Wednesday, May 23, 2012
TrinDay & A Memoir of Injustice
BillsbookBlog
Bill Kelly
http://billsbooksblog.blogspot.com/2012/05/trinday-memoir-of-injustice.html
A Memoir of Injustice (TrinDay, 2011)
by Jerry Ray as told to Tamara Carter, with an Afterward by Judge Joe Brown.
From the moment Martin Luther King, Jr. was shot and killed it was clear there was a war on, not a race war, a perspective encouraged at the time, but because the violence also consumed the lives of John and Robert Kennedy, it was a war over the hearts and minds and political lives of the America people.
It is a war that continues today, a violent one that uses murder and assassination as a tool in the chest of strategists who remain behind the scenes and immune from justice, and a war that is manifest in the refusal of the government to release the now historical investigative records of the Congressional investigation into the murder of Dr. King.
The assassination of MLK is not unique in the failure of the government to bring justice to an historic homicide, or release of the relevant government records, as that is also the case with the JFK and RFK assassinations. More specifically in the MLK case, the government failed to give the accused assassin on a fair or thorough trial, or to properly identify and locate the shadowy Latin smuggler “Raoul,” who holds the key to the true powers behind the assassination, thus requiring amateur sleuths, civilians, historians and the younger brother of the accused to do the job.
While there are dozens of other books that go into the details more thoroughly, Jerry Ray’s view of the proceedings is fascinating and reads like a Raymond Chandler novel, without pulling any punches, short, crisp and to the point.
The early part of the book, describing the dysfunctional and basically criminal nature of the Ray family, is a sad tale that sets the stage for how Ray could have been easily persuaded to be part of the plot or, like Oswald, set up as the patsy and fall guy.
One might expect the brother of the accused to stick up for his kin, even after James Earl Ray died in prison, but Jerry’s story is engaging and believable, and thanks to T. Carter, is delivered in a style that serves a fine example of the proper way to draw out oral history from a closely engaged witness like Jerry Ray.
Jerry first learned the authorities were looking for his brother when he heard they were after a suspect named Eric Galt, which he knew was an alias James Ray had used. He immediately drove to St. Louis to talk to another brother who owned the Grapevine Tavern, a seedy, shot and beer joint on the hard side of town.
After James was caught in England, and the details began to emerge, Jerry learned that when the alleged getaway car was located, “Don Wilson, a 25 year-old agent with the Atlanta FBI office, was one of two agents who made the initial response. While the senior agent conferred with Atlanta police, Wilson opened the driver’s side door and two pieces of paper fell out. Thinking the papers were insignificant and that possibly he had messed up a crime scene, Wilson stashed the two pieces of paper inside his pocket. It was not until later that Wilson discover the great significance of the two pieces of paper: they had the name ‘Raoul’ written on them…”
From prison, James Earl Ray asked his brother to check out a guy “Randy Robenson,” whose name was on the back of a card “Raoul” had, a card from the Le Bunny Lounge on Canal Street in New Orleans.
A cab driver told Jerry the club was probably one of Carlos Marcello’s joints, and as Jerry relates: “At the time, Carlos Marcello was the biggest crime boss in the United States, his criminal empire claiming the entire Gulf region, even stretching into parts of the Caribbean. At the time, there was strong evidence that Marcello, who harbored bitter hatred for Robert F. and John F. Kennedy, had played a direct role in JFK’s assassination.”
As recounted by Jerry, “I walked inside, sat down at the bar and ordered a beer. To my surprise, Le Bunny Lounge was an average place. There were only a few other customers there, and they were sitting at tables away from the bar. The cocktail waitress was an attractive woman. We started talking back and forth. I asked her if she knew Randy Robenson. She stared my way and said, ‘Who’s asking?’ I didn’t beat around the bush, and replied, ‘Twenty Dollar Bill, that’s who.’…”
She knew a Randolph Robenson, a guy from Florida who came in with a Latin looking guy, good tippers.
Jerry thought it significant, “Jimmy and Raoul meeting at Le Bunny Lounge, owned by a New Orleans crime boss, an acquaintance of Percy Foreman, an attorney with ties to both the Kennedy and King assassination – the pieces were coming together, and a big picture was starting to take shape. It was not a pretty picture.”
Though Ray never acknowledged killing King, and it is questionable that his rifle that was left at the scene was the one used in the shooting, Percy Foreman, who became James Earl Ray’s lawyer, convinced Ray to plead guilty to avoid the death sentence, and also avoid a trial during which all the facts in the case would have emerged.
Some of those facts would come out during the 1978 House Select Committee on Assassinations (HSCA) investigation and two subsequent civil trials, one led by Dr. William Pepper on behalf of the King family that resulted in the conviction of co-conspirators, thus proving conspiracy. The other case was COPA v. DOD – Coalition on Political Assassinations versus Department of Defense that sought the release of Army Intelligence files on Dr. King in the last two months of his life, and though COPA lost the case on appeal, the DOD did release an after action summary of the reports, which clearly indicated they had maintained a very close surveillance of King and in fact, watched him being murdered.
William Pepper once said that he had identified “Raoul” and even talked with him on the phone, but since then, we haven’t heard [much] more about the shadowy Latin smuggler, or whether the other leads were properly followed and investigated. Pepper’s suspect is described and his photograph printed in his book, An Act of State.
Memphis Judge Joe Brown, now of TV Court fame, presided over James Earl Ray’s last court appeal before he died, and tested the alleged murder weapon against the bullet removed from Dr. King’s body. Judge Brown claims the rifle ballistics don’t match and it should be tested properly. Instead it sits in a case in the Civil Rights Museum at what was once the Loraine Hotel where King was killed. Judge Brown writes an appropriate afterword for this book.
The records on the Martin L. King assassination of the HSCA are still locked away, and were not included among the JFK Assassinations Records Act as they should have been, though they can and should be released by an act of Congress, if people will only ask them to do so.
Justice many never be served in this case, as Jerry Ray concludes, but history still can be, if the relevant government records are released to the public, as they should be.
TrinDay P.O. Box 577, Waterville, OR, 97489
1-800-566-2012
[Bill Kelly is author of “300 Years at the Point” and “Birth of the Birdie.” His research on the JFK assassination is supported in part by a grant from the Fund For Constitutional Government Investigative Journalism Project. He can be reached at bkjfk3@yahoo.com]