| Connected Entity | Relationship Type |
Strength
(mentions)
|
Documents | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
person
Bobby Kennedy
|
Political adversaries |
5
|
1 | |
|
person
Jacqueline Kennedy
|
Strained |
5
|
1 | |
|
person
Justice Goldberg
|
Advisor political ally |
5
|
1 | |
|
person
Jacqueline Kennedy
|
Adversarial witness |
5
|
1 | |
|
person
Jacqueline Kennedy
|
Tense resentful |
5
|
1 |
| Date | Event Type | Description | Location | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| N/A | N/A | Conference between LBJ and Douglas Dillon while LBJ was defecating. | Unknown (White House implied) | View |
| N/A | N/A | Confrontation between LBJ and Senator Fulbright regarding Vietnam policy while LBJ was defecating. | Unknown (White House implied) | View |
| 1966-01-01 | N/A | Conversation between Lyndon Johnson and Austrian ambassador | Unknown | View |
| 1963-11-22 | N/A | Alleged desecration of JFK's corpse by LBJ prior to swearing-in. | Air Force One (Implied by '... | View |
| 1963-11-22 | N/A | Flight from Dallas to Washington after the assassination. | Air Force One | View |
| 1963-11-22 | N/A | Lyndon Johnson allegedly chuckling over the casket of JFK. | Air Force One | View |
| 1963-01-01 | N/A | Death of JFK and swearing in of Lyndon Johnson. | Bethesda / Washington D.C. | View |
The author reflects on the profound influence of Judge David Bazelon, emphasizing his role in raising enduring legal questions and shaping the author's critical view of the judiciary. The text compares this experience with the author's subsequent clerkship under Justice Arthur Goldberg during a historically tumultuous period involving the Kennedy assassination, noting that while the Supreme Court work was more high-profile, the time with Bazelon was more educationally significant.
This document appears to be a page from a memoir or manuscript by Alan Dershowitz, included in House Oversight Committee records (Bates stamped). It details his early experiences at Yale Law School and his struggles with job hunting in New York in the late 1950s/early 1960s, specifically focusing on antisemitism and religious discrimination at major law firms like Sullivan and Cromwell and Paul, Weiss. It concludes with an anecdote about working for Milton Handler at Kaye, Scholer.
This page appears to be an excerpt from a memoir (likely by a counter-culture figure given the context) contained within a House Oversight document production. It details interactions with activist Dick Gregory, including his presidential run with Mark Lane, a protest event involving the band The Fugs and an 'Unbirthday Party' for LBJ, and Gregory's appearance on the narrator's San Francisco talk show in 1971 regarding a hunger strike against the Vietnam War. The document does not contain direct references to Jeffrey Epstein or Ghislaine Maxwell on this specific page.
This document is a page from a manuscript or memoir (stamped with a House Oversight identifier) recounting a personal anecdote. It describes a sexual encounter with two women named Sheila and Marcia, followed by a recount of a philosophical conversation with comedian Groucho Marx regarding his cynicism toward marriage and politicians, and his optimism about 'people'.
This document appears to be a page from a narrative manuscript or essay titled 'The Mime and the Pacer.' It describes the narrator mimicking a man known as 'The Pacer' at the Wallenboyd Theater and provides cultural observations of Venice Beach, referencing Don Johnson and Linda Lovelace. The page is stamped 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_015182,' indicating it is part of a larger collection of evidence reviewed by the House Oversight Committee.
This document excerpt describes a political strategy to prolong the Vietnam War to influence the 1968 American election. It details how Anna Chennault was used to dissuade South Vietnamese officials from attending peace talks, hindering Lyndon Johnson's efforts to end the war and disadvantage his successor, Hubert Humphrey.
This document appears to be a page from a memoir or manuscript included in House Oversight files (likely related to a larger investigation involving intelligence or political history). The text recounts a conversation with Walter Cronkite regarding his emotional reaction to the JFK assassination and LBJ's succession. It further details Robert Kennedy's 1962 interest in the Alger Hiss case and his 1968 political overture to Jim Garrison, as well as Howard Hughes's efforts to prolong the Vietnam War to protect helicopter defense contracts.
This document appears to be a page from a House Oversight collection (stamped 015086). It contains a highly graphic and controversial narrative attributed to Jacqueline Kennedy, in which she alleges seeing Lyndon Johnson sexually desecrate the corpse of JFK (specifically the throat wound) immediately before being sworn in. The text includes 'marginal notes' questioning if this act was necrophilia or a pragmatic attempt to alter ballistics evidence (entry/exit wounds). NOTE: The content matches the text of a known satirical piece from 'The Realist' magazine (1967), though here it is presented within a government document format.
This document appears to be a page from a manuscript or book discussing the private animosities between American political leaders in the 1960s. It details the mutual dislike between Bobby Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson, and recounts a specific allegation made by Gore Vidal and Jacqueline Kennedy that LBJ was seen 'chuckling' over JFK's casket on Air Force One following the assassination. The text ends mid-sentence with Jacqueline Kennedy speaking to the writer about a historical record. The document bears a House Oversight stamp.
This document appears to be a page from a manuscript or book (possibly distinct from standard flight logs or financial records) bearing the Bates stamp HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_015082. The text recounts historical anecdotes regarding the 1960s, specifically alleging an intimate encounter between Marilyn Monroe and the Attorney General (implied RFK), and describing President Lyndon Johnson's crude behavior toward subordinates Douglas Dillon and Senator Fulbright. It also details Jacqueline Kennedy's distaste for Johnson's lack of 'style' compared to JFK.
This document contains an excerpt describing deleted passages from William Manchester's book "The Death of a President," allegedly provided by an anonymous publishing executive. It details a political conflict at the 1960 Democratic National Convention where Lyndon Johnson attacked John F. Kennedy based on his father Joseph P. Kennedy's alleged Nazi sympathies.
This document is a page from a manuscript, article, or book (stamped HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_015070) critiquing the religious motivations of US Presidents and officials. It compiles quotes from George W. Bush, General William Boykin, George H.W. Bush, Ronald Reagan, James Watt, and Lyndon Johnson to suggest a pattern of religious zealotry influencing national policy, war, and environmental issues. The text does not explicitly mention Jeffrey Epstein or his associates.
The diety comes and speaks to me about two o' clock in the morning
LBJ wanted advice from Goldberg immediately after taking office.
Discussion 0
No comments yet
Be the first to share your thoughts on this epstein entity