09-04-2012, 09:08 AM
William Pepper, Orders to Kill, is the best work on the assassination of Martin Luther King. Ray was a railroaded patsy. There was no shot from the boardinghouse bathroom window until Memphis Sanitation cut down the overgrowth the next day. Marrell McCollough an army intelligence agent was present to check King's vitals; he was later employed by the CIA in the Langley headquarters.
The CNN article does not mention Thomas Noguchi the medical examiner who determined Robert Kennedy was hit by four bullets, three to his person, one piercing his clothing, all down-to-up, right-to-left, back-to-front, point-blankwithin an inch or twoa position at no time occupied by Sirhan B. Sirhan.
The article did not mention that the LAPD polygrapher Hank Hernandez badgered witness Sandy Serrano until she sobbingly recanted her account of the polkadot dress woman shouting, "We shot him!" an account corroborated by several others.
The article does not mention the significant photos taken by Scott Enyart which might have shown the actual shooter were seized and partially recovered three decades later, the bulk of the shots having been destroyed.
As was the evidence consisting of bullet-holed doors, door jambs, ceiling panels, the sum total of shots from photos, testimony, and the acoustic evidence being thirteen, five more than the eight Sirhan brought to the action.
The signature of the acoustics scores eight Iver Johnson (Sirhan) and five H & R 922 the type of gun Cesar lied he had sold before the assassination.
The principal aim of MK-ULTRA operated by CIA's Sidney Gottlieb was to produce Sirhans: assassins programmed to shoot and forget. That Sirhan was programmed to shoot to distract, and to forget, adds merely an additional layer of plausible deniability.
The case has been presented and advanced by the Turner/Christian, Klaber/Melanson, and Shane O'Sullivan books, the presentation of the Noguchi proof, the Sandy Serrano snapshot, the Van Praag acoustic test.
That Moldea tried desperately to smear Sirhan and clear Cesar with polygraphs is a testimony to the fragility of the case.
The culpability of Sirhan hinges on his possessing a Magic Gun capable of shooting thirteen bullets of two acoustic signatures, and having a muzzle which like Pinocchio's nose would grow and twist round the candidate to rest against his person.
Pepper's defense is all one could ask for, and Michael Calder (JFK v CIA, 2000) is continuing his research on the case pursuant to a book.
The CNN article does not mention Thomas Noguchi the medical examiner who determined Robert Kennedy was hit by four bullets, three to his person, one piercing his clothing, all down-to-up, right-to-left, back-to-front, point-blankwithin an inch or twoa position at no time occupied by Sirhan B. Sirhan.
The article did not mention that the LAPD polygrapher Hank Hernandez badgered witness Sandy Serrano until she sobbingly recanted her account of the polkadot dress woman shouting, "We shot him!" an account corroborated by several others.
The article does not mention the significant photos taken by Scott Enyart which might have shown the actual shooter were seized and partially recovered three decades later, the bulk of the shots having been destroyed.
As was the evidence consisting of bullet-holed doors, door jambs, ceiling panels, the sum total of shots from photos, testimony, and the acoustic evidence being thirteen, five more than the eight Sirhan brought to the action.
The signature of the acoustics scores eight Iver Johnson (Sirhan) and five H & R 922 the type of gun Cesar lied he had sold before the assassination.
The principal aim of MK-ULTRA operated by CIA's Sidney Gottlieb was to produce Sirhans: assassins programmed to shoot and forget. That Sirhan was programmed to shoot to distract, and to forget, adds merely an additional layer of plausible deniability.
The case has been presented and advanced by the Turner/Christian, Klaber/Melanson, and Shane O'Sullivan books, the presentation of the Noguchi proof, the Sandy Serrano snapshot, the Van Praag acoustic test.
That Moldea tried desperately to smear Sirhan and clear Cesar with polygraphs is a testimony to the fragility of the case.
The culpability of Sirhan hinges on his possessing a Magic Gun capable of shooting thirteen bullets of two acoustic signatures, and having a muzzle which like Pinocchio's nose would grow and twist round the candidate to rest against his person.
Pepper's defense is all one could ask for, and Michael Calder (JFK v CIA, 2000) is continuing his research on the case pursuant to a book.