Author Topic: Someone Would Have Talked, Larry Hancock  (Read 6456 times)

Alan Dale

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Someone Would Have Talked, Larry Hancock
« on: July 11, 2013, 01:00:10 AM »

http://www.amazon.com/Someone-Would-Talked-Larry-Hancock/dp/097746573X/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1362720115&sr=1-1&keywords=Someone+would+have+talked

Somebody did talk. His name was John Martino. He was a credible source,
and his story has been corroborated in significant ways. What he said is one
of the clearest indicators that opponents of JFK’s Cuba policy had
foreknowledge that Kennedy might be assassinated in Dallas.

http://jfkfacts.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/12/John-Martino.jpg

Castro Political Prisoner

Martino, a native of New Jersey, was a petty racketeer as a young man.
Arrested for gambling and loan sharking charges, he developed an
Expertise in electronic equipment related to gambling. In the 1950s, he gravitated
to south Florida and then to Havana where his skills won him a  security job
at the casino in the new Deauville Hotel in Havana.

When Fidel Castro’s revolutionary movement took power in 1959, the
Deauville was closed and Martino was arrested for criticizing Castro. He
spent three years in jail, a bitter experience that he detailed in his
book “I Was Castro’s Prisoner.” Upon his release, he threw himself into the
clandestine war against Castro. A publicity tour for the book took him to New
Orleans and Dallas in the fall of 1963 where he associated with other anti-Castro
activists.

In the days affter JFK was killed, Martino devoted considerable effort to
linking Lee Harvey Oswald to the Cuban government, claiming that Oswald
had gone to Cuba (a claim that has never been verified). Without supporting
evidence, Martino gained attention from investigators but convinced no
one of his claims.

In 1975 Martino was dying and he knew it.  He started telling a quite different
story about the events of 1963, confessing to two acquaintances that he
had participated in a conspiracy to assassinate President Kennedy.

The first was John Cummings, an investigative reporter at New York’s *
Newsday*, who had covered Martino’s return from Cuba in 1962 and stayed
in contact with him over the years.

“He told me he’d been part of the assassination of Kennedy,” Cummings
recounted later. “He wasn’t in Dallas pulling trigger, but he was
involved. He implied that his role was delivering money, facilitating things. He
asked me not to write it while he was alive.” It is worth noting that
Cummings was an award winning reporter who did not make his reputation by
believing tall tales.

The second person to whom Martino confided was a former business partner
named Fred Claassen. He  said Martino told him. “The anti-Castro people put
Oswald together. Oswald didn’t know who he was working for–he was just ignorant
of who was really putting him together. Oswald was to meet his contact at the Texas
Theater [the movie house where Oswald was arrested]. They were to meet Oswald in
the theater and get him out of the country, and then eliminate him. Oswald made
a mistake….there was no way we could get to him. They had Ruby kill him.”

Martino’s widow Florence declined to talk to congressional investigators
in the 1970s, but later acknowledged her husband’s story to British author
Anthony Summers. She said that her husband had advance knowledge of
JFK’s assassination. “Flo, they’re going to kill him,” she recalls him saying
in November 1963. “They’re going to kill him when he gets to Texas.”

Martino’s son, Edward, then a senior in high school, recalls that on Friday
Nov. 22, 1963 his father told him to stay home from school and listen to
the radio. When the news came from Dallas, “my father went white as a
sheet. But it wasn’t like ‘Gee whiz’.’ It was more like confirmation.”

Martino, now a business consultant and custom software developer has not
profited in any way from his story. Nor did his mother, now deceased.

Summers reported the Martino story in Vanity Fair magazine in 1994 and
His  1998 book “Not in Your Lifetime. The most complete version of Martino’s
involvement in the anti-Castro movement and his subsequent confession is
found my his 2010 book “Somebody Would Have Talked.”

There were other people who showed foreknowledge that JFK would be killed
in Dallas but none whose story is so well-documented as John Martino. He
was somebody who talked.

http://larryhancock.wordpress.com/2013/01/02/somebody-did-talk/
Our future may lie beyond our vision, but it is not completely beyond our control. It is the shaping impulse of America that neither fate nor nature nor the irresistible tides of history, but the work of our own hands, matched to reason and principle, that will determine our destiny.

RFK