Did the CIA or MI6 kill John Lennon for the Birthdays of Knights of British Empire, Helter Skelter Helix and DNA protein cords?

Secret Talk of Secret Things – hidden in plain view.

In order to keep cohesion in the Cabal the Cabal must be messaged that it is doing the right thing such as preventing war (when in fact Reaganism was about preventing war by making the agression of other nations too costly a venture for them and associated with too low a chance to succeed in bringing return.)

Star Trek Voyager and other programs have led propoganda the Cabal is moral and just and on a good though secret mission.

The Cabal is misled but misled in way that keeps the Cabal loyal to the top. John Lennon was planting Cabal messagaing but lost faith in the messages he was transmitting for the cabal.

The Beatles were asked by PsyOps to plant ideas and lead culture then Lennon decided he wanted out

The Beatles were also part of the mass experimentation that contemporary society was being subjected to by the CIA, Britain’s MI6 and the Tavistock Institute utilizing extraordinarily powerful mind-altering psychedelic/psychotropic drugs.

More than most of the other boys in the band, John Lennon became increasingly aware not only of the extent of corruption, co-opting and infiltration of the counterculture — most CERTAINLY including the rock music scene — by these same covert government intelligence elements.

Lennon was also aware than one of the “big guns” in the CIA/Tavistock/MI6 arsenal, LSD, had been having effect upon the population groups to which it had been funneled so extensively that was most unexpected on the part of the social manipulators–and to a large extent the effect was rather positive and beneficial.

Shortly before Lennon’s death at the hands of what beyond the faintest glimmer of a shadow a doubt was a mind-controlled, “Manchurian Candidate” type assassin deployed by Tavistock/CIA/MI6, Mark Chapman to terminate a “loose cannon”, Lennon had the audacity to massively and blatantly “out” the aforementioned consortium in a Playboy interview — in which he made note of LSD’s completely unforeseen liberating impact upon human society and civilization–pretty much thumbing his nose at the whole bunch and their whole trip; AND indicating as well that he was aware of the extent to which he and other pop musicians had been set up–to be used as dupes in massive social manipulation schemes.

Shortly afterward, New World Order head honcho and Satanist, globalist, CIA chief and Tavistock underling vice-president George Bush had Lennon slaughtered on the streets of new York; where he died in the arms of someone that a number of sources claim was the monarch agent deployed by MI6/CIA to keep the exceptionally intelligent Lennon constantly gravitating toward the social fringe; thereby keeping his potential influence at least minimized — Yoko Ono. That’s NOT to say that even IF this last supposition is true, that genuine love and a fulfilling relationship did not exist between the two and that Yoko’s “programming”, just like John’s, broke up and fell apart.

And what about those Beatles, anyway? Anyone who has heard the Beatles’ live tapes recorded in 1961 and 1962 on the “Reeperbahn” in Hamburg, Germany realizes that this was an incredibly talented and energetic bunch of rockers who no matter what would have undoubtedly had a significant impact upon popular music and thus upon society itself, regardless of things which occurred subsequently in their saga.

And without any doubt being given access to state-of-the art audio and recording technologies and facilities stimulated their creativity quite a bit–for the benefit of all; “MR. KITE” included.

Personally I think the Beatles were definitely “the greatest”–or damn close to it.

Return to Tavistock Institute
Return to CIA – The Central Intelligence Agency

Military Loyalty as a Moral Emotion

Loyalty between soldiers is idealized as an emotion that promotes cohesion and combat effectiveness. However, little empirical work has examined how military personnel understand, feel, and enact loyalty. We use a symbolic interactionalist informed frame to explore the lived experience of 24 retired Australian Defence Force members via in-depth semi-structured interviews. Our analysis revealed three core themes: (1) Loyalty as reciprocity, where there was an expectation that loyalty would be returned no matter what. (2) The importance of emotional connection for cohesion. (3) Loyalty as a prioritizing process, where a soldier’s loyalties gave them a way of choosing between competing demands. Loyalty is a moral emotion that enabled sensemaking. Close interpersonal loyalties tended to trump wider/diffused loyalties. Respondents understood their loyalties to fellow soldiers within wider social constructs of mateship and professionalism. The findings show the risks that come from a reliance on loyalty for combat cohesion.

https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0095327X19880248
Beatles singer John Lennon with wife Yoko Ono at Apple headquarters as he sends his MBE back to The Queen, 25 November 1969. Picture: WATFORD/Mirrorpix/Mirrorpix via Getty Images https://www.radiox.co.uk/artists/beatles/why-john-lennon-returned-his-mbe-1969/
English model and actress Jean Shrimpton joins a group of anti-war protestors campaigning to end the killing of civilians in Biafra and the Nigerian Civil War, 24 December 1969. Picture: Evening Standard/Hulton Archive/Getty Images

Jean Rosemary Shrimpton (born 7 November 1942)[4] is an English model and actress. She was an icon of Swinging London and is considered to be one of the world’s first supermodels.

In other books I Edward Donegan assert she was tied to the British secretive Illuminati out of wedlock lines.

Between Yoko Ono, John Lennon, Jean Rosemary (repeat Jen Rosemary) shrimp soup variety the Anti-Vietnam War Anti- US Anti-CIA sentiment of these British MBEs was in doubt as still loyal the regime chnage politics they were pumping out White Album coy lyrics for, about birthdys and Helter Skelter DNA helixes under study.

All four Beatles were made Members Of The British Empire in 1965 for services to British industry. The Fab Four had brought millions into the British economy – but some commentators cynically suggested that the move was more of a PR stunt by the then-current Labour Prime Minister Harold Wilson to earn favour with younger voters.

Ringo Starr was happy to accept the award, which was announced in June of 1965 as the band were putting this finishing touches to their album and film Help! He later said: “I had no problem with it – none of us had any problems with it in the beginning. We all thought it was really thrilling.”

Lennon had been uneasy accepting an honour from the Queen in the first place and by the end of the decade, he was even more opposed to being endorsed by the establishment.

His relationship with Yoko Ono had garnered criticism from the public, he’d been busted by police over an alleged drug offence and ridiculed in the press for his post-wedding “bed-in”, in which he and Ono held a press conference in their honeymoon suite.

The “bed-in” was all part of John and Yoko’s campaign for peace, started in response to the ongoing conflict in Vietnam. At the same time, the British government supported the Nigerian government in a civil war, which saw the unrecognised state of Biafra attacked and driven to famine in a bloody conflict that intensified across the summer of 1969.

In 1947 King joined the Central Intelligence Agency. Eventually he became chief of CIA’s Western Hemisphere Division. On 11th December, 1959, King sent a confidential memorandum to Allen W. Dulles, the director of the CIA. King argued that in Cuba there existed a “far-left dictatorship, which if allowed to remain will encourage similar actions against U.S. holdings in other Latin American countries.” (1)

As a result of this memorandum Dulles established Operation 40. It obtained this name because originally there were 40 agents involved in the operation. Later this was expanded to 70 agents. The group was presided over by Richard NixonTracy Barnes became operating officer of what was also called the Cuban Task Force. The first meeting chaired by Barnes took place in his office on 18th January, 1960, and was attended by David Atlee PhillipsE. Howard HuntJack Esterline, and Frank Bender.

According to Fabian Escalante, a senior officer of the Cuban Department of State Security (G-2), in 1960 Richard Nixon recruited an “important group of businessmen headed by George Bush (Snr.) and Jack Crichton, both Texas oilmen, to gather the necessary funds for the operation”. This suggests that Operation 40 agents were involved in freelance work. (2)

It is known that at this time that George Bush and Jack Crichton were involved in covert right-wing activities. In 1990 Common Cause Magazinemagazine argued that: “The CIA put millionaire and agent George Bush in charge of recruiting exiled Cubans for the CIA’s invading army; Bush was working with another Texan oil magnate, Jack Crichton, who helped him in terms of the invasion.” (3) This story was linked to the release of “a memorandum in that context addressed to FBI chief J. Edward Hoover and signed November 1963, which reads: Mr. George Bush of the CIA” (4)

King officially retired from the CIA in 1967 but soon came back as a CIA consultant. He was CEO of the Amazon Natural Drug Company, known as a front for the CIA.

Joseph Caldwell King, the son of Warren Charles King and Jessie Calhoun Caldwell, was born in Brooklyn, New York on 5th October, 1900.

King worked for Johnson and Johnson in South America before joining the Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs (OCIAA). He was stationed in Argentina from 1941 to 1945, where he was engaged in feeding deceptive information to Japanese agents. For his service in 1943 to 1946 as a military attaché in Argentina, Lt. Col. King was awarded the Legion of Merit. He oversaw Frank Sturgis.

Joseph Caldwell King died on 27th January, 1977.

Frank Fiorini (Sturgis) was born in Norfolk, Virginia, on 9th December, 1924. Six years later his family moved to Philadelphia. In 1942 Sturgis joined the United States Marines and during the Second World War served in the Pacific.

Sanjenis cover-up

Frances Anne King Babbitt. Decembert13 1925. These CIA people are tied to Richard Nixon, Bush, and Lyndon B Johnson in Operation40.

Recently I discovered that someone named Jose Perdomo
was a member of Brigade 2506 during the Bay of Pigs
Invasion in 1961, a failed CIA operation to overthrow
Fidel Castro. Perdomo’s full name was Jose Joaquin
Sanjenis Perdomo, but he used his middle names,
Joaquin Sanjenis, as an alias. He also called himself
Sam Jenis. It was learned that Sanjenis worked closely
with convicted Watergate burglar Frank Sturgis
(deceased) for about ten years on the CIA’s payroll,
running “Operation 40,” a black ops unit that
performed assassinations, among other things.

Salvador Astucia's profile photo

Salvador Astucia https://groups.google.com/g/rec.music.beatles/c/RRPd-kZVqYc?pli=1

unread,

The topic of Jose Perdomo has always been extremely sensitive
on this newsgroup (rec.music.beatles) for some reason.
As many of you know, Jose Perdomo was the doorman at the
Dakota on the night John Lennon was murdered. What you may
not know is Perdomo’s name was withheld from the public for
six years after Lennon’s murder.

The following is a summary (Chapter 4 from my book,
“Rethinking John Lennon’s Assassination…”) of how
I was attacked on r.m.b. for discussing Perdomo too
aggressively in the spring of 2003:

“Chapter 4: FBI Surveillance on the Internet”
http://www.jfkmontreal.com/john_lennon/Chapter04.htm

You will notice that the following people attempted
to stop all discussion of Jose Perdomo:

– Tna Yzarc (later learned this was a screen name
of Nick Andrews; it’s “Crazy Ant” spelled
backwards.)
– Black Monk
– Charlie Gauger (aka, Mister Charlie)
– Ehtue
– Susan from PA

Recently I discovered that someone named Jose Perdomo
was a member of Brigade 2506 during the Bay of Pigs
Invasion in 1961, a failed CIA operation to overthrow
Fidel Castro. Perdomo’s full name was Jose Joaquin
Sanjenis Perdomo, but he used his middle names,
Joaquin Sanjenis, as an alias. He also called himself
Sam Jenis. It was learned that Sanjenis worked closely
with convicted Watergate burglar Frank Sturgis
(deceased) for about ten years on the CIA’s payroll,
running “Operation 40,” a black ops unit that
performed assassinations, among other things.

This new information about Sanjenis introduces the
very real possibility that Sanjenis may have been
Lennon’s true killer. This would explain why
Nick Andrews, Black Monk, Charlie Gauger, Ehtue,
and Susan from PA tried so desperately to stop
any discussion about Perdomo (aka, Sanjenis)
a year and a half ago when I first broached the
subject.

It appears that Nick Andrews, Black Monk, Charlie
Gauger, Ehtue, and Susan from PA are not your
garden variety Usenet Thought Police (spooks).
These people are criminals, directly involved
in the conspiracy to murder John Lennon.
By obstructing public dialog about Sanjenis,
most likely Lennon’s killer, they made themselves
part of a criminal conspiracy.

Sanjenis’s background is described in the following
article:

Jose Joaquin Sanjenis Perdomo, Lennon’s true assassin(?)
http://www.jfkmontreal.com/john_lennon/Usenet/Perdomo.htm

Frank Fiorini (Sturgis) was born in Norfolk, Virginia, on 9th December, 1924. Six years later his family moved to Philadelphia. In 1942 Sturgis joined the United States Marines and during the Second World War served in the Pacific.

After the war Sturgis attended the Virginia Polytechnic Institute before joining the Norfolk Police Department. In 1948 he became the manager of the Whitehorse Tavern. He also served in the U.S. Army (1950-52). This was followed by a spell as the owner-manager of Top Hat Nightclub in Virginia Beach.

In 1956 Sturgis moved to Cuba. He also spent time in MexicoVenezuelaCosta RicaGuatemalaPanama and Honduras. In 1958 he made contact with the Central Intelligence Agency at the US Consulate in Santiago. Over the next few years he worked as an undercover agent for the agency. His control officer was Sam Jenis.

Sturgis also became involved in gunrunning to Cuba. On 30th July, 1958, Sturgis was arrested for illegal possession of arms. However, he was released without charge. There is some evidence that in 1959 Sturgis had contact with Lewis McWillie, the manager of the Tropicana Casino.

After Fidel Castro gained control of Cuba, Sturgis formed the Anti-Communist Brigade. In his book, Counter-Revolutionary Agent, Hans Tanner claims that the organization was “being financed by dispossessed hotel and gambling owners” who operated under Fulgencio Batista.

According to a declassified FBI document Sturgis participated in anti-Castro leaflet-dropping raid over Cuba with Pedro Diaz Lanz, former chief of Cuban Air Force in October 1959. Pedro Luis Díaz Lanz (July 8, 1926 in Havana, Cuba – June 26, 2008 MiamiU.S.) was Chief of the Revolutionary Air Force of Cuba under Fidel Castro, before and after the 1959 Cuban Revolution.

Pedro Luis Díaz Lanz (July 8, 1926 in Havana, Cuba – June 26, 2008 Miami, U.S.) was Chief of the Revolutionary Air Force of Cuba under Fidel Castro, before and after the 1959 Cuban Revolution.

Contents
1 Life in Cuba
2 Life after Cuba
3 Notes
4 See also
5 External links
Life in Cuba
In 1957, Pedro Díaz Lanz joined Fidel Castro’s rebel group in Santiago, Cuba. He was employed as a commercial pilot with the airline Aerovías Q. He later acted as head of the Revolutionary Air Force, and during 1958 he smuggled weapons and ammunition from Costa Rica and Florida into Cuba by air.[1]

After the Cuban Revolution on 1 January 1959, he was confirmed as head of the new Revolutionary Air Force as well as Castro’s personal pilot. Within months, he became vocal about his opposition to the influence of communists on the new revolutionary government. On 29 June 1959, Fidel Castro relieved him of his post, and he left immediately by boat for Florida with his second wife and 3 of his six children, and reportedly with Frank Sturgis, a fellow anti-communist.[2]

Life after Cuba
On 14 July 1959, Díaz was interviewed by the US Senate Internal Security subcommittee, where he gave out the first account of Fidel’s planned move towards communism.[2]

On 21 October 1959 he carried out one of his most notorious acts, flying a twin-engined bomber (variously reported as a B-25 or B-26) over Havana while dropping anti-communist leaflets, along with his brother Marcos Diaz Lanz. Pedro Diaz Lanz piloted and Marcos Diaz Lanz threw the leaflets down from an open bomb hatch. The unsuccessful gunfire from armed forces on the ground caused injuries and deaths, leading to unsubstantiated reports of bombs being dropped from the aircraft.[1][2]

By April 1960, he was recruited by the CIA and became a member of Operation 40, a group of CIA operatives who specialized in carrying out secret anti-Castro assassinations and acts of sabotage.[2] Then on May 27 of 1960, the Miami Herald published a list of names of pilots who were placed on a U.S. Government ‘Blacklist’ thereby prohibiting them from flying to Cuba; on that list was Pedro Luis Diaz Lanz.[3]

Díaz committed suicide with a gunshot wound to the chest in 2008 at the age of 81 after years of poverty and depression.[4]

Sturgis became involved with Marita Lorenz, who was having an affair with Fidel Castro. In January 1960, Sturgis and Lorenz took part in a failed attempt to poison Castro. It is also believed that Sturgis was involved in helping the CIA organize the Bay of Pigs invasion.

Sturgis was also a member of Operation 40. He later explained: “this assassination group (Operation 40) would upon orders, naturally, assassinate either members of the military or the political parties of the foreign country that you were going to infiltrate, and if necessary some of your own members who were suspected of being foreign agents… We were concentrating strictly in Cuba at that particular time. Actually, they were operating out of Mexico, too.”

On 19th December 1961, the Border Patrol in Miami reported that Sturgis/Fiorini was involved in a CIA operation that was trying to overthroe Fidel Castro. An investigation carried out by the FBI suggested the operation was being financed by Sergio Rojas.

Alexander Irwin Rorke, who was closely associated with Sturgis/Fiorini was interviewed by the FBI on 22nd June 1962. According to the agent: “In connection with the flights over Cuba, Rorke stated that Fiorini does not pilot the planes and acts for the most part as a co-pilot. The planes are rented in the United States and flown to bases outside the United States such as the Bahamas. In making the contract for the rental of the planes, usually someone other than Fiorini signs the contract, although Fiorini is in contact with local CIA agents in Miami relative to the details of the flight. Rorke stated that Fiorini has instructions that on these flights, if he is arrested or stopped, he is to notify the officers that they should telephone a number which is the number of the CIA office in the Miami area. Fiorini has also been informed, according to Rorke, that if anyone arrests him, CIA will get him out.”

According to the FBI agent: “Rorke went on to argue that he could not understand why the Bureau was interested now in the activities of Fiorini as all of Fiorini’s actions are fully known to CIA in Miami and there should be a record of his activities on file with CIA in Washington, D.C. Rorke stated he knows for a fact that Fiorini has not done anything on his own and that whatever he has done in the past he has done on instructions from CIA… Rorke advised that in the event Fiorini would be arrested for his anti-Castro activities, he, Rorke, having good connections with a well-known newspaper chain, will make plenty of trouble for those involved.”

Alexander Irwin Rorke claimed that their contact man was “Commander Anderson of the United States Navy, who is assigned to CIA overt office in New York”. This claim is supported by a declassified CIA memo’s from Anderson to Robert Trumbull Crowley on 9th January 1961: “Alex Rorke phoned from Miami to report that personnel in Varona group and other groups in process joining Dr. Bosch – Commander (of) Diego Party. According (to) Rorke, Frank Fiorini has been power behind scene.”

In an article published in the Florida Sun Sentinel on 4th December, 1963, Jim Buchanan claimed that Sturgis had met Lee Harvey Oswald in Miami shortly before the assassination of John F. Kennedy. Buchanan claimed that Oswald had tried to infiltrate the Anti-Communist Brigade. When he was questioned by the FBI about this story, Sturgis claimed that Buchanan had misquoted him regarding his comments about Oswald.

Sanjenis cover-up

m

Jan 21, 2005, 7:47:09 PM

On 21 Jan 2005 01:15:59 -0800, “Salvador Astucia” <cropdu…@cs.com> wrote: >

Gualdo H.

 started this petition to 

Inspector General of the United States Department of Justice, UK Attorney General, Europe

Latin Heritage Foundaton demands Justice for John Lennon.

John Lnnon was murdered by CIA Operation 40.

http://latinnewsagency.blogspot.com/2019/12/latin-heritage-foundaton-demands.html

The Murder of John Lennon by CIA Operation 40. By Gualdo Hidalgo

The night John Lennon was killed in the upscale Dakota apartment
complex in Manhattan, the night doorman called sick. Jose Perdomo, the
commander of Operation 40 – a CIA assassination squad- , showed up for
coverage. Posted by Gualdo Hidalgo, Latin Heritage Foundation’s
publisher

Amot-2 was the CIA code name for Jose Perdomo.

“Cryptonym: AMOT-2

Definition: Jose Joaquin Sanjenis Perdomo, also known as Joaquin
Sanjenis, titular head of the AMOT organization circa 1961 prior to the
Bay of Pigs landings and into 1962. His pseudonym was Carlos Blanco.”

Cryptonym: AMOT-2 MARY FERRELL FOUNDATION

“In the Shadows a Killer Waited”, James R. Gaines describes Mark Chapman
the man who supposedly “killed John Lennon”, together with “the
Dakota’s night doorman, José Perdomo”.

“When Goresh left, Chapman had only the Dakota’s night doorman, Jose
Perdomo, to keep him company, Jose was an anti-Castro Cuban, and they
talked that night of the Bay of Pigs and the assassination of John F.
Kennedy.”

 In the Shadows a Killer Waited | PEOPLE.com
The presence of Jose Perdomo at the crime scene is the unequivocal proof that CIA murdered John Lennon.

Jose (Sanjenis) Perdomo, Chief of the Secret Service at the Presidential
Palace in Havana during President Carlos Prio Socarras, a CIA veteran,
worked for CIA/Miami station in the early 1960s, and recruited most of
the members of Operation 40 (a CIA assassination squad most of whom were
Cubans). Larry Hancock in his 2006 book, Someone Would Have Talked
reveals “Sanjenis, the individual in charge of Operation 40, was
actually the number one exile in the AMOT organization trained and
prepared by David Sánchez Morales. Jose Perdomo was a member of Brigade
2506 during the Bay of Pigs Invasion. Jose Perdomo was the control
officer that CIA assigned to Frank Sturgis when Sturgis joined CIA in
1958.

The presence of Jose Perdomo at the crime scene is the unequivocal proof that CIA murdered John Lennon.

Jose (Sanjenis) Perdomo, Chief of the Secret Service at the Presidential
Palace in Havana during President Carlos Prio Socarras, a CIA veteran,
worked for CIA/Miami station in the early 1960s, and recruited most of
the members of Operation 40 (a CIA assassination squad most of whom were
Cubans). Larry Hancock in his 2006 book, Someone Would Have Talked
reveals “Sanjenis, the individual in charge of Operation 40, was
actually the number one exile in the AMOT organization trained and
prepared by David Sánchez Morales. Jose Perdomo was a member of Brigade
2506 during the Bay of Pigs Invasion. Jose Perdomo was the control
officer that CIA assigned to Frank Sturgis when Sturgis joined CIA in
1958.

Jose Perdomo is also known as Jose Joaquin Sanjenis Perdomo, who sometimes uses the aliases Joaquin Sanjenis and Sam Jenis.

– Jose Perdomo was the doorman at the Dakota on Dec. 8, 1980, the night
Lennon was killed; Jose Perdomo was at the crime scene when the murder
occurred.

– Jose Perdomo told police Chapman was Lennon’s assailant. One of the
arresting officers, Peter Cullen, did not believe Chapman shot Lennon.
Cullen believed the shooter was a handyman at the Dakota, but Perdomo
convinced Cullen it was Chapman. Cullen thought Chapman “looked like a
guy who worked in a bank.”

Posted 10 December 2019

Sam Halper, who has been the Times correspondent in Havana and more recently in Miami, came to see me last week. He has excellent contracts among the Cuban exiles. One of Miro’s comments this morning reminded me that I have been meaning to pass on the following story as told me by Halper. Halper says that CIA set up something called Operation 40 under the direction of a man named (as he recalled) Captain Luis Sanjenis, who was also chief of intelligence. (Could this be the man to whom Miro referred this morning?) It was called Operation 40 because originally only 40 men were involved: later the group was enlarged to 70. The ostensible purpose of Operation 40 was to administer liberated territories in Cuba. But the CIA agent in charge, a man known as Felix, trained the members of the group in methods of third degree interrogation, torture and general terrorism. The liberal Cuban exiles believe that the real purpose of Operation 40 was to “kill Communists” and, after eliminating hard-core Fidelistas, to go on to eliminate first the followers of Ray, then the followers of Varona and finally to set up a right wing dictatorship, presumably under Artime. Varona fired Sanjenis as chief of intelligence after the landings and appointed a man named Despaign in his place. Sanjenis removed 40 files and set up his own office; the exiles believe that he continues to have CIA support. As for the intelligence operation, the CIA is alleged to have said that, if Varona fired Sanjenis, let Varona pay the bills. Subsequently Sanjenis’s hoods beat up Despaign’s chief aide; and Despaign himself was arrested on a charge of trespassing brought by Sanjenis. The exiles believe that all these things had CIA approval. Halper says that Lt Col Vireia Castro (1820 SW 6th Street, Miami; FR 4 3684) can supply further details. Halper also quotes Bender as having said at one point when someone talked about the Cuban revolution against Castro: “The Cuban Revolution? The Cuban Revolution is something I carry around in my checkbook.”

Published by Edward Paul Donegan

Civil libertarian https://archive.org/download/genoracketeering_202001/JulyDistUSSS.zip

Leave a comment