538 lines
26 KiB
Plaintext
538 lines
26 KiB
Plaintext
Rumors, Myths and Urban Legends
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Surrounding the 'Death' of Jim Morrison
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by Thomas Lyttle
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Reprinted from SECRET AND SUPPRESSED: BANNED IDEAS AND HIDDEN
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HISTORY, edited by Jim Keith, $12.95, available from
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1-800-680-INET.
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So much has been written and speculated upon surrounding Jim
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Morrison's life, death and after-death that it is no longer
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enough to address just the facts. One must now also address the
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self-perpetuating mythos that has developed and enveloped the
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facts.
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In the late nineteen sixties, Doors' singer Jim Morrison
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founded a publishing company named Zeppelin Publishing Company
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with the help of the legal department of Warner Brothers Pictures
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and Atlantic Records. According to promotions for Zeppelin, "Jim
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wanted to get his hands on the trademark 'Zeppelin' before Led
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Zeppelin did. He did this while everyone in America knew who the
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Doors were, but before the other rock group was well known..."
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Zeppelin Publishing Company was chartered and put into
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hibernation for later resurrection.
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On July 3, 1971, rock and roll wunderkind James Douglas
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Morrison was supposedly, reportedly, found dead in a Paris,
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France apartment he had sub-leased as a writer's studio. His
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'wife', Pamela Courson, was the first to discover the body in the
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bathroom. Jim lay in the bathtub, naked and half-submerged. At
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first she thought that "Jim was pretending", noticing that he had
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"recently shaved".
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What immediately followed was a series of bizarre and
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convoluted events, probable conspiracies, strange coincidences
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and surreal news reports surrounding the death of James Douglas
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Morrison. Following the death there was a three day news
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blackout. This was reported on and questioned widely in the
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media, including articles in The Berkeley Barb, Esquire, the LA
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Free Press, Sounds, The Baltimore Morning Sun, and many others.
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Robert Hillburn writing at that time in The LA Times, called his
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obituary of Morrison "Why Morrison Death News Delay??" igniting a
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spark that has yet to smolder.
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The blackout prevented Morrison's close friends from getting
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at the principals and witnesses -- and the corpse -- for close
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inspection. Even Jim's parents and his in-laws were prevented
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from seeing the corpse.
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Pamela had called a local French medical examiner -- Dr. Max
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Vasille -- to take charge upon finding her husband's body. Dr.
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Vasille listed the cause of death as "heart failure". Several
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people viewed the sealed coffin, including Doors manager Bill
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Siddons, who apparently chose not to view the corpse. Siddons
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official statement to the press was that "Jim Morrison died of
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natural causes" and that "the death was peaceful".
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Although Jim's death was listed officially as "heart
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failure", his personal physician, Dr. Derwin, stated to the press
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that "Jim Morrison was in excellent health before travelling to
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Paris".
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This has recently been complicated by "Queen Mu" writing in
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the avant garde magazine Mondo 2000 (Summer, 1991). Apparently
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Mondo 2000 surfaced a rare medical file regarding Jim Morrison's
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various sexual diseases, and the treatments he was undergoing for
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them. There was mention of "cancer of the penis...". Queen Mu
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reports:
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"... Hey! No one wants to be expunged from the Book of
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Life. How many medical workers at UCLA knew that Jim
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Morrison was being treated for gonorrhea in the Fall of
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1970? Knew of the biopsy that confirmed adenoma of the
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penile urethra -- often consequence to repeated gonorrhea?
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This is a particularly swift form of cancer whose only
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alternative may have been radical castration..."
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-- Queen Mu, pp. 131
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No autopsy was performed on Jim Morrison's corpse, as is the
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usual custom in unusual or suspect deaths in France. Had friends
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been able to at least see the corpse this might have been done.
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According to several reports, a Morrison confidant Alan Ronay
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alos helped maintain the blackout surrounding the death. Jim
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Morrison's body was quickly whisked away to be buried at Pere
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Lachaise. Pere Lachaise is a national French monument and
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notables like Balzac, Edith Piaf, Moliere, Oscar Wilde and other
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French countrymen are buried there. Regarding Pere Lachaise: Jim
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had handpicked the gravesite on several occasions for his
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impending 'burial'. He had visited the site as late as three
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days before his 'death'. This is reported in Break On Through
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and other Morrison biographies.
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The media at once showed suspicion regarding Morrison's grave
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due to the fact that foreigners are rarely buried in a national
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French monument. Reports like those in the Baltimore Morning Sun
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questioned how he might have cajoled his way into the cemetary to
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be buried.
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Upon viewing the Pere Lachaise grave site, Doors drummer John
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Densmore stated: "... the grave is too short!" Doors manager
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Bill Siddons, when asked about Pere Lachaise, stated: "... how it
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happened is still not clear to me". He was quoted in Bam!, a
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rock magazine back in 1981 regarding the controversy. At any
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rate, Morrison's grave at Pere Lachaise remained unmarked for
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several months, adding and maintaining a further cloak around the
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corpse and the evidence.
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Only two people saw Jim Morrison's dead body -- his wife
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Pamela and Dr. Vasille. Dr. Vasille has repeatedly denied
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interviews and will not answer questions, and Pamela is dead.
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The Occult Connection
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Besides the "facts" as laid out in countless books, films,
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interviews and press reports, there exists also a wild and
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surreal assortment of rumors regarding "what really took place".
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Many of these rumors center in on the occult, black and white
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magick, Voudoo, magical Christianity and assorted mystical
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strangenesses.
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In J. Prochniky's biography of Morrison, Break On Through,
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there is this description of Morrison-based occult rumors:
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"... even more incredible were theories that Morrison
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had somehow been "murdered" through "supernatural means".
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While Jim was fascinated with the occult, it is quite an
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assumption that a jealous rival or jilted lover could cause
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his death in a Paris bathtub by stabbing a Voodoo doll or
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melting down a Doors album while chanting a curse."
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"... Another supernatural-based theory is that
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Morrison's body had been driven to great extremes by the
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spirit of the shaman he believed had entered his body as a
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child on that New Mexico highway. When this spirit or a
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demon its talents to influence the world, it abandoned Jim
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and left him a physically wasted and mentally exhausted man
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who felt betrayed with no desire to go on..."
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-- Riordan and Prochniky, pp. 466
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Another occult theory exists in No One Hear Gets Out Alive by
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Sugarman and Hopkins. Regarding Jim's death they state:
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"... Other theories abounded in Jim's close circle of
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friends. One had him killed when someone plucked out his
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eyes with a knife ("to free his soul", as the story had it).
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Another had a spurned mistress killing him long distance
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from New York by Witchcraft..."
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-- Sugarman and Hopkins, pp. 372
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Anthropologist Allison Bailey Kennedy even went so far as to
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tie Morrison in with Orphic mystery cults and the initiatory uses
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of various spider venoms, which release the "deuende in Gypsy
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tradition -- the dark soul that burn incandescently like a
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cicada, immolating itself in fiery passion."
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Jim Morrison many times claimed connections to the occult and
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specifically Voodoo or Voudun philosophy and magick. It was a
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part of his "path". The moniker "Mr. Mojo Risin'" was an anagram
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-- a rearrangement of the letters in Jim Morrison. Mojo is a
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religious term describing shamanic "power icon" or affiliation.
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The African root Mo refers to the dark or darkness. Mojo is a
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specific African/Voodoun/Obeah traditional term.
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"I think that there are whole regions of images and feelings
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that are rarely given outlet in daily life... when they do come
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out, they can take perverse forms" said Morrison circa 1968. He
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goes on to say that "the shaman is the healer, like the
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Witch-doctor." Morrison reiterates elsewhere that "we must not
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forget that the snake or the lizard is identified with the
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unconscious and the forces of evil..." So says the legendary
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"Lizard King". "The Lizard King" was one of Jim Morrison's
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occult code names. He was also called "The Exterminating Angel"
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in occult circles, according to film critic Gene Youngblood and
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others.
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In No One Hear Gets Out Alive authors Hopkins and Sugarman
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recount Morrison drinking blood with Witch-initiate Ingrid
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Thompson. In certain occult traditions, the use of blood
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combined with certain sexual acts is reginmen, part of a hidden
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technology for spell casting. This is especially so in the
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Tantric Vama Marg (left-handed) rites. It is also a part of
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Western ritual magic, used in groups like La Couleuvre Noir, the
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Ordo Templi Orientis, Les Ophitis and others, although it is more
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uncommon than common in occult work. This sort of sorcery is
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also used in Voodoo/Voudun Petro rites to summon different Loas
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(gods and goddesses).
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Speaking of the Tantra Vama Marg and the Voodoo Petro, there
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is this description of death mythology pertinent to Jim
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Morrison's occult beliefs and possibly his practices. At the
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very least he would have known of these ideas:
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"...but the human form is no means just an empty vessal
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for the Gods... Rather it is a critical locus where a
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number of sacred forces may converge. The players are the
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basic components of man: the z'etiole, the gros bon ange and
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the ti bon ange, as well as the n'ame of the corpse cadaver.
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The latter is the body itself, the flesh and the blood. The
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n'ame is the gift from God and the spirit of the flesh that
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allows each cell in the body to function. It is the
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residual presence of the n'ame for example, that gives form
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to the corpse long after the clinical "death" of the body.
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The n'ame, upon the "death" of the body begins to pass
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slowly into the organisms of the soil... A process that
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takes 18 months to complete..."
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-- Davis, pp. 99
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Remember, Jim Morrison's grave at Pere Lachait remained
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unmarked for several months so that no one might disturb the
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corpse and the surrounding site. The whole event from day one
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was part of a blackout, remember.
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According to Tibetan tradtion, something similar is believed
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to exist so far as naming the componants of the soul and the
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body. The Vama Marg and especially the Bardo Thodol (the Tibetan
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Book of the Dead) relate specific death myths concerning what
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occurs right after someone dies. Writing in Psychedelic
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Monographs and Essays, psychiatrist Dr. Rick Strassman shows
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that:
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"... Another model of birth and death, and
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transformation in which the 49 day interval appears is in
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the Bardo Thodol... This is the time when the life forces of
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the deceased -- the energetic tendencies accumulated during
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"life", "decide on" or gravitate towards or coalesce around
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the next incarnate form..."
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-- Strassman, pp. 182
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Rock writer Greg Shaw, writing in Bam! and Mojo Navigator
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interpreted Morrison's song The End along these lines also,
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stating that each line in the song is a direct quote from the
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Bardo Thodol. It all "makes perfect sense, if one is familiar
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with the mystical background," said Shaw.
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What are the implications for these ideas in light of the
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supposed "death" of Jim Morrison? At clinical death, according
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to the above, the person actually splits up into his or her true
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parts, formerly connected into a whole being.
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According to occult lore, it is possible to ensnare or trap
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parts of the personality or spirit during this transition. Wade
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Davis, author of The Serpent and the Rainbow and Passage of
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Darkness: The Ethnobiology of the Haitian Zombie, has this to
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say:
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"During initiation, for example the ti bon ange may be
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extracted from the body and housed in a clay jar called a
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canari. A canari is a clay jar that has been placed at the
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inner sanctuary of the hounfour (ritual house)."
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"... During the stages directly following the physical
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death and the first stages of after-death the ti bon ange is
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extremely vulnerable... Only when it is liberated from the
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flesh... is it relatively safe..."
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-- Davis, pp. 102
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Is it Jim Morrison's ti bon ange that is at the root of all
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these occult rumors? Was it his ti bon ange that was bought,
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sold and then collected on that fateful day in Paris when he
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"died"...?
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That canari has a name. It is called Zeppelin Publishing
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Company. And the bokor, or Voodoo high priest who cajoled
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Morrison's ti bon ange into the canari? He runs a company called
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the B of A Company (or B of A Communications), formerly of Baton
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Rouge, Louisiana, and now of Fort Lauderdale, Florida. He owns
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an active passport and IDs under the name of James Douglas
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Morrison and claims to actually be the no-so-dead rock star!
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Apparitions and Appearances After the "Death"
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In the first two years after Jim Morrison's "death" in Paris,
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many sightings of the rock star were reported. These sightings
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range from the totally spurious and ridiculous to the reliable
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and very hard to shake.
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The LA Free Press and several wire service reports described
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someone in 1973 appearing on several occasions in San Francisco.
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There Morrison was involved with business and banking
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transactions with the Bank of America of San Francisco. The
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employee that handled the transactions, Walt Fleischer, confirmed
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that someone resembling Morrison and using that name was indeed
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doing business at the Bank of America. He did add that he "was
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far from sure that this was the 'dead' artist" as Morrison showed
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no identification. Could this be because a photo ID was already
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on file at the bank, with the name James Douglas Morrison? Yes,
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it is still on file.
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According to authors Riordan and Prochniky, Morrison was also
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seen on several occasions hanging out in "unpleasant places" in
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Los Angeles and wearing Morrison's leather garb, all in black.
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This was over a period of two years right after the Paris
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"death". I researched this a bit further and found out that the
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"unpleasant places" meant notorious gay leather bars, and the
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underground gay community in Los Angeles.
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There were also many rumors that Morrison was also appearing
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regularly in Louisiana and had made several radio interviews.
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Again, Prochniky and Riordan reveal that:
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"... At an obscure radio station in the Midwest Jim
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supposedly showed up in the dead of night and did a lengthy
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interview that explained it all... After the interview he
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vanished into the darkness again. As you might buess, no
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recordings of the interview exist and no reliable source
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remembers hearing the broadcast..."
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An LP record called Phantom's Divine Comedy was released also
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in 1974. This was rumored to be Jim Morrison singing with an
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anonymous band with the names of "drummer X, bassist Y, and
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keyboardist Z". The music reportedly resembled Jim Morrison's
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sound quite well. All this again added and sparked the rumor
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mills, and stirred public fascination.
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However, in a 1992 press released from the Zeppelin group, it
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is revealed that Morrison pal Iggy Pop was actually doing all the
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singing and helping the "hoax" along. This added more fuel as to
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how many people were actually involved in maintaining his "death
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hoax". Up until the 1992 press release, the record company that
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had released Phantom had refused to divulge the names on the LP,
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or the singer's name -- which was indeed Iggy Pop.
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Regarding all these rumors, Doors keyboardist Ray Manzarek
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stated: "If there was one guy that would have been capable of
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staging his own death -- getting a phony death certificate and
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paying off some French doctor... And putting a hundred and fifty
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pound sack of sand into a coffin and splitting to some point on
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this planet -- Africa, who knows where -- it is Jim Morrison who
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would have been able to pull it off."
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Jim Morrison's best friend Tom Baker, writing in High Times
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(June, 1981) had this to say: "I was very tempted to believe the
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rumors that Jim had faked his own death."
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A group of fans actually went so far as to try to get
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Morrison's dental records, apparently to try to get permission to
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dig up his body and match the records to the remains. This was
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immediately blocked both by Morrison's parents and their
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attorneys -- at least for the time being.
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It is known that Jim Morrison had repeatedly planted the
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seeds which would lead to this sort of speculation -- that he had
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somehow faked his own death and dropped out into a new identity.
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At the Fillmore in San Francisco in 1967, Jim started suggesting
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that he should pull a "death stunt" to bring national press
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attention onto the band. This was when he came up with the "Mr.
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Mojo Risin'" anagram which would be used after he "split to
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Africa" and wished to secretly contact friends.
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Morrison also told Danny Sugarman and Jerry Hopkins on more
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than one occasion that he could see himself "radically changing
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careers, reappearing as a suited and neck-tied businessman."
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Jack Holzman's assistant Steve Harris even remembers Jim Morrison
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asking what might happen if he were to suddenly "die"... how
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might it affect business, record sales, the press, and would
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people believe it? With confidant Mary Francis Werebelow Jim
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"entertained long conversations about how the Disciples had
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stolen the body of Christ from the crypt, jokingly calling it the
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"Easter heist," etc."
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In a Rolling Stone article for September 17, 1981, author
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Jerry Hopkins recounts many other Morrison sightings:
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"The first one I remember was a beaut... He surfaced
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in San Francisco shortly after Morrison's death and began
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cashing checks in Morrison's name. He was not writing bad
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checks, mind you; it was his money he was spending. It was
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just that he was dressed as Jim would in his 'leather
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period', and that he told everyone that he was indeed the
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'dead singer'.
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"The telephone operator asked: 'will you accept a long
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distance collect call from Jim Morrison?' It was an
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interesting conversation..."
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"Our conversations were unsettling. He told me to go
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to Paris and dig up the corpse, but that you would need
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permission from '12 Catholic Bishops' to do it... A visit
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to his home was more jarring. There at the end of one room
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was a Morrison 'shrine', converted with posters, flowers,
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religious icons -- the works!"
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-- Sugarman, pp. 33
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Years later, I actually got the chance to visit and interview
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the shrine's owner, who claimed to be Jim Morrison. He told me
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matter-of-factly details about Hopkins, as well as that other
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reporters had actually burglarized the shrine in an attempt to
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get a scoop.
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Another surreal sighting involved "Donny" of Baton Roughe,
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Lousiana. He described Jim Morrison at Morrison's home in 1978.
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Donny told his friend "Larry" about it, as Larry was trying to
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break in to the world of rock and roll:
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"I remember Larry telling me about the whole wall of
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one room lined with books all across it. Every one of the
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books were about Satan, or had something to do with him. He
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also told me about a large chair that looked like a throne,
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on which this man sat and watched over his nude children
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running around... I guess that you can probably guess who
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that kinky old weird man was -- Jim Morrison, The Lizard
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King!"
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-- Sugarman, pp. 33
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Another person named Rhea (the Greek goddess of fertility)
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claimed she was living with Jim Morrison in 1979 with their son
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"Jesse Blue James". She matter-of-factly claimed that Morrison
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had "evolved into a state of pure energy... And can materialize
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and dematerilize at will." She and Jim were also in direct
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telepathic communication and in "electromagnetic synch".
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The Intelligence Connection and JM2
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Rock icon Jim Morrison's father was an admiral in the United
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States Navy, privy to intelligence and counterintelligence
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information. His name is Steven Morrison.
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During the first few years surround Jim Morrison's "death" a
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number of interesting articles surfaced. These cited references
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showing various intelligence interests either in Morrison's
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underground activity; his "death" or that intelligence had even
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masterminded Morrison's death itself! One of the more explicit
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appeared in the Scandinavian magazine Dagblatte. This article
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detailed French intelligence efforts to assassinate Jim Morrison
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in Paris. Author Bernard Wolfe writing The Real Life Death of
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Jim Morrison for Esquire (June 1972) related the story of:
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"Sherry, a Pasadena girl who knew Morrison well: "...I
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couldn't make sense out of the stories in the papers.
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Suppose he had a heart attack exactly as they reported, is
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that what he died of? My God, you might as well say that
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Ernest Hemingway died of "extensive brain damage". If you
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want to know the cause of Jim's death -- not just the
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physiology of it -- ask what triggered his heart to stop...
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And whose finger was on the trigger."
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-- Wolfe, pp. 106
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In the first few years after Morrison's "death" the owner of
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B of A Communications, named James Douglas Morrison, claimed to
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be operating as an intelligence agent for a number of domestic
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and international groups including the CIA, NSA, Interpol,
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Swedish Inteligence and others. There are also connections
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between James Douglas Morrison and various occult groups with
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probable intelligence connections. [Author's note: from here on
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the B of A Morrison will be referred to as JM2].
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The enclosed plates show several documents implicating him in
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intelligence circles. JM2 also claims to be the "dead" rock star
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and former singer for The Doors. The new JM2 dropped the old JM1
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rock and roll identity to become a "James Bond" wearing the suit
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and tie that Morrison predicted when he was with The Doors.
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This author has in fact seen what appear to be stacks of
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official-looking documents and letters between the CIA, various
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government agencies, national news groups like CNN and NBC and
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JM2, involving what looked like personal meetings, projects and
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ephemera. Of special interest is that when I viewed parts of the
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files, all the reports had a paper-thin metallic band affixed to
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them with colored UPC bar codes. There is no way for me to
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authenticate the claims of JM2, but everything looked extremely
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offical and very elaborate.
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From about 1972 through 1992 JM2 has left a surreal trail of
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paper and appearances all over the world. These include letters
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to and from Louisiana Governor Edwin Edwards and CIA Director
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William Colby, through the Washington, DC law firm of Colby,
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Miller and Hanes.
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A courtroom transcript which I have seen implicates the FBI
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and CIA in several coverups regarding JM2's intelligence career.
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These show that there seems to be a sytematic destruction of
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files relating to JM2's spy activities. An enclosed plate also
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shows JM2's Swedish Intelligence ID card, obtained from the FBI
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through the Freedom of Information Act. Unfortunately the only
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copy I have is obscured in the facial area, but the ID numbers
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|
are intact. Also in my possession are files concerning JM2's
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rogue financial activities with the Bank of America, and news
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|
reports regarding lawsuits by and against JM2 for bank fraud and
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espionage, which he claims was done under intelligence auspices
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|
as part of financial experiments to destabilize foreign
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currencies and exchange rates.
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There also appear to be hundreds if not thousands of
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|
miscellaneous files -- both classified and declassified --
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|
regarding one James Douglas Morrison, dated after his "death" in
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1971. These also refer to "WBC", a nom de plume of JM2. These
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|
look like real letters, documents, and court transcripts
|
|
involving intelligence circles. These involve the CIA, Danish
|
|
intelligence, and others. There is also an active passport and
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|
banking IDs under the name James Douglas Morrison.
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Is this all for real or is this an elaborate hoax? It is not
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|
the scope of this work to determine the truth -- or lack of truth
|
|
-- or the consequences of such activities. The important thing
|
|
to note for the sake of this study is that someone or some group
|
|
are actively pursuing and setting up a mass "urban legend"
|
|
regarding James Morrison. They are painstakingly documenting it
|
|
also. Whether this is a hoax or not is not as important as the
|
|
fact that a lot of official-looking information is being
|
|
generated surrounding the myth and legendry of Jim Morrison, his
|
|
life and his supposed "death".
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|
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Just why might this be?
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Multiple Morrisons
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Like the "multiple Oswald" theories of Kennedy assassination
|
|
buffs, there also exist rumors and urban legends describing the
|
|
"multiple Morrison" theory.
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|
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The idea that Jim Morrison was in fact several different
|
|
people and actors, or intelligence agents has been going on for
|
|
some time. Besides the "Morrison" singing on the Phantom (now
|
|
shown to be Iggy Pop) there also exist rumors that a Louisiana
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|
banker as well as Richard Tanguay -- a close friend of Mick
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|
Jagger -- perpetuated the hoax. Even High Times ran and old news
|
|
story about someone claiming to be Jim Morrison (post 1971)
|
|
running for governor of Louisiana! Supposedly Richard Tanguay
|
|
(related to vaudeville legend Eva Tanguay) took the Morrison
|
|
persona on, on several occasions, and even sang with The Doors
|
|
when they toured Europe with the Rolling Stones. Is this
|
|
possible?
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In fact JM2 has claimed publicly that there have been
|
|
numerous James Douglas Morrisons, and that they all knew one
|
|
another and met from time to time to work it all out. The
|
|
impersonations were part of CIA sociological experiments like
|
|
Artichoke or MK-ULTRA.
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It is impossible to substantiate wild stories like this.
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|
But the fact that there are people and groups out there making
|
|
these claims in a big way and perpetuating "urban legends" about
|
|
Jim Morrison is a curiosity in itself... And funny, in a dark
|
|
sort of way.
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