IT’S TIME FOR THE
TRUTH! THE JFK COVER-UP:
THE REAL CRIME OF THE
CENTURY (2012) by CHARLES E. HURLBURT
Rev. by Hugh Murray
Hurlburt
has written an “overview” of the Kennedy assassination case. His book is not based on new research, but he
has assembled and organized the research of many authors who have delved in the
topic. Hurlburt has deduced a reasonable
assessment of the entire case – the murder in Dealey Plaza, the autopsies, the
slaying of the accused, the investigation, and the “cover-ups.” With Hulbert’s numerous footnotes, he guides
the inquisitive reader to the sources of his assertions.
Hurlburt
does not pretend to hold all the answers to these crimes; indeed, he asserts
that some of the evidence is blatantly contradictory, so one will have to
arrive at the most probable conclusions from what we are provided. Unfortunately there is much that we still do
not know, for “the CIA is still refusing to release over a million records…until
at least 2017…”(p. 306) I do not accept
all of Hurlburt’s hypotheses. While he
rejects Kennedy’s throat wound as being the exit wound for a bullet fired at
the Texas School Book Depository (that in the Warren Report version then
travels to injure Gov. Connally in several spots), Hurlburt also rejects the notion
that the small throat wound in Kennedy was the result of a shot from the
front. Instead, Hurlburt argues that a
bullet from the back cracked Kennedy’s skull, and a small piece of bone might
have exited the throat. Hurlburt also
contends that there were seven shots in Dealey Plaza fired at the President
from different locations. Needless to
say, Hurlburt believes that the assassination was a conspiracy, and one that
reached high levels of government.
Yet,
Hurlburt’s short summary of so much material permits new questions to
rise. For example, he notes that when
Oswald was Marine stationed in Japan, he received medical treatment for VD,
which he contracted “in the line of duty, not due to in own misconduct.”(115) Was Oswald having sex with a suspected KGB
prostitute for the US Government? Was
Oswald and agent of the US Government?
Hurlburt
spend many pages on “a dirty rumor.”
Beginning in November 1963 rumors circulated that Oswald was employed by
the FBI, and possibly the CIA, even earning $200 a month from the
FBI.(75-76) Hurlburt quotes early Warren
Commission proceedings as to how they should tackle this “dirty” rumor, and how
to resolve the issue. After considerable
discussion, they basically asked FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover about
Oswald. Hoover denied Oswald was either an
agent or an informer. The Warren
Commission made no further investigation of the topic.
Yet, one of
the first actions by the FBI in November 1963 was to destroy evidence. Earlier that month Oswald had left a note at
the FBI office in Dallas for Agent Hosty.
Once Oswald was identified as the probable assassin, Hosty was order by
his FBI superior to destroy that note.
Hosty flushed it. In his own
book, former FBI Agent Don Adams reveals that his FBI reports of November 1963
were distorted to absolve other possible suspects, and aimed at fulfilling
Hoover’s view that Oswald was the lone, nut assassin. When Oswald was arrested for disturbing the
peace in downtown New Orleans in the summer of 1963 – the scuffle he had while
distributing pro-Castro leaflets with a group of anti-Castro Cubans – Oswald requested
to speak with an FBI agent. There seems
to be no notes of that conversation.
Were those notes ordered to be destroyed by FBI superiors, too?
Despite the
FBI’s distortion and destruction of evidence, the Warren Commission decided to
rely chiefly upon the FBI for its investigation into the Kennedy assassination.
Hurlburt
writes how the Establishment sought to smear and destroy those who questioned
the official conclusion that Oswald was a lone, nut assassin, who in turn was
slain by Jack Ruby who hoped to spare Mrs. Kennedy the trauma of a trial in
Dallas. To maintain the official line,
liberal icon, Earl Warren sought to prevent American publication of Mark Lane’s
Rush to Judgment, an early, powerful
critique of the Warren Commission’s conclusions.
Hurlburt
includes how Lyndon Johnson’s Attorney General, Ramsey Clark, sought to derail
the Jim Garrison investigation by appointing a small panel of pro-CIA doctors
to review the Kennedy autopsy photographs and x-rays and thereby prevent
Garrison from subpoenaing the records.
Unfortunately, Hurlburt does not include the statement Clark made soon
after Garrison arrested New Orleans businessman Clay Shaw in connection with a
conspiracy to kill Kennedy. On national
television, Clark declared that the federal government had looked into Shaw,
and he was not involved in any plot.
Garrison arrests Shaw for involvement; that week, the US Attorney
General declares Shaw innocent! But
Clark’s absolution raised other questions at the time. When was Shaw cleared? By whom?
Why was he investigated about this case?
Clark’s attempt to smother the Garrison investigation backfired in this particular
incident.
Hurlburt
may have been misled by a Garrison article stating his interest in the Kennedy
case was spurred by a conversation with Louisiana Sen. Russell Long. Garrison had acted much earlier. In November 1963 he had David Ferrie arrested
in connection with the murder, and then handed him over to the FBI. The FBI questioned Ferrie and had him
released. One wonders if those notes
were also destroyed.
Hurlburt is
far too harsh on New Orleans DA Jim Garrison, whose investigation brought up
for the first time Oswald’s visits to Clinton, Louisiana, his relation to Guy
Banister, David Ferrie, pro-Castro Cubans; and Garrison placed Dr. Pierre Finck
under oath to testify about the Kennedy autopsy at Bethesda Naval Hospital, and
how doctors were ordered by the big brass not to perform basic functions of an
autopsy. Garrison also showed a print of
the Zapruder film many times in court so all could see the President’s head
knocked to the left and back, presumably by a bullet from the front right. Garrison failed to prove Shaw guilty of conspiracy
to the jury; but interviewed on television soon after, many of the jurors were
convinced there was a conspiracy.
Hurlburt is
excellent at taking on the defenders of the Warren Report – the New York Times, CBS, Gerald Posner, and Marquette
Prof. John McAdams. For example, Prof.
McAdams emphasized the movement in the Zapruder film of Gov. Connally’s lapel,
meaning the bullet hit him earlier than Connally was aware. Hurlburt shows a photo of the Governor’s
coat, and the bullet hole is not by the lapel.
Yet, occasionally Hurlburt’s discussion is unclear, as when he seeks to
describe where Oswald was in the lunch room with his Coke on the 2nd
floor of the TSBD shortly after the shooting as a police officer Baker was able
to see and confront him.
Hurlburt
reminds the readers of some obvious facts too often overlooked. For example, the “magic bullet” of the Warren
Commission, that entered Kennedy’s back, exited his throat, then hit Connally’s
side, wrist, and leg, had no blood or fleshy material on it. Also, the rifle discovered on the 6th
floor of the TSBD was identified by two weapons experts as a German Mauser. The rifle bought by Hidell (Oswald) was a Mannlicher-Carcano
and had “Made in Italy” clearly stamped on it.
There are many other thought-provoking facts in this book. Overall, Hurlburt has provided a service with
his work. It is an easy to read compendium
of important material. Even when one
disagrees, his argument provokes thought.
The book indicts the government for its long-term and continuing
cover-ups of the assassination of Pres. John Kennedy in Dallas.
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