Monday, November 17, 2014
Senator Richard
Russell and the Mysterious JFK Assassination
I would like to preface this with a story about the Warren Commission. In
1976 I was a check-in agent for TWA (Trans World Airlines) at Dulles airport in
Washington DC. Every week we had agents from the CIA, FBI and a host of other
intelligence services traveling, most of the time with their weapons. The
procedure was to take their weapons and put them in a lock box which would be
stored in the cockpit. The agents could travel with their weapons but we
would record their seat location and notify the flight crews and they were not
allowed to consume alcohol while traveling. Most of the time the
agents eagerly parted with the handguns.
In 1976 I checked in two members of the Warren Commission. They gave up
their guns without argument. After the check in process was completed, we
discussed the JFK investigation and they said, rather emphatically
............"the assassination of President Kennedy was without doubt
a conspiracy but it will never come out." To say I was taken back was an
understatement.
Richard
Lee Harvey Oswald, the Patsy
An Objective Review of the Evidence Concludes That
Oswald Was Framed
President Johnson and
Senator Richard Russell meeting in the White House |
In November 1963
Richard B. Russell was a powerful United States senator, having served in
Congress for 30 years. The morning that President John F. Kennedy was
assassinated, November 22, Russell was in an anteroom of the Senate chamber,
monitoring wire feeds from Associated Press and United Press.
A week later, on November 29, Russell received a telephone call from President
Lyndon B. Johnson, an old Senate friend, who asked him to serve on the Warren
Commission, established to investigate Kennedy’s assassination. Russell flatly
refused, only to receive a second call from Johnson five hours later informing
the Georgian that he had been appointed to the Commission and that the news had
already been released. This technique was typical of Johnson’s leadership
style. Despite his surprise and anger, Russell, who had spent his entire life
in public service, reluctantly accepted the position.
As the controversial investigation started, Russell was experienced enough to
suspect the motives of the FBI and CIA, the principal investigative agencies in
the probe, and others who worked within the government.
At the initial meeting of the Warren Commission on December 5, 1963, Russell
accused the FBI of leaking information to the press to force the Commission to
accept their ideas. “Something strange is happening,” Russell wrote. He thought
the FBI and other organizations were “planning to show Oswald” as the sole
assassin, an “untenable position” to him.
At a meeting on December 16 Russell repeated his conviction, adding that he
doubted the CIA would provide requested data and suggesting that evidence it
did submit would be “doctored.”
During a session on January 27, 1964, Russell drew an admission from former CIA
director Allen Dulles that the CIA and FBI “would never publicly admit that
Oswald had worked for them, if that had indeed been true.” Russell also
believed that Oswald as the sole assassin theory advanced by the FBI had been
reached hastily as the result of an incomplete investigation. “They have tried
the case and reached a verdict on every aspect,” Russell concluded.
On February 24 a frustrated Russell wrote a letter of resignation from the
committee to President Johnson, complaining that the Warren Commission was
holding, scheduling, and canceling meetings without his knowledge. Russell
reconsidered and never submitted the letter.
One of the most discredited declarations of the Warren Commission concerned the
“single bullet” or “magic bullet” that was claimed to have inflicted a
non-lethal wound on Kennedy and then started an intricate journey that
inflicted all the wounds of Texas Governor John Connelly, sitting beside the
president. On September 16, Russell, citing the testimony of Connelly, his
wife, who sat beside him, and the Zapruder film, wrote, “I do not share the
finding.”
Russell also declared that “a number of suspicious circumstances” and a lack of
evidence against Oswald precluded “the determination that Oswald and Oswald
alone, without the knowledge, encouragement or assistance of any other person,
planned and perpetrated the assassination.” That statement was omitted from the
final report of the Commission.
On the following day the Commission met for the last time to present and
discuss the official Warren Report. Russell advanced the same two reservations
of the previous day but this statement was excised from transcripts of the
meeting. Later that day Russell repeated his objections to President Johnson in
a recorded conversation. Of the magic bullet, Russell, said, “I don’t believe
it.” Johnson replied, “I don’t either.”
Russell was the first Commission member to criticize their report, in the
Atlanta Journal Constitution of September 29. Two year later, on November 20,
1966, the AJC called the senator “the great dissenter.”
On June 6, 1968, Russell told Harold Weisberg, a noted investigator and
journalist, that “we have not been told the truth about Oswald.” Russell
further stated that the FBI and other Federal agencies had deceived the Warren
Commission about Oswald’s background and ballistics evidence.
On WSB-TV on February 11, 1970, Russell said, “I have never believed that
Oswald planned that altogether by himself…I think someone else worked with
him.” Russell also stated that the majority of the Warren Commission “wanted to
find” Oswald to be the lone assassin. Many authorities believe the government
desired to dispel rumors and conspiracy theories in order to calm the public in
the aftermath of the shocking assassination.
Congressional committees have since upheld Russell’s criticisms, citing the FBI
and CIA for not adequately investigating the murder and failing to provide
useful information to the Warren Commission. While some researchers believe and
advance controversial findings that there were two or more shooters who fired
up to six bullets, Russell believed that Oswald was the lone shooter and fired
three shots.
For an exhaustive account of this story, read “Senator Richard
Russell and the Great American Murder Mystery,” an article written
by Donald E. Wilkes, Jr. Professor of Law at the University of Georgia Law
School, in the November 19, 2003 edition of Flagpole Magazine.
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