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- From: dona@bilver.uucp (Don Allen)
- Newsgroups: alt.activism,alt.conspiracy,misc.headlines
- Subject: File: Who killed Martin Luther King?
- Message-ID: <1991Sep4.021804.20851@bilver.uucp>
- Date: 4 Sep 91 02:18:04 GMT
- Organization: W. J. Vermillion - Winter Park, FL
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- This information is presented for your persusal and is a continuation
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- at *face* value. If this interests you, please endeavor to research it
- yourself and investigate it to *your* satisfaction, and as such I will
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- As I do not have a great amount of time available to pursue follow-ups
- exclusively, comments to me should be directed to dona@bilver.uucp
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-
- The following was sent to me and I thought it needs to be put forth.
-
- Draw your own conclusions...
-
- ----Begin included text ---------------------------------------------
-
-
-
- Reprinted without permission from CovertAction Information
- Bulletin, Number 34 (Summer 1990), pages 21-27.
-
- The Murder of Martin Luther King Jr.
-
- by John Edginton and John Sergeant
-
- {Editors' Note: In April 1988, John Edginton, a British
- independent film maker, began an inquiry into the circumstances
- surrounding the death of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Edginton had
- just completed a film about King's life ("Promised Land") and was
- intrigued by comments by King's friend, the Rev. Ralph Abernathy,
- that King was murdered by government forces. By January 1989,
- Edginton had gathered enough evidence disputing the official
- verdict that BBC Television agreed to fund a documentary: "Who
- Killed Martin Luther King?" John Sergeant joined the team as
- associate producer. The film aired in England in September 1989
- and on cable television in this country in March 1990. The
- following article is derived from information gathered in their
- investigation and raises questions about government complicity in
- the assassination of the civil rights leader.}
-
-
- Introduction
-
- Equivocation, uncertainty, and doubt have never been fully
- dispelled with respect to the untimely death of Martin Luther
- King Jr. in 1968. This could be put down in part to the intensity
- of public suspicion over the killing of President John F.
- Kennedy. But suspicions linger primarily because of the
- inherently unconvincing nature of the official version of the
- events.
-
- In an apparently {bona fide} effort to lay these ghosts to rest,
- the House of Representatives Select Committee on Assassinations
- (HSCA) concluded an investigation in 1979 which reaffirmed the
- guilt of convicted assassin James Earl Ray but conceded the
- probable existence of a conspiracy behind him - headed by a group
- of St. Louis businessmen with ties to organized crime. It
- referred its leads to the Justice Department which quietly closed
- the case in 1983.
-
- However, new revelations clearly demand official answers. The
- case should now be reopened and the whole 22-year-saga of James
- Earl Ray's conviction and imprisonment should now be rigorously
- reviewed.
-
- The first important new revelation involves Jules Ron Kimble, a
- convicted murderer serving time in a federal prison in Oklahoma.
- In a recent interview, Kimble admitted being intimately involved
- in a widespread conspiracy that resulted in the assassination of
- King. He said that this conspiracy involved agents of the FBI and
- the CIA, elements of the "mob," as well as Ray. In the late
- 1970s, investigators of the HSCA interviewed Kimble but,
- according to their report, he denied any knowledge of the murder.
- Now, for the first time, Kimble publicly admits participating in
- the assassination. [1. Kimble made this admission while being
- interviewed for the film documentary {Who Killed Martin Luther
- King?} The interview took place at the El Reno Federal
- Penitentiary, El Reno, Oklahoma, in June 1989.]
-
- Kimble, a shadowy figure with ties to the U.S. intelligence
- community and organized crime, corroborates much of Ray's self-
- serving story. He alleges that Ray, though involved in the plot,
- did not shoot King and was in fact set up to take the fall for
- the assassination. [2. {Ibid}.]
-
- Jules Kimble, in implicating the mob and CIA in the
- assassination, claims to have introduced Ray to a CIA identities
- specialist in Montreal, Canada, from whom Ray gained four
- principal aliases. In August 1989, a former CIA agent serving in
- Canada around the time of the King assassination, confirmed that
- the CIA did indeed have such a false identities specialist
- operating out of Montreal in the late 1960s. [3. Telephone
- interview with ex-CIA agent who requests anonymity, August 1989;
- in-person interview in December 1989.]
-
- An investigation by Dr. Philip Melanson revealed that the
- identities that Ray adopted during the period of the
- assassination were far more elaborate than previously realized.
- Melanson concluded that in at least one instance, Ray's alias
- could only reasonably have derived from a top secret security
- file accessible only to military and intelligence agencies. [4.
- See Philip Melanson, {The Murkin Conspiracy} (New York: Praeger,
- 1989).]
-
- Finally, Ray who has been protesting his innocence for over 20
- years, has always claimed that he was set up for the
- assassination by a mysterious "handler" called Raoul whom he had
- first encountered in Montreal nine months before. The former CIA
- agent who served in Canada named the agency's Montreal identities
- specialist at the time as Raoul Maora. [5. {Op. cit.}, n. 3.]
-
- Jules Ron Kimble cannot be dismissed out-of-hand. For a start he
- has a long record of mob activity and violence, often with
- political overtones. He is currently serving a double life
- sentence in El Reno, Oklahoma, for two murders he admits were
- political. He has proven links to the Louisiana mob empire of
- Carlos Marcello (frequently accused of involvement in political
- assassination) and admits to having done mob-related work in New
- Orleans, Montreal, and Memphis during the late sixties - three
- key cities in Ray's odyssey. [6. A July 1989 phone interview with
- a Baton Rouge police detective confirmed Kimble's close ties to
- organized crime. State investigator Joe Oster also investigated
- Kimble because of allegations of Kimble's involvement in the
- murder of union leader Victor Busie. In this investigation, Oster
- found that Kimble had ties to the Ku Klux Klan and organized
- crime.]
-
- Investigative records from the period confirm Kimble to have been
- involved with the underworld and the KKK, to have been in
- Montreal in the summer of 1967, and to have been called in for
- questioning in connection with the Kennedy assassination by then-
- New Orleans District Attorney, Jim Garrison. During this
- questioning, Kimble admitted being linked to the local FBI and
- CIA and Garrison accepted this admission as true. [7. Statement
- taken from Jules Kimble by New Orleans District Attorney Jim
- Garrison on October 10, 1967.]
-
- Like his contemporary, Lee Harvey Oswald, Jules Kimble had been
- living in Crescent City, California during the early 1960s and
- was associating with gangsters, segregationists, the FBI and, he
- forcefully asserts, the CIA. He is known to have been in contact
- with David Ferrie, the dead CIA flier who has been repeatedly
- implicated in the assassination of John Kennedy. [8. {Ibid}.]
-
- Most astonishingly, Jules Ron Kimble is not dismissed out-of-hand
- by James Earl Ray. When Ray was recently confronted with the
- alleged connection, he said that Kimble may have been one of two
- mysterious figures he saw on the afternoon of the assassination
- but he wasn't sure. Ray then asked if Kimble was in prison (which
- he was) but rejected Kimble's allegations about their connection
- as some sort of "government disinformation." [9. Interview with
- James Earl Ray, June 1989, Brushy Mountain State Penitentiary,
- Tennessee.]
-
- Although James Earl Ray, now 60, stands convicted of shooting
- Martin Luther King, most observers agree the truth of what really
- happened has never been established. New evidence from Kimble,
- compounded with other recent revelations, establish that the
- issue is not whether government operatives were involved in the
- King assassination but rather how high up the chain of command
- the conspiracy ran.
-
-
- The Lone Gunman
-
- In late March 1968, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. came to
- Memphis to support the city's striking sanitation workers who
- were predominantly black. He led a march of 6000 protesters which
- disintegrated into violence between police and demonstrators,
- giving conservative forces the opportunity to scorn King's
- doctrine of nonviolent political struggle. Determined to prove
- the sanitation workers' protest could be peaceful, King returned
- to Memphis on April 3rd to lead a second march.
-
- On April 4, a few minutes before 6 p.m., Dr. King walked out on
- the balcony outside his second-floor room at the Lorraine Motel.
- He was scheduled to attend a dinner at the local Reverend Billy
- Kyles's house and was bantering with his chauffeur down in the
- parking lot below. At 6:01 p.m. there was a shot. A high-velocity
- dum-dum bullet hit Dr. King in the neck, severing his spinal
- column and leaving a massive exit hole. One hour later, in St.
- Joseph's Hospital in Memphis, King died.
-
- Public suspicions over the investigation of Dr. King's death
- surfaced almost immediately. In 1968 there was already a growing
- body of opinion at odds with the official explanation that Lee
- Harvey Oswald had been the lone assassin of John F. Kennedy. In
- Memphis, King too had been shot with a high-velocity rifle,
- ostensibly from a window. Moreover, like Dallas, the
- assassination had taken place under the noses of the authorities
- in broad daylight.
-
- Soon after his murder, questions surrounding the assassination of
- King began to emerge. How had so many police arrived so quickly
- on the scene - within moments of the shot being fired - yet
- failed to spot the assassin either arriving or departing? Who, in
- an apparent attempt to distract police radio control, had
- broadcast a hoax car chase involving a Mustang on citizens band
- radio less than half an hour after the police radio announced the
- suspect car to be a white Mustang? If, as the police claimed, the
- shot had come from the bathroom window, why did at least three
- people claim to have seen a gunman in the bushes across the
- street?
-
- The official scenario of how Ray shot King is as follows: Ray was
- supposed to have checked into a rooming house on Main Street, the
- back of which faces the Lorraine Motel; established a sniper's
- post in the bathroom; shot Martin Luther King; panicked and
- dropped his belongings on the sidewalk as he fled the rooming
- house, leaving the rifle to be discovered with his fingerprints
- on it; and then raced out of Memphis in a white Mustang.
-
- Suspicions of conspiracy in the murder of King did not diminish
- with the capture of Ray, though officials continued to maintain
- he was a lone assassin. On the contrary, expectations of major
- revelations at Ray's forthcoming trial were very high. But these
- expectations were never gratified. The public was kept ignorant
- of many anomalies and peculiarities in the case, some of which
- were even ignored by investigators.
-
- The most prominent of these inconsistencies in the state's case
- was the self-contradictory and inconsistent testimony of its
- chief witness, Charlie Stephens. Stephens, who the state claims
- saw Ray emerging from the bathroom, did not recognize Ray in a
- photo he was shown shortly after the assassination. The state
- also failed to mention that Stephens was an alcoholic and was
- drunk the afternoon of the King murder.
-
-
- Why Did Ray Plead Guilty?
-
- It has never been established where the idea of Ray's guilty plea
- originated but certain facts stand out. Ray's lawyers in the
- original trial were Hugh Stanton Sr., the Shelby County Public
- Defender and Percy Foreman. It is interesting to note that
- earlier Stanton had acted as lawyer to Charlie Stephens - the
- prosecution's chief witness. No one in the judicial system,
- however, saw his acting as Ray's attorney as a conflict of
- interest.
-
- In December 1967, Foreman proposed to prosecutor Phil Canale that
- Ray could be convinced to plead guilty in exchange for a slightly
- reduced sentence and no death penalty. Canale was favorable to
- the idea and consulted with the King family lawyer, Harry Wachtel
- (former Governor of Tennessee), officials at the Justice
- Department, and finally the Attorney General. Everyone agreed
- that the guilty plea was a splendid idea. It was Foreman's job to
- convince Ray. [10. Interview with Phil Canale, Memphis,
- Tennessee, June 1989; interview with Dr. William Pepper, Memphis,
- Tennessee, June 1989.]
-
- Ray would have none of it. And it took more than two months for
- him to cave in, despite all manner of tactics employed to
- pressure him and his family into agreeing. Foreman even assured
- Ray in a letter that there was a 100% chance he would be found
- guilty and a 99% chance of the electric chair (even though the
- state's case was very weak and no one had gone to the chair in
- Tennessee in more than a decade). Ray also discovered he could
- not change his lawyer again and that Foreman was doing nothing to
- develop a defense. Finally Ray somehow believed that if he
- pleaded guilty he could dismiss Foreman, demand a new lawyer, and
- receive a new trial. [11. {Ibid}.]
-
- The so-called trial took place suddenly on March 10, 1968 and
- following a lengthy list of charges the state would have tried to
- prove, Ray pleaded guilty as arranged and was sentenced to 99
- years. He immediately petitioned for a new trial, which was
- denied, and has been petitioning on every conceivable ground ever
- since, also to no avail.
-
- In 1974, however, Ray succeeded in prying from the state an
- evidentiary hearing. The hearing was to determine whether Ray had
- enough grounds for a new trial based on his being negligently
- represented by attorney Percy Foreman. Harold Weisberg, a veteran
- of the John Kennedy case and a writer, was taken on as an
- investigator on Ray's legal team.
-
-
- Major Inconsistencies in the State's Evidence
-
- Weisberg's investigation was a searching and vigorous one.
- Although he differs with many experts in his conclusions - he
- believes Ray to be totally innocent, a fall guy or "patsy" - many
- of his arguments about the weakness of the official case and the
- existence of a conspiracy remain persuasive to this day. Through
- his relentless pursuit of FBI documentation under the Freedom of
- Information Act, Weisberg found many documents which revealed
- numerous irregularities in the Bureau's investigation. Among
- other inconsistencies, the state's examination of the alleged
- murder weapon is very revealing.
-
- An internal FBI report on the bullet which killed King said that
- it was too mangled to compare against the rifle that allegedly
- fired it. The report states that "... its deformation and absence
- of clear cut marks precluded a positive determination." Yet the
- evidence presented at Ray's "trial" gave the impression that the
- "death slug" was proven to have been fired from the rifle. [12.
- Internal FBI ballistics report, released under the Freedom of
- Information Act, dated April 17, 1968.]
-
- Weisberg consulted with a ballistics expert who examined the
- bullet and concluded that there were indeed sufficient markings
- on it to make test-fire comparisons. The ballistics expert is
- adamant about the fact the FBI could and should have carried out
- such tests. [13. Herbert McDonnell, the ballistics expert who
- made this claim, is regarded as a leading authority. He presented
- these views in an interview conducted June 1989, Memphis,
- Tennessee.]
-
- One of Weisberg's most powerful arguments concerns the crime
- scene itself. How, he wonders, did the assassin, who would have
- had to stand in a bathtub to fire at King, manage to take a
- single shot, run from the bathroom into the bedroom, bundle up
- the rifle and a bizarre collection of personal belongings into a
- blanket (ensuring that the belongings but not the bathroom or the
- bedroom had his fingerprints on them), run the length of the
- rooming house, down a flight of stairs, dump the bundle in the
- street, walk calmly to his waiting Mustang and drive away within
- the one to two minutes it took uniformed officers to reach the
- same location?
-
- Official records as to precisely what took place on the street
- outside the rooming house - Main Street, one block west of the
- motel - in those critical minutes, are astonishingly chaotic.
-
- At Ray's trial in 1969, testimony was given by Inspector N.E.
- Zachary of the Memphis Police Department that he found the rifle
- and the bundle first. By the time of the 1974 evidentiary
- hearings (after various books had researched the question), the
- state conceded that another officer, Sheriff's Deputy Bud
- Ghormley was first to discover the bundle.
-
- Yet Ghormley, in turn, has been contradicted by Sheriff's Deputy
- Vernon Dollahite. Dollahite, now chief of detectives, insisted
- that he was the first onto Main Street and first to see the
- bundle. Dollahite has been consistent in his story from the
- beginning. After one of his early FBI interviews, they calculated
- that the time he took from the shot being fired to his arrival on
- Main Street was 1 minute 57 seconds.
-
- The extraordinary factor in Dollahite's testimony is that though
- alert for anything unusual as he raced around the corner onto
- Main Street, he not only missed the Mustang pulling away, he did
- not even see the bundle with the rifle in it. Only after he had
- entered Jim's Grill beneath the rooming house, told everyone to
- stay put, and come out again, did he spot it lying in a doorway a
- few yards away. He and the FBI agreed that whomever was about to
- dump the bundle had probably seen him coming, hidden behind the
- staircase door until he had gone into the grill, then run onto
- the street throwing down the bundle while Deputy Dollahite was
- inside.
-
- There is an obvious problem with this scenario. How could Ray run
- out of the doorway, throw down the incriminating bundle, and then
- manage to climb into a white Mustang and drive off unnoticed
- within the seconds it took Dollahite to emerge from Jim's Grill
- just feet away?
-
- The judge at the evidentiary hearing took more than a year to
- conclude that Ray had no grounds for a retrial. The defendant's
- guilt or innocence was immaterial to the issue at hand, he said.
-
-
- Spying on King
-
- By 1977, with the revelations by the Church Committee of major
- abuses by U.S. intelligence agencies, public opinion about the
- political assassinations of the 1960s had reached such heights
- that Congress was forced into forming the House Select Committee
- on Assassinations to investigate the murders of John F. Kennedy
- and Martin Luther King Jr.
-
- Beset with political problems and threats to its funding, the
- HSCA nonetheless did manage to address, if inconclusively and
- frequently inadequately, the majority of the issues and points
- raised by critics of the official story in the King case. Its
- final report dated March 29, 1979 concluded that James Earl Ray
- was indeed guilty of killing Martin Luther King Jr. but there had
- been co-conspirators after all. An informant's report in the
- FBI's St. Louis office, previously overlooked, led to the
- discovery that a $50,000 bounty for the death of Martin Luther
- King Jr. had been offered in that city in 1967. [14. Final Report
- of the U.S. House of Representatives Select Committee on
- Assassination (hereafter referred to as the {HSCA Report}) (New
- York: Bantam, 1979).]
-
- However, blaming the King assassination on a conspiracy of St.
- Louis organized crime figures, with Ray acting as the killer,
- leaves many disturbing questions unanswered. One of these
- questions is, how could Ray simply walk into a predominantly
- black section of Memphis teeming with police, informants, and
- undercover agents, shoot King and then leave unmolested? The
- extent of the police surveillance on King was remarkable and the
- notion that Ray shot King and escaped undetected is even more
- remarkable. Recently, the true nature and extraordinary extent of
- the official presence in Memphis in April 1968 became clear.
-
- Retired Memphis police officer Sam Evans confirmed that King's
- chauffeur and the manager of the Lorraine Motel were paid police
- informants. It is also known that Marrell McCoullough, one of the
- first to reach King's fallen body, although ostensibly a member
- of the radical black group, the Invaders, was in fact an
- undercover agent of the Memphis Police Department. [15. This was
- not revealed by investigators in 1968 but was acknowledged by the
- HSCA after writers like Mark Lane and Dick Gregory had drawn
- attention to it. See Mark Lane and Dick Gregory, {Codename Zorro:
- The Murder of Martin Luther King, Jr.} (New York: Pocketbooks,
- 1977).
-
- The so-called Intelligence Unit of the Memphis Police Department
- (MPD) had been planting bugs and agents at all the strategy
- meetings of the sanitation workers and the Invaders.
- Nevertheless, they continue to deny having had any source, human
- or electronic, at the heart of the Southern Christian Leadership
- Conference (SCLC) (the group King headed) that day. A senior
- police officer claimed that military intelligence and the U.S.
- Secret Service had also deployed agents throughout Memphis. [16.
- Interview with investigative journalist Wayne Chastin in June
- 1989.]
-
- It is now known that a member of the SCLC and leaders of the
- local NAACP were in the pay of the FBI. And another figure close
- to the SCLC - Jay Richard Kennedy - had been reporting his fears
- of communist control over King to the CIA. [17. This information
- was revealed in documents released under the Freedom of
- Information Act and published by David Garrow in {The FBI and
- Martin Luther King, Jr.} (New York: Penguin, 1983). It was also
- discussed by Kennedy for the first time on camera in an interview
- conducted in June 1989.]
-
- Despite the presence of numerous people engaged in the
- surveillance of King, apparently not one of them spotted the
- assassin arriving, shooting Dr. King, or escaping the scene.
-
- Given that the Memphis Police Department had in the past provided
- extensive security for Dr. King on previous visits and was aware
- of the vulnerability of the Lorraine Motel, it seems incredible
- that a contingent of police bodyguards assigned to King on his
- arrival should have been removed the day of the shooting,
- apparently without the knowledge of the police chief, Frank
- Holloman.
-
- Just two hours before the assassination the MPD's patrolling "TAC
- Units," each comprising three cars, were pulled back five blocks
- from the vicinity of the Lorraine Motel. Police chief Holloman
- claimed that he did not know of that decision until afterwards.
- Inspector Sam Evans, who was in charge of the units, denied that
- they were pulled back, even though it is now an acknowledged
- matter of public record. [18. This point of fact was established
- in the HSCA investigation. However, when interviewed in June
- 1989, Sam Evans continued to deny it.]
-
- Furthermore, immediately after the shooting, no "All Points
- Bulletin" was issued which might have ensured that the major
- escape routes out of Memphis were sealed. No satisfactory
- explanation has ever been provided for that failure.
-
- In another bizarre incident, on the day of the assassination, an
- erroneous message was delivered by a Secret Service agent to the
- Memphis Police headquarters stating that there had been a death
- threat against a black police detective. The detective, Ed
- Redditt, was stationed at a surveillance post next to the
- Lorraine Motel. Shortly after the first message, a corrected
- message arrived saying that the threat was a hoax but the police
- intelligence officer who received it nevertheless, went to where
- Detective Redditt was stationed and ordered him to go home. This
- was two hours before the assassination. Why did the intelligence
- officer send Redditt home even though he knew the threat to be
- false? When we approached the officer, who has now left the
- police force, he refused to be interviewed. [19. See G. Frank,
- {An American Death} (New York: Doubleday, 1972).]
-
- Some of these circumstances are explained by the police as a
- series of coincidences, errors, and oversights. Some are not
- explained at all. While the HSCA's final report fell short of
- accusing the police of complicity in the assassination, it
- lambasted the Memphis Police Department for incompetence and
- latent racism.
-
- Perhaps the HSCA's final conclusion would have been different if
- it had obtained undoctored intelligence reports from the Memphis
- Police Department. While doing research for his book "The Murkin
- Conspiracy," Philip Melanson, obtained an MPD intelligence report
- regarding the King assassination. When he compared it to the same
- report published by the HSCA, he found that all the footnotes and
- most of the references to undercover police agents in Memphis had
- been deleted from the HSCA version. Numerous paragraphs were
- missing and certain sentences were rewritten to play up the
- violent nature of Memphis civil rights activists and strikers.
- [20. {Op. cit.}, n. 4, p. 80.] Why didn't the HSCA get the
- originals? When confronted with this discrepancy, Representative
- Louis Stokes (Dem.-Ohio), the former Chair of the HSCA, admitted
- that he did not know that the Memphis Police Department had
- provided the Committee with altered documents. [21. Interview
- with Representative Louis Stokes, Washington, D.C., June 1989.]
-
-
- The Role of the FBI
-
- It is also enlightening to look at FBI actions both prior to and
- after the King assassination. Former Atlanta FBI agent Arthur
- Murtagh has given some indication of the prevailing mood at the
- Bureau in King's home city.
-
- Murtagh related in an interview that "Me and a colleague were
- checking out for the day when the news came over the radio that
- Dr. King had been shot. My colleague leapt up, clapped his hands
- and said `Goddamn, we got him! We finally got him.'" When asked
- if he was sure of this statement Murtagh was adamant that his
- colleague said "we," not "they." [22. Interview with Arthur
- Murtagh, June 1989.]
-
- For years, through its COINTELPRO operations, the FBI had been
- spying on, bugging, falsifying letters, and sowing discontent
- among the leadership of the SCLC in an attempt to discredit and
- "neutralize" Dr. King. [23. See Garrow, {op. cit.}, n. 17; also
- see HSCA report.]
-
- Suddenly, after the King assassination, the FBI began what was
- called the greatest, most expensive inquiry in Bureau history -
- the hunt for King's killer. All the technical and human resources
- of Hoover's FBI focused on the bundle of evidence conveniently
- left at the crime scene - a bundle which only pointed to one man
- - Eric Galt, a.k.a. John Willard, a.k.a. Paul Bridgman, a.k.a.
- George Sneyd, whose real name is James Earl Ray. At the same
- time, white racist groups braced themselves for an FBI assault,
- but to their astonishment no one asked them any questions. "It
- was strange," recalled white supremacist J.B. Stoner, "[It was]
- almost as if they knew they didn't have to look this way." [24.
- Interview with J.B. Stoner, Atlanta Georgia, April 1989.]
-
- The HSCA, like the Justice Department which had already conducted
- an investigation into the FBI's handling of the King
- assassination, found no evidence of a coverup. In the end, the
- Committee did conclude that the Bureau had contributed to a moral
- climate conducive to the murder of Dr. King, but it stopped short
- of accusing the Bureau of actual involvement in the killing. [25.
- {Op. cit.}, n. 14.]
-
- Evidence nonetheless exists suggesting that elements within the
- FBI may have played a significant role in the political
- assassination. Consider, for instance, Myron Billett's story.
-
- In early 1968, Myron Billett was the trusted chauffeur of Mafia
- chief Sam Giancana. Giancana asked Billett to drive him, and
- fellow mobster Carlos Gambino, to a meeting at a motel in upstate
- New York. Other major Mafia figures from New York were there as
- well as three men who were introduced as representatives from the
- CIA and FBI. There were a number of subjects on the agenda,
- including Castro's Cuba. [26. Interview with Myron Billett,
- Columbus Ohio, June 1989.]
-
- According to Billett, one of the government agents offered the
- mobsters a million dollars for the assassination of Martin Luther
- King Jr. Billett stated that Sam Giancana replied, "Hell no, not
- after you screwed up the Kennedy deal like that." As far as
- Billett knows, no one took up the offer.
-
- Billett relayed this information in an interview conducted just
- weeks before he died of emphysema. Given his condition, there
- appears to be no particular reason for him to lie. While his
- allegations are mentioned in the HSCA's final report, it makes no
- judgement as to their validity - the HSCA report simply states
- that is was unable to corroborate his story.
-
- There is another instance in which FBI agents were heard
- discussing bounties and the recruitment of professionals to kill
- King. In September 1965, Clifton Baird, a Louisville, Kentucky
- policeman was informed by fellow officer Arlie Blair of a
- $500,000 offer to kill Dr. King. Louisville was the home of
- King's brother, the Reverend A.D. King. Baird said he overheard
- other police officers and several FBI officers discussing the
- contract. The next day, Baird tape-recorded Blair referring to
- the contract again. Later, the HSCA heard the tape and verified
- its authenticity. [27. {Op. cit.}, n. 14.]
-
- FBI agent William Duncan, liaison with the Louisville Police,
- admitted that the discussion had taken place and named two other
- agents who would confirm it. But he also claimed the offer was
- initiated as a joke by police Sergeant William Baker. Both of the
- other FBI agents denied any knowledge of the conversation and
- Baker had died. The HSCA ran out of leads. [28. {Ibid.}]
-
- There are also witnesses afraid to discuss what really happened
- on the day of the assassination due to continuing harassment and
- intimidation. For example, ever since a black Tennessee grocery
- store owner named John McFerren first told his story, he has been
- threatened, burgled, beaten up, and shot at. Now he is very
- reluctant to tell it again.
-
- On the afternoon of the assassination, McFerren was at a Memphis
- produce store when he overheard the store's manager say on the
- phone "Get him on the balcony, you can pick up the money from my
- brother in New Orleans and don't call me here again." The man on
- the phone was Frank Liberto. His brother, Sal, who lived in New
- Orleans, was associated with Mafia kingpin Carlos Marcello. As
- incredible as it seems, the FBI did not pursue McFerren's
- allegation after they initially questioned Liberto and he denied
- it. [29. Interview with John McFerren, Memphis, Tennessee, June
- 1989. It should be noted that because McFerren is terrified of
- retribution, he refuses to be interviewed on camera.]
-
- These connections, and other evidence that members of the Mob
- were involved in the assassination, were discovered by
- investigative reporter Bill Sartor. While doing research for a
- book, Sartor had gone undercover and infiltrated the peripheries
- of both the Memphis and the New Orleans Mafia. Sartor died
- mysteriously in Texas as he was completing his first draft and
- two autopsies failed to reveal the cause of death.
-
- There are other Memphis locals, particularly in the vicinity of
- the Lorraine Motel and Jim's Grill, who are still afraid to talk
- or who have suddenly changed their original stories. At least one
- of them is still visited from time to time by a man reminding him
- to stay silent. There is also the allegation that someone posing
- as an advance security person appeared at the Lorraine Motel two
- days before the assassination and ordered Dr. King's room changed
- from the ground floor to the first. Finally there was the known
- presence in Memphis on the day of the assassination as well as a
- week after, of a notorious anti-Castro mercenary and CIA contract
- employee. Years later, when questioned about why he was in
- Memphis on the day of the assassination, he admitted "it was my
- business to be there."
-
-
- The CIA and False Identities
-
- It is not disputed that the CIA took a very active interest in
- Martin Luther King Jr. Documents released under the Freedom of
- Information Act reveal an extensive and ongoing CIA scrutiny of
- the thoughts, actions, and associates of the civil rights leader
- throughout the 1960s. One of those reporting back to the CIA was
- Jay R. Kennedy, a writer and broadcaster prominent in the civil
- rights movement. Kennedy fervently believed that King's
- opposition to the war in Vietnam was orchestrated by Peking-line
- communist agents.
-
- There are other compelling questions about the complicity of the
- CIA in the King assassination. For example, although James Earl
- Ray never visited Toronto before April 1968, he used four
- identities belonging to individuals living within a few miles of
- each other in that city. Each of the four bears a rough physical
- resemblance to Ray. Of these the most elaborate alias was that of
- Eric Galt, a name Ray used extensively through the period before
- the assassination. Only on April 4th, the day of the
- assassination, did he abandon Galt's name and begin to use the
- other three. [30. Interview with Ray, {op. cit.}, n. 9.]
-
- The Galt alias was not merely the result of a fraudulently
- obtained birth certificate - it was the wholesale usurping of the
- real Eric Galt's history and physical identity. Evidence shows
- that James Earl Ray had travelled in the same U.S. cities as the
- Canadian Eric Galt, had access to Galt's signature, and even
- inquired into emigrating to southern Africa - a place where Eric
- Galt had relatives. [31. See William Bradford Huie, {He Slew the
- Dragon} (New York: Delacorte Press, 1970).] Moreover Ray has
- scars on his forehead and his hand, as does the real Eric Galt.
- Two months before the assassination Ray had plastic surgery on
- his nose. Galt revealed that he, too, had had plastic surgery on
- his nose.
-
- Eric Galt is, moreover, an expert marksman.
-
- The question arises: How could Ray or his co-conspirators acquire
- such a detailed profile of this alter ego? According to Eric
- Galt, there is only one place where all the pertinent information
- is collected together - his highly classified security clearance
- file in the Union Carbide factory in Toronto, where, in the mid-
- 1960s, he was working on a top secret U.S. defense project. [32.
- Interview with Eric Galt, Toronto Canada, June 1989.]
-
- Fletcher Prouty, a former Pentagon colonel and author of "The
- Secret Team," was responsible for providing military support for
- CIA covert operations in the early 1960s. Prouty finds these
- revelations highly significant: [33. Interview with Fletcher
- Prouty, Alexandria, Va, June 1989.] "The Royal Canadian Mounted
- Police (RCMP) [which at that time included the Canadian
- equivalent of the CIA] would have compiled this file and besides
- them and Union Carbide, the only people with access to it would
- have been U.S. intelligence."
-
- The question of how Ray came to acquire these identities provided
- the original link to Jules Ron Kimble, the man who has confessed
- to us that he aided Ray in the assassination.
-
-
- Who is Raoul?
-
- Ray claims that the mysterious "Raoul" hired him to carry out
- assignments in Montreal in late July 1967. This sparked an
- interest in {Toronto Star} reporter Andre Salwyn, who sought
- corroboration to this claim after Ray's arrest. Salwyn conducted
- an exhaustive search of the neighborhood in which Ray had
- allegedly been seen drinking with an American stranger. He found
- that there had indeed been a man with similar characteristics to
- Ray's description of Raoul living there at different times during
- the previous year. He was known as Jules "Ricco" Kimble and was
- said by his girlfriend to have had a car with rifles in the trunk
- and a radio tuned into the police band. Salwyn checked phone
- records and discovered that Kimble regularly contacted numbers in
- New Orleans. [34. Salwyn testified before the House Select
- Committee on Assassinations; see also, Melanson, {op. cit.}, n.
- 4, p. 44.]
-
- But the phone numbers disappeared, and Salwyn was never allowed
- to pursue the story. The HSCA did manage to come across Kimble
- ten years later and they investigated. They found an FBI file on
- him; and a CIA file; and an RCMP file.
-
- Joe Oster, a Louisiana state investigator, conducted extensive
- surveillance of Kimble in 1967, and claims that there is a week
- in July 1967 when nobody can account for Kimble's whereabouts.
- [35. {Op. cit.}, n. 6.] This is the period in which Ray claims to
- have met "Raoul" in Montreal.
-
- When interviewed in 1967, Kimble claimed to have been a low-level
- CIA courier and pilot. [36. Statement to Garrison, {op. cit.}, n.
- 7.] When we talked to him from prison, Kimble confirmed that he
- had worked for the CIA as well as organized crime and also made
- the following allegations: [37. {Op. cit.}, n. 1.]
-
- + He claims that the HSCA did know all about his role in the
- assassination (more even than he could remember), producing
- documents, photographs, and files which proved his association
- with James Earl Ray, an association he then admitted. However,
- all files relating to the HSCA investigation have been sealed for
- 50 years.
-
- + Kimble also stated that on the orders of a Louisiana FBI agent,
- he flew James Earl Ray from Atlanta to Montreal in July 1967
- where Ray was provided with an identities package by a CIA
- specialist in Mont Royal, Montreal. An ex-CIA agent with
- knowledge of Agency operations in Canada in the 1960s recently
- confirmed in an off-the-record interview that there was an Agency
- "asset" specializing in "identities" in Montreal in 1967. His
- name was Raoul Maora.
-
- + Kimble said that he then accompanied Ray to a CIA training camp
- in Three Rivers, Canada where Ray was taught to shoot. It was
- there that the two men were seen together by Kimble's former
- girlfriend.
-
- + At the same time, an assassination team was assembled to kill
- King. Kimble claims that he flew two snipers into Memphis using a
- West Memphis airfield belonging to a CIA front company. He said
- that the only involvement that Ray had in the assassination was
- to serve as a decoy.
-
- + Finally, Jules Kimble stated that elements of the Memphis
- Police Department did cooperate in the assassination but that the
- actual operation was coordinated by a high-ranking intelligence
- official based in Atlanta.
-
- What is the validity of Kimble's assertions? The evidence
- presented here, and the many questions it raises, suggests one
- thing: Those responsible for the murder of Martin Luther King Jr.
- have yet to be caught and convicted of this political
- assassination. There is strong evidence that shows agents within
- the U.S. intelligence apparatus could have played a major role in
- King's murder. If that is the case, then the U.S. government
- could be guilty of not only covering up details of the
- assassination, but of the murder itself. The only way to answer
- these questions is through a complete and thorough investigation.
- The documents from the HSCA should be unsealed and a new probe
- begun. It is long past time for that to happen.
-
- ----End of article-----------------------------------------------
-
- Don
-
-
- --
- -* Don Allen *- InterNet: dona@bilver.UUCP // Amiga..for the best of us.
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