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CITIZINE REVIEWS
The
CIA Makes Science
Fiction Unexciting #1
The Assassination of
Martin Luther King Jr.
by Abner Smith
(Microcosm Publshing)
Review by Thom White
Election year, Spring, 1968. The scene is set.
The Lorraine Motel stands across the street from
Brewers Boarding House in Memphis, Tenn. In this motel is
staying the itinerant Martin Luther King Jr. In early evening, one
rifle shot is fired. The bullet enters Kings head, his companions
come to the rescue. King is rushed by ambulance to a hospital, but
declared dead. So who killed King?
One James Earl Ray pleads guilty to Kings
murder. But according to Abner Smith, author of The CIA Makes
Science Fiction Unexciting #1, it is unlikely Ray could have
been the true assassin, and in fact, we still dont know who
killed MLK.
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The author first makes it clear that he wants to
portray the facts as they are known in an objective manner
and urges the reader to draw your own conclusions and do your
own homework.
Smith emphasizes that examining the strange circumstances
of Kings death is made difficult by the destruction of some
evidence and by classification of many relevant FBI
documents. U.S. government decisions to effectively withhold information
from Americans for some fifty years has created the primary cloud
of mystery that hangs over the assassination.
And so, this treatise concentrates on known involvement
by the FBI and CIA in the murder of King and the subsequent investigation
/ cover-up which nominated one James Earl Ray as the sharp-shooting
assassin.
Martin Luther King Jr. and the FBI
With the approval of Attorney General Robert F.
Kennedy, the FBI had for years maintained surveillance (via wiretaps
and paid informants) on the nationally-known desegregationist leader,
the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr. (legal name Michael King, Jr,
b. Jan. 1929). FBI agents had even code-named him snearingly the
fake messiah.
Cartha DeLoach, head of COINTELPRO
(the governments counterintelligence programs
run through the FBI), spoke of removing the fake messiah
when King did not return the calls of FBI agents in early 1968.
King was now voicing opposition the U.S military's presence in Vietnam,
and was planning a great "March on Washington" and with
his known ties to Communist Party USA members,
According to Abner Smith's zine, at a March 28 visit
by King to Memphis, days before his assassination, FBI agents and
undercover police posed as a militant group The Invaders
and converted Kings appearance to support striking workers
into a riot. Despite the bad publicity, King returned a week later
to Memphis on April 4th, and was to speak in support of a janitors'
strike.
April 4, 1968.
King had stayed at the new Holiday Inn on his previous
visit to Memphis, but had taken flak from the press for staying
in such an "establishment" location in the white part
of town, while his supporters were out rioting. On this trip, he
therefore stayed at the low-key Lorraine Motel.
A bit before 6:00 pm, Rev. King emerged on the balcony
of the motel to greet well-wishers standing below. At 6:01 pm, a
single shot from a high-powered rifle tore into the right side of
Kings face, forcing him backward. King was soon unconscious
and pronounced dead at 7:05 pm at St. Josephs Hospital.
Forty-year-old James Earl
Ray was later arrested in London, extradited to the U.S., and tagged
as Kings murderer. After the arrest, the FBI pushed Rays
story as the lone nut assassin. Life magazine
published a cover story on Ray a month after the murder containing
a considerable [number] of lies about his childhood and family.
The official story was that Ray fired the fatal
shot from a bathroom window at Brewers Boarding House (because
he was a crazy racist convicted criminal who hated "what Martin
Luther King stood for," and had had a bad childhood). He then
fled the scene in a white Mustang, but hurriedly dropped an important
bundle that contained a 30.06 Remington rifle with Ray's fingerprints
on it, boxed in its original packaging (this the FBI claimed was
the murder weapon), ammunition, and a portable prison radio (with
Rays prisoner ID number on it).
After his capture in 1968, James Earl Ray plead
guilty (because of an agreement between his attorney and the prosecution),
but immediately recanted, claiming innocence to the charge of firing
the shot that killed King. Ray claimed that a mysterious character,
Raoul had set him up as a "patsy" to the assassination,
and may have been the one who dropped the incriminating bundle with
the hunting rifle and radio identifying Ray.
James Earl Ray had escaped from prison in 1967 and
soon befriended Raoul, who gave the prison-breaker false
identification papers and cash payments in exchange for Rays
services. After going to Canada for a stay, Ray began travelling
the U.S. under false names, buying and delivering firearms in illegal
schemes devised by Raoul.
According Rays story, while in Birmingham,
Ala., at the beginning on April, Raoul told him to purchase a white
Mustang and a Remington 30.06 Gamemaster rifle, and to bring the
rifle to Memphis to show to potential clients. Ray arrived
in Memphis on April 3, but stayed at a hotel in another part of
town. On April 4, upon Raouls urging, Ray moved to Brewers
Boarding House (which happened to be across the street from the
Lorraine Motel where King Jr. was staying).
At about 5:00 pm, Raoul told Ray he should go
to a movie while Raoul met privately with clients. According
to the pamphlet, Ray didnt know what do to and eventually
went to fix the spare tire he had discovered was flat.
Rays side of the story, quoting at length
from the Abner Smith's zine:
On his way back to Brewers, he found the
area full of policemen so he immediately fled the city being a wanted
criminal on illegal business. While he was driving, he heard on
the radio that King had been shot and that police were looking for
a white man in a white Mustang. He realized how much this description
sounded like [himself] and headed for Atlanta where he had left
some belongings on his last visit. He abandoned the car in an Atlanta
parking lot and took a bus to Detroit. From there he took a train
to Toronto hoping that hed find a way to leave North America
for good.
He researched papers in the Toronto area and
applied for a passport under the name Ramon George Sneyd. On May
6, 1968, Ray flew to London. He attempted to join a renegade army
unit that would send him to Nigeria. As he boarded a plane to Brussels,
he was arrested as an international suspect in the murder of Martin
Luther King Jr. and was extradited to the US for conspiracy
charges.
Where's Raoul?
The official U.S. commission investigating Kings
murder found Rays Raoul character did not exist.
But the author of this text sees the potential that Raoul may have
been Jules Ron Rollie Kimble. Kimble told reporters
in a 1989 BBC interview that he knew Ray and had been involved
in the conspiracy to kill King, and added that he had already
told this to the FBI investigating committee. He continued
saying that Ray did not pull the trigger and was only a patsy.
Kimble is serving a life sentence in Oklahoma for two murders he
says were "political."
Kimble was ... in New Orleans at the same
time that Ray claimed to have received another payment from [Raoul].
Kimble says he helped get Ray from Atlanta to Montreal in 1967 to
meet with a CIA identities specialist, curiously named
Raoul Maora. During the year after first meeting Raoul,
while traveling around, Ray would use four aliases (notably Eric
S. Galt), all names of Toronto residents.
Smith argues that Kings assassin likely lay
behind bushes across the street from the Lorraine Motel to make
the shot. Later, a Memphis reporter discovered that there
was not a clear view from the bathroom window where the shot supposedly
originated to the balcony of the Lorraine. In fact, it was completely
obscured by branches from 10-12 foot oak and willow trees in the
courtyard... Just as the revelation was being discovered, the city
made a decision to cut down the trees. No further investigation
of this aspect of the case has been pursued.
In sum, Abner Smith's zine is worth checking out.
More links:
An Investigation of the Assassination of
Martin Luther King Jr.
http://www.carpenoctem.tv/cons/mlk.html
-- Carpe Noctem (Mark & Kristi Fisher)
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