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376 The Man From the Klan [315]<br />

founded by the late James H. Madole. Although Madole was apparently a<br />

dyed-in-the-wool Nazi, it is an established fact that his organization was<br />

infiltrated, funded in part and manipulated by agents of the ADL's<br />

undercover spy apparatus.<br />

The ADL's operative inside the NRP was one Emmanuel Trujillo who<br />

also went by the name Mana Truhill. In turn, Truhill worked closely with<br />

Sanford Griffith, then the ADL's chief spymaster.<br />

Two "right wing" activists of the 1950s era—author Eustace Mullins<br />

and businessman DeWest Hooker (referenced in Chapter 4)—have confirmed<br />

to this author that the ADL was indeed active in "infiltrating" rightist<br />

groups at the time and that the aforementioned Griffith was a familiar figure<br />

moving in and out of the right-wing orbit during the period.<br />

During the heyday of Madole's ADL-manipulated organization wellknown<br />

maverick New York publisher Lyle Stuart publicly accused the ADL<br />

of financing American Nazi groups—such as Madole's outfit—for its own<br />

insidious ends. That Daniel Burros was himself deeply a part of this unusual<br />

circle being manipulated by the ADL is an intriguing fact. But there's much<br />

more to the story of the Oswald-Burros connection.<br />

Some JFK assassination researchers have focused on New Orleans<br />

private detective and CIA contract agent Guy Banister's ties to Robert<br />

DePugh and the paramilitary group known as the Minutemen as proof that<br />

"right wing extremists" were perhaps behind the JFK assassination. As we<br />

noted in some detail in Chapter 15, however, there is strong evidence to<br />

suggest that Banister was also being deployed by the Anti-Defamation<br />

League (ADL) of B'nai B'rith in its own "fact-finding" operations aimed<br />

against left-leaning civil rights groups.<br />

The evidence regarding the Minutemen, however, suggests that the<br />

Minutemen were, for all intents and purposes, a government-infiltrated—<br />

perhaps even government-controlled—"right wing extremist" outfit. It is the<br />

Minutemen link that opens up the door in the Oswald-Burros connection to<br />

some highly unusual facts about a strange individual named Roy<br />

Frankhauser who just happens to have been associated with both Oswald<br />

and Burros.<br />

John George and Laird Wilcox, in Nazis, Communists, Klansmen, and<br />

Others on the Fringe, have provided us with a wealth of information about<br />

Frankhauser's operations inside the Minutemen in particular. Here's what<br />

George and Wilcox wrote about the government's infiltration of the<br />

Minutemen and the role of the Roy Frankhauser. The extended direct<br />

quotation from George and Wilcox follows:<br />

"The Minutemen, in fact, were among the most thoroughly infiltrated<br />

of all domestic far right groups. According to Eric Norden, in his long essay<br />

on the paramilitary right appearing in the June 1969 issue of Playboy<br />

magazine, virtually all of the major Minutemen cases were cracked with the<br />

assistance of government infiltrators and informants.<br />

"One of these informants was a nightmare named Roy Frankhauser, a<br />

professional government infiltrator whose alliance with [Robert] DePugh [of

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