top of page
Blog: Blog2 Custom Feed
Blog: Blog2
Search


Why did Jim Garrison Want to Speak to Thomas Beckham?
Jim Garrison took a big interest in Thomas Beckham. In the early 1960s, he was a young kid trying to make it in the music business, and Jack Martin tried to help him out. He taught Beckham a few tricks, and before you know it, Beckham was "raising money" for the anti-Castro cause while wearing a priest's habit. Here's an early Garrison memo on Beckham. Ultimately, they found him in Omaha, Nebraska. The fact that Beckham was masquerading as a Doctor should have been a sign. Ac

Fred Litwin
Dec 20, 20201 min read


Jim Garrison's book, A Farewell To Justice
I recently came into possession of the first three chapters of Jim Garrison's manuscript, A Farewell To Justice , from 1985. I am posting today the Table of Contents, and Garrison's chapter outline. Garrison got nowhere with this manuscript. He reworked it and retitled it Coup D'etat, and Prentice Hall paid him a $10,000 advance. They hired Sylvia Meagher as a referee, and she submitted a 26-page critique. She recommended publication because Garrison now said that Oswald was

Fred Litwin
Dec 18, 20202 min read


Jim Garrison Finds Another JFK Assassination Conspirator!
Yes, Clay Shaw was not the only person that Garrison went after for conspiring to kill JFK. In December 1967, Garrison was in Los Angeles and he told his staff to file charges against a Mr. Edgar Eugene Bradley. Here is the original charge sheet: In January, 1968 Garrison filed paperwork in support of extraditing Bradley to New Orleans. Here is his paperwork. Here is Jim Garrison's affidavit. Here are the supporting affidavits. And, yes, THE Roger Craig got into the act by id

Fred Litwin
Dec 16, 20201 min read


Was Jim Garrison Mentally Ill?
I've already posted Garrison's psychiatric reports from 1951 . Here is a memo that Aaron Kohn, head of the Metropolitan Crime Commission of New Orleans, wrote about Garrison's mental state. By the way, the Metropolitan Crime Commission was a private organization formed in 1952 to investigate corruption within the New Orleans Police Department. You can read more about their history here. Kohn would eventually appeal to the State Government to have Garrison removed. I'll be pos

Fred Litwin
Dec 13, 20201 min read


Did RFK Tell Garrison that there were guns between him and the White House?
We will start this off with a UPI story from June 11, 1968, just six days after the assassination of Robert Kennedy, quoting Mark Lane: Sylvia Meagher wrote a letter to Kerry Thornley, and wondered if Jim Garrison would back up the Mark Lane story. Thornley wrote Meagher back, and was anxious to write about Mark Lane. Of course, it didn't take long for Garrison to repeat the Mark Lane story! Here is the article that Kerry Thornley wrote. Update Here is a letter that Sylvia Me

Fred Litwin
Dec 12, 20201 min read


Two Anonymous Letters to Jim Garrison
In May 1967 Jim Garrison received an "important" anonymous letter and handed it to Bill Boxley to investigate. This was the beginning of Garrison being interested in Fred Crisman; he was already on the lookout for Thomas Beckham. I find it interesting that the letter writer claimed that Tippit was a homosexual. I have previously posted a cover story from Confidential Magazine about the homosexual ring that killed Kennedy. That article was written by Joel Palmer who worked wit

Fred Litwin
Dec 5, 20201 min read


The Attempt to Rehabilitate Jim Garrison
My friend John McAdams has put the conclusion of my book, On The Trail of Delusion - Jim Garrison: The Great Accuser, up on his website.

Fred Litwin
Dec 4, 20201 min read


Two Letters to Jim Garrison about "A Heritage of Stone"
James Phelan had a great sense of humor, and it is on display in this letter to Jim Garrison. Completely unrelated to this letter is one that Sylvia Meagher wrote to Garrison about A Heritage of Stone. I have presented, earlier in my blog, two memos that Sylvia Meagher wrote about Garrison's prosecution of Clay Shaw. She never thought much of his knowledge of the 26 volumes of evidence, and she never thought much of Garrison's case against the Warren Report as presented in th

Fred Litwin
Nov 28, 20201 min read


Did the CIA Pay the Lawyers of Garrison's Witnesses?
Garrison believed that the CIA was paying the lawyers of several witnesses. In June 1967, Garrison appeared on NBC: Question : We now find three people who are outside Louisiana who are fighting their return to the state in connection with your investigation—Gordon Novel, Sergio Arcacha Smith, and Sandra Moffit. Could you briefly discuss these three people and their role in all this? Garrison : The point that you’re going for is that we are in private difficulty for getting t

Fred Litwin
Nov 26, 20202 min read


Jim Garrison, the Cryptologist
Besides being a crusading District Attorney, Jim Garrison was also a cryptologist. No code was too difficult for him to crack. A researcher noticed similar notations in Clay Shaw's notebook and in Lee Harvey Oswald's notebook. Clay Shaw had written P.O. 19106 in his notebook along with the name Lee Odom. Mr. Odom had talked to Shaw about possibility of putting on a bullfight in New Orleans. In Oswald's notebook was a similar notation, but instead of P.O., there were two Cyril

Fred Litwin
Nov 14, 20202 min read


James Phelan's Challenge to Jim Garrison
One of the first reporters that Garrison talked to about his case was James Phelan, who had written a laudatory article on him in the June 1963 issue of the Saturday Evening Post. Garrison invited Phelan to Las Vegas and he explained what his investigation had found. He gave Phelan two memos on Perry Russo and Phelan had them photocopied at one of the hotels. He noticed that in a memo written by Andrew Sciambra there was no mention of any party at which there was a discussion

Fred Litwin
Nov 11, 20202 min read


Jim Garrison's Memo on the Military Industrial Complex
I published the Norman Gallo section of this memo yesterday. Here is the entire memo (from September 1968). Where does one even start with such a memo? To Garrison, everything is connected to intelligence. He finds it suspicious that so many people worked for the aerospace industry. First, David Reitzes has written a good article showing that many people that Oswald worked with at Reily coffee stayed at Reily coffee. Secondly, right under Garrison's nose, thousands of good-pa

Fred Litwin
Nov 9, 20201 min read


Did Garrison find proof that Ruby knew Oswald?
Here is a memo dated March 6, 1967 regarding a walk-in lead. You can see that Alcock doesn't quite believe the lead - "this man's appearance was very shabby and in some respects his story was not believable." Well, Limbough did claim that Tippit was Ruby's body-guard-boyfriend! His story also made the newspapers. Here is a story by Washington Post reporter George Lardner from March 12, 1967. Now, Limbough tells the press that "I think's a queer ring." Bill Gurvich, the Garris

Fred Litwin
Nov 7, 20201 min read


Jim Garrison Tries to Pull a Fast One On the HSCA
On August 16, 1977, JIm Garrison sent a memo to HSCA investigator Jonathan Blackmer about statements of Perry Russo while under hypnosis. Here is the memo: Perry Russo had continually given Garrison and his staff a description of Oswald that did not match reality. Russo kept describing Oswald as having a beard and as being somewhat dirty - when, in fact, Oswald was clean-shaven, and had good personal hygiene. Now, Garrison has a new explanation for why Russo had gotten Oswald

Fred Litwin
Nov 5, 20202 min read


Jim Garrison Sends His Best Leads to the HSCA
In September 1977, Jim Garrison sent a letter to the HSCA about Clay Shaw - which we published yesterday. Along with the letter, Garrison sent a memo with his best leads about Clay Shaw. Here is the memo along with Garrison's notations.. First, let me fill in a couple of paragraphs that are hard to read (I have a copy of this memo that was typed before Garrison added his notations). J. Statement of Barbara Messina, Monroe, Louisiana, re: Q. One of the meetings was at Shaw's a

Fred Litwin
Nov 3, 20203 min read


Jim Garrison and the House Select Committee on Assassinations (HSCA), Part One
After the HSCA began its work, investigators visited Jim Garrison and spent a week interviewing him. He also started writing memos to the HSCA. Here is a list of memos that I have found: - July 15, 1977 letter about Morgan City. - July 18, 1977 regarding Thomas Beckham. - August 16, 1977 letter about the deaths of Guy Banister and Clay Shaw. - August 25, 1977 letter with questions for Thomas Beckham. - September 12, 1977 memo listing a variety of leads. - September 14, 1977 l

Fred Litwin
Nov 2, 20203 min read


Garrison's Playboy Interview - More Secret Information
Garrison tried hard to convince Playboy he was the real deal. And, so he wrote them a memo. I found this in the papers of Elmer Gertz, Gordon Novel's lawyer, and it appears that Garrison didn't have time to finish the memo. Once again, you can see that Garrison was well aware of the Paese Sera articles about Clay Shaw and Permindex/CMC. He references the Italian, French and Canadian stories - but all of those stories emanated from Paese Sera, a communist-controlled newspaper

Fred Litwin
Oct 29, 20202 min read


Garrison's Playboy Interview - What Couldn't Be Printed
The October 1967 issue of Playboy Magazine contained the longest interview in their history - 20,000 words from Jim Garrison. About 5 million copies were printed and Playboy organized a press tour for Garrison. You can read the whole interview here . Here is Playboy's press release for their interview: Warren Commission critic Sylvia Meagher did not much like the Garrison interview and she wrote Playboy a 3-page letter. For the first time ever, here is her letter: As you can

Fred Litwin
Oct 28, 20202 min read


Jim Garrison's Rejection Letter from Prentice Hall Press, and His Reply
In 1983, Garrison sent his manuscript, then titled The Execution , to McGraw-Hill which had published his novel. They rejected it. He then renamed it A Farewell to Justice but had trouble selling it. He hit pay dirt with Prentice Hall in 1986 for his newly titled book, Coup D'Etat , and they paid him a $10,000 advance. Sylvia Meagher served as the referee and she submitted a 26-page analysis, which noted several problems. She was not happy with the discussion of Shaw,, Fer

Fred Litwin
Oct 26, 20202 min read


Jim Garrison's Nightmare on Burgundy Street
Here's a good example of Garrison's theory of propinquity at play. Clay Shaw lived on Burgundy Street in 1960, so Garrison looked at phone directories to see who else lived there. Mr. Todd, because he lived on Burgundy Street, needed to be investigated. The last sentence is important – Garrison had this belief that one of the gunmen on the grassy knoll had a scar on his face. Investigating Mr. Todd led to Mr. Bertram. He was now a suspect because he lived across the street fr

Fred Litwin
Oct 24, 20201 min read
bottom of page








