Authors: Lamar Waldron
of
Time
’s
article about Hoffa’s role in the 1959 CIA-Mafia plots. Traf-
ficante, Marcello, and others couldn’t afford to let Hoffa testify under
oath about those or any other plots. On July 30, 1975, Jimmy Hoffa was
spotted leaving a restaurant near Detroit, headed for what he thought
was a meeting with New Jersey mobster Tony Provenzano, an associ-
ate of Carlos Marcello’s. Hoffa was never seen again, and no body was
ever found.11
Government informant Crimaldi said that “he had heard information
that the same man that killed [Giancana] took care of Hoffa for the same
reason: he knew about the Castro plots [and] it had been Hoffa who was
the original liaison between the CIA and the [Mafia].”12
Rolando Masferrer was killed in a spectacular car bombing on Octo-
ber 31, 1975. His death could have been related to the Church Com-
mittee hearings or to the general upsurge of violence in Miami’s exile
community, fueled by politics and the expanding drug trade. A current
article about JFK’s assassination was on Masferrer’s desk when he died.
John Martino, Masferrer’s mutual associate with Trafficante, had died
of natural causes a few months earlier. In declining health, Martino had
finally confessed his role in JFK’s murder to two friends, his business
partner and reporter John Cummings. The Church Committee appar-
ently never learned about Martino or his published statements about
the Kennedys’ 1963 coup and invasion plan.
Johnny Rosselli used Jack Anderson to ensure he didn’t meet the same
fate as Giancana and Hoffa. Anderson’s September 1, 1975, column said
that Rosselli wasn’t being deported because of his war record, helping
Rosselli show Trafficante and Marcello that he wasn’t getting preferen-
tial INS treatment because he was testifying. Rosselli was back in front
of the Church Committee on September 22, ten days after Helms had
faced the Committee yet again.
The CIA withheld a massive amount of information from the Church
Committee, a situation that wouldn’t change when President Ford
fired William Colby and replaced him with George H. W. Bush, who’d
headed the Republican National Committee during the latter stages of
the Watergate investigation. At times, information found its way to the
Committee from non-CIA sources—like the leads about the 1959 CIA-
Mafia plots—only to hit a stone wall because the CIA withheld crucial
information related to those leads. The Church Committee was never
told about the JFK-Almeida coup plan, and thus knew nothing about the
Mafia’s infiltration of it. It received a few leads that could have pointed
it in the right direction, if not for the information withheld by the CIA
and other agencies.
On October 1, 1975, the Church Committee told the Justice Depart-
ment it wanted “telephone logs derived from electronic surveillance”
on seven people—including Trafficante, Tony Varona, Manolo Ray, and
Harry Williams. Whoever tipped off the Committee had either worked
with Bobby Kennedy or knew someone who had, because the memo lists
736
LEGACY OF SECRECY
Harry’s name as “Enrico Ruiz Williams.” “Enrico” was Bobby’s nick-
name for Harry, since he had trouble pronouncing Harry’s first name,
“Enrique.” The Justice Department acknowledged having electronic
surveillance on Trafficante, but it’s not known what—if anything—they
provided about Harry.13
At one point, the Church Committee asked the deputy attorney gen-
eral for all the materials they had on “Major Juan Almeida,” as well as
Maurice Bishop (spelled “Morris”). This generated a document group,
called the “Senstudy,” of CIA files that had been given to the FBI. A
dozen documents about Almeida were part of the Senstudy, all FBI
copies of CIA documents, but the CIA did not provide their own copies
of those documents to the Church Committee. These Almeida docu-
ments don’t address the coup plan, but do talk about Almeida’s dis-
satisfaction with Castro and his desire to defect shortly before the Bay
of Pigs. However, the request for the Almeida documents was sent five
days after the Church Committee completed its Final Report, so there
was little the Committee could have done with the material—especially
since Bush and the CIA were still withholding all information about
the Almeida coup plan, AMWORLD, and Artime’s involvement in the
CIA-Mafia plots.14 Inside the CIA, the small fig leaf of justification was
no doubt that Almeida was still of potential value since he remained
unexposed, plus the CIA’s secret support for his family, which made
the whole matter an ongoing operation. Ted Shackley probably over-
saw that support after Phillips’s resignation, since by 1975 Shackley
was the highest CIA official remaining who had supervised 1963 Cuban
operations.
While CIA officials withheld the most important information, they
were usually quick to acknowledge more esoteric, unused assassination
schemes, diverting attention from the plots that used high-powered
rifles and might remind the public of JFK’s murder. The CIA knew that
unusual items like shellfish toxin would interest journalists and televi-
sion audiences, and the increasingly publicity-hungry Senator Frank
Church—eying a run for president in 1976—took the bait, holding two
days of hearings on the poison.
In the fall of 1975, the Church Committee started to fragment for sev-
eral reasons, in part because there was too much to investigate and too
little information being provided. By this time, the Church Committee
was investigating not only the CIA—in areas ranging from Chile to
assassinations to domestic surveillance—but also the FBI and military
intelligence. In addition, Church was investigating the FBI’s COINTEL-
PRO efforts against Martin Luther King. Their revelations helped to
generate a 1977 Justice Department Task Force Report that critically
reviewed the FBI’s investigation of Dr. King’s murder.
Leaks were another problem for the Committee. Though they didn’t
jeopardize real CIA operations, they did generate headlines—the most
notable being the November 1975 leak about Judith Campbell, the
woman who’d had relationships with JFK, Johnny Rosselli, and Sam
Giancana. However, in some cases it’s unclear if leaks came from Com-
mittee staffers or from one of the federal agencies being investigated.
One significant development for the Church investigation was when
Schweiker and Hart’s JFK subcommittee hired journalist Gaeton Fonzi
in November 1975. What Fonzi assumed would be a weeks-long inves-
tigation would turn into a three-year quest involving both houses of
Congress.
Fonzi and Hart were constantly frustrated by CIA stonewalling.
Hart took particular interest in CIA assassin recruiter QJWIN. The CIA
refused to tell the senator QJWIN’s true identity, but when pressed it
arranged for Hart to meet QJWIN in Europe. But after Hart flew across
the Atlantic for the meeting, the enigmatic QJWIN failed to show up.
After the Schweiker-Hart JFK subcommittee folded, a freedom of infor-
mation lawsuit by Bernard Fensterwald would turn up one page from
a CIA file about Michel Victor Mertz, the French assassin with so many
parallels to QJWIN. Even that lone CIA page about Mertz came about
only because of an order by Watergate Judge John Sirica. When Fen-
sterwald’s client Gary Shaw tried to get photos of Mertz from William
Attwood’s
Newsday
team, the newspaper found their one grainy photo
of Mertz was no longer in the file.15
The CIA had used its considerable media assets and savvy, as well as
David Atlee Phillips and his group, to counterattack Church and Con-
gress. They got the ammunition they needed to eventually end Church’s
investigation when, on December 23, 1975, Greek rebels murdered Rich-
ard Welch, the CIA’s Station Chief in Athens. The Ford administration,
backed by CIA boosters in the press and Congress, claimed that leaks
in the media had caused Welch’s death. The charge was false, since
Welch had been publicly identified as a CIA agent since 1969 and made
no attempt to hide his home address—even though many Greeks were
angry over US support for the brutal dictatorship that had ruled their
country in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Though nothing in the Church
738
LEGACY OF SECRECY
Hearings had prompted Welch’s murder, a masterful spin campaign
gave the opposite impression and helped to end the Church Commit-
tee’s investigations in a matter of months.16
Before the Committee ended, David Atlee Phillips himself became
embroiled in the Church investigations. In July 1974, Antonio Veciana
had been arrested in a drug bust, telling an associate that “the CIA
framed him because he wanted to go ahead with another attempt to kill
Castro.” Veciana was convicted and sentenced to twenty-seven months
at the federal prison in Atlanta.17 After his release, on March 2, 1976,
Veciana told Gaeton Fonzi about his control agent, who used the name
Maurice Bishop. It was Senator Schweiker himself who said on April
11, 1976, that a police artist drawing of Bishop—based on Veciana’s
description—looked like a CIA agent who’d testified to his committee:
David Atlee Phillips.18
That began a cat-and-mouse game between Phillips and Fonzi that
would last for three years, first in the Senate investigation and then in
a new House committee. Veciana was always reluctant to definitively
identify Phillips as Bishop. Phillips would dissemble and even lie in his
sworn testimony to Congress, but to the frustration of Fonzi and other
staff members, no perjury charges resulted.19
William Harvey also tried to obscure vital information in 1976, when
he was working as an editor for publisher Bobbs Merrill, a subsidiary
of ITT. That year, Bobbs Merrill was readying for publication a book by
former Army Ranger Bradley Ayers, detailing his work with the CIA in
south Florida in 1963 and 1964. Not bound by the usual strict CIA secrecy
oath, Ayers’s book mentioned Harvey (renamed “Harold”), Shackley,
David Morales (“Dave”), and Johnny Rosselli. Using Rosselli’s real
name, Ayers described the mobster’s exile sniper team and friendship
with Morales. Later, Ayers said that someone at the publisher altered his
book and he hadn’t known that Harvey worked there.20 In June 1976, the
overweight, hard-drinking William Harvey died of heart problems.
On April 23, 1976, Johnny Rosselli testified to Richard Schweiker’s
small JFK subcommittee. When pressed, Rosselli admitted he had
no facts to substantiate his Castro retaliation theory of JFK’s murder.
Though the Final Report of the main Church Committee was published
that day, Schweiker was determined to continue his investigation, using
Fonzi and his own office staff. Meanwhile, the Senate Intelligence Com-
mittee learned of other important information, such as the Cuba Con-
tingency Plans from the fall of 1963 to deal with possible retaliation by
Fidel, like the assassination of American officials. The Senate staffers
had stumbled across a reference to the material in a Justice Department
file, since the CIA had not given their copies of the plans to the inves-
tigators. Tad Szulc even wrote an article about the Cuba Contingency
Plans that appeared in the
Boston Globe
and the
New Republic
, revealing
that “Robert Kennedy, the CIA and the FBI decided to keep from the
Warren Commission the fact that a special group had been set up to
protect American leaders from possible Cuban assassination plots.” But
no other journalist followed up Szulc’s work (until we did in the 1990s),
and it was dangerous for Szulc to write more without exposing his own
work on AMTRUNK.21
When the summer of 1976 began, the press suddenly appeared tired
of investigations of the CIA. Or perhaps they had gotten the message
that the Ford administration and conservative members of Congress
wanted such things stopped—and if Ford won the election, the reporters
could be frozen out for four years.
Senator Schweiker was determined to forge ahead and issued his JFK
subcommittee’s report on June 23, 1976. Though largely ignored by the
news media, it was filled with important information, despite all the
material withheld by the CIA, FBI, and military intelligence. Schweiker
also planned to recall Johnny Rosselli for more testimony.
Facing more interrogation, from increasingly informed Senate staffers,
Rosselli would have consulted with his attorney, Tom Wadden. Rosselli
had another problem: During intense questioning, he had reportedly
given Congressional investigators Santo Trafficante’s name. Rosselli
had to explain to Wadden why that, or further testimony, was so dan-
gerous. According to historian Richard Mahoney, Rosselli confessed to
Wadden his “role in plotting to kill the President”—something Wadden