NOVEMBER IN DALLAS 2011 

NID 2011
Schedule

Sherry G. Fiester's JFK Homicide includes
Bloodspatter Analysis · Trajectory Analysis of Head Shot · Crime Scene Investigation: 1963 Protocols · Tippit Trajectory Analysis

Beyond the Fence Line: The Eyewitness Acount

 of Ed Hoffman and the Murder of President Kennedy by Casey Quinlan & Brian Edwards


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Randy Owen, Previewing The Assassination Photo Chronology Website

 

Chris Scally, Z Film Chronology, presented by Owen

 

Jerry Dealey, TSBD Shooter Issues 

 

Casey Quinlan, The North Knoll

 

Greg Parker: RFK, A Different Trail, presented by Hancock

 

Greg Parker: CIA Spy Games in Mexico City, presented by Conway

 

Larry Hancock - Oswald's Words VS Actions

Banquet, Awards and Auctions, Dealey Plaza Ceremony

 

Stu Wexler, CIA Penetration of the Cuban embassy; MLK, A Different Trail, presented by Hancock

 

Bill Simpich, Oswald and Intelligence; Angleton's Cover-up

 

Lamar Waldron - JFK, King and Watergate: Files still withheld or destroyed 

 

Larry Hancock - National Security issues on Nov 22

 

Jim DiEugenio, Historical Revisionism and the JFK Case

 

Brian Edwards, Minox Mysteries

 

G. Paul Chambers, From his book, "Head Shot, The Science Behind the JFK Assassination"

 

Don Thomas, From his book, "Hear No Evil"

 

Sherry Fiester, Update on Blood Spatter and the Trajectory Controversy

 

Rollie Zavada - The Zapruder Film, Understanding the Tools Available for Authentication 

 

Jim Marrs, the Roscoe White Mystery 

 

John Sanders, with Luellen Smiley, Life of Mobster Johnny Roselli 
Quick Links...
NEXUS
By Larry Hancock
NEXUS
Larry Hancock, author of critically acclaimed "Someone Would have Talked" has a new book, NEXUS, available now for purchase and at the JFL Lancer Annual International Conference in November. You can have your copy autographed during his book signing at the conference.  The Kindle Edition is now available on Amazon.com.

Handcock describes his book saying in essence that this work deals with "what happened" rather than "how could something like that happen?"
 
Political Assassinations and the CIA 
Hancock has completed a revealing historical study of how political assassinations evolved within the Central Intelligence Agency
  • How did it start?
  • How was it conducted?
  • Who gave the orders?
  • Who were the people actually involved in such actions as political assassination?
  • Were there "executive actions" of senior political leaders during the 1950's and 1960's

Hancock's book, NEXUS provides startling answers. 

 

The CIA and Extreme Deniability
While many of those questions and Agency participation was quite mysterious for a considerable time, Hancock's book now addresses:
  • Congressional investigations of the 1970's
  • Documents on the subject of Agency political assassination Documents  with code words
  • Agency name crypts, which have only recently become known
  • Biographies and oral histories on key Agency personnel
  • Insights into internal shadow world of covert operations
Hancock reveals the things that never showed up in memos, were obfuscated with agreed upon "agency speak" and often were never sanctioned with as a designated project; in other words, the way such things were done under "extreme deniability".

 

The Culture of the Agency

Hancock traces the development of a "culture" which viewed murder as simply another tactic - justified by a variety of national security concerns. In his detailed and intriguing study we discover
  • A culture which considered any perceived weakness as being equivalent to treason
  • A culture in which an obsession with national security trumped all other moral and legal constraints.
The reader will will learn a good deal of new information about the Agency  and about American cold war history through NEXUS. Hancock related much was certainly new to him, even after a decade of working on the subject.

 

Hancock, a leading historian-researcher into JFK assassination, is a native of Oklahoma, attended Oklahoma State University and the University of New Mexico. After receiving a bachelor's degree in history, anthropology, education, he served four years in the United States Air Force, specializing in computerized telecommunication equipment. That led to a 20-year involvement in the telecommunications industry, mainly in the technical training aspects. For the last 12 years before his retirement, he was involved with the marketing and advertising of personal computers and communication equipment.

 

He is co-author of "November Patriots," a docufiction novel. His "Someone Would Have Talked," a factual analysis of both the conspiracy and cover-up of the Kennedy assassination, was first published in November 2003.

 

Hancock also has researched and published several document collections dealing with the 112th Military Intelligence Group, Richard Case Nagell and his intelligence connections and the CIA segregated files. He has been a contributor to the JFK Lancer Chronicles and to the journal of the research group Dealey Plaza UK. He also published a study of the RFK assassination, "Incomplete Justice," in conjunction with the Mary Ferrell Foundation. In 2000 he received the prestigious Mary Ferrell New Frontier Award for contributing new evidence in the Kennedy assassination case. In 2001 he received the Mary Ferrell Legacy Award for his contributions of documents released under the JFK Act.

Bill Simpich
Spy Games in Mexico City

 

Bill Simpich is a civil rights attorney and an antiwar activist in the San Francisco Bay Area. The main areas of his law practice are government misconduct and toxic tort violations. He also writes for publications such as Truthout, Counterpunch and OpedNews.
He considers the assassination cases to be a poorly understood area of civil rights violations. To preserve cold cases, he is preparing a proposed JFK Preservation of Evidence Act that would be applicable in both of these areas of the law and administered by a citizen panel similar to the ARRB. His study of the JFK case focuses on the documentary evidence, rather than firearms, acoustics, and other forensic evidence. His current focus is on Mexico City and the counterintelligence aspects of the JFK case.

 

The Warren Commission indicated Lee Harvey Oswald traveled to Mexico City between September 27 at October 1, 1963 to obtain a visa for travel to Cuba and the Soviet Union. Failing in that effort, he returned to Dallas where just seven weeks later he was accused of assassinating President Kennedy. That trip to Mexico is probably one of the most controversial events for those researching Oswald's life prior to the assassination of president Kennedy.

 

What really happened in Mexico City remains mysterious. Was Oswald really there or was he impersonated by someone else? Surveillance photography of an unidentified man outside the Soviet Embassy during that time has come into question. Someone using Oswald name telephoned the Soviet Embassy on tap phone lines, where the calls meant to tie Oswald to a KGB assassin? What do CIA records indicate happened? Certainly we know the events in Mexico City affected the federal government's response to the assassination; but how and why?

CUSTOM TOUR of JFK ASSASSINATION SITES
This custom tour of assassination related sites will be conducted by experienced tour guides who can provide information and insight to the locations and how they relate to the assassination.
 
See the parade route through downtown Dallas, and walk the famous "Grassy Knoll" in Dealey Plaza where JFK was shot. Walk behind the picket fence, see where Zapruder stood, and stand where eye witnesses such as James Tague, Bill Newman and Jean Hill stood on that fateful day.
 
The tour will recreate Oswald's route out of downtown to the bus stop, the cab stand, the cab trip to the rooming house on N. Beckley. Witness the site where Officer J. D. Tippit was killed and the Texas Theater where Oswald was arrested. Visit Jack Ruby's apartment, see the location of Ruby's Carousel Club, City Hall where Oswald was killed, Western Union office, and the Neely St. house where the famous picture was taken of Oswald holding his rifle and more.
 
If you are coming to Dallas, you need to make this tour. The custom two hour tour is only $50 but will provide invaluable insight into the locations and events surrounding the JFK assassination. 
 
Special tours are available for those who don't want to miss the conference speakers.
 
It's Time for the Conference! 
and JFK Lancer is making plans to insure the leading researchers and the latest published authors are there to commemorate the 48th anniversary of President Kennedy's death.  

 

 
Our Awards Banquet, included in the registration fee,  gives you opportunity to honor fellow researchers and authors while sampling fare at the fabulous Adolphus Hotel.
Blocked rooms are limited so  register today  

indicate you are attending the JFK Lancer Conference to receive the

special group rate.

Please telephone the Hotel directly at 800-221-9083 to make reservations.