Mary's mosaic The CIA conspiracy to murder John F. Kennedy, Mary Pinchot Meyer, and their vision for world peace

Peter Janney

Book - 2012

Explores the unsolved murder of Mary Pinchot Meyer, her ties to President Kennedy, and her possible uncovering of an assassination plot.

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Subjects
Published
New York : Skyhorse Pub [2012]
Language
English
Main Author
Peter Janney (-)
Physical Description
548 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color) ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781620872826
9781616087081
  • Part One. Prologue
  • Introduction
  • Fate's Engagement
  • Murder on the Towpath
  • Conspiracy to Conceal
  • Deus Ex Machina
  • Trial by Fire
  • Part Two. "Prima Female Assoluta"
  • Cyclops
  • Personal Evolution
  • Mary's Mission
  • Peace Song
  • Part Three. After Dallas
  • How It Went Down : The Anatomy of a CIA Assassination, Part I
  • How It Went Down : The Anatomy of a CIA Assassination, Part II
  • Epilogue
  • Appendix 1: FBI Crime Lab Report for the Murder of Mary Pinchot Meyer
  • Appendix 2: Confidential U.S. Justice Memorandum, February 24, 1965
  • Appendix 3: Notes Taken by Attorney James ("Jimmy") H. Smith on His Telephone Call with Leo Damore, March 31, 1993, at Approximately 8:30 AM
  • Appendix 4: Ben Bradlee's 1952 Rosenberg Case Press Liaison with the CIA.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Although unlikely to cause any JFK conspiracy theorists or Warren Commission defenders to change camps, Janney's exhaustive look at the 1964 murder of Mary Meyer shines a light on a now obscure crime that could have a connection to the events in Dallas a year earlier. Meyer, rumored to have been the president's mistress shortly before his death, was gunned down on a walk on a towpath in Washington, D.C. The police quickly seized upon Ray Crump Jr., an African-American found in the vicinity, as the shooter, despite his not matching an eyewitness's description of the man he'd seen standing over the corpse. The victim's social status made the murder a high-profile one. Apart from her alleged personal involvement with Kennedy (which Janney takes as established fact), her brother-in-law was now legendary Washington Post editor Ben Bradlee. The author is most successful at demonstrating the innocence of Crump (who was acquitted at trial), and pointing out unanswered questions. That Janney was friendly with Meyer, that one of her sons was his best friend growing up, that he accuses his own father (who worked for the CIA) of being complicit in her death, casts doubt on his objectivity-and his ultimate theory that Meyer was eliminated because she was asking too many questions about her lover's murder. (May) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.