Show #601
Original airdate: October 25th, 2012
Guests: Joan Mellen / Debra Conway
Topics: JFK Assassination Research
Play Joan Mellen (48:49) Real Media
- Our Man In Haiti, Joan’s writing about Jim Garrison led to an interest in the CIA
- CIA relationships in Texas, George de Mohrenschildt handled Oswald in Dallas
- A CIA document which states that Clay Shaw was a contract employee of CIA
- April, 1963, de Mohrenschildt was assigned to Clemard Joseph Charles in Haiti
- In 1804, Haiti overthrew slavery, 200 years of U.S. explotation and intervention
- Charles worked for Haitian ruler “Papa Doc” Duvalier, while trying to overthrow him
- CIA was worried about de Mohrenschildt talking about what he knew
- Hunt Oil security chief, Paul Rothermel, implicated the Hunts in the JFK assassination
- The Zapruder film was not viewed by Hunt on the day of the assassination
- de Mohrenschildt’s suspicious death was ruled a suicide
- de Mohrenschildt was a man for sale, he worked for French intelligence in WWII
- CIA man Jim Moore in Dallas, why was this sophisticated man cultivating Oswald?
- He also handled Herbert Itkin, involved in plots to overthrow Duvalier
- Papa Doc was the “not-Castro” in the Caribbean, hospitable to American capitalism
- Relations to Haiti are a model for U.S. relations with other countries
- Joan plans three books on the CIA and Texas; Haiti, Cuba, and Mac Wallace
- de Mohrenschildt was a thoroughly awful man, some good people in the book
- Joan found no direct involvement of de Mohrenschildt in the assassination
- He never got paid by the government of Haiti, he came back broke
- He was dangerous, he knew that CIA knew about Oswald in 1962
- The CIA betrays people that contract with them, a dangerous business
- A letter to CIA Director George Bush, Bush involved in CIA fronts in Haiti
- de Mohrenschildt was attractive to women, he was not suicidal
- Trineday publisher, joanmellen.net, next book, The Great Game in Cuba
- Mohamed Al-Fayed, Haiti, Lady Diana’s death
- Next year, a reprint of A Farewell to Justice (2005), with a 134 page update