02-12-2008, 08:00 AM
(This post was last modified: 02-12-2008, 08:41 AM by Peter Lemkin.)
Charles Drago Wrote:The American humo(u)r magazine "The National Lampoon" once offered the following quote:
"Hey, I'm over here!"
-- Hale Boggs
Given how hard the authorities likely really looked for him...he may well well have. Boggs is on everyone's list of suspicious deaths related to the JFK case. Here is one such list here http://www.ratical.org/ratville/JFK/ToA/ToAchp10.html and this from Marrs' Conspiracy http://www.textfiles.com/conspiracy/deaths.txt - there are several others - all contain Boggs. His secret meeting with Garrison [no doubt not only known about but transcribed and circulated to the conspirators and their protectors] may well have been signing his own death warrrant. Afterall, in the land of the free and the home of the brave we can't have elected officials trying to tell other elected officials the truth, now can we - even less so about treasonous actions of others and faux commissions to 'investigate' same?!
"Over the postwar years, we have granted to the elite and secret police within our system vast new powers over the lives and liberties of the people. At the request of the trusted and respected heads of those forces, and their appeal to the necessities of national security, we have exempted those grants of power from due accounting and strict surveillance."
--House Majority Leader Hale Boggs, in a speech before Congress, April 22, 1971
"[FBI Director J. Edgar] Hoover lied his eyes out to the [Warren] Commission – on Oswald, on Ruby, on their friends, the bullets, the gun, you name it."
--Hale Boggs, speaking to an aide, quoted by Bernard Fensterwald, Coincidence or Conspiracy?
It is a myth that the Warren Commission was united in its conclusion that a lone assassin killed President John F. Kennedy. On the seven member Warren Commission, there were three dissenters: Senator Sherman Cooper, Senator Richard Russell, and Congressman Hale Boggs. As journalist Jim Marrs points out, "The most vocal critic among Commission members [was Hale Boggs]. Boggs became frustrated with the panel's total reliance on the FBI for information. Speaking of the 'single-bullet theory,' Boggs once commented, 'I had strong doubts about it.' On April 1, 1971, House Majority Leader Boggs delivered a blistering attack on [FBI Director] J. Edgar Hoover, charging that under his directorship the FBI had adopted 'the tactics of the Soviet Union and Hitler's Gestapo.' Boggs, who undoubtedly would have become Speaker of the House and a powerful ally in any reopening of the JFK assassination investigation, vanished on October 16, 1972, while on a military junket flight in Alaska. Despite a massive search, no trace of the airplane or of Boggs has ever been found."
"Several years after [Hale Bogg's] death in 1972, a colleague of his wife Lindy (who was elected to fill her late husband's seat in the Congress) recalled Mrs. Boggs remarking, 'Hale felt very, very torn during his work [on the Commission] ... he wished he had never been on it and wished he'd never signed it [the Warren Report].'"
--Bernard Fensterwald, Coincidence or Conspiracy?
http://haleboggs.tripod.com/index.htm