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LBJ was behind JFK's assassination, upcoming book contends
Knight Ridder Newspapers ^ | Aug. 20, 2003 | HYE JEONG

Posted on 08/20/2003 6:18:44 PM PDT by new cruelty

GULFPORT, Miss. - (KRT) - The father of the White House press secretary claims in his upcoming book, "Blood, Money & Power: How L.B.J. Killed J.F.K.," that former President Lyndon B. Johnson was behind the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.

Barr McClellan, father of White House press secretary Scott McClellan and Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Mark McClellan, is preparing for a Sept. 30 release of a 480-page book by Hannover House that offers photographs, copies of letters, insider interviews and details of fingerprints as proof that Edward A. Clark, the powerful head of Johnson's private and business legal team and a former ambassador to Australia, led the plan and cover-up for the 1963 assassination in Dallas.

Kennedy was shot and killed while throngs watched his motorcade travel through Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963. Vice President Johnson was sworn in as president shortly after on Air Force One.

"(Johnson) had the motive, opportunity and means," said McClellan, 63, who was a partner in an Austin law firm that served Johnson. The book, McClellan said in an exclusive interview at his Orange Grove home, is about "(Johnson's) role in the assassination. He was behind the assassination, how he was and how it all developed."

McClellan and his wife have lived in Gulfport since 1998, where his wife's family lives. McClellan consults for some businesses on the Coast and writes books.

McClellan said he includes information in the book that alludes to Johnson's role in the assassination. An example is a story that was told to him by the late Martin Harris, former managing partner at the law firm, as told to Harris by Clark.

McClellan writes in his book that in a 1961 meeting on Johnson's ranch outside Johnson City, Texas, Johnson gave Clark a document that may have helped the assassin:

"Johnson suddenly let Clark go. `That envelope in the car,' he said quietly, almost an afterthought, `is yours.' Stepping toward the car, he muttered, `Put it to good use.' He turned, putting his arms across Clark's shoulders, pulling him along, (and) the two walked toward the convertible.

"As they drove back to the ranch, Clark opened the envelope. It contained the policy manual for protection of the president."

Barry Bishop, senior shareholder of Clark's former law firm, defended the attorney.

McClellan's theory is "absurd," Bishop said over the phone. "Mr. Clark was a big supporter of Mr. Kennedy. The day that President Kennedy was assassinated, there was going to a be a dinner that evening in Texas. Mr. Clark was a co-sponsor of that dinner."

McClellan's book is just one of numerous conspiracy theory books that criticize the conclusion of the FBI's investigation of the assassination, that found that Lee Harvey Oswald was the lone gunman.

According to the Warren Commission's 1964 report, "Examination of the facts of the assassination itself revealed no indication that Oswald was aided in the planning or execution of his scheme."

But that hasn't stopped people from writing books that challenge the Warren Commission's findings. Other ideas about who was behind the assassination include U.S. intelligence agents, the Mafia, Nikita Khrushchev, the military-industrial complex and Cuban exiles.

So why should people believe McClellan? What makes his book different?

"The big beauty is, (readers) don't have to believe a word I say," McClellan said. "They can believe the fingerprint examiner. They can believe the exchange of memos and letters."

"The book is the evidence," said Cecile McClellan, McClellan's wife, who has edited much of the book. "When you read that book and look at those exhibits, and say, `Do I believe this?' There it is … It's like (McClellan is) a lawyer presenting this book to the jury. You make your own decision. He's putting it all out there."

The theory that Johnson was involved is "exceedingly unlikely," said John C. McAdams, who is an outspoken supporter of the Warren Commission's findings and teaches a course on the JFK assassination at Marquette University in Milwaukee. "What did he (McClellan) find in the documents, and what does it, in fact, indicate? If he's looking at all the documents everyone else is looking at, I would want to know which documents he's interpreting as L.B.J."

Eric Parkinson, president of Truman Press Inc., the parent company of Hannover House, said the book comes out at a good time.

"Now, 40 years later, it's appropriate that this additional information be brought to light. It (the book) will provide closure for a lot of people."

McClellan began working with Clark in 1966 and said he had no role in the conspiracy. But he did hear rumors about it.

"When I first started work there and was told that Clark was behind the assassination, I didn't believe it. It was, `This guy you really liked, John Kennedy - he was killed by the guy you're working for now.' I think I went into a bad case of denial."

McClellan said he learned of Clark's role several times, from Clark and others in the law firm, including while he was acting as Clark's lawyer. The case involved the 1969 application for Clark to drill an oil well and name it after himself.

At the time, McClellan said he asked Clark about the rumors he had been hearing. He said Clark talked in code, but he said, "He wanted the payoff for it. When you mention Dallas, you were talking about the assassination. We had a discussion about it. That's in the book, pretty much verbatim."

But why didn't McClellan go public with the information back then?

"When you get inside the attorney-client privilege, you find out a whole lot," McClellan said. "At the time I thought everything I learned was privileged. I've since found out that there's no privilege for lawyers who plan crimes," he said, referring to Clark.

McClellan said he left the law firm in 1982 because Clark wanted him to represent a company that would conflict with interests of McClellan's other clients. Then, he said, Clark sued him over a personal loan. McClellan counter-sued. Then the bank holding the loan sued.

"When I found out what they were going to do to me, I got mad. The gloves came off. I said, `Forget it. They're not going to get away with this anymore.'"

But it took years before McClellan was able to publish the book that he said supports his assassination theory.

Finally in 1994, the 14-year legal battle with the lawsuits ended with dismissals. By that time, Clark had been dead for two years.

McClellan said he was trying to get a book out in 1984, while Clark was alive. "He knew I was going public - from the affidavits in one of those three lawsuits," McClellan said. And he said a book agent he approached in 1984 told him to "do an investigation."

So he began.

"I wanted to be comfortable with what I knew," McClellan said. He said it took a long time to verify fingerprints with several experts and to find a publisher.

"A lot of it wouldn't have been available except that old Clark's records" were bequeathed to Southwestern University, McClellan said, making them available for research. Previously "they were stored in his private records. I'm sure if he had thought about it before he died, he would have probably thrown away a few."

McClellan had been writing bits and pieces of the book since he left the law firm. He logged numerous hours of research and 10 researchers helped him, he said.

Supporters and detractors have talked to McClellan about possible repercussions from the book, McClellan said, but he's not losing any sleep.

McClellan said he hasn't had any overt threats. He said people imply retributions, like suggesting that "I'm not going to make it in Austin. `You're going to be out of here.'"

McClellan said at least some in his family accept his work on the book.

"They said, `OK, I guess that's what Dad's doing now,'" McClellan said.

But he said he has not had the chance to ask sons Scott and Mark for their reactions.

"I assume that they know about it," McClellan said. "They know what I'm doing. They're not going to comment on it. The oldest, Mark, was then maybe 15 when I left the law firm."

When asked if he was concerned for the safety of his twin sons, Dudley, an Austin lawyer in private practice, and Bradley, a Texas state associate attorney general, McClellan said: "The Democrats are pretty much out of power, really, in the state of Texas. So as far as Republicans go, they're in good shape. My ex-wife (Carole Keeton Strayhorn) - she's the comptroller of the state of Texas. There's really none of this influence or anything like that."


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Extended News; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: 2ndgunman; 33rddegree; assassination; backandtotheleft; bookreview; dealeyplaza; freemasons; grassyknoll; illuminati; jfk; jfkassassination; kingkill; lbj; tinfoil; vastleftieconspiracy
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To: The KG9 Kid
The M-C in its best day (1940) was junk and would be the last rifle an assassin would use. He could throw it at the victim with more deadly effect than shooting it at one.

Query -where were the other bullets or did Ozzie only have three? Where were they purchased?
241 posted on 08/21/2003 7:56:53 AM PDT by justshutupandtakeit (America's Enemies foreign and domestic agree. Bush must be destroyed.)
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To: The KG9 Kid
Glossed over the dynamics of the shooting? I thought Stone went in great detail with Costner to debunk the one "magic" bullet theory.
Watch the trial scenes again.
242 posted on 08/21/2003 7:58:45 AM PDT by Rennes Templar
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To: new cruelty
is that the title track from the new weishaupt album?
243 posted on 08/21/2003 8:00:28 AM PDT by kallisti
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To: new cruelty
During the time I lived in Dallas in the mid 80's this was not an uncommon theory. In particular, a retired Dallas deputy sheriff told me he was "certain" that LBJ had JFK killed. I don't know, but I certainly don't take seriously the opinion of anyone who is a "staunch defender of the Warren Commission Report". That document has more holes than a sponge and IMHO anybody who says they believe it is either uninformed, naive, or lying.
244 posted on 08/21/2003 8:02:22 AM PDT by katana
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To: Princeliberty
Well...Lee's own brother disagrees with you. He was interviewed about ten years ago about his hunting trips with Lee. He said that his brother was a good shot.
245 posted on 08/21/2003 8:02:22 AM PDT by Austin Willard Wright
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To: Taft in '52
I have a bizarre and outlandish hypothesis: Oswald pulled the trigger and acted alone.

I thought so too until I went up to the sixth floor window. It was a punch in the stomach as I aimed my finger down to the street - Oswald did not kill JFK. There's no bullet that miraculous. The grassy knoll, the man hole, or a Martian space ship, but not the sixth floor.

246 posted on 08/21/2003 8:05:48 AM PDT by mtbopfuyn
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To: kallisti
LOL... yeah, off of the album Order of Perfectibilists straight out of Ingolstadt Studios.
247 posted on 08/21/2003 8:06:08 AM PDT by new cruelty
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To: justshutupandtakeit
He only hit two out of three at a fairly large target within 100 yards. Any rifle is capable of that.

Oswald fired three shots which the two guys on the fifth floor heard and felt as dust and debris fell from their ceiling. Three empty cases were found at the scene.

Oswald did chamber a fourth round that was found in the rifle.

The ammo was bought with the rifle. IIRC.
248 posted on 08/21/2003 8:06:10 AM PDT by Shooter 2.5 (Don't punch holes in the lifeboat.)
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To: new cruelty
"LBJ was behind JFK's assination"

well duuhhh. I grew up in Texas and that fact was considered common knowledge.

249 posted on 08/21/2003 8:08:49 AM PDT by sweet_diane (Philippians 4:12-13)
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To: GodBlessRonaldReagan
And what about Stu Sutcliffe's untimely death? Pretty suspicious there, if you ask me! Personally, I blame Pete Best.

And Pete Best had to replaced replace by...Ringo, who bears a striking resemblance to Yasser Arafart. Have you ever seen the two in the same room? No? Hmmmm...

250 posted on 08/21/2003 8:09:03 AM PDT by HenryLeeII
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To: sweet_diane
I grew up in Texas and never really gave it much consideration.
251 posted on 08/21/2003 8:09:53 AM PDT by new cruelty
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To: Servant of the Nine
Yes, he was suspected by individuals, but the government would never allow for any official suspicion to fall on the newly-implanted president. In that regard LBJ knew he would be safe, if in fact he had anything to do with it...
252 posted on 08/21/2003 8:11:30 AM PDT by HenryLeeII
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To: mtbopfuyn
And I'm not telling how I know he had an innie...

Everybody knew he had an innie. That and some other things used to hang out or at least be clearly visible when he wore a bathing suit - which he did frequently down on the ranch. He also liked to hold a meeting with someone he disliked - while he was sitting on the toilet.

253 posted on 08/21/2003 8:13:01 AM PDT by ladyjane
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To: HenryLeeII
Ringo has a better-looking wife than Arafat.
254 posted on 08/21/2003 8:17:44 AM PDT by GodBlessRonaldReagan (where is Count Petofi when we need him most?)
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To: ladyjane
He also liked to hold a meeting with someone he disliked - while he was sitting on the toilet.

Ha, this computer is mere feet from where he um, once did his business but what all that entailed I wouldn't know. As for his inny, I don't need pictures.

255 posted on 08/21/2003 8:27:42 AM PDT by mtbopfuyn
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To: ladyinred
I have heard rumors about LBJ over the years, and know that he was a pretty dirty politican, and that is about all I know about him.

Not only was he a dirty politician, he was a dirty man. Recently I learned when LBJ was walking around the White House Gardens, he would take out his ding-a-ling and pee wherever he was standing.

256 posted on 08/21/2003 8:33:43 AM PDT by Spunky (This little tag just keeps following me where ever I go.)
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To: Shooter 2.5
In "The JFK Conspiracy (1992)" it is stated that the motorcycle cop (drivers side rear) had blood and skull fragments on his wind screen, another indicator of a shot from the front/right (grassy knoll).
257 posted on 08/21/2003 8:39:57 AM PDT by moehoward
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To: HenryLeeII
Excellent detective work!
258 posted on 08/21/2003 9:15:46 AM PDT by Diddle E. Squat
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To: PhilDragoo
I read his first book about the assasination. Can't remember the name. I think he was the best researcher at the time. Lane being more volatile and emotional. I was hot on the subject for awhile. The Mark Lane book Plausible Denial was startling and based on a court victory. The conclusion just hangs out there in the atmosphere. C-YA
259 posted on 08/21/2003 9:26:14 AM PDT by breakem
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To: Shooter 2.5
I disagree slightly but agree the gun was capable of doing the job.

I have owned a couple of 6.5 Carcano's. They are a little rough but other than that, are perfectly good guns. They are accurate, powerful and reliable which is all that counts.

Not meaning to brag but I once won our gun club's all comers match and I think the shot was a difficult one. First of all it was a moving target and not really all that large if you mean his head. Also the shots were made very rapidly. The shot is possible but not likely. I guess the fact that it is possible is all that counts tho.

260 posted on 08/21/2003 9:41:48 AM PDT by yarddog
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