Authors: Lamar Waldron
L E G A C Y O F S E C R E C Y
LEGACY
OF
SECRECY
the long shadow of the
JFK A S S AS SINA TI O N
Lamar Waldron
Thom Hartmann
C O U N T E R P O I N T
b e r k e l e y
To my father, who showed me the way
To all those who have been inspired by John F. Kennedy,
Robert Kennedy, and Dr. Martin Luther King
Copyright © 2008 by Lamar Waldron.
All rights reserved under International
and Pan-American Copyright Conventions.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Waldron, Lamar, 1954-
Legacy of secrecy : the long shadow of the JFK assassination /
Lamar Waldron & Thom Hartmann.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN-13: 978-1-58243-422-3
ISBN-10: 1-58243-422-0
1. Kennedy, John F. (John Fitzgerald), 1917-1963—Assassination.
2. Official secrets—United States—History—20th century.
3. Conspiracies—United States—History—20th century.
4. Political corruption—United States—History—20th century.
I. Hartmann, Thom, 1951- II. Title.
E842.9.W275 2008 973.922092—dc22
2008039740
Cover design by Sarah Juckniess
Printed in the United States of America
C O U N T E R P O I N T
www.counterpointpress.com
Distributed by Publishers Group West
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Contents
Introduction and Overview vii
PART THREE
PART ONE
PART TWO
PART FOUR
PART FIVE
Photographs and
Documents
773
Introduction and Overview
The assassination of President John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963,
triggered cover-ups by officials that continue to negatively impact
American politics, life, and foreign policy.
Legacy of Secrecy
details those
cover-ups and hidden investigations, many for the first time, including
the reasons they were carried out under such intense secrecy. Most were
spawned by John and Robert Kennedy’s “top secret” 1963 plan to stage a
coup against Fidel Castro—a plan so highly classified that it only started
to be exposed in 2005 and is finally fully revealed in this book.1
Their own confessions now show that three Mafia bosses—Carlos
Marcello, Santo Trafficante, and Johnny Rosselli—were behind JFK’s
assassination. They used parts of the secret coup plan to kill JFK in a
way that forced Attorney General Robert Kennedy, President Lyndon
B. Johnson, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, and high CIA official Richard
Helms to withhold crucial information not only from the public and
the press, but also from each other and sometimes their own investiga-
tors. It’s important to keep in mind that JFK was murdered just a year
after the tense nuclear standoff during the Cuban Missile Crisis. The
main goals of US officials were to prevent a nuclear confrontation with
the Soviets and to protect JFK’s ally high in the Cuban government:
Commander Juan Almeida, head of the Cuban Army in 1963—still listed
as Cuba’s No. 3 official today.
While US leaders managed to prevent a confrontation with Russia
and preserve a critical ally high in the Cuban government, this limted
the investigation into JFK’s murder, allowing the three Mafia chiefs and
their associates to remain free. As a result, the long shadow of secrecy
surrounding both JFK’s murder and the coup plan set the stage for the
murder of Martin Luther King, ultimately driving two Presidents from
office, and bringing about the murders of five Congressional witnesses
in the mid-1970s.
viii
LEGACY OF SECRECY
Legacy of Secrecy
breaks important new ground in key areas, detailing for
the first time Louisiana godfather Carlos Marcello’s clear confession to
ordering JFK’s assassination. Marcello’s criminal empire ranged from
Dallas to Memphis, and previously secret files at the National Archives
have shown that he made this confession in 1985 to an FBI informant
ruled credible by a federal judge, as part of a secret FBI undercover sting
operation named CAMTEX. Exposed here for the first time, CAMTEX
yielded Marcello’s admission that he’d met Lee Harvey Oswald and
set Jack Ruby up in business in Dallas. The operation also generated
hundreds of hours of heretofore secret prison audiotapes of Marcello
discussing his crimes, recorded using the FBI informant’s bugged tran-
sistor radio. Yet the FBI and Justice Department withheld most of that
information from the public and Congress for years, until its revelation
in this book.
Carlos Marcello wasn’t the only mob boss who confessed his
involvement in JFK’s murder to a trusted associate.
Legacy
also uncovers
important new information about Marcello’s partners in JFK’s assas-
sination, Tampa godfather Santo Trafficante and Johnny Rosselli, the
Chicago Mafia’s man in Las Vegas and Hollywood. Shortly before their
deaths, both mobsters admitted their roles in JFK’s murder to their
attorneys. Two of their associates, with documented ties to the secret
JFK-Almeida coup plan, likewise confessed.
Using exclusive new information, supported by FBI files apparently
withheld from Congress,
Legacy
names two of the Georgia men who paid
James Earl Ray to kill Dr. Martin Luther King: white supremacist Joseph
Milteer and Hugh R. Spake. Milteer, who had been involved in Marcello’s
murder of JFK, was part of a smal clique of racists in Atlanta who used
Marcello to broker the contract to murder Dr. King. We document James
Earl Ray’s ties to Marcello’s heroin smuggling operation and long over-
looked evidence in FBI files linking Ray to Marcello’s associate, Johnny
Rosselli. Finally,
Legacy,
explains why Ray—while fleeing to Canada the
day after killing Dr. King in Memphis—made a 400-plus mile detour
south to Atlanta, where he contacted Spake to get help from Milteer.
In 1979, the last Congressional committee to investigate the murders
of JFK and Dr. King—the House Select Committee on Assassinations
(HSCA)—concluded “that Trafficante, like Marcello, had the motive,
means, and opportunity to assassinate President Kennedy.” The HSCA
had been created in the wake of Rosselli’s sensational murder, but the
HSCA “was unable to establish direct evidence of Marcello’s complicity,”
and the same was true for Trafficante and Rosselli—because the CIA,
FBI, and other federal agencies withheld so many relevant files. The
HSCA, headed by civil rights figure Rep. Louis Stokes, also concluded
“there was a likelihood of conspiracy in the assassination [of Dr. King]”
and that “financial gain was [James Earl] Ray’s primary motivation.” But
they were unable to determine who had paid Ray, or how the conspiracy
had worked, because the FBI and other agencies hid critical files.
With the help of more than two dozen associates of John and Robert
Kennedy—backed up by thousands of recently released documents
at the National Archives, many of which are quoted here for the first
time—
Legacy
tells the full story long denied to Congress and the Ameri-
can people.
Because top US officials covered up so much about JFK’s assassination,
of the dozen people knowingly involved in that murder, three were
free to participate in Dr. King’s slaying five years later. At the heart of
the 1963 cover-ups lay the top-secret plans of John and Robert Kennedy
to stage a coup against Cuba’s Fidel Castro—set for December 1, 1963,
ten days after JFK’s Dallas trip. The Kennedys’ goal was democracy for
Cuba, after what they hoped would always appear to be a seemingly
internal “palace coup.” The Kennedys had banned the Mafia from the
operation and from reopening their casinos if the coup succeeded.2
JFK’s plans for a coup in Cuba—which included a “full-scale
invasion” if necessary—were detailed in the authors’ previous book,
Ultimate Sacrifice
. The 2006 expanded trade paperback edition first
named Almeida as the coup leader after the National Archives released
his identity after more than four decades of secrecy.
Ultimate Sacrifice
also
exposed how Robert Kennedy had US officials secretly develop plans
for dealing with “the assassination of American officials” if Fidel found
out about the coup plans and retaliated.3
Legacy of Secrecy
also adds important new information showing how
Marcello, Trafficante, and Rosselli—desperate to end Robert Kennedy’s
unprecedented prosecutions of them and their associates—infiltrated
the JFK-Almeida coup plan and used parts of it to murder JFK. Their first
attempts to kill JFK, in Chicago (on November 2, 1963) and then during
JFK’s long motorcade in Tampa (November 18), failed—but because
they had planted clues implicating Fidel, Robert Kennedy and other
officials were forced to cover up those threats to protect the security of
the JFK-Almeida coup plan. The Mafia chiefs made sure their murder
of JFK in Dallas on November 22, 1963, involved ties to the coup plan
and false clues pointing to Fidel. As a result, Robert Kennedy and other
x
LEGACY OF SECRECY
high officials had to withhold key information in order to prevent, in
the words of President Johnson, a nuclear holocaust that could cost the
lives of “forty million Americans.”4
Legacy
provides a well-documented and definitive account of the