A Farewell to Justice

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by Joan Mellen


  Oswald not only was set up as a scapegoat, but there were alternative scapegoats trained should he not fulfill the job, among them Thomas Edward Beckham, whom the CIA protected in Omaha. As for Oswald, not only was he an FBI informant and a CIA employee working for Counter Intelligence, but he was also an operative for United States Customs, a dual role shared by customs officers in Miami.

  I met Jim Garrison in New Orleans in May of 1969, where he registered my husband and me as “Mr. and Mrs. Lyndon Baines Johnson.” My husband had sent Garrison a series of articles from an Italian newspaper called Paese Sera, which revealed that Garrison suspect Shaw had been on the board of directors of what had been a CIA front. That Garrison’s arrest of Shaw coincided with the publication of the articles was a coincidence of history.

  Jim Garrison arrived, a very tall, heavyset man with a smooth, rosy complexion. You did not look at him—you listened to his deep, sonorous baritone, because he did not stop talking. He spoke not about Clay Shaw’s trial, which had concluded three months earlier with Shaw’s acquittal, but about the assassination. He did not mention that he was running for reelection as district attorney. He did not even suggest that he presently was district attorney. He did not mention his wife or his children. He spoke only of what had befallen President Kennedy.

  Dinner was at Moran La Louisiane. Garrison had us seated in the center of the red brocade-walled room, directly under the crystal chandelier. After dinner, he lit a cigar. He was not downcast and you would not know that he had lost anything. The next day he talked of how Earl Cabell, the mayor of Dallas, was the brother of Major General Charles Cabell, who had left the CIA when John Kennedy fired Allen Dulles after the Bay of Pigs invasion.

  In later conversations we discussed his novel manuscript. My husband sold The Star-Spangled Contract for him to McGraw-Hill for a quarter of a million dollars. Jim was broke then, and grateful. Ralph was not a literary agent and didn’t want to take any commission, but Jim insisted. Then he refused to sign the contract unless Ralph agreed to be paid.

  I saw Garrison for the last time in the spring of 1989. He mentioned that a film was to be made about his investigation, that his memoir, On the Trail of the Assassins, was a best seller. But all that really mattered were the facts of the assassination. He spoke ill of no one, blamed no one for the harsh turns his life had taken. Instead he wanted to discuss the changing of John F. Kennedy’s Dallas parade route, one more time.

  What began as the chronicle of a man I once knew, a sardonic ironist, who would talk for hours about the assassination, became a biography of his investigation. Interviewing over a thousand people, I was able to demonstrate the specifics of how the FBI and CIA, led by National Security Agency, FBI and CIA veteran Walter Sheridan, attempted to destroy Garrison’s effort, not least by bribing his witnesses.

  The decades-long campaign to silence Jim Garrison included the participation even of “Deep Throat” himself. Hardly interested in the “truth,” as those who laud him for providing guidance to Bob Woodward suggest, Mark Felt on the matter of the Kennedy assassination is revealed in documents to have been an open enemy of free inquiry, no less than a convicted felon specializing in FBI “black-bag jobs.”

  W. Mark Felt was high among those in the government attempting to sabotage Jim Garrison’s investigation. An FBI document of March 2, 1967, the day after Jim Garrison arrested Clay Shaw, has an investigator named H.L. Edwards reporting to Felt on scurrilous rumors that might be enlisted to undermine Garrison and his evidence. Edwards is obviously replying to an assignment from Felt to find a way to stop Garrison. He quotes Frank Manning, chief investigator for Louisiana Attorney General Jack P. F. Gremillion, who calls Garrison a “psychopath” and accuses Garrison of shaking down “hundreds of sex deviates in the New Orleans French Quarter.”

  Manning confided to Edwards that “Garrison might himself be a sex deviate, or at least he is a participant in some deviate activities with other homosexuals.” None of this was true. But Edwards’ focus is revealed in his writing for the record that “Garrison has absolutely no basis for his present publicity stunt in claiming that he has reason to believe Oswald acted as a part of a conspiracy in the assassination.” Edwards knew that Felt was interested, not in Garrison’s prosecutorial foibles as a district attorney, but in destroying his credibility, the better to subvert his challenge to the Warren Commission. Edwards recommends to Felt that the New Orleans field office contact Manning directly so that they might dig into cases where, hopefully, they can “discover” that money was paid to Garrison to have cases against these “sex deviates” disappear.

  William C. Sullivan, who would be Felt’s rival in assuming the leadership of the FBI after J. Edgar Hoover’s day was done, only to be shot in an “accident” where, standing on his porch, he was mistaken for a deer(!), read the document addressed to Felt. Then he urged that the FBI “move with prudence.”

  Less circumspect voices prevailed and the FBI’s General Investigative Division wrote to Felt recommending that the information in Edwards’ memo be made available to the White House and the attorney general in what was patently a conspiracy to silence Jim Garrison. Four days later, Felt obliged.

  If I believed Garrison, who was so persuasive a talker that he won wily reporter Jack Anderson over to his side, it is the overwhelming documentary evidence that has vindicated his effort since the CIA had trained its sights on an independent president. Its involvement in President Kennedy’s assassination has been an open secret for these forty years. The mainstream media have persisted in granting credence to the by now thoroughly discredited Warren Commission Report, a document based on a scant and arbitrary pseudo-investigation, in actuality on no investigation at all.

  On the fortieth anniversary of John F. Kennedy’s death, a Gallup poll recorded that twice as many people believed that the CIA had masterminded the assassination as were persuaded that Lee Harvey Oswald, a man without a motive, had acted alone in the dastardly deed.

  Reader, you decide.

  CAST OF CHARACTERS

  The District Attorney’s Office, Orleans Parish Jim Garrison, District Attorney

  Assistants

  James Alcock

  William Alford

  Denis A. Barry

  Numa Bertel

  Milton E. Brener

  Richard Burnes

  William Martin

  Alvin Oser

  Ross Scaccia

  Andrew (Moo Moo) Sciambra Ralph Slovenko

  John P. Volz

  Charles Ward

  D’alton Williams

  Investigators

  Raymond Beck

  Steve Bordelon

  Raymond Comstock

  Pershing Gervais

  Louis Ivon

  Frank Meloche

  Lester Otillio

  Staff

  Tom Bethell

  Sharon Herkes

  Joyce Wood

  The Garrison Family

  Mrs. Jane Garrison Gardiner, mother

  Mrs. Leah (Liz) Garrison, first wife

  Phyllis Weinert Kritikos, second wife

  Children: Jasper, Virginia, Lyon (Snapper), Elizabeth, Eberhard

  The Shaw Defense Team

  F. Irvin Dymond

  Salvatore Panzeca

  Edward F. Wegmann

  William Wegmann

  Louisiana Politicians

  Hale Boggs, Representative to Congress

  Jack P. F. Gremillion, Attorney General

  Aaron Kohn, Metropolitan Crime Commission

  Earl Long, Governor

  Russell B. Long, Senator

  John McKeithen, Governor

  Frank Minyard, Coroner of Orleans Parish

  Chep Morrison, Mayor

  New Orleans Police

  Robert Buras

  L. J. Delsa

  Frank Hayward

  Richard Hunter

  Norman Knaps

  James Kruebbe

  Francis Martello

  Edward O’Do
nnell

  Robert Townsend

  Major Presley Trosclair, police intelligence

  Louisiana State Police

  Colonel Thomas Burbank

  Francis Fruge

  Captain Ben Morgan

  Guy Banister’s Office

  Guy Banister, former FBI Special Agent in Charge, ONI, CIA asset, “detective”

  Helen Louise Brengel, secretary

  William Dalzell, CIA

  Vernon Gerdes

  Lawrence Guchereau, detective

  Jack Martin, CIA

  Joe Newbrough, CIA

  I. P. Nitschke, former FBI agent

  Delphine Roberts, lover and secretary

  Banister’s Infiltrators

  Tommy Baumler

  Allen Campbell

  Daniel Campbell

  George Higginbotham

  The New Orleans Bar

  Edward Baldwin

  Burton Klein

  Stephen B. Lemann Jim McPherson

  Lou Merhige

  Donald V. Organ

  Louis P. Trent

  Sam (Monk) Zelden

  Suspects

  Thomas Edward Beckham, Banister courier and country singer Edgar Eugene Bradley, assistant to the Reverend Carl McIntire, falsely charged

  David Ferrie, police informant, ex-Eastern Airlines pilot, CIA contract pilot

  Loran Hall, CIA mercenary

  Lawrence Howard, CIA mercenary

  Clay Shaw, managing director, International Trade Mart

  Kerry Thornley, Oswald Marine Corps cohort and author of a book about Oswald

  Friends of David Ferrie

  Alvin Beaubouef, traveled to Houston and Galveston with Ferrie the weekend of the assassination; Ferrie’s heir

  Bob Boylston, Civil Air Patrol

  Morris Brownlee, named Ferrie his “godfather” during his conversion to Catholicism

  Melvin Coffey, traveled to Houston and Galveston with Ferrie and Beaubouef

  G. Wray Gill, Ferrie’s attorney

  Jimmy Johnson, Ferrie acolyte and informant for Jim Garrison

  James Lewallen

  Layton Martens, indicted by Jim Garrison for perjury

  Benton Wilson

  John Wilson

  Friends of Clay Shaw

  Patricia Chandler, wife of David Chandler

  Jack Sawyer, news director, WVUE-TV

  Donald G. Schueler, professor

  Jefferson Sulzer, professor

  Nina Sulzer

  The International Trade Mart

  David G. Baldwin, public relations

  Theodore Brent, first managing director

  Lloyd J. Cobb, founder in 1946 and president from 1962 and during the Shaw trial

  Jesse Core, public relations

  J. B. Dauenhauer, Shaw assistant

  Witnesses

  Dean Andrews, attorney telephoned by “Clay Bertrand”

  Dago Garner, Dallas roustabout

  The Reverend Clyde Johnson

  Jack Martin, once and present CIA operative

  Julia Ann Mercer, saw Ruby at Dealey Plaza on the morning of November 22

  Richard Case Nagell, CIA operative; warned FBI of the November Dallas conspiracy involving Oswald and two right-wing Cubans

  Donold P. Norton, CIA courier

  The FBI

  John Edgar Hoover, Director

  Cartha DeLoach (“Deke”), third in command at headquarters after Hoover and Clyde Tolson

  Regis Kennedy, Special Agent, New Orleans field office

  Warren de Brueys, Special Agent, New Orleans field office

  William Walter, clerk, New Orleans field office

  Elmer Litchfield, Baton Rouge resident agent

  Department of Justice

  Ramsey Clark, Acting Attorney General

  Herbert J. Miller Jr., Department of Justice attorney and CIA liaison

  Fred Vinson, Assistant Attorney General

  Walter P. Yeagley, Assistant Attorney General, Internal Security Division

  The CIA

  James Angleton, Chief of Counter Intelligence

  Major General Charles Cabell, Dulles’ assistant, forced to resign when Dulles was fired

  Allen Dulles, Director of Central Intelligence, fired by John F. Kennedy after the Bay of Pigs fiasco

  Desmond Fitzgerald, JMWAVE

  Richard Helms, DDP (Deputy Director, Plans), chief of clandestine services on November 22, 1963

  Lawrence Houston, Chief Counsel

  Hunter Leake, second in command, New Orleans

  John McCone, Director of Central Intelligence on November 22, 1963

  David Atlee Phillips, Chief of Western Hemisphere, COG (Cuban Operations Group), Chief of Cuban Operations at the Mexico City Station in 1963; at his retirement in 1975, he was Chief of Latin American and Caribbean Operations

  Lloyd N. Ray, chief, New Orleans field office

  Raymond Rocca, nicknamed “The Rock” by James Angleton; head of Counter Intelligence’s research and analysis division (R&A).

  Jack Rogers, attorney, Louisiana Agency asset, and Chief Counsel for the Louisiana Un-American Activities Committee

  Walter Sheridan, Department of Justice attorney and intelligence operative sent to New Orleans as an NBC producer to destroy Jim Garrison’s case

  Clinton Witnesses

  Verla Bell, CORE activist

  Corrie Collins, Chairman, East Feliciana CORE

  Anne Dischler and Francis Fruge, investigators for Jim Garrison William Dunn, CORE activist

  Merryl Hudson, secretary, personnel office, East Louisiana State Hospital at Jackson

  Maxine Kemp, staff, East Louisiana State Hospital

  Edwin Lea McGehee, barber, Jackson, Louisiana

  Reeves Morgan, State Representative, East Feliciana Parish

  John Manchester, Town Marshal

  Henry Earl Palmer, Registrar of Voters, East Feliciana Parish

  John R. Rarick, District Court judge during the summer of 1963 and former congressman

  Dr. Frank Silva, medical director, East Louisiana State Hospital during the summer of 1963

  Cubans

  Frank Bartes, CIA asset, second cousin of Dr. Frank Silva, and contract pilot

  Carlos Bringuier, arrested with Lee Harvey Oswald on Canal Street

  Eladio del Valle, David Ferrie’s CIA handler in Florida

  Bernardo de Torres, CIA and FBI asset and plant in Garrison investigation

  Alberto Fowler, veteran of Bay of Pigs and Garrison investigator

  Orestes Peña, operator of the Habana Bar and FBI informant

  Carlos Quiroga, assistant to Sergio Arcacha Smith

  Sergio Arcacha Smith, New Orleans Cuban Revolutionary Council

  Juan Valdes, close associate of Lee Harvey Oswald, International Trade Mart employee, suspect in Mary Sherman murder

  Soldiers of Fortune

  Howard Kenneth Davis

  Loran Hall

  Gerald Patrick Hemming

  Lawrence Howard

  E. Carl McNabb (“Jim Rose”): CIA contract pilot and Garrison investigator

  FBI Informants on the Garrison Case

  Hugh Aynesworth, Newsweek, formerly with the Dallas Morning News

  Sam Depino, New Orleans television

  Gordon Novel

  Joe Oster, former partner of Guy Banister and founder of Southern Research

  Orestes Peña, proprietor of Habana bar

  James Phelan, Saturday Evening Post

  Arnesto Rodriguez, language school, and Oswald contact

  Lawrence Schiller, author

  The Fourth Estate

  Hugh Aynesworth, Dallas Morning News and Newsweek

  Richard N. Billings, Life magazine editor

  Donald Dean Bohning, CIA asset as AMCARBON-3, Miami Herald

  David Chandler, Life magazine stringer

  Jack Dempsey, States-Item, broke the Garrison case

  Sam Depino, FBI informant, New Orleans, Channel 12

  R
osemary James, States-Item

  Iris Kelso, States-Item

  James Phelan, Saturday Evening Post writer and FBI/CIA asset

  David Snyder, States-Item

  William Stuckey, CIA asset writing for States-Item

  Richard Townley, WDSU, assistant to Walter Sheridan

  AN ARTICLE IN

  ESQUIRE MAGAZINE

  1

  I guess part of me still thought I was living in the country I was born in.

  —Jim Garrison

  IN MARCH OF 1965, with Governor John McKeithen barred by law from succeeding himself, Orleans Parish district attorney Jim Garrison decided to run for governor of Louisiana. On a rainy morning, he flew to Shreveport with his favorite assistant John Volz, two very tall, black-haired, handsome, politically ambitious men. While Garrison addressed a convention of dentists, Volz was to distribute a press release to the local radio stations. Ever late, Garrison rushed to board the return flight, his raincoat flapping over his arm, a copy of Esquire magazine in his hand.

  “Read this!” Garrison told Volz, pointing to an article by Dwight Macdonald, reviewing the Report of the President’s Commission Investigating the Assassination of John F. Kennedy. The Warren Report, Macdonald wrote, was a work of fantasy and literary imagination, an American “anti-Iliad”; it bore no resemblance to a murder investigation. Perceiving that the Warren Commission’s task was one of “exorcism,” not a search for truth, Macdonald wondered how FBI and CIA involvement in the assassination, which seemed obvious to any disinterested observer, came in “motivewise.” “Officials of a feather stick together,” Macdonald concluded, regretting that neither Sherlock Holmes nor Earl Stanley Gardner had been on the scene. On the orders of FBI director J. Edgar Hoover and President Lyndon Johnson, a Justice Department lawyer close to the CIA, Herbert J. Miller Jr., had rushed to Texas to forbid the Dallas police from doing any investigating on its own.

 

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