03.06.2015 Views

Final_Judgment

Final_Judgment

Final_Judgment

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

436 Agents of Influence [339]<br />

many commission conclusions. Interestingly, Boggs, who died in a plane<br />

crash in 1972, was once described as an "errand boy" 858 for Mossadconnected<br />

Clay Shaw's close friend, Edith Stern, head of the WDSU media<br />

empire in New Orleans that helped create Lee Harvey Oswald's public image<br />

as a "pro-Castro agitator." Thus, Boggs and Hubert were positioned to<br />

restrict inquiries into the Shaw-Banister-Ferrie apparatus in New Orleans that<br />

was intertwined with the Lake Ponchartrain Cuban-exile training operations<br />

of CIA contract agent and Mossad asset Frank Sturgis.<br />

Burt W. Griffin. A junior member of Leon Hubert's commission<br />

team investigating Jack Ruby's background, Griffin was a former assistant<br />

U.S. attorney and practicing lawyer in Cleveland. Later a Cleveland trial<br />

judge, Griffin—like Hubert—ultimately expressed some doubts about the<br />

commission's findings but was never vocal about his reservations.<br />

William T. Coleman, Jr. At the time of his appointment to the<br />

commission, Coleman was one of the most prominent Black attorneys in<br />

the nation, associated with the "political" law firm of Dilworth, Paxon,<br />

Kalish, Levy & Coleman, headed by Philadelphia's former Democratic<br />

Mayor Richardson Dilworth. Coleman's edge up the political/legal ladder<br />

came, however, when he clerked in 1948-49 for Supreme Court Justice<br />

Felix Frankfurter, one of the most ardent leaders of the Jewish community<br />

in America. Coleman's clerkship came at the very time that the state of<br />

Israel was being established. On the Warren Commission Coleman was the<br />

senior member of a team examining "possible foreign conspiracies" 859<br />

behind the assassination of President Kennedy. He found no such<br />

conspiracies.<br />

W. David Slawson. A Princeton graduate with a master's degree in<br />

theoretical physics, Slawson essentially functioned as an assistant to<br />

William Coleman—eleven years his senior—in "researching conspiracy<br />

theories." 860 This was, needless to say, a highly unlikely post, to say the<br />

least, for a young man with a background in physics and who was charged<br />

with the responsibility of investigating foreign conspiracies which may<br />

have been behind the assassination. Slawson gave up his study of<br />

international intrigue after he left the Warren Commission and specialized in<br />

the far less theoretical and highly unscientific fields of contracts and antitrust<br />

as a law professor at the University of Southern California<br />

Francis W. H. Adams. The former New York City police<br />

commissioner from 1954 to 1955, Adams should presumably have been a<br />

top-notch investigator for the commission. It appears, however, that Adams<br />

was mere window dressing. Although Adams was supposed to be teamed<br />

with Arlen Specter to track President Kennedy's activities in Dallas as well<br />

as investigate the motorcade, Adams was, according to the National Law<br />

Journal, "rarely present," 861 so much so that Chief Justice Warren mistook<br />

him for a coroner testifying before the commission. Recommended to the

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!