John
Patrick Judge
December
14, 1947 – April 15, 2014
It is with a heavy heart that I write this.
I guess
it was just an ironic coincidence that I came across an academic tribute to my
longtime college mate, friend and associate John Judge on the eve of the sixth
anniversary of his death. It is a beautiful and heart felt tribute that was
written by former Congresswomen Cynthia McKinney (D..Ga.) while John was still
alive. It captures his basic background, traces much of the journey he made – some of which we made together, and most clearly defines his vision of what he
wanted in the future and what he was
striving for. It made me sad, and then mad. Sad that John is no longer here to
keep up the good fight to see that vision realized, and mad because those he
entrusted with his archives and legacy have hijacked it and trashed it.
To read John
Judge – Transformational Servant Leader – an Academic Tribute by Cynthia
McKinney see:
According
to Amir Levy, “transformational leadership” is ‘capable of providing new
vision, aligning members with its vision, and mobilizing energy and commitment
to the realization of this vision.”
I met
John Judge in the fall of 1969 in the hall in front of the University of Dayton
JFK Student Union, which is named after President Kennedy and there’s a
lifesized statue of him out front on the steps. There were tables lining the
hall in front of the basement cafeteria, some recruiting frats, one
manned by two Army recruiters, and next to them was John Judge’s table,
advocating conscientious objection to the war in Vietnam and full of leaflets
promoting those ideals. I said hello to John, and he handed me a copy of Playboy
magazine, of all things, the one that contained an interview New Orleans
District Attorney Jim Garrison. I took it home and read it and returned it to
John the next day, and began helping him man the table, as the previous summer
I had been a student volunteer coordinator for Gene McCarthy for President, the
anti-war candidate, and was radicalized by the Chicago riots at the 1968
Democratic National Convention.
While I
was a freshman John had graduated the year before, but stuck around the campus
just to irritate the administration, who he had previously fought successfully
to eleminate manditory ROTC for incoming male freshman.
Although
I have many stories to tell about John, as we remained friends and associates
over the years, I will only add my thoughts and my humble two cents to the ones Cynthia McKinney
mentions in her paper.
I stuck
around campus after most of the students left in the spring of 1972 and was
with John in a nearly deserted cafeteria over breakfast, drinking coffee and
reading the Dayton Daily News when I noticed a small, one column two or three
inch story announcing the Watergate break –in and showed it to John.
As
Cynthia quotes John: “In 1972, the day
after the Watergate break-in, I saw the five names of those arrested on site
and they were all known to me because they had been part of the Bay of Pigs and
the history of the assassination of President Kennedy….”
Leaving
the JFK Student Union John and I walked over to the new UD Library and went
straight to the Research section where we found copies of Who’s Who in
Washington and found Hunt, Liddy and maybe McCord. And we avidly followed the
Watergate caper in the news and on TV, which led John to Mae Brussell.
When John
lived in Philadelphia in the mid-1970s, working for the Quakers, I would give
him rides to his home, a large mansion near Germantown that was owned by two of
John’s University of Dayton friends, who were never there when I was, but I
remembered them from Dayton. We would go into a side sun room and John would
play cassette tape recordings of Mae Brussell’s radio show for hours.
Around
that time John took me to one of the first conferences on the JFK
assassination at NYU Law School in New York City, where I sat in on a class on
covert operational procdures taught by Col. Fletcher Prouty, and John
introduced me to the irrascable Penn Jones and Mae Brussell. Both John and Mae
always had a big pouch full of books and papers they always carried around.
I drove
a huge U-Haul Truck full of books and papers from John’s apartment in Washington
D.C. to Santa Cruz, drove the whole way with John ridding shotgun, and we
unloaded it all in a three bedroom rancher a block from the beach. You could
hear the sea lions bark from the front door. We added Mae’s collection that
filled up the house with books and the garage with filing cabinets full of news
clips.
In regards
to the late, great Mae Brussell John said, “Mae wanted me to continue her work
at a Research Center in Santa Cruz, but others prevented me from realizing that
wish and forced me to abandon her collection of 6,000 books, 42 clip filing
cabinets and hundreds of folders and tapes.”
Yes, Mae’s
daughter decided she wanted her mother’s collection so she forced John “to
abandon” the collection, much to our dismay, as we had envisioned the Mae
Brussell Research Center to be a permanent institution. The collection remains
stored in a warehouse today.
After
that happened John often talked about other such collections. He said that
Jochem Joestein’s widow sold off his collection piecemeal, while Penn Jones’
ex-wife sold his collection at a garage sale, breaking up his 24 volumes of
Warren Commission books, selling them separately for a few dollars each, thus
relegating the collection useless as a research tool. He said he was determined
not to let that happen to his collection, but it has.
John
continues: “I had co-founded the Committee for an Open Archives (COA) in the
1980s to push for the release of classified records in the JFK case. At the final
JFK ASK conference, I organized a panel to call for the creation of a national
coalition of groups and researchers who wanted to work for a solution to the
case and to combine our efforts to push for both media and government
responses.”
When he
says co-founded, I was the other co-founder for COA and COPA. At the ASK
conference we held our first meeting at the now defunct West End Café around
the corner from Dealey Plaza, with about a dozen people present, including
former FBI Agent Bill Turner, who would be a major player in our activities.
We
agreed to regroup in Washington, where we did over a two day weekend at the
Quaker Meeting House on Capitol Hill, deciding on the name Coalition on
Political Assassinations (COPA), and uniting three organizations with similar
goals – COA, Jim DiEugenio’s California organization (Now Kennedys and King),
and Jim Lesar’s Assassination Archives and Research Center (AARC). Peter Dale
Scott and Dr. Cyril West were also significant players, and attorney Dan Alcorn
drew up the COPA non-profit papers.
John continues:
“In 1994, I co-founded the Coalition on Political Assassinations (COPA) to
facilitate the search for and release of Warren Report, HSCA and other records,
combining the efforts of hundreds of independent researches, medical and
forensic experts, historians and academics and the Assassination Archives and
Research Center and Citizens for Truth About the Kennedy Assassinations. COPA
is a 501-© 4 non-profit, which allows us to lobby and endorse candidates, but
does not allow tax-deductible donations.”
John
Judge: “Prior to the release of the film ‘JFK’ I had co-founded the Committee
for an Open Archives to effect the release of the Warren Commission files
locked up by Lyndon Johnson in 1964 for 75 years. We got legislation proposed
by several members of Congress, but they did not move in Congress. Once the
Stone film came out and ended with a note about the records still being
classified, a huge wave of letters and calls came into Congress calling for
full release. This led to the JFK Assassinations Records Act of 1992, finally
implemented between 1994 and 1998 by the Assassinations Records Review Board.
(ARRB)”
COPA
played a major role in monitoring the activities of the ARRB and is mentioned
in their Final Report.
As
Cynthia McKinney outlined John’s vision for the future: “John has done that
through his selfless work with COPA…John’s next project is a Museum of Hidden
History to house all of the volumes of government documents, books,
manuscripts, and historic collections that the researchers have compiled over
these last 40 years. He envisions the Museum would act as a library, a tourist
attraction, a place for students to intern and learn about an alternative
historical analysis, and a place for the community to gather to discuss
strategies for policy change. He is currently working with other libraries and
archives to digitilize COPA’s holdings so that information can be more easily
disseminated. Once again, John’s future plans involve giving truth to the
interested community – service in the truest sense of the word.”
Unfortunately,
with the death of John in April 2014, those who inherited John’s personal
belongings, disbanded COPA, without consulting the chairman or Advisory
Board, wrongfully co-mingled the funds with the Hidden History Museum, obtained John’s five
figure life insurance and took it all to York, Pennsylvania, where the
collection is housed in a strip mall storefront that a local newspaper reporter
called “The Boondocks.”
Now it’s really Hidden History.
Now it’s really Hidden History.
While some
of the former COPA members reformed under the Citizens Against Political
Assassination (CAPA) banner, with Dr. Cyril Wecht as our chairman, and there is
a new movement to have John Judge’s COPA Archives digitalized and placed on
line, that should and may happen.
But I
want to see John Judge’s original vision established: a permanent institute
based in the District of Columbia not owned by any one person but one that will
continue on after we are gone. As John described it, “the Museum would act as
a library, a tourist attraction, a place for students to intern and learn about
an alternative historical analysis, and a place for the community to gather to
discuss strategies for policy change.”
And that’s
what makes me sad, and mad.
“The tragedy of it is that I can’t do a damn
thing about it. The only thing we can do is to keep hammering and pounding at
the door. It’s not going to happen in my lifetime.” – Dr. Cyril Wecht
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