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Final_Judgment

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An Apology From the Author . . .<br />

"I Missed the Missing Link."<br />

"Michael Collins Piper does much more than convince readers of the<br />

multi-layered conspiracy to remove JFK from office: he convinces us<br />

that the facts have always been right before our eyes."<br />

From a review of <strong>Final</strong> <strong>Judgment</strong><br />

posted on Amazon. Com<br />

One of the problems with writing a book is that no matter how hard an<br />

author researches his subject, he's bound to miss a few significant items the<br />

first time around. Since <strong>Final</strong> <strong>Judgment</strong> was first released in 1994, I've<br />

repeatedly kicked myself for having passed by more than a few such details<br />

that I believe lend credence to the theory that this book puts forth.<br />

Up through and including the fourth edition of <strong>Final</strong> <strong>Judgment</strong>, I<br />

repeatedly made the point that former New Orleans Jim Garrison who<br />

prosecuted trade executive Clay Shaw for conspiracy in the JFK<br />

assassination had no inkling of any Mossad connection to the assassination.<br />

But it now seems that I was wrong.<br />

After the fourth edition of <strong>Final</strong> <strong>Judgment</strong> was released, I made the<br />

somewhat unsettling discovery that Garrison apparently did indeed realize<br />

that the Mossad was connected to the conspiracy—and the information had<br />

been there for me to find it, if I had looked in the right place.<br />

Although I had scanned the quite extensive Internet web site of veteran<br />

JFK assassination researcher A. J. Weberman (www.weberman.com) I<br />

found something which amazed me, to say the least. On his web site,<br />

Weberman made the following remarkable assertion:<br />

This researcher knew Jim Garrison in the mid-<br />

1970's. Garrison wanted me to find a publisher for a<br />

manuscript he had written on the assassination of<br />

President John F. Kennedy. When I read the<br />

manuscript I found that it was a fictional work that<br />

placed the blame for John Kennedy's death on the<br />

Mossad—the Israeli intelligence service.<br />

Considering all the grief to which I had been subjected over the past<br />

several years—even including criticism coming from some defenders of the<br />

Garrison investigation—I could barely believe what I had read.<br />

If A. J. Weberman is to be believed, Jim Garrison himself had indeed<br />

figured out—somehow, not surprisingly—that there was good reason to<br />

believe that the Mossad had been involved in the crime of the century.

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