Dark Quadrant – New Book by Jonathan Marshall
An
announcement from Jonathan Marshall, whom I have moved from the bcc list to the
cc list for this thread.
There are blurbs from Tony Summers, Gus Russo and others on the publisher’s
page.
Much of the text is visible and searchable on Amazon.
[Paul
Hoch - Co-author with Jonathan on a 1978 article on the HSCA.]
Members
of this group will likely be interested in the imminent publication of Jonathan
Marshall’s timely new book, Dark
Quadrant: Organized Crime, Big Business, and the Corruption of American
Democracy, from Truman to Trump
(Rowman & Littlefield, 2021). Though the book does not focus on the JFK
assassination, it has revealing new information on many figures of interest to
researchers, including LBJ, Carlos Marcello, the Murchisons, Irving Davidson,
and John Rosselli, to name a few.
Synopsis
Taking a highly original look at an old subject, political corruption, this
book challenges the myth of a past golden age of American democracy. Drawing on
a mass of new material from law enforcement files and a host of other original
sources, it tells a shocking story, largely neglected by traditional
historians, of how well-protected criminals and their business allies
systematically organized the corruption of American national politics after
World War II.
The
book begins by tracing the extraordinary scandals in the administration of
President Truman, whose political career was launched by the murderous
Pendergast political machine in Missouri. It quotes secretly recorded boasts by
a leader of the Chicago mob about how Truman’s attorney general helped arrange
the early parole of several notorious gangsters who extorted millions of
dollars from the film industry. It goes on to expose the role of organized
crime in the rise of McCarthyism during the Cold War, the near-derailment of
Vice President Johnson’s political career owing to two mob-related national
political scandals, and how Richard Nixon’s career-long association with
underworld figures culminated in the Watergate scandal. It closes with a
discussion of Donald Trump’s unique history of relations with leaders of both
the traditional American Mafia and newer transnational gangs like the Russian
Mafia—and how the latter led to his historic impeachment by the House of
Representatives.
“A unique blend of magma-deep research, dramatic revelations, and judicious
conclusions. Marshall tells some frequently gob-smacking tales while steadily
keeping his eye on the larger historical context. Readers will come away with
an enlarged sense of the meaning and methods of corruption—and with a fresh
perspective on what makes modern America tick.”
— David M. Kennedy, emeritus historian, Stanford University, and Pulitzer
Prize-winning author of Freedom from Fear: The American People in Depression
and War, 1929–1945
Excerpt:
The [Senate Rules] committee was unaware of what the FBI knew about
[Bobby] Baker’s New Orleans associates. In February 1963, under intense
pressure from the Attorney General, Hoover directed his field office there to
aggressively develop new informants and initiate electronic surveillance of
suspected underworld members. Had Hoover been authorized to share information,
the Rules Committee would have learned that Louisiana mob boss Carlos Marcello
was reputedly a hidden partner in Popich’s Vieux Carré restaurant on Bourbon
St. in New Orleans. (Testifying before Congress in executive session years
later, Marcello confirmed that he and Popich had been close friends since
childhood, and did business together.) It would have learned that Popich was
involved with a 1961 shipment of 2,000 machine guns and a number of M-1 rifles
to a “big wheel” allied with a group of disaffected Honduran military officers.
It would have learned that Popich received at least two calls in 1964 from
Charles “the Blade” Tourine, a senior Lansky associate and former Havana casino
operator living in Miami Beach.
The
FBI may not have known at the time an even more explosive bit of information
about Nick Popich: he owned land near Lake Pontchartrain on which militant
anti-Castro exiles were training in 1963 to undertake illegal raids into Cuba.
Their activities violated the Neutrality Act and the Kennedy administration’s
firm policy of preventing such raids from U.S. soil in the wake of the Cuban
Missile Crisis. Without naming Baker’s New Orleans contact, the guerrilla
training camp became the subject of testimony before the Warren Commission in
1964, while the Rules Committee was still investigating Baker. The Commission
learned that President Kennedy’s presumed assassin, Lee Harvey Oswald, had
attempted to infiltrate the camp in the summer of 1963 while living in New
Orleans. The camp disbanded that August only after the FBI raided a nearby arms
cache maintained by anti-Castro activists, seizing more than a ton of dynamite,
20 bomb casings, fuses, and fixings for napalm. The militants acquired these
explosives for a planned bombing raid against oil refineries near Havana. Their
stockpile was allegedly financed by dispossessed Havana casino owner and his
partner, who was described years later in Senate testimony as “a dealer in
counterfeit money . . . [who] has been involved in dealing with stolen
securities and other securities closely associated with . . . gamblers in
Miami.” Authors Warren Hinckle and William Turner observed, “the Lake
Pontchartrain raid was evidence that circles existed within circles. The most
violent and rabidly rightist of exile elements, feeling that JFK had betrayed
them, were turning to the mob and the radical paramilitary right wing for help
in a war that was to turn against the government itself.” To say the least,
members of the Rules Committee apprised of such facts would have been duty
bound to dig further into the background of Baker’s associates.
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