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From: "Alex Constantine" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Lloyd" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: The Christian Defense League
Date: Saturday, September 09, 2000 1:26 AM

     "The first indication that the Swift/Gale complex was interested in
more than preaching religion came from George Harding in April 1963 when he
informed the FBI that he was being recruited to become part of an eight man
team to assassinate three hundred public officials in high positions of
government...."

------------------------------------------------------------------------
A League of Their Own:
A Look Inside the Christian Defense League
by
D. Boylan*


------------------------------------------------------------------------

The heating up of the Cold War, the Supreme Court�s decision to end
segregation in 1954, and the establishment of a Communist Cuba in 1959 lead
to an unparalleled growth of extremist organizations from the John Birch
Society on the right to the Fair Play for Cuba Committee on the left.  One
of the lesser known but more influential right wing fringe organizations
that was formed during this period was the Christian Defense League (CDL).
The CDL managed to meld  anti-communism, anti-Semitism, anti-Castro
activities, and a hatred of the �liberal� policies of the Kennedy
Administration into a cohesive whole.  It is in this context that the CDL
will be examined.
      The driving forces behind the rise of the CDL were Reverend Wesley A.
Swift and Colonel William Potter Gale.  It seemed inevitable that they would
gravitate towards each other. Their religious beliefs were similar:  both
were adherents of what is now called Christian Identity, an updated version
of the earlier British Israelite Movement that originated in the late 19th
century.  Christian Identity adherents believe that those of Celtic,
Anglo-Saxon, Nordic, or Aryan origin were the true Israelites, �the sons of
Adam�, and that those of Jewish origin were �the sons of Satan.� (1)
      The origins of the Christian Defense League is somewhat clouded.  Some
accounts credit its founding to the Reverend Swift,(2) while Colonel Gale
gives credit to Reverend San Jacinto Capt.(3)   Capt, a Baptist minister,
was one of the early pioneers in the Identity Movement.(4)   Gale says that
�the idea of the Christian Defense League was entirely that of Reverend San
Jacinto Capt. He proposed it to me [Col. Gale] who prepared the initial
material in the form of a letter entitled, �The NAACP represents the negro;
the ADL represents the Jews; who represents YOU - the white Christian?� (5)
      Gale, again speaking in the third person, claims, �...others were
brought to Dr. Swift�s [Identity Churches] by Colonel Gale, it was decided
that the time was appropriate for reactivation of the Christian Defense
League (CDL), which had been in �limbo� these past years.�(6)   In early
1964 the CDL was officially incorporated with Richard G. Butler as
President; attorney Bertrand L. Comparet, Vice President; Steve Foote(7),
Western Regional Director; and Rear Admiral, USN(Ret) John G. Crommelin,
Eastern Regional Director.(8)
      Swift began as a �Ku Klux Klan organizer and Klan rifle-team
instructor.�(9)   In 1946, Swift formed the Church of Jesus Christ-Christian
whose fundamental ideology was that Jesus Christ was not Jewish but
Christian and that �pure blooded whites are the lost children of
Israel.�(10)   By 1953 Swift had become Reverend Gerald L. K. Smith�s West
Coast representative of the Christian Nationalist Crusade.(11)   Smith, a
former member of William Pelley�s Silver Shirts and friend of Henry Ford,
was a �godfather� to many on the far right.  By the early 1960�s Swift�s
string of �Identity� churches spread throughout California.
      In contrast to the somewhat uneducated Swift was the more impressive
William Potter Gale.  Under General MacArthur, Gale became the youngest Lt.
Col. in the U. S. Army where he trained Filipino guerrillas to fight the
Japanese.  After retiring from the Army in June of 1950, Gale, like many
retired military officers, found employment in the aircraft industry,
specifically Hughes Aircraft.  This became what he described as his �Jekyll
and Hyde� period; leading the Hollywood life by entertaining actors and
singers but hiding his growing involvement in the Identity movement.  At
this same time, he became a member of the Republican Party and later the
Constitution Party.  He ran for Governor of California on the Constitution
Party ticket in 1958 and 1966, and the Republican ticket in 1962.
      Gale�s association with Wesley Swift came about through San Jacinto
Capt.  Capt, a former Klansman like Swift, introduced Swift to Gale after a
meeting in Los Angeles in the early 1960s.  Gale in turn introduced Richard
Butler to Swift initiating their long-term relationship.  Butler is the
founder and current leader of Aryans Nations.
      William Gale managed to land the CDL a financial �angel� in the person
of James Oviatt.(12)   Oviatt, owner of Oviatt Clothiers, donated money and
office space at 617 S. Olive St. in Los Angeles for the CDL
headquarters.(13)   It was Gale�s success that eventually brought about the
demise of the CDL.  Swift claimed that the financial success of the CDL was
hurting his church offerings.  Gale and Capt agreed to take a backseat to
Butler, Comparet, Crommelin and Foote in order to avoid a conflict with
Swift.
      The Reverend Oren Potito represented Swift�s church on the East
Coast.  Potito, a one-time organizer for the National States Rights Party
(NSRP), was the 1962 campaign manager for Admiral John Crommelin. (14)
Potito joined with other members of the NSRP (and apparently William Gale)
in journeying to Oxford, Mississippi to protest against the enrollment of
James Meredith.  Potito was arrested for possession of firearms that were
found in the trunk of his car. (15)
      One of Swift and Gale�s more notorious associates was Charles Conley
�Connie� Lynch.  Lynch was simultaneously a minister in the Church of Jesus
Christ-Christian, state organizer for the NSRP, a member of the Minutemen,
and a member of the CDL.  He became one of Swift�s first ministers after he
left the church of the General Assembly of Jesus Christ where he cut his
teeth as a self-taught minister.  Lynch became politically active during the
early 1960�s when he became the California State organizer for the NSRP
(1962) and a member of the CDL in fall of 1963.  The FBI considered him
sufficiently dangerous that they conducted an investigation to determine his
whereabouts on November 22, 1963. It was determined that Lynch was in
�Jacksonville, Florida, speaking at Ku Klux Klan rallies during the last two
months.�(16)   His extremism became too much for even the NSRP. Dr. Edward
Fields, NSRP information director said, �He raised more money than any other
man we had.  But he was too extreme.  He scared away the more substantial
elements of the community.�(17)
      Lynch�s notoriety reached its peak in June of 1964 when he joined
local Klansmen and NSRP leader J. B. Stoner(18) in what has been termed St.
Augustine�s [Fla.] worst racial violence in a century.  Lynch was arrested
the following month along with J. B. Stoner, Barton Griffin, Bill Coleman,
and Jacksonville Klan leader Paul Cochran for illegal cross burning.(19)
      The paramilitary side of the CDL/CJCC was the California Rangers,
sometimes referred to as the U.S. Rangers. Formed in 1959 by William Gale,
it never grew as large as its better known cousin, the Minutemen. Robert
DePugh, founder of the Minutemen, knew William Gale and structured his
organization after Gale�s Rangers.(20) The purpose of the Rangers was to
build an underground network to conduct guerrilla warfare. Gale�s recruiting
efforts were directed toward former military servicemen. He transferred his
American Legion membership to the Signal Hill post where he and George King,
Jr., also a member of the CDL, converted the post into a front for the
Rangers.(21)
      Much like their Minutemen cousins, the CDL believed in hoarding a
large supply of arms and weaponry. A police raid on William Garland�s house
in Cucamonga, California turned up eight machine guns, and one hundred
rifles, shotguns and pistols. When they searched his barn they found an
ammunition dump for heavy caliber rockets, bombs, and thousands of rounds of
ammunition.(22)
      The first indication that the Swift/Gale complex was interested in
more than preaching religion came from George Harding in April 1963 when he
informed the FBI that he was being recruited to become part of an eight man
team to assassinate three hundred public officials in high positions of
government.  According to WCD 39 and WCD 1107 �Harding claimed that the
leaders in the group were Dr. Wesley Swift, James Shoup and others.... The
second in command was a Colonel William Gale...who was supposed to have been
the youngest intelligence officer under MCARTHUR(sic).�
      A related incident also occurred that April. Los Angeles physician Dr.
Stanley Drennan approached Captain Robert K. Brown, who was also involved in
anti-Castro activities during this period, stated that �while at Drennan�s
home, Drennan stated in general conversation that he could not do it, but
what the organization needed was a group of young men to get rid of Kennedy
and the Cabinet Brown stated that he considered the remark crackpot; however
 he gained the impression that Drennan had been propositioning him on this
matter.�(23)   Drennan, a member of the National States Rights Party and
associate of William Gale, also told an acquaintance, Al Raheb, that Drennan
went to Poor Richard�s Book Shop and discussed with others the plan for
assassinating �President John F. Kennedy, Attorney General Robert Kennedy
and twenty or thirty members of Congress .Drennan said that they would
select a member of the military with a neutral political reputation and no
connection to the John Birch Society to perform the assassination.�(24)
      The Secret Service and FBI generated another series of reports in
August 1963 triggered by the arrest of Gale�s associate George King, Jr.
King was overheard discussing the possibility of assassinating the president
and was later arrested that month for the sale of illegal firearms.  A later
FBI field report, CO2-26104  #6419, stated that �King is extreme right wing,
hates Jews, was arrested by ATF O'Neil for illegal possession of firearms.
Emotionally unstable.  Arrested 2-29-68 again.  This time for CCU, John
Bircher, Christian Def. League(sic), Am Nazi Party, Christian Defense
League.�(25)
      There was yet another pre-assassination report (November 15, 1963) of
a plot to assassinate �the President and other high-level officials� by a
�militant group of the National States Rights Party.�(26)   The report was
dismissed by the FBI because they felt the subject was trying to make a deal
because of pending criminal charges. This was not the well-documented
November 9, 1963 report of Joseph A. Milteer�s accurate prediction that
Kennedy would be shot  �from an office building with a high powered rifle.�
Milteer was also a member of the NSRP and ran for governor of Georgia on the
Constitution Party ticket the same year that William Gale switched from the
Constitution Party to the Republican Party to run for governor of
California.
      There seems to be considerable evidence that Gale and Milteer may have
been acquainted.  Both attended the gathering of the Constitution Party in
Indianapolis, Indiana during October 18-20, 1963. Also in attendance were
notable right wing extremists General Pedro Del Valle, Curtis Dall of the
Liberty Lobby, Colonel Arch Roberts who was the architect of General Edwin
Walker�s �Pro Blue� program in the military, Richard Cotten, editor of �The
Conservative Viewpoint,� Kenneth Goff, leader of the paramilitary group
Soldiers of the Cross, a Minutemen affiliate,(27)  and Klan leader James
Venable.(28)
      The Garrison investigation also produced a wealth of information about
the same California anti-JFK crowd.  Gerry Patrick Hemming, who became
acquainted with many of these people in his efforts to fight Castro in the
1960s, stopped by Garrison�s office on July 7, 1967.  He gave Garrison a
list of names �as being of possible interest to [Garrison�s]
investigation.�  The first was Dennis Harber(29)  �who was connected to both
[Loran] Hall and [Lawrence] Howard in Miami in an attempt to blow up ships
in Vera Cruz.  Apparently a �Mexican Minuteman�, tutor to someone, a
homosexual, and recently visited Nebraska.�  The second was Colonel Gale.
Described as �active in the local Minutemen army in Southern California.
Has offices in downtown Los Angeles.  Friendly with General Walker and
Lincoln Rockwell and stayed at Walker�s house in July 1963.  Patrick
mentioned a Eugene Lyons in connection with Colonel Gale, and that one BOB
WELLS(30)  is also associated with Gale.�(31)   Rockwell, the founder of the
American Nazi Party, was assassinated in 1967 by former party member John
Patler.  Rockwell�s name and address is contained in Lee Harvey Oswald�s
address book.  Eugene Lyons was a member of  the American Committee to Free
Cuba  (ACFC).
       There was an overlap in membership between the CDL and the ACFC.
Steven Foote, Western Regional Director of the CDL, was a board member of
the ACFC.  Curiously enough, so was Dr. John Lechner.  Lechner, Executive
Director of the Americanism Educational League, a political arm of the
California American Legion, is listed in Richard Case Nagell�s
notebook.(32)   Lechner and Burt Mold met with Cuban exiles Cesar Blanco and
Paulino Sierra in Chicago during the month of March 1963 to discuss writing
a document on uniting the different Cuban exile factions.  Mold and Lechner
were the founders of an offshoot of the Americanism Educational League
called Americans for Cuban Freedom that was formed in 1961 shortly after the
failed Bay of Pigs invasion.(33)
      Also of interest to Garrison was G. Clinton Wheat of Los Angeles.
Wheat has been identified as an ex-Klansman that hosted meetings at his
house of the Church of Jesus Christ-Christian, the Christian Defense League
and the American Nazi Party.(34)   An FBI informant described the speakers
at Wheat�s house as giving �classic examples of the hate-mongers sermons.�
He also goes on to describe William Gale as saying, �...I can show you
top-secret documents that prove that the six million Jews Hitler was
supposed to kill are right here in America....�  Garrison had information
that in September of 1963, Wheat had meetings at his house where discussions
were held on assassinating the President, and according to a former
neighbor, traveled to Dallas that same fall (1963) in a hurry after
borrowing four hundred dollars from him.(35)  Lawrence Howard further
identified Wheat�s house at Lafayette Terrace in Los Angeles as a place
�where paramilitary organizations held meetings and prepared
ammunition.�(36)   Wheat disappeared shortly after Garrison attempted to
have him subpoenaed, reportedly on orders �from headquarters.� [Gale?]  He
was reported to be hiding out at Fred Lee Crisman�s ranch in Oregon(37)
before moving to Burney, California from where he disappeared
altogether.(38)
      Crisman is another intriguing character that became a subject of
interest by both Jim Garrison and the House Select Committee on
Assassinations.  He first came to Garrison�s attention after an anonymous
letter was sent from Orlando, Florida linking him to Clay Shaw, Sergio
Arcacha Smith, and Thomas Beckham.  The anonymous writer further tried to
implicate Crisman as a courier of funds between certain individuals and
�Cuban factions� imploring Garrison to place him under a lie detector and
ask him �certain questions.�(39)
      There was enough information on Crisman that the House Select
Committee on Assassinations made him a subject of their investigation.  The
Committee sent investigators Robert Buras and L. J. Delsa to Jackson,
Mississippi to question Thomas Beckham about his association with the now
deceased Fred Crisman on October 9, 1977.  Beckham, a noted con-man, had
quite an interesting tale to tell.  He claimed that Crisman belonged to a
group called �The Organization� and that it had connections all over the
country.  Beckham credited Crisman�s connections to �The Organization� in
helping locate Beckham in Lincoln, Nebraska where he �took off after the
assassination of the President.�  Crisman suggested that he relocate to
Omaha where Garrison couldn�t reach him.(40)    This may be the reason for
Dennis Harber�s �recent visit to Nebraska� as previously noted by Gerry
Hemming during his July 7, 1967 visit to Garrison.
      Two other figures that were heavily investigated by the Warren
Commission, District Attorney James Garrison and the HSCA also had ties to
Wheat, Gale, Swift, and Butler.  They are the previously mentioned Loran
Hall and Lawrence Howard.  Howard told Steve Burton, investigator for
Garrison, that Richard Butler introduced him and Steven Justin Wilson to
Gale and Swift after a meeting in which Wesley Swift spoke.(41)   Butler
also introduced Howard to Hall in the spring of 1963.(42)   This was
possibly the �talk� that Hall referred to during an interview with Bill
Triplett of the HSCA.  Jose Norman, another board member of the American
Committee to Free Cuba, brought Howard and his wife Rose to a doctor�s house
in Whittier, California to hear Hall give one of his fund raising
speeches.(43)
      It was at Clint Wheat�s house that Hall, Howard, and �Juarito� a.k.a.
Celio Castro Alba, picked up a trailer of weapons to bring to Miami for
anti-Castro activities. According to Howard the weapons consisted of a �.30
caliber, there was a scope weapon,(44) and there was M-1s, standard M-1
Girands an M-14, modified, strictly semi...�(45)   Some of these weapons
were supplied by Ergiaga Arms Company owned by Juan Ergiaga, the former top
arms ordinance man for Fidel Castro.  The trailer carrying these weapons was
left at Lester Logue�s house in Dallas on October 10, 1963.  Logue, an oil
geologist, was a friend of Hall�s.  Hall and William Seymour traveled from
Miami the following week to retrieve the trailer of weapons and medical
supplies.  It was on this return trip that Hall and Seymour were arrested
for drug possession - a bottle of Dexedrine.  Hall remained in jail for two
days before being released.  Hall had called Dr. Robert Morris who in turn
called Lester Logue.(46)   Logue secured an attorney for Hall.(47)
      A close look at Hall and Howard�s associates explains why the various
investigations took such an interest in them.  Hall testified to receiving
money from Mafioso Sam Giancana ($20,000 - 30,000), went on a mission with
ex-CIA paramilitarist Rip Robertson, just missed going on the Bayo-Pawley
raid on Cuba, went with Rip Robertson to Al [John] Martino�s house in Miami,
visited General Edwin Walker with Gerry Hemming, admitted to having heard of
Lee Oswald in June of 1963 and testified that he was offered $50,000 to kill
Kennedy but that he declined the offer.(48)
      Howard�s associations are just as interesting as Hall�s.  Howard was
second in command to Gerry Hemming at No Name Key before assuming full
command with William Seymour as his second. Howard, Seymour and friends,
along with fifty of Rolando Masferrer�s men from New York spent the summer
of 1963 preparing to overthrow �Papa Doc� Duvalier in Haiti in the hope that
they could establish a base close to Cuba for anti-Castro operations.(49)
      Howard�s connections were wide reaching.  Some of the people that he
claimed to know and who�s names appeared in his address book were: Pedro
Diaz Lanz; Frank Fiorini [Sturgis] of Watergate fame; Frank Fernandez of
Dallas; oilman Lester Logue; Clint Wheat; William Gale; Larry Laborde;
Enrique Molina Rivera(50)  who Hemming and Howard claimed was a Castro
agent; Alexander Rorke, who disappeared along with Geoffrey Sullivan in
Rorke�s airplane September 25, 1963; Richard Butler; former Batista official
Rolando Masferrer Rojas and his brother Kiki; Captain Robert K. Brown,(51)
Dr. Grennan [Dr. Stanley Drennan](52); Eddie Field, �right winger� was also
a  friend of John Lechner; Roy Hargraves; Nico Crespi; Dr. Robert Morris
whom he was very reluctant to admit knowing; Cuban exile leader Tony Varona
who thought Howard was double-crossing him because of Howard�s relationship
with former Batista henchman Rolando Masferrer; Renee Valdez, Los Angeles
representative of the Cuban exile group Alpha 66; and Edgar Eugene Bradley
whom he described as �a man who believed in action.�(53)   Carol Aydlotte
described Bradley as an associate of Col. William Gale and that she was
certain that she saw him at Clint Wheat�s house with Loran Hall and Gordon
Novel.  Peter Noyes suggests in his book Legacy of Doubt that she may have
had an ulterior motive in linking Bradley to Gale.(54)
      The CDL became �inactive� again sometime in late 1964 or early 1965
when Gale and Swift had a �parting of the ways.�  Gale told his biographer
Cheri Seymour that Swift �took some money from some widows...two elderly
ladies.  That�s the official version.  Nothing to do with the Church.�(55)
      After the split, Gale put all his efforts into his ministry.  He began
publishing a magazine called �Racial and National Identity�(56)  in 1965 at
the request of �a bunch of military officers...Colonel Ben Von Stahl,
Admiral Crommelin and General Pedro del Valle.�  He continued to be active
in the Identity Movement by forming his own group called the Ministry of
Christ Church.  In 1969-70 he joined forces with former Silver Shirt Henry
Beach to launch the Posse Commitatus movement.(57)   Colonel Gale died in
April 1988 of complications brought about by emphysema.
      Wesley Swift died in 1970 leaving Richard G. Butler to lead the Church
of Jesus Christ-Christian.  Butler moved the headquarters to Hayden Lake,
Idaho and renamed the organization to Aryan Nations-Church of Jesus Christ,
Christian.  Butler, although now in his late 70s, is still a leading figure
in the Identity Movement.
      The Christian Defense League was reformed by James K. Warner in the
early 1970s.  Warner is a former member of Rockwell�s American Nazi Party,
the National States Rights Party, Sons of Liberty, and current publisher of
Christian Vanguard.  He moved from California to Metarie, Louisiana in the
middle 1970�s after he met David Duke who was then a member of the Klan.
Duke became an unsuccessful presidential candidate in 1988.  In 1983 Dr.
John Coleman joined the CDL as its �intelligence expert.�  Ironically, one
of Coleman�s functions as �intelligence expert� was to produce a series of
audiotapes on the �secrets of the Kennedy assassination.�  The CDL is no
longer the force it was in the early 1960s although its influence is can
still be seen in today�s extreme right wing movement in both its Identity
teachings and the continued formation of small paramilitary groups and
militias.* I�d like to thank Larry Haapanen, Anna-Marie Kuhns-Walko and Joe
Backes for their help.
---------------------------------------------------------
1  Identity, �Children of God vs. Children of Satan�, June 1973 p. 3
2 Michael and Judy Newton,  The Ku Klux Klan, p.109 (Garland Publications.
New York. c1991)
3  Identity, �A Reply to the National Chronicle�, November 1975,  p. 5
4  Cheri Seymour, Committee of the States: Inside the Radical Right,
(Mariposa, CA: Camden Communications 1991) 87.  Most of Gale�s history has
been derived from this book.
5  Identity, ibid.
6  Identity, ibid.
7  Foote was the California State Chairman of the American Legion and a
friend of Dr. John Lechner.
8  Shasta County Chronicle, vol. 13 no. 10 April 9, 1964. This paper would
soon change its name to the National Chronicle. The editor, Hal Hunt,
followed Richard Butler up to Hayden Lake, Idaho where it continued
publication.
9  William Turner, Power on the Right  (Ramparts Press. Berkeley CA.  1971)
p 100.
10  Newton, p. 113
11  Newton,  p. 167
12  Ibid.
13  Oviatt attempted to sue the Anti-Defamation League for $10 million in
January 1966. Oviatt�s attorney was Senator Jack Tenney. Richard Cotten�s
Conservative Viewpoint, February 10, 1966 p. 2.
14  Turner, p. 101
15  Seymour, p. 68
16  WCD 1107. According to WCD 42, the information on Lynch�s whereabouts
was furnished by Gene Fallow, officer of the Ku Klux Klan, Oceanway,
Florida. Documents courtesy of Larry Haapanen.
17 Trevor Armbrister, Saturday Evening Post, �Portrait of an Extremist�,
August 22, 1964
18  See Jerry Rose�s article on Stoner, The Fourth Decade, 3 #1 November
1995 p. 26.
19  Saturday Evening Post
20  John George and Laird Wilcox, Nazis, Communists, Klansmen and Others on
the Fringe. (Prometheus Book. Buffalo, NY. 1992)
21  Thomas C. Lynch, 1965 California Attorney General�s Report on Private
Armies in California.
22  George Thayer. The Farther Shore of Politics. (Simon and Schuster, New
York, 1967) p. 145.
23  FBI Report 62-109060-1521.
24  FBI Report 124-10018-10193. Agency File Number 62-109060-1505
25  This is extracted from RIF 180-10118-10033. This document courtesy of
Joe Backes.
26  Warren Commission Document  762
27  Goff appeared with John Martino as guest speakers for the kickoff of
Robert DePugh�s Patriotic Party on July 4, 1966. DePugh was the founder of
the paramilitary Minutemen.
28  This list was from William Holden�s fine article in the November 1996
issue of The Fourth Decade, �New Evidence Regarding Oswald�s Activities in
Clinton, Louisiana�. I often refer to this group as �The National Chronicle
crowd.� Most of them have appeared in the paper as either authors or
subjects of articles. Other regular authors during the 1960�s were Wesley
Swift, Edwin Walker, Gerald Smith, Korean Kilsoo Han of the anti-communist
underground and friend of John Lechner, Reverend Oren Potito, James K.
Warner, H.S. Riecke leader of a �Minutemen� affiliate called the Paul Revere
Associated Yeoman, aka P.R.A.Y., and editor Hal Hunt.
29  Dennis Lynn Harber had a boat, identified as a �two man sub�,
confiscated by the Coast Guard in October 1963. This boat was to be used for
anti-Castro operations and was owned by Paulino Sierra.
30  Richard Cotten described Wells as �the pastor of the marvelous church in
Anaheim which just happens to be near Knotts Berry Farm . Reverend Wells�
church is the church where Dr. McIntire and Dr. Hargis and Major Bundy and
all of those other fine men speak whenever they are in the area.� Wells
formed his own �league� - the Christian Anti-Defamation League. Richard
Cotten�s Conservative Viewpoint, February 10, 1966 p. 2.
31  HSCA 002176, RIF 180-10105-10097
32  Dick Russell, The Man Who Knew Too Much. (Carroll and Graf Publishers,
Inc. 1992) Nagell claimed that he was sent by U.S. intelligence to
infiltrate a �domestically formulated� plot to assassinate JFK.
33  Edward Edell, An American with Guts. (The Coleman-Holmquist Press, Los
Angeles 1961) This was a biography of Lechner.
34  Letter from Warman to Garrison, May 10, 1968. This document was obtained
from the AARC.
35  FBI 124-10178-10206, Agency File Number 89-75-907.
36  HSCA RIF 180-10085-10197. Interview of Howard by Garrison investigator
Steve Burton.
37  Edd Jeffords to James Alcock. July 18, 1968. (AARC)
38  �Klamath Falls Herald and News�. May 5, 1968. The article describes
Wheat as a �former Klamath County resident wanted for questioning by New
Orleans authorities in connection with alleged Kennedy assassination probes,
failed to show for a Shasta County, California Superior Court hearing this
morning.... Wheat was last seen in Klamath County when he moved from a
residence in Poe Valley May 6. The building burned to the ground that
night.� Coincidentally, when the FBI questioned Harold Doyle, one of the
newly identified �tramps�, he was found in Klamath Falls, Oregon. Crisman
became a subject of investigation by Garrison in his probe. Crisman�s name
and address appeared in Clay Shaw�s address book. Shaw was tried by Garrison
and subsequently found not guilty.
39  Letter from Orlando, Fla to Garrison. This document was acquired from
the AARC.
40  Beckham interview by Delsa and Buras. HSCA 014888. RIF 180-10121-10016.
Dated October 9, 1977.
41 Memo from Burton to Garrison, May 8, 1968
42  HSCA 006058. RIF 180-10085-10191
43  HSCA 006058. RIF 180-10085-10194. These are notes from a 8/20/77
interview with Loran Hall.
44  This was Gerry Hemming�s rifle that was hocked by Hemming and taken out
of hock by Hall. The check was issued by the American Committee to Free
Cuba.  The check was supplied by Jose Norman. Norman wanted to go with Hall,
Howard and Celio Castro Alba on a raid to Cuba but his speaking schedule
precluded him from doing so. For a complete account of the rifle saga see
Hathcock�s interview: HSCA 001041 RIF 180-10086-10375.
45  Howard Interview by Garrison. HSCA 008269 (pt. 9) RIF 180-10076-10015.
This was copied by Anna-Marie Kuhns-Walko at the National Archives, June
1994 and has since been withdrawn.
46  Morris is the former Chief Counsel for the Senate Internal Security
Subcommittee, lawyer for General Edwin Walker, and the force behind Larrie
Schmidt�s attempt to take over Young Americans for Freedom and General Edwin
Walker�s organization. Morris would later join forces with friends Julien
Sourwine and Otto Otepka in an organization called �The National Committee
to Restore Internal Security.�
47  HSCA 014660. RIF 180-10117-10026 p. 97. This was Hall�s HSCA testimony.
48  Ibid.
49  HSCA 8269 (pt. 9 ) RIF 180-10076-10015
50  Gerry Hemming told HSCA investigator Bill Triplett that Molina was Loran
Hall�s Cuban guard/jailer at Trescornia prison in Cuba. Hall, along with a
host of others, was jailed after Castro took power.  Noted mafioso Santo
Trafficante was also held at Trescornia during this time.
51  Brown is the founder of Paladin Press and Soldier of Fortune magazine.
52  CDL Vice President Bertrand Comparet represented Dr. Stanley Drennan in
his efforts to fight Garrison�s extradition efforts. The judge ruled in
favor of Drennan.
53  HSCA 006058 RIF 180-10085-10197
54  Memo from Boxley to Garrison, March 19, 1968. Aydlotte had a falling out
with Bradley after he allegedly got her kicked out of the John Birch
Society. This may have been her way of getting back at him. For a full
description of this incident, see Peter Noyes� Legacy of Doubt. The memo
covers quite a few interesting subjects. Aydlotte claims that her mother
heard Bradley propose the use of the storm drain system as a location for
the prospective assassination of JFK.  A Reverend Brice, acquaintance of
Bradley, told Garrison investigators that Bradley was supposed to meet with
Ned Touchstone in Louisiana before proceeding to Dallas. Touchstone was the
editor of The Councilor, a White Citizen�s Council newsletter based in
Louisiana.
55  The split seemed to include Gale, Edgar Eugene Bradley, and Dr. Stanley
Drennan as one faction and Swift, Butler and Dennis Patrick Mower as the
other. William Turner also noted this in Power on the Right.
56  Gale claimed that he was the originator of the term Identity. In fact,
Rev. John Lovell of Dallas, Texas, another member of the British Israelite
Movement, used this term in the February 1957 newsletter of Kingdom Digest.
57  Newton, p. 220

END doc046

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