So you think it's totally not a problem that the CIA brought Joannides out of retirement to be the liason for the HSCA without disclosing his relationship with the DRE?
The CIA also continues to fight against declassifying files related to Joannides despite the fact that he died years ago.
Jeff Morley wants to know if Joannides spent time in New Orleans in 1963. That question seems relevant to JFK Assassination research. And for reasons that we don't currently know, the CIA won't answer the question...
Re Joannides: It may be a problem; it may not. It shouldn't have been done. As you probably know, Blakey was furious when he found out. Rightly so.
I'll crib from Myers and echo his view (AMSPELL was the code name for the DRE):
"That is why the CIA records on George Joannides could prove to be valuable. As Mr. Morley rightly points out, “[During the 1978 HSCA investigation,] Joannides did not take the opportunity to say that the accused assassin had been in contact with his assets, rather, he concealed his working relationship with the DRE in 1963. He provided only a handful of miscellaneous AMSPELL documents to investigators… In fact, four decades after the fact, the most important AMSPELL records are missing from CIA archives – perhaps intentionally.”
However, Mr. Morley is also right to point out, and perhaps emphasize more than he has, that “…As a result [of the gap in AMSPELL records], it is hard to draw any firm conclusions about the contacts between the DRE and Oswald…” [Our Man in Mexico City, page 177]."
So release the material.
Questions: Wouldn't Joannides, if he had gone to NO, have met with Bringuier to get more information on Oswald? Bringuier insists that he never met Joannides. And if the DRE in Miami told Joannides about this Bringuier/Oswald encounter before the assassination why do the records show they told him about it afterwards? Isn't once enough?
I just don't think there's any there there. Oswald was a nobody and I simply don't see the CIA having any interest in him for any reasons.