Some writers who have investigated
the assassination of John
F. Kennedy
have claimed that a large
number of witnesses to the event have died in mysterious circumstances.
The Sunday Times reported that
"the odds against these witnesses being dead by February, 1967,
were one hundred thousand trillion to one." When the Select
Committee on Assassinations questioned the newspaper reporter
who wrote the article, he admitted he had made a "careless journalistic
mistake".
In his book Crossfire,
the author Jim Marrs, provided a list
of 103 people who he claims died in mysterious circumstances between
1963 and 1976. In reality, most of these people died of natural causes.
Some of these people did die in accidents. Others were murdered or
committed suicide. However, these people rarely had information that
would have been important in helping investigators discover if there
was a conspiracy to kill Kennedy.
The first person to die
linked to the case was Karyn Kupcinet.
In his book, Forgive
My Grief, W. Penn Jones reports
that "a few days before the assassination, Karyn Kupcinet, 23,
was trying to place a long distance telephone call from the Los Angeles
area. According to reports, the long distance operator heard Miss
Kupcinet scream into the telephone that President Kennedy was going
to be killed." Karyn's
body was discovered on 30th November, 1963. Police estimated that
she had been dead for two days. The New
York Times reported that she had been strangled. Her actor
boyfriend, Andrew
Prine was the main suspect but he was never charged with the murder
and the crime remains unsolved.
Some researchers
claimed that there was a link between the death of Kupcinet and the
assassination of John
F. Kennedy.
It was argued that the conspirators were trying to frighten off her
father and journalist, Irv
Kupcinet from
telling what he knew.
Grant
Stockdale, a close friend of John
F. Kennedy
died on 2nd December, 1963 when he fell (or was pushed) from his office
on the thirteenth story of the Dupont Building in Miami. Stockdale
did not leave a suicide note but his friend, George
Smathers,
claimed that he had become
depressed as a result of the death of the president. However, it later
became known that four days after the assassination Stockdale flew
to Washington and talked with Robert
Kennedy and
Edward Kennedy. On his return Stockdale
told several of his friends that "the world was closing in."
On 1st December, he spoke to his attorney, William Frates who later
recalled: "He started talking. It didn't make much sense. He
said something about 'those guys' trying to get him. Then about the
assassination."
After the assassination
of President Kennedy,
Gary
Underhill
told
his friend, Charlene
Fitsimmons, that
he was convinced that he had been killed by members of the CIA. He
also said: "Oswald is a patsy. They set him up. It's too much.
The bastards have done something outrageous. They've killed the President!
I've been listening and hearing things. I couldn't believe they'd
get away with it, but they did!"
Underhill
believed there was a connection between Executive
Action,
Fidel
Castro
and
the death of John
F. Kennedy:
"They tried it in Cuba and they couldn't get away with it. Right
after the Bay of Pigs. But Kennedy wouldn't let them do it. And now
he'd gotten wind of this and he was really going to blow the whistle
on them. And they killed him!"
Gary
Underhill
told
friends that he feared for his life: "I know who they are. That's
the problem. They know I know. That's why I'm here. I can't stay in
New York." Underhill
was found dead on 8th May
1964. He had been shot in the head and it was officially ruled that
he had committed suicide. However, in his book,
Destiny Betrayed, James DiEugenio claimed that the bullet
entered the right-handed Underhill's head behind the left ear.
There has been a significant
number of people who have died who did appear to have important information
about the case. This includes several journalists investigating the
murder. On 24th November, 1963, Bill Hunter
of the Long Beach Press Telegram
and Jim Koethe of the Dallas
Times Herald interviewed George
Senator. Also there was the attorney Tom
Howard. Earlier that day Senator and Howard had both visited Jack
Ruby
in jail. That evening Senator
arranged for Koethe, Hunter and Howard to search Ruby's apartment.
It is not known what the
journalists found but on 23rd April 1964,
Hunter was shot dead by Creighton Wiggins, a policeman in the pressroom
of a Long Beach police station. Wiggins initially claimed that his
gun fired when he dropped it and tried to pick it up. In court this
was discovered that this was impossible and it was decided that Hunter
had been murdered. Wiggins finally admitted he was playing a game
of quick draw with his fellow officer. The other officer, Errol F.
Greenleaf, testified he had his back turned when the shooting took
place. In January 1965, both were convicted and sentenced to three
years probation.
Jim
Koethe decided to write a book about the assassination of Kennedy.
However, he died on 21st September, 1964. It seems that a man broke
into his Dallas apartment and killed him by a karate chop to the throat.
Tom Howard died of a heart-attack, aged
48, in March, 1965.
On 21st July, 1964, Dr.
Mary Sherman was murdered
in New Orleans. She had been
stabbed in the heart, arm, leg and stomach. Her laboratory was also
set on fire. The crime has never been sold. Later
Edward T. Haslam
published Mary, Ferrie & the Monkey Virus
: The Story of an Underground Medical Laboratory. In the
book he argued that Sherman was working with David
Ferrie. Haslam believed that this Central
Intelligence Agency backed
research involved disease intelligence gathering and cancer research
using laboratory-made biological weapons. Haslam claimed this biological
weapon was to be used against Cubas Fidel
Castro.
Judyth
Baker later began giving interviews aboout involvement in an anti-Castro
conspiracy. She claims that in 1963 she was recruited by Dr. Canute
Michaelson to work with Dr. Alton Ochsner
and Dr. Mary Sherman in a CIA secret
project. This involved
creating the means to insure Fidel Castro developed cancer.
In 1963 Judyth moved to
New Orleans where she worked closely
with others involved in this plot. This included Lee
Harvey Oswald,
David Ferrie, Clay
Shaw and Guy Bannister. Later she
claimed she began an affair with Oswald. The research into this biological
weapon was carried out in the homes of Ferrie and Sherman. Oswald
role in this conspiracy was to work as a courier. However, the project
was abandoned in September, 1963, and Oswald was ordered to Dallas.
Oswald kept in touch with
Baker and in November, 1963, he had been forced to join a plot to
kill John
F. Kennedy.
Oswald believed that the conspiracy was being organized by Mafia leader,
Carlos
Marcello
and a CIA
agent, David Atlee Phillips. Oswald
told her he would do what he could to ensure that Kennedy was not
killed. After the assassination of Kennedy and the arrest of Oswald,
Baker received a phone-call from David Ferrie
warning her that she would be killed if she told anyone about her
knowledge of these events.
On 12th October, 1964,
Mary Pinchot Meyer was shot dead as she
walked along the Chesapeake and Ohio towpath in Georgetown. Henry
Wiggins, a car mechanic, was working on a vehicle on Canal Road, when
he heard a woman shout out: "Someone help me, someone help me".
He then heard two gunshots. Wiggins ran to the edge of the wall overlooking
the towpath. He later told police he saw "a black man in a light
jacket, dark slacks, and a dark cap standing over the body of a white
woman."
Soon afterwards Raymond
Crump, a black man, was found not far from the murder scene. He was
arrested and charged with Mary's murder. The towpath and the river
were searched but no murder weapon was ever found.
The media did not report
at the time that Mary Pinchot Meyer had
been having an affair with John
F. Kennedy.
Nor did it reveal that her former husband, Cord
Meyer, was a senior figure in CIA's covert operations. As a result,
there was little public interest in the case.
During the trial Wiggins
was unable to identify Raymond Crump as the man standing over Meyer's
body. The prosecution was also handicapped by the fact that the police
had been unable to find the murder weapon at the scene of the crime.
On 29th July, 1965, Crump was acquitted of murdering Mary Meyer. The
case remains unsolved.
In March, 1976, James
Truitt gave an
interview to the National Enquirer.
Truitt told the newspaper that Mary Pinchot
Meyer was having an affair with John
F. Kennedy.
He also claimed that Meyer had told his wife, Ann Truitt, that she
was keeping an account of this relationship in her diary. Meyer asked
Truitt to take possession of a private diary "if anything ever
happened to me".
Ann Truitt was living in
Tokyo at the time of the murder. She phoned Ben
Bradlee at his home and asked him if he had found the diary. Bradlee,
who claimed he was unaware of his sister-in-law's affair with Kennedy,
knew nothing about the diary. He later recalled what he did after
Truitt's phone-call: "We didn't start looking until the next
morning, when Tony and I walked around the corner a few blocks to
Mary's house. It was locked, as we had expected, but when we got inside,
we found Jim Angleton, and to our complete surprise he told us he,
too, was looking for Mary's diary."
James
Angleton, CIA counterintelligence chief, admitted that he knew
of Mary's relationship with John
F. Kennedy and
was searching her home looking for her diary and any letters that
would reveal details of the affair. According to Ben
Bradlee, it was Mary's sister, Antoinette Bradlee, who found the
diary and letters a few days later. It was claimed that the diary
was in a metal box in Mary's studio. The contents of the box were
given to Angleton who claimed he burnt the diary. Angleton later admitted
that Mary recorded in her diary that she had taken LSD with Kennedy
before "they made love".
Leo
Damore claimed in an article that appeared in the New
York Post that the reason Angleton and Bradlee were looking
for the diary was that: "She (Meyer) had access to the highest
levels. She was involved in illegal drug activity. What do you think
it would do to the beatification of Kennedy if this woman said, 'It
wasn't Camelot, it was Caligula's court'?" Damore also said that
a figure close to the CIA
had told him that Mary's
death had been a professional "hit".
There is another possible
reason why both Angleton and Bradlee were searching for documents
in Meyer's house. Were they looking for material that Meyer had been
collecting on CIA's covert activities?
In
1963 Desmond
FitzGerald was
in charge of the CIA's Cuban
Task Force. In this post he personally organized three different plots
to assassinate Fidel
Castro.
According to Dick Russell, FitzGerald
had a meeting in France with a Cuban code-named AM/LASH, finalising
a plan to eliminate Castro, at the same time John
F. Kennedy was
assassinated. FitzGerald
died of a heart attack while
playing tennis in Virginia on 23rd July, 1967.
Lisa
Howard
died at East Hampton, Long
Island, on 4th July, 1965. It was officially reported that she had
committed suicide. Apparently, she had taken one hundred phenobarbitols.
It was claimed she was depressed as a result of losing her job and
suffering a miscarriage. At first no one associated Howard's death
with the Kennedy assassination. However, it has recently emerged that
Howard was involved in secret negotiations with Fidel
Castro on
behalf of John
F. Kennedy.
Winston
Scott
was
the CIA's station chief in Mexico. Scott retired in 1969 and wrote
a memoir about his time in the FBI, OSS
and the CIA. He completed the manuscript,
It Came To Late, and made plans
to discuss the contents of the book with CIA director, Richard
Helms,
in Washington on 30th April, 1971.
Four days before the agreed meeting Scott died of a heart attack.
Michael
Scott told Dick
Russell that
James
Angleton took
away his father's manuscript. Angleton also confiscated three large
cartons of files including a tape-recording of the voice of Lee
Harvey Oswald. Michael Scott was also told by a CIA source that
his father had not died from natural causes. Scott
eventually got his father's manuscript back from the CIA. However,
150 pages were missing. Chapters 13 to 16 were deleted in their entirety.
In fact, everything about his life after 1947 had been removed on
grounds of national security.
Nancy
Carole Tyler
worked
as secretary to Bobby
Baker.
At the time of the assassination she was living with Mary
Jo Kopechne,
who worked for