20-03-2015, 03:49 PM
From Shenon's article:
..."Thomas was dismissed from the department in 1969, a decision that the State Department years later would acknowledge was made in errorthe result of what the department insisted was a clerical mistake related to the misfiling of some of Thomas's personnel records. The department's admission would come only after Thomas, who struggled to establish a new career, committed suicide in 1971.
Congressional investigators, who later reviewed the case and obtained pension benefits for Thomas's family, said they suspected, but could not prove, that the diplomat had actually been forced out because of his persistent, unwelcome effort to open a new investigation of Oswald's activities in Mexico. "It was impossible to prove, though," one of the congressional investigators told me when I was writing my book. "If he was forced out because of Mexico City, it was all done with a wink and a nod."
Decades after Thomas's death, the State Department would declassify internal memos that he had written to superiors, in which he had pleaded for someone to go back and reinvestigate Oswald's Mexico trip. What Thomas had learned in Mexico would not, by itself, "prove that there was a conspiracy to assassinate President Kennedy," he wrote. But he warned of what might happen if long-secret evidence suggesting a Mexican-born conspiracy in JFK's murder ever became public. "Those who have tried to discredit the Warren Report could have a field day," he wrote.
In 1975, Thomas's widow received a formal apology from the White House. "The circumstances surrounding your husband's death are a source of deepest regret to the government he served so loyally and so well," the letter said. "I can only hope that the measures which came about as a result of this tragedy will prevent reoccurrences of this kind in the future." The letter was signed by President Gerald R. Ford, who, as a rising Republican congressman from Michigan in 1964, had been a member of the Warren Commission."
Anyone know what "measures" were taken by Nixon, or Ford, after Thomas' suicide in 1971?
Edit: 1975 was the year Ford apologized to biochemist Olson's family regarding his unconsented-to ingestion of LSD during MKULTRA, an incident which ultimately led to his death as well.
..."Thomas was dismissed from the department in 1969, a decision that the State Department years later would acknowledge was made in errorthe result of what the department insisted was a clerical mistake related to the misfiling of some of Thomas's personnel records. The department's admission would come only after Thomas, who struggled to establish a new career, committed suicide in 1971.
Congressional investigators, who later reviewed the case and obtained pension benefits for Thomas's family, said they suspected, but could not prove, that the diplomat had actually been forced out because of his persistent, unwelcome effort to open a new investigation of Oswald's activities in Mexico. "It was impossible to prove, though," one of the congressional investigators told me when I was writing my book. "If he was forced out because of Mexico City, it was all done with a wink and a nod."
Decades after Thomas's death, the State Department would declassify internal memos that he had written to superiors, in which he had pleaded for someone to go back and reinvestigate Oswald's Mexico trip. What Thomas had learned in Mexico would not, by itself, "prove that there was a conspiracy to assassinate President Kennedy," he wrote. But he warned of what might happen if long-secret evidence suggesting a Mexican-born conspiracy in JFK's murder ever became public. "Those who have tried to discredit the Warren Report could have a field day," he wrote.
In 1975, Thomas's widow received a formal apology from the White House. "The circumstances surrounding your husband's death are a source of deepest regret to the government he served so loyally and so well," the letter said. "I can only hope that the measures which came about as a result of this tragedy will prevent reoccurrences of this kind in the future." The letter was signed by President Gerald R. Ford, who, as a rising Republican congressman from Michigan in 1964, had been a member of the Warren Commission."
Anyone know what "measures" were taken by Nixon, or Ford, after Thomas' suicide in 1971?
Edit: 1975 was the year Ford apologized to biochemist Olson's family regarding his unconsented-to ingestion of LSD during MKULTRA, an incident which ultimately led to his death as well.
"All that is necessary for tyranny to succeed is for good men to do nothing." (unknown)
James Tracy: "There is sometimes an undue amount of paranoia among some conspiracy researchers that can contribute to flawed observations and analysis."
Gary Cornwell (Dept. Chief Counsel HSCA): "A fact merely marks the point at which we have agreed to let investigation cease."
Alan Ford: "Just because you believe it, that doesn't make it so."
James Tracy: "There is sometimes an undue amount of paranoia among some conspiracy researchers that can contribute to flawed observations and analysis."
Gary Cornwell (Dept. Chief Counsel HSCA): "A fact merely marks the point at which we have agreed to let investigation cease."
Alan Ford: "Just because you believe it, that doesn't make it so."