Authors: Lamar Waldron
policeman associates: Blakey “was convinced that Sgt. Patrick Dean
had been the one that let Jack Ruby in the basement on the morning of
the 24th.”7 Dean refused to testify to Blakey’s Committee, and even told
author Peter Dale Scott “of his longtime relationship with [Joe] Civello,”
the mobster who ran Dallas for Carlos Marcello. Scott also notes that
Dean “was in charge of security in the Dallas basement when Oswald
was murdered,” and that Dean “later failed a lie detector test about
Ruby’s access to [the basement].” Dean also worked in narcotics, which
Ruby was also involved in with Civello and Marcello.8
If JFK’s assassination had occurred in Tampa, Ruby could have been
assisted by Trafficante associate Police Sgt. Jack de la Llana. If JFK had
been killed in Ruby’s hometown of Chicago, Ruby could have turned
to Trafficante and Rosselli associate Richard Cain, the chief investigator
for the Cook County sheriff.
Even as evidence tying Oswald to Cuba and Russia was causing con-
cern among officials in Washington, and would soon break in the press,
Marcello continued with the plans to kill Oswald. If the main goal of
JFK’s death had been to provoke the invasion of Cuba, keeping the
seemingly pro-Castro Oswald alive a while longer would have seemed
a more logical choice, so that he could be the focus of an outcry to retali-
ate against Fidel. But since the main goal of killing JFK was to end the
pressure on Marcello, Trafficante, and their associates, hence Oswald
had to die—and soon. With the authorities still seeking David Ferrie,
the whole plot could unravel and point to people working for Marcello,
unless Oswald was killed. Marcello could make only limited efforts to
contain Oswald’s public statements and cooperation with police, which
is why two attorneys linked to Marcello had been asked to represent
the still lawyerless Oswald. But only killing Oswald could guarantee
his silence.9
As had been planned the night before, at 10:19 AM (Central), dancer
Karen Carlin in Fort Worth called Ruby’s home, supposedly to ask him
to send her money. It’s doubtful that Ruby was there, since an earlier call
to Ruby’s home by his regular housekeeper was answered by someone
who didn’t seem to recognize her voice. At 10:45 AM, Ruby was talking
to a TV crew in front of the police station, before heading to the Western
Union office. At 11:00 AM, Sgt. Dean apparently removed police who
had been guarding an interior door to the basement. Upstairs, in Detec-
tive Fritz’s office, a small group of officials was questioning Oswald, but
at 11:15 AM they were told their time was up. However, the transfer car
wasn’t in position, so the group with Oswald had to slow its passage
toward the basement. The basement was packed with at least seventy
policemen and forty newsmen. At Western Union, Ruby wired Carlin
the money at 11:17 AM and then headed back to the police station, which
was only a block away. The timing was tight for Ruby to have any hope
of claiming a “sudden passion” defense, but he had plenty of associates
who could signal when he should arrive. For example, one minute after
Ruby left the Western Union office, his attorney entered the police station
and saw Oswald coming out of the jail elevator. Ruby’s attorney turned
to leave, telling a police detective, “That’s all I wanted to see.”
Even with the crowds of press and police, no one ever claimed to
have seen Ruby actually entering the police basement, which is one
more indication that he must have had help in doing so. Ruby most
likely entered the basement from the alley that runs between the Western
Union office and the police station. One officer claimed to have seen “an
unidentified white male” walk down the ramp into the basement, past
Officer Roy Vaughn, who was guarding the ramp. But that officer failed
a polygraph test, while Officer Vaughn, who consistently said he had not
let Ruby down the ramp, passed his polygraph test.10 Seven witnesses
agreed with Vaughn.
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LEGACY OF SECRECY
Around 11:20 AM, Oswald walked through the door, flanked by two
Dallas police detectives. As soon as he was visible, a car horn blew, and
is audible on the news broadcast of the transfer. At 11:21, Ruby shot
Oswald and the basement erupted in pandemonium. As Oswald was
rushed to Parkland Hospital, the apprehended Ruby appeared to police
officer Don Ray Archer as “being extremely agitated and nervous, con-
tinually inquiring whether Oswald was dead or alive.” Oswald died at
1:07 PM, and it was only after Ruby was told that his victim had died
that “Ruby calmed down,” according to Marcello’s biographer, John H.
Davis. Davis notes that even after an officer told Ruby, “‘It looks like it’s
going to be the electric chair for you’ . . . Ruby immediately relaxed and
even managed a wan smile.” Officer Archer said “it seemed at that time
that Ruby felt his own life depended on the success of his mission, that
if Oswald had not died, he, Jack Ruby, would have been killed.”11
Later that day, a Secret Service agent interviewed a “highly agitated”
Karen Carlin. Carlin blurted out to the agent that “Oswald, Jack Ruby,
and other individuals unknown to her were involved in a plot to assas-
sinate Kennedy, and that she would be killed if she gave any information
to authorities.”12 As Officer Archer had suspected, the same was true
for Jack Ruby and members of his family. Ruby would soon be visited
in jail by Dallas restaurateur Joe Campisi, an underboss for Marcello;
Ruby had last seen Campisi at his restaurant on the night before JFK’s
murder. Campisi was also close to Sheriff Bill Decker, in whose cus-
tody Ruby would spend most of the rest of his life, reportedly in a cell
overlooking Dealey Plaza. When Ruby was later asked in a polygraph
examination if “members of your own family are now in danger because
of what you did,” Ruby said “yes.” Ruby’s sister later testified that Ruby
worried about their “brother Earl being dismembered [and] Earl’s chil-
dren [being] dismembered [and their] arms and legs . . . cut off.” At the
time, a Chicago mobster associate of Richard Cain was well known in
the underworld for that type of Mafia retribution; years later, Johnny
Rosselli’s legs were cut off after he was murdered.13
In South Carolina, Joseph Milteer had completed his phone call and
rejoined his friend William Somersett. After the radio broadcast the news
about Oswald’s death, Milteer told his friend, “That makes it work per-
fect . . . now we have no worry.”14
As Jack Ruby’s name surfaced and started to reverberate through the
back channels of law enforcement and intelligence, agencies ranging
from the FBI to the CIA had new information to withhold from the
public and from one another. Oswald’s death also had an immediate
and dramatic impact on the situation in Washington, since there would
now be no public trial. This spawned more investigations, some of them
secret, since the evidence gathered—and their final conclusions—would
not have to be presented in open court.
One of the by-products of Oswald’s death was the creation of what
would become known as the Warren Commission. Sometimes misper-
ceived as something solely created by LBJ so he could control the inves-
tigation, the Warren Commission was actually created because of the
efforts of several of Bobby Kennedy’s associates. Neither President
Johnson nor J. Edgar Hoover wanted the Warren Commission, whereas
Bobby’s associates apparently saw some type of commission as pre-
ferable to having the whole investigation in the hands of LBJ and
Hoover.
Within hours of Oswald’s death, Hoover was talking to Nicholas Kat-
zenbach, Bobby’s trusted deputy Attorney General. While Bobby was
consumed with funeral preparations and family matters, Katzenbach
was essentially running the Justice Department. However, Katzenbach
focused on areas like civil rights, and wasn’t a specialist in the areas of
organized crime or Hoffa, areas that were now especially relevant in
light of Ruby’s recent actions. Also, there is no evidence that Katzen-
bach was ever told about the JFK-Almeida coup plan, which had been
withheld from all of Bobby’s associates who weren’t actively involved
in the Cuba operation. Finally, it’s not clear if Katzenbach was acting at
Bobby’s direction in pursuing the creation of what became the Warren
Commission, or if he and other associates of Bobby were simply doing
what they assumed the Attorney General would want them to do.
Hoover’s memo of his conversation with Katzenbach on the after-
noon of November 24 says, “The thing I am concerned about, and so
is Mr. Katzenbach, is having something issued so we can convince the
public that Oswald is the real assassin.”15 In later years, much attention
was focused on the fact that Katzenbach seemed to be more interested
in convincing the public that Oswald acted alone than in finding out
if he was involved with others. Katzenbach stated his feelings even
more strongly in a memo the following day to LBJ aide Bill Moyers,
declaring, “The public must be satisfied that Oswald was the assas-
sin [and] that he did not have confederates who are still at large.” He
even wrote, “Speculation about Oswald’s motivation ought to be cut
off, and we should have some basis for rebutting thought that this was a
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Communist conspiracy or . . . a right-wing conspiracy to blame it on the
Communists.” In his private memo to Moyers, even Katzenbach notes
that “the facts on Oswald seem [almost] too pat—too obvious (Marxist,
Cuba, Russian wife, etc.).” Yet Katzenbach’s main goal was “to head off
public speculation or Congressional hearings. . . . ”16
However, as reflected in Hoover’s notes of his November 24 talk with
Katzenbach, they disagreed about the best way to achieve that goal. Kat-
zenbach “thinks that the President might appoint a Presidential Com-
mission of three outstanding citizens to make a determination.” Hoover
“countered with a suggestion that we make an investigative report to the
Attorney General . . . then the Attorney General can make the report to
the President, and the President can decide whether to make it public.”
Hoover points out that to do otherwise could “complicate our foreign
relations [because], for instance, Oswald made a phone call to the Cuban
Embassy in Mexico City which we intercepted.”17
We feel the evidence shows the latter concern is at the heart of Katzen-
bach’s desire to convince the public Oswald acted alone, and to cut off
speculation about anyone else who might have been involved. In that,
Katzenbach shared the concerns of Hoover, LBJ, McCone, and other top
officials as well, from Bobby to Rusk to General Maxwell Taylor. The
only differences are that Katzenbach expressed his feelings in writing
and was the least informed of the top officials just listed, all of whom
had additional reasons to avoid any intensive investigation of Oswald’s
(and now Ruby’s) associates.
As the struggle between Katzenbach’s “pro-Commission” forces and
Hoover and LBJ’s “anti-Commission” forces played out in the com-
ing days, Hoover was busy keeping a lid on connections to Ruby and
Oswald that could embarrass the FBI. Ruby had been an official FBI
informant in 1959, as part of an unusual sequence of events that coin-
cided with Ruby’s well-documented trips to Havana while Trafficante
was under house arrest there. As we mentioned earlier, and documented
at length in
Ultimate Sacrifice,
Ruby was running guns and other arma-
ments to Cuba at the time with associates of Trafficante and Hoffa, and
Ruby was probably one of the people using the alias “Jack La Rue,” the
mysterious man whom Bobby Kennedy’s investigators were unable to
find. At the time, Ruby was also acting as an intermediary for Marcello,
in efforts to get Santo Trafficante released from house arrest in Cuba.
Just two days after Oswald’s death, the FBI and the CIA learned that
“a British journalist . . . John Wilson . . . gave information to the American
embassy in London that [in 1959] an American gangster named Santos . . .
was visited frequently by an American gangster type named Ruby.”18
Wilson was a reliable witness who had testified before the US Senate
in 1959 about a young Salvador Allende (later president of Chile), and
Congressional investigators would eventually turn up information cor-
roborating his account. However, in late 1963 and 1964, the FBI and CIA
did not want this information to be made public, so their main emphasis
was in trying to discredit Wilson.
In Dallas, just a few hours after Oswald’s death, FBI Agent Hosty
was ordered to destroy the note Oswald had left for him a couple of
weeks earlier. He flushed it down a toilet, and its existence wouldn’t
become known until 1975.19 Hosty’s name was also excluded from the