Sunday, May 25, 2025

Lyndon Johnson tried to have sex with his black secretary Gerri Whittington immediately after signing the 1964 Civil Rights Act

 

Lyndon Johnson tried to have sex with his black secretary Gerri Whittington immediately after signing the 1964 Civil Rights Act

Photos of Gerri Whittington: https://www.google.com/search?q=gerri+whittington+lbj&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ei=7khlU_jgDIOzyAT72YLQDA&ved=0CAYQ_AUoAQ&biw=1231&bih=880

          “Gerri’s last trip to the Texas White House would be on the weekend of July 4, 1964. Lyndon was always so casual and relaxed at the ranch, which, much more than the real White House, he considered his own space, where he could do as he pleased. According to his aides in earlier years, this included nocturnal wanderings with a flashlight into staff bedrooms. What happened behind those doors is known only to those staff members whose rooms he entered, but it was certain that others would know he was there. There was little likelihood that the president of the United States could wander about in the night - even in his own home - without someone hearing him and drawing his or her own conclusion. Regardless of his motive, this kind of behavior would be highly offensive to someone like Gerri, who valued her reputation as much as anything in life. This was something Lyndon apparently didn’t understand…. So he probably gave it little thought before he showed up at Gerri’s room one night after everyone had retired. Gerri thought  she handled it quite well. Without waiting to learn why he was there, she told LBJ she wasn’t feeling well, and although it was nothing serious, just her time of the month, she had to get to sleep. With that, she nixed the possibility of anything from chitchat to- well, Lyndon did have a reputation, although with Gerri he had always acted appropriately. He left, and that’s the way it was. Mulling it over later, she thought perhaps he just wanted to talk. But this was not the right time or place. She realized, however, that her calm and quiet brush-off did not assure it would not happen again, and she wanted to make sure it didn’t. When the president and entourage returned to Washington after the holiday weekend, Gerri avoided the president while she thought it over. She told me she had considered resigning, but hoped it wouldn’t come to that….At the end of the week, when she finally came face to face with the president in the secretaries’ office, he commented (with some exaggeration and maybe a little sarcasm), “Did you decide to come to work - haven’t seen you over here in a week or so?” The secretary keeping the president’s diary that day noted the comment, as well as some good-natured banter with the other secretaries.Gerri felt she may have made her point by her absence.”

[Simeon Booker, Shocking the Conscience: A Reporter’s Account of the Civil Rights Movement, pp. 244-245]

Email to Robert Morrow on 5/8/14 from Myra McPherson

I wrote this in 1974!! With lbj saying 'move over. This is your president' . Source , Carl Rowan was quoted by name, the woman was not. 
Look It Up! The Power Lovers: an intimate look at politicians and their families.  
Myra MacPherson

202-256-6659

Author: The Scarlet Sisters: Sex Suffrage and Scandal in the Gilded Age 

www.myramacpherson.com

Twitter: @scandalsisters 

See the book the Power Lovers, pp. 184-185 by Myra McPherson for the LBJ crawling in bed with flashlight anecdote

On 12-31-63 Lyndon Johnson helped to integrate the Forty Acres Club by bringing Gerri Whittington to a New Year’s Eve party there. This was six months before LBJ tried to “integrate” Gerri at the LBJ Ranch

“New LBJ Library Director to Show LBJ History Through Modern Lens” – Nov. 21, 2019

https://liberalarts.utexas.edu/public-affairs/news/new-lbj-library-director-to-show-lbj-history-through-modern-lens

QUOTE

One evening, LBJ decided on a whim that he wanted to attend a party held at the Forty Acres Club, Lawrence explains: “The problem was that the club was segregated and some of LBJ’s aides worried that he would mire his presidency in controversy if he went there.” 

“But Johnson had other ideas. He deliberately walked into the club arm-in-arm with one of his secretaries, an African-American woman named Gerri Whittington,” says Lawrence. “From that day onward, the Forty Acres Club was desegregated.”

Lawrence’s admiration for LBJ is rooted in both the President’s charisma, as well as his commitment to social justice, and he hopes his enthusiasm for that history reverberates in his role as the new director of the LBJ Presidential Library, beginning in January 2020.

UNQUOTE

 

LBJ and Gerri Whittington integrating the Univ. of Texas’s Forty Acres Club on 12/31/63 – the same night LBJ made his revelations to Madeleine Brown

https://deadpresidents.tumblr.com/post/53207381610/lbjs-historic-night-out

On December 31, 1963, Lyndon Johnson had been President of the United States for just over a month.  Forty days earlier, John F. Kennedy had been assassinated in Dallas, Texas and LBJ was now entering 1964 – a Presidential election year – as the incumbent President, albeit an accidental one.

After several somber, tense, and exhausting weeks, LBJ was spending the Holidays at the LBJ Ranch in the Texas Hill Country.  On that New Year’s Eve, many members of President Johnson’s staff gathered at the Forty Acres Club in Austin, Texas to celebrate a birthday party for LBJ aide Horace Busby.  President Johnson wanted to join the festivities, but a tired Lady Bird wasn’t interested in going out, so LBJ gathered his secretaries at the LBJ Ranch and boarded a helicopter for the short flight into Austin.

Austin and its main businesses in the early 1960s were no different than any other city in the Segregated South.  Although the party for Busby was being held at the Forty Acres Club on the campus of the University of Texas, the hangout’s strict code of segregation had previously led to controversy.  In 1962, an African-American official from President Kennedy’s newly-formed Peace Corps was denied service at the Forty Acres Club, which led to a minor boycott and the resignations of several University of Texas staff members who had held club memberships.  Still, segregation was strictly enforced, just as it was in restaurants, bars, hotels, bus stations, playgrounds, cemeteries, and basically anywhere that one group of people might come into contact with another group of people throughout the South.

When President Johnson and the secretaries that he had brought along with him to the party arrived at the Forty Acres Club, the simple fact that the President of the United States was about to attend a gathering at a segregated business could have caused a major national controversy.  It was still early in LBJ’s Presidency and the fact that Johnson was from the South had worried civil rights leaders when JFK tapped Johnson as his running mate in 1960.  Up to that point, LBJ had not yet done anything as President to neutralize the fears of liberal Democrats who mourned President Kennedy’s assassination as the loss of potential civil rights legislation.

Everyone inside the Forty Acres Club recognized that the President was about to arrive when Secret Service agents entered the building and began scanning the guests and taking up positions.  Music was playing, cocktails were being served, conversations were cascading throughout the room, but there was also a sense of dread amongst those on LBJ’s staff who realized that the President’s decision to frequent a segregated nightclub in Austin would likely require some major explaining when the news got out.

And then, when Lyndon Johnson walked into the Forty Acres Club, it became clear that he might not be the President that some worried he may be.  As he entered the strictly segregated club, the President of the United States was arm-in-arm with one of his secretaries – Gerri Whittington. One of the guests, Ernie Goldstein turned to LBJ aide Bill Moyers and asked, “Does the President know what he’s doing?"  Moyers didn’t hesitate.  He responded, "He always knows what he’s doing."  Whittington asked Johnson a similar question.  "Mr. President,” she asked as they headed inside the club, “do you know what you are doing?"  Johnson didn’t hesitate.  "I sure do.  Half of them are going to think you’re my wife, and that’s just fine with me.”

Gerri Whittington was an African-American woman and in the final hours of 1963, the President of the United States had taken it upon himself to integrate the Forty Acres Club in Austin.  

Nobody had suggested it.  Nobody had demanded it.  Nobody had expected it.  There were no focus groups convened and no polling data was consulted.  Political calculations had nothing to do with it.  It was as simple as Lyndon Johnson wanting to celebrate New Year’s Eve with his staff – a staff which included an African-American woman.  On the last night of 1963, Lyndon Johnson brought a black friend to what had been a strictly segregated, all-white club because he wanted to, but he also did it because he realized that he was now the most powerful man in the world and it was something that he could do.  As LBJ said in other situations, “Well, what the hell is the Presidency for?"  On that last night of 1963, LBJ showed that the Presidency was for breaking down barriers and beginning the journey that made a big, brash Texan from the Hill Country the man who did more for Civil Rights than any other President besides (maybe) Lincoln.

Gerri Whittington, who had been asked to join LBJ’s secretarial staff in the White House shortly after President Kennedy was assassinated, continued to work in the White House for President Johnson until the day he left office and flew home to retirement in Texas.  She was the White House’s first black executive secretary and one of her fondest memories wasn’t desegregating the Forty Acres Club with LBJ, but the day in June 1967 when President Johnson steppped out of the Oval Office with Thurgood Marshall and shared the news that he was appointing Marshall as the first black Supreme Court Justice.  Other than the President and Marshall, Whittington was the first person to know of the historic nomination.

As for the Forty Acres Club, the rigid segregationist policy that had previously been the rule literally disappeared overnight.  The very next day, January 1, 1964, a curious party-goer from the night before called the club to see if it might have been an aberration or a one-time concession to the power of the Presidency.  When he asked if black guests were now allowed at the Forty Acres Club, he was told, "Yes, sir.  The President of the United States integrated us on New Year’s Eve.”

LBJ 6 months later tried to have sex with Gerri Whittington at the LBJ Ranch. She turned him down and later insisted on being transferred out the White House to the Pentagon so she could get away from Johnson.

QUOTE

                                           Desegregation

Shortly after he became President, LBJ integrated the Forty Acres Club, faculty club for the University of Texas, in Austin. He simply walked into the club’s dining room with a handsome black woman [Gerri Whittington] on his staff. “Mr. President,” said the woman rather nervously beforehand, “do you know what you are going” “I sure do, LBJ assured her. “Half of them are going to think you’re my wife and that’s just fine with me.” After LBJ’s appearance the club abandoned its age-old segregationist policy.

UNQUOTE

[Paul Boller, Presidential Anecdotes, p. 317]

LBJ comparing his penis to a rattlesnake with CBS television team

QUOTE

Of a Kennedy aide he once said: “He doesn’t have sense enough to pour piss out of a boot with the instructions written on the heel.” After becoming President he contemplated getting rid of FBI Chief J. Edgar Hoover and then decided it would be too difficult to bring off. “Well,” he said philosophically, “it’s probably better to have him inside the tent pissing out, than outside pissing in.” And once, driving around his ranch with a CBS television team, he stopped to urinate in the underbrush. “Aren’t you afraid a rattlesnake might bite it?” asked a CBS cameraman. “Hell,” snorted Johnson, “it is part rattlesnake.”

UNQUOTE

[Paul Boller, Presidential Anecdotes, p. 319]

Alexis Coe article on Gerri Whittington 4/2/25

[“When a President Knew Diversity Was a Superpower,” Alexis Coe, Harpers Bazaar, April 2, 2025]

When a President Knew Diversity Was a Superpower

QUOTE

Oh, I think someone is playing with me," Gerri Whittington cooed into the phone after the caller identified himself as "the president." In 1963, Whittington's skepticism was well-founded. The nation writhed in Jim Crow's iron grip, its laws etching the violent subjugation of Black Americans into every facet of life—and the White House no exception. Whittington had met President Lyndon B. Johnson, but there was no reason for him to call her at home; they’d hardly interacted during her tenure as secretary to one of the late John F. Kennedy's special assistants.

This moment, plucked from the 800-hour trove of LBJ's clandestine recordings, captures a seismic shift: The "reassignment" he proposed would make Whittington the first Black secretary to a president in 187 years of American history. Johnson's stunned reaction upon learning she lived more than 30 minutes from the White House betrayed a dawning awareness of the insidious reach of segregation. He sent a car.

Whittington would be a living, breathing testament to his administration's complex, often contradictory, yet unwavering commitment to racial equality. When Senators, lobbyists, and activists came to the Oval Office door, they'd find unmistakable evidence that Jim Crow's reign was crumbling—and a stark reminder that LBJ's executive order reinstating segregation mere days earlier was no ironclad edict. It was a tool he wielded in the public arena, a calculated move prioritizing political gain to ensure enduring change.

By Christmas 1963, Whittington's presence was quietly dismantling segregation across LBJ's Texas haunts. She slept in the 'Carnation Room' in the main house, alongside white visitors, at the “'Texas White House,” dined with the First Family at their ranch table, occupied a pew in their all-white church, and even trod the rugged Hill Country hunting grounds. Each step she took—from the ranch's threshold to the church's aisle—was a calculated stride toward equality.

“You integrated that club,” Johnson crowed to Whittington after they rang in 1964 at Austin's notoriously segregated 40 Acres Club. “He knew exactly what he was doing,” Bill Moyers later recalled—and so, with quiet determination, did Whittington.

"It was a revelation to me," Whittington reflected, as it was to Paula Okamoto, wife of Yoichi Okamoto, the official White House photographer. Okamoto inquired if Whittington was "foreign." "No, I'm a Negro," she replied, noting she felt no hostility.

By 1964, Johnson was desperate to advertise Whittington, but with uncharacteristic restraint, he eschewed the blunt instrument of a press conference in favor of soft power propaganda. In early January, Whittington stepped into America's living room as a guest on CBS's long running game show, "What's My Line?" The President's cunning was vindicated as the blindfolded panel floundered, unable to conceive of a Black woman in such a position of power. Meanwhile, the studio audience, who could be, sat in stunned silence, the words "Secretary to President Johnson" blazoned behind Whittington.

"You're just as charming as we've been led to believe that White House secretaries to be," host John Daly remarked at the end of her appearance, carried immense weight. This seemingly mundane comment normalized Whittington. She was no token or exception, but as a professional equal to her white counterparts. In doing so, it subtly challenged viewers' preconceptions about race and capability. This approach, more than any grandstanding or overt politicking, served to quietly but profoundly shift perceptions.

The understated nature of Whittington's groundbreaking role was, ironically, its most radical aspect. Johnson's genius lay in presenting her normalcy as a fait accompli, though he never lost sight of its strategic value. "He didn't ask me anything," Whittington recollected, "but he told me." He confided in her his preference for Roy Wilkins over Martin Luther King, Whitney Young, and James Farmer.

And when these luminaries graced the Oval Office, Whittington's presence was carefully choreographed—a living tableau of progress. "And I took pictures with them," she recalled with a hint of bemusement. She posed with Thurgood Marshall, the first Supreme Court Justice, as well. "I don't recall what they said. I don't think they said anything." The silence spoke volumes about the complexities of representation.

In a twist of fate that seems almost scripted, Whittington and Marshall exited the stage of life in tandem. After a stroke at 38 and a battle with cancer, she passed away on January 24, 1993, at 61—the same day as Justice Marshall. Their intertwined destinies, from White House photograph to final curtain, serve as a poignant coda to an era of tumultuous progress.

LBJ's 1965 Executive Order 11246 mandated government employers "hire without regard to race, religion and national origin.” Six decades later, in 2025, President Trump has inverted this legacy. He wields diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) as a political weapon to dismantle progress. But purging DEI initiatives from the government is only one part of an insidious plan to erase progress from public consciousness, leaving the National Museum of African American History and Culture particularly vulnerable among the imperiled Smithsonian institutions. The contrast between LBJ's expansive vision and Trump's regressive agenda highlights the fragility of hard-won progress in America's ongoing struggle for equality.

Under Trump, Whittington, about whom little has been written, faces erasure. She has no obvious champion; there are no direct descendents, though she put many members of her extended family through college with a medical settlement. And by the time she sat for oral history interviews, the patina of age had settled over her memories. Like many secretaries, her memories centered on the tangible—photographs, which seemed to be her particular domain among the clerical staff.

When probed about pivotal moments in civil rights history—the Senate invoking cloture on the 1964 Civil Rights Bill, its signing ceremony in the Rose Garden, or Martin Luther King's "I Have a Dream" speech—Whittington's memory faltered. "I don't remember anything," she confessed, adding with a touch of self-deprecation, "Isn't that funny?" Her narrative, punctuated by significant omissions, echoes the selective recall common to presidential employees, especially those in close proximity to the executive-in-chief. And her amnesia wasn't absolute; she distinctly recalled being the sole representative from the president's office.

This is my secretary," Johnson had said by way of introduction to an African Ambassador aboard the presidential yacht the USS Sequoia after she’d left the White House, a simple statement laden with historical weight.

Gerri Whittington's legacy defies easy categorization. Her presence in the White House was both revolutionary and quotidian, epitomizing 1960s America's complex progress. She carried nuclear codes and photographed civil rights icons, yet struggled to recall—and sometimes chose not to—the landmark moments she witnessed. Whittington's fragmentary, human story shows how history unfolds in quiet moments, as perceptions shift when barriers fall silently. Her life, brushing against her era's titans yet largely unsung, exemplifies how countless individuals, by simply occupying previously forbidden spaces, reshaped a nation.

UNQUOTE

LBJ 6 months later tried to have sex with Gerri Whittington at the LBJ Ranch. She turned him down and later insisted on being transferred out the White House to the Pentagon so she could get away from Johnson.

QUOTE

                                           Desegregation

Shortly after he became President, LBJ integrated the Forty Acres Club, faculty club for the University of Texas, in Austin. He simply walked into the club’s dining room with a handsome black woman [Gerri Whittington] on his staff. “Mr. President,” said the woman rather nervously beforehand, “do you know what you are going” “I sure do, LBJ assured her. “Half of them are going to think you’re my wife and that’s just fine with me.” After LBJ’s appearance the club abandoned its age-old segregationist policy.

UNQUOTE

[Paul Boller, Presidential Anecdotes, p. 317]

Saturday, April 26, 2025

Absolute Proof that Robert Kennedy did not ask that Allen Dulles and John J. McCloy be in the Warren Commission

 Absolute Proof that Robert Kennedy did not ask that Allen Dulles and John J. McCloy be in the Warren Commission

 11/29/63: Sen. Russell asks LBJ: are you going to let the Attorney General nominate someone [for the Warren Commission]? https://www.youtube.com/shorts/eOPOFFES5yo  

 

NOPE! But Hoover is agreeable to Allen Dulles and John McCloy.

 

11/29/63 LBJ and Sen. Richard Russell conversation:

 

Sen. Richard Russell – “Are you going to let the Attorney General [Robert Kennedy] nominate someone, aren’t you?”

 

Lyndon Johnson: “No. Unt -unh.”

 

This comes in the context of LBJ telling Sen. Richard Russell that FBI Chief J. Edgar Hoover was agreeable to have people like Allen Dulles and John McCloy on the Warren Commission. And that Hoover himself would not be on the Warren Commission but it would be based on his FBI report.

 

Takeaway LBJ and Hoover both agreed that Allen Dulles and John McCloy would be good picks for the Warren Commission. They did this without the consultation of Robert Kennedy. LBJ specifically says Robert Kennedy would not have any input into picking members on the Warren Commission.


Sincerely,


Robert Morrow


"The World's Leading and Most Humble Authority on the JFK assassination"


Austin, TX     512-306-1510

Tuesday, March 11, 2025

Former FBI Special agent Paul Letersky makes it clear: LYNDON JOHNSON WAS THE BOSS OF J. EDGAR HOOVER and not the other way around

 

J. Edgar Hoover: his surprise at the JFK assassination – which in my book means he was not in on the planning of the JFK assassination although he certainly covered it up

 Paul Letersky:

 QUOTE

           Despite their personal relationship, Hoover hadn’t exactly been thrilled when Johnson became president. I had it on good authority, from someone who was in the room, that when the Director first got word that Kennedy had been pronounced dead in Dallas, Hoover’s response was “Jesus Christ! Now Johnson is president! He couldn’t run a dog show, how the hell is he going to run the country?

 UNQUOTE

 [Paul Letersky, The Director: My Years Assisting J. Edgar Hoover, p. 133]

 Paul Letersky explaining how Lyndon Johnson dominated J. Edgar Hoover who feared LBJ

 QUOTE

 The popular conception these days is that J. Edgar Hoover was a manipulator of presidents, that he was a puppet master looming darkly over every sordid episode mid-twentieth-century American history, that he used his power, and his secrets, to blackmail presidents and bend them to his will. But I never saw Hoover blackmail a president. Actually, it was the other way around.

           During my entire time in the Director’s office the president was Lyndon Baines Johnson. Whenever he called the Director – the calls came from the president’s secretary – I was under strict orders to inform the Director immediately, no matter what. Even if the Director was enjoying his customary post lunch nap and the NO CALLS card was propped up by the phone, if the president called, I had to wake him up.

           That only happened a couple of times. I’d call the Director’s inner office on the green phone and he’s answer groggily and grumpily, “I said no calls!”

           Sir, the president’s office is calling.”

           He’d tell me to put it through at once. Hoover always understood who the boss was.

           Of course, I wasn’t privy to what was said during those presidential calls. But on a few occasions I’d have to bring some documents to the Director’s desk while he was on the line with the Oval Office, and I’d hear his side of the conversation. And mostly what I heard was “Yes, Mr. President.” Yes, Mr. President.” “I’ll take care of that right away, Mr. President.” To me the Director sounded less like a presidential manipulator than a husband being browbeaten by his domineering wife – which in the case of LBJ was an apt analogy.

 UNQUOTE

 [Paul Letersky, The Director: My Years Assisting J. Edgar Hoover, p. 125]

 

Paul Letersky makes it clear: Lyndon Johnson was the boss of J. Edgar Hoover and not the other way around

 QUOTE

 Still , he usually acquiesced to Johnson’s politically motivated orders. Johnson was, after all, the president of the United States, and Hoover had never thought that his power was greater than any president’s. The racetrack incident notwithstanding, Hoover never thought he had the authority to defy a firm presidential order, especially one issued in the name of “national security.” Despite Johnson’s waiver of Hoover’s mandatory retirement, Johnson made it clear that the director of the FBI served at the president’s pleasure – and Hoover knew if he didn’t follow Johnson’s orders, Johnson could simply find someone who would. Johnson never wanted to fire Hoover – as he’d said, it was better to have “Hoover inside the tent pissing out than have him outside the tent pissing in” – but to use Johnson’s terminology, he had the “balls” to do it if he had to.

 As tough as the Director was, in some ways he seemed overwhelmed by the force of Johnson’s personality.

 UNQUOTE

 [Paul Letersky, The Director: My Years Assisting J. Edgar Hoover, pp. 134-135]

 On page 136 of his book The Director (published in 2021), Paul Letersky makes is abundantly clear that Lyndon Johnson was the boss of FBI chief J. Edgar Hoover and not the other way around. Letersky asks, “After reading that, I ask you, Who was the boss of whom?”

 Lyndon Johnson’s girls would often ask “uncle” J. Edgar Hoover and the FBI for help whenever they lost their dog

 QUOTE

 Hoover occasionally had dinner with Johnson and his wife Lady Bird, and Hoover was also friendly with Johnson’s young daughters, Lynda Bird Johnson and Luci Baines Johnson, who viewed Hoover as sort of a kindly old uncle. They’d often knock on Hoover’s door and ask for help in finding their dog Little Beagle Johnson – clearly, Johnson had a thing about the LBJ theme – help that the dog-loving Director of the FBI would cheerfully give.

 UNQUOTE

 [Paul Letersky, The Director: My Years Assisting J. Edgar Hoover, pp. 130-131]

Wednesday, March 5, 2025

Richard Calvin Dodd and James Leon Simmons were 2 EXCELLENT witnesses that prove JFK was being shot at from behind the fence line on Grassy Knoll

 

The FBI warped the interviews of both men and the Warren Commission avoided them like the plague because they prove JFK was being shot at from behind the fence line on the Grassy Knoll. - Robert Morrow 3/6/25

Mark Lane interview of Richard Calvin Dodd, who along with S.M. Holland was standing on the Triple Overpass with a Bird’s Eye view of the JFK assassination and the Grassy Knoll.

Railroad Worker Richard Dodd - Witness to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy

QUOTE

Railroad worker Richard Calvin Dodd was standing on top of the triple underpass, in front of John F. Kennedy's presidential motorcade on Elm Street LANE. Did you see anything which might indicate to you where the shots came from? DODD. Well, we all four seen about the same thing. The shots, the smoke came from behind the hedge on the north side of the plaza. And a motorcycle policeman dropped his motorcycle in the street with his gun in his hand and run up the embankment to the hedge. And then I went North to look around the corner to see if there is anyone behind the hedge and met special agent of the railroad. And he went down there, and I walked along with him to see if there were any tracks there. In which there were tracks and cigarette butts was laying where someone was stranding on the bumper looking over the fence or something. LANE. Where you questioned by agents of any government agency on November 22, Mr. Dodd. DODD. Yes, we were. We were taken over to the court house and questioned by I suppose Secret Service men of some kind. Asked me quite a few questions about the same as I’ve told you here today. This clip is from Mark Lane's Rush to Judgment (1967)

UNQUOTE

1) with 3 Railroad friends, including S.M. Holland on the Triple Overpass

2) All 4 men saw smoke coming from being the hedge, the fence on the Grassy Knoll

3) looked behind fence and saw tracks and cigarette butts, near where someone had been standing on a bumper looking over a fence

4) questioned by Secret Service

5) Never called as a witness by the Warren Report

Richard Calvin Dodd (1906-1967) Find-A-Grave

Richard Calvin Dodd (1906-1967) - Find a Grave Memorial

QUOTE

His parents were Nute Dodd & Edna Southern.

Social Security Number 707-16-6285

Occupation: Track Supp. - Union Terminal, Dallas (On Death Certificate).

He is buried next to his wife, LaRue Phillips Dodd (Died in 1968).

Eyewitness to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. He was standing next to Sterling Mayfield Holland, on the overpass on Elm Street. Dodd was also certain that a shot came from behind the fence on the Grassy Knoll, and also saw the puff of smoke. He was adamant that the FBI falsified his report from what he had told them.

UNQUOTE

Just Look at this Pitiful Interview by THE FBI of Richard Calvin Dodd and look at all of the critical information the FBI intentionally left out of it’s report: namely the puff of smoke coming from the Grassy Knoll fence line!!

CE 1420 - FBI interview of Richard Calvin Dodd

QUOTE

FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION

Date 3/18/64

Mr. RICHARD CALVIN DODD, 1216 South Tyler, Dallas, Texas, was interviewed at Lamar and Henning Street n Dallas, and furnished the following information:

Mr. DODD stated he is employed as a track supervisor for the Union Terminal Company, 500 South Houston Street, Dallas, and was so employed on November 22, 1963. On this date, he took up a position on the Elm Street railroad viaduct overlooking the route used by the Presidential motorcade on this date. Mr. DODD stated that when the motorcycle escort and the automobile carrying President KENNEDY approached the area where he was standing his attention was directed on President KENNEDY. He stated he first realized something was wrong when he saw president KENNEDY slump forward and simultaneously heard shots ring out. He stated he did not know how many shots were fired, but that the sounds were very close together. Mr. DODD advised that his attention remained on President KENNEDY; he did not look up and did not know where the shots came from.

Mr DODD stated he did not know LEE HARVEY OSWALD and had never met or seen JACK RUBY.


on 3/17/64 at Dallas, Texas File # DL 100-10461

By Special Agent THOMAS T. TRETTIS JR. & E.J. Robertson Date Dictated 3/17/64

UNQUOTE

Mark Lane interview of James Leon Simmons – saw puff of smoke coming out from the fence line on the Grassy Knoll

Railroad Worker James Leon Simmons - Witness to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy

1) loud explosion, sounded like it came from the fence line of the Grassy Knoll

2) puff of smoke came from fence on Grassy Knoll

3) ran around to the back of the fence on the Grassy Knoll, no one was there

4) footprints in the mud

5) footprints on the railing of the fence

6) questioned by FBI

7) Not called as a witness by the Warren Commission

QUOTE

James Leon Simmons stood atop the triple overpass with fellow workers S.M. Holland and Richard C. Dodd. LANE. What did you see and what did you hear? SIMMONS. As the presidential limousine was rounding the curve on Elm Street, there was a loud explosion. At the time I didn’t know what it was, but it sounded like a loud firecracker or a gun shot. Ann it sounded like it came form the left and in front of us towards the wooden fence. And there was a puff of smoke that came underneath of the trees on the embankment. LANE. Where was the puff of smoke Mr Simmons in relation to the wooden fence? SIMMONS. It was right directly in front of the wooden fence.... LANE. After you heard the shots and saw the smoke, what did you do? SIMMONS. I was talkin with Patrolman Foster at the time. And as soon as we heard the shots we ran around to the wooden fence. And when we got there there was no one there. But there was footprints in the mud around the fence, and there was footprints on the wooden two by four railing on the fence. LANE. Were you questioned by Dallas Police that day? SIMMONS. Yes, I was. LANE. Did you give your name to the Dallas Police? SIMMONS. Yes, I did. LANE. Did you tell them what you just told me? SIMMONS. Yes, I did. LANE. Were you subsequently questioned by agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. SIMMONS. About a month later I was questioned by the FBI. LANE. Did you tell them what you told me and what you told the Dallas Police? SIMMONS. Yes, I did. This clip is from Mark Lane's Rush to Judgment (1967)

UNQUOTE

James Leon Simmons (1929-1980)– Find-A-Grave

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/49942678/james_leon-simmons

James Leon Simmons – FBI interview 3/17/64 – covering up that Simmons obviously thought a shot or shots to JFK came from behind the fence on the Grassy Knoll

https://www.history-matters.com/archive/jfk/wc/wcvols/wh22/html/WH_Vol22_0432a.htm

https://www.history-matters.com/analysis/witness/witnessMap/Simmons.htm

QUOTE

Simmons said he thought he saw exhaust fumes of smoke near the embankment in front of the Texas School Book Depository Building. Simmons then ran toward the Texas School Book Depository Building with a policeman. He stopped at a fence near the Memorial Arches and could not find anyone.
Simmons advised that it was his opinion the shots came from the direction of the Texas School Book Depository Building.

UNQUOTE


Saturday, March 1, 2025

Lyndon Johnson murdered pre-selected CIA patsy Lee Harvey Oswald

Lyndon Johnson Murdered Lee Harvey Oswald

 LBJ murdered Lee Harvey Oswald. How do we know this? Because Dallas Police Chief Jesse Curry and Detective Will Fritz were not planning on a public transfer of Lee Harvey Oswald on Sunday, November 24, 1963.

Mayor Cabell through City Manager Crull ORDERED Dallas police chief Jesse Curry to have a very public transfer. Who told them to do that?

In the words of Dallas Police detective Don Archer, the pressure for this public transfer came from "Washington, D.C."

Who was Washington, D.C.?

Lyndon Baines Johnson who was personally calling down to Dallas, including Will Fritz and who ordered his aide Cliff Carter to make multiple calls to Dallas County officials telling them to charge the whole JFK assassination on Lee Harvey Oswald and quit talking about a "communist conspiracy" or any conspiracy.

Remember, although Mayor Earle Cabell was a CIA asset and also the brother of Air Force Gen. and CIA Charles Cabell, who JFK fired after the Bay of Pigs fiasco, Earle Cabell ran for Congress in 1964, got elected by beating LBJ-hater GOP Cong. Bruce Alger and was an absolute lackey for Lyndon Johnson for his time in Congress.

Not only did LBJ murder JFK, but of course he murdered the pre-selected patsy Lee Harvey Oswald through the third party of the Dallas mafia, who his Dallas friends knew quite well.

Oswald was controlled by Washington who told Mayor Earle Cabell of Dallas and the City Manager that Oswald must have a public transfer!

 

Dallas Cops: Oswald Transfer Was Controlled by Washington - YouTube

 

Dallas Police detectives L.C. Graves and Don Archer discuss the transfer of Oswald. Especially note the comments of Don Archer blaming the transfer on “Washington!” 

 

Former Dallas County Sheriff Steve Guthrie said that it was common knowledge that Mayor Cabell or City Manager Crull ordered Police Chief Jesse Curry to have a very public transfer of Lee Harvey Oswald.

 

12/7/1963 Steve Guthrie affidavit with the FBI: https://history-matters.com/archive/jfk/wc/wcvols/wh22/pdf/WH22_CE_1251.pdf


Henry Wade, at the urging of LBJ’s Cliff Carter, was IMMEDIATELY telling people that Oswald ALONE had murdered JFK. Henry Wade, a former roommate of John Connally, had previously worked for both LBJ and J. Edgar Hoover.

 

https://thedailytexan.com/2013/11/22/prisoner-denies-slaying-of-jfk/

 

[“Prisoner denies slaying of JFK,” Charmayne Marsh, Daily Texan, 11-23-1963]

 

Prisoner denies slaying of JFK

Charmayne Marsh
November 22, 2013 (Daily Texan typo on date, should be 11-23-1963)

 

DALLAS (Spl.) — Lee Harvey Oswald, 24, was charged for murder with malice in the slaying of President John F. Kennedy at 11:56 p.m. Friday night.

Henry Wade, the district attorney making the announcement in Dallas City Jail, said the charge was made on “physical evidence.”

“It was no one else but him.”

Oswald denies killing the president. He said, “The only thing I knew about it was when reporters asked me.”

The slightly built brown-haired man defected to Russia in 1959. He returned to the United States in 1962 after denying the alien status offered by Russia.

Earlier, he was charged with the Friday murder of a Dallas policeman. The officer, J. W. Tippett, was shot in Oak Cliff about 40 minutes after the president was killed.

Six witnesses identified Oswald as the officer’s murderer. Wade said it is a capital offense, and he would seek the death penalty on both charges.

Oswald was arraigned for the murder of Tippett in David L. Johnson’s Precinct 2 Justice Court.

ITALIAN GUN

The Italian-made gun believed to have been the assassination weapon was sent

 to Washington for a ballistics check.

Oswald’s Russian wife Marianne said she thought she had seen a rifle of this type in her husband’s possession, Jesse Curry, Dallas chief of police, said.

“I do not think so,” Curry said when asked if Dallas police thought the man had a Communist background.

Oswald is said to be pro-Castro and chairman of a “Fair Play for Cuba Committee.” He has been arrested in New Orleans for his Committee demonstrations, a Dallas policeman said.

Oswald said he is not a Communist but a Marxist.

 

He will be arraigned for the presidential killing at City Hall tomorrow. The prisoner will stay at Dallas City Jail until Monday, and, then, be taken to the county jail.

Murder is not a federal charge, and if brought to trial, he will be tried in a Texas district court, presumably in Dallas. “He offers no alibis,” Wade said, “but denies both killings.”

“You are against me because I like Russia,” he said as policemen escorted him to an elevator.

Newsmen from all over the world jammed the hall.

The small blue-eyed man wore a brown shirt, a white tee shirt and dark pants.

Over his left eye was a gash. His right eye was bruised and cut. Police said he got both from a scuffle, when officer M. N. McDonald arrested him for Tippett’s murder. He had a .88 caliber pistol stuffed in his belt.

Officer McDonald apprehended him in the downstairs middle section of the Texas Oak Cliff Theater.

Oswald ran into the theater, witnesses said, after shooting Tippett. The theater was one and a half blocks from where Tippett was believed to have been shot.

“War is Hell” and “Cry of Battle” are playing at the theater which was filled with school children observing a holiday due to the President’s visit.

Lt. Carl Day, head of the Dallas Crime Laboratory, said the rifle was found on the sixth floor of the Texas School Book Depository Building.

IN BUILDING

 

Will Fritz, captain of the Dallas homicide bureau, told newsmen that Oswald was definitely in the building when the President was shot.

The gun was found lying on a carton of books about six feet from the back stairs. Chicken bones and other pieces of food were on the floor surrounding the window. The end window on the building’s south side was the site used by the slayer.

Cardboard cartons were stacked in a semi-circle in a shield-like manner around the window. Three smaller cartons were stacked directly in front of the window. Lt. Day said the dent on the top carton is where he thought the man rested the gun.

Oswald’s mother, wife and brother spent most of the afternoon at the jail. Oswald said he did not have an attorney and was being denied legal counsel. Wade said he didn’t know if he had legal counsel, but he thought his family was taking care of it.

His wife, a small brown-haired woman, barely speaks English.

She and his mother walked through the crowd of newsmen without commenting on the situation. The wife held a small baby wrapped in a white blanket.

City Detective Ed Hicks said Oswald’s wife lived in Irving, but he did not know if the couple were separated.

TWO MONTHS IN DALLAS

Oswald’s mother lives in Fort Worth and his brother in Denton. He has been in Dallas about two months, Curry said.

He has been living in a rooming house in Oak Cliff.

Mrs. Erlene Roberts, who manages the house Oswald lives in, said he would leave about 7:30 or 8 a.m. returning in the evening. He lived there under an assumed name, O. L. Lee.

 

He did not know anybody and didn’t have much to say,” Mrs. Roberts said. “If you got a good grunt out of him, it would be a miracle.”

Oswald is believed to have been originally from New Orleans. He attended Ridlega Elementary School in Fort Worth.

His mother told a Fort Worth Star-Telegram reporter that he had always been persecuted. She said he did not have a father and suffered from it. The father died when Oswald was a child.

The grand jury will not convene until next Wednesday.

It is believed he was an expert marksman in the Marines.


Sincerely,


Robert Morrow    Austin, TX   512-306-1510


"LBJ Murdered a lot more people than just John Kennedy"