade CIA officer Barry Goldwater to the Presidency.

I will get to Nixon, Ford, and Reagan when I have more time.

Or if you want to just read my book, you can get all the in-depth details.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07V9JT65Y
Title: Re: President Kennedy Was Not The Only One They Killed
Post by: Anthony Frank on June 07, 2021, 09:42:50 PM
Their plans to assassinate President Johnson went awry when Suffolk County Police arrested the KGB’s intended patsy, a man named Robert Babcock.

Suffolk County detectives spotted Babcock parked along President Johnson’s motorcade route with a telescopic rifle “on the seat beside him,” and after searching his car, they found “a loaded 12-gauge shotgun” in his trunk.

Babcock was parked “300 yards from the gate” of Republic Aviation Corporation in New York State and arrested “eight minutes” before President Johnson stepped from his plane on the company’s airstrip.

President Johnson’s motorcade had been “expected to make a number of stops along the motorcade route,” but it made absolutely no stops after Babcock was found with the telescopic rifle and shotgun, which completely derailed the assassination plans.

President Johnson passed by the spot where Babcock was taken into custody “twenty minutes” after his arrest.

Suffolk County Police and the “Secret Service” questioned Robert Babcock, who “said first that he had been going on a hunting trip when he decided to stop and see the motorcade. He then said he had made a bet with barroom acquaintances that he could do what he did without being detected.”

With their intended patsy prematurely apprehended and with no chance of assassinating President Johnson, the “Secret Service” wanted the incident to receive as little attention as possible, and Babcock was simply “charged with disorderly conduct and jailed for the night.” The few details that are available ended up in a few paragraphs back on page 78 of the New York Times and on page 10 of the Dallas Morning News on November 1, 1964.

Babcock’s case makes it crystal clear that in 1964, a man could be paid money to sit along the Presidential motorcade route with a telescopic rifle on the seat beside him and a loaded shotgun in the trunk, and when discovered, the “Secret Service” would conduct no investigation, even though the Presidential election was three days away and the preceding President had been assassinated with a telescopic rifle less than a year earlier.
Title: Re: President Kennedy Was Not The Only One They Killed
Post by: Anthony Frank on June 08, 2021, 01:41:54 AM
Easily the stupidest theory I've heard in a while.

Depending on a single patsy when it's crystal clear they could have bought two more!

ROFL

Sorry. It is most definitely not a theory.

After going to prison in 1984, the KGB officers admitted that killing President Kennedy was only the first step in a two-stage plan to take over the Presidency. They admitted that they had plans to kill LBJ on October 31, 1964, three days before the 1964 Presidential election.

As for the idea that they could have bought two more patsies, maybe you did not read that their intended patsy was arrested “eight minutes” before President Johnson stepped from his plane on the company’s airstrip, and  Johnson passed by the spot where Babcock was taken into custody “twenty minutes” after his arrest.

And maybe you did not read that President Johnson’s motorcade had been “expected to make a number of stops along the motorcade route,” but it made absolutely no stops after Babcock was found with the telescopic rifle and shotgun, which completely derailed the assassination plans.

You can roll on the floor and laugh all you want, but it will not change the fact that I exposed KGB infiltration of the CIA in 1984, and the KGB admitted that they assassinated President Kennedy.

It’s all in my book. I invite everyone to read the reviews and read the “Look Inside” sample.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07V9JT65Y
Title: Re: President Kennedy Was Not The Only One They Killed
Post by: Anthony Frank on June 08, 2021, 05:23:54 PM
They did not purchase their patsy. They duped him into parking along President Johnson’s motorcade route with a telescopic rifle “on the seat beside him,” and “a loaded 12-gauge shotgun” in his trunk.

Title: Re: President Kennedy Was Not The Only One They Killed
Post by: Anthony Frank on June 08, 2021, 08:25:16 PM
The assassination was averted not because the patsy was apprehended, but because the motorcade, which had been “expected to make a number of stops along the motorcade route,” made absolutely no stops.

They could have still pulled off the assassination, and they could have accused Babcock of being party to the assassination, but the motorcade did not make stops along the motorcade route.

The JFK assassination went so well for them that they figured assassinating LBJ would be easy. They never considered the possibility of the motorcade making no stops, which happened only because Babcock was discovered with a telescopic rifle “on the seat beside him,” and “a loaded 12-gauge shotgun” in his trunk.
Title: Re: President Kennedy Was Not The Only One They Killed
Post by: Anthony Frank on June 08, 2021, 09:45:23 PM
Neither did the JFK motorcade.
Neither did the JFK motorcade.
Although just one year earlier the JFK motorcade made no stops?

They were able to assassinate JFK because he was riding in an open convertible. After Kennedy's assassination, the Presidential Limousine model in which he travelled was given a substantial redesign.

According to the Henry Ford Museum of American Innovation, the vehicle was given a permanent roof, titanium armor plating, and an explosion-proof fuel tank. They clearly had no chance of assassinating LBJ unless that motorcade made the scheduled stops along the motorcade route.

1963 to 1972: Lyndon B Johnson's armored Continental
(https://i.postimg.cc/50QH3mG4/LBJ-Limo.jpg) (https://postimages.org/)
Lyndon B Johnson inspects the new presidential limousine, a 21-foot custom-built Lincoln Continental, that was
delivered to the Secret Service at the White House, October 21.

Title: Re: President Kennedy Was Not The Only One They Killed
Post by: Anthony Frank on June 08, 2021, 11:39:09 PM
You mean LBJ exiting the vehicle?

Obviously they should have used a paid patsy instead of dumb-ass Babcock exposing his rifle in the front seat.

Amateur hour.

They were overconfident after assassinating JFK and having the Warren Commission cover up the obvious conspiracy.

They were clearly planning on President Johnson’s motorcade making “a number of stops along the motorcade route.”
Title: Re: President Kennedy Was Not The Only One They Killed
Post by: Jerry Organ on June 09, 2021, 12:08:06 AM
They were able to assassinate JFK because he was riding in an open convertible. After Kennedy's assassination, the Presidential Limousine model in which he travelled was given a substantial redesign.

According to the Henry Ford Museum of American Innovation, the vehicle was given a permanent roof, titanium armor plating, and an explosion-proof fuel tank. They clearly had no chance of assassinating LBJ unless that motorcade made the scheduled stops along the motorcade route.

1963 to 1972: Lyndon B Johnson's armored Continental
(https://i.postimg.cc/50QH3mG4/LBJ-Limo.jpg) (https://postimages.org/)
Lyndon B Johnson inspects the new presidential limousine, a 21-foot custom-built Lincoln Continental, that was
delivered to the Secret Service at the White House, October 21.

That's a picture of the 1967 Lincoln Continental Presidential Limousine built for $500,000 and delivered to the Johnson White House late in 1968. I don't know if Johnson used it much. The limousine served into the 70s and was retired to the Richard Nixon Library in Yorba Linda, CA.
Title: Re: President Kennedy Was Not The Only One They Killed
Post by: Anthony Frank on June 09, 2021, 12:25:47 AM
But getting back to the topic of the thread and Gerry Down's question:
So the KGB were going to keep assassinating US Presidents as they came into office one after another?

They intended to kill Nixon in April 1972 so that Vice President Agnew would become President and then lose the 1972 Presidential election to the Democratic nominee, who was supposed to choose Senator and renegade CIA officer Thomas Eagleton as his running mate. They would then kill the newly elected Democratic President to catapult Vice President Eagleton into the Presidency.

When the plan to kill Nixon failed, which is addressed later in this book, they, by their own admission, orchestrated the Watergate break-in to discredit Nixon but still failed to prevent his re-election. They also failed to get Senator Eagleton onto the Democratic ticket with Presidential nominee George McGovern, who first chose Eagleton to be his running mate but was forced to choose a different running mate a few weeks later.

The KGB officers were grooming CIA officer Jimmy Carter, the former Governor of Georgia, to run for President when they tried to assassinate President Gerald Ford in September 1975. The KGB had no belief in the democratic process, and the hope was that Carter’s election would be facilitated by assassinating Ford fourteen months before the election, which would have catapulted the relatively unpopular Vice President Nelson Rockefeller into the Presidency.

But the democratic process worked in 1976 to get a CIA officer elected to the Presidency, as Carter narrowly defeated President Ford in 1976, whereas the KGB efforts to take over the Presidency by way of assassination consistently failed.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07V9JT65Y
Title: Re: President Kennedy Was Not The Only One They Killed
Post by: Anthony Frank on June 09, 2021, 06:03:11 AM
In 1981, KGB officers inside the CIA again sought to catapult one of their assets, Vice President and CIA officer George H. W. Bush, into the Presidency sixty-nine days after Bush became Vice President. CIA officers “detailed” to the “Secret Service” were tasked with making it happen when President Reagan left the Washington Hilton Hotel on March 30, 1981.

According to the Washington Post, if the Secret Service had parked the Presidential limousine where it should have been parked outside the Washington Hilton Hotel, “Reagan would have had a straight-line walk of about eight feet from door to car.”

Instead, Reagan’s limousine “was waiting about twenty to twenty-five feet down the driveway from the door.” In order to get to the limousine, Reagan had to “walk down the curving sidewalk.”

“Around the curve, flush against the hotel wall, the assailant waited with his pistol.” (“Come this way, Mr. President, your limo is down here.”)

“Generally, agents want the armored limousine waiting in a direct line with the President’s exit door as he moves from building to car. Such positioning shortens the period of vulnerability and makes it easier for agents to form a human shield as the public figure moves.  In some cases, agents have had the car moved one foot or less to have it perfectly aligned with the exit.”

“Television crew members at the Hilton said they had complained to the Secret Service about bystanders pushing into the area reserved for the press. One bystander, as it turned out, was the accused gunman.” (“Don’t worry about the bystanders. We know what we’re doing.”)

Henry Brown, an ABC television cameraman, “had complained earlier to the Secret Service that members of the public had ‘penetrated the police line,’ creating crowded conditions in the press area and making it difficult to work . . . . His complaint went unheeded, and Brown went on working. He was standing near the assailant when he started to fire.”

“‘He just opened up and kept squeezing the trigger,’ Brown said.”

“A Secret Service official said the advance agent on the scene concluded that it would be counterproductive to set up an area restricted only to the press on the narrow, curving walk outside the hotel.”

On April 4, 1981, the Washington Post reported: “The bullets that struck President Reagan and two of the three other persons wounded in Monday’s assassination attempt were positively identified yesterday by the FBI as ‘Devastators,’” which are “expensive, customized .22 caliber cartridges designed to explode upon impact with the force of slugs fired from much more powerful handguns.”

Besides the CIA’s “designated officers of the Secret Service” being intrinsic to the attempt to kill President Reagan, the intended assassin, John Hinckley, was traveling in the same cities with his CIA/Secret Service handlers in October 1980, and Hinckley had made off-and-on stays in Washington, D.C. dating back to September 1980, six months prior to the attempted assassination.

The Washington Post reported that Hinckley “was in Chicago, Dayton, and Nashville last October” at the same time President Carter “was in those cities for campaign appearances,” and Hinckley stayed at the “Capital Hilton Hotel September 27 and 28 and at the Quality Inn on Capitol Hill October 17-19, February 10 and 11, and February 16 and 17.”

The Post went on to state, “There is no evidence to indicate that these visits were tied either to the attack on Reagan or to any plan directed at former President Carter,” and no evidence “that he was stalking Reagan or any other political figure,” but “many of Hinckley’s travels are otherwise unexplained.”

The KGB officers obviously kept Hinckley close by while grooming him for the assassination, which they did by instilling him with a maniacal desire to impress teenage actress Jodie Foster by assassinating Reagan. Before setting off to kill Reagan, Hinckley wrote a letter to Foster stating that he was performing “this historical deed to gain your respect and love.”  It was well-established in 1981 that Hinckley thought he was going to impress Jody Foster by killing the President.

The Washington Post reported that Hinckley bought “what is apparently his first gun sometime in early September at a pawnshop in Lubbock, Texas,”  after which he was staying at a hotel just three blocks from the White House in late September and then traveling in the same cities as President Carter and his “Secret Service” handlers in October.

Regardless of the “not guilty by reason of insanity” verdict, information in the Washington Post on April 5, 1981, clearly shows why Hinckley was chosen to kill Reagan. The Post reported that in the spring of 1978, Hinckley joined the National Socialist Party of America, marched in a Nazi parade in St. Louis, and studied Mein Kampf in college. The National Socialist Party said Hinckley had been “expelled” because “he was too violence-prone.”

CIA operatives, specifically KGB officers inside the CIA, had no trouble manipulating the violent deranged psychotic into thinking he would impress a teenage actress by killing President Reagan. With KGB asset George H. W. Bush finally in the Vice Presidency, Hinckley’s KGB handlers easily provided him with access to the President of the United States.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07V9JT65Y
Title: Re: President Kennedy Was Not The Only One They Killed
Post by: Jerry Organ on June 09, 2021, 03:13:19 PM
(https://content.gallup.com/origin/gallupinc/GallupSpaces/Production/Cms/POLL/qawvwtsoi0iggz9cntkloa.gif)

Johnson and Humphrey had the greatest sustained lead in modern history (Nixon in 1972 was similar). Killing LBJ would have propelled Humphrey into office. If a Presidential candidate dies or is removed, the party's National Committee decides on a replacement; in this case, it would almost certainly be Humphrey. There is also a provision for Congress to delay the election.

At one point, prior to the convention, Johnson was reluctant to run in 1964. He had a heart condition. Both things could have been exploited by the KGB.
Title: Re: President Kennedy Was Not The Only One They Killed
Post by: Anthony Frank on June 09, 2021, 08:34:07 PM
Thanks for the info, but you failed to answer my question: was LBJ expected to leave the limo?

RE open limo, pretty stupid plotters as they could have eliminated both JFK and LBJ in Dealey Plaza and taken a year off in '64.

Like hitting two birds with one stone, considering the amount of effort it must have taken to plan and control the cover-up.

(Unless, of cause, LBJ was in on it from the get-go)

I assume LBJ was expected to get out of the limo at one of the scheduled stops on Saturday, October 31, 1964. That would be the only way they could assassinate him.

Killing him at the same time they killed JFK on November 22, 1963, was contrary to their plan.

The 25th Amendment to the Constitution, providing for Presidential succession and the appointment of a new Vice President, did not become part of the Constitution until 1967.

There was no Vice President on Saturday, October 31, 1964.

The first person in line for the Presidency was John W. McCormack, a Representative from Massachusetts who had been elected Speaker of the House in January 1962 following the death of House Speaker Sam Rayburn. President Johnson’s death would have catapulted Congressman McCormack into the Presidency on Saturday, October 31, 1964, after serving as Speaker of the House for less than three years.

The United States would be into the third day of a McCormack Presidency on Tuesday, November 3, 1964, when the American people voted in an election pitting the late President Lyndon Johnson against CIA officer and KGB asset Barry Goldwater.

With Johnson dead, the Southern states, including the electoral prizes of Texas and Florida, would definitely not be going to the liberal “Vice Presidential candidate,” Hubert Humphrey, nor would the mountain states, where conservatism flourished in 1964.

As for the electoral prize of California, it already had one Republican Senator going into the 1964 election, and a second Republican Senator was elected in 1964. San Francisco, which hosted the Republican National Convention in 1964, had a Republican Mayor at the time and had nothing but Republican Mayors from 1912 to 1964, and California was conservative enough to elect staunch Goldwater supporter Ronald Reagan as its Governor in 1966.

Goldwater’s running mate was Representative William Miller of New York, Chairman of the Republican National Committee. Going into the 1964 election, the electoral prize of New York had two Republican Senators and a Republican Governor, and more than half of New York’s forty-one Congressional Representatives were Republicans.

Efforts to block Senator Barry Goldwater’s election to the Presidency would be totally devoid of the political capital garnered by the late Presidents Kennedy and Johnson among liberals, moderates, independents, and conservatives. Even with fellow Southerner Lyndon Johnson alive and running as the incumbent President, the electoral prize of Florida gave 49 percent of its vote to Goldwater.

People who were determined to stop Goldwater from being elected to the Presidency would have to figure out who, if anyone, they were trying to elect as President.

Were they now trying to elect Johnson’s running mate, Senator Hubert Humphrey, to the Presidency, or were they trying to elect President John W. McCormack to a four-year term?

Were they trying to elect President McCormack to a four-year term while electing Vice Presidential candidate Hubert Humphrey to the Office of Vice President?

Or were they trying to elect one of them to the Office of President while not electing anyone to the Office of Vice President?

Devout opponents of Barry Goldwater would have to tune in to the news, read the newspapers on Sunday and Monday, and try to find out from polling officials just who and what they were voting for as they futilely tried to prevent Goldwater from being elected President.

According to the Twentieth Amendment to the Constitution, if the Johnson-Humphrey ticket prevailed on election day with President Johnson dead, Vice Presidential candidate Hubert Humphrey would become the “Vice President-elect,” while no one would be elected to the Presidency. Humphrey would then “become President” at the “beginning of the term of the President” on January 20, 1965, and the Vice Presidency, which had been vacant for fourteen months, would remain vacant for another four years.

John W. McCormack would relinquish the Presidency and most likely return to his position as Speaker of the House, where the Massachusetts Representative would again be first in line for the Presidency should anything happen to “President Humphrey.”

Few people would realize that their only choice would be to elect Hubert Humphrey to the Office of Vice President and that Vice President-elect Humphrey would “become President” at the “beginning of the term of the President.”

A 1964 CIA memorandum states that the “Disinformation Department” of the KGB has “covert propaganda campaigns aimed at the creation of confusion and panic in Western countries.”

In the end, the confused 1964 election would pit a liberal Senator from Minnesota, who had done no campaigning for President and who, as the Vice Presidential candidate, had no running mate, against the well-traveled, high-profile Republican nominee, Senator Barry Goldwater, and his running mate, Representative William Miller of New York, Chairman of the Republican National Committee.

KGB officers inside the CIA would have easily realized their goal of having Barry Goldwater elected to the Presidency in 1964. Robert Babcock’s story about a bet with “barroom acquaintances” would not have helped him any more than a letter to “President Goldwater” stating, as a very upset Lee Harvey Oswald once said, “I emphatically deny these charges.”

Once they knew their plan to kill President Johnson had gone awry, certain individuals in the “Secret Service” made sure that Robert Babcock was only “charged with disorderly conduct and jailed for the night.”

Maybe you should just read the book --> https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07V9JT65Y


Title: Re: President Kennedy Was Not The Only One They Killed
Post by: Bill Chapman on June 10, 2021, 01:00:23 PM
They did not purchase their patsy. They duped him into parking along President Johnson’s motorcade route with a telescopic rifle “on the seat beside him,” and “a loaded 12-gauge shotgun” in his trunk.

Wouldn't have done him much good in his trunk. Unless he had a Walter White-type deal goin' down.
Title: Re: President Kennedy Was Not The Only One They Killed
Post by: Anthony Frank on June 10, 2021, 08:21:20 PM
Wouldn't have done him much good in his trunk. Unless he had a Walter White-type deal goin' down.

There were also no bullets in the telescopic rifle.

As my book states, "There were no bullets in the telescopic rifle, which would have been conducive to persuading Babcock to take this action, but that would not be a problem for the KGB officers, and Robert Babcock would have found it impossible to understand how he could be in possession of the assassination weapon and why the loaded shotgun in his trunk made him look even guiltier."

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07V9JT65Y
Title: Re: President Kennedy Was Not The Only One They Killed
Post by: Jerry Organ on June 10, 2021, 09:20:08 PM
There were also no bullets in the telescopic rifle.

As my book states, "There were no bullets in the telescopic rifle, which would have been conducive to persuading Babcock to take this action, but that would not be a problem for the KGB officers, and Robert Babcock would have found it impossible to understand how he could be in possession of the assassination weapon and why the loaded shotgun in his trunk made him look even guiltier."

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07V9JT65Y

The quote from your book is identical to your 2004 post. Your book largely a compendium?

(https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/51lx6TppypL.jpg)

Of course, you can quote your own past writings and collect them into an anthology.
Title: Re: President Kennedy Was Not The Only One They Killed
Post by: Bill Chapman on June 10, 2021, 10:26:12 PM
There were also no bullets in the telescopic rifle.

As my book states, "There were no bullets in the telescopic rifle, which would have been conducive to persuading Babcock to take this action, but that would not be a problem for the KGB officers, and Robert Babcock would have found it impossible to understand how he could be in possession of the assassination weapon and why the loaded shotgun in his trunk made him look even guiltier."

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07V9JT65Y

More importantly, much more importantly, do you know of the 'Walter White' of whom I speak?
Title: Re: President Kennedy Was Not The Only One They Killed
Post by: Anthony Frank on June 11, 2021, 04:15:10 AM
The quote from your book is identical to your 2004 post. Your book largely a compendium?

Of course, you can quote your own past writings and collect them into an anthology.

2004 was the early days of my research into news articles. I was writing my book at the time and posted some of it online.

My book has 843 citations, most of which are from official documents that I started researching around 2006. I can provide links to any of the quotes from official documents.
Title: Re: President Kennedy Was Not The Only One They Killed
Post by: Paul May on June 14, 2021, 06:11:47 PM
The desperation to sell a book has no bounds. Embarrassing.
Title: Re: President Kennedy Was Not The Only One They Killed
Post by: Anthony Frank on June 14, 2021, 10:31:39 PM
The desperation to sell a book has no bounds. Embarrassing.

I simply want people to know that KGB officers inside the CIA killed President Kennedy as part of their quest to control the government.

And I want people to know that, after KGB infiltration of the CIA was exposed in 1984. renegade CIA officers continued to carry out the KGB-initiated quest to control the government.

I want people to know that the CIA has corrupted the government far beyond what anyone can imagine and that the CIA is desperate to keep people from finding out about the corruption.

Take the Jim Garrison investigation, for instance.

The CIA gathered intelligence on Garrison and on all aspects of his investigation. An abundance of CIA memorandums and communications reveal top-level CIA officials focused on the Garrison investigation.

An April 26 CIA memo stated that there are “loads of possible concern to CIA because of what may be an intent to involve the Agency directly or indirectly.”

A June 1967 CIA memo, written shortly after the CIA realized they had a “problem,” states, “The activity of District Attorney James C. Garrison of New Orleans shows no signs of abating . . . . We shall continue to study all available information about the New Orleans investigation.”

In September 1967, the CIA documented, “Since the Garrison investigation was first publicized in February 1967, we have kept book on all persons in the case: 139 to date.”

The CIA also established the “Garrison Group,” consisting of some of the senior-most officials in the CIA; the Executive Director, the Deputy Director for Plans, the Deputy Director of Support, the CIA General Counsel, the CIA Inspector General, and Raymond G. Rocca, the Chief of Research and Analysis in the CIA’s Counterintelligence Division.

A CIA memo states that at the first meeting of the Garrison Group on September 20, 1967, “Rocca felt that Garrison would, indeed, obtain a conviction of Shaw for conspiring to assassinate President Kennedy.”

The memo also quotes the CIA Executive Director as having said, “The possibility of Agency action should be examined from the timing of what can be done before the trial, and what might be feasible during and after the trial.”

The CIA also engaged in a world-wide propaganda campaign to discredit Garrison.

In July 1968, the CIA sent a dispatch to all CIA stations and bases around the world, and it contained a nineteen-page article critical of Garrison and his investigation. The dispatch states, “You may use the article to brief interested contacts, especially government and other political leaders.” It also states that the article should be used to demonstrate “that there is no hard evidence of any such conspiracy.”

The CIA had previously issued a “Propaganda Notes” Bulletin when the Warren Report came out in September 1964, and copies of the Warren Report were sent to CIA “field stations” so that “covert assets”  in the United States and around the world could “explain the tragedy” of President Kennedy’s assassination. The CIA also issued “Countering Criticism of the Warren Report” in January 1967.

And now, in 1968, the CIA was engaged in a worldwide effort to disparage a New Orleans District Attorney and his investigation.

Besides eliminating anti-Castroites David Ferrie and Eladio Del Valle when Garrison’s investigation became public in 1967, and besides a world-wide propaganda campaign to discredit Garrison’s high-profile claim that Cuban exiles killed President Kennedy, the CIA continued to eliminate Cuban exiles to keep them from talking.

Five Cuban exile leaders were killed after Congress set up the House Select Committee on Assassinations in 1976.

On January 14, 1977, the Tampa Tribune reported that they had been “assassinated” in Miami “in the last few months,” including one who was “gunned down as he left his front door last week.” It also reported that a total of seven Cuban exile leaders were “assassinated in Miami in the past three years.”

It’s all in my book. Click the link.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07V9JT65Y

It seems that the only people who are "desperate" are people in the CIA, but I am sure they are not "embarrassed." They get a fat juicy paycheck to engage in their efforts to destroy America.