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Sirhan Bishara Sirhan |
A multimedia exposé on the assassination of RFK and the making of a political prisoner |
by charles amsellem |
c 2003 by charles amsellem. All rights reserved |
START |
THE KENNEDY BROTHERS: Their Administration and the Murder of the Century |
Louisiana congressman and Warren Commission member, Hale Boggs, expressed strong doubts about the commission's findings. He later accused the FBI of Gestapo tactics against critics of the Warren Commision and of bugging his and other congressmen's phones. |
John F. Kennedy's administration enjoys a Camelot-like status in American political mythology. The Kennedy brothers' reputaion for ruthlessness was often camouflaged in the public's eyes by their courageous stance on reform. That combination of progressiveness and implacability earned them the enmity of the CIA, J. Edgar Hoover's FBI, military industrialists, and other shadowy interests. Bold commitments to civil rights, disarmament talks with the Soviets, and the introduction of legislation to raise |
the minimum wage highlighted policies that included health care subsidies for the elderly, expanded federal aid for education, and the hiring of African Americans to federal posts. The Kennedy administration saw to the founding of the Peace Corps, and the signing of a nuclear test |
ban treaty with the UK and the USSR. Robert F. Kennedy assumed the post of Attorney General under allegations of nepotism; the fact that he never tried a single case in court didn't help. He responded by fashioning his office into a formidable mobilization against racial injustice and for the prosecution of mobsters. |
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Meanwhile, the president refused to be manipulated into a war with Cuba to the consternation of the CIA and top military brass. After the infamous Bay of Pigs fiasco, a failed CIA orchestrated invasion of Cuba, JFK fired the CIA's director, Allen Dulles, its deputy director, Charles Cabell, and its Clandestine Services chief, Richard Bissell. Furthermore, he vowed to, "...splinter the CIA into a thousand pieces and scatter it to the winds." The agency was shocked and angered by these developments . John Fitzgerald Kennedy was assassinated on November 22, 1963 and the controversy over the official story rages to this day. At Bethesda Naval Hospital, bullets were removed from his body before a less than professional autopsy was performed. There is evidence that the photos and X-rays of his body were destroyed and replaced with forgeries. Accused assassin, Lee Harvey Oswald is apprehended immediately and is murdered in police custody before a trial could determine the merit of the charges against him. Allen Dulles was then appointed to the Warren Commission which officially ratified a lone gunman theory that literally defies belief. In the following years, there were many strange and convenient deaths of key witnesses and alleged co-conspirators. Louisiana congressman and Warren Commission member, Hale Boggs, expressed strong doubts about the commission's findings. He later accused the FBI of Gestapo tactics against critics of the Warren Commission and of bugging his and other congressmen's phones. Soon afterwards, Boggs mysteriously disappeared after his airplane vanished in Alaska. |
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Along with all of those lives, the hopes and dreams for a better society were extinguished as well. Many civil rights advocates had an expectant confidence in Kennedy's "New Frontier" policies. Corretta Scott King reflected on the impact the assassination had on her family as they watched events unfold on television:"We felt that President Kennedy had been a friend of the Cause and that with him as President we could continue to move forward. We watched and prayed for him. Then it was announced that the President was dead. Martin had been very quiet during this period. Finally he said, 'This is what is going to happen to me also.' " The impact that the Kennedy's had on the poor, the disenfranchised, and minorities was evident when Martin Luthor King Jr's chilling premonition came true in April 1968. After announcing King's assassination to an unprepared audience in Indianapolis, RFK appealed for calm and non violence, invoking the memory of his own murdered brother. As a result, Indianapolis was the only large US city that didnt see major incidents of rioting and violence. He went on to win the Indiana primary as well. The Kennedy brothers could inspire such regard because they championed the poor and disenfranchised. For example, RFK publicly supported native american causes when such a position would yield negligable votes. He committed to end the Vietnam war that was ravaging poor and middle class communities. Robert Kennedy considered it his personal responsibility to end the Vietnam War since his brother's administration approved the escalation of that conflict. It should be noted that there is evidence that JFK was planning on pulling out of Vietnam shortly before he was killed. RFK distanced himself from law enforcement and had a well earned distrust for the intelligence establishment. |
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"...only the powers of the presidency will reveal the truth about my brother's death." -Robert Francis Kennedy, June 2 1968 |
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Senator Robert Francis Kennedy was assassinated on June 5, 1968 after a victorious presidential nomination at the Democratic National Primary in Los Angeles. He passed through the pantry at the Ambassador Hotel, where the convension was held. There he was set upon by Sirhan Bishara Sirhan who fired and emptied his eight round revolver. Hotel assistant maitre d', Karl Ueker, and other witnesses insist that Sirhan only got off two shots in RFK's general direction before Ueker pulled the still firing gun away from the senator. Ueker, along with bodyguards subdued Sirhan before he could reload and fire again. Many witnesses claim that Sirhan never got closer than three feet away from and in front of the Senator. LA County coroner Thomas Noguchi's forensic examinations indicated that the fatal bullet entered the back of the Senator's head at a point blank range of just three inches. Don Schulman, a KNXT television station runner, stated in an interview immediately after the assassination that he saw a security guard fire three times behind Kennedy. That security guard was Thane Eugene Cesar who is also regarded as the prime suspect for the murder by several RFK assassination investigators. Cesar, who was a supoporter of segregationist Governor George Wallace's presidential candidacy and forsaw a racist civil war, has always denied being the culprit. He once |
stated in an interview, "I definitely wouldn't have voted for Bobby Kennedy because he had the same ideas that John did and I think John sold the country down the road. He gave it to the commies, he gave it to whoever else he wanted. He literally gave it to the minority." Regardless of the truth regarding Cesar's guilt or innocence, he was a second gunman in the pantry and he was best situated to either deliver or witness the fatal shot. |
Senator Robert Francis Kennedy was assassinated on June 5, 1968 after a victorious presidential nomination at the Democratic National Primary in Los Angeles. He passed through the pantry at the Ambassador Hotel, where the convension was held. There he was set upon by Sirhan Bishara Sirhan who fired and emptied his eight round revolver. Hotel assistant maitre d', Karl Ueker, and other witnesses insist that Sirhan only got off two shots in RFK's general direction before Ueker pulled the still firing gun away from the Senator. Ueker, along with bodyguards subdued Sirhan before he could reload and fire again. Many witnesses claim that Sirhan never got closer than three feet away from and in front of the Senator. LA County coroner Thomas Noguchi's forensic examinations indicated that the fatal bullet entered the back of the Senator's head at a point blank range of just three inches. Don Schulman, a KNXT television station runner, stated in an interview immediately after the assassination that he saw a security guard fire three times behind Kennedy. That security guard was Thane Eugene Cesar who is also regarded as the prime suspect for the murder by several RFK assassination investigators. Cesar, who was a supoporter of segregationist Governor George Wallace's presidential candidacy and forsaw a racist civil war, has always denied being the culprit. He once |
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Another suspect in the conspiracy is the mysterious woman in the polka dot dress. Kennedy campaign worker Sandra Serrano was interviewed on national television about the woman accompanied by a young man Serrano described as mexican american. According to Serrano, she said, "We shot him!" as the pair fled through an emergency stairway. When Serrano asked, "Who did you shoot?", the woman replied, "Senator Kennedy." The couple then gleefully fled toward the parking lot. Several witnesses claim they saw Sirhan in the company of this woman that fateful night as well. |
LAPD Sgt Paul Scharaga interviewed an elderly couple that corroborated Serrano's testimony. When Scharaga issued an all points bulletin for the woman in the polka dot dress, it was neutralized by a supervisor and his notes on the matter later vanished. |
Policeman, Randolph Adair, who was present during the transfer of Sirhan to police custody recalled, "The guy was real confused." He added, "It was like it didn't exactly hit him what he had done. He had a blank, glassed-look on his face; like he wasn't in complete control of his mind at the time." |
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THE TRIAL |
All mental health professioals that used hypnosis on Sirhan (including Simson) agree that he is an excellent subject that has been subjected to previous programming |
Several witnesses, including police officers remarked that Sirhan Sirhan appeared to be in a trance like state in the aftermath of the murder. Sirhan has consistently claimed that he doesn't remember the events of June 5th, although he has admitted that he must have done the deed. |
Dr Bernard Diamond, who had much experience in legal psychiatry was hired to determine if Sirhan could be induced to remember with hypnosis. After Diamond witnessed a deep and rapid induction that indicates previous work on the subject, he concluded that Sirhan was indeed hypno- programmed. While evidence of the involvement of others in the assassination was suppressed, Diamond and other doctors came to the conclusion that Sirhan hypnotised himself, that he was a paranoid schizophrenic, and that he somehow programmed himself to forget either intentionally or accidentally. Aside from the psychiatrists, Sirhan's own defense attorney, Grant Cooper, unneccessarily proceeded from the assumption of his guilt, and conceded to it in court. He further stipulated, again unneccessarily, that the bullets taken from the bodies of the victims were tied to Sirhan. Cooper failed to raise sufficient objections to the prosecution's evidentiary model of the crime. Remarkably, he stood shoulder to shoulder with the prosecution's handing over of Kennedy campaign aid, Valerie Shulte, as the woman in the polka dot dress. Witnesses describe the woman as a brunette in a white dress with black spots and as clearly bragging about having a role in the murder. Shulte is a blonde, was in crutches at the time, was wearing a colored polka dot dress, and certainly had nothing to do with Kennedy's death. |
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Dr Cyril Wecht, who assisted Noguchi on the autopsy, stated the evidence indicates the bullets that killed Kennedy didnt come from Sirhan's gun and that he deserves a new trial. |
Cooper's behavior may be explained by the fact that he was under federal indictment when he agreed to accept Sirhan's case. He stood accused of bribery in the aquisition of confidential court documents and then trying to decieve the court about it. After his |
performance on the RFK murder trial, he was spared jail and disbarment and instead was given a one thousand dollar fine. These proceedings later aroused speculation of arm twisting on the part of the federal authorities to make certain that the trial went smoothly. Cooper alleged that he was trying to save Sirhan's life by arguing for diminished capacity in the face of apparent guilt. Cooper neglected to discuss LA County coroner Thomas Noguchi's autopsy results in depth, which along with witness testimony might have exhonerated Sirhan. Dr. Cyril Wecht, who assisted Noguchi on the autopsy, stated the evidence indicates the bullets that killed Kennedy didn't come from Sirhan's gun and that he deserves a new trial. Sirhan's revolver had eight bullets. A minimum of nine bullets are accounted for in the pantry including three holes in the cieling, two in the center divider of the swing doors, and two bullets recovered from RFK's body. Additionally, five other people were wounded by gunfire as well. According to Michael Hecker Phd, of the Stanford Research Institute, there were no less than ten shots fired based on his alalysis of three audio recordings of that day. LAPD criminologist DeWayne Wolfer stated unequivocally that the bullets taken from the bodies of RFK and two others were fired from Sirhan's gun, "...and no other gun in the world." The serial number identified with the gun was the same as one apprehended by the LAPD three months before the assassination. This, along with a mountain of other evidence, the LAPD subsequently destroyed. |
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Wolfer also either lost or failed to compile crucial lab records related to the tests on the gun. In an unrelated case, he would later be chastised by the California State Court of Appeals for, "...false testimony bordering on perjury," and for making negligently false statements to the court. |
mistook their identities. He was compelled by their presence to make an impossible confession and asked for the death penalty. Some have theorised that these events were also the result of hypnosis. On April 23, 1969, Sirhan Bishara Sirhan was sentenced to die in the gas chamber and sent to languish on death row in San Quentin State Prison. San Quentin prison psychologist Eduard Simson was so outraged by Sirhan's diagnosis in court and his treatment in prison that he released a twenty-three page affidavit on the matter. In it he condemned the psychiatric testimony during the trial as "discrediting and embarrassing psychology and psychiatry as a profession," and dismissed their diagnosis of Sirhan's mental state as "Freudian fantasies". Simson's examinations of Sirhan yielded no evidence that he is either a paranoid schizophrenic or that he is psychotic as the trial psychiatrists suggested. All mental health professionals that used hypnosis on Sirhan(including Simson) agree that he is an excellent subject that has been subjected to previous programming. Simson made progress unlocking the mechanisms that concealed the truth in Sirhan's mind when his visits with his patient were suddenly halted by prison authorities. |
Security guard, Thane Eugene Cesar's gun was never examined by the LAPD. He was never called as a witness during the trial despite the fact that he was standing right behind the Senator with his gun drawn. Don Schulman's testimony that there was a security guard firing his gun behind Kennedy was not adequately followed up on by the police and his name was excluded from the LAPD's list of the bystanders in the pantry. Sirhan later made a bizarre confession triggered by the appearance of two women in the court room. Even though he evidently had a romantic infatuation with both women, he mysteriously |
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The Media Whitewash |
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The national media led by the Los Angeles Times consistently wrote about Sirhan to lynch him in the mind of the community. Their accounts are a litany of the authorities' portrayal of Sirhan as the lone assassin while deriding critics of the official story. 'In Cold Blood' author and socialite Truman Capote remarked on NBC's, The Tonight Show, that the murders of John F Kennedy, Martin Luther King Jr, and Robert F Kennedy were all part of a larger conspiracy. |
He suggested that Richard Condon's novel, The Manchurian Candidate, could reveal a theoretical model of how such a scenario could be played out. The novel, which was made into a movie as well, is about a conspiracy to kill the President with a mind controled assassin. The New York Times', Jack Gould was quick to answer by reprimanding host Johnny Carson; writing that the statements were "...beyond the acceptable province of entertainment television shows." He strongly condemned Capote and refered to his remarks as "an orgy of rampant conjecture." Gould's attitude was typical of the mainstream media on the issue of a larger crime than what was being depicted by the officials. A gallup poll taken the day after the assassination favored by a margin of 4:3 that the senator's death was the result of a conspiracy. |
s if the complete failure of democracy orchestrated by the LAPD and the criminal justice system wasn't enough grief for Sirhan, there was also a general failure on the part of the media to give him a fair hearing in the court of public opinion. |
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hen LA County Supervisor, Baxter Ward began investigating the ballistics data, the LA Times called his efforts "... a strange and ghoulish inquiry." In the mid 1970's, Charles Manson prosecutor Vincent Bugliosi began gathering affidavits from assassination witnesses. Those missives represent the first time they were questioned by the authorities regarding the number of bullets fired. |
Subsequent Times editorials scorned Ward and Bugliosi's efforts as opportunistic attempts to advance their careers. A 1975 LA Times editorial falsely claimed that 90-100 witnesses corroberate the lone gun theory and assailed "..the inane suspicions of those who still want to believe that there is an official conspiracy to conceal critical evidence in the case." In 1975, the most |
startling example of the attempts by conventional journalism, acting in tandem with the authorities to conceal the facts of the case occured. A panel of ballistics experts were assigned by Judge Robert Wenke to rexamine the evidence. This panel was formed when RFK friend, and fellow pantry gunshot victim, Paul Schrade filed legal action as an injured party in the shooting. The panel was only allowed to examine the gun and bullets and were forbidden to explore their trajectories, the witness testimony, or to accept the possibility of more bullet holes in the ceiling and door areas. Even within these glaring constrictions, the panel still managed to refute that the bullets came from Sirhan's gun. Due to the slanted parameters of Wenke's directions, the experts were unable to determine the existence of a second gun. |
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Even though the panel left the issue open for a day when a more thorough and honest investigation could be conducted, There was no attempt at all by any major media venue to report these findings with any degree of context. Not one of the seven panelists ruled out the possibility of a second gunman and the proof that clears Sirhan's gun never made headlines. The headlines speak for themselves: "No Second Gun in Kennedy Assassination, Panel Says," reported the Los Angeles Times. UPI recorded, "RFK Second-Gun Theory Ruled |
OUT." "One Gun Killed Bobby: Experts," was the New York Daily News' line. And the Associated Press wrote, "7 Experts Say RFK Slain by Single Firearm." Panelist Lowell Bradford responded to these developments in an official statement: "The findings of the firearms examiners is being improperly interpreted by the news media," he stated. He tried to reiterate that the bullets could not have originated from Sirhan's gun and he recomended the examination of other evidence to determine the still open issue of the second gunman. His statements as well as that of other panelists who expressed similar opinions were largely ignored. |
ven though the ballistics experts recomended further review of the evidence and largely exhonerated Sirhan, the mainstream media fell over themselves in the stampede to report the findings that they were unable to establish a second gunman. |
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"TO PROTECT AND SERVE" |
After the trial, the small independent newspaper, LA Free Press published an article refering to press and police photos. The images depict two more bullet holes than the eight that were accounted for in court. The Free Press asserted that the LAPD, the District Attorney's office, and the media lied about the case. |
Soon afterwards, District Attorney and Sirhan prosecutor Evelle Younger made statements promising to release the evidence in the possesion of the police. Less than a month after that, the LAPD destroyed the bullet riddled ceiling tiles and door frames from the pantry while Sirhan's case was still under appeal. During the trial, (or afterwards for that matter) Younger didn't contest the LAPD findings and ignored all evidence to the contrary. When Younger became District Attorney of California years later, he used his influence to convince judge Robert Wenke not to admit extra bullets and trajectory data into the judge's 1975 panel of forensics experts. The panel was assembled by Wenke to rexamine the evidence in the case. Younger described to the judge that it would be impossible to make accurate conclusions due to the LAPD's "routine" destruction of the evidence. The destruction of evidence didnt stop there. A month after the destruction of the physical evidence, the LAPD incinerated 2410 photographs related to the RFK assassination. Fifteen year old Scott Enyart had three rolls of 36-exposure film taken from him by the police. When he sued in 1988, his case was dismissed on the grounds that the statute of limitations expired on the matter. Later, the California Court of Appeals reversed the decision based on the secrecy, citing, "The [LAPD's] own actions for over 20 years prevented [Enyart] from obtaining his property or any information about its status or existence." |
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he LAPD also neglected to investigate Thane Eugene Cesar. His gun was not checked to determine if it was discharged the night of RFK's murder. A claim Cesar made that he sold his .22 caliber handgun the day before RFK's murder was later proven false when a receiept in his handwriting and with his signature dated the transfer of the weapon to four months after the assassination. Sgt Paul Scharaga's vanished notes on witness testimony of the woman in the polka dot dress were allegedly taken by agents from SUS (Special Unit Senator: the task force assembled to investigate RFK's murder and prepare evidence for trial). When Scharaga inquired, SUS agents denied they had his report and soon after his supervisors began turning on him. When the LAPD finally released what was left of the evidence pertaining to RFK's death in 1988, Scharaga reviewed a copy of a report that SUS claims is an interview transcript with him and two of their detectives. Angered, Scharaga signed an affidavit claiming it "...contained false and deliberately misleading statements." Four years later he said, "That report is phony." Scharaga added, "No one ever interviewed me..." and he went on to decribe that key statements he and other witnesses made were changed. Scharaga described that : |
"This is just how things were done. If they couldnt get you to change your story, they'd just ignore you. If they couldn't ignore you they'd discredit you, and if they couldnt do that, they'd just make something up." |
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Witness Sandra Serrano was treated like a suspect and was pressured to change her story about the woman in the polka dot dress. Sgt Enrique Hernandez used a polygraph on Serrano and simultaneously flattered her and warned her she would live a life of shame if she didnt change her story. Gradually, Serrano was worn down until she did just that. Chief of Detectives and author of Special Unit Senator, Robert Houghton wrote glowingly of Hernandez's work on Serrano. "In police work, for lack of a better word, we say a witness was 'contaminated'." Several weeks later, Hernandez would recieve a promotion to lieutenant. In a 1988 interview, Sandra Serrano said that she just told the LAPD what they wanted to hear. |
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ieutenant Emmanuel Pena had enormous influence in his role at SUS. All evidence of a conspiracy, all approval for interviews, and all further investigation in preparation for the trial had to go through him. Pena had counter intelligence experience during his military service and served with the CIA for years. William Turner and John Christian, authors of The Assassination of Robert F Kennedy write that Enrique Hernandez served in the Office of Public Safety of the Agency for International Development. That organization was a clandestine CIA program for assisting police and intelligence personnel in Asia and Latin America in 'anti-communist' operations. District Attorney, Evelle Younger, who was instrumental in containing the Sirhan situation throughout its history, headed the FBI's National Defense Section during World War 2. He then transfered to the counterintelligence branch of the Office of Stragic Services (OSS: the precursor to the CIA). |
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THE INCARCERATION OF SIRHAN SIRHAN AND THE FAILURE OF AMERICAN JUSTICE |
irhan Bishara Sirhan was sentenced to die in the gas chamber on April 23, 1969. He was then sent to death row at San Quentin State Prison. The LAPD would hold all information and files related to his case as state secrets until 1988, with key evidence long since destroyed. On February 18, 1972 the California Supreme Court ruled six to one that the death penalty violated the state constitution's prohibition of cruel and unusual punishment and subsequently Sirhan's sentence was commuted to life imprisonment. His appeal was denied on June 16, 1972 by the California Supreme Court. Despite the colossal machinations intent on the persecution of Sirhan as the lone assassin, there were voices in the wilderness trying to bring the truth to light. Notable among these was Allard Lowenstein. The former New York congressman and friend of RFK began a publicized investigation into the case in December 1974. Citing ballistics evidence, he petitioned Los Angeles District Attorney, Joseph Busch to reopen the case. A month later, he submitted a writ to the California Supreme Court to inquire into the evidence that was not admitted into Sirhan's trial. Predictably, these petitions got nowhere officially. Yet Lowenstein, who's political undertakings landed his name on Richard Nixon's secret enemies list, managed to keep the search for the truth alive by attracting greater public scrutiny to the case and heading off official |
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denials with press conferences and official appeals. For example, on August 14, 1975, the District Attorney's office of California headed the efforts on the part of The State to quell the rising questions of the official story. DA John Howard appointed Thomas Kranz, a private lawyer, to review the evidence and submit a report. The 135 page Kranz report was condemned by RFK researchers as a close minded attack on the public's lack of confidence and as an apology for the police's misconduct in handling the evidence. Lowenstien was quick to send a list of seventy five errors and misrepresentations in the report to the Los Angeles Board of Supervisors. Lowenstein's efforts to bring the facts to light were gradually gathering momentum and attention from the press. With regard to the suppression of evidence, he is quoted in a 1977 article in The Saturday Review: "...people who have nothing to hide do not lie, cheat, and smear to hide it." Allard Lowenstein was murdered on March 14, 1980. On that day, yet another mentally ill lone nut, Dennis Sweeney, marched into Lowenstein's office and shot him five times. Gregory Stone, who worked closely with Lowenstein and was postumously his biographer remains undecided on conjecture that Sweeney, like Sirhan before him, was subjected to mind control. "It's clear that Dennis Sweeney was a nut," said Stone, "The only Question is whether he was a handled nut." |
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n 1975, After procedures were changed against undefined endings of prison sentences in California jails, Sirhan was given his first parole date. Sirhan was transfered to Soledad Prison where he would have more contact with other prisoners, though he was still in a restrictive protective custody unit like he was in San Quentin. In an effort to head off his parole, the DA's office began taking witness testimony from prisoners who claimed to have had contact with Sirhan. The authorities were eager to discredit Sirhan as both a lone nut and a dangerous conspiratorial terrorist in an effort to subvert his parole. Their method of doing this was with fellow inmate, Carmen Falzone, who claimed that Sirhan tried to recruit him to steal plutonium and smuggle it to Lybia. Falzone, who agreed to assist in this latest Sirhan investigation if he were compensated 'for expenses', further claimed that Sirhan fabricated the "psycho act" and "..all that other trance and hypnosis stuff." Sirhan, had long denied that he was psychotic or that he had been hypnotized. The DA's office was taking seriously that Sirhan, while under constant watch in protective custody was actively recruiting Falzone to steal enough plutonium to make fifty tactical nuclear missiles by just walking up to the appropriate facility with "Dummy papers" and "the right people." San Quentin inmate, Philip C. Clark, claimed Sirhan confided in him that he was a member of the Black September faction of the PLO. |
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ellow inmate Lawrence Wilson claimed Sirhan promised to kill Edward Kennedy if he were ever released. The merits of these accusations may best be described by prison officer J.V. Billman: "I believe Lawrence Wilson's account to be a malicious fabrication. I have never known Sirhan to discuss any aspect of his case with anyone." In his bid to become Attorney General of California, LA County District Attorney John Van de Camp held press conferences in Los Angeles and Sacremento. Citing the testimony of the inmates, he used Sirhan's unfortunate situation to gain publicity for himself by preventing Sirhan's release. Sirhan's parole was revoked and Van de Kamp was elected to the attorney general's office of California. Predictably, this had a negative effect on Sirhan's willingness to make any close friends in prison. After paroles were denied in 1986, '87, '89, and 1990, Sirhan was transfered to Corcoran State Prison in 1992. He claims the routine is the worst part of his incarceration. At 5:30am he is awakened and bells ring throughout the day to signal time for meals and other activities. Sirhan cleans the prison for $18 per month. He lives alone in an 8x10 cement cell with a 5 inch slit for a window, making the artist's rendition depicted here seem luxurious by comparison. |
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hen he refused to be brought before the parole board in chains, his parole was denied once again in 1992. "What board is going to believe that I'm ready for the outside if I'm brought in tied up like an animal," said Sirhan. He has become expectant of disapointment when coming before the parole board: "There are many people who have committed worse crimes, whom I have seen come and go. The whole thing has just become political." Indeed, each time that his parole hearing has come up, Sirhan was accompanied by favorable psychological evaluations that recomended his release. The parole board members have responded with denials and absurd demands and when Sirhan fulfills those demands and appears before them years later with new favorable evaluations, they make more demands and deny his release again. On January 13, 2003, the Associated Press reported that Sirhan Sirhan was denied his Supreme court appeal to get a new trial. Justices refused without comment to consider if California courts could review the case. Other appeals are pending in lower courts. |
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MIND CONTROL: THE HISTORY OF THE INTELLIGENCE ESTABLISHMENT'S QUEST FOR DOMINION OF THE THOUGHT PROCESS |
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San Quentin State Prison psychologist, Eduard Simson wrote that some of the writing in Sirhan's notebook is markedly different than Sirhan's penmanship. Simson's professional opinion was that Sirhan was hypno-programmed and other anonymous figures were involved in the assassination. He declared that, "Sirhan's trial was, and will be remembered as, the psychiatric blunder of the century." Is Sirhan's case an isolated one? Emile Franchel, professional hypnotist and host of the 1950's weekly TV program, "Adventures in Hypnotism" knows differently: "The hypnotic techniques being employed at present make the hypnotic technicians of the ex-nazi regime look like well meaning psychiatrists." Franchel also admits, "I am fully satisfied that hypnotic techniques are being used on a |
side from the fact that he pointed and fired a gun in RFK's direction, the one piece of evidence officials used to hang Sirhan in court was his personal notebook. In it are the automatic writings that are another indication of mind control. Sirhan admited the notebook was his but never recalled writing the things in it. Incriminating things like "RFK must be assassinated," written fourteen times and then one time inscribing, "RFK must be assassinated before 5 June 68." |
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vast scale; both criminally and for other terrible reasons." One such case is Bjorn S. Nielson, of Copenhagen, who was sentenced to life imprisonment in 1954 for "having planned and instigated by influence of various kinds, including suggestions of a hypnotic nature," crimes that included a pair of bank robberies and two murders. Nielson programmed Palle Hardrup to rob banks and kill anyone that interfered. It took psychiatrist, Dr Paul Reiter almost a year to unveil what lay behind Hardrup's amnesia. |
The fact that the CIA had an extensive mind control program, one objective of which dealt with the creation of robot-like assassins, is not up for debate. The CIA's massive MK-ULTRA program along with a host of sub projects and sister projects in behavioral influencing would likely have remained secret if not for the death of the agency's own Frank Olson. |
The agency claims that Olson was the unwitting subject of an LSD experiment. They claim he became paraniod, even after the effects of the drug wore off and flung himself or fell out of a hotel window. While it's true that the CIA pioneered the manufacture, distribution, and experimentation with LSD, the Olson family has assembled evidence that indicates that their father was murdered. The controversy over his death in 1958 was instrumental in exposing the CIA's mind control program in 1975 Senate hearings. |
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Project ARTICHOKE developed a technique that Sirhan may have been subjected to. Drugs are used to render the subject's concious mind filter inert and hypnosis is administered. In this highly vulnerable condition, the subconcious mind then can be programmed to respond on automatic pilot. In the majority of cases, amnesia can be induced so that the victim has no one to blame for "his actions" but himself. Many people were unwitting subjects of the mind control program. Some died as a result of the experiments, some had their entire past memories erased, and others were left with a permanent psychosis. The survivors and families of the victims, including the Olsons, eventually went to the government for redress for these atrocities. The Senate Subcommittee headed by Frank Church investigated MK- ULTRA and other CIA mind control programs in 1975. |
n an outreach effort some of the Olsons have released this statement: "This is not an LSD drug-experiment story, as it was represented in 1975 . This is a biological warfare story. Frank Olson did not die because he was an experimental guinea pig who experienced a “bad trip.” He died because of concern that he would divulge information concerning a highly classified CIA interrogation program called “ARTICHOKE” in the early 1950’s, and concerning the use of biological weapons by the United States in the Korean War." |
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The MK-ULTRA program was eventually phased out in favor of research that included using various modulated frequencies to control behavior remotely. The experiments incorporated radio remote control of the motor functions of several species of animals as well as humans using electrode implants. They also covered the use of various invisible waveform energies (radar signals, radio waves, acoustics, microwaves,etc) to covertly influence and control thought processes, brain function, the metabolism, and motor movement. While hypnosis research plateaued, advances in electronics, communications, and nanotechnology only propelled implants and other froms of remote influencing forward. Psychotronics is the term sometimes used to describe these methods and devices. Ultrasound and microwaves in the extremely low frequency and ultra high frequency bands were successfully developed by both the USA and the Soviets for behavioral control purposes as well as for operationally lethal weapons. |
enator Edward Kennedy's subcommittee investigated MK-ULTRA in 1977. The findings indicated that the agency was guilty of violating its own charter prohibiting it from engaging in domestic activities and guilty of a host of ethical violations. All agents evaded criminal charges and the CIA made the specious vow that it would discontinue it's mind control research. |
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A 1970 RAND study published findings that extremely low frequency (ELF) microwaves "...could promote insomnia, fatigue, irritability, memory loss, and hallucinations." Dr Ross Adey of Loma Linda Research Hospital, succeeded in identifying and recording EEG rythms of different mental states. He also discovered techniques to manipulate both the recall and the ammassing of memory itself. As early as 1959, the CIA had used many domestic front organizations to spy on dissenters. Many of these individuals did nothing more than express disagreement with government policy. During the Johnson administration, the agency greatly widened the breadth of its university campus operations and it's interpersonal collusions with police departments across America. The CIA's Operation CHAOS further consolidated and expanded these activities in 1968. Mind control techniques and psychotronics technology was eventually shared with law enforcement agencies around the world, including the FBI. The FBI's COINTELPRO (counter intelligence program) used much the same methods that CHAOS did against percieved 'subversives'. |
n 1977, the Defence Intelligence Agency declassified a report about Soviet bloc remote psychotronics. The report confirmed that modulated microwave radiation was used by the Soviets in 1974 to induce various disruptive symptoms. The capabilities included inducing, "Headaches, fatigue, perspiring, dizzyness, menstrual disorders, irritability, agitation, tension, drowsiness, sleeplessness, depression, anxiety, forgetfulness, and lack of concentration." |
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A standard COINTELPRO/CHAOS program is initiated in which surveillance, a discrediting campaign, and harrassments ruin the individual. Surreptitious manipulations such as food tampering, drugging, and psychotronics promote emotional agitation, anti-social behavior, and a general lack of concentration. These activities are orchestrated to make and keep the individual unemployed and isolated. When total isolation is achieved, the agents abduct and experiment on the victim. Strong doses of drugs with hallucinagenic properties, hypnosis, microwave radiation and the latest mind control technologies |
lack Bag jobs' such as break-ins, wiretaps, mail opening/tampering, and assassinations eventually were brought to light. Under the facade of reform the CIA officially ended CHAOS and the FBI ended COINTELPRO. The methods of these programs have, up until the present, continued covertly with psychotronics as one of the primary weapons of its arsenal; also with the complicity of police personnel. Much of this work is also privatised and manned with right wing groups and allegedly former agents to maximize deniability. |
B |
ind control has come a long way since Sirhan snapped out of his trance in the Ambassador Hotel pantry. For many years there has been a massive mind control program to serve the interests of the power elite. Hunderds of people around the world have come forward about these abuses, which often fall into the following pattern: |
M |
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are combined to create orchestrated scenarios. Freudian nightmares tailored to the individual's psyche are induced to break the individual (trauma based conditioning). Implants are deployed to both universally monitor and induce neutralizing pain in the individual. Directed energy weapons can also be used for the latter effect. There are several patents for devices that can deliver accoustic signals directed solely to the individual, even in a crowded room. This can produce the effect of voices in the individual's head, further promoting the illusion of mental illness. Like Sirhan, mental illness is the standard crutch used to discredit and possibly institutionalize and destroy the victim. Through this political genocide program future Robert Kennedy's and Martin Luther King Jr's can be effectively neutralized covertly without their messy corpses in public scrutiny. In fact, former friends, family and the general public will often largely be convinced that the victims are themselves to blame for their tragic circumstances, making the JFK/MLK/RFK affairs seem crude by comparison. Political dissidents and whistleblowers are the standard targets with the ultimate goal being the unhindered interests of capital and mass control of society. |
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irhan Sirhan is still officially villified as the lone assassin of Robert Kennedy. His release would make international headlines and a renewed examination of his life's circumstances which strike at the heart of everything wrong about America today. Sirhan, the Palestinian scapegoat, could renew concerns about arabs being subjected to unwarranted arrests and detentions. Questions could be raised about what really lies behind the sensational acts of terror on 9-11. Ostensibly orchestrated by extremist arab organizations with past ties to the CIA, while the FBI, according to bureau whistleblowers, intentionally subverted investigations that may have prevented it. Sirhan, the tool of election fraud, could renew questions about the democratic legitimacy and general integrity of the CIA's own Bush clan. Sirhan, the robot assassin, might bring fresh light to the fact that statesmen that dont fall in line with the interests of the power elite, the real rulers of the world, are eliminated one way or another. Sirhan, the mind control victim, could bring the current state of the COINTELPRO and CHAOS programs out of the closet of paranoid conspiracy theories. Hopefullly, renewed inquiries about the activities of the intelligence establishment may finally bring them under the elusive reins of accountablility. Sirhan Bishara Siran is one of the most important political prisoners in America today. |
S |
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William Klaber and Philip Melanson, "Shodow Play, The Murder of Robert F Kennedy, The Trial of Sirhan Sirhan, - and the Failure of American Justice," St Martin's Press, 1997 Philip Melanson, "Who Killed Robert Kennedy?", Odonian, 1993 Philip Melanson, "The Robert F. Kennedy Assassination", Shapolsky Publishers Inc, 1993 Harrison Edward Livingstone, "High Treason 2 The Great Cover Up: The Assassination of President John F - Kennedy," Carroll and Graf Publishers, Inc. , 1992 Dan E. Moldea, "The Killing of Robert F Kennedy," W.W. Norton, 1995 Robert Blair Kaiser,"R.F.K Must Die!", Dutton, New York, 1970 Victor Marchetti and John D. Marks, "The CIA and the Cult of Intelligence", Dell, 1974 Mark Zepezauer, "The CIA's Greatest Hits", Odonian Press, 1994 Verne Lyon, "The History of Operation CHAOS," Covert Action Informantion Bulletin #34, Summer 1990 William Turner and Jonn Christian, "The Assassination Of Robert F Kennedy," Thunder Mouth, 1991 John Marks, "The Search for the Manchurian Candidate," Dell 1979 Andy Boehm, "The Lingering Mystery of RFK." LA Weekly, November 18-24, 1988 Mike Rothmiller and Ivan Goldman, LA Secret Police, Pocket Books, 1992 Walter Bowart, "Operation Mind Control," Dell 1978 Jim Mars, "Crossfire: The Plot That Killed Kennedy," Carroll & Graff, 1989 Robert Weisbrot, "Freedom Bound: A History of America's Civil Rights Movement," Plume(Penguin Group), 1990 "Supreme Court Rejects RFK Assassin's Appeal,"Associated Press, January 13, 2003 Robert Houghton and Theodore Taylor, "Special Unit Senator," Random House, 1970 Douglas Stein, "Thomas Noguchi: Coroner to the Stars," Omni Magazine, 1 November 1986 Emile Franchel, "254 Questions and Answers on Practical Hypnosis and Autosuggestion", 1957 Lisa Pease, "Sirhan and the RFK Assassination Part I: The Grand Illusion," Probe, March-April 1998(Vol 5, No 3) Lisa Pease, "Sirhan and the RFK Assassination Part II: Rubik's Cube," Probe, May-June 1998(Vol 5, No 4) Jose M. R. Delgado, "Physical Control of the Mind: Toward a PsychoCivilized Society," Harpers, 1969 Jose M. R. Delgado, "Intracerebral Radio Stimulation and Recording in Completely Free Patients," The Journal of - Nervous and Mental Disease, Vol. 147, No. 4, 1968 Greg Harrison, "Electronics and The Mind," October 26, 1997 Ross Blackstone, "Special Assignment: Do You Believe in Government Mind Control?," KOVR 13 News, Sinclair - Broadcast Group, November 17, 2000 Eric Olson, PhD, Stephan Kimbel Olson, Nils Olson, DDS, Lauren Olson, Kristin Olson, "Family Statement on the - Murder of Frank Olson, August 8, 2002 DOUGLAS PASTERNAK,"Wonder Weapons: The Pentagon's Quest for Nonlethal Arms is Amazing. But is it , - Smart?" US News And World Report, July 7, 1997 The Nessie Files, "PsyOps Technology," San Fransisco Bay Guardian, March 13, 2000 |
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loadingMessage | Symbol 7 EditableText | "100%" |
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