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- (Part 1 - The first Ricky White News Story)
-
- NOV. 22, 1963: ANOTHER STORY BLURS THE FACTS
-
- SON OF DALLAS COP SAYS DAD WAS 1 OF 3 WHO SHOT KENNEDY
-
- By Andrew Likakis
-
- In another bizarre twist to a mystery that has haunted Americans
- for more than a quarter century, the son of a former Dallas police
- officer plans to tell the world that his father was one of
- the assassins of President John F. Kennedy.
-
- Ricky White, a 29-year-old, unemployed oil equipment salesman in
- Midland, says he "had no conception of ever, ever giving this story
- out" but decided to do so after FBI agents began asking questions
- in May 1988.
-
- "I'm telling you a story that has touched me, not only others, and
- I feel uncomfortable just telling it to strangers," White said
- during a recent interview with the Austin American-Statesman.
-
- Monday in Dallas, White is scheduled to show reports material
- implicating his father, Roscoe Anthony White, in the 1963
- assassination. It suggests that White, who died in 1971, was a
- member of an assassination team of three shooters, that he fired
- two of the three bullets that killed the president, and that he
- also killed Dallas police officer J. D. Tippit during the manhunt
- for Lee Harvey Oswald.
-
- Among the material: a rifle with telescopic sight that uses the
- same kind of ammunition as Oswald's gun; records showing that
- Oswald and White served together in the Marines; three faded
- messages that appear to be decoded orders to kill someone in Dallas
- in November 1963; and a son's recollections of his father's
- incriminating diary - a document that is missing.
-
- The press conference is being sponsored by two private groups - the
- JFK Assassination Information Centre of Dallas and the
- Assassination Archives and Research Centre of Washington - and some
- Midland Businessmen.
-
- The possibility of Ricky White's story being a hoax - a falsehood
- concocted either by Ricky or his father - has not been dismissed by
- the people urging him to publicly talk about the matter. During
- the last 27 years, many private researchers have claimed to have
- found evidence of a conspiracy, only to be proved wrong or
- deceitful.
-
- Bernard Fensterwald, executive director of the Assassination
- Archives and Research Centre, says if there was a conspiracy, Ricky
- White may have the key. "I think it's our best shot," he says,
- "and we better take it."
-
- J. Gary Shaw, co-director of the JFK Assassination Information
- Centre, says he hopes White's story will result in an investigation
- of the assassination by Texas authorities. Two Washington-based
- probes - the Warren Commission in 1963-64 and the House Select
- Committee on Assassinations in 1976-78 failed to resolve the enigma
- of the Kennedy shooting, Shaw maintains.
-
- As with previous conspiracy theories, White's story is tantalizing,
- the evidence intriguing. Yet, as with other theories, it raises
- more questions than it answers -- such as: Who issued the orders
- to the so-called assassination team? Why was the assassination
- ordered against Kennedy? And why is Ricky White telling this story
- now?
-
- AN OSWALD CONNECTION
-
- Using clues discovered in his father's effects and relying on
- available government records, Ricky White says he has determined
- that Roscoe White and Lee Harvey Oswald probably met in 1957.
- Ricky White's mother, Geneva, is gravely ill and unable to be
- interviewed, family members say.
-
- According to Military records, both White and Oswald were among a
- contingent of U.S. Marines, who boarded the USS Bexar in San Diego
- that year for the 22-day trip to Yokosuka, Japan.
-
- In its final report, the Warren Commission published a photo of
- Oswald with other Marines in the Philippines. All but one of the
- Marines was squatting on the ground. Ricky White says his father
- claimed to have been the standing Marine and claimed to have become
- acquainted with Oswald in Japan and the Philippines.
-
- Military records show that Roscoe White took frequent unexplained
- trips in the Pacific, and Ricky White says that his father's diary
- described those as secret intelligence assignments.
-
- It has been established in previous investigations that Oswald was
- discharged in 1959 and defected to the Soviet Union. He returned
- to the United States in mid-1962, settling first in Fort Worth
- with his Russian-born wife, then moving to Dallas a short time
- later.
-
- Military records show Roscoe White was discharged in late 1962,
- joining his wife and two young sons in Paris, Texas. Ricky White
- says that shortly thereafter, his father moved the family to Dallas
- and took a job as an insurance salesman.
-
- MAN WITH TWO NAMES
-
- Ricky White says that two months ago he found several faded
- messages in a military weapons canister in the attic of Geneva
- White's parents home in Paris. Ricky believes the messages to be
- decoded cables in which Mandarin, a name he says his father was
- known by, was told his next assignment would be "to eliminate a
- National Security threat to worldwide peace" in Houston, Austin, or
- Dallas.
-
- Another message from the same source - "C. Bowers" of "Navy
- Intelligence" - identified Dallas as the destination and provided
- White with a list of contacts. It stated White had a "place hidden
- within the department." The message was dated September 1963 - the
- same month that Geneva White began a brief stint as a cocktail
- hostess at Jack Ruby's Carousel Club in Dallas. Ruby fatally shot
- Oswald two days after the Kennedy assassination.
-
- Dallas police records show that on Oct. 7, 1963, Roscoe White
- joined the department as a photographer and clerk. He did not
- become a patrol officer until 1964. A staff member in the police
- personnel department said recently that White's file contains no
- job references.
-
- Ricky White says his father's diary referred to several trips made
- during this period to a remote area in the foothills near Van Horn,
- Texas. There, Roscoe White and several others practised shooting
- at moving targets, Ricky White says. Although he was younger than
- 3 years old, Ricky White says he has vague memories of being taken
- to Van Horn.
-
- "My impression was they (others at the Van Horn camp) had been
- working with my father in the military," Ricky White says, "because
- they had known each other well when this took place."
-
- A FOOTLOCKER AND DIARY
-
- Ricky White says that, after his grandfather died in 1982, he was
- given his father's footlocker, which had been stored in the
- grandfather's house in Paris.
-
- The locker contained military memorabilia, a Marine uniform, a safe
- deposit box key and a black leather-bound diary with gold trim that
- detailed Roscoe White's life.
-
- As he and his mother read the diary, Ricky White says they found
- passages that implicated Roscoe White in the Kennedy assassination.
-
- "My mother and I cried together," he says, "because it hurt very
- deeply to learn what I know now. It hurt so much because the man I
- had known couldn't have fired those shots. It took this
- investigation to be able to learn it's true. And my family's given
- a part of themselves to tell the story."
-
- From the diary he says he learned the significance of the hunting
- rifle his father gave him: a 7.65mm Mauser with telescopic sight,
- an Argentine rifle that shoots round-nose, elongated bullets -
- projectiles that closely resemble those of a Mannlicher-Carcano, an
- Italian rifle that Oswald was accused of using.
-
- After reading the diary, White says he was convinced his father was
- one of three assassins who fired six shots from Mauser rifles into
- the president's open top limousine in Dealey Plaza.
-
- Roscoe White shot from behind a fence atop a grassy knoll to the
- right and front of the limousine, his son says. Two other marksmen
- were in the Texas School Book Depository and Records buildings
- behind the vehicle.
-
- Three shots struck Kennedy; a fourth wounded Texas Gov. John
- Connally.
-
- Ricky White says the two shots that his father fired both struck
- Kennedy: the first in the throat; the second, and last of the
- shots fired, in the head.
-
- Oswald, Ricky White says, knew of the plot, but did not fire a
- shot. He had been instructed to bring his rifle to the Book
- Depository, where he worked, and to build a sniper's nest of book
- boxes near the sixth floor window, from which he was accused of
- firing all the fatal shots, Ricky White says.
-
- Ricky White says the diary referred to the other shooters only by
- code names: Sol in the Records building; and Lebanon in the Texas
- School Book Depository. The diary indicated each of the three
- riflemen was accompanied by an assistant who disassembled the
- rifles after the shooting and carried them out of the area, Ricky
- White says.
-
- According to the diary, Ricky White says, his father was to escape
- with Oswald by riding to Red Bird Airport in South Dallas in a city
- police car driven by a friend and fellow officer who did not know
- what was happening. That officer, Ricky White says, was J. D.
- Tippit, who was shot to death at 10th Street and Patton Avenue in
- the Oak Cliff section of Dallas about 45 minutes after Kennedy was
- shot. Oswald was seen running from the scene of that shooting.
-
- Ricky White says his father wrote that, as they drove south, the
- unsuspecting officer began to realize what White and Oswald were
- involved in. Oswald panicked and jumped from the car. When the
- officer insisted on "turning in" White, White got out of the car
- and shot the officer, Ricky White says.
-
- "I killed an officer at 10th and Patton," Ricky White quotes the
- diary as saying.
-
- Less than a half hour later, Oswald was arrested in the Texas
- Theatre on West Jefferson Boulevard in Oak Cliff. He had a .38-
- calibre revolver police said was the murder weapon. Murder charges
- against Oswald in connection with Tippit's death were filed before
- he was charged with Kennedy's death. Whether the revolver found in
- Oswald's possession was actually the weapon that killed Tippit has
- been a matter of dispute in several government investigations.
-
- Ricky White says that shortly after the assassination, his father
- sent the family to Paris and that he and other members of the
- assassination team used a "hideaway house" in Dripping Springs.
-
- He says that, among his father's effects, he found a third decoded
- message, dated December 1963, that advised his father to "stay
- within department, witnesses have eyes, ears and mouths....The men+will be in to
- cover up all misleading evidence soon."
-
- That same month President Lyndon Johnson named Chief Justice Earl
- Warren to head a commission to investigate the assassination. The
- Warren Commission concluded in September 1964 that Oswald acted
- alone in killing both Kennedy and Tippit.
-
- Police records show that on Oct. 19, 1965, Roscoe White quit the
- Dallas Police Department and became manager of a Dallas area drug
- store. During the next six years, he switched jobs several times,
- finally working as a foreman at M&M Equipment Co., in East Dallas.
-
- FAMILY TROUBLE AND DEATH
-
- By early 1970, Roscoe and Geneva White were a deeply troubled
- couple and sought help, said the Rev. Jack Shaw, their Baptist
- minister in Dallas.
-
- During a recent interview with the American-Statesman, Shaw said
- Roscoe White told him at the time that he and his family were "in
- danger." White confessed to leading "a double life," the minister
- says, "and I knew something was not right, something strange was
- going on."
-
- Shaw says that within the last two years he tape recorded a number
- of counselling sessions with Geneva White about her recollection of
- what she believed to be her former husband's role in
- assassinations. Shaw, who is very guarded in talking about the
- case, says Ricky White has only a small portion of the full story,
- which he says "will knock your eyes out."
-
- Shaw says he met with the Whites several times in 1970-71, but the
- Kennedy assassination was not mentioned. In 1971, Roscoe White was
- fatally injured in an explosive fire at M&M Equipment. Before
- White died, Shaw talked with him in the hospital. He recalls White
- saying he didn't think the fire was an accident - that he had seen
- a man running away just before the fire.
-
- After the funeral, Geneva White moved her family back to Paris.
- There, about four years later, the White home was burglarized and
- some of Roscoe White's personal possessions were taken, Ricky White
- says.
-
- Police captured the two burglars and returned the possessions which
- included some of Roscoe White's photos - among them a shot taken by
- Marina Oswald of her husband Lee Harvey Oswald holding a rifle in
- the back yard of their Dallas home in 1963.
- For nearly 15 years after the assassination only two such photos
- were known. Roscoe White's became the third. In its final report,
- the House Special Committee on Assassinations identified the photo
- as coming from the family of a former Dallas policeman. According
- to Ricky White and an investigator for the House committee, Geneva
- White had contacted the FBI after the burglary. The FBI informed
- the committee of the existence of the photo. The matter was not
- pursued because committee investigators didn't know about White's
- past relationship with Oswald or Geneva White's brief employment at
- Jack Ruby's Carousel Club.
-
- OTHERS FIND OUT
-
- Until he discovered the footlocker, Ricky White says he didn't
- think much about his father or the Kennedy assassination. He grew
- up in Dallas and Paris, where he went to school, got married and
- moved to Midland where he and his wife have two children. There he
- took a job selling oil field equipment.
-
- As shocking as the diary was to Ricky White and his mother, Ricky
- says it was the safe deposit box key that was to draw others into
- the Roscoe White story.
-
- Thinking his father might have left money or valuables in a deposit
- box, Ricky White tried to find a bank that would recognize the key.
- By 1988 he was so frustrated in his attempts that he turned to
- Midland District Attorney Al Schorre for help.
-
- Schorre says he and his chief investigator, J. D. Lucky, failed to
- find the bank.
-
- Schorre and Lucky say they repeatedly asked to see Roscoe White's
- diary after Ricky White mentioned it, but that he told them a
- relative in the Lubbock area had it. Ricky White says he may have
- told Schorre the diary was somewhere else but that he had always
- kept it in his possession.
-
- Finally, Schorre, who lacked authority to demand the diary, called
- the FBI.
-
- Ricky White says three agents came to his house and asked him to
- answer questions in their Midland office. He says he took his
- father's effects with him and the FBI made copies of all the items
- except the diary. He says after several hours of questioning he
- returned home with all his father's effects.
-
- Later that same day, White says, FBI agent Tom Farris came to his
- house to retrieve a notebook he had inadvertently left in the box
- of Roscoe White's effects. White says he became aware that the
- diary was missing three or four days later.
-
- "I never said that the (FBI agents) took it," he says. "I am just
- saying he was the last one to leave that box."
- Agent Farris, who is in the Midland FBI office, transferred
- inquiries about the diary to his supervisor, Tom Kirspel. Kirspel
- would neither confirm nor deny that the agents had seen a diary.
-
- White says he never asked the FBI if it had the missing diary
- because he was "scared" of the agents who called at his house. "I
- don't want to have anything to do with the FBI," he says.
-
- Ricky White says FBI agent Ron Butler told him in 1988 that the FBI
- had determined that Roscoe White was at a crime scene in far
- Northeast Dallas at the time Kennedy was shot. Butler declined to
- comment on any conversations with Ricky White.
-
- QUESTION OF AUTHENTICITY
-
- Shaw, the director of the JFK Assassination Information Centre in
- Dallas, says Ricky White has passed both a polygraph test and a
- voice stress analysis and passed both tests "with flying colours."
-
- However, the authenticity of the messages Ricky White says he found
- is undetermined.
-
- Office of Naval Intelligence spokesman John Wanat says the agency
- cannot determine whether the messages came from authentic ONI
- cables without the coded cables.
-
- "What they have there is really nothing that we can narrow down as
- far as who may have generated it or if it's legitimate or whether
- it's something that was fabricated," Wanat said after viewing texts
- of the messages.
-
- John Stockwell, former chief of the Central Intelligence Agency's
- Angola Task Force in Washington, D.C. has seen the messages and
- sees a "90 to 95 percent probability" that they are genuine.
- However, he says he cannot discount the possibility the messages
- are part of "an elaborate hoax."
-
- "I've measured it against my own readings and consultations with
- researchers of the Kennedy thing," says Stockwell, who ended a 12-
- year CIA career in 1976 after being accused of violating his
- secrecy agreement with the agency. "I can't see anything in what
- they have found and what the young man (Ricky White) is saying that
- is implausible in terms of what our best knowledge of the
- assassination is now. It all could very well be true, and I would
- put it at a high probability that it is true."
-
- Bob Inman vehemently disagrees. After reading copies of the text,
- Inman, former naval intelligence director (1974-76) and CIA deputy
- director (1981-82), says the messages were not ONI- generated.
- None of the three-digit code names in the heading of the messages
- means anything, he says.
-
- "My reaction is that it's a forgery of some kind or invalid," Inman
- says. "There is not anything about this format that I have ever
- seen before. That's not the way messages were set up in those days
- at all."
- Less is known about what Ricky White says is a witness elimination
- list that he found in the canister. Ricky White says there were 28
- witnesses on the list, news clippings of each victim and
- accompanied in some cases by his father's writing.
-
- "Ricky White's story is no less logical than what we have been led
- to believe in 27 years." says Fensterwald. "If just anyone came
- out of the woodwork and said, 'I shot John Kennedy,' I would be
- exceedingly cautious about it. But if someone who was in the
- Marine Corps with Oswald, whose wife worked for Jack Ruby and who
- knew the Tippit family, crawls out of the woodwork and says I was
- involved in it, that doesn't stretch my credulity at all.
-
- "It does, however, need a lot more investigation by some official
- body with power to subpoena witnesses. I don't think private
- citizens can carry it much further."
-
- PREVIOUS INQUIRIES ON ASSASSINATION
-
- The assassination of President John F. Kennedy on Nov. 22, 1963, in
- Dallas was investigated by two government bodies:
-
- The Warren Commission, headed by Chief Justice Earl Warren,
- concluded after a nine-month investigation in 1964 that Lee Harvey
- Oswald, acting alone, fired two shots from the sixth floor of the
- Texas School Book Depository, killing President John F. Kennedy
- and wounding Texas Gov. John Connally.
-
- The report conclusions left many skeptics. Since bullets passed
- through the victims and shattered, investigators were not able to
- match the rifling on the bullets to the marks that would have been
- caused by Oswald's rifle.
-
- After a three-year investigation, the House Select Committee on
- Assassinations concluded in early 1979 that Oswald fired two shots
- that killed Kennedy and wounded Connally. Scientific acoustical
- evidence indicated a "high probability" that an unidentified second
- gunman was firing from the grassy knoll to the front and right of
- the presidential limousine, but missed.
-
- TEXT OF NAVY CABLES
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------
- Navy Int.
- Code A MRC
- Remark data
- 1666106
- NRC VDC NAC
- Dec. 63
- Remarks Mandarin: Code G:
-
- Stay within department, witnesses have eyes, ears and mouths. You
- (illegible) do of the mix up. The men will be in to cover up all
- misleading evidence soon. Stay as planned wait for further orders.
- C. Bowers
-
- RE - rifle Code AAA destroy/on/
- ------------------------------------------------------------------
- Navy Int.
- Code A MRC
- Remark data
- 1666106
- NRC VDC NAC
- (illegible). 63
-
- Remarks Mandarin: Code A
-
- Foreign affairs assignments have been cancelled. The next assignment
- is to eliminate a National Security threat to world wide peace. Destination
- will be Houston, Austin or Dallas. Contacts are being arranged now. Orders
- are subject to change at any time. Reply back if not understood.
-
- C. Bowers
- OSHA
-
- RE - rifle Code AAA destroy/on/
- ------------------------------------------------------------------
- Navy Int.
- Code A MRC
- Remark data
- 1666106
- Sept. 63
-
- Remarks Mandarin: Code A
-
- Dallas destination chosen. Your place hidden within the department.
- Contacts are within this letter. Continue on as planned.
-
- C. Bowers
- OSHA
-
- RE - rifle Code AAA destroy/on/
- ------------------------------------------------------------------
- (Part 2 - The post-press conference follow-up story)
-
- August 7, 1990
-
- DALLAS COP'S SON ROLLS OUT JFK THEORY
- MATTOX, CIA, HOLLYWOOD ANSWER CONSPIRACY CLAIM
-
- By Andrew Likakis
-
- The Texas attorney general, a major Hollywood producer and the
- Central Intelligence Agency are now being written into the newest
- chapter in the never-ending mystery of who assassinated President
- John F. Kennedy.
-
- A 29-year-old unemployed oil equipment salesman from Midland stood
- before scores of reporters in Dallas Monday and implicated his dead
- father in the assassination. Soon after, Attorney General Jim
- Mattox said he'd gladly review the evidence, and the CIA issued an
- unheard of denial.
-
- At the same time, the FBI, which had previously refused to comment
- on Ricky White's story, issued a statement in Washington saying
- agents had reviewed and dismissed White's story two years ago.
-
- And, finally, those who believe White's story is true acknowledge
- that last weekend, several of them met in Hollywood with
- producer/director Oliver Stone, presumably to discuss movie rights
- to the White story.
-
- The latest chapter in the Kennedy epic began at a two-hour press
- conference in which White said his father, Roscoe Anthony White,
- joined the Dallas Police Department in October 1963 with the
- express intent of killing Kennedy.
-
- During the press conference called by two assassination research
- groups and several Midland businessmen, White and Baptist minister
- Jack Shaw talked about incriminating entries in Roscoe White's
- missing diary, decoded cables, and the relationship that Roscoe
- White and his wife, Geneva, had with Lee Harvey Oswald, Dallas
- Officer J. D. Tippit and Jack Ruby.
-
- Based on his own memories, his father's diary and effects, and the
- recollections of his mother, Ricky White told reporters that his
- father had been one of three shooters on the day Kennedy was
- assassinated in Dallas.
-
- Although Officer Tippit was a friend of his father's, Ricky White
- says his father shot Tippit to death in the Oak Cliff section of
- Dallas about 45 minutes after the assassination, as he and Oswald
- were trying to get away. Oswald was later accused of killing
- Tippit.
-
- During the press conference, White said his father was following
- orders to kill Kennedy and that, while he did not know who issued
- the orders, three messages found among his father's effects have
- coding that might have come from the Office of Naval Intelligence
- or, indirectly, the CIA.
-
- CIA RESPONSE: 'LUDICROUS'
-
- The suggestion of CIA involvement brought a sharp response Monday
- from agency spokesman Mark Mansfield in Washington: "These
- allegations - that this was done on CIA orders, that this guy
- worked for us and that CIA had any role in the assassination of
- President Kennedy - are ludicrous."
-
- Roscoe White never worked for the CIA, Mansfield said, adding:
-
- "normally, we never confirm nor deny employment, but these
- allegations are so outrageous that we felt it necessary and
- appropriate to respond."
-
- Also Monday, the FBI issued a statement saying its agents had
- considered the Ricky White story in 1988 and had "determined that
- this information is not credible."
-
- Bernard Fensterwald, executive director of the Assassination
- Archives and Research Centre in Washington, said Monday that Mattox
- will be given all material that points toward Roscoe White's
- involvement in the assassination.
-
- RUBY, OSWALD MEETING
-
- In another curious twist to the case, Mattox said late Monday he is interested
- in pursing the White story because he was once told by
- his mother, a waitress at Campisi's Egyptian Restaurant in Dallas,
- that Ruby frequented the restaurant and that she thought she saw
- Ruby and Oswald eating dinner there together once.
-
- The restaurant owner, the late Joe Campisi, testified before the
- House Select Committee on Assassinations in 1978 that he didn't see
- Oswald in his eatery, Mattox said.
-
- Mattox said he believes he has jurisdiction in the case, and he
- would interview White and his associates "to see what they've got
- and let them explain it to me."
-
- "The key to the thing, of course, is, if the FBI acknowledges
- seeing the diary," Mattox said. "The only thing to do is to get a
- look at the diary or acknowledgement (by the FBI) that it existed."
-
- "This is not a solution to the John Kennedy case," Fensterwald said
- after Ricky White told his story. "It's information we think is
- important, and we think it's true. Even if what is said here today
- checks out, the case is not solved. We still don't know who
- planned it and paid for it and basically what the shooting was
- about. The best we can hope for is to get out of this an idea of
- who the actual assassins were."
-
- It may be difficult for Mattox or anybody else to do much with the
- case without the Roscoe White diary, which disappeared in 1988.
- The leather bound journal talked about the assassination and the
- aftermath, said Ricky White, adding that he and his mother read it.
-
- Roscoe White died of injuries sustained in an explosive fire in
- 1971. His widow, Geneva, is critically ill and, according to
- family members, unable to be interviewed.
-
- A 'SILENCED' WIFE
-
- According to the Rev. Shaw, Geneva White could help an
- investigation.
-
- Shaw says Roscoe and Geneva White confided in him in 1970-71 when
- they were having marital problems. And, he says, Geneva White
- confided in him again during the last year, telling him that she
- was working as a hostess in Ruby's Carousel Club when she overheard
- her husband and Ruby discussing "the entire plot of the
- assassination of the President two months before the shooting.
-
- After the assassination, Shaw says, Geneva White was given electric
- shock treatments and kept sedated so she "would be silenced." Ruby
- had told her "in no uncertain terms that if she opened her mouth
- she was dead and her children were dead," Shaw says Geneva White
- told him.
-
- Shaw says Geneva White told him she confronted her husband after an
- organized crime figure approached her in New Orleans in 1971 and
- told her to deliver a warning to her husband.
-
- According to Shaw, Geneva White was shown nearly a dozen
- photographs and identified the man in New Orleans as Charles
- Nicoletti, formerly the number one hitman with the Sam Giancana
- Mafia family in Chicago. Nicoletti was executed gangland style in
- 1977, about a year after Giancana also met the same fate.
-
- Shaw says that, when she returned to Dallas and told her husband of
- the ominous meeting in New Orleans, "he told her everything."
-
- Shaw says that, as he lay in a hospital dying from burns in 1971
- Roscoe White told him that he had been marked for execution by some
- of his underworld associates and that he believed the fire had been
- deliberately started to kill him.
-
- A HOLLYWOOD INTEREST
-
- Ricky White said Monday that, since he found his father's diary, he
- has been consumed full-time with trying to find out what role his
- father played in the assassination.
-
- He said that for more than a year he has received a "monthly
- salary" from the Matsu Corp., which was formed by seven Midland
- oilmen solely to help finance Ricky's investigation into his
- father's involvement in the assassination.
-
- Matsu president Gary Baily said Ricky began receiving financial
- help from Matsu on a "day-to-day basis" about six weeks ago after
- getting just expense funds for more than a year.
-
- Baily also said Ricky White is negotiating with Hollywood
- producer/director Oliver Stone for movie rights to his story. Last
- weekend, Ricky White, his wife and Larry Howard of the JFK
- Assassination Information Centre in Dallas met in the Los Angeles
- area with Oliver Stone and toured Universal Studios.
-
- "Oliver Stone is interested, but no deal has been made," Baily
- said.
- Matsu so far has spent more than $100,000 on the White project,
- Baily said. If any money is generated by the White story, about 74
- percent will go to Ricky White's family. The rest would go to the
- Matsu Corp., Baily said.
-