Its often stated that two days after the JFK assassination, FBI director Hoover wrote:
"The thing I am concerned about is having something issued so we can convince the world that Oswald is the real assassin."Nicholas Katzenbach wrote a similarly worded statement which stated:
"The public must be satisfied that Oswald was the assassin."So similar were these statements that it has been speculated that Hoover and Katzenbach must have been talking between themselves before each then made their own statement.
However i've seen recently that Fred Litwin says that Walter Jenkins, not Hoover, actually wrote this statement. Walter Jenkins was an aide to LBJ. He says it at 6 minutes in on this video:
If it was Walter Jenkins that wrote this statement and not Hoover, then this must be one of the most often repeated myths in the JFK research community.
The book "J. Edgar Hoover: The Man and the Secrets" appears to clarify this issue:
In other words, Hoover phoned Walter Jenkins and made the statement to him. Jenkins then put this in writing (hence the document) and therefore the document was written by Jenkins and not Hoover.
How this is often misstated can be seen in "Reclaiming Parkland". Jim DiEugenio says that Hoover told Johnson. But actually Hoover told Jenkins, and then Jenkins put it in writing for LBJ:
So the correct sequence of the statements by Katzenbach and Hoover is that Katzenbach put his statement in writing and sent it to Bill Moyers, who then passed this to LBJ. With regard to Hoover, Hoover phoned Jenkins, who then put the statement in writing to LBJ.
Its a technical point but its nice to get these things right.