Episodios

  • An Announcement
    Jul 7 2025

    If you’ve been enjoying this podcast, you may want to check out my newly launched home at Substack. I’ll be using that platform to write about things other than the Kennedy assassination – although it won’t surprise me if I sometimes end up touching on the JFK case there too, if the need arises. Subscription is free, so don’t be afraid to hit the subscribe button. And if you check out my archive there – which is also free – you may be surprised to find that I do have a few other interests besides the JFK case ... Also, stay subscribed to this podcast feed for more announcements and episodes in the future. With Donald Trump in the White House, the story of American conspiracy theory goes on … and you never know when the Ghosts of Dallas will raise their heads again, giving me more material for future episodes. For the moment, stay subscribed to this feed, and do please go to my Substack and hit “Subscribe”.

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    2 m
  • 20: Trump and the JFK Files
    Apr 13 2025

    The JFK assassination is back in the news. A House Declassification Task Force is unsealing all the remaining classified files about the assassination, in keeping with a promise made on the campaign trail by Donald Trump. "It's been 60 years," Trump said. "Time for the American people to know the TRUTH." What is it about this case that has made Donald Trump, of all people, suddenly become interested in the concepts of truth and transparency? And what kind of truths will the declassification of these files deliver?

    Show notes: www.ghostsofdallas.net

    Support the podcast: https://paypal.me/goodbadbogus

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    2 h y 1 m
  • 19: Flooding the Zone
    Oct 31 2024

    On January 25, 1967, two men squared off to debate an issue that had become an increasingly hot one, in the fractured and paranoid atmosphere of late 1960s America. Who killed President Kennedy? Had there or had there not been a conspiracy behind his murder? The two participants in this long-ago debate are now dead. But the tactics that one of them used that day to drown out the truth, and to flood the zone with demagoguery and lies, live on today, in the dangerous conspiratorial style of Donald J. Trump …

    Show notes: www.ghostsofdallas.net

    Support the podcast: https://paypal.me/goodbadbogus

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    1 h y 53 m
  • 18: The Trial of Clay Shaw (Part 6)
    Oct 1 2024

    On February 27, 1969, the defence in the matter of the State of Louisiana versus Clay L. Shaw called its final witness to the stand. The witness was Clay Shaw himself. Under questioning from his own attorney, Shaw didn’t say anything all that startling or unexpected. What was surprising was happened next …

    Show notes: www.ghostsofdallas.net

    Support the podcast: https://paypal.me/goodbadbogus

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    1 h y 48 m
  • 17: The Trial of Clay Shaw (Part 5)
    Sep 10 2024

    On January 21, 1969, at the criminal district court building in NO, proceedings finally got underway in the case of the State of Louisiana versus Clay L. Shaw. For almost two years now, Garrison had been loudly telling the world that he’d solved the Kennedy case. He had repeatedly promised that the proof would be delivered, when the time came. Well, the time had finally come. Garrison’s chance to put up or shut up had officially arrived. And if he didn’t put up, he really was going to look like one of history’s all-time greatest frauds and tools …

    Show notes: www.ghostsofdallas.net

    Support the podcast: https://paypal.me/goodbadbogus

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    1 h y 33 m
  • 16: The Trial of Clay Shaw (Part 4)
    Jul 29 2024

    In April 1967, researchers working for the New Orleans DA Jim Garrison found a suspicious entry in the address book of Clay Shaw, the man Garrison had charged with having conspired to murder President John F. Kennedy. The entry was for a man named Lee Odom; the address Shaw had scrawled down for this Odom character was PO Box 19106, Dallas, Texas. According to Jim Garrison, the late Lee Harvey Oswald had once scrawled the same PO Box number in his notebook. Also according to Garrison, Post Office Box 19106 did not really exist in Dallas, and never had. It was “a non-existent or fictional number.” This meant that the number had to be some kind of code. And Garrison publicly claimed to have cracked the code. He announced that the number in the notebooks was an encrypted version of Jack Ruby’s unlisted telephone number: WH1-5601. The telephone code was the smoking gun. Not only did it link Clay Shaw with Lee Harvey Oswald. It also linked both men with Jack Ruby …

    Show notes: www.ghostsofdallas.net

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    2 h y 9 m
  • 15: The Trial of Clay Shaw (Part 3)
    Jun 16 2024

    How do you make a case when you have no real case to make? It’s a question that all conspiracy theorists face. Jim Garrison faced it in March 1967, when he opted to stage a public pre-trial hearing in the Clay Shaw case. Garrison would now have to produce some evidence, fast, to show why he believed that Shaw had conspired in the murder of President Kennedy. So how did Garrison make his case? By injecting witnesses with truth serum and hypnotizing them. By offering bribes and issuing threats of violence. By springing convicts from prison in exchange for lurid anti-Shaw testimony. “He’s an unmitigated liar and a psychopathic paranoid,” said one of Garrison’s former aides, after quitting from his investigation in disgust. And the Jolly Green Giant was just getting warmed up …

    Show notes: www.ghostsofdallas.net

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    2 h
  • 14: The Trial of Clay Shaw (Part 2)
    May 11 2024

    On March 1, 1967, the New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison arrested a local civic leader named Clay Shaw, and charged him with having conspired to murder President John F. Kennedy. To Garrison, it didn’t matter that there was no serious evidence to support that extremely serious charge. He set about simply manufacturing a case out of thin air, using a series of increasingly desperate measures, including coercion of witnesses, bribery, extortion, forgery, and threats of physical violence. When Garrison arrested Clay Shaw, he crossed the Rubicon. There was no turning back. He had nowhere to go except deeper and deeper into the almost incredible clusterf**k that he had set in motion. And unfortunately, the man who was going to pay for Garrison’s act of madness wasn’t Garrison himself. It was Clay Shaw, the man who suddenly found himself starring in a Kafka novel, accused of committing a crime that he’d had absolutely nothing to do with …

    Show notes: www.ghostsofdallas.net

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    1 h y 22 m