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AFTER 28 YEARS, DOUBTS LINGER IN KING MURDER\Recent book on assassination charts conspiracy theories.


Byline: Associated Press Associated Press: see news agency.
Associated Press (AP)

Cooperative news agency, the oldest and largest in the U.S. and long the largest in the world.
 

The latest chapter in the mystery that still clings to the 28-year-old murder case unfolds like this:

"I was here one day and a man called me," says lawyer Lewis Garrison. "He said, 'My wife has some information you'd probably be interested in. I've been trying to get her to come forward for 25 years. But she's scared.'

"They came in the next day or two. They never asked for any money. She said she had known 'Raul' down in Texas. . . . She had a photograph of this Raul's cousin. She gave the investigators names of people who knew him."

Garrison pauses, recalling his apprehension when he first heard all of this - especially that name, Raul.

Then, he says: "Everything has checked, just like the sun rising and setting." But his quiet voice carries a kind of weariness.

Many considered the case solved decades ago, and yet it has never seemed to rest. Perhaps because of all the sleuths and diehards drawn to its heroic victim. Perhaps because of its taciturn tac·i·turn  
adj.
Habitually untalkative. See Synonyms at silent.



[French taciturne, from Old French, from Latin taciturnus, from tacitus, silent; see tacit.
 villain. Or perhaps because of the tragic irony of a single lead slug stopping history.

The murder victim those 28 years ago: Martin Luther King Jr.

As the nation marks a day of remembrance Monday for King, the spellbinding spell·bind  
tr.v. spell·bound , spell·bind·ing, spell·binds
To hold under or as if under a spell; enchant or fascinate.



[Back-formation from spellbound.
 preacher whose nonviolent crusade for civil rights won him the Nobel Peace Prize The Nobel Peace Prize (Swedish and Norwegian: Nobels fredspris) is the name of one of five Nobel Prizes bequeathed by the Swedish industrialist and inventor Alfred Nobel. , there will be many speeches about his life.

But King's death on a motel balcony in Memphis on April 4, 1968, will loom in the background, along with an extraordinary new round of claims about who caused it.

There's the claim of Glenda Grabow, who told Garrison about "Raul," leading some to believe they finally had found the shadowy, Latin-accented gunrunner long suggested as a conspirator conspirator n. a person or entity who enters into a plot with one or more other people or entities to commit illegal acts, legal acts with an illegal object, or using illegal methods, to the harm of others.  but dismissed as imaginary by prosecutors.

And then there's the Memphis restaurant owner restaurant owner ndueño/a or propietario/a de un restaurante  who sought immunity from prosecution if he detailed the assassination Assassination
See also Murder.

assassins

Fanatical Moslem sect that smoked hashish and murdered Crusaders (11th—12th centuries). [Islamic Hist.: Brewer Note-Book, 52]

Brutus

conspirator and assassin of Julius Caesar. [Br.
 plot in which his former waitress implicated im·pli·cate  
tr.v. im·pli·cat·ed, im·pli·cat·ing, im·pli·cates
1. To involve or connect intimately or incriminatingly: evidence that implicates others in the plot.

2.
 him. And the man identified as an ex-Special Forces soldier who tied military intelligence to the murder, a charge the Pentagon dismisses as laughable.

These purported leads and many others are detailed in a new book by William F. Pepper This article is about the lawyer. For the physician, see William Pepper.
Dr. William Pepper (born August 16, 1937) is a barrister in the United Kingdom and admitted to the bar in numerous jurisdictions in the United States of America.
, a lawyer who marched with King but today represents James Earl Ray ''This article or section is being rewritten at , and sourcing.]] James Earl Ray (March 10, 1928 – April 23, 1998) was convicted of the assassination of American civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., which occurred on April 4, 1968 in Memphis, Tennessee. , now serving a 99-year sentence as King's killer.

In "Orders to Kill: The Truth About the Murder of Martin Luther King," Pepper quotes several people - some by name and others with pseudonyms This article gives a list of pseudonyms, in various categories. Pseudonyms are similar to, but distinct from, secret identities. Artists, sculptors, architects
  • Balthus (Balthazar Klossowski de Rola)
  • Bramantino (Bartolomeo Suardi)
 - who say they were personally involved in or privy to a complex plot to kill King.

The Associated Press contacted many of Pepper's sources and investigators who worked with him on the case and, with minor exceptions, they say he wrote accurately about them. Some even tried to show they had more to lose than to gain by coming forward.

Still, it is difficult to determine just who is telling the truth; there are too many sealed documents and fictitious names, and 28 years have passed.

Pepper asserts: "The body of new evidence, if formally considered, would compel any independent grand jury . . . to issue indictments against perpetrators who are still alive."

But prosecutors in Memphis continue to reject any notion of reopening the case, and discount Pepper's leads.

"He wrote 500 pages of suppositions - and extrapolations on suppositions," District Attorney General John Pierotti John Pierotti was a cartoonist who was probably best known for his editorial cartoons. He received the National Cartoonist Society Editorial Cartoon Award for 1975. Having first been Treasurer for 9 years, he was president of the National Cartoonist's Society from 1957-1959 and won  said.

Pierotti said some witnesses Pepper quotes have given conflicting statements to prosecution investigators. In other cases, he said, those cited as witnesses are impossible to find.

"They're either dead, or people who wish to remain anonymous," Pierotti scoffed. "That's pretty difficult to take to court."

Pepper's book, released at the end of 1995, was preceded by a televised mock trial A simulated trial-level proceeding conducted by students to understand trial rules and processes. Usually tried before a mock jury, these proceedings are different from Moot Court proceedings, which simulate appellate arguments.  for Ray on HBO Hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBO)
A form of oxygen therapy in which the patient breathes oxygen in a pressurized chamber.

Mentioned in: Ozone Therapy
 in 1993, in which Pepper was joined by television producers who continue to press for a review of the case.

"The whole thing was gone into as a commercial venture," Pierotti charged. "It has not succeeded, and now it just drags on."

The mystery might have ended in a Memphis courtroom about a year after King's assassination when Ray pleaded guilty. He was then a hapless thief who had been on the run following a prison escape.

His fingerprint was found on a rifle dropped near the shooting scene; officials called it an open-and-shut case.

Many, including then-FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover Noun 1. J. Edgar Hoover - United States lawyer who was director of the FBI for 48 years (1895-1972)
John Edgar Hoover, Hoover
, insisted Ray had acted alone, that there were no other plotters. Yet even as he pleaded guilty, Ray dissented.

"I don't agree," he told the judge, ". . . about the conspiracy."

Ray's cryptic comment planted a seed of doubt, and many others followed.

Historians later revealed that Hoover's FBI had directed a years-long campaign of bugging and harassment against King. In 1978, a special congressional investigation concluded that indeed a conspiracy had been behind King's death, but that the government was not involved. Then came reports of Army intelligence units shadowing King all the way to Memphis. Some members of the House probe said it should be reopened.

For years, Ray has sought to retract TO RETRACT. To withdraw a proposition or offer before it has been accepted.
     2. This the party making it has a right to do is long as it has not been accepted; for no principle of law or equity can, under these circumstances, require him to persevere in it.
 his guilty plea, saying it was coerced.

Still pending in court are a bid for a new hearing and, separately, a civil lawsuit seeking damages against alleged conspirators CONSPIRATORS. Persons guilty of a conspiracy. See 3 Bl. Com. 126-71 Wils. Rep. 210-11. See Conspiracy. , both named and unnamed.

After fleeing prison, Ray has always said, he made his way to Montreal, where he met a mysterious man named Raul, a gunrunner who engaged Ray in his contraband smuggling smuggling, illegal transport across state or national boundaries of goods or persons liable to customs or to prohibition. Smuggling has been carried on in nearly all nations and has occasionally been adopted as an instrument of national policy, as by Great Britain  and then set him up as a patsy, directing his movements up to the day of King's killing.

Investigators working for Pepper and Garrison have learned much about the man they identify as Raul, who lives in the Northeast. An intelligence agency document, they say, shows he learned gun-exporting while working for a large weapons manufacturing company in his native Portugal.

Portugal was one of the first places Ray headed after the assassination.

Said private investigator Kenneth Herman, who has worked for Pepper and the TV producers: "I don't believe in coincidences."

"It's him," Glenda Grabow said, sitting with her husband, Roy, in their rural home a couple hours from Memphis. She told the Associated Press that she had identified the man she knew as Raul from a photograph shown to her by Pepper and by talking with him twice on the telephone at investigators' request.

She said she first met the man in the early 1960s when she lived in Houston; she was about 14 then, and the man was in his 30s.

A few years later, Glenda Grabow said, she became involved with a group that conducted various illegal activities, including producing false ID cards and pornography. They also received shipments of weapons from ships that docked at the huge Houston port, she said. Sometimes, Raul himself joined members of the group, including Grabow, as they off-loaded weapon parts and later assembled them, she said.

Jack Saltman, a British television British television broadcasting has a range of different broadcasters, broadcasting multiple channels over a variety of distribution media. Major broadcasters
There are six major broadcasters: Free-to-air analogue terrestrial networks
 producer also investigating the King case, said an independent source he declined to name recalled that Raul was considered a major gunrunner there at the time.

At Raul's direction, Ray has said, he ferried contraband across the Canadian and Mexican borders.

Raul, he said, sent him to a gun shop to purchase a hunting rifle, purportedly to show a client, and later took it from him after directing Ray to meet him in Memphis. That rifle, bearing Ray's fingerprint, was dropped near the scene of the shooting, Ray has said.

What else ties Raul to the King assassination?

Two men in the Houston criminal group told Glenda Grabow he was involved, she said. Grabow also told of a time in the early 1970s when Raul himself claimed a role in the assassination. She happened to be carrying a souvenir-type key ring that bore a small picture of King. When Raul saw it, she said, he exploded in anger.

"I killed that black SOB once and it looks like I'll have to do it again," she quoted him as saying in Pepper's account, which she repeated to The Associated Press. Raul then stomped the plastic key rings to bits, dragged her into another room and raped her, she said.

She denied that she made up the story for revenge. In fact, she expressed mixed feelings about her identification of Raul, which he angrily denied in a phone call.

"He's got family. I've got family. But there's somebody sitting in prison. I feel like I've been in prison all these years, too," Grabow said.

"I wish it was somebody else and not me. . . . It's brought up a lot of my past. It's just made me miserable," she added. "That's all I want, is the truth."

Pepper named the man - only as "Raul" - as a defendant-conspirator in Ray's civil suit. "We want to depose To make a deposition; to give evidence in the shape of a deposition; to make statements that are written down and sworn to; to give testimony that is reduced to writing by a duly qualified officer and sworn to by the deponent.  this guy," he said. "We think that's the case right there."

Prosecutors, however, disagree.

Of Grabow, Pierotti said, "She may be sincere." But he said she is not credible in the face of other information he has seen about the purported Raul, which he declined to describe.

An assistant district attorney general, John Campbell John Campbell is the name of: British political figures
  • John Campbell, 1st Earl of Loudoun (died 1933)
  • John Campbell, 2nd Duke of Argyll (1680–1743)
  • John Campbell of Cawdor (1695–1777), minor British politician
, characterized the alleged Raul as "a run-of-the-mill citizen," and added, "It's just a mistake."

While the new Raul chapter in the King mystery may be the latest, it is only one of many in recent years.

There's the saga of Loyd Jowers Loyd Jowers was the owner of a restaurant (Jim's Grill) near the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, where Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was murdered in 1968. In December 1993, Jowers appeared in ABC's Prime Time Live and related the details of the conspiracy involving mafia and the U. , who at the time of the assassination owned Jim's Grill, a Memphis greasy-spoon whose backyard faced the Lorraine Motel balcony where King was shot.

In 1993, Jowers was under pressure because a former waitress at the restaurant, Betty Spates, implicated him in the killing.

"I remember hearing a sound like a firecracker going off and within seconds Loyd came running through the back door carrying (a) rifle. . . . He looked like a wild man," Spates said in one sworn statement.

Jowers went to his lawyer, Garrison, in hopes of arranging immunity from prosecution in exchange for what he knew. When he did not get it, he went public with parts of his story on ABC's "Prime Time Live," saying he was part of a conspiracy that involved organized crime.

Is Jowers' story true? Garrison said he has lost his business and his wife since speaking out. "He has gained nothing," said the Memphis lawyer, declining an AP request for an interview with Jowers, who lives in an undisclosed location.

Is Spates' story true? No, say prosecutors, contending that she gave them a conflicting statement.

Interviewed by the AP, Spates seemed eager to get off the phone. Before hanging up, she said, "I've forgotten that whole year. It's gotten me into a lot of trouble."

Pepper, whose book detailed Spates' on-again, off-again on-a·gain, off-a·gain
adj. Informal
Existing or continuing sporadically; intermittent or occasional: an on-again, off-again correspondence. 
 willingness to tell her story, acknowledged in an interview, "This woman is very nervous, very shaky. But she is telling the truth."

Even Pepper's admirers say the overlapping layers of plot he lays out are hard to follow - and prosecutor Pierotti jokes that Pepper's approach is "if you don't buy this Don't Buy This is a ZX Spectrum compilation. As described on the box, it contains five of the poorest games submitted to Firebird. Each compilation was sold for only £2.50. , try this."

Most complicated of all is his last puzzle piece: Pepper quotes with pseudonyms two men he says were members of an Army Special Forces unit who claim they received instructions to prepare to shoot King and his then-aide Andrew Young Andrew Jackson Young, Jr. (born March 12, 1932) is an American civil rights activist, former mayor of Atlanta, Georgia, and was the United States' first African-American ambassador to the United Nations. , who later was U.S. ambassador to the United Nations.

Though they had weapons aimed, no order to fire ever came, he quotes them as saying. Instead, a civilian fired the fatal shot from another location, they say.

A Pentagon spokesman, Lt. Col. Mike Wood, dismissed the claim. "I sent it down to Special Ops (Operations) Command - and, after they got done laughing a lot, they said it never happened. . . . The military going out and murdering citizens - that's not what we do."

Pepper contacted the purported sniper team Sniper teams are used in military doctrines of the United States, Canada and United Kingdom in sniper warfare, as well as in the police forces. A sniper team consists of two people, a sniper and a spotter.  members, now living outside the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. , through former investigative reporter Steve Tompkins Steve Tompkins is an American television writer. His first job in television was on the short-lived animated series The Critic. After it was cancelled, he went to work for The Simpsons during the seventh and eighth seasons. , who spent nearly two years preparing a story about Army intelligence operatives' intensive surveillance of King during the turbulent civil rights era.

In the story he wrote for The Commercial-Appeal in Memphis in 1993, he said he found no evidence the Army had a direct role in King's death.

But Pepper sketches such a role by supplementing the paper's findings with information from other sources - among them, government and military officials he quotes anonymously. He also paid for Tompkins to travel to pose a series of prepared questions to the alleged snipers.

Tompkins said the men emphasized their primary mission was reconnaissance, with a "contingency plan A plan involving suitable backups, immediate actions and longer term measures for responding to computer emergencies such as attacks or accidental disasters. Contingency plans are part of business resumption planning. " to shoot.

"They were observing. The place was bubbling," he said, recalling there had been violence in connection with a sanitation workers strike that King was in Memphis to support - and race riots This is a list of race riots by country. Australia
  • Burrangong (1860-1861) - Lambing Flat riots
  • Broome (1905,1914,1920) - Broome riots
  • Redfern (2004) - Redfern riots
  • Palm Island (2004) - Palm Island death in custody riot
 in other cities just months before.

"They were given verbal instructions that if all hell broke loose, and they were involved in a Detroit-type riot, they had orders to take out King and Young," Tompkins said.

When contacted about the new allegations in the 28-year-old case, Young, now co-chairman of the Atlanta Committee for the Olympic Games Olympic games, premier athletic meeting of ancient Greece, and, in modern times, series of international sports contests. The Olympics of Ancient Greece


Although records cannot verify games earlier than 776 B.C.
, said he did not doubt Pepper's assertion but voiced no alarm.

"I never got involved in this," Young said, "because I thought it was important to carry on Martin's work. And you didn't do that by finding out who pulled the trigger. . . . You don't get bogged down in the sickness of society."

CAPTION(S):

PHOTO

Photo (1) Aides standing over the body of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. point out the direction of shots that killed Dr. King at a Memphis motel in 1968. Associated Press (2) Glenda and Roy Grabow speak about a man tied to the 1968 King killing. Associated Press
COPYRIGHT 1996 Daily News
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1996, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Jan 14, 1996
Words:2252
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