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The Colonel’s Corner The Devil’s Chessboard Part 23

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0:00 Hello, everybody. Let me get Bridget up here and get live. How are you? Still trying to chip away at all this ice, but we're getting by. I threw you the co-host, Bridget. Oh, my goodness. My grandson just left, and he was not happy leaving Papaw and Memaw's house. Tears your heart out. All right.
0:37 So where were we? We are on chapter 18. Are we on chapter 18? I'm double checking. I think so. Yeah. Okay. Self-doubting myself here. All right. So October 1963. Talked about that, didn't we? The craft of intelligence. That's what we started with last time.
1:24 Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. That's a problem when I've already read the book. It all is familiar to me. All right. Here we go. The fingerprints of intelligence. That's where we're at. Lee Harvey Oswald was one of those bright, lost, fatherless boys whom society finds inventive ways of abusing.
1:57 Never knew his father, Robert, who died of a heart attack before he was born. His mother, Marguerite, suffered from high-strung disposition. She had three sons. When Lee was three years old, his mother placed him in a New Orleans orphanage known as Bethlehem Children's Home, where his two older brothers were already residing. Some of the children there fell.
2:26 prey to predatory members of the staff. This is eerily familiar. And Lee was said to have witnessed scenes of sexual exploitation at a very young age. Marguerite withdrew Lee from Bethlehem after a year and his two brothers came home several months later. But life in the Oswald family continued to be turbulent as Marguerite married for a third time and divorced. Put her older sons in the Mississippi
2:57 military school and moved Lee to Fort Worth with her. When Lee's older brothers fled the domestic chaos and enlisted in the military, he was left adrift. In the summer of 1952, when Lee was nearly 13, Marguerite packed up the two of them and headed to New York, where they moved in with her oldest son, John, who was now married and living in an apartment. Life was no more stable for Lee in New York. He cut class, was arrested for truancy.
3:27 Oswald was confined for three weeks in the city's youth house for psychiatric evaluation. Wonder what happened to him there. Dr. Hartoga, a German-trained physician who was chief psychiatrist at the youth house, found the intelligent and free-floating Oswald.
3:56 to be such an interesting case that he made the 13-year-old the subject of one of his seminars. Hartog's psychiatric profile of Oswald, which he would reprise for the Warren Commission a decade later, created the pathological framework by which the alleged assassin would be known for many years, almost like the entire thing was a setup.
4:26 Oswald, according to Hartogs, was an emotionally disturbed, mentally constricted youngster who's suspicious and defiant in his attitude towards authority. While a probation officer had found Lee to be bright and likable.
4:45 With a reasonable explanation for his truancy, he thought the school was a waste of time and other children made fun of him because of his Texas draw. Hartogs saw Oswald as a walking time bomb. The only reason he had not acted upon his hostility or aggression was that he was not yet developed in the courage it would take. Hartogs himself was a curious case, one of those intrepid.
5:15 explorers of the human mind who with government encouragement and funding had been willing to go to the scientific fringes. His resume, including working at the Allen Memorial Institute where the CIA did all of their experimentations, Hartogs went on to work with Dr. Sidney Malitz, the Malitz.
5:44 the New York State Psychiatric Institution, which received funding from the Army Chemical Corps and the CIA. So Oswald was under the care of a psychiatrist associated with the CIA. Malwitz is the guy who was involved in the LSD experiments. Later, after Hartogs was drummed out of psychiatry,
6:16 By a sex scandal, he turned himself into a hypnotist expert. That's very interesting. And of course, he played a key role in the Warren Commission. Young Oswald was a searching mind. After the teenager was handed a pamphlet on the New York street corner about Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, the spies condemned to death for passing atomic secrets to the Russians.
6:44 He was moved to learn more about communism, forcing himself to read Karl Marx. Oswald's dream of an exciting world beyond the hysteria of his life, where he could make himself into whoever he wanted to be.
7:05 After returning to New Orleans with his mother in 1954, the 15-year-old Oswald hooked up with the Civil Air Patrol, a group of young men interested in learning to fly. The military auxiliary group, which was founded in World War II to help defend America's coastline against German and Japanese attack, not only trained future pilots, it had patriotic Cold War values. Among its founders was David Harold Byrd.
7:35 a right-wing Texas oilman and defense contractor. Byrd also owned the Texas School Board Depository. What a small world. The Dallas warehouse where Oswald would be hired in the fall of 1963. In New Orleans, young Oswald's life began to intersect with older men who saw how he could be of use, including characters who would later have flamboyant walk-on roles.
8:05 in the DA Jim Garrison's doomed investigation of the Kennedy assassination, like David Ferry, the Eastern Airlines pilot who supervised the local Civil Air Patrol chapter, of which Oswald was a member. Suffering from, I don't know how you say this word, alopecia, where you lose your hair, Ferrari took to wearing an ill-fitting...
8:37 reddish wig and filling in his eyebrows with theatrical grease paint. Catholic educated and a homosexual, he led a secretive and tortured life. He liked to practice hypnotic techniques on the young cadets and lure them into a drug research program at Tulane University.
9:09 that he was connected with, and it too was connected to the CIA drug research. A passionate anti-communist, Ferry threw himself into the New Orleans steamy anti-Castro politics. After the Bay of Pigs debacle, he denounced Kennedy with a vicious abandon during a speech to a veterans group that he was asked to step down from the podium from.
9:39 In October of 56, Oswald, barely 17 and less than a month into his 10th grade year, followed the same path of his older brothers and enlisted in the Marines. The following year, he was sent to Arasugi, the naval air station outside of Tokyo, which served as a takeoff point for the CIA's top secret U-2 spy flight over the Soviet Union.
10:08 The base was also one of the centers for CIA LSD experimentation. The CIA memo titled Truth Drugs in Interrogation revealed the agency's practice of dosing agents who were marked for dangerous overseas missions. An operative who had tripped on acid before, the memo noted, would be less likely to crack up if suggested.
10:36 if subjected to hallucinogenic treatments by his captors. Some chroniclers of Oswald's life have suggested that he was one of the young Marines that was part of the test. Oswald's overseas tour of duty was a troubled one. He shot himself in the arm with a derringer, apparently by accident.
10:58 He was court-martialed twice, once for illegal possession of a firearm and the second time for pouring a drink over a sergeant in a bar brawl. He was also alleged to have had a nervous breakdown, but he also continued to be defined by his intelligence. He began expressing an interest in traveling to Russia. At some point, Oswald's growing
11:28 curiosity about the Soviet Union got the better of him. He transferred to the El Toro Air Station in Southern California in December of 58. He applied himself to learning Russian. J. Lee Rankin, the chief counselor for the Warren Commission, would later suggest that Oswald had received training at the Monterey School, which is the Defense Language Institute in California.
12:02 Oswald now launched on a grand adventure, not entirely of his own making. He quit the Marines, claiming falsely that his mother had been injured and needed his help. On September 20th, 1959, nine days after receiving his discharge, he left for Russia. He went to England first, which is very interesting. And he was there.
12:35 like almost being in briefed. He was there for the better part of three weeks. Then he flew to Helsinki. Oswald later told his wife Marina that he had taken a quote unquote hop, a US military transport flight to get to Finland, which was the easiest point of entry to the Soviet Union. There's one problem with that. He was no longer in the military and not eligible unless he was on orders.
13:05 to do that so the question becomes did he actually take a hop if he did he was still on active duty you don't get to do that in the inactive reserves which is where he would be you are not eligible to take hops there was a magical element to oswald's germany despite the fact that he was broke he had no money how did he travel he supposedly only had 200 in his
13:38 bank account when he left America. But he was put up in the best accommodations, well outside his ability to pay. In Helsinki, he stayed in two of the city's finest hotels. After checking out, he still had enough money to buy a ticket to get into Moscow via train. If Oswald was being moved by unseen hands,
14:07 His performance at the U.S. Embassy in Moscow, where he arrived on a Saturday morning in October, to theatrically announce his defection seemed particularly awkward. There was a scripted quality to the way he renounced his citizenship and declared his intention to turn over military secrets to the Soviets. The American consul, Richard Snyder, had the distinct feeling
14:34 that he was watching a part of a rehearsed show, like a pre-planned speech. But Oswald never seemed certain of the role he was playing during his two and a half years in the Soviet Union. He clearly was not a genuine defector, since the CIA and other U.S. intelligence agencies reacted to his provocation performance at the U.S. embassy with a studied nonchalant attitude.
15:03 even though he threatened to hand over classified information from his U-2 tour. It took a full year before Angleton's counterintelligence department finally bothered opening a standard file on him. Oswald did not seem particularly threatening to the Soviets either. While the KGB officers found him puzzling, they did not regard him as a CIA spy.
15:29 He did not snoop around secured areas, and despite his military service, the Russians learned that he was a terrible shot. When Oswald went on a hunting expedition with the factory that he worked in, in Minsk, he never could hit anything. A co-worker finally took pity on him and shot a rabbit for him. That's really weird. A KGB official described Oswald in one document as an empty person.
16:00 He was a type who could be used as a dangle by a sophisticated puppet master like Angleton, someone to flush out moles to find out what the Soviets knew about the U2 program. In the kabuki theater of Angleton's mind, people played parts whose significance only he understood. It was the paper record, the legend, that mattered most to Angleton.
16:28 Under the covert wizard's direction, a person's file sometimes took on a life of its own, full of action and dialogue that bore no relationship to their real life. If there was a real Oswald, the picture emerged in a flickering light, only to be seen by a few people. Nobody was in a better position to observe Lee as he went around his new life in Mingst.
16:58 where Soviet authorities had given him a sparsely furnished but comfortable apartment and a job at a radio factory. His buddy Ernst Titovich, a medical student who would become Oswald's best friend in Russia. The two men spent much of their free time together chasing women, playing records, and going to the opera, debating capitalism versus communism.
17:33 Titovets was better educated and more culturally sophisticated than his American friend. The Russian had to explain to Oswald who George Gershwin was. But in spite of the high school dropouts education gaps, his friend recognized that Oswald was a innately smart person. I had ample opportunity to observe during our debates how quickly he was to grasp.
18:01 a philosophical idea. He goes on to talk about how he was not a political extremist. He had very well-reasoned arguments. He was quoted as saying, Oswald did not produce the impression of a narrow-minded political zealot. He would not allow other people to push their ideas on him. As he prepared to return to America, Oswald began drafting his vision.
18:33 of an ideal society, one that combined the best features of capitalism and socialism. Nothing about Oswald that Tenevitz knew conformed to the profile of the Warren Report. He had been popular with women and he loved children. When tense confrontations arose with other men, like the time he got into an argument with a fellow worker at the shop machine, Oswald simply would go limp.
19:04 Even after Max grabbed a fistful of his shirt and shoved him against a steel pillar, Oswald simply stood quietly contemplating the man's rage. He did not respond. Oswald displayed a sharp awareness of the Soviet surveillance state that was indicative of his training. Oswald kept his apartment sparse, as if carefully refraining from giving any
19:33 identifying characteristics away. He would painstakingly examine his room for KGB bugs. He would play his record player louder in case someone was eavesdropping. Titovitz doubted that Oswald could have been an American spy. He seemed to show no interest in intelligence gathering during all of his years in Russia, and there is no evidence that he was turned by the KGB.
20:05 Oswald maintained his allegiance to his native country throughout his time in Russia. His loyalty was evident in the small gestures he made and the arguments. He was proud of his military service as a Marine. By 1961, when Oswald notified the U.S. Embassy in Moscow that he wanted to return to America, he was the subject of an enormous amount of secret paperwork in the deep.
20:33 recesses of the cia fbi state department and the office of naval intelligence years later richard skyker the republican senator from pennsylvania who was one of the first legislators to try to unravel the mystery of lee harvey oswald while serving on the church committee eloquently summed up the strange malitable life of oswald everything you look at with him there are fingerprints
21:03 of the CIA. Oswald's re-entry into the U.S. was absurdly easy considering he supposedly was a defector. He had tried to renounce his citizenship. He had declared his intentions to betray his country by handing over one of the most zealously guarded military secrets, the U-2. He had lived as if he were a Soviet citizen for well over two years. And to top it all off, he was bringing back a Russian wife, Marina.
21:32 who had been raised by an uncle who was actually a KGB officer. Tenevitz had taken an immediate disliking to Marina, whom he regarded as a foul-mouthed woman with whom Oswald was not compatible. But Oswald immediately fell under her spell. Lee and Marina were introduced at a dance at a trade union house, which is an entertainment center.
22:03 She was wearing a low-cut dress, and he immediately suspected she was KGB bait for Oswald. Tenevitz was told that she had been run out of the Leningrad by local authorities for prostitution. Taking into account her past history and her legal problems, he concluded she certainly had given the KGB a sure hold over her. A month after they met, Oswald proposed to her.
22:33 It was one more curious episode in Oswald's life, and yet none of his suspicious past or the bride caused U.S. authorities to blink an eye when he came back. He was not placed under detention. He was not subject to rigorous interrogation, nothing. At the height of the Cold War, when paranoia about spies, subversives, and brainwashed GIs was rampant throughout the U.S.,
23:02 Oswald and his Soviet wife waltzed right in to the country. The State Department even provided a $435 loan to help pay their travel expenses. When the cruise liner from Rotterdam carrying Oswald and their infant daughter docked at the Hoboken Pier on a rainy afternoon, June 13, 1962, there was not even any federal officers.
23:32 and they knew they were coming. Oswalds were greeted only by Travelers Aid Society caseworker, Spas Raken. Despite persistent rumors, Raken has always vehemently denied he worked for the CIA. But Raken, a Bulgarian refugee, who was an active anti-communist militant, was politically sophisticated enough to realize
24:01 that there was something strange about Oswald's uneventful return to the U.S. It was one more instance in Oswald's endlessly mystifying life when the dog did not bark. I wonder why there weren't any government officials to meet him, Rakin later recalled. In my mind, there was an idea that he could be a spy. I had suspicion, but I did not want to get further involved. The day after arriving, the Oswalds flew to Fort Worth.
24:31 where they moved into a temporary housing situation with Lee's brother, Robert. It would take nearly two weeks before the FBI got around to interviewing him. Over the next year and a half, the young man seemed to lead aimless existence, drifting to New Orleans, returning to Texas, supposedly taking a side trip to Mexico City as he jumped from one job to the next before finally ending up at the Texas School Book Department.
25:04 repository. But on closer examination, there was a method to his movement. While in Texas, Oswald and his family came under the watchful care of people who in turn were being carefully watched. He met quietly with a prominent CIA officer in Dallas. He staged public scenes in New Orleans and Mexico City that called attention to himself as being a militant, as he had done at the embassy in Moscow.
25:31 There were invisible wires attached to him everywhere. And some of the most intriguing ones led directly to Alan Dulles. Lee did not know who he was really servicing, Marina would say years later. He was manipulated and he got caught. He tried to play with the big boys. And then another Forrest Gump we always run into, George DeMorganshield, dropped into Oswald's threadbare lives in Fort Worth like a benefactor.
26:04 like a fairytale prince. It was Dallas Oil Society, and he was one of the European aristocrats in it. Baron D. Morgan Shield, as he enjoyed being called, was everything. Oswald was not. He showed up one afternoon on the doorstep of the Oswald's home, which he later described as a shack near Sears and Roebuck.
26:33 He was there, he said, on a mission of mercy, a white Russian immigrant of noble birth who had done well for himself in America, lending a hand to an impoverished young couple recently arrived from his native land. Now, I'm just going to say here for the audience, because we have new people every day, George DeMorganshield was one of Alan Dulles' best friends. They met in Azerbaijan.
27:03 specifically on a Baku oil field that was owned by the Nobel family, the same Nobel Peace Prize crazy family that's warmongers. And Nobel owned the oil field. Alan Dulles had traveled there to buy it while he was working for Sullivan and Cromwell on behalf of Standard Oil. And the meeting he had,
27:32 was with George's father, who was the caretaker of the oil field in Azerbaijan. So George at the time was 10 years old. When George later moved to the United States, his father asked Alan Dulles basically to look after him, and they were good friends from then on. Alan Dulles socialized with his father. He socialized with George.
28:02 So this isn't just somebody come randomly knocking on his door that's a fellow Russian. This is somebody that is very, very close to Alan Dulles. You need to know that. All right, DeMorganshield, a decadent old world guy, when it came to women, did not think much of Marina when he met her that day. He said that she was not particularly pretty and a lost soul.
28:33 But he immediately took a liking to Oswald because he had to. Over the following months, DeMorgan Shield and his equally sophisticated wife, Jean, or Jean Ann, a fellow high-born Russian whose father had run the Far East Railroad in China.
28:54 hovered over the Oswalds, finding lead jobs, installing the family in new living quarters, making sure that Marina's rotting teeth got fixed, and their baby got shots and doctor's appointments. You know, because we have to give babies shots. Taking the young couple to parties and intervening in their quarrels when things got tough. Later, when people remarked on how unlikely the friendship between the sophisticated baron and the high school dropout was,
29:23 DeMorgan Shield just shrugged it off. I believe it's a privilege of an old age not to give a damn about what other people think of you. I choose my friends just because they appeal to me and Lee did. And that's a big fat lie. DeMorgan Shield explained that he admired the young friend's rejection of the segregationist values of his native South.
29:51 as well as Oswald's complete disinterest in the rampant materialism of American life, unlike Marina, whom the Baron found crude and money-grubbing. I am not a turkey which lives only to become fat, Oswald announced one day. De Morgenschild responded, Lee, your way of life is so un-American, it scares me to think what may become of you. Yeah. Sweeping into Oswald's life when he was still grieving,
30:20 From the loss of Sergei, de Morgenschild came to think of Lee as almost as a son. Sergei was de Morgenschild's son. George came from the lost world of Russian cavalry officers and palace balls who had vaporized by war and revolution. His father,
30:53 had been a Tsarist official and a director of Nobel Oil. And Nobel Oil is what I was just telling you. His dad was a director. He was in Azerbaijan, met with Alan Dulles. When the Bolsheviks took power, his father was arrested and sentenced to Siberian work camp. But the family fled to Poland and de Morgenschild lost most of his old life.
31:23 luxuries, including their land and position, as well as George's mother who succumbed to typhoid fever. Their surviving members of their family, including George's older brother, Dimitri, developed a burning anti-communist rage. His father hated communism, George later said. That was his life's hatred. During World War II,
31:52 Poland became a bloodline in the fighting between Hitler and Stalin. His father fled west again to Nazi Germany, where he was welcomed as a comrade in the war to finish the Bolshevikism. His father was not a devoted Nazi, but he worked for him. George de Morgenschild, the Nazi. His father did work for the German Military Intelligence Agency. You know, Reinhard Galen.
32:26 Eastern Front? Otto Skorzeny? Ring any bells? George, he told his son, the Nazis are not good and Germany is going to lose the war, but I prefer to be in Germany than Soviet Russia. Meanwhile, Dmitry, the older son, George's older brother, preferred the German version of the family name, which was von Morgenschild, not D. Morgenschild.
32:58 He immigrated to America where he would prosper. One of the cultured white Russians who managed to work their way into the East Coast high society. Dimitri married Winifred Betty. Ma'am? Yeah? Can you check and make sure you're not muted over on Rumble? Sorry. Well, shoot. I'm sorry. Let me, no. Yeah, I think I had to.
33:26 redo my computer. I don't know why it keeps doing that. I had to refresh it. Sorry. Sure. Where was I? Where did SR go? He disappeared just a little bit ago. All right. Okay. Dimitri married Winifred Betty Hooker, a divorced Park Avenue socialite.
33:55 and became a prominent scholar, winning appointments in 1950 as the first chairman of Dartmouth's Russian Civilization Department and launching the Russian Review, an anti-communist journey. Dmitry moved in those circles of millionaires, academics, and spies. He and his wife counted de Beauvier, the parents of JFK's wife Jackie, as friends.
34:24 as well as the Bush family. They were close friends with the Bush family. The conservative author, William Henry Chamberlain, was a friend of Alan Dulles' with whom he worked on Radio Liberty Committee, one of the Cold War propaganda projects launched by Dulles and his associates in the post-world period. Dimitri himself became a CIA agent.
35:01 George DeMorgan Shield's brother became a CIA agent, asset, in April of 1950 when, according to the agency memo, he was approved as a contact for foreign intelligence purposes. Well, of course he was if he's working with Radio Liberty Committee because that's a CIA front. So George DeMorgan Shield does CIA stuff, knows the CIA director intimately.
35:32 And Oswald has CIA stuff written all over him. That's so weird. Dimitri had brought his younger brother to America in 1938, George, who stayed for a time with Dimitri and his wife in their Park Avenue apartment. And he also owned a Long Island estate. Envied their good life, but seemed uncertain on how George could achieve his own.
36:04 George lacked his brother's strong political convictions, veering between Nazi and communist sympathies early in his life and later between the paternalist and sentimental new left. George was also missing Dimitri's professional discipline and a sense of direction. After arriving in America, George tried his hand at selling sports clothes with his girlfriend at the time.
36:31 And when that venture flopped, he briefly became a perfume salesman. Later, he gave the insurance business a shot. Finally, George settled on oil, figuring that he could follow in his father's footsteps. He eventually wound up in Texas, where he got a petroleum geology degree from the University of Texas after cheating his way through his final exams.
36:57 A typical DeMorgenschild style, he charmed his way out of the trouble that he got in when he got caught. DeMorgenschild, that probably got him into the CIA right there. DeMorgenschild, who sported a year-round tan because he was either skiing or running around on a yacht, continued to rely on his good looks and old world charm to pursue his oil career.
37:26 He had a gift for bedding and wedding wealthy women, including an 18-year-old Palm Beach debutante, and then tapping their family funds to launch his various oil ventures. The second of his four wives, Phyllis, was a little bit wild, very attractive and adventurous.
37:51 The Baron told the Warren Commission that she had a habit of walking around the rugged oil fields in Colorado Rockies, where the DeMorgan Shields were working at the time, wearing a bikini among all of the men. Albert Jenner Jr., the Warren Commission co-counsel in charge of questioning DeMorgan Shield, displayed a keen interest in his active love life. The Baron conceded that he was something of a ladies' man.
38:23 You know I'm not a queer, he said, although some people accused me even of that. DeMorgan Shield could also be very cruel. Dorothy, his teenage bride, later said that he manhandled her, once kicking her in the stomach and striking her in the head with a hammer. He also enjoyed kissing and pawing other women right in front of her. The baron's sexual habits were abominable, she said.
38:51 None of the DeMorgan Shields oil ventures paid off, and he was soon adrift and trying to roll the dice one more time. His true skill was cultivating the wealthy and well-connected, you know, like a spy. One of his first jobs in the oil business was working for Pentepic Oil, the petroleum company founded by the father of William F.
39:22 Buckley Jr., Mr. CIA himself. Crazy. Later, DeMorgan Shield proved adept at working his connections in the Dallas Petroleum Club. It was a hotbed of anti-Kennedy hatred, whose leading members, including Clint Merkinson, where's Illini? He's not here today. He brought him up yesterday. Senior and H.L. Hunt.
39:58 and Sid Richardson were tied to Dulles, LBJ, and J. Edgar Hoover. The Petroleum Club also counted D.H. Byrd, the Texas Book Depository owner, and Mayor Cabell, brother of Dulles' former CIA deputy, as members. DeMorganshield put Byrd's wife on the board.
40:28 of the charity that he had set up to fund cystic fibrosis, which is how his son died. It all came together at the Petroleum Club. The deals, the works, the darker stuff over drinks in wood-paneled rooms. Also, it was located downtown in the elegant Baker Hotel. The international oil business and U.S. intelligence establishment overlapped everywhere.
40:58 And DeMorganshield soon found himself with a foot in each camp. He alluded cryptically to this early in the Warren Commission testimony when he mentioned that he was involved in a controversial business, an international business. But Commission Attorney Jenner quickly steered the conversation away from that because they didn't want any of that to come out. In the late 1950s, DeMorganshield stopped drilling dry wells in Texas and Orlando.
41:29 in colorado and started spending more time overseas you know like he would if he was working for the cia he became a consultant on petroleum projects in latin america gosh who was working on them nelson rockefeller europe and africa huh all of the hot spots in the 1950s his work sometimes took him to cold war hot spots such as yugoslavia
42:00 which kicked him out because they said he was a spy, and Cuba. When he returned from his trips, DeMorganshield was debriefed by the CIA field agent J. Walton Moore. The Baron always insisted that he was not a CIA agent, though his denials were convoluted. Quote, I cannot say that I never was a CIA agent. I cannot prove it, unquote.
42:31 He would later go on to say in his unpublished memoirs, I cannot prove either that I ever was. Nobody can. While it was probably true that DeMorganshield was not an official agent, he was most certainly an asset gathering confidential information on his business trips under the CIA called commercial cover. DeMorganshield was not motivated by.
42:56 any particular thing. He was not like his brother, whom he described almost bemusedly as really anti-communist. The Baron did not believe in anything either religiously or politically, said his Dallas neighbor, a fellow white Russian named Igor Voskinen. De Morgenshield believed only in himself. He had learned from his Ruth
43:23 a rootless, stateless existence to ingratiate himself with whomever had power or money. He was at your service. If he could also serve himself, all the better. He wasn't an oil man, although he pretended to be, but having friends in the spy world opened doors for him, especially overseas. So it was not surprising when DeMorgan Shields showed up at the Oswald's front door that summer afternoon in the company of a man.
43:53 called Colonel Lawrence Orlov, O-R-L-O-V, a CIA informant who was a friend and a handball partner of J. Walton Moore, the CIA. Again, why do we got CIA people in the U.S.? DeMorganshield himself had also become friendly with Moore when the CIA domestic contact agent
44:23 began debriefing him after his overseas trips. The Baron thought of his CIA handler as a very nice fellow. We got along. Moore, the son of missionary parents, had been born and raised in China, like DeMorganshield's wife, Jean, who I invited him and his wife to the house, and they got along fabulously. I used to see Mr. Moore occasionally for lunch. After Oswald arrived in Texas,
44:50 From Russia, it was Moore's turn to invite DeMorganschild to lunch. The CIA man had a request for his Russian-born friend. DeMorganschild was apparently tasked with keeping an eye on the young couple, a job he performed until the following spring when he and his wife left on business to go to Haiti. He had CIA business in Haiti. Lee was enthralled with DeMorganschild.
45:20 He was like a father figure. The Baron grilled him about his life in Minxed as if he was conducting an agency debriefing. But Lee didn't seem to mind. He glowed under the older man's attention. Oswald would do anything that DeMorganshield told him to do, observed the Baron's son-in-law, Gary Taylor, who lived in Dallas with DeMorganshield's daughter, Alexandra.
45:46 Marina Oswald later agreed that DeMorganshield and her husband had been very good friends and that the Baron was a good humanitarian who had been interested in other people. Yeah, not so much. But in an interview with FBI agents after the assassination, Marina added a provocative remark about the two men's relationship. Oswald was somewhat afraid of him, who was big in stature and talked very loudly. In the end,
46:14 No Warren Commission witness betrayed Oswald more deeply than George DeMorganshield. His testimony before the commission, the lengthiest of anyone's, did more to convict Oswald in the eyes of the press and the public than anyone else. He tied Oswald to the alleged murder weapon, telling the commission about the day when an agitated Marina showed him and his wife the rifle that he had stashed in a closet.
46:42 And most important, Morgan Schill gave the Warren Commission the motive for killing Kennedy that the panel sorely lacked. Oswald, the baron said, was insanely jealous of an extraordinarily successful man who was young, attractive, and had a beautiful wife, had all the money in the world, and was a world figure. And poor Oswald was just the opposite. He had nothing. He had a bitchy wife. He had no money.
47:12 and a miserable failure in everything he did. Shooting Kennedy, he concluded, would be a memorable way for him to become a hero. DeMorganshield had enough of a conscience to feel uneasy about his Judas-like performance before the commission, and as if to make amends, he offered contradictory testimony about Oswald. Quote, but what I wanted to underline that was always amazing to me.
47:42 that as far as I'm concerned, Oswald was an admirer of President Kennedy's, unquote. During a conversation they had about JFK, acknowledged DeMorganshield, Oswald described him as an excellent president, young, full of energy, and full of good ideas. Oswald's own words about Kennedy completely erased the motive that DeMorganshield had given the panel.
48:09 But the Warren Commission simply glided over all of the inconsistencies in DeMorganshield's testimony and highlighted just the beginning. It was the baron's unfounded and irresponsible remarks about the crazy lunatic Oswald, a man supposedly driven to kill out of resentment, that struck and stuck with the commission. DeMorganshield took the young man with whom he had spent hours discussing politics and offering advice.
48:38 the man who hung on his every word and threw him under the wheels. On the morning of April 22nd, 1964, when he appeared at the VA building in D.C., where the Warren Commission set up shop, DeMorganshield was not in possession of his customary, smooth, self-composed demeanor. The months after the assassination had been extremely difficult. He had been summoned to the U.S. Embassy in Port-au-Prince and treated like he was a suspect in the case.
49:08 His business affair in Haiti began to suffer as rumors spread about the mysterious Russian who had been Oswald's closest confidant. It is highly unlikely that de Morgenschild knew in advance about how Oswald was to be used on November 22nd. This sort of messy business was not part of his portfolio, but he was sharp enough to quickly connect the dots. De Morgenschild was not certain how he would come out of the Warren Commission. Would his career be ruined?
49:38 Would he be put on trial or did he face even more dire consequences? America was not the Soviet Union, but the Baron had learned from his worldwide wanderings that power was capable of anything, especially Alan Dulles. De Morgenshield was quite anxious when he entered the hearing room that morning, his eyes fixed immediately on Alan Dulles. The spymaster did not interfere in the proceedings that day. He just observed Morgenshield.
50:07 Letting Jenner handle the interrogation, but the Baron found Dulles' silence unnerving. He was there as a distant threat, de Morgenschild later wrote in his memoirs, a provocative remark that he did not explain further. Was the near presence of Dulles looming over the proceedings a reminder to mind his words? He described it as a grueling exercise in intimidation.
50:38 DeMorgenshield later claimed Jenner put him on stern notice. We know more about your life than you do. So answer all of my questions truthfully and sincerely, Jenner warned him. Over the next two days, Jenner switched between chilling aggressiveness and flattery as he worked over DeMorgenshield. Afterwards, Jean DeMorgenshield followed her husband to the witness table, bringing along their terriers as support animals.
51:07 When the DeMorgan Shields interrogation was over, the Baron told his wife, it was an unpleasant experience, but in Russia, we'd have been sent to Siberia. Jenner raked over the most embarrassing details of the DeMorgan Shields' private life, but he stayed resolutely clear of his CIA ties, of course.
51:28 The Baron realized just how thoroughly the commission had penetrated his personal life when Dulles got his hands on private correspondence that de Morgenschild had exchanged with the First Lady's mother, Janet, following the Kennedys' assassination. After divorcing Jackie's rakish father, Black Jack Bouvier, Janet had married Hugh Hossenkloss, whose family fortune derived
51:58 from his grandfather's Standard Oil partnership with John D. Rockefeller. DeMorganshield was forced by the Warren Commission to read out loud from his own letters to Janet Atkinsloss, whom he had known from the time that her daughter Jackie was a girl romping on the sands of Long Island Gold Coast.
52:22 Jenner put the Baron on the spot, asking him to explain why he had questioned Oswald's guilt in one letter that he had sent to Jackie Kennedy's mother. Somehow, he wrote Mrs. Ochencloth three weeks after the assassination, quote, I still have lingering doubts, notwithstanding all the evidence of Oswald's guilt, unquote. Since his letter
52:47 obviously undermined his own testimony about Oswald as a crazy lunatic who killed the president, DeMorganschild was put in an awkward position to clarify. After DeMorganschild concluded their Warren Commission ordeal, they were invited by Janet Osenkloss and her husband to their home in Georgetown. Relaxing with old friends in a comfortable splendor of her home, the Baron and his wife
53:14 felt confident enough to voice their true feelings about the assassination. By now, it was dawning on the couple that the Warren Commission was not interested in the real story of the president's murder. They suspected that the true purpose of the investigation was to waste taxpayer money and to distract attention from the American people of who was involved in the assassination. That's an actual quote.
53:41 Jean de Morgenshield risked upsetting the symmetry of the gathering by directly challenging Mrs. Osenkloss. Why don't you, the relative of our beloved president, you who are so wealthy, why don't you conduct a real investigation as to who the rat was that killed him? Mrs. Osenkloss regarded Jean coldly, quote, but the rat was your friend Lee Harvey Oswald, unquote.
54:11 She was in no mood to be lectured by the friends of Oswald. Upstairs in her attic, Mrs. Auchincloth was still keeping the blood splattered pink Chanel suit her daughter had worn in Dallas. Jackie Kennedy's mother had no doubt arrived at her conviction about Oswald's guilt with the help of her neighbor and friend, Alan Dulles. Her husband, Hugh,
54:37 who had served in the Navy intelligence before pursuing his investment banking career, and Dulles were from the same world. The Auchinclosses, in fact, had more in common politically with Dulles than they did with the late president. When DeMorgan Shield had bumped into JFK's mother-in-law on a plane trip in the 1960 campaign, he was surprised to hear her tell him,
55:02 that she was a staunch Nixon supporter and that Jack did not stand a chance. It was a remarkable scene at the Auchincloss Mansion that spring evening in 1964. Fresh from their cowardly performance before the Warren Commission, the DeMorgan Shields were now urging JFK's in-laws, who had never supported him politically, to show some moral courage and use their wealth to solve the crime. Despite how his wife had been rebuffed,
55:31 DeMorgan, she'll continue to argue the point with Mrs. Ashencloth. Janet, you were JFK's mother-in-law and I'm a complete stranger, but I would spend my own money and lots of time to find out who the real assassins or conspirators were. Don't you want any further investigation? You have infinite resources. She was still unmoved. Jack is dead and nothing will bring him back.
55:57 Finally, as the discussion reached an emotional crescendo, the two women fell into each other's arms and cried. Aww. As if the evening was not unsettling enough, at some point, Dulles himself showed up. When did Morgan Shield is there at the Ashencloss house? Yeah. Yeah. Just come on over. As if they were still in the hearing room. Did the accused assassin have any reason to hate Kennedy, the astute Dulles?
56:31 as the Baron described him, knew that this was the most mixed up part of de Morgenschild's testimony and it was imperative that he fix it. If the commission were to succeed in portraying Oswald as a lone nut, but de Morgenschild again frustrated Dulles, giving him the answer Dulles didn't want to hear. No, he said, Oswald did not hate Kennedy. In fact, he was an admirer of the president.
56:56 At this point, Dulles would have certainly noted that despite his accommodating performance before the Warren inquiry, George DeMorganshield might pose a further problem. Later that evening, as the DeMorganshields took their leave, Janet Auchincloss took the Baron aside. Here's what she said. Incidentally, my daughter Jacqueline never wants to see you again because you were close to her husband's assassin, unquote.
57:24 It's her privilege, DeMorgan Schill said. It was the beginning of another kind of exile for the ruthless cosmetolitan who would find himself increasingly banished from high society world that he depended on for contacts and contracts. It all seemed grossly unfair to the Baron. His only sin
57:46 had been to believe his CIA friend Moore when Moore told him that Oswald was merely a harmless eccentric who needed some friendly supervision. DeMorganshield prided himself on his worldliness, but in the end, he realized he had been used, just like Oswald, who after being taken into police custody, had shouted out, I'm a patsy. DeMorganshield, too, had been set up to play a role to incriminate Oswald, and like Oswald, he didn't realize it until it's too late.
58:15 In the last years of his life, de Morgenschild sought atonement for his sins. To make it right with the ghost of Lee Harvey Oswald, he wrote his memoirs, I Am a Patsy, an outspoken form from the heart whose raw Russian syntax de Morgenschild did not bother to polish. He apologized for the damage he had caused to the memory of Lee Harvey Oswald, his friend.
58:42 He proclaimed Oswald's innocent and took back the damning things that he told the Warren Commission. In truth, Lee was not jealous of the Kennedys' wealth and did not envy their social positions. Of that, I am sure, to him, wealth and society were a joke. DeMorgan Shield had described Oswald to the Warren Commission as a semi-educated hillbilly, someone you can't take seriously, you just laugh at. But now, he wrote of his late friend, original mind and nonconformist thinking.
59:12 Along with Titovitz, Chronicle, I Am a Patsy stands out as the most convincing portrait we have of Oswald. DeMorgan Shields' manuscript, which his wife gave to the House Select Committee on Assassinations after his death, remained unpublished but is available online. Oswald came across the Baron's memoir as a budding...
59:51 A quote from the book. Under dictatorships, people are enslaved, but they know it. Here, the politicians constantly lie to people and they become immune to those lies because they have the privilege of voting. But voting is rigged.
1:00:08 And democracy here is a gigantic profession of lies and clever brainwashing. That's from Oswald. He knew, he knew. Oswald did worry about police state surveillance tactics. And he believed that America was turning more militaristic as increasingly there was interference in people's personal affairs. He also predicted that someday there would be a coup in America.
1:00:44 The United States was a country debased by war, assassination, government corruption, and constitutional subversion. My wife and I, this is DeMorgan Schill talking, spent many agonizing moments thinking of Lee, ashamed that we did not stand up more decisively. But who would have listened to us at the time and who would have published anything true and favorable about him? DeMorgan Schill's life took on a frantic quality near the end.
1:01:10 as he began working on his memoirs and trying to make sense of the entangled relationship with Oswald. In September 1976, he mailed a distraught handwritten letter to an old friend, George Bush, who was then serving as the CIA director in the Ford administration. DeMorganshield knew Bush from prep school at Phillips Academy, when Bush was a roommate of Dimitri von Morganshield.
1:01:41 Now the Baron was appealing to the CIA director's sense of family and class. I guess he didn't know him very well. DeMorganshield claimed that he and his wife were the targets of harassment. Our phone has been bugged and we're followed everywhere. We're being driven to insanity. DeMorganshield thought their surveillance campaign began after he suffered the death of his second child, his daughter. And he was behaving like a damn fool.
1:02:12 because of his grief. He began to write stupidly and unsuccessfully about Lee Harvey Oswald, DeMorganshield told Bush. And I must have angered a lot of people, I do not know. But to punish an elderly man like myself and my highly nervous and sick wife is really too much. The Baron ended the forlorn plea. Could you do something to remove the net around us? This will be my last request for help and I will not annoy you anymore.
1:02:42 Bush sent back a sympathetic reply, assuring DeMorganshield that he was not the target of federal authorities and blaming his troubles on renewed media interest in the Kennedy assassination and journalist. Yeah, yeah. By the following March, the 65-year-old DeMorganshield was separated from his wife, struggling with depression and living with family friends in Palm Beach. His testimony was once again in demand.
1:03:11 this time at the House Select Assassinations Committee, whose investigators were showing a keener interest in the truth than the Warren panel had. On the morning of March 29, 1977, committee investigator Gaten Fonzie rolled up outside the Beach House, and when told that DeMorgan Shield was not at home, the congressional staffer left his card with the Baron's daughter, Alexandra.
1:03:39 Early that evening, after returning to Miami's motel room, Fonzie got a call from Bill O'Reilly, who was working in those days as a Dallas TV reporter. O'Reilly had some stunning news. George DeMorganshield had been found dead at home, his head blown off. Fonzie's card was found in the dead man's pocket.
1:04:10 O'Reilly's 2012 Killing Kennedy book, O'Reilly exaggerated his personal involvement in the drama, placing himself on DeMorgan Shields' doorstep as the shotgun blast rang out. A subsequent news report pointed out that O'Reilly was in Dallas. He was not in Miami Beach. Why would he lie about that? The Palm Beach Corner ruled.
1:04:40 Of course that DeMorgan Shield died by suicide, but his violent demise incited heated speculation. His death came amid a flurry of other sudden exits during the season of renewed congressional inquiry into the Kennedy case. Witnesses succumbed to heart attacks, suicides, or were dispatched in various dramatic ways, as in the case of the mafia CIA Johnny Roselli.
1:05:09 who got chopped up and stuffed into an oil drum and dumped in Biscayne Bay. Some investigators felt the rising mortality rate around Kennedy witnesses was connected to the creeping dread that somebody was going to find out. What really happened? Was DeMorganshield murdered before he could begin to talk to the House Assassination Committee, or did he take his own life in atonement for what he had done? We'll never know. Okay.
1:05:41 That's a good place to stop as we go on to a new person. I'm surprised Bill O'Reilly coming up in that. That's kind of a, didn't see that one coming, but I should have, you know, they don't make it unless they're, you got to remember, they aren't going to make it unless they have some connection. I was shocked by that myself. Yeah. That was a very interesting twist. Didn't see that one coming, but.
1:06:21 Yeah. But like I said, should have, because I mean, anytime they're going to get any airplay, they're only going to get airplay if they are willing to play the role. Yeah. Play the role. In some capacity, you know? Yeah. Megan, go ahead. Colonel, I have to apologize to you. About what? This will be a two-parter. This will be a two-parter. Okay. First off,
1:06:55 Remember when I first started showing up to your little book club? And it ain't so little, let me say. I was a little salty about all this information that you were exposing. I remember. And I hit you pretty hard. And for that, I apologize. You don't have to apologize. I understand. I couldn't believe any of this when I first found it either.
1:07:24 I got you. Yeah. And to be honest, can I just add one context here? The reason why the colonel and I hooked up is I initially, when I found her back on true social, before we ever came to X, before we ever went to Rumble, and she was talking about things I thought could not possibly be true, and I was trying to go behind her and fact check her.
1:07:51 And the only problem was I kept finding she was absolutely true, if not making light of it. Well, not making light of it. No, but Bridget, yes, Bridget would find three other things.
1:08:06 Because I have a limited amount of time in a day. And that's how her and Cousin It and I became a team because we just started dumping stuff in a signal folder on each topic that we were uncovering because it was so much. And I welcome anybody. I tell people all the time, fact check me. I don't care. Good luck on finding it if you don't use the index because you won't. But yeah.
1:08:36 I love it. And I understand. I was very upset at the very beginning of this. I didn't want to believe any of it. But I also knew when I was going through this and looking at foreign papers and they're reporting what is written in these books, almost word for word, that we'd been lied to. But I appreciate the sentiment, Megan Uke.
1:09:01 Go ahead. You're very welcome. And like I said, I've been making amends in X spaces here for some other posts that I or some other comments that I have made. And what this leads me into is I think it is very important for an individual such as yourself or multiple individuals to start bringing this to light while you're using books.
1:09:26 Some of us don't have the time or the patience to read through a book. Right. But it's bringing to light what these people, these evil, sadistic individuals have done throughout history. And in this day and age, every single individual on this platform, every single individual on Rumble,
1:09:55 Anywhere you want to go find information. We have the most amazing technology today. We don't have to wait until after someone dies to find out what their life was like. Yeah. And I think the more people that finally start to realize the amount of technology that they have access to, and you can fact check people on the fly now. Yeah. All you have to do, you can go into any chat GPT.
1:10:24 any of that stuff. And within 10 seconds, you can fact check somebody if they say something. So I would, I would not recommend you use chat GBT because it will lie to you about anything I talk about. And I would also don't ever fact check me with WikiLeaks because I will wipe you up. Go ahead. Yeah. Well, and what my point was though, you have so many resources available to you.
1:10:54 You can't just use one platform or one stream of information. You have to cross-reference everything. And nowadays, the nefarious people, it's starting to come out. You can't get away with what you used to be able to get away with for years and years and years on end. And I think this is going to make a major difference in the way this country moves forward.
1:11:22 Because when enough people get pissed off to finally go check and see if they want to verify the information they're being shoved down their throat, we're going to have the opportunity to slam every single ass munch out here on the planet. We're done. We don't have to put up with it anymore. You know what I'm saying? No, and that's kind of my mission is to give you guys the bullets in your belt to have the information.
1:11:52 to push back on narratives. That is my ultimate goal in this whole endeavor and why I spend so many hours doing this. I'm just one voice. It is greatly appreciated. Yeah, we're a collective. Thank you, thank you, thank you. Sure, sure. I'll land there, thank you. We're a collective large voice. We all have individual small voices, but collectively we have a very big voice.
1:12:22 And that's kind of what I had hoped to do with all of this. So let me just give you guys a pointer that I've noticed makes a huge difference. So if you go into Grok and you ask it a question, you can watch it think and look at what sources it's using. And despite the fact that Elon Musk plugs Grokopedia or whatever that is,
1:12:51 primarily uses sources like the New York Times and Wikipedia. You can watch it doing it. So what I have started doing is if I want to know something like about a person or a topic, I ask it to go look up books. Any book that this person or this operation or this, that, or the other is written about,
1:13:20 and provide the reference as you're telling me what it says about the people. And I found that extraordinarily more helpful than just asking it for a biography on someone because basically all it's gonna give you is the Wikipedia bullshit. But if you ask it to go look at all foreign sources of news
1:13:50 where this person's name has come up. And then of course you can look at the way, and there's some outliers when you do that. So I'll get information back like from five book authors and four of the five will describe the person kind of cohesively where it's consistent.
1:14:13 Then there will be this one outlier and you look up the author and you find out, you know, he's somewhere associated. He's a Skull and Bones graduate or whatever. And so you can just discard that because obviously they're telling you a story and not the story. And the other four is probably more in the mean of average of what has been documented.
1:14:39 So you can also ask it if it's in a book reference. You can ask if the passage where he's talked about is footnoted, and it will give you the footnote, too, for you to be able to look up. And that's just another tactic you guys can use when you're researching that doesn't hold you captive to, you know, narrative building. And that was a point I was trying to make, Colonel. Yeah.
1:15:07 Regardless, you can ask a surface level question all day long. People don't realize using like the bullying process we used to use back with Google and everything to get more, more, more information, more concise information that you're looking for. Yeah. And just today. You're doing that a lot better than I did. Yeah. And just today I was asking, I don't even remember this morning, I was looking something up and it started dribbling out. Grok started dribbling out undocumented.
1:15:37 migrant and I'm like what the hell they're not undocumented grok it's called an illegal alien and he's like oh yeah yeah you're right it's alien in the legal description and blah blah blah I'm like stop being politically correct I argue with grok a lot
1:15:58 I've had a little fun with Grok myself. I've locked it up a few times, like you've expressed it. Oh, yeah, I've crashed it multiple times. And when it takes more than a minute or two minutes for it to come up with an answer for a question, I just love it because I know that old Elon or whoever's down there running that program is just...
1:16:21 human because it's like the fred flintstone ask a simple question yeah it's like fred flintstone running on the wheel no i don't want to give you that answer ap jonas over on rumble yes don't ask your ex-sister-in-law i love it yeah you never want their opinion of you that's hilarious again like i said thank you thank you thank you
1:16:47 Sure. You have set my mind at ease a whole lot more. I really appreciate it. And I needed that. Sure. No problem. All right. I'm out of here. Thank you. Have a phenomenal afternoon. All right. I don't see any more hands. Okay. Oh, all along. It wouldn't be a show without you talking. Go ahead. That's what my mom said in utero. And also where she has to be buried 12 feet under.
1:17:20 Um, Colonel, I just wanted to mention, you know, this, you know, intriguing family, the DeMorin Shields and how, you know, on the one hand, they're like right in the middle of World War One when there's there's this division seemingly in the oil, like the oil cartel, like the seven, the so-called big seven sisters between, I think, Shell versus the standard.
1:17:51 and british on the other hands but it was related to baku yes and um so it's how interesting that de morenchild's family the guy who's meeting the son who's meeting oswald in dallas which is full of white full of white russians yes it's not an accident that's not that's that's a double geography accident and um so basically at the same time you had
1:18:22 You know, there's this interesting subset in, you know, the diplomacy. Some of the diplomats who were like at the outskirts of Versailles, you know, there's this counterintuitive like Treaty of Rapallo. They call it the Treaty of Rapallo, 1922, where you have like, even though it's the Soviet Union, right? They're making a deal with like this guy, Walter Ratnow, who's like a social democrat in Germany. But at the same time.
1:18:51 Even though and he later gets assassinated, like and like one of the key early Weimar Weimar assassinations. But at the same time, there's also like right wing elements in the like old time. Give me the old time religion. Prussian MF says it were in the German army that are wanting to have their own relationships with the Russian army, even though it's now become Bolshevik. Right. And these diplomatic shenanigans are going on. You can like the book by Kugin.
1:19:20 um uh is is good on that and um also you get some of that also in the in albarelli's road to dallas and so um how weird it is that demortian's so typical of this this family with you know both right-wing white russian connections into the post-soviet post-revolutionary russian army and um you're like why the you know why
1:19:50 This is like, it's a certain kind of contradictory raw materials of so good at Gladio operations, including the ones that happened in Dallas, Texas. If you know what I'm saying. I do. Because, and so it's just, it's how, you know. So let me. How intriguing it is. Let me say that a different way. That Des Moines should be at the core of both like the efforts to maintain like oil cartel unity during the tricky, trickiest moment of World War I.
1:20:19 Right when Wilson was flipping and sending his Bush-Baker for Houston cronies literally that early in World War I to Baku. How intriguing that DiMorici would be at the center of that and also setting up Oswald in Dallas when he gets back. So let me say that a different way. And there were Germans in Dallas too. I'm sorry. I apologize. No, no, that's fine. I've been roughing. Let me say that a different way for you. Because it's an excellent point. I just want to like.
1:20:48 slam it the the proverbial yankees and cowboys in one family dimitri de morgan shield is in the yankee camp and the george de morgan shield is in the cowboy camp right yeah it's like how that's the very essence of the bush family itself yes they're connecticut yankees yes yes
1:21:20 Well, isn't that special? But you see that same link up in the Boston Club in New Orleans when they're framing Oswald with, whatchamacallit, there's that East Coast, you know, first Boston connection that's the essence of United Fruit Company, you know, Allen Dulles and CIA, and they're using, they see New Orleans as kind of like their grain pipe where the Mississippi hits, you know, all of the trade on the Atlantic at the Gulf, and that's like a merger of what would later be the
1:21:50 Like the Western factions of the Republicans with the East Coast, European-centered, you know, richer Democrats. Well, it also brings in the mafia piece of it because the mafia boss of New Orleans ran Houston, which is where the Bush was. Right, right. Yeah. So it's pivotal that you would use New Orleans because all of your control mechanisms are there. Right.
1:22:19 And it's not the first time that you're going to use New Orleans for that because they did that in the Aaron Burr conspiracy, which is not called a conspiracy theory. Funny how that works. Yeah. New Orleans has been involved in many, many nefarious things. Right. It's just going to happen just because of its geography. Correct. And they were involved in the MLK one. So, yeah.
1:22:46 They are a hotspot for bad shit, just like Miami. Right. And then look and look at how and after that guy from Inca, the Ed Butler guys, you know, does part of the setting up Oswald work in New Orleans. As you mentioned, he's like the day after the RFK assassination. What a coinkidinky. He's there in Long Beach, California, holding a conference, blaming it on Fidel Castro. And then he is. Well.
1:23:14 You know, there's an article that I'll put in this bubble about this guy, the guy Carpenter. I know the historian Carpenter at Loyola University in New Orleans. It's you've got to read this. OK, it's a fascinating article on it. And it's like CIA doesn't need to build from scratch. They can just link in. Yes. What they call industrial intelligence. Yes. And just. Well, I would argue that I would argue that most of their.
1:23:42 industrial intelligence is directly connected to the CIA because that's where they retire to, just like Kermit Roosevelt. They just take their government pension and then they go place themselves or they're placed into these corporate entities to further continue doing the same thing that they were doing. They're quote unquote retired.
1:24:10 Right, and also, you know, the O'Reilly Coffee Company, the banana companies in New Orleans. All in New Orleans. You know, you have a total revolving door between private corporations and CIA. Yep, that's what those trademarks in Chicago and New Orleans are all about. Yeah. I don't know who was next. Stella, go ahead. Hi, thank you again for having such an amazing space.
1:24:37 These parasites are going to be hopeful. Yeah. Anyway, I tagged you guys in a few things and wanted to maybe if you guys end up doing a space later another day or whatever with this Las Vegas stuff, I'd really appreciate it because I see false flag all over the place and it's kind of crazy. Okay. I'll look at it. Thank you, Stellar. Travis, go ahead. I just wanted to say Gronk hasn't responded.
1:25:12 to me in quite a while because the last time it did, I told it not to quote Mockingbird Media to use actual sources. There's declassified CIA documents that totally contradict what it's saying, proving that it's Mockingbird Media. And then I attached the video of Tulsi Gabbard.
1:25:42 saying that it has been declassified and it is ongoing. So it hasn't responded to me after that. You broke it. It doesn't have any non-Mockingbird sources. I know. I have had some luck when you give it specific directions.
1:26:10 More often than not, I get the infamous little circle of I'm thinking, I'm thinking, I'm thinking, and then it never answers you. All along, go ahead. Yeah, Colonel, I wanted to just mention something else that you mentioned later on. I didn't hear the whole show because my phone was going in and out. I'm on the silly subway. But relating to the 1977 death of George DeMorenshield in.
1:26:44 Florida, which, you know, that's fascinating on many, many different levels, right? Because it's like, on the one hand, it is basically 1977, it's the year of legislative oversight of CIA. I mean, there's a four-year period in there, but that's the very height of it. And then things got out of control, and literally the CIS professor, whatchamacallit, at the University of California, Davis says, he just says, like,
1:27:11 The CIA worked through New York Times and Washington Post to get – all they have to do is replace the chief counsel on the House of Elections. They don't have to replace everyone because that's the steering wheel. Just like in the Warren Commission, all they had to do was replace the chief counsel, and that's why – which is alluded to in the – I've told you a billion times, but it's significant. In the movie The Runaway Jury, what's his name? His name is Rankin. That's the message.
1:27:37 The CIA is running the whole thing, and the Gene Hackman character is Alan Dulles, basically, running something. But anyway, it's similarly – and so what's so interesting is that it came up very provably and with tape-recorded proof that George – that Bill O'Reilly, who we know is there trying to – a number of different functions, one of which is obviously obscuring stuff.
1:28:04 But he did say some interesting things that were valid around 92. But nevertheless, because he was with Channel 6 in Dallas at that time. Yep, yep. And in the 70s. And so they have him saying that he was in Dallas for the morning show, literally opening the door or hearing the shots on the footpath to the morning show. And then they clearly show that he was not even in that town floor, whatever it's called.
1:28:31 where de morin was killed and was was in the studio in dallas at channel six at the time making that statement so what's so interesting is like this is a time where it's interfering with dallas morning news articles in the 1970s this is not you know fringe it it would be considered what today we would call msm but it's like you know it's back when the dailies had actual news bureaus and um
1:28:55 It's back when the Detroit News was putting that stuff out about Jack Ruby by South Panther that has like some WTF stuff. And it's like, we can't believe that that was in Daily Papers in the 70s when it was. And so what's the point here? The fake left had a very interesting reaction to this because this guy on The Young, there's a show called The Young Turks. It's like it gets about, it has an audience of sometimes around 500 million.
1:29:23 500,000, but usually more like about 70,000. And, but it is a significant influence on the fake left, but they're like the part that's close. And then there's other actions of the fake left that are seen. And it's so you can use. Okay. Well, anyway, you're fading out. Yeah. It's just, can you hear me now? Yeah. I'll try to, I'm blathering on here, but the point being that it's clear that
1:29:54 Like, they use a riff between the Young Turks guy who was saying, look, this proves DeMora was lying on Bill O'Reilly, which is a true and valid point. It should have been made by everyone to, you know, expose the mass media, like the big media. If there's actually a lot of media, it should have taken down big media with that, but it didn't. And then some comedian who was attacking Jimmy Dore is like too close to the Democrats, starts making fun of it. They have it.
1:30:22 a base like fight on youtube it's like 500 000 youtube versus 500 000 youtube this is like this is how they split audiences like that you know yes this is a very significant information that bill o'reilly is flat out lying yet he's getting mad it is fox but you know you know how they play that false opposite too and it's just yes this could have been huge you know this guy is directly contradicting his own testament about you know when when congress was literally investigating that
1:30:52 the JFK assassination. And yet they, the fake left media allows Bill O'Reilly to survive. That's the point. They're all wrong and they can seem left or points left or, but if the points never connect, it's just one more onion skin of delusion after another. Yeah. Yeah. That's true. I don't know if we lost him or not, but that's absolutely. Yeah. Yeah. Sorry.
1:31:20 Yeah, that's absolutely true. You have the fake right and the fake left. And it's put out there. Obviously, saying something like that is critical to the narrative at the time. And then once it's proven a lie, the whole country's moved on. And that's manipulation at its finest. That is propaganda.
1:31:49 And both, you know, of the proverbial sides, because I don't believe they're any different than each other, participate in it. And, you know, they have mass audiences to do it. And the whole fake infighting and all of that other stuff. So, yeah, it's crazy. Anyway, all right, I think we're done.
1:32:18 Thanks everybody for being here. Appreciate it. I'll be on Apple Warrior Show tonight at 9.30. We're going to, I've found, I went back and was doing some research into one of the CIA coups that I thought would most represent what we're seeing here going on. And I'll be interested in.
1:32:48 hearing your reaction tomorrow if you feel like there's a close parallel to it, because I think there's a very close parallel to it. I also want to point out something, that you see lots of people talking about intelligence agencies. And of course, the most hilarious take out there is from NATO.
1:33:16 accusing the Russian of Epstein working for the Russians, you know, and we all just roll our eyes. That's actually on purpose deflection. And so what I find most interesting is people in the United States, people with very, very large audience, very large audience and very smart people. They consistently say, well, he definitely worked for MI6.
1:33:46 And he definitely worked for Mossad. You find very few people, very few large accounts, and I did a search on it this morning, talking about his relationship with the CIA. Very few. Now, just on the surface, not even digging into it, just on the 50,000 foot look, we know what kind of tools the CIA has.
1:34:20 We know that the CIA is spread out throughout the entire country. We know they have a large presence in Miami. We know that they have a large presence in New York, his two primary foot stomping places. And they always talk about in relationship to Minnesota, the Marxist and all of this stuff. And again, completely ignoring
1:34:48 that there's an entire population that was resettled from a CIA operation in Somalia in Minneapolis. These people refuse, for whatever reason, to even discuss or name the CIA. The CIA did not allow Jeffrey Epstein. The FBI did not allow Jeffrey Epstein to work inside America.
1:35:17 without him being attached to the CIA. It's impossible because what the CIA would have done if he was not ours and they were not complicit in all of it, they would have gotten that material to the DNI and something would have been done with it. Nothing was ever done with it. And it's not because they didn't know. They know all of this stuff.
1:35:47 They follow all of it. They knew exactly what he was doing. He had their old airplanes. And I'm gonna write an article about that, some of the background on some of the airplanes that he had. And we've shown you the chronology of these airplanes, the fronts that they use and the switching of these airplanes to the different fronts. And it's one.
1:36:13 company after another company, and they're all tied to the CIA. So I just find that fascinating to watch this. And every time I see one of them doing, I'm sure they don't see my post, but I don't care. I correct every one of them. But anyway, oh, I see Illini. I'll let him close us out. Well, there he goes. How you doing, Illini?
1:36:51 All right. Yeah, we're talking Epstein. So, I mean, if you've covered the Franklin scandal before, it's I mean, there's there's some other clues that tell you that this has got CIA DNA on it. Obviously, number one, there's Epstein's relationship with the Rockefellers, his presence on the Council on Foreign Relations. And his seat on the board of Rockefeller University. Just as a reminder, when Kissinger left.
1:37:17 the State Department in, I think, 77. All of his files, which are totally classified, his telecons went, and this is on the Nixon Library's website, they went to David Rockefeller's vault. Yep. Kissinger, 20 years later, is fighting with the CIA, trying to get those files declassified.
1:37:44 But it's perfectly fine to storm in David Rockefeller's vault in upstate New York, hundreds of miles away from Washington, D.C., the National Archive, or any sort of classified record system. But then really, you've got Kissinger, as well as I think the Bushes implicated in some of these emails. And that was what Paul Bonacci was getting at.
1:38:07 in some of his interviews with Ted Gunderson back in the early 1990s. He said that, I think Kissinger was linked to the whole Franklin scandal, and certainly George Bush was. So that's kind of your tell, that this is a CIA thing. And then you haven't mentioned yet, Colonel, your comments on Kathy Rumler.
1:38:35 She received a CIA award. This lady's kind of acting as Epstein's handler. She's acting as one of the executors of his estate. Rumler gets a CIA award that she could only get by participating in a CIA op, and this award is classified. She tells Epstein about it. Yep. She trusts Epstein not to leak that.
1:39:01 there's not a single person in the history of the CIA that has been given the award that she was given that was not under the operational control of the CIA. Not one. And to your point, and thank you for bringing it up, the Kissinger files being in the Rockefeller vault. So the way the classification process works,
1:39:33 It goes directly to what I've been saying for years now of how this whole system works, that the CIA reports to the oligarchs. And Kissinger's files being in the Rockefeller vault is the smoking gun that says that. That would never, ever, ever happen if the government...
1:40:03 was working for the people and not the oligarchs, especially someone like Kissinger. And it was Kissinger that set up at Harvard the grooming school for the CIA with CIA funding that was discovered as a CIA front. They didn't get rid of that school.
1:40:27 They just renamed it and his deputy became the head of the new organization that was set up at Harvard. And where do you find Epstein? At Harvard. And so none of that is a coincidence. None of it. So they were all grooming at Harvard, but not for good purposes. Don't forget, I think there's another Twitter person out there who found that there's a bunch of boxes.
1:40:58 that I've seen standing in front of, they're all labeled CIA. Yes. Like, I think to anybody, to anybody in our space, it's relatively clear, there's a lot of evidence of CIA connections that doesn't necessarily rule out connections to other intelligence agencies, particularly NATO, but it doesn't necessarily rule out this whole Putin thing either. We can't, like, that's, I can't imagine how Putin could afford all of this. Like, every single thing.
1:41:28 Not everything that, if everything that Western intelligence alleged about Putin manipulating people and influencing people was true, Russia would be completely bankrupt like 15 times over. But the point is- They would also control more government. Control any government. We do. I mean-
1:41:52 I mean, imagine this crazy, you know, amazing conspiracy theory where the FSB manages to control Epstein, and then he manages to control the awards program over at the CIA, and he manages to control the movement of CIA planes.
1:42:10 And he manages to, you know, control Kissinger. And he manages to control the Rockefellers. Man, this guy's got a lot of puppet strings going everywhere. So why is Russia so freaking broke all the time is the other thing that they're telling us. So it doesn't, look, I think my way of handling it is to be, is to kind of play more Daedalus here than Icarus and say, yeah, maybe it's possible.
1:42:38 But everything that Western intelligence is telling us that Putin is doing, he doesn't have the money to do all of it. Correct. This is kind of getting ridiculous. Yes. The entire thing is ridiculous as far as I'm concerned. And I understand that the intelligence agencies work as a hive. We've talked about this a lot.
1:43:09 Very rarely in any of these research dives into coups around the world, do you ever find a single intelligence agency working by themselves. Very rare. They are usually in tandem, if not triplet, in their activity. And sometimes more than that, but generally not because of command and control. But you certainly find,
1:43:39 on average two or three involved in each one of them. Because each one of them brings specialty capability as far as what they specialize in. And so you very rarely find anyone on an adventure big enough to overthrow a government working independently. And we know that forever, up until 2020,
1:44:09 Well, actually, Germany got out several years before that. But we know that the German BND and the subsequent organization that it morphed into in Germany once they became Germany as opposed to West Germany was partners in Crypto AG sharing all of that information. And then they selectively shared it with other NATO.
1:44:32 and Israel, depending on what the operation was. So they don't work independently of each other. And they certainly don't, the only independence they have is from the government that they're working for. And that's not always. I mean, they work in tandem with the government because generally the government they've selected. But in the rare cases where someone gets elected, they didn't select, they work ruthlessly against that government. So.
1:45:02 Those are just facts. We've talked about them at Nauseam. I mean, I can only just imagine Walter Kern getting on there with Matt Taibbi and just tearing this whole conspiracy theory apart. He's going to find 15 other ways to pillory this one if he decides to run with this whole op saying that this was a KGB operation. It's just ridiculous.
1:45:31 They can try. I think that they're just exposing themselves, and we might be able to help with...
1:45:40 the bureaucratic reset in in europe and it might reduce some of the pressure on strategy of tension here for us to expose this to the european public and to basically say hey that telegraph story that ran you know they admit right in there that this whole claim that this is that fc was a kgb op it says right in the article this is coming from intelligence sources so it's coming from mi6 so it's this is like oj simpson hunting for the real killer
1:46:14 Go ahead. I did want to say, since you brought up Russia, I did have someone DM me from Russia that has a podcast that wants to interview me. I'd be careful with that one. I'm going to be an official Russian bot. I don't care. I'll talk to anybody. Well, most anybody. I can't believe anybody's still talking to Bannon after all of the shit that was exposed on him.
1:46:51 Gosh, holy crap. Anyway, I need to run guys. And I will see you back here at 9.30 on the Apple Warrior Show. And we'll be back tomorrow at four o'clock to continue on in our book. Thanks for being here, everybody.

Entities here

George de Mohrenschildt35Lee Harvey Oswald25CIA23Warren Commission21Soviet Union20Allen Dulles14Marina Oswald12Robert Kennedy assassination12New Orleans12Janet Auchincloss11United States10John F. Kennedy10Dimitri de Mohrenschildt10Dallas10Jeffrey Epstein8Henry Kissinger7George H.W. Bush7United States Marine Corps6Bill O'Reilly6Ernst Titovich6Albert Jenner6Rockefeller6Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis5Eastern Soviet Union5Marguerite Oswald5KGB5Dr. Hartog5De Mohrenschildt family4J. Walton Moore4Miami4Richard Snyder4Vladimir Putin4House Select Committee on Assassinations4Palm Beach3James Jesus Angleton3Dallas Petroleum Club3NATO3U-2 spy flights3David Ferrie3West Germany3

Claims made here

Allen Dulles funded Battelle host_asserted ▶ 5:15
“explorers of the human mind who with government encouragement and funding had been willing to go to the scientific fringes. His resume, including working at the Allen Memorial Institute where the CIA …”
CIA funded New York State Psychiatric Institution documented ▶ 5:44
“the New York State Psychiatric Institution, which received funding from the Army Chemical Corps and the CIA. So Oswald was under the care of a psychiatrist associated with the CIA. Malwitz is the guy …”
Lee Harvey Oswald member_of Air America documented ▶ 7:05
“After returning to New Orleans with his mother in 1954, the 15-year-old Oswald hooked up with the Civil Air Patrol, a group of young men interested in learning to fly. The military auxiliary group, wh…”
David Harold Byrd founded Air America documented ▶ 7:05
“After returning to New Orleans with his mother in 1954, the 15-year-old Oswald hooked up with the Civil Air Patrol, a group of young men interested in learning to fly. The military auxiliary group, wh…”
David Harold Byrd secretly_owned Texas School Book Depository documented ▶ 7:35
“a right-wing Texas oilman and defense contractor. Byrd also owned the Texas School Board Depository. What a small world. The Dallas warehouse where Oswald would be hired in the fall of 1963. In New Or…”
David Ferrie recruited Lee Harvey Oswald host_asserted ▶ 8:37
“reddish wig and filling in his eyebrows with theatrical grease paint. Catholic educated and a homosexual, he led a secretive and tortured life. He liked to practice hypnotic techniques on the young ca…”
Lee Harvey Oswald member_of United States Marine Corps documented ▶ 9:39
“In October of 56, Oswald, barely 17 and less than a month into his 10th grade year, followed the same path of his older brothers and enlisted in the Marines. The following year, he was sent to Arasugi…”
George de Mohrenschildt member_of Dallas Oil Society documented ▶ 26:04
“like a fairytale prince. It was Dallas Oil Society, and he was one of the European aristocrats in it. Baron D. Morgan Shield, as he enjoyed being called, was everything. Oswald was not. He showed up o…”
Allen Dulles member_of Sullivan & Cromwell documented ▶ 27:03
“specifically on a Baku oil field that was owned by the Nobel family, the same Nobel Peace Prize crazy family that's warmongers. And Nobel owned the oil field. Alan Dulles had traveled there to buy it …”
George de Mohrenschildt funded Lee Harvey Oswald documented ▶ 28:54
“hovered over the Oswalds, finding lead jobs, installing the family in new living quarters, making sure that Marina's rotting teeth got fixed, and their baby got shots and doctor's appointments. You kn…”
George de Mohrenschildt member_of Abwehr host_asserted ▶ 31:52
“Poland became a bloodline in the fighting between Hitler and Stalin. His father fled west again to Nazi Germany, where he was welcomed as a comrade in the war to finish the Bolshevikism. His father wa…”
Dimitri de Mohrenschildt member_of Dartmouth College documented ▶ 33:55
“and became a prominent scholar, winning appointments in 1950 as the first chairman of Dartmouth's Russian Civilization Department and launching the Russian Review, an anti-communist journey. Dmitry mo…”
Dimitri de Mohrenschildt member_of CIA host_asserted ▶ 34:24
“as well as the Bush family. They were close friends with the Bush family. The conservative author, William Henry Chamberlain, was a friend of Alan Dulles' with whom he worked on Radio Liberty Committe…”
Allen Dulles founded Radio Free Europe host_asserted ▶ 34:24
“as well as the Bush family. They were close friends with the Bush family. The conservative author, William Henry Chamberlain, was a friend of Alan Dulles' with whom he worked on Radio Liberty Committe…”
George de Mohrenschildt member_of CIA documented ▶ 35:01
“George DeMorgan Shield's brother became a CIA agent, asset, in April of 1950 when, according to the agency memo, he was approved as a contact for foreign intelligence purposes. Well, of course he was …”
Radio Free Europe front_for CIA host_asserted ▶ 35:01
“George DeMorgan Shield's brother became a CIA agent, asset, in April of 1950 when, according to the agency memo, he was approved as a contact for foreign intelligence purposes. Well, of course he was …”
George de Mohrenschildt member_of Dallas Petroleum Club host_asserted ▶ 39:22
“Buckley Jr., Mr. CIA himself. Crazy. Later, DeMorgan Shield proved adept at working his connections in the Dallas Petroleum Club. It was a hotbed of anti-Kennedy hatred, whose leading members, includi…”
David Howard Byrd member_of Dallas Petroleum Club host_asserted ▶ 39:58
“and Sid Richardson were tied to Dulles, LBJ, and J. Edgar Hoover. The Petroleum Club also counted D.H. Byrd, the Texas Book Depository owner, and Mayor Cabell, brother of Dulles' former CIA deputy, as…”
George de Mohrenschildt appointed David Howard Byrd host_asserted ▶ 39:58
“and Sid Richardson were tied to Dulles, LBJ, and J. Edgar Hoover. The Petroleum Club also counted D.H. Byrd, the Texas Book Depository owner, and Mayor Cabell, brother of Dulles' former CIA deputy, as…”
George de Mohrenschildt member_of CIA host_asserted ▶ 42:00
“which kicked him out because they said he was a spy, and Cuba. When he returned from his trips, DeMorganshield was debriefed by the CIA field agent J. Walton Moore. The Baron always insisted that he w…”
J. Walton Moore spied_on George de Mohrenschildt host_asserted ▶ 42:00
“which kicked him out because they said he was a spy, and Cuba. When he returned from his trips, DeMorganshield was debriefed by the CIA field agent J. Walton Moore. The Baron always insisted that he w…”
George de Mohrenschildt member_of CIA host_asserted ▶ 42:31
“He would later go on to say in his unpublished memoirs, I cannot prove either that I ever was. Nobody can. While it was probably true that DeMorganshield was not an official agent, he was most certain…”
George de Mohrenschildt member_of CIA host_asserted ▶ 42:56
“any particular thing. He was not like his brother, whom he described almost bemusedly as really anti-communist. The Baron did not believe in anything either religiously or politically, said his Dallas…”
George de Mohrenschildt member_of CIA host_asserted ▶ 43:23
“a rootless, stateless existence to ingratiate himself with whomever had power or money. He was at your service. If he could also serve himself, all the better. He wasn't an oil man, although he preten…”
George de Mohrenschildt spied_on Lee Harvey Oswald host_asserted ▶ 44:50
“From Russia, it was Moore's turn to invite DeMorganschild to lunch. The CIA man had a request for his Russian-born friend. DeMorganschild was apparently tasked with keeping an eye on the young couple,…”
George de Mohrenschildt covered_up Robert Kennedy assassination host_asserted ▶ 46:14
“No Warren Commission witness betrayed Oswald more deeply than George DeMorganshield. His testimony before the commission, the lengthiest of anyone's, did more to convict Oswald in the eyes of the pres…”
George de Mohrenschildt exposed Lee Harvey Oswald host_asserted ▶ 46:14
“No Warren Commission witness betrayed Oswald more deeply than George DeMorganshield. His testimony before the commission, the lengthiest of anyone's, did more to convict Oswald in the eyes of the pres…”
George de Mohrenschildt exposed Lee Harvey Oswald host_asserted ▶ 46:42
“And most important, Morgan Schill gave the Warren Commission the motive for killing Kennedy that the panel sorely lacked. Oswald, the baron said, was insanely jealous of an extraordinarily successful …”
George de Mohrenschildt exposed Lee Harvey Oswald host_asserted ▶ 47:12
“and a miserable failure in everything he did. Shooting Kennedy, he concluded, would be a memorable way for him to become a hero. DeMorganshield had enough of a conscience to feel uneasy about his Juda…”
George de Mohrenschildt exposed Lee Harvey Oswald host_asserted ▶ 47:42
“that as far as I'm concerned, Oswald was an admirer of President Kennedy's, unquote. During a conversation they had about JFK, acknowledged DeMorganshield, Oswald described him as an excellent preside…”
George de Mohrenschildt exposed Lee Harvey Oswald host_asserted ▶ 48:09
“But the Warren Commission simply glided over all of the inconsistencies in DeMorganshield's testimony and highlighted just the beginning. It was the baron's unfounded and irresponsible remarks about t…”
George de Mohrenschildt framed Lee Harvey Oswald host_asserted ▶ 57:46
“had been to believe his CIA friend Moore when Moore told him that Oswald was merely a harmless eccentric who needed some friendly supervision. DeMorganshield prided himself on his worldliness, but in …”
George de Mohrenschildt exposed Lee Harvey Oswald host_asserted ▶ 58:42
“He proclaimed Oswald's innocent and took back the damning things that he told the Warren Commission. In truth, Lee was not jealous of the Kennedys' wealth and did not envy their social positions. Of t…”
George de Mohrenschildt exposed Lee Harvey Oswald host_asserted ▶ 59:12
“Along with Titovitz, Chronicle, I Am a Patsy stands out as the most convincing portrait we have of Oswald. DeMorgan Shields' manuscript, which his wife gave to the House Select Committee on Assassinat…”
George de Mohrenschildt exposed Lee Harvey Oswald host_asserted ▶ 59:51
“A quote from the book. Under dictatorships, people are enslaved, but they know it. Here, the politicians constantly lie to people and they become immune to those lies because they have the privilege o…”
George de Mohrenschildt exposed Lee Harvey Oswald host_asserted ▶ 1:00:08
“And democracy here is a gigantic profession of lies and clever brainwashing. That's from Oswald. He knew, he knew. Oswald did worry about police state surveillance tactics. And he believed that Americ…”
George de Mohrenschildt exposed Lee Harvey Oswald host_asserted ▶ 1:00:44
“The United States was a country debased by war, assassination, government corruption, and constitutional subversion. My wife and I, this is DeMorgan Schill talking, spent many agonizing moments thinki…”
George de Mohrenschildt exposed Lee Harvey Oswald host_asserted ▶ 1:01:10
“as he began working on his memoirs and trying to make sense of the entangled relationship with Oswald. In September 1976, he mailed a distraught handwritten letter to an old friend, George Bush, who w…”
George de Mohrenschildt exposed Lee Harvey Oswald host_asserted ▶ 1:01:41
“Now the Baron was appealing to the CIA director's sense of family and class. I guess he didn't know him very well. DeMorganshield claimed that he and his wife were the targets of harassment. Our phone…”
George de Mohrenschildt exposed Lee Harvey Oswald host_asserted ▶ 1:02:12
“because of his grief. He began to write stupidly and unsuccessfully about Lee Harvey Oswald, DeMorganshield told Bush. And I must have angered a lot of people, I do not know. But to punish an elderly …”
George de Mohrenschildt exposed Lee Harvey Oswald host_asserted ▶ 1:02:42
“Bush sent back a sympathetic reply, assuring DeMorganshield that he was not the target of federal authorities and blaming his troubles on renewed media interest in the Kennedy assassination and journa…”
George de Mohrenschildt exposed Lee Harvey Oswald host_asserted ▶ 1:03:11
“this time at the House Select Assassinations Committee, whose investigators were showing a keener interest in the truth than the Warren panel had. On the morning of March 29, 1977, committee investiga…”
George de Mohrenschildt exposed Lee Harvey Oswald host_asserted ▶ 1:03:39
“Early that evening, after returning to Miami's motel room, Fonzie got a call from Bill O'Reilly, who was working in those days as a Dallas TV reporter. O'Reilly had some stunning news. George DeMorgan…”
George de Mohrenschildt exposed Lee Harvey Oswald host_asserted ▶ 1:04:10
“O'Reilly's 2012 Killing Kennedy book, O'Reilly exaggerated his personal involvement in the drama, placing himself on DeMorgan Shields' doorstep as the shotgun blast rang out. A subsequent news report …”
George de Mohrenschildt exposed Lee Harvey Oswald host_asserted ▶ 1:04:40
“Of course that DeMorgan Shield died by suicide, but his violent demise incited heated speculation. His death came amid a flurry of other sudden exits during the season of renewed congressional inquiry…”
George de Mohrenschildt ordered_assassination_of Lee Harvey Oswald host_asserted ▶ 1:05:09
“who got chopped up and stuffed into an oil drum and dumped in Biscayne Bay. Some investigators felt the rising mortality rate around Kennedy witnesses was connected to the creeping dread that somebody…”
George de Mohrenschildt member_of De Mohrenschildt family host_asserted ▶ 1:17:20
“Um, Colonel, I just wanted to mention, you know, this, you know, intriguing family, the DeMorin Shields and how, you know, on the one hand, they're like right in the middle of World War One when there…”
Soviet Union targeted_for_regime_change West Germany host_asserted ▶ 1:18:22
“You know, there's this interesting subset in, you know, the diplomacy. Some of the diplomats who were like at the outskirts of Versailles, you know, there's this counterintuitive like Treaty of Rapall…”
George de Mohrenschildt recruited Lee Harvey Oswald host_asserted ▶ 1:20:19
“Right when Wilson was flipping and sending his Bush-Baker for Houston cronies literally that early in World War I to Baku. How intriguing that DiMorici would be at the center of that and also setting …”
Dimitri de Mohrenschildt member_of De Mohrenschildt family host_asserted ▶ 1:20:48
“slam it the the proverbial yankees and cowboys in one family dimitri de morgan shield is in the yankee camp and the george de morgan shield is in the cowboy camp right yeah it's like how that's the ve…”
Bill O'Reilly covered_up George de Mohrenschildt host_asserted ▶ 1:27:37
“The CIA is running the whole thing, and the Gene Hackman character is Alan Dulles, basically, running something. But anyway, it's similarly – and so what's so interesting is that it came up very prova…”
Bill O'Reilly covered_up Robert Kennedy assassination host_asserted ▶ 1:30:22
“a base like fight on youtube it's like 500 000 youtube versus 500 000 youtube this is like this is how they split audiences like that you know yes this is a very significant information that bill o're…”
Jeffrey Epstein member_of Rockefeller University host_asserted ▶ 1:36:51
“All right. Yeah, we're talking Epstein. So, I mean, if you've covered the Franklin scandal before, it's I mean, there's there's some other clues that tell you that this has got CIA DNA on it. Obviousl…”
Jeffrey Epstein member_of CFR host_asserted ▶ 1:36:51
“All right. Yeah, we're talking Epstein. So, I mean, if you've covered the Franklin scandal before, it's I mean, there's there's some other clues that tell you that this has got CIA DNA on it. Obviousl…”
Paul Bonacci exposed Franklin Scandal guest_asserted ▶ 1:38:07
“in some of his interviews with Ted Gunderson back in the early 1990s. He said that, I think Kissinger was linked to the whole Franklin scandal, and certainly George Bush was. So that's kind of your te…”
BND traded_network_to Crypto AG documented ▶ 1:44:09
“Well, actually, Germany got out several years before that. But we know that the German BND and the subsequent organization that it morphed into in Germany once they became Germany as opposed to West G…”
Crypto AG traded_network_to NATO documented ▶ 1:44:09
“Well, actually, Germany got out several years before that. But we know that the German BND and the subsequent organization that it morphed into in Germany once they became Germany as opposed to West G…”