On November 19, Washington Post reporter Charles Krause wrote an account of what happened when he was shot and wounded while accompanying U.S. Congressman Leo Ryan to Jonestown, Guyana in 1978. Ryan’s visit prompted Jonestown leader Jim Jones to murder Ryan and others in his party as well as 909 Jonestown residents, who died in a revolutionary “mass suicide.”
Krause recalls his encounter at that time with Mark Lane, a lawyer for Jonestown and author of one of the most influential conspiracy theory books on the Kennedy assassination, Rush to Judgment. Lane had accompanied Ryan, Krause and others in their visit to Jonestown, but escaped the carnage.
Krause writes:
A few days after the killings, Lane asked me if I had eaten the cheese sandwiches served to us that day before we left for the airstrip where I was wounded and Ryan was murdered. When I said yes, I had eaten the sandwiches, Lane said he had not – because he’d been told they were poisoned. Why hadn’t he told Ryan and the rest of us, I asked. There was no response.
Lane’s ethical lapses are also evident in Rush to Judgment. Vincent Bugliosi writes, in Reclaiming History: The Assassination of President John F. Kennedy, “if the reader checks Lane’s assertions against the evidence produced by the [Warren] Commission … he or she will find that Lane’s contentions are either distortions or outright fabrications.”
Bugliosi notes that Lane says that none of the doctors who treated Kennedy in Dallas observed a bullet entry wound in the back of his head. This would seem to indicate that Oswald, who was behind Kennedy, could not have been the assassin. But Bugliosi says the reason the doctors saw no entry wound is that they did not turn over Kennedy’s body to look at the back of his head. Their concern was treating his visible injuries to try to save his life.
It sounds like it’s not wise to trust either a cheese sandwich served by Lane’s employers or a book produced by him.
In a related historical footnote, when Vasili Mitrokhin, senior archivist for the KGB’s First Chief Directorate, defected to the United Kingdom in 1992 with thousands of transcribed summaries of KGB documents, he revealed the KGB had sent Lane, through an intermediary, $2000 to support his work on Rush to Judgment. Lane says he did not know these funds had come from the KGB, although the KGB suspected he might have guessed.
Todd Leventhal is the Department’s expert on conspiracy theories and misinformation—stories that are untrue, but widely believed. He enjoys reading obituaries, which tell the personal stories of people who have shaped the fabric of American life.
Todd became interested in international affairs after a four-month trip to the Soviet Union, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and India in 1972. He worked for Voice of America for seven years and bikes to work year-round.
Comments (4)
JAMES SUTTON
25 November 2008 at 06:38 EST
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JFK ASSASSINATION,JACKQUELINE KENNEDY,ROBERT KENNEDY,LEE HARVEY OSWALD,JACK RUBY,JAMES FILES,
THE TRUTH WILL SET YOU FREE
http://www.squidoo.com/jfkassasinationconspiracytheories
Snapple
4 June 2009 at 19:48 EDT
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You don’t tell that Mark Lane was also the lawyer for the AIM killers who took over Wounded Knee in 1973.
They killed Ray Robinson, a black civil rights activist. they killed about 7 people and buried them on the reservation.
That’s a pretty big omission for a government site about propaganda.
The FBI took a lot of sanitary napkins from Lane because the FBI knew these were going to be used as plugs for molotov cocktails.
You missed that, and it’s not in Mitrokhin’s book.
You can read about it in American Indian Mafia by Joe and John Trimbach.
http://www.americanindianmafia.com/
An e-book is only 5 dollars.
I think Mark Lane is a very sinister person.
Snapple
10 June 2009 at 02:01 EDT
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Why don’t you tell about Mark Lane’s role at Wounded Knee?
I wonder if still-classified information that Mitrokhin copied from the KGB files discusses mark Lane’s role at Wounded Knee.
Snapple
10 June 2009 at 02:03 EDT
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I would like to know if Mark Lane is the father of the Denver Lawyer David Lane.