A LOOK AT THE DEATHS OF THOSE
INVOLVED*
Jim Marrs and Ralph Schuster
[Editor's Note: The claim that many
persons who had
personal knowledge of the assassination of JFK have met
untimely deaths is reviewed by the authors, who provide
a overview of the evidence. It appears that many who
had personal knowledge of the assassination of JFK
have indeed met untimely deaths.]
In the three-year period which
followed the murder of President Kennedy and Lee Harvey Oswald, 18 material
witnesses died - six by gunfire, three in motor accidents, two by suicide,
one from a cut throat, one from a karate chop to the neck, three from heart
attacks and two from natural causes.
An actuary, engaged by the "London Sunday Times," concluded that on
November 22, 1963, the odds against these witnesses being dead by February
1967, were one hundred thousand trillion to one. The above comment on the
deaths of assassination witnesses was published in a tabloid companion piece
to the movie "Executive Action," released in 1973. By that time,
part of the mythology of the Kennedy assassination included the mysterious
deaths of people who were connected with it. By the mid-1960s, people in
Dallas already were whispering about the number of persons who died under
strange or questionable circumstances.
Well into the 1980s, witnesses and others were hesitant to come forward with
information because of the stories of strange and sudden death which seemed
visit anyone with information about the assassination.
Finally, in the late 1970s, the House Select Committee on Assassinations felt
compelled to look into the matter. But aside from discrediting the
"London Sunday Times" actuarial study, the Committee was unable to
come to any conclusion regarding the growing number of deaths. The Committee
said it could not make a valid actuarial study due to the broad number and
types of persons which had to be included in such a study.
In response to a letter from the Committee, "London Sunday Times"
Legal Manager Anthony Whitaker stated:
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.
This settled the matter for the House Committee, which apparently made little
or no attempt to seriously study the number of deaths which followed the JFK
assassination.
Jacqueline Hess, the Committee's chief of research for the JFK investigation,
reported:
Our final conclusion on the issue is
that the available evidence does not establish anything about the nature of
these deaths which would indicate that the deaths were in some manner, either
direct or peripheral, caused by the assassination of President Kennedy or by
any aspect of the subsequent investigation.
However, an objective look at both the number and the causes of death
balanced against the importance of the person's connection to the case, still
causes raised eyebrows among those who study such a list.
In this section, people who were connected - no matter how tenuously - with
the assassination and who are now dead are listed according to date of death.
This is dealing only with deaths, not with the numerous persons - such as
Warren Reynolds, Roger Craig, Richard Carr or Richard Case Nagell - who claim
to have been shot at or attacked.
This section has been entitled "Convenient Deaths" because these
deaths certainly would have been convenient for anyone not wishing the truth
of the JFK assassination to become public. Of course, it is impossible to
state with any certainty which of these deaths resulted from natural causes
and which did not.
Because so many of the these deaths involve persons either working with or
connected with the CIA or other domestic intelligence services, the Agency
has gone to some lengths to discredit the idea of mysterious deaths plaguing
assassination witnesses.
A 1967 memo from CIA headquarters to station chiefs advised:
Such vague accusations as that
"more than 10 people have died mysteriously" can always be
explained in some rational way: e.g., the individuals concerned have for the
most part died of natural causes; the (Warren) Commission staff questioned
418 witnesses - the FBI interviewed far more people, conducting 25,000
interviews and reinterviews - and in such a large group, a certain number of
deaths are to be expected.
Yet it is now well established that the CIA was developing a wide-range of
lethal techniques for disposing of people dating back to the early 1950s.
Testifying before the Church Committee in 1975, CIA technicians told of a
variety of TWEP technology - Termination With Extreme Prejudice - including
liquid botulinum toxins and a pulmonary-embolism-causing pill which cannot be
detected in a post-mortem examination.
One recently-declassified CIA document, a letter from an Agency consultant to
a CIA officer, states:
You will recall that I mentioned that
the local circumstances under which a given means might be used might suggest
the technique to be used in that case. I think the gross divisions in
presenting this subject might be:
1.
bodies left with no hope of the cause of
death being determined by the most complete autopsy and chemical examinations
2.
bodies left in such circumstances as to
simulate accidental death
3.
bodies left in such circumstances as to
simulate suicidal death
4.
bodies left with residue that simulate those
caused by natural diseases.
The letter goes on to show
that undetected murders do not have to be the result of sophisticated
chemicals. It states:
There are two techniques which I
believe should be mentioned since they require no special equipment besides a
strong arm and the will to do such a job. These would be either to smother
the victim with a pillow or to strangle him with a wide piece of cloth such
as a bath towel. In such cases, there is no specific anatomic changes to
indicate the cause of death...
While is obvious that the CIA - and hence the mob through operatives who work
for both - has the capability of killing, it is less well-known that the
Agency has developed drugs to induce cancer. Recall that Jack Ruby died of
sudden lung cancer just as he had been granted a new trial.
A 1952 CIA memo reported on the cancer-causing effects of beryllium:
This is certainly the most toxic
inorganic element and it produces a peculiar fibrotic tumor at the site of
local application. The amount necessary to produce these tumors is a few
micrograms.
Local law enforcement officers and coroners are simply not equipped, either
by training or by inclination, to detect deaths induced by such sophisticated
means. They look for signs of a struggle, evidence of a break-in, bruises or
marks on the victim. With no evidence to the contrary, many deaths simply are
ruled suicide or accident. Others are ruled due to natural causes, such as
heart attack.
It is interesting to note how the deaths are grouped. Many of the earliest
deaths came during the time of the Warren Commission investigation or just
afterwards. Some significant deaths also took place in the late 1960s as New
Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison was launching his own investigation.
Other suspicious deaths occurred during the mid-1970s, as the Senate
Intelligence Committee was looking into assassinations by U.S. intelligence
agencies. And finally, another spate of deaths came around 1977, just as the
House Select Committee on Assassinations was gearing up its investigations.
These deaths are listed in chronological order. An asterisk (*) means the
death is a particularly suspicious one. They also are grouped according to
which investigation was being conducted at the time.
The area of convenient deaths leads one into a well of paranoia, yet the long
list of deaths cannot be summarily dismissed.
Obviously, many of these deaths - particularly in recent years - can be
ascribed to the passage of time. But others cannot - especially when viewed
in context of the assassination inquiries taking place at the time.
Read for yourself and consider...When
does coincidence end and conspiracy begin?
https://www.blogger.com/null
List of Deaths
Date
|
Name
|
Connection
with case
|
Cause
of death
|
11/63
|
Karyn Kupicinet
|
Tv host's daughter who
was overheard telling of JFK's death prior to 11/22/63
|
Murdered
|
12/63
|
Jack Zangretti
|
Expressed foreknowledge
of Ruby shooting Oswald
|
Gunshot Victim
|
2/64
|
Eddy Benavides
|
Lookalike brother to
Tippit shooting witness, Domingo Benavides
|
Gunshot to head
|
2/64
|
Betty MacDonald*
|
Former Ruby employee who
alibied Warren Reynolds shooting suspect.
|
Suicide byhanging in
Dallas Jail
|
3/64
|
Bill Chesher
|
Thought to have
information linking Oswald and Ruby
|
Heart attack
|
3/64
|
Hank Killam*
|
Husband of Ruby
employee, knew Oswald acquaintance
|
Throat cut
|
4/64
|
Bill Hunter*
|
Reporter who was in
Ruby's apartment on 11/24/63
|
Accidental shooting by
policeman
|
5/64
|
Gary Underhill*
|
CIA agent who claimed
Agency was involved
|
Gunshot in head ruled
suicide
|
5/64
|
Hugh Ward*
|
Private investigator working
with Guy Banister and David Ferrie
|
Plane crash in Mexico
|
5/64
|
DeLesseps Morrison*
|
New Orleans Mayor
|
Passenger in Ward's
plane
|
8/64
|
Teresa Norton*
|
Ruby employee
|
Fatally shot
|
6/64
|
Guy Banister*
|
x-FBI agent in New
Orleans connected to Ferrie, CIA, Carlos Marcello & Oswald
|
Heart attack
|
9/64
|
Jim Koethe*
|
Reporter who was in
Ruby's apartment on 11/24/63
|
Blow to neck
|
9/64
|
C.D. Jackson
|
"Life"
magazine senior Vicepresident who bought Zapruderfilm and locked it away
|
Unknown
|
10/64
|
Mary Pinchot
|
JFK "special"
friend whose diary was taken by CIA chief James Angleton after her death
|
Murdered
|
1/65
|
Paul Mandal
|
"Life" writer
who told of JFK turning to rear when shot in throat
|
Cancer
|
3/65
|
Tom Howard*
|
Ruby's first lawyer, was
in Ruby's apartment on 11/24/63
|
Heart attack
|
5/65
|
Maurice Gatlin*
|
Pilot for Guy Banister
|
Fatal fall
|
8/65
|
Mona B. Saenz*
|
Texas Employment clerk
who interviewed Oswald
|
Hit by Dallas bus
|
?/65
|
David Goldstein
|
Dallasite who helped FBI
trace Oswald's pistol
|
Natural causes
|
9/65
|
Rose Cheramie*
|
Knew of assassination in
advance, told of riding to Dallas with Cubans
|
Hit/run victim
|
11/65
|
Dorothy Kilgallen*
|
Columnist who had
private interview with Ruby, pledged to "break" JFK case
|
Drug overdose
|
11/65
|
Mrs. Earl Smith*
|
Close friend to Dorothy
Kilgallen, died two daysafter columnist, may have kept Kilgallen's notes
|
Cause unknown
|
12/65
|
William Whaley*
|
Cab driver who
reportedly drove Oswald to Oak Cliff (The only Dallas taxi driver to die on
duty)
|
Motor collision
|
1966
|
Judge Joe Brown
|
Presided over Ruby's trial
|
Heart attack
|
1966
|
Karen "Little
Lynn" Carlin*
|
Ruby employee who last
talked with Ruby before Oswald shooting
|
Gunshot victim
|
1/66
|
Earlene Roberts
|
Oswald's landlady
|
Heart attack
|
2/66
|
Albert Bogard*
|
Car salesman who said
Oswald test drove new car
|
Suicide
|
6/66
|
Capt. Frank Martin
|
Dallas policeman who
witnessed Oswald slaying, told Warren Commission "there's a lot to be
said but probably be better if I don't say it"
|
Sudden cancer
|
8/66
|
Lee Bowers Jr.*
|
Witnessed men behind
picket fence on Grassy Knoll
|
Motor accident
|
9/66
|
Marilyn "Delila
Walle*
|
Ruby dancer
|
Shot by husband after 1
month of marriage
|
10/66
|
Lt. William Pitzer*
|
JFK autopsy photographer
who described his duty as "horrifying experience"
|
Gunshot rule suicided
|
11/66
|
Jimmy Levens
|
Fort Worth nightclub
owner who hired Ruby employees
|
Natural causes
|
11/66
|
James Worrell Jr.*
|
Saw man flee rear of
Texas School Book Depository
|
Motor accident
|
1966
|
Clarence Oliver
|
Dist. Atty. Investigator
who worked Ruby case
|
Unknown
|
12/66
|
Hank Suydam
|
Life magazine official
in charge of JFK stories
|
Heart attack
|
1967
|
Leonard Pullin
|
Civilian Navy employee
who helped film "Last Two Days" about assassination
|
One-car crash
|
1/67
|
Jack Ruby*
|
Oswald's slayer
|
Lung cancer (he told
family he was injected with cancer cells)
|
2/67
|
Harold Russell*
|
Saw escape of Tippit
killer
|
killed by cop in bar
brawl
|
2/67
|
David Ferrie*
|
Acquaintance of Oswald,
Garrison suspect and employee of Guy Banister
|
Blow to neck (ruled
accidental)
|
2/67
|
Eladio Del Valle*
|
Anti-Castro Cuban
associate of David Ferrie being sought by Garrison
|
Gunshot wound, ax wound
tohead
|
3/67
|
Dr. Mary Sherman*
|
Ferrie associate working
on cancer research
|
Died in fire (possibly
shot)
|
1/68
|
A. D. Bowie
|
Asst. Dallas District
Attorney prosecuting Ruby
|
Cancer
|
4/68
|
Hiram Ingram
|
Dallas Deputy Sheriff,
close friend to Roger Craig
|
Sudden cancer
|
5/68
|
Dr. Nicholas Chetta
|
New Orleans coroner who
on death of Ferrie
|
Heart attack
|
8/68
|
Philip Geraci*
|
Friend of Perry Russo,
told of Oswald/Shaw conversation
|
Electrocution
|
1/69
|
Henry Delaune*
|
Brother-in-law to
coroner Chetta
|
Murdered
|
1/69
|
E.R. Walthers*
|
Dallas Deputy Sheriff
who was involved in Depository search, claimed to have found .45-cal. slug
|
Shot by felon
|
1969
|
Charles Mentesana
|
Filmed rifle other than
Mannlicher-Carcano being taken from Depository
|
Heart attack
|
4/69
|
Mary Bledsoe
|
Neighbor to Oswald, also
knew David Ferrie
|
Natural causes
|
4/69
|
John Crawford*
|
Close friend to both
Ruby and Wesley Frazier, who gave ride to Oswald on 11/22/63
|
Crash of private plane
|
7/69
|
Rev. Clyde Johnson*
|
Scheduled to testify
about Clay Shaw/Oswald connection
|
Fatally shot
|
1970
|
George McGann*
|
Underworld figure
connected to Ruby friends, wife, Beverly, took film in Dealey Plaza
|
Murdered
|
1/70
|
Darrell W. Garner
|
Arrested for shooting
Warren Reynolds, released after alibi from Betty MacDonald
|
Drug overdose
|
8/70
|
Bill Decker
|
Dallas Sheriff who saw
bullet hit street in front of JFK
|
Natural causes
|
8/70
|
Abraham Zapruder
|
Took famous film of JFK
assassination
|
Natural causes
|
12/70
|
Salvatore Granello*
|
Mobster linked to both Hoffa,Trafficante,
and Castro assassination plots
|
Murdered
|
1971
|
James Plumeri*
|
Mobster tied to mob-CIA
assassination plots
|
Murdered
|
3/71
|
Clayton Fowler
|
Ruby's chief defense
attorney
|
Uknown
|
4/71
|
Gen. Charles Cabell*
|
CIA deputy director
connected to anti-Castro Cubans
|
Collapsed and died
afterphysical at Fort Myers
|
1972
|
Hale Boggs*
|
House Majority Leader,
member of Warren Commission who began to publicly express doubts about
findings
|
Disappeared on Alaskan
plane flight
|
5/72
|
J. Edgar Hoover*
|
FBI director who pushed
"lone assassin" theory in JFK assassination
|
Heart attack (no
autopsy)
|
9/73
|
Thomas E. Davis*
|
Gunrunner connected to
both Ruby and CIA
|
Electrocuted trying to
steal wire
|
2/74
|
J.A. Milteer*
|
Miami right-winger who
predicted JFK's death and capture of scapegoat
|
Heater explosion
|
1974
|
Dave Yaras*
|
Close friend to both
Hoffa and Jack Ruby
|
Murdered
|
7/74
|
Earl Warren
|
Chief Justice who
reluctantly chaired Warren Commission
|
Heart failure
|
8/74
|
Clay Shaw*
|
Prime suspect in
Garrison case, reportedly a CIA contact with Ferrie and E. Howard Hunt
|
Possible cancer
|
1974
|
Earle Cabell
|
Mayor of Dallas on
11/22/63, whose brother, Gen. Charles Cabell was fired from CIA by JFK
|
Natural causes
|
6/75
|
Sam Giancana*
|
Chicago Mafia boss
slated to tell about CIA-mob death plots to Senate Committee
|
Murdered
|
7/75
|
Clyde Tolson
|
J. Edgar Hoover's
assistant and roommate
|
Natural causes
|
1975
|
Allen Sweatt
|
Dallas Deputy Sheriff
involved in investigation
|
Natural causes
|
12/75
|
Gen. Earle Wheeler
|
Contact between JFK and
CIA
|
Unknown
|
1976
|
Ralph Paul
|
Ruby's business partner
connected with crime figures
|
Heart attack
|
4/76
|
James Chaney
|
Dallas motorcycle
officer riding to JFK's right rear who said JFK "struck in the
face" with bullet
|
Heart attack
|
4/76
|
Dr. Charles Gregory
|
Governor John Connally's
physician
|
Heart attack
|
6/76
|
William Harvey*
|
CIA coordinator for
CIA-mob assassination plans against Castro
|
Complications from heart
surgery
|
7/76
|
John Roselli*
|
Mobster who testified to
Senate Committee and was to appear again
|
Stabbed and stuffed in
metal drum
|
1977 - A
Terrible Year For Many
The year 1977 produced a
bumper crop of candidates for listing under convenient deaths connected to
the JFK assassination - including the deaths of six top FBI officials all of
whom were scheduled to testify before the House Select Committee on
Assassinations.
Topping this list was former number three man in the FBI William C. Sullivan,
who had already had a preliminary meeting the investigators for the House
Committee. Sullivan was shot with a high-powered rifle near his New Hampshire
home by a man who claimed to have mistaken him for a deer. The man was
charged with a misdemeanor - "shooting a human being by accident" -
and released into the custody of his father, a state policeman. There was no
further investigation of Sullivan's death.
Louis Nichols was a special assistant to J. Edgar Hoover as well as Hoover's
liaison with the Warren Commission. Alan H. Belmont also was a special
assistant to Hoover. James Cadigan was a document expert with access to many
classified assassination documents, while J.M. English headed the FBI
laboratory where Oswald rifle and pistol were tested. Donald Kaylor was the
FBI fingerprint expert who examined prints found at the assassination scene.
None of these six Bureau officials lived to tell what they knew to the House
Committee.
Other key assassination witnesses, such as George DeMohrenschildt and former
Cuban President Carlos Prio Soccaras, died within weeks of each other in
1977, just as they too were being sought by the House Committee.
The ranks of both organized crime and U.S. intelligence agencies were thinned
by deaths beginning in 1975, the time of the Senate Intelligence Hearings,
and 1978, the closing months of the House Committee. Charles Nicoletti, a
mobster connected with the CIA-Mafia assassination plots, was murdered in
Chicago, while William Pawley, a former diplomat connected with both
organized crime and CIA figures, reportedly committed suicide.
Adding official confirmation to rumors that "hit teams" may have
been at work was a "Time" magazine report that federal agents had
initiated a nationwide investigation into more than 20 gangland
assassinations constituting what agents believed was an "open underworld
challenge to governmental infiltration of Mafia activities."
One FBI source was quoted as saying:
Our main concern is that we may be
facing a revival of the old "Murder, Inc." days.
A "New York News" story concerning this official fear of roving
assassination squads even mentions the death of Sam Giancana, who was killed
one day before he was to testify about MOB-CIA connections and while under
government protection.
Just as the House Committee was gearing up its investigation into the JFK
assassination, the news media reported the following deaths:
Date
|
Name
|
Connection
with case
|
Cause
of Death
|
1/77
|
William Pawley*
|
Former Brazilian
Ambassador connected to Anti-Castro Cubans, crime figures
|
Gunshot ruled suicide
|
3/77
|
George DeMohrenschildt*
|
Close friend to both
Oswald and Bouvier family (Jackie Kennedy's parents), CIA contract agent
|
Gunshot wound ruled
suicide
|
3/77
|
Carlos Prio Soccaras*
|
Former Cuban President,
money man for anti-Castro Cubans
|
Gunshot wound ruled
suicide
|
3/77
|
Paul Raigorodsky
|
Business friend of
George DeMohrenschildt and wealthy oilmen
|
Natural causes
|
5/77
|
Lou Staples*
|
Dallas radio Talk Show
host who told friends he would break assassination case
|
Gunshot to head,ruled
suicide
|
6/77
|
Louis Nichols
|
Former No. 3 man in FBI,
worked on JFK investigation
|
Heart attack
|
8/77
|
Alan Belmont
|
FBI official who testified
to Warren Commission
|
"Long illness"
|
8/77
|
James Cadigan
|
FBI document expert who
testified to Warren Commission
|
Fall in home
|
8/77
|
Joseph C. Ayres*
|
Chief steward on JFK's
Air Force One
|
Shooting accident
|
8/77
|
Francis G. Powers*
|
U-2 pilot downed over
Russia in 1960
|
Helicopter crash (He
reportedly ran out of fuel)
|
9/77
|
Kenneth O'Donnell
|
JFK's closest aide
|
Natural causes
|
10/77
|
Donald Kaylor
|
FBI fingerprint chemist
|
Heart attack
|
10/77
|
J.M. English
|
Former head of FBI
Forensic Sciences Laboratory
|
Heart attack
|
11/77
|
William Sullivan*
|
Former No. 3 man in FBI,
headed Division 5, counter- espionage and domestic intelligence
|
Hunting accident
|
1978
|
C.L. "Lummie"
Lewis
|
Dallas Deputy Sheriff
who arrested Mafia man Braden in Dealey Plaza
|
Natural causes
|
9/78
|
Garland Slack
|
Man who said Oswald
fired at his target at rifle range
|
Unknown
|
1/79
|
Billy Lovelady
|
Depository employee said
to be the man in the doorway in AP photograph
|
Complications from heart
attack
|
6/80
|
Jesse Curry
|
Dallas Police Chief at
time of assassination
|
Heart attack
|
6/80
|
Dr. John Holbrook
|
Psychiatrist who
testified Ruby was not insane
|
Heart attack but pills,
notes found,
|
1/81
|
Marguerite Oswald
|
Mother of accused
assassin
|
Cancer
|
10/81
|
Frank Watts
|
Chief felony prosecutor
for Dallas D.A.
|
Natural causes
|
1/82
|
Peter Gregory
|
Original translator for
Marina Oswald and Secret Service
|
Natural causes
|
5/82
|
Dr. James Weston
|
Pathologist allowed to
see JFK autopsy material for HSCA
|
Died while jogging,
ruled natural causes
|
8/82
|
Will H. Griffin
|
FBI agent who reportedly
said Oswald was "definitely" an FBI informant
|
Cancer
|
10/82
|
W. Marvin Gheesling
|
FBI official who helped
supervise JFK investigation
|
"Long illness"
|
3/84
|
Roy Kellerman
|
Secret Service agent in
charge of JFK limousine
|
Unknown
|
Following names are the recently known deaths, almost all died of
natural causes:
Date
|
Name
|
Connection
with case
|
Cause
of Death
|
10/92
|
Jim Garrison
|
Former District Attorney
of New Orleans, only one who sued in the JFK assassination case
|
Natural causes
|
?/94
|
Perry Russo
|
witness who told he had
seen Shaw, Oswald and Ferrie talking about the killing of JFK
|
Unknown
|
01/95
|
Rose Kennedy
|
Mother of John F.
Kennedy
|
natural causes
|
01/95
|
L.C. Graves
|
wrested Ruby's revolver
away from him after shooting Oswald
|
natural causes
|
2/95
|
Irving L. Goldberg
|
Judge who advised L. B.
Johnson on transition of power
|
natural causes
|
3/95
|
Philip L. Willis
|
Dealey Plaza Witness,
photographer
|
Leukemia
|
5/95
|
Evelyn Norton Lincoln
|
JFK's personal secretary
|
natural causes
|
5/95
|
Phil L. Barleson
|
Defender of Ruby
|
Heart attack
|
11/95
|
Richard Case Nagell
|
CIA agent who claimed he
uncovered a "large operation" aimed at killing JFK
|
heart disease
|
12/95
|
James W. Altgens
|
Dealey Plaza Witness,
press photographer
|
natural causes
|
1/96
|
Ralph W. Yarborough
|
Dealey Plaza witness,
rode in motorcade
|
natural causes
|
7/96
|
Melvin Belli
|
Lawyer of Jack Ruby
|
Suffering stroke and
pneumonia
|
8/96
|
Charles Brehm
|
Dealey Plaza Witness
|
Unknown
|
9/96
|
McGeorge Bundy
|
Top aide to JFK and LBJ
|
Heart attack
|
10/96
|
Rufus Youngblood
|
Agent who shielded LBJ
during the JFK murder
|
Cancer
|
10/96
|
Larry Ray Harris
|
Researcher
|
Car accident
|
10/96
|
Lawrence Brantley
|
Sold Jack Ruby the gun
used to kill Oswald
|
Complications from
surgery
|
Text by Jim Marrs
Dates by Jim Marrs and Ralph Schuster
(c) 2002 Jim Marrs and Ralph Schuster
|
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