Bernard Fensterwald
Bernard Fensterwald
Bernard Fensterwald
DETAILs:
'< . ..
Fensterwald was employed as a lawyer by the United Stat.es Department of State.
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DETAILS - CONTINUED OVER
t \~. ~
wherein we had furnished information to members of Cong}"ess'. ,se\{~tor
Henning subsequently advised the Bureau that Fensterwald 's requests ' tp
the Bureau had been improper. Over the past.four years we have had
considerable contact with Bernard Fensterwald as Chief Counsel of the
United states Senate Committee on· the Judiciary; Subcommittee on Adminis- ·
trative Practice and Procedure (the Loni'Co~mittee). In these contacts-·
with Fensterwald it was clearly evident4'J:\e,,was
# $. ,,_ .unscrupulous,
,.., untrustworthy
and anti-FBI. He frequently endeavored
. to draw
~ ,. .·
the FBI into .
conflicts .
around the
. country by his requests of various ...,_..._ ,...telephone . companies and
. other sources who might possibly have inforJ:IlatiQ.)l of wiretaps and other
technical surveillances by the FBI. · In January, 1966, in connection. with
Fensterwald's hearings in San Francisco he indicated that ex-Agent William
Turner would be one of the. witnesses he intended to call in connection with
the extent of FBI wiretapping. Mr. DeLoach briefed Fensterwald and
Senator Long who was pre'sent
~~ ~'
at the time of the. discussion with Fensterwald
as.to Turner's unsavory Backgrorn:rl. Fensterwald indicated he would take
a second look at Turner in .~ew'of ......the- .information furnished - by Mr. DeLoach.
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Bureau .· .-..; REC«
t:·· t~. l FROM .;;.. · c. D.· DeLoach~- ... r~ L..<7 .· ·'''" 0 '" 0
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;;; t··, l~UBJECT: .f'FRED P. GRAHAM ·;;--:2o -~--~n...J
1
' ';:fi-41/
i:': i :: 16 ·cf'NEW YORK TIMES" , : :: , . ( !
"'. t" "··~ WIRETAPPING ; ii--·----~ - =---,
tfr:
t,·1;_
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. At ~.oo p.m. today Fred
".\°I --..
Grah~m, c~ve~ ·u"st, . . .1·1~c~·f-~L.~')
1r1 i;~s
who .th
.. ·e.· J.. 1
~-.-.. 3. · 22 Department for the ''New York Times," telephoned and talked to Wick. He <f,~J \
ff'.:;.' ;23 said he is planiling an arti_cle mfWiretapping for"the "Times." In connection~,;
~::~~: ;24 with the Kansas City hearings of the Lorig Committee, he would like to know :Q·1· :..
[7:.~::;i whether the Attorney General had approved of the FBrs coverage there and " '·,
r;"~'·: whether the devices were microphones or wire taps. Graham also asked ~ ~.::. .
~r £_1;; whether the FBI condoned the actions of Las Vegas Agents in impersonating \ ·-'-. .
•c:, "'"' 2 9 telephone men when entering an office to install a wire tap in the telephone .1
,. ~; ~ . box. ~e stated he thought this was a violation of law. ~:
~~ ti ]2. ACTION TAKEN:
Wick told Graham that the FBI had no comment to make ; :: :
t' J F,. j 2 <- . .
on the matter, that he is asking questions concerning a ;,1 =::
i:v? ki: 3 4 .,,:_pending matter, and that the FBI had no comment to make. Graham asked -~ .:
f,~'.;1 ~:
25
.again if the Attorney General approved all wire taps whether in internal : securit~
1 t~~- ~;: ~ ~ cases or in criminal cases, and Wick told him he should look in the testimony ~ ·
I t):1~ iJ 1 s · by Mr. Hoover before the Appropriations Subcommittee for answers to \ ' ·
~;: ~; } 9
"'-'·
questions. such as this.
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'?~ 1~!; ~; I REC.ENT DEVELOPMENT:
z
At 6:45 p. m.
ment phoned Wick stating Graham had been
pr. es sing him for infor,mation on the same matter and is planning an "expose"
~ i:;; :...
S§ ~
today Jack Rosenthal in the Dep~E~ -~
;
, .ior·
44
it~ 1~; 1 , ~~;t:;~~~;~f :e S~r:1!~~{~d;~e~~;:~r::;~~;_r~7nJfar; !~~:?~'
\
0
..;; -ti>' l., which will not be unfavorable. Rosenthal said there is no question but· what
,
·.;' ~11'.; a .-- the Graham article in the "Times" will be highly critical of the FBI and the
~.;~ f}J}~!l Justice D:partment. Rosenthal said ~o from ta~ing with_ Graham, whom he
;c. :::t, characterized as a "skunk," he recognized the obv10us tactic of Graham's
:.;! ~~ 51 , tt~mpt to-~~".~ a wedge between the FBf and.the Department of Justice or -"· ...
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,1~; . ce versa~-'"',· · · .. J:"v c · !. 0 /.) ·. o tJ.9-., c-.7- -.<
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Mr. Gal_e..
-Mr.~es
,-~'ENCLOSm''-f
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'-1.•Jol. REC.,51 7 _l ..::'£.~.~~':__~ 7
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f ,~,Contrnued on next page •• .-..
~ 5 DEG291965 .
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DeLoach td''.Belmont memo 12/17/65 ;;l:x-:- .
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1 Mr. Rosenthal said it is very interesting to knm". that
; Fensterwald, who is Long's Chief Counsel, and Fred Graham are boyhood
friends from Tennessee and are very friendly now. Obviously, Graham
is getting all his information from Fensterwald, who has been pushing
Senator Long on this matter.
ACTION:
For infor.mation.
? .
-ADDENDUM: CDD:mel 12-18-65
Isituation with Senator Long at the present time and recommendations for· ·
handling this matter with him immediately following the first of the year when
he returns to Washington. , ~ dR'-
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There is attached a copy of the 12-17-65 article which appeared
on page 79 of the "New York Times." ·
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t- ·r.- lO\N;.1r-B--I ~ -WIRE~-~p-(1 ator Long seemed reluctant to~tlffs' conversa~ons from the . Tave\---~=-··_
r::r;.~ ,·i.~~-·:.·~ i L/ff .'.... .: . .'--:, ~' ~~ 0 ~~s~:~~·;;·ty ~s~ ~c~~~= ~.r.;~;~~e.~~co:~~: ~~
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~
ked several v:itnes:;s i! they I in the Desert Inn'.,...__ ..,_
Trotter
Wick------
t.:..... ! . · l Las Vegas Case St died byt·ne\v about F.B.I. acavitles. He!Sands,. St.ardus~. ~d Rn-:iera. Tele. Room _ __
f'.~:-1 ·~. Id not call the agents to tes.: Hotels.. •. · · ~ ! Holmes
t:7'-': .:·:.:. Senato( Long.of Missouri t1Iy. ·· f- - · · -·-·- -- -·----·-
.·
~·f ~1.o..·.~ ~ ·~1>: •• · • ~ · · "\.'ii'e've had our men locking•
· . • Gandy
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_ By FRED P. GRA.HA..l[
SP'Ktd to ntr ~ .... Yori<. Tlmt"s
I
nto F.B.I. wiretapping of garn-\
ling establishmei:;ts: out there,~:
P.n<ttor Long ."><tld today in a
. . .,•.. t.!-.J. . WASHINGTON, Dec. 16- ~elcphone interview · from·
.t •": 2 Senator Edward. V. Long of 1 pringfield, Ill.
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~2~fis.:'3ou_rl ."l~d :niursday that ~e '''\Ve haYe all the lnf_onnation,
• ·~·a.:s cons1denn;; turning his we nc-ed for full hcanngs, but,
:·-·:; • 21~vim - tapping , Investigation I haven't had a chance to go• ·:.:·
..•.
--;:.:''·.·:: f z' g-airu"t th& Federal :3ureau of ?Ver. it in detail
:- t: :. . , by' the .!fame commi3S1on Thurs- it with my staff, ' he said...
to <;Iiscuss;
:
:mct
, :'. ~ ··:: 2 5ctay. · The. wiretapping by the Fed-
_;:fft'. .. :Mr. Long, &. Democrat, said eral agents in Las Vegas has .
•'.::·- J:::::r; 2 f)he vtould . decide early next come to public attention in a
~;_.. :j·i 2 :tm'onth whether to hold public[s-erie.s of legal moves since ft
~;·.:. r: ,l ·hearings .concerning ~at he v.·a.'> accidentally discovered in
"':g ':7:-.: 2.B:called wholesale 'A'iretzjiping by April. 1963. · · •
~ z·91he F.B.L in .La..3 Vegas, Nev ..1
·
Last Friday the F.BJ. agent.
::~~ ~·· . that hi:'!'. investigators had been 1n charg-e oft.he Las Vegas divi-
....~· ~~ ; Ointanned a.bout If :->e, it would sion. Dean W. Eslon. and three
~- ~: :.,.~~anewturninthefive-month- of his special agents were
~: ~-·: !'1-old investigation that has al- named in a :s million invasion-
I
·: ::,::· ~ } fready sh.a.ken the Internal Rev- of-privacy damage suit filed by
I':"· . J i;enue Service with testimony tv:o hotel executives in Las
:~· b'.•: f about viola.tion3 of taxpayers' Vega..o:;.
". ~;; 3 4privacy In several cities. One suit wa.~ filed by Edward
tf;>~ r-:; ., c;: Almost a.11 9! the Yiolations Levinson, part owner of the
~- Jo:..~ - ~ c-onnected with the Gov- Fremont Hotel. in Las Vegas.
~.·-~ t=":: 3 5ernment's orgwilzed crime driYe \l.·ho once was a business as.om-
,t
·:.
~.,:~~;: ~:: _,against suspected racketeers. ciare of Robert G, B;\ke:-. Secre-
i:--~ 1 · It w~ the hearing ·involving tar;-t to the Senate Democratic
fi: 1 1 8the Revenue Service that turned majority. He :rued · the four
~.i n~P testimony about illegal eaves- agents, the Central Telephone
~ I:;:;: -1 :.iaropping by the Federal Bureau Company and sb: of its em-
; 5·~~ · r!.i?t Investiga..tion in Las Vegas, ployees for con.spiring to place
~x f ,. ::rnami and Kansas City. \\."irct.ap devices in his quarters Thu Washlnqton Post'and. _ _ _ ,,
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;~~ l Until tod~y Senator Long had in the hoteL
"'""":'.~ ; :··- inot said publicly that he \Vas A similar sutt was brought
Times Herald . .
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:,: jconsiderlng follo~'ing up these by his B.S.Sistant. Johnny Grandy The Wa•hinqton Daily News _ __
;f;.~ Jeatl5 with full hearing- mto the The suits con~endcd that tlu
~'. ·'17~ p-edera1' "'=-· --:z's methods. edcral bureau 'irxa 7ca:Scd 2! The Eveninq Stai - - - - - - - -
fr- 1~~ ~ S . .'?0.~~~~-~c: -~f \\'lttta special lines from th.:...!::1ephon£ Ne- York Herald Tribune - - - -
:;._ t~ ~i t:~ 5 2
The W o r k . e r - - - - ' - - - - - - - - -
The New L e a d e r - - - - - - , , - , -
The Wall Strae-t Jo4mol --~-=--
~-·_..::·
-.rr.· . ~:., ~' The National dbse:rrer - - - - -
-~} :-,~ SENT DIRECTORJ_
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Peopl&'"s World
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- /~-1?f-l:;7 Date -----------~~·-..·:_"-. .·_·-.•_"
DEC i·s l9o5
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I ENCLOSURE/ (:;/
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edition
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of.;,~e "New York Times" on page 79 of the late. city edition.
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-~... "We've
had our men looking into FBI wire tapping of gambling
establish~ts out ~er:," Senator Long said today in a telephone inter;:iew [.'-::.·
JI from Spri~eld'. Illmois.. .. . . /.: . ., . -. t~;"":.~
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all
ff/· "We have fue iniorn"iation we need for full ~e.arings, b~t I ~ ·
hahver:'dt h~.ii.. chance to.. go over it in detail an~ to discuss it with my staff, " ~~~· .· -
esa1 • ......, ·· ,., ..-
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The wire tapping by Federal Agents in Las Vegas has come to
public attention in a series of legal moves since it was accidently discovered
in April, 1963. \
'
· Last Friday the FBI Agent in Charge of the Las Vegas Division,
Dean W. Eslon and three of his Special Agents were named in a .$6 million
invasion - Of - privacyl-~.Jll.~.l'.. suit filed by two ~otel executivESin Las Vegas.
One suit was filed by Everett Levinson, part owner of the Fremont Hotel in
Las Vegas who once was a business associate of Robert G.Baker, secretary
to the Senate Democratic Majority. He sued the four Agents, the Central
Telephone Company and six of its employees for conspiracy to place wire tap
de:vices in his quarters in the hotel.
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Tolson-----
D~Loach ____
',.':, ~lohr - - - - - -
Bishop _ _ _ __
Casper _ _ _ __
Callahan
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IG· .llt Mr. Mohr
}fr. Bi?hnp ~)/ 1.-T
?rfr. C-'1.!p~r
1fr_ Call:ihan
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~ir. Conrad ···--
!.Ir.' Felt ;:;.
Mr. GaJ~:1. ~;.j
Mr. Ro/en •.:-___
Mr. Sull1l.n ~
¥r.. Tavel .--
···.-.
'1.fr. Trotter··-·
·Tele. Room. _ _
1-fiss Holme-.s. ·--
. Mis.:i Gandy _ _
'! • :
Character: :/
or
Claa•illeation:
SubmitUnq Of!ic'lt: TC 8
0 Beinq lnvet:stlqa.te-d :.::l.::..~>-
MAR 27 1969
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46
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Conrad ;::.·
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Rosen ·/
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Trotter-----
Tele_ Room-·
Holmes -----c
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NbT RECORDELJ
4~ !tiAR Z4 1869
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. •'" tJNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
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FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION
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t~:-i ~; 11 Washington, D.C. 20535 ___
·_;;:;.- '
.~~,;tl f~
~:;_:t::·~ ~a CONFERENCE AT GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY
s:-,, l WASHINGTON, D.C., NOVEMBER 23-24, 1973
~
' 9
:·J..;_-P -
·{.".".20 . SPONSORED BY THE COMMITTEE TO INVESTIGATE ASSASSINATIONS
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cautious before he got out on a limb; that if he inquired into LaFitte' s background;'
ne would find an extensive record; and that under no circumstances would the
Bureau support LaFitte. I told him that officially, of course, we could not take
a position but that, personally, we would hate to see some friend embarrassed
and he should be very cautious. Fensterwald stated that was en0ugh for him.
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fi!!tti!e![~~telephoned ~hortly
this afternoon
concerning his attendance at the Conference on the FBI,
it~/~T~ !~~2!e~~d a~o':~~c=~~~s~~1~e~;i~~~-;~ti~~ustice
tic'p-1. . Jprese7tation on Friday, 10/29/7~, which lasted until ~O p.m., :.:: .
~",;- ,.,.,
24' ~was simply outrageous. It consisted of the presentation of
~:.if~.I.~_i;~\ papers whose authors had a long history of .writing bitter
~\ _ denunciations of the FBI and the Director. He said he was
lo., (/
~~::;·. fffr,;;.
!§;1 ~;; convinced that even Burke Marshall was embarrassed and
-· •'" considerably concerned that t.'fie conference would lack ,\
29 objectivity and be only a "hatchet jobtt on the FBI. He said \)
3o that the presentations on that day were a complete discredit ~
~:~: t:'\j; ~-
1
to the conference. ( ,,
. ~~· ~--
. ~) j ~ He said that most of the papers prese.nted on Sat=day
~.''..;~~ land inuch of the discussion were in a much more conservative vein
F: and even various professors with more liberal tendencies raised
f t> !!:;:;& questions which appeared to attempt to reach the purported
! ~.Yj' t''..ie "... purpose of the conference,_d-.e., to understand the struct=e
.I fi ~:-; ,·9 of the FBI and.. its ro.le and'~.wer in t~: Amer~can s~cietY, •. I~ !' l
···. .,. 'l~·a · : - ~ .~ REC 7, ?,, - //~. 9,,,. / - · v
·; :;: :f:;, §"~~that very few of the papers were at a l
-_~
. ., ~- 1 1:
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.-.:,..;';·:r,._._:._'_:,l_. scholarly .T4'be5t papers dealt with the collection of ·
.:- 23 intelligence data. Discussions brought comments from left-
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He..'llorandum to Hr. Bates
RE; C01·1'·1ITTEE FOR PUBLIC JUSTICE ~ ..
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Casper -~-c.oo-·'·_··_·_
f l'l'o t~~~tigate_
f .By Cl1:1.rlcs Krause ~ -; rJ
FBJ.'.:
11-., . :
Conrad.~-'·.:.·-~
Dal bey -~'".;_'°'·~
CI c ..·e land ;;....~:... __.
l
·:·
'IFRI "ncit~er ta vindicate nor! ganized crime divi::;ion from Tele. Room _ _·_
condc1nn thC/ bureau" but 195C to 19G6, said he believed
l"onl~- lo im nJvc il." : hue of 1.he reasons the- FDI
Holmes - - - - -
1
Burk··. !arshall, iorn1er.a.s-.I
Gandy _ _ _ __
h::.id been lax in invcstigatin;
7ista ~ attorney< general dur-1 organized crime \\'<'.l.S • that
1ni; the Kennedy administr:i- many conr;rcssmcn had
tion, Norm;"tr/Dorscn. a profes-
sor of la}V" at. !'\e\V Y~orkrru:
/.' .!, .
rl j
conneclions ~·ith the ?IIafia
and Uta~. conversely, conzress-
I JT1o:-.ir_9J~!rndt>d thc.E:3!.!S-~sc
Ycrsity, and \\". Dua,... ck- of uao:-mcrs. \V"irctaps and
n1cn n·ill be loath to in\'CSti· i clcclro11ic surYciliancc in g:i.in-
ard, chairrnnn of rinccton
~
'"'ale 1.he btlrr'aU been.use they in;;- inioI"'mJtion about the Ku
r3nh·crsitr's polilics dcp3rt- ,, J cared the .FBI might I"'Cta.l- Klux Klan and · dificrCd ·
1
ment.; suid ihal 'for 50 years .a ...-· ~~ . . . . ; sho.I"'ply ...,.·ith opinions 'cx-
pa..v:erful federal agency h:is -J·•?.Jr. Hoover is. U1~~1C'tc'. 1 pres~cd earlier in the confer-
not had the thorou;::h review
that v.·e bclic\'e frec<lom andr ! b~rc:iucr<1,.t... Jiundl~;ii_d: ence that the USC' of in!orn1ers:
;;ood goven1ment. require in al ''Itc-ai\\:a\'s picked arc-as "rai!-ies the spccler of a poliCe
1I ,.io:e."
democracy."
The conference, \\·hich
\':here he had U1e most popu-
lar and political supporl ·rn -==-- ·. . . .""'---"·- .
ended thi.:s afternoon, made a some political prosecutions' I
start LO\\'ard ;;:uch an inquiry, I
the co-chairmen ~aid, but \\.'as
·/hampered "for lack of public
I / was invoh·cd \rith, the bureau
! ,,,·zis Ye11:. very scnsiti.-.~."
·1 I The discussion o! the Fn;·s
lnfurm::ition.'"'\\fe ur:;e- our
: IegisJatiYe represcnt:J.tiYcs to
inYe.StitiaUon
' crime stemn1cd m a po.per
o[ or~anizcd The 'n'ashini:;~on Post n, _I)·.
Times Herald _ __,/.:l~--R..'--'"-
consider a national con1mI.:s- pre~entcd to 1c confcrencc-
The Washin!;ton Daily Nev.:s ___:____
-sion of inqujry that \Vould an- 1by Fred , Cook, author of r· .:
s-~·cr many of the questions r'Thc F and Uiganized / The Even-ing Star ('J.'ashington) _ _
raise-rl here,'' tllc)· s.a.id .. ~rime.~ Cook said the FBI be. Tne &,lnday Star (i\-"ashingt.on) _ _
The co·ch;.irmen sug.:;e-stcd Came interested in the :\IaCia Daily News (~ew York}
that the Senate, having: po'.\-·erl only after Robert Kennedy be- Sundcty. Ne\VS .(N"cw York_)_ _ _ __
o! approval over the next came ;lttorni:-:,· general and
i:iire~tor of the FBI, .might
:'the Job. . . .
dol even then was not :tl~·aj's co-
opcrali..-e.
Ne"'· York P o s t - - - - - - - - -
The New York Times - - - - - -
: One of the con{ercn ' ar- /A 'dlscu.:ssion of tbe FBI'~ The Daily Wodd _ _ _ _ _ _ __
/ ticipant.s .had anot view, . per!ormancc in ln\·esti_;ating
howc7er. B~rnar• .·' Fenstcrf' ch.-il rights volin~ discrimina- The New L e a d . e r - - - - - - - -
_wald, former c nsel to the/ tion cases "'·a!t led by John The Woll Street Joumal - - - - -
Adminlstratire Practices Sub-! oar, former .,sistan! 2ttor: J , •••
committee of the Senate Judi-; n general in the ciV"il rights The Nationfil Observer-----
cia.ry Committee, said he. did; division. Do.o_r s<lid th<it before People' a W o r l d - - - - - - - - -
not think· Cangre.:ss ..is cvcrj -19G4- '\>:e fcund that the bu-
;;;oing to ir.:T..cstig;i°le J. Edg-aI"' reau didn't know the first
Hoover u1 the FBL Hoo ..·eI"''s
lgot a dossier on eYeryonc on
thing ~ '::ut its job'' o.E inYcsti-
gatin; discrirnination cases.. _
OCT 3 11971
r~4? and. tbe.r k:rfo?t· i;. ·-:. .. But after CfA DirC1:tor Date ----------~-
Allen Dulles spe-nt t\\·o ·d.'.lYS
in\'esti;.:itin:; an incrc.asingly
violent situ.:ition in :.'.Iissi:ssippi
£.,._ l in 1964, "the bure~u really
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• •
27 J"·· 1974~.~:.-::~~;
• • • • •
March
~.';(~ \~~~'.·:,.::-~_-:'~:·::- .. enclosing·· a_ letter .. fr= one George ·McHillen c to. Jorui ~r_,.j_~;~;
~;]}?$ j":;{::~·"·i:>"'':'..>.~: ~ay, .and requesting access. to our investigative file'·::,-~',':=::{}!';'
l~~IJIY:1;s1~~;,~~:'."'.~1;;:::.f:k!:.~s;~z~o'.::~:~:.~:;;;f~1;;~1~1~ffli~~
~ '.~ :;:;i~;~;~.:~-~~~-':::~~·:-:-::·; As an investigative· file·· pert'ain~ij.g...fC:)_~a'p~ssibt~;~~5,·;:~
~~.:•3 -·-;,:;:;;,~,, ..•/:~~::..··, ... violation of federal erin:inal statutes,. this material i~..:-:~····
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~;;~,~ ~;,~.i;;;:O.·~:~..;~?,-::.·~,'_ disclosm:-~· of
the '(:ont:ent3 "of
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- -· ~~~..... -·cu--.. •N. ' ' · - · _,_, •. ,~ .. 7~" • .•··.· · • »eputy A4aiata.nt Attorney Gener~l·-""'~.:..-""'"'""°·
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May23, 1958 .~.r.
I/Ir.~~H;:~I· \
t • (
""'"°'··-.!
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Mr. C1.=j·Ui.:i__::__.
Tek I<oo~
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fi ~~~': :::D~~!~:~:::i~;!~~i~1~§~~~~~;::;;~g~
~"have a~veruy
21 I likewise told him been th~
:i to some extent the truthfulness of
~~\;--;~~ statem~nts set forth-in the "New ~ark Post._" I told :him what~ pr?pos.ed to d? in_:;...,·-;
i -I
(.:/:, i 2 4 ~ontac~mg some of the Sub-->:,O,WJ:l1;.~~e to brief th~m on our policy. m "'.1-retappmg :: :·':
"«"'"·;~,: 2 5 and to inform them that the S. , 1 could not testify as to the desirability or
j;.c :?6 undesirability of wire tap legislation. He agreed with our plans in this regard
r~ ·;~
~ ·-
I'·,1~27 and thought that it should be done. He did not feel that what Hennings proposed
· ·:~28 to do.is in accordance with the philosophy of Southern s;:nators such as Johnston and ":'.'
~ -~~~ Ervin .. Likewise, he _s~ted that certainly Senator Hruska and Senator Watkins woul~' ',:_
~' -~~inotbemfavor.,,, .. _n,...
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1 i. :~;~. p,.':·: ... - Is;bsequently discussed this matter in some detail with Sen~..toi:.
;zl ~~;]"Hruska. I told him that calling the Director would serve no purpose and that as he ,-
;-~; ~~; s kriew;--the Director could take no position ·an legislation; that whatever the will of
~: ~ 3 ~ ~o:igress mi~ht b~, we. would,. of course, abide by i~. told ~m w~at ?ur p?sition -:: ~
. :. ·--
~;:
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) fi\ ~:)' 1 . is.m connection with wire tappmg. Senator Hruska mdicated his agitation with the ~
! -,;:1 ~~j~i whole af:'.air. He stated that .Henn_IDgs is running with.the lJa1:1 and. th~t it is d.if!icult :~.
. " ]:;: : t to know Just exactly what he is domg. He stated that if Hennmgs mvited the Directol'---'
. 1_ ~¥. ~ t to appear be.fore 1:he ~ubcommitte:, th~ Diz:ector can simply. tell Hennings that.he d_oes
J;o\:42 not accept his mvitation. I told h1m this =ght be well, but if a subpoena was issued;;'.
::'.r~~~ ~ for the Director, it would be a different matter. Hruska stated that if a subpoena.was
:,, HS 4 4 issued he would personally vote against it and he feels OtheL.3 would too. Be stated that
. f;. . \'_t';;.J ~ ilbefore a. S1;lbpoena was issued, ti:-e entire Sui:committee sho~d_ v:ote On it, ~U~ du~ to .
-;: !'o'~ ~ the unpredictable nature of Hennrngs, there is always a possibility that he nnght issue
-~ ;.'~~
·~.
!
·:i:.J.• ...
a subpoena without consulting other members of the Subcommittee. Be indicated his
~
);. j~ 4 9 disgust with Hennings, stating that there are other important matters he should be
5. ;~,(so devoting his.time to, but that he has found it necessary two days this week to ride herd
~~~ t~ S l on Her_mIBgs-:- Hruska was very cordial and promised to do ~he cap for_ the ~u_:.>au .
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['~~ ~~ 56 GAN:cjc . '<;.~, . .~ JUN 10 1958 /i-i~
~~\~~~;(5) . . Jr:,/ c:Ja-c.r:-z;;:- er~ CONTINUED - - · - 1,,J/.ll
~A~li~ .,.:~,.~ JUN-16 ~958 ·- 1
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TOLSON: He tnld ~~that he had bn® in to.:Ch w;th Wilkey nf the Department in
::': · -~~ l!E;ee if he wanted to testify. Wilkey told him that he did not know until he could review
}, .f ~1he testimony. Hruska had the testimony on his desk and stated he was going to send
t to Wilkey. He stated that, of crurse, if anybody testified, it should be someone
rom the Department if they desired to do so. Senator Hruska promised to keep me
~;:;· .,•·:: ~nformed if the:=-e is any unusual occurrences_- He told me 1:hat out of three individuals
r,,.: . :1,:. &rho have testified thus far, tvro had ?een entirely against wire tapping_:. .
·":-.:·•:-· ;
i/·~:.;;~;
t!''·:: •;" ;-. ._ ·J 0l~T,-,1hn t .·:.--.tj.f',.th_../ 'ty
:--"~ . s on is ou o
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talkedt --.:z__ \ ' / ...._...._
· o Hugh...Ffuzel, Tom.Connor
[:»: {! l hd To~adwick'. ' Connor is a very intelligent individual with the textile industry
~ho 'fa-orfl~an 'to Johnston's Office to aid in his Public Relations work. Chadwick is his
I ';.' ::", 2 ,rress relations man. The latter two prepared all of Johnston's speeches. All three
-:':• ,": 2 jVere incensed over Hennings' activities and indicated their complete disgust for him.
~:'\'.~q:'hey po~ted out that Hennin~~ is _gett~g out ~f his_ field; that if there is any question
;:, ~:. -;'.il:oncernrng the Bureau's position rn wire tappmg, it should properly come under the
j:.1!.. '..~;H2'1nternal Security Subcommittee and not the Hennings' Subcommittee. They promised to
~'.{; ::_; brief S~ator Johnston completely on this matter and they strongly feel that he will
.
-
.7z: f-: ot condone Hennings' activities. They likewise expressed the opinion that neither would
'i~ t~. enator Ervin of North Carolina. · ·
~1~
,_,,,,,,11 . .
i0'~ 2) j 2· I likewise furnished Jay Sourwine with a copy of the "New York Post"
~:::.·: : · j article and he indicated it was his intention to show it to Senat~stland who is
~"<.>, ~ . • • ·- • .• · · - ·- • - • • • ..•
[~ {~s9 _~ _ . / Respectfully, .
~; 0.J)1'0 .-·.· . .- ~
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Bureau letter to Washington Field dated 9/20/61.
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MEMORAND MFOR: Directory?-::(~' / ·C(@o,:_ifJ~4.fS._q%~
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Federal Bureau of Investigation . j ·1cr. -"l·
Attention: Mr. S. J. Pa pi ch / ·"
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SUBJECT GARRISON and the Kennedy Assassination: '/. \ \"-
(> \ ~e~nar_d FENSTERW.ALD et aL ,, , ... y·,:J\ \~ ' ' '
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l. A Washington UPI dispatch of 3 January 19 69 reads ,. ' '
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"Our position is there was a conspiracy in Dallat~ tM.\fllr&8 1969
were strong footprints of a conspiracy in Memphis~e
Dr. King was shot ar_d nobody really knows much about what - - ·
went on in Los Angeles (where Senator Kennedy was slain)
but we intend to look. 11 ~~
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). CO:\IMITI'EE TO INVESTIGATE
I ASSASSINATIONS
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D1DL'Y.utD FJl!..,.8TZIE'W'A.LD. .J a.
BO.uu> OP DDIZCTOJIS
EXZCtn'r'nl DllUICTOa
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M E M ORA NDu ~A FO:R.: Director 0£ Central Intelligence
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O=mwn!Numher 959.-927 AE . ... :'. .-. I
..... for FOIA Revi&W Off -..
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.·. LAWRENCE R. HOUSTON
. Attachment General Counsel
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8 April 1971
Mr. Fenst~rwald said he knew who the person was and had
spoken to him; that the man was too nervous .to c9me forth on his
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We told him that Mr. Helms had issued instructions to
cooperate fully with the Warren Commission; that members of
the Commission visited CIA and were shown everything we had.
Fenstenvald seemed impressed by this and said that he doubted
that the American people were aware of this fact. He raised a
question about the 4 October date of the photo since Os,v:ald al-
ready had left Mexico. I explained that Oswald was not under in-
vestigation when he was in Mexico, and we did not learn about his
departure date and many other details until the exhaustive FBI in-
vestigation following the assassination. I also explained the reason
for the two affidavits of Mr. Helms. I told him that the Commission
was trying to disprove the -allegation by Oswald's mother that the .
man in the picture was Jack Ruby; that at first it asked for a de-
I tailed affidavit which was furnished, and then decided that the
broader one, used in the public record, would suffice. Fensterwald
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said it was obvious that the picture was neither Oswald nor Ruby.
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who furnished the photo to the FBI didn 1 t want to take any chances.
He then said that he had no need fo~ the pictures anyway and thanked
.I us for cooperating with him.
·I Fensterwald did a little fishing about our classifieci exhibits
I in National Archives. We told him that they were being withheld to
.1 protect intelligence sources and methods - - not because of any
inc rim inatt n g contents; that some of the ex..lJ.ibits bearing different
numbers are int errelated, giving a misleading impression that
there are more exhibits than is the case.
Attac~ents a/ s
Distribution:
"i Orig &r 1 W /Attachments
2 - Mr. Houston Legal Counsel
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Dear sir:
The records I seek are those indicating the date and ho-Jrs of
I Mr. Osw·ald's debriefing, and the city and street address of the
building in which the debriefing took place. If there are no
r physical rec_ords of the debriefing / please inform me whether
reco~ds ever existed and provide the requested information by
letter.
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co;\r~ .i::..·1··1·EE TO Il~:-'Y'E::;·,i.'IGl...T:S.
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:;:::i:.~ctrn~ ll!lT~CTO"<l lHCITAnn lnr.:-~n•fJ'!J. 'l~·11.~1n;-ooro:"'. n. u.
rRl':'D- COOK. i,:::.-:n:ltc.A10:71', 7;,.._ Jr.;i'i.<JX'C
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You 'dill recall a meeting we had. about a year ago, conc;erning
a photograph which constituted OCium Exhibit l to the Wcxren
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Collli-nission. · At the time, I did not insist on having a copy
of. the uncropped picture; ho"1ever ~ J..r my memory i~ co::::rectr
you said that you would make a good copy available without re-
sort to the Freedom of Information Act.
. '~
Since that time, the signiricance of the indiviaual ~n the
'
Hoping that :lou \Vill be able to cornply v1i th this request with-
...·
out our having to resort to court action, I remain
sincerely yours,
·"t
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Docum~nt N;1mberCJ03 · 927 t~'J:
for FOJA Review on SEP i97S Bernard Fenste:Dvald, Jr •
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.17 February 1972
·,•
... Sincerely, ...
Document NumberS02-9Z7 AH
for FOIA 'Review on
SEP IDS Angus M. Thuermer
Copy in draft;
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" V/ ASHl"'GI08, 0.C. 2.0505
18 February 1972
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N.Lr. ,.Bernard Fei. . s~er\valci, Jr~
I E.xecuti ve Director
Committee to fui;·estigatc -~s s~s sinations
I 92 7 15th Street, N. W.
Viashington, D. C. 20005
Dea.r Bud:·
. I
In yo·.ir letter of February 11th you requested a copy.
of a. photogra.ph which constituted Odum Exhibit 1 to the
Warren Cornmis sion. As we pointed out to you la.st April
when you visited this office, the uncropped photograph was
classified to protect the source and method of acquisition.
I, Nevertheless, a full disclosure was made to the President's
I
j Commission charged v1ith investigating the assassination of
President Kennedy, subject to that classification.
Document
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Lawrence R. Houston.
.· .. General Counsel
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cc: Asst to DCI-Mr; Thuermer
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February 24, 1972
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I Mr. L." liouston
I. Feb. 24, 1972
j Page 2
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photographs appear to have been shown to a foreign national in
'J Mexico City itself without precautions to ensure that the source
.. .j and method of photography was protected from inadvertent dis-
closure .
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I 1have bee n unable to find any indication that the fact of the
" ·~1I existence of these ot..~er two photographs was ever explicitly
I furnished to the 'i'larren Commission, either by the FBI or the CIA.
j
The possibility occurs to me that some or all . of these photographs
1 were originally obtaira d by the FBI alone, and that the FB:t, in ·
its discretion, chose to furnish to the CIA and the Warren Com-
I mission only the item correspondirgto Odum Exhibit l, thus account-
ing for the silence of the CIA on this point. Can you cl.ear this
./ up for me? . !
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You have suggested in your letter that I furnish any information I
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concerning the man depicted in Odum Exhibit 1 to the appropriate j
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governmental agenc1. Can you suggest further which specific
agency I should contact? Would i t be the CIA? If ' so, I would
like to know why you would be "interested - at this late date in
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. Most cordially yours,
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I Bernard Fensterwald, Jr.
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fllol\'o! P'cbruary 21t, 1961~
polioe .ldentit;Lcation
. 1i Divip1on
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This second confidential source abroad .furthe:t!
advised on February ?o, 1964, that; the fingerprint record::;
of the Mctropoli tan Police of the Federal Dist1..ict disclosed
that i'ingerprints of' GUTIERREZ VALENCIA were taken on Jlli"'le
1, 1938, in con..11ection with the issuance or a driver's liccj::we :
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· were taken on February 27,. 1942, in connection with .the .l
r e n et·1 al of a d r ive r'~> license; wera taken again on Auc;u::>t 16.; ·
1951,, in c o~:; ecti on ~11th the issuance of a police good conduct ~
certificate 1 n connec.: t1on with the issuance of: a chau.f.feur' a l
license to Gtl:i?IER.-=\EZ; and .fing erpl"ints of th.is individual ;
I: were taken o.n October 25, 1957, in connection with a poJ.ice
good conduct certificate issued to GUTIEHREZ in connection
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rirearm, ; '
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The above source stated that the right thumb print
of GUTIERREZ VALENCIA which ~1ad appeared on his letter to .
Presipent. JOillISON, as· indicated above, was pos1t.1.vely identi~ie·
ey a ~1gerpr1nt expert of the ai'ore-mentioned Mex:1co City po11ce:
agency t-~ith the vario·us .f'1ngerpr1nt cards on !'ile with that ~
agency, as described p.bove. · i
This second , source also stated that the pol.ice i'11cs :;I
at Mexico City do not contain any in.formation or a derogatol"':f
nature ~oncern1ng GUT;tERREZ. '
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On F.e bruary · 20, 1964,, a third confidential source
abroad, who has fur-niahed reliable information in the past,
reported tha t the following investigation was conducted at
Mexico, D. F., conceriling the credit investigator, PEDRO
GUTIERREZ VALENCIA, a ! resident of Calle Florida {J9, Colonia.
Napoles, Mexico, D~ F.; ·
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It was noted by the source that the building at the
l1· above addrens is a .four.. storiJ apartment building, the ground
.floor of \'lhich is occttpied by various small comme:ttcial e.:;tab-
11shments and a rentaurant lmot-m as the "Valencia. 11 The
ca:retnker of the building, Mrs. GUADALUPE ALVAREZ,, and Z..U':l.
MERCEDES OROCIO, who ren1des with ALVAREZ, advised the source·
that PED~O.GUTIE.HREZ rezides in Apartment #12 at that address
w1tl'l p;I.~ wife ·and tna~ Qt1'J:'lERRE4 ha~ pq ;30ns or qaughter.s
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re~liding \·1ith him. ~Chese individuals described -GUTIEP.REz nnd
h1n wife as honorablE:~ individuals of good conduct and reputa-
tion.
Mrs. ALVAREZ and Mrs. OROC!O stated they have Imown
· GUTIERREZ and his Hii'e as neighbors in the builq.1ng :f o::::- a
period of 12 years .
These two r.1eighbors further stated, according to
the above source, tha:t GUTIERREZ is a man who is truthful 1n
what he says and worthy o.f trust. T'ney descr:tbed hi.m a5 a
person of moderate .financial me~"'ls who is employed as an
investigator for a Mexico City commercial establishment, and
!. these neighbors said that GUTIERREZ always pays his rent very.
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GUTIERREZ i·;as again shown a photograph ot: I.EE Hi\.RVV..: !
OSWALD which had appeared in 11 Life" magaz1.ne and Nhich dep1.cts j
OS\-!f\LD passing out pro- Cub;:m literature on a street in New !
Orleans, Louisiana. It is to be noted that this is a pro:file i
photograph of OSH/\LD sh01·rinQ; 'his rit:ht. arm extended and i
depicts his torso :from the i-1aist up. '
GUTI~RREZ
agreed that a mist&keri ident:l.ficat:l.on f'ro:n
ne1·1Spaper photographs :o:r OSl·TALD which he saw almost ti·10 months .
··.,Ij later 1·1ould be very pqss:l..ble. He pointed out, however, that he~
does not believe he is mistaken in his ident1:f1cation o:f OS\"JALD:
because the image of the American he observed during the ;
. ·'','
occurrence at the Cuban Embassy in Mex:Lco C:Lty on October 1,
1963, became firmly fixed :Ln his mind because o:f the importance
he attached to his observance that the Cuban and the f\mer:l..can ·
were arguing heatedly and that the Cuban passed some United · . ;i
states 9urrency to the American ai'ter these ind:Lviquals had . ;
exited the Cuban Embassy premises and were wa;J.ldng along the ''
pidewalk toward the Cuban's vehicle.
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GUTIERREZ state.d he is certain that· the Cuban 1s
vehicle, described by him as a beige colored late model Dina.·
Rena tilt, was: the prope~rty_ of the \]µpan 'pecaµ;:ie he saw ti+e
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WASHING70N, D.C. 20505
6 March 1972.
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Mr. Bernard Fensterwald, Jr.
Executive Director
Committee to Investigate Ass.a.ssinations
927 15th Street, N. VT. ·... '
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V{ashington, D. C. · 20005 ··.
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Dear Bud: 'I
I have your letter of February 24th with which you !'
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.' forwarded a declassified FBI report identified as the first
I five pages 'of Commission Docurrient 566. I was not previously
L.- familiar with the document and its reference to photographs .
l do not know at this point whether we can shed any light in
this area, but I will be "back to you in due time.
Sincerely,
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..C EXSTERWALD AXD 0HLEA..USEi:<
P05 SIXTEENTH STREET. N. VI.
\'/ASHINGTON. D. C. ZOOO:S
011 i:·.'.i.arc:h 22nd I se~1.t a let:.te::c 2.11.Cl Fo3:m D.J ... ll8, seckir1g
access Jco ana copies o~ tlt~~e pl1otogr.:-rpl1s ~efeJ:::ccC to on
l)~ges 3 and· 4 0£ t·1a:::ren Comruissio:..1 Docu..-nent I~o .. 566 _
[Plea3S sco attac:l-"led copy of 1r~y lette~ arl.d fo:cm 0£ ~~a::;:cli.
22, 1972.)
Respectfully yours,
---·-··
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY .-.
· WASHINGTON, D.C. 20505
·.
12 April 1972
Dear Bud:
In my letter to you 0£ March 6th I said we would com,e
back wi.th a report on the photographs which are mentioned on
pages 3 and 4 of the FBI report of ·February 24, 1964 .
....
I am informed that the only picture involving the Central
Intelligence Agency and the President's Commission is Odum.
Exhibit l; which we have discussed previously. · 1
..
.
.
mentioned in the FBI report.
- .;-. , Sincerely;
.Lawrence R. Houston
General Counsel
fl ·q11
. qr,'a_O- .
cc: Asst to DCI-Mr. Thuermer
. .•.
Document Number ,(.__, J Al\l
for FOJA Review 011 SEP 1975
..
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.JA.'"fl'::J Z.XIJ"'-Jll, "'W"A1t.trnorOT0-17, D". C. •
April 11,. 1972 l'llCUAJlD POPKD'f', Z...... JOt.:c.A, CALX:r-
L, TZ.J>XCllllfH .P:JIOUTT, W.A·'Hl.UTOTO:!"". D .. g..
noaorr "><rm, WAJtJU2foT"Orr, .:D .. ~
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,..
y
Angus M. Thuermer
Assistant to the Director
•'. · Cenc:.:al Intelligence Agency 'i; .
..; \Vasb..ing,on, D. C. 20505
. I
Your letter of the eighteenth of February is somewhat perlexing.'
The conclusion that records of Oswald's debriefing do not exist now is
apparently based upon sta;:ements of persons other than yourself.
The letter and spirit of the Freedom of Information Act and the
applicable regulations require that you respond to iny request on your
own authority. Accordingly, I ask that you 1) make the records available;·
._;
or 2) state' the exemption provision of 5 u. s. c.' 552 'under which you '
clair:i privilege; or 3) state' that the records do not exist and never did
exis>:, if that is the fact.
"·.
; .· .· Yours truly,
·-
"·
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l?P~iJfv~1~~'
Bernard Fensterwald
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OGC:LRHouston.
13 April 1972.
...·.. ;·
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Dea.r ·Iva. Fen.sterwa.ld;
:. '_:.. ~.::
It is beyond my comprehension how anyone could rea.d
.
..;.". Agency never h".-d any contact with Oswald a.-i.d that, therefore, .' ~
.
of February 9th,
' .i '
the information sought by you in your letter i
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1 Attachment, A/S
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4 . .\t ;.!r. Icl1ord's request, T gave ?1i2 a conplete
l-Ln1.do"Irt on 110•.-.T CI;\ learnecl of Cs~·:alct 1 s nre.sence in ;~!exico,
an(.~ tt1(~~ c:.i rct11i1stances surroL1:-idii-l:r t11e n11.oto of t\1e.
t!n~cn0•...rrt ;;1.an i.·111i ch ~..iaS tD.~~en · ·
I s9ccificd and refuted .the as;ortcd alle~ations regardin~
l:;1is n.I c t!_1rc 1·:}1icZ1 l·rere generc1ted l)y~ l2d';·.:-2~rd. Epstei:l]
·\':e:.;_ey
· l ·.. ·L(~~Je..teT
· ' ( (t ·f or;r.er r-.. . orn.r.llSS1.0n
· · •
attorney·): ::::~rr::.
,. ' I..ane,
.Jin~ G('.i.:Crisson, and later !3ernard Fenster.·ta.lc1,. Jr. I
;;1ention.:'d that Fensten:aL1 tolci us a yeaT ago th:i.t '.u::
~~ne:-r the icLentity·of t11e tln1:no'. I11 ~an hut so-far has not
1
'iOlt1i1teered. 11is n,q_rne. ()ne o:F Garriss on' s chn.rf.eS T.-Ias t11a.t
Os~vald ·.·r.:ts a CIA agent anc1. t11at 1-_re cut hirn ot1t o·f the
pictt1reT I took the occasion to stress t~l.a't Os~·Ialcl 1·ras
v.ot a Cii\. agent ar1d t11at 1.·:e 11ei.,-e1- ~1ad an:ft~1ing to do l•ri th
him~
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I 3 April 1972
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l ME'i'-if.ORANDUM FOR DDP
i
j SUU J E CT Release of Documents Furnished t o th e
Presidentts Commission by the Central
I Intelligence Agency
Action
Background
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be.e~:---~~t.8.ting to reopen the case.. ',Ve have had conside·rable
coTl''.f:f11i'ondence ourselves with Mr. Fensterwald in recent years.
. ' .
2. F.or your convenience we have also attached copi.es-. of the
perti11(0nt docume.nts with appropriate notations •
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Distributi.on:
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26 June 1972
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VTashington, D. C. 20535
Document
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reveal intelligence sources and methods which by statute
the Director of Central Intellige;,,ce is responsible for
protecting from unauthorized disclosure (section 102(d)(3)
of the National Security Act of 1947, as amended}. Pursuant
to that statutory requirement, the photographs were clas-
sified in accordance with Executive Order 10501, and this
classification is continued pursuant to the provisions of
Executive Orde~ 11652. , Spe.cifically, sec;tion. l(J?) of ..
Executive Order 11652 refers to information'which requires
a substantial deg:-ee of p::;:-otection· and among th~ examples
is the revelation of intelligence· operations. ~-_Furthermore,
this r:naterial was assigned to Group 1 under Executive
Order 10501 and is, therefore, excluded from the General
Declassification Schedule of Executive. Order 11652. i l
appropriately cropped, the intelligence source and method
.probl.e= is eliminatE?.a:;-.· ;.vhich.is· the reason why we answer
>. . ··.·.'·1'.:. :::;·-' .:.~·\~ :~:,::·-··. ~~: .:: •. · .·;·I:.. .
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LAWRENCE R. E:OUSTON
General Cou:n.s el
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29 June 1972
Special Agent ·-
Federal Bureau of Investigation
Vfashington, D. C. 20535
Dear Bill:
.
Enclosed are three photographs which, as I said in ,·. ·
-~·
..
my memorandum of 26 .June 1972, we believe to be the o·.:i.es" · ·"•
described on page 4 of ·warren Conimission Document
Number 566 and which are t'i.e subject of the Fenste:i:wald
suit. As you will notice, the background has been cropped
out, and as we stated in the 26 June me)'Xlorandu.m we have
no objection to the release. of these photographs in this form.
Sincerely,
. .~ :~; ....
II: Docume~t NumharC)73 ~ 9;7AS 'SIGHED
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Dear Larry,
If your memory hasn-ct failed worse than mine in our aging process, you will recall
a meeting regarding an unidentified man characterized as a "possible white male
sus]ect" in the J :fK case.
Following a suggestion from you, I sought from the FBI two additional photographs
of the 'same man which were taken in Mexico City. Ultimately .. we got the photos;
copies are enclosed.
At your convenience, we would appreciate a meeting with you and your assassination
expert (who was present at our last meeting). If possible, I would like to bring Fletcher
Prouty, Robert: Smith, and Jim Lesar. If, for security reasons, it would be easier to
meet in my office, we would like very much to have you and your colleague t9 lm1ch.
Hopefully, your secretary and mine can arrange a convenient time and place
~~
Bernard Fensterwald Jr.
BF:bf3
Cccu.menl Numb~r
..
.:
: .. ·. -
17 Ai.:gt:.s'.: 1972
'
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I r.. a·ve y·ou::- letter of July 28th suggesti:ig a mee-t:..::.1.g
see )rou per s o:-...ally ~ bi.lt I d.o ::iot q«.:ite l.lnde rsta.n.d.. \vha-::
Sincerely,
Lawrence R. Houston
General Counsel
·Document Number
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MARKED FOR INOEXlllG
x NO lllDEJCING REQUIRED
lllFO. ONLY OUAllFIED DESK ..
CAN JUDGE INDEXIHG
' FROM
MICROFllM
suai;cr
Transmittal of Memoranda
ACilON REQUIRED · WEP.ENCES
Documem Nlfmbar
I ,.,,-:-""i
I t t;
2 _._ 9~9 8
for FOIA Review on NOV i97S /
- .. ..... .• . - • - ·1
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Attachments: I
As stated h/w
Distribution:
Orig. & 2 - . (w/atts. h / w)
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19 September 1972
flA~mlfATION HOS fllf NUMBER
!.
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Legal Attache
FROM
: LEE !L<'.RVEY OSWALD
SUBJECT c 9-18-72)
_,our~qffice_. ·m.ay
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·Distribution: · ..
Original - Addressee
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Memo.Chrono
··2:· 1; -Headquarters
Originator:
DATE: 19 September 1972
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NO INOEX. 0 RETURN T O - - - - DHANCH
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Cocument Number\
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119 - qq5 I
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NOY 1976 l-
for FOIA Review on 1
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DISSEMINATION D FILCl
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END OF MESSAGE :: ·. _.
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1.U' Hr.N-; .CATING
' OF Fi .:c.n
f;t:LEAEING OFFIC:;R
RE.l'RODU Ci lOil E!Y OTH (?. TH.L,U rt l e 15~!.: ! ~·JG Cff 'Cc;. · sf °'.('~ ' IC:IT(O•
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Sincerely.
'•
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Lawrence R. Houston . -.. -.
General Counsel
..... .
·-·· . ~- -·-..~: -;-_-~· _-....
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·Asst to DCr-Mr-. Thu~rmer
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w/incomlng and background
Document
:
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for FOIA Re~iew Ori SEP 1975
. ._ . .
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--- . - .- ._ ......... ~ - -- · ---=-·~: .::..- -:."" - --
c:=:NT.~.~L !i'ITE!....UG!::.' lC?. AG' .\ IC'f
WA:>HINGTON, D.C. ·;!:)505
I
!.
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I 11 October 1972
I·
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I
Dear Mr • . GNy;
.. The Director has asked me to reply to your memorandum · · ':
. 0 . .. .-:-
of September 22nd concerning the . r..~qY..?_$_1;_ _o.L~r_.__B.~:r.t@...~ _. ::, _ ..·
.f'ensterwald, . Jr. to 'examine t wenty photographs- whi~h were·>~~:--. - ..
.m.entioned...in_a__Z_~b_n.i._a_ry 1964 £.BI me~9..J:".9:n~µm •.._ ._ :~·::::: -~' : -._
"1···: ". . · .. ·. . . . . - ·. ·- . :.: .:::~·,.. ..:::·.: ~ -~
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There is no way in.·which these tw.enty pho.tographs, can. :~ -
be identified, either from the abo ve -ma~tion.ed . memorandum or
f:rom our . .records. Since the pictures had no reievance· tc;> the :-::-.
Oswald ·case, ~o identification was made at the ti ma, anci unl~s~s- - '· ':
Sincerely,
\ ...... .! '. .
cc: ER via 0/ DCI
Asst to DCI-Mr. Thw~ rm e r
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,. UPI release of 1-3-69 announced the formation of National
~Committee to Investigate Assassinations. Board members of the committ~e ·: "-
h ncludc Bernard Fensterwa.ld; Jim Garrison, New O:dcans Dis~ict /_tto:tn~y; · ,
i V./illi::m Turn8r, f or ~11er lf ~I Agent; Fred J. Cook, author-; Hic!larG Sprague, \'\,
'.·a computer expert; Lloyd Tupling, Washington, D. C. ; and Paris Flammoncie, '°"'
~: author of a book on assassinations, soon to be released. The Director has ~
:;.. ~'. asked for a memorandum on Fensterwald, Sprague, Tupling and Flammonde. ''<
"-..
Fe1'lsterwald., f_9 rmer Chief _C ounsel .to S~nator Long's cpmmitte ~;--.
on Wiretapvin~ was subject of applic.a nt-type ·inquiries cond_ucted by Bureau L; <~
t 19..:9 and
1£59. The names of Fensterwald's mother and sister appeareci on ,'"
1a list of delegates and members in 19~2 of the Southern Conference for Human
. I V/elfare.bocited by the House Cominittee on Un-American Activities. Vfnile
e mPloyed by the State Department in 1956, Fensterwald and his mo.ther.. travel e~
to the Soviet Union.
.-
h'V · -b..:.;.! 1 • ·
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.•· ,~ _..!.· 1 - Mr. DcLoach
1 - l\tlr. Bishop
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1vL. A. Jones to Bishop memo
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:. . RE: N).TIONAL COiVJ1'iITTEE TO
.. . ·• . . INVESTIGATE ASSASSINATIONS . , •. ; ·~~~;~~·.,::
a reouest
.... to the Bureau from this subcommittee ior a list of instances~. ·:.~:;.:.
.. .,...· · ~
·· .. · .
Iv1r. DGLoach maintained close oersonal liaison with Senator .
Long concerning the work of thG FBI as it might pertain to inquiries conducted
by his committee?. On occasions letters directed to the ·FBI re~uGsting certain
information w;;re handled orally by Mr. DeLoach with SGnato:c- Long who
indicated fuat Fenste1·wald had prepared the lettGrs. One such instance was
in DGcemb2r, 1937, in co::mection with FBI contacts wifo credit udons. On
that occasion, Senator Long stated we sho:.Ud ig11ore the letter and he would
instruct Fensterwald to "keep hands off" the F:o::.. On 1;'.-,2 same occasion .
.· ·.. ...;
- 3 - DETAILS - CONTINUED. OVER
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Lloyd Tupling: During 1954, W. Lloyd Tupling was appointed the Information
Officer of the staff of Richard L. Neuberger, Democratic Senator of Oregon.
One .Lloyd Tupling, University News Bureau, Eugene, Oregon, was listed as
.. : .
·a member of the "Society of America's Friends of the Mexican People" as · .
of 8-13-38. This g1·oup is no longer in existence and was not investigated by ·
the FBI, although indications were that the group was sympathetic to the:.
communist c~use. Du~·ing 1\.1ay, 1950, one Lloyd Tupling was the publisher
...... ~.. .. . -0f "The State-Vlide Newspaper," a weekly published in Boise, Idaho.
·. {100-179915-23) -' •
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' .. DETAILS - CONTINUED OVER
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•'
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FBI
Date: 6/5/70
AIRTEL
Via----------
(Priority} J
------------------------------------------------L-------
TO: DIRECTOR, FBI (44-38861)
FROM: SAC, MEMPHIS (44-1987)(P)
SUBJECT : lfURKIN '·
.
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EX-1f0
S/\C, ~reraphi::; (.lJ-1937)
6/lG/70
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Di rec tor, Flll ( 1'1-380Gl)-.5"' g '(;' 3
MUflKIN
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~ ~~ rr: . (9) NOTE: See memo Mr. Rosen to •tr. DeLoach, 6/15/70,
~:~~!~~~~ ~=;~~=~d · Fenste~w:ld, Jr., Name Check
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UN11~ED STATES GO Vl-:R..''1I\1E~T
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• Washington Post.
January 3, 19'69
tr ' -
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Assassination l!nit
Formation of a new na:
tional Committee to lnvt!sli-
gate Assassinatior-s \•;as an·
~ nou;iccd, ll will have its,
'\headquarters in Washi.n:;ton:
\ ~- The. cxccuti\"C director o~
the Commlttec ls "'1lernar~
~n~t~·ld, former~l
•to-"!"""S-cnale Ju~iicic'~Y sub-
, .commlLtC'e that ir.·;C':.~!gated.
~·i~~~l~p1;1iig aiid c!eckon!c
$urvcllli!. nce.
J:'enstcrwalc1 5aid "the
United States ls fo5t becom-
ing a banana repu~!tc" ~.nd
••assassinations 2re becom-
ing a regular }:'i!.r~ of OUt"
potitic~l pro:C'ss."
lle s:iid the nc\': commlt-
tcc "ultirnatch• htl;•CS to
force the Fcd:?ral Go•·er:<·
/ menl into the thor ot1zh a:vl
,/ honest Inquiry wh:ch it has
avoided slr.ce Nov, 22, 1963."
/
.,;1
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Among the <!irec~ors o!
the committee arc J::1\ G;?r·
-
4 i'iso!'l, the Ne\\' Or:eims di:s-
·',.. trlct attorney who h<l5 b~en
f J. conductI ng an inH5~ig~tic.:i.
of President K<':tr.er!y's as,
..
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Inquirie~ on Capitol Hill revealed that it is rumored t~at
a probe concerning the assassination of President Kennedy
will be undertaken by several members of the Sub-Committee
on Ad.-nin'istrative Practices and ..Procedures, '@hich i s * .
he New Senate Office Building, Room
inention~d severa.L
./
A request was .made to the Library of ' co~gress to obtain
th~ article s i n which Mr, Fenste;rwald is mentioned" since
i t was rum.ored that , he mily liii a; rec t j ng t he a•• sssin:at:~n-
probe. These articles are attached to this report.
/ .
/
Attachments
RWJ:bap
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INF'ORMATIO NI . -_ .
AT ABOUT J J 130 AM, MAY 13, 1973, HER TELEPHONE RANG ·:.· ,.
TWICE. SHE PICKED UP THE PHONE AND BEFORE SHE COULD SAY
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PAGE TWO• ".°"' · •• •
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ONE, THE WATERGATE? HELL YES I AM INVOLVED. THAT IS WHY I AM .'· - -~·-· ·..:.. " '...:
- ·, • . - • - •w
GETTING OUT.• GEORGE <OR JOEL> MENTIONED SOMETHING TO lHE EFFECT · ..· '· -
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·wE ARE TO MEET WITH THE BOOK AND ALCH.. HE ALSO MENTIOf·1ED ·oNc· .: ;:' ::_: ,:' _.., '
JOEL> SAID, .. WELL LISTEN BABY, YOU BETTER FORGET THIS -CALL AND
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~- · EVERYTHING YOU HEARD AND ENTIRELY WIPE .J T OUT.• "..: ~ .~. : . ... : ..,,,..
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SAID, •rtL FORGET IT•• GEORGE <OR JOEL> SAID, "IF YOU ARE , · :.
CONNECTED WITH OR HAVE ANYTHING TO DO WITH THE TAPS OR THE BUG, " ·,·:··· .
KNOCK IT oFr, BABY.· AID, .. ALL RIGHT, I •tt LEAVE .·.-· ··
EVERYTHING ALONE... GEORGE <OR JOEL> SAID, ·No PHONE CALLS to THE '-:
POLICE OR ANYTHING, JUST LEAVE IT ALONE.• SAID < .·. :· : ".. ·
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;. .--oK· • . AND GEORGE <OR JOEL> .HUNG UP. - -··-" ...·.-.. -- -·-'·-·- - _: ___,, - --~-.:~-~,~
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Memorandum
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investigations by the Bureau in 1949 and 1959, which developed
that the names of bis mother and sister appeared on a 11st
~ of delegates and members in 1942 of the Southern Conference · .,
for Bll::lan Welfare, cited by the Bouse Committee on tJn-Anerican
Activities , and in 1956, while employed by tbe State. Department•
Fensterwald and his mother traveled to the Soviet. Union ~or a
vacation. Ko other derogatory data was developed. Fenstenrald, I
~n addition to bis former State Department employment, was chief ··
counsel of the U.S. Senate Committee on the Judiciary; SU'!:Se0mm1ttee I
on Administrative Practice and Procedure (Long Com.mi ttee) • .and I
our contacts with him clearly showed be was unscrupulous, . · - .•
7
untrustworthy and anti-J"BI and sought to involve the Bureau 1.a ·-.~ :-~ ,.
· :.. ' _ _ · .: •· ·
RECOIBJENDATION:
That the attached letter, 1f approved, be fo?"Warded
to Special Agent in Charge, Memphis.
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:SINATION SYSTEM
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£ A l l References (Subversive & Nonsubversive)
D
Subversive References Only
CJ Nonsubversive References Only
D
Main
Localities
Searcher
R~ _ _ _ _ _ I/·,
Date --'--"-'--Initials ···,. ..,. 1 ' -
PARIS, SPRAGUE, RICHARD,
Prod.
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NEW YORK, M~NDAY, MARC11· 26, 1973 15 CENTS
JOINTd!NIT=BAC({S: :WA€NEii4JARs:;;i~REPUBiifAN;6FFER,-::_, _
SPENDING CEILING BLAMING PART1'SCOUNTY:LEADERS•'
SOUGHT:BY NIXON - . - .. .. ~ .~ . . ~ · .
I • • • • ' •
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or
Panel (!ongress Urge
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.. .
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bdom O.O.P. leacferJ. _ w ett..___ -
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LONG D&NOUNCES A Senator Under Fire COUNSEL DEFENDS Hecuings on B ugging in Detr(
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mnr11y on l h& I'o•t Ortic-. Dd·
pa.rtmtnt and the rntcmal Rev·
CLERGYMEN OFFER Hid he h11cl no 1tmbltlon1 "ln l'llou reported tlln!ct , h lh on - • • - ...
run !or n hy..othcr· om~~." • the 11cntr•tor bulldlnfl' a nd boll- Jnfe]J6C '°'"laJS fo /Of
- . ue- Servl.,...and-1h_cl.cJ1!1c_ or . -· - - . •wi- -:-ir:rii---r!'iilft--rni~=- a r houaa ul lh• plJull. which IV U
----=:;:w1 ...1apj>rntand 11tMr111ethod.• -A--BORT_l__O_N-AO.V-IC·E- w111<11c~':r ·x dr;,.. ~ft .1~r1~rrn:-"I lurnl•h•d,.~..uT..2u por i:Cn l.u! . - .
- -- - lo-o1>t"1ft, ~unnaUon._____ 71\ 1·x·r~ tlwl "lo lilh ll'f\1lllf'1lrtlll' i.:'\"°~~!~ u~Lpul.bofuru the -
1
n,. .
t AX • ·nAXl<F:'J .- ·· - •d1 orth ·;.- ,.
- ... ~'l'hla-l>',..._ 01 lnvcsU.i;nl,J~m ----··-~ -- fttfu...,,.'- ·-···- - ·- / rs _.!L · , .. ~...-.- ~""" 1.,_
attpi. oD .ome l06," the Bona· • ..'. _ • He snlcl thrtt h i• docl51on "'"" ._Unlt•·d Rl•t"" "'"rplnn•·•. al.ii W AS fll :-lllT \l:-.1, M•,v 21 • 1111• 1n "
- - -- tor . .Id in & ' ltlephonn Jnl tr· • ··~ > , ·- .• - ·· . • • ·- "pU1'1'1Y - JlC""on•t:• and lh"t ntlftcl1cd lwo ;~U G nlrll.,lds. A Pre~lclrnt John•on i:~lhtrrd lht r n·• ltlc
-.lew f"."!". h l9 2.llOG·a<M! farm ?1 'Mlm! ters · and • Ra_!!!!!_ tbr rcul•i:to..::llJuC 0 r lhlli1<• lhnl lhl!- Kcp b:'"'" 3.7 mu... north- somr or lhe mo • t 111mlno11• • Ji nn•" l"l'h
----- - ...~t-(llarlWIYU~ hlir-1llt" CUWICll&n!!l~vcoJUOJl&ll • -tnlrllect11ftl.,.,_.,,,--hl:o-f'1t.......i~,.__,,..~,
mllPI u p lhrr Ml~~prl r rom Orm eW r. p- He added thnt ho had not evon eri wrrr dom•11Nl. • DAtlmo•.- 1trm1111t n . lun··h lfthl• . lh~ of hi• 1•rr1111
111. Lou~_nm.....Clhn lnlull4I ...:,; Proposo Altern:ttlv~s rt' nr hrll n dor lolon nn wlll'lhor prcv••nlcd •n """"'"''"'l or othr r thly 111 lln11 011t wh v hn. ,,..,.,,. th'it t
_ n.ewnue-bo)'ft a re very vl ctnu1t • " ... • to M:ck uiidllH' r t ct·nC nl CJlY il :tnH\f14' "l lh,. Jlonlllc b:uu• w""' ~ h"vln~ l nu1hh' 1·1 m 1m 11· in" i'\n11 utr
~- _ .:_-: .:._~&n4 t.h!J'Ye said they would~ ·:- . -:-:"'~~.:..... - ~ !U:u: · .:.._ -· ,..:. ·~ ~- · ~vo~L .or ~i~capltat. nlmllng wtlh " '" ro11 nlry'.• round n hill;
~ .ine. But lhl1 I• hOC"t!le:-w1'Y . - Y.l!:DWAnD B._FISK!l •. M r. Llnd•ny, an~wcnn& qu cs· •ndlon amly dcpol nnd lumlnolL• lnl•llecl11•t.. , • inln i•lrt\tlol•
• • ~ do It."___ _ .- Twmly.one I'tolM~t m inis. Uon.• on n tclovl•lon ln!rrvlcw mL'l.•11• aupport comrtrx, lll\out Th• AMWN\ i.·h l<:h Mr. them l')r,el
--~ · ........... Juat .Nolhlnr t o_ W · tctM, 11nd~ rabbi• In 1'1tw York nnd lntrr l\l n · now• c....Ccrcncc, riv•' mllcio •oulh of , lire capllAI, John.•on h lnir.r l( bro11r,hl l o 'llr d •omr
· · "You....ian-oh.clck ..all the way City .E_a\·o_&nno_uh~!~~~~-~M!~'!: declTnO<t --:-1.o dlJ cuu Lh• mall••r WM AISC\ rnld<'ll. · the mN'lln r,. '" ' ' Vl r tn:un. t:ul<hrll coll
• - - · -- lhrou h thott h t!.. r lni:• l~hm•nl or a Clrrr,ymcn'• Con· rurl hrr, olhrr l h•n to ""Y lhKl Thn Alli~ ......1i Into t ho Dul lhl\t w a• M l)' l h•• hri:ln· 'tr llrr lU>I r t
bac!.,. and :hot11'• nul one word • ullaUon A~rvlrt Qn Aborllnn 1r ,. N,.w York Mnyor 1, to do 1011thrm halt o l lhr oll<-mllr· n1n1: o r wh>t I• .-Id In h n\'r Thr ro• wo1
NC ah\ ur Mlmfnrt to lO 1111•l•l women ••'llkln11 •~or· th~ ""•l 11 n~•111l•• Jnh, hr "n111rht w it! • hultrr •lrlp b•1r•n Thu r.- hern " oplrllr.I " "" ·hour di•· n•r. tho• ~cc
- that JlrR an way .. he anld. llo'h•. lo 1.1111111111 • • • lllhnorlfl to <l•y. It rnma nflrr lner,..uln~ly r 11••l1111 or w hnt 11" nol n h l <111 1"ol1h·a•l·•11 "
?loffa , n uolynolhln~ lo ll.'' T he ncv. llnwnrd n. .~fondy. thol job nnd fbrl{rl nbout nlh r r heft\'Y rntniy athck• nn llor • hm1l th• l11ld ko111.1I< nllll 111rr r o•ll••o:•'
'"nl~tta j ti ((er opok "'1mnn t or thn i:ro11p, ••Id nfllc••.. Soulh f rom pnolll nn1 ln.•ld• lhcl- -....,..- - - - - - - -- -- - - --
Jn ttply t.o a
«rneritlnlt from & .
q~:.'rv~:io~
In· lhlll ll• nrtvlceo, which lier.In
lhe lodny, would lnclud~ " '"lotnnce
~"""""
flt Mlll•ot•I r on•. .
Mllll nt')' opok.-smrn oold nnr
JUNTA WILL DRAFT M er t'1
c " You' vo 1t0 l tn lhrnw llWll)' " 11 Mnrlnn bnltl\llon m ovln1t nlnni: 5
AGREEK CHARTER JS p l
t ervltw het11 lhl• rvcnlnJI, In obllltnlnr: leg• 1•rnpe
l!enatnr ••Id th•t lho Jnte mlll abnrllono a~d vlM on aucl th r cr,.dll c•r•I•, rxho11• l ynur- lho wr•l•rn frln1tr• . or chr
Rev.nut ftervlcft n:;:..:111dltt!d "lfJ•rn.llvr• " · kM'Jlln1t t h• • rtr .. 011 lhr Jnh ftnd lhrn i:f'l •W"f'· on hlr,h 11ro11n11, mrl 1tllf
h i• rtcard.ol Ju l Oc t ' child or hnvl • him rut up ul, h• ••Id. np1• ••lll un f rom an appftrently
" I wnuld ••Y th•l lhry for ftdorll nn. · Aflrr thl• M.•1·rt1 11n - "" •lr.nhln r11cnry rorc n. "
cht!c:k~ mY honk• very lhor· " Ir lr1t•I lhrr11rr11tlc obnrtlnn lr11n1te•t hn hn• '"'"'" 1111 rul lnn 'J'oll RI••• Ov•t 600° f'~nlaRon '
+ -- m•ahly t nr 1uea and
•
1081 :: ~c I• 'nm pn•ntblc, 1n1t nn- nbCJrtlnn oltl pl""" l" .,.,, for bllu•r 0
• ·,
rlT•·• •
_ I•., l. lnd on owllchr,1· thr TM cnrmy <lt•lh 1011 f<>r tho
-
Constantino
• .
Says . .
P:rncl Wiii, n~. lf A:":<O ..
1
very 1111111 In conlriovo-rny, onl y lltn wnrnon lM b<••l i••X'llbln onbJrct . 11 1 • • c ·p " •
a f!IW 'hundred dnll•"'· """ II mrd1rt1I •<lvlco l o tllko r 11 ro o f ovrr lht• wllhclraw111 or cloo •1••W Jlllt"lll-mnl"l'·th•n U•.\V/Ui
ll comu oul lh• wny I th ink, hrl r roblom prr"nAn ry '' he ~.~OO·Mlln Unllrd Nnl111n• 11r n1•0· 2G marln.. l<lllNI and M
-n'
Plcbl~eltt! IS Pl:lllllCd ~I in t n ""'rl
. . "'""'" or II
lh ' R flW• n11 nionry." •aid. ' krrrlnlf tnrr~ t~om thr ll lnlll wo11111lr1I In \M llfW flahtlnA', · 1111n 1111• Arn
~I Lite orllclo, whllii\ RP· "In 1omft ln1tnnccN ll IA rn~· r erlln•nll\ ftnd lhn O•n lltrlp. Unit<'<! nlal••~UUftltlto al'tl l"I'• Jly Rll'll Anll l':llY.tt' I• .<llll ll<'l nl'
'. au In Ure h•11n'd1tlfll May ~o. • lbln we would allempt lo f a· • H& dl•cuund lhlN cnnc'1'1\ on portr.d at 70 dtad and 400 """"' ' t • T•• ,.,. ' " ' Tl"'" 111•• 11 h•n In ~
. :eceu1ea th• eenator of hAv lng cllllale hM R•ltln11 itn l\bortlon hi• reg111or broadcMC nvcr • l•· woundr d for lho onllni oper a • ATlll-J N!I, M• y 2 l· 1c111i: Con· /lr.>r n ·•:·
; _ •mlswred hli B@nate 1ubcommil· lll.&.counlry whore lt...I• lo11aL" Uo WNYC.J.nd &l hi• new1 lion • far.__ - · - · 0 h al&nUno 1 nno1111cf'd t nnJi:hL Uttll A " pnigrn m
•.- t.e•• tn a way . that _benctltcd I n New York B~e. only cont•r• ncn and nn tho wc;ns. The · report rro~ Dong a lhc'.O~ mllllftry Juntn h• <l or.1t1on I ~ . t
• • Rott... , t lrgal cau•• for. perfo rml~lf on TV "New•mnker•" progrnm. - lold or hr&vy l\Ctlon on .i,ooHl commlltrc~ll. for tho flrnl r11mlonL.• • 111
'Ill Torunatu'leadrr hA• con· abortion I• to HY~ l ite or Noting th• city hnd ob•ervad lwo lronti u lho. allll!d I.Mk lime lo a tlmolnblr ror' 11r o- 111 lt>Y.•rr
1
•.•• .:.._ lhal 10ml! or the · evl· lhe mother• .)l;::-:Mi.Ody- lic. fhn fOlh" -11iinlvero~;y:..or 'th• force -p~ul!d · In fmm - lhrtt ducl~I!,. con•lllutlnn. CTunrd rllv l• lo
"'\mdll\oadlna lo hi• convlatlon knnwltdCed lhat lhe project In· rnundlnlf nf tho Rlitln nJ l.• ue l • 1110• 1111•lntl 2,GOO North Vl•l· Tllo t1m•l1bl1• I• 1n1·r1111/1let~. llorrn 1" 1" br
l , '
' dell~ - -• _.,lvt'I "Mml! lPRftl rlMk," hill h n l••l 'wtnk1 , lhn J.fNyur Miid on nnni••r lnl.tnlrymcn.
Cellllnue4oePa1"88• (fotunina addadt " Wt' aro not.:.w111l11g Co l\la WNrc brondcn1l:. -·
nd ml t lh•l 11 I• 1110.gNI."
~ -• - ·•·• ,.
" A; tllr Maynr or our a rcnt •ttAclt~ •- bW~i~ee
nt f"IR Ynrk' ·w h\r h " hnl'I Vtillnamcnnw
'
· ->. , 0 1
but It I• vlowrol a- j!nlllJC to r 1" nb" 111 ""'
. T ht fl<!ulh Vlt!lM!!!~•r.tnrerN be,r.ond anythlnfl' lh•l lh• Junl• " 1" 11 1• 11 w ill
tl.~n wllllng 1., .ny ur un lll Arm~ It~.,.,.1
110\V ft.h ~111 t u,. In' •nUrJn 'f to~ !' ' ''\ ~,~n ~:. ,, t •
1
11
·, \'rnr. ... .... .
\\' lti :t ttnmlnalf'lf ny tn r tiln1r d Vll lll.wrlftrln.n" n., " 1
. Nrtlhrr hr ""r Mr. ~ltrnk1•r l>omocratlo Convrn ll11n lQ ft>r l"'r•onal frt' rtlnm. ";;1; lhl\t In ID~J •nd JDft• Bonator at tno " "" ' "'""' .,,~ · - •....• -
ro·so 11
'"'" ' " ''""·' l<$lh' Willi 111r
Po•t·Dl•r• t r h' • •rtlrl ~. which
rom...i 11..1r df'nl•I• th• t 0 1..,.,.
WM "nylhlni: un u .... 1 In th•
rrlrlT!ll ,,.,. nrnni:•mrnl or
thol ftn,1· r~n m rl o r tnl,,,...M
wall ll'''uh,..1 • •
~~Irr";''' th; !~to :homu c. l'l'lllr• •• ,. lhO\• h~vr. (ollr n
· r nn ni;s r. • IU• " c onl• ahort of lhe •l• Ady problnJ!
proml11e •rlN:llnn whrn thr. .• ~ tnYf'l'tlglltlon · n~ed lo ••·
r.onvrnllnn tould ·not c hoo"" tfthli•h ftll thr. fftcl• 'nir lno•t
brlwrrn Oov. Jam•• T. nl•lr ff'l"11irnl rhftrr:r I•. lh•I. I.hr
,Ir, . And rtr rrr•rnlAllvr · 1_, 011 •uhrommtH r • "'""'"
'~""'"• " · ltmwn, , huth "' only \Ylwn lhfHu \!16 " i' h l\l\llf"
1...ni: l'f'(•th'NI $4~.000 In fr r•
fnr rr.frl'ling tft~r.• to Mnrr1• A.
Shenker, _a l11wycr_ Jrom . BL
1..oul•, whn I• " clolll! ftlrn<t of
th• Gr""tor ftnd couM•I for. the
Nltn•lol•d llnlfl•,
•rtu• tll»f'l imrnl"f! nt thf'I
pol11•• orrir r r whn h•rl "'"''' ,.· r~;,:~·.
drJ'O•ltlnn lll•t trndrd to •Up· ni:ht~,
port Dufallno'• rhu i:c of polle r. llr lv,"
huiri:lnl( wM n nl nllrd lo l••·
llfy.
'"'" ~ Inn" nn O r t t 1d t
/\tr.
"J'••kr
A fr w w-.•k• oil., lhr h•• r · 011.-r
w \rf'll "flf1l n n tnrv 1
·
n n!._!!~ IJllP• ·
""ppottf'll KN1n•1ly
-
• " """""" ~ ( tllrf"!l•ll•lor'• mlttlld
huolnou lnl<'rf'•ta and hi• rr.r.• :. eA"
rofll •• I\ mrml>f'r ot thf' ·lltl• • •nm
flr.l work nftr r c~llrr."' wn..• bu•lnc"-1 wi t h th" Goverrlmcnll========= ====,..,,==
. tM• hlnr; -• hool 11,. W AO ad• nr h•vlng " rllrrct lnl,...r•t In
H · al
ro
llu> h~r Ill Hll2
d "lo·~
marr1• 10 " . - rr'•"
d,.tlno llN-nr, ' form•r
c rnp0Me1l lr111,10t111n. Mnny lll•hi - " '•111 •• 111. Mr. C"'nh•n lolol lhr r r •"'
•r• r"""
a rt:rpl rofrrrol or " tln<l· 111hr ,.mmll l.r• lh•t h• h'1pr• I t11 ''rlr• rr
t r h•I lnr; h11•I r 1
n I' b n """ hr "blr In "''l' JllY th• r"'f11 l rr~ 111 ,...,.
•ourl l"'lflol•lure, rnon y ri« or h""I lf'ftc hrr, In JO.i 5, 'J'hry ~.~~.~~:nee~:;,~!;~:~ llJ!k• llP In· lnrnrmn11nn In !K!-d1'~ · - " ~
~ss~ir
l'f'<:lf'd -hl~A con.wr- l lllVe a dtlui:h~r. Mr•. Ann
.. • · • - -
H 'r v•11· d r tlnltPly d•ny that
or " f'Vf'r 1e•v" m,. $24,000 or h• hl\ti rath., con•lfttcnllt.'.: lllo. ' . •
!!omft mrmbrro ' bfn,;..r- that )feMwhllo, Mr. P'•Nlerw.>.lcl Thr
votive In 'COn~owciiTr';--"Gnrncr Miiler of Ha.nlba.I, th" monllly of thl1 practice I• l<ald, °'"
•ubeommltlrr "'-" ~· W1'nl• ·
24 r rn.b f'llhrr dl,.,.clly ~r Ind.I· '"'rport"'I thr l•i;l•l,.llnn Tliil ~•nr<t.Or I• •hort 1'nr1 'lll••llonabla even tr Ito loirallly cftlVln11 I.he clo•t'Ot cl)()pcr:.llon r lnit
N<'tly. .. . -- · - •J••nMnr..., - h-fu holli l{NI~ tneKy. 11~ n•ll.h•I' rt rlnkft nor lo llOt. L~
rn. , .- - • - (mm - th .. ,Jo• lh... -n.r•nm ...t Arlie!•
...... I h j k lllr. rrftftl•rw• 11 101.t Lit• , wh
"'" l"'r1 nn or I ,. I.Ire art I· nf'lly and o nson admlnl1lrl\• 11110 ••· Ill• hobblr• nre m•~UIM hod not • • l•hllahrot Md lh• F r<lr r•I ll11rr ~n nt I n· ""
fi"llrr •
0
u 1 I
nnlhlni; unu
Bhcnk•t would dl:«:UM the o.bout ,. Unltl'd Rbtr• Sen"""' 1 Into <'AVr.dropplnr;.
ni:.. I.Yr•.My
I• nntc thl •w.
"nr Ir •, whlrh
:itor
F'nrrcrutnllon
nhjrcl of Mr.
b.rn " prlnclp•I
Lon1t'• Inquiry
"Thry (th• lntrm•I Re,·rnue mlllM'
th". I' l R•~J••)
' • , r h·v· •l•-n t he R•nl\·
• • ~ • ..
"Q . !lrMtrir. Are \'OU drn y· bolh ••Id thry con.•l•trd or 30 Y••ra- 25 \'rl\fo- l ' Vf' "' tnr'• l:ut return• .. rrclty prn'"ClllOn who ....... pltnulnc plrkln
• ll\tffl. "Z•i:rl h • d b-'rn
ping l ur • Coni:,..,.•lnn•l com- J>ftny
In lnvr..•lli<a te
• cllvlllr< uf .lu•llrr o~ . ,.
• hnp- hn1t
the •nd I• •
•rtm rnl In • rr.
A'
lnr; ll ~ A.. I r.u. .. , I dm)' II. eorpor•t.,, ••Lt.tr •nd prnnftlll In " r111tbowl Ii··~ In ~""""~:::-~ l.hornuich oudll lnir the hut •l'C ltoffl\ ." lwrrn
ol humid ilnv.11 "Q. Wu It tnr a lr ral ,,,. d•m•r;e C""""·
The Rrnatnr •llld · -- ·- . • · nr •ll(hl mo11lh1," Mr. Frn•t•r· Thr ftrllrl• •• Id lh• I ~Ir. llnlt•
ltolhmnn hrlp~
· ta.ln1tr' h~ h• d alan brrn con• ultr<I 1111
2
lhr c•••• an•I rlnm10rt •on10
DEAD
A. Aln A 1'flC'C'f w•hl a•l•I. 1 .-•n~ h••I
r:A!U(..3..l!JJ.lbllNf: llr po.Jrt lh•t " lh• tv1"' of w • l•I " ' d rtrt ro un•,.I. Mr. 1' " ' " ' '
rl"'""
Mr l' r ri.1... 1 " If
w4W1_.,_.""°'1---#llf!--:::-:~:":'.'.~:i:i':~~~~'"tT~.nT!M!~~
. rirmir,;.,.:'"
. .....filrt-6.~/NGACC/DE'NT' r•••:• "'"'Lll'"l'"" "'"t .,, .., , .. ... . ...... ..... . ... ... ....,
~rn•on'll .ttlnrt. mr an y tnun•i· l lrrl lh•I ynu
wtll hrlVe t n ' dorwnf'nl II.
Ai r. Rh;.nk•r ••kl th•l
kn own .Mr. Long. 'w ho I• llll!O ft
h• h•d VIII
·
h••t "lhry 1'011"1 only a•t nrr a thr l•<o :1.. not nr Y.•1r. l( rr•u ·
t• H ,.Lum." • vrr'• ln•••lli:ri llnn nt lh• drui: h•vr
" "" •
ic.~ in ft wldc (rl\uie.) Wtu this • uppos"'1' b:tnkrr And sm111t-loM brokrr. NICHOLASVILLE, l<y., May A spokc•m•n tor the l .R .S., lndu•try In I PGt J\lld JDe2. · h11\'ln~
. to be brfo~ I WI.• ln th" Sen· tor more th11n 20 ) 'ell"" end had 21 (UPl)- A cabin crul"Cr nnd Jo,..,ph S, ltoup"r.· when ln· It ~"1d thnl" Mr. Fenslerw•ld. t hr • •
~ t Y I I!~ • • • In from • sm•II molorbna t wrre •Wl'J'll f onnrc1 ·nt thl 11 •u• ~- 1l r 1
Ou~. two, And •le"Q, •fll!,.,..rd!
nrWhll• you Wf'l'f! In th• "'' I'llt•.rr•I L,.•ln-•
r;rr.t: I•.... n~ ~··
•· rm•n t , ~ Id : " m cm.,..-r nr "w~ ILh y r" m II "
Ren,.t• .· him ~'41"9 h' went lo Ute ~n_· ovrr a lnr. k nn lh• l<rntllck "1110 lnlttn•I l{•vrnu• Rrr\'lcf' lh• l hntl r.lv•n SG.000 1.. lh~ law.iii
• nr nlrle Yl'rllll.
Ind lh• lll!WORt
'
-11.. J dmy It. llut • vrn If It
ate,
"llenator Lona: hu rf'ff'M'l'<I
ltl""" !Dd~y . T
.
y drnlr• flllll)' that nny tntnnn" · l(rnn~dy P; ••lll-nlh<I ramral~n. •Jlf'"MI
IVn J>rri nn.o tlnn In lltf' I.It• u lir'I• nn ray. M rt 11111 l it" hl• m• nn At1nrn•1· hr.rln
_..,. In•· 1 cnll1dn't Lalk l1111ln••• In m• nn a mnl'f! or drDW11f!fl and fnnr nr ,,.... nlh•MI mrlltA tn llrnator l-"ni: ~•nl" 0 •11.,MI RHl>rrt ' '· IC...,nMty rn'r ...,,.~ ·
abuut II bf'<'au•• It would be INIO ttjfUIOI' bMI• tor )'1>&1'11," Wlll"ll nilMln11 And Jlrt'1tmed fmm a nYM" In tho l.lt.8" ~ol h• vlni< ,...,.rl\or•I " Hl." r \\'h•
nnsre of .11lyll'l!, • prtvlll'fll'd communlcAtlo?, Mr. Rhrnknr . ••Id. ''I'm aurc drfld. I n a i!rordftnrr • ·llll lllr O..porlm•nL •rrnl ntm rnl. Thr • IJ<olr
rnlly not All In •
~~~~Pi...:~r .'\~d t~! r'Jiir· l ' tn ~ol }he only towyer h"- J!'nur nll1•r• •wnm tn •~fnty aftmny'o ,.,r;ulAtloM, Mr. ltooft· • rllrlr lnllma lrll lh• l M.r . ~·rn· l>t'r w
1
1irh we CAnnot fnw thlllr conv·-·tlon th• LI!• m•ra to. h l h h' d • ,.
~ " - • • NoU i: t 11. e n " 10 m•n
L Stale poller r""'U" unll• •llld
Pf'P• rf'fuof"d to llllY wh rlh•r an •tcrwl\ld h• d t hu• llrrn d lllpQ•rd hl1 •U
oudlt had bcrn mad• nt Bt na' tQ-:,iL~t/lt;/< Atr. Kcnnf"<ll"• •M c· h•d 11
1~ brand name11, n!J>Orl•r had ln•I•~ that lhr flnn ft~d tho foclltllc• to h~dlc the bodlc• or D r. Hencl!rl Mur· tor [.on!r'a rrtum•, .on ·"4ha t~trnnlc uv°'drnpplni;: phnnr,
nnllonAlly fen. S@nator ........ ~nonl\I ttlcnd Vftrlou. typ~ nr easel, Mr. ""Y 11nd W111tcr B~rktr. both ot ~rounll U1ftt the l•W pro'Ctlbe• ht ht. c11mpaJi:;n •i:..1nst OrJ:Bn· • ubcor
ot Hoff• •nd hl\d not~ ·I.hilt Shenker oddr.d'• Wc.t Liberty Ky. W•l"fl rrcov· thr (11.cloaur• or Information on IEl'd crlmf'. • lonlt Ir
·nt. . thf'yT<nftr Jlvf!\1. 11.t one Ume In ..
both Apartmrn!JI • ' ' ·~ t
Th r artl c Ic •• IrI u••
the In W&ah· I irct appmxlmllttly 40 J>l'r tted. tt1um•. no :ru b Uono· •
ln«iton. ct'nt of my practice In rererrftl l The A.rtaocl.drd l'r••.• lllrn· rnrti ...n na,.,.ty at -Ion• comm Ill..., n1embrr "wa• r unr h-n,.,,
" . bu•lnttiR by othn l•'ll')'cnt. Il'• llflM D 1. Th,.,.., ArMlor• .... Mr Lon.... fl WU• nr anmr nt lhc rMUIOn• "' •n
I told him thr!'f' Wf'l'ft 4,000 not unu1111a l for lawyer• to rt!for r. turr"y aa """rftftry •ubcomlnlltCf' - Dlrch , nayh for Lonr;'o ""r.•mH.• 10 t•k• up fl11p rr1
P"OJ>lr In thoM! Apllrlmrnl•, l\nd bualneu to ot.her lawy•ra-Ju.•t or I.he UnJwndty or Kf'ntucky Domocrl\l nr Indl•n•: Qumlln it'. I he lnv~•lll{Allnn." I Beyo nd th.. ~~":;:";
iERWEIOHT lhftt I'd n~r """' Hofto thin!," like docrn"'" l>oArd ot tnL•t...,~ and rrr•I· Burdick. tlf'mocnt 01 North D•· l'\•n•lor • hl r ncllh I' tor Mr. nirnt'i
OATS the llf'llator Hid. " I hnft met In d•nylnir that an}' JfllftA d•nt or U1e M1111nlaln Rural knlA, ,.nd !llrom Thurmon<!, n .... Za.crt. ft Ulrl, lh<m1 '"'r• •I.., l•lnrd
Hott" lhn!e or four llmea, but momy wru ln•olVf'd In th• P•Y· ,..1 h C tn ,..uhltcan or South Carolina- hi• otromr; Pf'rorma l llnko In lh• 11
never aocll\Jly." mont. t o B<onator ~If throur;h· •P one '?""""'0 V& could nnt ho rf'&Ch•d tor cnm· t•"•m•l•ra," a pollUcal f orce In ~u~~
The Lite •rllcle, thou«ih It oul 10113 and 19'4, Jl(r. llhenkor w..1~ Liberty.) m•nt on the ch•rJ:'C.'• by Lii•. SI. Lmrla. . On
ch•rr;~ t.hal Rmator Lnnr Wl\11 oa.ld: · • Drnll'fllnll' l'•rl\tlono Wrt'e to The rt1nklnlf Rrpuhllcan m• m· Tho artlr lr d••rr1brd ho"' M
lnOucnctd by •"frlendf who '"I'll• tlral penny that I iot cnntlnue throur;h the nlr;ht In brr Ev.,rctt MrK lnlty Dlrkarn 9 rnnl ~r l .nni:. •f'l'• k lnr; M n.-
w•re ~!r;h In th• TMmAl•r hlrr· out of the Hoffa cue WIUI on •n •ll•mrt ton-rover th• bndl,.. nf illlnnl•. • •hf ht !'llrrly allrnd· a l••m•lrn • cnn \'rn tlnn · In Ml·;'., ~ ...1
t
t
wahr.;.,,11•• 1; looy_- •rchy, did ~nt ,..., er lo any Nnv. 30r JP94. It wu " ve~ or lh• oth~r, ~,.on, w..h~I ~ ~ubt:onimllltt hr•rlnl{•- . l\nH flr• r h l••I ..•11n1rnrr . h11rl .._.c 11,.,
Re•I•" •~tvl4'n itel- i:;.raohftl fr l'lldllhlr Mtween minor fie· ,.1n1oat ln•lirnltlca.nt.' over thfl lork. , " II• (1-"nirJ ...,,. runn lnir th• rl\llrcl ll M f• 11 1tyno nilr an~ r 1 11
't aYeile~le
, •• .,Jr.lf1 off!' •nd U•• B•~•t or.. · He omphulzed that this J>•Y· ;rtie poll°" ••Id the enr;IM on •hnw." Mr. Dlrka•n ••Id. " l fli;hllni: r,...•lrlrnl." . l~:t l
tndll'fft ('Ampalrrn Aid . mrnt come olmo1t al th~ rnd lbn c nilM!r "11111t l\ntl th• bMt don' t know, an yllllnir ahnul It." n ..... 111nr; ";h~n, A.• Jii i~•""" • " "'~
"ehfttnr Lcnr; al•n ooht that of the tWD'yur pl'l'lod durhlff b•11an,tlnatlnr; loworrt lh• 11"m Ronotnr rhlllp A. llort, Df'hl• C,lrnl•n•nt (,o,.mnr, h• ttul In toi
IUI tar u he kn•w ntlthrr Jloff1. wl1lch 8rnotor Lonir "''"" aold The lock mlllflflr hurrll'dly .All:· nrrt of Mlr hlr;•n, ••Id h~ l!nuht· mrl llotra, he ••M. ocrordlni: t o On
nor the TrNn•t~N h•d . •vtr la have been drawlnir $2,000 a Ml<!d the crrw to drop An<hor rd thJ.t..Mr Lnnr; hod mlauaf!d the l\rtlr lc: • M· I
""It'll HkP m11de " dlrrct rollth:•I cnntrlbu· month from tll• Bhmlett firm . .ond...... •mall outhoard motor the ouhrn,,.;mltlre or lh•l hi• ".Timmy " '•• rtllb•r " hot tn~~rv
r>pplnt1 nt lion t b him, llnw,, vr r, he 1atd, 11• alto aald that hit f,..a u bo•t -1tt the AC8f!9 1111"'111)1."'1 to M r l•lon lo 1n1111ll'fJ tnl.n wlrt!l•r· nrll rle Al lhnt llm• In Ml••n1tf'1, n1rnt
ho wa~ """' lh•y h• d mad• cnn- chltf eoun..1 for Hnffo. amount· hrlp. , • , plnr; hort anythlnr t u wo wi t h •nil l w .. <h• onl,1· •l•I• nm. t hr 11
1Jrfl11 In 1~ lrlhullona lo lltf' al.Ale eommlt• 4'd tn ,,., titan 3 r•r c~nt or 1'11uen1<~!\ ,"" t.11• c n11 ...r th• Hn!I• naiie r lol lh•t hMI lh~ AUtlAtlt)• to r h
t,..., which would hov~ aldrd hi• firm'• annual bu•ln•u. '""""" lnt4', th• wolrr and . R•nfttnr L.onir bf.came lh• •how 11 r -" la~•;I
l,.,..,lly In hit c..mp•lirn. Mr.. Shenker • lnat•ted that rllmbrd lnlo lh" •m•ll hMl. ehAlnnl\n ot tho •ubro~1ntlttr• ,,,,.n, IN• •rtlrl• rrrnrtrd, h• "'nuld
e nator Loni:""'" he WU not lh•nt wao no •lgnlflcanc•. In The ranl\11 c,,.rt !Jim i:nt ton11hid In Maren nf JD03. In Srptem""r t urn r rt th llnll•. whn "'"" a b o lion '
•tll hut h• lhour;hl Mr. Shenk· Chi nir;ulr.r lnVrv•l•~,.t which In th,, cnil..r's J'nc hor mr•. or J 094 he drcldf'd lo •tudy on lh• plaUnrm, llnd conllnul'd: who t
•r h ma<lo motlr ratfl conttl· s'tn1.lnr Loni wao paid. which hod foll...t tn cntoh lhe wlN!'tapptnr; hy the l"fodoral "Afl•r hoorln1r ynu •P<'ftlt, I rln '
bnllon• ln hi• pollllc•I f'lftl• " I ·flltlll r di . rlv• r bntt11m, An rl b •JIAR drlrtlnr O<lv•mment and ••nl ttUt .. tnld lh•I. rmwd •nrt l ul•I )'1111 ..... ~
pall{h. Hl!Wftvor, ht llald. none • U• nH• rn nr townrd lhft dnm., queallrmMI,. to .a r;•nnlM Ill· Lhat ynu rt•lltht you~ f rl•nrt• / Irr
Of lh~.. WOl"ll .....ny aubtlLt.nUal 'They w ont madoe fMrlodl· P'our .,... . ...,,. - mrut•~t'r'l lo volvt!d II\ tnvuU.c11t01"Y work. •nd roll am~ I• ynur •n•mlro- " Rll
Floth th• ll•nator and Mr eally," thf' lawyer anld, "•• .a 1Wlm to •hore w·hlln ll•• awlrt Alm""t lmmrrtlh.tnly he WIUI •nd " ..~""P on t l1ht1n11 lhrnt, ~h ed
llhenk~r d<! t~nd•tl U1e 1'&Yl!Hlnt.i wllhdrawol .11r•ln•l hi• coaeo. nurrrnt '•w• rt who.t lh• llH"k N'('Ortt'd In oonLentlnn with lh• Jimm y. "Irr tr
ot Whot lh~y lfrtnM• niterral I atilt hove bu1Jn""' In my Of• mo.ottt et1Uin11led lo be "•f!V•n lnl.ernat ,•Rennue l!e1'¥lct1 ttllf'r In llle ('()hduc t. of th• Inquiry, On
rt MAN '"" as routine pnicu... _ flee ,lhat 1.oon1ldtr' hi• hU1tnu• other pcnon•" ovrr lhe rt..m. IL.t reply to Ille qu,..uonnal..,.. the Ar11cle nh•ri:•d. Mr. Long 11 • mr
30 yea..,. Md I have ~n .,_ 'i'm
• '.'I 1\11.ve pntcU<:M law ro~ over and when . any Income from The police wlthheld lh" namN Mr Jl't'Nlterwald uld today ahfl Mr. J'"•n• t•rw11td sooJ:'ftl In Court
comea In· he would bf! en· of U... ml""ln'!'.
aoclaud· with mrut y lawy"n In lt ll!d to put.lolpate 1n the fe•."
t ha't the a~cy wll.hdttW It build the ir c.•••
around "dll · l'"t'd• r
• - whm the aubcommlttH "•how· 1erunUfd cltlt•n.•.'" m•ny or I.hem Cha tt
mAny cu•• In tha t time .. lhe "The truth I•." he a.old, Fire Blacken• 5,000 Acre. · t!d It had fnfonnatlon which In trouble wtlh the JmUte o.., yrr• 1
R•na!A'lr ii.Id. "l have callt!'i'that" hrllt! are not paymtnta I make TUpllON, Arla., M•y 21 madlt lbll an.wen by I.lt.f'I. p•rtmrnt or th• l ntcm " I R•V· rtr n.-
1 tok~ and ~d on't . tak•. I've lo Lonr. l m1k11 tnnney on ( Uf'l.._Twn lar,ce tlre•Jll lhn lnaccul'llte."
""'"""'d 1111!11t or·'lh•••
· • •nu• llrrvlr-, and
to Mr. thl!lle ~-. he'• mulnr monsy bn111h country nf anuthea•tcm Jn Jutr ot-211ell, )(r_Fe1u1Alr- ln1r con¥1r.t lm1s tor lntoma. Ill.~ .oi.
"°"'"
•rf'<"• I· th• r
ffhrnkf'r." ft>r ma. It 1 .m.alt• 11.000 tnr • Arlrnn• hlo ulinnrJ nro rly , ft,000 wald ..-Id, th• •ll'tn•y'1 Cnm· eva•lon. Th••• wl llt• •or•. lh• Arn•!
Th~ ""n• ln~ ,.•I~ I.hat Jrl hit 0110,, tnr ln•l•ne4>, an•l P•Y him •nrro anti rnrr"'t llt• rvll r ll&llnn mt.. lnn, r, llh~ldon II, Coh ~n. arll r l•
onft·nl•h law rtA olla• In llnWI• ••IHI, l've niada SftOO." .
••Y., ,...,...
nfl•n J rr~ t•t1 h••rll
nt ahnut • t101rn hnrn .. n•ar 1<1111 lh• •11bcm11n111!ow thKl tho d"'•re nll•lly, w hll• nrllr•,... nt • r.a ln
Sat, It 6 P,"!. e 5' f.1400 tnr Ort<'n, nrr.r Clark1Ylll•. !l&rlle'r. llrnatnr l.nntt ll•d ornelo., Ari.•" tDd•y, I"n"'•I "~•nry wu n111nln«i tlA own In· U1e a 11rn1·y or,.tuollr,.. l>rr-.t· wrM
t.htre wan• limit l'll lho 1U110\1nt rcoented the 1amo Jo1lc. · Service olflCllU• In 'I\Jc•on, ""Jd v"'llr;atlon or •l•clronlo e"w•- nionl " w•M l~nled with hrovy· imlt.
. I . ........'w:!I~==:; • s:i.1t • °".':Pl!
S..n11.tor Lonir ""Id Uio.f wMii io.oouCllir• ldea that Shftlker'a ~111.h ot OrAcl" Md ltrrn parlly the aubcommltl.ff. Whm the In· AflO!r Hoffll WA~ rounll i;ullty lhr•r.
he Wl\1 ,ln' •t.alll l{Overnment he olnr 10melhln&' ror me .that'.. conl.lll!ll'd ftfler tlanklnir I.he qulry "'"" completf!d. • · on Jotarch 4, 1004, or Jury L'lm· ot lie
had d••lded not to· ace.pt any elolf1atln1tP1•}0 blm," lb• a,,,~ town any t bd.lfy; • .: ~ "- -~ " -o";:~.P~':: JIHI~ ~t; i'emt•.t· J>C!rlnf, !"d· er!!_l_£~d !!'__..!!!~~ t? ~v·
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the. only thln9 he .....time .to lnwdig..t>E ·is
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S. Jeny Cohen, n...h.I tty ScNtor JOMph Tydins- Crislrtf •nd
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John M. Blair, the .~·1 cJ,icf economist.
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1-1uyr,-r:aa~11w-&1.,"··r:J 6·"'°"'y- : - • · ·-<· ··--· · ~·t ·.. EN.ATOP( ?.'fcetr:lla~ ..i.,, ~erom -~_··'···--- --··M"ri.'Adler'a l".r--.a Soupr Ami_
~i-.1 .H'i:'•for-'oui-~c•l.•k>il:-.! It: lncfud" ~r -~ ,.!:..c· · -_,,.;:_'< __ :,;_:.:.~.:..,._ -·_-,-o.;,. ~t.with _tbe,llmcfif:;bL,.. 1 ukl"d Abe_·'..-'.~'"':~;·· :::::her l""erit-'ble Soop! :~. _. 1 _.
11·!JtJT11nC.tok:tumiturt".,.-:anrl:i:ftnc1(1«rtnn:-. - ... RJbl~f:-(Ot!rnocrnt of :c~k:ut] ~:__ __ _:_Bu~-wh,._~~-J""1oos!_._._·~.:_:__
.. _............ '•' l0lm10-B6tne;, llCirtnf!S Ofrm~~, -. _. ,. Jull\f ~tT!'! It to rour ho•-:
~1.-c.-... the.workbench ...:._7::-~.... - , -~ JtC1tndat1t·... 1n procu~t." hf: ~id_ ~ --hJ1nd . ..-iLh-•-110Lh1n~·to-it--·-
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Ci;t~''° t:tt..- St."'" ~ ..1·---·· - - ·-::;---: ·.· .. "'. _[Dt-niociil 51t Oth.homarhold ~ ._, . ._._... _. ta10. ~Jr-&loael.:..-:-.:":.-~.:.-..~.___:.~ _
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·- -_, · ·· ,/~ . . ~ (: ·.·~the job wiu ·u_"f!fuL 'John T. K"en~y·-:-- ··
_ _,_-:----,---~---.f'...,,..-1-1--~--::c.-..:-~.-~:·:.-:.~_wa.5 .. lh!'!n·--:•-member-:of ~··corn.-::•:-:-:
':'niitttt;• with R"fl~bllain bia..~ hut-!-~·----!
·1-----~-~~""""==~•~ccu"""~ra~cy"'"."lMunlit !UY~. '"Look:-
in,; baCk on it now; 1·5"!! thal Dobby
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Kennft!Y ~ . ~ JOO . for hi~
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t'tt na°ppmNi ·fo· t·~iid1e'}~.i"
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_.,. --;; ~ Reuthff'a support.. H-e
ti~ a~inn··Rorri,: but we "-'t're
wa~ a
horn ......,. all the t"X°Ceu bulk, ~ · :_ ..... •--~-- ..:...:...-.'.su~ tn.be: invc.'!:tlptin~ all __ of ~·
l~nn ck-tln · up-lo--dat!'! venion'"'-~· ·- i"
. : ·- ··:----:-:~·-·labot-~-:~-~ flna.lly J:Ot a CLO •.
ind ~ut.Jf~l ll ~ ~ Ahame
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1 i'~·-inan on the irt»nd, Bobby almoc:t l_
'hide it In the b.-droom. ,._v.: '_.came the ck-fen~ ~tncY1"', · ' ,
lnm ~ roll'.'! on cul~l"!'I.
, Sourwine al!IO uffd hb rounM"IIDlp
to Umt' he.lsht ""top~ ~·l_h_al -~-· . ... _' ~·-~·· ~; fM-' a''brkf, fllrt.U(i.it:,..;lh· Pf"~~l
tM!·u.."'-'ir1o;Tth~ror·uroara1·~1.Y.. . · ..... ~, .. : 'poUt~ Th.In~ thai N~tt..- ..r~-- .
de In our oWn'WorU.hop..:.... ' ,.. ., •. _ ...... _ ...... c:ni.t Abtn-~ wa~·gotn1::-1o·quit the~--
·dy oil~-w-alnut fnme11: ,: . · ' , : , SeNlte~ In IfJ.55,. he· decidNI. to. J:O ;
Sar. ll(trln~; dunble poly(Ntm
"·• ;, 'bed home ta Nevada and run for -·'
~~ $256.- AI.o anillablc "rith : ,. ..!,· ;·,:,:the ~t.--To .-J:t"t·-•hh ;na.me· better.;::~-.·.~·
itrlch ro.rn·ruh~r m11t~ ; ..... ! ·.drcala.lt'd, Soun.nm!- crank:r-d up an ~~ .•
~ ~p.p aiWni:. 5<¥. - .... ', .; ....... -~~ ••. ..:, -i~_lnv~tj~tlon Into. Commun~ •mon.c
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C T I A NEWSLETTER
COMMITTEE TO INVESTIGATE ASSASSINATIONS
1520 16th Street, N.W., Suite 101
Washington, D.C. 20036
(202) 232-1152
Fall, 1973
A movie has been made out of Mark Lane's and Don Freed's
book Executive Action, starring Burt Lancaster and Robert
Ryan. The flick is part fact and part fiction. rt is due
for rel~ase in November; possibly its premier will be held
in Washington on November 22nd, though its producers are
hoping to have it open in Dallas.
~-F-K.
*****
The Committee is still basically unfunded. We have
enough for rent, telephone and postage, but that's about
all. If any of you can spare a few dollars you can be
assured that they will be put to good use. Four contribution
blanks are enclosed; please distribute them to interested
persons. If you can spare more than a few dollars, we might
even be able to afford to hire a trained investigator to
follow some of the myriad leads .smoldering away in our files.
of Robert Kennedy, and James E<'Lr 1 Ray, the killer of Martin Luther
King, and Arthur Bremer, the man who shot. George Wallace? Did
them know any of these people? If so, how and how well? Under
fai from normal. These are not normal times. Among people on
the street, among people far removed from the elite strata of
that this reporter was in Dallas when Kennedy was shot, followed
closely th.e warren investigation, and conducted for CBS News and
and ever since, this reporter had defended the warren Commission
all those old doubts and suspicions. But fear of the truth is not
questions about characters such as Hunt and Liddy and their Cuban
contacts and whether they had at any time any connection with
Dear Sir,
Enclosed please find $15 for one reservation (or $___ for
____ reservations) for your conference at Georgetown University
in Washington on November 23rd and 24th, 1973.
Name
Enclosed: $
-------
Dear Sir:
Name
Street
---------------------~
Enclosed: $-----
r) /'1
l7 .. I II
·- ·
or'.l:!ct Shhan." ~"~ • 28 April 1%9 , PP• 41+.
<:<'
tso , r. IUlO K, Kronea . ' 'Refl e ction• on a tragedy . " ~~· Aug...s t 1968 , pp . 194-
AMERICAN POLI TICAL ASSASSiNATIO N S:
r uVt '-' v< rJ
r~,,.&~(c
195.
a t '"'"" in Sirhsn '• tlnd?" ~. 2t. J31\uary 1969 , p , 5~. / '' ~
tdc. , ;>.;.ul R. "The Oregon Pr1"'4ry." ll!!V t £ r ubl1r., 8 June 1968 , PP • ·J.'r-15.
1n or ~ose, the Pri,.;.cy Pl ayen." Life , 7 June 196 6, pp. 35-t.l. /, I J~ (l '\ •
n , D"via . ''!!"" uobb y Pia.'le to l<.' t.-,It:'' S.•tu rday Evening l'ost , l June 1968 , pp. 23- 27.
1tnc:HC5 :; ~al<, " llov•-•eek , 24 J un~ 1968 , Pl'· 26-27, .jf/ I \
\
tlc.um, Robert , "~cdy imd !icC..rthy: 1% 5- 1961 Voting ·Re<!ord," New Republic , 11 ~.ay
1908 , pp. 23-27.
"l' ((i 3 3 \
\
A BIBLIOGRA PHY
I I l('
.) L
1
C•r1 ,k /
\\~\- ·{~\
• L ( WORl<S PUBLISHED
\ - . . . . . .. '
- \
\ I ' ~..r , <- . 196 3- 1970
\ . : ·. ""<.\ ,,
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\ I -~ , -., ·.
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"· ROBERT F. KEN N EDY
), !!!- i \
'
\,I ---·
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""" Compiled by
,
I
··y-,
d
THE COMMITTEE TO INVESTIGATE ASSASSINATIONS <:.
--<..
•/1 ; /;
.~
II L/ / . WASHINGTON, D. C.
COMMITTEE TO INVESTIGATE ASSASSINATIONS
,·
\ 1973
:~
The years 1963-1968 vitnesaed three tragic but ape ctac ular politic:d 9Jrde n in the United
States . The !int vu of President John F, Kennedy in Dallaa on Novuber 22, 1963; the aecond
v aa of Nobel Laureate Kart in Luther King in Hec;ih ia on April 4, 1968; the third vu of Senator
Robert F. Kennedy in Los Angelea an June S, 1968. Theae anders, vhich have 10 radically
altered the ccunoe of Aacrlcim biatory, have ap..med •great maaa of literature of all aorta .
Huch of thia literature, along vith a - a of llJlterlal relating to earlier aaaaJuioationa , v u
collected in lolashingtan by t h e eo-ittcc to Invutigate Mauainationa, lnc., and by its ..,llbcn
in different pares of the ccuntry.
To aaaist it in its worlr., the Cor.nittec lr.ept an •><tensive card-file bibliography on u -
aase1nationa generally. In ansvcr to numerou.• requcata for bihliogrnph1c"1 la4ter1al, the ea....
aittce aimcographcd and distributed a liot or the aoat 111portant Mtcr1alo . In t1oe, t he Cor>-
.S.ttce atttq>tcd to do a c°""lete bibliography o f poli tical aoaa.•alnot i ono , go i n~ b aclr. through
hi.etory to th" hci;inning of rc eordcd even to. This p roved to be mu ch too lorge a t Mk for the
Colll'littce 's a l l i hcilitiea ; yet , a vhole '"""" of the MterieJ. v aa gathered and p laced i n c ord
f1lC11. Thcae h a ve been depoeited in the Specia l Collections Di v1a lon of Ccorget°"" l'n iversity
TABLE GP C<llTENTS Library, lolanhtnnton , o.c .• vhic:h ulti1N1tely vill b ecome the repooitory or one o f t h e largeat
collections of vork.a on thcae Maaosinaticna. All of the Mterlal io the collection will be
avaJ.lahl.e t o ac:holan .
The bibliography 1n hand covera only t h e surdcra of J~ , H!Jt, and RPI:, .nd it 11 ... co.-
.j plete Bii • • could aake it, 1111 of the aUJJ11er of 1972 . l t ia c00i>ilcd p rt:oarily fron aat•rial in
the Library of Congreoa , other printed bibliogra;>hiea, and fl"<11l private ccllactiom o f aatrrlaa.
Forevord, by Bernard Fenatentald , Jr. l Meet of tllc boolr.a ond an:itlcs Hated either are or v ill be in the Ceot'J!etOWTI Uni vc niity Lli>rary;
Coapilera' note l a hcndful arc a vailable only at the Library of Cong n .eo. Theoe tvo llbrnr1e.a, plua tl1n llat iooal
John P, Kennedy Arcbl-.., conatitute a trhd 1n one city vherc all of the aaterlal 1e available . Ln tiW!!, all
Cene ral 4
of the filCJ1 of the eo-ittee to lnvcatigate Alu• Mainot ions and thoee of aa:ny of it• _,.ben v1ll
Wo rld opinion and effect• 14
be depooited at Ceorgctown,
lolarrcn Cms:dsaion l5 There are aa:ny indiapeMable people to thnnlr. for the CD"l'lht ian of tllh bibliography .
l.ee Harvey O.Vald 19
P1rat and fore.oat i.a lliaa CandAC2 Haze , a ccllegc a tude:nt and rr future da"ihter-ln-1,..; vit boat
Jaclr. R&>y 20
her diligence, the proj1tct v ould have floundered. Next vould be Hr. C".eorge B"rrinl!er, bead of
Qucat1on of conapiracy 21 tha Special Collecti.ona Dirlaian; vithout h1a aUll and ual.Jotaiu:e , v c v ould never hne go tum
Jin Ca rria on 22 paet the aiuograph atage, lie ...,t aleo thank ltiu Adoreen McCoruclr. of the Library of Congreaa
Willian Manchaeter 23 for bar bdp i.n aalti.ng that greet li.brary'a aatertal available 1n Ullcful foni. Ln add.iti O<J ,
Lyndon hinea Johna°" 24 thcilul - t So to Mr. Roben Saith and Mi-, J,,.... Luer of the ea-ittce to lnvcati 3ote Aosaa i-
Martin Luther King 25 nationa, md to wy "n..-,•T an• aan,• Barnard Penatarvald, Ill, for their dogged aaal.Jotmce.
Rebut r. Kennedy 26
I
!emard l'enatcrvald, Jr,
Dec:allbc r 11, 1972
Thia b1bllogrqhy l ieca v o rlr.a publiahe d th r ough 19 70 relating to the a.uaul natlO!ll of John
Y. K£nnedy , Robert F. ~nnedy, and Knrtln Luth er lang, The c""'l'ilcra are .., • ..., th a t there are
probeblc errora of doucript1on , mid hence of coru.l•te'llcy or ro .... t; thd r plu t hould be not ed
that they did not have the oppon:unity t o h andle each ite11 dcacribed. Thd r chief hope i& t~•t
I
r..
th1" Hating vill be ~letc ~ou gh to acl"'9'C ~ a uaeful tool to th06c lntcru t ed ln the li trr-
aturc of thcac Maaos1nat1ana as veil as t o the atudcnt of political ruo1ul1nati0lll in s e n•n l.
The cUviaion of the aatcri al i nto aubjecta has been undertaken vlth the U""' e nd i n viev.
In • o....Cer o f CABCB thla div1.a1on vaa bMcd on title alone , mid rca1archeni in t cruted io t he
John r. l:.enocdy 11110 ... olnati°" vill v 1U1t to con.oult t h e "Cencral" aectioo u vc ll u vhatcver
paniculu a n:1111 a '.ty ae ca ftppropriatc. Th• fo1'11t adopte d i a a cloac rendering of that propoH d
in the - t recent recension of the llU Style Shee t .
Ftn .illy , the co"'l' llen "Pl'e.u to you , t ~1 elr rendera, for vhat e ver he l p '." OU c an ~I v e in cor·
re cting and ~ letlnc thei r efforca . Comrunicatlons rcopectlnit a1n1 of o>:!S1iO!I or co =~ss: c:.
s hould be addressed to Mr. Robert Smith , Dire c tor of Rcscuch , r:o rcittce t o Inveatl;•t• Assa.a -
ail>atioaa, 927 15th S treet , S,lol. , lolashin~ton, D.c., 20005 .
Additional copU. of this bibliography (a 1111.itcd numb er) arc available at S ),00 each,
p.-t.paid , f . - the Specla.l Collectiona Divl.Joion , Ceor1tet01111 Univcniry Library, 17th ond O
Str.eu. J.lol., ll•biqtan, D,C,, 20007. Requeaca for copiea 1hould be acc011po111led by • chcci.
for the a ldtcle - t , ..le pqeble to th• Georgat""11 Unhen ity Library,
I, JOHN F, KENNEDY Bickel, A.H. "Return to Dall111a." NC'lol' Republic, 23 Dece~r 1967, f'• j.I,,
Bfohop, Jilll, Th~ Dny K1~nc'dy Wan Shot. Nev York.: funk aod i..'.,gna.11 .... , 1968.
"Blnc\:: Friday, five yenrs later. 11 Nc.il'n"Cclc., 25 Novc::aber 1968, pp. 22-:ZJ,
A, GENERAL "B~nai Bri.th, Overocna Houm JIT; IlB1'0 1n 40th Ann1Y9l'o111UJ Se:I:"!ict. <kdicat•d to Jn:; hlllal
Oirecton1 plnCJ;! Wrcnth at To.ti of Preeident," ttnt.tr.tu•J Jevi.ah Honthly, Janu.i._ry-
1964, pp. 24~26,
11
"Abernl.tions of Dourgcoia Democracy: The Right to Deny Rights. Current Digest of the Spv- Bonner, Judy Whitson. lnve.'-!tig11tion of 11 Hm:.icidc• the tturdcr of John F, rr:nncdx. bd.ar-
iet Press, 1 January 1964, p, 25. 1100, S,C.: Drok(l Howie, l'JU9.
"After the Trngedy." Tab]ct, JO Novemhor 1963, pp, ll~:--11s2. Booker, Si111Con. ''Jlow Jfl: Sur1uuu1ed Ahrnh11n Lincoln," F.:bonr, Fcbry . . rt 196-'., pp. 25--28, JO,
,"Ag 11 in th~ Aasassinati~Newaveek, 15 AugUflt 1966, pp. J0-33, 32-34.
,"Agony relived; second installment of the death of a Preoi<lent." ~. 27 Jsnul\ry.1967, BoOUlltra, Jan. Z>:!n Rc.concn in DHllAR: 22 llovel!lber 1963, De coord op John f, !Cr.:nn•d!I
P• 58, 1917-196), Prcaident vnn de Vercnigde Staten vnn A:rcrlk.11, hlc:itcrda•: Bfb-
iAhlr.r, J. and J, T;umey. "SOlllO! Functions of Religiou.q Ritual in Catastrophe: Kennedy Alrnae- I liothcck en-docunicntstie Hchool, 1968.
II uination," Sociological Analysia, 25(1964), 212-2J-0, Bo....Ber, !!ellCNell, "The Perlln of Rruity History." Saturday Re.veil#, 31 Decet::ber 1966,
I
Allarey, Monina, "Thnt Day In Washington. 11 Philippine11 Herald Maga:z.ine, 25 Janunry 1964,
PP· 2J-2s.
I p, 14,
Brand, Sergiu. "Si Totuni Cine?" Cronfc;i, !7 December 1966, p. 12,
'--- '')/hen Night Fell on the U.S." Philippine.'! Hernld Magaiine, 7 December 1963, p. 12, Brevo, Francisco, .John Fit;;~ld K~ tl ~rtlr de l"- enperiuan: d1ncurto, Cuenct1,
'Alsop, S. "Johruion Take.a Over. 11 Saturdr.z F.vcnine: Porit, 15 February 1964, PP• 17-23,
:"N:>erica's Long Vigil, 11 TV Guide, 25 Jnnu.ary 1964, pp. 19-22. 1 1963.
Breig, J, "Assaasinntion of a People." Ave Haritt 1 1'1 Deceubcr 196J P• 10.
:"And a child's ye.ll<JY flouCrB.
".-I.rid then it wa6 Novctcbl'r 22 11gain.
Nc ....11vt!ek, 2 Decirr.bcr 1963, -pp, 36-37.
NeYal.'cck, 30 NoVetllbcr 1964, pp. 25-28.
:•1u1niven•ary of An Aas.i.aain11tio11," Rllcanstntl!tinnint, 27 Novc!Wer 1964 1 p, 6,
Antoninus, Brother. "Death ht!.S Po1.1nced: Excerpt fro111 Ton3s of Jecpnrdy," Do::tl'nicana,
I - - - , "President Kennedy's Dc11th: \Jhyl
11
Ave Hnrta, 11 J1t11nnry 1~64, P· 9,
De<1th in Emerr;;ency No, One: J'Arklltlld Xeeorial llo11pitel." S!'!turd.11 EYenin.g
!£!!.!, 14 fK:.teaber 196J, PP• 30-Jl.
Brienberg, Mordecai. "The Riddle of DallM," 5pectator, 212(1964), 305--306.
Septaro.Lcr 1965 1 pp. 9-12, Bringuler, Carloa, RP.d }'rfdny. 01ic11go: Dlarlen llnllberg l> Co. n.d.
"Apoc11lypse nnd after," On-1Rti4n Ccnt11r;, 80(1963), 1487. Brodie, I11roel. Tribute to the lnte Pret1ident John ritiger111d Kenned!.•••nt th~ ~irble
d'Apollonia, L, "Reflec:tiOTtB sur une Tragedie," Relntionii, January 1961+, P• 27, Arch Synni:.02uc, !,{)fldon,.,196), London: Office o[ the Oiief Rabbi, 1':164,
~pe.lb.1m::, Stephen A, "Tiic Kennedy A.a11assinatiou, Psychoanalytic Re\•ie.t,,t, 53, no. 3(1966), Buchanan, Thomas C, 1'rravo J'orocilo o lJTr.)rU v Dall1U1u," Delo, 27-29 febru-11cy 1964,
69-8\l, PP• 56-58, --
~rnoni, H.S. The Denth of n Prcnident. Passaic, N,J,: Hinority of One, 1964, Budil:m.llc:, Budillrlr. "Zlocin u Tek.nruiu. 11 ~· 22 (1963), 6U4,
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11
~aa 6 r.ioation of a rre!!id ... nt, reprinted fr0111 Ne\/ York Tin!s vi.th intro, by Anthony Lei.>-i.,, Businean Pledp;e!l ite Support, 11 B\lSlincnll Wee.k, JO No\"t:nber 1963, p • .).4,
u.,.. York, 1963, Butler, £d. "The GreRt Msallsin Puzzle, the \<'eRtl.'ood Vtll!!ge Sgwore, 1 1 no, 2.(l968) 1
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rhe Aasnaoin.,tion of President F:.cnncdJ, (N,P~ ~. 196J, ("Memorial Edition") 85, 115.
·The M1111s.iinsttoo: Sce:ue of the Crba.e.," ttcv-svee\:, 4 D<iumher 1967, PP• 31B-32, Carney, Frederick S, "Crisi11 of ConMcience in 01111~: Soul-searching vB, 'Nev f,.itJi in
'.The. AtliH1!!:iins.tion: th~ Rr.porter'11 Story; o;.'hat "LUI Seen and Read: Te.lev111ion, Nev11p11rers, Dalla11. 1 Thought on the day of the funer&l of Tolll F, Dri\'l!t"." Oiriatlmiitr nnd
Magazine.a; Journaliaa 1 e R.ole: Unresolved I11oues," Colrntltia Jo11rn11lisM RevieY, Cri~is, 23 December 1963, pp. 2]5-2~1.
Winter 1964, Carr, \;'as.goner. Te:xlUl Supple--ntal F.eport on the Allllfl.'lsinlltion of rres1de11t Kennedy ttnd th""
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pp. 40-50B. Cmitro, Fidel, Cc>ur;rnrecenc1<1 df':l Coo"'-!1tl:mte f1del Cn.'ltro, Mte el pur.blo de Cuba !!obre lo~
"The .~uto-pGy~" Time., 27 Dec.ePlber 1963, P• 18. succ11011 rel.icion11dr;wi concl ;i11eH1nnto del Prcl'lidcnte ~ncdr, Havim11: Comi.lz!on de.
'klful Interv111.~ewuvcek, 6 Jnnuary 1964, PP• 19-20. Orientacion Revolucionar111, Dlrecion 11.o.cional del PIJR5C 1 1963,
~ach=-n, Ida, "Pre!lident Johruions Mordk0!'.llnis11ion." Frit Druiumrk 1 23, no, 2(1964-65), A Q-dld 1 fl Eyes: Soveriber 22 1 196J (motion pictun•.), Group Vl ProductiOOfl (rele11.1ed by Patlie
4-6, Contewporary F11Il\'3) 1 1968,
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ru11.ry 1964, pp. 52+, Ci.1.rdi 1 John, "Rovclllher 22, 1963, Snturduy Rerlew, 7 Dcceitber 1963, pp. 16+,
1
1'.ac.'t to Dallas: Theories of J, Thocpaon and J. <'.onnally," ~. 24 l-lovco.ber 1967, "Of ch!!OB end cour11ge." Saturday Re\•iew, 28 Do:!ctt'Oer 1963, P• 25,
pp, 54T55, Clifford, G, '')jnrren Report: A Ne" Bo-ost for the Kenned] He1JoOrnbili• IndW1try." Xllcle11D'11
1
Back.1:round to the Kennedy filro.," Film Co=ent H.t!gl\:r:ine, fall/1.linte.r 1967, pp. 39-44. H:i511zine, 2 1/ovcmher 196~ 1 p, 3,
lagdikian, B,R, "Me411Bin," Saturd:iv Evening Post, 4 Deccn,;ber 1963, pp. 22-27. Cole, Al"}'n. "Assassin Forger," Journal of Fort!ns!c Sci<:!.nCi::B 1 July 1966• pp. 272-288.
la.ker, De.an C, The Mlla.'lnination of P"rl:'!liCcnt Kennedy: A Study of the Press Coverage. "Compendium of Curtou.a Coincidcncen: 1'11.r.tllela in the 1.1,.~ imd Deethir. of A. U.ncoln md
Ann Arbor: University of Hichigan Dept, of Journalism, 1965, J.F. Kennerly," ~. 21 Augwit 1964, p, 19.
larbierl, Frmie. "Dv:i Atentato," Vjesn1k, 24 November 1963, The Col::f'lete Ke.nneih Sap.i: Four Dar\: Oitye. 4 vol11, Rollyvood• All•oci.lted Profe-.•ion.tl
laxnndell Lt:!.._. "The Kennedy Maassination." ~. Autumn 1964, PP• 90-93, Services, 1967,
rt:alle, M~rria A. Guns of the rcgresf'ive r1ghtj the onlv recon!ltruction of the Kennedy Condoo, R_. "Hancliurian C.mdid,,te -in Dllll41i," N~tion, :?.8 Decemb~r 1963, PP• 1'49-451.
Aas11.1u;innticn that m.akefl sense, Wa!lhington: Columbia Pub, Co, 1 196t., Connally, John B. ''i.'hy Kennedy W'ent to !l&ll"-ll.1l"J.ire, 24 l-loveuher 1967 1 pp, 86A-B68.
~drick. 1 Stephen B. Cerf SayB Assansination Book to \.iiden Kennedy-LBJ Rift." Yale Daily Connally, Hnt, ~ohn B, "Sioce Thtt Day in D11llu.~cC<'lll~, AugU11t 1964, pp~ 76-7~,
1 NC'l.fs, 15 Deceio.ber 1966' pp. 1-3. Coo\'.. 1 fred J, As1111-11einstion InveetigRti003. The Tr"'gu111ni Taleo th11 Yitild. Nation 1
1ebrlta, Anna, Eln6}.gyilkoss~gtol elnOk.v.flasr.:t11~ig, Budapest: Kossuth Konyvkiado, 196io, 19 July 1971, PP• 40-46,
~lin, De....-fd, "Truth 1".'>UJ lllY only goal." Te;r,:Af! Observi!r, 13 August 1971, pp.,,13-15, Coo'W';e, Alistdir, "A.f.ter the President 1 s AB11.•.1uin11tion," Listener, 5 ~ce•ber 196) 1
l Bell ,!UJ,d HOYell ~ra Used for A.!!ea.sa1n11tion Film !-ICN in National Archives,
-eredtl.ov v
&ga:z.ine, Jan\1.'lry 1967,
"Hore Light on the Kennedy Ase.111eination (book revie'W of Die t,,'eArheit \lb~r
Imnge
~.
PP• 907-908,
- - - , "De11th of the Tol.mg l.'&rrior." L~tener, 28 NovC1'h.cr 1963, pp. 863-864,
11
Han lit Large: the Evidence OQ the Asellll&in11tion of Pl:""1ddent ~DD•dy." ~
chester Gu.'l.rdirut, 22 Sept~r 1966, P• 8.
'·ae~ t::cn:i.edy-:Kord:
w:te 1.md wnrum der 1.larren-report lUgt, by Jo11chim Jot!i!ten)."
I Nt.i.1 TicreB, 26 Octobur 1966 0 pp. 28-32.
.arnieree Luc Le Jour 0~1 l<P.nnet{ fut 111111a_'li<iine, P11ri11: Edition11 du Gerfaut, 1963.
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Cottrell, John, AAB11.t111in11tion: The i.'orld Stood Still. L.;mdou: M_. F.ngli&h l.ibr•ry,19,~.
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5Atordlr'! P.r.Ti~, 7 Dec~•r 1963, i'P•
~rry. ~~dell: Nov-e:-ber Tventy S x Rtneteeo Hundred Si:xty Three (pO<o?m), New Yorks
Crirwford, 1".c-nQeth, "'Tb• E:aa.de• 6111 K&da," M-.--Uo 2 P,.~r 1963. p. )}.
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iickal, .l,M. "CBS on the \Jiarrim Mport." N"ew Republic, 15 July 1967, PP• 29-30,
I,
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7
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Fox, Sylv1tn. "UnantrWred Quie.stiona Abovt Prr:w:idmt ~dy'• As.u:>inatiOn." J•t1orutl
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893. •
Gnu:, J.V, "RH and JtX: Tvin5 of Fate," PhilippinCB Herald Ka$azine, 14 March 1964, PP•
42, 44, 67, 72, Galea, Robert Rab1n1100. ''NotC-3. The M111l'la1natioo of the P-raidentl Jin--iAd1ct1..oGal J'rclo-
Curry, Jesse, JIT Ansaasinlltion File, Dallas: Amcricllil. Footer and~inting Co,, 1969, lc=i," Srrl!lctme J.m.r R.cvi~, Fall 1964, pp.69-81,
D<!.etvyler, Rarui W,, ed, In mc1DOriara John F. Kennedy. Aus dem ~bcn eines grosnes Gm.a, H,J, ''why did Kennedy Oic.? 11 Tnm!!-Act1c-n, July 1968, pp, 5-t,
Stnatsmc>•.ncs. Zurich: Roinerl1of-Verlag 1 1964, Gardea, HikloR, A Y~nnedy Don!!Lie. Bud~pet1t, 1968,
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"Dallaa Rejoinder," N11tion, 25 Mny 1964, p. 519.
"l},.,,11.!IJJ R.e\'isited," Titoe, 21 February 1969, pp. 18-19. i Gellner 1 J, 'i.'ho K.illed .John Y.enned-y?" Soltu-rd.ay Nicht, Jul7 1964, P-P• 11-1-'.
Ge.raheniicn, Alvin. Kennedy and Big 5unincan, (11,p;i Book ~.my of JDcr1ca (n.d't
Gilliatt, Penl'llope. 11 The Current Cinc:ia, 11 Hew Yorker 17 June 1967 p, 95,
"Dnlla.5J. DetektivhintoriA," E:lOre, 10 Nirll 1964, p. 519.
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,.,A Oall1U1i Traged.111." Xi11qar Szoy1et Y.Ozr,nzdann:31 sr;cmie, 14 October 1964, pp, 273-265,
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of John Kennedy. Nev York1 Bil.Ilic Boo~, 1964.
Daniel, P. Assessing the Blw. in the rrccident 1ri ~11th: Excerpts froin Addre111u:s,"
The. Hyaterie11 of the Kenn~dy Ans11.s11inntion !Uld the English Pre1u1." .!:!!!.
11
lI
U,S, Ne-.ni rutd World Reoort, 14 Dccen:bcr 19?3, p. 73, Goodh11rt, A.L.
Dcncliauacr, i..',J. P.evie" of~ by G, Fnm.ir.. eo--ntary, July 196J, pp, 90-92. QUllrterly R.cvie.v, January 1967,
R.e,•i\!\/ of r~ed by G. fr.om\(.. Di:'!cusnlon, Jimuary 1964, PP• 6+, Gordon, Bruce, One IUld One K.1¥.c T...-o Scme Tiaes: the Kermedy M11:uia1.nation, Fulle_rton,
"D"Y Jn:: died; <::xcerptfl frtm Th~ Il<t'I' Kennedy \J&n Shot by Jia IU11hop." Ladif!G Hob! Journal, Cnlifon1-1a, 1968.
November 1968, pp. 151-157. Gordon, Willinm E. "The Ms11.1111inatioo of Preni.J.ent i.'.t:rrncdy." Coutc910r11n Rt:Yie"ol', J...riu-
"Day i::'.ennedy Died," N~~· 2 DcCl!tM:uu· 196J, pp. ~O-:Z6, nry 1964, PP• 8-13.
"nrre.ath in D.tllan.
11
~· Jnnu.'lcy 1964, pp, 39-44,
' ~tte, frit~. "N,1ch John F', Kennedy11 Tod," Die dni, 1964, pp. 143-145,
~. 29 Novt:nober 1963, pp. 21-32.
11
"Death of r. aodern,' Sp~ct~, 29 No~t111r 196J, p. 681. The GoVl!.rn=-ent Still Live•,
"Ile&th of the Prcnldent, Cr.H'l:f!an~-enl, 6 December 1963, p, 299-JOl, Gr;ili«11:;, Fn~d P. "Doctore ln11pect Kerned)" :X-riry11." Nev Yor~. T!ro.e11, 9 Janu..ary 1972,
:n~ Death of ii. l'reaident," ~cmcn o Wel\r Daily, 28 H.,,rcli 1967. Graenbcrg, Bradley S, "Diffusioo of ttewe of tht: J;.{)nnedy Allaa.•11in11tion," Public Opinlon
.. ne:llth of a Presidm1t: The Esta.bliahcd f:.cta," .\tlantic, }farch 1965, pp. 112-118, Quarterly, 28(1964) 1 2:ZS-2J2,
Tilc Death of ff -Pr~~ident: Told in nt;cct Testimony, ~~cerptM." U,S, Neva ftnd World Gr01;veuor, He.lvilla Sell, "The lMt Full Hll!uure," Nl!-tionl\l Ct:orgrl!J>hic, Karch l964,
~>0rt, 7 Dcccmher 1964, pp. 68-70, pp. 307-355.
"~nth of l'rea1iknt J:~nedy: St11tca...inU b:y Sir Robert Heni:ie11 and Sir Garfield Bnnriek on Cun, Nerin E, Red Ro!!C'-' YrOtll Te;c;,..,,. London: l'rcr!t.rick Hull!!r, Ltd., 1964,
23rd Novc::.!ier." Current Noteu on Tntcrnationl!-1 Affalrn, Hovelller 1963, pp. 38-J9, Cur-go, Ottorino. Perclie i Kennedy rruolono, V.O...: Trevi, 1968.
::The Death ~f the Prcnidcnt. Illuoitrntcd London l'le"'~-n, JO t-lo-re:nbe.r 1963 1 pp. 589-899, flaba, Hrn. "Die Halfte der Wahrheit; der HOrder r.tfundender 1-klrd Unge.kl';;:rt," \.'1?lty.ocbc,
32(1964). 1614,
Oo.lbate oc Who "l:il.kd John Kennedy? Co-~nt>i by critiCJ'I and dc!t-nde.n1 of the W11rren R.eport,"
5(!nillr Sd1ol11.etic, 18 Novelli:icr 19&6, pp. 21-22+, - - - , T1ie i..'ounrled Litnd: Journey through 11 Divided Mt.crlCJ1,
~.son, R.R. ne::tinT 1•t D.r..lll!-11! on tl1c 11cene 11ton in picture/!. O.....ll4s1 The authot" 1 1964, 1961,.
- - - , ~at!~Dnllru1. D11llt1n: Dcuco- Corpon1tion, 1964. Hanson, WilliB.11 H, The Shooting of John F. K#.nntdJ.
Dico, ~rt'bt, All!IL<Soinnt1oo Wld the Afteno.i'!lh." im.!ri...:.~n Opinion, H.&rcli 1964, PP• 1-10, Co!iipl'lrly, 1969.
April 196.'., pp. JJ-40, Hsrr111 1 T.~. "Keruo Abotlt 11 DllllM Citite," Look, 11 Aup;UHt 1964, pp, 64+,
"'~ffercnt look &t Dallll.6," U.5. Jit:v!I and \lorld P-'"Port, 3 }'e.bnui.r:y 1964, pp, 42-46, Hart, L. The Death of President KP.noedy," Colui=bt .. , ri..u:ei.b~r 1963, P• ).
~rli:;, i . .....'l1y v11,.., Jn:'.. Shot?" Atl""'• K.-IJ 1967, pp. 10-lJ, -,- - - , "A Year of Pr~gresB ...-1.th a SorrO'-'ful Clo~c.' ~' JanUAry 1964, p. 16,
D"'1d::u:o, R, "Co~ntllry of <'ttl CJevitneAll," Nev Republic., 21 ~er.Mer 1963 1 P• 18, 'Hatred bi0'-'11 no logic, S11turday Evening Po11t, 4 Jll:TIU-R.fJ 1964, p, f\O,
1 11
tJ.ihn::oel, Horvrn. l-<":n guatre jouni du D11lla:i, Parts: EditiOtlf\ Fra:nc-t"'Piro1, 1966, 'H11ve. We ~11rned Our Lw11ona2 Dlrilltil\n Century, EO(l963), 1567-1568,
Dune~, J, ••5.,.J Di::y in Tex.i.s, 11 ~£_._ 14(1964}, 26-27, He Gave Hin Life, Nruihville, Tenn,: The /fa.1'hville Ten~l'><Om,1965,
Do.rorlc.in, Hs.r.....in S, "The Kenned] fill>! Dinc.UBac:.d •t the Warrenton St:.i.nar," Nlm ~nt, Hep,yi, Karoly. A D.alliud Itelethirdete.11 Ot~.'' r.1'0ra, 17 H,,rclJ 1964, p,J,
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~dt, friiio. ''vaahlngtoo 25 ~ovellber 196)." ~. 11 ~rch 1967, PP• 18-20, "History's: Jury," Ncvf!veck, 16 Decerlier 196), pp. "25-27, '
EnterprLie: H.e:~rial Boo111. Ncva~ek, JO Dcc<=ller 1963, pp. 49-50, Hol-, W.A. "011e thing vorse than this: Se~ df!livered 11t Horthhaven Methodiat Church
Epgtein, Edvard J, "Der Tod Kam bei Bild 313: cine ne.ue L'ntcrnuchung de.I! Kl!nned]-Horde.11." .i~ Dnlla.11, NovC?ttber 24, 1963." Oi.rL~tlim CA-:ntua, 80 (1963}, l555--15S6. '
r:>.o:r Spiegel, ·20, no. 29(1966), 63-67,
11
Final Ornptcr in the A.s11;u;iiin11tion CootrOV"1ncy,"
I H01.Lage to a friend, ff ~~riftl tribute br the United Matiorui for Pre11ident John f, i:.::mw-dy.
~cv York: U~ited St~tes Cotso.lttee for the lhlited Nlltic11:111, 1964.
April 1969, PP• :>0-31. Hor(J'l(itz., lrvirlg L, Kennedy 3 D<!ath, Hyth•, Md Rc•litiu," Tr11-rui-Actian July 196!, pp,
:>-s.
".Eyc on tlrnt .,,1nd°"'· '' Ncws ...-cck, 22 June 1964, P• 32.
"Fatt":ful t••o hours vithout a ;:-:-esident: c:ic.e.rpts fro11 te11tlllooie11." 0,S, R~ and ilorld
Report, 14 ~ovcmber 1966, pp. 68-78.
t Hout11, Harsh~ll. "Pre11fdent Kenn111dy'11 Autop•J va.1 lkotc.hed," Xi!dicAl EeonoaiCJI, I, H.o!rch
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Fe_ltl=m, Harold, Fift7-~e. ',./jtncasea: The Grits[! Knoll. San Francisco: ldlevild Pubs., ..-----, Whera Dc.ath Dclighta: Arlventu~ in CourtroO'C!I }Y;ditlnc.. NA Tori! Cc.•rd-&Ca:n.n 1
1965. 196 7.
Fllt!a of evidr.ncc connected vith the inVt',.11ti5~tion o! the 11sSMl!ination of Pre.tiid1:nt John ''H°"' JFK Dlcd," Nevnl.'eel., JO Decr.=b-er 1963, r.SS,
1. Kcr.nedv, \.N.P_3 196J--64, HOYn.rd, Anthony. Logistic. of the f\mer11l," E.,~uire, November 1968 1 P'P· ll9--122,
File.• of cvidt:nce connected .....1th the i.nv-eflti l'ltion of the Ml!aasinAtion of Prellidcnt John Bove, Irvin~. "On the deillth of Jnhn r, J::.ennedy, lo h111 Ste:o.dy Wor~: f-~•ry11 In the Pol1-
F. Kcnnc-dy. 2 vole. in reels microfiln., Washin(:tOO Kicrocard tdition11, 1967, t1Cll of Dctr<:Jc.rfttic RndicAlin!I!., Ne...- Yorli:: Harcourt, Brue~ " World, 19Mt,
Nne, Willia.ct:, 1 ed. Th~t fl:iy \I.1th God, ii~ York: HcGr.nt-Hill, 1965, ~ughen., Et<WN!t John, An tcho in the Silence," New-o;vrr.k, 2 Dcc•_...r l96J~ p. 52,
: "Foreign P<Ner: Satt>C Goals, Sterner Style;" Bu,.'lirle.lla ',./eek, JO Noveitber l96J, pp. 31-):Z, HVeQ Hyrdede Hven og Hv~rfor1" Frit D1U1mark, 2~4), )-5.
11
1 "Four Daya," !elevi.,ion, Jenuary 1964, pp. 27-33, ,..Hy;mnia Pott Revi11itcd, ~ ~17 Noveoher 1964: Th" J-0: HetllOritl Ia.~), pp. J7-'o5,
Four D"Y.'1-! The Histor:!r:al Record of the Del\th of President Kennedy, Ne"oi' York: American Hypothetical C-&3e: Letters, N11tionAl ReVl'!i.'ol, 17 Dcc.,aber 1965, pp. 515-516;, .14" J.anu..ary
Heritage Publillhing Co,, 1964. .. 1964, p • .'>6, . :~.. ---1.l:,·
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zin~, Nov~i:ober 1966, pp. 12-15, 78-8-4, 86, !drU, Soe'olard.. Te.d1uotihnl11. Prf!.niden 1cntady, DjU..rt•I I~, 196-4. •'
- . n;-;-L'nim~red Qu.e.11tioruo About President Kt:nnedy'll Ailf1a.!111inntion, Nev York! Award If It All Rappom•d A;a.in," Uitor 11.Ild r-ublUb.r, 21 ~r 19"4, ~· ,::19•·
Rook.a. 19&5.
' '
'"1mt.acur•; p0ftt-let111•d}' aooaasln•tioo. thrcu:t• of .ugnicl&.," Nevaveek, 23 Dec:elliher 1963,
p. 27. Kopkind, Andr-e'\.I, "The. Kennedy Mystery Re.opened," H~ St11te.11L'!.n 29 July 1966 p 163
Ill. Ksk'rt-: John Flt:;gt?rnld ~D?:dy, 1917 1963, Pre11!dent of the United States of J..oeriC11; Korolovsky,~Llljoa. "FanatiBlJ118 e11 VellA1101'eAg. Gondol11tok. II K~ne.dJ Gyill.011•~.. •
~r.UU =rocntion at the Univcni.ity of Kentucl:.7, L..exin5t5. Kentucky, Nov~r Hatte.re.rol," Vil;gos!l;J:j, 5, no, 2 (1964) 1 80-87,
t.he tvt!nty-fJ.fth, nineteen btmdred rnd sixtz three •. Lexington: Uni~rnity of Kri11tl, Zvonill!.ir, e.t 111. Kennedz: DrttNI u Dall11t1u, Zng.~b: Ir.dlfTi~U I:~• "St..-•rno.t",
lentucl:y, 1964. 1963,
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"Into tt>.e Archi~s, X-rflys and photographs of body of Jn.:." Thae, 11 No~Olber 1966, p. J],
r
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Rei1Mtbl11.tt 1 10, no. 12 (196J).
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Iory•h, Ahrni. J::uda ~dut n~. t'..oticCN, 1964. --- ! Lane, Hiirk. A Citir.cn'a Dissent: Hnr'r: Lane Re.plies. NC1.1 York: !loit, Rlnehnrt,
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r f':ennedy1 o crl!rw:! e. a faraa. Rio de JRne.iro: Ui, S,1g11, 1967,
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JeW:J.na, John B • .:r>1tl-cr the Ftm,.t1= nor the f1>lnthenrtcd, The To•1r L<!ndinlo'. to thl'. Pre11i-
dP.nt'11 ~ath 4Ild the Two Speec.hco: He Could Hot G1·1e. Auotin, Tcxa11: Pc0tr.'>crton
l "
Ruah to JudS?Cnt. N= York: Holt, Rineh11rt .m<.I Win.11ton, 1966,
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L.1ne ll«ya JIT death ia st:ill urrnolved l!!urdcr." ruhlialiers "'ecl.:11 22 Au!olilllt 1966, p, SR,
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Prcs11, 1-J&i, Dccer;,be.r 196J, pp. 1446--1447, ~.
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"Jn: could lose,' ~. 17 Ilece:.Ver 1')6l, pp. 94+, L.i!ttimer, Dr;, John K, "Fn5torl" in the l'.J.::ath of Pre111dt:nt Kennedy." JAHA, 24 October 1966,
"Jl'X de.th: a nev lnve11t!gation but ••• " U.S. Ne-'ol'!I lllld l."orld Report, 13 H11rch 1967, P• 16, Lauzon, A. Au Bone. AccUAea, une V1Ile.: D.dlM," Le K.'t'1'11r.ine Hncle-;;n;- HArch 1964,
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11 Wr..r-Tence., D, "Incredible Tragedy." U,5, lle...·n 11nd \..'orld Re.port, 2 Decenter l96J P• 104,
"JF1':• the. dc.ath 11nd t..'i.ti doubt. Ne1onwck 1 5 IA!ced.:ie.r 1966, PP• 25---26,
1
"J~: The Hurdcr .md th!". ttyth," Tillt'.!, 12 June 1964, pp. 44+, La-vre.nce, Lincoln (paeud~ >.'e['e We Controlle.d. Nev Hyde Pllrk, Nev Yor~: Univereity Bo-oU,
"JFK's H::ircler: SC!'oo"e-.J of Doubt," /kl1;;n.-ee.l, 6 April 1964 1 pp. 22-24, 1967.
Jo•clii111, Nic!c., "An /..a.?-ricim '!ragedy, 11 Philippines F'l't'.e Pre1111, 7 necas.be.r 1963, pp, 2-3 1 Lefever, Ernf!11t W. L'neertain Handate, BaltillQre.: John Ropr.ina Pre.1111 1 1967 1 1968,
75. Le.mer, Kll.X, "The World l111pact. Illustr11te.d London 11CY'll, 66, no, 1707 (1963),
Joeateo, Joacliic, Tue Bip!est Lit Ever Told. The Kennedy F'rnud ltlld H01oo' I helped E:r:po11e "The World Impact," Nev St11t!'!flm11n, 29 November 1963, P• 769,
I.E.• 4 vols, The author, 1968, ;;-ealie, Warren ... Da11M City Limit, '...,_N.p;; Gro1111emi '.._n.d:)
11
ROY Kennl'.dv l."M Killrd, The full Aep4lllog~, Lcrndoo: Peter Davney, 1968, Lettern to the Editor, :>ational Revl!.'V 1 31 ~ce~cr 1963,
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atl.tio-.\, Copenhagen: l'fyt Hordi8\:: ForlAg, 1965. · pp. 84-87.
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11
Look (J7 Novemher 1964: The JIT. Ht.'l:IQrinl I11~1..I<:!), P• ~5,
0
MarkJI, Stanley J. Hnder !Knit foul! The Coospin1cy thnt murder.id Prenident Kennedy: 975 Nationlll BroadClllltiug Cot:r;umy. The.re \,i'l\11 A Pre111dent. Rev Tork: Ltndca Hou.•, 1966.
que11tiD'll:I rnd lmllVCru. l.Qfl Angelea! Bureau of Internatlonnl R.e.lntious, 1967, "The Nations: Row- Sor-rCN"ful ll11d. Tiir.e., 29 Noved:rer 1963 1 pp, 38-)9,
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H.rvin, Richard. The f.enne<lz Cun1e. New York: Belmont Books, 1969 •.• Aogclefl Til':'es, 7 June 1968, pp. 1. 19.
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196), "New L1ght oo the A.a111l8sination: 11 aecret Agent 1s 11tory, 'U,s, Nev" trnd World P.t!port, 8
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j
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June 1964, pp, 38-39,
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I
HcDade, Thco.ao H, "The Aoaas1:1inatioo Industry: A Tentative O..ed:l1Bt of Publications on "Notea and cet=ent," Nev Yorker 7 Dece.lliber 1963, P• lr5.
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11
Keagher, Sylvia, "The Curious Testll=ay of Mr, Giv~." Texao O,:ioP-rver, 13 &uguat 1971, 0o the Far Right: The MYMllinntion, 11 Coi=orwe.111 1 27 DecCl!lber 196) 1 PP• 384-385.
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22. . Pantcr-Dovnce, Hollie, "Letter from London," Nev Yorkt:tr, 7 °'1ceW:ier 1963, pp. 196-198.
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~. July-August 1968, pp. 23-27, "Pathologist Sleuth Reopenn Kennedy Controversy; Suggceta JFK suffered frDIB AddJ.f!on, 11
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• . ' p.
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358
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"R.e11ction to the AanaasinRtion; excerpts fr010r ?'t'port11 to 0-.rl~t~:.n C.e~tury'• r.e-..-1 cor-
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" reBpondentR~" O.riat!im U::ntm, 80 (1963), 1616-1619,
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#ee Honray, Joae Luia, Rn...--o de orqufden~; 111 bell., flor lli\cioo11l de Gu11t~l11, ,, h 1 ~ri_.._
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del frl!n pretddente d.:i l(>ll f.nt11don l'nJdc.9 de ~rtcH l'lt:nor John f, l: .. nnrdI• GUJ1tit:-
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~o&geridge, Halcol•. "A Nev Kennedy Theory.:' New StateRm..'lll, 18 NOVl!l:::ber 1966, P• 735,
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~.,-. P, "Report froo Mexico an R.eaction to John Kennedy a Tl-aiP.c. Oo!.&i:h." G.itholic 1
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Bertord1 l:.oo&hl11n V•rla2i1Jt......._11... m .. r~ iaL<.
.;·u~
' ~ ·,·.
"Datil Tw.flische Spi!!l tA den !J!nned:y-Mord, Der Trld:. de11 W"cltkowrtvtf.,i.- Durch.chaw: und
Roy•ter, v. "'No t:i.Jr,e for col111Jctive guilt. 11 U,S, Nevti and World Report, 9 D<ecember H..it1Rgl"uck.t," Schlr..ni,.che nmdRch1tu, 15, no, .\9 (1963}. 1. 3,
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11
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21
20
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"Outdnor life and the D-:!ath of :i Pres i dent: lli lli•r.o Manchester Q13rges Outdo:>r Life - - - . \/hat Hsnn•r of l'.an: A Rloar.iphv of MIJ(, Chicago: Johnson Pub, Co, , 1968.
v1.th Hard ll:i1led Callousness Tovard n N~tional Tra~edy." Outdo:>r Life, Oct ober 1967, "Big Hunt for mystery killer. ii U. S. """" and llorld Report , 29 April 1968, pp. 6+.
Hanc..'lcster, Williaa, "lli Hi""' Hanchester'a <Nn Story , " Look, 4 April 1967 , pp. 62-66 . Blair, Clay . '!l1e St r nnr.e C.i.1 c of J .irt"• f :i rl F.ny . llev York: Bantt111 Books, 1969.
"Mru!chcater !look: ~ite Fl""11 and Error, a Story That Tiil:ari;er than Life or Death." !!!!!• Boutelle, P. ct 41. ~!urder In :-lc::chlo. lr;•P•) Hcr1t Publicatious , 1968 ,
7 April 196 7. pp . 22-23. Br<Nll, Hro. Julia, Pl e<.rc D<m 't llclp r.lnrify Hllrtin Luthe r fins.. TACT CoClml.ttee. ln,d.J
~a ghe r, Sylvia. "After t h e Bat t le, The Book." The Hinorttv of One , ' J une 1967 , PP• 25 , 2 7. C...ciero n , J . H. "Britt...h v1C\I on H.u tln Luther Ki nR. 11 Co=n~vcal, 26 April 1968, p . 161< .
"?irn, J:.ennedy llen!he~ Acco rd v ith Harper & RO>I and 111111am Hancioester. " Publlaheni lleekly , Clarke , J.11. Md J. 11, Soul e. "110\I Southern ChUdrrn felt nhou t King 's Death.'' Trnn•-Actian,
23 JanUBt'J 1967 , P• 222, October 1968 , pp. 35-40,
Hevina, Allm . " Cargantuan , Honest and Useful , but so ex.aaperating." Panorama Magazine , "Deepening °"'stery of Dr, King ' s As•~•nination," U,S. N..,,. and World ~port , 27 Hay
8 April 1% 7. pp. 2-3. 1966 , p . 1'l.
Pllmh, J.H. " TI1e P riva te Gri ef of Public Figures. " Sa t urday llevi<:V, 21 January 1967, pp, "Old R.oy !Ull Ki~gl" Sotlnnol Pevtcv, 23 April 1968, pp. 376+,
24-2.5 , "Doctor King, " llnt1cn1tl F.cvicv , 23 A,~ril 1968 , PP• 376+.
"Sequel.: Sp r e:a.ding Contrav~ray." ~. 6 January 1967, pp . 16- 17, "Doctor King'• a urdc r : noggtng quP• tiona ru:.. in, " U, S . NCW'll and llorld Rryon , 24 Karch 1969,
Sheraan , George. '"The Book of the Century . " This \leek Maguine , 7 January 196 7 , pp. 6-7, P• 13.
Suinn, Richard K.. "Note: Guilt and Depth lle;:iction t o the Death of a Pr esident .'' llubeno t&11 , H, "A.re you guilty of murdering Hartin Luthe r J:ing?" N«v Torlr. Ti!lra Magutr.R,
Poychol!n3.lyt ic Reviev , F~l 1966, pp . 81- 82. 9 June 1968, pp. 27-29+.
Tell!se , Cay. "TI1e Corry Papers.'' Eoaui ' l , June 196 7, pp. 2 4+ . Huie , 11,11. "Story of Ja.-cs E•rl P.ay ll!ld the plot t o uaua inau llart1" Luther ltiag." ~.
"To Hel p You f-"er the Record Strnigh• About that Book; Concerning The Death of • President, 26 Sovrrbcr 1968 , rp. 96-97+.
by \Im, Manchester.'' U, S. N L'VG :md llorld Report, 6 February 1967 , pp . 66-67. Huie , 11. B. et al. "lih y JaelCs Earl Hay 1-brdertd Dr. King , " .!::22!!,. 15 April 1969 , pp.
TolZ>&lin, Nicholss. "Jua t Read the Neve, Hr. Manchester. 11 :icv Stateamllll , 21 April 1967 , 102- 104 .
Pl'• 547-548. " Jaceo R.y: 111;mhunt enda but ry8terien ret::.iin." U, s . Ntva and llo rld Repo rt, 2 4 June 196 8,
Tuchaann, Ssrbn u II. "TI1e Historian's Opportunity, " Sa t urdav lleviev, 25 February 1967, PP• )lo-36,
PP· 21, 31, n. "King 1a the rt.111 , oh , Lord," S ~vnve~'k , 15 Ap ril 1968, pp , 34-38.
Van C'-eldcr , l.avTcnce, The Untold Story: vhy the Kennedvs lost the Book Battle. llev 'l'.orl<: Loanx , Louio, Tn Kill a Bl •ck l'on. Lon A.~&cl t1J: llollt'Vay Rouae, 1968.
Av a-d Boolta, 1~67. "l"..an in Rooo 5.'' .!..!!!!:., 12 A;- ril 19 611, p. 21.
"\/here v as O' Doanell?" ~. 17 Fcbroacy 1967, p. 78, "H.:irtin Luther Kinp, and the r ir.h t to knO'J , " A..'1'! ric• , 22 Harch 196'i , p. 323 .
' 'Widow vs, author; concerning II, Manchester's Death o f a President.'' Senior Scholastic:: , "No tes and Cor::oent .'' ! le-J Yo r ker, 13 April 19~ 35-37,
6 January 1967, p. 16. O'lcary , J. "Greatest !!l'l:ihunt in lav enfor cc1>Cnt history . " Rendcr' n Discot , Auguat, 1968,
I/U la , Cary. "Kmlcheater's Uphea vtl." Natlan.d CAcholic R"Porter , 29 Hsrch 196 7, p. 10. pp. 63-69 .
Wyndha, Franeli. "HD:nc::heater and the Kennedya, 11 Sundav Hoes , 15 January 1967 , p. 10, ::Raising a vhirlvind; Ray's plea o f guilty ," !!!::!5., 21 Xarch 1969, pp. 16-17.
Reacticns to t he slaying of H.> r tin Luther King; aympoaium," ~. April 1968 , pp.
534-536.
l, LTIHlON BA.INtS JOHNSON Turne r, II, " Some disturb i ng parnllels . " ~. 25 January 1969.
Watters , P, e t al. "Beale Stree t and points North , " Hat ion 22 April 196 8, pp. 529-535,
''\/here is Jal!'Cs Earl Ray?" Nc-Jsi:eck , 29 Ap ril 1968 p:-zr:-•
"'Croving Rift of UIJ and Kennedy! Behind the Furor over a Book, Conce rning the Death of "I.no killed King?" ~. 22 April 1968, pp. 31:33, ·
a&tre.si~cnt ., by II•. ~ch•ter," U.S. N~ and llorld Report , 2 J anuary 1967, "llho Killed King?" Tine , 26 April 1968, pp . 20-21.
pp. 22-27. "Widening Search . " ~ . 19 April 1968 , p. 20 ,
aley, J. Evett.s. A Texan Loolu; at Lyndon: A. Study in lllesitimate Power. Canyon, Tern: "llillard, Galt, P.ay?'l'l""!iationa l Reviev, 7 Kay 1968 , p. 4 32.
P&l.o lll:ro Preas, 1964, lloodbury, R, "~urder clu es: hand prints, a car chas • and a ailly smile.'' .!:!ll,. 19 April
JoachiL The C""e Agdnat Lvndon B. Johnsoo in the Assasainatioo of Pres ident 1968, pp. 40- 40A
''Yur later : honors fo r Dr, King; violence, too , " U. S. Scvs and \lorld Report , 14 April
-. ~· (ll•P•J The author, 1967. 2 vola ,
llle 03rk Side of Lvndoa B. Johcson. London: Petl! r Dmtnay, 1968.
L.». Meftaa.i;e to the Caogn!ao: Addreas delivered be f ore a·joint aeaaion of the
1969, p. 8.
•
. dyAsussinatloo : n!ligiouo overtones." 0 1rt.stim Today, 21 June 1968 , P• 39.
~ ennedy C..dl d&l;J' ." Oln 3 ttan Ce:ntuq , 27 IU.rdl 1968 0 l'I'· 380+.
E ct-ra Thank l'at ioo for l'ravtdbig thea 111.th Stn:ngtb and !!ope.• llew York Tt.e.. 16 JUDlt
. 1968, PP · 1, 34 .
Peter. "Suspe<:t ulll!d c.ala mid lucid •• • Sirhan describes h1-elf as J ordanl.8> bom
1.a Jerua.Un.." i;.,., Yorlr: Times , 6 June 1968 , pp. 1 , 21.
'"li.l~ a father." ~. 21 Han:h 1969, p . 17.
::•ltlng the oath." !'l"""llveek, 2S August 1969 , p. 42.
.,Tea t cue; reeronse.s to rsyc:holoJtical tu ta ." H"""""ek, 7 Aprll 1969, pp. 94-!IS.
'Three Aa sueinations ." Hinor ltv o ( One , 10 , no. 9 (1968) U-16 0
"Toward t.he Ga.o O>Allll>tr. " ~. 2 Hay 19&9, p. 19 . '
TCW11.11end , Dorothy. "llitne•s Rq>ar:a Cirl uld 'lie Sho t Hi•' . " Loo Angell!• Thou , 6 JUDA
1968 , p . 11.
1..uibert, T-. '"l'reaide:nt aeta Sund.n • dMY fo r 111oou:aing.." Loll Anseles Tl""", 7 J une 1968,
i.-n.ic:e, D. :'l11.aa1ag \OOrd; reprlat~ • t:.s·. 1'""1> and World !!eport, 17 June 1968, p. 1.00. "Trag e dy in Los Angeles." ~. 15 J1S1e 1968, p. 763.
~aans of the t.=>.edy tragedy,• U.S . IOewe mid llorld Repon , 17 J\Dt! 1968, PP• 37-38. "U. S, guilt in Aaeaseinations , the talk IWld the f a cta." U,S, N...,,. and Vorld R"J?Ort,
24 J une 1968, p. 37 .
"Unanswered quatiaiu ; acCUl5ed -..rdcrer caugtit.• N..,..,_et . 24 Juna 19611, pp. lH.
United Preae International . An• u• fn•tton: Robert r, K.f!nn~dr . 191..,_JQbl\. - T<"rt 1
eo..1. . Ed.>catian Corp ., 1968.
....
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C T I A NEWSLETTER
COMMITIEE TO INVESTIGATE ASSASSINATIONS
1520 16th Street, N .W., Suite 101
Washington , D.C. 20036
(202) 232-1152
Fall, 1 9 73
J.F.K.
A movie has been made out of Mark Lane ' s and Don Freed ' s
book Executive Action, starring Burt Lancaster and Robert
Ryan . The flick is part fact and part fiction . It is due
for release in November; possibly its premier will be held
in Washington on November 22nd, though its producers are
hoping to have i t open in Dallas .
.R.F.K.
*****
Along with almost everything else, the Watergate has
affecte? the several assassination investigations. Its
general· effect has cut tw6 ways: People are less inclined to
believe what the government tells them and more inclined to
believe that "the government is capable of almost anything;"
conversely it has turned off millions qf Americans with respect
to politics in any way, shape, or form; this in turn, means
less interest in· solving political murders.
r
Page Five
*****
The Committee is still basically unfunded. We have
enough for rent, telephone and postage, but that's about
all. If any of you can spare a few dollars you can be
assured that they will be put to good use. Four contribution
blanks are enclosed; please distribute them to interested
persons. If you can spare more than a few dollars, we might
even be able to afford to hire a trained investigator to
follow some of the myriad leads smoldering away in our files.
From "The Last Days of the President" by Leo Janos, The .Atlantic,
July, 1973:
(Upon inquiry, Ramsey Clark has denied that any such request was
made of him, pointing out that he did not become Attorney General
* * * * *
"Rethinking the Unthinkable': - Dan Rather, CBS News First Line
Report, August 10, 1973:
Lee Harvey Oswald, the man who shot President Kennedy: Did he ever
of Robert Kennedy, and James E<itr 1 Ray, the killer of Martin Luther
King, and Arthur Bremer, the man who shot. George Wallace? Did
them know any of these people? If so, how and how well? Under
fai from normal. These are not normal times. Among people on
the street, among people far removed from the elite strata of
that this reporter was in Dallas when Kennedy was shot, followed
closely th.e Warren investigation, and conducted for CBS News and
and ever since, this reporter had defended the Warren Commission
reporter and to others, that the Warren Corrunission may have made
was asked then, why could not the investigation be open-ended? Why
son, Chief Justice Warren and the Kennedy family all decided that
it was best for the country and for the case to end the warren corn-
didn't know then that President Johnson was never finally, abso-
vinced. Now the old sores, the old doubts, the old questions and
some new ones are being reopened: Oswald's involvement with anti-
Castro Cubans; what was supposed to have been his mystery appearance
in Mexico city; the possibility of contacts with people who had CIA
allegations, . and downright rumors that sweep through and boggle the
minds of people who try to think straight about what has happened.
of the reason people who think about it might talk about it l:ittle.
' '
Page Jfine
all those old.doubts and suspicions. But fear of the truth is not
. questions about characters such as Hunt· and Liddy and their Cuban
contacts and whether they had at any time a.ny connection with
.,
. _ ..Si.r.r...
.. -,
0.r 1
Committee to Investigate Assassinations
1520 16th Street, N.W., Suite 101
Washington, D. c. 20036
Dear Sir:
Enclosed please find $15 for one reservation (or $~- for
reservations) for your conference at Georgetown University
in Washington on November 23rd and 24th, 1973.
Name
Enclosed: $ ~~~~~-
Dear Sir:
Name
Enclosed: $ ~~~-
REPRODUCED AT "!HE NATIONAL ARCHIVES
ROUTING SLIP I
Ac rv " ' /r
£.~r1s .Ltvc
e<;:,lcr ':rduP 1
~!L'h
~;;:::.::t~J lr:1:: a;::~;;;at~
c:·r.r.;;r;:'.i:~ a;;!l
c~:;::~5ili::::i.t!~n
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Sarah K. Hall
S?,S/05
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8 April 1971
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the photographs, and I asked how he would use them. He said
he did not know and finally agreed that for the time being he
would not press his request. I then returned their check for
$20. 00. The whole meeting was extremely friendly and they
thanked us for our response.
4. Mr.· Dqoley; .CI Staff, who was with me, said that,
from the names they gave as being of interest t.o them, they
appeared to be following down some of the same old tracks
that the FBI had thoroughly investigated and found to be
unprofitable. They did say, however, that the·y expected to
stir the pot in due course.
.
..
,
..i., .-. ~-.
\...~ -
·~ • ';.1 CENTER Dete. -•a'S!!a-seeeif!.it-
ltem No._,_ _ __
.
. NE-WS SERVICE
•, , ~'
Ref. No~ ---"9-.-.-· - .'
DISTRIBUTION II
~- .
The attached is from today's Star.
OandA ..
· :.rt:'\.· .,..,,,Uc
o':.Wmdd
to
It - ·~~· die Amerio
just simply releue this lnformeti
.I
· ~
-A: It's a.lways po!>::iNe; ar.d there ·and 6et to tbe bottom al the- ma~ d,.ce a.
Is con!i<ierab!!' · ev id r.n ~ e which is lorall? . " . ..
,·. :1
'U.S. Integrity" wider lock and key in the Nati~maJ
Archives today which will remain
dassificJ until the year 2039 unless it
. . .., . .
·· A: The Committee to Invntipte AasaS!
; nations has urged through the years that a
. •.. . .. .~ .. ·..
Is declassified by the various govern-' · j of the Information with respect to the Jot
. i'
Is at Stake men~ agencies, primarily the FBI
and the CIA. In addition to that, there
are litt:r.:.Jly ~~m:~:>.t"'15 of rlocL!Itl2:lts
· ·Kennedy assassiftatiOn be made public. ·•n
tdriclaJ iolvrioh is that Lee ltan.-ej Cswa
was a lone nut .killer and that there were 1
that the CIA did not ~i1•e to the War- .other peopte involved and there were t
·1
I
I
.In JFK Probe'·: ren Commilsioµ and did not go tc the
National Archives which h:n-e never
been made public. A number ot free-
lntemadonal .ramifications. And therefor
lalcing that story as IOIPl!l ml\kes It ctifflct
for a lawyer to 1ee why they lhouJd cov.
lenwint Fensterwotd Jr.• o Woshin§- dom of information 5Uirs ha,·e result· 1
anything. However•.tbere ls thf1 lntense d
I ton lowyer who represented Jomes
McCord during Wotergote and James
ed in declassification of a pun of this Ii.r e ao the part of aovernm~nt to keep it e,
I Earl Ray. convicted of killing Dr. Mortin
material, yet we know from the index·
they gh:e us that they have a ·m ass ~ ·
a-et. and I thin\'. in any lawsuit where ff
have this sort cl inan1a for locking the e1
Litfter King Jr., heods tfte ~mittee to
l""'tigote Asscminations, o group Of
material. which has De\'er been made
· public. I
dence up you create the SUSl>icion that then
more there. A.."'d I don't think anybody at tl
phule eilizeiu tllet has investigated :Um~ out1(de the 1ovemm«it lmow1 -~
the sloyings of President John F. K4!nne- Q: Apart from mat~rl11J t'14t might .. . happened.to .Jobta Kennedy. I thin~ the co
4y ond others. He was inter.iewed br l prove distasteful or hurtful to the " ,,.areestoaal committee. in time will find out.
·1
•1 .
WosltingtOll Star Stoff 'Writer MU:hoel J. Kenned:.· family, the JFK autopsy
Satchell. . . . .. ·.i photographs lor,. ex11.mple, is tbere.. ..·· ~·~·Q .. · ~ ·-n ~~~ ~ ~n u ~he~ since
. I . "7t ?!---
other evidence or do .re" feel there'• . : "~~tioa. · Wby~bisfi"a~~?_. ,....
Q: The Committee to Investigate otber material undel" lock and key '..'. . • ·,. · ·: .- · . · :.
i
i Assassinations has lone been sus-- t.'1at r:ould shed signi.!Jcant light oa A. Jt I bnt teally a question ol ~pe:!t:
pected by &ame people of being some- the assassinations? . his 1trave. I kno• the subject II frequen!
. • I
bow conn«ted with the CIA and you ~ · . talked -about hi tenm limllar tc, that. l thi
.' .J yourseU being label«/ possibly a CIA A: w~u. ce-rtainly from r'vimne· the that the Integrity of our whole Political pr<
.~ ·' agent or CIA plant. M you ·in fact a index o: the withheld material wbic~ •h~Y. ess ls probably at stake beca~ whether t
OA agent al any sort? . have been forced to supply to varlotJS district Warren Commission •as right -or. wrong
I • courts, you get the impression that much think that rhe American people - and t
· Fenste~d: No, rm a full-time yery vital information is being withheld. JM)ll 9 bNr this out - have a great doubt as
i
. •''
IH'}'er. Neither I n~r my ~nrtner . Again, I say. without knowing what that whether O:JWaJd was properly investiratf
have ever been nffi.hated wit~ the information i9, it'1 hard to say where Ws 'Ibey have a doubt as to whether Olwlild w
CIA or wo!ked for the CIA either · suing to point. . . · ' · . . · · ·a lone nut kill.er. And until their-doubts c
with or without pay in any way, . . . . . . ..,. · . , " : be satisfied, .J think the integrity of the s:
. . j
I
Iha~ or form. 1 ha\'e n~ idea where Q: Can you hazard•• ped as to 1FIJat they tetn and the credibilltY, o1 ·tbe aovernment
' the rumor startcl. I do_n t know any- .Dligbtba•-e? . . · · · · \lerymuchweakened. . . . . , ·
one that knows anything abour. my . \. . . . ., · ~- · '
·j
history that bas ever made sue~ an A; No, I ~·t. (can onJy tell~ at · O: Wby b~ ll tahn U .yeah, tor o.ian
90 far
a~usatlon . On the con~erse side, the CIA is concerned 8 large part of the with· . to becotne.allfdally bwolv~ in UU.' · ·
fomg back to the early tiOs when [ held testimony involftS a trip Lee Harvey · · ··
worked for _the Sena~e as counll~I for Oswald made to Mexico ju st tmmee:a.t~ly A: Well, It's a number of reasons. One
one o~ th~tr comrr.mees, I d1~ an prior to L'le assMsir.ation. No one in the !"'J~ 11-.ir.Jt the metnberihip of the " 'a1Tell Cornn
invesllgation on the CIA and since lie knows what this trir was all about. E:~ we sion Itself c<tnteined so. m '.l?lY outstand
th.e n I ~ave represt;nted a number cf do know that the CIA has been rarficuhrl~ J'COJ'~ that it is di!fictJlt to believe ttnt '.
clienrt m Cfl:qes aga!11st the ~IA to t he scnsirive with rcspe!:t to that. We do ~n.;iw v•ha.tever reason they would not Krioosly :
ext~nt that _if ~ere s any e~"l_dcnc~ at that there \!'ere CIA cameras taking pictures to give the puhli.: a full ·a~wer. There'!
·l all. J! all po:.nts m the other directHin. or pecplc gd ng in and out of the Cuban anl.l great r.eluctance to ctisb!heve people Ii
... ~ · Q: Is It pa$6ible that the CIA or the Soviet embassies and they took a number of Justice Wamm and Sen. Russen. Secondb
'FIJI' ha." evidence Jocked sway som e- , pictures of a man they labeled Lee Harvey think until Watergate JM!f'1''.e t~nded to d
\l-:':t ' .""C r
:..: 1 C r•u .. : -·1 ·.f C!e \o(; _! .:: ··r · Oswal:1.
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From !oak.in ~ at hirr.. be i:; oh·:i Nt~ I!' be! i~vc that !il t' i C" '!.'ff:~::"1' :": - ., ,--.i ~'r:i . ~··
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by Senator Long of Missouri vas investigating invasions of' privacy
Committee 's intention to call him. A man who -was employed by Maheu
'
.t i.n .1954-55 vas informed that he would be called to testify about his
activities during that :period. He was an employee of' AID in 1966.
~ Internal Security Division of the Department of .Justice learned
Counsel.
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n. FENSTERWALD
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UNITED STATES SENATE ~
NAME: APP .
LAST FIRST & MIDDLE SEX MCE AGE ALIAS OR OTHER I NFOR~IATION
- Aguero
Alba
Hector
Cu ban 37
Indio l\likoyan
Quarito
ish ' . . ..
Martin M Americ a n Arrested l\liami 11/14/6 7
-:> ~ "- .... . . .
- Casey
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Gonzalez Ernesto Cuban Miami Police BC1#62443 i.,..,....~.-i•" .
FBI #454-207-A \
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Gonzalez Obregon, Francisco Ii! Cuban Also known as T. Gonzalez"
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- Gonzalez 11igoyo, Vincenter M Cuban s.::.rtured Cuba Aug. 1967 t:.;;{1'·
11 11
Hall Loran Eugene M American 40- Lorenzo Pascillo
ish
-Hargraves Roy Jy[ American
11
---Hemming, Gerry Patrick M American 30- "Gerry Patrick
;.r...r--r
40
~'t~~:<.
Hernandez Celso M. M Cuban
1·'J.l;l..~~;-
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-Hernandez Placed M Cuban Arrested Cubo. Aug. 1967 ? r--·
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-Hernandez Victor Dominator 1! Cuban Arrested Nev: Orleans 1963
--11artinez
Jack
Jorge Soto M
American
Cuban
ish
25- Nati\re of i\'est 1/irginia
45
iforked at Fountainblenu
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..,..._, 1lasferrer Rolando Latin
11 11
El Tigre -No nan1e key f '
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Matthews Russell D. i\! American 50- Gambler
ish ~·
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october 2, 1970
Best regard•,
• • i
Dear ARI
Since writing the above, I have discovered t1J00 leads in your general
area which 1 am hopeful ycu ir.ay be able to check out •
..
(1) There ~a a ir..an na~ed Christopher Kantianis, 214 Lo~ Hill
Street, Springfield, tlaosachusetts, this u.an was Assistant to Attorney -
General Robett F. Kennedy and is alleged to kr.ow why Robert Kennedy
would ir.akc no efforc to fine out wbo killed his brother.
(%) I am enclosing a letter fro~ a fellow investigator, Howard
Verb of San Francisco, to aoA$ian refugee la\.T)'er in Littleton,
Nev Hai:tpsbire. The letter is somewhat self-explanatory. You DO
doubt know that Geor~e De Mohreoschildt was a key fi gure in the
CIA operation in the Caribbean area. This Asian gentlen.an was with
George De liohrenschildt when news ca.me of JFK's death. lie c.ay have
considerable infonu&tion to supply if you c.an get him to talk.
BF:jb
cc: Reading file
I
I
TfiCFc are otlle~ angles thatf
14 . ·------·- --- beg questions in the \VatTen·
CornmisSion report. OSwald wns
givc1i lhe opportunity lo enjoy
Stilf another intriguing bil of'
infol'n1ation which n1ay fit info
:1 pntlcrn. According lo \Varren
Commission Exhibit No. !O·IO,
lcuba Conunittee. 'fhe inference
to be drawn \vas that he vranled
lo show credenlials teslifying to
ROOSEVELT one or lhe most prized aparl- Dr. Herminio Porlell-Vi/a of pro·Con1n1unist leanings. \Ve 'are
fCu11ti11ttt;cl"fro111, 11uµc 011«) 111cnts ·in il'Iinsk during his slay. •IHO Conncelicul Jive., N. \\'., informed by the Warren Com-
1
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\Vnrrcn Conunission slates 11 ·nt
I !e also was given an extra
i11c.:01ne ::1111ounti11g lo 700 rubles
Woshinglon, advised llml on!'
!Hay l:l, 1904, he had received a,
mission report !hat Oswald
visiled 1bolh lhe Russian and !he
or ,$70 " month lhal snpposedly coded n1e.ssage frorn Bil un.i Cuban e1nbassy while ·he \Vas in
there \\'as no inle!Jigence train- came from l11e ,Hussian !led k~o~vn source wilhin Cuba per-' lvlexico City and sought un-
ing scl1pol ir;
Minsk during the Cross. Ho\vever, in notes nuu!c lau11ng to . Oswald's relations suceessfully lo go lo Cuba.,
period of Oswald's stay in that during his. relurn trip, Oswald with two Cuban ambassadors Classified i\'laierial
city between January of 1960 slale(I llial lhe 'subsidy given while he was in Moscow. But lhe \Varren Con1mission
him came from !he KGB and According lo the n1e1norandurn only discloses information con·
<ind June 10G2. However, accord-
was in con1pensatio11 for having' given Porlell-Vila, the files cerning !he first day of Os-
ing lo a n1crhorandun1 fro1n lhe. "clc11ounced" lhe U.S.A. concerning these allged contacts wald's f i v.e ·day sojourn in
Cenlral Intelligence A g e 11 c y Subscribers lo the ConHnunist by Os\valcl were turned over lo Mexico between Sept. 27 and
I \\1:irrcn Co1n1nission exhibit conspiracy theory spcculaic Lhal Pidcl Castro aud his brother October 21 [963. To know 1nore1
No. 27J3), a Soviet defector ·had !he .subsidy given Oswald could just 1.wo days after the assassi- 1one would have· lo exa1nine
rcJ~ll:led lhal an inlelligence in facL have been n gift lied into nation of President Kennedy. about 30 classified docun1cnts in
l.ra1n111g school was in existence his · recr,uihncnl ;::is a Soviet .Dead :Bud Beached the' Nalional Arcliives \vhich
during 1947, The 1nc1nora11dun1 agent. 'Phere is also' lhe fact The Conunitlec to Tnvcstigale µerlain in sonic way lo Os-
added llwt the continued exist- that Oswa!d 1s Russian wife, Assassinnlions \Vould like rnore \Vald's trip lo Mexico. 1\lea11-
ence of this installation !uis noL who111 he met and marl'ied in inf?nnalion on this but, 1nys- 1v,hile, lbe ClA is lrylng lo ,run
hee?n' · subse'quenlly 1nc11lloned rviii:isk, had an uncle who was a lcriously, efforts lo obtain cor- down lhc backgrounds of the
eohfinned or corroborated bY. t\GB•agenl. r o. ~.or a tin g do cu1ncntary persons who were on the ·sarne
Cel1tra.I lnlelligei;ce Ag en c y. . Dinry POstclaled . evidence have reached 'I dead bus as Oswald on his trip lo
sources. Another [act which arouses end. On June 4 1964 FBI i\'lexi~o. They al'e B!so trying lo
'fhus, ns far ns our gover11- suspicion is lhe disclosure by DireC!or ,J. Edgar ~loove1; wrote/ contact . so 111 e Cubans who
1nCn~'s. lop foreign inlclliget1cc· l!Jc \Vnrren Co1n1hissi011 report tl1~ \\7arrcn Con1n1ission that stayed al !he holel in 'Mexico
1~:ip1cn!1g r:1gm1cy is concerncd,j tlrnl Oswald postdated lhe en· !he Cenlral Intelligence Agency t;;iLy where Os\vald was regis-
lherc JS no positive evidence tries itr his clial'y of experiences lwd· concluded that lhe refer- tered.
!lint !he intelligence school was 1 dul'ing his slny in ivloscow. I-Ie I cnc·e to "Osvaldo'' in the tnerno Will lhe Committee lo ln-
either abandoned or relocated.I did not even s.larl l1is diary until · ru.rnisbect lbe agency by ,Porlell- vestignlc Assassinations ever
Perh:ips, ll1c school rnerely he \\'as in IVIinSk. So1ne people V1la refcned to Oswaldo Dor- solve !he myslery of President
went underground and Ccnt.ral' wonder could this n1ea11 tliaf. ticos, president of Cuba rather Kennedy's violent and unti1nely
!nlclligcnce A g c n c y sources OS\Vald was ordered to· prepare than lo Lee Harvey Oswald. end? Or, for that n1atter find
were uhablc lo co11Iin11 its I he diary as a cover? CIA Therefore, Hoorer inforrned the whal forces "'ere behind ' the
existence. t'Csearchers note that there are con1:nission, the govern111ent murders of Marlin Luther King
Speculation Unusicd slate111enls in his clinry that are considered "the 1nessage con- and Robert F. Kenncc!y 1 which
\Vhalever Lhe explnnalibn 1 !he ve!'y crilical of Ll\c Soviet . laiued no infonnation of signifi- ·also are within its scope of
Jl!'iValti CIA's sleuths do not system, the Soviet bureaucracy · cance and it \vas destroyed. 11 interest?
believe lhal lhc \\rarrcn Corn- Hnd Co1n1nu11isn1 generally. \Vas ; Hesearchcrs al !.he private Fensterwald is opLiinisLic be-
1nissio11's slalcn1cnls, s i in p I y lhe diary incant lo be found and CIA would lend not so easily lo cause "all the t.ime new pieces
c.lcriying I.lie cxisll•nce of the rend by U,.S. goverrunent inves- i disrniss the coded n1essage! of infonnation turn up.JJ He
intdJJigcncc training school dur- ligalors lo lhrow them off the I received by Portell-Vila as feels the work of his Committee
ing 'the ti1nc Oswnld wns in scent? J hav!ng no significance. is in1portant "because thei·e
!Vli11sk, were justified. The co1n- F1nall1, there is Oswald's Jrip n1ay be. n1any 1nore · political
n1isSion's :tlliludc only has lo Mexico which to this day assassinations if the earlier
scrycd lo increase spcculalionf reinatns a n1ajor inponderable. ones arc not solved." J-le hopes
U1nL .Oswald n1ighl hnvc had/. Oswald carried with him lo lhal there will be a new o[ficial
~0111c conncclion with the. inlcl- Mexico City lhe proof of his trip investigation of the assassina-
ligCncc school, p~1rticuh1rJyi lo. Soviet Russia and of his Jefl- ~ion of ·,John F. Kennedy either
since, I.he co111n1issiou acltnils~ w1~1g. netivHies including "street a1 a courlroorn or by another
that !his is the least-known aviation" activities and 1118111_ con1111ission or a Congressional
i1criod of his life. bcrshio in the .Wair 1PJay for cornn1itt.ee.
July l, 1974
CC: Hello.
CC: Yeah.
BF: £or a while, but r was pretty green back in th,yse days·
CC: So was I.
CC: Um mmm.
CC: Um mmm.
BF: I have read Burnstein and Woodward and other people ,_,c;nd
went in with the President and spent the evening witrh him.
I J ~ • • ~
that they had the right guy, that there were not others
and that they seal off his premises and car and anything else
that they found, and that they put someone with him in the
repeat where the guy get assassinated and they never find out
his apartment
CC: Um mmm.
CC: Um mm.
CC: Yeap. They goofed. The FBI goofed, and that's what Mark
BF: In other words, the fact is that they did leave and then
CC: Yeap,
Page 2
BF: .Um mm. Could you tell me what your conversation with Hunt
BF: Um mmm.
anything else.
CC: I tried like hell to explain to them the facts and show them
the logs and the timing and the affidavit from the FBI and
Page 3
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CC: I do not.
CC: No. I was out. That ·was after the Woodward and Burnstein's
BF: Is there anybody else that you can think of that might
CC: That's the only guy I ever dealt with on it, so.
CC: Okay.
CC: Bye.
Page 4
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January 23, 1970
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Kind regards,
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Mr. Jules Striso
540 Tuckahoe Road
Yoru:ers, New York
·.·
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Sincerely yours,
:·:'.'
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BELLER VOLZ COMPANY.
REAL ESTATE AND INSUR.:..NCE
170 EAST 8 I" STREET
NEW YORK, N. Y. 10028
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Y•nkers, ~·.: . .l •
J3J1U3.l~~l 13 1 197 0
Thank you very much for your recent· letter and its
.co'.:.tents. I am intrigued by your dedicatio;-. to the uncevering
·of a rr1uch needed 1I1~LTi-: in tl1e United States.
after :·1:.;;r meeti~~g ··,·:itl1 t-:orpel in I~ei,·l York Cit:y Jcol 1:af].2.r~ v:as :'.".o·.-::..::
into a :;1a.:{ir.1u8 security prison. i.:y sources ~ell r..e t~:.a-: t!l.e r..o-·te
wa3 r!orpel inspired through the t~e concerned peofl3· I assu~e
~/Ou tl'is. t ':ie coulC. h?..'re brought i t of:: ·,·:i thou t a11y legal re c1~i::-.i:-.~ ti:
etc. It too~c Quite a good deal of corl.vincir~g "to E:et Joel i:·(c.~13.:-_ ·
to go along with the deal as he is scared to ~ove out of the j~il.
Kaplan 11olds 011e of· tl:e ke:,rs to the J ,p .1\:. assa·ssinz.. tio·r.
·Which Vi ill lead to the grou11 v1f10 11G."'ie rur1 +_hem b~i tl·le string.
Then we r.avGa big ;:ians frien:iship with Del Vi ebb, Louis ?.•sens teil
who is a no god damned good anti American if there every vias or:e
.' .y,e,'.!···
rlcfo1 ... te~l ~rc:.l~::~- :-.1[;0. ::Jr:l ~d·e::.:r., t11·~ L:.ts \Te~os. fl:,rc:-ttc}1er,
F:-3.I'\'in Do!L1~r.::.;;.t1 1:-:hic~ sf,ottld 118\re L_;ot-::0:1 DotlLl:.}:'.3 out ar1c.1 2. cour.-lc
of niore ,, hits n
C0 •• 1c
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J. ;.H ~·n~r
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Politically· I care nietrier for the rie3ht v1i1:g o:c the
left wing. I lOt very close ~o ~alccl~ ~ prior to his death
and fou~1tl that i:1e q:as de.fir-1i tely accepti::-~~ r..oriEj' fron: Oltr er1eoies
as was the so called ~lack Saint ~}10 just wns honoeretl with a
school holiday. ?he Queen of the F.B.I.'s has sorae rather
interestinE; r:laterial \'1[lic!1 ari::::i.rently is "11.0t go.:.1:s to be !."'ele::..sed
a la Justice ~arren 2039. I personally do not give a GD v1ho
o-ets l'ur~lt o..,,...
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and can be pro ren. You apparentl~r ha.ire sor.le af::':::ction for the
1
I(er:nedy fai:iil;)· f'ia"ring met tl1e old ::12.n in th.e liquo1" biz I ce..r1~ot
she.re ar1y affectio:1 11or is rr:y rnooci rigfltv:ing ••. just plo..i::--:. "t!."'utr._.
I '\Villf! rie1ter be a:.1e to r.s.tionaliz2 the ::iurder o~ a F:-esid.ei-.. t
on
You use the CIA iri your :t=R rel2ases ::t.:"ld i ~ :i:2.j' be par·u.do:-:i::.al
as the root of all of oui~ proCler.:s, massiv~e corruption ste:-:s fror;i
. 1 1 . . ri - I\ +~on agenG -l- l~
. c -l-h
~au~ eas~ ASla Glsa~~ears
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our ~nca~~ro_ ea u • ~· h• rl
i11to Red Chino.. to s·.·1ing a m.assiVe narco-:;ics deal .... rr!urders of ........
nationals other than u. S. A· ( at least we should keep cur
official f.;urder offici~l inc. at home. Assassination ;rganizztions
gone out of con-;rol ...... ;;.11 I ca~ say is that I st". oo.l the t,·.;ni te
House and t11e C .I .A. or1ce ar.. U Defore I die I \·1ill do it a_so..iri
but more e:fective1::,.~ aT1d o~.:1l;I 'Ni t~'1 the God 1 s l:.o:· . .::st -trL~"':i1 I
my cou::1-:ry. I r:.ovr l1a11e a se"'.ren year old sari v1:b. o is n1,:,r 0::1ly life
and conceri1• I a:n :io lor1ge1-- proud o:f being a citizen of -this
country al"ld I do!l' t reall~r care v1ha t hdpper1G. I:' my life is
necessary to fiL;I'it cor;:n:.unism ir.. tf1 1~ st1--eets £:0;ne da;:,1 I \·:ill lay· i-t
on ~1e line~ If tho people I used to l~now go the route of Fascism
I ~ill fight the same battle in the 3treets against tl1e~1.
Just thougr1t of sometl'!ing '' 2039 vie are ~}?::..d I v;ant to l~r:.o•:: r.:Jvi, 11
not '\'1hat vie al1--ead~,r knov1 J:ut ·tJ:at the:)' are soine decent a:-1d honest
uncor·rputed 1nGn in the I\Io. ti on ••••• i Viand.er if it is v1ort!i. the
effort ?
Respectfull.,, · ·
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/ ~ules Striso
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OVER
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Our arrangement had Jim Nick less working fn the fie Id while
I handled the necessary contacts ln New Yark Cfty. Jim became
fntlmatc with al I of the people who were Involved fn the Say of
- Pigs. Through our joint communication I was made completely
- aware of the complete iimlng of Piqs. I was also aware of the
!:
tragic f~cts of I ife whfch doomed nplgs" before rt even started.
Ultimately many of those involved became aware of what was done
-~ to them and they became extremely bitter. The motlvatfonaJ
fmpl !cations are wel I kno'H~_to you and need not be developed. In
~ freely moving through every major staging area Jim Nitkless met
' all of the people who are Involved In your story. There Is little
' question that he could put his finger on any one of the people.
i who are necessary to the success .of your Investigation.
;
' V/hlle cooperating wfth Jim Nickless I used him to research.
,
:~ .another C.I.A. abortion which by strange coincidence runs right
Into your lnvesti gatfon fn New Orleans. I had personal contact
~
! with a number of Individuals who were Involved in the J M.
;
Kaplan F11nd C.I.A. front and conduit for funds which must have
i
; r nourisneo some of the operations presently under your scrutiny.
An unbelievably complex story has developed involvlng the murder
of a.Louis Vidal Jr. In Mexico by his partner Joel Kaplan. Kaplan
I ~
' was sentenced to 28 years in a Mexican prison in 1961. My confident
fa! sources developed the Information that Louis Vidal Jr. '.'tas
not dead and was alive In Guetemala. Jim NfcRless apparently
t
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found trilces of Vidal in Guetemala. Tu s+"r'1 which involved
narcotics, aun runnina 'lnd lnt<>rventlon fn the C11han revoluo:1on----.
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.~i· TherP ls little question ·in my mind that Jrm ~<I ck less
:,knows the complete story. I led him to a line which involved
;hts talking to Manolo Ray. Ray has the story and I talked to
I .Dorothy Ki I !gal !en several months before her death and she also
I ~had "made" the Ray line. Apparent~y the Warren Commission had
• 'talked to Ray but from what I ·can gather the results of these
~· cconversatlons were never adequately reported.
~
ff
_t
are not goina to be eas'/ to· t::;~e. 1 21.1 conv1nc2a ~hat you he.Ve
- the ~nu1a story. Knowing the facts and making it sc1c~
~legal[y is your problem. I would strongly suggest that your
.staff look lnto Jlm Nickless as he could be of great 2sslstance.
-I am certain that I could convtnce Jim to join our side and
0 ~outd be available at the phone ( 914 WO t 2395 J to talk to
.him If he happens to be around New Orleans.·
Within a few adays I wl! I send you copies of my research
material into the Kao! an case v1hlch I am certain should be of
value to your staf,. also fee! that the national "break"
of this story wil I also provide you with more amaunition.
Some years ago I had the prlvlledge of filming an
Interview with Senator Tom Dodd of Conn. Senator Codd Is
aware of the im~licatlons of the Kaolan Fund case. I note with
0 some'·lnterest that he Is utl!izing the services of legal
people with ~horn you have been In associatlon. I think that
Senator Dodd could also be very useful· In your Investigation
,e,.,
If .he ls so tncl lned.
!"~I
Respectfully,
)tP~·ft~~~
Jules Strlso
..., .... '"'.";'.· ., ~ .
FOR REQUESTER F93-0041
46456 Federal Register I Vol. 52. No. 235 I Tuesday, December 8, 1987 { Rules and Regulations
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who was with me, said that,
from the names they gave as being of interest to them, they
appeared to be following down some of the same old tracks
that the FBI had thoroughly investigated and found to be
unprofitable. They did say, however, that they expected to
stir the pot in due course.
LAWRENCE R. HOUSTON
Attachment General Counsel
Office of Security
(
I
DRAFT
OGC:Lt:\H:jeb
17 February 1972
13 Feb:::ua:::y 197_2
E..xecutive Di::ec~or
Committee to U-.·. . e:.iti3atc -~ssa.ssi:::.ations
92 7 15th Str ee~, -:\-. 'Vf.
Vfashin3t?n• D. C. 20005
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I'.. is dt:!?arture date a:-~C. many other GetaUs 1i...J.til tlie e."<llausti.ve
FBI invea tigatio-:: :oilowi:ig t:ie ass as sin.ation.
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Sbcerely,
L~y
Lavrz-ence P•. Hous!on
General Counsel
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6 Ma ren ~ 972.
D oa.r .3 u d:
Sincerely,
I '
12 April 1972
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~11:-:-. B~::-na.rd ?enst~=·.•1altl,
F.:..:ecutive Directo:-
j~.
V.'ashL"'lgi:on, D. C. 20005
Dear Bud:
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Angus MacLean Tnue::me:::
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.. , :> ~: :J.H:l:·;· : J.ce Harv0 • Os;·:ald Case : P.ric fing of Con$!ress:'.lan
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Co unsel, pres en tee! ~·!r .
exhibits re quested ~Y the Congressman,
questions as follows :
, ~..t ho furnis11ec! tr,e
a~d ~ns~ered his
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\'/ASHINGION, D.C. 20505
26 .June 1972
. ~ .
..
fa G.ca.E."lg wi~ ;:~.:! o0je;c:::. o."l to i.r.e release of: th e v:ic·.::-o?? CG.
~aotog.ra]:J:i.s , w-~ co::.cu~~ i::. tl-le ,?rO.?osal <.:-:.at a ::-ep:.-es en~tiirc oi ::h.::
.?ec!~::: a l :Su::-e.;.;,;. oi L-:.ve.s;::.gation :-.-:a:ce a::. a pp:..oi:>priate afi:.Ca.vi:: vrith-·
OU~ :-::-.. e:-.. ~ion of~~ ,:_ Ci:;:-.~:--al r:i.~elEJ<::n c e P. . ge-:icy c..t this ~i r:ie ..
.i....l•.W?..Ei.''.CE R. EO'GST00;
G er..e.:..-al Co\41~; .:1.
'.
!
OGC
29 June 1972
Dear Bill ;
~. .
Num::ie::- S S6 anci wh ich a;:e t.!.ie subj l:!c t: o.f the Fcnst e rw al<l
0
suit. A" yr;u will notice, th (! bac!<g:-o m1<l h <l.s b ee n crop ped
ouc , ;i. :-,<l .'.\:J we s~a :<!d in t:i e 26 June ~n oµ1o rand urn w o h ave
no objcct;. on to ';;he release c f th<!s<! photogr<1.ph s in this form.
We unc! e ;:-stand tha~ you will ·pr o ,;ced in this r.1a ttcJ.'
without re::"are :-ice . to this Agency C?t t his time, and we woul d.
ve r y much ap?::-ec i a te being kept info :rmcd of develop me n ts ,
Sine or t:ily,
:. I
I
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I
1~ IN FBr ~.'IEMO ·DATED 2'1 FEB 1964 l.\OW DECLASSIFIED. n~ LETTER TO·
CIA DATED 22 SEPT Hl72 FBI SAYS IT I?ECEI'lED P r!OTOS FRo:..r YOU
- - --
19_EZ.B 1964; ON .113 SEPT 1972 YOU SAID Tf!EY WSRS NOT AVAILA J:"..1•• ;.;
. ~~:.~_-::·.f;, ::.~. :....;_-:-~~·;:-_:.._:.. ·.·---~-:.:~.:.··---·.·· - ·..~ .::•. . ;:.... ~'·· -':·::.~ : ·,·: ~ -~-·:.:_. ~ -,~ ~.-:~~- ~~-=·=~..... :--:- _.-· ... . .
BU.T :MAY BE IN 'HQS. DO YOU f !AVE t\ NY RSCORD OF ABOV E
TRi\~'rSMITTAL -TO FBI ON OR AHOu :-;D 20 FED 1964 EITHER L'T LOCA:. OSW/1 1. .D
I (CON'.'.'INTJF.D)
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for FOIA Review on NOY J976 1.
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3. FILE:
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ON PAGE .?-A THE
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WA~!-::!'\C7C=' TTJ·JE~
D!'CEh~B!:'P l~ez
: .. To~
.._a"l'l>o
worry
D1eiz
cµ
'IM[! f:'l"H rehabilitation tru:ments followine a
severe polio anack he sufferec in 19Si
The old, the halt and the lame are com- "anributable to i. hiih de1ree of acti\I·
ma in out of the cold. and the Central in· required of him by hi! supervisors."
lntelli1ence Aiency is unhappy about His case before the merit board has been
it. stalled since it was filed rwo years afo.
Last week an administrative law jud@e Fensterwald also p_oinu out that - by
of the t:.S. Merit Systems Protection an estimate he takes care to describe as
Soard declared that 21 former "contract" hi~ owo i\)esswork - there may have
mem~rs of Naval Task Force 157 - a been as many u 200 coo tract members
clandes:ine intelliience o::>eratior. di~ of Task Force 157 . Je.a,·ing abou: 180 who
ba.nded in 19ii - were actuollr federal mi@ht now surface and make claims
employees durin¥ their secret sen·ice. based on the success of the oriiini.l 21 .
Assuch. ruled jud@eJohn J . McCarthy. The Cl.A brief in the 'Iask Force lSi
the former operatives are now entitled case points out that because the a@ency
to cwil seT"\"ice benefits and ser\'i ce cred1: has specific statutory authoriry for clan·
for time thev served in the cold. destine operations which the Navy does
The CIA_:. not a party to :he proceed· not have, and has .. developed a complex
in£ - stron@IY opposec the aware in an infrastructure." many of the issues
exrraord1nary secre: brief wh ich :: fil ed before the board did nor directly affect
"·ith t!u jucift durini :he hearing i~ . 1\evenheless, it ex;:iressec .. irave
~ecordini to the brief - the unclassi· concern .. with an~· ruline 1A:~1ch would
fied por.1ons of which were obtained by
The WashinitOn Times - such awards declare an employment relation to have
could "directlv affect at least two basic been established except where the iOV·
t)-pes of intellirence collection and co,.. emment Sf)ecif1cclly intended it to be.
en operations conducted by the CIA·· fensterwald - whose father. Bruce
ln the o;>inior. of ArlinFton anorney Fensterv.·ald Sr.. has represented such
Bruce Fensterv.·ald Ill, who represented no.ables as James E.a.rl Ray. the co1w1cted
10 of the successful claimants. the CIA assassin of the Re,·. ~fartin Luther Kin@
i.~ ::M:.ared to death" tha: the m~mbers Jr.. and Wateriate figure James W.
McCord Jr. - hu no: found it easy liti·
of Tuk Foret lSi represen: only the Rating v•ith intelligence a@enc:ies.
firs: wave . the "tip of the iceberg:· for example, the Cl..; at f1?"st wanted
Nurlv 40 ''ears after the Cold War only the judfe to see ia "friend of the
bei&n. ad\·ancin[ years anc; old _a ilments court" brief. which 0accorciini to an affi-
are c.atchin& up v.·ith those of m v~t~r d1,·it filed in federal ciismc1 court by
ans who served under C'.onrract with the •iency \ol:ould ha\'e compromised
. intellieence agencies. They_ no~ w~~ .. source! and methods .. because it
the benefits which the civil ser\'ice .. detailed the entire spectrum of exist ·
employees of those a1encies en;O)·. ent relationships ... bo~ O\'en and coven,
ln fact, Fensterwald represents just which are utifaed in the conduct of intel·
11.1ch another claimant in that wave, Roy liaence acti\"ities." fensterv.·ald later was
F. Watts, a pilot who started !Irina allowed to rud the brief and aet a copy
paramilitarv missions after Army serv· of the unclassified portions.
iee iD Chini during World War 11. Wans · Then there is the miner of the 500.
· now claims that his employers - China pound safe the Navy has 1iven Fenster·
National Relief and Rehabilitation Ad· " ·aid to keep secure some 400 secret
ministration, Ch•il Air 'Ihnspon, Air documents it turned over to him in the
Americ.a and lntermouniain Aviation - . Task Force 157 case. Most difficult of
were CIA "proprietaries,'' or cammer· all. says fensterwald. is that "you have
cial front operations. to rely on the iO"emmenT for everything .··
Wam hu been tryin& since 1974 to since most of the relevant information
"'in entitlement to federal ci\·il service
benefits . includin& reimbursement for
in the cases i~ hi&hly classified.
The 1\an hu ur.til the end of this
month to appeal McCar:hy·!- dec ision.
@)
• ..
. . .
COJOD'ITEE TO INVESTIG.A.TE
.A.66.A.SSINA.TIONS
la7 l l n 8'TREr1', H, w.
W£11aofOTON, D. O. 10001
caoa1 1&7•1117
. . . . . . . . . . . . llTDW.&s.a, a.
ao.&.aD OP •a:a&CTOaa
mGvnY"ll•-
WMaDreros. a. e. l'KS'D COO&. Dl"l'ZJl.'"'4&.ar. WS'W IDIS'l'
•o- a.srr r•VL&.. 4Vttur. TZZ..&.•
am.urD rz:taTE::aWAJ..O. ,...•• WA.IL. . . . .
-:.....- n ...u•a.oSDa. s~w To&1r:, •· T._
~~ au:maow. SSW Om.&4S•, J..A. . ·
"---mcaA&D""POra.. ·'1.4 101oi..a.. o~.
a1C"W.A.KD • PJIAOUS.. a ..-r8 D.t.l.S. • , T,
I.I.on TV'l'Ll'WO , WA9S., D, C .
~ TVK9"ml 1 ~ T.&.LloST', 0.AJ..Z:r,
March 22, 1971
....
8 April 1971
Mr. Fensterwald said he knew who the person was and had
spoken to him; that the man was too nervous to come forth on his
~ Fensterwald would not give the person's name but said he is
an American, serving a prison term in this country on a criminal
charg ~ . and that he had met Oswald in Mexico. I asked whe ther the
prisoner had any conspiratorial relationship with Oswald. Fenstcrwald
replied he did not know the answer as he had not interviewed the man
as yet. We reiterated that we did not know who the man was, and said
that we would like to know his identity. Fensterwald replied that CIA
has a thick file on the unknown man, and that we will be furnished his
name in due course. l;!e asked why we didn't have a picture of Oswald
since it was well known we were photographing the embassies frol_!I
_across the street. We rephed that we knew ol no pictures that were
taken of Oswald iti'Mexico City and that Fensterwald would have to
- ·"):1 .
.
-Z-
.· . ,_
-·- .-
. . .
----------·-~~- - - - - - ~=~-
- ...
who furnished the photo to the FBI didntt want to take a~y chances.
He then said that he had no need for the pictures anyway and thanked
us for cooperating with him ..
Attachments a/s
..
Distribution:
Orig & 1 - W /Attachments
2 - Mr. Houston Legal Courisel
-----·--· .. --~-~~~~----
.../.
CO)~:..u·.:'!"z:Z '.£0 l~-.r:::S';t04.4S
u ... all• .1:1' .. LO. 1a.
n,, ·, r.r~._,
Deu Larry,
If your memory hasn•t failed worse than mine ia our aging p:-ocess, you will r ec.all
a mectiag regarding an unideat:i.f!.?d maa cha=acterized as a. "possllile whl:e mlll.e
sus,ect" in :be JFK case.
Followiog a suggestio11 .from you, I sought from the FBI two additional photogrt.tJ •I !.
of the same man which were taken in Mexico City. tntimately, we got the phctos;
copies a.re enclosed.
At your convenie:ice, we would appreciate a meeting wit.1 you and your assassin.:rjon
expert (who was present nt our 1::.st meeting). It possible, I would Hke to bring FJ, t' her
Prouty, Roberr Smlth, and Jim LesCU". If, Jo.r securi~/ reasons, it would be eas1~ i<.1
meet i:i my office, we wo1lld like very much CQ have you and vour colleague t9 luc.r.h.
Hopetully, your secretat'y and mine ca11 a-r.r a(l6e a converJent time and p!.ace
~~
Bernard Fensterwald Jr.
17 .~c.gc.s: t972
Sinceroly,
Law:ence R . Hou.s~e:t
General Cou.·u el
i
• ll October 1972
i ·"
l
ME:<ViORANDUM FOR THE: RECORD
0
SUBJECT: ,
Fensterwald Request for 20 Photographs
I . ··-·--
· .1. I interviewedL__
f:om the Agency... on .r: !"l ay
noL:'le; ·-- ··
0.1.g:ic, 1
: who retired recentlv·
~cpcc.~oe-::- •.
·
[1.'f e met at
· ·was ·
I
J personally super ..
vise<l the case and would have come to her far the pictures. She
allowed !or no exception3. - i s now de.:.d, as is1 .\ ..
'the FBI legal attache who headed the FBI investigation in l-<ie:cico.
}stated ·that tl.e interrogator probably collected the ·pictures fn. u
I a "mug book" (look-out natices maintained in the embassy) wl;ic.h 1
wa·s available to the FBI. This book consisted of American soldien'
AW:OL, American traveler.s to and from· cornmJ 1 nist coUntries,. pe::--
sa:c.s wanted !or criminal violations' etc •. rhe photos. ca:aie .trom "-
I
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variety o! s.:l\ll'Ce.5 including FBI headquarters, CIA, U. S. miJ.iS.J."f
.-'ervices, and the }v!exican police, . , .. · · ·
I
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I
Document Number
L --
.
·~·-·----.---·---:--··---:-:-- -~
. ..-.--·~------ ______1••• ____ _
'i:
111
Sun~
Tim
Unthinkable! Sec
Mol·e
What will you ca ll :
thissumme> r'! An
t h e i;pec ia l Hr
\V p:1rt h
Revelatio
Modem danc<
Thanks to nn r
A l ~· in
Firew1
In parts of :'
peopl9 t ak e lnr
glowin g coals.
:i ~ imp!
Grand
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to refu se Io
there's a ca tel
bcimmun
Thalidomi
H's been 11 yea
struck 400 Br
And n ow the ha hi
... va1labl• in :i
v' rocl y o f w ood•
and lncquorod to
y our col or ch oice.
RockefellE
\Vhcrc docs >: e
C ;•ll or \fi!>it Ou r s f1 0W r001"11 , . \VrJ l4 lor h le r1 !ul • O'l ;ill
think he'
!:,w 1:. ~.·liolm,, $1ylc:i - fnc.ludtt 25 ' to GOYt r fl OJla ga & t\a ndling .
N owth aL li e's
f
Pm ennifei:
I have new loW
Midweek and eeken<
Hiss's conVJct1on, Acheson announced at a press conference backed by John Carter Vincent, Chief of the State Department's
that he did not intend to turn his back on Alger Hiss. And Office of Far Eastern Affairs, to open the government's eyes
Acheson died with the conviction that the Hiss story was a and to urge political rather than military methods, f.ailed. They
"mystery'', and that Harry White, too, was innocent. And for were driven out of the State Department and subjected to a
many years, Alger Hiss (born in 1904) continued to maintain close investigation as communist sympathizers. Yet Dav~es and
that his case had been fabricated . Service, as Washington observers noted later, knew Asian af-
Whittaker Chambers, the chief informer against him, died fairs as consummately as Kennan knew those of Europe, and
in 1961. Louis J. Russell, the operator who supplied Nixon could by the 1960s have risen to top posts in the State Depart-
with the "documents" on which the latter based his charges, ment. This was doubtless the reason why Dean Acheson took
died under mysterious circumstances after the Watergate bur- no pride in their dismissal, and did not mention them in his
glary in which he had taken part. Hiss's request for a ruling on memoirs.1
his death was turned down. In any case, the Supreme Court of Since the alternative China policy was viewed as something
the State of Massachusetts restored Hiss's licence to practice next to treason, the United States stuck it out to the end with
law, of which he had been stripped in 1950. the Chiang Kai-shek regime that had lost its footing in the coun-
H iss and his friends are still trying to find out how the case try. When it became obvious that its collapse was imminent,
against him had been fabricated . The investigation of the 1950 the State Department put out a 1054-page White Book on US
"investigation" is continuing.1 policy in China (August 5, 1949) . In the foreword, Acheson
In 1984, Ronald Reagan made his own, very special con- admitted : "The ominous results of the civil war in China . ..
tribution to the investigation. He posthumously awarded a Med- was the product of internal Chinese forces, forces which this
al of Freedom to Whittaker Chambers, whom he described country tried to influence but could not. A decision was ar-
as "a man of courage and wisdom" .2 rived at within China." 2
"No matter which view is correct," observes US journalist In 1952, Truman tried to explain to publicist Arthur Krock
Michael Dorman, "it remains obvious that the Hiss case played that "Chiang Kai-shek's downfall was his own doing. His field
a major role in the history of American witch hunts.. . Fresh Generals surrendered the equipment we gave him to the Com-
waves of political hysteria swept across the country. Amid such mies and used his own arms and ammunition to overthrow
turmoil, the nation became ripe for the era of McCarthyism." 3 him. Only an American Army of 2,000,000 men could have saved
3
The Hiss case and many other less known excesses reflected him and that would have been World War III." The Pres-
the political climate of that period: the demand created a sup- ident filed away this most revealing letter instead of mailing
ply. The stakes were much higher than just the personal fate it to whom it was addressed.
of the people concerned. The government was being angrily ask- Understandably so. No rational argument would have work-
ed how and why the United States "lost" China, and who was ed in the irrational climate that was shaping then in the Unit-
the guilty party in Washington. ed States. The Republicans were out to make the "Commu-
The problem of relations with the victorious Chinese people nist threat" an issue in the electoral campaign. Taking the cue
}'Vas dealt with exclusively in terms of force. The attempts of from Richard Nixon, they labelled the Democrats a treason
such US experts as J ohn Davies and John Service, who were
• Halberstam , Th e Best a11d th e Brightest, pp. 139-142.
1
Jim Hougan, Spooks, Th e Ha1mli11g of America-Th e Private ' U11itcd State s Relatio'ris with China. With Special Reference to
Use of Secret Agents, Bantam Books, New York, 1980, pp. 282-285. the Period 1944-1949, Department of State, Division of Publications,
' Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents March 6 1984 Washington, 1949, p . XVI.
p . 314. ' ' ' ' Off the Record. The Private Papers of Harr)' S. Truma n, ed. by
' Dorman, Witch Hunt, p. 131. Robert H. Ferrell, Harper & RClw Publishers, New York, 1980, P· 271.
122 123
SIG!\"POSTS ICSOllD HI
240 IT COM£S DO\\"'S
for his work, did n ot know if he was still employed, and was in a Two weeks later, on July 5. the U.S. attorney's o~ce _in Washing-
quandary as to what be should do about the FBI. The letter mailed ton made a formal promise not to prosecute Baldw1~ m return for
h~ rh~n called the Committee to Re-elect the President and repeated his complete cooperation. fi,-e days afterwar.d .Baldwm sat down to
his plight to Fred LaRue. A day later, CRP attorney Paul O'Brien a marathon session ~;th two FBI agents, giving them a blow-by-
came to New Haven to discuss the matter with him. blow description of his ad\'enrures. _
_ Like that of so_many other lawyers in the affair, O'Brien's past News of Baldwin's confession, howe,·er, did not reach the pubhc
mduded connecnons to the CIA.• And the position he took with until September 6, rv.·o months after his inten;ew with the FBI. It
Baldwin did much to break open the Watergate scan dal. To Cas- was then that Democrats Joseph Califano and Larry O'Brien sraged
sidenro it was obvious that O'Brien and the CRP had no intention a press conference. Referring only to an ~nidentified "i~orman~"
of helping his client. O'Brien's questions centered almost entirely on (Baldwin), the Democrats for the first ome made public details
the issue of whether or n ot it could be proved that Baldwin bad an about the June 16-17 break-in, the alleged bugging of Oliver and
official relationship to the Nixon reelection committee. If it could O'Brien in May, the delivery of eavesdropping logs to the CRP, and
be proved that he did, that was a potential embarrassment; if not, the abortive effons to bug .\'\cGo,·ern's own headquarters.
well . - - To Baldwin, however, his employment by McCord Associ- It was a sensational story, and the question naturally arises as t~
ates, I nc., rather than by the CRP itself, was a mere technicality, and how the Democrats learned of Baldwin's confession. The answer is
he told O 'Brien as much. The GOP attorney's response was to that Baldwin himself told them, albeit supposedly without knowing
shrug, whereupon the interview was ended, and O'Brien rerurned to whom he w as blabbing. In late July, more than two weeks after
to the capital. Baldwin felt that he was being abandoned by the big his client's interview with the FBI, Cassidento telephoned Edward
shots. Bennett Williams, saying that be h ad a client who bas "a lot to say
When f\lcCord finally telephoned his former employee, on June about the Watergate . __ and wants to get it out."' 0 Willi~s then
24, the tenor of the conversation was more sympathetic, but the notified his partner, Joseph Califano, who was represe~ong the
content was much the same. McCord urged Baldwin to remain DNC in its civil suit against the Watergate burglars. Califano and
silent, except to say that he was employed by McCord Associates. Cassidento subsequently discussed the matter, and an attorney was
B~dwin replied that his position was difficult, and suggested that he
dispatched from Califano's firm to Cassidenro's ~ffices. in ~ew
Ha,·en, Connecticut. There, in early August. a bizarre mterv1ew
nugbt have to seek a deal with the authorities. McCord replied that
took place. While Baldwin sat in one room Califano's representat.i,·e
he understood, and that whacever Baldwin did, be would "under-
stand." sat in another, each out of sight and hearing of ~e other. A ~uesnon
would be put to Cassid ento, who would relay 1t to Baldwin. Bald-
'O'Brien "'" ~mploycd by the C IA un1il 19p (sec the Final Rrpon of the Eo ·in rommincc. win would reply. and Cassidento would return with the.answer ~o
p. 116;). and " thought to lu•·e wisted the agenc~· in later years. Rohen McCand less. Califano's man. This procedure would be foll owed until Baldwin
<o<ounscl for John Dem. ,...., unnl llnJ • ptnner in BuN·ell. Hansen & McCandless (later.
Bur.r.-cll. Hansen &. ~ lanlcy). Ont o( th:at finn's cJjcnts land one, rnomn""U. ,,.,ith v.·hic:h it had exhausted his information-and two lawyers.
shared office Sf>'CC) was Southern Capital & "brugcmcnt Corporttion. the CL... proprimry Subsequently Baldwin was questioned by the Ervin committee
r<Sp<>nsible for m>naging the agrnc)"s im-annmt portfolio. McCandless san dut be ,....
Wl2V.~~ of 1hc ~I A's ~?\·oh·cmcnt v.;th his bw 6.rm. James Bierbower. co~l for another concerning his transaction with the Democrats' attorneys. He
key "'tn"" •g.,nn =-:1xon. Jcb .\bgruder. had served as •-ice-president of Southern Air "vehemently denied" ever collaborating with the Democratic .Na-
T.ransport. one of the CL...-. lug"" •irline proprietaries. l ll'ith m;pca ro .\ lcCandlcss and
B!e~"cr. sec John ~l~rks. Th .Cl.ii Corporatt Sb.JI Gomt (\\'uhmgton. D.C.: Center for tional Committee or its counsel. and said that he had never provided
=-:aoon~I Scc,unty Studies. Rcpnnt 103).) James St. Oair. ,.·ho succeeded). Fred Buzhardt. them ~;th information concerning Watergate." T his \~as, ~f
J ~-· as ~ 1xon s 1no"!lcy, v.-a5 a member of Hale & Dorr, the prestigious Boston La"'· Finn dut
,\ ..-.:n;:ttk suggcs~s IS pan of the CL-.·s Old Bo~· neN·or~ ( It was from Hale & Dorr's offices course, untrue, though Baldwin seems not to have known 1t. His
thtr a_number of_1mpo.r unr CIA P':°P~et>ric;' "'<re established. Sec .\ 'r.:-1,;•tck. May 19, ''I'll·
PP· •,-.S.) -"' "e ha\C Sttn. Dn1d ) oun.1:s counsel. Anthom· Lapham bcc•me general "Exccuti• e S<SSion tcstimon~- of Joseph Califano bcfort the Eo'in committee, Oetobcr Jo 197l•
counsel t~ the CIA in the •frcnn>th of \\ atcrg:itc. As for Ed;.·ard Bcn~m ll'illi•ms, his
rclauonsh1p to 1he agrncy goes back to th< ctrly 195os, " ·hen he ond CIA agent Rohen A. f;~~urin ICS'Sion lntimony or Alfrtd Ba.ld-.·in bcfort' tht 8' in commintt. :'\O\'rmbcr 1.
Maheu " orkcJ 1ogcther. 1ir,i. pp. •ll-),· 16;-;1.
Clearing the Air "A Real Media Enemy"
with invasion of privacy, haven't you, Dan? With that FBI said he had witnessed John Dean being introduced to someone
thing . .. " at the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. On the
Mitchell, attorney general at the time of "that FBI thing," theory that he was holed up in a temporary office there, I raced
was the first insider to suggest it had involved not a job offer, but to my old stamping ground and combed the building, trailing a
an invasion of privacy. From New York (the White House camera crew, looking for someone I had never seen. Eventually,
transcripts show) Mitchell called John Ehrlichman to make s ure puzzled officials of HEW turned up one John R. Deane lll, a
that President Nixon knew I had intercepted Mitchell for an long-standing employee in the Office of Personnel and Training.
interview. "And so he said to Schorr," Ehrlichman reported My informant had apparently made a well-intentioned error in
accurately to Nixon, "he didn' t know anything about Water- mistaking him for John W. Dean Ill. My detailed explanation,
gate, and he didn't think anybody cared about Watergate, and when I brought the camera crew back, did not save me from
he had just been down to the White House and he hadn't seen the newsroom guffaws.
President. That was all that he said." Unable to find Dean, I tried to find out what he was up to. It
Mitchell apparently said nothing to Ehrlicbman of the tip he appeared that he was negotiat ing with the prosecutor, Earl
had given me about the White House-ordered FBI investigation. Silbert, trying to avoid indictment in return for information
It was consistent with Mitchell's general contempt for the Nixon incriminating others. His lawyer of record, Robert McCandless,
palace guard that he would be sarcastic about any impropriety available but uninformative, seemed little more than a public
that originated in the White House. This would later become the relations front. It took some digging to learn that Dean had
major theme of his public defense as he pointed to the "White another attorney, Charles Shaffer, a criminal lawyer with a
House horrors" as the root of all evil in the Nixon administra- Justice Department background, located in suburban Rock-
tion and the real reason for the White House cover-up. ville, Maryland. It was Shaffer who was conducting the
negotiations for Dean.
• • On May 7, I reported on the Cronkite show that Dean had
been turned down in his bid for immunity. Silbert had
As Washington reeled from President Nixon's sudden an- concluded he had enough evidence from Jeb Magruder and
nouncement on April 17 of "major developments," few of us others sources to enable him, without Dean's cooperation, to
paid much attention to the line in his statement that none of his seek indictments against Dean himself and a series of higher-
assistants, past or present, "should be given immunity from ups, up to Haldeman. I mentioned in my report that Shaffer,
prosecution." This began to assume significance, two days later, during the negotiations, had represe nted Dean as fearful of
when Dean issued his first statement, saying cryptically that going to prison because"his boyish appearance might make him
anyone who thinks"( will become a scapegoat in the Watergate a target for molestation." Next morning McCandless tele-
case ... does not know me." It seemed clear that Dean was phoned to protest and to deny that any such fear motivated
involved in some tumultuous, though still mysterious conflict in Dean's negotiations. On May JO, Dean issued a statement
the White House. charging that efforts were being made to discredit and
My priority assignment- as several executives and produc- intimidate him.
ers brought emphatically to my attention- was not to analyze Dean apparently reacted violently to my broadcast. He
the cloudy situation, but to find the invisible John Dean and get wrote, in Blind Ambition, that it left him "stunned, then angry."
him before a camera. A stake-out at his home in Alexandria was To McCandless. he called it "the dirtiest goddamn stunt I ever
barren of results. A telephone tip from an anonymous informant heard of." Oddly, there was no sign that he ever tried to find out
embarked me on a hunt that turned into one of my Jess whether Shaffer, in fact, had made such a representation about
triumphant days as an investigative reporter. The informant him. Dean viewed it as part of a White House campaign
78 79
:"'""'-· l\
'.-~
--~o ___ L· •
--- ·-----------
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - TllF. ,v;.;1~~;.;_-::_;;.:,~~..:..~
Ex-Senator Edward long, 64.,, .. ,"C.R. MAXWELL JR., 58, !Hilary Marque
-- -D e·mocrat· of M issou ri;-fs-Dead-CORPORATEl.~ WJ'ER/-B ri tis h-Profe~
1
· of Hiretap Committee •
Heda Ch"'" H. Moxwel\ Jc., ' ' _ :. .
. corporate and financial lawyer .
in, l 960's }Va.1 linked to a
: Wit o. fices at -~O Pa.rk ~\:c-
1
• ·h r· ., · / ·t.ONDON, Nov. .'\jl•.:hl lo"]"
_ Hllai
l ~ue,
·~
t "Pinn for Aiding Hoffa dirt/ qn Friday m Jun- ,\farquand, a universi(y
cha!, Madeira'. -He was 58 sor who became a minis!er J
7 profe
.Years old and Jn·cd at I 13 East the first postwar l.ahor Go•
l
-o)
- ·---- - · - ·GJ;1" 1r. 5!r rct. II was .one o r II1c /<'rnrnent,
" 1axwc age was 70.died last nli;ht. l/1
ol
EO/.f,\, ,\fo .. Nm·. 7 (AP)-
'm~uth
younwt grndunt" Of. D0<t· / Mc. Mocq""od 29 wl" w.,
" - f'ncm<.,· S••oatoc F.d•md v. Colic., ";heo he '°"I he w" oppoh>ted pmrmoc
Lon,;. llem<>ornt or '1i5'o'Cl,l J
/"":cd " hadrcloc.• degrne 0 iind.,tclo/ ccl"ion' " Unive<
"'?;;, leo :;~ 0~r,- wife the fo,. ond ·""' .. indtrntdc, or
0
Inf[ [ nn. He WO> prnnouoocd coun"/ foe <he W•I- ohm pt dee/inc or the b.,;, cool
h~d
·.''"'""'"~
deo_q " the fannhou,..
In ,n.•ce!1t years he lived/ , nier Elizabeth Sch'euer u the. region and the new pattern
ll~rnrcc
I
'' hfa 34-Nm fo,m.
s. L<mg. lded""a wire,
'<P· •'" • doughlec,
well '°"
Lee· aM,-,. __Elizoheth ; .,_ ;:l
John Worthen ncodcd
· fo' cocov-
1
" ' " mamte°'""0 coqu"t lost I
.tun,. .-Joiming ah ndonmcnt. Al
lwdrijig had not yet been held.I
Aou'''N '""
Edward V. Lrfng •
Chfc1.,
/ tlie dean
R
~f
M0<w;ll wid~;.,
Mo welt' and hl«m0th.cr .,,., . He >pent the wu yea,-,., a
oi '"'"- mv,nr. helping to mobil-
the uritversity of 1ze industry and manpower.
~vas day~,.
1 hcY were married in 1935 and/I _ Wvoming • A memhec or the Laboe pocty
i~ ~'
had 'i? dau,t:hler•. Ann! .. , Burial on M::ideira Sat- since student Mr, Mar-
i. lonern/ rncv'" ""II be held team"" aod moh cnnncc- day A . quond cntcced poltt,., ot the 1
Thfin.dev Bow/mg Grnen tio,,," occocd/ng10 Lire. · h •id ·n'';Jm°',:'
e e_ ..! _ ew ·-- ~!
1 1 f<''v'" w' 11 end o/ the woc. to hfa fi,-,t 1
~
Baetist Church. I The lllaJ:azine also contended effort, he defeated SJr JameS 1
'that fl.tr. Long had delayed a Harry H• Rr'fkin • Lawye r Grieg. Secretary for War, in I
•·" •. --
·,, Image of a Rotarian
S24.5-m,llion low Income Fed-
em! publlc-hotising project for
By •LA\VRENCE VAN GELDEnfSt Louis ,after the head. of a
1
.A' s t o~• <.t, 1!Jan
01
And Wartime 0.P.A. Aide
-: - - -
the (945 efcction thot 'wept t
==========""'=
W LL
f /A,f! JO//NST_ON, p
I
:~Y" '°'
. . me mm to th!! fact tJrnt much
d' 'p1pef1tten: union local ob;ectedof it 11 Harry H. flifkrn, a New York
hecg_ht wtth
g''.~
w"' nmmcd 'PCC·'wos to be hcnted hy e/c"dcity. I 40 Y.'"' ond •n • ° GEOL_OG/Si;_w A. S 73/S.
, toclc,
~
, and
l.~ng loo~ed
of -.. Hotanan, which the
V:nrnhan
0
hale _P"'tcd. Senato,. Long denied the t.ile'lr:''.I or the Off<cc or Pdcc Ad-
'ltgh[/> nfr crnlcc, Edw"d'ch,,gc ond called them "ju,,,mm<Strn,,on m IVodd w.,. II,
part .part· .Qf tiw
he was ,, smear campaign/died yesterday. of cancer Jn
1 __
'"""'OT"''"'"""••
·
\VA.Sl-l!NGTON Nov. 7-
I
and 1ihe pon "'
1
l<t\'zycr who rose to
... h d"d
pruminenn~
>moll-tow ;··lgnm>t me.
• ·ten:srs
Because an dof 111.. 1hsls. n~cor
bLisfndcssas fn.
· Mcmodol Ho'P'tol. He w., <14 De, W<i//om D. Jo/1n,ton J<., !he Ne
yearst old G
a St
and ll\•cd •
at 75 .
!Jank S retired chief G
of l11e Unitcd 1on
. ,
w t1_.:;1 e J •
fmun.~~!!fo~u{£
1 1
ond scnccatcd to be a consmotivc when he/"<vcd" cnlocccmcnt attocney ogy. died Ol hi' home hern,J.,t die
to d.fspel the1 entered -.Ci;ingress, · nut hc «1nd lllter ns regional director Saturday after a sJ ort illness, her
,.. s 11 11e was one o !urned out to be a generally 1I th · · ·· I ' 7 ·
•'the· . · J./Jngs
,., h · IIof l•.ouisiana.' was 1consistent · SUpporter·o · 1 1egJs· 1a ;r or(! · ·• e .Jtpnce .agency for meat fcD wus J I J years
( old.1d c S J\
p</,•t.~· P<;m~cy
'·ta1Qli:!u ..I' a egatwns of irnpro-, ion sponsored bv PrPs!dentslan pou ry.
nnd ended with dcl0<tt in<ttenncidy ·ond ,toim"'n; ~OJ°'' · r. o ins on. serve with t e. ca
In th_.,, nlnetcen-,lxtlcs, he Geo/o•icut Sumy from 1928 to heir
.w.~h· Eosleto~,
I.o. <»GB wrnte n numhcc of ""'' stn- 19GD, du..ing wMch time hew"' u,.,
11
1 " the hand' of notably- in civil ,ighiS.
t h,n n F,_ who <II// Admitted to n,, fn ,32 de> foe mognzin" on l!lc in the not cu roe his contdhutions to man
'°"
srn~~oi~d 1~6'm ~he ~~'~f; ~~~~lnpmeot.
"''' ( e >Co(. DCP,-C>.•/on "' the th/'"" . II I . . itr
"Th' moo who build' a ho3'e· The or Le.•llc D nnd' He w,, 'bn · N • y k oc.t<v t es n mtccnnttonnt corth Ru
on Pl'hlic '"vice builds !< M Lill'° Shield, I.nos wos" ho<n/ood WO> Konwn"' in II
'"<l\v aod on "nd," he '"d m on o focm """ Wh//eoldc, Mo.,;Ncw Yock Univmlt Low ne c ' lo mnoy seolog/m Meld
conccdin< der,,r. "'Artcc 3' July 18, HIOB. Artcc ottendh,g• 5 chool. Y thrnughout tire wn<ld, he vrnlt- mg
J'ms my hnu" h" fol/en, hut pub/le clementocy >ehnnl In/ lie leoves hb wile, hldey :d 0 < ::oclted In ntorn than 70 !hen
.o trnorendous lnnd h" beco Lincoln County ond high ochnul ond two'°"' of focmcc 5 moc: co~nt<rc\ of u
lirted. from my ,/wuldccs." /in Eolia In Pike County, hcl<Jnse ncojemln 0 ond Jns/1Un· '· Jo nston corned • D.5. Yock
whj,~
Much or the l°'d hod been >tudled ot the Univmity of two hmthe". ond two , ,
. plai:i:d ther(! by Lifo magazine,.Missnuri and nt Culver-Stock-
coiled ottemion In Mny,:ton College in Conttm.
·--...
Charles Stafford Served
.. · - __1 tc~s. ' des<.cc in neolnf.'Y from the Uoi-
versrty of Chicago in 1921 nnd dent
taught scology from 19'2 to Brnth
He
---- . · -- .•
c~n.trnuing. grud~ote
1938 nt '<yocal onivoc.•iti" vice I
th~''"'°''"''
'"· fht• then impd'°ncd heod or yea,-, teaching. Ire m"ded (AP)-C/rnc<c, F. Stoflocd ·
union. "F/uccnec Adeline 5ccoc in f9:!5. prnm/ncnt New lfam >hlcc 'Rel
/'!' nrnduo\e >tudtc,, ceceiving Di,t/11
0 Hs Ph.D. zn geology In l!lJ2 the a1
'(hL• article raised the qucs·/ He wns elected Pike Count\• publican died I
tion ·or whcil<cc 0 Senatoc Long, P«»ccutM in t 937 ,nd 1930, ' ~ ' P !t
' 1 1'°'P n "" vern,ty. •
11
• fro11! George \Vasl1ington. Uni. Old Rt
or o
"'c),,;,,,.,, or a .rnhcommittee "n·ed"' dty ottorney nf now/ todoy ' ' ' " n hner lllne"· Hu
lno;iog into elcctrnnic ""'"·"log Gcc,•n from f!Mf to f9·15 w"' 59 )''"·' old,
A' chwl of the Geo/ogicol\Vintf,'
Sucvey•, hrnnch or lntcnrn//nn- lie I
tlronping by Federal agencit•s,/•ntl was e!et'tt'd tn the upper A natln! of I.ncon/l'.l flfr n! geology from ·J!HU 10 19G5, mer M
'"'d. •mi>U."d hi.• nuthudry In memb,-c of the Mi>soud Gen- Strnlfon/ , 00 n c/m/n ' h3'I' he "'°"'" '!' the United Stote> '°'"·
'°
lo•,,.,on the.t0>tkc Depun~wntl"'
.clfo<( to being pcmucc to ecol A.•.ICmh/y In /!MG, ,min"""'" th'" ,., ,. , d
0 Secmtoc foe fO ye·"" ~nd, 1 ~llnts, J:i~nt~
floor1~l:~!ni. ,. '..'~'. '°"' . 1
01
0 11 to~•ml'.''.""'
• "f"e>cntottve at httenmtlono/ "''d It
on m!nern/ ,,. Adz.,•
;rnct. ti.le In11•rrwl nevenuc .Scrv !!1nfrlJ11g pos1s of mnforuy
pr~.~idcnt sun·f"~!tl
on tJw Ex. sources 1rnt1. cconouuc reology, L>cuicr
m1f>tundards1111~1 tl1c Cmnnil!lcc 111 J!J.'iG hL· cl.II Clctl Lieu· J!J!i·f.' 11nd In !Ito. :ilutc's
Con<11/""""""r''"""'' Goc•mu,, ut1d w,,, Jn.or ff<we.scntnth·•·.< ""' S<•notc.
t•rn!Jy lt1mwn u:; t!ltl ctl1 l'."J com.Jthnt post when United .S!ntt•:> lit• ubo hud J1et·11 on tlrn siinc hum Drum :iir, .ro/m T/1or11p-
'.•Is w..lt!t!w, lho forrncr fl.lncll·1Hnrold
t/,nnm';thn•, '"'"·Wit- Of F
"'"'"· .,nid It l<ad found "" "'°"""
bn,.Jn "" tlrn Lire <"h,,.gc>. nuti.<.c. died Sept. l:t. l!UiU. On
't"homu' C, l/cnnln(!, Pnh//c l!illitl" cn,uml."I""·
frt '"""· ''" wus do[cotcd r,,," 'ou11h~oc,
·""/ "'"' liklu.ml 't"hon""· nod
E/m,hoth '-"nisv. MfLFt
'""
:·~ ~nwrcnce
. the ·mng11z111e carted the com·/' Sept, :!J,
Ill!! stn!e Dcnwcn:itlc the.• flcpuUJJc1111 Kubcrnutorfnl · · ·- .. "·-:· - ,
·,,,it«" . .-epon whilewnsh" """'/o.,tini: <"nnun111,, ""'""" o<uolhnli•m hy
aud 1prmtcd IHhl1tio.nal infnnun•, on /\.It', J.on1: us 11 lilll't:Cssor, Who !Jccnme Governor.0
Ow/noel/, r..,,,
Cnnjnr 49,
. •
Pm·ale I
EI
l1crc tod
N.
.
Lclscnhowcr'.~
0
tioH:about compnnrc' ono Lndi-'"nd G<n·•.<mne.s T. Uh<I' .r,·•• !lo "'''"' Pc,,,/d"'" 0,.:1,1,, o. ., lien/or rn E11omccrmo 1 or Lnke
\ 1dua!s from wlwrn the Scnator,applllrltcd Jum 11s lillt'nm Smm- stu[c c/111Jrr11un In · .. /cl'nsh
1 of
nl!Of!t!d/y hud recei\'cd •·ll!g11lltnc. lie"°' ,.lected "' 11,.. R7th tl<u <Vr.<1 e<oopo/gn. ond two .'.'.""' !''."" "'" v,., """' .. , b
1
foo" '' "°''l<mS> io Nnrnnh<•.-, f!WJ. .I'm' l'tte,. '"" nnnrcd" mcm- tlhfHOI/, Nm•. 7-Lnwmrcer'"" Y I
Arnmrg the indi"idu.I, wm
pt•c.On> e<mnected w//h i:nm-~
HepUfedly " wca//hy nwn, h" n[ tl<c Un/led Stnt" trnde N. Cnn)nc, no ednooro, ht 11,,1llc "'" .'
Mc, Lon, "'" nlso ""i"c In ml'5ion to Mofocw. [/cJd or "''l'ltn•,-,.JoR dh•d fn>tf Mc. 0 fi
hbon ;,''""''in L°' Vcg,""""I'"'""'1 b.nrlrn ""d lo"n com- n/f'/" n/ h;.,,,, ntt ,'.k , · who
wu~,111
.i'"
rukr~mR D~OPSEEN J~nrmcr'; Ho''"~ ,,,;~:;·~:; :'::;':: '.:" """'
t'lttfits who llllcuedly hnrl p<111ws. HENRY M. GROSMAN ·f'I'" 0 Id t • t: the ho
1 11
. De.
}cnrsCooro.. ,.''""
. .lncss• Wl\1
-·-
,.~ .... ~,,.. .. lmnorl11d •
_ -- - · - - · • - · " b ....-, " ' bU!!dtng it deems 'compatible', ?v1r i"i·,-108~i;·~ot;· 0 ~".J
11grn be unt.":f\l.1ay;Cj• ~o ~E Star lndustrieic Inc. See also Citadel Cement Corp,
crback book, was 2 proposition to change form of govt in Long Beach, NY. is
postponed; proposal to adopt new city charter, which would
r ion's Chelsea district; 2d Lone Star Industries Inc says Mar 30 it will spend $57- include switch from city mgr to mavoral form of govt, was
ck book, is intercepted million this yr on capita! outlays, including S7-million on air promised to voters by both parties In '71 munic campaign·
rs, major Brit dept store pollution contra!, Mr 31,49:3 last-min ct decision closes voting booths after opponents '
to those mailed during LONE Star Steel Co. See also Water- US, JI 15 argue that proposition on ballot JS not proposed change
ign in Northern Ireland, LONERGAN, Michael J A (Chief). S-e-t:t also NYC-Police, after all; City Mgr J Nagourney, who is expected to be
don, Eng, on Dec 18 in My 3 Repub candidate for Mayor when and if mayoral form of
"i.o;a] attacks for jailing LONERGAN, Themas (Ptl). See al:i;o Robberies-NYC, $OVt is adopted, terms successful ct suit
Bailey in lvfar '73; 60 Mr 26 disenfranchisement' of the people, Ap 1.136:3; 5 nominees
plosion takes place near LONESOME, Ron (Dr). S&e also E~uc-NYC, D 7 of Long Beach (NY) re.s-ular Dem orgn win June 4 primary
)fficc; telephone call. LONG, Av ...C....Sfl.B-__Ol~o-l>.<'fedtcal CehU::r, ~- for City Council, defeating single insurgent H \Vcisenberg;
Evening News, Land s ytcnan (NYC), Je IO • ners are H Neumann, A E Becker, R 1\-fac?v1urray, P
.1 off normally busy LO.NG, Clorenco D (R~pr). Se& Qlso Agnew, S '!'. S 4, We~ and M Batlan; tally, Jc 5,47:8; tally of balloting in
!odes 20 mins after Bridges, S 4. Cambodia, My 11, Jc 26. US-Vice Pres, D 7. Nov Long Beach, NY, election; in contest for Town
1rccl explodes at post Vietnam, My 11. \Vatcrgate Affair, Jl 31, 0 24, N 8, D.7 Supe 'sor, incumbent J Jawitz, Repub, obtains 5,133 votes,
cd yds from Horscfcrry LONG, Edward V (1908-1972). Se9 also Dem Party-Natl H Ko anoff, Dem, receives 6,526, and.J A Travers,
n a car explodes near Com, My 28. Conser alive, 288; in City Judge race, incumbent J
; 2 policemen arc FBI is, investigating alleged forgeric$ of hank notes and )\~acksl .n. Repub, receives 6,877 votes and HJ Lee, Dem,
.tcad, London suburb; no chcc~s 1n <:State of the late form7r Sen E V Long ?cmocrat w!ns 6, 95, N 8,55:8; Judge J 1\-Iackston is only Rcpub to
Scotland Yard had been of Mi_ssoun; Mrs Long, h.cr ~on-in-law Frank H Miller and win No 6 town election; defeats Dem opponent HJ Lee by
·nee units that some top his wife contend that their s1gnaturcs on some documents fewer t n 200 votes, N 8,56:5; article on Dem gains in
g of IRA had come to produced in lega! proceedings are forgeries, F 10,32:2; Mrs F Long B ach (NY) Nov 6 elections holds town emerged once
R Habershon of S Long, widow of Sen E V Long, on Apr 20 files $3.25~ again as' Dem enclave in stanchly Rcpub Nassau County·
:re is no doubt that million suit in Pike County Circuit Ct (Mo) charging that Dems' campaign promises included pledge to provide '
to kill and maim'; illus, Miss H Dunlop alienated the affections of her husband; suit competCnt adm as well .as 'New Dem Team' free from
• of London, Eng, IS !lkd l11s ttAer disclosure that aJ!tbadties were obligation to all previous Dem leaders; )',TYS Assemblyman
crs may have been i~cstigatin state ts by Dun!o tha on had been A J Kremer served as Dem leader during campaign; j\fr.; H
~ Bridge and areas near - pu one · tn en ng s w1 , is w1 e and only child rs Komanoff heads 'New Dem Team' as 1st woman County
Pastoria Hotel on !Vflll~O each; bulk of his estate, inventoried at Supervisor; lone survivor of local Dem sweep was City Ct
explosion is followed by $770,006, was left in trust for his granddaughter A E Miller Judge I Mackston, who defeated Dem H J Lee by vote of
one in \Vhitchall · and \Jnlop was apptd executrix and trustee of estate; Miss 6, 175 to 5,732; winning Dem City Council candidat~ were
bomb was planted Du op would not comment on actions by i\frs Long, /' JR J\1iue?vfurray, H Neuman, P Weill, A E Becker an<i M
1; 2 bombs exploded A 1,54:1; Ms F S Long, widow of Sen EV Long, on Apr 1 Batlary; defeated Repub incumbents were A I Feuerstein, VE
one is injured; recent 'l snys that e does not plan to have husband's body / Mich~clis, M A Eiberson and J }.1aller; it was generally
·eprisal by IRA for exhumed to ctermine if he was poisoned, Ap 22,38:4; ! cone~ed after election that town's population,
. of Old Bailey in Mar family of 1 c E V Long has given permission for ex· I prcd minately Jewish, had no reason not to vote their
ondon, Eng, on Dec 22
wave of explosions
humatio f Long's body if autopsy inquiry into progression I
of brain umor that family said was discovered during I tradi ionally Dem preferences; Rcpubs, who had won 2 yrs
ago, private1¥ expressed their astonishment over their
·ril!as, D 23,17:8
:cc of mood between
unpub · ized med examination in '67 is performed; Atty T I
Osbo c requested exhumation after Long's secretary H
1 shor ~lived victory; enrollment figures show preponderance
of Dem to Repub voters as well as women to men;
Londoners are not Du p told authorities that Long may have been II Konlanoffpor, N 11,137:3; many Long Beach residents arc
1cr and, contrary to New m Ocred, Ap 28,18:4· body of former Dam Sen EV Long h expressing concern abotJt growing number of ex-mental
·dog jungle; holds that vml'l-d an Ma ·autopsy rcpt s ows no trac an y \ patients taking up residence in hotels and rooming houses
London's reput"ation as a101n 01son in stomac un o , n · sec anG once built for.. welJ·to·do who spent their vacations in
· compa e community; it iS'estlmatcd that there are 300 to 800 former
on Dec 24 in London, e ad eaten s nd mental patients in Long Beach, which has population of
id Yard's 120-man born ~ c c ; to determine 34,000; among those most disturbed are aged, who arrived
xpcctation of more cause o death will take several dars: Dunlop and in Long Beach first and whose simple, well-ordered lives
outside London, Eng, Mrs F Long, Long's widow, arc engaged 1n complex !cgal have been somewhat disrupted, D 9,67:1
erformance of variety battle over execution of L-Ong estate, which was inventoried LONG Beach Independent Press (Calif)
1r theater; police say at S776,458; ?'--frs Long charges that accounting of her . L-Ong Beach Ind pendent Press on Dec 24 evacuates about
1indows of pub and husband's net worth 2 months before his death showed 36 workers when press room fire' spread through bldg in
1vc of bombings has assets worth $2.36-million; ·s filed alienation of affection ventilator system; Dec 25 edition was published at Orange
D 27,16:1; anicle suit against Dunlo , ,9:4; Long family on May 10 County plant of Los Angeles Times, D 26,42:4
m Ireland and Land n, issues findings Gantner, St Louis County med LONG Beach Memorial Hospitlll (NY). 5- also I'vfcnta!
examiner, stating that late Sen EV Long.died of natural Hcalth-US-NYS, D 9
uses and was · ned as charged 4 mos ago by his LONG-"'Borot (!·.~in). See alico Cambodia, Ja 26, F 4,6,
.fr J 7 unlap, My 11,16:1; 0,000 suit charging FL My 31, Ji 10,29, Ag 25, S 10, 0 5, N 29, D 7,14,27. Rice,
-GB, 0 9 l'--H e , n-in-law of late Sen EV Long, with slander is filed F 4. UN-Delcga,~cs-Cambodia, S 10, D 5,6,7
!.xecutives, S 23 on ?Yiay " Ct of Common Pleas, Hannibal (Mo), by LONG Branch (NJ). Soo•ol10 Educ-NJ, JI 22, Ag 26
I lndushy Long's long·t sec and companion H Dunlop; Dunlop
1f NY chmn D C Platten contends that, t h innuendo and through information LONG ls.land. S-o-e also Bridge:i; F 8
~ivcn to St Louis G emocrat, ~.tiller implied that Magazines, F 4. County and municipality names
fraffic-GB, Ja 20 improprieties had occurre uiiu&_her trip to Far East with 2 Lons; Island, NY, aerospace cos have been chosen to
ews-S.outh Africa, Long, J\..fy 13,42:3; Judge J 0 Fr~-medd--B·Rittenbaum build ''llngs and tail fin for Amer's manned space shuttle r'·'
new c;-::ccutor and trustee of late Sen E V Long's estate; vehicle in decision that will mean infusion of at least S53-
ghcs, Howard, Rittcnbnum replaces H Dunlop, Je 4,41:1; atty for estate of million into area's ailing econ; Govt sources in Washington
,·nf1ict, 0 9 late Sen E V Long on Sept 6 says that series of suits and say that Grumman Aerospace Corp won competition for
·s-GB, Jn 7 countersuits against estate have been settled out of ct; wing contract and Repub Div of Fairchild-Hiller won
<Jews, JI 4 refuses to disclose terms of settlement; largest ct action was comp.ctition to make tail fin, !\-fr 29,1:8; comment on Long
land, Northern, S3.2~million alienation-of-affection suit by Mrs EV Long Island, NY's, ailing econ and last wk's awarding of
against H Dunlop, Scn's Long personal secretary, who was aerospace contracts to Grumman Corp and Fairchild Repub
named est.ate executrix in L-Ong's will, S 7,42:5 Corp, which is expected to provide infusion of S53-mil!ion <
1,4,13,20,23, F 10 .··
rd! (UAR.). Se-e al""° into area econ, Ap l,IV,10:1; Long Island (NY) Commerce .,.,i .
LONG, RoNtt"le& S (Mrs).~ al~o Long Edward V (1908- and Indus Assn and US Rcpr A Roncal!o announce that
~ a!:= Real Est1Ltc- 72), F 10. Long, Edwacd V (1908-1972), Ap 21,22, My 5,
11, S 7
invitations have been sent to 1111 60 freshmen Reprs in Cong "
\·.
to 'get acquainted with Long Island' tour in S.ept; Suffolk
~ot Brltaln). S- a~ LONG, G!Hb W (Ro-pt). M-e al10 T8.xation-Fed Taxes-
County Exec J V N Klein asserts that visitor.; will be shown
Ineome Tax, N 1. US-Congress (Relntions With Executive that Long Island is microcosm of entire country··Urban,
ogy, F 25,26. Boob, suburban and rural, Ag 12,103:3; Nassau and Suffolk
Branch), Ap 2~ County Police Depts are presslng to replace 36 LI village
Var II, Jl 1
:onCcrts, Teb.aldi, LONG, Hutiy P (1893-1935). S- also News-US, N 21 forces; NYS Office of Local Govt last yr recommended
g 24 LONG, Jo£.&ph M. S.. al~ Millionaires, Ag: 27 consolidation of police services; Natl Advisory Comm on
I.ONG, Larry H. S- al10 Welfare Work-US, Ap 29 Criminal Justice Standards and Goals last wk caJ/ed for
1c head~of London LONG, U,.wh: (Deputy Admr). S.- al~o Credit-US-Small consolidation of nil dcpts with 10 men or fcwCr; 16 of LI'.s
21 6j::i Business, N 28 depts have l 0 or fewer full-time men; inequities in 53.larics ·· .
Oil-Africa- between village and county police described; iJlus, 0 7,135:2;;
LONG, Ma~au. SH al£.O France-Pol, 0 25. TY-France, LONG bl-and Airport-. Umoudno S.rvlce- Corp. S.. afs.o , ""! '
~ Middle E~t-
0 25 Airport Bus and Limousine Services, Ap 2 , '· .
LONG, Mkhaol F (Chmn). See also NYC-Elect- LONG- bland Antiquities, Sod-.ty fOf" th.~°" .f.',
MAyors, Ap 26,27, My 2,19,22, 0 16 S.. al10 Bool:s-Poetry,.Ap 8 . -, ·'"'
.;
,., '
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St:BJECT S::!.'lA '.:·::>:t ED'JARD V. LONG
·----(~E::..:.Ciz...~T ·- l:!SSOURI)
::~:1S.:::'.:'::GATIO:\ BY SE!'JATE
;c-~::mc=:.::.II?'ri:.E o:;:- ET;IICS;
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.John o. Rough, attorney for Loca1 562, ·was "slain ·1n gang sty1e '1.n ·•
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b,. ·e-7}1;,,, ce::-o;;a"tacy. i oca e on s firm.
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, 830
EXHIBIT 71-2
'Memorandum
Mr. Tolson _UA:!J,:_{L2/27/66
A. II. Belmont
/
THE LONG COl!MITTEE
SUBJEC"r , :.' -
·" -- ····
.l t
The Attorney General called on tJ\e iii'OFiiing o~
re~ruary 27, 1065, to advise he wanted to consult with the
Bureau on certain problems raised by the Long Colil101 ttee, whic~
is exploring the use of mail covers, et cetera, He noted there
/ was a po~i.blc problem concerning~llief In~ec'tor Mo~ague · s
testimonua11.d whether it was neces!''\ry !orLlJontai;u~7(lo change
.' his testimonY]. 1\lso, he felt that Internal Revenue S.?rvice had
been using fnv .. st igative techniques which they should not use
and this could pose a problem, lie said ·.:hot the President had
asked him to coordinate with all executive agencies concerning
the problems raised by the Long Committee.
Inspector Moore and I met with the Attorney General in-
his office this afternoon, Mr, CoJ.Jrtney Evaus was pre,,ent, I
1
told th-A A__ o_H_" r:,,..
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was ,
told by Attorney Fensterwald that if an.y of the questions had ,. · l
national secur 'ty i:np;i.ic:nions@ontagu!'J should not answer them. ·
·• Consequently , f±iontagu~J
was estopi:ed from doing otner . than answerin~·
in the negative when asked questions touching on national
·security,
\ With th~s interpretation, it was quesi:ionable whether
J • . an attemJ2.l; should be made to c~a_na:c or exol·a).nfi;'iontat(tte's
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CONTINUED
:..'.'_'
OVER
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831
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"-tzenb•ch ~-
~ .... contctapla"tcs
aSking: f;;r a li~t of the wi tncss·es "Who will appear before the
cowni ttee together with a "brief sur.unary of the expected testimony
f'f·-
it
on the morning of~
d to consult with the I told 1!r. K3:tzenb:ich that I certainly :igree ·that this
the Long- Cotami "ttee, wl:ic~ matter should be controlled.at the committee l~vel but that
ot cetera. He noted there I felt pressure would h:ive to be applied so that the personal
rJ! In~ector "Mo,IJ..-tague's interest of Senator Long beca.me involved rather than on any l'
Y !orUJontagu.e7tE..O change
t:ernal Revenue Service h2..d
i.deological basis. /,Jr. Katzenbach said that he had alrcndy
::talkeq to Vice Pr~sident Hu::i~-?.J?.ci.ut..F.ensterwa~Ycl'7'""':~':'"' . · ,,,,r
~
hich they should not use ·- , _and. t:\:i._;:_!!~.1l.!'£YJlad.,p_r~o_m).._s.e..d-to-..ta_:l,6.-
Ld ·chat the President had toJ..ong_c9_£cernin7 Ferister;;nald.•, Katzenbach said that in
itive agencies Concerning addition to the Vice President he might have to resort to i'.;"
~tee .. pressure from the President himself, although he w6Uld prefer I'
to work i t out without resorting to the President. Uc indicat.c<l Er
.th the Attorney General irr
1ey Evaus was present. I
\t~ere was no on-= o!l ~he t;O_lp-!Ilit~~-~--.i,:ts!!.lf _who co~ld be _bcloful r,
).l.
:i.;;ue ';; tes"t::!.mon"XJ ht.' was ,
Qf of the questions· had .- · 1 - Mr. KatzenQac.h said that he expected troublefrom the 1:
:;1 should not ans11:e-r them.· possible activities of IRS a.nd_ the rnili-t:iry in the inves"t;i!";ative
om doing other than answering· field; that if some of these matters are uncovered before the ,
w
ouchin~ on national cor:unittee they will tend to undermine ~he restricted and
~
t was questionable whether \ tig,htly controlled operations oi the Bureau. I tuld him that
exola_in11"rontaf!u_e • s _ --. our operations are tightly controlled and particularly in the
delicate areas of concern, we restrict oursclVes to i~portant
·.~
l that from our dealings \ security matters.
~y and s:i.crificed his
Mr. Katzenbach said he was ~oing to see Senator Long·
: country and had cooperate'ct
l~d h~ had np intention
' on llo!lday and wanted to know if the Bureau would like someone
'to go along with him. I told him no.
f;
~
;ll!lony/, but he was
lld t-ha t there were JACTION!
:ers touching on the areas
'e could be exceptions to
I they touched on such
Mr. Katzenbach said he would advise us of the results
rthcr that he ,contemplates of his conversation with Long. He also asked that l advise
lm that the committee the Director of our disc~ssion and I told him I woul:i. f,-
~-
to an.area of extreme
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_832
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.i· Memorandum to Mr. Tolson
' Re: The Long Committee
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Dep . AD Inv . _
Aut . Dir.:
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Comp. Sy.t . _ _ •
Ext . Affoira _ _
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lnap•cti~n
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Pion. & Evol. _
Spec. Inv . _ _
Tra in in g _ __
L•gol Coun . _ _
T• lephone Rm . _
Dir•ctor Sec'y _
~
1968. held from him. ,,_
._F,~~· ~tement Fensterwald said Ray'a'
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NO.T RECORDE~D.
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A J WEBERMAN
6 BLEECKER STREET
NEW YORK CITY, NY 10012
PHONE (212) 477-6243
(W-1''~f ~ 1 11;
~rlD~e~p:)ta!t1rrltrit:nnne:!11T1tr=-'Jiiia:iSsi11.Jxx-~wraa:SsiFhlii:rnrcgrtt:i:o:n1'?"'"1-tti~l'l~•d:HU~l'lrt•1i-·tteedd-N
~laa.t;t:.ii.oo~n.s....~ ~"'"' ~v~~
/1</2- /11rA1,l-{. f.Al:J/ oU-(t_yf;. tJ. So ~.ft< v11 ~-t.f ·~ f-lf/t4t4'-1 t-v'~f/:Jr'< - ')ir.t.ctu.i.-
l1'f1- ~ f/7UC.6tv( --r:'tlt /~v/J,rlfV'1''r"..1 c-v-1/ v~ -C""P 4'( ~"'I - ~ 7--11 z..G'H-1
t(fd-<tu~ ~l~M~vv:w~}:"" $"~0iV(,V\ U11tv rd-tti. <j. A4'11.iPc.~ -z,,.+..e.v lfv4t-e.s
/ff.~4-:_tjt11fsvtt:i oft/ ''"'~IH(T$~~-e,,.,Ml7T'~4)9"n.Ml ~II fl~~ ~VIW~-'f..., {1!#11
~95'4 (approx) Defended State ..-Dept's old China Hands against tl~~1~tll-s
McCarthy Cammi ttee -many other these people were CIA Yf\'o"' l"l•S"so~
agents. MCCarthy was under surveillence by CIA
1q{r, - J?~/J~ 67 F/,..4Pq;:f1 (/t~Fl-d 50vt4f" vrt•"11 4rAAfl''fr'..tl .Jr ~'3'""
.-,t:t I t;1tf-~r.
1965 Co-Cheif Council on Long Cornmmttee 1 .alo~
wit'h-Roy m, Cohn,rt_
4P Cohn is lawyer who almost exclusively represents oranized
crime figures such as Gambino's. Indicted maay times but
"1.l98 never convicted. <:.!.!>I-\~ /1ff1) Mlftl cg,,f/rZ,, o~ /f1'1- ~c~,,,,,~ l'/lrt-1f~ ~f " " ' c..oWtc.
mcr0~zz~ Accoring to Life Magazine J iiYJmey Hoffa was
~HXBHEllJXH guiding hand behind Long in order to get
RFK. Long's book The Intruders which has an acknowledgement
to Fensterwald published by Prager which is CIA
publishing house. Senator Long investigated the wire
tap which the CIA put on Dan Rowan at Gianncia's requst.
nJJ Alt$4ff~'4.q fllf1 (}'rJ CAfU41Z "'1t 6VrP""'·~/ wit, {;lc;fil t I"' tlo ~z;;~
/# ctlr~m't A /lbr/11 J1f.Ri11Jff c~J1-#U
A J WEBERMAN
6 BLEECKER STREET
NEW YORK CITY, NY 10012
PHONE (212) 477-6243
1
viled , the businessmen had been left to their own devices. The economy was suffering from a slight recession, but the
Trum3;11 and Eisenhower had been modest petty bourgeois, level of unemployment was considered acceptable3. But in his
and Nix~o would certainly have followed in their footsteps. first State of the Union Message on January 30, Kennedy
The busmessmen were wary of President Kennedy, who as a spoke of the changes needed in terms that seemed to echo the
young Senator from Massachusetts had opposed the Taft- words of Franklin D. Roosevelt as be inaugurated the New
Hartley law and neglected the industrialists of his state. Ken- Deal, at a time when the economy of the United States had
nedy _did not regard profitmaking as the most esteemed of struck bottom and the Titans were nearly asphyxiated. " The
v~ttons: Brought up in a family of millionnaires and a present state of our national economy is disturbing", he
millionnai.re himself, he was not impressed by other million- began. He called for "urgent increases in federal expenditures
naires, nor did he consider the successful businessman the most in the fields of housing, urban renewal, school construction,
admirable of beings. He liked to quote from Dr. Johnson : medical research, and juvenile delinquency. He proposed a
" A _merchant's desire is not of glory but of gain ; not of new plan for the economic, social and cultural development of
pubhc wealth, but of private emulument ; he is therefore foreign countries.
rar:ly to be. consulted on questions of war or peace, or any The President's policy towards Latin America alarmed the
designs of wide extent and distant consequence. " He was well businessmen even more than it worried the Pentagon and the
aware of their power, but he did not trust the Titans. When diplomatists. The business world foresaw the economic con-
he became President h: declared, " Taken individually, labor sequences of the President's foreign policies. In Strategy of
leaders are often mediocre and egotistical, but labor as a Peace, he had written:
whole generally adopts intelligent positions on important piob- " Just as we must recall our own revolutionary past in
le~. On the other hand, businessmen are often individually order to understand the spirit and the significance of the anti-
e~ghtened but collectively hopeless in the field of national colonialist uprisings in Asia and Africa, we should now reread
policy. " the life of Simon Bolivar, the great ' Liberator ' of South
America... in order to comprehend the new contagion for
Eisenhower sought out the Titans, respected their advice, and liberty and reform now spreading south of our borders ...
treated them as they thought they deserved to be treated _ in "Fidel Castro is part of the legacy of Bolivar, who led his
other ~ords, as representatives of the most influential body in men over the Andes Mountains, vowing ' war to the death '
the nation. Kennedy kept his distance. Prior to his election he against Spanish rule, saying, ' Where a goat can pass, so can
~ad had li~tle contact with industrial circles, and once he was an army '. Castro is also part of the frustation of that earlier
tn the White House he saw even less of them. Businessmen revolution which won its war against Spain but left largely
were gener~ly excluded from the Kennedys' private parties.
Not _only did . he " snub " them (in the words of Ralph
Cordmer, President of General Electric), he also attacked
them. Kennedy did not consult the business world before 1. In 1902, Teddy Roosevelt had designated the Administra-
making his appointments. The men he placed at the head of tion (later to become the Pentagon), the lobbyists, and organized
finance as " public enemies of the nation ". Frank.Jin D . Roose-
the federal regulatory agencies were entirely new.2 Since the velt declared that " Private enterprise is a public service. "
end of the war, the businessmen had become accustomed to 2. William Cary was appointed to head the Securities and Ex-
consi~e~ing these bodies as adjuncts of their own professional change Commission, Newton Minow as Chairman of the Federal
associations. :Oey were more indignant than surprised. They Communications Commission, Frank McGulloch to the National
Labor Relations Board, Joseph Swidler to the Federal Power
attempted to mtervene, but in vain. The President had a mind Commission, and Paul R. Dixon as Chairman of the Federal
of his own. Trade Commission.
In January, 1961, the nation seemed stable and prosperous. 3. 3. 9 million unemployed in 1960 ; 4 million in 196 1.
/
WHO'S WHO OF AMERICAN WOMEN 140
CHERNOCK, MARlA CIULLA, consumer products co. me.; b . S.1.. of 1C. Office: South eastern Consortium for Minori1ie1 In Engineering 1971; M.S .. George Williams Coll., 197S; m. Ale. .ndcr Nicho lru
N.Y., Dec. 19, 19SI; d . JOKph John and JOKPhine Morie (uBilll) Georgia l0itilute of Technology Atlanta GA 30JJ2 Chibucos. Aug. 2S, 1979. Admissions counselor R0>ary Coll .. Ri ve
Oulla; B.A. in Psycholo3y 1nd English magm cwn laudc. L.1.U .. 1974: Forest, JU., 1912·74; grad . a111. George Willi•mt Coll .• Downen Grove
m . Jo>eph Chemoclt, ScpL 4, 1976. AuL credit mar. Stinncs Stcd Corp.• CHESSHER., FAYE BATEY, bank e•ec.: b. Dcwville. Ta., July 28. Ill .. 1974-15, asst. dir. admission s. 1975-76, asso. dir. admiMitln'
1974-76; wi th John son & Johnson Producu. In c., 1976-. ter. mgr., 1921; d . Willinm Whitfi eld and Harriet Mary (Callison) Batey: B.S., Tex. 1976-19, aclins dir. admissions. 1979. Man. Coll. Entr:mcc Exam. Dd
197&-79, mcrch1ndising mgr. health care div .. dill. mgr. NJ .. 1979-80. Lut h. Coll.. 1962; M .A .. S.W. Tu. Stste U .. 1968; m . Daniel Simpson Nit. A'5n. Women Oca.ns, Adrnin1an. and Counselors. Na r., Ill. ta.~n~
mar. fidd sales services. New Brunswick. NJ .• 1980-. Mcm. Nat. Assn. Chessher, Ap<. 22. 194 J . With Sta. KWED. Seguin. Ta.. 1949-80. coll. admissions counsdnrs, Nat., 111. u:sn s. collegiate regist ran unc
Female Execs .. Am. Mgmt. Assn .. Variety Scnicc Club, Resource Dur. women"s dir., 19~~62.t 68-80, public aUairs dir,, 1976-80; community admissions officers. Am. Aun . U. Adminstrc.• Women in Mgml.. p
Corp./ Coll. Relotions. Office: SOI George St NeW Brunswick NJ 08903 services dir. Noltl Nat. Dank, Seguin, 198()-; tchr. J oe F. Saegcrt Jr. Garnmo Mu. Sigmo Dclts Pi. Greek Onhodox. H ome: J91) S S.11110µ
High Sch.. Seguin. 1962-68. Omm., Sch. Vocat. Nursing. New Braun· A ve A.pl 20SG Downen. Grove IL 6051S Office~ George Willi11m1
CHERNOK, NOR.MAB. soci•l worker. b. N.Y.C., Aug. !S·
1928; d . !els, Tex.. 1968-; r.cc. Coli..um Bd., 1972-80; vocat . cdnl. adv. bd. College SSS list St Downm Grove IL 6051S
Louis and S.die C.; B.S.. L.l. U.. 1949; M .Ed.. Fla. Atlantic U.. 1968; Seguin High Sch. Met hodist. Club: Zonta. Home: 14J6 Mockingbird Ln
M .S.W., Rutgers U .. 1973. Dir. med . ...i11ing program Broward (Fla.) Seguin TX 1g1ss CHICAGO, JUDY, anist: b. Chio .. July 20. 19J9: d . Arthu r M . an(
Jr. Coll., 1965-66; assL p rof. Coll. of S.I., 1969-, also adminstr. S.l. May (Levenson) Cohan: B.A .. UCLA. 1962. M .A-. 1964. An organiw
Women' s Crisis Center. 1978-80; Cca.ching ant. aociaJ work Rutgers U., CHESn:R, CHARLOlTE WANETTA, artist; b. Colum bo•, Ohio. Fcmini~t Studio Workshop, L.os Anielcs. 1970--; numerous one-ar1 b11
1978; cons. Hudson Valley Communit y Coll., N.Y.C. Bd. Edn. Pres. Oct. 27, 1921; d . Charl es William 1nd Edna May (Casted) Harper; cxhbn.s.. numerouJ group shows; The Dinner Pan y cAhbn. 11 San
Richmond Sr. Centers, Inc., 197&-80; CJ<CC. dlr. Project SHARE. student Copi tol U.. 19Sl-S4. Ol<lahoma Chy U., 19SS-S9, Pa. Acad. Fine Francisco Mus. M odem An. 1979. U. Howton at Clcor Lake City. 19~0.
1980.81; chmn. health com. N.Y.C. Hu!TUIO Resources Adminstrn. Adv. Arts. 1968-69, Philo. Coll. An. 1971, workshops. 1968-69; B.F .A .. Ft. Cyclorama Thc:i.ter, Boston. 1980. Dkl yn. Mus .. 1980. MusC.: de l'Art
Com. Dist. 40. pres., 1980-82. Mom. Nat. Assn . Social Workers (chmn. Wright Coll ., 1977; m . David Murel Chester. Sept. 27, 1939; childrcn- Contcmporain. M ontreal. 19g2, Sculprurn Arts Mus.. Atlanta , 1982:
S.l. council 198().81), Am. Assn. Med. Assts. (past pres. N.Y. State). Carol (Mrs. Verne Landt), Janet (Mrs. Ronald Cocklcrcccc), David ttprcsentcd in permanent collections. Recipicnl Mademoiselle Woman
Author: Your Future in Medical Auisting rev. ed .• 1979; Domestic Murel. With U.S. Govt ., 19S5-71; propr. Char's Studio and Gallery, of Yr. awa rd. 1973. Mem. Phi Beta Kappa. Author: Throug.h the Flower.
Violence: A Family Matter of Public Concern, 1980. H ome: 212 Ventnor. N .J ., 196S.69; tchr. advanced painting Atlantic Community 197S: The Dinner Pany: A Symbol of Our Heritage. 1979; Embroidcnna
Ocrmont Pl Ststen lsl1nd NY IOJ14 Offl= 130 Stuyvesant Pl Staten Coll .. N.J .. Fed. An Assn . NJ .. 1968-69,chmn. So. sect.. l 971;co-owner Our Heritage: The Dinner Party Needlework. 1980. Address : PO Bo,;
Island NY I 030 I gallery Art Is the Key, West Or1ngc, NJ., 1972-73: paintings in 842 Bcnicio CA 94SIO
pcrmnnent collec1ions Nat. Air nnd Space Mus.• Smithsonian lnstn ..
CHERNUCHIN, ELAYNE UNK <MRS. PAUL CHERNUCHINl, Frankfort. Gennany, Yearbook Ocean City, Kerr Mus. Recipient CHICAGO, JUDY RAELENE, assn. adminstr.: b . Safford . AriL , Nov.
mgmt. cons. co. ucc..; b. N.Y.C., OcL 8. 192g; cl. Sydney and Lillian honorable: mention A.C Arc C.c:ntc.r. Atlantic Cit y, 196S, 70, meril S. 1946; d. Ralph Newton and F0;yrcnc {Goodner) Johnson; st'udcn1
(Kalish) Link: B.A .. Bldyn. Coll.. l9SO. M .A .. 19S2; Ph.D., U. London, a ward Atlantic City C. of C., 1970, hon. mention Cultural Art Center. Biol• Coll., 1964-6S: B.A. in Christion Edn .. Southwestern Coll .. 1no:
t 9S7; M .A. in Computers: Columbia U., 1979; m . Paul Chernuchin, Ocean City, 1973. Mcm. League South Jersey Artists (pres. I 96g), NaL m. Jan . 21. 1978 (div. June 1981). Editorial asst. Baptist Public.:nions.
Sept. 12, 19S2' children - Michael Scott. Cindy Jo. Tc~r. math., N .Y.C. Polit. Caucus1 NOW. Unita.rian-Univcnalist (program chmn. 1973). Denver. 1970-73; expedi ter Phel ps Dodge Corp., Douglas. Arit-.
Public Sch. System. 19.5G-S2; math. analyst NaL Security Agy., 19S2-S4; Address: Route I Box S3 Reardan WA 99029 also Route I Box SJ 1974-18; orfice mgr. So. AriL lntemat. Livest ock Assn., Inc.• Tucson.
in.. r. math. USAF, 19SS-S7; officer Chcmuchin Assos., N.Y.C., 1965-. Reardon WA 99029 191g-80; supt.'s sec. Phelps Dod~e Corp., 19g1-. Mcm. adv . bd. Ariz.
Mein. Am. Statis. Assn., Assn. Computing Machinery, Opcra1ionaJ Lung Ass n.; leader 4-H. Douglas. Recipient Am. Legion Good Cit izen
Research Soc. Research in applications spccilic ststis. problems to high CHESTERFlELD, RHYDONlA RUTH EPPERSON, fin. co. exec.; award, 1964. Man. Nat . Assn. Female Execs .• Inc., So. Aril.. Jntern1u.
speed dcctronic equipment, comparative course io geometry for high b . Dallas, Apr. 23; d . Leonard Lee and Sally Evelyo (Stevenson) Livestock Assn . Sigma ~ba Dclts. Repubican. Baptist. Clubs: Trun k
school. Home: 108-19 67th Rd Forest Hill.s NY 11J7S
Griswold; S.S.. Southwestern U., 19S2; B.S., Nonh Tex. U .. 19.54. &. Tusk. Pima Count)' Republican, Cen1rc Cc., Westerners lntcmar., So.
M.Ed., 19S6; Ph.D .. Bcroadcan U .. 1974; D.Utt. (hon .). Calif. Christian Ari.t. Depression Glass. Home:: PO Box 6S Playas NM 88009
CHESHIRE, MAXINE <MRS. HERBERT W. CHESHIRE!, colum- U .. 1974; m . Chad Chesterfield. Apr. 2 1, 1979. Personal appearances,
n ist; b. Harlan, Ky., Apr. S, 1930; .cl. M .F. and Sylvia (Cornett) Hall; radio, cvang. worker Griswold Trio, 10 19S8; public sch. tchr., D:illas. CHICHINSKAS, PAMELA OLIVE, publishing ucc.; b. Montreal.
student Union Coll. , Barbourville, Ky., 19Sl-S2. U. Ky .. 1949-SO; m .
Los Angeles, 1954-74; pres. Griswold -Epp<rson Fin. Enterprise, Los Que., Can., July 27, l9S2' d . M ichael and Doreen (O'Brien) C.; di ploma
Herbert W. Cheshire. Apr. 2S, 1954: children-Marc. Hall. Paden, Angeles. 197-. Fellow lntcmat. Naturopathic Assn.; mem. Los in ans. Dawson Coll .. 1971: B.A. in Lit .. McGill U., 1974. Pub. asso.
L.agh. Reporter Knoxville (Tenn.) Ncws-Sc:otinel 19Sl-S4; reponer Angeles l nsL Fine A ru. Hoo. Assn . for Women in Edn., K.ppa Dclts Take One mag .• Montreal. 1974-16; asst. editor Canadi&n Business m3g .,
Washington Post. 19S4-6S; c<>lumnist Los Angeles Times Syndicate, Pi, Pi Lambda Theta. CJubs: ln tcmat. Bw. and Pron. Women. Nat. Bus. Mon1real, 1976-77; pub. dir. Eden Press Women's Publ.1., Montreal.
1965-. Author: (with J ohn Grccnya) Muinc Cheshire. Reponcr, 197g; and Pron. Women. Author: The Little Citir.cns (film series). Address: 1978-. Recipient Lionel Shapiro nward, McGill U .. 197J. Office: 24S
G riswold-Eppcnoo Fin Enterprise Bo1 2464g Village St.a Los Aogeles V1etoria Ave Suite 12 Montreal PQ H JZ 2M6 Clflada
c:oatbr. articles to popular mags. Olfia:: Tunes Mirror Square Los
CA 90024
Angeles CA ~SJ. ~ : : , CHlCO, BEVERLY ANN BERGHAUS. historion, <;ducator. b. no..
CHESLOCX, ROSALIND PLEET, tech. info. mgr.; b. DalL, Aug. 6, CHESTNUT, DElMA LOU, aoct_, rancher; b. Graham, Ta., July 8, ton, May l4, 1931: d . Theodore Francis and Genevieve Valanine
1940; d . Arnold B. and Nellie Faye (Mayes) McGlothlio; B. B.A.. (Mahoney) Bcrghaus: B.A., Boston Coll., 1962; M .L.A .. Johns Hopkms
1946; cl. Samuel 1nd Anne (Rubin) Pleet; 8-A. magna cum laude in Latin
Midwestern U., 1971; postgrad. in acctg. Tex. Tech. U., 1979-; U.. 196S, C.A.S.L.A., 1973; D .A .• U. No. Colo .. 1979; m. Raymundo J .
and Greek. Goucher· Coll ., 1967; M.A. in Latin and Greek, Johns
children-Ronnie Mac, Larry Everett, Dclmaric. Dcp. disL elk. Youna Chico, July 2S, I 9S9; childrcn--Otristian James. Gregory John, Jl>y.
Hopkin• U., J96g; M.L.S.• U. Md.. 1974; m. Arthur S. Cheslock, ScpL
County, T.,.., 196J-6g; booklcoepcr ~ & Glass. 1963-70; acct., gen. mund Matthew, Man.ha Vida M. Free lanu journalist Radio Naciona.1
S, 1967: Youngadultspccialist Enoch Pratt Frccl.lbrary, DalL, 1968-71,
mgr. oil ops .. ranchin g and investments LcSage Industries. Graham, de Espaia UN. 1958-64; instr. social scis . dept. Community Coll. &It..
asst. dir. bookmobiles. 1971-73: assL librarian Martin Marietta Labs .. 1971>-; farmer, rancher. Mom. March or Dimes C om., 196&-69; adult 1965-69. asst. prof. history. 1969-73, :uso. prof., 1973-76; vi<. prof.
Dalt.. 1974-n, info. specialist, 1975-76, sci. and tech. librarian. 1976-79,
leader 4-H Clubs in Young County, 196f>-. Mcm. Nat . Asso. Female history Met . State Coll., Denver, 1976-79; vis. prof. history U. Colo..
mgr. tech . info. scrviocs. 1979-. M=- Neighborhood Bus. Adv. Com..
Execs".~ West Tex. Oil and Gas Assn_, Tu. Mid-Continent Oil and Gas Denver, 1976-77; adj. faculty history U. No. Colo .. Greeley, 1977- .
1980-; bd. dirs. People 'Encouraging People, 1981-. Dean's scholar
Assn., Desk aod Derrick (pres. 1970). Baptist. Home: Bunger Rout e Observer UN Commn. on Status or Women, Buenos Aires. 1960; ofcl.
Goucher Coll.; Gilmao fellow Johns Hopkins U., 1967-68. Mcm.
Graham TX 76046 Offi= Box 92g Jacksboro Hwy Gnlwn TX 76046 observer Nat. Conr. Women , Houston. 1977; bd. dirs. VWCA . Denver.
Aluminum Assn. (tech. info: com. 197-: cbmn. subcom. World
WILDA .~A
Mcm. Am. Hist. Soc.• AAUP. Oral History Assn .. Nat. Women's
Alumioum ' Abstracts 1981-), Interlibrary Uscrs Assn. (dir. 1981-), CHEVERS, VAR.DE CMRS. KENNETH CHEV- Studies Assn . Democrat. Roman C:uholic. Author numerous articles on
Dept. Def. Remote On-line System USCB Council, Am. Soc. Info. Sci..
ERS), probation officer: b. N.Y.C.,; d . Wilsey Ivan and Hcrbcnlcc women's history. H om e; 9600 E Grand Ct Englewood CO go111 Office:
Spl. l.lbraries Assn. (various corns.), As>ociated Info . Mgrs., Md.
(Perry) Yarde: D.A., Hunter Coll., 1947; M.S.W., Columbio. 1959; Dept History U No Colo Greeley CO 806J9
On-lioe Osen Group. Phi Bela Kappa. Beta Phi Mu. Mgmt. adv. panel P h.D.. N .Y.U., 1981; m . Kenneth Chevcrs. May 14, 1950; I dau., Pamela
Modcn> Plastics, 1981;joint editor: Guide lo M etallurgical Information . Anilll . Probation officer, 1941-SS; supr. probation officer, 1955-65; br. CHI COREL. MARIE'ITA, pub. co. exec.j b. Vienna. Austria: eune 10
3d edit.. I 98J, Jour. Holdings in the Washington-Baltimore Arco, 1983. chief Office Probation for Cts. N.Y.C .. 1965-72, asst . dir. probation, U.S., 19J9. naturali:r.cd. 194S: B.A .. W>yne State U., 19S2: M.A .. U.
Home 2510 Smith Ave Baltimore MD 21209 Office: 1450 S Rollin& Rd 1972-77, dcp. commr. dcpL probation. 197&-; c<>nf. facult y mCDL NaL Mich .• 1960. Chief edit.o r Ulrich's Internal. Periodicals Directory. R. R.
Baltimore MD 21227 .. ··' -... Council Juvenile and Family Ct. Judges . Sec. Susan E. Wagocr Adv. Bd..
;.,. I •. ' .. •,J. • .!
Bowker Co., N.Y.C .. 1966-68; project mgr. In fo. Scis., Inc.. Macmillan
1966-70. Sec., bd. dirs. Allen Community Day Core Center, 1971 -7S; bd. Pub. Co.• Inc .• N .Y.C.. 1968-69; pra. Chicorel Ubrary Pub. Corp .•
CHESNEY, PATRICIA JOAN (COOIC),' pcdiatrician: b. Kingston ,
dirs. Allen Sr. Citizens Housing, Allen Christian Sch., Quocnsboro Soc. N.Y.C., 196~79; prof. library sci. Queens Coll .. 1971-72: pres. Am .
OnL. Can.. Sept. 23, 1941; came to US.. 19S6, natur.Ulud, 1962; cl. for Prevention Cruelly t o Children. Mcm. Nit. Council on Crime and Library Pub. Co., Inc .. N.Y .C., 1979-. Bd. govs . Booksellers l..c3gue of
Leslie Glad.otone 1nd Alfreda Mary (Crutcher) Cook; B.A.• U. Roches- Delinquency, Nat. A5"n. Socio! Workers, Acad. Cert. Social Workers . N .Y.. 1968-79. Mcm. A LA, Am. Soc. Info . Scientists . Office: Amcri~
ter, N.Y., 1962; M .0., McGill U .• 1966; m . RlllSCIJ Wallace Chesney, Middle Atlantic Sl4tcs Con!. Correction. Alumni Ann. Columbia Sch. Library Publishing Co Inc 275 Central Pork W New York NY 10024
June 8, 1968; childrcn- Ksren McColl , Oiristophcr Paton, Gillian Social Work, NAACP, Am. Soc. Pub. Adminstrn. (dir.), Cowuclicrs.
Leslie Russell. Intern, Strong Mcml Hosp., Rochester, 1966-67, Delta Sigma Thets. Club: H ansel and Gretel (pres. 1967-69) (Queens. CHILCUJT, DOR.THE MARGARET, educator. artist: b. Fond du
rcsidCllt, 1967-68, JohnJ Hopkins HO!p., Ball., 1971-72, fellow in N .Y.). Home: lOS-62 IJ2d St Richmond Hill New York NY 1141 9 Lac, Wis .. Jan. 29, 191S; d . John William and P<:1rl Evelyn (Bernett)
microbiology, 196&-71. lellow in pcdiatric infectious discssc, 1972-73; Office NYC Dcpr Probation llS Leonard St New York NY IOOIJ Trummcr, 8 .S.• U. Wis.. 1940. M .S.. 1952; postgrad. N.Y . U., 197S·78.
med. rcsearch council fellow Montreal Oilldra>'s Hosp. McGill U. med. Ins1ituto All ende. Mexico. summer 1958, La Romila Sch. Art, ll.aly,
school. quc., !97l-7S; asst. pro!. dept. pcdiat.rico U. Wis., Madison, CHEZEM, ESTH1i:R MAE TIMBERLAKE, nurse; b. R.ivcr>idc. 197g.g2, Sc hohegan Sch. Painting and Sculpture, 19S9; m . Booth
1975-80, asso. prof.. 1981>-. Mom. Am. Acod. Pediatrics. Infectious Calif., Apr. 6, 1926; d . Warren Evere1t and Gladys Marie (Myers) Chilcutt, Feb. 14, 1942' children-Karen Chilcutt Hulett. Booth. Cindy
Disease Soc. Am., Am. Soc. Microbiology, Midwest Soc. Pediatric Tonberlokc: R.N., loci. U., 1947; student St. Mary of Woods Coll .. 1979. Jo Chilcutt Underhill. Debra Ann Chileutt·Aippo. Layout anist D eVry
Rcscarclt. Contbr. in field. Office: Dept Podiotrics Oinical Science 80; m . Ralph Chczcm, Jr., Apr. 26, 1947; children- M ary Jeanne. David Corp.• C hgo .• 1941-42; tchr . on St. Louis pubhc schs.. 19Sl -SJ, M onroe
Caller. 600 Highland Ave Madison ~ SJ792 • •' Michnel, Susan Elizabeth. Offioc nurse, Richard S. Bloomer, M .0., County Schs .. Key West, Fla.. l9S7-62. Oke<ehobee (Fla.) Jr. Hip. Sch..
Rockville. Ind., 1947-77; dir. nursing Vermillion Convalc:sccnt Center, 1963-82; one woman shows: Little Gallery. Key West. 1960. Mancllo
CHESNJCK, JOYCE BAILES CMRS- JOSEPH CH.ESNICK>, retail Ointon, lnd .. 1977-. Mom. Parke County H ealth Bd., 1966-, cbnm .. Gallery, Key West, 1963, Ft. Pierce (Fla.) An Gallery , 1970; eAhibited
furniture and intcriorsucc.; b. Memphis. June 6,"192S; cl. George W. and 1970-72, 7&-80. Mcm. Ind . U. Alumni Assn .. Ind. U. Nursing Alumni in group thews: Jacksonville (Fla.) An Mus ., 1959. Tampa Art M us.•
J ean Y. Bailes; studcsit U . Tex., 194l-4S, U. Houston, 19S4-S6; m. Assn ., VFW Aux. DcmocraL Mcm. Rockville Christian Ch. Oubs: 1960. Nonon An Gallery. West Polm Bc:i.ch. Fla.. 1960. Ft. Pierce An
Joscpb Chcsnick, Feb. 28, I 94S; cbildrcn-JOlf1 O>csnick Dincrstein, Order Eastern Star. Ladies of EJks. Home: 402 McCune Ave Box JS Gallery, 1977-82. St. Louis An M us .• 1951. Wis. Salon o r An, Madi son.
Joseph. J r •• Robert G . _Vice pres. Gcorgcto•Tl Manor; Hou.it on. 19687, Rockville jN 47872 Offioc: 170S S Main St Clint on IN 47842 1947, Key West An and Hist. Soc.. 19S7- , Key West Art Center, 19S9;
Sin Antonio, 1971-. Bcaurnonl, Tex., 197~ Hou5lon , 1977-, rcprcsc:nt.cd in p.!ITI1.ane:nt collections Ft. Pierce Art Gallery, Ma neJlo
Roben Joseph Interiors, Corpw Christi, Ta., 19g1-, Houston, 19g2-. CHI, LOTTA CHAI JUI, cngring. research c1oc.; b. N .Y.C ., Dec. S, Galleries. Rccipfen1 Best of Show awards Aa. Fcdn. Art. 1974, FL Pierce
Mcm. Am. Soc. Interior Dcsigncn (asso.), Houston Retail Furniture 1930; d . Chen Picn and Han Chih (Tang) Li; B.S., Heidelberg Coll.. Ar1 Gallery, 1977, Ybor Chy Ann FiC"Sla Day, 1980, Isl pl. awards
Assn.; S.W. Home FurnishingJ Assn., VDC. Oub: Westwood Country Tiffin, Ohio, 1953; M .S .. Rut8crs U., 19S5; m . Michael O>i. June 15. Highlands An League 8th Ann., 1974, Jc:n lC"ll Beach Ann .• Ell iot MU£.,
(JOY. 1977-81). Home:: g Inwood Oaks Houston TX n024 Office: 1801 19.57; children-Loretta Elizabeth, M.a.xwcll Michael. Virologist. N IH , 1974, FL Pierce Scholarship Show, 1972. 7J, 74, 75. Four-County A n
N Loop w Housron TX 77008 l 9S6-63i v.p. Oli A.uos .• cngring. research, A rlington. VL. l 974-. Show. Ft. Pierce, 1972. 73. 74. 75, 82. othcn . Mcm. Okeechobee An
Mcm. N .Y. Acad. Scls.. Am. Soc. M icrobiologists. Nat . Assn. Women League (pres. 1975.go), Fla. Watercolor Soc. (sec. 1975-82), Nat. Art
CHESNUT, CAROL PJlTING, economist: b. Pecos, Tex.. June 17, Bus. Owners, Sigma Xl. Dcmocrot. Home: 2721 N 24th St Arli ngton VA Edn. M in .• A.a. An Edn. Assn., Miami Wa1c.rcolor Soc .• Key West Art
1937; cl. Ralph Ulf and Carol (Lowe) Fit ting: B.A. magna cum laudc. 22207 Office: 956 N Monroe St Arlington VA 22201 1nd HisL Soc. Democrat. Clubs: Ft. Pierce Art, Okeechobee A n .
U . Colo.,· 1971: m . Dwayne A . Chesnut. Doc.. 27, 19SS; chlldrcn-<:arol Contbr. anicles to pron. jours. Home: S06 SW 15 St Okca:hobee FL
Marie. Michelle. Mark Steven. Rcocanoh asst. U. Colo .. 1972: head CHIARELLO, DOROTHY ELIZABETH, nurse: b. Phila.. Oct. 14, 33472
qu.aliry conrroUer Mathematica, Inc., Denver, 1973-74; cons. Mincomc 194g; d . Raffella and Elizabeth Dorothy (Rambo) C.; diploma Rox-
Manitoba (Can.), Winip<J. 1974; cons. cconomi11 Energy Cons. Assos. borough Mcrnl. H osp. Sch. Nursing. Philo .. 1969; B.S. with honors in CHILD, JULIA MCWILLIAMS (MRS. PAUL CH ILD), author, TV
Inc .. Dcnva, 1974-80, exec. v.p.. 197~80, at.o dir.; ucc. v.p. ECA / Nuning, AL lntcmat. U .. 1974, M .S. in Adult Edn .. 1978; ocn. in performer: b. Pasodeno, Coli!.. Aug. IS. 1912; d . John and Julia Carolyn
Jntercomp. 1980-81; mng. pannet The Chesnut Coa sortium. Den ver. health occupations cdn.: postgrad in edn. Starr nurse emergency dept. (Weston) McWilliams; D.A .. Smith Coll.. 19J4; hon. de~rcc Boston U..
19g1- ; dir. Critical Resources, Inc.; on leave with surf Senator Gary Roxborough Mcml. H o•p.. Phila.. 1969. charge nurse ICU. 1969-71: 197g; m. Paul Child. Sept. I, 19-IS. With advt. dept. W, & J . Slo•ne.
Han . 191g. Rep.. Lakehurst Civic Asso., 1968. Precinct capt. Republi- staff nurse. rdid charge nurse med. ICU, Jackson Mani. H osp.• Miami, N .Y.C.. 19J9-40; with OSS, Washington, Ceylon and Ch ina. 1941-4S:
can Pany, 1960, 64: now committeewoman Dem. Precinct. Man. Am. Aa., 1971·73; 1tafi and re.lier charge nun.c emergency depl. Parkway condr. TV program The French Chef. WGBH-T V, Bos1on, 1962-, JuJia
Mgmt. Aun., Soc. Petroleum Enan., Aun . Women Geoscicnli11s, A11n . Gen. Hosp., Miami , 1973-79. ednl. inur.. 1979·80, cdnl. coordinator / Child & Co.. 1978, Julia Child & More Co .. 1980. Rccipien1 Pc.:ibody
Tng. 1nd Devel.. Opera Colo., ACLU, NOW, Phi Beu Kappa, Phi Chi 1pl. care area, 1980-; home health nurse Am. Home H ealth, Miami, award, 1964. Emmy award, 1966: dccoralcd OrdrC' dC' Merit.. / · ' "'
Theta. Unitarian. Oub: City of Denver, Friends of Phrcatophyia. 1916-80~ matron U.S. Marshall's OffJCC, Miami , 1978-: man. ano. Ordrc National de Merite (France). Aurhor: (with Sii •·
Office: 419 A Sai nt Paul Denver CO 80206 faculty Nursing Unlimited, Miami Dad e Communi1y Coll .: mcrn. Dade Louisclle Dcnhollc) Mas1ering lhC' Ari of French Ct-
County Disa11er Team. l980. Recipient service award Parl:v.-ay Gen. Frcnch Chef Cookbook. 1968; (W1th Simone Deck)
CHESNl.l'IT, CAROLYN CRAWFORD, usn. uec.: b. Maryville. H osp.. 1979: ccn. of achievemen t Am . Hear\ Assn .. 1979: rcpstcrcd French Cooking , Vol. It, 1'>70; From Juli1 C hild'•
Tenn., Sept. 16, 1933: d . John Calvin. Jr. and America Arey (Moore) nurse, Aa.; rcgi11crcd emergency med . 1echnidan, Fla.: ccn. cnt1cal cnre Child & Com pun y. 1978; Juliit Child&. More C
Crawford; D.A. (Presser Found. Music.cholar), Agnes Scoll Coll.. 1955: nurse; registered advanced lite 'i.upport provider, advanced cardiac life col umni11 From Julia Child",; Khchcn, McCal
M .Ed. (Ednl. Research fellow), U. S.C., 1972: M.S .• Ga. lnll. Tech .. 1upport provtder; emergency med.. 1y11ems adminstr. ccr1s.: jr. roll. cdllor Yaradc. J 982-. WC'Ck ly TV appearant.
1979: children-John Calvin, Thomes Waltez. Margaret America. rcbrs. ccr1 .. F1a.; emergency nurse 1po:iali11 ccn.: CPR insrr.· trainer. Am., 19SO--. Office: WGDH 12S Western A
Carolyn Chriuian. Ant. librarian, Hart1villt, S.C .• 196S-66; in11r. mnlh. Mem. Nat. Aun. Femn.le Eaccs .. Am . Ann. Crl rical CarC' Nurses. Am.
and psychology leCOndary Khs., G&. and S.C.. 1966--7 ~; ttssl . t o den.n Heart Assn.. Adult Edn. Assn . U.S.A .. Emergency Dept. Nurses Assn .. CHILD, LOUISE A VERY, pubhc rclotinn> <
cng.ring. G&. ln.sl. Tech., All1nta.. 191.S-77: CJ.CC. dir. SouLheutcm Emersency Med. Tcchnid ani Aun. (Mcri1orious KrY1ot and pres. Bradford a nd Genrude (Syk.,,) C:.: II.A .. W
Consortium /or Minondcs tn £ngring., Allanta, 1977-. also organist. awards EMTA -Paramcd. Soc. A a.), chp1. prct1. 19Ml.1te1C" treas. 19~1). cdn onal •IAH Thnc. 192'4: Asst. t1Junr nc
choinna11er v1rious churchc:1o, l 9~1-. Campa1gn chair Communiry S. Aa. l nscrvlc.c Educu1ors, Emcrgenc)' Med. Technicians and Para.me- 1 q2S·3~: frcc· l•ncc 11u blici1 y. nC"w) r"'
Conccn Assn .• 1968-70, pres .. 1971-74: v.p. H•nsville Art• Council. d ic Soc. (dir.. sec. 191.0. edn. chmn. I 9KOI. Home: 262 S B1sca)'nc River rclauon~ d ir. Youth Consul•hnn
1968-72: com. to ra1ructurc bds. and aJtcnoes Prcsby1erian Ch. U.S. . Dr M11mi FL 33169 Office: 160 NW 170th St North M11mi Bc~ch FL relation' du . D11t, Uren .. Inc ..
1968-71: gen. oec. bd. Prcsbyn. Ch. U.S.. 1971·72: pres. PTA. 1973. 33169 Untted Dd O.nauan m-~-""'""-
Allred P. Sloan Found. rantcc. 1977-81: NASA Rrontcc 19R2. Mem ·-~ ··""
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CONGRESSIONAL INQUIRY INTO
POLITICAL ASSASSINATION .S· (CCCI.PA)
September "24, 1976
(More)
130 GRE.ENE . ST. NEW YORK 10012 · TEL.
212 966 6030
- 2 -
(More)
- 3 -
Thank you for this opportunity to submit our views. With all
good wishes.
For CCCIPA
cc. Hon. Henry B. Gonzalez
Hon. Richardson Preyer
Hon. Louis Stokes
Hon. Walter E. Fauntroy
Hon. Yvonne B. Burke
-- - - --Hon.ChristopherJ.- Dodd " - --- -- .
Hon. Harold E. Ford
Hon. Samuel L. Devine
Hon. Burt L. Talcott
Hon. Stewart B. McKinney
Hon. Charles Thone
yes. ,
, ...,. 1 Senato~· BAKER. I s that u,stunclard metnod o f renching. co1l\"cying
- - :.nformat10n to your Agency!
· " General ,V,\LTF.RS. I would not knnn-. sir.
Senator BAKER. Do ~·011 know 'd10 °.\!r. Gaynor is i
G encrrrl " T"\LTERS. I know hr is rrn Agrncy c>mpl oyce. T do not knon-
i.n dd ail what lw does.
S enator 13.1.KER. Do you kno 1Y why }fr. °.\IcCorcl 1rnulcl he °\\riting
to him?-
Genernl \V,\LTF:ns. I han: heal'd it snicl he k.nen- }fr. }fcCorcl ,..,-Jiilc
Mr. .\fcCorcl wa;;;;ti]] ,rorking with thv _\ !:!"enr l".
Senator BAKER. C'onld v oi1 tell us n-h;u . i\Ir. GaYn0r·:: function is?
General ,.L\!:rrn,;. I hri'ien°!d hr n-0rk1'd in the Office of Sec11r-ity nf
the .:\.!!'encv.
Scn~ttor.R\KER. H e worked n-ith }fr . .\IcC'nnl n-hen he was therr.
the OfficP of Securit...- !
General "T.ILTEn::O: I l1n1<> been !!:i,-en to unclcrstam l that. I l1: n-r n o
personal knnwl cdire of it. •
Scn ntrJr B.\KF.n. :\fnch of this is information we alrr ach· ha,·r in ch ··
testim on~- of .\[r . .\kConl a nrl. an nclcliti.onal pre::irr.bk. might he in
orcfrr. I nm not tnin <•· to cont rad irr tlie t0,,t i111nn,· of .\f r. ~\f .. C,,1·d. .\ :-<
a matter of fact. n1nch of this corrnhoratrs this b1it T wanr to d0 this to
reach a final ar<>a rif inquiry. rlh' .Lt111iary .-1. i r1 -;-:!. qn ot\· ::ay:":
The outfit tried t o la .' thE: 0rier atirm ut the f eet o f the CU. thi~ 'l'i'eek un-i fai !Pd.
YrHer<ln_,. rllP.' trietl t0 g-e1 a' ! ., f t he rlefe n1t111 n.-: t0 ple:i <i !,:ll i[t)·. tlrns 1irnn-r ti 11::
th o;;e higher 11p of im' oln~me nr u n(l t~1 lt f :i i led . B a rker :ind E •jm " ere · !le;.;1'ri')·
t o p!n:irl . ;;o it i> "aid. ~Ir:C ri r1 l :1nrl T.i1l rl y ~efn,e<l.
.'3. Jn n .:H·n.;-e 11ri>< tl!<> pro !' ~cuti on i ~ J11n nn in g t0 >t:ue thn · t he m<>tin· ~ nf ::t
l•·:i..:r ~r,m ;\ r.f r hr· <!'"·f~1Hl :1nr ..: ,,,n,;; lda r·!: n1n i l. Thi ' (·il n 1e nnt t 1f ih f' .\r·r.1-11 r-ar i c~:-:
torl u;; in -.h '.di r!1f. _\.r·r.r la "Cnr >n it! h ~ ,,.:1, r..1,1 t hi' ! .' flh' prr1'F'n ti• rn t1.:i:
1 ;~-u·J.:rn:lil v.·a-.: rL -: un-:--, ..
-t. T hr o-nfi :·t, 1·..-.. 11 ;:···tti nz ~rH1'.,..tn ble. It 1Y;is :rntici1 •n t Prl ·t.:rrr "hrn I rrf iE;erl
tr• i111 1l ir·a -r· f' T.\ th·:: ~··n; 1 u :~ 1.1e rtn. ke ri !1 i ;1 :.:.< z(.l ,·,:: :· ..v··-,·· r :i...:..::;: ...:-.:i 11:1 rl11r..
1
:-i ~1e1..irt.
;i _ 'Ihc.. j nr1:.!'E- i.::: r.n .. J 1 · . :·~ r. ~ rl Ji-:: plr1.\ . J-J.:,i ind ica tr-11 :i:.: n111r·:; t i1i~ ei nrninC'.
ref·~rr:r.z t 11 1:. n~ :i c•-1\ i--"':' '=: 1•rr n~ : 1 in rl icati :-~ ~ th:: i th P w 1rl(! r. .. ~ \\T;1rr·h in z rh i:-:
~~~";;.-' 1;:; li'../'~~ r/;~.;-~ ~\;·;·~·. ·;~~\:;~(\n ~!i;;;' ];~'.1 1;;~,i:?g ~~~~. ~\';~ ./:.'.:;~.1~~~ ..";~J~· ~,r:;::.~
r. f t·•.:-:rir:·. .-,. :· :i:1 r1 '.i-:,•: :: i .· - liJ· .~r: 1 r:r1 J:il',\" r!1:1- i:·..-.'"h·t.,1 11 : ~: _<- r - - .! , ... ,.:· lO \\l •J"
I
fk.'lire~ in,-cj1 -;-c ·1. ~. IL r.. : ri:· t i .. !1r- l'"\ ;:Jn~n ...:a~ ... i.f-r fl f P :-=t:rq ,p::~ :1r.-. . "."\'"~ • :·r ..:r··:i p,·-
~0:1 t:-:. tl.~y :: r ~ rL~h - .
l'
lhP l)J:t1ne on th(' <'Ompnn,\· for the operation. This j;;; Qf inunediate iniportance
lwcnuse the plans :-ire in the fonnatiYe stage now and can be preempted now if
fill• >:torr i:-: !PakPtl >:o tl1at the press iR nlerteU. It 111nr not he l1eadeU off lnter
when it is fno lafl'. Th(' fix is on. One of the poliee officers in the :\IPD intelligence
dPparttnPnt b to tl'»iify that nne ~)f the def('ndauts told him that the defendnnts
l
"·•·re t'Oinpauy PCO!)h' aud it wns a corn11any operation. Ile has 11robnblr been
pro111i~C'd promotion for <'ln1nging hit> story to this C'ffect. Be c:trefnl in your deal-
ing-s \Yith hint. J \\ill do :tli J can to ket>p you informed. I<\:eetl the faith •
•\.nrl nnothcr one. addrcssccl to "Hr. rnchard Helms. Director. Central
fnlt'l!ig«'llt'C'- _\g:C'ucy, T.angleyi \,Tn.: on a post111nrk I belieYe of Jn1y 30)
197~. n111rked "personal.::
:F'ron1 thne to tinie J '"ill send a.long I hings :rou n1ay he interested in from an
info >:h1ndpnint. This is a t'OP~? of a 1P1-ter \Yhich I SPnt to n1r Jawrer. \\'ith best
re~ards.
T-nsigncd.
~\ncl 'another one. 'Ihere is no acco1npanying enye]opc as fn.r ns this
con1 piln.tion indicates.
Senators Demand ·. I
Names of 24,000 ·. . .
1 . UnderMailWatch
1
By C. P. TRUSSELL
Si>«lal to 11le Ntw York Times
SENATORS DEMAND
.MAIL-WATOU. LIST
Continued From Page 1, Col. S
postal inspector. the principal
\vitness, described special mail
watches, or "covers• that some· J
times were in effect against
up to 750 individuals or com.;,
panies at a tilne and were ap~
plied at a rate of about 1,000 ~
month.
He also gave n1uch credit to
''lookout galleries:' from \Vhich
postal en1ployes could be
\Vatched \Vhile working, for
holding do\\'11. theft and other
crimes \Vithin post offices.
\Vhen a person is subjected
to a mail cover, the Post Office
records the name and address
of anyone sending mail to him,
as well as the postmarking and
the class of mail. First-class
mall is not delayed or opened.
the department says.
Such surveillance must be
authorized and may be insti·
tuted only if there is reason to
suspect wrongdoing. The com·
piled data. are treated as ieads
to inquiries and not as evidence.
Court tests, ~fr. Montague
said, have pronounced the prac-
tice constitutional. Types of
ccu;es iri which covers are em-
.ployed include fraud, a-pprehen-
·sion of fugitives, espionage,
sabotage, illegal . mailing or
smuggling ot drugs, narcotics
and firearms:
pornographic
mailings, income tax \riolations, trial last July, \Vas acquitted _of
organized gambling and racket- charges of atten~pting ·to oh~
eering. struct a Federal _ invesUgation1
l\ilr. ?tiontague cited as ex-1 of a ~a million stock swindle.)
an1ples the Frank Costello in- 1 In· the
first Cohn trial, which·1
come tax case, the capture in ended in a mistrial, Thomas 1
1\1:exico of a rapist-n1urderet\ . Bolan, Mr. Cohn's attorney,
and health insurance frauds ·
that \ictimize elderly persons. charged that the Governnient
Mail covers are not used in had , been intercepting :Mr.
the department's separate Cohn's mail. It came out later
program of screening Com- that a mail cover had· been put
munist propaganda sent into!· on his incoming mail. Federal
the United States. Judge Archie Dawson termed
Those subjected to mail cov- ; the mail watch "shocking... The
ers include some persons who: American Civil Liberties Union
joined the resulting protests
turn out to be innocent of any !
• I against the postal action.
\Vrongdo1ng. For example, the '
Post Office may suspect a
dealer in pornography \vho ma.y
in fact be only an innocent
recipient. Another subjected
to a mail cover might be a tax·
payer under suspicion of tax
evasion; the investigation mayl
prove him innocent. 1
Kennedy Upbrar.ds II
1
I Senate Committee I
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1
On Expose Charge:
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By C. P. TR.C SSELL
S~ec!al to The :\ew YCJrk T1mr!'
'\Y.ASHINGTON, l\[arch 3- .
Senator Robert F. I~ennccl)\:
De1nocrat of :\cw· York, de-
nounced a Scn::tte in\·cstiga.ting
.subcornn1ittec today for haYing
raised \Yhat he ~aid \\:flS a false
in1plication that he had acted
i1npropcrly \\·hilc .Attorney Gen-
eral. (
The panel had heard charg-es !
yesterday that i\[r. Kennedy, ~
during- U1c eal'lv
"'- .. da\'s
. of his i:
incumbency ..,
as Attornev -· Gen- ;
eral in 1961, had tried to pro- ·
mote a magazine expose of .
James R. Hoffa. At that tin1e :
Hoffa, president of the Inter- i I
Continued Fron1 Page l, Col. 3 ':;iven to any magazine. "I thought it \Vas a citizen1 into court." . and developed and if it \vas de-
! "There \vas a connection be-' \vho "'as reporting information I "That is not the "·ay it \vas ' rogatory to an individual," he
the press. Senator Long repliec' I l\veen 1'Ir. Baron and Life nlaga-i and evidence in connection \vith 1
!done, ~Ir. Counsel," the Senator said, "\ve inforn1ed that indi-
that the testimony and princi zine over \Vhich I had no control I illegal activities," the Senator replied. "I never did anything . vidual so that he could appear
Iin1mediately if .he wanted to.
said.
.l
1
pal document had so indicated . •.nd \Vhich \\cas only to be pub- , like that."
Bernard Fensten\·ald Jr. ' ~ ished in ca.se Mr. Baron \Vas I "That \vould be a very good · Mr. Fenster\valci suggested "That was not done to me.
chief counscL of the subcon1
'killed," he said.
].Ir. Fenster\\"ald observed :
definition." the counsel said.
"Let me say," Mr. Kennedy, re-
that if there \Vas furtlier evi-
' ctence that might be sent to the
I There \Vas an implication across
the country that I had acted
n1ittee. interrupted to ask ?.lr ~hat there \Vas nothing in the 1 sumed, "I am shocked to hear full Judiciary Co1nmittee, it in1properly. and I resent it."
Kennedv if he believed the doe ·1ocun1ent desc1;bing plans for : that. I think there have been should be submitted to clear up
un1ent containing the principa 1 possible article in Life to in- a lot of loyal people, if I n1ay discrepancies and conclusions.
i111plications "·as faked. l\lr ~licate that the article \Vas to say, l\Ir. Counsel, that provided Senator I<:ennedy said he did
Kennedy said he accepted it a: ie published on;y in case of lVIr. 1
information to the United States not gather that there \vere dis-
a true docu1nent. \ 3aron's death. !Government in connection \vith crepancies.
This document "·as an 11 . "The article at that stage," 'Comn.unist activities, under- "I arn giving you \\'hat the
page n1emorandun1. datet I ~fr. Fenstenvald said, "had not ''vorld activities, narcotics. ac- inforn1ation \Va.s," he said.
l\Iarch 6, 1961, represented l1 j
'1een ~'critten. This \Vas an ar- tivities at great 1isk to tl1cir Senator Long in\•ited Nfr.
.
have been allctressect by Henr·. ,
Suvdam. then rhief of th.
rangement \\'hereby I under-
stand it, you \Vere putting \vhat
O\Vn lives, and f think that is-
that has been very, very help-
Kennedy to read the con1plcte
record of yesterday's proceed-
\Vashington oureau of Liff \Vould no1;--n1ally be described as ful to the United States." ings ana add anything he be-
n1agazine, to E. I(. Thon1pson, a 'a fink' in touch \Vith Tin1e- "And it is also your position, • lieved \Vas required "to com-
Life editor in Ne\\' York. It re-
lated that .l\Ir. Kennedy had
asked 1\lr. Suydam to drop
\\·hatever he "·as doing and go
to l\fr. Kennedy's office.
J\Ir. Suydan1 reported in the
n1en1oranciwn that l\Ir. Kennedy
had then proposed the pos-
sible expose by San1 Baron, a
disgruntled Tean1ster executive.
in a Life article. As presented.
the proposed article \vas vie\ved
bv subcon1111ittee n1en1bers as
o~e that \vould certainly not
have helped Hoffa's defense
against an indict1nent that had
been returned against hin1 on
111ail-fraud charges.
In that Federal case. Hoffa
and a Detroit banker \\·ere
charged \vith misusing for per-
sonal profit $500,000 in union
funds for the development of a
retiren1ent village for team-
sters in Florida. The charges
\\·ere dismissed on July .13, 1961. 1
By E. \V. KEN\VORTHY
Special to The New York Tlmes
I
TO BE EXAMINED
I
1
Senate Panel to Investigate
Methods Used by Agents
By JOSEPH A. LqFrUS
Spectal to The New York Times
/ W. L\.SHINGTON,
. April 24 .-
!A Senate subcommittee has set
!aside three days in the coming
f week to find out \vhether Food
and to bring the elaborate \vire- :tionist of Ne-..v .York City, \Vhol
Iess electronic eavesdropping ;has complained of being har-
!equipment they are reputed to :assed for years by the F.D.A.,
! ;has been invited to testify. The
1use.
! Senator Long served notice !committee also \\ill hear fron1
ion the F.D.A. and other agen- .Ir\vin L. Hubbard and 1filton
icies in a Senate speech on 1
A. Bass of Ne\v York, president
iThursday. He said: :and attorney for the American
I "\Ve intend to complete this ·Dietaids Con1pany. Inc.
!investigation into invasions of : Senator Long said that the ·
lprivacy. If it takes a year, so :F.D.A. objec ted to the com1nit_I
1
j be it. If it takes t\vo years, or
. tee s inquiring into cases that!
[three years, so be it. But one ·\\·ere under investigation or 1
i\vay or the other, this commit- :prosecution. i
i tee v. ill get the information, ! "As long as a nlonth ago," t
!and then decide \vhat ·
\Ve \Vi!l ·Senator Long told the Senate,
· ~ 'I requested the presence of
Itypes of legislation to recom.. :
I
:n1 end to Congress.'' !
'
certain F.D.A. employes from
•the field at our coming hear..
Heads a Subcoinmittee ~ :ings. Eventually I \Vas told that]
Senator Long is chairman of departn1ental officia.ls \Vould ex-·
Ithe Judiciary Committee's Sub- ·plain to us the subject matter
!committee on Administrative in \Vhich \:v·e \Vere interested. 1
t Practice and Procedure. The Then. if \Ve still \vantcd the I
Treasury and Post Office De- .ont-of-tO\\·n \Vitnesses, F.D.A. j
partn1ents have acknc)\vledged \vou Id reconsider and discuss!
at hearings before the con1n1it- · th~ r;i.~tter. f~rt~er \\'it~~, u:. j
Tn1~ u11scs co!1s1Je1 able !
i tee earlier this month that they
! \Vere secretiy checking the question in my n1incl. I have !
:United States mails for in- becon1e ' suspicious as to \\tha t I
1 formation on delinquent tax- the· Departn1ent of Health. !
:payers. Educ a ti on, and \Yelfare is cov- !
; Bernard Fenster\vald counsel ering up or concealing because j
I
~1,
• • !; t l. C'\.:'ll . ~ ' j
)had been subpoenaed to explain
:aqegations that they had used
ielaborate methods to obtain
:evidence against t\vo school
; teachers \vho, in spa.re hours,
sold a special food in a super-
market.
Then, it is alleged, l\\·o car-
loads of agents sw·ooped do\vn _
upon the supermarket for a .
spectacular seizure of the e\~i- :
dence. The issue \\~as the an10\ nt
of protein the product clain1ed
and contained.
The evidence is A1lerjoy, a
product sold as a milk substi-
tute for children \Vho are al-
lergic. The maker \\ras
prosecuted and acquitted.
Ellis A.rnall, forn1er Govern- ·
or of Georg ia \Vho defended A.l-
lerjoy, \vill testify and · the
F.D.A. officials \Vill be asked
to ans\ver.
The F.D.A. also \vill be a sked·
to explain a similar raid on the :
Church of Scientology in Jan- '.
U:\fy, 1963. Agents seized elec- :
tronic equipment that the
church uses in its confessional .
processes to try to determine:
the causes of emo tiona.l syn1 p- ~
ton1s. :
The committee's opening \Vit- \
nesses \\"ill be George P. Lar- ':
rick, F.D._A... Commissioner, and .
Allen H.a yfield, who is in charge
of F .D...!\... agents.
Carlton Fredericks a nutri-·
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Is Someone
Bugging You? '•
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THE INTRUDERS: The Invasion of Privacy sorted methods of surveillance .of in- under American law of whoetapping, ing the constitutional and common
by Government and Industry. By Senator dividuals by government and indus- eavesdropping, polygraphing and law rights of privacy.
Edward V. Long. Illustrated. 230 pp. New trial investigators. At the end of the other int1·usive techniques, and offers At least a dozen committees of
Yorlc: Frederick A. Praeger. $5.95, insertion comes the Senator's favor- Senator Long's recommendations for Congress have dealt with .this issue
ite question: "Mr. President, how far legislative action. The book comes at in the 1960's, but four main com-
..
By ALAN WESTIN will Big Brother be allowed to go a perfect time, since a major effort mittees have been the leaders in this
in America?" is now developing to get Congress area: Senator LoJfg's subcommittee;
EADERS of the Congressional
R Reco1·d. and regular visitors to
the Senate chamber during the past
Senator Long's Big Brother items
sometimes come from the press or
from magazines in the field of tech-
finally to pass legislation on gov-
ernment and private use of electronic
eavesdropping.
the House Government Operations
Committee, under Rep. john Moss of
California; the Senate Subcommittee
three years have grown accustomed
to a rather special bit of ritual. A
short, stocky man wee.ring rin1less
nology, law and the social sciences.
But .the majority of them ai•e prod-
ucts of hearings on invasion of pri-
J on Constitutional Rights, under Sen-
HE writing of Senator Long's book · ato1• Sam Ervin of North Carolina;
underscores the fact that in the past and the House Subcommittee on In-
glasses and smiling almost pixieishly decade Congressional committees vasion of Privacy, under Rep. Cor-
is recognized .by the chair. "Mr. Presi- vacy held since 1964 by the Sub-
committee on Administrative Practice have emerged as one of the most nelius Gallagher of New Jersey.
dent,'' it.he man announces tartly, "my energetic and effective forces sup-
Big Brother item for today is. . . .'' and Procedure of the Senate Ju- How the story told in "The In-
diciary Committee, of which Senator porting p1ivacy. By exposing the truders" was put together by the
With this introduction, Senator Ed- practices of Federal agencies, the Long subcommittee is worth noting,
ward V. Long, Democrat of Missouri, Long is chairman. Now the Senator
has produced a book reporting the committees have accomplished sev- since it is not described in the book.
places in the Record hi.':l latest ex-
ample of wiretapping, personality main findings of these hearings, a eral things: they have prompted ex- With Senato1• Long's support and
testing, lie-detector probing, peephole full-dress parade of government tap- ecutive action ending many of the general approval, the subcommittee's
and camera watching, or other as- pers, private eyes, corporate sleuths most flagrant official activities; they chief counsel, Bernard Fensterwald
and private voyeurs, with well cho- may well have laid the groundwork Jr., a shrewd Washington hand and
sen illustrations to show how omi- fo1• major Federal legislation in the vete1•an staff dboector of the Senate
MR. WESTIN, who teaches public l11w nously ·wide and unrest1icted i':l the near future; and they have provided Antitrust and Monopoly subcommit-
and government at Columbia, is the author
of "Privacy and Freedom," to-be pubiished
su1·velllance net they have cast. The official support for some present and tee, began in 1963 to look into
this spring.
boolt also summarizes the legal status future judicial declarations expand- the use of (Co11tf1111ed on Page 16J
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Drawing bJ HandelllDan: '1}198'1 1.'tle New Yorker MaSUlne. Inc.
"If you didn't sneeze and I didn't sneeze, then the F.B.I. must have sneezed:'
By E. \V. KENWORTHY
Speclai to T~e N•iv York Times
WASHINGTON, May 21-
The chief counsel for · the Sen-
ate Subcommittee on Adminis-
trative Practice and Procedure
vigorously denied today that
Senator Edward V. Long, the
committee chairman, had un-
dertaken an investigation of
electronic eavesdropping by
Federal agencies in an effort to
keep James R. Hoffa out of
prison.
'l'he counsel, Bernard Fenster-
wald Jr., \Vho conducted the in·
vestigation, said in a telephone
interview:
"We have tried to stay out
of all cases in litigation. We
have stayed religiously clear of
the [Hoffa] case."
In an article that will appear
on newsstands
. tomorrow
. ' Life
magazine says that, as a result
of three months' investigation
of the relationship bet\veen Sen-
ator Long, Democrat of Mis-
souri, and Hoffa, president of
the International Brotherhood
of Teamsters, it has concluded
the follo\ving:
"(1 J Senator Long 1vas
stron~ly ii:flue.nced tn take up
the 1nvest1gat1ons of Federal
snooping by friends 'vho \Vere
hight in the tea111ste!' hiaer-
archy.
" ( 2) Senator Long's hearings
have blunted the Justice . De-
pa~tment's Organized Crilne
Dr!ve .bY discrediting I ts par-
ti.c1pa.~1ng governmental agen-
cies, m particular the Internal
Revenue Service.
: . " ( 3 J Sena.tor Long has nils·
ns_ed his _investigating subcom·
m1ttee-f1rst · as an instrument
for .trying to keep Jimmy Hoffa
I out. of prison; subsequently, for
trying to get Hoffa's conviction
reversed." . I
Close F"rlend of Senator
The magazine article, 1vrl tten
by William Lambert, also states
that in 1963 and 1964 Senator
Long received $48.000 in fees
for referring cases to Morris A.
Shenker, a lawyer from ·St.
Louis, who is a. close friend of
the Senator and counsel for the
convicted Hoffa.
The disclosure of the refer·
ral fees, reported to have been
paid on a regular basis of $2,000
a month, 1vas also 1nade by The
St. Louis Post Dispatch in an
article today.
There is no law prohibiting
1ne1nbers of Congress from do-
ing legal work, providing they
do not represent clients doing
business with the Government
or having a. direct interest in
proposed legislation. Many 1nem· 1vald said, J\Ir. Cohen told the years in jail; the article said, he
hers accept referral or "find· subcommittee that he hoped to "desperately needed evidence"
er's" .fees ~or helping busines~es be able to supply the required to reverse his conviction or get
get f1nanc1ng fro1n banks or 1n· I f ti · 90 d . ·
surance companies 11 orma on 1n a~ s. a ne\v tnal.
Some members 'believe that Meanwhile, Mr. Fensterwald The evidence that Hoffi\
the morality of this p1·actice is sa.id, the subcomn1ittee \Vas re· wanted was of Federal wlretap-
9uestionable even if its legality ceiving the closest cooperation ping and eavesdropping, the
is Mnot. F t ld .d L'f from the Justice Departlnent article said, "and late last year,
r. ens erwa sa1 1 e th •
magazine had not established and . the Fe~cr~l Bureau of In- when · e teamster leaders .aP·
any connection between the vest1gation 1n its efforts to get peals had neared exhaustion,
wiretapping investigation and Congressional support for an Longs help-Hoffa-campaign be·
the efforts by Hoffa and his Administration bill Ii1niting came flagrant, as sho1vn by
counsel to keep the teamster Federal eavesdropping to na· some strange machinations In·
leader out of jail or get a re- tional security cases. valving Williant Bufallno," one
versal of his conviction. Tlte Life article said Mr. Long of Hoffa's lawyers.·
Mr. Fensterwald also inti· had undertaken the investiga· Mr. Bufalino had had a la\v.
mated that the information tion of Federal '!snooping" on suit pending for soi:ne tinte in
about the referral fees had the urging of Sidney Zagri, an Detroit against the M;.chig1n
been leaked to Life ntagazine old friend and lobbyist for the Bell Telephone Company, several
by the Internal Revenue Serv· teamsters.. policemen and an agent of the
lee, which has been a. principal "Since 1962," the article Internal Revenue Service. He
object of Mr. Long's inquiry stated, "Zagri J1ad been shop· had at ~irst cha~ged µie com·
into eavesdropping. ping for a Congressional coin· pany with tapping his phone
"They [the Internal Revenue mitt~e. · to inyestlgate the and later amended the complaint
Service] have given the Sena- actlv1t1es of Justice Department to accuse the alleged tappers oi
tor's tax retunts a pretty prosecutors \Vito 1vere pursuing picl<ing up conversation~ be·
thoi·ough auditing the last six Hoffa." t1vecn hi1nself and his client
1or eight months," 111r. Fenster- The article said that J\Ir. Hoffa.
wald said. Long had chosen Mr. Fenster- "If that allegation co11ld be
He said that "the type of wald as chief counsel. Mr. proved and i~ the conv:erati~ns
1exact information" that Life Fensterwald had worl<ed on had occurred 111 connection w1 t.h
had "they could only get off a lhe late Senator Estes I(efau- Hoffa's defense, Hoffa would
ta.x return." ver's Investigation of the drug have a strong argument for
A spokcsn1an for the I.R.S., industry in 1961 and 1962. having his convicti.1n reversed,"
Joseph S. Rosapcpe, \Vhen in- It said that Mr. Fensterwald. the article said. .. .
formed of this statement, said: a 1nen1ber of a \Vealthy fan1ny It c.harged that the Bufahno
"The Internal Revenue Service that had given $5.000 to the lawsuit, the progri?ssiv~ ~offR.
denies flatly that any infonna· J(ennedy Presidential campaign, appe_als and the Long com1111tlee
tion in the Life article on pay- had put the blame on Attorney hearings 1vere to takP. on th~
mcnts to Senator Long came General Robert F. J(ennedy for iaspects of a coordinated effort.
from anyone in the 1.R.S·" not having received a State When llfr. Bufalino produced
: In accordance wiUt the Department appoinbnent. The a Detroit policeman last Octo·
1
agency's regulations, Mr. Rosa- article intimated that :r.i:r. Fen- b~r \Vho ~estified that in 1962
1pepe refused to say whether an stenvald had thus been disposed his superior, William DePugh,
i audit had been made of Sena- to attack Mr. Kennedy's sane· had tapped Mr. Bufallno's telc·
tor Long's returns, on the tion of electronic eavesdropping phone, :r.rr. Long dispatched a
ground that the Jaw proscribes in his campaign against organ- subco.mmittee inve~tigator to
. the disclosure of information on ized crime. look into Mr. Bufahno's allega·
!returns_ The article said that no sub tions, the article contended.
Dirksen Rarely at sessions committee member "was fully Then, the article continued,
I Tl s t M L ' aware of some of the reasons when Mr. Shenker asked the
b tree i~f8 ors ~ r. ~nghs for Long's eagerness ti) tak• up Supreme Court last Jan. 26 to
~u co~ fe~ d- i.rcQh t'ayH, the investigation," Beyond the thro\v out ,the Hoffa conviction
emd~ckra Do n iatna,f Nuenth1nD . Senator's friendship for Mr on the ground that the Govern·
Bkota
ur 1c emocra o or a. . .
a~d Strom Thurmond Re· Zagr1, It said, there were also en s ev ~nee . a
· m t' Id h d b b
een o •
l'' f s th c 1.• his strong personal Jinks to the ta.lned by wiretapping, the Buf·
pub 1can o ou aro 1na- t t .. lit! f ahno allegations were intro·
coul~. not t~e r~ched f~r 'f?.';1" S~amJ!~i~s, a Po cal orce in duced in support of the motion.
mhen onk. e Re a.r~fis y I e. 1 The a'rtlcle described how On Feb. 4, the article said,
T e ran 1ng epu can mem· S Mr Long appeared in Detroit
ber, Everett McKinley Dirksen ena.tor Lo~g, speaking ~efo~e at ~ nteeting of the Committee
of Illinois, Sfl:id he rare!y attend· a t_eamsters convention ~n Ml· to Preserve American Freedom
ed subcommittee hearings an11 Beach last sun1me1, had '\vh 1 d 11 1 •
"He [Long) was runni~·g the ~~!~et~ Hoffa.da "dynan1ic and frie~J: ofe'::rifta_ ·~=~d :redfc~=~
show," Mr. Dirksen said. "I ig ing .Presi ent." . ., that the Court ~ould hand do\vn
don't know anything a.bout It." LIRetcalhng ivhcn. as l\[issou_ri s a major ruling on 1viretapping
Sl!nator Philip A. Hart, Dem- eu enant Gov~rnor, he. first in 1967.
ocrt of Michigan, said he doubt· met Ho~fa, he said, according to On Feb 7 the article aid
the article· · • s '
e d th at Mr. If>ng h a d misuse d "Ji · . th h t Mr. Fensterwald began secret
the subcomm1 ttee or that his . mmy ivas 1 a . er . a 0 . interview.~ of Justice Depa.rt-
decision to inquire into \Vlreta.p· ar~cie at tht~ tlmf 10 {';1ssour.i, ntent lawyers and defendants in
ping had anything to wo with a~ 1 th wash de tfn Y sd t~ off!· the Bufallno case. On Sunday,
the Hoffa case. ~~~w uat., a ie au acity to Feb. 19, it said, as word clrcu-
Senator Long became the h p. . lated that the Supreme Court
chairman of the subcon1mlttee t T ~ • t th~ 11.;licle hreported, hc 1vould consider the wiretap mo-
1
in March of 1963. In September urnc 0 0 a, \V 0 \Va~ a 1s~ tlon on Feb. 24, Mr. DePu h
of 1964, he decided to study on.. ~~et pla~f0 "!1• and continrcdi \Vho had already denied the t:p~
wiretapping by the Federal told tl;~t ~:~nf l~u t)ea t, ping charge, \Vas ordered to ap-
Government and sent out a th . d 0 d. you pear at l\[r. Fensterwald's of·
questionnaire to agencies in· at you delight you!' ..friends fice
valved In Investigatory \vork. fan~ 0 ukanlaze Yf1u~t~neniies- "But DePugh was unable to
Ahnost Immediately he 1vas j!1 0 ,,, ccp on g ing them, shed any light on the alleged
reported in contention 1vith the nnmy. · . wiretapping," it said.
Internal Revenue Service over In th~ conduct of the inquiry, On March 27 the article said
its reply to the questionnaire. th~ Martic; chtarged, Mr. Long a month afte'r the Suprem~
Mr. Fensterwald said today an. r. ens erwald sought to Court denied Hoffa's motion
that the agency withdrew it build thei.r. case,, around "dis· Federal Judge Frank Wilson i~
when the subcommittee "show· ~runtled citizens, many of them Chattanooga. gave Hoffa's law·
ed it had Information which in trouble With the Justice De· ycrs untll May 8 to produce evl-
made the ans\vers by I.R.S. partment or the In tern al Rev· dence that \Viretaps had tainted
Inaccurate." enue Serylce, and some appeal- the case against him.
In July of 1965, llfr. Fenster- lng conv1ctlons for income tax on April 4 the article said
\Vaid said, the agency's Cont· evasion. These witnesses, the Senator Long "began publt~
missioner, Shcldo!1 S. Cohen, article says, wer~ often. treated hearings in Washington" and
told the subcom~1ttee that the deferentially, while . officers of again many of the witnesses
agency was running its own in· the agency or Justice Depart· :were defendants in the Bufalino
,vest!gation of electronic eaves- ment "were treated with heavy· lsult.
!dropping and 1vould report to handed scorn." ' The implication w1ts that
1, th~ ~ubcommittee when the In·
qu1r~ was completed.
After Hoffa \vas fo~nd guilty jthese he!trlngs were in support
on J\iarch 4, 1964, of Jury tam- of Hoffa's last-ditch maneuvers
1 On April 4, 1967, J\lr. Fenstcr·,pering, and sentenced to eight to avoid jail.
I
•
Published: May 28, 1973
Copyright © The New York Times
RETALIATION MOVE
CHARGED BY LONG
TO TAX OFFICIALS
Senator Says 1.R.S., Vexed
by Wiretap Inquiry, Was
Behind Report of Fees
By DOUGLAS E. l\NEELAND
Special to The :\ew York 'l'tmes
ST. LOUIS, May 21-Senator
Edward V. Long of Missouri 1
accused the Internal Revenue
Service today of trying to "get
ine" in retaliation for his inves-
tigation of the agency's use of
wiretapping.
Mr. Long, a Democrat, said
that the tax agency \Vas behind
reports published in Life maga-
zine and The st. Louis Post-
Dispa tch that he had received
$48,000 over two years from a
counsel for James R. Hoffa, the
Teamster president convicted of
jury tampering and sentenced· to
prison.
The 58-year-old Senator is
chairman of the Senate Sub-
committee on Administrative
Practice and Procedure, which
for three years has been inves-
tigating alleged invasion of
privacy by Federal agencies.
The hearings have focused pri-
marily on the Post Office. De-
partment and the Internal Rev-
enue Service and their use of
wiretapping and other methods
to obtain information.
''This type of investigation
steps on some toes," the Sena-
.tor said in a telephone in tcr-
view from his 2,500-acre farn1
at Clarksville, Mo., about 60
miles up the Mississippi from
st. Louis. ''Some Of the Internal
Revenue boys are very vicious
and they've said they would get
me. But this is not the way to
do it."
'There's Just N othlng to It'
"You can check all the way
baclc through those hearings
records and there's not one \vo'rd
that gives aid or comfort to
Hoffa i11 any way,'' he said.
"There's just nothing to it."
In reply to a question after
emerging from a television in-/
terview here this evening, the
Senator said that the Internal
Revenue Service had audited
his records last October.
"I would say that they
checked my books very thor-
oughly for 1963 and 1964,'' he
~aid \Vith a smile, '•But there's
very little in controversy, only
a few hundred dollars, and if
it comes out the way I think,
they'll owe me money."
The Life article, which ap-
pears in the issue dated May 26,
accuses the Senator of having
'misused his Senate subcommit..
ee" in a \Vay that benefited
Hoffa.
The Teamster leader has con-
ended that some of the · evi-
dence leading to his conviction
Continued on :Page 38, Column a j
ENEMY OF CRIME
AND MONOPOLISTS
Twice Lost Bid for· Party's
Presidential Nomination
-Ran With Stevenson
('ontinued From Page 1, Col. 3 I
Howard H. Baker Jr., ranking minority member of the Senate Watergate committee, and Sam J. Ervin Jr., chairman,
listening to the testimony of John J. Caulfield, former employe of Committee for the Re-election of the President.
By DAVID E. ROSENBAUM
S~clal to The ~tw York ~.r!m~s
WASHINGTON, May 24-Un-
der aggressive and at times
hostile questioning from the
Senate Watergate con1mittee1
Gerald Alch, the original law-
yer for James W. McCord Jr.,
suggested today that he, Mc-
Cord and McCord's present ,
lawyer take lie-detector tests to
see \vho was telling the truth.
But the coanmittee's chair-
n1an, Senator Sam J. Ervin Jr.,
objected to the idea, calling
such tests "20th.century \Vitch'!
craft," and McCord's present
lawyer, Bernard Fensterwald,
said that he and McCord would
not take the tests ''because 1
have no faith in them.,.
However, Mr. Fensterwald t
said later that if the committee
ordered every witness to take a
polygraph test, "I \Vill, too.0
Mr. Alch did not deviate from
the basic points he made in his
long state1ncnt to the commit..
tee yesterday:
f:JHe did not, as McCord has
contended, try to persuade Mc ..
Cord to say that the Watergate
burglary was an operation of
the Central Intelligence Agency
or tell McCord that McCord's
C.I.A. records could be altered·
·to support the claim.
t]He did not tell McCord that
the convicted burglar could re·
ceive executive clemency if he
kept silent about the Watergate·
case.
liMr. Fenster\vald told him in
a telephone conversation after
McCord had been co11victed in
January that ''\ve're going after
the President of the United
States."
Contrasting Testimony
:'
The first t\vo points \Vere in .
direct contrast with McCord's
·1testimony earlier this week.
: The final point was denied by
··Mr. Fensterwald yesterday but .
'vas not mentioned in a state-
. 111ent he filed \Vith the commit-
. tee this morning.
. Senator
Ervin, a Norlh .
L Carolina Democrat, asked Mr. .
· Fensterwatd to submit the
t statement so that the commit·
· tee could decide \vhether to
· call him as a formal witness
later.
J In statement. Mr.
t11e
, Fensterald maintained that he
t had taken McCord as a client ·
~ after McCord,s conviction and .
had helped· him. raise bail be ..
: cause McCord asked him to be
. his lawyer and because he
• thought the $100,000 bail set .
: for McCord's release pending .
. sentencing was excessive.
. · The Senators on the comnltt-
,1 tee subjected Mr. Alch to the :
most rigorous questioning of ·
· any \Vitness at the hear- .
~ ings thus far. Mr. Alch, a de-
: fense lawyer with a national .
reputation, is an associate of ·
.1an even m~re famous lawyer,
·IF. Lee Bailey. He repeatedly .
• 1referred to the committee as
~I "this honorable committee.'~
Mr. Alch was kept on the
· defensive through much of his
testimony this morning. .
Senator Howard R. Baker Jr.
of Tennessee, the ranking Re- :
: publican on the committee,
picked up quickly on a com-
ment of Mr•. Alch's that he al·
. ways left to his client the deci-
. sion of whether to plead guilty
! or 11ot guilty.
''I. admire your rectitude in
that respect,,, Senator Baker
. remarked, "but I doubt your .
· judgment. And I really \Yonder
- and I put this to you in
. a very blunt and in a very. ·
. very cruel way - I really
: wonder if there is not a bal-
: ancing judgment to be made in
; the minds of the expert re-
~ tained as counsel to advise him
. of his rights."
· 'Nothing. at Stake'
Senator Joseph M. Montoya,
. Democrat of New Mexico, told
Mr. Alch that McCord, having
already been convicted, uhas
nothing at stake now except
· waiting for the mercy of the
judge in the sentencing pro-
cedure."
On the other hand, Senator
Montoya said, "you have an
interest in trying to dispel the
veracity of Mr. McCord•s alle·
gations in that, if they would
be found to be true or
credible, you would be subject
to some reprisals from some
grievance committee or from
a court." ·
Senator· Montoya was
referring to that fact that· ff
Alch had really tried to
persuade McCord to concoct
a defense based on the C.l.A••
he could be subject to legal
sanctions.
But the real showdown of
the morning came when Sena·
tor Ervi·n challenged Mr. Alch•s
belief in the accuracy of lie-
dctector tests.
Senator Ervin l1as several
times prepared legislation that
\Vou1d outla\V the use of such
·ievices in certain circumstances.
Mr. Alch has used lie-detectors
1
1nany tilnes in his \York as a
!defense lawyer.
"I think,'' the · Senator de ..
clarcd. ••a guilty person who is
caln1 can pass one withot.ut any
difficulty, and a truthful person
who is nervous could pass one
with gr~at difficulty. 0
-WA.$HINGTON, .March 11
(UPI)-S~ator Estes Kefau-
ver, Democrat of Tennessee, an-
nounced today the selection of
Bernard Fensterwald of Nash-
ville,_ Tenn., a lawyer, as staff!
&.reetor of the Senate Antitrust l
~d Monopoly subcommittee. Hej
replaces Paul Rand D~on, who
has been named chairman of the
Federal Trade Commission. Mr.
F~terwald has been serving
8.s
' chief counsel of the
. : .
Senate
Constit.Utional Ainendments sub-
c~n,nnittee.
ByBillChoyke
Capitol Hill News Service
p. Alch, a former associate of Bost
attorney F. Lee Bailey, told the Se1
t ate committee that the first time f
'J'.he .two-~ek-old House investi- ever heard of F ensterwald was whe
gation mto the assas sinations of for- ?.1a-Ga-c1 .. !li~ cli ent, tel ~ h~m tv 41
\:a
~e~ P.resident John F. Kennedy and
c1v1l rights leader Dr: Martin Luther a man by the name of Bernard Fei
King Jr. has already run into major sterwald, whom he said might t
difficulties. - - 7 very helpful in raising bail."
~he problems in the fledgling in-
Alch, who was subsequently fire
quiry stem from the selection of a and replaced by Fensterwald, sai
staff director and the role a well- tl}e Washington attorney had tol
known Warren Commission critic has him that he could probably meet tt
played in the investigation so far. $100,000 bail in a few days. The
· The controversy has focused on about two weeks later, when Ale
Washington attorney Bernard Fen- conveyed to Fensterwald his client
sterwald, who for more than a year thanks for the effort on his behal
has closely advised probe chairman .- Fensterwald replied, according 1
Alch: "I don't see how he can sen
Re~ .. Thomas Downing, D-Va., on the t
poltttcal assassinations. Fenster- :> his thanks to me because I never mt
wald, said one source has been :i the man."
"fairly close to him (Do~ning) every Testifying under oath, Alch the
step of the way." . told the Senate committee that h
Committee members involved in never was certain whether McCor
the H.ouse investigation report that and Fensterwald knew each othE
Downing had tentatively selected f prior to his making the initial phon
Fensterwald as the committee's staff I call.
director, only to back away from the t In telephone interviews, the ve1
choice after two congressmen and t sions of the two attorneys today rt
others ~Y interested in the assas- ~ calling those Watergate convers<
sinations raised a fuss. r tions three years ago sharply clash.
· Committee Vice Chairman Rep. .I FENSTERWALD SAYS that Ale
Henry Gonzalez, the Texas Democrat called h ·-, to ask for assistance be
who introduced the first House reso- ~
lution calling for an assassination in- . '
quiry,_ ~as privateiy voiced his strong
oppos1hon to Fensterwald having
any role on the committee, even as
an unofficial adviser.
I
•
cause "I knew Jerry Alch."' The lation about the job is :entering
Boston attorney, meanwhile, still around Philadciphia attorney Rich-
mainta ins that he had never heard of ard A. Sprague. As a special prose-
Fensterwald until the day McCord cutor, Sprague helped convict form er
directed him to call for bail. United Mine Workers President Tony
Fensterwald ' s committee on Boyle for the 1969 murder of Joseph
investigations is one of a number of Yablonski and his family.
i ti 0 ~en.den -ouu.s v. ·-h~r: h h.a ve __ (S p r 3 g1..!e ~s .net tc !}~ co!1fuserl .,,.,ith
sprung up around t-he country in re- another Richard Sprague. a form er
cent years but is set apart from the col league of Fenster wald- on his
others because of fears that it is a assassination committee.)
CIA front. Besides advising Downing on the
In a telephone interview, Fenster- assassinations, Fensterwald has also
wald first acknowledged that he had served as an intermediary between
connections with the CIA and then the Virginia .congressman and other
scoffed at the suggestion. lawmakers.
"I am on the payroll," he said. He met, for examp le, with Gonzal ez
However, when pressed, he said he on Sept. 4, 1975, in the House restau-
had "nothing to do with the CIA. " rant in an attempt to reconcile dif-
"There is absolutely no reason to ferences between the two congress-
think I am a member of the CIA," he men.
emphasized, adding that there was Gonzalez, who had introduced his
"absolutely no vestige of evidence of original House res olution in Febru-
any kind." ary 1975, calling for an investigation
Downing, who called Fensterwald · of political assassin ations, had want-
a "good source of information . . . ed the probe to cover the deaths oi
extremely knowledgeable," said he President Kenned y, Robert F.
was aware of vague accusations of Kennedy and King, as well as the
the link between Fensterwald and shooting of Alabama Gov. George
others having CIA connections. But Wallace.
the congressman has discounted But some months later, Down ing
these claims. introduced his r esolution, which
wh!l~ fensterwald and fellow War- called for an investiga tion of the
ren Com mission critic Mark Lane presidential assassination only.
'rf€-e tv~h at une time considered f;,,:: The final resolu tion included boV
t_he top staff position, current specu- the Kennedy and King assassin·
tions.
...
.·P.Tlrtaie:~Eves:cRJCJs~:on--ASSii$Sih8tiiiiiS.j~
By Mike Winmtp
• .I
country who have become amateur CTIA has ·accumulated a ~ sys;.
-
Asubpoena to appear before. the Seide.
l!ilmcilll .. tl'e Stllr·News sleuths atteIJll7ti.M to uncover what they tem of files of. material collected from Watergate 01111miuee is taped to Fen-
Their in_vestigators work our- of a think may fie the tnf! stories behind the around the woruL Most of. the doctt-. sterwald's. bookcase:. & ·is serving as a. · ·
crowded office in a 16th Street apart- shootings. men.ts, articles, and copies or declassi- defense amnsel to James McCord.: ...- '.·
ment.. building. Taped to the door is a The amount Of research material in fied material will be n.nted over to
other of the Waterpte Five. r·t
piece-a( scrap paper with the scrawled
~ ·'CTIKr-theoffide'I only~
existence is staggering. By Snitb:'s esti-
mate, the National Archives bas ten
Georgetown tlniversitrs library for
safe-keeping. -· ':
Does.MC.Ord see my caoflic:t.af ~
est With private inw:stigation ~ IDilflL• . .
'l
fication. . ' times more documentary evidence But tile commlttee sees-its func:tim as dravr even .a tenuoos link l:etween W. ·. ,
Imide, the small rooms: am packed about the m.miu <I John Kamedy than mucb D'm'e' ti.in a depository fiJr illfOr,.. . tm:gate and misdeedS of. die.part? •
with books, papers and. filing cabinets.
An oscilloscope and several radios sit
i:s contained in the entire 26 volumes of
the Warren Commission.Report. -
matiln..~'We're sort cl the. leading-edge ·
of the 'Let's solve tile murder. mave-
nJim McCord Was_ well aware of my - ii
hobby before l became. bis lawyer,"''
near L window, and the wall5 af one cu- mmt/" FeQStec.wafdsaid. - Fensterwald stated. "He hu never 1
bicle are covered with maps m Texas As chief counsel to the Senate StJb:,.· •
. helped_ or bindeied as. 1'be only thing r
and England. committee on administrative practice TIJey have ·filed several lawsuits.. to
and pm::edure from 1964-1968, Fenster- release infOJ matiJa still withheld in.ttie · ban. againsL .run is tflat be'"s such a
The lnitial undermver look of the of- straigbtMet:to:t. .
fice disappears with the appearance of waid wanted to see a separate Senate various cases, and they lobby«JD the Hill
8ab Smith. director af research of the investigation into the Kennedy assassi- for legislation to declassify restricted: U-E"veirbefore Watergate, l refused bJ
. Comn'tittee to lnwstigata ASsas:si.na- nation. material and :reopen official investiga- write" off anything u~rous;" be
. tioos. . The: cfJairman . of the coma:tittee, at tiOn.. - added. ' 'Bal before~ we
" Are yon -~ for Bud?" he asb, that time, Sen. Edward Loog, was una- AtSo an hand' is" a. list of imre ttian hue bad a theory in this WUDlly that
and picks up a light ooat. ~·ee·s overat ble to act on the suggestiOo because of 25'.<XX> names of people 'who have been goes back well OVel: 100 Je8n, and. it bas
· his office. Let's go.'• ~ction trouties in Missouri (he was involved in the various Dm:stigatjons-ta ta do with our national ego. You can
defeate.d in the 1958 Democratic pri- date. · have a political oonspiracy ilr France,
Waita minu_te-are thos-e maps being
med to ·tnldt. down the ~cape l"OUtes of mary by Tix>mas Eagleton) and a Llfe uyourd tie surprised bow mmy names. GUatemala. Russia or anywhere - IJO" • •
profession:Bl assassins? Oh, m, Smith magazine article tllat accused tum of keep Clopping up,''" ~ com- filical mm:ders are often committed by
shakahis bead and gives a.pained IOok. secret dealings with the Teamsters Un- mented. "'N_ot necess&tily wida Uy a pJfitica:l group for PQliti.caI neasons .
but.in this. nation we.lave been: m ~ t·i'
'-'-Our secretary, Andn:a, just joined iiJn. criminaf oonoecrim-but when .Frank
T riple A. She put& them up for ~ Fensterwald went into private prac- Sturgis' namecame up in die Wa~ so demx:raric and t.mri>lent tbat..mrlY' a .
tim:L.. tice and pmC:eeded to organi21e CTIA"s case. we.. knew who be was...._ ' ·. nut.aadd pa:fGt m -an.act like that ..
team of investigators.
THE COMMI I LEE to Investigate The C'fM efforts soon expanded into STURGIS, orE c:1. the me ' men art'l!St'- It's that at.littxb:: that bas kept the om.
Assassinations, organlled in 1969, be- other cases besides the first Kennedy ed in the. Watergate offices of. the Dem>- cful investigations of asmssinatiom
lieves that the official explanation fOl' assassination-Martin Luther King Jr., cratic. National Commit.tee, lived in from being complete, Feo:sterwald be-
the. nmrders of the Kermedys, Martin Malcolm X, Rockwell, and Robert Ken- . Miami at the time af the John Kennedy lieves.
Luther King Jr:, Malcolm X. American nedy. . assassinatiOn under the- name m F"l'Bllk
Nazi leader George Lincoln Rockwell, Events forced expansion of their in- ·"'"' Hln.all oftbeseca9e', the slappy WOrt.
Fiori~. &ran a group·c:alled '"!be ln-
and the shooting of George Wallace vestigations::. '-We couldn't help but ffiat's- been ~. whether accidentally-
teruational i\ntFCOmmonist Brigade.""" or OD' purpose. would nevet' saffice. in. , ,
have been woefully inadequate. worT}'"about the Wallace shoo(ing...too.'' and one of-its' members. a0wrding to
Privately fWlded, the committee bas CTIA is especially interested in bow the average murder case," be claimL
Fensterwald, later claimed that Lee
two full-time. unpaid staff members in Wallace's would-be assassin, Arthur Harvey Oswald -bad attempted tn infil- •Hfi John Kennedy·fmd been:JObn.D>e.
the nerwork of "doctors, lawyers, writ- Bre~ was able to afford his travel trate the group. But, added Fenster- a coroner's jury would have denw•led
ers, architects, housewi ves , Indians, around the country in pursuit of. his vic- wald, the FBI "bad m ftCDrd of ()s.. amsi:derably better proof than tlJe. war-
paranoids and hardheads" around the tim. Wald's being in Miami." ren Chmmission got.''
Bernard Fensterwald, 69, Lawyer w
lJ
ForJamesRayandWatergateSpy
\I
By ALFONSO A. NARVAEZ b1
an
Bernard Fensterwald Jr., a former service and returned to private rrac- to
Government lawyer who later de- tice, he took over the defense o Mr. Me
fended James Earl Ray and James W. Ray, who was convicted of killing the 801
McCord Jr., a Watergate burglar, died Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., and i
Tuesday at his home in Alexandria, Va. headed the defense team through a Jei
He was 69 years old. series of unsuccessful appeals. I
anl
He died of a heart attack, his wife, In 1973 he took over as defense coun- tar.
Patricia, said. sel for Mr. McCord after his conviction Ne
for spying on the Democratic national me
Mr. Fensterwald was with the State headquarters In the Watergate com- 100
Department for six years before he
joined the Senate staff. He later was
plex but before his sentencing. tun
counsel to several Senate subcommit- T
Mr. McCord, director of security for b~
tees, including the one on practices and President Richard M. Nixon's 1972 re- Arn
'
procedures. election campaign, tater wrote a letter ant
989
1 In 1965 he orchestrated a highly pub- to Judge John J. Sirica implicating fant
licized inquiry Into allegations of illegal White House and Republican campaign A
= wiretapping by Government investiga- officials in the burglary and with trying
to cover up the incident. The letter in-
fron
tive agencies. Accusations were later luml
made that the inquiry had been under- tensified an investigation into the bur-
taken in an effort to keep James R. glary that eventually led to President Ht
Hoffa, the head of the teamsters' union, Nixon's resignation. Blar
Har
110 out of jail, but Mr. Fensterwald denied Esb
lte the accusations, saying in a 1967 Inter- Since 1968 Mr. Fensterwald had been
rs, view that the investigation had stayed deeply involved In investigating the as-
>B- "religiously clear" of the Hoffa case. sasslnations of President John F. Ken-
in . . nedy, Senator Robert F. Kennedy and J
Bo~ Aug. 2, .1921, mto a promment Dr. King. He created a Committee to
lly Nashville famtly, Mr. Fensterwald Investigate the Assassinations and es-
graduated magn~ cum laude from tabllshed the Assassination Archives iq
rs Harvard ~ollege m 1942. He served in and Research Center in Washington as St.
rid the Navy m World War II and received a repository of materials on the three and
a a law degree from Harvard in 1949. killings.
pa
of Interest In Three Killings He was a senior partner In the firm Ken
11.S Fensterwald & Alcorn In Alexandria. Pat1
27 He joined the State Department in dins
1950, leaving in 1956 to become a In addition to his wife, he is survived 11
~r speech writer in the vice-presidential by a son, Bernard 3d of Reston, Va. ; publ
n- campaign of Senator Estes Kefauver, three stepchildren, Patrick Marlette of sary
J., Democrat of Tennessee. In 1959 he re- Sacramento, Calif., David Marlette of !· tung
turned to the Senate staff and investi- Falls Church, Va., and Margaret Alice of 66.
gated price fixing and the drug indus- Cox of Taipei, Taiwan; a sister, Ann cerpt
try. Eisenstein of Nashville, and six grand- 1tengtl
In 1970, after he had left govern~ent children. : by th~ .
mm
- IJraths ll
ference was being held on "a
CIA campus," a referPnce to
CIA-sponsored resParch that
has been carried out at I
Georgetown, and suggested
that at least two prominent.
OTIA members have ridden,
CIA ties.
One of th1> panelists, Dr.
Richard Popkin, rofessor of
Airs/
philosophy at Wa,shington Uni-
versity at St. ouis, said that ::-....
many other countries have \~
Plot Theory
had political assassination con-
spiracies, et American offi-
cials here would have the na- 111 Killings
tion be ·eve that the assassi-
. nations of the last decade
have been carried out by "a
lJy John Hanrahan
.Vashlng ton Post S taff Writer
lone nut." Popkin said the A myriad of conspiracy the-
Watergate affair, with its
" nspiracy to re-elect the ories, including one attempt-
resident," should convince ing to link the assassination of
Americans once and for all President John F. Kennedy to
that conspiracies do exist and some of the figures involved
that President Kennedy was in the Watepgate affair, were
the victim of one.
raised yesterday on the con-
Although none of the panel-
ists dealt specifically in their cluding day of p. two-day con-
prepared remarks with links fere:ice here on political assas-
between Watergate and PrE-si- sinations of the last decade.
dent Kennedy's murder, vari- Various theorists at the con-
ous members of t he audience
cqntended that there may ex- ference at Georgetown Uni-
ist evidence to show that per- versity's Gaston Hall attrib-
sons arrested in the break-in uted President Kennedy's as-
at Democratic Headquarters sassination to or g a n i zed
in the Watergate also were in
crime, the CIA, anti-Castro
Dallas on the day of Mr. Ken-
nedy's assassination. Cu bans, big businessmen, the
Ramparts magazine and late President Lyndon B.
many underground and smaller Johnson, soldiers of fortune OF
circulation publications have combinations of these ele-
suggested in recent months ments.
that there may be direct
links between the Dallas shoot· In most instances, the theo-
ing .and the Water:gate affair ries were old ones brought up
but, as some members of the to date. While some theorists
audience said yesterday, the exonerated Lee Harvey Os-
major news media have ig-
nored this possible connection. wald of the assassination of
President Kennedy, others
Peter Dale Scott, author and
professor at the University of said Oswald may have been a
California at Berkeley, said minor figure in a large con-
there were "lessons of Water- spiracy.
gate" that shoutd be applied What was different about
to examining what he said was
the "cover-up" of the facts the discussions from those ot
about the Kennedy assassina- earlier years was the apparent
tion. widespread feeling that the
The Watergate affair also Watergate affair and cover-up
showed, he said, that the per- had links to President Kenne-
sons involved in the cover-up
need not necessarily have dy's assassination in Dallas 10
been involved in the original years a.go last Thursday.
crime. He said he suspects Although the conference
this was the case in the inves- sponsor, the private, Wasbing-
tigation of Mr. Kennedy's
murder. ton-based Committee to Inves-
tigate Assassinations (CTIAJ,
In a morning panel discus- had not listed Watergate on
sion, authors of various books its program, the issue was
and articles on political assas- brought up yesterday after-
sinations expressed frustrat- noon by Chicago-based gadfly
ion over not being able to in- Sherman Skolnick, who was in
terest major news media in the audi•nce. A sizable por-
newly discovered evidence or tion of the audience of about
theories relating to the polit- 200 persons appeared to sup.
ical murders and attempted port Skolnick's successful ef.
murders. fort to put Watergate on the
Although so.me panelists agenda.
said they felt there was a new
Skolnick, the chief propo-
willingness by the news media nent of the theory that there
to do more investigative re-
porting as a result of the was deliberate sabotage in .t he /
plane crash that last Decem-
Watergate affair, othPrs said
there was still a strong reluc- ber killed Dorothy Hunt, wife
tance in the media to re-open of Watenrnte conspirator E.
investigations of assassina· Howard Hunt .Tr., stiITelt up
tiona. e conference by questiomng
i M were possible /
lijiK. e ween e
r:;lf'A.
'
- r.
, ...
s t • s aJLd one of the ·commission's legal ·staff
who recalled the incident. said he He·.
Bernard F-e~erwald and .to our rep resentative '. in Mexic~. at the time, might have been associated had asked Raymond G. Rocca, the
George O'Toole .~<· I·
•whG 'will attempt to determine if
the L'ee OSWALD in Mexico City
with Oswald." 9 The Report quoted an
affidavit by Richard Helms that "the
Agency's liaison with the • Commis-
sion, 16 about the photogr!lph. The law- .
Six weeks before the assassination of . and subj~ct · are the same individ- original photograph had been taken by yer later received word from the A~~ncy
President Kennedy on November• 22, uaL 4 the .CIA outside of the United States that the mystery man was though~ to be
1963, the Central Intelligence Agency . " sometime between July 1, 1963 and Oswald at the time the photograph was
sent the following teletype message to Sitice Oswald had served in the November 22, 1963." 1 0 . given to the FBL. Why, he asked, ..did
the Federal Bureau of · Investigation Marine Corps, which comes under the The Commission's explanation is the Agency mistake someone so dis-
and the Departments of State and the administration of the Navy, his person- both inaccurate and misleading. The similar in appearance for Lee Harvey
Navy: nel records would have included his implication that the CIA thought the · Oswald? The CIA said they_ would
Subject: Lee Henry OSWALD
photograph. mystery man was "associated with check further and call !Um back. The
What the Agency did not say in this. Oswald" only masks the true situation. lawyer told Epstein that they never
I. On I October 1963 a reliable cable is that it had in its possession a On the basis of its own evidence, the called him back and the Warren Report
and sensitive source in Mexico photograph of the man who had Agency must have concluded either contains no explanation of the Agen-
reported that an American male, apparently "identified himself' as Os- that the mystery man was imperson- cy's mistake.~ 7
who identified himself as Lee wald. The man in the CIA photo was ating Oswald or that an unlikely chain Another piece of the puzzle fell into
-e- OSWALD, contacted the Soviet not Lee Harvey Oswald; he was, just as of errors had accidentally linked both place early in 1971, when the National
Embassy in Mexico City inquiring the Agency's "reliable and sensitive the man in the photograph and the Archives released a previously classified
whether the Embassy had received source" had ·described, him, approxi- man who "co)ltacted" the Soviet Em- memorandum about the mystery man
any news concernir.g a telegram mately thirty-five years old, with an bassy to Lee Harvey Oswald. from Richard Helms to the · Comrnis-
which had been sent to Washing- athletic build and a receding hairline. The truth was further obscured by sion 's general counsel, J. Lee Rank-
ton. The American was described According to a memorandum by the Report's reference to the Helms in. 1 8 Dated· March 24, 1964, - the.
as approximately 35 years old, Helms, the CIA never received the affidavit, which described the circum- memo informed Rankin:
with an athletic build, about six Navy's pictures of Oswald •and only stances in which the mystery man was
feet tall, with a receding hairline. concluded after the . assassination that On 22 and · 23 November, im-
photographed only in the most vague mediately following the assassi-
. 2. It is believed that OSWALD two different people were involved. 5 and general terms. The affidavit was
Meanwhile, the photograph . was. deliv- nation of President Kennedy, three
may be identical to Lee · Henry dated August 7, 1964. 1 1 However, the - cabled reports were received from
OSWALD, born on 18 October ered . to the FBI on November 22, Commission never mentioned in its
1963~ . .. [deleted] in Mexico City relative
1939 in New Orleans, Louisiana. A Report or in its twenty-six supplementa- to photographs of an unidentified <:
former U.S. Marine who defected ry volumes that ·it had obtained an man who visited the Cuban and
to the Soviet Union in October One can only guess <it the confusioJ) .earlier affidavit from Helms on July 22, Soviet Embassies in that city dur-
1959 and later made arrangement caused by the picture. The FBI needed 1964 in which he was much more mg October and November
through the United States- Em- no Navy photograph to establish that specific.1 2 "The original photograph,"
1963 .. .. 19
bassy in Moscow to return . to the , .... ....
United States with his Russian-
born wife, Marina Nikolaevna '
··.J· .
On the basis of these cables, Helrris
went on to say, the · CIA ..had'
sent .....
; Pusak.~va, and the~ child. ....
-~....
!~.r , .,,; .. or;·'t.
several reports to the Secret Service.
3. The informafion in- paragraph -·
Attached to the Helms' memorand~·m
jl:• ·
were • 2 er
paraphras,es of these reporti,,, r
one is being disseminated to yo1.1r ... ··
Two dealt with the mystery man:
representatives in Mexico City. Ti~
Any further information received ,,, Message to the Protective 'Re-!
on this subjei;t will be furnished the mystery man was not Oswald-Lee Helms testified, "was taken in Mexico search Staff, The Secret Service,
~ou . This information is being •···· Harvey Osw~d w.as sitting handcuffed ·city"~ un _Octobe.r 4, 1963." 13 (This delivered by hand~ o n 23' Novem -
made available to the Immi~ation in a third-fl oor office of the Dalla s e:irlier Helms :lffidavit was ~sed in • ber 1963, at I 010 hourS:
and Naturalization Service . 1 police h eadquarters. The neXi d ay 1 9 6 7 •through the efforts or Paul Hoch, I, ~ ~.. ":' H,
Specjal Agent .Bardwell D. Odum was . .,, a })rivate. rcsear<;her.) .-.- :~ .. 'fhrough , sources available to it,
dispatched with the photograp·h to the . i _ There ·is no ·available record that the CIA . [deleted] h ad come .int~ ..
Was the · Lee Henry Oswald '•Of t)le
motel where .Oswald's wife ~d mot het .: 'Richard Hehns ever · tglt.1_, 1h~ ~ \llan:en PJ>Ssessjon -eJ....a ...phQ..tQ8l:apl~of,
CIA mes$ilge tee" Harvey Oswald? Yes; ,,were....hidden.- tfo sh~wen ·t h P"nirf,b ·- , •. c,,..,.._ ._...... ..,. .. ,,
1Jrrorrffn.-· tn ·p..;.~~.,,..,i t7~'1'- - • t. - • · '
..... ~, ' '·
Helrns's covering memorandum af- 'Veillance cameras, on at ' least two - . deputy director of Mexican Federal Embassy. There ~were ~ lo:
firmed that "the subject of the photo-
graphs mentioned in these reports. .is
separate occasions. And neither or the .
new photographs reveals · any ' resem-
S_ecurity on . November 23, 1963, she
said that Oswald had visited the Cuban
Oswald's applicnboi1' for :. C
bearing his photogx:iph :m
not Lee Harvey OSWALD." 23 ·blance · between the mystery man and Embassy . in late September to apply ture, 3 1 and a letter rcponcdly wnucn
Lee Harvey os\vaid. for a visa _ to visit Cuba during a by Oswald to the Soviet Embu..ry ln
. The Warren Commis;aon concluded planned trip to the Soviet Union. Mrs. Washington, referring to hiS vrit to the
Se· v~ral
photographs, then, of a that Os~ald had be'en in Mexico in late Duran recalled a heated exchange be- Cuban Embassy .32 The address boo\.
mysterious stranger who kept being September and early October 1963 . tween Oswald and the Consul when found among Oswald's possessions,
' confused with Lee Harvey Oswald, and Records of Mexican Customs and Im- the Cuban official told him his request moreover, contained Duran's name and
who had visited both the Soviet and migration, bus lines, and a Mexico City could no t be granted immediately. She telephone number. But the only cred-
Cuban embassies. Was it the same hotel indicate that Oswald entered remembered making, a "semiqfficiaJ" ible eyewitness testimony that Oswald
mystery man whose picture had .been Mexico at Nuevo Laredo on the US phone call to the Soviet Embassy to in fact · visited the embassy is the
shown to Mrs. Oswald? Or was it yet border on September 26, traveled by try to speed up action on Oswald's statement of Silvia Duran.
another Oswald Doppelgiinger? bus to Mexico City, arriving there the application. She identified the Lee When viewed in the light of the
Firm evidence of the existence of next morning, and returned to the Harvey Oswald who visited the Cuban recently disclosed evidence suggesting
additional · photographs of the unidenti- United States on October 3. 25 Passen- Embassy as the acc used assassin whose that someone might have visited the
fied man mentioned in · the Warren gers on the bus to Mexico City photograph appeared in the Mexica n embassy impersonating Oswald, the
remembered Oswalc\,, but there is al- newspapers on November 23 .29 CommiS5ion's failure to settle com- ~
~
&eport was turned up by Robert
Smith, a private researcher. In 1972 most no eyewitness testimony to sup- Apparently the Warren Commission pletely the question of the three
Smith , then research director for the port the Commission's reconstruction staff did not interview Silvia Duran, misidentified photos seem·s extraor=?
~ Commission to Investigate Assassina- of Oswald's movements after he arrived but instead relied solely on her affi- dinary. It is probable thafthe CIA did
'-., tions, was poring over some 'recently in that city. 26 The Commission's find- davit. Whether any attempt to talk to in fact supply an explanation of the
~ . _ declassified 'Warren Commission docu- ing that Oswald made repeated visits to her was made is not ·recorded in any photographs that was enough to satisfy
men,ts when he found reference to the both the Soviet and Cuban embassies available document. However, accord- the Commission at the 'time. If so, that
mystery photo and two other views of rests heavily upon the affidavit of one ing to the Commission . files, a Mexican expla:nation ·remains a part of the ·
~
-
classified Warren Commiss1on docu-
~ - --.,----------~~~
..... t'
ments not available to the public:
Raymond Rocca (who, until his
~~ recent resignation, was the Agency's
action officer for all po~.t-Warren Re-
.port inquiries about the'' matter) told
~
so, we may wonder how the Agency
I could have offered a satisfactory ex~
planation pf the incident ·to the Com:
mission. Until additional documents
bearing on this matter are declassified,
~ the conclusion that,Qswald 1really visit-·
ed the Cuban· Embassy mu'st remain in
~ so.me doubt. But even i{ he did, the
question whether someone
theless trying ~ i :. ; er; :: "tc; hi.
mains a cru ... ,al ~one.
! someone po~lng as O s w ald · visitelS
the Soviet and Cuban e m b a saies in the
early autumn of 1963, what imp llca·
tions mlght be drawh from this diS:.
.- covery? One obvious interpretation is
th;it someone sought to counterfeit a
.-
fresh connection between the man who
:was soon to · become the accused
, pr.esidentiaI • assassin arid the govern-
ments . of t hose · two communist coun-
tries. But it is not necessary to
speculate further. If someone were
tr}>ing to impersonate Oswald e~t
· weeks before the assassin.a tion, th~
the same person} 4 Smith called his witness, a Mtrxican woman who newspaper reporter tried to interview Warren Commission' s theo'ry of a lone
discovery to the "att"ention \ of one of worked at the Cuban Embassy. 2 7 her in 'April 1964. Her husband would assassin, unconnected with any con-
the authors, Bernard Fensterwald , who not permit th~ man to speak with her, spiracy, is seriouSly undermined and
instituted a suit unde( the Freedom of saying "she had suffered a nervous the case should be reopened.
Information Act for release of the two Silvia Tirado de Duran was.. secretary breakdown following her interrogation There could be, of course, an
pictures. .The government yielded and to the Cuban Consul in Mexico City . by the Mexican authorities and had innoce~t explanation of how the CIA
turned over the photographs to Fen- In a sworn statement 28 she gave to the been prohibited by her physician . .. came to misidentify the mystery man
-; terwald and Smith. They ?re pub- 25 from discussing the Oswald matter as Lee Harvey Oswald: Oswald may
Report , p. 299.
1ished · here for the first time. further." 3 0 If this report is correct, actually have visited the Cuban and
26
The two new views of the mystery Ibid ., pp . 733-736. the interrogation of Silvia · Duran may Soviet embassies. If this were the case,
man were ~ taken at a different time 27
Jbid .. p. 734. Two other witnesses have l:reen a more emotional interview then somewhere in .the CIA's file·s
fr om th~ first picture. In the first told the FBI they saw Oswald at the than one would conclude from the there should be photographs of the.
pictuie-, 'the -0ne published in the- Cuban Embassy. A Mexican private report forwarded by the Mexican po- real Lee Harvey Oswald departing from
Warren Commission volumes, he is detect ive who had visited the embassy lice . The:: report gives the impression the Soviet and Cuban embassies in
wearing a long-sleeved dark .shirt and on October l. 1963, identified Oswald that the police were routinely collect- Mexico City. If those photographs
Jppears empty-h.!lilded; in the two new from newsp aper photographs as some- ing information about Oswald's Mexi- exist, their publication would help to
p h~tos lie is wi:aring a short-sleeved one he had seen leaving the embassy settle the question. If they don't, the
can trip for the American authorities.
wbitc:- shirt and is. carrying some kind on that date in the company of a CIA should now explain why not. In
Cuban. The detective was shown other One question that arises is whether
of. bag .or pouch. The new photos also Duran's statement was given volun- either case, it should also disclose w~at
photos of Oswald and failed to iden-
show . trim holding· a small, passport- · tarily , and, if not, whether her identi- it knows about the man it wrongly
tify him, and lhe FBJ seems to have
sized booklet and what· appears to be a con cluded that he was mistaken (Com- fication of Oswald as th e visitor to the identified as Oswald on two separate
wallet. As in the first photograph, the mission Doc um ent 566). The Warren embassy is valid. occasions. · It should explain why it
hac_kgrounds pf ' the two new photos Rep o rt does not offer the detective' s The Warren Commission may have believes that this man was not imper-
have been . cropped out.. Whoever he testi mon y as ev;de nce of Oswald' s visit. omitted a full exploration of this sonating Oswald. All these matters
.....,J \vas, he managed to be photographed , An o th er witness who claimed to have question because it had collateral evi- _should be clarified both by the CIA
apparently by . the CI A's hidde n su r- see n Oswald at th e Cuban Embassy itself and by the congression al com- ..,.... _
dence of Oswald's visit to the Cuban
retra cted his testimon y after failing to mittees that are about to investigate its ·
13 pass a po lygra ph ex amination (R eport, 29
[bid • . 1bid., p. 5. activities. 0
p . 308 ).
24
C::~m~'issionDocument 56 6, The 30
commission Document 963 , The 31
Na ti'Onal Archives, Washington, DC , pp.
18
Commissi on Doc ume nt 776a The National Archives, Washington, DC, p. Hearing1, Commission Exhibit 2564.
3-4: National Archives, Washington, DC. 16 . 32
Ibid., Commission Exhibit 15. " · ·~ ~
A nril 3 . 1975
~ .\ •. .'i. A\\; •. -'"" .I .. j \ .... JS•
.. ::-
. ,
PRINCETON, NEW JERSEY
;...........-~~~~~~=~--~~~~~-r-
Italy needs. Mr. Rumor, in he favors renewing his par- goes home to Vicenza, l!ear
what looked like a fit of ty's old collaboration with Venice, where he was born ROBERT RYAN
pique, stepped down, and the the Socialists. His return to and most of his many rela-
unions somewhat sheepishly the premiership means that tives live. He likes to take
called off the walkout since the Christian Democratic long walks in the nearby Al-
there was no government to party reverts to a center-left pine foothills. Made 90 Movies-
strike agaimt. course after 15 months of a His father and grandfather
Many of Mr. Rumor's asso- centrist line under Mr. An- owned a printshop and pub- Scoted on Stage
ciates and rivals in the _fac- dreotti. lished a weekly, The Catholic
tious Christian Democratic Mr. Rumor - the stress is Worker. When Mr. Rumor in O'Neill Drama
party say to this day that he on the second syllable of the visited the United States
never explained satisfactorily name - has remained a more than five years ago, he
why be resigned so suddenly bachelor. A former high paid a call at The New York
then. school teacher of literature, Times and asked to tour the
I Now, Mr. Rumor returns to he reads a lot and likes es- composing room, where he
the Chigi Palace, the Pre- capist movies. Almost every chatted with the men.
mier's ornate office in down- weekend he leaves Rome and
town Rome, in a deal worked
out by the Christian Demo-
cratic leadership. A part of
this deal was that another
former Premier, Amintore
Fanfani, would become politi-
cal secretary of the party,
controlling the most power-
ful political machine in Italy.
Mr. Fanfani, who is 65
years old, has held that job
before, and when he. did Mr.
Rumor was depucy secretary
of the patty, ·working in an
adjoining 'office. Mr. Fanfani
used to .summon Mr. Rumor
by ringing a bell. Such rela-
tionships often leave lasting
traces, and Rome will be
watching in fascination how
the two men get along in the
weeks to come.
Since the time when Mr.
Fanfani used to ring the bell,
Mr. Rumor has been party
chief himself, has held the
posts of agriculture minister
and interior minister, and has
been Pemier in three cabi-
nets from December, 1968, to
that abrupt walkout three
years ago.
Adroit at political maneu-
vering, he has for at least a
decade been one of the lead-
ers of the strongest among a
varying number of six to
nine Christian Democratic
party factions. His faction is
known as the Dorotheans,
the name being derived from
St. Dorothy, the patron saint
of a convent in which Mr.
Rumor .;µid his party associ-
ates once ·held a caucus in a
rebellion against- Mr. Fan-
fani.
The middle-of-the-road
Dorot~s are today the pil-
lar of the Italian Establish-
mf:llt. P.:tey are represented
in 'e'iecy .,Cabinet aifd con trot
the· chpicest political plums,
which are Jmown as the "sub-
govetnment"
Favors Soclalist Role
In the musical-chair exer-
cise of Italian govemment-
making, Mr. Rumor has again
become Premier because he
had long been signaling that
1228
~~) ~76
{;hie/ IIUAC In 1 esligalor /)i<'s- 1 1 C.
I\
I
nr JP.1111 n 11all1·; l .~ ..
I
I l.oul1 Jam .. , T!us•l'll . 61 . a
former chf,.f l11\'f'Sl1~ at or for
the llou11<· Un -Amer k on At··
th>l tles Co mm1t ter, dlrcl yrs-
tvrd11y alter a hrart atta ck
,., ... '
it t he homr of 11 clnu~hter in 1 I I 1 ~ f
B y PETER. ~HSS
ing address was General Post
Office Box: 2691, New York
.A research group urging a City 10001. It operates from
new investigation of President his hon1e at 243 West 54th
Kennedy's assassination said Street. he said.
' '
he· and other men had pulled C. L. Lewis listed that day Sylvia Bernstein, treasurer, an- !where the commission con-
some utramps and hoboes" off one uLonnie Ray Wright w/m/ other Canadian. .eluded that a lone assassin, Lee
a long freight train that was 3 time looser [sic], drunk, put He said the committee~s mail· Ha~ey Oswald, h~d fired.·
~bout to leave the yards, and in jail. W~ on RR tr?~k."
~ad them taken in for ques-
1
Names of 24,000 ·. . .
1 . UnderMailWatch
1
By C. P. TRUSSELL
Si>«lal to 11le Ntw York Times
SENATORS DEMAND
.MAIL-WATOU. LIST
Continued From Page 1, Col. S
postal inspector. the principal
\vitness, described special mail
watches, or "covers• that some· J
times were in effect against
up to 750 individuals or com.;,
panies at a tilne and were ap~
plied at a rate of about 1,000 ~
month.
He also gave n1uch credit to
''lookout galleries:' from \Vhich
postal en1ployes could be
\Vatched \Vhile working, for
holding do\\'11. theft and other
crimes \Vithin post offices.
\Vhen a person is subjected
to a mail cover, the Post Office
records the name and address
of anyone sending mail to him,
as well as the postmarking and
the class of mail. First-class
mall is not delayed or opened.
the department says.
Such surveillance must be
authorized and may be insti·
tuted only if there is reason to
suspect wrongdoing. The com·
piled data. are treated as ieads
to inquiries and not as evidence.
Court tests, ~fr. Montague
said, have pronounced the prac-
tice constitutional. Types of
ccu;es iri which covers are em-
.ployed include fraud, a-pprehen-
·sion of fugitives, espionage,
sabotage, illegal . mailing or
smuggling ot drugs, narcotics
and firearms:
pornographic
mailings, income tax \riolations, trial last July, \Vas acquitted _of
organized gambling and racket- charges of atten~pting ·to oh~
eering. struct a Federal _ invesUgation1
l\ilr. ?tiontague cited as ex-1 of a ~a million stock swindle.)
an1ples the Frank Costello in- 1 In· the
first Cohn trial, which·1
come tax case, the capture in ended in a mistrial, Thomas 1
1\1:exico of a rapist-n1urderet\ . Bolan, Mr. Cohn's attorney,
and health insurance frauds ·
that \ictimize elderly persons. charged that the Governnient
Mail covers are not used in had , been intercepting :Mr.
the department's separate Cohn's mail. It came out later
program of screening Com- that a mail cover had· been put
munist propaganda sent into!· on his incoming mail. Federal
the United States. Judge Archie Dawson termed
Those subjected to mail cov- ; the mail watch "shocking... The
ers include some persons who: American Civil Liberties Union
joined the resulting protests
turn out to be innocent of any !
• I against the postal action.
\Vrongdo1ng. For example, the '
Post Office may suspect a
dealer in pornography \vho ma.y
in fact be only an innocent
recipient. Another subjected
to a mail cover might be a tax·
payer under suspicion of tax
evasion; the investigation mayl
prove him innocent. 1
Kennedy Upbrar.ds II
1
I Senate Committee I
! l
1
On Expose Charge:
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By C. P. TR.C SSELL
S~ec!al to The :\ew YCJrk T1mr!'
'\Y.ASHINGTON, l\[arch 3- .
Senator Robert F. I~ennccl)\:
De1nocrat of :\cw· York, de-
nounced a Scn::tte in\·cstiga.ting
.subcornn1ittec today for haYing
raised \Yhat he ~aid \\:flS a false
in1plication that he had acted
i1npropcrly \\·hilc .Attorney Gen-
eral. (
The panel had heard charg-es !
yesterday that i\[r. Kennedy, ~
during- U1c eal'lv
"'- .. da\'s
. of his i:
incumbency ..,
as Attornev -· Gen- ;
eral in 1961, had tried to pro- ·
mote a magazine expose of .
James R. Hoffa. At that tin1e :
Hoffa, president of the Inter- i I
Continued Fron1 Page l, Col. 3 ':;iven to any magazine. "I thought it \Vas a citizen1 into court." . and developed and if it \vas de-
! "There \vas a connection be-' \vho "'as reporting information I "That is not the "·ay it \vas ' rogatory to an individual," he
the press. Senator Long repliec' I l\veen 1'Ir. Baron and Life nlaga-i and evidence in connection \vith 1
!done, ~Ir. Counsel," the Senator said, "\ve inforn1ed that indi-
that the testimony and princi zine over \Vhich I had no control I illegal activities," the Senator replied. "I never did anything . vidual so that he could appear
Iin1mediately if .he wanted to.
said.
.l
1
pal document had so indicated . •.nd \Vhich \\cas only to be pub- , like that."
Bernard Fensten\·ald Jr. ' ~ ished in ca.se Mr. Baron \Vas I "That \vould be a very good · Mr. Fenster\valci suggested "That was not done to me.
chief counscL of the subcon1
'killed," he said.
].Ir. Fenster\\"ald observed :
definition." the counsel said.
"Let me say," Mr. Kennedy, re-
that if there \Vas furtlier evi-
' ctence that might be sent to the
I There \Vas an implication across
the country that I had acted
n1ittee. interrupted to ask ?.lr ~hat there \Vas nothing in the 1 sumed, "I am shocked to hear full Judiciary Co1nmittee, it in1properly. and I resent it."
Kennedv if he believed the doe ·1ocun1ent desc1;bing plans for : that. I think there have been should be submitted to clear up
un1ent containing the principa 1 possible article in Life to in- a lot of loyal people, if I n1ay discrepancies and conclusions.
i111plications "·as faked. l\lr ~licate that the article \Vas to say, l\Ir. Counsel, that provided Senator I<:ennedy said he did
Kennedy said he accepted it a: ie published on;y in case of lVIr. 1
information to the United States not gather that there \vere dis-
a true docu1nent. \ 3aron's death. !Government in connection \vith crepancies.
This document "·as an 11 . "The article at that stage," 'Comn.unist activities, under- "I arn giving you \\'hat the
page n1emorandun1. datet I ~fr. Fenstenvald said, "had not ''vorld activities, narcotics. ac- inforn1ation \Va.s," he said.
l\Iarch 6, 1961, represented l1 j
'1een ~'critten. This \Vas an ar- tivities at great 1isk to tl1cir Senator Long in\•ited Nfr.
.
have been allctressect by Henr·. ,
Suvdam. then rhief of th.
rangement \\'hereby I under-
stand it, you \Vere putting \vhat
O\Vn lives, and f think that is-
that has been very, very help-
Kennedy to read the con1plcte
record of yesterday's proceed-
\Vashington oureau of Liff \Vould no1;--n1ally be described as ful to the United States." ings ana add anything he be-
n1agazine, to E. I(. Thon1pson, a 'a fink' in touch \Vith Tin1e- "And it is also your position, • lieved \Vas required "to com-
Life editor in Ne\\' York. It re-
lated that .l\Ir. Kennedy had
asked 1\lr. Suydam to drop
\\·hatever he "·as doing and go
to l\fr. Kennedy's office.
J\Ir. Suydan1 reported in the
n1en1oranciwn that l\Ir. Kennedy
had then proposed the pos-
sible expose by San1 Baron, a
disgruntled Tean1ster executive.
in a Life article. As presented.
the proposed article \vas vie\ved
bv subcon1111ittee n1en1bers as
o~e that \vould certainly not
have helped Hoffa's defense
against an indict1nent that had
been returned against hin1 on
111ail-fraud charges.
In that Federal case. Hoffa
and a Detroit banker \\·ere
charged \vith misusing for per-
sonal profit $500,000 in union
funds for the development of a
retiren1ent village for team-
sters in Florida. The charges
\\·ere dismissed on July .13, 1961. 1
By E. \V. KEN\VORTHY
Special to The New York Tlmes
I
TO BE EXAMINED
I
1
Senate Panel to Investigate
Methods Used by Agents
By JOSEPH A. LqFrUS
Spectal to The New York Times
/ W. L\.SHINGTON,
. April 24 .-
!A Senate subcommittee has set
!aside three days in the coming
f week to find out \vhether Food
and to bring the elaborate \vire- :tionist of Ne-..v .York City, \Vhol
Iess electronic eavesdropping ;has complained of being har-
!equipment they are reputed to :assed for years by the F.D.A.,
! ;has been invited to testify. The
1use.
! Senator Long served notice !committee also \\ill hear fron1
ion the F.D.A. and other agen- .Ir\vin L. Hubbard and 1filton
icies in a Senate speech on 1
A. Bass of Ne\v York, president
iThursday. He said: :and attorney for the American
I "\Ve intend to complete this ·Dietaids Con1pany. Inc.
!investigation into invasions of : Senator Long said that the ·
lprivacy. If it takes a year, so :F.D.A. objec ted to the com1nit_I
1
j be it. If it takes t\vo years, or
. tee s inquiring into cases that!
[three years, so be it. But one ·\\·ere under investigation or 1
i\vay or the other, this commit- :prosecution. i
i tee v. ill get the information, ! "As long as a nlonth ago," t
!and then decide \vhat ·
\Ve \Vi!l ·Senator Long told the Senate,
· ~ 'I requested the presence of
Itypes of legislation to recom.. :
I
:n1 end to Congress.'' !
'
certain F.D.A. employes from
•the field at our coming hear..
Heads a Subcoinmittee ~ :ings. Eventually I \Vas told that]
Senator Long is chairman of departn1ental officia.ls \Vould ex-·
Ithe Judiciary Committee's Sub- ·plain to us the subject matter
!committee on Administrative in \Vhich \:v·e \Vere interested. 1
t Practice and Procedure. The Then. if \Ve still \vantcd the I
Treasury and Post Office De- .ont-of-tO\\·n \Vitnesses, F.D.A. j
partn1ents have acknc)\vledged \vou Id reconsider and discuss!
at hearings before the con1n1it- · th~ r;i.~tter. f~rt~er \\'it~~, u:. j
Tn1~ u11scs co!1s1Je1 able !
i tee earlier this month that they
! \Vere secretiy checking the question in my n1incl. I have !
:United States mails for in- becon1e ' suspicious as to \\tha t I
1 formation on delinquent tax- the· Departn1ent of Health. !
:payers. Educ a ti on, and \Yelfare is cov- !
; Bernard Fenster\vald counsel ering up or concealing because j
I
~1,
• • !; t l. C'\.:'ll . ~ ' j
)had been subpoenaed to explain
:aqegations that they had used
ielaborate methods to obtain
:evidence against t\vo school
; teachers \vho, in spa.re hours,
sold a special food in a super-
market.
Then, it is alleged, l\\·o car-
loads of agents sw·ooped do\vn _
upon the supermarket for a .
spectacular seizure of the e\~i- :
dence. The issue \\~as the an10\ nt
of protein the product clain1ed
and contained.
The evidence is A1lerjoy, a
product sold as a milk substi-
tute for children \Vho are al-
lergic. The maker \\ras
prosecuted and acquitted.
Ellis A.rnall, forn1er Govern- ·
or of Georg ia \Vho defended A.l-
lerjoy, \vill testify and · the
F.D.A. officials \Vill be asked
to ans\ver.
The F.D.A. also \vill be a sked·
to explain a similar raid on the :
Church of Scientology in Jan- '.
U:\fy, 1963. Agents seized elec- :
tronic equipment that the
church uses in its confessional .
processes to try to determine:
the causes of emo tiona.l syn1 p- ~
ton1s. :
The committee's opening \Vit- \
nesses \\"ill be George P. Lar- ':
rick, F.D._A... Commissioner, and .
Allen H.a yfield, who is in charge
of F .D...!\... agents.
Carlton Fredericks a nutri-·
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Is Someone
Bugging You? '•
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THE INTRUDERS: The Invasion of Privacy sorted methods of surveillance .of in- under American law of whoetapping, ing the constitutional and common
by Government and Industry. By Senator dividuals by government and indus- eavesdropping, polygraphing and law rights of privacy.
Edward V. Long. Illustrated. 230 pp. New trial investigators. At the end of the other int1·usive techniques, and offers At least a dozen committees of
Yorlc: Frederick A. Praeger. $5.95, insertion comes the Senator's favor- Senator Long's recommendations for Congress have dealt with .this issue
ite question: "Mr. President, how far legislative action. The book comes at in the 1960's, but four main com-
..
By ALAN WESTIN will Big Brother be allowed to go a perfect time, since a major effort mittees have been the leaders in this
in America?" is now developing to get Congress area: Senator LoJfg's subcommittee;
EADERS of the Congressional
R Reco1·d. and regular visitors to
the Senate chamber during the past
Senator Long's Big Brother items
sometimes come from the press or
from magazines in the field of tech-
finally to pass legislation on gov-
ernment and private use of electronic
eavesdropping.
the House Government Operations
Committee, under Rep. john Moss of
California; the Senate Subcommittee
three years have grown accustomed
to a rather special bit of ritual. A
short, stocky man wee.ring rin1less
nology, law and the social sciences.
But .the majority of them ai•e prod-
ucts of hearings on invasion of pri-
J on Constitutional Rights, under Sen-
HE writing of Senator Long's book · ato1• Sam Ervin of North Carolina;
underscores the fact that in the past and the House Subcommittee on In-
glasses and smiling almost pixieishly decade Congressional committees vasion of Privacy, under Rep. Cor-
is recognized .by the chair. "Mr. Presi- vacy held since 1964 by the Sub-
committee on Administrative Practice have emerged as one of the most nelius Gallagher of New Jersey.
dent,'' it.he man announces tartly, "my energetic and effective forces sup-
Big Brother item for today is. . . .'' and Procedure of the Senate Ju- How the story told in "The In-
diciary Committee, of which Senator porting p1ivacy. By exposing the truders" was put together by the
With this introduction, Senator Ed- practices of Federal agencies, the Long subcommittee is worth noting,
ward V. Long, Democrat of Missouri, Long is chairman. Now the Senator
has produced a book reporting the committees have accomplished sev- since it is not described in the book.
places in the Record hi.':l latest ex-
ample of wiretapping, personality main findings of these hearings, a eral things: they have prompted ex- With Senato1• Long's support and
testing, lie-detector probing, peephole full-dress parade of government tap- ecutive action ending many of the general approval, the subcommittee's
and camera watching, or other as- pers, private eyes, corporate sleuths most flagrant official activities; they chief counsel, Bernard Fensterwald
and private voyeurs, with well cho- may well have laid the groundwork Jr., a shrewd Washington hand and
sen illustrations to show how omi- fo1• major Federal legislation in the vete1•an staff dboector of the Senate
MR. WESTIN, who teaches public l11w nously ·wide and unrest1icted i':l the near future; and they have provided Antitrust and Monopoly subcommit-
and government at Columbia, is the author
of "Privacy and Freedom," to-be pubiished
su1·velllance net they have cast. The official support for some present and tee, began in 1963 to look into
this spring.
boolt also summarizes the legal status future judicial declarations expand- the use of (Co11tf1111ed on Page 16J
• t
I t •
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l I
I •
a·
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p
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•
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Drawing bJ HandelllDan: '1}198'1 1.'tle New Yorker MaSUlne. Inc.
"If you didn't sneeze and I didn't sneeze, then the F.B.I. must have sneezed:'
By E. \V. KENWORTHY
Speclai to T~e N•iv York Times
WASHINGTON, May 21-
The chief counsel for · the Sen-
ate Subcommittee on Adminis-
trative Practice and Procedure
vigorously denied today that
Senator Edward V. Long, the
committee chairman, had un-
dertaken an investigation of
electronic eavesdropping by
Federal agencies in an effort to
keep James R. Hoffa out of
prison.
'l'he counsel, Bernard Fenster-
wald Jr., \Vho conducted the in·
vestigation, said in a telephone
interview:
"We have tried to stay out
of all cases in litigation. We
have stayed religiously clear of
the [Hoffa] case."
In an article that will appear
on newsstands
. tomorrow
. ' Life
magazine says that, as a result
of three months' investigation
of the relationship bet\veen Sen-
ator Long, Democrat of Mis-
souri, and Hoffa, president of
the International Brotherhood
of Teamsters, it has concluded
the follo\ving:
"(1 J Senator Long 1vas
stron~ly ii:flue.nced tn take up
the 1nvest1gat1ons of Federal
snooping by friends 'vho \Vere
hight in the tea111ste!' hiaer-
archy.
" ( 2) Senator Long's hearings
have blunted the Justice . De-
pa~tment's Organized Crilne
Dr!ve .bY discrediting I ts par-
ti.c1pa.~1ng governmental agen-
cies, m particular the Internal
Revenue Service.
: . " ( 3 J Sena.tor Long has nils·
ns_ed his _investigating subcom·
m1ttee-f1rst · as an instrument
for .trying to keep Jimmy Hoffa
I out. of prison; subsequently, for
trying to get Hoffa's conviction
reversed." . I
Close F"rlend of Senator
The magazine article, 1vrl tten
by William Lambert, also states
that in 1963 and 1964 Senator
Long received $48.000 in fees
for referring cases to Morris A.
Shenker, a lawyer from ·St.
Louis, who is a. close friend of
the Senator and counsel for the
convicted Hoffa.
The disclosure of the refer·
ral fees, reported to have been
paid on a regular basis of $2,000
a month, 1vas also 1nade by The
St. Louis Post Dispatch in an
article today.
There is no law prohibiting
1ne1nbers of Congress from do-
ing legal work, providing they
do not represent clients doing
business with the Government
or having a. direct interest in
proposed legislation. Many 1nem· 1vald said, J\Ir. Cohen told the years in jail; the article said, he
hers accept referral or "find· subcommittee that he hoped to "desperately needed evidence"
er's" .fees ~or helping busines~es be able to supply the required to reverse his conviction or get
get f1nanc1ng fro1n banks or 1n· I f ti · 90 d . ·
surance companies 11 orma on 1n a~ s. a ne\v tnal.
Some members 'believe that Meanwhile, Mr. Fensterwald The evidence that Hoffi\
the morality of this p1·actice is sa.id, the subcomn1ittee \Vas re· wanted was of Federal wlretap-
9uestionable even if its legality ceiving the closest cooperation ping and eavesdropping, the
is Mnot. F t ld .d L'f from the Justice Departlnent article said, "and late last year,
r. ens erwa sa1 1 e th •
magazine had not established and . the Fe~cr~l Bureau of In- when · e teamster leaders .aP·
any connection between the vest1gation 1n its efforts to get peals had neared exhaustion,
wiretapping investigation and Congressional support for an Longs help-Hoffa-campaign be·
the efforts by Hoffa and his Administration bill Ii1niting came flagrant, as sho1vn by
counsel to keep the teamster Federal eavesdropping to na· some strange machinations In·
leader out of jail or get a re- tional security cases. valving Williant Bufallno," one
versal of his conviction. Tlte Life article said Mr. Long of Hoffa's lawyers.·
Mr. Fensterwald also inti· had undertaken the investiga· Mr. Bufalino had had a la\v.
mated that the information tion of Federal '!snooping" on suit pending for soi:ne tinte in
about the referral fees had the urging of Sidney Zagri, an Detroit against the M;.chig1n
been leaked to Life ntagazine old friend and lobbyist for the Bell Telephone Company, several
by the Internal Revenue Serv· teamsters.. policemen and an agent of the
lee, which has been a. principal "Since 1962," the article Internal Revenue Service. He
object of Mr. Long's inquiry stated, "Zagri J1ad been shop· had at ~irst cha~ged µie com·
into eavesdropping. ping for a Congressional coin· pany with tapping his phone
"They [the Internal Revenue mitt~e. · to inyestlgate the and later amended the complaint
Service] have given the Sena- actlv1t1es of Justice Department to accuse the alleged tappers oi
tor's tax retunts a pretty prosecutors \Vito 1vere pursuing picl<ing up conversation~ be·
thoi·ough auditing the last six Hoffa." t1vecn hi1nself and his client
1or eight months," 111r. Fenster- The article said that J\Ir. Hoffa.
wald said. Long had chosen Mr. Fenster- "If that allegation co11ld be
He said that "the type of wald as chief counsel. Mr. proved and i~ the conv:erati~ns
1exact information" that Life Fensterwald had worl<ed on had occurred 111 connection w1 t.h
had "they could only get off a lhe late Senator Estes I(efau- Hoffa's defense, Hoffa would
ta.x return." ver's Investigation of the drug have a strong argument for
A spokcsn1an for the I.R.S., industry in 1961 and 1962. having his convicti.1n reversed,"
Joseph S. Rosapcpe, \Vhen in- It said that Mr. Fensterwald. the article said. .. .
formed of this statement, said: a 1nen1ber of a \Vealthy fan1ny It c.harged that the Bufahno
"The Internal Revenue Service that had given $5.000 to the lawsuit, the progri?ssiv~ ~offR.
denies flatly that any infonna· J(ennedy Presidential campaign, appe_als and the Long com1111tlee
tion in the Life article on pay- had put the blame on Attorney hearings 1vere to takP. on th~
mcnts to Senator Long came General Robert F. J(ennedy for iaspects of a coordinated effort.
from anyone in the 1.R.S·" not having received a State When llfr. Bufalino produced
: In accordance wiUt the Department appoinbnent. The a Detroit policeman last Octo·
1
agency's regulations, Mr. Rosa- article intimated that :r.i:r. Fen- b~r \Vho ~estified that in 1962
1pepe refused to say whether an stenvald had thus been disposed his superior, William DePugh,
i audit had been made of Sena- to attack Mr. Kennedy's sane· had tapped Mr. Bufallno's telc·
tor Long's returns, on the tion of electronic eavesdropping phone, :r.rr. Long dispatched a
ground that the Jaw proscribes in his campaign against organ- subco.mmittee inve~tigator to
. the disclosure of information on ized crime. look into Mr. Bufahno's allega·
!returns_ The article said that no sub tions, the article contended.
Dirksen Rarely at sessions committee member "was fully Then, the article continued,
I Tl s t M L ' aware of some of the reasons when Mr. Shenker asked the
b tree i~f8 ors ~ r. ~nghs for Long's eagerness ti) tak• up Supreme Court last Jan. 26 to
~u co~ fe~ d- i.rcQh t'ayH, the investigation," Beyond the thro\v out ,the Hoffa conviction
emd~ckra Do n iatna,f Nuenth1nD . Senator's friendship for Mr on the ground that the Govern·
Bkota
ur 1c emocra o or a. . .
a~d Strom Thurmond Re· Zagr1, It said, there were also en s ev ~nee . a
· m t' Id h d b b
een o •
l'' f s th c 1.• his strong personal Jinks to the ta.lned by wiretapping, the Buf·
pub 1can o ou aro 1na- t t .. lit! f ahno allegations were intro·
coul~. not t~e r~ched f~r 'f?.';1" S~amJ!~i~s, a Po cal orce in duced in support of the motion.
mhen onk. e Re a.r~fis y I e. 1 The a'rtlcle described how On Feb. 4, the article said,
T e ran 1ng epu can mem· S Mr Long appeared in Detroit
ber, Everett McKinley Dirksen ena.tor Lo~g, speaking ~efo~e at ~ nteeting of the Committee
of Illinois, Sfl:id he rare!y attend· a t_eamsters convention ~n Ml· to Preserve American Freedom
ed subcommittee hearings an11 Beach last sun1me1, had '\vh 1 d 11 1 •
"He [Long) was runni~·g the ~~!~et~ Hoffa.da "dynan1ic and frie~J: ofe'::rifta_ ·~=~d :redfc~=~
show," Mr. Dirksen said. "I ig ing .Presi ent." . ., that the Court ~ould hand do\vn
don't know anything a.bout It." LIRetcalhng ivhcn. as l\[issou_ri s a major ruling on 1viretapping
Sl!nator Philip A. Hart, Dem- eu enant Gov~rnor, he. first in 1967.
ocrt of Michigan, said he doubt· met Ho~fa, he said, according to On Feb 7 the article aid
the article· · • s '
e d th at Mr. If>ng h a d misuse d "Ji · . th h t Mr. Fensterwald began secret
the subcomm1 ttee or that his . mmy ivas 1 a . er . a 0 . interview.~ of Justice Depa.rt-
decision to inquire into \Vlreta.p· ar~cie at tht~ tlmf 10 {';1ssour.i, ntent lawyers and defendants in
ping had anything to wo with a~ 1 th wash de tfn Y sd t~ off!· the Bufallno case. On Sunday,
the Hoffa case. ~~~w uat., a ie au acity to Feb. 19, it said, as word clrcu-
Senator Long became the h p. . lated that the Supreme Court
chairman of the subcon1mlttee t T ~ • t th~ 11.;licle hreported, hc 1vould consider the wiretap mo-
1
in March of 1963. In September urnc 0 0 a, \V 0 \Va~ a 1s~ tlon on Feb. 24, Mr. DePu h
of 1964, he decided to study on.. ~~et pla~f0 "!1• and continrcdi \Vho had already denied the t:p~
wiretapping by the Federal told tl;~t ~:~nf l~u t)ea t, ping charge, \Vas ordered to ap-
Government and sent out a th . d 0 d. you pear at l\[r. Fensterwald's of·
questionnaire to agencies in· at you delight you!' ..friends fice
valved In Investigatory \vork. fan~ 0 ukanlaze Yf1u~t~neniies- "But DePugh was unable to
Ahnost Immediately he 1vas j!1 0 ,,, ccp on g ing them, shed any light on the alleged
reported in contention 1vith the nnmy. · . wiretapping," it said.
Internal Revenue Service over In th~ conduct of the inquiry, On March 27 the article said
its reply to the questionnaire. th~ Martic; chtarged, Mr. Long a month afte'r the Suprem~
Mr. Fensterwald said today an. r. ens erwald sought to Court denied Hoffa's motion
that the agency withdrew it build thei.r. case,, around "dis· Federal Judge Frank Wilson i~
when the subcommittee "show· ~runtled citizens, many of them Chattanooga. gave Hoffa's law·
ed it had Information which in trouble With the Justice De· ycrs untll May 8 to produce evl-
made the ans\vers by I.R.S. partment or the In tern al Rev· dence that \Viretaps had tainted
Inaccurate." enue Serylce, and some appeal- the case against him.
In July of 1965, llfr. Fenster- lng conv1ctlons for income tax on April 4 the article said
\Vaid said, the agency's Cont· evasion. These witnesses, the Senator Long "began publt~
missioner, Shcldo!1 S. Cohen, article says, wer~ often. treated hearings in Washington" and
told the subcom~1ttee that the deferentially, while . officers of again many of the witnesses
agency was running its own in· the agency or Justice Depart· :were defendants in the Bufalino
,vest!gation of electronic eaves- ment "were treated with heavy· lsult.
!dropping and 1vould report to handed scorn." ' The implication w1ts that
1, th~ ~ubcommittee when the In·
qu1r~ was completed.
After Hoffa \vas fo~nd guilty jthese he!trlngs were in support
on J\iarch 4, 1964, of Jury tam- of Hoffa's last-ditch maneuvers
1 On April 4, 1967, J\lr. Fenstcr·,pering, and sentenced to eight to avoid jail.
I
•
Published: May 28, 1973
Copyright © The New York Times
RETALIATION MOVE
CHARGED BY LONG
TO TAX OFFICIALS
Senator Says 1.R.S., Vexed
by Wiretap Inquiry, Was
Behind Report of Fees
By DOUGLAS E. l\NEELAND
Special to The :\ew York 'l'tmes
ST. LOUIS, May 21-Senator
Edward V. Long of Missouri 1
accused the Internal Revenue
Service today of trying to "get
ine" in retaliation for his inves-
tigation of the agency's use of
wiretapping.
Mr. Long, a Democrat, said
that the tax agency \Vas behind
reports published in Life maga-
zine and The st. Louis Post-
Dispa tch that he had received
$48,000 over two years from a
counsel for James R. Hoffa, the
Teamster president convicted of
jury tampering and sentenced· to
prison.
The 58-year-old Senator is
chairman of the Senate Sub-
committee on Administrative
Practice and Procedure, which
for three years has been inves-
tigating alleged invasion of
privacy by Federal agencies.
The hearings have focused pri-
marily on the Post Office. De-
partment and the Internal Rev-
enue Service and their use of
wiretapping and other methods
to obtain information.
''This type of investigation
steps on some toes," the Sena-
.tor said in a telephone in tcr-
view from his 2,500-acre farn1
at Clarksville, Mo., about 60
miles up the Mississippi from
st. Louis. ''Some Of the Internal
Revenue boys are very vicious
and they've said they would get
me. But this is not the way to
do it."
'There's Just N othlng to It'
"You can check all the way
baclc through those hearings
records and there's not one \vo'rd
that gives aid or comfort to
Hoffa i11 any way,'' he said.
"There's just nothing to it."
In reply to a question after
emerging from a television in-/
terview here this evening, the
Senator said that the Internal
Revenue Service had audited
his records last October.
"I would say that they
checked my books very thor-
oughly for 1963 and 1964,'' he
~aid \Vith a smile, '•But there's
very little in controversy, only
a few hundred dollars, and if
it comes out the way I think,
they'll owe me money."
The Life article, which ap-
pears in the issue dated May 26,
accuses the Senator of having
'misused his Senate subcommit..
ee" in a \Vay that benefited
Hoffa.
The Teamster leader has con-
ended that some of the · evi-
dence leading to his conviction
Continued on :Page 38, Column a j
ENEMY OF CRIME
AND MONOPOLISTS
Twice Lost Bid for· Party's
Presidential Nomination
-Ran With Stevenson
('ontinued From Page 1, Col. 3 I
Howard H. Baker Jr., ranking minority member of the Senate Watergate committee, and Sam J. Ervin Jr., chairman,
listening to the testimony of John J. Caulfield, former employe of Committee for the Re-election of the President.
By DAVID E. ROSENBAUM
S~clal to The ~tw York ~.r!m~s
WASHINGTON, May 24-Un-
der aggressive and at times
hostile questioning from the
Senate Watergate con1mittee1
Gerald Alch, the original law-
yer for James W. McCord Jr.,
suggested today that he, Mc-
Cord and McCord's present ,
lawyer take lie-detector tests to
see \vho was telling the truth.
But the coanmittee's chair-
n1an, Senator Sam J. Ervin Jr.,
objected to the idea, calling
such tests "20th.century \Vitch'!
craft," and McCord's present
lawyer, Bernard Fensterwald,
said that he and McCord would
not take the tests ''because 1
have no faith in them.,.
However, Mr. Fensterwald t
said later that if the committee
ordered every witness to take a
polygraph test, "I \Vill, too.0
Mr. Alch did not deviate from
the basic points he made in his
long state1ncnt to the commit..
tee yesterday:
f:JHe did not, as McCord has
contended, try to persuade Mc ..
Cord to say that the Watergate
burglary was an operation of
the Central Intelligence Agency
or tell McCord that McCord's
C.I.A. records could be altered·
·to support the claim.
t]He did not tell McCord that
the convicted burglar could re·
ceive executive clemency if he
kept silent about the Watergate·
case.
liMr. Fenster\vald told him in
a telephone conversation after
McCord had been co11victed in
January that ''\ve're going after
the President of the United
States."
Contrasting Testimony
:'
The first t\vo points \Vere in .
direct contrast with McCord's
·1testimony earlier this week.
: The final point was denied by
··Mr. Fensterwald yesterday but .
'vas not mentioned in a state-
. 111ent he filed \Vith the commit-
. tee this morning.
. Senator
Ervin, a Norlh .
L Carolina Democrat, asked Mr. .
· Fensterwatd to submit the
t statement so that the commit·
· tee could decide \vhether to
· call him as a formal witness
later.
J In statement. Mr.
t11e
, Fensterald maintained that he
t had taken McCord as a client ·
~ after McCord,s conviction and .
had helped· him. raise bail be ..
: cause McCord asked him to be
. his lawyer and because he
• thought the $100,000 bail set .
: for McCord's release pending .
. sentencing was excessive.
. · The Senators on the comnltt-
,1 tee subjected Mr. Alch to the :
most rigorous questioning of ·
· any \Vitness at the hear- .
~ ings thus far. Mr. Alch, a de-
: fense lawyer with a national .
reputation, is an associate of ·
.1an even m~re famous lawyer,
·IF. Lee Bailey. He repeatedly .
• 1referred to the committee as
~I "this honorable committee.'~
Mr. Alch was kept on the
· defensive through much of his
testimony this morning. .
Senator Howard R. Baker Jr.
of Tennessee, the ranking Re- :
: publican on the committee,
picked up quickly on a com-
ment of Mr•. Alch's that he al·
. ways left to his client the deci-
. sion of whether to plead guilty
! or 11ot guilty.
''I. admire your rectitude in
that respect,,, Senator Baker
. remarked, "but I doubt your .
· judgment. And I really \Yonder
- and I put this to you in
. a very blunt and in a very. ·
. very cruel way - I really
: wonder if there is not a bal-
: ancing judgment to be made in
; the minds of the expert re-
~ tained as counsel to advise him
. of his rights."
· 'Nothing. at Stake'
Senator Joseph M. Montoya,
. Democrat of New Mexico, told
Mr. Alch that McCord, having
already been convicted, uhas
nothing at stake now except
· waiting for the mercy of the
judge in the sentencing pro-
cedure."
On the other hand, Senator
Montoya said, "you have an
interest in trying to dispel the
veracity of Mr. McCord•s alle·
gations in that, if they would
be found to be true or
credible, you would be subject
to some reprisals from some
grievance committee or from
a court." ·
Senator· Montoya was
referring to that fact that· ff
Alch had really tried to
persuade McCord to concoct
a defense based on the C.l.A••
he could be subject to legal
sanctions.
But the real showdown of
the morning came when Sena·
tor Ervi·n challenged Mr. Alch•s
belief in the accuracy of lie-
dctector tests.
Senator Ervin l1as several
times prepared legislation that
\Vou1d outla\V the use of such
·ievices in certain circumstances.
Mr. Alch has used lie-detectors
1
1nany tilnes in his \York as a
!defense lawyer.
"I think,'' the · Senator de ..
clarcd. ••a guilty person who is
caln1 can pass one withot.ut any
difficulty, and a truthful person
who is nervous could pass one
with gr~at difficulty. 0
-WA.$HINGTON, .March 11
(UPI)-S~ator Estes Kefau-
ver, Democrat of Tennessee, an-
nounced today the selection of
Bernard Fensterwald of Nash-
ville,_ Tenn., a lawyer, as staff!
&.reetor of the Senate Antitrust l
~d Monopoly subcommittee. Hej
replaces Paul Rand D~on, who
has been named chairman of the
Federal Trade Commission. Mr.
F~terwald has been serving
8.s
' chief counsel of the
. : .
Senate
Constit.Utional Ainendments sub-
c~n,nnittee.
ByBillChoyke
Capitol Hill News Service
p. Alch, a former associate of Bost
attorney F. Lee Bailey, told the Se1
t ate committee that the first time f
'J'.he .two-~ek-old House investi- ever heard of F ensterwald was whe
gation mto the assas sinations of for- ?.1a-Ga-c1 .. !li~ cli ent, tel ~ h~m tv 41
\:a
~e~ P.resident John F. Kennedy and
c1v1l rights leader Dr: Martin Luther a man by the name of Bernard Fei
King Jr. has already run into major sterwald, whom he said might t
difficulties. - - 7 very helpful in raising bail."
~he problems in the fledgling in-
Alch, who was subsequently fire
quiry stem from the selection of a and replaced by Fensterwald, sai
staff director and the role a well- tl}e Washington attorney had tol
known Warren Commission critic has him that he could probably meet tt
played in the investigation so far. $100,000 bail in a few days. The
· The controversy has focused on about two weeks later, when Ale
Washington attorney Bernard Fen- conveyed to Fensterwald his client
sterwald, who for more than a year thanks for the effort on his behal
has closely advised probe chairman .- Fensterwald replied, according 1
Alch: "I don't see how he can sen
Re~ .. Thomas Downing, D-Va., on the t
poltttcal assassinations. Fenster- :> his thanks to me because I never mt
wald, said one source has been :i the man."
"fairly close to him (Do~ning) every Testifying under oath, Alch the
step of the way." . told the Senate committee that h
Committee members involved in never was certain whether McCor
the H.ouse investigation report that and Fensterwald knew each othE
Downing had tentatively selected f prior to his making the initial phon
Fensterwald as the committee's staff I call.
director, only to back away from the t In telephone interviews, the ve1
choice after two congressmen and t sions of the two attorneys today rt
others ~Y interested in the assas- ~ calling those Watergate convers<
sinations raised a fuss. r tions three years ago sharply clash.
· Committee Vice Chairman Rep. .I FENSTERWALD SAYS that Ale
Henry Gonzalez, the Texas Democrat called h ·-, to ask for assistance be
who introduced the first House reso- ~
lution calling for an assassination in- . '
quiry,_ ~as privateiy voiced his strong
oppos1hon to Fensterwald having
any role on the committee, even as
an unofficial adviser.
I
•
cause "I knew Jerry Alch."' The lation about the job is :entering
Boston attorney, meanwhile, still around Philadciphia attorney Rich-
mainta ins that he had never heard of ard A. Sprague. As a special prose-
Fensterwald until the day McCord cutor, Sprague helped convict form er
directed him to call for bail. United Mine Workers President Tony
Fensterwald ' s committee on Boyle for the 1969 murder of Joseph
investigations is one of a number of Yablonski and his family.
i ti 0 ~en.den -ouu.s v. ·-h~r: h h.a ve __ (S p r 3 g1..!e ~s .net tc !}~ co!1fuserl .,,.,ith
sprung up around t-he country in re- another Richard Sprague. a form er
cent years but is set apart from the col league of Fenster wald- on his
others because of fears that it is a assassination committee.)
CIA front. Besides advising Downing on the
In a telephone interview, Fenster- assassinations, Fensterwald has also
wald first acknowledged that he had served as an intermediary between
connections with the CIA and then the Virginia .congressman and other
scoffed at the suggestion. lawmakers.
"I am on the payroll," he said. He met, for examp le, with Gonzal ez
However, when pressed, he said he on Sept. 4, 1975, in the House restau-
had "nothing to do with the CIA. " rant in an attempt to reconcile dif-
"There is absolutely no reason to ferences between the two congress-
think I am a member of the CIA," he men.
emphasized, adding that there was Gonzalez, who had introduced his
"absolutely no vestige of evidence of original House res olution in Febru-
any kind." ary 1975, calling for an investigation
Downing, who called Fensterwald · of political assassin ations, had want-
a "good source of information . . . ed the probe to cover the deaths oi
extremely knowledgeable," said he President Kenned y, Robert F.
was aware of vague accusations of Kennedy and King, as well as the
the link between Fensterwald and shooting of Alabama Gov. George
others having CIA connections. But Wallace.
the congressman has discounted But some months later, Down ing
these claims. introduced his r esolution, which
wh!l~ fensterwald and fellow War- called for an investiga tion of the
ren Com mission critic Mark Lane presidential assassination only.
'rf€-e tv~h at une time considered f;,,:: The final resolu tion included boV
t_he top staff position, current specu- the Kennedy and King assassin·
tions.
...
.·P.Tlrtaie:~Eves:cRJCJs~:on--ASSii$Sih8tiiiiiS.j~
By Mike Winmtp
• .I
country who have become amateur CTIA has ·accumulated a ~ sys;.
-
Asubpoena to appear before. the Seide.
l!ilmcilll .. tl'e Stllr·News sleuths atteIJll7ti.M to uncover what they tem of files of. material collected from Watergate 01111miuee is taped to Fen-
Their in_vestigators work our- of a think may fie the tnf! stories behind the around the woruL Most of. the doctt-. sterwald's. bookcase:. & ·is serving as a. · ·
crowded office in a 16th Street apart- shootings. men.ts, articles, and copies or declassi- defense amnsel to James McCord.: ...- '.·
ment.. building. Taped to the door is a The amount Of research material in fied material will be n.nted over to
other of the Waterpte Five. r·t
piece-a( scrap paper with the scrawled
~ ·'CTIKr-theoffide'I only~
existence is staggering. By Snitb:'s esti-
mate, the National Archives bas ten
Georgetown tlniversitrs library for
safe-keeping. -· ':
Does.MC.Ord see my caoflic:t.af ~
est With private inw:stigation ~ IDilflL• . .
'l
fication. . ' times more documentary evidence But tile commlttee sees-its func:tim as dravr even .a tenuoos link l:etween W. ·. ,
Imide, the small rooms: am packed about the m.miu <I John Kamedy than mucb D'm'e' ti.in a depository fiJr illfOr,.. . tm:gate and misdeedS of. die.part? •
with books, papers and. filing cabinets.
An oscilloscope and several radios sit
i:s contained in the entire 26 volumes of
the Warren Commission.Report. -
matiln..~'We're sort cl the. leading-edge ·
of the 'Let's solve tile murder. mave-
nJim McCord Was_ well aware of my - ii
hobby before l became. bis lawyer,"''
near L window, and the wall5 af one cu- mmt/" FeQStec.wafdsaid. - Fensterwald stated. "He hu never 1
bicle are covered with maps m Texas As chief counsel to the Senate StJb:,.· •
. helped_ or bindeied as. 1'be only thing r
and England. committee on administrative practice TIJey have ·filed several lawsuits.. to
and pm::edure from 1964-1968, Fenster- release infOJ matiJa still withheld in.ttie · ban. againsL .run is tflat be'"s such a
The lnitial undermver look of the of- straigbtMet:to:t. .
fice disappears with the appearance of waid wanted to see a separate Senate various cases, and they lobby«JD the Hill
8ab Smith. director af research of the investigation into the Kennedy assassi- for legislation to declassify restricted: U-E"veirbefore Watergate, l refused bJ
. Comn'tittee to lnwstigata ASsas:si.na- nation. material and :reopen official investiga- write" off anything u~rous;" be
. tioos. . The: cfJairman . of the coma:tittee, at tiOn.. - added. ' 'Bal before~ we
" Are yon -~ for Bud?" he asb, that time, Sen. Edward Loog, was una- AtSo an hand' is" a. list of imre ttian hue bad a theory in this WUDlly that
and picks up a light ooat. ~·ee·s overat ble to act on the suggestiOo because of 25'.<XX> names of people 'who have been goes back well OVel: 100 Je8n, and. it bas
· his office. Let's go.'• ~ction trouties in Missouri (he was involved in the various Dm:stigatjons-ta ta do with our national ego. You can
defeate.d in the 1958 Democratic pri- date. · have a political oonspiracy ilr France,
Waita minu_te-are thos-e maps being
med to ·tnldt. down the ~cape l"OUtes of mary by Tix>mas Eagleton) and a Llfe uyourd tie surprised bow mmy names. GUatemala. Russia or anywhere - IJO" • •
profession:Bl assassins? Oh, m, Smith magazine article tllat accused tum of keep Clopping up,''" ~ com- filical mm:ders are often committed by
shakahis bead and gives a.pained IOok. secret dealings with the Teamsters Un- mented. "'N_ot necess&tily wida Uy a pJfitica:l group for PQliti.caI neasons .
but.in this. nation we.lave been: m ~ t·i'
'-'-Our secretary, Andn:a, just joined iiJn. criminaf oonoecrim-but when .Frank
T riple A. She put& them up for ~ Fensterwald went into private prac- Sturgis' namecame up in die Wa~ so demx:raric and t.mri>lent tbat..mrlY' a .
tim:L.. tice and pmC:eeded to organi21e CTIA"s case. we.. knew who be was...._ ' ·. nut.aadd pa:fGt m -an.act like that ..
team of investigators.
THE COMMI I LEE to Investigate The C'fM efforts soon expanded into STURGIS, orE c:1. the me ' men art'l!St'- It's that at.littxb:: that bas kept the om.
Assassinations, organlled in 1969, be- other cases besides the first Kennedy ed in the. Watergate offices of. the Dem>- cful investigations of asmssinatiom
lieves that the official explanation fOl' assassination-Martin Luther King Jr., cratic. National Commit.tee, lived in from being complete, Feo:sterwald be-
the. nmrders of the Kermedys, Martin Malcolm X, Rockwell, and Robert Ken- . Miami at the time af the John Kennedy lieves.
Luther King Jr:, Malcolm X. American nedy. . assassinatiOn under the- name m F"l'Bllk
Nazi leader George Lincoln Rockwell, Events forced expansion of their in- ·"'"' Hln.all oftbeseca9e', the slappy WOrt.
Fiori~. &ran a group·c:alled '"!be ln-
and the shooting of George Wallace vestigations::. '-We couldn't help but ffiat's- been ~. whether accidentally-
teruational i\ntFCOmmonist Brigade.""" or OD' purpose. would nevet' saffice. in. , ,
have been woefully inadequate. worT}'"about the Wallace shoo(ing...too.'' and one of-its' members. a0wrding to
Privately fWlded, the committee bas CTIA is especially interested in bow the average murder case," be claimL
Fensterwald, later claimed that Lee
two full-time. unpaid staff members in Wallace's would-be assassin, Arthur Harvey Oswald -bad attempted tn infil- •Hfi John Kennedy·fmd been:JObn.D>e.
the nerwork of "doctors, lawyers, writ- Bre~ was able to afford his travel trate the group. But, added Fenster- a coroner's jury would have denw•led
ers, architects, housewi ves , Indians, around the country in pursuit of. his vic- wald, the FBI "bad m ftCDrd of ()s.. amsi:derably better proof than tlJe. war-
paranoids and hardheads" around the tim. Wald's being in Miami." ren Chmmission got.''
Bernard Fensterwald, 69, Lawyer w
lJ
ForJamesRayandWatergateSpy
\I
By ALFONSO A. NARVAEZ b1
an
Bernard Fensterwald Jr., a former service and returned to private rrac- to
Government lawyer who later de- tice, he took over the defense o Mr. Me
fended James Earl Ray and James W. Ray, who was convicted of killing the 801
McCord Jr., a Watergate burglar, died Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., and i
Tuesday at his home in Alexandria, Va. headed the defense team through a Jei
He was 69 years old. series of unsuccessful appeals. I
anl
He died of a heart attack, his wife, In 1973 he took over as defense coun- tar.
Patricia, said. sel for Mr. McCord after his conviction Ne
for spying on the Democratic national me
Mr. Fensterwald was with the State headquarters In the Watergate com- 100
Department for six years before he
joined the Senate staff. He later was
plex but before his sentencing. tun
counsel to several Senate subcommit- T
Mr. McCord, director of security for b~
tees, including the one on practices and President Richard M. Nixon's 1972 re- Arn
'
procedures. election campaign, tater wrote a letter ant
989
1 In 1965 he orchestrated a highly pub- to Judge John J. Sirica implicating fant
licized inquiry Into allegations of illegal White House and Republican campaign A
= wiretapping by Government investiga- officials in the burglary and with trying
to cover up the incident. The letter in-
fron
tive agencies. Accusations were later luml
made that the inquiry had been under- tensified an investigation into the bur-
taken in an effort to keep James R. glary that eventually led to President Ht
Hoffa, the head of the teamsters' union, Nixon's resignation. Blar
Har
110 out of jail, but Mr. Fensterwald denied Esb
lte the accusations, saying in a 1967 Inter- Since 1968 Mr. Fensterwald had been
rs, view that the investigation had stayed deeply involved In investigating the as-
>B- "religiously clear" of the Hoffa case. sasslnations of President John F. Ken-
in . . nedy, Senator Robert F. Kennedy and J
Bo~ Aug. 2, .1921, mto a promment Dr. King. He created a Committee to
lly Nashville famtly, Mr. Fensterwald Investigate the Assassinations and es-
graduated magn~ cum laude from tabllshed the Assassination Archives iq
rs Harvard ~ollege m 1942. He served in and Research Center in Washington as St.
rid the Navy m World War II and received a repository of materials on the three and
a a law degree from Harvard in 1949. killings.
pa
of Interest In Three Killings He was a senior partner In the firm Ken
11.S Fensterwald & Alcorn In Alexandria. Pat1
27 He joined the State Department in dins
1950, leaving in 1956 to become a In addition to his wife, he is survived 11
~r speech writer in the vice-presidential by a son, Bernard 3d of Reston, Va. ; publ
n- campaign of Senator Estes Kefauver, three stepchildren, Patrick Marlette of sary
J., Democrat of Tennessee. In 1959 he re- Sacramento, Calif., David Marlette of !· tung
turned to the Senate staff and investi- Falls Church, Va., and Margaret Alice of 66.
gated price fixing and the drug indus- Cox of Taipei, Taiwan; a sister, Ann cerpt
try. Eisenstein of Nashville, and six grand- 1tengtl
In 1970, after he had left govern~ent children. : by th~ .
mm
- IJraths ll
ference was being held on "a
CIA campus," a referPnce to
CIA-sponsored resParch that
has been carried out at I
Georgetown, and suggested
that at least two prominent.
OTIA members have ridden,
CIA ties.
One of th1> panelists, Dr.
Richard Popkin, rofessor of
Airs/
philosophy at Wa,shington Uni-
versity at St. ouis, said that ::-....
many other countries have \~
Plot Theory
had political assassination con-
spiracies, et American offi-
cials here would have the na- 111 Killings
tion be ·eve that the assassi-
. nations of the last decade
have been carried out by "a
lJy John Hanrahan
.Vashlng ton Post S taff Writer
lone nut." Popkin said the A myriad of conspiracy the-
Watergate affair, with its
" nspiracy to re-elect the ories, including one attempt-
resident," should convince ing to link the assassination of
Americans once and for all President John F. Kennedy to
that conspiracies do exist and some of the figures involved
that President Kennedy was in the Watepgate affair, were
the victim of one.
raised yesterday on the con-
Although none of the panel-
ists dealt specifically in their cluding day of p. two-day con-
prepared remarks with links fere:ice here on political assas-
between Watergate and PrE-si- sinations of the last decade.
dent Kennedy's murder, vari- Various theorists at the con-
ous members of t he audience
cqntended that there may ex- ference at Georgetown Uni-
ist evidence to show that per- versity's Gaston Hall attrib-
sons arrested in the break-in uted President Kennedy's as-
at Democratic Headquarters sassination to or g a n i zed
in the Watergate also were in
crime, the CIA, anti-Castro
Dallas on the day of Mr. Ken-
nedy's assassination. Cu bans, big businessmen, the
Ramparts magazine and late President Lyndon B.
many underground and smaller Johnson, soldiers of fortune OF
circulation publications have combinations of these ele-
suggested in recent months ments.
that there may be direct
links between the Dallas shoot· In most instances, the theo-
ing .and the Water:gate affair ries were old ones brought up
but, as some members of the to date. While some theorists
audience said yesterday, the exonerated Lee Harvey Os-
major news media have ig-
nored this possible connection. wald of the assassination of
President Kennedy, others
Peter Dale Scott, author and
professor at the University of said Oswald may have been a
California at Berkeley, said minor figure in a large con-
there were "lessons of Water- spiracy.
gate" that shoutd be applied What was different about
to examining what he said was
the "cover-up" of the facts the discussions from those ot
about the Kennedy assassina- earlier years was the apparent
tion. widespread feeling that the
The Watergate affair also Watergate affair and cover-up
showed, he said, that the per- had links to President Kenne-
sons involved in the cover-up
need not necessarily have dy's assassination in Dallas 10
been involved in the original years a.go last Thursday.
crime. He said he suspects Although the conference
this was the case in the inves- sponsor, the private, Wasbing-
tigation of Mr. Kennedy's
murder. ton-based Committee to Inves-
tigate Assassinations (CTIAJ,
In a morning panel discus- had not listed Watergate on
sion, authors of various books its program, the issue was
and articles on political assas- brought up yesterday after-
sinations expressed frustrat- noon by Chicago-based gadfly
ion over not being able to in- Sherman Skolnick, who was in
terest major news media in the audi•nce. A sizable por-
newly discovered evidence or tion of the audience of about
theories relating to the polit- 200 persons appeared to sup.
ical murders and attempted port Skolnick's successful ef.
murders. fort to put Watergate on the
Although so.me panelists agenda.
said they felt there was a new
Skolnick, the chief propo-
willingness by the news media nent of the theory that there
to do more investigative re-
porting as a result of the was deliberate sabotage in .t he /
plane crash that last Decem-
Watergate affair, othPrs said
there was still a strong reluc- ber killed Dorothy Hunt, wife
tance in the media to re-open of Watenrnte conspirator E.
investigations of assassina· Howard Hunt .Tr., stiITelt up
tiona. e conference by questiomng
i M were possible /
lijiK. e ween e
r:;lf'A.
'
- r.
, ...
s t • s aJLd one of the ·commission's legal ·staff
who recalled the incident. said he He·.
Bernard F-e~erwald and .to our rep resentative '. in Mexic~. at the time, might have been associated had asked Raymond G. Rocca, the
George O'Toole .~<· I·
•whG 'will attempt to determine if
the L'ee OSWALD in Mexico City
with Oswald." 9 The Report quoted an
affidavit by Richard Helms that "the
Agency's liaison with the • Commis-
sion, 16 about the photogr!lph. The law- .
Six weeks before the assassination of . and subj~ct · are the same individ- original photograph had been taken by yer later received word from the A~~ncy
President Kennedy on November• 22, uaL 4 the .CIA outside of the United States that the mystery man was though~ to be
1963, the Central Intelligence Agency . " sometime between July 1, 1963 and Oswald at the time the photograph was
sent the following teletype message to Sitice Oswald had served in the November 22, 1963." 1 0 . given to the FBL. Why, he asked, ..did
the Federal Bureau of · Investigation Marine Corps, which comes under the The Commission's explanation is the Agency mistake someone so dis-
and the Departments of State and the administration of the Navy, his person- both inaccurate and misleading. The similar in appearance for Lee Harvey
Navy: nel records would have included his implication that the CIA thought the · Oswald? The CIA said they_ would
Subject: Lee Henry OSWALD
photograph. mystery man was "associated with check further and call !Um back. The
What the Agency did not say in this. Oswald" only masks the true situation. lawyer told Epstein that they never
I. On I October 1963 a reliable cable is that it had in its possession a On the basis of its own evidence, the called him back and the Warren Report
and sensitive source in Mexico photograph of the man who had Agency must have concluded either contains no explanation of the Agen-
reported that an American male, apparently "identified himself' as Os- that the mystery man was imperson- cy's mistake.~ 7
who identified himself as Lee wald. The man in the CIA photo was ating Oswald or that an unlikely chain Another piece of the puzzle fell into
-e- OSWALD, contacted the Soviet not Lee Harvey Oswald; he was, just as of errors had accidentally linked both place early in 1971, when the National
Embassy in Mexico City inquiring the Agency's "reliable and sensitive the man in the photograph and the Archives released a previously classified
whether the Embassy had received source" had ·described, him, approxi- man who "co)ltacted" the Soviet Em- memorandum about the mystery man
any news concernir.g a telegram mately thirty-five years old, with an bassy to Lee Harvey Oswald. from Richard Helms to the · Comrnis-
which had been sent to Washing- athletic build and a receding hairline. The truth was further obscured by sion 's general counsel, J. Lee Rank-
ton. The American was described According to a memorandum by the Report's reference to the Helms in. 1 8 Dated· March 24, 1964, - the.
as approximately 35 years old, Helms, the CIA never received the affidavit, which described the circum- memo informed Rankin:
with an athletic build, about six Navy's pictures of Oswald •and only stances in which the mystery man was
feet tall, with a receding hairline. concluded after the . assassination that On 22 and · 23 November, im-
photographed only in the most vague mediately following the assassi-
. 2. It is believed that OSWALD two different people were involved. 5 and general terms. The affidavit was
Meanwhile, the photograph . was. deliv- nation of President Kennedy, three
may be identical to Lee · Henry dated August 7, 1964. 1 1 However, the - cabled reports were received from
OSWALD, born on 18 October ered . to the FBI on November 22, Commission never mentioned in its
1963~ . .. [deleted] in Mexico City relative
1939 in New Orleans, Louisiana. A Report or in its twenty-six supplementa- to photographs of an unidentified <:
former U.S. Marine who defected ry volumes that ·it had obtained an man who visited the Cuban and
to the Soviet Union in October One can only guess <it the confusioJ) .earlier affidavit from Helms on July 22, Soviet Embassies in that city dur-
1959 and later made arrangement caused by the picture. The FBI needed 1964 in which he was much more mg October and November
through the United States- Em- no Navy photograph to establish that specific.1 2 "The original photograph,"
1963 .. .. 19
bassy in Moscow to return . to the , .... ....
United States with his Russian-
born wife, Marina Nikolaevna '
··.J· .
On the basis of these cables, Helrris
went on to say, the · CIA ..had'
sent .....
; Pusak.~va, and the~ child. ....
-~....
!~.r , .,,; .. or;·'t.
several reports to the Secret Service.
3. The informafion in- paragraph -·
Attached to the Helms' memorand~·m
jl:• ·
were • 2 er
paraphras,es of these reporti,,, r
one is being disseminated to yo1.1r ... ··
Two dealt with the mystery man:
representatives in Mexico City. Ti~
Any further information received ,,, Message to the Protective 'Re-!
on this subjei;t will be furnished the mystery man was not Oswald-Lee Helms testified, "was taken in Mexico search Staff, The Secret Service,
~ou . This information is being •···· Harvey Osw~d w.as sitting handcuffed ·city"~ un _Octobe.r 4, 1963." 13 (This delivered by hand~ o n 23' Novem -
made available to the Immi~ation in a third-fl oor office of the Dalla s e:irlier Helms :lffidavit was ~sed in • ber 1963, at I 010 hourS:
and Naturalization Service . 1 police h eadquarters. The neXi d ay 1 9 6 7 •through the efforts or Paul Hoch, I, ~ ~.. ":' H,
Specjal Agent .Bardwell D. Odum was . .,, a })rivate. rcsear<;her.) .-.- :~ .. 'fhrough , sources available to it,
dispatched with the photograp·h to the . i _ There ·is no ·available record that the CIA . [deleted] h ad come .int~ ..
Was the · Lee Henry Oswald '•Of t)le
motel where .Oswald's wife ~d mot het .: 'Richard Hehns ever · tglt.1_, 1h~ ~ \llan:en PJ>Ssessjon -eJ....a ...phQ..tQ8l:apl~of,
CIA mes$ilge tee" Harvey Oswald? Yes; ,,were....hidden.- tfo sh~wen ·t h P"nirf,b ·- , •. c,,..,.._ ._...... ..,. .. ,,
1Jrrorrffn.-· tn ·p..;.~~.,,..,i t7~'1'- - • t. - • · '
..... ~, ' '·
Helrns's covering memorandum af- 'Veillance cameras, on at ' least two - . deputy director of Mexican Federal Embassy. There ~were ~ lo:
firmed that "the subject of the photo-
graphs mentioned in these reports. .is
separate occasions. And neither or the .
new photographs reveals · any ' resem-
S_ecurity on . November 23, 1963, she
said that Oswald had visited the Cuban
Oswald's applicnboi1' for :. C
bearing his photogx:iph :m
not Lee Harvey OSWALD." 23 ·blance · between the mystery man and Embassy . in late September to apply ture, 3 1 and a letter rcponcdly wnucn
Lee Harvey os\vaid. for a visa _ to visit Cuba during a by Oswald to the Soviet Embu..ry ln
. The Warren Commis;aon concluded planned trip to the Soviet Union. Mrs. Washington, referring to hiS vrit to the
Se· v~ral
photographs, then, of a that Os~ald had be'en in Mexico in late Duran recalled a heated exchange be- Cuban Embassy .32 The address boo\.
mysterious stranger who kept being September and early October 1963 . tween Oswald and the Consul when found among Oswald's possessions,
' confused with Lee Harvey Oswald, and Records of Mexican Customs and Im- the Cuban official told him his request moreover, contained Duran's name and
who had visited both the Soviet and migration, bus lines, and a Mexico City could no t be granted immediately. She telephone number. But the only cred-
Cuban embassies. Was it the same hotel indicate that Oswald entered remembered making, a "semiqfficiaJ" ible eyewitness testimony that Oswald
mystery man whose picture had .been Mexico at Nuevo Laredo on the US phone call to the Soviet Embassy to in fact · visited the embassy is the
shown to Mrs. Oswald? Or was it yet border on September 26, traveled by try to speed up action on Oswald's statement of Silvia Duran.
another Oswald Doppelgiinger? bus to Mexico City, arriving there the application. She identified the Lee When viewed in the light of the
Firm evidence of the existence of next morning, and returned to the Harvey Oswald who visited the Cuban recently disclosed evidence suggesting
additional · photographs of the unidenti- United States on October 3. 25 Passen- Embassy as the acc used assassin whose that someone might have visited the
fied man mentioned in · the Warren gers on the bus to Mexico City photograph appeared in the Mexica n embassy impersonating Oswald, the
remembered Oswalc\,, but there is al- newspapers on November 23 .29 CommiS5ion's failure to settle com- ~
~
&eport was turned up by Robert
Smith, a private researcher. In 1972 most no eyewitness testimony to sup- Apparently the Warren Commission pletely the question of the three
Smith , then research director for the port the Commission's reconstruction staff did not interview Silvia Duran, misidentified photos seem·s extraor=?
~ Commission to Investigate Assassina- of Oswald's movements after he arrived but instead relied solely on her affi- dinary. It is probable thafthe CIA did
'-., tions, was poring over some 'recently in that city. 26 The Commission's find- davit. Whether any attempt to talk to in fact supply an explanation of the
~ . _ declassified 'Warren Commission docu- ing that Oswald made repeated visits to her was made is not ·recorded in any photographs that was enough to satisfy
men,ts when he found reference to the both the Soviet and Cuban embassies available document. However, accord- the Commission at the 'time. If so, that
mystery photo and two other views of rests heavily upon the affidavit of one ing to the Commission . files, a Mexican expla:nation ·remains a part of the ·
~
-
classified Warren Commiss1on docu-
~ - --.,----------~~~
..... t'
ments not available to the public:
Raymond Rocca (who, until his
~~ recent resignation, was the Agency's
action officer for all po~.t-Warren Re-
.port inquiries about the'' matter) told
~
so, we may wonder how the Agency
I could have offered a satisfactory ex~
planation pf the incident ·to the Com:
mission. Until additional documents
bearing on this matter are declassified,
~ the conclusion that,Qswald 1really visit-·
ed the Cuban· Embassy mu'st remain in
~ so.me doubt. But even i{ he did, the
question whether someone
theless trying ~ i :. ; er; :: "tc; hi.
mains a cru ... ,al ~one.
! someone po~lng as O s w ald · visitelS
the Soviet and Cuban e m b a saies in the
early autumn of 1963, what imp llca·
tions mlght be drawh from this diS:.
.- covery? One obvious interpretation is
th;it someone sought to counterfeit a
.-
fresh connection between the man who
:was soon to · become the accused
, pr.esidentiaI • assassin arid the govern-
ments . of t hose · two communist coun-
tries. But it is not necessary to
speculate further. If someone were
tr}>ing to impersonate Oswald e~t
· weeks before the assassin.a tion, th~
the same person} 4 Smith called his witness, a Mtrxican woman who newspaper reporter tried to interview Warren Commission' s theo'ry of a lone
discovery to the "att"ention \ of one of worked at the Cuban Embassy. 2 7 her in 'April 1964. Her husband would assassin, unconnected with any con-
the authors, Bernard Fensterwald , who not permit th~ man to speak with her, spiracy, is seriouSly undermined and
instituted a suit unde( the Freedom of saying "she had suffered a nervous the case should be reopened.
Information Act for release of the two Silvia Tirado de Duran was.. secretary breakdown following her interrogation There could be, of course, an
pictures. .The government yielded and to the Cuban Consul in Mexico City . by the Mexican authorities and had innoce~t explanation of how the CIA
turned over the photographs to Fen- In a sworn statement 28 she gave to the been prohibited by her physician . .. came to misidentify the mystery man
-; terwald and Smith. They ?re pub- 25 from discussing the Oswald matter as Lee Harvey Oswald: Oswald may
Report , p. 299.
1ished · here for the first time. further." 3 0 If this report is correct, actually have visited the Cuban and
26
The two new views of the mystery Ibid ., pp . 733-736. the interrogation of Silvia · Duran may Soviet embassies. If this were the case,
man were ~ taken at a different time 27
Jbid .. p. 734. Two other witnesses have l:reen a more emotional interview then somewhere in .the CIA's file·s
fr om th~ first picture. In the first told the FBI they saw Oswald at the than one would conclude from the there should be photographs of the.
pictuie-, 'the -0ne published in the- Cuban Embassy. A Mexican private report forwarded by the Mexican po- real Lee Harvey Oswald departing from
Warren Commission volumes, he is detect ive who had visited the embassy lice . The:: report gives the impression the Soviet and Cuban embassies in
wearing a long-sleeved dark .shirt and on October l. 1963, identified Oswald that the police were routinely collect- Mexico City. If those photographs
Jppears empty-h.!lilded; in the two new from newsp aper photographs as some- ing information about Oswald's Mexi- exist, their publication would help to
p h~tos lie is wi:aring a short-sleeved one he had seen leaving the embassy settle the question. If they don't, the
can trip for the American authorities.
wbitc:- shirt and is. carrying some kind on that date in the company of a CIA should now explain why not. In
Cuban. The detective was shown other One question that arises is whether
of. bag .or pouch. The new photos also Duran's statement was given volun- either case, it should also disclose w~at
photos of Oswald and failed to iden-
show . trim holding· a small, passport- · tarily , and, if not, whether her identi- it knows about the man it wrongly
tify him, and lhe FBJ seems to have
sized booklet and what· appears to be a con cluded that he was mistaken (Com- fication of Oswald as th e visitor to the identified as Oswald on two separate
wallet. As in the first photograph, the mission Doc um ent 566). The Warren embassy is valid. occasions. · It should explain why it
hac_kgrounds pf ' the two new photos Rep o rt does not offer the detective' s The Warren Commission may have believes that this man was not imper-
have been . cropped out.. Whoever he testi mon y as ev;de nce of Oswald' s visit. omitted a full exploration of this sonating Oswald. All these matters
.....,J \vas, he managed to be photographed , An o th er witness who claimed to have question because it had collateral evi- _should be clarified both by the CIA
apparently by . the CI A's hidde n su r- see n Oswald at th e Cuban Embassy itself and by the congression al com- ..,.... _
dence of Oswald's visit to the Cuban
retra cted his testimon y after failing to mittees that are about to investigate its ·
13 pass a po lygra ph ex amination (R eport, 29
[bid • . 1bid., p. 5. activities. 0
p . 308 ).
24
C::~m~'issionDocument 56 6, The 30
commission Document 963 , The 31
Na ti'Onal Archives, Washington, DC , pp.
18
Commissi on Doc ume nt 776a The National Archives, Washington, DC, p. Hearing1, Commission Exhibit 2564.
3-4: National Archives, Washington, DC. 16 . 32
Ibid., Commission Exhibit 15. " · ·~ ~
A nril 3 . 1975
~ .\ •. .'i. A\\; •. -'"" .I .. j \ .... JS•
.. ::-
. ,
PRINCETON, NEW JERSEY
;...........-~~~~~~=~--~~~~~-r-
Italy needs. Mr. Rumor, in he favors renewing his par- goes home to Vicenza, l!ear
what looked like a fit of ty's old collaboration with Venice, where he was born ROBERT RYAN
pique, stepped down, and the the Socialists. His return to and most of his many rela-
unions somewhat sheepishly the premiership means that tives live. He likes to take
called off the walkout since the Christian Democratic long walks in the nearby Al-
there was no government to party reverts to a center-left pine foothills. Made 90 Movies-
strike agaimt. course after 15 months of a His father and grandfather
Many of Mr. Rumor's asso- centrist line under Mr. An- owned a printshop and pub- Scoted on Stage
ciates and rivals in the _fac- dreotti. lished a weekly, The Catholic
tious Christian Democratic Mr. Rumor - the stress is Worker. When Mr. Rumor in O'Neill Drama
party say to this day that he on the second syllable of the visited the United States
never explained satisfactorily name - has remained a more than five years ago, he
why be resigned so suddenly bachelor. A former high paid a call at The New York
then. school teacher of literature, Times and asked to tour the
I Now, Mr. Rumor returns to he reads a lot and likes es- composing room, where he
the Chigi Palace, the Pre- capist movies. Almost every chatted with the men.
mier's ornate office in down- weekend he leaves Rome and
town Rome, in a deal worked
out by the Christian Demo-
cratic leadership. A part of
this deal was that another
former Premier, Amintore
Fanfani, would become politi-
cal secretary of the party,
controlling the most power-
ful political machine in Italy.
Mr. Fanfani, who is 65
years old, has held that job
before, and when he. did Mr.
Rumor was depucy secretary
of the patty, ·working in an
adjoining 'office. Mr. Fanfani
used to .summon Mr. Rumor
by ringing a bell. Such rela-
tionships often leave lasting
traces, and Rome will be
watching in fascination how
the two men get along in the
weeks to come.
Since the time when Mr.
Fanfani used to ring the bell,
Mr. Rumor has been party
chief himself, has held the
posts of agriculture minister
and interior minister, and has
been Pemier in three cabi-
nets from December, 1968, to
that abrupt walkout three
years ago.
Adroit at political maneu-
vering, he has for at least a
decade been one of the lead-
ers of the strongest among a
varying number of six to
nine Christian Democratic
party factions. His faction is
known as the Dorotheans,
the name being derived from
St. Dorothy, the patron saint
of a convent in which Mr.
Rumor .;µid his party associ-
ates once ·held a caucus in a
rebellion against- Mr. Fan-
fani.
The middle-of-the-road
Dorot~s are today the pil-
lar of the Italian Establish-
mf:llt. P.:tey are represented
in 'e'iecy .,Cabinet aifd con trot
the· chpicest political plums,
which are Jmown as the "sub-
govetnment"
Favors Soclalist Role
In the musical-chair exer-
cise of Italian govemment-
making, Mr. Rumor has again
become Premier because he
had long been signaling that
1228
~~) ~76
{;hie/ IIUAC In 1 esligalor /)i<'s- 1 1 C.
I\
I
nr JP.1111 n 11all1·; l .~ ..
I
I l.oul1 Jam .. , T!us•l'll . 61 . a
former chf,.f l11\'f'Sl1~ at or for
the llou11<· Un -Amer k on At··
th>l tles Co mm1t ter, dlrcl yrs-
tvrd11y alter a hrart atta ck
,., ... '
it t he homr of 11 clnu~hter in 1 I I 1 ~ f
B y PETER. ~HSS
ing address was General Post
Office Box: 2691, New York
.A research group urging a City 10001. It operates from
new investigation of President his hon1e at 243 West 54th
Kennedy's assassination said Street. he said.
' '
he· and other men had pulled C. L. Lewis listed that day Sylvia Bernstein, treasurer, an- !where the commission con-
some utramps and hoboes" off one uLonnie Ray Wright w/m/ other Canadian. .eluded that a lone assassin, Lee
a long freight train that was 3 time looser [sic], drunk, put He said the committee~s mail· Ha~ey Oswald, h~d fired.·
~bout to leave the yards, and in jail. W~ on RR tr?~k."
~ad them taken in for ques-
1
2V\t~(f_~rs
11-~ · ··-- ---- -1- ~! S~-tw -cf i1,IZc/J~Y ~ LC'?"'-5 (3bcf. /JP!--)
FtrravtfYZQ \ b'( VI (J2, f,re_ ?$1 ~-f_ i··htk~ )-4, 1-h.01'fAv-€J
I
\ ,.
... - ~
I
I I
~~th
---- ---- -:-:1 .Legi~
grat.eful acknowledgment to Robert Be}an, :UY
' lat1ve Assistant, and Be · n vald r ,·Chief Coun-
1 -
se~ of the Senate Subcommittee on Administ ative Practice
·~~ ~ocedure, for their invaluable assistan ·e.
I
l --------------. - ----·----- ____ _ )
\
\
I
I
A// rights reserved
P!CTVRE CREDITS I
Photographs 3, 4, 6, 7, 10, 11 (Arthur Schatz); 5, 13 (Chuck Rapoport);
11 (D ick Meck); l2, 15 (Henry Groskinsky): Li(t: Magazine
© I9C6 Time, I nc. All rights reserved.
Pr inted in the UlJitcd Sta les of America
~ .~- ----
...
DECADE OF ASSASSINATIONS
1963 - 1973
PROGRAM
I
FRIDAY - NOVEMBER 23 FRI DAY - Continued SATU RDA Y - NOVEMBER 24
Hunt was in Washington on the day of murdered in 1965; there were no less rious circumstances, and that Onassis
the assassination, attending a sneaky than eight teams of assassins on duty in himself knew who killed J.F.K.
meeting with disgruntled anti-Castroites Dallas that November day of 1963; and Obviously the crackpottery displeases
who were planning another invasion of former Presidents Johnson and Nixon, Lane, who presents himself as Mr. No-
Cuba to make up for El Floppo at the as well as President Ford, were all in on Nonsense. "I know this subject attracts
Bay of Pigs. But J .F.K. had already said the conspiracy from the beginning. people who are paranoid, in addition to
he wouldn't sanction another invasion , "Penn Jones says he's got a list of norma l people. This tends to obscure
so why were these guys talking about people who were killed mysteriously," the constructive work that is being done
one unless they knew that K ennedy was says Weisberg, "and that they took to bring about a conclusion."
breathing his last in Dallas that very secrets to the grave. Well, what secrets? Lane hopes his Citizens Commission
November day? l don' t know of any." of Inquiry can serve as an umbrella
"It's too damn coincidental for my Says Weisberg antagonist Weberman: under which warring assassinationist
money," says Sprague. "Jones brings everybody a nd his mother factions will find peace. "This is. a move-
But these theories go on and on, and into the fuckin' conspiracy." Say ment that cannot be stopped. A few
some assassinationists believe that more Weisberg and Weberman antagonist years ago, we could hardly get a nybody
conspiracy theories are not what the F ensterwald : "ll Marguerite Oswald's in Congress interested in this thing. Now
movement needs most at this time. 98-year-old aunt died of diabetes, Jones we have about half the members of Con-
"Thel"e is entirely too much speculation would say, 'I told you so.' That sort of gress interested. Bills arc being intro-
in this field," Lane complains. He's thing hinders serious investigation." duced. Freedom of Information Act
trying to get some respectability into From the Texas town of Midlothian suits are being filed. You know, fully
the circus. (popu lation 3000), where her husband, one fifth of the entire Warren Commis-
Weberman, cutup though he is, says Penn, temporarily hospitalized with sion investigation is still classified, and
he's after the truth, too. "D o n't lump me pneumonia, does his assassinationist man y of the documents that arc avail-
in with all those other guys, please," he work, Louise Jones defends her hus- able have big pieces cut out-just as if
says. "I've spent hours and hours on this band's tireless research and describes somebody used a razor blade on them.
thing, man. I've been into this since No- the role she herself has played. "I'm Talk about deception!"
vember of 1973, when I first got the the one who puts in all the a llegedJys," What docs Lane expect to find at the
tramp pictures. I spent a ll last summer in she says. bottom of this? " l don't even think about
the National Archives, and I speed-read Plots, plots, plots. They abound, they that. I just believe that Congress inves-
papers that would stack up JOO feet. multipl y, they regenerate. Some people tigating is the only way the truth can be
"I know you think assassina tion re- think there were two Lee Harvey Os- known. 1 don't know any better ap-
searchers ma ke too ma ny people gu ilty, walds (at least) and two Sirhans and proach to end this decade of deceit.
right?" Right. " Well, eve1ybody wasn' t God knows how many James Earl Rays. This has been a really disastrous period
involved. Only a few of the Da llas police Some people believe that Audie Murphy in American history."
were involved. But you got to remember, was sacrificed to the cause when the You can say that again, Mark. And
there was tremendous anti-Kennedy sen- assassins decided he knew too much . you will.
timent at the time. I'm convinced we Organized crime, Jimmy Hoffa, the CIA, Weisberg bas filed six F reedom of
have the assassins of President Kennedy the FBI and a Maryland outfit that Info rmation Act suits himself- "more
in this country right now. But it's a little watches for flying saucers have all been than a ny other writer in the country,"
hard to explain. I do n't consider it a cited as tied in with this mess in one he says-and he has secured access to
conspiracy. I consider it American his- way or another. The hideous part is that informa tion bailed by others as inval-
tory. It happens to have gone this way." some of it has to be true-if only be- uable, though he is not getting the credit
Like a lot of people, Weberman is cause of the sheer odds of it all. he thinks he deserves.
on the Weisberg shit list. Weisberg refers "Some people have gone round the "They ripped me off in R olling Stone,"
to Weberman as "that wild man in New bend on this thing," says Lane. "There he says with sadness. "They don't even
York." Weberman refers to Weisberg was one woma n at the A.LB. confer- have me down in their piece as one of
as "a bitter old man." ence in Boston who read a list of 45 the ' nuts,' and I did most of the basic
Weisberg says of Sprague, "He's gone assassins she claimed were involved in work on the subject. I don't think you
hog wild." the J .F.K. killing. They cut her off after know how hard it is to t ry a nd hold a
Sprague says of Weisberg, "I think five minutes or she said she would have middle position on this. You've got
he's flipped. For the past two years he's named 110." people saying the re were 50 assassins at
been yelling and shouting. H e wrote a She also proposed that even Abraham the scene of the crime. What the hell
long diatribe against everybody and a Zapruder, who took the famous home were they doing, sweeping the streets?
long and awful letter to Mark Lane." movies of the assassination and sold Most of these other people are beyond
But everybody agrees on one thing: them to Time-Life (which proceeded to their depth in this. P eople such as Lane
Penn Jones, Jr., is the farthest-out of hide them away o ut of most people's are not about to do work when they
all. Jones, a former Texas newspaper reach), was himself part of the conspir- can make speeches and be famous."
editor and perhaps the very first Early acy. Zapruder is now, like so many Lane looks for hopeful signs of in-
True Disbeliever, has declared, among others, dead. Then there are all the re- c reasing public interest. Recently he
other things, that Jack Ruby was "fed lated or unrelated assassinations: Robert saw one. "They selected me to be listed
cancer" in his jail cell; columnist Doro- F . Kennedy, Martin Luther King, Jr., in Wh o's Who in America." It took ten
thy Kilgallen could have cracked the Malcolm X, the attempt on George years, he notes happily, but they finally
whole case after her last-minute inter- Wallace. Some say that Aristotle Onas- came around. There may be hope for
view with Ruby- if only she hadn't been sis' son, Alexander, died under myste- us yet. ~
122 o ul
ASSASSINATIONIST BUSINESS The years 1966-1968 constituted what might be called the First Golden
Age of Assassinationism. Then the movement suffered a near-fatal blow.
the proceedings and the report, an un- ernment with its own Freedom of in wh ich the theory was not only elab-
popular position to take at a time when Information Act. In I 97 5, for instance, orated upon but also chiseled in stone
the country was lionizing the Warren Weisberg triumphed over the General as Holy Writ. (Lane also adopted the
Commission as a model of legal probity. Services Administration in forcing the theory for the film he co-authored in
After 15 publishers had rejected his declassification and release of key Warren 1973, Exec11tive Action.)
manuscript, Lane found himself in Lon- Commission transcripts; these were the This transformation of idle speculat ion
don debating Warren Commission staff records of the executive-session dis- into the one true word helped lead to
counsel Arlen Specter on BBC-TV. Sid- cussions in which the subject of Oswald's Garrison's downfall, and with it came
ing with Lane in criticizing the report CIA and FBI connections was brought the end of phase one of the assassina-
was Hugh Trevor-Roper, the noted up-and quickly squelched. tionist movement. At the height of pub-
Oxford historian who had earned dis- lic and media interest in Garrison's
tinction with his pioneering research on The year 1966 was a seminal point investigation, in early 1967, the Harris
the conspiracies of Hitler Germany. in the history of the assassinationist Poll had recorded 66 percent of the
Trevor-Roper observed that Lane's movement. Weisberg's Whitewash, pub- American public as disbelieving the
manuscript lacked credibility and that lished Jate the previous year, was Warren Report's lone-assassin theory; by
he, a best-selling historian, would provide followed in quick succession by Lane's the end of 1967, the figure had dropped
same by penning a glowing introduction. Rush to Judgment and Edward Jay to about 60 percent and was to sink
He did, and Lane was launched. Epstein's Inquest. The Early True Dis- even lower during the following months.
The successful' bidder for the suddenly believers' diligent work was at last be- In 1968, a New Orleans jury acquitted
credible manuscript was the firm of ginning to bear fruit and the vaunted Shaw; in 1969, G arrison was tried- and
Holt, Rinehart and Winston, then Warren Commission was beginning to acquitted--on charges of bribery and
owned by Texas oilman Clint Murchi- encounter sharp c riticism from non move- income-tax evasion; in 1970, the voters
son. When Murchison's friend J . Edgar ment sources. The Washington Post was of New Orleans retired the erstwhile
H oover first heard of H olt's interest, the first prestige newspaper to begin Jolly Green Giant fro m public service.
he sent a top FBI aide to New York to probing into the assassination; its lead Along the way, the media had with-
try to talk Holt out of the Lane contract. was followed by other newspapers and drawn their sympathy for the assassi-
That was a tactical error, accordin g to news magazines, and the next couple of nationist movement, and abandoned their
Holt spokesmen: It was partially because years constituted what might be called interest in investigating assassination ist
of the FBI's keen interest that Holt de- the First Golden Age of Assassination- theories. The N ew York Times and CBS
cided to deal with Lane, and the book ism. Interest in-and promotion of-the News found the movement to be ir-
that 15 publishers had rejected went on subject kept the since-departed Life, responsible and deceitful. Newsweek was
to sell 1,500,000 hardcover copies and Look and the original Saturday Evening downright bitter ; wrote White House cor-
millions more in paperback. Post alive well past their primes, and by respondent Charles Robert: "The assas-
1968, no fewer than 30 commercial sination industry's products would never
Shortly before Lane's Rush to Judg- books and 130 privately published manu- stand the scruti ny of Consumer·s Union.
ment appeared in 1966, the fi rst book- scripts were in widespread circulation. Consumers buy its products as they buy
length attack on the Warren Report had Theo, in 1968, the movement suffered most t rash: The package promises satis-
been privately publish ed. Its title was a near-fatal blow. T he politically ambi- faction, but the innards are mostly dis-
WhitewaSh and its author was Harold tious district attorney of New Orleans, tortions, unsupported theories and gaping
Weisberg, a former Congressional in- Jim Garrison, mounted a n inept prose- omissions."
vestigator and retired Maryland poultry cution/ persecution of C lay L. Shaw and The fact that this was p retty much
farme r who now ranks as the most pro- his gay Cuban caballeros and, in the proc- the same thing that the movement had
lific author of all the Early True Dis- ess, managed not onl y to lose the good been saying about the Warren Report
believers. With no fewer than seven will of millions of sympathetic Ameri- was of little moment. Jim Garrison was
books to his credit, each of them the cans but also to tum the movement into beaten, and his cause was in disrepute.
result of vast original research and a.II warring pro- and anti-Garrison camps The fri nges of the movement had de-
but two of them privately published, and to squander completely the support stroyed its center, and the demonologists
Weisberg is clearly different from the of the prestige media. rushed in to finish it off. The Early True
rest of the pack. For one thing, he is a Even before the Garrison debacle, how- Disbelievers scattered, some packing up
professional investigator. In the Thirties, ever, there were signs that rationality their files and storing them away fo r
Weisberg worked as an investigator for was givi ng way to Creakiness, as specula- another day; others, such as writer I
Wisconsin Senator Robert LaFollette, tive conspiracy theories metamorphosed researcher Paris Flammonde, moved to
and during World War Two, he was em- into assassinationist gospel. In White- the hil ls to investigate flying sauce rs; still
ployed by the Office of Strategic Services wash, for example, Weisberg had soberly others turned their critical fire on the
as an intelligence analyst and researcher. raised the possibility that there may have movement, with Epstein writing a sequel
Weisberg became his own publisher been several Lee Harvey Oswalds, as to I nquest ti tled Counterplot: Garrison
only after more than 100 publishers in the Warren Report kept putting Oswald vs. Everybody.
the U.S. and abroad had rejected White- in two or three places at the same time
wash. Today, when the publishers wou ld (Mexico, Dallas, New Orleans); Richard The movement rema ined moribund
pay top prices for Weisberg's writings, he H. Popkin, a Washington University pro- the next couple of years, until the
won't go near them, preferring to fessor, embellished the point in an article double- and triple-knit fabric of Water-
squeeze out a precarious living free for the New York Review of Books; gate began to come unraveled in mid-
from the taint of commercialism. Garrison read the a rticle and " im- 1972. The mu lt iple conspiracies that
Weisberg has also received attention proved" on the theory in his early public wove around the break-in and the cover-
because he, more than any other assassi- pronouncements; Popkin then published up suddenly made thinking the un-
oationist, has tried to bait the Gov- his successful book The Second Oswald, thinkable fashionably thinkable once
124 oul
ASSASSINA TIONIST BUSINESS The most Sensuous Condom
"They" are everywhere..
in the world
(Continued from page 78) people as- NACKEN. the sensuous condom from
sociated with the assassination-eye- Sweden, introduces a whole new concept
witnesses and others-met untimely, .. . NACKEN's unique feature is Its delicately
sometimes violent, deaths, he started to ribbed. lightly textured surface ...
keep a running count and to speculate on designed to mass9ge her for max-
the ex.istence of a vast, murderous con- imum sensitivity. NACKEN is formed to
spiracy. Jones, now retired from his fit snuggly to body contours.
publishing duties, continues to keep his Imported from Sweden. NACKEN
morbid tally (his count of assassination- meets the strictest government
relatcd deaths now exceeds 60) and he has standards, yet is made from such sheer in mind.
also written four books, Forgive My "nude" latex you hardly know It's there. Try
Grief, volumes I, II, HI, IV, which popu- NACKEN. the most sensuous condom in the world.
larized the theory that Lyndon Johnson If your d ruggisl is out of stock. p lease o sk him to order
immediolely. or write to PPA Dept.zou.2. 120 E. 56th St..
was one of the men behind it al l. New Yorl<. N.Y. 10022. ond we'll Inform you of where Nocken
With his early columns and his chron- Is ovolloble.
icling of Da llas-related deaths, Jones
represents the wing of the assass ination-
ist movement tjlat can be called the
Save 50~ on purchase of
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Both the original and latter-day wings,
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ASSASSINATIONIST BUSINESS In the Sixties the demonologists were an isolated minority. Now they
are accorded space on meeting platforms alongside the most respected researchers.
more. The press, for its part, rushed to had resulted in pis getting a rare peek raphy of Gerald Ford!)
prepare regular doses of heady sensa- at the Kennedy autopsy report. The Although presently all roads lead
tionalism for a public increasingly suspi- Latter Day Converts were represented from Dallas to Watergate in the Skol-
cious of people in high places and, once by, among many others, Robert Groden, nick-Bottos Welta11Scha111111g, they some-
Watergate was reduced to a heap of the young New York optics technician times detour at Chicago's Midway
faded threads, fastened upon the subject whose image enhan~ement of the Zapru- Airport-for it was Skolnick's remark-
of assassination conspiracies. The f11edia der home movie of the assassination has able explanation of how a United Air
now told of abortive plots against Fidel received much recent media attention. Lines flight came to crash at this little-
Castro, of apparently successful plots A las, the demonologists also showed used terminal in December 1972 that
against Rafael Trujillo, i\nd of resuscitat- at Georgetown and, as one participant thrust him into the pantheo·n of move-
ed theories regarding plots against Presi- later said, "their' presence w~~ clearly ment crazies. The flight, which originated
dent John F . Kenned y. divisive." The demon hunters and con- in Washington and which carried CBS
The assassinationist movement was spiracymongers had, of course, been News corrcspon9ent Michele Clark and
flush as never before. The Early True present in the movement from the be- Mrs. E. Howard Hunt, was made to
Disbelievers swung back into action- ginning; one of the earliest was Mae crash, according to Skolnick's theory,
Weisberg publishing an9ther volume Brussell, a 46-year-old California house- when the pilot a11d ere~ were felled by
of Whitewash, Lane going Hollywood wife and peripatetic writer-lecturer who cyanide. Skolnick 's explanation: Mrs.
with Executive Action~and there were theorizes that Howard Hughes was Hunt was on the lam from the Watergate
many new faces to keep them company. buried at sea by Aristotle Opassis in gang and was carrying $2,00b,OOO in
Shortly before Jim Garrison self- 1957, that Adlai Stevenson was mur- cash and negotiable securities, which was
destructed, a successful criminal lawyer dered with a cyanide-gas gun because be Nixon's hush money for the · White
and archetypal Latter Di\Y Convert knew too much about Dallas and that House plumbers; Miss Clark was onto
named Bernard "Bud" Fensterwald, Jr., J. Edgar Hoover was felled by two the story and was purs uing Mrs. Hunt
had established in Washington the Com: Cuban domestics who fed him poisoned for the detai ls.
mittee to Investigate A~sassinations {"the apple pie. It was a lot of story to S\Yallow, but
town's other CIA," The Washington Post In the Sixties, however, the demon- the press had a go at it. Even The
called it). Ironically, Fi:nsterwald, who ologists, like Brussell, were an isolated Washington Post assigned a reporter to
was later to represent James W . McCord minority who, after Garrison, were check it out and carried a long front-
at the Senate Watergate hearings, had totally ignored. Within the Latter Day section piece on Skojnick ·and his theory;
first gotten interested in assassinology Convert wing, they are far more vocal the article concluded that Skolnick was
as a res ult of a casual encounter with and insid.ious than qefore; they ·are ac- nuts-but still, he w'as in the Post.
Garrison during a New Orleans business corded space on meeting platforms along-
trip in early 1968; the district attorney's side the most respected researchers, and The phenomenon of the assassina-
enthusiasm for his then-popular crusade the press listens closely to their lurid tales tionist movement's post-Watergate ren-
had inspired Fensterwald to read the of dark conspiracy, hoping for the clue a issance was best · exemplified at a
Warren Report and subsequently to that will break open the next Watergate. three-day conference held at Boston
organize the movement's own CIA, as a University in early J 974, under the spon-
clearinghouse for assassination research. The movement's new undisputed sorship of the fledgling Assassination
One of Fensterwald's first projects c h ~mp i o nof demonology- and prime Information Bureau. The A.l:B. had ex-
was to recruit Richard Sprague, a com- disturber of the Georgetown affair-is pected that perhaps 500 p~ople would
puter expert who is known in the move- a muscular, paraplegic court researcher register for the multimedia conference;
ment for his analysis of photographic from Chicago, Sherman H. Skolnick, instead, 1500 showed up.
evidence, and for the two of them to whose credo is "H we don't act weird, As drawing cards, the A.LB. had im-
begin conver ting thousands of pages of nobody wlll pay attention." Skolnic!c re- ported a few of the diligent, earnest
research to computer punch cards. Funds ceives a good deal of attention. Early True Disbelievers. But the mem-
were hard to come by in the post-Garri- Assisting Skolnick with his investiga- bers of the audience were not interested
son days, however, and after raising only tions arid with his wheelchair is a in some gray-haired researc)ler's boring
$5000, the pair abandoned the project. swarthy, gun-toting, sinister-looking fel- litany of facts and statistic;! ; what this
Another Fensterwald-Sprague venture low from Gary, Jndiana, named Alex conspiracy"-hungry group had come to
was a two~day conference at George- J . Bottos, Jr. At the push of a tape- hear and see were the Latter Day demon-
town University, which was billed as a recorder button, Bottos will happily ologists. A manifesto calling for the
commemoration of the tenth anniversary spin nonstop tales of a megacorporation politicizi.n g of the assassination-con-
of the Kennedy assassination but turned world conspiracy run by the Rockefel- spiracy question during tht: 1976 elec-
into something of an assassjnationists' lers ·and the Rothschilds, with the active tions was read; petitions demanding that
homecoming party. Among the old-grad complicity of the CIA, the British MI-5 Congress investigate Dallas were circu-
Early True Disbelievers in attendance and the Italian Mafia. (Skolnick is lated; scabrous books and scandalous
were Sylvia Meagher, the World Health also occasionall y assisted by Alan J. pamphlets were hawked; sessions were
Organization researcher whose A cces- Weberman, the reformed Yippie and jammed to overflowing; films had to be
sories After the Fact remains a move- celebrated Dylanologist whom some repeated several times; fights broke out,
ment text on the assassination; Haverford movement members suspect of being a factions were rent, new alliances were
College professor Josiah Thompson, Government infiltrator; after all, Web- formed, and a good time was had by all.
the ma n who first postulated the theory erman's book, Coup d'Etat in America: A movement had been reborn and had
that President Kennedy was killed in The CIA and the A ssassination of John grown to raucous adolescence in a few
a cross fire ; and Pittsbµrgh coroner Dr. F. Kennedy, was published by th!! very short months. Observed one of the A.LB.
Cyril H . Wecht, fresh from a successful same firm-The Third Press-that pro- organizers: "Boston was our Woodstock.
duel with the National Archives, which duced Jerald terHorst's friendly biog- You ain't seen nothing yet." ~
126 oul
125
..
'
he missing Cl
l/ /
ma
ling. body was found. Last Wednesd the Senate Select In-
Specl1l In Tht Miami News A week later, on Oct. 1, a bloated and badly com- telligence Committee called for e FBI to step up Its
posed body was found floating In the bay, a milll· investigation. The committee's hairman, Sen. Birch
WASHINGTON - On the moonlit night of Sept. meter gunshot wound in the back of the head, ight• Bayh, sald findings were being ed over to the Jus·
23, 1978, John Arthur Paisley vanished In the waters of ed diver's belts around the waist. tlce Department. "A number of ubllng questions re-
Chesapeake Bay, the silent kingdom of oysters and The next day, the body was identified main,'' he said.)
crabs. He was a 55-year-old man with a passion for sol- land's chief medical examiner as that of John Maryland State Police initial suggested Paisley's
itary sailing. He was also an expert on Soviet nuclear Paisley. Over the next 18 days, however, fl death was suicide, and the CIA, a ed about It, saw "no
capability who had worked for the CIA. identification could not be made since neither reason to disagree." Maryland lice later concluded
Paisley was last seen that morning, crossing a nar- nor the FBI could locate a set of Paisley's fing 'the cause of death was undeter ed. Their investiga-
t
row section of the bay aboard his sloop Brilllg, a name The hands were severed and sent to the FBI. 'tlon was marred by what they c ed the "contamina-
picked from Lewls Carroll's "Through the Looking was cremated in a CIA-approved funeral hom
Glass." The empty boat ran aground under full sail the Washington, D.C.
followlng morning, its ship-to-shore radio still crack· (T~e Senate began an Investigation shortly ter the PAISLEY, 4A
PAISLEY 1 from 1A
~
DECADE OF ASSASSINATIONS
1963 - 1973
PROGRAM
I
FRIDAY - NOVEMBER 23 FRI DAY - Continued SATU RDA Y - NOVEMBER 24
. ·''
4March2002
Mr. A. J. Weberman
Independent Research Associates
POB 2091
New York, NY 10013-2091
Reference: F-1993-00041
Thank you for your patience during the time required to process this
request.
Sincerely,
Kathryn I. Dyer
Information and Privacy Coordinator
Enclosures
MORI DocID: 192250
-----------------·--·-·- --···
c.;; :.~
--:STER"\VALD A"Kr·-yHLH.-'l.USEN ~-! .~) . -i.
"•
.9/o .9°'CJ-~a w::.../::~ L~;:.9.<c. .':uc·c
.51----/, .A-:JI'. 7
-9:"/7/~, J:O.': .':.':.J.f6"C7
rle must: i n s i s t that i f any similar calls come into the bus~
office they should be verified hy calling this office- The dis-
ruption of our telephone service this morning has been ~ gx·eat
inconvenience and ~e have proPably missed a number of important:
inco~ing ca]Js_ (I aro already having repercussions from t~o missed
calls_) I suggest·~hat you refer this letter to your general
counsel's office, because we are explori~g avenues of legal
redress for.this incident_
Sincerely yours; ,.
Eernard Fensterwa]dJ
BF,blf
MORI DocID: 192251
...
I
3. In 1969 h"• together: with aever&l other people, found"d !
the Committee to Illvcatig,.te .Aaaa.• ain.ation•. a.c:ronym, GIA.· The
f<>undera of thb com.znlttee. included au<:h individuab a.a Jim Ga.rriaon,
contr.,ver•U.l New Orluna diatrict a.ttorney {1969), Ma.rk Lane,
author of a. book on the aa~aalna.tion of Preoldent Kennedy in .,..hich
he crlticl11cd the finding• of tJi,, Warren Comroioaion, ~Mort &hl,
; .
MORI DocID: 192252
~--------------------·-··
.·
RC
§§A§§JJNAJJJJl!j!Ff J!Jf.l.CIEJJVJE§
James H. Lesar, President
918 F Street, N.W. • Suite 510
Washingmn, D.C. 20004
JI)! !JllE§/KJ!Jf.l.CIPI CliINJJIZ!I!
(202) 393-1917
31.'!J•
., '•11
March 3, 1992
...
Dear Sir:
This is a request made under the Freedom of Information
Act, 5 U.S.C. 552-
This request is made on behalf of the Assassination
Archives and Research Center, Inc. (AARC), a non-profit
organization headquartered in Washington D.C. which collects
information and conducts research into the circumstances
surrounding political assassinations, particularly those of
President John F. Kennedy and the Reverend Martin Luther
King, Jr.
The AARC requests access to or copies of all records
pertaining to its founder, Bernard Fensterwald, Jr. Until
his death in 1991, Mr. Fensterwald was also the President of
the AARC. Mr. Fensterwald was born in Nashville, Tennessee
on August 2, 1921- His Social Security Number is 414-22-
1934. His Service number. is 142274. At the time of his
death, April 2, 1991, Mr. Fensterwald resided in Alexandria,
Virginia and worked in Arlington, Virginia and Washington
D.C.
The AARC requests a waiver of all fees connected with
:the processing of this request.because release of the 1
· ir1for:rriaticr1 will sig·r-;ificantl~i cd?B!Eibute tc the pu0lic s
understanding of the activities ~nd operations of government-
Mr. Fensterwald s military and civilian government career
1
DOCUMENTS
APPROVED FOR RELE
- --- ASE
MORI DocID: 192253
Reference: F92-0485
RC
§5Af§:!i!INA1IJJ@N AJBCBIJV!Ef§
James H. Lesar, President
918 F Street, N.W. • Suite 510
Washington, D.C. 20004
J1)J Ifl.IE§!EAJJl/C!BI C!ZN1f!Klf.!
(202) 393-1917
_. ,- .: ·•'~·,. ,= .s:." '" "' "' <-. ,1. ,·;-. ,;., ;~·:
...... ..
· .. ...,··.4"··......, _ _ ~ ---.~-~ - -,...!- - - - - - - - - - · - - · -
--------
I
COMMONWEALTH OFIVIRGINIA
_ _CT_Rl IF IED CJ)..E..l'._Of. ~EATH RECOR.a
COMMONWEALTH OF Vl RGINIA ·CERTIFICATE OF DEATH
1
'P'E.cr0€..iT
.. ; ;'lfll N~{
C" OfCe!'<' .. t
.
~·"
Bernard
.. ··- - 1--1
!!MN
-
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"· ~··.
Reference: F92-0485
·'
DOCUMENTS
MORI DocID: 192257
}$SELL J. GASP.t..R
f L.HANN>:-
COVt-:S(L
:ir. R. w_ Frey
Vice-P:esident & General Manager ·1~
•!"
The Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone ao_ t·::
..:.;
930 H Street, N. r.;_
·1:~
i/ashinqton,,. D. C. 20001 !!~
·t~
re; Committee "to Investigate
I
:~fssassina tions
•
Telephone No. (202) £;28-3361
.@i
Dear !Jr_ Frey: "1;;
..:?
;:~·
DOCUMENTS
APPROYE.D FOR RPI i::::.<::r.
I ,~
•. ·----·---------···-MoRr-DC5cID: '192257
)
Hr. R. h'- Frey
Dec. 1 J, 1 9 7 6
Page 2
TV hen .1
at my direction; my secretary telephoned the C & P Tele-
phone Company to investigate and dcmanC that the CTIA phone be
1 • '
I -..:...
restored to service.I' she was advise·d by Hi:s. c_ Johnson, U.'1it 41,
I ·,,;.
that I must call her myself and then write a letter of confirma-
tion before the phone service at (2021 62i-3361 could be recon-
.: • .F
nected. h'ithout any request or authofit:.yf:.:what:soever; beginning
on December 7, 1976, all phone calls to that humber have been
I
referred by the phone company to the Law Offices df Fensterwald
& McCandless_ I ~
1)
'-* .
Under what circumstnaces and by ~hat authority
did the phone company disconnect t:he rhon~
6) Why is i t necessa-r·y
--- for me toI write a letter to reconnect
my telephone which was disconne~ted w1thout my authority?
·' )
..
.,1··
'
!'1r R. I</. Frey
.,..,. !Jee 13, 1976 "
?age 3
].etter D.C" d d
CD '"' m
P Cv' vm,; D P" " " mlm'.viom
Cvmm;P viom
and
~,~.',
~c: Hr. N. Belt
Chief Engineer
..
District of Columbia
.~
Public Service Commission : l
". "
·t"
Central
Langley~
Intelligence Agency·
vi,.rginia
1 "~
'
~n
:~ ,.
:~·
.~
.:1·
.;.-r
ii
~;:
,.
"
~~~~----....:.-------- ..............
MORI DocID: 192258
------·--
8 April 1971
.-·
ORJ-·DocID: 192258 -·
.·.
lL&k.0.~c.
I .
(](. ~-
LAWRENCE R. HOUSTON
General Counsel
Attachment
- ··-
--
Pf OCT 1994
-------+--------ll'lORL_D_o_cJP_;___l9_~- :)8
COMMITTEE TO nrV.ESTIGA.T.E
l---·-··-·
;?/- /:...:.;- _:,..
A.SSA.SSINA.TIONS
I
g:z7 J.~r STREET. N. W.
W...LSBJ:NGITOK. D. c. 2000:..
(2.02) J3.~7-Il8&T
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::U:.OTD '.fVJ-"LtXO, 'WAl<X:,, J), O.
~L<..M: ~. 1"<ILL TJ..LLrr, o...i..rr
March 22, 1971
·
Having .I ·
con d ucte d an·ex t ensile investigation into th e rnur d er · - -
of President Kennedy, we feel that we might be a:ble to
identify the man in the photl ographs. Being aware of the
1
Sincerely yo~rs,
f: ,, C( .. ~.,->(? J ..
RArnara RAnRtRrwal~.
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I Dy c. I. A. '.
' .[ ·. ·.. ··lc"'tte.r of Jan. 4, 19'(l
: ,._... :/:~11L _ ty~yuu;ia'~:--5--;i.-A~ 197\
. i . ;·: : ·( . ; . . • . •
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B J a.nuo.ry 1969
I
•••••tated tlu.t Subject ha.d been highly
r
critical of - CLA ..ud io a.pparontly c omplct.Iy backing
1
Attorney Goneral Jur,<>• G•rriaon in liio a.ctivltioa
I
r
concerning th-e John Kennedy a••aaain!..tlon. I
i
i
DIST1UBUTION
Ori.:
1
DOFUMENTS
APPROVED FOR RELEASE
.. --
1
15 December 1976
FROM
Office of General Counsel
: ;. - . .~ . . .·, .' : . . . .
'
. .
Attachment
OGC~
Distribution
,.
MORI DocID: l9226l
20 Se pt \her i 978
?ERE~CE · dtd
. 8I A .ugust l978 r requ es-t·ing
e l ec t rc•nic 3urveillancE"' check en Charl "s G
Castor, et al. ·
Attachment:
'.:JGC:--
Distribution:
-Of"iginal - Addressees
'DOCUMENTS
APD~o,;i:::n cr-.r. ,.,,,_.,..., ~-
I~
PERIOD OF TH1E· AS TO REQUESTED SEARCH OF INDICES-
January l, 1968-~re~ent: I
~ Defense Attorneys (1972-present)
Bi.JLEN, L. Keith
Law Offices:
1969-1971: 1106 Indiana Building
120 East Market Street
·Indianapolis, Indiana 46204
317-639-2361 I .·
1971-date: One Indiana Square, Room 2050
Indianapolis, Indiana "46204
317-639-4171 I , _.
l ·:
Political Office:
1969-1972: Marion County Republican Campaign
Corruui ttee
144 N. Delaware Str·eet
Indianapolis, Ind"ana 46204
317-635-8881
317-637-1267 (unlisted number)
Residences:
1969-1975: 70 0 • North Alabama .
• 1.
Indianapolis, Indiana 46204 .
317-632-8049 (un]isted number)
1975-date: 8323 South Rahke IRoad f
Indianapolis, Indiana 46217 i
311-888-2405 I I
1970-1973: Watergate West lf66l
:2700 Virginia AvJnue, S - W. /
Washington, D. cJ
202-337-5086 I
FENSTERWALD, Berr:ard, Jr.
Law 0£fice: Suite 203
2101 L S~reet, N. W.
Washington, D. C.
'
20037
_dGNUSON, Claude R.
-3.WOffice: 1 Indiana Square, Suite 1650
Indianapolis, ~ndiana 46204
YARLING, Richard W.
Law Office: l Indiana Square
3170 Indiana Tower
Indianapolis, Indiana 46204
...
MORI DocID: 192262
20 Se Ptember 1978
;UH FOR:
Associate Deputy Director -
Attn: Chief, Security A 4or A~ministration
Associate Deputy Director ~alysis Group, os
Associate Deputy Director ·-er Science & Technol
Attn:~ frr Operations ogy
-
·1t
: .ion:
.1 - Addressees
DOCUMENTS
Ii D..D.Il..•:nrr::r.. ,_,..,._ - - - -
.. '\
'
.:;: '
~GN1JSON, .Claude R.
~aw Office: 1 Indiana Square, Suite l650
T:hdianapolis, _Indiana 4G20 4
~ .
!1C CANDLESS, Robert C.
J..,aw Office: 1707 H Street, l\I. W·. ....
Washington, D. C. 20006
SHAW,· Hark W. .. I
Law Office: 110 North Delaware Street
Indianapolis, Indiana ~6204
YARLING, Richard W.
Law Office: l Indiana Square
3170 Indiana Tower
Indianapolis, Indiana 46204
. i
·---·-MORI DocID: 192262
~
WASHINGTON, D.C. 2.0SOS
30 October 1978
..
OGC~. . . . . . .
Distribution:
·'
'\. MORI DocID: 192263
·-,g/-i~~..: . .'.~- - -------"'-'·':'} - - - - - ! - - - - - ' - - ----------- -- ------
... :
BULEN, L. Keith
Law Offices:
1969-1971: 1106 Indiana Building
120 East Market Street
Indianapolis, Indiana• 46204
317-639-2361 I ;;
HOVBE .. F. Boyd I
.Law'Office: 150 East Market Street-2nd Floor
Indianapolis, Indiana 46204
nnrtJM!=NTS
~~~--j~~~~~--~~-MMLOffiRCI.T DocTD:...... l92263
·-~-- ~.
--
) ·.
'.
.GNUSON, Clauge R. -I
~ Office:, l Indiana Square, Suite ]650
Indianapolis, Iridiana 4~204
.,.·-
CANDLESS, Robert C .
• w Office:iio7 H Street, N. w.
Washington, D. C. 20006
.::LANGTON, Philip R. , Jr. I ;:
aw Office: 1430 Circle Tower Buildi~g ~
Indianapolis, Indiana ~6204 ~
;:::HABEI,, Donald A.
_aw Office: 111 Monument Circle-12th Floor.'],;_
g
l
Indianapolis, Ind.iana 46204 '·'
:HAW, Mark W. ·
~aw Office: 110 North Delaware Stree
Indianapolis, Indiana 46204
YARLING, Richard W.
~aw Office: l Indiana Square
3170 Indiana Tower
Indianapolis, Indiana 46204
. ·.
MORI DocID: 192264
- - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - · · · · - · · --·····.
•:!
'"'ERHAL
UNCASSfflED .. OHLY 0 CONf. - ':NT! AL 0 SEC REI
l I
ROUTING ANO RECORD SHEET
I
·•.\: £XlENS.to'N
"0- .::"i
~~-
Att: . . . _ . .
10- l :~}
-~ 7-
'.''- ,._
. ~
..
...·.::
·.
-- ..
.."
4. ,
..
;·I::,
-- ·...
or
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. -
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\.
.. ---·----·· I
'.2.
\ 3.
,-
-
"·
\ 5.
.. , ·"-PP11aeocu""c
i>tt' 1~94
CD F'o N-rs
1111£
.
~ I..f_'Asc
I
'
MORI DocID: l92275
·.
4 February 1969
~- ··-
Attachment - As stated
DOCUMENTS
APPROVED FOR RELEASE
•I SEP 1!9~
~
..
had left his position w:l.th the Senate S ubcommittee. He stated that he and
several other individuals had started ah organization known as the Committee
to Investigate Assassinations (CIA), lo cated at 9l5-l5th St., N. W. 20005
1
All of these individuals have ~een crit~cal of the Warren Commission Report,
the FBI and CIA. I
_ 3. Subject said his group would l~ke to open 0f.£~in Dallas, Texas
and Mexico eventually. When asked abo~f ho<T he was g!;>'.Il!p; to :finance the
Committee, FENSTERWALD said: "I wish ~ knew. I think that the;re probably
_..,_llld_ _
I
MORI DocID: 192275
,., .. _
*'f-
Massachusetts; Harvard Co:Llege, 1938-1942 (B.S.• magna Cwn laude );
Harvard Law School, 1946-1949 (LL.B); scrJool of M.vanced International
Stua.ies, Washington, 1946-1950 (M.A.); C~mbridge fuiversity, Cambridge,
Englana., 1954-1955- Entered Active Duty las Ensign, Navy, 1942; released
as Lt., 1946; present rank; Lt., USNR, 1-rr(II Service, S. W. Paci=ic, 1943-1945;
Assistant to Legal Advisor, Department o~· State, Washington; :i:95~:·-1958,
administrative Assi·stant, Senator- RENNJJiJGS 1 Missouri. Member, Boston :&:i.r
Asaociation." I
--~-
~
I
' HORI J:lGG-ID-:-l.922'.Z.5.
"
31 March 1971
I
SUB.JECT: Bernard Fensterwald, lr.
1
?tJ .. 001~.
L
I met with Gen~ral Counsel, ·in-1i"i501Ii"C:-e
on 30 Marc 1971. exp~ained that·Mr_ Fensterwald
would be coming into the building to I see him this week to look at
some pictures that the Agency possesses and which appeared in
the Warren Commission Report. I
i ·-
1S73
.·..
·.
4. In addition to t:he Board of ·D.irectors, the
to Ir.vestigate Assassilnations has been nsso-
wi th i-rri t~rs. ·· · · ;;·;·;;;;;·111~=-~·
2
MORI DoclU: l~LL/~
·····-··--····-------
·~
·.
SU:STECT
believe that
Intelligence r'CUC
I .
DOCUMENTS
APPROVED FOR RELEA~E
~ WW C'CI> 100 •
I
-~
SUBJECT: ·.
.
--.·~
Dist;ribution:
Orig & 1 - A~dressee 1 _ . . . . . . (23 May 1973)
2 -
1 -
---
i·,,
2
E~~terwald Security File
~-
(6 April 1973)
2
MORI DocID: 192279
24 May 1973
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MENORANDlJJ.l FOR: DiJ:"ector of Security
Attachments
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MOK.LDGCTD :···192279 --- ... ·
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: on electrori.ic !urveillance I
A!! Alch related ye:!lterday,
Luther 'King Jr., :authority~ Fensterwald began .playing
a key role after ·March 19
~;tnd fqrmer Senate prob.er, 'because Alch wa!I busy with
~ ·µ an attorney who almost · ; A trial in Cltlcago, It ha!!:
~veenr,-
•
thorlzed
'
wRha~tehrt
.a.ttdrney g
e er
FK.
enera • 1
certain Mretfi.pa
Kednnedy
enne y al · R
h d •
a
Ii;t the hearings, Fenster::.~
I •
au-
•
roldler -ot fortune Joie Luis
I omero, who 15aJd •he wa&: ap-
I
.Jlfo.&.ched ..n-,.,.-..
iai'..rt- #""i,-.t<:-~..,.:
•·~-·J.~o;t::•a.
...... ·· in ~-.·.-·~::..'l ~
a
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ae-emed destined from his : been in the period since :vaid sharply questioned fad • . . ~ Ti~~··~71_..
b.1.ckgr.ound to become in- then· that. the most sensa-
Volved in the \Vatergate i tlonaJ public disclosures in
~ral agent• .1.K to ·...n.ether'{ :j<f
theigovernJt?~n-l h.&-d U!!l-Cd iJ. •• Y'o ~1!". 1 7.. _ ;l~n-,....
t · t:.ZS .
case. '.the V/.atergate case have :J.e.£"~1 vrir~n t.Q~ ~~ ~ ~:::... :.. . ~
.Fensterwald, 52, signed on come-many of them thus · ~~ce .ag.a.inst ·r-eamsters . .~·s.. cmbu..i:y Clf!_ . . .
a.s: la:wyer for Watergate con- . far from the mouth oi Mc- l.Jn1,on President James g1ena, WhG then lntrodt!c- ..
1plrator. James W. McCord Cord. f• ~o~fa and other!. ed Romi;ro to two at.her·
Jr. in early 11arCh, after Mc- Fen:5terw.ald'3 career . Jiew t~~atfon re.stiiCtini · American.!!.~ . . .
Cord had. already been con- ~how' that he ha3 long been ele~tron1c surveillan(;e re. The American_,. auggetted
victed, and ihere have been fa3cinated with intrigue, .iulted from the he.arl . A plan to .e.11.,-a11sfn.,te Preli·
·firework!! ever since'. · ·conspiracies and political !-.Ioiig with it. Life m.a.g.az~~~· Jdent ~ennepy When )1e
In testimony before the witch hunts. I came to Paris and to do it 0
Senate select committee on Io 3ix. years as assistant to e~9ose · charg:iof t.h&t . the in xuch way a.a to m•ke it
the Watergate yesterday, the legal adviser in. the late Sen. Ed""Pu-d- V ..·L<Jn~ appear 1t was really· an a.t-
i.~·u.· ~-l'ft··.
McCord'.s former attorney, .State Department, FenJ:tef- CD-ffo.), th.e Sub.corn~ttw •.... ~ ··~ . ·'.~ ~. . .-
1
Gerald Alch, alleged that wald had to read classified chairman, had split leii.t. ~-
F~nsterwald had told him in
l~ ·-~'·,.!j'!~~~
. documents , on some Df ,
April that Fenstenv<ild and State's. career ffieo whose s-e- feef with one of Hoffa'3 ..
McCord were .... going after curlty clearances were sua. J yers:. ·;·:·t·' [ ~~
the Pres~dent of the United I,pended becau3e of the at- 1 ~ng was defeated tn l~ .. :£.j~'.
L
St.ate.!." J:_ •
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1 :'mo.sphere created by the an-
After tlie. hearing, Fen- :ucommunist investigations
a:terwa.ld"derued th.11.t he had . of the late Sen. Jo!!leph Mc-
.and Fenster-Wald left Senate
serfice. Unhappy over both
dep artures, Fen:'l:terw.1.ld
ergate conap!ratof:! tp·
who, in tum, took them ~.
'."F:..J
·. ever ma.de sucli .1. i;tatement ~ :.earthy, he recalled in a 1969 Co~menteq later that the Romero who w•s in hidl.~j:\.!.:
1
to ..A..lch. • · '-~"inten-iew. · · vriretap hearings were ""the The woman 1>aid .Romere.·
In a. lat~r telephone Inter~
view-, F~erwald said he
1: Fensterwald left the State
Department in 19~ to serve
onek that did u 3 all in."
Ill 1969, the COmmittee to
identified two Ot the Wx.t~ .
gates.even d.efendant.s a!!I "tlte-·
.first mrl McCord Maroh 7 •as a "'fciie·igil ·Policy 'Adviser Invfstigate·Assa.ssinations (a men who had appioach~
when McCord was freed on to Sen. Et1:tes Kefauver in CIA not to be confused with hlm in Algeri~ in 1961. ·
~100,000 bail This w.as just th~ late . Democratic sena- ! the I CIA---central Intelli. The Post cOritacted Gille3,
16 days before U.S. District t tor's vice ~residential bid. ; ge~e Agency--1'.fcCord c-nce but he ctiq not contirm the !
Court Judge John J. Sirica, ~ ' For the next two years, he l se~ed) was rormed · with
in open court, read Mc· ; aerved ae adm1nistre.tive as- ;. Fensterwald as executive di~
~ •lory_ R o m e r o j'
c~ot be loc.ated~
Cord's now-famous letter .al- ; aistant . to ·Missouri ·sen. ! rector. Another founder was 1
gullty. another key Watergate fig. tha~ led to the assassination McC-Ord's having iiV"O.n con· i
, Fen.sterwald said he first ;·ur.e;{ohn W.._.Dc.11.D;:II~, .. tor.- : of fresident John F. Keri- tribution!I to F~nrterwe.ld'.11:""!
~ lb-ecatne involved in Mc- t ~mer · thief) pre3"ideii.tial ! nedy. · .[· Com;nlttee to Inve&igate As- i
·.Cord's behalf when he wa~ ; :coungel.) :.t.. :: PUrSuing c1ue.& ;all oV~r the r :Hl.3S:lnaUons: •.
:· a~roached -by a mutu~·illOOOO, :F'Cn&t~·-1 t:Jnited St.ates and Eura"pe 1· ' Fensterwfld z: ll.1 d l .a 11 t'
.; _frie~d, Lou Russell, wh~ waJ }Wald ~-.1 n cb:Uit·~~ ·F;n:~te~wald llttempted t~·.
1: night·. ihe.t McCord had
;: :seeking assirtB.nce in raisin.( •On th~ ~•te ~u~/ d1scr.~d1t th,e offici.al Warren ~ never.· contrlb"uted to. ·the
.; !hf c Cord !!1 ball. (Fenstep..·· '.OI;l. ·C~n.a-tft.UtiOntl·:O~~-· Rep-prt on President Ken- ~ .committee. . ~· . ::.
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~ wald .reportedly :put up ~o,. '. :menfa.1U-'i96i, he ;..ejolned nedY'~. a.ssassination, He al.:!o ·i! • Fensterwald · i11 ; the 1nde-
"j 000.). ~U....p...fu..:i;:mer. sgq-_ l :his old boss .ind fellow Ten- t:ive'stlg~ted the assassin11.. pendentlY. weAltby Bon ·.of a
i_ gresrl.Ot?A:!:*ettl.ta.t~, h'~·,; nesseell.n, Kefauver, 11s staff honlof the President's brolli· . clot.bing merchaflt in Nath- :
.i Worlid~'foi::;:~r<l '.~t~ -?D.e . ,director of the Senate Anti- er, Sen. Rhbert Kenn~dy, Ii1 -.rille. He gr.adu~ted,. m•gna 1
·~me,~1!i'.l :s&.\CU .·_- 1·_ 'trust and ?o.Ionoply Subcom- and the Rev. Martin Lu. ,1 cum laude :tram. Harv.a.rd '
l, Fil'. ...._:.:Wd. he ,h.td·,, mlttee that Kefauver th JG Hi b ,. College· in !942·.and receivt:d
i had.~· to,·d~ w!.th .1{c- · .he..aded ... K'e~ ng, s pro e of the 1' hi~ilaw qcgr@-e.in.lg{g from.
bi ~jt~ ~~~no~=v~;~~~~=i
1 1
~ ~q:·!:"·rn:J.tw~,to'e:.JA.fftr.. tn.. --;} It ~Wµ-.in 4tis ·PQst that l Hiirvard LXW13cho-el.,He 1nd
! Siric+.-...~~ .. p.id..'McCo:d .de_-- : .Fe.~r1tal-4. encountered of r~corc;i for Kin.g's c-Onvlct-
.•;. cided' .t.Q;.'.tccept. h1rn ·.a,co- : "thl.~.tli61~ ..!"th.- h.i•:.fnP. .. .:, ed kilJpJ;,1 ·J,.n,,,."' "R.>trl ·~~~.
I
MORI DocID: 192280
24 May 1973
DOCUMENTS
APPRO'(ED FOR RELEASE
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MORI DocID: l9228l
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-:;;-:OR
PUBLIC AFFAIRS STAFF
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ViODER.0.TOR ------~1
Our guest on this edition of: Con~rontation Eas·hington
is Hr. Bud Fensterwald who is about to become t'1E:
3:-::eCt:ti.ve Director--of a ner:; Corru::i tte:e investigate Ito
asso.s'sinations. 11r. Fenster1.-.-a.ld 1·1as ~orrn2rly Ci1i·e.f
C::oL:r:cil to the .Senate Sub-Comsi ttee on Administrative
"?1"oe:2c0.ures. This vras the cor:m1il:tee .:ihiQh v;;as ir:vestigating
1
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(VOICES OVERLAP)
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~·!J\L12:ERS:
The Commission had access as far ·as we
lcnm·1 to all the documents.
5'ENSTERWALD: No sir.
':!ALTERS: Are you suggesting th e ComBission has never
seen some classif'ied agency and bure au documents?
1
,
tc.see by lar the most important single documents
ir_1J0-::. veci and those 1-rer·e the x-rays 3.nd I photographs
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MORI DocID: 192859
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2 $ SEP ;3i8
ATTENTION:
Directo~,of
FROM:
Deputy Security
Personnel Secu,ity ~nd Investigations
SUBJECT:
Electronic Sur~eillance Search Request--
Harold E. Bean, Jr.; et al.
Claude R. Magnuson
Robert C. M~Can~less
Philip R. Melangton, Jr.
~onald A. Schabel
Mark W. Shaw I
Richard W. Yarling
I
. Our search disclosed no record of an electronic surveillance
involving the-se individuals or the _listed premises. ~-··
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MORI DocID: 192860
_/.
2 4 MAY 1S72
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SUBJECT
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1. Thl• =•m.oraadu.m l• for lnforma.Uon only.
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Dlr«:tar o{ S•curlty
JI tt
;c
··---·--···---MoRr·DoCTD: ·-i92860 ·-
.r·::.~~~;r?·::
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Washinr.ton, D.C."
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MORI DocID: 192251
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inve•tiiatlng wiret&ppini;::-a.nd other ele<:tronlc aurvdllll.nce• by
US io.vernment &g:enciee. ~· ··- !
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!
3. In. 1969 h ... together with aeveral other people, fO<=d"d \
the Committee to I:llvc•tigate A~aa..al.n.Ation•. a.cronyrn. CIA.' The '
f<>under• of thla conunittee. included auch individuah .._. Jim Ga.rri•on,
contr<>ver•l.&l New Oriea.n• diatrict attorney {19&9), Ma.rlc: L&ne,
a ..thcr of a. book on the Aaa.&•aine.tion of Preaid«nt Kennedy in which
he criticl1'ed the finding• oft""- Warren Comrolaaion, e.nd Mort Sa.hl,
MORI DocID: l9225T------·
then a._ widely known come<lla.n. Thia corn:::nlttee believed that there
wa11 a link between the ~•aa..a•lnation.s o.f the two Kenned_r• a..nd the
aa•a...&Min.&.tion of iv:.a.rtin Lather King.. They a.lao b-elieved these
a.s.a•a:ln.a.tiona were tl:e result of con•pir.a.cie• a.nd th.a-t. t.he US govern-
ment ~nd the W.arren Conmiiiaion engaged in 41.. coV'cr ~ wh.t":D. they
inveatlgatc<l the ee ldUillga.
2
NAME: Berna.rd· Fe.nate_rwa.ld, Jr.
EMPLOY-
MENT: 1950-1956, Specia.l Aaaistant to.the legll.l a.dviaor,
D.,pa.rtment of State
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