
New Interview and Review by
Simon Barrett of Bloggernews.net
Press Release
PROOF OF JFK ASSASSINATION CONSPIRACY
AND MOTIVE FOR LBJ MANIPULATION OF ASSASSINATION INVESTIGATION
SHOWN
DALLAS, TX, DECEMBER 6, 2006 -
SOMEONE
WOULD HAVE TALKED: THE ASSASSINATION
OF PRESIDENT JOHN F. KENNEDY AND THE CONSPIRACY TO
MISLEAD HISTORY ($35; Hardcover 620 pages;
Published by JFK Lancer Productions & Publications)
identifies people who talked about a personal prior
knowledge of the conspiracy to murder President Kennedy:
including a veteran of multiple Castro assassination
projects and two senior CIA's officers of the JM WAVE
station in Miami, Florida. A fourth man, John Martino,
was a three year prisoner of Castro and organizer of
the most explosive Cuban penetration mission ever conducted.
Martino's remarks and motivation are newly verified
by his son, Edward Martino.
Also revealed is an August 21, 1963, White
House meeting between LBJ and Fred Black, a known associate of Bobby
Baker and mobster John Roselli. That meeting exposed
President Johnson to potential pressure from Roselli
and provides possible motivation for the well documented
LBJ manipulation of the JFK assassination investigation.
SOMEONE WOULD HAVE TALKED is
supported not only by normal endnote references and a
bibliography, but with an extensive library of online
exhibits including archived documents, contemporary newspaper
articles, testimony and telephone transcripts, diaries,
investigative reports and memoranda used as sources for
the book. See the online exhibits, Ed Martino's statement
and more at www.larry-hancock.com .
Larry
Hancock, author of SOMEONE WOULD HAVE
TALKED is a leading historian-researcher in the JFK assassination.
Hancock co-authored November Patriots with Connie
Kritzberg and authored the 2003 research analysis publication
titled Someone Would Have Talked . Hancock
has published several document collections: 112th Army
Intelligence Group, John Martino, and Richard Case Nagell.
In 2000 Hancock received the prestigious Mary Ferrell
New Frontier Award for contributing new evidence in the
Kennedy assassination case. In 2001 he received the Mary
Ferrell Legacy Award for his contributions of documents
released under the JFK Act.
REVIEWS: Gaeton Fonzi,
author of The Last Investigation and
Former Staff Investigator for the US House Committee
on Investigations states “There have been two
official US Government investigations of the assassination
of President John F. Kennedy; the first resulted in the
Warren Commission Report. Rank with distortions and manipulations
of the evidence, its conclusion that Oswald was the lone
assassin quickly disintegrated under objective scrutiny.
The public's distrust of the Warren Commission's Report
produced political pressure for a new investigation and
the subsequent formation of the U.S. House Select Committee
on Assassinations. Unfortunately, the HSCA was intimidated
and manipulated by the very government agencies it was
investigating and its final report emerged as misleading
as the Warren Commission's. Now, with his experience
and analytical acumen, Larry Hancock has identified and
detailed culpable conspiratorial associations. Among
the most respected researchers of the JFK assassination,
Hancock has produced SOMEONE WOULD HAVE TALKED, an
awesomely comprehensive and impressive work of compelling
validity and a ‘must-read' in the field.”
"Larry
Hancock is always the first person I call to learn about
the latest documents and discoveries.” says Lamar Waldron,
author of the best seller Ultimate
Sacrifice.“ Especially those involving CIA anti-Castro
operations and mob associates like David Morales and
John Martino. SOMEONE WOULD HAVE TALK ED continues to
break new ground and should be read by everyone interested
in the JFK assassination.”
Read Amazon
reviews here.
JFK LANCER PUBLICATIONS & PRODUCTIONS,
INC.
is an historical research company founded in 1995 to
study the JFK assassination. JFK Lancer contributes balance
and expert insight into public and media discourses on
historical issues as they relate to the Kennedy assassination;
promotes public understanding of the historical record
surrounding the Kennedy assassination; promotes the study
of JFK assassination documents released as a result of
the JFK Act; and publishes authors particular to this
event in history.
Publisher: Debra Conway, JFK Lancer Publications & Productions,
Inc.
Voice Phone Number: 817-488-8694
FAX Number: 817-488-3429
Email Address: conwayd@jfklancer.com
Website: www.jfklancer.com
###
Printable version
New Book Documents Foreknowledge
of JFK Assassination Conspiracy
"They're going to kill him.
They're going to kill him when he gets to Texas."
John
Martino, Former Cuban prisoner and anti-Castro activist
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Dallas, TX – Nov. 7th, 2006
Someone Would Have Talked forces open doors the official
governmental investigations slammed shut!
There have been two official U.S. Government investigations of the
assassination of President John F. Kennedy. The first resulted in the Warren
Commission Report. Rank with so many blatant distortions and manipulations
of the evidence, its conclusion that Lee Harvey Oswald was the lone assassin
quickly disintegrated under objective scrutiny. But the Report's arrogant fallaciousness
seeded in the public's psyche a new distrust of Government that would grow
over the next decade into a trenchant and sometimes fiery force in American
history. An element in that force produced enough political pressure for a
new investigation and the subsequent formation of the U.S. House Select Committee
on Assassinations.
Congressionally mandated to "conduct a full and complete investigation" of
JFK's murder, the HSCA's priority was quickly castrated. The Committee was
intimidated and manipulated by the very government agencies it was investigating
and its final report emerged as misleading as the Warren Commission's. While
the HSCA report masked a truncated investigation, it also unavoidably left
slivers of light revealing certain areas of inquiry the Committee dared not
pursue. The forces governing the Committee knew that pursuing leads in those
areas would have opened doors it did not want opened, doors marked with the
names of operators and assets of the Government's intelligence community. Now,
with his experience and analytical acumen, Larry Hancock has pushed wide those
doors, naming names and detailing the culpable conspiratorial associations.
Among the most respected researchers of the JFK assassination, Hancock has
produced an awesomely comprehensive and impressive work of compelling validity;
a "must-read" in the field.
Gaeton Fonzi
Former Staff Investigator
for the U.S. House Committee on Investigations,
Author
of The Last Investigation
Someone Would Have Talked deals
with specific people who talked about their personal
knowledge of a conspiracy in the murder of a President.
These individuals include four men associated with
the CIA’s
JM WAVE station in Miami Florida; two of them senior
CIA officers, one a veteran of three years of Castro
assassination projects and the fourth a three year
prisoner of Castro and organizer and participant,
along with a former U.S. Ambassador, of the most
potentially explosive Cuban penetration mission ever
conducted.
Someone Would Have Talked is supported
not only by normal endnote references and a bibliography, but also with an
extensive library of online exhibits and documents at http://www.larry-hancock.com .
Exhibits include archived documents, contemporary newspaper articles, testimony
and telephone transcripts, diaries, investigative reports and memoranda used
as sources for the book.
Someone Would Have Talked reveals:
Investigative Leads Were Avoided by the FBI and Congressional
Investigations - excerpts from their closed sessions that reveal
they were frightened about exploring certain areas such as:
-
A body of investigative
documents which revealed pre-assassination leaks suggesting
that President Kennedy was at risk prior to the assassination.
-
An international
wire intercept of discussions about a conspiracy.
-
Suppressed
informant reports showing that Lee Oswald was
in contact with, and being manipulated by, a network
of individuals he initially came into contact with
in New Orleans during August of 1963.
-
JFK's personal
physician’s thwarted attempt to bring
forth evidence of conspiracy
-
-
The
JFK Assassination Inquiry was "Managed" by
New President Lyndon Johnson - actions
personally orchestrated by President Johnson prevented
a true open-ended criminal investigation of leads
suggesting conspiracy in the murder.
-
-
White House tapes, transcripts, meeting diaries and personal
interviews with law enforcement in Texas, with
Autopsy personnel and with other individuals show
a consistent pattern of control and evidence management
by President Johnson.
·
-
Internal Warren Commission dialog
about being totally dependent on Hoover.
·
-
Documents which show Vice President
Johnson to have been at extreme risk in 1963 due
to the Bobby Baker influence peddling scandal and
Baker’s ties to mob gambling interests.
“If I
told you what I really know, it would be very dangerous
to the country.
Our whole political system could be disrupted.”
FBI Director Hoover in response to whether
or not Oswald had killed the President
Larry Hancock, author of Someone Would
Have Talked is
a leading historian-researcher in the JFK assassination.
Hancock co-authored with Connie Kritzberg November
Patriots and authored the 2003 research
analysis publication also titled Someone Would
Have Talked . In addition,
he has published several document collections addressing
the 112th Army Intelligence Group, John Martino, and
Richard Case Nagell. In 2000, Hancock received the
prestigious Mary Ferrell New Frontier Award for the
contribution of new evidence in the Kennedy assassination
case. In 2001, he was also awarded the Mary Ferrell
Legacy Award for his contributions of documents released
under the JFK Act.