Larry Dunkel and the Sixth Floor are involved in serious, no-holds barred psychological warfare against the American public on the Kennedy case. In their brazen disregard of any journalistic integrity, their script and techniques might have been written by the likes of Allen Dulles or James Angleton, writes Jim DiEugenio.

Almost none of the following is included in the hour: the involvement of Ruby and Oswald in the Cuban conflict through the CIA and the Mafia; the plentiful and multi-leveled connections of Ruby to the DPD; the witnesses who indicate Oswald and Ruby knew each other, writes Jim DiEugenio.

Sunday, 28 August 2011 21:43

John Hankey Marches Onward and Downward

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A follow-up to Hankey's replies to criticisms by Coogan and DiEugenio.

All in all, although the new version is a slight improvement, this is still an inferior film that does not do our cause any good, writes Jim DiEugenio.

Tuesday, 16 March 2010 23:37

John Hankey, Dark Legacy, aka JFK2

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Seamus Coogan's review which started a firestorm on the JFK fora, and a series of further articles at CTKA.

Monday, 01 September 2008 17:25

John Newman, Oswald and the CIA (re-issue)

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This remarkable book could never have been composed or even contemplated without the existence of the Assassination Records Review Board. No book takes us more into Oswald's workings with the intelligence community than this one. And his section on Mexico City is clearly one of the 5 or 6 greatest discoveries made in the wake of the ARRB, writes Jim DiEugenio.

Monday, 01 September 2008 17:16

Jefferson Morley, Our Man in Mexico

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The best part of the book deals with Oswald's alleged visits to the Cuban consulate and Russian Embassy in Mexico City in the fall of 1963. This section of the work owes itself to the disclosures of the ARRB. More specifically to the Lopez Report and to John Newman's important book Oswald and the CIA, writes Jim DiEugenio.

Monday, 01 September 2008 15:43

David Kaiser, The Road to Dallas

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The Road to Dallas is a methodically bad book. And as you read it you pick up on the method in its badness. And then at the end you comprehend the reason for it all, writes Jim DiEugenio.

Monday, 01 September 2008 15:31

Gaeton Fonzi, The Last Investigation

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It is not just well-written. In some places it rises to the level of extraordinarily well-written. Almost every chapter is well-planned and organized. And the book as a whole contains a completed aesthetic arc to it, writes Jim DiEugenio.

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