PDA

View Full Version : Jury finds government involvement in the assassination of Martin Luther King


GonzoLays
05-15-2006, 05:45 PM
Loyd Jowers found guilty of conspiring with "government agencies" to murder Dr. Martin Luther King

The first trial ever held for the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr. occurred from November 15 to December 8, 1999 in the Memphis Circuit Court of Judge James E. Swearengen. After hearing seventy witnesses in three and one-half weeks of testimony in the wrongful death awsuit filed by the King family, the twelve jurors (six black and six white) found former Memphis bar-and-grill owner Loyd Jowers guilty of conspiring with "government agencies" to murder Dr. King. At the request of the Kings, whose purpose was not punishment but the truth, the ailing Jowers was fined a symbolic one hundred dollars–to be donated to a Memphis sanitation workers' fund.

This historic trial was so ignored by the media that, apart from the courtroom participants, I was the only person who attended it from beginning to end. What I experienced in that courtroom ranged from inspiration at the courage of the Kings, their lawyer-investigator William F. Pepper, and the witnesses, to amazement at the government's carefully interwoven plot to kill Dr. King. The seriousness with which US intelligence agencies planned the murder of Martin Luther King, Jr. speaks eloquently of the threat Kingian nonviolence represented to the powers that be in the spring of 1968.

At the trial, a series of African-American police officers and firefighters testified how each of them had been pulled from duty in the vicinity of King's room at the Lorraine Motel, and how normal security had been withdrawn from Dr. King in the hours preceding his assassination on April 4, 1968. The Memphis police and fire director responsible for this systematic stripping of King's security was the now-deceased Frank Holloman, a retired FBI agent. During his twenty-five years in the FBI, Holloman had served as head of the Memphis field office and as J. Edgar Hoover's appointments secretary.

Eyewitness testimony from King colleagues and neighborhood observers that the assassin's shot had been fired from a heavy growth of bushes directly across from the Lorraine was provided to the Memphis Police Department (MPD) and the FBI immediately after the event. Yet senior Memphis sanitation official Maynard Stiles testified that MPD Inspector Sam Evans ordered him by phone at 7:00 o'clock on the morning after the assassination to assemble a ground crew and cut down those same bushes, thus sanitizing the crime scene.

Loyd Jowers confessed to Dexter King and former UN Ambassador Andrew Young that at his Jim's Grill, whose back door opened onto the dense bushes, he had acted as a conduit for a rifle and a pay-off of $100,000. A man named Raul brought the rifle in a box the day before the murder. (Raul, who had been James Earl Ray's shepherd, was identified in a passport photo by Jowers and six other witnesses. While dying in jail, Ray had identified the same photo as the Raul he knew.)

Jowers said that seconds after the shot, the still smoking rifle was tossed to him through the back door of Jim's Grill by Lt. Earl Clark, the MPD's best marksman, whom Jowers assumed was the triggerman. In his audiotaped confession, Jowers also said that planning meetings for the assassination had been held at Jim's Grill and included Clark (who died in 1987), undercover MPD officer Marrell McCollough (who would be the first person to reach King's body and is now with the CIA), another police officer, and two men he didn't know but believed were federal agents.

A role in the assassination also emerged for the US Army. Carthel Weeden, captain of the fire station across from the Lorraine, testified that he showed two US Amy officers, who indicated they had cameras, to the roof of his station on the morning of King's assassination. Former CIA operative Jack Terrell, a whistle-blower in the Iran-Contra scandal who is now dying in Florida, testified by videotape that his best friend, J.D. Hill, had confessed shortly before his death to having been a member of an Army sniper team assigned, in a contingency plan, to shoot King on April 4 if the shooter in the bushes failed. Douglas Valentine, author of The Phoenix Program (1990) on the CIA's assassination of thousands of Vietnamese villagers, testified about the redeployment of Phoenix veterans to the Sixties antiwar movement and the King assassination in particular. Two of those intelligence officers, corresponding to the men on the fire station roof, had reportedly photographed the man in the bushes shooting King.

Former US Representative Walter Fauntroy testified that "very sophisticated forces" pressured the King investigation of the House Select Committee on Assassinations, so that it reached its James Earl Ray-as-lone-assassin conclusion "without having looked at all the evidence." In an interview, Rev. Fauntroy told me that after his retirement from Congress, he learned from HSCA files that in the three weeks prior to the assassination, FBI Director Hoover had held a series of meetings with CIA and military intelligence Phoenix operatives. He also learned that such intelligence agents were present in Memphis on April 4.

When the trial was over, David Morphy, the only juror willing to discuss it publicly, said, "We can look back on it and say that we did change history. But that's not why we did it. It was because there was an overwhelming amount of evidence and just too many odd coincidences."

Perhaps the lesson of the King assassination is that our government understands the power of nonviolence better than we do, or better than we want to. As Rev. James Lawson testified, the background necessary for understanding our greatest prophet's murder by his own government was Dr. King's radical opposition to the Vietnam war and his aborted plans for the Poor People's Campaign. King wanted wave after wave of poor people to engage in massive civil disobedience in the nation's capital until the government faced up to the moral imperative of eradicating poverty.

"I have no doubt," Lawson said, "that the government viewed all this seriously enough to plan his assassination."

Thirty-two years after Memphis, we know that the government that now honors Dr. King with a national holiday also killed him. As will once again become evident when the Justice Department releases the findings of its "limited re-investigation" into King's death, the government is continuing its cover-up–just as it continues to do in the closely related murders of John and Robert Kennedy and Malcolm X.

The faithful in a nonviolent movement that hopes to change the distribution of wealth and power in the USA–as Dr. King's vision, if made real, would have done in 1968–should be willing to receive the same kind of reward that King did in Memphis. But as each of our religious traditions has affirmed from the beginning, that recurring story of martyrdom ("witness") is one of ultimate transformation and cosmic good news.

http://www.forusa.org/fellowship/mar-apr_00/thekingtrial.html

Taco John
05-15-2006, 06:12 PM
wow. Staggering...

Not suprising that the Mass media didn't report on this...

Bronco_Beerslug
05-15-2006, 06:31 PM
The Kings had sought unspecified damages and were awarded a token $100. They wanted the verdict to lend support to their call for a fresh investigation of the killing.
Shelby County prosecutor John Campbell, who has investigated the assassination, said Jowers' claims have no merit, saying several of Jowers' friends and associates said he was hoping to get a movie or book deal.

"We looked at this off and on for five years ... and I've still seen nothing that would change my opinion," Campbell said.
http://tinyurl.com/psnfb

Weekend Edition - Saturday, June 10, 2000 · Susan talks with Barry Kowalski, chief civil rights prosecutor at the Justice Department about their new report that says there was no conspiracy to kill Martin Luther King.

http://tinyurl.com/nz3tt

GonzoLays
05-15-2006, 06:35 PM
http://tinyurl.com/psnfb



http://tinyurl.com/nz3tt

Obviously an independent jury of 12 American Citizens thought differently. Damn conspiracy juries! Tin foil hat wearin' citizens!



It is obvious that you wait for the spin machine to sanitize your thoughts for you.

elsid13
05-15-2006, 06:37 PM
Is it a full moon tonight???

Bronco_Beerslug
05-15-2006, 06:52 PM
Is it a full moon tonight???
I'm not sure but I'll be able to tell you in another 30 minutes or so :)

elsid13
05-15-2006, 07:14 PM
I'm not sure but I'll be able to tell you in another 30 minutes or so :)


smart ass ;D

GonzoLays
05-15-2006, 07:28 PM
Lets see here:

* There were 70 witnesses called to testify

* Officers PRESENT at the Loriane Hotel TESTIFIED that they were PULLED from their normal duty and withdrawn from protecting MLK by a FBI agent.

* Eyewitnesses to the event STEPPED FORWARD and said they saw shots fired from a heavy growth of bushes across the Loraine Hotel.

* Loyd Jowers confessed to Dexter King and former UN Ambassador Andrew Young that at his Jim's Grill, whose back door opened onto the dense bushes, he had acted as a conduit for a rifle and a pay-off of $100,000.

* Carthel Weeden, captain of the fire station across from the Lorraine, testified that he showed two US Amy officers, who indicated they had cameras, to the roof of his station on the morning of King's assassination.

* Former CIA operative Jack Terrell testified by videotape that his best friend, J.D. Hill, had confessed shortly before his death to having been a member of an Army sniper team assigned, in a contingency plan, to shoot King on April 4 if the shooter in the bushes failed.

* Former US Representative Walter Fauntroy testified that "very sophisticated forces" pressured the King investigation of the House Select Committee on Assassinations, so that it reached its James Earl Ray-as-lone-assassin conclusion "without having looked at all the evidence."



But, but, the only reason this trial happened was because Jower's FRIENDS said he wanted to write a book. Even though it was Jower's that was on trial he WANTED this trial to happen! So he got 70 eyewitnesses that included police officers, fire fighters and even a freaking US congressman to collaborate his story for a BOOK! Amazing! And what is even crazier than that is the fact is they got 12 jurors to believe this cockamany story! Wow!

GonzoLays
05-16-2006, 12:38 PM
Lloyd Jowers...American Traitor

http://www.cnn.com/US/9901/18/mlk.investigation/link.jowers.jpg

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
05-16-2006, 07:08 PM
Not suprising that the Mass media didn't report on this...

There's that "liberal media" in action again, eh?

:D