Key False Document in the Thomas Merton Death
Case
In the paper that we presented to the Thomas Merton Symposium in Rome, ŌWhat We Know about Thomas MertonÕs Death,Ķ we noted that on the
subject of MertonÕs death, Michael MottÕs authorized biography, The Seven Mountains of Thomas Merton has been treated as the
ultimate authority, that is, up until we published The
Martyrdom of Thomas Merton: An Investigation in March of 2018. Unfortunately, the International Thomas
Merton Society (ITMS), which has 45 U.S. chapters, conducts four-day conferences
biennially, and publishes the quarterly Merton
Seasonal and the Merton Annual
jointly with the Thomas Merton Center of Bellarmine
University, in a most benighted fashion, still seems to be treating MottÕs
flawed and dishonest work as definitive. In one vital part of his narrative, Mott
relies upon information contained in a document that we have determined must
surely be fraudulent. Worse than
that, he fails to reference the document, as though he is aware of its
fraudulence. We know that is where
he must have gotten his information because it is found nowhere else in the
record, and it is directly at odds with much more reliable information that is on
the record. We hardly have to guess
about this, because the document is among his archived papers at the library of
Northwestern University.
We are speaking of MottÕs assertion that Father Odo Haas, one of the three witnesses who found MertonÕs
body in his room with a defective fan lying across his pelvic area, attempted
to remove it and suffered a strong shock, finding himself stuck to the fan
until another witness, Father Celestine Say, was able to unplug it. That is not at all what happened,
according to Fr. Say. Mott also
writes that there were four initial witnesses, including Father Franois de Grunne, a ŌfactĶ which only could have come from the
suspect document. We know that
according to the testimony of several others that Fr. de Grunne
was not there.
Phony Documents and
Cover-Ups
In the case of government cover-ups, made up or
misrepresented documents are almost standard fare. A notable example is Vincent FosterÕs
somewhat gloomy memorandum to himself, belatedly found in his briefcase days
after it had apparently been emptied out in the presence of several people,
torn into 28 pieces with no fingerprints on it, and with one piece missing
where a signature might have been.
That document served for the press as FosterÕs suicide note, though it
isnÕt addressed to surviving loved ones and gives no indication that anything
in it is serious enough that the writer might be even considering taking his
own life. Furthermore, three
notable handwriting examiners have declared it to be a forgery.
A similar document played a central role, from the very
first day, in the press and government declarations that recently resigned
Secretary of Defense James Forrestal had taken his own life on May 22, 1949,
when he fell from a 16th floor window of the main tower of the
Bethesda Naval Hospital where he had been confined. In this case the surrogate suicide note
was the supposed transcription by Forrestal of a morbid poem by Sophocles, ŌChorus from Ajax,Ķ in which the main
character in despondence apparently contemplates suicide. That transcription turned out not to be
even an attempt at a forgery.
Perhaps the writer was confident that it would never see the light of
day, because the handwriting doesnÕt begin to resemble ForrestalÕs.
A more common type of phony document is a falsified witness
statement. Sylvia MeagherÕs seminal 1967 examination of the Warren Commission
Report on the John F. Kennedy assassination, Accessories after the Fact,
is replete with examples (pp. 323-326) of misrepresentation of witness
statements by the FBI interviewers.
A clear example of an FBI-falsified statement in the Foster case is that
of the witness, Patrick Knowlton.
Knowlton described to the FBI a car parked at Fort Marcy Park, where
FosterÕs body was found, that was older and of a distinctly different
color from FosterÕs car, but the FBI interview report stated blandly that Knowlton
saw FosterÕs car.
We have encountered a document in the Merton case that
appears to be a combination of the two types of falsifications that we have
described. It is apparently not a
misrepresentation of what a witness told interviewers; rather, it looks very
much like a witness statement that has been entirely manufactured. It has not been as central to the Merton
case as the two notes were to the Forrestal and Foster cases, but it is
important. It provides the only
ŌevidenceĶ that the bad wiring of the fan might have been such that a person
touching it might possibly have been killed on the spot.
It is represented as the written statement of Fr. Odo Haas. It
would appear to be what he submitted to the Thai police on the day of the
death, and that was how it has been characterized in correspondence between
those responsible for constructing the narrative approved for public
consumption. The documentÕs
legibility is poor, so we transcribe it here so that readers might join us in
evaluating its authenticity:
Report on the Discovery
of the Corpse of R.Fr. Thomas-Louis Merton
10 Dec.1968
About 4 p.m. In Bangkok- Swanganivas on Sukhumvit Rd. –Thai Red Cross Haus
No. ii
Reporter: Odo Haas, osb,
Abbot of Waegevan [sic]
*****
About 4 pm I went by Haus no. 2 together with Rt. Rev. Archabbot E.
Donovan/Vincent-Latrobe (USA-Penn.) where Rev. Louis-Thomas Merton was living. There were living with him in the same
house: Rev. Celestine Say, om[sic]/Prior of Manila
Rev. Francois de Grunne/St. Andr-Belgium
MR.Moffitt/Editor of America
Magazine
We met Rev. Fr. Grunne [sic] and he told us that about 3 pm he had heard a
cry and the fall of a heavy object in or nearby the house. After some time he wanted to go look in
the room where Fr. Merton was, off on the right. He saw Fr. Merton lying on the floor as
he looked through the screen. The
door was locked. He took off immediately
to get a key.
The three of us
immediately hastened to the door of the room. There we met Fr. Say.
I was going to break the
door-window open and it gave way right off so that we could easily open the
door.
Fr. Merton lay on the
floor before us. He was dressed
only in his shorts. He lay between
the bed and a stand where his habit was hanging to dry. The feet lay about 40
inches from the feet-end of the bed with the head in the corner of the room in
front of the clothes-stand.
On his body lay a fan (made in Japan), about 45 inches high. The feet of the fan lay between the legs
of Fr. Merton, with the switch on the top seam of the shorts and the fan itself
on the face or the head of Fr. Merton.
The toes of both feet
seemed to be cramped.
At the point where the
switch touched the shorts and the body a wound, a hands-breath [sic] in width,
gaped open. The raw flesh was
visible and the base of the wound was blood-shot.
The face was deep
blue. The eyes were half open. He was the mouth.[sic] On the left side between the body and
the arm I observed a pool of fluid.
It was not water. I thought
it was fluid from the wound or from the body. (Fr. Say advised me to take a picture of
the scene. It is doubtful whether
it took since it was too dark.) An
odor filled the room which, from earlier experience, I
had learned to recognize as burnt human flesh.
The fan was still
going. And so I wanted to take it
off the body right away. In doing
so I got a strong electric shock.
It kept me from getting free of the fan. Fr. Say pulled the plug of the fan out
of the socket as quickly as he could (it was behind the bed in the other corner
of the room).
We four together
verified the death of Fr. Merton.
And so Rt. Rev. Donovan gave him the blessing (presumably general
absolution). I did the same.
Immediately I hastened
to Rt. Rev. Abbot Primat [sic] R. Weakland
who appeared at the scene about 3 minutes later. About 4:10 p.m. the Abbot Primate gave
Fr. Merton extreme unction.
(signed)
Eyewitness; Odo Haas, osb
Abbot of Waegwan/S. Korea.
(The typewritten
document was not signed. ed.)
Considering the fact that this statement was supposedly
given within a few hours after the actual event, its clear errors can hardly be
explained away on account of the witnessÕs faulty memory. The most obvious error is that de Grunne joined Haas and Donovan after he had informed them
of MertonÕs plight: ŌThe three of
us hastened to the door of MertonÕs room.Ķ
We know for certain that that is not true. Everyone else said that the three people
who first entered MertonÕs room were Haas, Donovan, and Say and that de Grunne
had gone on to the main building.
De Grunne, himself, in a letter to John Moffitt said that he went
quickly to the main building after informing Haas and Donovan of the Merton
emergency. Say also wrote to
Moffitt that he had noticed that de Grunne did not
return after going for help, and reflected that de Grunne
must have been hit hard emotionally by what had happened to Merton.
We can also see that this misstatement is not just a
slip-up, because near the end of the document the writer says quite definitely,
ŌWe four together verified the death of Fr. Merton.Ķ The four that he is clearly referring to
at that point are Say, Donovan, de Grunne, and
himself. One of them could not be
Dr. Edeltrud Weist, whom he
does not mention in his statement, and it could not be Weakland,
who didnÕt get there until a few minutes later, almost simultaneously with Dr. Weist.
The error looks very much like the sort of inadvertent one
that a person would make who was not actually there at the scene. It is very difficult to believe that
Haas would have made such a major mistake.
Another error of that type concerns the matter of the key that de Grunne supposedly left the death scene to pursue. The door to MertonÕs room was not
secured by a lock that required a key, but by an internal latch. And if getting
the key were so important in de GrunneÕs mind, why
would he not have continued on to the main building to try to get it?
The DocumentÕs Poison
Pill
Such inadvertent mistakes may be contrasted with the
statementÕs central inaccuracy, which appears to be the main reason that the
statement was concocted. We are
talking about the Ōstrong electric shockĶ that the writer says he got that
Ōkept [him] from getting free of the fanĶ when he attempted to lift it off
MertonÕs body.
That is not what Say reported that he witnessed at the time,
saying only that Haas ŌrecoiledĶ from the shock and that Haas told him that the
shock was Ōnot too strong.Ķ There is an absolutely fundamental difference
between these two descriptions, representing the difference between a would-be
killer fan and a fan that one would jerk back from in the manner in which one
jerks back from an electric fence.
It is extremely hard to believe that a witness like Say, who has proved
to be so consistent and reliable in every other way, could possibly have been
so wrong about what he saw when Haas touched the defective fan and in what Haas
told him about the nature of the shock.
Surely Say would not have found such an episode so forgettable that he
would never tell anyone else about it, that is, that he had to rush to unplug
the fan so that Haas could free himself from it. It is also quite difficult to believe
that Haas would describe such an extremely painful and, indeed,
life-threatening experience in such a matter-of-fact way.
Whoever wrote this statement—which tellingly lacks
HaasÕs signature and dating at the bottom where a signature is supposed to
be—must have realized that reinforcement was needed for the notion that
Merton had been killed by a defective fan. The idea had to be planted that the
fan might have killed Haas, too, but for the quick thinking of Say to rush to
unplug it.
The short statement has other anomalies, likely errors of
both the intentional and inadvertent type.
In that latter category, the writer has the fan lying on MertonÕs body
with its base between his legs and the blades of the fan on MertonÕs head. Since the diagonal placement of the fan
across MertonÕs body was so radically different from this, one can hardly
believe that this could be the writing of an actual witness.
The document also describes a wide, open wound on MertonÕs
body mentioned by no other witnesses or the police report and not apparent in
the two photographs of the scene that we have.
The writer also says that Say suggested that he take a
picture of the scene, but we know that it was Say who actually took
photographs, and, according to Say, it was Haas who suggested that he do
so. Say, we know, after observing
the conduct of the Thai police, became wary of them and decided not to reveal
to the police that he had taken photographs of the body for fear that they
would confiscate his film. Haas is
likely to have shared SayÕs wariness of the police and would not have divulged
that he had taken any photograph for the same reason.
Another likely inadvertent mistake in the statement is that
the fan was still running, suggesting that the blades of the fan were still
turning. Donovan, however, wrote in
a letter to Moffitt, that the blades of the fan were still when they entered
MertonÕs room. It is a good deal more likely that a short-circuited fan would
not be running, so DonovanÕs observation seems more believable.
It is highly unlikely that Haas would have begun his
statement by misspelling the hometown of his abbey in Korea. It is equally unlikely that he would
have written the initials for the Order of St. Benedict that follows his name
in lower case letters. This is
never done.
In
the intentional misinformation category, the writer reports that de Grunne, as soon as he encountered Haas and Donovan, told
them that he had heard Ōa cry and the fall of a heavy objectĶ at about 3:00
p.m., but, curiously, he hadnÕt gone to check on it until about an hour
later. This fits very well with the
Ōloud noiseĶ that the police report says that de Grunne
heard at about that time, but itÕs very strange that Haas would report such a
thing so routinely. WouldnÕt he
have found it odd that de Grunne would have waited so
long to check on such alarming sounds?
It
also fits with Dr. Weist writing that she had been
told that de Grunne heard a shout at about 3:00 p.m.,
causing her to speculate that this could have been the time of MertonÕs death.
(M. Edeltrud Weist, Report
on the first impressions after Rev. F. Thomas MertonÕs tragic death given by an
eyewitness, handwritten note, Bangkok, Dec. 11, 1968, the Merton Center.) De Grunne very
likely did tell others what the police say in their report that he told them. For the record, John Moffitt, after
studying the evidence, had concluded by 1970 that de Grunne
could not have heard any shout or sound of an object falling–never mind
the time–because de Grunne was upstairs on the
opposite side of the cottage with a door closed between the two floors. MertonÕs body falling onto the terrazzo
floor would hardly have made any noise.
Neither would the fan falling on top of MertonÕs body have made much
noise. (John Moffitt, letter to
Brother Patrick Hart, February 8, 1970, Moffitt papers.)
In fact, in a letter to Moffitt, thatÕs not at all how
Donovan remembered the encounter.
The thing that stood out in his mind was how de Grunne
first oddly asked them if they had had a good swim, and only then told them
that he had heard a thump, and when he promptly checked he saw Merton on the
floor of his locked room. Donovan said that on hearing this from de Grunne, he and Haas quickly went to MertonÕs cottage. Not only does that account have a
greater ring of truth, but it also correctly reports, in agreement with de Grunne and Say, that only Haas and Donovan rushed to look
about Merton.
Say reported that Haas had told him he thought it most
unusual that de Grunne should greet them with a
casual query about their swim, but it seems not to have been remarkable enough
for mention in this statement that is purportedly by Haas, which is just
another reason to doubt its authenticity.
The Shower Story Came
Later
Readers may note that the statement says that Merton was
found wearing shorts and that whatever liquid was present was not water. This gives the lie to any notion that
Merton was wet from showering when he touched the fan. One might wonder why the perpetrators of
a cover-up would manufacture a document that is so incriminating on this
point. But we must remember that
the wet-from-showering scenario was not yet part of the story that the public
had been told. It was not in the
police report, and it was not in any news reports and would not be for a few
years. That would not come until
1973 when, as we reported in ŌNew DirectionsÕ Misdirection on Thomas MertonÕs
Death,Ķ
MertonÕs secretary at the Gethsemani Abbey in
Kentucky, wrote it in the postscript to The
Asian Journal of Thomas Merton.
Even though it did not support the shower story, this ŌHaas
statementĶ was still used to support the approved account, even after the
wet-from-showering story had become a part of it, though carefully, as we have
pointed out, without direct acknowledgment. A major reason why Michael Mott, who was
one of the few people even to be aware of this document, could make no direct
reference to it was precisely because of what the statement accurately said
about MertonÕs body with shorts on it and the absence of water at the scene. By the time Mott published his biography
in 1984, the shower story had become thoroughly incorporated into the myth of
MertonÕs death.
If this is indeed a statement that Haas made for the Thai
police, and it was in possession of the U.S. Embassy at the time that they ostensibly
translated the police report, there is no conceivable innocent excuse for
either of them to have mangled the spelling of the names of Haas and Say, as
they did in the copy of the police report that was supposedly furnished to the
abbey. Those names are right there
in this statement for them to see.
The statement, in fact, in great contrast to the police
report, is downright meticulous about peopleÕs names as well as their proper
titles and occupations. In that
regard, it seems to reflect more the concerns of a fussy bureaucrat than those
of a witness at the scene, which is just one more reason to doubt its
authenticity. Since neither the
Haas statement nor the police report was signed and neither had the embassyÕs
official stamp, as other documents related to MertonÕs death did, it further
raises the question of whether either of the documents even came through the
embassy.
As we discuss in more detail in Chapter 8 of The
Martyrdom of Thomas Merton, the typewritten witness statement by Dr. Weist has a big problem of its own, that is, that it omits
the concluding two paragraphs of Dr. WeistÕs signed,
handwritten version of the statement.
The important information thereby left out is that, according to Dr. Weist, Haas told Say that the
shock that he had received upon touching the fan was not very strong. It is hard to escape the conclusion that someone
realized how damaging to the electrocution story it was that the fan had only
mildly shocked Haas, so that part was deleted.
This explanation would be all nice and neat, except for the
fact that it was the original handwritten version of WeistÕs
statement that was sent to the abbey with the police report. We obtained our typed copy of it from Father
Rembert Weakland, Abbot
Primate of the Benedictine Order who presided over the conference. Weakland was
not even aware of the police report.
Perhaps someone just messed up when he or she provided WeistÕs handwritten statement and not the typed one to the
abbey. Why would they have even
bothered to type it up if it were not designed to be the official one for
public consumption?
Finally, Dr. WeistÕs handwritten
statement and Fr. SayÕs letter giving his eyewitness account are not the only
sources that contradict this Haas account of the Ōstrong electric shockĶ that
kept him stuck to the fan until Say could unplug it. The police report itself, which Michael
Mott had in his possession, along with the statement of Dr. Weist
and the letters of Fr. Celestine Say, when he wrote MertonÕs biography, says that
Haas Ōjerked backĶ from the fan, and Brother Patrick Hart in the introduction
to The Other Side of the Mountain, Volume
7 of The Journals of Thomas Merton,
published in 1998, described the shock to Haas as Ōslight.Ķ He had previously described the shock as
Ōstrong,Ķ however, in that postscript in which he introduced the shower story
back in 1973. Hardly surprisingly, Brother
Patrick has no source for either of these assertions
that contradict one another.
Sir Walter ScottÕs famous line, ŌOh what a tangled
tale we weave, when first we practice to deceive,Ķ seems particularly
appropriate for what we have described in all of the foregoing.
January 3, 2019
Adapted from
Chapter 4 of The Martyrdom of
Thomas Merton: An Investigation by Hugh Turley and David Martin.
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