was booth a patsy?

3
In 1957 Ray A. Neff of Gibbsboro, New Jersey, walked into Leary's bookshop in Philadelphia and purchased a faded, second-hand book for fifty cents. Unbeknownst to  Neff, inside that dusty military journal was a profound and stunning confession from the grave of a Union General and traitor, Lafayette Baker. Booth was not alone, and according to Gen Baker, did indeed survive. And as late as 1977, the FBI, did in fact investigate the issue of JOHN WILKES BOOTH and his possible survival. According to the FBI, "These records contain correspondence dated 1922-23 of William J. Burns, former Director of the Bureau of Investigation, conce rning a theory that Booth lived many years after the assassination of President Lincoln. Also included are the results of a 1948 examination by the FBI Laboratory of a bo ot said to be worn by Boo th on the night of the assassination and a 1977 examination of a diary belonging to Booth." On January 23, 1923, William J. Burns, by then the acting director of the Department of Justice wrote "I have gone over with considerable interest the volume entitled "The Escape and Suicide of John Wilkes Booth" by Finis L. Bates of Memphis, Tennessee...The work contains very strong evidence in support of the old belief that Booth did escape and live many years after the assassi nation of President Lincoln..." (see  page 12, booth1.pdf ) In fear for his life, Gen. Baker wrote the aforementioned confession before he was fatally  poisoned with arsenic in 1868. If someone today could forge this confession, he would have to learn two different ciphers, and then invent a time machine, because he would have to perform the deed no later than October 1872. The book itself is referred to in a Philadelphia probate hearing held October 14 and 15, 1872; when William Carter testified that Lafayette Baker gave him an English military journal in the days before he died, which Carter tried to decipher but couldn't, even though he was familiar with codes from his days in the National Detective Police during the Civil War. Carter also testified that he saw Baker writing his coded memoirs in the margins of numerous books; the same which were the subject of the hearing, and that Baker tried to give him about a dozen boxes of books and papers. When John Wilkes Booth shot Lincoln, he was already famous for playing in Shakespeare's "Julius Caesar", and the allusion to Booth is obvious-- he's "one of the son s of Brutus". Johnson, who was in possession of a letter from Booth before the assassination, is also one of the the "sons". Judas was Edwin St anton-- Lincoln's Secretary of War, whom at the moment Lincoln died, actually did say "Now the ages have him and the nation now have I." Both diaries, Bakers and Booth's, gave parallel accounts of the assassination. Both implicated, even boasted of a secret government council (the Scottish Rite) which in the interests of the British Crown has bound a nation, the United States of America, for over 

Upload: mansoncasefile

Post on 07-Apr-2018

220 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

8/6/2019 Was Booth a Patsy?

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/was-booth-a-patsy 1/3

In 1957 Ray A. Neff of Gibbsboro, New Jersey, walked into Leary's bookshop in

Philadelphia and purchased a faded, second-hand book for fifty cents. Unbeknownst to

 Neff, inside that dusty military journal was a profound and stunning confession from thegrave of a Union General and traitor, Lafayette Baker.

Booth was not alone, and according to Gen Baker, did indeed survive.

And as late as 1977, the FBI, did in fact investigate the issue of JOHN WILKES BOOTH

and his possible survival. According to the FBI,

"These records contain correspondence dated 1922-23 of William J. Burns, former 

Director of the Bureau of Investigation, concerning a theory that Booth lived many years

after the assassination of President Lincoln. Also included are the results of a 1948examination by the FBI Laboratory of a boot said to be worn by Booth on the night of the

assassination and a 1977 examination of a diary belonging to Booth."

On January 23, 1923, William J. Burns, by then the acting director of the Department of Justice wrote "I have gone over with considerable interest the volume entitled "The

Escape and Suicide of John Wilkes Booth" by Finis L. Bates of Memphis,Tennessee...The work contains very strong evidence in support of the old belief that

Booth did escape and live many years after the assassination of President Lincoln..." (see

 page 12, booth1.pdf )

In fear for his life, Gen. Baker wrote the aforementioned confession before he was fatally

 poisoned with arsenic in 1868. If someone today could forge this confession, he would

have to learn two different ciphers, and then invent a time machine, because he wouldhave to perform the deed no later than October 1872. The book itself is referred to in a

Philadelphia probate hearing held October 14 and 15, 1872; when William Carter testified that Lafayette Baker gave him an English military journal in the days before hedied, which Carter tried to decipher but couldn't, even though he was familiar with codes

from his days in the National Detective Police during the Civil War.

Carter also testified that he saw Baker writing his coded memoirs in the margins of 

numerous books; the same which were the subject of the hearing, and that Baker tried to

give him about a dozen boxes of books and papers.

When John Wilkes Booth shot Lincoln, he was already famous for playing in

Shakespeare's "Julius Caesar", and the allusion to Booth is obvious-- he's "one of the sons

of Brutus". Johnson, who was in possession of a letter from Booth before theassassination, is also one of the the "sons". Judas was Edwin Stanton-- Lincoln's

Secretary of War, whom at the moment Lincoln died, actually did say "Now the ages

have him and the nation now have I."

Both diaries, Bakers and Booth's, gave parallel accounts of the assassination. Both

implicated, even boasted of a secret government council (the Scottish Rite) which in the

interests of the British Crown has bound a nation, the United States of America, for over 

8/6/2019 Was Booth a Patsy?

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/was-booth-a-patsy 2/3

a century. (Gen. Baker's coded diaries, incidentally, were written in the margins of a

British military journal; Colburn's United Service Magazine/Naval and Military Journal.)

The coded book, its messages written in a sliding cipher, revealed that the true killerswere led by Lincoln's most trusted military advisor in the Civil War: Edwin McMasters

Stanton.

About seven years later, the modus operandi described in that book was revisited in the

Kennedy assassination. The infamous Lincoln and Kennedy parallels, for instance, are

uncanny until you realize it was almost a copycat murder. The Lincoln and Kennedymurders were both bipartisan coups; and many of the masterminds in both assassinations

 belonged to the same Scottish Rite.

This aforementioned international secret society, the largest, has its headquarters templein Washington DC, and curiously, it presently houses the crypt of Confederate Gen.

Albert Pike, a Tennessee Ku Klux Klan Chief Judicial Officer, Imperial Wizard and 33rd

Degree Scottish Rite Sovereign Grand Commander.

Much like we would see in 1963 in the Kennedy assassination; in 1865 at least two

newspapers would publish highly detailed stories of the Lincoln assassination severalhours before it ever took place. Moreover, in 1868 Lafayette Baker would confess in his

coded diary that at least three newspaper publishers were involved, through blood money

and disinformation, in the plot to kill Lincoln. Thus we move from the publishers' lucky

 premonition to outright foreknowledge and complicity. This, too, was a betrayal of the public's trust which the mass media repeated in 1963, but continues to maintain--

 particularly through the New York Times (JFK) and the Los Angeles Times (RFK).

As Anton Chaitkin wrote in the New Republic:

"A striking instance of the Confederate 'Lost Cause,' persisting and haunting the presentcentury, is to be seen in the attic of The New York Times. Iphigenie Ochs married

Arthur Hays Sulzberger in 1917. He succeeded her father Adolphe Ochs as publisher of 

The Times, which Mr. Ochs had bought in the 1890s. Adolphe Ochs and his father founded the "Baroness Erlanger" Hospital in Chattanooga, Tennessee. The hospital was

named forJohn Slidell's daughter who married the Confederacy’s chief financier Baron

Emil Erlanger...Adolphe Ochs had married Iphigenie Wise, the daughter of B’nai B’rith’s

Cincinnati leader Isaac Wise..."

In Kennedy's case, intelligence agents in Russia read Soviet accounts of the Dallas

ambush several hours before the hit took ever took place. By December, 1966, the KGBwould finally determine Kennedy's true murderer, and they concluded it was Lyndon

Johnson.

When John Wilkes Booth shot Lincoln, he was already famous for playing in

Shakespeare's "Julius Caesar", and the allusion to Booth is obvious-- he's "one of the sons

of Brutus". Johnson, who was in possession of a letter from Booth before the

assassination, is also one of the the "sons". Judas was Edwin Stanton-- Lincoln's

8/6/2019 Was Booth a Patsy?

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/was-booth-a-patsy 3/3

Secretary of War, whom at the moment Lincoln died, actually did say "Now the ages

have him and the nation now have I."

Baker's decoded confession in Colburn's United Service Magazine, an English military

 journal, was dated February 5, 1868 and read as follows:

"I am constantly being followed. They are professionals. I cannot fool them. In new Rome

there walked three men, a Judas, a Brutus and a spy. Each planned that he should beking when Abraham should die. One trusted not the other but they went on for that day,

waiting for the final moment when, with pistol in his hand, one of the sons of Brutus

could sneak behind that cursed man and put a bullet in his brain and lay his clumsey[sic] corpse away. As the fallen man lay dying, Judas came and paid respects to the one

he hated, and when at last he saw him die, he said 'Now the ages have him and the nation

now have I' But alas, fate would have it Judas slowly fell from grace, and with him went 

 Brutus down to their proper place. But lest one is left to wonder what happened to the spy, I can safely tell you this, it was I." 

It was signed Lafayette C. Baker. And he wasn't as safe as he thought. Numerous

attempts would be made on his life until he was finally poisoned with arsenic in 1868.His personal physician confirmed the poisoning by applying leeches behind his ears. Sure

enough, as they became engorged, they dropped off dead.

General Lafayette Baker, chief of the National Detective Police Force and fellowconspirator, wrote Stanton's plot was a vast, well financed gned Lafayette C. Baker. And

he wasn't as safe as he thought. Numerous attempts would be made on his life until he

was finally poisoned with arsenic in 1868. His personal physician confirmed the poisoning by applying leeches behind his ears. Sure enough, as they became engorged,

they dropped off dead.

General Lafayette Baker, chief of the National Detective Police Force and fellow

conspirator, wrote Stanton's plot was a vast, well financed attempt to seize control of the

federal government.

According to witnesses who aided in John Wilkes Booth's escape, Booth told them this

conspiracy involved fifty to one hundred; and thirty-five in Washington alone.

Source: http://itwasjohnson.impiousdigest.com/zero12.htm