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ORDERS TO KILL -- THE TRUTH BEHIND THE MURDER OF MARTIN LUTHER KING

Chapter 21:  Making a Case:  December 1992

ON DECEMBER 1, 1992, in St. Louis, Susan Wadsworth, a friend of FBI and HSCA informant Oliver Patterson, who had since died, confirmed her knowledge of his covert, dirty-tricks activities but refused to testify at the television trial for personal  reasons. I also spoke with St. Louis television reporter John Auble who confirmed the incident, discussed earlier, where New York Times reporter Tony Marro was sent to a St. Louis hotel to interview Patterson and obtain derogatory information about  Mark Lane. Auble, who had filmed the incident, was willing to  testify and agreed to provide the footage.

The next day in New York I talked with Bill Schaap of the  Institute for Media Analysis. Schaap and his colleague Ellen Ray (no relation to James) had agreed to be our experts on the role and use of the media in this case. I asked them to  analyze the media's treatment of Dr. King during his last year,  as well as that of James Earl Ray from the time of his identification to his conviction. I thought it was important to reveal that  government manipulation of the media was part and parcel of  the ongoing conspiracy. I intended to put Bill Schaap on the stand. He had an  international reputation on the political use  of the mass media and had testified as an expert in the Spycatcher case in Australia, where the British government had  attempted to stop publication of former MI-5 agent Peter Wright's book.

***

FOR SOME TIME I'd been interested in finding out whether any  foreign intelligence agencies had any information in their archives about the assassination of Dr. King. The previous summer I had traveled to Moscow to meet with ranking KGB officials who had come to treat long-held secrets as a commercial commodity and a source of income. Despite their willingness to search, it  appeared that they knew little about the assassination.

On December 4 I flew to Paris to meet with French lawyer (avocat) Marcel Sorrequere and Pierre Marion, the former  head of SDECE -- the French equivalent of the CIA. Sorrequere  had been personal lawyer to French president Charles DeGualle  as well as to SDECE superintendent Ducret, who in 1968 was head of SDECE and had since died. Marion insisted on intense  secrecy. He agreed to tap his sources in French and Israeli  intelligence. At one point he said to me, "You are in great danger." I realized that he had already concluded that some  part of the U.S. intelligence community had been involved in,  if not responsible for, the assassination of King. Marion had no  reason to overstate himself. Sometime afterward France went  through a turbulent change of government. Marion's inside  sources became very nervous about discussing anything sensitive. His Israeli sources claimed to have no information.

****

BACK IN MEMPHIS, after many tears and much soul searching,  Betty Spates had finally agreed to tell all. In an interview with  Ken Herman, she revealed that she had had an affair with Loyd Jowers which began when she first went to work at the grill in  1967 when she was about seventeen years old. She said she only "helped out" and couldn't be formally employed in a  place where beer was served because of her age. She also  worked part-time across the street at the Seabrook Wallpaper  Company. She said that she believed that on the day of the  assassination she went to the grill around 5:30 a.m. to help  Jowers prepare for the day. As was their custom, she thought  that they went to the small storage room at the back of the  kitchen, where Jowers kept a cot, and "fooled around." Jowers would sometimes also use the room for a catnap in the afternoon. On other occasions he would go home during his  break -- usually around 2:30 p.m. -- or go off to the Tremont Cafe on Calhoun, which he also owned.

That afternoon Spates came over from Seabrook to Jim's  Grill several times. She knew that prostitutes had been working  in the Huling/Mulberry area and was determined to keep an eye on Loyd. She said that he had been spending a lot of time  in the backyard that week and she was worried that he might  be two-timing her. Around 2:30 in the afternoon Jowers announced that he was closing up for a while and ordered everyone out, including her.

She went back to Seabrook and returned again around 5:00.  Around 6:00 she noticed that Jowers had disappeared from the  grill and she went to the kitchen to look for him. She was  standing in the kitchen when she heard what sounded like a  shot and then, within seconds, Jowers burst into the kitchen  through the back door with a rifle. "What are you doing with  the gun?" she asked. He said, "If I catch you with a nigger, I'll kill you." She was frightened. "Loyd, I ain't doing nothing," she said. He said softly, "I wouldn't hurt you."

Jowers was pale, "real white," and nervous. In front of her he  broke the gun down into at least two pieces and then without a word held them close to his chest and walked briskly through  the grill and out the front door. She watched through the front window as he turned right and walked the short distance to his  brown and white station wagon parked north of tile grill. She saw him open the hatch of the wagon and put the pieces of  the gun inside. He then came back into the grill. The entire series of events -- from the time he entered the kitchen until  he put the pieces of the gun in the wagon and came back  inside-took only seconds.

Spates recalled that Jowers's wife used to come to Memphis every Thursday to have her hair done; Spates assumed that she also did so on that day, and at the time she thought that was  the reason for Jowers's more than usual efforts to keep her out  of the grill. He was always more cautious on Thursdays. Jowers's wife owned the white Cadillac that was parked that day close  to the fire hydrant, behind James's Mustang, but Spates wasn't  certain whether his wife (who has since died) had parked it  herself or whether Jowers had done so, as he claimed.

She also remembered finding around this time a large sum of cash, "more money than I ever saw," in an old suitcase in a disused stove in the kitchen.

Spates was afraid of Jowers. Jowers told her that he'd kill her  if she ever talked about what she had seen. Over the years she'd been visited at each new job by Jowers's "heavy," Willie  Akins. She believed that this was Jowers's way of telling her that  he was keeping an eye on her. She also said that in 1969 he bought a house for her on Oakview to keep her quiet. It was  put in her sisters' names because she was underage.

Betty Spates elaborated on her story when I interviewed her on December 16. She said she and her sisters Bobbi and Alda had begun to work at the grill in 1967. On the afternoon of  April 4 she remembered waitresses Rosie Lee Dabney and Rosetta working in the morning but leaving around 3:30 p.m. She  believed that Bobbi was there in the afternoon.

She said that during the time she was having an affair with Jowers he rented an apartment for her on Peabody. After the  lease was up Jowers moved her upstairs to the rooming house  for a while, and then in 1969 he bought the house on Oakview  for her -- or so he told her.

Then in the spring of 1969 she recalled that two men came  by to visit at the new Oakview house, one of whom was black. They said that if she and her sisters would tell all they knew,  they would get money, new identities, and be moved away. Betty  didn't want to leave Memphis, so she refused. Since that time,  she insisted no one had ever talked to her about this case other than in her discussions with Herman and me. Even on the  night of the killing, when the police came in they told all the  blacks in the grill, "You niggers don't know anything, get in  the back." She said she and a number of the blacks went into  the kitchen and were never interviewed.

She also remembered going through a marriage ceremony arranged by Jowers which was conducted in the Oakview house  in November 1969 Jowers, who she said had begun to drink heavily in 1968, divorced his first wife around this time).

One evening in January 1972 when Betty was working at the  Arcade Restaurant she met a Mexican named Luis Ortiz, whom  she took home with her. Jowers must have seen his car parked in front of the house; he came in, drew a gun, and took Ortiz  away with him. Betty never saw Ortiz again and believed that Jowers killed him that night. His car remained there for  some time.

Betty said that Jowers eventually put out a contract on her  life. She said Willie Akins was supposed to do the job but mistook her sister Bobbi for her and tried to get Bobbi to go out  with him so he could better arrange the killing. When Akins  did finally meet Betty, he realized his mistake. During a subsequent interview she provided details of what she said were two  attempts by Akins to kill her by shooting at her on one occasion  and again at her and her two sons in 1983. I resolved to learn  more about Akins.

Betty told me that Jowers had remarried within the last year and moved to the country. He had forgotten all of his black friends. She currently had no contact with him but seemed  relieved when I told her that we didn't believe that Jowers had  actually shot Dr. King. It was obvious that she still had some  feelings for Jowers. She said that until he remarried earlier that  year he had provided support for two of her children.

I had instructed Ken Herman to interview Rosie Lee Dabney, another waitress from Jim's Grill. A few days later he reported on his interview with her. Rosie Lee was off at the time of the shooting and knew nothing about the gun, but she was aware of the affair between Jowers and Betty. She confirmed serving eggs and sausage that afternoon to a stranger.

In interviews, Bobbi told us that she went to work early on  the day of the shooting. She remembered that a priest came into the grill early in the morning asking where a certain church was located. She thought that was strange since there were no churches in that downtown area. She also remembered seeing James Earl Ray come in for a cup of coffee during the afternoon.

She was sure Jowers had gone out for a while in the morning because she remembered that Rosie Lee had to pay the beer man when he came in between 9:00 and 10:00. She said the  beer man pulled into the spot where Jowers's old station wagon had been parked.

Bobbi also said that Jowers told her first thing that morning not to take breakfast up to Grace Walden, who lived in room 6-B on the second floor of the rooming house, as was her custom. He made it clear that he wanted no one to go upstairs  into the rooming house on that day.

Jowers drove Bobbi to work the next day, April 5, in his old  brown and white station wagon and told her that he had found the gun out back that was used to kill Dr. King and had turned  it over to the police. He told her to be careful when she spoke  about these events. Other than being interviewed by two men  in 1968 who asked her if she saw Ray (not wanting to get  involved she said no), no one had ever talked to her about the case.

James McCraw had stated that Jowers showed him a rifle in a box on a shelf under the cash register, contending that he had found it out back and later that he had turned it over to the police. Thus, if Betty ever raised a question, both Bobbi  and McCraw would state that he'd told them about finding a gun and turning it in. It was a rudimentary cover-up at best, but Jowers probably thought it was better than nothing.

As for the Oakview house, Bobbi believed that she and her sister Alda had bought the house. She paid $200 for the $9,000  property purchase. The whole family lived in the house, and  Jowers stayed there many times. Bobbi recalled that Jowers fired  her soon after April 4, 1968, but did not remember any wedding of Betty and Jowers.

Bobbi confirmed that Jowers had also owned the Tremont Cafe on Calhoun, and MPD officer S.O. Blackburn disclosed  that the cafe was a gambling den used by Jowers, both Frank  Libertos and another member of the Liberto family. This information was the first indication that Jowers had any association  with the Libertos.

Betty's other sister, Alda, refused to talk during this period.

The indications were that Jowers had no facility with a rifle. It also seemed clear that there were other people in the brush  area and that the large footprints in the alley couldn't have belonged to the diminutive Jowers, who apparently usually had  others do his dirty work. Jowers, then, seemed much more  likely to be an accomplice than the shooter.

***

ON DECEMBER 5, Dale Dougherty called me from Waco, very excited. The hospital postmortem report on the death of his friend Bill Sartor had finally been pried loose after twenty-one years. It showed that Sartor had a lethal dose of methaqualone in his system when he died. Since Sartor had no history of any such drug use, Dougherty believed that it had been administered to him -- either in the drinks he had at the Hickory Stick  bar before he arrived home, or forcibly later that evening as he lay in bed.

Ken Abels, the Waco district attorney, officially declared the death a homicide. He assigned his chief investigator, J. C.  Rappe, to work with Dougherty and coordinate the inquiry.

Since much of Sartor's work prior to and at the time of his death involved the killing of Dr. King and focused on Shelby County, Dougherty asked J. C. Rappe if he would formally request help from the Shelby County attorney general's investigative staff. This he did, requesting help from Shelby County attorney general's investigator Jim Smith who had been designated as that office's liaison to our work on the King case.  Smith went to his chief who in turn secured the attorney general's permission for the cooperation.

I saw the investigation of Bill Sartor's death as being complementary to my inquiry into Dr. King's murder. The Waco investigation would be assisted by the knowledge I had about the  King case, and I would have access to witnesses not previously available.

We went to see Robert Patrick Lyons, who Sartor had maintained was attacked by a Liberto hit man who held a knife to his throat and said he was ordered to kill him for helping  Sartor learn things he had no business knowing. Lyons had  earlier rebuffed Kenny and Dale Dougherty. Jim Smith and I, as a special counsel to the Sartor family, now would have several meetings with him. It was obvious that Lyons was still deathly afraid. He denied knowing any of the persons or the events concerning him described by Sartor.

In a session a few months later he told Jim Smith that he remembered Sartor calling him just before he died, saying he was coming to Memphis. Lyons thought Sartor mentioned the  name of a person in the Waco area called Sam Termine with  whom he was going to meet. When Dougherty mentioned this name to J.C. Rappe, it rang a bell. Termine was a club owner and one of Carlos Marcello's operatives in Waco. It was clear that Lyons knew far more than he was willing to admit.

***

DURING THIS TIME WE SEARCHED for Gene Pearson Crawford, who we learned from the attorney general's files was allegedly the "eggs and sausage" man who ate in Jim's Grill on the afternoon of the fourth and the morning of the fifth. (Now it appeared that although Jack Youngblood could possibly have been the person who successively visited attorney Russell X. Thompson and Reverends Latimer and Baltensprager on the morning of April 11, it was unlikely that he was, as we had earlier suspected, the "eggs and sausage" man.) Crawford was picked up by the police after Loyd Jowers called them on April 5, only to be promptly released. He had vanished, but when we found out that he was a drifter from Jackson, Tennessee, whose father had been known by the woman who managed the  Ambassador Hotel, his potential significance greatly diminished. There was, however, no indication that Crawford was a gun collector, as FBI special agent in charge Jensen had maintained to Wayne Chastain was the case with the man whom  hey arrested.

***

KEN HERMAN CALLED former LL&L Produce Company vice president and Liberto partner James Latch, only to be told that he was under a doctor's care and that he couldn't discuss anything  that happened in 1968. Besides, he said, he had suffered a  heart attack and his memory was faulty.

Latch obviously knew a good deal. An FBI 302 report (302 reports are not signed statements but rather an FBI agent's summary of what a person allegedly said) on him in the attorney general's file confirmed that he was working at LL&L on the afternoon of April 4 and that he had a long scar on his  neck. John McFerren's 302 report of the late-night interview the Sunday following the killing noted that McFerren had described the man who answered the phone and passed it over to "fat Frank" as "one of the bosses" and as having such a scar. He had to have been describing James Latch. I was determined to go to Mississippi to see Mr. Latch, but that would  have to wait until after the trial.

***

I WAS AFRAID that Hickman might introduce statements of questionable validity from some of James's fellow prisoners. Under our rules, FBI 302 interview reports were admissible. When we asked James about particular individuals whose 302 interviews we had read, he genuinely seemed not to know them at all or  only remotely. This included the informant Raymond Curtis, whose story, as previously noted, had been widely quoted by UPI in a wire service release. It would have taken UPI very little  checking to learn that, though they were both in Jefferson City  prison at the time, Curtis never knew James and that certainly  James never spoke to him about anything. UPI's FBI contacts could have confirmed, however, that Curtis was well known to  the bureau. Harold Weisberg obtained the FBI file on Curtis  (C.A. 75-1996), and it revealed that he was determined to make  a name for himself in this case. He apparently began his endeavors with an effort to defraud Ebony magazine by attempting to sell a false story of a "contract" offer to kill Dr. King. According to Weisberg, the FBI records even characterized Curtis as a "pathological liar," [10] but this didn't deter the media from  spreading his blatant lies about James, nor did it cause the  bureau to reveal that it knew he was lying. Curtis's account reinforced the image they wanted of the lone assassin.

I obtained the testimony of one or more prisoners who actually knew James well. One was J. J. Maloney, a former multiple murderer and armed robber who had rehabilitated himself, becoming a published author and poet and a reporter for the Kansas City Star. He confirmed James's story about his escape  in the bread box from Missouri State Penitentiary on April 23, and said positively that James was not a racist, that he kept to  himself in prison, didn't use drugs, and had no problem with  black inmates. When we asked him what he knew about particular prisoners who had made negative statements about James,  he commented that those inmates didn't know James nor did they have contact with him. He questioned why prisoners who  knew James well and moved in his circle weren't interviewed  by the FBI.

Maloney was a find. He had been sent by the Star to cover  the story of James's 1977 escape from Brushy Mountain. When he arrived, he saw upwards of fifty flackjacketed, heavily armed  FBI agents already on the scene. They had established a base  camp, and some of them had gone into the hills where the  escapees had fled. Maloney didn't know why they were there.  James and the others were, after all, state prisoners, and there had been no call for federal assistance. He recalled that a highly vexed Tennessee governor Ray Blanton showed up and  ordered the FBI out. When they didn't leave, he threatened to  put them in the cell vacated by James. 

Maloney agreed to testify.

Ken Herman and I met with another former inmate, Don Wolverton, at his automobile garage. Wolverton had shared a cell with James at Brushy Mountain off and on for three and a half years. He knew him well and liked him. He also confirmed that James wasn't a racist, didn't use drugs, and had no difficulty with blacks. After he and James were thrown in the hole for eighteen months following a botched escape attempt, they celled alongside each other.

In 1981 James had been the victim of a stabbing at Brushy  Mountain Penitentiary, allegedly by some members of a militant black organization -- the Akabulon group. Wolverton remembered that three or four days before the stabbing, Doc Walker, one of the assailants, was moved next to James. Two days before the incident, Wolverton (who had put in for a transfer nearer home one and a half years earlier) was suddenly transferred to Nashville. Wolverton said this was ominous because he always looked out for James.

Wolverton agreed to take the stand.

***

IN CONVERSATIONS WITH ONE OF MY INVESTIGATORS Jim Johnson, Jules Ricco Kimbel, expanding on the story he had earlier told  English producer John Edginton's researchers, said that he had  piloted a Cessna owned by a company controlled by Carlos Marcello and flown two shooters in and out of Memphis on  April 4. He provided specific details of his route -- Three Rivers,  Detroit, Atlanta, New Orleans, and west Memphis. I had doubts about Kimbel's truthfulness. When Canadian investigator Alec Lomonos of checked on the street where Kimbel originally said  he took James to get identification documents, it was clear that  he was mistaken or fabricating. Later, after viewing photographs of James, he decided that James was not the person he took to get identification. Further, in his story about flying in the shooters from Canada, he said he took off from an airport  near Three Rivers, an area he said the CIA used for training  operations. Eventually we learned that apparently no such training activity was conducted there.

However, some of Kimbel's information seemed to have the  ring of truth, because certain aspects dovetailed with information we had obtained from other sources.

Kimbel continually referred to the Liberto family, and in  particular, Sal Liberto of New Orleans, whom we knew to be one of Frank Camille Liberto's brothers. He stated that Sal was  connected to Carlos Marcello. Kimbel took "assignments" from  H. L. Hunt's Placid Oil Company over a period of twenty years, and he referred to Hunt as an implacable foe of Dr. King who,  with Leander Perez, the powerful Louisiana racist, wanted King  out of the way.

Kimbel described Marcello as having extensive business operations in Texas. He said that in all likelihood Marcello and  Hunt were in business together in Louisiana and possibly elsewhere. Kimbel confirmed knowing Sal Liberto and said he was  aware that Hunt's chief of staff, John Curington, posing as a  Dallas private investigator, handled the con tracts for a variety of unpleasant tasks the old man required.

Of great interest was Kimbel's description of a hunting camp where he said H. L. Hunt would occasionally meet and play cards with Carlos Marcello. Investigator Jim Johnson had once  told me that he remembered being taken by his uncle to an  east Texas ranch in the 1950s where he and his uncle and the  owner of the ranch, Monroe Walridge, went dove hunting and  where he saw Hunt and Hoover playing poker.

Writer Anthony Summers had earlier shown me his research on J. Edgar Hoover, which included evidence of Hoover's connections to the Texas oil barons, even to the point of them  making gifts to him of shares in a number of their companies.  He provided a copy of Hoover's last will and testament, which showed his oil company shareholdings. Summers also documented Hoover's closeness to senior mob leaders and their control over him. Among those figures exerting power over the  nation's top law enforcement officer was Carlos Marcello.

In late October I had instructed Johnson to make initial contact with John Curington, who lived on a ranch in Big Sandy, Texas. Curington, along with Paul Rothermel, Hunt's chief of security, left the Hunts in 1969, falling into disfavor with the  family (in particular, with sons Bunker and Herbert) over alleged managerial improprieties of the subsidiary HLH Foods.  Rothermel had been seconded to H. L. Hunt by Hoover in  1954, leaving the bureau to take over security for the Hunt organization. In the course of the dispute, Bunker and Herbert had resorted to wiretapping Rothermel. When Rothermel discovered this he brought criminal proceedings against them.  One of the lawyers the Hunt brothers hired in 1969 (to represent one of their investigators charged) was none other than  James's second attorney, Percy Foreman, who had often represented the Hunts.

Curington, a native Texan, had attempted to trade in information at various times and on one occasion provided material for a National Enquirer article on the Kennedy assassination linking Hunt financing to that event. Jim Johnson was unable to make contact with him because he was serving a sentence for a white-collar crime and was unable or unwilling to meet until he was released. Any discussions with Curington would have to take place after the trial.

***

AT ERNESTINE AND HAZEL'S RESTAURANT, a longstanding black-owned cafe on South Main Street about three hundred yards  from the rooming house, I spoke with patron William L. Ross, who told me that he was around the Lorraine at the time of  the killing. He had gotten off work and taken the bus to Butler and South Main, arriving around 5:45. He began to walk down Butler to Mulberry, then turned left on Mulberry, crossed the  street to the Lorraine side, and walked alongside the wall.  There were a lot of people in the parking lot below the  balcony. He heard the shot, ducked down, then straightened  up and ran the fifty or so feet back to the driveway, where  he saw Dr. King down on the balcony and people milling  everywhere. Ross recalled seeing uniformed police coming  up Mulberry.

Ross remembered talking with a woman who told him of a conversation that took place in the lobby of the Lorraine at  the time of the shooting. A phone call allegedly had been put through to room 306 just before Dr. King went out on the balcony for the last time. This was the first I had heard about this message being relayed to Dr. King's room.

Since Ross was closer to the brush area than anyone else I had found, I wanted him to undergo hypnosis in order to learn if he saw anything or anyone right after the shooting. He  agreed to try it. Ross also pointed me to Ernestine Campbell,  whom I would interview soon afterward.

In 1968 Ernestine Campbell and her husband owned the Trumpet Hotel which abutted the Lorraine. No one had ever talked to her or asked her about what she saw on that fateful  afternoon. Ernestine said she left the hotel and started for home just before 6:00 p.m., driving her gold-bronze Cadillac  up Butler and turning right on Mulberry. As she passed the Lorraine driveway on Butler, she saw Dr. King standing on the balcony. She didn't hear anything because she had the car  windows up and the radio on. As she turned the corner onto  Mulberry she looked up and saw Dr. King lying on the balcony.  She thought he'd had a heart attack. She stopped for a minute  or two at the driveway, wondering why people weren't racing to the balcony. Possibly she had arrived at the driveway when  everyone was still in a state of shock.

Her attention was in particular drawn to Jesse Jackson whom she said had one foot on the first step of the stairway looking  up to the balcony while bent over "... putting something into  a suit bag." Her pause was brief, and she drove on without seeing any policemen or really noticing anyone at all.

***

JIM LAWSON TOLD ME THAT WALTER FAUNTROY, the former HSCA  head of the King investigation, wanted to cooperate, and we set up a meeting. I had not seen Fauntroy for fifteen years,  and I was surprised and encouraged by his friendliness and  receptivity. We were joined by his personal lawyer, Harley Daniels, who had been examining a wide range of HSCA "sealed"  raw files that Walter had secured following the completion of  the committee's work. It appeared to me that Daniels had been trying, for the better part of a year, to investigate the King case  solely through files and documentation. (They were planning  to write a book based on this research.)

One of them told me that Hoover used to receive daily army intelligence reports on Dr. King's activities in 1967- 1968. I had discovered a document in the attorney general's file showing  that MPD intelligence officer Captain Jewell Ray had met after  the killing with a Colonel Bray, who was identified as being  with army intelligence. At the time, I put it down to the plan,  as Captain Ray had claimed, to move the Tennessee National  Guard into Memphis to control any possible riots arising from  the planned march. Now I began to believe that the army may have played a wider role.

It was curious, I thought at the time, that Hoover would have needed to receive reports from army intelligence surveillance when he appeared to have his own FBI operation in place (the surveillance activity at the Rivermont described by Jim Smith).

***

I TRIED TO CHECK OUT THE POSSIBLE INVOLVEMENT of an elusive character named J. C. Hardin. According to an FBI memo, in March 1968 while James was living at the St. Francis Hotel in Los Angeles a person named J. C. Hardin, who had spoken with the manager, Alan Thompson, had inquired about James.  I learned that produce man Frank C. Liberto's mother's maiden name was Hardin. The fact that a Hardin had married  into the Liberto family may have no bearing on the King case, of course, but I thought it should be checked out. Attorney  Jim Lesar who was James's lawyer in the mid-1970s, was familiar with an interview of a former Tampa-based FBI agent, John Hartingh, who was alleged to have remarked, upon being asked about J. C. Hardin, that he was an asset of the bureau. I asked James about this matter, and he denied any knowledge of J. C. Hardin or anyone else inquiring after him at the hotel during this time. The Hardin name would come up later in our investigation in another context.

Another stranger allegedly visited James in Toronto (giving him an envelope) shortly before James flew to England. For a very long time there had been publicity and rumors about this visit by a so-called "fat man." I finally learned the identity and address of the visitor, Robert McDoulton, from files in the attorney general's office. When I called McDoulton and introduced myself, he was abrupt and, I thought, fearful, saying he didn't want to talk about the incident. Then he hung up.

As 1992 WAS DRAWING TO A CLOSE, former Seabrook employee Frances Thompson was located and agreed to testify as to what she observed on the afternoon of April 4. She seemed convinced that she had seen a man sitting in a Mustang parked on South Main Street opposite the Seabrook offices where she was employed. One of my investigators seemed convinced that the man was James Earl Ray.

Former FBI agent Bill Turner agreed to testify from personal experience about the extensive use of electronic surveillance and "black bag jobs" (illegal break-ins) by specially trained units of the bureau. Turner had been an agent for about ten years but became appalled at the way Hoover ran the bureau and sought a congressional investigation. Consequently he was forced out of the FBI.

***

So, then, by the end of December, Betty Spates for the first time had directly implicated her former boss and lover, Loyd Jowers, in the murder, admitting that after hearing what sounded like a shot she saw him run into the kitchen from the brush area carrying a rifle.

Her sister Bobbi had confirmed in part, telling of being driven to work the next morning by Jowers, who admitted finding a rifle out back. The new information seemed to fit with cab driver McCraw's earlier revelation about being shown a gun under the counter of the grill by Jowers on the morning after the killing. Bobbi had pointed to some sinister activity going on upstairs on the day of the killing, recalling that Jowers put the second floor off limits. Further, S. O. Blackburn's information had revealed that Jowers's other cafe had been a gambling den frequented by, among others, two Frank Libertos and another member of the Liberto family. Also surfacing (from HSCA files  retained by Walter Fauntroy) was the surveillance by army intelligence on Dr. King in collaboration with Hoover. 

Finally, Bill Sartor's death had been confirmed to be a homicide. It became apparent that early on, though without hard factual evidence, he was on the trail of a Marcello/Liberto connection in the murder of  Dr. King.

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