©2010 by Rod Harrel
Author's Note: This is the original script for the documentary of the same (see link to video below).
Thirty years later there remains the accepted
history of John Lennon’s death: a lone nut Beatle fan gunned down the pop
culture hero. The songs, the tributes, the articles, the videos rarely
mentioned the killer, and when they do, he was always alone. Or, perhaps, he
did have company, but it was in the form of his demons, his misconceptions of
Christianity, or his craving for infamy. A lone nut, a fan no less, had gunned down our
dear, beloved, ex-Beatle John. It would seem all sewn up, except for what Sean Lennon said in 1998.
“He
was a countercultural revolutionary, and the government takes that shit really
seriously historically,” Sean Lennon said of his father’s death. “He was
dangerous to the government…These pacifist revolutionaries are historically
killed by the government, and anybody who thinks that Mark Chapman was just
some crazy guy who killed my dad for his personal interests is insane, I think,
or very naïve, or hasn’t thought about it clearly. It was in the best interests
of the United States to have my dad killed, definitely. And, you know, that
worked against them, to be honest, because once he died his powers grew. So, I
mean, fuck them. They didn’t get what they wanted.”1
Photo: Bob Gruen |
The quote, from an interview, was an amazing thing to
see in print: Sean intuitively lays out the groundwork for further investigation
of his father’s death. Unfortunately, perhaps predictably, less than two weeks
after the interview there was some serious backpedaling by Sean. Older
half-brother, Julian Lennon, had publicly chastised Sean, saying that his
remarks were “ill-advised” and that “if you’re going to say something like
that, you need to have your facts.” Through a spokesman, Sean said that he
regretted saying what he did immediately after the interview.2 In the world of celebrity, the word
regret is apparently a synonym for “sorry that I told the truth.” All that is
left is a brotherly debate, in public no less.
Incredibly,
in the conspiracy-strewn landscape of American pop culture, the Lennon
brothers’ statements represent only the second public contradiction of the accepted history
their father’s assassination. Only Fenton Bresler’s groundbreaking 1989 book, Who
Killed John Lennon?
stands as the first. The book caused nary a ripple in the mainstream media, the
press corps, America’s fourth estate.
If
intended as a trial balloon, Sean’s comments about the assassination proved to
be deflated by a mainstream media that adopted a derisive tone. Sean should not
have backpedaled at all. His opinion is pretty close to the actual events
surrounding the shooting. John Lennon was assassinated on December 8th, 1980 as
the result of a conspiracy. The evidence is obtainable from published
government documents and contemporaneous press reports.
The
following facts stand out
-
At
least eight bullets were fired; the killer’s gun was a five shot revolver.
-
There
were at least two different bullet trajectories.
-
The
claim by the known killer, Mark Chapman, and his uncle, that the bullets he
used were hollow-points is not true.
-
The
album of Chapman’s that John signed was later found in Chapman’s hotel room but
he did not leave the scene until he was arrested.
-
The
spying on John Lennon by agencies of the United States Government (USG) and his
attempted deportation by the same.
-
Yoko
Ono was harassed for several years after the assassination in an espionage situation
much like those perpetrated by agencies of the USG in the early 1970’s.
In his book, Bresler, goes almost as far as to say
that the only accused and convicted killer, Chapman, was a Manchurian
Candidate. This is unlikely insofar Chapman was not acting like a programmed
robot. He was quite deliberate in his actions, taking his orders consciously,
not subconsciously. Bresler, however, does give a coherent and fascinating
history of the Central Intelligence Agency’s (CIA) MK/Ultra mind control
program and the use of the drug, LSD, on unwitting subjects. He also shows the
frightening lengths that some USG agencies were willing to go to achieve their
aims. More importantly, it was Bresler who tied together the nasty history of
USG harassment of John Lennon and his timely assassination.
In the ethereal world of the Internet, Bresler’s book
has been looked upon as a sort of Holy Grail in non-mainstream publications.
The theories born on the web through the book lack an almost complete
understanding of what happened that unusually balmy night in New York City.
Rather than show that there was more than one gunman, hence a conspiracy, these
on-line publications go out of their way to name the “real” killer of John
Lennon. Oddly enough, these “real” killers are not Chapman, who becomes a
latter day Lee Harvey Oswald, e.g., a patsy. Chapman was no patsy, he was a
shooter and he was not alone. His five shot revolver could not account for the
at least eight to ten bullets that were fired at John.
There it is again; a lone gunman who fired more shots
than was possible from his gun. There were the covert operations taken against
John Lennon for years before and for years after he got his green card in July,
1976, and the right to reside in the America as a resident alien. There was
also the domestic and foreign spying on John and the massive effort undertaken
by the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS), spearheaded by the Nixon
administration, to deport him back to England. It is all too sickeningly
familiar to other assassinations and attempts since the early 20th
century. For thirty years
there has existed a conspiracy of silence in the assassination of John Lennon.
Amazingly the media has
ignored, and continues to ignore, any connection with the political harassment
John Lennon and Yoko Ono endured by agencies of the USG and his timely death
just at the beginning of the [P] Reagan/Bush years. Whether by knowledge or
deed, the USG knows more about the assassination than it is willing to admit.
It continues to withhold vast amounts of the singer’s government files, “…in
the interest of the nation defense or foreign policy.”3
An ex-Beatle???
The FBI opened a file on The Beatles when they came to
America in 1964 to appear on “The Ed Sullivan Show”. The FBI had been
routinely spying on rock and roll acts since 1955. The first reports in the FBI
files on The Beatles dealt with everything from death threats toward the group and, more
ominously, racial tension or unrest as of the result of their concert
appearances. The FBI was concern about any racial unrest that would result from
their concerts. “…no additional information has been received specifically
indicating any possible violence involving racial aspects in connection with
the appearance of the Beatles, a quartet singing group on tour from England, at
Municipal Stadium the night of September 17, 1964. (Name redacted) said that a
few apparently baseless and unverifiable rumors had come to his attention
suggesting that one or two Muslims or ex-Muslims…had been overheard to say
‘some trouble might occur’.”4 In
another document the FBI was concerned that, “…since the ball park (Municipal
Stadium) is located in a Negro residential neighborhood, the possibility of
Negro involvement in any spontaneous action is recognized…”5 Of course, no such provocations occurred during any concert. In fact, The
Beatles refused to perform at concerts that were segregated. Was this the
source of the FBI’s concern, the mix of white and black youth?
The
summer of 1966 was the first time The Beatles and especially John suffered
under intense media controversy. By this time, America’s involvement in the
Vietnam War was raging and people were beginning to protest against it en
masse. In an unprecedented move for a pop group, the Beatles responded during a
press conference that the war was wrong. They were against the war. The
bells went off at the FBI, CIA, Department of Defense and the like.
Meanwhile,
an interview that John gave to the London Evening Standard was reprinted in
American teen magazines. Originally published in February, 1966, the interview
had morphed into something else by the time it got to America. The headlines in
the teen magazines screamed, “John Lennon Says The Beatles Are Bigger Than
Jesus Christ”. USG agencies certainly took notice. Yet, as Brian Epstein noted
in a hastily called press conference before their American tour, “…the
interview was taken entirely out of context.” In the original interview by
Maureen Cleeve, John was asked his views on religion, if any. He said that,
“Christianity will go. It will vanish and shrink…We’re more popular than Jesus
now. I don’t know which will go first – rock and roll or Christianity.” He said
that Jesus’ disciples were thick and ordinary, “…(they’re) the ones that ruin
it for me.”6 John was forced to make a public
apology.
By
1968, John was known as the political and/or crazy Beatle. John had met Yoko in
1966 but it wasn’t until the summer of 1968 that they got together. They
released an album called Two Virgins which was remembered for nothing else but the fact
that they were both naked on the cover. This was worthy of the attention of
the United States Army, among others. Nakedness was apparently subversive.
John
and Yoko were busted for possession of a small amount of hash in 1968. In the
end they were charged with “moral turpitude.” Although a minor infraction in
England, when John and Yoko moved to America in 1971, it would prove to be
devastating.
Once
in New York, John and Yoko were under constant surveillance by the FBI and
other USG agencies. Some of John’s songs on his solo records were outwardly
political. This was especially so on the Sometime In New York City album. Released in 1972,
the album was an unabashed political tome about almost every current cause. The
Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) began its campaign to deport the
singer, thanks in no small measure with help from other USG agencies. This
harassment went on for years. John and Yoko were followed, phone tapped, and
bugged. John’s lawyers eventually worked out an agreement where John would
essentially, shut up, and then he could get his green card. He could become a
resident alien.
John
did not release any new records between 1976 and 1980. The usual reason
given was that he had become a househusband. In fact, before he let his record
contract expire in 1976, the last song he recorded was one he wrote for Ringo,
“Cookin’ In The Kitchen (Of Love)”. John was raising his baby boy, Sean, and
didn’t think of stepping into a recording studio until his son was five. This
may be true, but coincidentally, just after Sean’s fifth birthday, John’s
status as a resident alien would have changed.
In
January, 1981, John would have become eligible for United States citizenship.
If he were to become a citizen, the incoming Republican administration would
not have the option available to the previous Republican administration: that
of deportation. This bit of history is conveniently left out of the official
story, as was the fact that John, Yoko and Sean had planned to participate in a
street demonstration the Friday after his assassination.
Planning
to participate in this demonstration broke a long-standing agreement between
John and the INS. Still deportable as a resident alien, John nonetheless
decided to go to San Francisco to march. He knew as a citizen he could express
his beliefs without fear of deportation, but he wanted go anyway. The USG
agencies knew this as well.
That elements of the USG would want to kill John
Lennon is no surprise to anyone who followed the long running battle between
agencies of the USG and the musician. The FBI had labeled John a
“revolutionary” in the early 1970’s and they were not talking about the songs
he had written. A “revolutionary” in the mindset of the USG agencies meant that
John was actively seeking to overthrow the United States Government! An
ex-Beatle. The agency probably knew that he was preparing to participate in a
street demonstration in San Francisco on the Friday after his death.
That planned demonstration was in support of striking
Asian dockworkers against the mult-national Japanese conglomerate Kikkoman. One
of the organizers of the union worker’s demonstration was Yoko’s cousin, Shinya
Ono. He had been a member of the Weatherman faction of the Students for
Democratic Society in the 1960’s. The FBI and other USG agencies, of course,
spied upon that group. Shinya was one of many people on the FBI’s list of
“known radicals” that hung out with John Lennon.7
To
understand the mindset of the incoming Republican administration in 1980 toward
the so-called mild-mannered househusband, look no further than the mindset of
the previous one. Richard Nixon and his power brokers had this little
problem in 1972; it was called Watergate. USG agencies often work as strong
arms for presidential election campaigns. Sometimes an agency or a rogue agent
can go off in their zeal to keep or put a man in power. President Nixon was
such a man, and the FBI, CIA, INS, among others, were such agencies
In
1972, John and Yoko were planning on fronting a rock concert to be held in
Miami. The concert would coincide with Republican National Convention.
President Nixon was not happy about John Lennon upstaging him at his
re-nomination. John and Yoko’s recent leftist friends were pushing the deal and
it read like the FBI’s list of “known radicals.” Just who were John and Yoko
hanging out with when they first moved to New York? There was Abbey Hoffman,
the Black Panthers, and numerous, numerous, numerous others.
The prevailing wisdom in the mainstream press was that
if John had not gone off his rocker, now he really had. There were talks about
moving the Republican National convention to another city! Yet, it was all for
naught, as the concert was mysteriously cancelled. Posing nude for an album
cover was one thing; trying to defeat the President was quite another thing
There
is, of course, an accepted history to how all those agencies started spying on
John. In 1971, Senator Strom Thurmond suggested to his pal, Attorney General
John Mitchell, that it might be a good idea to have the INS deport John
considering his radical views. Mitchell promptly passed this on to the INS
which amped up its arsenal of machinery and it wasn’t until 1976 and many court
battles later that John finally received his green card. Although this history
is basically correct, it is in a time warp. The FBI spying began in 1964, as we
know, with The Beatles and in 1968 began to focus more and more on John, and to
a lesser degree, George Harrison. The US Army, the CIA, et al., and, yes, even
our friends at the INS, were violating John’s rights before well before1971.
Remember
Sean Lennon’s comment, “These pacifist revolutionaries are historically
killed by the government, and anybody who thinks that Mark Chapman was just
some crazy guy who killed my dad for his personal interests is insane, I think,
or very naïve, or hasn’t thought about it clearly. It was in the best interests
of the United States to have my dad killed, definitely.”
The
following selected documents show the frightening lengths that the USG agencies
did, or planned to, go. Even the released documents from John Lennon’s FBI
files have in most instances been heavily censored, or in the intelligence
parlance, redacted. His files remain basically under wraps to this very day, in
the nauseous refrain, due to the interests of national security. This
chronology is based on material published by Jon Wiener and the pioneering
Fenton Bresler.
23
April, 1970:
the CIA files on John Lennon contain a copy of a memo sent by J. Edgar Hoover
to FBI offices in Los Angeles and New York on this date. “On 4/22/70 a
representative of the Department of State advised that the American Embassy in
London had submitted information showing the captioned individuals (John
Lennon, George Harrison, Patti Harrison) planned to depart from London, England
on 4/23/70 via TWA flight 761 which will arrive in Los Angeles at 7:15 local
time…Lennon will be travelling under the name Chambers and the Harrisons are
using the name Masters. While Lennon and the Harrisons have shown no propensity
to become involved in violent antiwar demonstrations, each recipient remain
alert for any information of such activity on their part or for information
indicating that they are using narcotics. Submit any pertinent information
obtained in form suitable for dissemination.”
7
Febraury, 1972:
this was contained in an FBI document regarding John’s application to become a
US citizen, “CIA has requested that all (relevant) information be classified
‘Secret – No Foreign Dissemination/No Dissemination Abroad’. CIA has requested
details of information be furnished in daily summary teletype.” [emphasis
added] The USG was keeping its spying of John and Yoko a secret from their
foreign “friends”. The CIA wanted to be furnished with a daily report. An
ex-Beatle?
1972: this is from an INS
document, “(John Lennon and Yoko Ono) are judge to be political and unfavorable
to the present [Nixon] administration. Because of this and their controversial
behavior, they are to be judged as both undesirable and dangerous aliens…Your
office is to maintain a constant surveillance of their residence and a periodic
report is to be sent to this office.” This document shows that the FBI, the CIA
and at least the INS were maintaining daily spying on John and Yoko. They were
now considered dangerous and undesirable aliens, for god sakes.
25
April, 1972:
the following is contained in a memo from the Acting Attorney General to FBI
Director J. Edgar Hoover, “This information is also being furnished to the
Honorable H. R. Haldeman, Assistant to the President, at the White House.
Pertinent information concerning Lennon is being furnished to the Department of
State and the INS on a regular basis.” Now the Nixon White House was into the
daily reporting on the spying.
18
September, 1973:
this memo from the Justice Department to the FBI proves that there was illegal
surveillance of John Lennon. “Any memoranda…which demonstrate pertinent leads
which may have come from the illegal electronic surveillance.” [emphasis added] It is now
seen that USG agencies were unlawfully spying on John and Yoko. The type of
spying by these agencies were both overt and covert. The overt methods should
be noted.
21
September, 1973:
this FBI teletype is concerning a records review that may have come at the
request of John’s lawyers. Here is a classic case of plausible deniability as
the FBI conducted a records review which, “failed to indicate Lennon or
premises in which he had proprietary interest have been subjected to any lawful
surveillance.”
[emphasis added] USG agencies were conducting unlawful electronic surveillance
while reporting, truthfully, they were conducting no lawful electronic
surveillance.
One of the last known FBI documents in John Lennon’s
file is dated August, 1976, after he won his green card and the right to
legally stay in America as a resident alien. President Nixon had resigned from
office in disgrace two years previously, but that didn’t seem to matter. “No
investigation should be conducted concerning subject but your sources should be
alerted to the subject’s presence in the area covered by your office. Any
information developed indicating activity outside the scope of the intended
purpose while in the United States should be promptly furnished to the bureau.”8
The Nixon administration wanted John Lennon out of the country. Deported. The FBI labeled him a “revolutionary activist”, one who is actively seeking to overthrow the United States Government! An ex-Beatle? After the court victory, the FBI began scaling back its aggressive spying against John and Yoko, yet, the FBI, et al, sources were asked to be alerted to John’s whereabouts in their particular area. John’s decision to return to street demonstrations in December, 1980 would certainly have been thought of as, “outside the scope of the intended purpose while in the United States…”
At
about 5pm on 8 December, 1980, John Lennon had his first run in with what the
New York Police Department (NYPD) would later described as, “a local
screwball.” John autographed a copy of the Double Fantasy album for Mark David Chapman.
This was John’s first new album in five years.
Photo: Paul Goresh |
The
accepted history has Chapman stalking the eternal “ex-Beatle” for days then
shooting him to death when John and Yoko returned home from a recording studio.
Chapman was crouching next to the archway and after John and Yoko walked passed
he walked up behind them calling out, “Mr. Lennon”. As the musician turned he
had no time to react as he was hit by four of Chapman’s five shots.
John
staggered up the steps and into the Dakota office, followed by a frantic Yoko
Ono. The killer tossed the gun to the ground as the doorman, Jose Perdomo,
screamed at him, “do you know what you just did?” The killer replied, “I just
shot John Lennon.” Perdomo kicked the gun across the driveway as Chapman calmly
folded his coat and leaned up against the wall reading The Catcher In The
Rye. The
police arrived within minutes and arrested him at the scene.9
In the days that followed, Newsweek, Time, People, Rolling Stone, The New York Times, the Associated Press (AP),
the United Press International (UPI), the embryonic Nightline and CNN fell over themselves pitching
the “deranged Beatle fan” motive. Chapman, they reported, was a nutcase. He
heard voices, he reported to an imaginary government of little people, and he
was struggling with concepts of Christianity. Baby-boomers were stunned by John’s
murder and the added sting of the murderer being a “deranged fan” did not sit
well at all. The memories of all those screaming girls were still too recent.
Chapman
pled guilty, sparing everyone the pain of a trial, and was sentenced to twenty
years to life. Numerous books have been written about what a wacko Chapman is,
there’s been a TV movie and probably a graphic novel. Through it all, the media
soothes us with the message that John lives on in his music.
The
accepted history leaves us with a locked-up lone nut and dead culture hero.
This history is a falsehood, it is a specter. The facts reveal a sane man locked-up in a prison for
the sane
and another man shot to death for deep political reasons. As described by Peter
Dale Scott in his book, Deep Politics and the Death of JFK, deep politics are those that
the masses should not, ever, know. Occasionally, however, these deep political
underworlds burble up to the surface. They are sometimes obliquely sighted and
reported in the overworld and before the implications of what is going on are
clear, the political underworld sinks back into obscurity.10
In
the assassination of John Lennon, the first burbles occurred with the initial
AP wire service reports, continued on with The New York Times and dissipated with the
newsweeklies and Rolling Stone. About thirty minutes after the shooting, the first
AP bulletin came at 11:24pm Eastern Time that unusually balmy New York 8
December night. The bulletin was eerily similar to the way it began with the
JFK, the RFK, and the MLK assassinations.
“There’s a report that John Lennon has been shot,” AP began with a sense of
disbelief, “it happened in New York on the Upper West Side. Police say a man
tentatively identified as the former Beatle was shot and wounded and taken in a
police car to Roosevelt Hospital. A suspect has been taken into custody. No
word just yet on how serious it is.”11
For many in the radio industry, reading this bulletin, the fact that John was
taken to the hospital in a police car meant he was dead or very near death.
Then,
thirteen minutes later AP reported, “Officers at the 20th precinct
in New York confirm that it was former Beatle John Lennon who was shot and
wounded tonight. And a police officer describes Lennon’s condition as
serious…Police described the suspect they have in custody as ‘a local
screwball.’ And they say there was no apparent motive for the shooting.”12 Within one hour of the shooting the NYPD
knew and reported that Chapman had a history of mental illness.
“A
local screwball.” Certainly Chapman was not local in the sense that he lived in
New York. He was hanging around outside the Dakota for several days before the
assassination. Several weeks before the assassination Chapman had spent several
days outside the Dakota, but he didn’t shoot John at that time. He left New
York and went back to his hometown in Georgia, complaining to his wife about a
failed mission. “A local screwball.”
Twice,
in Hawaii, Chapman was admitted to mental institutions. How did this information
become so quickly known and publicly reported in the vernacular of the NYPD?
Mae Brussell, a journalist who broke the Watergate break-in story two months
before the Washington Post, claimed that Chapman’s home of Honolulu was
significant given his admittance to and then employment at a local mental
health clinic. “There are mind control places in Hawaii,” Brussell said,
“(t)here are hospitals there where it would be very convenient for that sort of
thing to be going on. There are a lot of military and naval bases in Hawaii
where we send all kinds of people to do all kinds of secret things.”13 The NYPD knew about Chapman’s mental
history. That was yet another burble. Within thirty minutes of his death at
Roosevelt Hospital, at 11:43pm Eastern time, the AP reported merely that John
Lennon had been “shot dead.”14 It is
far past the time to reject the accepted history. More than one gunman shot
John Lennon, his assassination was the result of a conspiracy.
No
fewer than fifteen people were reported as eye- or ear-witnesses to the
shooting or bullet damage. Half of these were within thirty feet of the
shooting. Of those, only four were reported as witnessing the actual shooting.
Only, burble if you will, four reported eyewitnesses.
Cab driver, Richard Peterson, who was parked behind John and Yoko’s limo, saw
Chapman point his gun, assume a three point stance, but only remembers him
firing three or four times.15 A
passerby identified in The New York Times as only Nina, asked Chapman after the shooting,
“what happened and he said, ‘I’d go away if I were you.’”16 Sean Strub, who was walking on the
sidewalk about thirty yards east of the shooting said, “he just walked out and
shot him,” as John Lennon and Yoko Ono and their group walked into the Dakota.17
Who
made up this group? They were also identified as “several people” in the 9
December, 1980 edition of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. John was also described in a
United Press International (UPI) story as, “gunned down…as…friends watched.”18 Days later, there was no longer any
mention of this group, or friends, in the accepted history. Hard to believe,
but their existence does raise the possibility of more eyewitnesses, among
other things.
Chapman,
in later interviews, said he used hollow-point bullets, although they certainly
did not behave like them. Hollow-points are designed to explode inside the
body, causing massive internal damage. The autopsy report released to the press
makes absolutely no mention of bullet fragments inside John’s body. It stated,
“(t)wo bullets hit Lennon in the left back, hit the lung and passed out through
the chest…The two other bullets both hit Lennon’s left shoulder. One shattered
the shoulder bone and went out…”19
There
were at least three bullet holes in the Dakota office glass door and one bullet
hole in the office window. That is a total of four bullet holes. In addition to
them, The New York Times reported that, “there were bullet holes in the structure and
blood on the bricks of the building.”20
Giving the benefit of the doubt, that is a total of at least six bullet holes.
One bullet that passed through John was found in his leather jacket, another
bullet was lodge in his neck. That bullet tore through his sub-clavian artery
and killed him. That is a total of at least eight bullets. Not bad for
Chapman’s five
shot revolver.
"At least three bullet holes in the glass door..." |
Chapman
did not reload his gun and fire more bullets. Peterson, the cab driver,
saw Chapman throw his gun to the ground after the shooting. Ben Eruchson,
another cab driver parked behind Peterson’s cab, was amazed that Chapman stood
around after the shooting. “He could have gotten away. He had plenty of time.”21
The
accepted history cannot explain what really happened that night. The facts
support a conspiracy in the assassination of John Lennon. To begin with,
Chapman was standing on the east side of the Dakota’s archway. John and Yoko’s
limousine pulled up to the curb. Yoko got out first, followed a few feet behind
by John. Yoko passed by Chapman first and he smiled at her, she continued to
walk toward the Dakota office door. John walked past Chapman and gave him what
Chapman later described as “hard look” and began walking faster.22 Chapman did not call out “Mr. Lennon”
and therefore John did not turn around. Chapman assumed a three-point
stance, gripped his gun with both hands and took aim at John’s back. Chapman
emptied his five shot revolver and two bullets hit John’s left lung and passed
completely through, one of these bullets was found in John’s leather jacket.
The other three shots were misses, causing damage to the façade of the Dakota.
None of these bullets were on a trajectory that could have reached the glass
door to the office.
And yet, the damned ex-Beatle did not fall. Another assassin, almost directly across from the Dakota office, fired more
bullets at John with a gun equipped with a silencer. Here is a big burble about
the second gunman, “…police said the suspect stepped from an alcove and
emptied several shots into Mr. Lennon…”23
Chapman was standing next to the archway, the only alcove would be across from
the office door where the service elevator happens to be and that is more than
fifteen feet away. The second gunman’s bullets hit John’s left shoulder; one
shattered his shoulder and went out, hitting either the office window or the
glass door, the other bullet lodged in his neck. The other shots may have all
been misses, hitting the office door and/or the office window, or they may have
caused additional
wounds.
There
were two reports of additional wounds to John that did not appear in the
released autopsy report to the media. The full autopsy report is under wraps,
as repeated requests under the Freedom of Information Act have failed to
release it. John was reported shot in the leg according to a police report
quoted in the Associated Press Newswatch Sidelights on 9 December, 1980 at
5:20pm EST. He was also reported shot in the head in a United Press
International story that appeared in the Yakima Herald-Republic, by a spokesman for Roosevelt
Hospital. At least eight, probably ten, bullets were fired at John Lennon that
night, causing the damage to his body, the façade of the Dakota, the office
window and the office door.
Jay
Hastings, the doorman inside the Dakota office, heard several shots and then the sound of shattering
glass. His report is another burble: there was a conspiracy in John’s
assassination. Bullets travel faster than the speed of sound. Hasting’s heard
shots and then the sound of shattering of glass; he heard Chapman’s gun and then
the effects of bullets fired from a weapon with a silencer. Hastings was
frozen, a bullet had also come through the office window, then John stumbled
through the door with, “a horrible, confused look on his face,” and collapsed
on the floor, scattering the cassette tapes he had been holding in his hand.
Yoko rushed in yelling, “John’s been shot!” Hastings attended to the prostrate
musician, who was gurgling up blood, vomit and bits of flesh. He tried to tie
on a tourniquet, but there was too much blood. Hastings summoned the police,
and than ran outside to confront the gunman. On the way out, Hastings noted the
“splintered office window.”24
Officer
Steve Spiro was in the first patrol car to arrive outside the Dakota after the
shooting. At first, Spiro and his partner believed that Hastings, covered with
blood, was the shooter. Perdomo told them it was the calmly reading Chapman.
Officer Spiro felt so threatened by what he called “suspicious people” that he
“used the suspect as a shield” until convinced there was no further danger.
Now, that is another interesting burble. Why, several minutes after the
shooting, would the arriving police officer feel threatened? Spiro said in his
own report that he used Chapman as a shield against other people whom he felt
were a threat. It was then that other people convinced him there was no
more danger and Chapman was the only suspect. Why? Officer Spiro’s report is
unfortunately vague about this whole matter.
Significantly, Officer Spiro also noted in his report
that there were, “at least three bullet holes in the glass door.”25 There is also video evidence to
corroborate not only Spiro’s but other witnesses’ claims of bullet holes in the
office door. The amateur video was shown on local New York City television
station channel seven the night of the shooting. The video shows four bullet
holes in the glass door.26 The
office door in the video is propped open. This has led to speculation that a
propped open door would be in line with the trajectory of Chapman’s gun. Well,
the office door was not propped open at the time of the assassination.
Some
eye-witnesses, a diagram of the shooting that appeared in The New York Times, and drawing, based on the Times diagram no doubt, which
appeared in Newsweek show Chapman standing on the east side of the Dakota’s archway.
This is even more difficult to reconcile with what really happened by having
Chapman standing to John’s right, because bullets hit John in the left back. That was a burble of
camouflage, it would appear.
Other
officers arrived at the murder scene and Chapman was placed in the backseat of
a patrol car. Spiro decided that John didn’t have time to wait for an ambulance
and he and five other people, including Hastings, picked up John and carried
him to a patrol car. Hastings remembers hearing the bones in John’s left
shoulder cracking and that his arms and legs were akimbo. Officer Moran sped
John to Roosevelt Hospital, repeatedly asking him if he was indeed John Lennon.
The only response he received was a mumbled “yes.”
At
the hospital, doctors rushed John into an operating room and worked on him for
over fifteen minutes. It was useless. The musician had simply lost too much
blood and the shock to his body prevented any resuscitation. The doctors
pronounced John Lennon dead at 11:15pm EST. The press conference given by Dr.
Stephen Lynn was accompanied by cries and gasps from the normally stoic press
corps when he announced the death.
Chapman
took aim at the musician’s back from ten to twenty feet away and fired his gun
rapidly. The additional bullets fired at John were silenced, as was any talk.
Chapman, Yoko Ono and eyewitnesses agreed there was no one calling out, “Mr.
Lennon.” John was not turning around to the sound of his name because it was
never spoken. John was walking faster after passing Chapman, perhaps he sensed
something, and perhaps he did not, yet he was quite literally walking into a
trap.
These
notes relate to either quotes or opinions based from the cited work.
1 Rebecca Mead,
“Department of Legacies”, The New Yorker,
20 April, 1998
2 Rod
Patterson, “The People Column”, The Oregonian, 2 May, 1998, pg. C2
4 FBI
document, # unknown, 18 September, 1964
5FBI
document, # unknown, 3 September, 1964
6 The
Beatles-the authorized biography, pp.
265-266
3&7 Come
Together, pp. 303-305
8 Who
Killed John Lennon?, pg. 71
9 Associated
Press bulletin, “Bulletin”, 8 December,
1980, 11:37pm EST
“Beatle John Lennon Shot To Death”, Yakima Herald-Republic, 9 December, 1980, pg. A1
Associated Press bulletin,
“Newswatch Sidelights”, 9 December, 1980, 5:20pm EST
10 Peter Dale
Scott, Deep Politics and the Death of JFK;
University of California Press – Berkeley, 1993
11 Associated
Press bulletin, “Bulletin”, 8 December,
1980, 11:24pm EST
12 Associated
Press bulletin, “Bulletin”, 8 December,
1980 11:37pm EST
13 Who
Killed John Lennon?, pg. 126
14 Associated
Press bulletin, “Bulletin”, 8 December,
1980, 11:43pm EST
15 Jack
Jones, Let Me Take You Down; Villard
Books – New York, 1992, pg. 4
16 Les
Ledbetter, “John Lennon Of Beatles Is Killed; Suspect Held In Shooting At
Dakota”, The New York Times; 9 December, 1980, pg. B7
17 Yakima
Herald-Republic, 9 December, 1980, pg. A1
18 Michelle
Mundith, “Beatle Fans Turn To Disc Jockeys”, United Press International, 9 December, 1980
19 Associated
Press bulletin, “Newswatch Sidelights”, 9
December, 1980, 6:32pm EST
20 ibid.
21 The New
York Times, 9 December, 1980, pg. A1
22 Let Me
Take You Down, pg. 5 and pg. 45
23 The New
York Times, 9 December, 1980, pg. B7
24 Gregory
Katz, “Inside the Dakota”, Rolling Stone;
22 January, 1981, pg. 17
25 Who
Killed John Lennon?, pg. 203
Let Me Take You Down, pg. 4
26 Steve
Salvador, What Happened, internet, 2003
LINK TO THE VIDEO:
APPENDIX
Eye
and Ear Witness Accounts
Here
is a list of some of the known ear and eye-witnesses to the shooting and/or
bullet damage and the witnesses known locations at the time of the
assassination.
BEN
ERUCHSON – A cab driver dropping off a passenger at the Dakota at the time of
the shooting. He was behind Richard Peterson’s cab, which was behind John and Yoko’s limousine. He reported
no number of shots or Chapman’s location at the time of the shooting, but he
did say the Chapman, “…could have gotten away. He had plenty of time.”
JAY
HASTINGS – Dakota doorman who was sitting in the office at the time of the
shooting. He heard several shots and then the sound of shattering glass. When he went
outside after attending to John, he saw the “(s)plintered” office window and
blood on the driveway.
JACK
HENDERSON – He was a Dakota resident who was in his apartment at the time of
the shooting. He reported that he heard “shots” and then ran downstairs where
he saw John lying in, “the back office.”
JOHN
LENNON – Yelled, “I’m shot!” as he staggered up the stairs to the door of the
Dakota office.
GUY
LOTHAM – He was in his 10th floor apartment on West 72nd
Street across the street from the Dakota at the time of the shooting. He said
he heard “shots” and looked out of the window to see two men standing in front
of the entryway of the Dakota and they were arguing. What’s interesting in his
account is that the entryway is deserted but for two men. The group reported in
two accounts, here, does not exist. And yet, of course, other witnesses report
there were several people other than Chapman and Jose Perdomo right after the
shooting.
JOSEPH
MANY – The Dakota elevator operator who was in the basement at the time of
shooting. He reported hearing three shots. He went up the elevator to the
driveway and saw the scene. He picked up the gun that Jose Perdomo had kicked
away from Chapman and returned to the basement. He placed the gun in the drawer
of his desk. A NYPD officer named Blake later retrieved the gun.
ELLIOT
MINTZ – He arrived at the Dakota several hours after the shooting to help out
Yoko Ono. He saw, “broken glass…and John’s blood on the cement…”
YOKO
ONO – She was walking ahead of John at the time of the shooting and ran into
the courtyard. She reported to the police “shots” and saw Chapman standing on
the west side of the entryway.
NINA
(last name unknown) – She was walking on the sidewalk in front of the Dakota at
the time and witnessed the actual shooting. She reported neither a number of
shots or Chapman’s location. She spoke to Chapman after the shooting and he
told her, “I’d go away if I were you.”
JOSE
PERDOMO – He was the Dakota doorman standing on the east side of the entryway
at the time of the shooting. He reported no number of shots and saw Chapman
standing on his side of the entryway. He argued with Chapman after the shooting
and kicked the gun away.
RICHARD
PETERSON – He was a cab driver in his cab on West 72nd Street behind
John and Yoko’s limousine at the time of the shooting. He reported three or
four shots and saw Chapman on the east side of the entryway. He witnessed the
shooting and said that John was hit, “twice in the back.”
JEFF
SMITH – He was a Dakota resident who was in his apartment at the time of shooting.
He reported hearing five shots.
MAURY
SOLOMAN – He was a Dakota resident who was in his apartment at the time of
shooting. He reported hearing five shots and went downstairs to the office. He
noticed “holes” in the glass office door and went outside in time to see
Chapman turning around with a strange look on his face.
STEVE
SPIRO – He was one of two NYPD officers who arrived at the Dakota in the first
patrol car after the shooting. While he was arresting Chapman (his partner
having gone inside the Dakota office) he felt that others were involved in the
shooting. “I (saw) two males to my left and used suspect as shield.” Within
moments he felt he was wrong as the doorman yelled that Chapman was the only
one involved. Spiro reported, “at least three bullet holes in the glass doors”
to the office.
SEAN
STRUB – He was walking down the block east of the Dakota at the time of
shooting. He claimed at one point to have witnessed the shooting, but another
report had him around the block at the time of the shooting. He reported
hearing four shots and claimed that Chapman was on the east side of the
entryway. “He just walked up and shot him…” He also was interviewed on
television outside the Roosevelt Hospital where the mortally wounded John had
been taken.
FRANKLYN
WELSH – He was a visitor to the Dakota, paying his cab fare to Richard
Peterson, at the time of the shooting. Thus he had his back to the shooting. He
reported hearing four shots and turned in time to see Jose Perdomo kick the gun
away from Chapman.
Anyone with any capacity at all for slightest bit of critical thought knows you are right about all of this.
ReplyDeleteAny hope that the case will ever be reopened or even addressed in an unbiased manner by the mainstream media?
It is extremely doubtful that anyone in law enforcement at any level will reopen this case. The official story of a lone nut is too widely ingrained, which is why it is also doubtful any MSM outlet would look into the case.
ReplyDeleteWonderful thought provoking and intelligent article on the topic! I am linking it to an article of mine!
ReplyDeleteRod, I want to interview you for my Radio Show The Opperman Report
ReplyDeleteLasvegaspi@aol.com
"...[Chapman] reported to an imaginary government of little people..."
ReplyDeleteSupposing Chapman was/is indeed deranged, this sort of comment could be revealing, considering the adage that in madness is truth.
If anyone has any information that could shed light on what happened that horrible day please inlighten us.
ReplyDeleteI agree with the author of this documentary.
ReplyDelete