Read Conspiracies: The Facts * the Theories * the Evidence Online
Authors: Andy Thomas
Tags: #Conspiracy Theories, #Social Science
not
show the real injuries, but have been switched to cover up proof of the additional gunmen.
One useful witness who might have revealed more would,
of course, have been Lee Harvey Oswald, but he was himself
infamously – and expediently – shot dead just two days after his
capture, at the hands of outraged nightclub owner Jack Ruby,
supposedly striking a vengeful blow on behalf of the citizenry.
But, just as some say that Kennedy himself had been left oddly
vulnerable by an unusual lack of protective agents on the day of
his shooting, so too has concern been raised at the seemingly
lax security at the police headquarters from where Oswald was
being brought out to be taken to the county jail. With a melee
of jostling press reporters and cameramen waiting for him, this
apparent carelessness allowed Ruby simply to step from the crowd
and shoot Oswald in the stomach at point-blank range.
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Far from being an incensed member of the public, it has been
alleged that Ruby had personal connections to Oswald and was
party to inside knowledge of the JFK assassination plot. It is
worthy of note that Rose Cherami, a self-confessed drug addict
who had worked as a stripper for Ruby, told police in advance of
22 November that she knew there were plans to kill Kennedy. She
also claimed, in the aftermath of both shootings, that Ruby and
Oswald had once had a gay relationship. Doubters poured scorn
on her stories, but her sudden ‘accidental’ death under the wheels of a car two years later made some take them more seriously.
Ruby himself was quickly convicted of Oswald’s murder
and might have added important details of his own at a second
impending appeal trial, having hinted that he knew far more than
he had been allowed to say at the first. However, he apparently
died of cancer in late 1966, before he had the chance. At a televised news conference in 1965, Ruby had said:
Everything pertaining to what’s happening has never come to
the surface. The world will never know the true facts of what
occurred, my motives. The people who had so much to gain, and
had such an ulterior motive for putting me in the position I’m
in, will never let the true facts come above board to the world.
When a reporter then queried, ‘Are these people in very high
positions, Jack?’, Ruby responded with a ‘Yes.’
By this time, Ruby had clearly become a conspiracy theorist
himself, believing that cancer cel s had been deliberately injected into his body by prison doctors. Later, Ruby apparently told
his psychiatrist, Werner Teuter, that JFK’s killing was ‘an act of overthrowing the government’. Ruby claimed to know ‘who had
President Kennedy killed’, but feared for his own life, stating,
I am doomed. I do not want to die. But I am not insane. I
was framed to kill Oswald.
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As with so many other events where answers to awkward questions
might be too readily available from named witnesses (see below),
it should be recorded here that an above-average number of other
key witnesses in connection with the killing of Kennedy appear
to have met strange demises.2 The further death of Robert F
Kennedy, dying shortly after being gunned down in a Los Angeles
hotel in 1968, created yet another tier of conspiratorial allegations.
The Warren Commission
Set up just weeks after JFK’s assassination to provide a full
investigation into the event and those following it, the Warren
Commission predictably concluded that both Oswald and Ruby
were the sole players. Its final report, delivered just ten months after Dealey Plaza’s darkest hour, was heavily criticized even
at the time for its sloppiness and inconsistent analysis, with all interviews held in suspiciously closed sessions. Remarkably, only one transcript out of the 94 witness testimonies was actual y read by every member of the commission, when it might have been
assumed that each would have wanted to see all of them in order
to make a valid judgement. Overal , the Warren Report felt less
than convincing and failed to inspire confidence in anyone but the staunchest
patriots. Its verdict was unsurprising to some minds, given that it had been set up by the very man that they, rightly
or wrongly, believed may even have been responsible for the
shooting – President Johnson.
When the Watergate scandal brought public trust crashing
down further, the public scepticism about the Warren Report
accelerated massively and became damaging. This may explain
why a further inquiry, using new evidence, was mounted by the
House Select Committee on Assassinations (HSCA) in the late
1970s. Its final report in 1979, while backing up some of the
Warren Commission’s findings as regards bullets and wounds, did
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make some attempt to take on board the other theories which had
been bubbling under, and accepted the likelihood that another
gunman had been involved, although the main responsibility was
still left with Oswald. The HSCA’s main concession, therefore, was to acknowledge that a wider conspiracy had ‘probably’ been at
work, although it failed to follow up any of the implications of
this conclusion, seemingly in the hope that history would soon
confine the whole business to the eternal grey box of unsolved
mysteries and move on – a strategy that mostly appears to have
worked.
Important Lessons
Here, perhaps, is the greatest lesson to be learned from the shooting of JFK. There
are
still people who insist on the lone gunman theory and dismiss all other speculation as poison from the treasonous
fringe, but the overwhelming mass of observers suspect that
something more insidious was at work. This conspiracy theory,
for once, resides firmly in the mainstream. Yet the vast mythology that has grown up around the ‘curse of the Kennedys’, with all
its affairs and scandals, Cuban missiles, Marilyn Monroe and
the Mafia, has swallowed up the magic bullet, grassy knoll and
mysterious tramps with it, allowing the more serious inferences
to go unaddressed. This is of concern, because if a secret cabal
capable of removing the leader of the world’s greatest superpower was at work even then, what might it be doing today? For all the
fingers pointed at the likes of Johnson and the CIA, lurking in
the background is always the idea that, beyond the selfish egos of individuals, the wider New World Order plan lies.
If the vast majority of people believe that JFK’s death was a
conspiracy, but feel that too much time has passed and too much
confusion been stirred into the mix for it real y to matter any
more, as would seem to be the case, then it stands to reason that 141
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similar tactics might well be employed on a regular basis. There is probably an art to obfuscating just long enough that the murkier
points of an atrocity become confined to an unreachable past. By
such strategies, murder becomes nostalgia. Something similar is
possibly being attempted over 9/11, creating an urgency among
truthseekers to keep the many questions about that more recent
atrocity fresh and alive while it is still in full living memory.
A crucial point remains: especial y with the Kennedy case,
certain events turn most of us into conspiracy theorists. The
question is, can those theories produce enough proven evidence
in time to prevent such crimes from occurring again? Already,
even a more recent assassination theory, this time involving a
member of the British Royal Family, has begun to fade into a hazy realm of myth.
ii) Diana, prinCess of Wales
Mass Mourning
Those who hold to the Kennedy lone gunman hypothesis might
argue that without proven evidence of others being involved it
cannot be described as a conspiracy. Only when the presence of
supplementary plotters or assassins is assumed does it cross into that category. What no one doubts, however, is that the President
was
unlawful y killed. Yet, when even establishing this becomes an uphill struggle in the face of official denial, it is curious to observe that the public doesn’t lose its natural propensity towards conspiracy thinking.
Of all recent history’s major upsets, the death of Diana,
Princess of Wales in a car crash at the Pont de l’Alma underpass
shortly after midnight in Paris on 31 August 1997 had the most
direct impact on the people of Britain, and many beyond. Scenes
of characteristical y restrained but still acute mass hysteria
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followed the announcement, and an atmosphere of intense
national mourning, not seen since the death of Queen Victoria
nearly a century before, gripped the nation. This culminated
in the televised funeral, which saw streets across the nation
empty and an eerie silence descend, outpourings of grief being
expressed even by usual y stoic individuals. Just briefly, the ‘stiff upper lip’ slipped, as something very profound was touched in
the collective – a phenomenon which has been oft-debated in
the years since.
It was easy to forget, during all of this, that Diana had not been so well regarded in the years leading to her end. In the glory days of her doomed marriage to Prince Charles, heir to the throne,
something of her innocent and apparently caring nature had
seemed to speak to the people, bringing a new human quality to
an often-remote Royal Family. Diana’s popularity consequently
soared to almost surreal heights, creating expectations that
no public figure could live up to indefinitely. But, sure enough, since the break-up of the marriage, her criticism of the royals,
tales of multiple affairs, illegal y taped phone cal s to lovers
(‘Squidgygate’) and very public personal revelations made in
books and interviews, actively encouraged by Diana herself, had
sullied her image. Yet something in her very fragility, together
with the admissions of everyday failings, still ensured that a streak of sympathy towards the Princess remained. With the shocking
news of her death, the view of Diana as a superstar martyr to
the modern world increased a hundredfold, enhanced by the
accusations that ‘paparazzi’ photographers may have contributed
to the crash by pursuing her vehicle. The gaping hole left in the public psyche by the sudden absence of the ‘People’s Princess’
starkly il ustrated just how many collective fantasies had been
projected onto Diana, making her loss feel an all the more bitter blow to people who had, almost without realizing it, vicariously
lived through this poster-girl for the masses.
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Murder Pol s
So was it, then, a deep state of psychological denial and anger
that compelled people almost immediately to seek external
responsibility for Diana’s death? Or did this occur because there was actual evidence to suggest that the devastating crash, which
killed Diana, her lover Dodi Al-Fayed and the driver of the car,
Henri Paul, may have been contrived – an assassination made
to look like an accident? Pol s taken in 2007, ten years after the event, showed that a remarkable proportion of British people
believed that Diana was murdered. Some reports alleged a 90 per
cent adherence to this view, while more moderate pol s said one
in three, but either way the results were telling. For all the official inquiries which have since said otherwise, little has changed in
this regard. The strength of views lessens somewhat beyond
Britain’s borders, but those within them would not appear to care what outsiders think.3 The combined gut of Diana’s own people
knows its own mind in this regard, and this hugely significant
statistic must make belief in her assassination one of the most
subscribed-to conspiracy theories of all time in any one country, even more so than with Kennedy in the USA.
Do statistics make a belief right, though? The verdicts of at
least three French and UK inquests or judicial inquiries are
clear on what happened: the driver, Henri Paul, was three times
over the French alcohol limit for driving and consequently lost
control of the car as it sought to speed away from over-eager
photographers. This scenario seems acceptably probable at
first glance, but, as we have seen, things are frequently not that straightforward, and the Diana case, in the details around both
the crash and its aftermath, does present a number of anomalies
that deserve some thought.
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Assassination Evidence?
The main piece of evidence for the official verdicts – the blood test carried out on Henri Paul – has come under heavy criticism from