BOOK
REVIEW: Pieces of the Puzzle by Gayle
Nix Jackson (2017)
Some
people try to understand the assassination of President Kennedy by using
metaphors or matrix models, comparing it to a game of chess or a puzzle, and
Gayle Nix Jackson adds some previously missing pieces of the Dealey Plaza
picture in her book Pieces of the Puzzle,
an important new book on the assassination.
As the
late Jim Marrs says, “Some people believe that there’s nothing left to say
about JFK’s assassination. They couldn’t be more wrong. There are still people
alive who were there and who were witnesses to the goings on in Dallas and
beyond. Gayle has found these people and talked to them and that’s what good
investigative reporters do: they go to the source. In a time where so many JFK
books are nothing more than recycled stories everyone has heard, Gayle brings
us new information about people we’ve heard about but never knew. Now we do.”
As Gayle
Nix Jackson’s second book on the assassination, after one on her grandfather’s
film, this is an anthology with chapters written by James Wagenvoord, Doug
Campbell, Steve Roe and Chris Scally, so there is more than one dimension to
this book.
With a
Foreward and a chapter written by Wagenvood, a former Life Magazine employee who
gives good insight into the inner workings of the publishing giant that purchased
and suppressed the Zapruder film. It’s a subject he will discuss further at the
CAPA symposium at the Old Red Court House at Dealey Plaza on Thursday, November
15.
Steve Roe
writes the chapter on “Welcome Mr. Kennedy to Dallas,” while Doug Campbell
writes Chapter 8 on The Gunrunner (Loran Hall) and Chris Scally writes the
final chapter on Closing In On the Nix Film?, about the frustrating search for
the missing film that is now the subject of a legal civil court case.
Most
people recognize Gayle Nix Jackson as the granddaughter of Orville Nix, the guy
who made the other film of the assassination, the original of which has gone
missing. There’s certainly more substance to this book than the one written by
Zapruder’s granddaughter, who pooh poohs conspiracy theorists and those who
question the provenance of that film. Establishing a clear provenance of the Z
film is something that Zapruder could have but failed to do and something that
must still be done. Where was the Z film and when was it there? That would seem
to be a simple question that she could have answered, but doesn’t.
Gayle Nix
Jackson gives us some answers we didn’t have before, and her writing cohorts
Wagenvoord and Chris Scally go into the details of the Nix film. But this book goes beyond the film as she
also goes into detail with the Walker shooting, the Cuban refugees in Dallas,
the Odio incident, and Loran Hall, who the Warren Report falsely says was one
of Odio’s visitors. Most significantly and miraculously, she tracked down and
interviewed the obscure and elusive but important witness Walter J. Machann, a
former Catholic priest who catered to the Cuban community in Dallas, including
the Odios.
Years ago,
when I finally tracked down Machann’s sister in Dallas, she said he was in
Thailand, where I imagined him becoming a monk after leaving the priesthood,
but the real story is even more interesting. Then known
as Father Machann, in 1963 he was a young Catholic priest assigned by his
bishop to cater to the welfare of the Cuban refugees in Dallas, mainly because
he had attended the University of Mexico and spoke Spanish.
Among
those he worked closely with were a number of Cuban exiles including Silvia
Odio, who told Machann of her encounter with “Leon” Oswald and two Cubans a month
before the assassination, seeking assistance for their anti-Castro activities.
The next day one of the Cubans called Odio on the phone and told her the Gringo
“Leon” was an “ex-Marine marksman who said that the Cubans had no guts or
President Kennedy would have been killed after the Bay of Pigs.”
Machann
first came into the picture when one of the rich society ladies he worked with
in helping the Cubans refuges informed the authorities of the story of “Leon”
Oswald visiting Odio with two Cubans.
Machann is
one of the most mysterious and elusive characters that populate the JFK
assassination story, yet she found him and convinced him to talk to her openly
and candidly.
The
ability to obtain the trust and belief of suspicious, mistrusting and
previously abused witnesses is a difficult task, and Gaeton Fonzi, Dick Russell
and Tony Summers are among the few who have attained the trust of Marina
Oswald, who Priscilla Johnson McMillan betrayed, Sylvia Duran of Mexico City
fame, and Silvia Odio.
Machann
puts an exact time to the visit when he says that Odio told him the incident
occurred on the night of a big Gala ball that featured actress Janet Leigh,
which sets the once disputed date as Friday, September 27, when Oswald was,
according to the Warren Report, on his way or in Mexico City seeking a visa to
Cuba.
It doesn’t
matter whether it was Oswald or an imposter posing as him, as the incident, as
Gayle suggests, was clearly a ruse to associate Oswald with the liberal JURE
faction of the anti-Castro Cuban groups as well as a preliminary chess move
before the assassination actually took place. JURE was a group that Silvia’s
father helped establish before he was arrested for his role in a plot to kill
Castro, a plot that also included Antonio Veciana, who figures prominently in
other aspects of the assassination drama.
Former
Congressional investigator Gaeton Fonzi, who convinced both Veciana and Silvia
Odio to testify before the House Select Committee on Assassinations (HSCA) but
to their dismay, they were never called. Fonzi wrote; “With liberal leader
Manolo Ray (the Odios) had formed one of the early, most aggressive anti-Castro
groups, the mOvimiento Revolucionairo, del Pueblo (MRP). Manolo Ray would later
be the leader of JURE (Junta Revolucianario).”
While a
leader of the anti-Batista underground in Havana, Manolo Ray worked as the
chief engineer at the Havana Hilton, which was managed by Colonel Frank M.
Brandstetter. Colonel “Brandy” as he was known, was affiliated with the Dallas
military intelligence unit headed by Col. Jack Crichton, but he reported
directly to Colonel William B. Rose of the Pentagon office of ACSI – Assistant
Chief of Staff for Intelligence, whose officers were all over the Dealey Plaza
operation. When Castro arrived in Dallas he took over the penthouse of the
Havana Hilton, at the invitation of Brandstetter, so they kept close tabs on
him.
The Warren
Report dismissed Odio’s story by falsely claiming her three visitors were Loran
Hall, William Seymour and Lawrence Howard, another wrong conclusion that has
since been debunked, and this book has an interesting chapter devoted to Loran
Hall and his connections to the assassination.
The FBI and
Secret Service also went looking for Machann and found him in New Orleans,
staying at the home of Odio’s uncle Auhudin Guitart – who just happened to be
one of the few people who attended the New Orleans court hearing the previous
summer, where Oswald was fined $10 for fighting with Carlos Bruinguier and two
other anti-Castro Cuban DRE members.
While
the official government records say that it was Secret Service Inspector Thomas
Kelley who met Machann in New Orleans, and had him call Siliva Odio to ask her
about the encounter with Oswald and the Cubans, Machann says it was FBI Agent
James Hosty. Machann knew Hosty as a parishioner at his Sacred Heart Parish,
and Machann’s secretary taught Hosty’s son in school.
Machann
was also the subject of a Life Magazine investigation that was never published,
and was interviewed on camera by the Frontline documentary producers. Machann
does get a mention in the book “Oswald
Talked” and is the main character of Marianne Sullivan’s “Kennedy Ripples,” which has been
described as the Harlequin Romance version of the assassination. She was one of
a number of the female parishioners who had a crush on the young, handsome
priest and wrote the book full of falsehoods, increasing Machann’s desire for
anonymity.
But other
than that, Gayle Nix Jackson is the only person he has told his story to, and
what an interesting story it is.
According
to a Dallas Morning News report Father Machann shared a Highland Park, Dallas
stage with John Martino, a book signing promotion shortly after the publication
of Martino’s book “I Was Castro’s
Prisoner” (with Nate Weyl, NY Devin-Adair, 1963). Father Machann reportedly introduced Martino to
a crowd of mostly John Birch Society members and Cubans, including Silvia’s sister
Sarita. Sarita cried when Martino mentioned meeting her father in prison on the
Isle of Pines.
Gayle
refers to him as “Johnny Martino,” and showed Machann a photo of the man, but
Machann has no memory of him, though Martino also features prominently in other
aspects of the assassination story. Martino shared a Florida apartment with
John Rosselli, the mobster who worked with the CIA on various plots to kill
Castro and backed one of the JMWAVE commando teams that were paid by the CIA
and trained to kill Castro. Martino’s wife told Anthony Summers that he
expressed foreknowledge of the assassination before it occurred.
I had previously interviewed Martino’s
Atlantic City sister and brother, and recorded a telephone interview with Nate
Weyl, the co-author of Martino’s book.
Trudi Castorr,
wife of Colonel William Castorr, also knew the Odios and Machann, and it was
Colonel Castorr who Nancy Perrin Rich says met with her husband and Jack Ruby
to discuss running guns to Cuba and exfiltrating refugees. But Machann doesn’t
recall Martino or the Castorrs, or perhaps he doesn’t want to and knows they
are hot suspects in this case.
Machann
now tells us that he met the Odio sisters in the course of his parish work for
the Catholic Cuban Refugee Relief. He says another Cuban – Joaquin Insua was
also assigned to work with him, taking care of all the money that was raised to
help the Cubans. As Machann put it: “I didn’t hire him. I don’t know who did,
but I would think it was someone from the Diocese. We worked together. Mr.
Insua kept our books so he knew all about the money we took in and gave out.”
Gayle
writes; “In 1962, after Father Machann was appointed head of the Dallas Cuban
Catholic Relief Program, his manager was put in place. Machann says he didn’t
hire the man: Joaquin “Papa’ Insua. Insua’s daughter Marcella also helped as
well as (a secretary), teaching Parish school classes and working part-time at
Neiman-Marcus. One of her students was (FBI Agent) James Hosty’s son. The
Insuas were related by marriage to the Odios. Joaquin Insua not only kept the
books for the Cuban Catholic Committee, but was an FBI informant as well.”
Unknown to
Machann or Gayle Nix Jackson, the Catholic Cuban Refugee Relief program was
bankrolled primarily by the CIA through the Catherwood Foundation, an
ostensibly philanthropic fund based in Philadelphia that I had wrote about
years earlier.
From
Machann, and Odio’s book of poetry, we learn that while Sylvia Odio was born to
a wealthy family in Cuba, she attended a Catholic high school in Philadelphia
and the Catholic Villanova University, not far from the Catherwood Fund office.
I first
learned about the CIA’s ties to the Philadelphia based Catherwood Fund from the
David Wise and Thomas Ross book “The Invisible
Government,” where it is mentioned in a footnote of such foundations that
served as financial fronts and conduits for CIA covert operations, including
the Catherwood Foundation. An article in Philadelphia
Magazine also intimated that the Catherwood Fund had some connection to
Ruth Paine, who lived in Philadelphia at the time, and the assassination of
President Kennedy. In the summer of 1976 I investigated the Catherwood Fund and
read all of the newspaper clips that showed how it covertly served the CIA. From
the news reports, that didn’t know of the CIA’s backing, I learned that the
Catherwood Foundation financed the Cuban Aide Relief (CAR) to aide anti-Castro
Cuban professionals who fled Cuba.
It also
provided covert cover for CIA agent Joseph Smith when he was sent to the
Philippines.
(See:
Joseph Smith – “Portrait of a Cold
Warrior” Ballantine Books, 1976, p. 251)
The Catherwood
Fund also financed the Catholic Cuban Refugee Relief program, established
medical clinics for the Cuban refugees in Miami, and financed other Catholic
Church related facilities set up in Philadelphia, New Orleans, New York,
Newark, Dallas and other places the Cuban refugees settled in large numbers.
Shortly
after the assassination, Dr. Jose Ignorzio, the chief of clinical psychology
for the Catholic Welfare Service in Miami, contacted the White House to inform
the new administration that Oswald had met directly with Cuban ambassador Armas
in Mexico, a story that was also falsely attributed to Silvia Duran, the
Mexican national who worked at the Cuban Embassy in Mexico City and dealt with
Oswald.
As House
Select Committee on Assassinations (HSCA) investigator Dan Hardway and others have pointed out,
most of the false stories implicating Castro in the assassination stemmed from
assets and associates of CIA officer David Atlee Phillips. And this one
originates from the CIA Catherwood funded Catholic Welfare Service, the same
organization that Father Machann was affiliated with, even though he wasn’t
aware of the CIA connection.
When the
FBI found out about the Odio incident they listed a dozen people who should
have been questioned about it, including Insua, Machann’s Catholic Cuban
Welfare associate and his daughter, the secretary for the Dallas Catholic Cuban
Refugee program. The Life Magazine investigation did the same thing, but never
published what they found out.
While
Machann was unaware of it, Joaquin Insua, the FBI informant who was inserted
into the Dallas Cuban Refugee Relief to manage the funds and files, must have
known that much of the money came from the CIA, and managed it.
Insua died
suspiciously in December 1964, and his office was torched, with the fire
destroying all of the Dallas Catholic Cuban Welfare records, emphasizing their
importance.
Gayle
asked Machann if he was around when the office caught fire and he responded:
“No, I was gone by then. I know all the records that Mr. Insua kept were
burned. He died not long afterwards, or maybe it was before.”
The Dealey Plaza Cleanup Crew at work.
Walter
Machann is just one of dozens of still living witnesses who should have been questioned
further about the assassination. These witnesses should be questioned again to verify
their official statements and testimony or correct the record, as their numbers
are dwindling.
Posterity
would have missed Walter Machann’s fascinating story if it wasn’t for Gayle Nix
Jackson, whose perserverance, tenacity and persuasiveness convinced the
reluctant Machann to talk.
Machann
has been invited, with other similar witnesses to tell their JFK assassination
stories at the CAPA event at the Old Red Courthouse in Dealey Plaza in Dallas
on Thursday, November 15.
For Gail
Nix Jackson’s Interview Excerpts see:
To purchase the book:
For more
information on this event see: CAPA-US.org.''
Walter Machann and Gail Nix Jackson
Bill Kelly said:
ReplyDelete"Former Congressional investigator Gaeton Fonzi, who convinced both Veciana and Silvia Odio to testify before the House Select Committee on Assassinations (HSCA) but to their dismay, they were never called."
Veciana testified before the HSCA on April 25 and 26 1978
Thank you WTP, but I think that was in "Executive Session" and not a Public hearing, as they were promised. As Syliva said, "They don't want to know the truth."
ReplyDeleteAnd WTP, how are you dealing with the conspiracy to kill JFK coming unraveled, as it is?
Are you going to stick with the Oswald as Lone Nut Assassin story to the end, or will you go with the Castro encouraged Oswald cover story?
And thanks for reading my stuff.
BK
Thanks for the glowing review Mr. Kelly. I am humbled!
ReplyDeleteGayle Nix Jackson