641 lines
31 KiB
Plaintext
641 lines
31 KiB
Plaintext
ÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÜ ÜÜÜ ÜÜÜÜ
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ÜÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛßÛßßßßßÛÛÜ ÜÜßßßßÜÜÜÜ ÜÛÜ ÜÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÜÜÜÜÜÛßß ßÛÛ
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Mo.iMP ÜÛÛÜ ßÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÝÛ ÞÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛ ÞÛÛÛÛ ÞÛÛÛÛÛÝ ßÛß
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ÜÛÛÛÛÛÛÛ ÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÝ ÞÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÝ ÛÛÛ ÛÛÛÛÛÛ
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ÜÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÝ ÞÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛ ÞÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛ ß ÞÛÛÛÛÛÛÜ ÜÛ
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ÜÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÝ ÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛ ÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÝ ÞÞÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛß
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ÜÛßÛÛÛÛÛÛ ÜÜ ÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÝ ÛÛÞÛÛÛÛÛÝ ÞÛÛÛÛÛÛßß
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ÜÛßÛÛÛÛÛÛÜÛÛÛÛÜÞÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛ ÞÛ ßÛÛÛÛÛ Ü ÛÝÛÛÛÛÛ Ü
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ÜÛ ÞÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛß ÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛ ßÛÜ ßÛÛÛÜÜ ÜÜÛÛÛß ÞÛ ÞÛÛÛÝ ÜÜÛÛ
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ÛÛ ÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛß ÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÜ ßÛÜ ßßÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛß ÜÜÜß ÛÛÛÛÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÛÛÛÛÛß
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ßÛÜ ÜÛÛÛß ßÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÜ ßßÜÜ ßßÜÛÛßß ßÛÛÜ ßßßÛßÛÛÛÛÛÛÛßß
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ßßßßß ßßÛÛß ßßßßß ßßßßßßßßßßßßß
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ARRoGANT CoURiERS WiTH ESSaYS
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Grade Level: Type of Work Subject/Topic is on:
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[ ]6-8 [ ]Class Notes [JFK Shooting Evidence ]
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[ ]9-10 [ ]Cliff Notes [ ]
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[ ]11-12 [ ]Essay/Report [ ]
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[x]College [x]Misc [ ]
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Dizzed: o4/95 # of Words:4796 School: ? State: ?
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ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ>ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ>ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ>Chop Here>ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ>ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ>ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ>ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ
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(Part 1 - The first Ricky White News Story)
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NOV. 22, 1963: ANOTHER STORY BLURS THE FACTS
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SON OF DALLAS COP SAYS DAD WAS 1 OF 3 WHO SHOT KENNEDY
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By Andrew Likakis
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In another bizarre twist to a mystery that has haunted Americans for
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more than a quarter century, the son of a former Dallas police officer
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plans to tell the world that his father was one of the assassins of
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President John F. Kennedy.
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Ricky White, a 29-year-old, unemployed oil equipment salesman in
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Midland, says he "had no conception of ever, ever giving this story out"
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but decided to do so after FBI agents began asking questions in May 1988.
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"I'm telling you a story that has touched me, not only others, and I
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feel uncomfortable just telling it to strangers," White said during a
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recent interview with the Austin American-Statesman.
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Monday in Dallas, White is scheduled to show reports material
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implicating his father, Roscoe Anthony White, in the 1963 assassination.
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It suggests that White, who died in 1971, was a member of an assassination
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team of three shooters, that he fired two of the three bullets that killed
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the president, and that he also killed Dallas police officer J. D. Tippit
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during the manhunt for Lee Harvey Oswald.
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Among the material: a rifle with telescopic sight that uses the same
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kind of ammunition as Oswald's gun; records showing that Oswald and White
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served together in the Marines; three faded messages that appear to be
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decoded orders to kill someone in Dallas in November 1963; and a son's
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recollections of his father's incriminating diary - a document that is
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missing.
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The press conference is being sponsored by two private groups - the JFK
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Assassination Information Centre of Dallas and the Assassination Archives
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and Research Centre of Washington - and some Midland Businessmen.
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The possibility of Ricky White's story being a hoax - a falsehood
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concocted either by Ricky or his father - has not been dismissed by the
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people urging him to publicly talk about the matter. During the last 27
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years, many private researchers have claimed to have found evidence of a
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conspiracy, only to be proved wrong or deceitful.
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Bernard Fensterwald, executive director of the Assassination Archives
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and Research Centre, says if there was a conspiracy, Ricky White may have
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the key. "I think it's our best shot," he says, "and we better take it."
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J. Gary Shaw, co-director of the JFK Assassination Information Centre,
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says he hopes White's story will result in an investigation of the
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assassination by Texas authorities. Two Washington-based probes - the
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Warren Commission in 1963-64 and the House Select Committee on
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Assassinations in 1976-78 failed to resolve the enigma of the Kennedy
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shooting, Shaw maintains.
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As with previous conspiracy theories, White's story is tantalizing, the
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evidence intriguing. Yet, as with other theories, it raises more questions
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than it answers -- such as: Who issued the orders to the so-called
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assassination team? Why was the assassination ordered against Kennedy?
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And why is Ricky White telling this story now?
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AN OSWALD CONNECTION
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Using clues discovered in his father's effects and relying on available
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government records, Ricky White says he has determined that Roscoe White
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and Lee Harvey Oswald probably met in 1957. Ricky White's mother, Geneva,
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is gravely ill and unable to be interviewed, family members say.
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According to Military records, both White and Oswald were among a
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contingent of U.S. Marines, who boarded the USS Bexar in San Diego that
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year for the 22-day trip to Yokosuka, Japan.
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In its final report, the Warren Commission published a photo of Oswald
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with other Marines in the Philippines. All but one of the Marines was
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squatting on the ground. Ricky White says his father claimed to have been
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the standing Marine and claimed to have become acquainted with Oswald in
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Japan and the Philippines.
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Military records show that Roscoe White took frequent unexplained trips
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in the Pacific, and Ricky White says that his father's diary described
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those as secret intelligence assignments.
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It has been established in previous investigations that Oswald was
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discharged in 1959 and defected to the Soviet Union. He returned to the
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United States in mid-1962, settling first in Fort Worth with his
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Russian-born wife, then moving to Dallas a short time later.
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Military records show Roscoe White was discharged in late 1962, joining
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his wife and two young sons in Paris, Texas. Ricky White says that shortly
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thereafter, his father moved the family to Dallas and took a job as an
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insurance salesman.
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MAN WITH TWO NAMES
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Ricky White says that two months ago he found several faded messages in
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a military weapons canister in the attic of Geneva White's parents home in
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Paris. Ricky believes the messages to be decoded cables in which Mandarin,
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a name he says his father was known by, was told his next assignment would
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be "to eliminate a National Security threat to worldwide peace" in Houston,
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Austin, or Dallas.
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Another message from the same source - "C. Bowers" of "Navy
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Intelligence" - identified Dallas as the destination and provided White
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with a list of contacts. It stated White had a "place hidden within the
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department." The message was dated September 1963 - the same month that
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Geneva White began a brief stint as a cocktail hostess at Jack Ruby's
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Carousel Club in Dallas. Ruby fatally shot Oswald two days after the
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Kennedy assassination.
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Dallas police records show that on Oct. 7, 1963, Roscoe White joined
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the department as a photographer and clerk. He did not become a patrol
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officer until 1964. A staff member in the police personnel department said
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recently that White's file contains no job references.
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Ricky White says his father's diary referred to several trips made
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during this period to a remote area in the foothills near Van Horn, Texas.
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There, Roscoe White and several others practised shooting at moving
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targets, Ricky White says. Although he was younger than 3 years old, Ricky
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White says he has vague memories of being taken to Van Horn.
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"My impression was they (others at the Van Horn camp) had been working
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with my father in the military," Ricky White says, "because they had known
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each other well when this took place."
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A FOOTLOCKER AND DIARY
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Ricky White says that, after his grandfather died in 1982, he was given
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his father's footlocker, which had been stored in the grandfather's house
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in Paris.
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The locker contained military memorabilia, a Marine uniform, a safe
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deposit box key and a black leather-bound diary with gold trim that
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detailed Roscoe White's life.
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As he and his mother read the diary, Ricky White says they found
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passages that implicated Roscoe White in the Kennedy assassination.
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"My mother and I cried together," he says, "because it hurt very deeply
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to learn what I know now. It hurt so much because the man I had known
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couldn't have fired those shots. It took this investigation to be able to
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learn it's true. And my family's given a part of themselves to tell the
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story."
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From the diary he says he learned the significance of the hunting rifle
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his father gave him: a 7.65mm Mauser with telescopic sight, an Argentine
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rifle that shoots round-nose, elongated bullets - projectiles that closely
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resemble those of a Mannlicher-Carcano, an Italian rifle that Oswald was
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accused of using.
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After reading the diary, White says he was convinced his father was one
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of three assassins who fired six shots from Mauser rifles into the
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president's open top limousine in Dealey Plaza.
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Roscoe White shot from behind a fence atop a grassy knoll to the right
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and front of the limousine, his son says. Two other marksmen were in the
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Texas School Book Depository and Records buildings behind the vehicle.
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Three shots struck Kennedy; a fourth wounded Texas Gov. John Connally.
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Ricky White says the two shots that his father fired both struck
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Kennedy: the first in the throat; the second, and last of the shots fired,
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in the head.
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Oswald, Ricky White says, knew of the plot, but did not fire a shot.
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He had been instructed to bring his rifle to the Book Depository, where he
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worked, and to build a sniper's nest of book boxes near the sixth floor
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window, from which he was accused of firing all the fatal shots, Ricky
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White says.
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Ricky White says the diary referred to the other shooters only by code
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names: Sol in the Records building; and Lebanon in the Texas School Book
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Depository. The diary indicated each of the three riflemen was accompanied
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by an assistant who disassembled the rifles after the shooting and carried
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them out of the area, Ricky White says.
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According to the diary, Ricky White says, his father was to escape with
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Oswald by riding to Red Bird Airport in South Dallas in a city police car
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driven by a friend and fellow officer who did not know what was happening.
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That officer, Ricky White says, was J. D. Tippit, who was shot to death at
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10th Street and Patton Avenue in the Oak Cliff section of Dallas about 45
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minutes after Kennedy was shot. Oswald was seen running from the scene of
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that shooting.
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Ricky White says his father wrote that, as they drove south, the
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unsuspecting officer began to realize what White and Oswald were involved
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in. Oswald panicked and jumped from the car. When the officer insisted on
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"turning in" White, White got out of the car and shot the officer, Ricky
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White says.
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"I killed an officer at 10th and Patton," Ricky White quotes the diary
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as saying.
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Less than a half hour later, Oswald was arrested in the Texas Theatre
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on West Jefferson Boulevard in Oak Cliff. He had a .38- calibre revolver
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police said was the murder weapon. Murder charges against Oswald in
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connection with Tippit's death were filed before he was charged with
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Kennedy's death. Whether the revolver found in Oswald's possession was
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actually the weapon that killed Tippit has been a matter of dispute in
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several government investigations.
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Ricky White says that shortly after the assassination, his father sent
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the family to Paris and that he and other members of the assassination team
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used a "hideaway house" in Dripping Springs.
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He says that, among his father's effects, he found a third decoded
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message, dated December 1963, that advised his father to "stay within
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department, witnesses have eyes, ears and mouths....The men+will be in to
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cover up all misleading evidence soon."
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That same month President Lyndon Johnson named Chief Justice Earl
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Warren to head a commission to investigate the assassination. The Warren
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Commission concluded in September 1964 that Oswald acted alone in killing
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both Kennedy and Tippit.
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Police records show that on Oct. 19, 1965, Roscoe White quit the Dallas
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Police Department and became manager of a Dallas area drug store. During
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the next six years, he switched jobs several times, finally working as a
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foreman at M&M Equipment Co., in East Dallas.
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FAMILY TROUBLE AND DEATH
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By early 1970, Roscoe and Geneva White were a deeply troubled couple
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and sought help, said the Rev. Jack Shaw, their Baptist minister in Dallas.
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During a recent interview with the American-Statesman, Shaw said Roscoe
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White told him at the time that he and his family were "in danger." White
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confessed to leading "a double life," the minister says, "and I knew
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something was not right, something strange was going on."
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Shaw says that within the last two years he tape recorded a number of
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counselling sessions with Geneva White about her recollection of what she
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believed to be her former husband's role in assassinations. Shaw, who is
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very guarded in talking about the case, says Ricky White has only a small
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portion of the full story, which he says "will knock your eyes out."
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Shaw says he met with the Whites several times in 1970-71, but the
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Kennedy assassination was not mentioned. In 1971, Roscoe White was fatally
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injured in an explosive fire at M&M Equipment. Before White died, Shaw
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talked with him in the hospital. He recalls White saying he didn't think
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the fire was an accident - that he had seen a man running away just before
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the fire.
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After the funeral, Geneva White moved her family back to Paris. There,
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about four years later, the White home was burglarized and some of Roscoe
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White's personal possessions were taken, Ricky White says.
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Police captured the two burglars and returned the possessions which
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included some of Roscoe White's photos - among them a shot taken by Marina
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Oswald of her husband Lee Harvey Oswald holding a rifle in the back yard of
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their Dallas home in 1963. For nearly 15 years after the assassination only
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two such photos were known. Roscoe White's became the third. In its final
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report, the House Special Committee on Assassinations identified the photo
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as coming from the family of a former Dallas policeman. According to Ricky
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White and an investigator for the House committee, Geneva White had
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contacted the FBI after the burglary. The FBI informed the committee of
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the existence of the photo. The matter was not pursued because committee
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investigators didn't know about White's past relationship with Oswald or
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Geneva White's brief employment at Jack Ruby's Carousel Club.
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OTHERS FIND OUT
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Until he discovered the footlocker, Ricky White says he didn't think
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much about his father or the Kennedy assassination. He grew up in Dallas
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and Paris, where he went to school, got married and moved to Midland where
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he and his wife have two children. There he took a job selling oil field
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equipment.
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As shocking as the diary was to Ricky White and his mother, Ricky says
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it was the safe deposit box key that was to draw others into the Roscoe
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White story.
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Thinking his father might have left money or valuables in a deposit
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box, Ricky White tried to find a bank that would recognize the key. By 1988
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he was so frustrated in his attempts that he turned to Midland District
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Attorney Al Schorre for help.
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Schorre says he and his chief investigator, J. D. Lucky, failed to find
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the bank.
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Schorre and Lucky say they repeatedly asked to see Roscoe White's diary
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after Ricky White mentioned it, but that he told them a relative in the
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Lubbock area had it. Ricky White says he may have told Schorre the diary
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was somewhere else but that he had always kept it in his possession.
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Finally, Schorre, who lacked authority to demand the diary, called the
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FBI.
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Ricky White says three agents came to his house and asked him to answer
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questions in their Midland office. He says he took his father's effects
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with him and the FBI made copies of all the items except the diary. He
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says after several hours of questioning he returned home with all his
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father's effects.
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Later that same day, White says, FBI agent Tom Farris came to his house
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to retrieve a notebook he had inadvertently left in the box of Roscoe
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White's effects. White says he became aware that the diary was missing
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three or four days later.
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"I never said that the (FBI agents) took it," he says. "I am just
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saying he was the last one to leave that box." Agent Farris, who is in the
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Midland FBI office, transferred inquiries about the diary to his
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supervisor, Tom Kirspel. Kirspel would neither confirm nor deny that the
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agents had seen a diary.
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White says he never asked the FBI if it had the missing diary because
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he was "scared" of the agents who called at his house. "I don't want to
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have anything to do with the FBI," he says.
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Ricky White says FBI agent Ron Butler told him in 1988 that the FBI had
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determined that Roscoe White was at a crime scene in far Northeast Dallas
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at the time Kennedy was shot. Butler declined to comment on any
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conversations with Ricky White.
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QUESTION OF AUTHENTICITY
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Shaw, the director of the JFK Assassination Information Centre in
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Dallas, says Ricky White has passed both a polygraph test and a voice
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stress analysis and passed both tests "with flying colours."
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However, the authenticity of the messages Ricky White says he found is
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undetermined.
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Office of Naval Intelligence spokesman John Wanat says the agency
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cannot determine whether the messages came from authentic ONI cables
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without the coded cables.
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"What they have there is really nothing that we can narrow down as far
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as who may have generated it or if it's legitimate or whether it's
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something that was fabricated," Wanat said after viewing texts of the
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messages.
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John Stockwell, former chief of the Central Intelligence Agency's
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Angola Task Force in Washington, D.C. has seen the messages and sees a "90
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to 95 percent probability" that they are genuine. However, he says he
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cannot discount the possibility the messages are part of "an elaborate
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hoax."
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"I've measured it against my own readings and consultations with
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researchers of the Kennedy thing," says Stockwell, who ended a 12- year CIA
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career in 1976 after being accused of violating his secrecy agreement with
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the agency. "I can't see anything in what they have found and what the
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young man (Ricky White) is saying that is implausible in terms of what our
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best knowledge of the assassination is now. It all could very well be
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true, and I would put it at a high probability that it is true."
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Bob Inman vehemently disagrees. After reading copies of the text,
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Inman, former naval intelligence director (1974-76) and CIA deputy director
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(1981-82), says the messages were not ONI- generated. None of the
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three-digit code names in the heading of the messages means anything, he
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says.
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"My reaction is that it's a forgery of some kind or invalid," Inman
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says. "There is not anything about this format that I have ever seen
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before. That's not the way messages were set up in those days at all."
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Less is known about what Ricky White says is a witness elimination list
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that he found in the canister. Ricky White says there were 28 witnesses on
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the list, news clippings of each victim and accompanied in some cases by
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his father's writing.
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"Ricky White's story is no less logical than what we have been led to
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believe in 27 years." says Fensterwald. "If just anyone came out of the
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woodwork and said, 'I shot John Kennedy,' I would be exceedingly cautious
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about it. But if someone who was in the Marine Corps with Oswald, whose
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wife worked for Jack Ruby and who knew the Tippit family, crawls out of the
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woodwork and says I was involved in it, that doesn't stretch my credulity
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at all.
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"It does, however, need a lot more investigation by some official body
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with power to subpoena witnesses. I don't think private citizens can carry
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it much further."
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PREVIOUS INQUIRIES ON ASSASSINATION
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The assassination of President John F. Kennedy on Nov. 22, 1963, in
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Dallas was investigated by two government bodies:
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The Warren Commission, headed by Chief Justice Earl Warren, concluded
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after a nine-month investigation in 1964 that Lee Harvey Oswald, acting
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alone, fired two shots from the sixth floor of the Texas School Book
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Depository, killing President John F. Kennedy and wounding Texas Gov. John
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Connally.
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The report conclusions left many skeptics. Since bullets passed
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through the victims and shattered, investigators were not able to match the
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rifling on the bullets to the marks that would have been caused by Oswald's
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rifle.
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After a three-year investigation, the House Select Committee on
|
|
Assassinations concluded in early 1979 that Oswald fired two shots that
|
|
killed Kennedy and wounded Connally. Scientific acoustical evidence
|
|
indicated a "high probability" that an unidentified second gunman was
|
|
firing from the grassy knoll to the front and right of the presidential
|
|
limousine, but missed.
|
|
|
|
TEXT OF NAVY CABLES
|
|
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Navy Int.
|
|
Code A MRC
|
|
Remark data
|
|
1666106
|
|
NRC VDC NAC
|
|
Dec. 63
|
|
Remarks Mandarin: Code G:
|
|
|
|
Stay within department, witnesses have eyes, ears and mouths. You
|
|
(illegible) do of the mix up. The men will be in to cover up all
|
|
misleading evidence soon. Stay as planned wait for further orders.
|
|
|
|
C. Bowers
|
|
|
|
RE - rifle Code AAA destroy/on/
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Navy Int.
|
|
Code A MRC
|
|
Remark data
|
|
1666106
|
|
NRC VDC NAC
|
|
(illegible). 63
|
|
|
|
Remarks Mandarin: Code A
|
|
|
|
Foreign affairs assignments have been cancelled. The next assignment
|
|
is to eliminate a National Security threat to world wide peace. Destination
|
|
will be Houston, Austin or Dallas. Contacts are being arranged now. Orders
|
|
are subject to change at any time. Reply back if not understood.
|
|
|
|
C. Bowers
|
|
OSHA
|
|
|
|
RE - rifle Code AAA destroy/on/
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Navy Int.
|
|
Code A MRC
|
|
Remark data
|
|
1666106
|
|
Sept. 63
|
|
|
|
Remarks Mandarin: Code A
|
|
|
|
Dallas destination chosen. Your place hidden within the department.
|
|
Contacts are within this letter. Continue on as planned.
|
|
|
|
C. Bowers
|
|
OSHA
|
|
|
|
RE - rifle Code AAA destroy/on/
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
(Part 2 - The post-press conference follow-up story)
|
|
|
|
August 7, 1990
|
|
|
|
DALLAS COP'S SON ROLLS OUT JFK THEORY
|
|
MATTOX, CIA, HOLLYWOOD ANSWER CONSPIRACY CLAIM
|
|
|
|
By Andrew Likakis
|
|
|
|
The Texas attorney general, a major Hollywood producer and the Central
|
|
Intelligence Agency are now being written into the newest chapter in the
|
|
never-ending mystery of who assassinated President John F. Kennedy.
|
|
|
|
A 29-year-old unemployed oil equipment salesman from Midland stood
|
|
before scores of reporters in Dallas Monday and implicated his dead father
|
|
in the assassination. Soon after, Attorney General Jim Mattox said he'd
|
|
gladly review the evidence, and the CIA issued an unheard of denial.
|
|
|
|
At the same time, the FBI, which had previously refused to comment on
|
|
Ricky White's story, issued a statement in Washington saying agents had
|
|
reviewed and dismissed White's story two years ago.
|
|
|
|
And, finally, those who believe White's story is true acknowledge that
|
|
last weekend, several of them met in Hollywood with producer/director
|
|
Oliver Stone, presumably to discuss movie rights to the White story.
|
|
|
|
The latest chapter in the Kennedy epic began at a two-hour press
|
|
conference in which White said his father, Roscoe Anthony White, joined
|
|
the Dallas Police Department in October 1963 with the express intent of
|
|
killing Kennedy.
|
|
|
|
During the press conference called by two assassination research groups
|
|
and several Midland businessmen, White and Baptist minister Jack Shaw
|
|
talked about incriminating entries in Roscoe White's missing diary, decoded
|
|
cables, and the relationship that Roscoe White and his wife, Geneva, had
|
|
with Lee Harvey Oswald, Dallas Officer J. D. Tippit and Jack Ruby.
|
|
|
|
Based on his own memories, his father's diary and effects, and the
|
|
recollections of his mother, Ricky White told reporters that his father had
|
|
been one of three shooters on the day Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas.
|
|
|
|
Although Officer Tippit was a friend of his father's, Ricky White says
|
|
his father shot Tippit to death in the Oak Cliff section of Dallas about 45
|
|
minutes after the assassination, as he and Oswald were trying to get away.
|
|
Oswald was later accused of killing Tippit.
|
|
|
|
During the press conference, White said his father was following orders
|
|
to kill Kennedy and that, while he did not know who issued the orders,
|
|
three messages found among his father's effects have coding that might have
|
|
come from the Office of Naval Intelligence or, indirectly, the CIA.
|
|
|
|
CIA RESPONSE: 'LUDICROUS'
|
|
|
|
The suggestion of CIA involvement brought a sharp response Monday from
|
|
agency spokesman Mark Mansfield in Washington: "These allegations - that
|
|
this was done on CIA orders, that this guy worked for us and that CIA had
|
|
any role in the assassination of President Kennedy - are ludicrous."
|
|
|
|
Roscoe White never worked for the CIA, Mansfield said, adding:
|
|
|
|
"normally, we never confirm nor deny employment, but these allegations
|
|
are so outrageous that we felt it necessary and appropriate to respond."
|
|
|
|
Also Monday, the FBI issued a statement saying its agents had
|
|
considered the Ricky White story in 1988 and had "determined that this
|
|
information is not credible."
|
|
|
|
Bernard Fensterwald, executive director of the Assassination Archives
|
|
and Research Centre in Washington, said Monday that Mattox will be given
|
|
all material that points toward Roscoe White's involvement in the
|
|
assassination.
|
|
|
|
RUBY, OSWALD MEETING
|
|
|
|
In another curious twist to the case, Mattox said late Monday he is
|
|
interested in pursing the White story because he was once told by his
|
|
mother, a waitress at Campisi's Egyptian Restaurant in Dallas, that Ruby
|
|
frequented the restaurant and that she thought she saw Ruby and Oswald
|
|
eating dinner there together once.
|
|
|
|
The restaurant owner, the late Joe Campisi, testified before the House
|
|
Select Committee on Assassinations in 1978 that he didn't see Oswald in his
|
|
eatery, Mattox said.
|
|
|
|
Mattox said he believes he has jurisdiction in the case, and he would
|
|
interview White and his associates "to see what they've got and let them
|
|
explain it to me."
|
|
|
|
"The key to the thing, of course, is, if the FBI acknowledges seeing
|
|
the diary," Mattox said. "The only thing to do is to get a look at the
|
|
diary or acknowledgement (by the FBI) that it existed."
|
|
|
|
"This is not a solution to the John Kennedy case," Fensterwald said
|
|
after Ricky White told his story. "It's information we think is important,
|
|
and we think it's true. Even if what is said here today checks out, the
|
|
case is not solved. We still don't know who planned it and paid for it and
|
|
basically what the shooting was about. The best we can hope for is to get
|
|
out of this an idea of who the actual assassins were."
|
|
|
|
It may be difficult for Mattox or anybody else to do much with the case
|
|
without the Roscoe White diary, which disappeared in 1988. The leather
|
|
bound journal talked about the assassination and the aftermath, said Ricky
|
|
White, adding that he and his mother read it.
|
|
|
|
Roscoe White died of injuries sustained in an explosive fire in 1971.
|
|
His widow, Geneva, is critically ill and, according to family members,
|
|
unable to be interviewed.
|
|
|
|
A 'SILENCED' WIFE
|
|
|
|
According to the Rev. Shaw, Geneva White could help an investigation.
|
|
|
|
Shaw says Roscoe and Geneva White confided in him in 1970-71 when they
|
|
were having marital problems. And, he says, Geneva White confided in him
|
|
again during the last year, telling him that she was working as a hostess
|
|
in Ruby's Carousel Club when she overheard her husband and Ruby discussing
|
|
"the entire plot of the assassination of the President two months before
|
|
the shooting.
|
|
|
|
After the assassination, Shaw says, Geneva White was given electric
|
|
shock treatments and kept sedated so she "would be silenced." Ruby had told
|
|
her "in no uncertain terms that if she opened her mouth she was dead and
|
|
her children were dead," Shaw says Geneva White told him.
|
|
|
|
Shaw says Geneva White told him she confronted her husband after an
|
|
organized crime figure approached her in New Orleans in 1971 and told her
|
|
to deliver a warning to her husband.
|
|
|
|
According to Shaw, Geneva White was shown nearly a dozen photographs
|
|
and identified the man in New Orleans as Charles Nicoletti, formerly the
|
|
number one hitman with the Sam Giancana Mafia family in Chicago. Nicoletti
|
|
was executed gangland style in 1977, about a year after Giancana also met
|
|
the same fate.
|
|
|
|
Shaw says that, when she returned to Dallas and told her husband of the
|
|
ominous meeting in New Orleans, "he told her everything."
|
|
|
|
Shaw says that, as he lay in a hospital dying from burns in 1971 Roscoe
|
|
White told him that he had been marked for execution by some of his
|
|
underworld associates and that he believed the fire had been deliberately
|
|
started to kill him.
|
|
|
|
A HOLLYWOOD INTEREST
|
|
|
|
Ricky White said Monday that, since he found his father's diary, he has
|
|
been consumed full-time with trying to find out what role his father played
|
|
in the assassination.
|
|
|
|
He said that for more than a year he has received a "monthly salary"
|
|
from the Matsu Corp., which was formed by seven Midland oilmen solely to
|
|
help finance Ricky's investigation into his father's involvement in the
|
|
assassination.
|
|
|
|
Matsu president Gary Baily said Ricky began receiving financial help
|
|
from Matsu on a "day-to-day basis" about six weeks ago after getting just
|
|
expense funds for more than a year.
|
|
|
|
Baily also said Ricky White is negotiating with Hollywood
|
|
producer/director Oliver Stone for movie rights to his story. Last
|
|
weekend, Ricky White, his wife and Larry Howard of the JFK Assassination
|
|
Information Centre in Dallas met in the Los Angeles area with Oliver Stone
|
|
and toured Universal Studios.
|
|
|
|
"Oliver Stone is interested, but no deal has been made," Baily said.
|
|
Matsu so far has spent more than $100,000 on the White project, Baily said.
|
|
If any money is generated by the White story, about 74 percent will go to
|
|
Ricky White's family. The rest would go to the Matsu Corp., Baily said.
|