Who was Joseph Milteer?Joseph Milteer (1902‐1974), of Quitman, GA, was a racist right‐wing extremist activist who hatedPresident Kennedy insanely and spent his life combating the Civil Rights movement. On Nov. 9, 1963, 13days before the Kennedy assassination, Milteer had a lengthy conversation in a Miami, FL apartmentwith a childhood friend, Willie Somersett, in the course of which Milteer told Somersett about a plotthat was afoot to assassinate JFK. Unknown to Milteer, Somersett, a secret informant for local Miamipolice, was surreptitiously tape‐recording the conversation.In that conversation Milteer confided that the killing of Kennedy “was in the working;” that thepresident could be killed “[f]rom an office building with a high‐powered rifle;” that the rifle could be“disassemble[d]” to get it into the building; and that “[t]hey will pick up somebody within hoursafterward, if anything like that would happen, just to throw the public off.” (Excerpts from the transcriptof the conversation are set forth below at the end of this article.)FBI InvestigationMiami police promptly notified the Secret Service and the FBI of Milteer’s remarks, giving themtranscripts of the recorded conversation. The Secret Service and the FBI both quickly opened files on the matter, hastily investigated Milteer and within a few days—and prior to the assassination—closed those files.Five full days after the JFK assassination, on Nov. 27, 1963, the FBI interviewed Milteer. The FBI’s officialreport of that interview is one and one‐half pages long, consisting of six terse paragraphs, only one ofwhich relates to the assassination. Shockingly, during the interview Milteer was not interrogated abouthis previously recorded statements to Somersett regarding plans to murder the president. Milteer wasnot even asked the vital question of what he knew of or had heard about any plots against PresidentKennedy. Unlike many other witnesses, Milteer was not asked where he was on Nov. 22, 1963.There is no mention of Joseph Milteer in the Warren Report or the 26 volumes of exhibits published bythe Warren Commission, and for years both the Secret Service and the FBI kept secret as much as theycould about Milteer.The public did not find out about Milteer’s recorded conversation with Somersett until three years afterthe assassination, when Miami police gave a transcript of that conversation to Bill Barry, a localnewspaper reporter. It is said that Miami police decided to release the transcript because they realizedthe striking similarities between what Milteer said would happen and the Warren Report version ofwhat did happen.On Feb. 2, 1967, Barry published an article in The Miami News newspaper which discussed Milteer(without revealing his name) and quoted from the transcript of that conversation. In 1971 the entiretranscript was published in Harold Weisberg’s book Frame‐Up, and, for the first time, Milteer’s namewas publicly revealed. Soon assassination scholars were suggesting that Milteer could be seen in aphotograph taken in Dealey Plaza shortly before the president was murdered. Milteer, it was claimed,was the sixtyish, unsmiling man standing on the sidewalk with other spectators watching thepresidential limousine as it drove past them a minute before the assassination. The spectator alleged tobe Milteer is easy to spot: immediately to his right is a taller man wearing a dark hat, coat, and necktie.