April
19, 2013
|
|
|
|
The
1973 film Executive
Action depicted a conspiracy to assassinate JFK. It was based on a
book by Mark Lane, who in 1966 was the first JFK investigator to debunk the
Warren Commission in his book “Rush to Judgment”. Burt Lancaster and Robert
Ryan played CIA operatives involved in the plot. They were resisted in their
efforts to have the film made by mainstream Hollywood producers. The movie
reveals how Kennedy’s progressive agenda and peace initiatives were a threat to
the establishment. He refused to invade Cuba, was seeking detente with the
Soviet Union, planned to pull all troops out of Viet Nam by 1965, break up the
CIA, eliminate the Federal Reserve and promoted the civil rights movement.
Congress passed the Test Ban Treaty a few months before the assassination. In
other words, he was doing his job.
At
the end of the film, it was revealed that an actuary
engaged by the London Sunday Timescalculated the odds of 18 material
witnesses dying within three years of the JFK assassination. as 1 in
100,000 TRILLION. Assuming the data and calculation methodology were
essentially correct, then it was clear proof of a conspiracy and refuted the
Warren Commission conclusion that Oswald was the lone assassin.
There
has been much controversy about the actuary’s calculation. Apparently, no one
at the Sunday Times even remembers the actuary’s name. And even more strange,
the Times editor did not provide the 1977 House Select Committee on
Assassinations (HSCA) the actuary’s calculation assumptions or methodology. The
editor claimed that the problem was not clearly defined and therefore the
calculation of the odds was suspect. This analysis indicates that the
calculation was essentially correct – and that the editor’s response to HSCA
was misleading and incomplete.
In
fact, there were more than 18
suspicious deaths in the three years following the
assassination. The actuary did not include Oswald and Ruby – and at least
20 others. The JFK
witness spreadsheet database shows there were at least forty (40)
suspicious deaths in the three years; at least 33 were unnatural (homicide, accident,
suicide, unknown). The probability of 33 unnatural deaths is lower than 1 in
100 TRILLION TRILLION!
The
probability of at least 70 unnatural deaths in the 14 years following the
assassination is 1 in 700 MILLION TRILLION TRILLION (1.4E-33). . But there
were at least 100 unnatural and suspicious deaths, so the probability is even
lower. Since the probability of at least 70 deaths is infinitesimal, why bother
to look any further? There are 104 dead witnesses in the spreadsheet database
(this is conservative; researchers have estimated at least 300).
Of
the 104 in the database, 71 deaths were unnatural: 7 were ruled suicides
(0.58%); 40 homicides (0%); 24 accidental (0%). The other 33 deaths consisted
of 4 from unknown causes (0.02%) and 29 suspiciously timed heart attacks,
sudden cancers, etc.(0%). The probability of each cause of death is shown in
percent.
Perhaps
the problem is better illustrated if we ask: How many unnatural deaths are
required in the 14 year period (assuming 1400 material witnesses) to obtain a
probability of less than 1% (ONE in ONE HUNDRED)? This would meet the
definition of beyond a reasonable doubt. The answer is 18. How many would
return a probability of ONE in ONE THOUSAND? The answer is 22. As the number of
deaths increase, the probability rapidly approaches ZERO.
HSCA
statistical expert Jacqueline Hess testified
that the actuarial calculation was “invalid” due to the “impossibility” of
defining the “universe” of material witnesses. Her dismissal of the odds was a
ruse (like the Magic
Bullet Theory) to maintain the cover-up. The fact is that there
was a definable set of 552 Warren Commission witnesses, of whom at least 19
died unnaturally in the period from 1964-1977. Only four would normally be
expected. The 552 is a subset of the approximately 1400 JFK-related
witnesses named in the reference Who’s
Who in the JFK Assassination.
But
in addition to the 19, two others should be noted. Domingo Benavides was a
witness to the Tippit murder who could not identify Oswald. But after his
brother was killed by a gunshot, he identified Oswald. Warren Reynolds was also
at the Tippit scene. He changed his testimony after making a miraculous
recovery from a gunshot to the head.
There
were different categories of witnesses: 1) The 121 eyewitnesses who gave
depositions to the FBI (51 said the shots came from the front, 38 from the
rear, 32 were unsure); 2) the 552 interviewed by the 1964 Warren Commission; 3)
witnesses sought by Jim Garrison 3) witnesses sought by the HSCA; and 4) the
full set of 1400+ JFK-related witnesses.
The
timing of the deaths makes it all the more suspicious. At least fifteen died
the year after the assassination; several died in 1967, soon after being named
as witnesses in the 1969 Garrison/Shaw trial; at least 12 died in 1977
(including SEVEN FBI officials) just before they were due to testify at HSCA.
Using this information, we can calculate probabilities of these unnatural,
suspicious deaths for each witness category.
Hit
List: An In-Depth Investigation Into the Mysterious Deaths of Witnesses to the
JFK Assassination is a comprehensive study by Richard Belzer and David
Wayne (published April 2013).
The
following graph of unlikely deaths among the 552 Warren Commission witnesses
over the 14 year period from 1964-1977 shows that the probability of at least
19 deaths is essentially zero.
But
even the “natural” deaths were suspicious: heart attacks, sudden cancers,
etc. Jack Ruby died
just before his second trial, 29 days after being diagnosed with cancer. He
claimed that he was injected with a virus. Another mysterious death was that
of David Ferrie, who
supposedly had a brain aneurysm that was ruled a suicide the day after his
release from protective custody, shortly after New Orleans D.A. Garrison named
him as a witness in the Clay Shaw trial.
In
spite of their efforts to the contrary, the HSCA was forced to conclude that
both the JFK and Martin Luther King murders were conspiracies. Acoustic
evidence indicated a 96% probability that at least four shots were fired. At
least one came from the grassy knoll, indicating at least two shooters. That
should have closed the book on the Warren Commission’s physically impossible,
irrational Magic Bullet Theory but this 50-year old work of fiction is still
presented as gospel by the mainstream media while the overwhelming scientific
ballistic, acoustic, video, medical, eyewitness and mathematical evidence of
suspicious deaths is ignored.
The
mathematical analysis of the scores of suspicious, unnatural deaths related to
the assassination is further proof of a conspiracy – beyond any doubt. This
is a comprehensive spreadsheet database of suspicious unnatural witness deaths,
probability calculations, Warren Commission, Garrison/Shaw trial and HSCA
witnesses.
The
London Times
|
In
a response to a letter from the 1977 House Select Committee on Assassinations,
London Sunday Times Legal Manager Anthony Whitaker wrote: Our piece about
the odds against the deaths of the Kennedy witnesses was, I regret to say,
based on a careless journalistic mistake and should not have been published.
This was realized by The Sunday Times editorial staff after the first edition –
the one which goes to the United States – had gone out, and later editions were
amended. There was no question of our actuary having got his answer wrong: it
was simply that we asked him the wrong question. He was asked what were the
odds against 15 named people out of the population of the United States dying
within a short period of time to which he replied -correctly – that they were
very high. However, if one asks what are the odds against 15 of those included
in the Warren Commission Index dying within a given period, the answer is, of
course, that they are much lower. Our mistake was to treat the reply to the
former question as if it dealt with the latter – hence the fundamental error in
our first edition report, for which we apologize. None of the editorial staff
involved in the story can remember the name of the actuary we consulted, but in
view of what happened, you will, I imagine, agree that his identity is hardly
material.
The
actuary’s identity was hardly material? It was and still is very
material. Only the actuary could speak to his interpretation of the
problem and method of calculation. And no one on the editorial staff remembered
his name? Really? We are supposed to believe that? Both statements made no
sense; nothing else the Times editor said should have been taken at face value.
In fact, Whitaker misrepresented what is essentially a simple mathematical
problem: to determine the probability of a given number
of unnatural deaths over relevant time intervals within a given
population group.
His
first error was to provide an incomplete and misleading statement of the
problem. The U.S. population is not relevant; the number of JFK-related
witnesses is. The “short period of time” is not specific. He misrepresented the
essential goal of the probability analysis by not considering the frequency of
unnatural deaths.
His
second error was one of omission. He did not provide unnatural death
mortality statistics and probability calculations used by the actuary. Was it
because they would show that the calculation was plausible?
Whitaker
claimed that he asked the actuary to calculate the probability that 15 names
included in the Warren Commission Index would die within a “short” period. One
must assume that the actuary assumed unnatural deaths and utilized
corresponding unnatural mortality rate(s) in his calculation. Just because the
Times Editor did not specify unnatural deaths does not mean that the actuary
was oblivious to the distinction. Is it just a coincidence that at least 15
Warren Commission witnesses (listed below with links to their testimony) died
unnaturally and/or suspiciously. Or that others died mysteriously at convenient
times just before they were due to give testimony at the Garrison/Shaw trial or
at the HSCA?
It
is important to note that Whitaker did not specify unnatural deaths – as he
should have. In any case, his response settled the matter. The HSCA’s
designated “statistical expert” just added to Whitaker’s obfuscation.
HSCA
Obfuscation
|
The
HSCA designated statistical expert Jacqueline Hess dismissed
the actuary’s odds as being invalid, claiming that it was “unsolvable”. Hess
testified that she consulted with actuarial experts, who told her “you cannot
establish any kind of universe” of material witnesses. This was pure
disinformation; a universe of 1400+ JFK-related witnesses was presented in
the Who’s Who in the Kennedy Assassination reference.
In
her list of 21 names, Hess conveniently left out scores of mysterious,
unnatural deaths. Hess focused on five names in the list where the deaths
appeared to have been natural (heart attacks). But they were still suspicious.
For
example, Thomas Howard was one of three people who met in Ruby’s apartment on
Nov. 24, 1963. All died within a little over a year (two unnaturally). Hess
never calculated the odds of that.
She
did not include David Ferrie and Eladio del Valle. Ferrie supposedly died of an
aneurysm within days of being called as a witness by Garrison. Ferrie was held
in protective custody until Feb. 21, 1967. He was found dead in his apartment
the next day. Ferrie associate Eladio del Valle was also sought by Garrison. He
was murdered on Feb. 21. Hess never calculated those odds, either.
What
is even more unbelievable, Hess neglected the strange deaths of nearly a dozen
prospective HSCA witnesses. She gave a convoluted excuse as to why she did not
include George De Morenschildt, Oswald’s friend who allegedly shot himself with
a rifle the day he was notified by HSCA. Nor did she mention the seven (7) high
level FBI officials who died within a six-month period in 1977 just before they
were due to testify at HSCA. She obviously never calculated the probability.
Apparently, HSCA-related deaths were immaterial; she limited her analysis to 1964-1967.
In
this analysis, all of the probabilities are easily calculated.
Hess
claimed the actuary concluded that on 11/22/63 the odds of 15 witnesses being
dead was 1 in 10 to the 29th power which is 1 in 10,000 TRILLION TRILLION. That
is obviously an incorrect statement. The actuary calculated the odds as 1 in
100,000 trillion (1 in 10 to the 17th power). He presumably used the Poisson
probability function of rare events – the perfect mathematical tool for the
problem (see below). One in 100,000 trillion is E-17, or 0.0000000000000001.
Hess appears to have been anything but a “statistical expert”. If she was one,
she would have done the calculations herself.
So
how did the actuary calculate the probability? How many witnesses did he
assume? If he assumed 560 witnesses, consisting of the 552 who testified
at the Warren Commission (10 died unnaturally) and 8 other JFK-related
witnesses who died unnaturally, then applying the 0.000542 unnatural mortality
rate, the probability of exactly 18 unnatural deaths in three years is 1.16E-17
or 1 in 85 thousand trillion. This is very close to the actuary’s 1 in 100,000
trillion odds! Only ONE unnatural death out of the 560 would normally be
expected in the three year period.
Bugliosi’s
Calculation
Famed
prosecutor Vincent Bugliosi tried to refute the actuary in his book Reclaiming
History: The Assassination of President John F. Kennedy. He cited
Robert M. Musen, vice president and senior actuary at Metropolitan Life
Insurance Company. Musen calculated the odds of 15 people out of 2,479 in
the Warren
Commission Index dying within a three-year period, assuming a median
age of 40, to be 98.16 percent or one out of 1.2.
But
there are two major problems with Musen’s calculation. 1- There are only
approximately 600 names listed in the index, including George Washington and
several other presidents. Only 552 were witnesses who testified.
2-
Musen did not consider that the deaths were unnatural. Even assuming 2479
names, approximately 4 unnatural and 70 natural deaths from the list would be
expected over a three year period. Musen must have applied an approximate .01
overall mortality rate, not the .000542 unnatural rate.The odds that at least
15 of 2479 would die unnaturally within 3 years is 1 in 46,000. The odds of 18
dying unnaturally is 1 in 3.6 million.
The
Correct Method: Expected and Actual Unnatural Deaths
There
were 1400 JFK-related witnesses listed in the Who’s
Who in the JFK Assassination by Michael Benson. At least 15 died
from unnatural causes in the first year, defying the odds. There
had to be a plausible explanation; the 15 unnatural deaths could not have been
just a 1 in 167 TRILLION coincidence. Only one unnatural death would normally
be expected. There must have been a rationale and motivation for the deaths.
What could it have been?
|
The expected
number N of unnatural deaths in time period T is approximated by
a simple formula: N = R * W * T, where R is the unnatural mortality
rate, W the number of witnesses and T the number of years in the study. For one
year, N = 0.76 deaths = .000542*1400*1
This
is a Probability
Analysis of Witness Deaths. At least 33 of 1400 JFK assassination-related
witnesses died unnaturally in the three years following the
assassination. Only two or three would normally be expected. The
probability of this occurrence is 1 in 137 TRILLION TRILLION.
The
Poisson Probability Distribution
This
mathematical function is useful for calculating the probability that a certain
number of rare events will occur over a specified period of time. For instance,
the probability that 10 customers will walk into a store from 10-11 am, given
an average arrival rate of 5 per hour for that time period. Or that 2 accidents
will occur at a busy intersection next month, given an average of 1 per month.
In
this analysis, the Poisson function is used to calculate the probability that
at least n people in a random group of N individuals will
die unnaturally(suicide, murder, accident, unknown cause, etc.) in T
years. Historical mortality statistical tables show that the unnatural
death rate R is approximately 0.000542 (1 in 1845).
The
probability of an unnatural death in one year from… suicide….. 0.000107
homicide…. 0.000062 accidental.. 0.000359 unknown….. 0.000014 Total……. 0.000542
The
Poisson probability function is: P(n) = a^n * exp(-a)/n! where a = the expected
number of unnatural deaths = R*N*T
For
example, in a random group of 1400 individuals, in any given year
less than ONE unnatural death (0.7588) is expected to occur: a =
0.7588 = R*N*T = 0.000542*1400*1
Using
the expected number (a=.7588) of unnatural deaths and the actual
number (n= 15) in the Poisson formula, the probability that there would
beexactly 15 unnatural deaths turns out to be P (15) = 0.7588^15 *
exp(-0.7588)/15! P (15) = 5.70E-15 = 1 in 175 trillion
The
probability of at least 15 unnatural deaths is of course slightly
higher: P (>=15) = 1 in 167 trillion!
Key
witness categories 1 Unnatural deaths vs. suspicious natural deaths 2
Witnesses: Warren Commission (552), Shaw trial (60), HSCA (100) 3 Witnesses who
died just before being called to testify (15+) 4 Approximate number of
JFK-related witnesses (1400+) 5 Eyewitness depositions to the Warren Commission
(121)
|
–
The unnatural death rate is used in the probability analysis. – ZERO
probability of unnatural deaths in categories 2,3 and 4. – 51 Warren Commission
eyewitnesses claimed that the shots came from the Grassy Knoll, 38 from the
Texas Schoolbook Depository and 32 had no opinion. Their recollections were
dismissed by the Warren Commission as simply being “mistaken”. Parkland
Hospital doctors initially reported entrance wounds to the neck and head which
were confirmed years later in the Zapruder film.
Ruby’s
Visitors
Ruby
shot Oswald on Nov. 24, 1963. But how many know that three people who met in
Ruby’s apartment that day died within one year, two unnaturally and one
naturally. The probability is P = 1/(.000542^2*.01)= 1 in 340 million!
–
Bill Hunter, a reporter, was shot to death by a policeman in April 1964. It was
ruled an accident. – Tim Koethe, another reporter, was killed in Sept. 1964 by
a blow to the neck. – Tom Howard, Ruby’s first lawyer, died from a heart attack
in March 1965.
Mysterious
FBI Witness Deaths
In
1977, seven top FBI officials died in a six month period just before they were
scheduled to testify at the House Select Committee on Assassinations( HSCA).
Two were accidents. If we assume only 7 FBI were called to testify and all died
from natural causes within a six month period, the probability is 1 in 81
TRILLION. But the odds must be lower than that since at least two of the deaths
were unnatural “accidents”.
Now
we will conservatively assume that the HSCA sought testimony from 20 FBI
officials. The probability that 7 would die from natural causes in a 6
month period is 1 in 55 BILLION. But since two deaths were unnatural, the
probability is much lower.
.
William Sullivan- Head of counter/espionage. Predicted his death. Hunting
accident. . James Cadigan- Document expert; previously testified to Warren
Commission. Accidental fall in his home. . Regis Kennedy- Heart attack on the
day he was to testify on confiscation of home movies of assassination. . Louis
Nichols- Former #3, worked on JFK investigation. Heart attack . Alan Belmont-
Liaison to Warren Commission; Long illness. . Donald Kaylor Fingerprint expert.
Heart attack. . J.M. English- Head of Forensic Sciences Lab. Heart attack.
|
Suspicious
Timing of Other Witness Deaths
In
1967, David Ferrie was found dead (ruled a suicide from a brain aneurysm) in
his apartment shortly after he was named as a defendant by New Orleans D.A. Jim
Garrison in the upcoming trial of Clay Shaw. Ferrie was an associate of Oswald,
Shaw, Guy Banister and anti-Castro Cubans. Ferrie left two suicide notes. He
was held in protective custody until Feb. 21, 1967 and was found dead in his
apartment the next day. Ferrie associate Eladio del Valle was also sought by
Garrison. He was murdered on Feb. 21 by gunshot and an axe. The odds of both
deaths: 1 in 453 billion: P= 1/(0.000542/365)^2. Banister, an ex-FBI agent,
died in 1964 from a suspicious heart attack.
Shaw
was a New Orleans businessman accused of involvement in the JFK assassination.
He denied he was CIA and acquitted. He died a few years later from cancer.
There was no autopsy. CIA Director Richard Helms later admitted under oath that
Shaw was a CIA contractor.
Maurice
Gatlin, also sought by Garrison, was a pilot who worked for Guy Banister, an
ex-FBI agent in New Orleans connected to Ferrie, CIA, Carlos Marcello and
Oswald. Gatlin died in a fall from the 6th floor after suffering a “heart
attack”. The death was ruled an accident.
The
following individuals were sought by the HSCA. All died unnaturally. Once
again, the probability is ZERO… – Charles Nicoletti, mob hit man and possible
JFK shooter, was found dead from gunshots the day before he was scheduled to be
contacted. – John Paisley, Deputy Director of the CIA, was “about to blow the
whistle” (shotgun ruled suicide). – George DeMohrenschildt, a friend of Oswald
with CIA contacts, had previously testified at the Warren Commission. He was
found dead the day before he was scheduled to be contacted (shotgun ruled a
suicide). – Johnny Roselli, a powerful Mafia figure, was found in a drum off
the coast of Miami. He told investigative reporter Jack Anderson that Ruby was
ordered to silence Oswald and testified before the Senate.
Data
Sources The reference Who’s
Who in the JFK Assassination by Michael Benson, presents vital
information on each of more than 1,400 individuals (from suspects to witnesses
to investigators) related in any way to the murder of President John F. Kennedy
on November 22, 1963. Based on years of research, it uses a wealth of data
sources and a detailed analysis of the Warren Commission’s twenty-six volumes.
The volume includes entries on virtually all suspects, victims, witnesses, law
enforcement officials and investigators involved in the assassination.
In Crossfire assassination
researcher Jim Marrs lists
103 individuals related to the assassination who died mysteriously from 1963-1978.
Lee Harvey Oswald is not on the list but should be.
|
Warren
Commission apologists who troll the online forums jump through illogical hoops
in their attempts to debunk the probability calculations. But their arguments
just prove the case for conspiracy. They agree that the math is correct, but
argue that the data is invalid. They claim that the 1400+ witnesses and scores
of unlikely deaths were self-selected and not a random group. Of course it is
not a random group – by definition. That is precisely the point.
Witnesses
who were called to testify before the 1964 Warren Commission, the 1969 Clay
Shaw trial and the 1977 HSCA investigation were obviously not self-selected.
Neither were the 1400 in the “Who’s Who” reference; they were all related in
some way to the JFK assassination – suspects, victims, witnesses, law
enforcement officials and investigators. It is not just a coincidence that an
impossible number of them died unnaturally. There are only a few dozen that
were missed in the “Who’s Who”, but even some of these died unnaturally. The
only rational conclusion is that many JFK-related witnesses had inside
information that would expose the crime and coverup. That’s why they died
unnaturally in numbers that defied the unnatural death mortality tables.
PROBABILITY
CALCULATIONS N witnesses, at least n unnatural deaths, T years, P odds Warren
Commission: N= 552, n>=21 (exact), T= 14, P = 1 in 236 million Warren
Commission Index: N= 2479, n>=18, T= 3, P = 1 in 3.6 million Who’s Who
Reference: N= 1400, n>=15, T= 1, P = 1 in 167 trillion Who’s Who Reference:
N= 1400, n>=33 (exact), T= 3, P = 137 trillion trillion HSCA FBI N=20
(est.), n>=6 (4 natural), T= 6 months, P = 1 in 784 million
1400
JFK-related Witnesses T = 3 years p = 0.000542 = unnatural mortality rate n =
33 unnatural, suspicious deaths; Expected a= 2.3 = p*N*T P(33) = a^n * exp
(-a)/n! = 7.3E-27 P = 1 in 137,439,196,231,656,380,000,000,000 1 in ONE HUNDRED
THIRTY-SEVEN TRILLION TRILLION
To
put these numbers in perspective, there are approximately 7E17 (700,000
trillion) grains of sand on the earth and 3E23 (300 billion trillion) stars in
the universe.
|
Alphabetical
List of Witnesses and Testimony
1964-1966
Benavides, Eddy – His brother Domingo was a Warren Commission witness who was
in the vicinity of the Tippit crime scene. Domingo was forced to change his
testimony after his-look alike brother was killed by gunshot – a very
suspicious case of mistaken identity.
Carlin,
Karen – a Ruby employee, was the last one to talk with him before he shot Oswald.
Killed by gunshot.
Bogard,
Albert – Dallas automobile salesman who said Oswald test drove a new car. He
was badly beaten after giving testimony. Supposedly died by committing suicide
with carbon monoxide poisoning.
Bowers,
Lee E. – Employee of the Union Terminal Co. Witnessed men behind picket fence
on Grassy Knoll. Died in a one-car collision.
Roberts,
Earlene – Oswald’s landlady testified he did not kill Tippet. Heart attack.
Russell,
Harold – Witness in the vicinity of the Tippit crime scene. Saw escape of
Tippit killer with Warren Reynolds. Blow to the head head by a cop in a bar.
Heart failure.
Worrell,
James – Saw man flee from rear of Texas School Book Depository. Motor accident.
Whaley,
William Cab driver who reportedly drove Oswald to Oak Cliff (only Dallas taxi
driver to die on duty). Accident: motor collision
Martin,
Frank Dallas policeman Captain who witnessed Oswald slaying; told WC: “there is
a lot to be said but its best that I don’t say it”. Sudden Cancer.
Ruby,
Jack – Oswald’s slayer. Connected with Mob. Believed he was poisoned in prison.
Died from sudden cancer. In
this press conference, Ruby claimed a government conspiracy to murder JFK.
|
“Everything
pertaining to what’s happening has never come to the surface. The world will
never know the true facts, of what occurred, my motives. The people had- that
had so much to gain and had such an ulterior motive for putting me in the
position I’m in, will never let the true facts come above board to the world.”
Reporter: “Are these people in very high positions Jack?” Jack: “Yes.”
1972-1977
Hale Boggs was a congressman who served on the Warren Commission. He expressed
disagreement with the conclusion that Oswald was the assassin. He died in a
mysterious plane crash over Alaska.
J.
Edgar Hoover, FBI Director, died suddenly. There was no autopsy. The FBI did
not reveal warnings
from the field (Abraham Bolden) of a plot to assassinate JFK and later
withheld this information from the Warren Commission.
Roger
Craig, a Dallas Deputy sheriff, found a German Mauser rifle in the TSBD, before
the police claimed that Oswald used a Mannlicher-Carcano. Died from gunshot.
These
Warren Commission witnesses died just before they were due to testify at HSCA
in 1977: Alan Belmont – FBI liaison to Warren Commission. Long illness.
James
Cadigan – FBI document expert. Accidental fall in home.
George
De Morenshildt – CIA friend of Oswald, suicide by gunshot.
No comments:
Post a Comment