| Connected Entity | Relationship Type |
Strength
(mentions)
|
Documents | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
person
John
|
Business associate |
5
|
1 |
| Date | Event Type | Description | Location | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| N/A | N/A | Chance meeting at an art auction | Art Auction (location unspe... | View |
| 1972-01-01 | N/A | Social gathering involving drug use (marijuana and opium) | Unknown specific location | View |
This document appears to be a page from a manuscript or memoir draft (page 217) produced to the House Oversight Committee. The narrator (likely Alan Dershowitz based on context) reflects on their role in preventing John Lennon's deportation in the 1970s and their subsequent guilt over Lennon's 1980 murder in the U.S. The text details a conversation with Yoko Ono where she absolves the narrator of this guilt, and mentions the narrator's refusal to assist Jonathan Marks in the defense of Lennon's killer, Mark Chapman.
This document appears to be a page from a memoir or narrative account attached as an exhibit in a House Oversight investigation (stamped HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_015422). The text discusses the philosophy of the 'Yippie' movement in the late 1960s, describing it as a mix of political activism and psychedelic culture. It then transitions to a specific anecdote from 1972 where the narrator is smoking marijuana and opium with John Lennon and Yoko Ono, discussing the slang term 'bogarting.' NOTE: This specific page contains no mentions of Jeffrey Epstein, Maxwell, or financial crimes, focusing instead on 1970s counterculture history.
Narrator expressed regret over winning deportation case; Yoko admonished him, saying the extra years were their happiest.
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