Befuddled Juror in
Thomas Merton Book Verdict
My copy of the quarterly Merton Seasonal, published jointly by the International Thomas
Merton Society and the Thomas Merton Center of Bellarmine
University, has arrived, and I see that they have finally stopped ignoring The
Martyrdom of Thomas Merton: An Investigation, written by Hugh Turley
and yours truly and published in March of 2018. The Winter 2018 edition upon the 50th
anniversary of MertonÕs untimely and mysterious death in Thailand on December
10, 2018, is on the general theme of MertonÕs demise. On the cover is a photograph of MertonÕs
grave marker at his home Gethsemani Abbey near
Bardstown, Kentucky. The modest
black and white magazine, 43 pages in length, contains six articles and two
poems. The last three of the
articles are book reviews, and the final one is of our book entitled, ÒA Challenge to the
Standard Account.Ó Unfortunately, it appears that they did
not choose a member of the varsity team for the job.
Here are the reviewerÕs bona fides as they
appear at the bottom of the reviewÕs first page:
Paul
R. Dekar, Professor Emeritus of Evangelism and
Mission at Memphis Theological Seminary, is a Canadian Friends Service
Committee member and long-time contributor to ITMS conferences and
publications. He is the author of Thomas Merton: Twentieth-Century Wisdom for
Twenty-First Century Living (Eugene, OR: Cascade Books, 2011) and most recently
of Dangerous People: The Fellowship of Reconciliation Building a Nonviolent
World of Justice, Peace, and Freedom (Virginia Beach: Downing Publishers,
2016).
Professor
Dekar appears qualified enough for his assignment,
but as you look at the work he has done, you really have to wonder if he is
even qualified to serve on a standard American jury, as bad as they can be. His bottom-line assessment of the bookÕs
general thesis is his third from the last paragraph, repeated here in its
entirety:
However,
the authors fail, for me, to satisfy a criterion operating when I have served
on juries, namely, to establish beyond reasonable doubt that Merton was
murdered. Barring access to CIA documents, I am not clear what new evidence may
strengthen the authorsÕ case. More disconcerting is the authorÕs claim that
Brother Patrick Hart and Abbot Flavian Burns played a
crucial role in a cover-up. In effect the authors charge that MertonÕs brothers
were complicit in concealing the facts of his death. Over the years, during
visits to the Abbey of Gethsemani, I have talked with
many of MertonÕs fellow monks, including Patrick Hart, and I have heard nothing
inconsistent with understanding that Merton could have died by accidental
electrocution, per the generally accepted account of his death.
The
first thing at issue, as we make very clear in the book, is what Dekar calls the Òstandard account,Ó that is that Merton
died from accidental electrocution by a defective (Hitachi) floor fan in which,
according to the only Thai police report known to exist, a defective cord had
at some point Òbeen installed.Ó The fan had been running perfectly well for the
first two days of the monastic conference that Merton was attending just
outside Bangkok, not known to have shocked anyone touching it. Dekar uses the
terms Òstandard accountÓ and Ògenerally accepted accountÓ instead of Òofficial
accountÓ because the only official cause of MertonÕs death is the one of the
police report, the doctorÕs certificate, and the death certificate. They agree that Merton died of the
natural cause of heart failure and that he was already dead when he came into
contact with the defective fan. You
can see them all at http://www.themartyrdomofthomasmerton.com/documents.html. The U.S. EmbassyÕs December 13, 1968,
Report of the Death of an American Citizen on the line for cause of death
states, ÒSudden Heart Failure (according to official Death Certificate).Ó You can see that document at http://www.themartyrdomofthomasmerton.com/index.html.
Mendacious Defendants as Expert Witnesses
With
such an official conclusion on the record, the ones who have the tall order are
those who would argue that the cause of death was accidental electrocution,
instead. Since there was no
autopsy, how can Dekar possibly conclude Òbeyond a
reasonable doubtÓ that the official conclusion is wrong? In his wisdom, he apparently thinks that
that has been done, but how so? Since
heÕs on the Ògenerally acceptedÓ side he seems to think that all he has to do
is to resort to the invocation of nos. 2 and 7 of my Seventeen Techniques for Truth Suppression, which are ÒWax
indignantÓ and ÒInvoke authority.Ó Worse
than that, the authority that he invokes is that of those that we show should
be regarded as defendants, at least in the cover-up. If he actually read
our book and scored anywhere above the lowest quartile in the
reading-comprehension part of the Scholastic Aptitude Test, he should know that
Hart in particular has repeatedly borne false witness about the most important
things. If you have only read our
article, ÒNew DirectionsÕ
Misdirection on Thomas MertonÕs DeathÓ you know that Hart completely made up the
story, published almost five years after the death in 1973, that Merton had
showered and was therefore wet when he encountered the faulty fan. That was in his postscript to The Asian Journal of Thomas Merton. In that volume, which Hart co-edited, was
a letter, widely published for the first time, purported to be from six Trappist monks who were in attendance at the conference
where Merton died. That letter
described MertonÕs body as lying on its back on the floor Òin his pajamas,Ó
with the fan lying across him. No
doubt to support the claim that Merton had taken a shower, the editors removed
Òin his pajamasÓ from the letter. The
juror Dekar appears not to realize that these
egregious falsehoods invalidate Hart as an expert witness. Rather, they implicate him in the
cover-up.
It
gets worse. In our book, we reveal
that we have an earlier draft of his postscript that Hart had shared with America magazine poetry editor, John
Moffitt, who had been in the cottage where Merton died. The draft and letters of exchange with
Hart were in the late MoffittÕs papers at the library of the University of
Virginia. Moffitt had suggested to
Hart that he could not say that Merton had showered because there was no
evidence for it. Hart did it anyway. Hart did take MoffittÕs advice on
another matter. Hart had written
that the U.S. Embassy in Thailand had informed the Gethsemani
Abbey that Merton had died at about 3:00 p.m. Moffitt had examined the matter
carefully and told Hart that the time of death was about 2:00 p.m. So Hart changed his text to say that the
U.S. Embassy had told the Abbey that
Merton had died at about 2:00 p.m.
We also reveal in our book and in our most recent article, ÒKey False Document in the Thomas Merton Death
Case,Ó
that in that 1973 postscript Hart wrote that one of the witnesses who attempted
to remove the fan from MertonÕs body suffered a Òstrong shock,Ó but in his
foreword to another volume of MertonÕs papers in 1998, Hart wrote that it was a
Òslight shock,Ó with no reference for either claim.
One
must read the book in which we show the letters exchanged between key people
that reveal Abbott Flavian Burns as a key
orchestrator of the cover-up, but a couple of examples, which we havenÕt
mentioned so far in our articles, capture the flavor of it. The reason that Burns gives for no
autopsy being performed was that he had been informed by the U.S. Embassy that
Thai law required that anyone autopsied in Thailand must be buried in Thailand,
and that it was more important to them that Merton be buried there at his home
abbey (so The Merton Seasonal could
display that cross with the inscription on it on its Winter 2018 cover, I
suppose). Think of it. The notion is preposterous on its
face. What does one thing have to
do with the other? We checked with
the Embassy, and, of course, no such law exists currently and itÕs almost
certain that there never was such a ridiculous law. Furthermore, the U.S. military quickly
took possession of MertonÕs body and embalmed it at a U.S. military
hospital. They could easily have
autopsied it first, and surely there is nothing the Thai government could have
done to prevent them from transporting the body back to the United States. ThereÕs no reason why the Thais would have
even known of such an autopsy. Even
after embalmment, Abbott Flavian could have requested
an autopsy once the body was back home, but he did not do so. We also show in our book, and the
documents that one can access at the bookÕs web site, given above, that the
Thai authorities falsely indicated that an autopsy had been performed in a Thai
hospital in accordance with law, as an
apparent prerequisite for permitting the body to leave the country.
Also,
in our book, we show from our reading of letters exchanged by those we indict
as parties to the cover-up that Burns floated the idea of claiming that the
retreat center did not have fuses in the cottages. The others didnÕt go for it, and it was
dropped. We realize, now, that we
made less of that little aborted gambit by Burns than we should have. In the standard or generally accepted
account, it was a Òshort-circuited fanÓ that caused MertonÕs death. But before it was able to do that, it should
have caused a fuse to blow and there would have been no current at all coming
out of the wall receptacle into which the cord of the fan was plugged. An electrician who has written a review
of our book on Amazon has brought that point home. This suggests that the fan was likely
carefully rigged in such a way that someone touching it would experience a
shock, and lying across MertonÕs body for a period of time it would cause a
burn, but it was not short-circuited.
That is to say, it was rigged to be a prop suggesting that electrocution
had been the cause of death.
Professor
Dekar professes to find it disconcerting that we
should conclude from what we discovered that Brother Hart and Abbott Flavian played crucial roles in the cover-up of MertonÕs
apparent murder. We have to say
that we were very much disconcerted as well. We were disconcerted at finding out what
these men of the cloth had done, just as the public these days, particularly
members of the Roman Catholic community, are disconcerted at discovering what
many other members of the Catholic clergy have done under the cover of
religious piety. I should think
that most people now are well past the ÒHow dare you?Ó stage, when it comes to
allegations about criminal behavior by members of the clergy, particularly when
those allegations are as well-buttressed by the facts as the ones that we are
making.
The
other thoroughly discredited authority that Dekar
invokes is the celebrated biographer Michael Mott:
In
his authorized biography, Michael Mott wrote that the evidence overwhelmingly
pointed to accidental electrocution as the cause of MertonÕs death. Mott
offered a Òmost likely reconstruction of eventsÓ according to
which, after a shower, Merton may have slipped while gripping a faulty fan that
gave Merton a shock sufficient in itself to kill him as he cried out, or which
induced a massive heart
attack. Mott acknowledged that there were a number of unanswered questions and
that it was a matter of Òreal regretÓ that MertonÕs death
was investigated in a bungled and amateurish fashion and that there was no
autopsy. Mott discounted suicide or murder.
As
we point out in the book and in ÒWhat We Know about Thomas MertonÕs Death,Ó Mott had to have
known for certain that, far from it having any part in a Òlikely reconstruction
of events,Ó Merton had not taken a shower.
Mott had in his possession one of the two photographs that we discovered
that the witness Fr. Celestine Say had taken of the body as they found it, with
shorts on and a fan lying diagonally across the pelvis. Neither hand was near
the fan. Mott also had SayÕs letter
in which Say said that he took the photographs that he
did because they found the scene so peculiar. Yet in his various possible
reconstructions, Mott speculates about the possibility of the body having been
wet and naked and the witnesses having put shorts on the body for modestyÕs
sake. A careful reader of what he
has written, even, can see that that is not true, because he quotes from the
police report, ÒThere was a burnÉon the underwear on the right side which was
assumed to have been caused by electrical shock from the fan.Ó (p. 566)
Mott
has no source for Merton having taken a shower. We know that as far as the ÒstandardÓ or
Ògenerally acceptedÓ account goes, Brother Patrick Hart is the source, but Mott
could hardly cite him, because people would see that Hart didnÕt come out with
it until 1973. Mott in his account
also tells us that the witness Fr. Odo Haas was
Òjerked sidewaysÓ and Òheld to the shaft of the fan until Father Celestine
managed to unplug the fan at the outletÓ when he tried to lift the fan off
MertonÕs body. (p. 565) As we explain in ÒKey False Document in the Thomas Merton Death
Case,Ó
MottÕs only source for that assertion had to have been that very questionable
unsigned statement by Fr. Haas, which contradicts much more credible testimony
on that point and a number of other points by a number of other credible
witnesses. Mott ignored everything
that contradicted the dubious Haas document, and he could not cite it as his
source because of its questionable nature and because it states explicitly,
consistent with the clear implication of the police report, that Merton was
wearing shorts when he was found and that there was no water in evidence.
In
case you still think that there might be at least an ounce of honesty in MottÕs
dominant contribution to the Òstandard account,Ó you need to know that Mott
tells us that Say photographed the scene after it had been disturbed in a
number of ways. He had to have
known that that was not true, because he had in his possession SayÕs letter
that accompanied his photograph and negatives, saying exactly when and why he
took the photographs.
WhoÕs Not Qualified?
ItÕs
not very hard to see how someone like Professor Dekar
could be taken in by MottÕs razzle-dazzle.
Check out what he writes in back-to-back sentences in the second
paragraph of his review, ÒA local doctor concluded that Merton died of cardiac
failure from electrical shock. Without reason to suspect criminal cause,
authorities deemed MertonÕs death was from Ôa natural causeÕÉÓ
What, one might ask, is ÒnaturalÓ about such an
ultimate cause of death as an electrical shock? Dekar is wrong
both in fact and in logic. As we
have noted, the doctor did say that Merton died of cardiac failure, but that it
had nothing to do with the shock administered by the fan and was therefore a
natural cause. This is an
absolutely basic fact in the case, and Dekar gets it
completely wrong.
He even starts off getting things wrong with
his opening sentence, ÓHugh
Turley, volunteer columnist for the Hyattsville Life and Times, and David
Martin, who works for the Bureau of Labor Statistics, argue in their new book
that Thomas Merton did not die by accidental electrocution.Ó
We
certainly do argue that Merton did not die from accidental electrocution, but
Turley is not a volunteer columnist for that small monthly newspaper and I am
not an employee of the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Those are both former occupations of
ours, from a few years in the past.
We mention those jobs in order to cite the notable writing awards we
received in our respective capacities in the ÒAbout the AuthorsÓ part of the
book at the end, but Dekar leaves the awards part
out. We make it clear that TurleyÕs
dabbling in journalism was voluntary because we are consistently hard on
AmericaÕs professional journalists in the book.
The
impression Dekar apparently intends to leave is that
we are not qualified for the task that we have taken upon ourselves. To create that impression, not only does
he cut out the awards, but he ignores the bookÕs
foreword. There one learns that far
from being unqualified, we might well be the two most qualified people in the
world to look into MertonÕs demise critically and objectively. We explain how we met through our mutual
curiosity about the supposed suicide of Deputy White House Counsel Vincent
Foster and Turley ended up collaborating with the dissident witness in the
case, Patrick Knowlton, and his lawyer, John Clarke, to write a letter
destroying the suicide thesis that the appointing judges ordered Special
Counsel Kenneth Starr to include in his report on FosterÕs death, a part of the
report that has been blacked out by AmericaÕs press. We also write of the book about the
case, Failure of the Public Trust,
that Turley co-wrote with Knowlton and Clarke and the 75 articles that I have
written about the Foster case and say where our writings can be found, at http://www.fbicover-up.com and at http://www.dcdave.com.
Seeing
ourselves described as Dekar does, I am reminded of
nothing so much as Al FrankenÕs Stuart Smalley character on Saturday Night Live
introducing Michael Jordan, after looking down at his notes, as Òa basketball player.Ó
Dekar does manage to make some amends for his attempt
at a review with his concluding sentence, ÒThe authors of the book under review
do raise important questions that should engender more-than-usual comment and
further research.Ó
I
think that it is safe to say that no such research will be
done by the scholarly or religious community of which Professor Dekar is a comfortable, card-carrying part. They sat on their hands for a half-century,
after all.
David
Martin
January
8, 2019
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