ANALYSIS OF THE SUPPORT PROVIDED TO THE WARREN COMMISSION BY THE CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY
Staff Report of the Select Committee on Assassinations
U.S. House of Representatives
Ninety-fifth Congress
Second Session
March 1979
CONTENTS
I. FORWORD
The committee emphasizes that it has not uncovered any evidence sufficient to justify a conclusion that there was a conspiracy to assassinate President Kennedy.
The committee has, however, developed evidence which impeaches the process by which the intelligence agencies arrived at their own conclusions about the assassination, and by which they provided information to the Warren Commission. This evidence indicates that the investigation of the assassination was deficient and that facts which might have substantially affected the course of the investigation were not provided the Warren Commission or those individuals within the FBI and the CIA, as well as other agencies of Government, who were charged with investigating the assassination. (1)
This compilation [of CIA-generated material] is appropriate to consideration of the extent of the CIA effort, to the extent that it reveals something of the results of that effort.(5)
II. ORGANIZATION OF THE CIA's INVESTIGATION OF PRESIDENT KENNEDY'S ASSASSINATION
* * * practically my whole branch participated in the thing. We dropped almost everything else and I put a lot of my officers to work in tracing names, analyzing files.
He characterized his functions with respect to the Agency as follows:
I knew that we [at CIA] did not have the basic responsibility for investigating the assassination of the President. If there was a crime committed in the course of this activity, it belonged to the FBI. I recognized that it was our responsibility to give the fulleat cooperation to the FBI to protect the Agency with regard to any aspects of our operations, you understand, and at the same time giving them cooperation, and I was in close contact with Mr. Sam Papich [of the FBI], and always fully cooperated, and he always fully cooperated with me.(11)
[This officer] noted that his office (CI/SIG), at the direction of the Chief of Counterintelligence, James Angleton, was designated the central point for collection of assassination-related information made available to the FBI.(12)
**Raymond Rocca, chief of research and analysis for CIA's Counterintelligence staff, characterized Scelso's' responsibility not as a mandate to investigate, but rather to "coordinate traffic (code facilitation, telegram or telegraphic consideration) for working with the DDP with respect to what was being done over the whole world ...."(15) Rocca referred to this phase of CIA activity by a cryptonym. (16)
We were flooded with cable traffic, with reports, suggestions, allegations from all over the world, and these things had to be checked out. We were checking out just dozens and dozens of people all the time.(17)
III. THE WARREN COMMISSION-CIA WORKING RELATIONSHIP
A. OPINIONS OF WARREN COMMISSION AND CIA REPRESENTATIVES REGARDING THE WARREN COMMISSION-CIA RELATIONSHIP
The policy of the CIA was to give the Warren Commission everything that we had. I personally asked Chief Justice Warren to come to my office and took him down to the vault of our building where our information is microfilmed and stored and showed him the procedures that we were following and the extent to which we were giving him--giving his staff everything that we had, and I think he was quite satisfied.(56)
STAFF COUNCIL. In summary, is it your position that the Agency gave the Warren Commission information only in response to specific requests by the Warren Commission?
Mr. HELMS. That is correct. I want to modify that by saying that memory is fallible. There may have been times or circumstances under which something different might have occurred, but my recollection is that we were attempting to be responsive and supportive to the FBI and the Warren Commission. When they asked for something we gave it to them. As far as our volunteering information is concerned, I have no recollection of whether we volunteered it or not. (63)
B. THE CIA'S FAILURE TO DISCLOSE CIA ANTI-CASTRO ASSASSINATION PLANS TO THE WARREN COMMISSION
STAFF COUNSEL. Mr. Helms, I take it from your testimony that your position is that the anti-Castro plots, in fact, were relevant to the Warren Commission's work; and, in light of that, the Committee would like to be informed as to why the Warren Commission was not told by you of the anti-Castro assassination plots.
Mr. HELMS. I have never been asked to testify before the Warren Commission about our operations.
STAFF COUNSEL. If the Warren Commission did not know of the operation, it certainly was not in a position to ask you about it. Is that not true?
Mr. HELMS. Yes: but how do you know they did not know about it? How do you know Mr. Dulles had not told them? How was I to know that? And besides, I was not the Director of the Agency and in the CIA, you did not go traipsing around to the Warren Commission or to Congressional Committees or to anyplace else without the Director's permission.
STAFF COUNSEL. Did you ever discuss with the Director whether the Warren Commission should be informed of the anti-Castro assassination plots?
Mr. HELMS. I did not, as far as I recall. (70)
Attached to the above memorandum was a May 14, 1962, memorandum from Sheffield Edwards to Attorney General Robert Kennedy which described the CIA-Giancana connection as having been terminated prior to McCone's assumption of the CIA directorship.(72) McCone concluded that the CIA-Giancana operation concerned the assassination of Fidel Castro.(73) The 1967 CIA Inspector Generars Report concluded that August 1963 was:
* * * The earliest date on which we have evidence of Mr. McCone's being aware of any aspect of the scheme to assassinate Castro using members of the gambling syndicate. (74)
STAFF COUNSEL. Do you think Mr. Helms was acting properly when he failed to tell the Warren Commission about the assassination plots?
Mr. SCELSO. No, I think that was a morally highly reprehensible act, which he cannot possibly justify under his oath of office, or any other standard of professional public service. (79)
C. AGENCY'S LEGAL RESPONSIBILITY TO PROTECT SENSITIVE SOURCES AND METHODS--FACTORS AFFECTING THE CIA RESPONSE TO WARREN COMMISSION REQUESTS
called fo the attention of the Commission, through its attorney, that we have information [as determined from Agency sources] coinciding with dates when Oswald was in Mexico City and which may have some bearing on his activities while in that area. (89)
Helms further indicated that the CIA might be called upon to provide additional information acquired from checks of CIA records and agency sources. He suggested that certain policies be employed to enable CIA to work cooperatively with the Commission in a manner which would protect CIA information, sources and methods. Among the policies articulated were two which Helms claimed would enable the Agency to control the flow of Agency originated information. In this way the CIA could check the possibility of revealing its sources and methods inadvertently. The policies articulated were:
(1) Your Bureau not disseminate information received from this Agency without prior concurrence.
(2) In instances in which this Agency has provided information to your Bureau and you consider that information is pertinent to the Commission's interest, and/or complements (or otherwise is pertinent to information developed or received by your Bureau through) other sources and is being provided by you to the Commission, you refer the Commission to this Agency. In such cases it will be appreciated if you will advise us of such referral in order that we may anticipate the possible further interest of the Commission and initiate action preparatory to meeting its needs. (90)
**See paragraphs 78.
D. WARREN COMMISSION KNOWLEDGE OF CIA SENSITIVE SOURCES AND METHODS
A large part of it [the summary report] is simply a summation of what the Mexican police learned when they interrogated Mrs. Silvia Duran, an employee of the Cuban consulate in Mexico City, and is therefore only is accurate as Mrs. Duran's testimony to the police. (107)
E. THE PHOTOGRAPH OF AN UNIDENTIFIED INDIVIDUAL
STAFF COUNSEL * * * So the Agency was making a unilateral decision that this was not relevant to the Warren Commission. (134)
Mr. SCELSO. Right, we were not authorized, at first, to reveal all our [sensitive] operations. (135)
Coleman went on to state:
As you know, we are still trying to get an explanation of the photograph which the FBI showed Marguerite Oswald soon after the assassination. I hope that paragraph 4* of the memorandum of March 24, 1964 [CD 631] sent Mr. Rankin by the CIA is not the answer which the CIA intends to give us as to this inquiry. (151)
F. LUISA CALDERON CARRALERO
1. A reliable source reported that on 22 November 1963, several hours after the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, Luisa Calderon Carralero, a Cuban employee of the Cuban Embassy in Mexico City, and believed to be a member of the Cuban Directorate General of Intelligence (DGI), discussed news of the assassination with an acquaintance. Initially, when asked if she had heard the latest news, Calderon replied, in what appeared to be a joking manner, "Yes, of course I knew almost before Kennedy."
2. After further discussion of the news accounts about the assassination, the acquaintance asked Calderon what else she had learned. Calderon replied that they [assumed to refer to personnel of the Cuban Embassy] learned about it a little while ago. (135)
During the Rockefeller Commission inquiry, Calderon's conversation was identified as a possible item of information from the Agency's Cuban and Soviet [sensitive sources] that might suggest foreknowledge of a plot to assassinate the American President. This involves a faulty translation * * * [Calderon's statement]. In answer to * * * [a] * * * question as to whether she had heard the latest news, Calderon said: "Si, claro, me entere casiantes que Kennedy." The verb entere is mistranslated. Me enter (the first person of the verb enterarsede, past tense) should betranslated as "* * * I found out (or I learned) [about it-the assassination] almost before Kennedy [did]." In other words, Calderon was saying she heard about the shooting of Kennedy almost at the time the event took place .... (164)
The narrow interpretation of Calderon's comments assigned by the Agency is not the only reasonable one. The translation of me entere as either "I found out" or "I learned about" does not foreclose interpretation of Calderon's comments as a suggestion on her part of possible foreknowledge of President Kennedy's assassination. The interpretation, in any event, should have been left to the judgment of the Warren Commission, not the CIA.
. . . Washington should urgently consider feasibility of questing Mexican authorities to arrest for interrogation: Eusebio Azcue, Luisa Calderon and Alfredo Mirabal. The two men are Cuban national and Cuban consular officers. Luisa Calderon is a secretary in Cuban Consulate here. (167)
Prior to October 1963, Oswald visited the Cuban Embassy in Mexico City on two or three occasions. Before, during; and after these visits, Oswald was in contact with the Direccion General De Intelligencia (DGI), specifically with Luisa Calderon, Manuel Vega Perez, and Rogelio Rodriguez Lopez. (177)
The DDP in person or via a designee, preferably the former, discuss the [A-1] situation on a very restricted basis with Mr. Rankin at his earliest convenience either at the Agency or at the Commission headquarters. Until this takes place, it is not desirable to put anything in writing. (184)
Although the Mexican unit considered the conversation of sufficient possible interest to send a copy to headquarters, the latter apparently did nothing with it, for there appears to be no record in the Oswald file of such action as may have been taken. A review of those Warren Commission documents containing information provided by the agency and still bearing a Secret or Top Secret classification does not reveal whether the conversation was given or shown to the Commission.* (191)
IV. BALANCE OF THE EVIDENCE
Submitted by:
CHARLES M. BURKE, Research Attorney
REFERENCES
(1) The Investigation of the Assassination of President John F. Kennedy: Performance of the Intelligence Agencies, book V, final report, Senate Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence, 94th Congress, 2d session (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1976), pp. 6-7 (Senate Report 94-755) (hereinafter cited as SSC, book V).
500
(2) CIA Classified Document 1977 Task Force Report, Introduction to tab E (hereinafter cited as 1977 TFR).
(3) See ref. 1, SSC, book V, pp. 67-75.
(4) See ref. 2, 1977 TFR.
(5) Ibid.
(6) Classified Staff Report, "HSCA Investigation of CIA Support to the Warren Commission," Dec. 10, 1978, House Select Committee on Assassinations (JFK classified document 015036).
(7) Executive Session Testimony of Richard Helms, Aug. 9, 1978, House Select Committee on Assassinations. pp. 17-18 (JFK classified document 014719) (hereinafter Helms Executive Session Testimony).
(8) See ref. 1, SSC, book V, p. 25.
(9) Deposition of John Scelso, May 16, 1978, House Select Committee of Assassinations, pp. 111-112 (JFK classified document 014728) (hereinafter Scelso Deposition): see ref. 6, Helms Executive Session Testimony, p. 10.
(10) Deposition of [Agency Employee], June 20, 1978, House Select Committee on Assassinations, pp. 7 and 52 (JFK classified document 014735); see ref. 9, Scelso Deposition, p. 80.
(11) Id. at p. 52.
(12) Id. at pp. 52-53.
(13) See ref. 1, SSC, book V, p. 25; see ref. 9, Scelso Deposition, pp. 111-112.
(14) See ref. 9, Scelso Deposition, p. 112.
(15) Deposition of Raymond Rocca, July 17, 1978, House Select Committee on Assassinations, p. 9 (JFK classified document 014718 ) (hereinafter Rocca, Deposition).
(16) Ibid.
(17) See ref. 9, Scelso deposition, p. 131.
(18) Id. at p. 133.
(19) Id. at p. 134.
(20) Id. at pp. 114-115; CIA report by John Scelso to chief/counterintelligence, Dec. 13, 1963.
(21) See ref. 9, Scelso deposition, p. 114.
(22) Ibid., Scelso deposition, p. 136; see also ref. 15, Rocca deposition, in which Rocca stated that responsibility shifted from Scelso to CI staff on January 12, 1964.
(23) See ref. 6, Helms executive session testimony, p. 14; see also Scelso deposition. p. 138.
(24) See ref. 15, Rocca deposition, pp. 12-13.
(25) Id. at p. 12.
(26) Deposition of James Angleton, Oct. 5, 1978, House Select Committee on Assassinations, pp. 76-77 (JFK classified document 014720 (hereinafter Angleton deposition); see a]so ref. 15, Rocca deposition, p. 23.
(27) Id. at pp. 32-33 and 44: see ref. 6, Helms executive session testimony, p. 23.
(28) See ref. 15, Rocca deposition, pp. 32-33.
(29) Id. at p. 33.
(30) Id. at p. 44.
(31) See ref. 6, Helms executive session testimony, p. 21.
(32) Id. at p. 138.
(33) See ref. 26, Angleton deposition, p. 86.
(34) Id. at p. 93.
(35) Ibid.
(36) See ref. 15, Rocca deposition, p. 7; see also ref. 26, Angleton deposition, p. 77.
(37) Id. at pp. 16-17.
(38) Id. at p. 17.
(39) Ibid.
(40) Ibid.; Rocca testified that neither CI staff nor his staff displaced the CIA's Soviet Division (represented by [Agency employee] Chief of the Soviet Russian division and his assistant, [Agency employee] in its contact with the Commission; nor did counterintelligence/research and analysis displace Scelso in his contact with the Warren Commission).
(41) Id. at p. 36.
(42) See ref. 15, Rocca deposition, pp. 17-18. See ref. 26, Angleton deposition, p. 78.
501
(43) Id. at p. 81.
(44) See ref. 15, Rocca deposition, p. 18
(45) Ibid.
(46) Ibid.
(47) Id. at pp. 19-20.
(48) See ref. 9, Scelso deposition, p. 113, in which Scelso stated that counter Intelligence staff, including [Agency employee], was repository of HT-Lingual intercepts; but see also deposition of [Agency employee], HSCA, July 20, 1978, pp. 83-84 (JFK classified document 014735), in which [Agency employee] stated that he did not know whether the Warren Commission had knowledge of the HT-Lingual program because it was not his responsibility to provide the Commission with material derived from the HT-Lingual program. (49) See ref. 15, Rocca deposition, p. 10; ref. 26, Angleton deposition, pp. 75, 80; see also CIA document, Raymond Rocca memorandum for the record, April 1, 1975, re: Conversation with David W. Belin, April 1, 1975; in which it is stated that Helms remained the senior official in charge of the overall investigation, with counterintelligence staff acting as a coordinator and depository of information collected.
(50) See ref. 15, Rocca deposition, p. 18; see also ref. 6, Helms executive session testimony, pp. 9 and 24.
(51) Staff interview of William Coleman, Aug. 2, 1978, House Select Committee on Assassinations.
(52) Executive session testimony of W. David Slawson, Nov. 15, 1977, House Select Committee on Assassinations, p. 17 (JFK document 008625) (hereinafter Slawson executive session testimony); see also JFK exhibit 23, hearings before the Select Committee on Assassinations, U.S. House of Representatives, 95th Cong., 2d sess. (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1979), vol. p. 190 (herein after HSCA-JFK hearings).
(53) Deposition of J. Lee Rankin, August 7, 1978, House Select Committee on Assassinations, p. 4 (JFK Classified Document 014874) (hereinafter Rankin Deposition); see also deposition of John McCone, August 17, 1978, House Select Committee on Assassinations, p. 9 (JFK Classified Document 014729) (hereinafter McCone deposition ).
(54) See ref. 53, McCone deposition, p. 5.
(55) Id. at pp. 5-6.
(56) Id. at p. 9.
(57) See ref. 15, Rocca deposition, p. 14.
(58) Id. at p. 24.
(59) Id. at p. 26.
(60) Id. at p. 23.
(61) See ref. 6, Helms executive session testimony, p. 10.
(62) Id. at pp. 10-11.
(63) Id. at p. 34.
(64) See ref. 53, Rankin deposition, p. 4.
(65) See ref. 52, Slawson executive session testimony, p. 29.
(66) See ref. 1, SSC, book V; see also Alleged Assassination Plots Involving Foreign Leaders. Senate Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Operations, S. Rep. No. 94-465, 94th Cong., 1st sess. (Washington, D.C., U.S. Government Printing Office, 1975 (hereinafter cited as SSC. Alleged Plots).
(67) See ref. 15, Rocca, p. 50.
(68) See ref. 9, Scelso deposition, pp. 73 and 142-143.
(69) Id. at p. 166.
(70) See ref. 6. Helms executive session testimony, pp. 30-31.
(71) Memorandum to Director of Central Intelligence, re: Sam Giancana,
from Richard Helms. August 16, 1963, in SSC Alleged Plots, p. 107 (see ref. 66).
(72) Id. at pp. 107-108.
(73) Ibid.
(74) CIA Inspector General's report, p. 70.
(75) See ref. 53, McCone deposition.
(76) Ibid.
(77) See ref. 53, Rankin deposition, pp. 61-63; ref. 52, Slawson executive session testimony. p. 27; executive session testimony of Arlen Specter. November 8, 1977, House Select Committee on Assassinations. pp. 45-46 (JFK document 013094) (hereinafter Specter executive session testimony); but see also executive
502
session testimony of Wesley Liebeler, November 15, 1977, House Select Committee on Assassinations, p. 71 (JFK Document 008625) (hereinafter Liebeler executive session testimony).
(78) See ref. 15, Rocca deposition, p. 45.
(79) See ref. 9, Scelso deposition, p. 153.
(80) See ref. 6, Helms executive session testimony, p. 25.
(81) See ref. 9, Scelso deposition, p. 158.
(82) See ref. 53, Rankin deposition, pp. 22-23; see ref. 9, Scelso deposition 158.
(83) Ibid.
(84) Ibid.
(85) CIA FOIA Document No. 509-803.
(86) Classified CIA Document, December 20, 1963, DIR. 90466.
(87) CIA memorandum for file, December 20, 1963, CI Soft File.
(88) Ibid.
(89) CIA FOIA Document No. 474-191.
(90) Ibid.
(91) CIA FOIA Document No. 498-204.
(92) Ibid.
(93) CIA FOIA Document No. 509-803; CIA FOIA Document 498-204.
(94) Letter from J. Lee Rankin to Richard M. Helms, February 10, 1964 (JFK Document 003872 ).
(95) See tel 15, Rocca deposition, P. 89.
(96) Ibid.
(97) Letter from Richard M. Helms to J. Lee Rankin, February 19, 1964, CIA FOIA Document No. 553-808A.
(98) Ibid.
(99) See classified staff study, "Lee Harvey Oswald, the CIA and Mexico City," House Select Committee on Assassinations, pp. 178-185.
(100) Warren Commission classified document, memorandum of W. David Slawson, April 22, 1964, p. 22.
(101) Staff interview with W. David Slawson, August 11, 1978, House Select Committee on Assassinations, p. 3 (JFK Document 010623).
(102) Warren Commission classified document, memorandum of W. David Slawson, Mar. 12, 1964.
(103) CIA FOIA Document No. 509803.
(104) Warren Commission classified document, memorandum of W. David Slawson, Apr. 22, 1964, pp. 3, 19, and 45-46.
(105) Warren Commission classified document, memorandum of W. David Slawson, Mar. 12, 1964, p. 6.
(106) Warren Commission classified document, memorandum of W. David Slawson, Mar. 25, 1964, p. 20.
(107) Ibid.
(108) See refs. 73-75 and accompanying text in this report.
(109) Warren Commission classified document, memorandum of W. David
Slawson, Mar. 27, 1964, p. 2.
(110) Warren Commission classified document, memorandum of William
Coleman and W. David Slawson, Apr. 2, 1964.
(111) Ibid.
(112) Warren Commission classified document, memorandum of W. David Slawson, Apr. 21, 1964, p. 1.
(113) Warren Commission classified document, memorandum of W. David Slawson, Mar. 12, 1964.
(114) Warren Commission classified document, memorandum of William Coleman and W. David Slawson, Apr. 3, 1964, p. 11.
(115) Warren Commission classified document, memorandum of W. David Slawson, Apr. 22, 1964, p. 1.
(116) See ref. 100, Slawson memorandum, pp. 9-10.
(117) Ibid.
(118) Ibid.
(119) Ibid.
(120) Ibid.
(121) Id. at p. 24.
(122) Warren Commission classified document of W. David Slawson, Apr.
1964.
(123) See ref. 100, Slawson memorandum, pp. 52-54.
503
(124) Id. at p. 24.
(125) Executive Order No. 11130, Nov. 29, 1963.
(126) Report of the President's Commission on the Assassination of President Kennedy (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1964), p. 364 (hereinafter cited as the Warren Report).
(127) CIA classified document, Mar. 24, 1964, DDP4-1555, Warren Commis-
sion document 64.
(128) Ibid.
(129) Warren Report, Vol. I, p. 153.
(130) Ibid.
(131) Letter from J. Lee Rankin to Thomas Karramesines, Mar. 12, 1964 (JFK Document 003872 ).
(132) Letter from J. Lee Rankin to John McCone, Mar. 12, 1964 (JFK Document 003872 ).
(133) See ref. 9, Scelso deposition, p. 158.
(134) Ibid.
(135) Ibid.
(136) CIA FOIA document No. 579-250.
(137) Ibid.
(138) See ref. 26, Angleton deposition, pp. 131-132, in which Angleton stated that the only reason for not providing the Warren Commission with access to (these materials) was due to the Agency's concern for protecting its sources and methods.
(139) Letter from J. Lee Rankin to Richard Helms, Mar. 16, 1964 (JFK Document 003872); Warren Commission classified document, memorandum of W. David Slawson, Mar. 12, 1964.
(140) Warren Commission classified document, memorandum of W. David Slawson, Mar. 12, 1964.
(141) Letter from J. Lee Rankin to Richard Helms, Mar. 16, 1964 (JFK Document 003872 ).
(142) Ibid.
(143) CIA FOIA document No. 622-258 (hereinafter CD 631); CIA classified document FOIA 621-259 (hereinafter CD 674).
(144) See ref. 143, CD 631.
(145) Ibid. (See also testimony of Marguerite Oswald, I Warren Commission Hearings, 152.)
(146) Ibid.
(147) See ref. 143, CD 674.
(148) Ibid.
(149) Ibid.
(150) Warren Commission classified document, memorandum of William Coleman, Mar. 24, 1964.
(151) Ibid.
(152) Warren Commission classified document, memorandum of Samuel Stern, Mar. 27, 1964.
(153) Ibid.
(154) Ibid.
(155) Ibid.
(156) Ibid.
(157) Ibid.
(158) Ibid.
(159) Ibid.
(160) Ibid.
(161) Ibid.
(162) Affidavit of Richard Helms, Aug. 7, 1964, XI Warren Commission Hearings, 469-470.
(163) This memorandum paraphrased the original source materials. See JFK Exhibit F-518, HSCA-JFK hearings.
(164) CIA document memorandum regarding Luisa Calderon conversation, undated 1979, p. 1.
(165) CIA classified document, memorandum of Raymond Rocca, May 23, 1975, p. 15.
(166) CIA FOIA document No. 138-598.
(167) Ibid.
(168) See ref. 1, SSC, Book V, pp. 28-30 and 40-43.
504
(169) Ibid.
(170) CIA classified document, Apr. 26, 1965.
(171) CIl FOIA document No. 717-312, attachment C.
(172) CIA FOIA document No. 98-137, CIA FOIA document 34-595.
(173) CIA FOIl document No. 559-243.
(174) Ibid.
(175) CIA classified document, memorandum of Joseph Langosch, June 23, 1964.
(176) Ibid.
(177) Ibid.
(178) Ibid.
(179) CIA FOIA document No. 687-295, attachment 2.
(180) Ibid.
(181) Ibid., attachment 4.
(182) Ibid.
(183) CIA FOIA document 687-295.
(184) Id. at p. 2.
(185) CIA FOIA document 697-294.
(186) Ibid., attachment.
(187) CIA FOIA document 739-316.
(188) Ibid.
(189) Ibid.
(190) Classified letter from HSCA to CIA, August 28. 1978.
(191) CIA classified document, memorandum regarding Luisa Calderon conversation, Aug. 28, 1978, p. 8.
(192) See ref. 53, Rankin deposition, pp. 18-19.
(193) CIA classified document, memorandum of Joseph Langosch, May 5, 1964.
(194) CIA FOIA document No. 687-295, attachment 4.
(195) See ref. 6, Helms executive session testimony, p. 136: see ref. 15, Rocca deposition, p. 148; classified staff summary of interview of former CIA employee, Joseph Langosch, Aug. 21, 1978, House Select Committee on Assassinations (JFK classified document): classified staff summary of interview with CIA employee, Aug. 11, 1978, House Select Committee on Assassinations (JFK classified document 014740). Further details analyzing this issue are set forth in the classified HSCA staff report upon which this study is based. Classified staff report, "HSCA Investigation of CIA Support to the Warren Commission," House Select Committee on Assassinations, Dec. 10, 1978 (JFK classified document 015036). (196) See ref. 2, 1977 TFR, p. 10.