Jack Ruby, by Wikipedia

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Re: Jack Ruby, by Wikipedia

Postby admin » Sat Nov 04, 2017 2:57 am

Dallas police were WARNED Lee Harvey Oswald would be murdered by a 'committee' - but still sent him to his death, infuriating FBI head J Edgar Hoover, newly released JFK documents reveal
by James Wilkinson
Daily Mail
PUBLISHED: 02:11 EDT, 28 October 2017 | UPDATED: 09:00 EDT, 28 October 2017

Before Oswald was shot, a 'calm' voice told the FBI a 'committee' was to kill him

The FBI then demanded twice that Dallas PD protect Oswald, the memos say

But that didn't happen - to the annoyance of Hoover who said it was 'inexcusable'

Hoover's remarks were unsealed along with almost 3,000 other JFK documents

He also worried about conspiracy theories, and hoped to quell public distrust

The Soviet Union thought LBJ or the right wing had killed Kennedy

And the Cuban ambassador was gleeful at the president's slaying


The murder of Lee Harvey Oswald could have been prevented after the FBI were warned of his impending death - but Dallas police failed to protect him, it has emerged.

Nearly 3,000 documents related to JFK's shooting have been declassified by The White House, among them remarks made by then-FBI boss J Edgar Hoover the day Oswald died.

According to Hoover, the FBI were contacted by a man who said a 'committee' was plotting to kill Oswald, who had been arrested for killing the president; the feds then told police in Dallas to protect the presidential assassin.

Instead, Oswald was walked out in front of a crowd, cameras - and local nightclub owner Jack Ruby, who marched out and shot him dead.


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Newly released memos from J Edgar Hoover reveal that the FBI had been warned by a man with a 'calm' voice that a 'committee' was planning to kill Lee Harvey Oswald (pictured being shot)

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Hoover said the feds told Dallas PD twice to protect Oswald, but the man was still gunned down by small-time crook Jack Ruby (pictured); Hoover said that was 'inexcusable'

Speaking on November 24, 1963, the morning Oswald was killed, Hoover said: 'There is nothing further on the Oswald case except that he is dead.

'Last night we received a call in our Dallas office from a man talking in a calm voice and saying he was a member of a committee organized to kill Oswald.

'We at once notified the chief of police and he assured us Oswald would be given sufficient protection.

'This morning we called the chief of police again warning of the possibility of some effort against Oswald and again he assured us adequate protection would be given.


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Hoover (pictured) also worried about the public believing in a conspiracy theory. The documents are some of almost 3,000 released by the White House this week

'However, this was not done.'

Oswald was being transferred to Dallas County Jail when Ruby, who claimed to have mob connections, fired the fatal shot.

GUTHRIE further informed he has heard and believes it is fairly well known around Dallas that either Mayor CABELL or City Manager CRULL ordered Chief of Police CURRY to "put on the show for TV" of transporting OSWALD from the City Jail to the County Jail.

-- Commission Exhibit No. 1251, Date: Dec. 7, 1963


Hoover - who headed the FBI and its predecessor, the Bureau of Investigation, for a total of 48 years - said that getting Oswald killed before he could be interviewed was 'inexcusable.'

'It will allow, I am afraid, a lot of civil rights people to raise a lot of hell because he was handcuffed and had no weapon,' he said.

'There are bound to be some elements of our society who will holler their heads off that his civil rights were violated - which they were.'

Hoover also expressed concerns about conspiracy theories forming around Kennedy's murder, just days after the death.

'The thing I am concerned about, and so is [deputy attorney general Nicholas] Katzenbach, is having something issued so that we can convince the public that Oswald is the real assassin,' he wrote.

He suggested that 'instead of a Presidential Commission, we can do it with a Justice Department report based on an FBI report'.

Hoover's suggestion was ignored and instead, President Lyndon Johnson set up the Warren Commission to investigate the assassination the following week.


The notes also reveal that the Soviet Union also suspected a conspiracy organized by the right-wing, or possibly Lyndon Barnes Johnson, Kennedy's successor.

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All of the documents are related to the killing of JFK (pictured) in 1963. They also say that the Soviets believed Kennedy was killed either by Lyndon Baines Johnson or right wingers

They certainly didn't believe that Oswald - a 'neurotic maniac who was disloyal to his own country and everything else' - was the killer, the notes claimed.

'Our source further stated that Soviet officials were fearful that without leadership, some irresponsible general in the United States might launch a missile at the Soviet Union,' a note says.

The documents also say that the Cuban ambassador to the US met the news of Kennedy's murder with a 'happy delight'.

It's not clear how Ruby might have got into the basement that Oswald was being transported through when he was shot.

But another memo released by the White House said that according to an FBI informant, Ruby had a 'good in' with the Dallas PD.

HSCA Appendix to Hearings – Volume IX Page 135 of 1178

A. THE SHOOTING OF LEE HARVEY OSWALD: RELATIONSHIP WITH THE DALLAS POLICE DEPARTMENT*

(498) Following the shooting of Lee Harvey Oswald, Jack Ruby’s relationship with the Dallas Police Department was scrutinized. Rumors had naturally arisen concerning this relationship. They included the allegations that Ruby provided off-duty employment for officers at his nightclubs, (1) that he enabled policemen to obtain bank loans by acting as a cosigner, (2) that he provided officers with female companionship, (3) and that he had visited Hot Springs, Ark., with the chief of police. (4) Although documentation for these allegations has not been produced, it is known that Jack Ruby did maintain a close relationship with the police force, “one of the greatest police forces in the world,” according to Ruby, (5) even if its nature cannot be determined with precision.

RUBY’S FRIENDSHIPS WITH POLICE OFFICERS

(449) Ruby took great pride in and thoroughly enjoyed his friendships with Dallas police officers. He has been described as an individual who loved police officers, (6) was a “police buff,” (7) had great respect for authority (8) and was “keenly interested in policemen and their work.” (9) The relationship was both collectively and individually oriented. “I have always been very close to the police department,” Ruby stated in 1964, “I don’t know why.” (1)) As part of this closeness, Ruby offered his friends what he could: a free table, a few beers, a listening ear.

(500) Ruby told the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) that he had never given money or other things of value to officers except when he gave out bottles of whiskey as Christmas gifts. (11) This practice may have occurred at other times, since it has been reported that policemen were seen going into Ruby’s private office in the Carousel (one of Ruby’s nightclubs) and leaving with bottles of

_______________

* Prepared by Donald A. Purdy, Jr., senior staff counsel and Howard Shapiro, research attorney.


Ruby himself died of cancer in his prison cell four years later.
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