Over the last couple of months I’ve had the opportunity to join my friends Chuck and Carmine in doing a series of two hour shows on Chuck Ochelli’s program – delving into the basics of the assassination of President Kennedy.  We have been working hard at staying focused, discussing the basic facts and issues of that day in Dallas, the initial criminal investigations and the follow on actions by the FBI and Warren Commission.

Some of it will be quite familiar to those who have researched this subject for years, but if you are a relative newcomer we hope that it will be helpful and a balance to some of the rather sensational things that you can become immersed in by over-dependence  on YouTube videos as your only sources of information. Not that we don’t address suggestions of conspiracy but objectivity is our watchword – well at least it is for Carmine given that Chuck and I might stray a bit now and then.

If it sounds interesting you can find the current show at the following link and Chuck has the others posted as well; along with reference material for each of the shows. We should have another one coming up in a few weeks.

https://ochelli.com/podcasts/04202017-thursday-jfk-101-part-3-larry-hancock-carmine-savastano/

Hope you enjoy the dialog,  Larry

By request, here are the first two in the series:

https://ochelli.com/podcasts/03302017-thursday-jfk-101-part-2-with-carmine-savastano-and-larry-hancock-dpd-in-focus/

https://ochelli.com/podcasts/03162017-thursday-jfk-assassination-101-with-larry-hancock-and-carmine-savastano/

 

 

About Larry Hancock

Larry Hancock is a leading historian-researcher in the JFK assassination. Co-author with Connie Kritzberg of November Patriots and author of the 2003 research analysis publication titled also Someone Would Have Talked. In addition, Hancock has published several document collections addressing the 112th Army Intelligence Group, John Martino, and Richard Case Nagell. In 2000, Hancock received the prestigious Mary Ferrell New Frontier Award for the contribution of new evidence in the Kennedy assassination case. In 2001, he was also awarded the Mary Ferrell Legacy Award for his contributions of documents released under the JFK Act.

3 responses »

  1. caesarx says:

    Thanks, Larry. Do you have links to Parts 1 and 2? That website is a bit hard to navigate.

    Best, Chris

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