Thursday, November 22, 2012

The Last Time We Had a Coup in America


The Rumor Mill News Reading Room 

The Last Time We Had a Coup in America
Posted By: Lion [Send E-Mail]
Date: Wednesday, 21-Nov-2012 21:07:30

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Source: Project Camelot
http://tinyurl.com/b9mvyns
http://projectcamelotportal.com/kerrys-blog/1436-the-last-time-we-had-a-coup-in-america
The Last Time We Had a Coup in America
Wednesday, 21 November 2012 09:49
Written by Kerry Cassidy
(snip)
With everything that is going on behind the scenes it is interesting to reflect back on history.
Victor Martinez is a writer/editor who runs a newsgroup and sometimes collects info on a topic and aggregates it.
He has done this recently with regard to the Kennedy assassination.
In a recent release he cites this quote, from Madeleine Duncan Brown's book, "Texas in the Morning" which highlights Kennedy's view on a future running mate just prior to his death:
Kennedy's secretary, Evelyn Lincoln wrote that the day President Kennedy left for Dallas, they discussed the Bobby Baker scandal, LBJ's deep involvement in it, and the effects of the scandal on the campaign.
Kennedy told her: "I will need a running mate in '64, a man who believes as I do."
Lincoln wrote: "President Kennedy had talked and I had just listened, but I did venture one question.
Now I asked, "Who is your choice as a running mate?"
He looked straight ahead, and without hesitating, he replied:
'At this time, I am thinking about Governor Terry Sanford of N Carolina. BUT IT WILL NOT BE LYNDON.' "
Remainder here:
http://tinyurl.com/b9mvyns
(end snip)
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Source: Spartacus Educational
http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/JFKbakerB.htm
Uploaded by 10Garmonbozia01 on May 28, 2007
Concerning the personal friendship between Lyndon B. Johnson and J. Edgar Hoover.
Statement by Bobby Baker. He says that Lyndon Johnson told him that J.Edgar Hoover had 'extensive files on President Kennedy's womanizing', and that he hated both brothers.
To many people it was surprising that Kennedy chose Johnson to be Vice President.
Evelyn Lincoln remembers parts of their conversation.
The conversation they vowed to never disclose the information within.
She is convinced they were blackmailed.
One thing was the claims of the President's womanizing, FED to Johnson by Hoover. "They were boxed in".
Lastly a couple of statements by Hoover and LBJ. Phone conversations included. Clip of JFK concerning Johnson as the new Vice President.
From 'Evidence of Revision' - Conspiratus Ubiquitus
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Blackmailing the President - Part 2

http://youtu.be/2cc31ZqQWUg
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2cc31ZqQWUg&feature=player_embedded
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WHO IS BOBBY BAKER?
Robert (Bobby) Baker was born in Pickens, South Carolina in 1929. At the age of 14 Baker became a page at the Senate.
He was befriended by Lyndon B. Johnson and eventually became secretary to the Senate Majority Leader.
At this time he obtained the nickname Little Lyndon.
Harry McPherson, another Johnson aide, described Baker as:
"He was very smart, very quick, and indefatigable. Just worked all the time. He was always running someplace to make some kind of a deal."
Johnson also used Baker to obtain political information.
He told Jenkins that it was very important to "read" politicians.
He constantly told him: "Watch their hands, watch their eyes. Read eyes. No matter what a man is saying to you, it's not important as what you can read in his eyes.
The most important thing a man has to tell you is what he's not telling you.
The most important thing he has to say is what he's trying not to say." Robert A. Caro (Lyndon Johnson: Master of the Senate) quotes Baker as saying:
"He seemed to sense each man's individual price and the commodity he preferred as coin."
In the early 1950s Baker had also been involved in helping that Intercontinental Hotels Corporation establishing casinos in the Dominican Republic.
Baker arranged for Ed Levison, an associate of Meyer Lansky and Sam Giancana, to become involved in this deal.
When the first of these casinos were opened in 1955, Baker and Lyndon B. Johnson were invited as official guests.
In 1960 Johnson's was elected as vice president under John F. Kennedy.
Baker remained as Johnson's secretary and political adviser.
He continued to do business with Levison, Giancana and Ben Siegelbaum (an associate of Jimmy Hoffa) in the Dominican Republic.
Baker argued that Dominican Republic could be a Mafia replacement for Cuba.
However, these plans came to an end when the military dictator, Rafael Trujillo, was murdered on the orders of the CIA.
President Kennedy now gave his support to Juan Bosch when he was elected to office in December, 1962.
Bobby Baker, Senate Pageboy, with Leslie Biffle (c.1945)
Baker had already arranged another source of income.
In 1962 he had had established the Serve-U-Corporation with his friend, Fred Black, and mobsters Ed Levenson and Benny Sigelbaum.
The company was to provide vending machines for companies working on federally granted programs. The machines were manufactured by a company secretly owned by Sam Giancana and other mobsters based in Chicago.
The president of Serve-U-Corporation was Eugene A. Han#####, who was a business partner of Grant Stockdale and George Smathers at Automatic Vending Services.
Questions were asked about Stockdale's business involvement with Baker.
In an interview he insisted he was "absolutely not" a stockholder in Serve-U-Corporation.
He also pointed out that he had disposed of his holdings in Automatic Vending Services, more than a year earlier.
However, under pressure from President John F. Kennedy, he resigned as Ambassador to Ireland in July, 1962.
Rumours began circulating that Baker was involved in corrupt activities.
Although officially his only income was that of Secretary to the Majority in the Senate, he was clearly a very rich man.
Baker was investigated by Attorney General Robert Kennedy.
He discovered Baker had links to Clint Murchison and several Mafia bosses.
Evidence also emerged that Lyndon B. Johnson was also involved in political corruption.
This included the award of a $7 billion contract for a fighter plane, the F-111, to General Dynamics, a company based in Texas.
On 7th October, 1963, Baker was forced to resign his post.
Soon afterwards, Fred Korth, the Navy Secretary, was also forced to resign because of the F-111 contract.
According to Anthony Summers (Official and Confidential: The Secret Life of J. Edgar Hoover) Bill Thompson asked Baker if he would arrange a meeting between Ellen Rometsch and John F. Kennedy.
Baker later said that: "He (Kennedy) sent back word it was the best time he ever had in his life. That was not the only time. She saw him on other occasions. It went on for a while."
J. Edgar Hoover discovered that Kennedy was having a relationship with Ellen Rometsch.
In July 1963 Federal Bureau of Investigation agents questioned Romesch about her past.
They came to the conclusion that she was probably a Soviet spy.
Hoover actually leaked information to the journalist, Courtney Evans, that Romesch worked for Walter Ulbricht, the communist leader of East Germany.
When Robert Kennedy was told about this information, he ordered her to be deported.
The FBI had discovered that there were several women at the Quorum Club, run by Baker, who had been involved in relationships with leading politicians.
This included both John F. Kennedy and Robert Kennedy.
It was particularly worrying that this included Mariella Novotny and Suzy Chang.
This was a problem because they had both initially came from communist countries and had been named as part of the spy ring that had trapped John Profumo, the British war minister, a few months earlier.
President Kennedy told J. Edgar Hoover that he "personally interested in having this story killed".
Hoover refused and leaked the information to Clark Mollenhoff.
On 26th October he wrote an article in the Des Moines Register claiming that the FBI had "established that the beautiful brunette had been attending parties with congressional leaders and some prominent New Frontiersmen from the executive branch of Government...
The possibility that her activity might be connected with espionage was of some concern, because of the high rank of her male companions".
Mollenhoff claimed that John Williams "had obtained an account" of Rometsch's activity and planned to pass this information to the Senate Rules Committee, the body investigating Baker.
The following day Robert Kennedy sent La Verne Duffy to West Germany to meet Ellen Rometsch.
In exchange for a great deal of money she agreed to sign a statement formally "denying intimacies with important people."
Kennedy now contacted Hoover and asked him to persuade the Senate leadership that the Senate Rules Committee investigation of this story was "contrary to the national interest".
He also warned on 28th October that other leading members of Congress would be drawn into this scandal and so was "contrary to the interests of Congress, too".
J. Edgar Hoover had a meeting with Mike Mansfield, the Democratic leader of the Senate and Everett Dirksen, the Republican counterpart.
What was said at this meeting has never been released.
However, as a result of the meeting that took place in Mansfield's home the Senate Rules Committee decided not to look into the Rometsch scandal.
According to the president's secretary, Evelyn Lincoln, Kennedy had decided that because of this emerging scandal he was going to drop Lyndon B. Johnson as his running mate in the 1964 election.
He told Lincoln that he was going to replace Johnson with Terry Sanford.
On 22nd November, 1963, a friend of Baker's, Don B. Reynolds told B. Everett Jordan and his Senate Rules Committee that Johnson had demanded that he provided kickbacks in return for this business.
This included a $585 Magnavox stereo. Reynolds also had to pay for $1,200 worth of advertising on KTBC, Johnson's television station in Austin. Reynolds had paperwork for this transaction including a delivery note that indicated the stereo had been sent to the home of Johnson.
Don B. Reynolds also told of seeing a suitcase full of money which Baker described as a "$100,000 payoff to Johnson for his role in securing the Fort Worth TFX contract".
His testimony came to an end when news arrived that President John F. Kennedy had been assassinated.
Life Magazine (November, 1963)
As soon as Lyndon B. Johnson became president he contacted B. Everett Jordan to see if there was any chance of stopping this information being published.
Jordan replied that he would do what he could but warned Johnson that some members of the committee wanted Reynold's testimony to be released to the public.
On 6th December, 1963, Jordan spoke to Johnson on the telephone and said he was doing what he could to suppress the story because " it might spread (to) a place where we don't want it spread."
Abe Fortas, a lawyer who represented both Lyndon B. Johnson and Bobby Baker, worked behind the scenes in an effort to keep this information from the public.
Johnson also arranged for a smear campaign to be organized against Don B. Reynolds.
To help him do this J. Edgar Hoover passed to Johnson the FBI file on Reynolds.
Nancy Carole Tyler moved back to Tennessee but returned in 1965 to work with Baker as his bookkeeper at the Carousel Motel.
Tyler believed that Baker would leave his wife.
When he refused, she became very angry and according to Baker, made scenes. This included threats to commit suicide.
On 17th January, 1964, the Senate Rules Committee voted to release to the public Reynold's secret testimony.
Johnson responded by leaking information from Reynolds' FBI file to Drew Pearson and Jack Anderson.
On 5th February, 1964, the Washington Post reported that Reynolds had lied about his academic success at West Point.
The article also claimed that Reynolds had been a supporter of Joseph McCarthy and had accused business rivals of being secret members of the American Communist Party.
It was also revealed that Reynolds had made anti-Semitic remarks while in Berlin in 1953.
A few weeks later the New York Times reported that Lyndon B. Johnson had used information from secret government documents to smear Don B. Reynolds.
It also reported that Johnson's officials had been applying pressure on the editors of newspapers not to print information that had been disclosed by Reynolds in front of the Senate Rules Committee.
On 10th May, 1965, Baker's secretary, Nancy Carole Tyler, died in a plane crash, near Ocean City, Maryland,.
Her roommate, Mary Jo Kopechne, died in road accident when a passenger of a car driven by Edward Kennedy.
Despite the efforts of his lawyer, Edward Bennett Williams, in 1967 Baker was found guilty of seven counts of theft, fraud and income tax evasions.
This included accepting large sums in "campaign donations" intended to buy influence with various senators, but had kept the money for himself.
He was sentenced to three years in federal prison but served only sixteen months.
Baker later wrote about his experiences in the book Wheeling and Dealing: Confessions of a Capitol Hill Operator (1978).
Joachim Joesten, an investigative journalist, wrote:
"The Baker scandal then is truly the hidden key to the assassination, or more exact, the timing of the Baker affair crystallized the more or less vague plans to eliminate Kennedy which had already been in existence the threat of complete exposure which faced Johnson in the Baker scandal provided that final impulse he was forced to give the go-ahead signal to the plotters who had long been waiting for the right opportunity."

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