Larry J. Hancock
Published: 2003-11-01
Total Pages: 320
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Forty years after John Kennedy's murder in Dallas, the event remains a part of the American conscious. Polls show the majority of the public still believes there was some sort of conspiracy involved in his assassination and the average person thinks it just might be exposed once the government releases all the confidential documents some day. Those that deny the conspiracy question scoff at all this, stating that no conspiracy could have been good enough that somebody would not have talked after all this time. After all we all know even successful criminals feel compelled to tell someone, sometime.Someone Would Have Talked tackles that objection head on, examining a number of examples of individuals who talked when they shouldn't have. Some talked before the assassination and some afterwards. These are not the people who sold their stories or whose names you would see in the tabloids. These are real people, many of them involved in the secret war against Castro and the U.S. Government project intended to assassinate him. You find their remarks in reports made to Police, the FBI and Secret Service. Reports which were never addressed in any coordinated or proactive criminal investigation.Even more important are the remarks made to family, best friends and lawyers remarks often made when the individual involved was terminally ill or nearing death.Ranging across 5 years of cold war history and a vast span of documents, many of them only available in the last three to four years, Someone Would Have Talked evaluates these leaks and confessions and connects the dots, showing the connections between the individuals involved and demonstrating the evolution of a conspiracy which led the death of a President in Dallas, Texas. Then it goes beyond, using more documents, White House diaries and telephone logs as well as executive tape recordings to detail how the new President managed a cover-up which defeated the goal of the conspiracy even after the plotters had successfully killed John Kennedy.The records have been released, people have talked, witnesses have finally revealed the elements of both the conspiracy and the cover-up, the real history is here in Someone Would Have Talked and the 1,400 pages of reference exhibits that come on this CD with it.