CIA CHIEF TOLD RFK ABOUT TWO SHOOTERS
(FROM JFKFacts.org)
Why did Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy believe that his
brother President John F. Kennedy was the victim of a conspiracy, as his son recently said?
Did RFK have any evidence for his belief, asked readers of
thewidespread
coverage of RFK Jr.’s comments?
It turns out RFK had it on good authority that two people
were involved.
RFK’s conviction was based on conversations with the
Director of Central Intelligence, John McCone, who had been briefed by analysts
at the CIA ’s National Photographic
Interpretation Center (NPIC) after they reviewed a home movie of JFK being struck by gunfire.
This little-known story comes from two credible sources:
Dino Brugioni, retired chief of the CIA ’s
photographic analysis offices, and historian Arthur Schlesinger.
The film, of course, came from the camera of dressmaker
Abraham Zapruder as he watched the presidential motorcade in Dallas
in which President Kennedy was struck by gunfire on November 22, 1963 . Zapruder had the film
developed and gave a copy to the Secret Service. That night one copy of
Zapruder’s film was hand-delivered to the Grand Prarie Naval Air Station in
southwest Dallas . A jet pilot flew
the film to Washington D.C.
where it was viewed by FBI and Secret Service officials.
At around 10 p.m.
on the night of November 23, two Secret Service agents delivered a copy of
Zapruder’s film to the new state-of-the-art National Photo Interpretation
Center (NPIC) at the Navy Yard in Washington D.C. ,
where Brugioni was working as duty officer. In an extended interview, Brugioni
told Doug Horne, a former chief of military records for the JFK Assassination
Records Review Board, what happened next:
Brugioni’s team analyzed the film and made still
enlargements of select individual frames that were mounted on briefing boards.
They worked on the film throughout the night. On early Sunday morning, November
24, Art Lundahl, the director of the NPIC, took the briefing boards to CIA
headquarters in Langley . Lundahl
was Brugioni’s mentor who had won the confidence of the White House with the CIA ’s
rapid analysis of aerial surveillance photos of Soviet missile installations in
Cuba in October
1962.
According to Brugioni, Lundahl went to the office of CIA
Director John McCone, taking along briefing notes Brugioni had prepared for
him. Lundal briefed McCone on the CIA ’s
analysis of the blown-up frames of the Zapruder film. He returned to NPIC
later Sunday morning, November 24, and thanked everyone for their efforts the
previous night, telling them that the briefing of McCone had gone well.
What Lundahl told McCone in the briefing is unknown but Lundahl’s
sources are not. He relied on the NPIC analysis of the original Zapruder film
and the reports of the Secret Service agents who witnessed the assassination.
McCone had already spoken once with RFK about the
assassination. The Attorney General had called McCone to come talk to him at
his home in McLean , Virginia ,
on the afternoon of November 22 to ask him about his brother’s murder. McCone
was surprised when RFK asked him if the CIA
was involved.
Because McCone was not a career CIA
man, RFK trusted him more than anybody else at the agency and pressed him for
more information. Sometime in the next two weeks McCone gave his informed view.
On December 9, 1963, Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., advisor to President Kennedy,
met with RFK and asked him what he thought about his brother’s assassination.
As Schlesinger wrote in his diary, published in 2007:
“I asked him, perhaps tactlessly about Oswald. He said there
could be no serious doubt that he was guilty, but there still was argument
whether he did it by himself or as a part of a larger plot, whether organized
by Castro or by gangsters. He said the FBI people thought he had done it by
himself, but that McCone thought there were two people involved in the
shooting.” [Emphasis added] (Journals 1952-2000, p. 184).
John McCone was not just speculating. His thinking came from
a highly credible source: the CIA ’s
leading photo analyst and his analysis of the NPIC blowups of frames of the
Zapruder film, as well as Secret Service reports.
In short, RFK’s belief in that more than one person was
involved in the assassination of JFK was based on the best information
available to the U.S.
government at the time.
Editor’s Note:
Q. What does this story have to do with the theory that the
Zapruder film was altered?
A. It is a separate but related.. Doug Horne believes the Zapruder film was altered by someone after Brugioni’s
team analyzed it. Before you scoff, you should know Brugioni lends credence to
this theory. He says the film he viewed at NPIC on the night of November 23 was
different from the famous Zapruder film that is avaiable to today. In any case,
Brugioni had no doubt he saw a camera original copy and used its imagery to brief
McCone. Horne believes that Brugioni is correct.
So the alteration theory should not be dismissed out of
hand. JFK Facts will deal it in a separate post.
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