| From the September-October, 1995 issue (Vol. 2 No. 6) |
Who says activism is dead? According to sources at COPA and the ARRB, the White House was surprised at the volume of communications it recieved over the ARRB-FBI dispute. And the FBI, already reeling over Ruby Ridge and Waco, decided to keep a low profile on this one. After all, it would have been difficult to defend secrecy, 32 years after the fact. But we have to keep up the pressure. Let the ARRB, the FBI and President Clinton know you are watching. Tell them you want no compromises with the ARRB's original mandate of full disclosure on everything relevant to the JFK case. The numbers are: ARRB: Phone: 202-724-0088, Fax: 202-724-0457; Louis Freeh, FBI: Phone: 202-324-3000, Fax: 324-4705; President Clinton: Phone: 202-456-1111, Fax: 456-2461.
In this issue, along with keeping you abreast of the latest goings on in Washington with the Review Board-over the continuing FBI dispute and a quickened release pace-we also update you on the latest shenanigans by DA Harry Connick and his rather obstreperous behavior in hiding away the last vestiges of the Garrison investigation from public view. (If Connick does not turn over these files, we will print the HSCA index to them and give out his phone and address so we can start a direct campaign against him.) We update what is probably the final installment of the lawsuits against Random House and The New York Times by Groden and Lane. Roger Feinman put up a good fight in a (now) seemingly forlorn cause. We are proud to print an exclusive from Bill Davy's wonderful monograph on New Orleans and Clay Shaw. Available in our catalog for the last two issues, Bill's work is already being discussed online and at researcher meetings in California. Jack White supplies us with some fascinating documents on the photographic possessions of "lone-nut" Oswald that the ARRB should definitely go after. Lisa Pease completes her much appreciated two-parter on Ruby's gunrunning activities and ties to the Cuban exiles and the CIA. In our initial installment of "CIA Watch" we continue our coverage of the travails of Jennifer Harbury in pursuit of justice and her husband's killers. We also note a rather eerie connection between some prominent spooks-we'd call Robert Gates prominent-and the Internet. Maybe Sandra Bullock did her movie too early.
Finally, we wish to thank a member of our production team we haven't really noted before. Dr. David H. Stern has been doing our photo scans at his office for us-gratis by the way- for the last three issues. He has helped give Probe a more visually graphic look. Dave also has a Web site on the Internet that is worth checking out. The address is http://www.copi.com/deepbook.htm. Punch it in. Tell us if you run in to Gates.
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