Why Was Everybody Connected to JFK Suddenly Mysteriously Killed

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November 22, 1963- a warm, sunny day in  Dallas, Texas. Multiple shots ring out.   Moments later, the President  of the United States is dead.  Two days later, the man responsible  was also dead. The man who killed him,   Jack Ruby, descended into an unfathomable mental  illness and himself died not too long after.  And as you’ll see today, many other  people connected in some way with the   JFK assassination quickly bit the dust. 6. What really happened to Jack Ruby?  So, what happened to Jack Ruby? How come he lost  his mind after he killed Oswald? One man who’s   done a lot of research on this topic, and a lot of  research into the Manson murders, isn’t quite sure   but does say some things look out of the ordinary. His name is Tom O’Neill, and he just had a book   come out after researching the Manson  murders for over 20 years. In a podcast,   he said this about Ruby’s meeting with Louis  Jolyon “Jolly” West, a man that for a long   time denied he was working with the CIA on mind  control program, MKUltra. O’Neill said, “My most   important finding is that a CIA contracted  agent or researcher for mind control, became   that witness’ doctor right before he testified  and told his story, and then he goes crazy.”  The problem is, no one who worked  in MK Ultra will talk about it.   It would have remained a complete secret had the  CIA got away with destroying all related files.  We know that just before Ruby was  to testify to the Warren Commission,   West visited him in his jail cell. No other  people were present. West said Ruby had gone   mad and was a paranoid, rambling mess of a man. We must remember here that prior to this when West   wrote to the CIA’s mind control master, Sidney  Gottlieb, he said his specialty was “inducing   insanity in people without their awareness.” We know that after Ruby shot Oswald, some   strange things happened. The police pinned him to  the floor, and out of his mouth came these words:  “What am I doing here? What are you guys jumping  on me for?” It was as if he wasn’t in control   of himself. A psychiatrist later said that Ruby  has suffered from a “fugue state with subsequent   amnesia.” A fugue state is characterized by  someone suddenly losing their sense of themselves,   having a kind of breakdown where  they don’t know what they are doing.  Remember no one had any idea that West had  been working with the CIA on mind control.   West tried very hard to get involved with Ruby,  at one time asking judge Joe. B. Brown to appoint   him on the case. According to documents that were  found by Tom O’Neill a long time after the trial,   West had been asked by “someone” to  work on the case, but he never said who.  At first, the judge refused to give West access  to Ruby, but with some effort, West insinuated   himself in the case. It was thought that perhaps  West, with all the skills he had, could help   Ruby recall the day he shot Oswald. On April 26,  1964, West boarded a plane and went to see Ruby.  Not long after, West came out of Ruby’s cell and  stated that the man had had a complete psychotic   break. West said that Ruby was “positively  insane.” No one knows, and likely will ever   know, what happened in that cell. In a sworn affidavit, West wrote that   Ruby was hearing things and seeing things,  going as far as to hide under his table   because he thought that all Jews in the US  would be “slaughtered.” West said that Ruby   said he’d seen his brother, “tortured, horribly  mutilated, castrated, and burned in the street   outside the jail.” West wrote that Ruby could  still hear the screams of Jewish children being   boiled alive. It sounded like a really bad trip. After that, any other doctor that met with Ruby   came to the same conclusion. He had suddenly gone  mad. Still, doctors who’d talked with Ruby before   West had seen him had said he was absolutely  fine, not crazy at all. West wrote, “Tonight,   my own findings make it clear that there has  been an acute change in the patient’s condition   since these earlier studies were carried out.” A doctor that had seen Ruby before and after   he had met with West was astounded by the change.  His name was Dr. William Beavers and he wrote that   there was a possibility that someone had done  something to Ruby, perhaps given him some very   powerful drugs. He wrote, “The possibility  of toxic psychosis could be entertained,   but is considered unlikely because  of the protected situation.”  Obviously, Beavers could not have had an inkling  that West was involved in a project that forced   powerful drugs on unwitting victims and tried  to mess with their minds. A good point is,   what if he had known about West’s involvement  with the CIA’s dark program? He probably   would have looked into the matter further. What’s even stranger is the fact that Ruby   was visited by Doctor Werner Tuteur in 1965. He  made an evaluation and sent the notes to West   so that they could be submitted to the court. West  looked at the document and he erased one part.   It said, “There is considerable guilt  about the fact he sent guns to Cuba.”  Why did West expunge that line? Did he  have anything to do with Ruby’s breakdown?   We just don’t know, but there is a possibility  that there is more to this story than we already   know, after all, the CIA wasn’t exactly  forthcoming about its mind control efforts.  Now listen to how three men all walked into a  room one day and not long after were all dead.  5. Enter at your own risk The journalist Bill Hunter received   some acclaim for writing “Three Days in Dallas”  after the JFK assassination. He also wrote about   Ruby shooting Oswald. He was one of few people  that actually got permission to have a look around   Ruby’s apartment right after he shot Oswald. In April of 1964, Hunter was sitting at a desk in   Long Beach police HQ and he was shot. The gun of a  policeman named Creighton Wiggins had apparently,   accidentally, gone off and a bullet had entered  the chest of Hunter, killing him instantly.   The officer said he had dropped the gun. Investigators soon found out that there was   no way that Wiggins was telling the truth. He  admitted that he hadn’t dropped the gun at all,   but had been playing around with  it when it accidentally fired.  It’s believed Hunter was  still working on the case,   and that’s why his death is seen as suspicious  by some of the JFK conspiracy fraternity.  Ruby had been living with a man named George  Senator. We’ve seen the court transcripts,   so this is very much a fact. Senator  said this in court about Ruby:  “He was a good, sound American citizen, and  politics, he never messed around with that.   He never messed around politically at all. The  majority was connected with the music industry,   the nightlife, you know, his club, his  competitors, what they were doing.”  It was because of Senator that Hunter was  allowed into Ruby’s room. Also allowed   inside was Dallas Times Herald journalist,  Jim Koethe, and Ruby’s attorney Tom Howard.  On 21st September 1964, while writing a book on  the assassination, Koethe mysteriously died. Some   sources say that he had been karate chopped to the  neck, but other sources say that he was strangled.   No one knows what happened, although Time magazine  in 1966 attempted to dampen the flames of a   conspiracy by saying the journalist was well-known  for hanging out with thugs. Time said police at   the time said the motive was somehow connected  to homosexuality but didn’t expand on that.  We found a news clipping from back then with the  headline, “Newsman’s Death Termed Murder.” The   police captain said this in the report, “He could  have been killed by a karate blow to the neck or   have fallen and struck his neck on a table or a  bedstead in the room where his body was found.”  The apartment had been ransacked and there were  signs of a struggle. Police in the end said it   was a burglary that had gone wrong, although  people have said that it had something to do   with notes the journalist had written about  the assassination or what he knew about Ruby.  One year later, Howard also died. His death was  ruled a heart attack, although as people are   quick to point out, there was never an autopsy.  Still, The New York Times wrote that he died of a   massive coronary infection, stating, “Mr. Howard  had been ill for several days but continued his   law practice.” He was just 48. As you’ll now see,   not only men tied to the case died. 4. Was this woman really going to crack the case?  One journalist actually got to chat with  Ruby, and her name was Dorothy Kilgalfen.   She was not so sure about the conclusions  that the Warren Commission came up with,   and she let that be known. She also published  some of the Commission’s findings before they   were officially released to the public. What happened to her?  On November 8, 1965, she was found dead in  her apartment in Manhattan. Prior to that,   she had written that the CIA and the mafia had  worked together. Some people have also said that   she was a CIA asset. After the assassination, she  reportedly told her friends that she was going to   crack the case. She said to one person, “In five  more days I'm going to bust this case wide open.”  By all accounts, she had given the first  draft of her book to Florence Smith,   her friend and the wife of the ambassador  to Cuba. When Kilgalfen’s body was found,   it was determined she had died from an overdose of  booze and barbiturates. According to some sources,   she was found in a room she didn’t go in often.  She had a book on her lap that she had already   finished and her reading glasses, which she  couldn’t read without, were in another room.  As for Florence Smith, did she have those  notes? No, is the answer. She died one day   after Kilgalfen of a cerebral hemorrhage. She  was 45. No book or notes were found. Still,   she had reportedly been ill for some time  and had only just gotten out of the hospital.  There is evidence that Smith was  friends with JFK and Mrs. Kennedy,   and it has never been revealed where the New  York Times got the information from about her   illness and stay in hospital. That’s just  what the paper wrote in her obituary.  This next one has had conspiracy theorists talking  for years, but they might have been seeing things   that just weren’t there. 3. The Benavides brothers  Then there were the brothers Edward Benavides  and Domingo Benavides. Domingo was one of the   witnesses who saw police officer J.D.  Tippit get shot after the assassination.   Some sources say that he testified that  the shooter looked nothing like Oswald,   but from what we can see, he just gave a vague  description that could have been lots of people.  Some sources say that a dark presence feared  that he would blow the lid on something,   so he needed to be taken out. But he wasn’t  killed. Instead, his brother, who looked like him,   was shot in a tavern in Dallas. But, and this is  important, the brother was shot after the Warren   Commission had people testify in court. Conspiracy theorists have argued that   he was shot during the investigation, but  we’ve actually seen his death certificate. Indeed, he was murdered on February 16, 1965.  This means he couldn’t have been taken out   accidentally by someone who wanted to kill  his brother. It’s just another death that you   could say is the type of thing to start  making lights go off in someone’s head.  Now let’s look at how one official  thought that the CIA took out JFK.  2. The Insiders Did a man who   worked for the CIA have extensive  knowledge about the assassination   and know that his own team had done the  job? This was a man named Gary Underhill.  According to some books, after the  assassination he said this to a friend:  “You're going to Spain? That's the best thing  to do. I've got to get out of the country, too.   This country is too dangerous for me now. I've  got to get on a boat, too. I'm really afraid for   my life. Oswald is a patsy. They set him up.  It's too much. The BLEEPS have done something   outrageous. They've killed the President!” The CIA denied that this man worked for them,   but then the CIA it has to be said has always  been very sparing with the truth. It is a fact   that Underhill worked in the Military Intelligence  Service, so he is a person of interest. It is also   stated by credible sources that he did actually  say those things about the assassination.  Shortly after, he was found dead in his house.  According to the District of Columbia Department   of Public Health, his Certificate of Death, dated  May 8, 1964, read that he “shot self in head with   an automatic pistol.” Some people have remarked  that he had been shot behind the left ear and   the gun was discovered in his left hand. He was  right-handed, but then, if he did kill himself,   maybe he was an unorthodox kind of guy.  Also, would CIA hitmen be that stupid?  Now we turn to the FBI and an agent  named Guy Banister. This guy was a   serious anti-Communist who later went  on to form his own private investigation   agency. He was accused by one of his colleagues  of knowing about the hit on JFK being an inside   job. This guy told a lot of people about that  and he became a big part of the investigation.  Bannister died soon after in 1964,  from coronary thrombosis. He was 63.  1. The lover According to various mainstream   sources, a woman named Mary Pinchot Meyer was  a mistress of JFK and a friend of his wife.   She was also a good buddy of the wife of a very  high-ranking CIA guy. In 1964, she was murdered,   and her death to this day remains a mystery. Her affair with the President had been a big   secret, and so that information only  came out later. As for her death,   it was said the shooter must have had extensive  training with a firearm. An African American man   named Ray Crump was charged with the murder, but  when the case went to trial he was acquitted.  So, why would someone have taken  this woman out, execution-style?  It’s well known that she kept a diary, and in it  were things that some people thought the world   didn’t need to know. After she was killed, people  went in search of that diary. One of them was a   CIA agent who was caught trying to break into her  apartment, according to journalist Ben Bradlee.  But, so what if the diary exposed the  president. So what if he and his mistress   smoked weed together in the White House.  Did that really qualify her for execution?  Well, some people believe that this woman knew  too much, maybe more than has been let on,   and that’s why she had to go. It’s also worth  noting that after the Warren Commission came   up with its report she was very skeptical.  Maybe that was one of the reasons why the   agency was wiretapping her phone. This is  all true, and you have to admit, her death   and the timing of it do sound quite suspicious. Now you need to watch, “The JFK Assassination   - What Really Happened?” Or, have a look at,  “Insane Ways USA Tried To Take Out Fidel Castro.”
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Channel: The Infographics Show
Views: 3,030,662
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Keywords: jfk, jfk murder, jfk assassination, history, US history, president, united states, jack ruby, lee harvey oswald, the infographics show, infographics, who did it, crime, criminal, criminals, crime story, true crime, mystery, jfk mystery
Id: 0AmP_ELZ7eU
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Length: 12min 41sec (761 seconds)
Published: Mon May 10 2021
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