AlterNet / By Thom Hartmann and Lamar Waldron Sept 25, 2014
Dear Mr. President, It's Time to Obey the Law:
Release the JFK Secret Service Records and End Other Needless Secrecy It's time for the Secret Service, CIA, and FBI to obey the law by
releasing their 50-year old files, and to pardon the first Secret Service whistleblower. Dear Mr.
President, We know you have many pressing issues on your plate, but last week's
problems with the Secret Service and White House security also warrant your
attention. What if the man who sprinted across the White House lawn--and into
your home--hadn't been a troubled ex-serviceman, but instead had been an terrorist from ISIS or Al Qaeda or a violent American
white supremacist?
As you know,
last week's incidents were only the latest in a long line of Secret Service
problems involving lax protection of you and your family, heavy drinking and
irresponsible behavior by some agents, and racial discrimination. What you
probably don't know is that those problems have been issues for the Service
since the early 1960s. One reason you--and most of the American public--aren't
aware of those issues is the culture of secrecy that sometimes pervades the
agency when it comes to its own shortcomings.
That secrecy
is especially ironic since this week marks the 50th anniversary of the release
of the Warren Report, the book-length finding issued by the Warren Commission,
appointed by President Lyndon Johnson and chaired by Supreme Court Chief
Justice Earl Warren. The Secret Service was one of several government
agencies--along with the CIA, the FBI, and the Office of Naval
Intelligence--that were found by later government committees to have withheld
crucial information from the Warren Commission.
Even worse, the Secret Service and the other agencies
continued to withhold important information all of the later government
committees that investigated the various aspects of JFK's murder. These
include the Rockefeller Commission appointed by President Ford, the Senate
Church Committee chaired by Senator Frank Church, the House Select Committee on
Assassinations whose Chief Counsel for G. Robert Blakey,
and the Assassination Records Review Board, appointed by President Clinton.
Congress
passed the 1992 JFK Records Act unanimously, to release all of the files
related to the JFK assassination, including records about the covert US
operations against Cuba in the early 1960s that surfaced in so many of the
official JFK investigations. While more than 4 million pages were released,
even today the National Archives refuses to say how many pages of files remain
secret. Is it 50,000 pages, a figure put forth by some experts? 90,000 pages, a
figure extrapolated from CIA fillings in a Freedom of Information lawsuit? Or
the figure reported by NBC News in 1998 of "millions" of pages, which
was confirmed by a report from OMB Watch, which quoted someone who worked with
the National Archives as saying "well over a million CIA
records"--not pages, but "records"--remained unreleased.
Because of the
needless ongoing secrecy practiced by the Secret Service, CIA, FBI, and other
agencies, you probably don't know that
just four days before President Kennedy was killed in Dallas, there was a major
threat against JFK's life during his long motorcade through Tampa, Florida.
While the Secret Service and other agencies withheld information on that
attempt from the Warren Commission--and all of the later government
investigating committees--long-overlooked newspaper files and Tampa law
enforcement officials have now allowed that attempt to be well-documented . You probably also don't know that in the weeks
and days before JFK's assassination in Dallas, the US government had a special
subcommittee of the National Security Council making plans for what to do
regarding the "possible assassination of American officials." Only a
few pages of those files were released decades later, though they indicated the
existence of hundreds more pages from the various government agencies who had representatives on that sub-committee.
Our concern
about needless secrecy that has persisted for decades is not merely academic.
As indicated earlier, the Warren Commission was only the first--and least
informed--of several government investigating
committees. In the late 1970s, the House Select Committee on Assassinations,
with access to much more information, concluded that JFK was likely killed by a conspiracy.
The Committee even named two Mafia godfathers--Carlos Marcello, who controlled
organized crime in Louisiana and Texas, and Tampa's Santo Trafficante--as
having "the motive, means, and opportunity to assassinate President
Kennedy." They couldn't be more definitive because once again, the
Secret Service, CIA, FBI, and Naval Intelligence withheld crucial information
from them, as later confirmed by Committee investigators.
America's
ongoing 54-year-old Cold War with Cuba is another painful side effect of all
that needless secrecy. That Cold War essentially began in the summer of 1960,
when then-Vice President Richard Nixon ordered the CIA to hire the Mafia to
assassinate Cuban leader Fidel Castro, before he had to face then-Senator John
F. Kennedy in the 1960 presidential election. Those
CIA-Mafia plots eventually included Santo Trafficante
and Carlos Marcello, and Congressional testimony confirms those plots continued
into the Kennedy Administration (and into 1963), only without the authorization
of President Kennedy or his brother, Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy.
Evidence indicates that Mafia godfathers Marcello
and Trafficante planted phony evidence implicating
Fidel Castro in JFK's murder, and sadly, some former CIA officials have
continued to put forward that idea for decades. They can only get away with that because the
Agency--along with the FBI, the Secret Service, and Naval Intelligence--continues to withhold so much crucial
information about the CIA assets like Marcello and Trafficante,
both of who later confessed their roles in JFK's murder, late in life, to close
associates. Part of Marcello's confession was even taped by an FBI
informant, but the FBI has refused to release any of those tapes or
transcripts. Marcello and Trafficante's close
associate in the CIA-Mafia Castro plots--Mafia don Johnny Rosselli,
of the Chicago Mafia--likewise confessed, shortly before he was gruesomely
murdered on Trafficante's orders. However, US
officials from President Lyndon Johnson to former Secretary of State Alexander
Haig believed those false "Castro killed JFK" reports, resulting in
the stalemate between the countries that exists today. That Cold War with Cuba
drains valuable US intelligence and security resources that could be used for
far more serious threats. In addition, opening up trade with Cuba--as the US
has done with former enemies like China and Vietnam--could be of tremendous
benefit to the US economy.
Finally, the
reluctance of the Secret Service to fully comply with the 1992 JFK Act has
allowed the Service to keep making the same mistakes for more than fifty years.
Because of that secrecy, you've probably never heard of a pioneering Secret
Service agent named Abraham Bolden, the first African-American Secret Service
agent to serve on the Presidential Detail, personally selected for that job by
JFK.
Back in 1963,
agent Abraham Bolden tried to warn the Secret Service Director about laxity on
the part of some agents, their bouts of heavy drinking, and the racism he
faced--problems that echo the Secret Service scandals of recent years. But
Bolden's complaints fell on deaf ears, and he was reassigned to the Chicago
office. While there, he monitored the investigation of a serious threat to
assassinate JFK in Chicago on November 2, 1963, three weeks before JFK's trip
to Dallas. The Chicago threat was so severe--with gunmen at large--that JFK
cancelled his motorcade and entire visit at the last minute, forcing his Press
Secretary to issue two different phony excuses. Bolden also heard the reports
from Tampa 16 days later, about a very similar attempt to kill JFK during his
motorcade in that city.
After JFK's
murder in Dallas, Bolden realized that the details of the Chicago and Tampa
attempts were shockingly close to what happened in Dallas. He's also heard the
reports of Secret Service agents drinking in the early morning hours the day
JFK was shot. As reported by Drew Pearson, America's leading investigative
journalist at the time, "six Secret Service men charged with protecting
the President...were drinking" at "the Fort Worth Press Club in the
early morning of Friday, Nov. 22," just hours before JFK was assassinated
in nearby Dallas. One agent "was reported to have been inebriated,"
and some remained at the Press Club "until nearly three o'clock" in
the morning.
But things got
worse--Drew Pearson reported that when some agents left the Press Club, they
went "to an all-night beatnik [club named] 'The Cellar.'" After
Pearson's article appeared, the Secret Service conducted a secret
investigation, away from the public eye, and found that ten Secret Service
agents had indeed gone to the notorious dive known as "The Cellar,"
which was run by Pat Kirkwood, an associate of Jack Ruby.
The agents and several reporters were escorted to the Cellar by Bob Schieffer, the CBS News anchor who then was a young
reporter for the Fort Worth
Star-Telegram. In his
autobiography, Schieffer described the allure of the
club as being "the fact that the Cellar's waitresses wore only
underwear" while serving drinks.
Bob Schieffer also pointed out that even though "the
Cellar had no liquor license...if you were a friend of the owner...the drink of
choice, Koo-Aid spiked with grain alcohol, was on the house." The Secret Service's own investigation showed that "10 special
agents of the Secret Service stopped at "The Cellar" in the early
morning hours of November 22, 1963. The Cellar's manager told investigators
that until at least 4:30 or 5:00am, numerous White House guests [including
"Secret Service personnel"] were brought over to" meet him, and "introduced
as a member of the White House party or press. He then escorted them to
tables."
More than
twenty years later, in a broadcast interview with noted investigative
journalist Jack Anderson (the protŽgŽ of Drew Pearson), Cellar owner Pat
Kirkwood claimed that some of the Secret Service agents "were drinking
pure Everclear [alcohol]." Kirkwood added that
several strippers who worked for Jack Ruby had come to the club, and indicated
that Ruby might have sent them over on purpose.
The Secret
Service's own internal investigation was later seen as a whitewash by some,
since it claimed none of the agents had any alcoholic drinks at the Cellar, and
that none of its agents were intoxicated at the Press Club. It also failed to
note Abraham Bolden's earlier charges that he'd witnessed heavy drinking by
some agents on the Presidential Detail.
By May of
1964, the public had largely forgotten about Drew Pearson's column, and the
Warren Commission had been sent the Secret Service's reassuring report on the
Cellar incident. The Secret Service had also successfully hidden from the
Commission their work at helping to stop the assassination attempts against JFK
in Chicago and Tampa in the weeks before Dallas.
So, Abraham
Bolden planned to go to Washington, to tell the Warren Commission staff about
all of those issues. However, Bolden was framed by the Mafia and arrested on
the very day he went to Washington to talk to the Warren Commission
investigators. The same Mafia bosses who had tried to kill JFK in Chicago--Rosselli, Marcello, and Trafficante--could
never allow the Warren Commission to hear Agent Bolden's story about the
Chicago plot to kill JFK.
Bolden was
sentenced to six years in prison, despite glaring problems with his
prosecution. His arrest resulted from accusations by two criminals Bolden had
sent to prison. In Bolden's first trial, an apparently biased judge told the
jury that Bolden guilty, even while they were still deliberating. Though
granted a new trial, the same problematic judge was assigned to oversee
Bolden's second trial, which resulted in his conviction.
Later, the
main witness against Bolden admitted committing perjury against him. A key
member of the prosecution even took the fifth amendment
against self-incrimination when asked about the perjury of Bolden's main
accuser. Yet Bolden's appeals were denied, and he had to serve hard time in
prison, and today is considered a convicted felon.
It's now clear
who was in the perfect position to help the mob bosses frame Bolden: Chicago
Mafia member Richard Cain, who also was a high official in the Cook
Country/Chicago Sheriff's department and an active CIA asset. Cain had also
worked on the CIA-Mafia Castro plots that had involved mob bosses Marcello, Trafficante, and Rosselli. (Cain
was later murdered in a mob hit, as was the Chicago mob boss he worked for.)
Abraham Bolden
paid a heavy price for trying to tell the truth about the Secret Service's
problems. The elderly Bolden still lives in Chicago, and has spent decades
trying to clear his name.
In many ways,
Abraham Bolden is the most tragic living victim of the needless government
secrecy that still surrounds JFK's assassination. For example, Bolden has two
CIA files, but neither has ever been fully released to him or to the American
public, and they were withheld from all of the government
investigating committees. Will the elderly Bolden live long enough to
finally see the justice so long denied to him?
Mr. President,
you embody the hopes and dreams of people around the world in a way that no US
president has since John F. Kennedy. We know your hands are full, dealing with
a variety of international crises and trying to get Americans the help the need
on a variety of fronts.
Before it's
too late for Mr. Bolden--and to help end the Cold War with Cuba--we hope you'll
order the heads of your agencies to finally fully comply with the 1992 JFK Act.
It won't be easy to implement, since files that have been previously released
show that agency heads and high officials haven't hesitated to hide crucial
information from Presidents Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon, Ford, Carter, and Clinton.
But there are plenty of noted historians--Dr. David Kaiser, Dr. David Wrone, Dr. Gerald McKnight, Dr. John Newman, and many
more--who would no doubt be happy to help you insure that the agencies don't
resort to the same obfuscation and secrecy that have let them hide embarrassing
secrets for years.
You once
paraphrased the old saying, "you have to know where you've been to know
where you're going." That is certainly true regarding the needless secrecy
surrounding the slaying of JFK, our never-ending Cold War with Cuba, and the
tragic injustice that forces the elderly Abraham Bolden to continue to suffer.
As long as the Secret Service and other agencies get away with hiding their
problems and issues--even those from more than 50 years ago--we worry those
problems will only continue.
Respectfully
yours,
Thom Hartmann
& Lamar Waldron
To readers:
We've started a new White House petition to release the files, and get a pardon
for Abraham Bolden You can find that link, as well as more information about
Bolden and the latest book about the still-withheld files (The Hidden History of the JFK Assassination),
at: http://thehiddenhistoryofthejfkassassination.com/
This weekend, many
noted historians and authors are speaking at a Conference in Washington, DC,
about the many important government files withheld from the Warren Commission.
More information is available from the Assassinations Archives and Research
Center.