
·S1 E13
125,000 Reasons [13]
Episode Transcript
Welcome to the MLK Tapes, a production of iHeartRadio and Tenderfoot TV.
The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are solely those of the podcast author or individuals participating in the podcast, and do not represent those of iHeartMedia, Tenderfoot TV, or their employees.
Listener discretion is advised.
Speaker 2It was about seven o'clock in the evening.
Speaker 3I got a teletype.
It was from the Memphis Field office and all it said was Martin Luther King has been shot while standing on a balcony in a hotel in Memphis.
That was it.
That was the whole message.
And I called Hoover at home.
I didn't want him to hear it over the news.
I called him and I said, mister Hoover, I just got a telex message from our Memphis office said that Martin Luther King was shot while standing on a belcon in that city.
And then there was this pause, and his reaction to me was is he dead?
Speaker 4I called the Union Hall.
I said, it's a matter of life and death.
Speaker 5I said, I think these peoples are planning to kill doctor King.
Speaker 2The authorities were parade, Oh, we found a gun that James o'ray bought in Birmingham that killed doctor King.
Except it wasn't the gun that killed doctor King.
Speaker 6James Lray was a pawn for the official story.
Speaker 7From My Heart Radio and Tender for TV.
Speaker 8The plan was to get King to the city because they wanted it handled in Memphis where Daddy and then could handle it.
Speaker 9And I've lived with it so long, my searity, and they scared for me.
Speaker 4The Lord told me, not the word.
I've been wanting to tell it all my life.
Speaker 7I'm Bill Cleeburgh.
And this is the MLK tapes.
In the nineteen sixties, as the FBI was making life as difficult as it could for Martin Luther King, its director j Edgar Hoover was living the sweet life in upscale restaurants and five star hotels, the Waldorf Astoria in New York and exclusive resorts in Florida and California.
And Hoover didn't go to these places alone, and virtually every instance he was accompanied by his second in command, Clyde Tolson.
So who was Toulson, when did he arrive and what was the deal there?
To help with this, we recently spoke with author Philip Nelson, whose excellent book Who really killed Martin Luther King was published just three years ago.
Speaker 10Clyde Tolson grew up in a small town in Missouri.
After public schooling, he attended George Washington University, where he received a law degree in nineteen ten twenty seven.
The next year, he applied for a job with the Bureau of Investigation, where j Edgar Hoover was boss.
Apparently Hoover already knew Tulson.
In any case, Toulson was hired, and only two years later, in nineteen thirty he rose to the position of assistant director of the Bureau, which became the FBI in nineteen thirty three, with Toulson as Hoover's number two, a position he held until Hoover died in nineteen seventy two.
Speaker 7It is widely assumed that Hoover and Twlson were lovers for forty years.
They lived in what appeared to be a spousal relationship.
Tulson maintained an apartment near to where Hoover lived.
The two men were driven to and from work every day in the same car, and they ate all their meals together.
Speaker 10Hoover and Toulson had lunch every day in the reb room in the Mayflower Hotel.
They didn't pay for their food or drinks For dinner.
Most evenings they would eat at Harvey's Restaurant, where they were also comped at great expense to the owners, something that was never reported to the irs.
Speaker 7And it wasn't just a workday relationship.
For many years, Hoover and Tulson went on extended vacations together.
Speaker 10In the winter, they would go for weeks at a time to the Gulf Stream Hotel in Miami, and in the summer it would be the Del Chro Hotel in California.
At neither place did they pay for room or board.
All travel, either by rail or by air, was built to their government expense account under the pretense that they were on official business inspecting FBI field offices, but they did nothing of the kind.
Instead, they spent all of their time either at the local racetrack or lounging around the hotel swimming pool.
Speaker 7The Delchara Hotel in La Jolla, California, where Hoover and Tulson went each summer, was a high end resort owned by oil barring Clint Murchison.
To the history website Gibson's World Quote, the hotel was frequented by guests such as Mobsters Meyer, Lanski, Carlos Marcello, Johnny Rosselli, and Sam g and Kanna, along with politicos such as Lyndon Johnson, Richard Nixon, and Jay Edgar Hoover with his partner Clyde Tolson Murchison gained control of the nearby del Mar Racetrack, where Hoover was set up with his own private box.
So the head of our National Police Force, who by reputation was the very personification of thrift and honesty, was in real life something entirely different.
And while the FBI was good at chasing down bank robbers and carthieves, and quite keen on raising the alarm about communists said to be hiding in the chambers of government, it didn't do a thing against organized crime, which decade after decade, became a stronger force in the American landscape.
One would have thought that the head of the National Police Force would have been eager to take on organized crime, but Hoover wasn't.
Moreover, he said publicly that organized crime didn't really exist in America.
What could be the explanation for this?
According to Bill Pepper, Mobster Meyer Lanski, who was basically running things at the Gulfstream Hotel, was pulling the strings here.
Speaker 11Meyer set that up.
Meyer instructed Costello, who had a suite at the Waldorf Astoria as did Hoover, to go visit Hoover and to show him photographs of him in sexual activity with Tulsen and put the photographs on a table and say to him, well, you can have a wonderful life, Edgar, or we can release these.
Well.
Hoover, being the coward that he was, had no choice in his own mind.
When Frank Costello confronted him and he agreed that he would do what they require, and what they required was that the mob didn't exist.
He has sold out to them entirely.
Speaker 7The story of Meyer Lansky bringing Hoover on board is best described in Anthony Summer's book The Secret Life of Jay Edgar Hoover.
According to Summer's sources, Lansky had Hoover in its control because he had photographs of him engaging in sex with Tulson and other men.
I don't know if this is true, but it's not an outrageous idea.
As we heard earlier, Hoover was happy to bug every hotel room that Martin Luther King stayed in so how hard would it have been for someone to do that to him in the forties and fifties, when Hoover and Tulson were staying for extended periods of time without charge in mob connected hotels.
Once Lansky or anyone else had those photographs, he would virtually own the director of the FBI.
And there is little one who's actions over the years to say that wasn't the case.
He just didn't go after the mob.
To be sure, there are other possible reasons for Hoover's reluctance to act against organized crime.
Arresting and convicting a mobster would be a lot more work than what was required to bring down a car thief.
Mobsters could afford good lawyers, and when scary guys were put on trial, jurys were more likely to end up undecided, and Hoover was particularly proud of the Bureau's conviction rate.
And along with that, it probably felt pretty good getting tips on horse races from people on the inside and hanging around the pool with film stars and gangsters, being treated like a celebrity and paying for none of it.
Of course, the people offering the free stuff were most likely expecting something in return.
So was Hoover being blackmailed or was he simply corrupted?
And which is worse?
Besides living the good life with Hoover when they were off duty, one might wonder what Tulson's responsibilities were inside the FBI as the second in command.
Quite simply, it was to protect Hoover from any threat, real or imagined, that might arise within the bureau or without.
Tulson was not only a second pair of eyes and ears.
He had his own informants, a reputation for being mean, and he might end a man's career over nothing just to show others that he could do it.
In short, he was Hoover's hatchet man, and everyone was afraid of him because he was sitting on the right hand of God.
But beyond that, Tulson gave Hoover a way to get things done that didn't have to be recorded in an order or a memo.
He could run important errands for Hoover, errands that were completely off the books.
And it appears that's what Tulson was doing when he becomes part of our story by showing up in Memphis.
Speaker 8The first time I met him was at Memphis Airport.
But it was a little old wireporard, you know, I mean they didn't have seven forty seven was dropping in and all that, and we went on latter and picked him up the airport.
Speaker 7In previous episodes, we have heard from Ronnie Lee Atkins, who was only sixteen years old when King was murdered.
Atkins lived in Memphis and was privy to many discussions about the need to kill King because he was a son of Russell atkinsor the man who led many of these meetings.
Atkins was a man of influence in Memphis, and beyond that, he had a special friend in Washington who would visit every so often.
Speaker 8He was a big connection with Daddy.
I mean he you know, he used Daddy and give Daddy money to do different things, you know, but he is there, you know, two or three times a year, maybe four or five.
Speaker 4Times a year.
Speaker 8Then hid Carl and you know, did he'd go get him and you know in the cab or.
I almost told you call him uncle Clyde.
I said, yes, I well from then on he was on Clyde.
Speaker 7So who was this man who would fly in from Washington, the man who Ronnie Lee Atkins was told to call Uncle Clyde.
It was Clyde Tolson, Hoover's second in command.
Speaker 4This is Bill Pepper.
Speaker 11Hoover used to send in Tolson on a regular basis to meet with Adkin.
The Atkins family to Dixie Mafia people.
Dixie Mafia people were junior cousins of the of the Marcello organization, but they worked together.
They were closely.
When Marchello might might not have wanted something to happen, but it had to happen, they would have used the Atkins family to do this.
And what surprised me was of the extent to which he used Clyde Tolson, who was his number two, as the messenger.
Speaker 7Always, for as long as Atkins could remember, Clyde Tolson would visit his house a couple times a year.
When Atkins gave his deposition to Bill Pepper, he brought several backyard photographs of himself and Toulson, which you can check out on our website.
Speaker 8Heyu is Clyde Lee and kid lived girl street.
Speaker 12All right, Hian and you would have been how old here?
Speaker 4Seven?
Dumm?
Yeah?
Probably six seven?
Speaker 12Okay, So this then would have been fifty eight or fifty nine yes, sir, photograph.
Speaker 7What we learned from these photos is that Toulson and Ronnie Lee's father, Russell Senior, had a relationship that went back for years, and part of what would happen on some of these visits is that Toulson would bring cash money for Russell Senior to pass along to those on the off the books.
Speaker 8Payroll came directly from Clyde Towson to my father's hand in a brown bag or a sup or kind of like a doctor's bag.
I have saying Clyde Towlson open the bag up and pull his papers out and take the money out.
Speaker 4And it was usually in a bag, you know, and they did.
Speaker 8He'd open a sack up and pull the money out, and then they'd go to count, and then they'd both count.
Yeah, I mean, you know they you know, one potato, two, potato, three, potato four.
Speaker 4That's why they did it.
Speaker 7Pepper then asked Atkins if he knew how much money changed hands.
Speaker 4I had no idea.
Speaker 8I always started saying, you know, a good chunk over, but it just didn't happen.
I got allowance.
It's pretty good, though, you know.
I get some bedy washers and peanuts, and stuff when I.
Speaker 7When I wanted so, Toulson would bring money to Atkins, who, as we discovered in an earlier episode, was a leader in the Dixie mafia.
As Atkins said, Towlson would use his father and give his father money to do different things.
This arrangement gave Hoover players on the board who were not g men and who could do things did not have to make reports.
As Atkins would describe, there had often been talk about killing King at various plan and Meson meetings going back into the nineteen fifties, but after King's nineteen sixty three march on Washington and his awarded the Nobel Prize in nineteen sixty four, the talk took on a sense of urgency.
More ideas were floated about how it could be done.
And if you've come with us this far, you've heard how Ronnie Lee described the general plan.
But we play his words here another time because they are important words.
Speaker 8The plan was to disrupt the city because they was gonna get King to the city, because Tolsen said that they wanted it handled in Memphis for Daddy and M could handle it.
Words specifically, Daddy and M could handle it.
So the workers would get King to town.
That's what it all boiled down to.
And by getting him to town, then they was going to take care of him.
So apparently come down from over Cloud was doing that on his own.
Speaker 7So this was the deal as fourteen year old Ronnie Lee Atkins understood it.
But the working relationship between Toulson and Russell Senior was derailed when Toulson suffered a stroke in nineteen sixty six and Atkins Senior died a year later.
But according to Ronnie Lee, the plotting kept on under new leadership, the part of his father assumed by his thirty six year old half brother, Russell Junior, and the role of Toulson picked up by veteran FBI agent Frank Holloman, who would become the next head of fire and Police in Memphis just a few months before King was killed.
What follows is Bill Pepper questioning Ronnie Lee Atkins, who was testifying under oath, with his lawyer Stephen Tolan sitting close by.
Speaker 12We're into nineteen sixty eight.
The guest sanitation workers strike hits, Yes, that is dead.
Hey, your father's dead.
Who's taken over the Russell Junior in Holloman so Russell Jr.
And Frank Hollman are running as the assassination effort.
Speaker 4Yes.
Do you know how long your father knew Holloman?
He knew Frank pretty good while.
Speaker 12Is it possible because Holloman, of course ran Hoover's office and for a number of years.
Yes, is it possible that Holloman introduced Tulson to your father?
Speaker 8I think that Tulson introduced Frank to Daddy.
Speaker 4I think guess how that happened.
You think it worked the other way around.
Speaker 8I think Tulson was the one that put Daddy with Frank.
Of course, Frank run this office here for years.
Speaker 7Frank Hollman had joined the FBI right out of law school in nineteen thirty seven.
He worked hard and found favor with Director Hoover, and for seven years in the nineteen fifties was the man who ran Hoover's office in Washington.
Then he left for important posts in the field, becoming the agent in charge in Atlanta and then continuing on the Memphis Which is what Atkins was referring to when he said he had run this office for years.
And this is important because Frank Hollman was no stranger to Memphis.
When he became the director of Fire and Police, he already knew who everybody was and what they were up to, and according to Atkins, Holloman was an important part of what they were up to.
Speaker 4What was said anything significant?
Senate then of the Frank Hollomantel Russell Jr.
Speaker 8I want some bitch shot, shoot Asomo bitch in the mouth and say that our dead Birkery Baptist Church in a meeting.
Speaker 4And do you remember when that meeting was?
Speaker 8That was probably less than two weeks before they killed him.
Speaker 7As we saw in the previous segment, in the week before King was killed, the FBI had composed a nasty article to be secretly released to friendly news outlets that attacked King for staying at a posh, white owned hotel in Memphis when there was a perfectly good black owned hotel, the Lorraine, where he could stay if he was willing to patronize black owned businesses as he was telling his followers to do.
Why did the FBI care were King state in Memphis?
This was an easy question for running the Yapkins.
Speaker 8I think they had it set up for him to stay at the Lorraine ahead of time, because they were set up to work out at Jowler's this place.
Speaker 4Now one or night they were going to hit him from the window.
I don't know, I don't think so.
Speaker 8I think they were going to try to hit him from the fire station at first, as far as old firemen, I know that they had some move My brother had talked to somebody and I think it was Holloman about having a moved.
And I think it was Halloman.
It came up with the idea, if there's a threat, if we can show some kind of a threat, we could have a mood.
And I think that's what they used, was a threat.
Speaker 7As Adkins relates, the first idea was to shoot King from some position at the firehouse, but even with the black fireman removed, there were too many people there to assure privacy at the back window.
But the brush covered yard behind Jim's grill had promise.
So who made the call?
Atkins said it was his brother Russell Junior and Frank Holloman.
Speaker 8Work came down to hitting him from behind the grill.
I don't know if he ever was down there after that, but man, there was a ton of sh had back here, so it was the perfect place the angle wasn't right.
Speaker 4They needed him up where he was level with him.
Speaker 7At least the angle wasn't right, and that would explain the sudden need for a room change.
King had been successfully booked into the rain motel, where ambush awaited, but he'd been booked into room two oh two, on the ground floor from the firehouse.
A man standing outside Room too o two might have been a decent target, but not from the yard behind Jowers Grill.
If the shooter were back far enough to be covered by the brush, the hill itself would hide the rooms on the ground floor.
This problem was apparently recognized a day or so before King was to arrive, and there was a rushed effort to get King into another room, preferably on the second floor, across from the yard behind Jowers Grill.
Speaker 4So there it is.
Speaker 7King was moved to room three oh six.
Martin Luther King was shot in Memphis at six in the evening.
Almost instantly the news appeared on the FBI teletype, But in Washington it was a little after seven and most people had already left.
But Paul Leturski, a young man who was serving is Hoover's personal assistant, was still there.
He saw the teletype come in, ripped it from the machine, and headed for the phone.
Speaker 3I called Hoover at home.
I didn't want him to hear it over the news.
I called him and I said, mister Hoover, I just got a telex message from our Memphis office said that Martin Luther King was shot while standing on a belt get in that city.
And then there was this pause, and his immediate reaction to me was is he dead?
And I said, I don't know.
All I have is the fact that he was shot.
And then I asked him if he would like me to connect him with the head of the Memphis office, and he said, yeah, do that.
Then there was another slight delay, and he said to me, I hope the son of a bitch doesn't die, because if he does, they'll make a martyr on Those are his exact words, and I'll never forget it.
Speaker 7So do Hoover's words upon hearing the news about King reveal anything to us.
Paul Letursky, who just came out with a book about his years in the FBI titled The Director, was pretty clear with me that he thought Hoover's words should remove him from any suspicion about the murder.
I was surprised because I didn't hear it that way.
So I played the clip for a friend and he said something similar that a man who holps another man doesn't die, isn't the one we should suspect of killing him.
That makes sense if you don't mind being overly literal with Hoover's words.
See in another way, if Hoover had played any part in the killing of King, however passive, he would have had time to reflect on possible unfortunate side effects, such as even in death, King would best him, as he clearly has done.
So.
Of course, Hoover might say what he said about King becoming a martyr, but regardless of which way you think his words point, there can be no dispute about the hatred you can hear in them.
At about the same time that Laturski was on the phone with his boss Hoover, John Currington was on the phone with his boss H.
L.
Speaker 4Hunt.
Speaker 6Mister Hunt, he called me, I would say, within less than ten minutes after Martin Lucy King was killed there in Memphis.
There and told me to call every radio station in the United States or everywhere that lifeline was broadcast.
We were also in Mexico and at that time Hawaii and have them not to do the program on Martin Lucy King.
We were doing a very derogatory series of stories on Martin Lucy King, most of which had come through jegg Or Hoover.
Over a period of time of about two hours, we were able to call all the radio stations.
Speaker 7As soon as Currington had accomplished this task, Hunt had another He wanted to go into hiding.
His views on King were well known and he didn't feel safe in his home.
He asked Carrington to arrange for travel and lodging under an assumed name.
So under the names of mister and missus John Krrington, Hunt and his wife Ruth flew out to El Paso and checked into a hotel.
But first thing Monday, a call came into Hunt's Dallas office, someone wanting to speak to the absent mister Hunt.
Speaker 6Jaeger Hoover called, I'd say about nine or nine thirty on a Monday morning after the death of Martin Lucy King on Friday, and asked for mister Hunt, and the switchboard advised mister Hoover that miss Trump was out of town at that time.
Mister Hunt asked our switchboard operator if John was in and for I know he never knew my last name, but anyway, I got on the phone and Hoover asked where mister Hunt was.
I told him.
He asked if I could get a hold of him and ask him if he would come to Washington.
I told him yes I could.
Speaker 7According to Currington, he called Hunt and told him that Hoover not only wanted to talk to him, but wanted to do the talking in person.
Would Hunt travel to Washington?
Hunt said yes, and Curington again made the reservations under another name.
Hunt flew to Washington and stayed for a couple of days.
In our previous episode, we heard attorney John Currington describe how one day out of the blue, he was selected to be H.
L.
Hunt's personal assistant, a position he held for twelve years.
Hunt was an extremely wealthy Texas oilman, often called the richest man in America.
As Currington tells us, Hunt was a longtime supporter of Lyndon Johnson and also had an ongoing alliance with jayag Good Hoover.
Speaker 6Miss Hunt felt like he could do certain things for Jag or Hoover that Hoover couldn't do for himself.
But more important, Miss Hunt believed that Jaeger Hoover could furnish him information that he could use in his business activities.
Speaker 7What activities.
As we've heard, mister Hunt produced a radio program called Lifeline that was designed to advance his rather extreme political views.
It was only fifteen minutes in length, but a new show came out every day, six days a week, and was carried by over five hundred radio stations across the country.
Speaker 6The program did a lot of derogatory comments on Martin Luther King.
Edgar Hoover Camp a personal file on them, and we were privileged to a lot of that information in those files that was redrafted and rewritten and used in Lifeline programmed.
Speaker 7As Curington would reveal, Hoover and Hunt would have brief conversations on the phone, maybe once a month.
It was a romance of sorts.
Hunt had wealth, Hoover had power, and they shared a deep hatred of Martin Luther King.
According to Curington, Hunt felt sure that he could destroy King with his radio program.
Speaker 6Mister Hunt was under the impression that the message against Martin Lucy King that Lifeline could deliver would eventually attract somebody, or some want or some group that would say that Martin Lucy King was removed from power.
Speaker 7Hoover, according to Curington, was less certain than Hunt that Lifeline alone could achieve this, but he was willing to help.
Speaker 4So.
Speaker 7Jed Garoover, the nation's top lawman, broke the law continuously by secretly giving to Hunt material on King that Hunt could turn around and use on his radio programs.
When President John Kennedy was murdered, Attorney General Robert Kennedy lost all control over the FBI and jaed Gar Hoover and the new President, Lyndon Johnson apparently had no desire to shield King from Hoover, though he and King time maintained an outwardly friendly relationship, but in private, Johnson's real feelings with Surface and Carrington was privy to some of it.
Speaker 6I've never heard such now language as Linda Johnson used in describing his feeling for Martin Lucor King.
So for the public, they were accepted as very close friends, all both looking out for each other.
But I don't know of anybody that Linda Johnson had a more dislike for than Martin Lucor King, and the same thing with Jaigar Hoover.
Speaker 7When Hoover invited Hunt to come to Washington right after King had been killed, it allowed for more private and personal conversations than either man was willing to have on the phone.
Carrington wasn't privy to any of that.
Speaker 6I have no worse the idea of what they talked about, but I believe that Jayacker, Hoover, X L.
Hunt, and Linda Johnson were putting themselves into a holding past and were if anything did surface that would suggest they had advanced knowledge of this, they wanted to have as clean a pass as possible.
Speaker 7Of course, a totally clean path was hard to be certain of because the alleged killer of doctor King had not been captured, and no one could be sure what he might reveal once he was, assuming he was captured alive.
At that time, H.
L.
Hunt and Jo Savillo, the powerful mafia boss, both lived in Dallas.
The two men were not what you would call friends, but they shared a respect, stayed out of each other's business, and once in a while might meet at Sivillo's place out at the airport, where, according to Carrington, Savilla might offer a short lesson on how to get away with murder.
Speaker 6Savello's in comments to Missus Hunt told him that, you know, hiring somebody to kill someone was no problem at all, but immediately after that killing was done, you either had to one destroy the person who did to kill him, or if the may god indicted, you had to make a rationalist if that man played guilty, so he could not testify an open court as to what he knew or did not know on a protecular crime.
Speaker 7There Two months after King's murder, James Earl Ray was captured in London.
He was brought to Memphis, where he was held in communicado for eight months.
Exactly what you would do if you were not sure what the man might say if allowed to speak in public.
But if others were involved in the killing the King, it would appear that Ray did not pose a danger at least as far as telling secrets, because he didn't know much.
But Ray did pose a danger because if he went to trial, the evidence would have to bear up under examination and the case against him might fall apart, as his first attorney, Arthur Haines, thought it would, and who knew what other witnesses might appear and what they might have to say.
And if Ray were found not guilty, or worse still, if the case against him were shown to be a sham, where would that, Jay ar Hoover in the vaunted FBI, who would run the investigation if Ray had been set up, who had done the setting up, who had allowed them to do it, and who had accepted and promoted the phony evidence.
These questions threatened to absolutely destroy Jade car Hoover again.
Speaker 6John Carrington, Hoover and Johnson and mister Hunt all shared the same view that if James Arrol Ray should go to trial, he could throw everybody out of the boat that was volating around out in the ocean there.
So I think, in the opinion of Jaegar Hoover, Lend Johnson hl Hunt, that it was necessary for James Earl Ray to play guilty to that work, none of his testimony would be made public.
Speaker 7According to John Carrington, Hoover and Hunt were on the phone more often after Ray had been captured.
The door between Carrington's office and Hunt's office was always open at Hunt's assistance, So there wasn't much that happened in that office that John Currington wasn't privy to one afternoon.
According to Currington, after Hoover had been on the phone with Hunt, Kurrington was called into Hunt's office, whereupon Hunt made another phone call.
Speaker 6Mister h called Percy Foreman one day and he told mister Foreman that he had a young lawyer in his office, said it'd come up with a lot of ideas as to why James row Ray should enter a guilty plea in the killing of Martin Lucy King.
And the young lawyer was myself, and he asked if I came to Houston, would Percy Foreman visit with me and go over the series and I had jotted down and Percy Foreman agreed to do that.
I left the next morning.
Speaker 7Kurrington made the quick flight from Dallas to Houston, took a cab from the airport, and arrived at Foreman's office.
He was not empty handed.
Speaker 6I had a briefcase with a one hundred and twenty five thousand dollars cash in it.
Mixter Foreman and I probably exchange a few pleasures for two or three minutes, and I just simply stated to him that had jotted down one hundred and twenty five thousand raisers why James Row Ray should plead guilty to Keillan Martin Lucy King, and would like to leave those reasons with him and Percy Foreman without any comment, say just leave you a briefcase.
That was the extent of our conversation.
Speaker 7Currington would say that the lack of any questions or conversation on the part of Percy Foreman felt spooky to him.
He left Foreman's office feeling that this was a deal that had been set up will in advance.
Speaker 6If I were just making an editorial type of comment.
In my opinion, I believe that Jay Hoover himself would have made a call to Percy Foreman and told him what was fiction.
Speaker 4To have with.
Speaker 7This is a stunning story.
According to Curington, he brings one hundred and twenty five thousand dollars to Foreman in exchange for the promise that Ray will plead guilty.
What reasons do we have for believing him?
Speaker 3First?
Speaker 7It would go a long way to explaining Foreman's strange conduct toward Ray, pushing his way into the case and forcing out a pair of lawyers who were preparing an affirmative defensive Ray then doing nothing on Race behalf and finally putting Ray under extraordinary pressure to plead guilty while publicly pretending that was always the plan.
And if that were not enough, Foreman then puts his name to an article in a national magazine assigning nasty, untrue motives for Ray in regards to the murder, such as what he was really trying to do was start a race war.
At every turn, Percy Foreman seems to be acting in the interest of someone off stage.
Would Foreman really take money and betray a client by secretly working for the other side, Well, as we heard in episode four, Foreman did that very thing.
Just a few years after the King murder.
Foreman signed up a client who had a conflict with Bunker and Herbert Hunt, the sons of H.
L.
Hunt, and then approached the Hunts and took one hundred thousand dollars from them in return forgetting his client to do what the Hunts wanted.
Is all laid out in a federal indictment.
So I think we now know how it was that James Olray put in a plea of guilty when he really wanted to go to trial.
It was arranged, paid for, he was forced into it.
Foreman was simply not going to defend him.
And the chief beneficiary of all that was j Edgar Hoover.
He was the one on the hook if the trial of James Olray took a bad turn.
In nineteen twenty four, j at Gar Hoover, at the age of twenty nine, became the first head of the Bureau of Investigation, which later became the FBI, and he was still director of the FBI when he died in nineteen seventy two.
He had seen presidents come and go, and he had used his office to collect information on just about every one, which made him the most feared man in America, unless, of course, you were with a mob.
Though many wanted to, no president dared to replace the man.
It was only after Hoover died that the Senate Church Committee was formed to investigate what they would call quote the criminal abuse of power by the FBI.
Two years later, Lewis Stokes, chairman of the House Select Committee looking into the assassination of Martin Luther King, read a statement of his own into the record that took the FBI's conduct to the very edge of murder.
Speaker 9Should the Committee take special note that the conduct of the FBI in this conspiracy of harassment of doctor King was not only unjustified as policy, it was also illegal and unconstitutional.
Did the conduct of the FBI contribute in any significant degree to the sequence of events that occurred in Memphis and led to doctor King's death?
Speaker 7In the MLK tapes, we have attempted to answer that question by presenting the stories of people who have told what they knew about the murder of Martin Luther King.
No one had a complete picture.
Each person only knew what he or she saw, heard, or did.
We heard from Police Captain Jerry Williams, whose all black security detail was not called to protect King on his final visit to Memphis.
Fire Captain Carthel Whedon, who on the day of the murder brought men with cameras and fancy id up to the roof of the firehouse.
Attorney ur Haines, who had a witness who saw the package with a rifle placed on the street minutes before the shooting.
Judge Joe Brown, who offered hard reasons why that rifle could not have been the murder weapon.
Detective Barry Linvill who saw a bullet in near perfect condition removed from the body of King, something that in no way resembled the pieces of lead the FBI would later offer as the death's luck.
Ronnie Lee Atkins, who told us how the shot was fired from the yard behind the grille where there was plenty of cover.
Betty Spates who saw a smoking gun brought in from that yard, and a lot of others with similar stories that did not fit with the official version of the crime.
But even collectively, their testimony doesn't tell everything.
Each is only a tile in the mosaic, and when they are all in place, the image is still incomplete.
We don't know all the actors and the roles they played, but if you step back and look at the mosaic, you can see a picture.
The murder of doctor Martin Luther King was a planned event, and that fact was covered up by the people who were in charge of investigating the crime.
And when it appeared that Rai's attorneys were really going to fight the charge in court and call into question the shaky evidence, something had to be done.
So Percy Foreman was sent in at the last moment to rest the case away from Rai's attorneys and force a plea of guilty, which is precisely what he did and what he was paid to do.
The evidence of this is overwhelming.
As a nation, we choose what we want to remember.
Each year, on the third Monday of January, we celebrate the birth of doctor Martin Luther King with a national holiday that bears his name.
Newspapers and magazines publish flattering portraits and gush about what a great man he was, conveniently forgetting the awful things they said about him after he spoke against the war.
Now they remember him not as the traitor they once denounced, but as an American saint.
But they never ask questions about how he died, and their pages are used to shout down anyone who does.
Meanwhile, the man who used his public position to take massive bribes, who every day violated the law he was sworn to uphold, the man who tried to destroy King at every turn and finally helped to arrange his death, that man has a granite faced building named in his honor in our nation's capital.
For Tenderfoot TV and iHeartRadio, I'm Bill Klaber and this has been the MLK types.
Speaker 5Thanks for listening to the MLK tapes.
A production of iHeart Radio and Tenderfoot TV.
This podcast is not specifically endorsed by the King Family or the King of State.
Speaker 1The MLK Tapes is written.
Speaker 5And hosted by Bill Claper.
Matt Frederick and Alex Williams are executive producers on behalf of iHeart Radio with producers Trevor Young and Jesse Phone.
Donald Albright and Payne Lindsay are executive producers on behalf of Tenderfoot TV with producers Jamie Albright and Meredith Stedman.
Original music by Makeup in Vanity Set, cover art by Mister Soul to One with photography by Artemis Jenkins.
Special thanks to Owin Rosenbaum and Grace Royer at UTA, the Nord Group, Beck Median Marketing, Envision Business Management, and Station sixteen.
If you have questions, you can visit our website, the emailktapes dot com.
We posted photos and videos related to the podcast on our social media accounts.
Speaker 1You can check them out at the emailk Tapes.
Speaker 5For more podcasts from iHeartRadio and Tenderfoot TV, please visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.