(UNTITLED)

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP75-00001R000100060017-3
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
November 11, 2016
Document Release Date: 
February 8, 1999
Sequence Number: 
17
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
August 30, 1967
Content Type: 
NSPR
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PDF icon CIA-RDP75-00001R000100060017-3.pdf203.06 KB
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FOIAb3b 1=afi~ Sanitized - Approve for F e`1ease bV-' DP7vf-W6601 R000100oWULo1 ii 1117 front its, of course. The minutes of tl c Com- He studied the 20 volumes of hearings, Now, the sate thing was true of the stag n;ission meetings are locked up In the Na- tional Archives and no one can see them. vest amount of the evidence, F.B.T. reports, d C.I.A. reports, which may be directly relate to the information we should have, are also locked up In the Archives. No one can see th alt. The photographs and H-rays of the Presi- dent's body, taken at the autopsy in Be- tL?escla, Maryland, taken just before the au- topsy was begun, taken by Naval technicians, which in and or themselves alight receive the whole question as to whether or not there was a conspiracy, cannot be seen by anyone today and, in fact, not one member Of the Warren Commission over saw the most Important documents in the ease, the photo- graphs and the X-rays. And not one lawyer for the Commission over saw-was curious enough to examine the most important evidence. I think talc villain was the desire of gov- er-nnlcnt of icials to be nice, to see to it that nothing would upset the American people, that the apathy which has seized us for all of these years be permitted to remain un- interrupted by a factual presentation of what happencd. The American people would have been upset surely if they were told there was :. conspiracy which took the life of your President. CeossitiTa: But Mr. Lane, who accuses the Commission of playing fast and loose with the evidence, does not always allow facts to get In the way of his own theories. In "Rush To Judgment,'' for example, he writes: "The statements of eyewitnesses close to the Presi- dent tended to confirm the likelihood that the shot came from the right and not from the rear." Lane then quotes Associated Press photographer James Altgens, and another eyewitness, Charles Brehm, as giving testi- mony that would support the idea of a killer on the grassy knoll. Yet Mr. Altgens, as we saw Monday night, Is entirely certain that all of the shots canto from behind, a fact that Mr. Lane does not mention. As for Mr. Brehm, Eddie Barker discovered that he holds no brief either for the grassy knoll theory or for the use of his words by Mark Lane, EDDIE BAP.iscR: Well now, seine critics of the Warren Report have taken your testi- mony, or interviews with you, to indicate that you thought the shots came from be- hind the fence over there. What about that? CHARLES Bazi-ins: Well, as I say, it was not a number of critics. It was one critic, Mark Lane, who takes very great liberties with adding to my quotation. I never said that the-any shot came from here like I was quoted by Mr, Lane. Mr. Lane would like No to have positively identified the-what I slew 'fly over here-his skull-although I told hint I could not-I did not-I thought it was but I could not. So, he has added his interpretations to what I said, and conse- quently that's where the story comes from that-that I said that the shots cone from hip there. No shot came from up there at any time during the whole fiasco that after- noon. CROVitirz: Nor are these the only examples of :her. Lane lifting remarks out of context to support his tllcories. Perhaps the most charitable explanation is that Mark Lano still considers himself a defense attorney for Lee Harvey Oswald-and a, defense attor- ney's primary duty is not to abstract truth, but to his client. There exists, however, a less partisan, and therefore perhaps more disturbing critique of the Warren Commission Report. Ra'r ssa: One of the most influential at- tacks on the work of the Commission is the book, "Inquest," by a young scholar named Edward J. Epstein. It began as a thesis in find out just how the Warren Commission had gone about solving this crime of the century, then interviewed five of the seven Commis- sion members, General Counsel J. Lee Ran- kill and some of the Commission's top in- vestigators. And the pattern that began to emerge disturbed him. -EPSTEI.,: Well, there were three, I think, levels of comp taint. The first one was the Institutional, you might say: the general problem that a government has when it searches for truth, The problem of trying to leave an, autonomous investigation, free from. political interference and at the snih:e time, it's dealing by its very nature with is political problem. The second level might be called the or- ganizational level of-was the Warren Com- mission, organized in a way that prevented it from finding facts, And here illy findings were that by using a part time staff and by the Conlmissioll's detaching themselves from the Investigation-in other welds, not ac- tively partaking in the investigation-it raised some problems as to whether the WWWar- ren Commission's investigation went deep enough, so that if there was evidence of a conspiracy, they would have in fact found it. The third level of my criticism concerned the evidence itself, and this concerned the problem of when the Warren Commission was come--confronted with a very complex problem. For example, the contradiction be- tween the F.B.I. summery report on the autopsy and the autopsy report they had in mind-how they solved this ;,robleu], whether they simply glossed over it or whether' they called witnesses and-and this-this, of course, brought up the ques- tions of-of a second ..ssassin. RATHER: One of the men Mr. Epstein in- terviewed for his "Inquest" is Arlen Spec- ter, now District Attorney of Philadelphia, but In 100t, one Of the principal investiga- tors for the Warren Commission, charged with establishing the basic facts of the assassination. Mr. Specter thinks the.Com- mission did its job well and came. up with the right answers, SPECTER: I would say after having pros- ecuted a great many cases that seldom would you ever find a case which was as persua- sive that Oswald was the assassin and, in fact, the lone assassin, and we convict peo- ple in the criminal courts every day right here In City Hall, Philadelphia: And the time; the d eatll_penalties are imposed or life il.prisoIlmeilt-so that-so that the case does lit together. RATI.sa: in separate interviews we asked critic Epstein and investigator Specter to discuss some of the central issues that must determine how well or how badly the Warren Commission did its work. EPSTeIrr: Part of the job of the Warren Commission was restoring confidence in the American goverlunont. And for this he had to pick seven very respectable men, men who would lend their name and lend probity to the report. And so that the problem was, in any seven men he picked of this sort, they would have very little time for the investi- gation. They would also have two purposes. One purpose would be to find the truth, all the facts. The other purpose would be to allay rumors, to dispel conspiracy theories and ma- terial of that sort. SPECTER: My view Is that there Is abso- lutely no foundation for that type of a charge. When the President selected the Commissioners, he chose meal of unblemished reputation and very high standing. The Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States would have no reason whatsoever to be expedient or to search for political truths. Nor would Allen W. Dukes, the former head of the C.I.A., nor would Jolla McCloy, with his dirt ng fished service in government, nor would the Congressional or Senatorial repro- . . FOIAb3b members. When it cane gore to select the Individuals to serve as assistant counsel ,.id general counsel,'men Were ChoseIl from Vari- ous parts of the 'United States who had no connection with government. EPsT1iI;v : For example, there were rumors concerning the F.B.I. or various intelligence agencies. I noticed that there were a num- ber of memorandums where the-where- from Warren to the Secretary of the Tress- ury, who was in charge of the Secret Service, assuring that their findings wouldn't Impair the eficicncy or the morale of the Secret Service, And the same thing again with the P.B.I., a question of whether there was over ill]}' possible connection between Oswald- end by connection I don't mean anything sinister, I simply meant that he was furnish- ing Infornlatloll and there were some rumors to this effect- find they, rather than inves- tigating these rumors, they preferred to give it to the P.B.I. to investigate the rumors ti]eniselves. As J, Lee Rankin, their General Counsel, said, they would rather that agency clear its own skirts. Well, what this meant, of course, is that if the F.B.I. would have dis- cretion if it ciid find a connection between Oswald and itself, the discretion of either reporting it or not reporting it. SPECTER: In the saip, the P.B.I. conducted the basic line of investigation. But the Cons- mission used its Independent judgment wherever, say, the F.B.I. or the Secret Serv- ice was involved itself so that they would not investigate themselves on the subjects where they were directly involved, and I think the Commission showed its independence in that regard by criticizing the Federal Bureau of Investigation and by criticizing the Secret Service where the facts warranted such criticism. On every subject where the Federal Bu- reau of Investigation had contact with the area of investigation with which I was inti- mr.tely connected, I was fully satisfied wl.tih their thoroughness and with their compe- tency and with their integrity. CRorvitiTR: Despite Mr. Specter's defense, it Is the opinion of CBS News that the role of the F.B.I. as well as the Secret Service, both in the assassination and its aftermath, has been less than glorious. And, to some extent, the perfornianco of these agencies weakens the credibility of the Warren Report. As to what the F.B.I. and the Secret Service did wrong before the assassination, we need look no further than the Report Itself. It notes the Secret Service agents assigned to protect the President had been drinking beer and liquor into the early hours of the morning, that no search was made of build- er.;,;; along, the route, and that, quote: "The procedures of the Secret Service, designed to Identify and protect against persons consid- ered serious threats to the President, were not adequate prior to the assassination," end of quote. That is, the Secret Service should have known about Lee Harvey Oswald. But the Report goes on to point out that if the Secret Service did not know about him, the F.B.I. did, and did not see fit to men- tion his existence to the Secret Service. The report issues a mildly phrases! yet devastating rebuke to the charging that it took an unduly restrictive view of its responsibilities. Knowing what the F.B.I. knew about Oswald, the Report says, an alert agency should have listed him as a potential menace to the pres- ident. Yet, after the assassination, the Con]- mission itself relied heavily on these two agencies as its i .vestigativc arms. Did their performance Improve? We know that some of the tests concluctccl by then, for the Warren Commission were unsatisfactory. In the first of these broadcasts we pointed out that to stimulate Oswald'., problem of hitting a moving target from a sixty foot high perch, the 1 .B.T. conducted its firing tests on a fixed target, from a 30-foot height. Certainly, if CBS News could duplicate the conditions of Sanitized - Approved For Releas - 0017-3