SG: Kemper Boyd's a faggot. He's got his eyes on the wrong target. Castro's just some taco eater with a good line of bullshit. Kennedy's worse for business than he ever was.
Non-applicable conversation follows.
DOCUMENT INSERT: 11/20/62. Des Moines Register subhead: HOFFA DENIES BRIBERY ACCUSATIONS DOCUMENT INSERT: 12/17/62. Cleveland Plain Dealer headline: HOFFA ACQUITTED IN TEST FLEET CASE DOCUMENT INSERT: 1/12/63. Los Angeles Times subhead:HOFFA UNDER INVESTIGATION FOR TEST FLEET JURY TAMPERING DOCUMENT INSERT: 8/10/63. Dallas Morning News headline and subhead: HOFFA INDICTEDTEAMSTER BOSS HIT WITH JURY TAMPERING CHARGES DOCUMENT INSERT: 6/25/63. Chicago Sun-Times headline and subhead: HOFFA UNDER SIEGETEAMSTER BOSS ARRAIGNED IN CHICAGO ON SEPARATE FRAUD CHARGES DOCUMENT INSERT: 7/29/63. FBI wiretap outtake. Marked: TOP SECRET/CONFIDENTIAL/ DIRECTOR'S EYES ONLY TOP SECRET/CONFIDENTIAL/ DIRECTOR'S EYES ONLY and and NO DISCLOSURE TO OUTSIDE JUSTICE DEPARTMENT PERSONNEL NO DISCLOSURE TO OUTSIDE JUSTICE DEPARTMENT PERSONNEL.
Chicago, 7/28/63. BL4-8869 (Celano's Tailor Shop) to AX8-9600 (home of John Rosselli John Rosselli) (THP File #902.5, Chicago Office). Speaking: John Rosselli, Sam "Mo," "Momo," "Mooney" Giancana (File #480.2). Conversation seventeen minutes in progress.
SG: I am woefully fucking tired of this.
JR: Sammy, I hear you.
SG: The FBI's got me under twenty-four-hour surveillance. Bobby went over Hoover's head to order it. I'm out on the fucking golf course and I see fucking G-men skulking in the rough and on the fairways, and for all I know, they got the fucking sand traps bugged.
JR: I hear you, Mo.
SG: I'm woefully tired of this. So's Jimmy and so's Carlos. So's every made guy I talk to.
JR: Jimmy's going down. I can see the writing on the wall. I also heard Bobby turned a major snitch. I don't know details, but-- SG: I do. His name's Joe Valachi. He was a button man for Vito Genovese. He was in Atlanta, something like ten to life for narcotics.
JR: I think I met him once.
SG: Everybody in the Life's met everybody else at least once.
JR: That's true.
SG: As I was saying before you interrupted me, Valachi was in Atlanta. He blew his cork and killed another prisoner, because he thought Vito sent him down to clip him. He was wrong, but Vito did put out a contract on him, because the guy he clipped was a good friend of Vito's.
JR: This Valachi is one prime stupe.
SG: He's a scared stupe, too. He begged to go into Federal custody, and Bobby beat Hoover to him. They cut a deal. Valachi gets lifetime protection for ratting the Outfit en fucking masse. The word is Bobby's going to put him in front of the newly fucking revived McClellan Committee, like in September or something.
JR: Oh, fuck. Mo, this is bad.
SG: It's worse than bad. It's probably the worst fucking thing that's ever happened to the Outfit. Valachi's been a made guy for forty years. Do you know what he knows?
JR: Oh, fuck.
SG: Quit saying, oh fuck, you stupid cocksucker.
Non-applicable conversation follows.
DOCUMENT INSERT: 9/10/83. Personal note: Ward J. Littell to Howard Hughes.
Dear Mr. Hughes,Please consider this an official business request, and one tendered only as a last resort. I hope that my five months in your employ have convinced you that I would never make an out-of-channels request unless I deemed it absolutely vital to your interests.
I need $250,000. This money is to be used to circumvent official processes and guarantee Mr. J. Edgar Hoover's continued tenure as FBI Director. I deem Mr. Hoover's continued directorship to be essential to our Las Vegas plans. Please advise me of your decision as soon as possible, and please keep this communique in the strictest confidence.Respectfully, Ward J. Littell DOCUMENT INSERT: 9/12/63. Personal note: Howard Hughes to Ward J. Littell.
Dear Ward,Your plan, however obliquely stated, impressed me as judicious. The sum you requested will be forthcoming. Please justify the expense with results at the earliest possible date.Yours, HH V
CONTRACT September--November 1963 DOCUMENT INSERT: 9/13/63. Justice Department memorandum: Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy to FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover.
Dear Mr. Hoover,President Kennedy is seeking to establish a normalization of relations plan with Communist Cuba and has become alarmed at the extent of exile-perpetrated sabotage and harassment aimed at the Cuban coastline, specifically violent actions undertaken by non-CIA sponsored exile groups situated in Florida and along the Gulf Coast.
These non-sanctioned actions must be curtailed. The President wants this implemented immediately and has mandated it a top Justice Department-FBI priority. Florida and Gulf Coast-based agents are to begin raiding and seizing weapons at all exile camps not specifically CIA-funded or vetted by established foreign policy memorandums.
These raids must begin immediately. Please meet me in my office at 3:00 this afternoon to discuss particulars and review my list of initial target sites.Yours, Robert F. Kennedy
85
(Miami, 9/15/63)
T The dispatch hut was boarded up. The orange-and-black wallpaper was stripped into souvenir swatches.
Adios, Tiger Kab.
The CIA divested their half-interest. Jimmy Hoffa dumped his half as a tax dodge. He told Pete to sell the cabs and make him some chump change.
Pete ran the parking-lot clearance sale. Buyer-incentive TV sets were perched on every tiger-striped hood.
Pete hooked them up to a portable generator. Two dozen screens blasted news: a spook church in Birmingham got bombed an hour ago.
Four pickaninnies got vaporized. Kemper Boyd, take note.
Browsers jammed the lot. Pete pocketed cash and signed over pink slips.
Goodbye, Tiger Kab. Thanks for the memories.
Agency cutbacks and phaseouts dictated the sale. JM/Wave slogged on, minus mucho personnel.
The Cadre was disbanded. Santo said he was getting out of narcotics--an all-time epic lie.
The formal order came down last December. Merry Xmas-- your elite dope squadron is kaput.
Teo Paez was running whores in Pensacola. Fulo Machado was on the bum somewhere. Ramon Gutierrez was anti-Castroizing outside New Orleans.
Chuck Rogers was phased off contract status. Nestor Chasco was dead or alive in Cuba.
Kemper Boyd was still running his Whack Castro squad.
Mississippi got too hot for him. Civil rights grief was escalating and polarizing the locals.
Boyd moved his squad to Sun Valley, Florida. They took over some abandoned prefab pads. That old Teamster resort finally saw tenants.
They set up a target range and a reconnaissance course. They stayed focused on the KILL FIDEL problem. They infiltrated Cuba nine times--white men Boyd and Guery included.
They took a hundred Commie scalps. They never saw Nestor. They never got close to Castro.
The dope was still stashed in Mississippi. The "search" for the heist men was still in sporadic progress.
Pete kept chasing fake leads. The fear got bad sometimes. He had Santo and Sam half-convinced that the heist men split to Cuba.
Santo and Sam harbored lingering suspicions. They kept saying, Where's that guy Chasco?--he split the exile scene post-fucking-haste.
He kept chasing fake leads. He synced the chase to Barb's road schedule.
Langley sent him out gun running. His circuits supplied good lead chase cover.
The fear got bad sometimes. The headaches came back. He popped goofballs to insure instant dreamless sleep.
He panicked last March. He was stuck in Tuscaloosa, Alabama--with Barb's local gig stone flat canceled.
Thunderstorms flooded the roads and closed down the airport. He hit an exile-friendly bar and tamped his headache down with bourbon. Two scraggly-assed spics got shit-faced. They started talldng heroin, too loud.
He pegged them as skin poppers with a dime-bag clientele. He saw a way to close the fear out once and for all.
He tailed them to a dope den. The place was Hophead Central: spics crapped out on mattresses, spics geezing up, spics scrounging dirty needles off the floor.
He killed them all. He burned his silencer down to the threads shooting junkies in cold blood. He rigged the scene to look like an all-spic dope massacre.
He called Santo with his fear choking him dry.
He said he walked in on a slaughter. He said a dying man confessed to the heist. He said, Read the Tuscaloosa papers--it's got to be big news tomorrow.
He flew to Barb's next gig. The snuffs never hit the papers or TV. Santo said, "Keep looking."
The junkies died on the nod. Chuck said Heshie Ryskind was dying--Big "H" had him phasing out on a painless little cloud.
Bobby Kennedy cleaned house last year. He initiated a shitload of non-painless phaseouts.
Contract guys got fired wholesale. Bobby sacked every contract man suspected of organized crime ties., He neglected to fire Pete Bondurant.
Memo to Bobby the K.: Please fire me. Please take me off the exile circuit. Please phase me off this horrible search-and-find mission.
It could happen. Santo might say, Take a rest. Without CIA ties, you're worthless.
Santo might say, Work for me. Santo might say, Look at Boyd--Carlos has kept him employed.
He could beg off. He could say, I don't hate Castro like I used to. He could say, I don't hate him like Kemper does--because I didn't take the fall that he did.
My daughter didn't betray me. The man I worshiped didn't ridicule me on tape. I didn't transfer my hate for that man to some loudmouthed spic with a beard.
Boyd's in this deep. I'm treading air. We're like Bobby and Jack that way.
Bobby says, Go, exiles, go. He means it. Jack refuses to greenlight a second invasion.
Jack cut a side deal with Khrushchev. He's phasing out the Castro War in not-too-provocative fashion.
He wants to get re-elected. Langley thinks he'll scrap the war early in his second term.
Jack thinks Fidel is unbeatable. He's not alone. Even Santo and Sam G. cozied up to the fucker for a while.
Carlos said the dope heist queered their Commie fling. The Castro brothers, Sam and Santo were now permanently Splitsville.
Nobody got the dope. Everybody got fucked.
Browsers walked through the lot. An old guy kicked tires. Teenagers grooved on the spiffy tiger-stripe paint jobs.
Pete pulled a chair into the shade. Some Teamster clowns dispensed free beer and soft drinks. They sold four cars in five hours--not good, not bad.
Pete tried to doze. A headache started tapping.
Two plainclothesmen crossed the lot and beelined toward him. Half the crowd sniffed trouble and hotfooted it off down Flagler.
The TVs were stolen. The sale itself was probably illegal.
Pete stood up. The men boxed him in and flashed FBI ID.
The tall one said, "You're under arrest. This is a non-sanctioned Cuban-exile meeting place, and you're a known habitue."
Pete smiled. "This place is defunct. And I'm on CIA contract status."
The short Fed unhooked his handcuffs. "We're not unsympathetic. We don't like Communists any more than you do."
The tall man sighed. "This wasn't Mr. Hoover's idea. Let's just say he had to go along. It's a standard, across-the-board order, and I don't think you'll be in custody that long."
Pete stuck his hands out. The cuffs wouldn't fit around his wrists.
The rest of the browsers vanished. A kid boosted a TV set and hightailed it.
Pete said, "I'll go peacefully."The booking tank was triple-capacity packed. Pete shared floor space with a hundred pissed-off Cubans.
They were crammed into a thirty-by-thirty-foot stinkhole. No chairs, no benches-just four cement walls and a wraparound piss gutter.