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Author Topic: Earlene Roberts’ Cuba Connections???  (Read 4660 times)

Offline Steve M. Galbraith

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Re: Earlene Roberts’ Cuba Connections???
« Reply #8 on: October 07, 2022, 02:16:25 PM »
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Okay, I have read Bertha’s WC testimony (she was a sister of Earlene Roberts).  It appears to me that the investigators were interested in Bertha due to her contact with Jack Ruby regarding Bertha’s interest in investing in a nightclub. I think that they were exploring any possibilities of ndirect contact between Ruby and Oswald. I didn’t see much of anything regarding Cuba.

Also, Bertha’s WC testimony was given on April 14, 1964. And the WC memo that contained item #6 (which I quoted in the first post in this thread) wasn’t written until May 14, 1964. So, it appears that they were still interested in possible Cuba connections via Earlene Roberts one month after Bertha’s testimony was given. Earlene Roberts’ testimony certainly doesn’t contain any clues regarding Cuba connections. I am still at a loss to explain the reason for item #6 in the WC memo…

As I read more about the details of the WC investigation, one thing has become clear to me though. Contrary to what some CTs like to claim, the WC certainly did question a lot of people looking for any possible evidence of a conspiracy…
As far as I can tell, the FBI looked into a report that Cheek had owned a boarding house where two unidentified Cuban males had rented rooms. One reportedly made regular calls to Havana. This taking place in 1958 or 1959. In a WC memo between staffers Bert Griffin and Leon Hubert they suggested checking a theory that Cheek had been involved with Ruby in gun running to Cuba (the two Cuban males were possibly involved in this operation) and that Oswald had somehow found out about it (from Roberts?). And that this needed to be investigated. I guess this is what Willens was referring to. There are several memos between Rankin and Griffin/Hubert on this idea.

Whew. How one goes from owning a rental property where two Cubans had rented a room (apparently this was not known to Cheek; she owned the property but rented it to someone who then rented rooms to the Cubans) to running guns with Ruby to Earlene Roberts to Oswald discovering this is...well, I guess if you're imaginative enough you can see a possibility. Maybe I'm missing more details but that's some wild speculation.

The FBI report is here: https://www.maryferrell.org/showDoc.html?docId=95674#relPageId=76&search=Bertha_Cheek

The Griffin/Hubert theory is discussed here: https://www.maryferrell.org/showDoc.html?docId=217852#relPageId=98&search=Bertha_Cheek

« Last Edit: October 07, 2022, 03:02:22 PM by Steve M. Galbraith »

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Re: Earlene Roberts’ Cuba Connections???
« Reply #8 on: October 07, 2022, 02:16:25 PM »


Online Charles Collins

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Re: Earlene Roberts’ Cuba Connections???
« Reply #9 on: October 07, 2022, 05:16:34 PM »
As far as I can tell, the FBI looked into a report that Cheek had owned a boarding house where two unidentified Cuban males had rented rooms. One reportedly made regular calls to Havana. This taking place in 1958 or 1959. In a WC memo between staffers Bert Griffin and Leon Hubert they suggested checking a theory that Cheek had been involved with Ruby in gun running to Cuba (the two Cuban males were possibly involved in this operation) and that Oswald had somehow found out about it (from Roberts?). And that this needed to be investigated. I guess this is what Willens was referring to. There are several memos between Rankin and Griffin/Hubert on this idea.

Whew. How one goes from owning a rental property where two Cubans had rented a room (apparently this was not known to Cheek; she owned the property but rented it to someone who then rented rooms to the Cubans) to running guns with Ruby to Earlene Roberts to Oswald discovering this is...well, I guess if you're imaginative enough you can see a possibility. Maybe I'm missing more details but that's some wild speculation.

The FBI report is here: https://www.maryferrell.org/showDoc.html?docId=95674#relPageId=76&search=Bertha_Cheek

The Griffin/Hubert theory is discussed here: https://www.maryferrell.org/showDoc.html?docId=217852#relPageId=98&search=Bertha_Cheek


Thanks Steve! That’s helpful, and it is making better sense to me now.

Wild speculation indeed! However, it does appear that both Ruby and Cheek had somewhat similar styles of entrepreneurship. Neither one appeared to be very good at it, or had many scruples when it came to how they made money. And, I think that I can see why they made contact with each other for business purposes. And I think that I can see why suspicions and a theory by Hubert/Griffin came about.

But suspicions and a theory are just that. Here is another snip from “History Will Prove Us Right” by Howard Willens that I think says a lot:

“My second problem was their definition of the assignment. They wanted to answer three questions: Why did Ruby kill Oswald? Was Ruby associated with the assassin of President Kennedy? Did Ruby have any confederates in the murder of Oswald? But in their memo, Hubert and Griffin said that “although the evidence gathered so far does not clearly show a conspiratorial link between Ruby and Oswald, or between Ruby and others, the evidence also does not clearly exclude the possibilities [emphasis added] that (a) Ruby was indirectly linked through others to Oswald; (b) Ruby killed Oswald, because of fear; or (c) Ruby killed Oswald at the suggestion of others.”

I had no objections to the questions posed, but their view that the evidence in the commission’s possession had to “clearly exclude” any and all possibilities struck me then and now as unreasonable and unachievable. I said so. Ironically, the next time I saw something like this “clearly exclude” standard was in the final report of the House Select Committee in 1979, which used the equally unacceptable phrase “evidence does not preclude,” in its misguided denunciation of our work.“



I think that way too many people fall into the same trap. They simply don’t realize that [another snip from Willens’ book, page 357]:

The commission’s investigation pursued a “ground up” approach that focused on the background, associations, and activities of Oswald and Ruby to unearth clues of possible conspiracies. You need evidence—not speculation—before concluding that a conspiracy existed. One can speculate about the “possibility” of a conspiracy directed by one of the many groups that had reason to dislike the president’s (or his brother’s) policies or programs. If such a conspiracy existed, however, it eventually had to manifest itself in some manner through contacts with Oswald or Ruby relating to their actions in November 1963.

Also, many people fail to understand that [another snip from Willens’ book, page 380]:


The commission’s lawyers who came from the private sector were instinctively more inclined to distrust—rather than trust—the federal government. They would not have acquiesced in an indefensible commission investigation and report and would have gone public with their disagreement if that became necessary. As the only assistant counsel who was on a government payroll, I served as a representative of the Justice Department and Robert Kennedy with only a single mission—to assist the commission in conducting a far-reaching and intensive investigation of the facts and in writing a report that would accurately reflect that investigation. We were none of us perfect, but it would have been difficult to deceive us individually, and impossible to do so as a group.

Offline Steve M. Galbraith

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Re: Earlene Roberts’ Cuba Connections???
« Reply #10 on: October 11, 2022, 07:09:34 PM »

Thanks Steve! That’s helpful, and it is making better sense to me now.

Wild speculation indeed! However, it does appear that both Ruby and Cheek had somewhat similar styles of entrepreneurship. Neither one appeared to be very good at it, or had many scruples when it came to how they made money. And, I think that I can see why they made contact with each other for business purposes. And I think that I can see why suspicions and a theory by Hubert/Griffin came about.

But suspicions and a theory are just that. Here is another snip from “History Will Prove Us Right” by Howard Willens that I think says a lot:

“My second problem was their definition of the assignment. They wanted to answer three questions: Why did Ruby kill Oswald? Was Ruby associated with the assassin of President Kennedy? Did Ruby have any confederates in the murder of Oswald? But in their memo, Hubert and Griffin said that “although the evidence gathered so far does not clearly show a conspiratorial link between Ruby and Oswald, or between Ruby and others, the evidence also does not clearly exclude the possibilities [emphasis added] that (a) Ruby was indirectly linked through others to Oswald; (b) Ruby killed Oswald, because of fear; or (c) Ruby killed Oswald at the suggestion of others.”

I had no objections to the questions posed, but their view that the evidence in the commission’s possession had to “clearly exclude” any and all possibilities struck me then and now as unreasonable and unachievable. I said so. Ironically, the next time I saw something like this “clearly exclude” standard was in the final report of the House Select Committee in 1979, which used the equally unacceptable phrase “evidence does not preclude,” in its misguided denunciation of our work.“



I think that way too many people fall into the same trap. They simply don’t realize that [another snip from Willens’ book, page 357]:

The commission’s investigation pursued a “ground up” approach that focused on the background, associations, and activities of Oswald and Ruby to unearth clues of possible conspiracies. You need evidence—not speculation—before concluding that a conspiracy existed. One can speculate about the “possibility” of a conspiracy directed by one of the many groups that had reason to dislike the president’s (or his brother’s) policies or programs. If such a conspiracy existed, however, it eventually had to manifest itself in some manner through contacts with Oswald or Ruby relating to their actions in November 1963.

Also, many people fail to understand that [another snip from Willens’ book, page 380]:


The commission’s lawyers who came from the private sector were instinctively more inclined to distrust—rather than trust—the federal government. They would not have acquiesced in an indefensible commission investigation and report and would have gone public with their disagreement if that became necessary. As the only assistant counsel who was on a government payroll, I served as a representative of the Justice Department and Robert Kennedy with only a single mission—to assist the commission in conducting a far-reaching and intensive investigation of the facts and in writing a report that would accurately reflect that investigation. We were none of us perfect, but it would have been difficult to deceive us individually, and impossible to do so as a group.
If you read the Willens' book along with the Shenon work and even Epstein's old work "Inquest" you'll see that the staffers, who did most of the work (the commissioners were absent most of the time), had all sorts of internal disagreements and conflicts over the course of the investigation. This was not some orchestrated coverup of what happened with the people playing roles and following a script as many conspiracists, certainly the WC critics, claim. These were all men who went on to have distinguished careers; some were distinguished at that time. The idea that they were lackeys for a coverup - and then remained silent for half a century later - of what would essentially be treason is just false.

If one wants to say they were misled or manipulated - Shenon suggests this in his book (about Oswald in Mexico City and who he met) - then fine. But to argue they were willing participants in again what would be treason is just groundless. Especially since we've had over a half a century of followup investigations that support their conclusion. Were all of these coverups too? How many people do conspiracists think are involved in this? Two, three generations of people? Hundreds of people over 50 plus years? Really? Is this the real world you are thinking about?
« Last Edit: October 11, 2022, 07:18:06 PM by Steve M. Galbraith »

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Re: Earlene Roberts’ Cuba Connections???
« Reply #10 on: October 11, 2022, 07:09:34 PM »


Online Charles Collins

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Re: Earlene Roberts’ Cuba Connections???
« Reply #11 on: October 11, 2022, 09:14:12 PM »
If you read the Willens' book along with the Shenon work and even Epstein's old work "Inquest" you'll see that the staffers, who did most of the work (the commissioners were absent most of the time), had all sorts of internal disagreements and conflicts over the course of the investigation. This was not some orchestrated coverup of what happened with the people playing roles and following a script as many conspiracists, certainly the WC critics, claim. These were all men who went on to have distinguished careers; some were distinguished at that time. The idea that they were lackeys for a coverup - and then remained silent for half a century later - of what would essentially be treason is just false.

If one wants to say they were misled or manipulated - Shenon suggests this in his book (about Oswald in Mexico City and who he met) - then fine. But to argue they were willing participants in again what would be treason is just groundless. Especially since we've had over a half a century of followup investigations that support their conclusion. Were all of these coverups too? How many people do conspiracists think are involved in this? Two, three generations of people? Hundreds of people over 50 plus years? Really? Is this the real world you are thinking about?


Yes, I think that Willens “told it like it was” in his book, and didn’t cut anyone any slack. This includes legitimate criticism of the FBI, the CIA, and even Earl Warren. Stephen Fagin of the Sixth Floor Museum interviewed Willens a while back and posted the videos of the interview. It took 3-days to complete the interview, there are many segments. They are interesting and well done. But you need to have a lot of patience if you intend to watch them all.



These were all men who went on to have distinguished careers; some were distinguished at that time.

I believe that Joe Ball was deemed “The best trial attorney of the 20th century in California” by the LA Times. Consider that accolade in conjunction with a quote of Joe Ball concerning the Tippit murder:

“In all my courtroom experience, I have never seen a more ‘open and shut case’.”

 8)

Offline John Iacoletti

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Re: Earlene Roberts’ Cuba Connections???
« Reply #12 on: October 12, 2022, 03:31:18 PM »
You don’t have to be a “lackey” to allow a predetermined bias influence an investigation. It’s human nature.

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Re: Earlene Roberts’ Cuba Connections???
« Reply #12 on: October 12, 2022, 03:31:18 PM »