Find Money That Is Owed To You!
Find Missing Money & Unclaimed Cash
Home About
 

Blood, Money & Power: How L.B.J. Killed J.F.K.

5

Product Description
“The great enemy of the truth is very often not the lie, deliberate, contrived and dishonest, but the myth, persistent, persuasive and unrealistic.” –John F. Kennedy Who had the opportunity, motive and means to assassinate J.F.K.? Who controlled the investigation and findings of the Warren Commission? These and other questions are answered with new, “insider” evidence from a former member of L.B.J.’s legal team, attorney Barr McClellan. An insiders knowledge is combined with hundreds of newly released documents to shed new light on one of history’s greatest unsolved mysteries.  The plot to assassinate President John F. Kennedy has been shrouded in secrecy and deceit, leading most Americans to doubt the veracity of the Warren Commission’s findings. Now, after forty years, Barr McClellan exposes the secret, high-level conspiracy in Texas that led to Kennedy’s death and L.B.J.’s succession as President. Utilizing court documents, insider interv… More >>

Blood, Money & Power: How L.B.J. Killed J.F.K.

Share and Enjoy:
  • Print
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Blogplay

Tags: blood, J.F.K., Killed, L.B.J., Money, Power.

Filed under Books by admin on Jul 14th, 2010. Comment. #

Comments on Blood, Money & Power: How L.B.J. Killed J.F.K. Leave a Comment

July 14, 2010
Reply

Anonymous @ 4:46 pm #

I found this book to be utterly compelling, forgiving the “faction” sections in favor of the real facts presented. Barr McClellan, former attorney of Lyndon B. Johnson, steps forward and claims that LBJ assassinated JFK. The evidence better be good.

The key piece of evidence given is a latent fingerprint. It was taken from a box, possibly used as a sniper’s mount, on the 6th Floor of the Texas Schoolbook Depository Building (TSDB) where Oswald allegedly shot at Kennedy.

But the fingerprint is not Oswald’s.

An expert chosen by McClellan was shown the latent print with no prior knowledge of its context, and found that it matched a fingerprint on record for a Texan named Mac Wallace. The affidavit of this expert, Nathan Darby, is impressive, as are his credentials. Darby found a minimum of 14 matching points, whereas the FBI had inferior prints and far fewer matching points from the barrel of the gun Oswald ostensibly used. (Publishers Weekly, in their recent review, referred to this key latent print as a questionable “smudge,” and devalued the book as a result. But on what basis? The reader should note that the Warren Commission took this latent print extremely seriously; so seriously that they circulated an internal memorandum among themselves — exhibited in the book — expressing “anxious” concern over it.) That memorandum and the latent fingerprint set the stage.

Together they are certainly worthy of examination — and of a book, if the right links can be proven. That this book is written by Barr McClellan, Texas insider and former lawyer for Johnson, makes the potential all the more compelling. From behind the wall of the attorney-client privilege, the details come forward.

The question then becomes this:

If the latent print proves Mac Wallace was on the sixth floor of the TSDB, then what was Wallace’s relationship to LBJ’s inner circle?

Wallace, it turns out, was the lover of Josefa Johnson, LBJ’s sister. Wallace murdered Douglas Kinser, her other lover, in a fit of rage. The trial was handled by LBJ’s attorneys, Edward Clark and associates. (Clark, a Texas super-lawyer, was the kingmaker behind Johnson and the leader of their group. He made Barr McClellan the youngest partner in his law firm.)
Wallace was convicted of the murder, but walked away with a suspended sentence.

Soon after his conviction, Wallace was hired at LTV, a company owned by D.H Byrd, a player in Texas big oil.
Clark got him the job. It so happens that Byrd owned the Texas School Book Depository building.

The connections do not end there.

Read the book for the whole story. It’s really worth the time. The chain of causation explaining Wallace’s link to the Clark-LBJ inner circle is fascinating — and very probably incriminating. The beginning of the text is a little circuitous, but McClellan hits his stride soon enough and lays the evidence bare. Walt Brown – a very good, solid JFK author and noted assassination expert -stands behind McClellan.

Bottom line for this reader: If Darby’s 42 years as a fingerprint expert are valuable; and if the Warren Commission did not see this print as a “smudge,” but as a key piece of evidence to be reckoned with – and they documented it as such — then McClellan has some very real evidence and a strong case. See for yourself, I say. There is enough evidence presented in the book to enable careful readers to form an opinion of their own.

(Note: The details of LBJ’s life are also compelling on their own. Here is a bio on him written by someone who represented his political and money interests.)
Rating: 5 / 5

Reply

E. Parkinson @ 7:42 pm #

Anyone questioning the veracity of Barr McClellan’s information would be fully convinced after watching the embarassing job of back-peddaling that Jack Valenti and other powerful Johnson administration millionaires forced upon the History Channel in a rebuttal of November’s broadcast of “the Guilty Men” documentary (based in part on some of the evidence in McClellan’s insightful book). Three dubious “historians” were paid to rebut the evidence in McClellan’s book and the History Channel documentary… but instead of dissecting any of McClellan’s 68 exhibits of courtroom quality evidence, they chose instead to attack his character through complete falsehoods about McClellan’s past. They glossed over McClellan’s 14 years as a member of the Clark Law Firm (handling all of the legal, personal and professional business transactions for L.B.J.), and blatantly lied about the circumstances surrounding McClellan’s departure from the firm and their attempts to discredit him with accusations (…)(which were fully dismissed and characterized as harrassing abuses of power by the Clark-Texas-Power mob). Now the Texas / Johnson apologists have pressured the History Channel to present a one-hour “discussion” about the facts presented in McClellan’s book and the “Guilty Men” documentary. So why didn’t they discuss the evidence? Could it be that it’s easier to attack the messenger than disprove the obvious message? I’ve been ashamed of Johnson and his organized mob for decades… now I’m ashamed that the History Channel would succumb to the bullying of rich and powerful old men, all of whom made millions on the back of Johnson, and on the blood of our soldiers killed in Vietnam. Kudos to McClellan for not being intimidated by this old-generation of corrupt Texas politicians.
Rating: 5 / 5

Reply

Sue M. Bruns @ 8:34 pm #

November 22, 1963: As a senior history major at The University or Texas, I was not a supporter of JFK nor was I interested in his scheduled visit to Austin later that day. Then the unthinkable occurred – the assassination of OUR President.

Fall, 1972: a history professor at Southwest Texas State (LBJ’s college) loaned me a book to read concerning the Zapruder film. The Warren Commission was not really satisfactory, and after reading the book about the assassination and the “magic bullet” my doubts increased.

October, 2003: BLOOD, MONEY AND POWER – is this what really happened? Did LBJ kill JFK?? This book is an intriguing and disturbing presentation of that possiblity. There are incredible revelations made by the author, Barr McClellan. Names are named, events are detailed, and the motive (of course) is obvious. It’s time to finally uncover the truth. No man is above the law. Let’s “recall” LBJ’s legacy through the proper legal channels to determine his guilt or innocence.

You don’t have to be a conspiracy nut to read this book. It’s a “good un”.
Rating: 5 / 5

Reply

David Johnson @ 11:19 pm #

The author opens with a detailed biography of Lyndon Johnson that removes the veneer of ‘presidentiality’ from Johnson and shows him as a greedy, fearful, mean man with an all-consuming need for power. McClellan then builds his case against Johnson by describing events earlier in Johnson’s life in which foul acts were performed for a momentary advantage. Quite a bit of detail is provided about the stuffing of the ballot box which allowed Johnson to win his seat in the US Senate in 1948 and also about the murder of the USDA inspector, Henry Marshall, who was on the trail of fraud being perpetrated on the Department of Agriculture. The original investigation found that Marshall had committed suicide…with five bullets in his body delivered by a close Johnson associate, Mac Wallace. Another murder victim was Doug Kinser who was threatening to bring scandal to Johnson. Mac Wallace was then convicted of killing Kinser but, thanks to Johnson’s power over the Texas legal system, was sentenced to 5 years in prison and given a suspended sentence.

It is Wallace that the author alleges was one of the trigger men in the sniper’s nest along with Oswald. As proof, the author matches a fingerprint found on a box in the sniper’s nest with one of Wallace’s earlier fingerprints obtained for the Kinser murder to place Wallace on the 6th floor of the School Book Depository. The author provides a lot of other interesting information such as pointing out that it was Johnson who arranged for Kennedy to visit Texas on November 22, 1963 and that Johnson had given a copy of the Secret Service plans for protecting the president to the conspirators.

McClellan also claims that there was a third trigger man on the grassy knoll who he does not identify and he claims that the conspirators wore suits and used fake Secret Service badges to identify themselves to police and escape the scene after the shooting. There is some credibility to this as many of the shooting eye witnesses and police officers reported encountering secret service agents in Dealey Plaza after the shooting and yet the Warren Commission established that not a single secret service agent was present in Dealey Plaza other than those riding on vehicles. One of the weaker parts of the book is where McClellan claims that the entire conspiracy was the work of a crooked Johnson lawyer named Ed Clark. It seems much more likely that the conspiracy was large enough that the lawyer Clark was working closely with other a handful of rogue agents from the CIA and the secret service and that the final conspiracy was a ‘team’ effort.

This is an interesting book that fleshes out a lot of missing pieces of the assassination puzzle and makes some of the earlier stuff attributed to Johnson, such as his phone call to the Parkland Hospital ER seeking a dying confession from Oswald, much more believable.

After reading this book, you will never again look the same way at the famous photo of Johnson getting a wink from Congressman Albert Thomas on board Air Force One after being sworn in as the president following Kennedy’s killing.
Rating: 5 / 5

July 15, 2010
Reply

Dawn Meredith @ 1:59 am #

For those who have studied the tragedy in Dealy Plaza on 11/22/63 there will be critical analysis…McClellan has not spent his life reading up on every little detail of “who killed JFK”, but, none the less, this book is must reading. McClellan is to be highly commended on getting this story out. This is probably the first-ever insider story from a source as high up as lawyers to LBJ. McClellan’s writing is powerful, fast-paced and you will be inspired by his personal sacrifice and bravery!
Ever wonder how a man as seemingly sleazy as LBJ made it so far?? Read this book and find out..stealing elections and having people killed…nothing mattered to this hell-bent-on- power crew. You won’t be able to put this book down!

And you will be angry, very, very angry, I hope.

For those naive enough to believe that we actually live in some sort of a democracy, please read this most powerful tale and then demand a criminal investigation. In 1979, after 2 years of hearings by the House Select Committee On Assassinations, our government announced two important findings: That there was “probably a conspiracy”, and that the Department of Justice needs to investigate. We are long overdue!!

Buy it, read it and then write to the press, who have been most complicit in this lie for now 40 years. Write to your elected representatives. McClellan sacrificed a brilliant legal career for this case….now it’s up to we the people. There can be no “justice” in America so long as this coverup continues. Don’t depend on CBS etc. for any historical truth, read this book and then continue your study. The powers that be depend upon the ignorance of the American electorate.
Rating: 5 / 5

Leave a Comment

Click here to cancel reply.

Fields marked by an asterisk (*) are required.

Main Menu

  • Articles
  • Books
  • Tips

Recent Posts

  • Money Can Buy Happiness: How to Spend to Get the Life You Want
  • Brandraising: How Nonprofits Raise Visibility and Money Through Smart Communications
  • Blood, Money & Power: How L.B.J. Killed J.F.K.
  • The Foreclosure Survival Guide: Keep Your House or Walk Away With Money in Your Pocket
  • Money For Life…
  • Transnational Criminal Organizations, Cybercrime, and Money Laundering: A Handbook for Law Enforcement Officers, Auditors, and Financial Investigators
  • How to Build a Multi-Level Money Machine: The Science of Network Marketing
  • Money Harmony
  • Storm Proof Your Money: Weather Any Economy, Rebuild Your Portfolio, Protect Your Future
  • The Kid’s Guide to Money: Earning It, Saving It, Spending It, Growing It, Sharing It

Tags

About account bank Business Cash dont Earn Easy Financial Find Free from Government Grant Guide help home Internet Investing Know Life Lost Making Miss Missing Money More Much Need Online People Property Real Save Saving Should some Start Take there Tips Unclaimed Ways without work

-

Syndicate

RSS feed

Subscribe to this site's RSS feed.

Desktop Reader Bloglines Google Live Netvibes Newsgator Yahoo! What's This?

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries RSS
  • Comments RSS
  • WordPress.org
Home
Copyright Find Missing Money & Unclaimed Cash, 2010
Made with an easy to use WordPress theme • Classy, Citrus skin by Denis de Bernardy