Who Really Killed Martin
Luther King, Jr.?
Do you think that the answer to the title
question is James Earl Ray? If so,
itÕs likely because you are still completely dependent for your information
upon what I have come to call the NOMA, the national opinion-molding
apparatus. The NOMA
is made up in various degrees by the GAME, the government, academia, media, and
entertainment. The NOMA and
the GAME are at the heart of Phillip F. NelsonÕs latest exposŽ of the U.S. Deep
State at its worst.
The full title of his book is Who Really Killed Martin Luther King, Jr.: The Case against
Lyndon B. Johnson and J. Edgar Hoover.
Nelson makes his case very well that the assassination plot was
conceived and directed by the latter and authorized by the former. In terms of the dominance of the
respective roles played by these two long-term Washington, D.C., neighbors and
co-conspirators, it is a sort of reversal of the picture that Nelson paints in
his two groundbreaking books on the JFK assassination, LBJ: The Mastermind of the JFK Assassination and LBJ: From
Mastermind to ÒThe Colossus.Ó In the JFK murder, according to Nelson,
Lyndon Johnson was not just the primary beneficiary of the murder, but he was
also the primary orchestrator. In
my review of the latter book, I argue that as a bare minimum, LBJ had to be
thoroughly involved in the plot, or it would have been entirely too risky for
the people who carried it out.
The real strength of NelsonÕs latest book, the
thing that might well make it his best book yet—including even his most
recent previous book, Remember the Liberty—is its focus upon the
big role played by the NOMA in making people believe, in the absence of a
trial, with only a clearly coerced then quickly reversed guilty plea, that Ray
was KingÕs killer. That took real
yeomanÕs work by the national news media.
In fact, to be properly descriptive, Nelson probably should have added
to his subtitle, Òand the media.Ó
Actually, but for its lack of popular currency
ÒNOMAÓ would have been even better, because most people think of the media as
just the press, and Nelson devotes a great deal of attention to the pernicious
job done by book writers on the MLK, Jr. murder, particularly the fiction
writer—even when he is purporting to write fact—William Bradford Huie. Here is how
Nelson sums up the work of Huie and his cohorts:
But a professionalÕs opinion of James Earl RayÕs
psyche was woefully inadequate to describe the designated patsy of the murder
of Martin Luther King, Jr. That was
left to a succession of inventive novelists as outlined above. William Bradford Huie, Gerold Frank, and George E.
McMillan in the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s were joined in 1998 by Gerald Posner
and in 2010 by Hampton Sides.
All had made up assertions to repaint the same contrived portrait of James
Earl Ray. The germ planted
originally by Huie in his first magazine articles and
book was then replanted in the books by the others, becoming
an organic linkage between them and the future books designed as
additional boosts for the original myths that reblossomed
each time with ever more flagrant deceits and distortions.
It suggests that the earliest authors were
brought in to FBI headquarters in Washington and put in a conference room with
Hoover, [Clyde] Tolson, [Cartha]
DeLoach, [William] Sullivan, and [Sam] Papich, where they were told to make up as many stories as
they could and write them up as convincingly as possible, to reframe the
narrative to paint the most derogatory profile they could of James Earl
Ray. Based on the results, it would
appear that they were competing with one another for the winning entry,
probably even a grand prize for the winner, who could come up with the most
absurdly outrageous fiction, and sell it to the public; whoeverÕs book sold the
most in the first production run would be declared the Òwinner.Ó (pp. 122-123)
Book writers are very much a part of the
national opinion-molding apparatus, but their reach is limited without full
establishment assistance, publishers to distribute the books and the press to
publicize them and their message. A
relatively few people actually take the trouble to read books. Most of what the general public learns
from them comes from reviews written about them or press articles that make
reference to them.
In the case of the MLK, RFK, and JFK murders,
that national news media make a sharp division of the books written into two
categories, either Òauthoritative,Ó or Òconspiracy theories.Ó The former group receives all the
publicity and the wide distribution while the latter are seldom even mentioned
individually; they are merely dismissed collectively. When the public was being sold what
Nelson shows is the completely preposterous notion, sold primarily in the
beginning by Huie, that Illinois native James Earl
Ray was a hard-bitten Southern George Wallace-supporting racist who stalked King
around the country before finally catching up to him in Memphis, the press
sellers of that story had a virtual monopoly on national information. As preposterous as the story might have been,
the press across the board has treated it as authoritative, and so it has been.
The King Family
The mainstream press might have done some
bump-and-run reporting on it here and there, but, thanks to the general
suppression of the news, most people, at best, are only dimly aware of the fact
that KingÕs family has been strongly opposed to the official blame for the
murder that was laid upon Ray. One
can get a good appreciation of the King familyÕs position, particularly that of
the son, Dexter, in the 2010 article by Lisa
Pease
on the Alex Constantine web site.
That article is also a very good supplement to NelsonÕs book on the
press role in the continuing cover-up.
I had a bit of a ringside seat for one bit of
this news suppression back in 1997.
On the evening of February 13, Hugh Turley and I attended a presentation
at George Washington University by some high media muckamucks,
including the incumbent White House press secretary, on the subject of what was
then considered the new Ò24-hour news cycle.Ó Our purpose was to ask questions that
demonstrated that the national press was not at all holding government leaders
accountable nearly to the extent that these speakers would have us
believe. TurleyÕs question, which
he was able to deliver, involved suppression of the news of the street
harassment of grand jury witness, Patrick Knowlton, in the Vince Foster death
case. Mine, which I didnÕt get the
chance to ask, was to have been related to the Martin Luther King
assassination. As it happened, I
had learned from the Internet that that day members of KingÕs family had held a
press conference in which they called for a new trial for James Earl Ray. I wanted to ask the panel if any one of
them would want to bet against me on the proposition that the news of that
press conference would be blacked out by the major press the next day. The story of the dramatic events of that
evening, at which Turley came close to getting arrested for asking his
impertinent question, is told in my article, ÒIndifference to Tyranny.Ó
I canÕt say if there was a complete blackout of
the news of the King family press conference, but I do know that there was
nothing about it in the edition of The
Washington Post that was thrown into my driveway the next morning, because
I wrote a poem about it:
News
Suppression, Feb. 14, 1997
What
did the "liberal" Washington Post
Do
for black history this day?
They
did what they've done most consistently,
They
protected our rulers from you and from me,
And
blacked out the news that the King family
Had called for a new trial for Ray.
The HSCA
The 1976 House Select Committee on
AssassinationsÕ (HSCA) cover-up die was cast when staff director Richard
Sprague was replaced by Notre Dame law professor and supposed expert on
organized crime, Robert Blakey. According to Nelson, the HSCA did accomplish
one very important thing. By
interviewing a number of the people that Huie had
talked to in order to spin his widely believed fantasy about RayÕs virulent
racism, they were able to establish that there was simply no truth to it. In
doing so, though, they created another problem for themselves:
The HSCAÕs rejection of Ray having a racist
motive required a little back-filling in order to
support his only other possible rationales. That was done by replacing racism with
the possibility that Ray might have been involved with other shadowy figures
who could have promised him other rewards for taking the extraordinary violent
action—especially for someone who had never done anything like this in
his life—of shooting King using a high-powered rifle with a misaligned
scope (one that was, incidentally, never shown to have been the murder weapon,
and indeed it has been proven that it could not have been). Instead of racism, it was conjured, Ray
might have been intrigued by having his name in a lot of newspapers, thus
making it into the FBIÕs Ten Most Wanted list (though he had carefully chosen a
number of aliases to avoid that very thing) and being given a large reward for
his efforts (though nothing like that ever occurred either, other than book
contracts that would be used against himself to pay for his deceitful lawyers.)
(pp. 298-299)
You know that theyÕre desperate when they have
to play the old aiming-for-immortalization-through-infamy charge, but thatÕs
all they ever had to explain Lee Harvey OswaldÕs supposed actions, and while
hinting at some possible conspiracy behind Ray, the HSCA never made any serious
follow-up on it, knowing, undoubtedly, where that approach would most certainly
lead.
What it Means
The real strength of NelsonÕs book lies in the
fact that his previous books have made him an experienced researcher into the
reality of American politics as it exists today. He has seen the tricks that were played in
the other major assassinations, making him better able to see through them in
the King case, particularly through the use of those detestable mercenaries in
the opinion-molding field. His
conclusion contains an ominous warning for us all:
Looking back on the story that never
was—the innocence of James Earl Ray—it finally becomes clear. He was merely another patsy, just like
Lee Harvey Oswald and Sirhan B. SirhanÉ
[What] we donÕt know is how much longer this
shamefully despicable lie—putting the blame on an innocent, vulnerable
man who was set up months, even years, in advance—can remain in the
nationÕs most secret closets. But
it should now be understandable to all that the longer the nationÕs foundation
continues to rest upon fabricated myths, built on top of fractured and
crumbling truths—compounded with a patchwork of new, ever-greater lies to
extend the original cover-up—the weaker and more vulnerable it will
become. (pp. 408-409)
Twenty years ago, I put the matter in even
starker terms in poetic form:
When
I first read The Gulag Archipelago
I
knew that those Reds had to go.
They
weren't quite as bad as Joe Stalin,
But
they were still up there running the show.
Now
the killers of King and the Kennedys
And
the makers of Dick's silent coup
Have
a similar grip on this country,
And we have to be rid of them, too.
But for the fact that it would
badly mess up the poemÕs meter, we could include quite a few more outrages in
that second verse, the most recent discovery of which has been the 1968
assassination of the great Catholic antiwar monk, Thomas Merton. Whatever unspeakable horror they have
planned for us next, one can be certain that the NOMA will be wheeled into
operation to make us accept it.
David Martin
August 2, 2018
Addendum
See also ÒPropaganda,
Disinformation, and Dirty Tricks: James Earl Ray Was Innocent of the
Assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr.Ó by Gary G. Kohls.
David Martin
August 3, 2018
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