Re: Plots
Posted: Thu Aug 02, 2012 9:37 am
Robches wrote:
> Essex Lad wrote:
>
>
> > >
> > You could and probably would argue that the mafia wanted
> Castro
> > gone because he threw them out of all the mob-run casinos in
> > Havana and they lost an immense amount of revenue. Similarly,
> > anti-Castro Cubans would want him gone in the same way
> > anti-Gadaffi Libyans, anti-Mubarak Egyptians, anti-Assad
> > Syrians want(ed) them gone.
>
> Yes, there was a shared interest between the CIA, Mob and
> anti-Castro Cubans. The problem was that after the Cuban
> Missile Crisis, JFK had given his word that the USA would not
> overthrow the Castro regime. For them, there was no way to get
> rid of Castro without also getting rid of JFK.
>
> >
> > I don't accept the idea that the CIA plotted to kill the
> > president because he wanted to break up the organisation. Was
> > it the whole of the CIA? Or just a few renegades?
>
> As far as I can see from the evidence developed by the HSCA,
> David Atlee Phillips of the Western Hemisphere Division was
> involved, how far up it went who can say?
But the HSCA's belief in a conspiracy was based on the Dictabelt. It specifically said that there was no mafia-CIA-anti-Castro Cuban conspiracy. In addition, you can't say that the HSCA said that there was a conspiracy and then when that is debunked say that the evidence was withheld by Blakey because of personal animus towards another lawyer.
>
>
> > So you are saying Dulles was sacked by President Kennedy and
> > then appointed to the Warren Commission so that he could
> > continue the cover-up?
>
> I am saying that the Warren Commission was not a true attempt
> to find out who had killed JFK, it was designed to show that
> Oswald did it alone. Can you think of a good reason to appoint
> a man JFK sacked, and who hated him, to the commission meant to
> investigate his death?
Yes, to show the commission was free of bias. There were five Republicans on the Warren Commission investigating the death of a Democrat president.
>
> > But no one has talked. And you would need dozens to have
> plots
> > in Dallas, Miami and Chicago. Look how many were involved in
> > Watergate, multiply that by three and that's a substantial
> > number already.
>
> Watergate is a good case. Howard Hunt was involved, and went to
> prison, but he did not talk. Nor did any of the Cubans arrested
> in the Watergate building. How many CIA operatives have ever
> talked about their roles in Italy, Iran, Guatemala, Chile,
> South Vietnam, Indonesia, or any of the other countries where
> they organised coups and/or assassinations?
There is a heck of a difference between CIA operations in foreign lands and plotting to kill the president.
>
>
> > No, I'm not surprised that you disagree with me on RFK and
> MLK.
> > But having read and written extensively on all three cases
> > (JFK, RFK and MLK), I'm in agreement with Dan Moldea, Gerald
> > Posner, Mel Ayton and Vincent Bugliosi that all three were
> > killed by loners.
>
> If you read the likes of Posner, Moldea and Vince I am not
> surprised. If you read Bill Pepper on MLK you may change your
> mind, not that I am saying you have to. I would strongly
> recommend Fonzi's book The Last Investigation, which has just
> been reprinted and updated.
>
> As to RFK, whilst Sirhan Sirhan was there, in front of RFK, and
> never closer than a few feet, firing a .22 pistol, we know that
> all the four .22 bullets which hit RFK were fired from behind
> him, from the right travelling left, and at a distance of about
> an inch. We also know that the security guard Thane Eugene
> Cesar was armed with a .22 pistol and was standing in that
> exact spot, yet his gun was never examined by the LAPD. Any
> thoughts?
Yes, if Thane Cesar (hired by the Kennedy family) had been the killer he would have had to be have been a solitary opportunist because he did not know he was due to work that day, being called in at the last minute
To say that Sirhan was never closer than a few feet is not correct. When investigating the dynamics of the shooting it has been concluded that Kennedy had been turning to his left when 5'4" Sirhan fired the fatal shot. Furthermore, the reliable witnesses to the shooting all said the distance from Kennedy to Sirhan?s gun was between one and a half to three feet. Therefore, it was not farfetched to say that the muzzle of Sirhan?s gun had or nearly touched Kennedy?s head in the chaos that ensued. One of the most reliable witnesses, Lisa Urso, who could see both Kennedy and Sirhan, saw Kennedy?s hand move to his head behind his right ear. As the distance from Kennedy to the gun after the first pop was three feet it is likely he had been simply reacting defensively to the first shot fired. Urso described Kennedy?s movements as ??[jerking] a little bit, like backwards and then forwards?. The backwards and forwards jerking, ?...came as Kennedy had recoiled after the first shot; he was then accidentally bumped forward, toward the steam table and into Sirhan?s gun where he was hit at point blank range.? Boris Yaro, a photographer for The Los Angeles Times, said, ?Kennedy backed up against the kitchen freezers as the gunman fired at him point blank range.? This claim is also supported by key witness Frank Burns, who was identified as one of the five in the group (the others were Karl Uecker, Juan Romero, Jesus Perez, Martin Patrusky) who were closest to the senator. Burns said that the gun was never less than twelve inches or eighteen inches from Kennedy, he did describe the shooting in such a way to make it entirely plausible that Sirhan?s gun moved to an area inches away from Kennedy. Burns had suffered an abrasion on his face that he thought was caused by a bullet passing near his cheek. It was likely a powder burn from Sirhan?s pistol. Burns said: ?I had just caught up with him [in the pantry], and he was a step or so past him. And I?d turned around facing the same way as he turned toward the busboys, I was just off his right shoulder, a matter of inches behind him?The noise was like a string of firecrackers going off, it wasn?t in an even cadence. In the process, a bullet must have passed very close to my left cheek because I can remember the heat and a sort of burn. I remember an arm coming towards us, through the people, with a gun in it. I was putting together the burn across my cheek, the noise and the gun and I was thinking, ?My God, it?s an assassination attempt.? I turned my head and saw the gun and quickly looked back to the senator and realised he?d been shot because he?d thrown his hands up toward his head as if he was about to grab it at the line of his ears. He hadn?t quite done it. His arms were near his head and he was twisting to his left and falling back. And then I looked back at the gunman, and at that moment he was almost directly in front of me. He was still holding the gun and coming closer to the senator, pursuing the body so that the arc of the gun was coming down to the floor as the body was going down.?
In addition, Sirhan was asked why he didn't shoot Kennedy between the eyes and said, "Because the son of a bitch turned his head" before later claiming that he could remember nothing of the shooting.
>
> > On a slightly different tack, what do you think of the death
> of
> > Diana, Princess of Wales?
>
> I think she should have worn a seatbelt.
>
Me too
> Essex Lad wrote:
>
>
> > >
> > You could and probably would argue that the mafia wanted
> Castro
> > gone because he threw them out of all the mob-run casinos in
> > Havana and they lost an immense amount of revenue. Similarly,
> > anti-Castro Cubans would want him gone in the same way
> > anti-Gadaffi Libyans, anti-Mubarak Egyptians, anti-Assad
> > Syrians want(ed) them gone.
>
> Yes, there was a shared interest between the CIA, Mob and
> anti-Castro Cubans. The problem was that after the Cuban
> Missile Crisis, JFK had given his word that the USA would not
> overthrow the Castro regime. For them, there was no way to get
> rid of Castro without also getting rid of JFK.
>
> >
> > I don't accept the idea that the CIA plotted to kill the
> > president because he wanted to break up the organisation. Was
> > it the whole of the CIA? Or just a few renegades?
>
> As far as I can see from the evidence developed by the HSCA,
> David Atlee Phillips of the Western Hemisphere Division was
> involved, how far up it went who can say?
But the HSCA's belief in a conspiracy was based on the Dictabelt. It specifically said that there was no mafia-CIA-anti-Castro Cuban conspiracy. In addition, you can't say that the HSCA said that there was a conspiracy and then when that is debunked say that the evidence was withheld by Blakey because of personal animus towards another lawyer.
>
>
> > So you are saying Dulles was sacked by President Kennedy and
> > then appointed to the Warren Commission so that he could
> > continue the cover-up?
>
> I am saying that the Warren Commission was not a true attempt
> to find out who had killed JFK, it was designed to show that
> Oswald did it alone. Can you think of a good reason to appoint
> a man JFK sacked, and who hated him, to the commission meant to
> investigate his death?
Yes, to show the commission was free of bias. There were five Republicans on the Warren Commission investigating the death of a Democrat president.
>
> > But no one has talked. And you would need dozens to have
> plots
> > in Dallas, Miami and Chicago. Look how many were involved in
> > Watergate, multiply that by three and that's a substantial
> > number already.
>
> Watergate is a good case. Howard Hunt was involved, and went to
> prison, but he did not talk. Nor did any of the Cubans arrested
> in the Watergate building. How many CIA operatives have ever
> talked about their roles in Italy, Iran, Guatemala, Chile,
> South Vietnam, Indonesia, or any of the other countries where
> they organised coups and/or assassinations?
There is a heck of a difference between CIA operations in foreign lands and plotting to kill the president.
>
>
> > No, I'm not surprised that you disagree with me on RFK and
> MLK.
> > But having read and written extensively on all three cases
> > (JFK, RFK and MLK), I'm in agreement with Dan Moldea, Gerald
> > Posner, Mel Ayton and Vincent Bugliosi that all three were
> > killed by loners.
>
> If you read the likes of Posner, Moldea and Vince I am not
> surprised. If you read Bill Pepper on MLK you may change your
> mind, not that I am saying you have to. I would strongly
> recommend Fonzi's book The Last Investigation, which has just
> been reprinted and updated.
>
> As to RFK, whilst Sirhan Sirhan was there, in front of RFK, and
> never closer than a few feet, firing a .22 pistol, we know that
> all the four .22 bullets which hit RFK were fired from behind
> him, from the right travelling left, and at a distance of about
> an inch. We also know that the security guard Thane Eugene
> Cesar was armed with a .22 pistol and was standing in that
> exact spot, yet his gun was never examined by the LAPD. Any
> thoughts?
Yes, if Thane Cesar (hired by the Kennedy family) had been the killer he would have had to be have been a solitary opportunist because he did not know he was due to work that day, being called in at the last minute
To say that Sirhan was never closer than a few feet is not correct. When investigating the dynamics of the shooting it has been concluded that Kennedy had been turning to his left when 5'4" Sirhan fired the fatal shot. Furthermore, the reliable witnesses to the shooting all said the distance from Kennedy to Sirhan?s gun was between one and a half to three feet. Therefore, it was not farfetched to say that the muzzle of Sirhan?s gun had or nearly touched Kennedy?s head in the chaos that ensued. One of the most reliable witnesses, Lisa Urso, who could see both Kennedy and Sirhan, saw Kennedy?s hand move to his head behind his right ear. As the distance from Kennedy to the gun after the first pop was three feet it is likely he had been simply reacting defensively to the first shot fired. Urso described Kennedy?s movements as ??[jerking] a little bit, like backwards and then forwards?. The backwards and forwards jerking, ?...came as Kennedy had recoiled after the first shot; he was then accidentally bumped forward, toward the steam table and into Sirhan?s gun where he was hit at point blank range.? Boris Yaro, a photographer for The Los Angeles Times, said, ?Kennedy backed up against the kitchen freezers as the gunman fired at him point blank range.? This claim is also supported by key witness Frank Burns, who was identified as one of the five in the group (the others were Karl Uecker, Juan Romero, Jesus Perez, Martin Patrusky) who were closest to the senator. Burns said that the gun was never less than twelve inches or eighteen inches from Kennedy, he did describe the shooting in such a way to make it entirely plausible that Sirhan?s gun moved to an area inches away from Kennedy. Burns had suffered an abrasion on his face that he thought was caused by a bullet passing near his cheek. It was likely a powder burn from Sirhan?s pistol. Burns said: ?I had just caught up with him [in the pantry], and he was a step or so past him. And I?d turned around facing the same way as he turned toward the busboys, I was just off his right shoulder, a matter of inches behind him?The noise was like a string of firecrackers going off, it wasn?t in an even cadence. In the process, a bullet must have passed very close to my left cheek because I can remember the heat and a sort of burn. I remember an arm coming towards us, through the people, with a gun in it. I was putting together the burn across my cheek, the noise and the gun and I was thinking, ?My God, it?s an assassination attempt.? I turned my head and saw the gun and quickly looked back to the senator and realised he?d been shot because he?d thrown his hands up toward his head as if he was about to grab it at the line of his ears. He hadn?t quite done it. His arms were near his head and he was twisting to his left and falling back. And then I looked back at the gunman, and at that moment he was almost directly in front of me. He was still holding the gun and coming closer to the senator, pursuing the body so that the arc of the gun was coming down to the floor as the body was going down.?
In addition, Sirhan was asked why he didn't shoot Kennedy between the eyes and said, "Because the son of a bitch turned his head" before later claiming that he could remember nothing of the shooting.
>
> > On a slightly different tack, what do you think of the death
> of
> > Diana, Princess of Wales?
>
> I think she should have worn a seatbelt.
>
Me too