Items filtered by date: September 2025

 

On November 5, 1963, Otepka was finally formally ousted from the State Department. Just seventeen days later, Kennedy would be assassinated. And the killing would be pinned on the man Otepka was trying to investigate when he was removed from his office, writes Lisa Pease.

Dexter King's call for a new trial exonerating James Earl Ray for the death of his father.

Saturday, 01 March 1997 05:14

Is It Ever Too Late To Do The Right Thing?

Lisa Pease chronicles the family of Martin Luther King stepping from the shadows of their own long-held doubts to call for a near hearing of evidence in the killing of the great leader.

Carol Hewett concludes that scrutiny of the FBI's response to all of the mail of Lee and Marina may also help us understand the intelligence roles played by the Oswalds (wittingly or unwittingly) and may shed light on the true nature of the Paine/Oswald and the Paine/FBI relationships.

Lisa Pease looks back over the vicissitudes in the story of Ray's convinction, incarceration and requests for retrial.

Published in News Items

While still backing the ARRB's mission, Jim DiEugenio criticizes some board members for publicly implying they have read all the declassified documents and that it doesn't matter, Oswald still did it – a judgment that does not fit the facts, or their own experience.

Published in News Items
Saturday, 15 February 1997 21:27

The Left and the Death of Kennedy: Ray Marcus

Ray Marcus's reviews of important figures on the Left, excerpted by Martin Schotz and attached as appendix B to “The Left and the Death of Kennedy”.

Saturday, 15 February 1997 18:46

The Left and the Death of Kennedy

The articles by Ray Marcus and Martin Schotz do not so much explain the reaction, or non-reaction, of the Left to the death of John Kennedy as show, in the face of that non-reaction, that the murder of Kennedy was the first step that led to the death of the Left, writes Jim DiEugenio.

A summary of a section of Martin Schotz's book, History Will Not Absolve Us.

Sunday, 15 December 1996 21:37

No Lieutenant Columbo in Mexico City

Lisa Pease examines the Slawson report in light of his willingness to be "guided" by the CIA, and concludes that it shows how once again the Commission deliberately ignored, misrepresented or played down evidence available to them.

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