Dvd james files interview download






















The Russians used the same runways that we did. We drank in the same taverns that the Russians drank in. We shopped at the same stores. We knew the Russians, they knew us. They trained their people, we trained other people.

It was just a close operation. Q- Was there more than one of these White Star teams? A- There were several White Star teams, but they all worked in individual groups and one group would never know what the other group was doing for a specific reason: Each group was on its own to a certain extent, but they did not know what the next group was doing in case they were captured, tortured, killed or whatever, they could give nobody up.

Q- Did you ever hear the name Colonel Fletcher Prouty? A- Yes I did. Colonel Fletcher Prouty, he was the man in charge. Excellent man, excellent warrior, soldier. Good leader. Q- You knew him? A- I knew Colonel Fletcher Prouty personally, yes. Q- Nicoletti, he decides the Dal-Tex building is the place to go … and what made you choose the grassy knoll?

A- Mr. Nicoletti asked me: So if you back me up, Jimmy, what do you think would be the best spot for you? And I said: Well, the spot I like best is up on the grassy knoll behind that stockade fence.

Somebody out there wearing a flannel shirt, nobody is going to pay attention to me. And he said, Okay, what weapon are you going to use over there? I said: This I understand, I realize this. He said: You are not going to fire unless it becomes a necessity. So you got to be very alert on this. I got it, boss! And he said: What are you gonna use? And he looked at me and he says: Why? Why the Fireball? Now, a lot of people are gonna tell you that this particular weapon was not available at that time.

But this weapon was available. But this weapon had been manufactured as early as in We had a lot of trouble with the barrel blowing up when we used too big a round on it or something, overloads in it.

A lot of problems with it, but they finally reinforced the barrel, we got it where it worked pretty good. Q- Where did you get hold of a prototype weapon like the XP? A- It was given to me by David Phillips. I had received this maybe a year prior or 8 months. A year prior to the assassination. The gun had been used twice before on assassinations, but nobody like a president or nothing.

It was good for using if you want to get into a close place area or somewhere. Somebody might say why use a pistol?

Well, anybody that knows their weapons, this particular piece is very accurate. Very accurate up to yards. And especially with a 3 power scope on it. But the weapon had been used before, you could put it in a briefcase, you could walk anywhere with it, nobody would pay any attention to it. The case I had set up, I had a little loading press inside for it, in case I had to manufacture anything, I had a little holder for all the special rounds that were in it.

Everything was packed, foam rubber inside, the case was watertight, waterproof. Q- What did the case look like? A- The case was black. It was like an oversized briefcase basically speaking. Q- Leather on the outside? A- Leather on the outside. It had some little metal flaps on it, you know, for locking it up, you could lock the case. But the thing is you could take it, you could go anywhere, you looked like a businessman with it.

And I felt that was the best weapon to go with. And so. So then, like I say, the Dal-Tex building, that had to have been previously arranged with them, because they already had made arrangements to get the people in there. So the Dal-Tex could not have been a last minute decision, as far as that goes. Like me saying: Okay, yeah, I think the Dal-Tex building. He just used me as sounding board.

You are talking about getting into a specific office? A- Getting into a specific office, into a specific area somebody. A- Okay.

But the sole purpose of having a connection there, somebody that could get you into a place, into an office where you could open the door and you could have a window to shoot from. Q- Do you happen to know which office that was?

A- No, I do not know which office it was. Q- So what did you do? A- What did I do? We walked around the plaza for a little bit. I took him back over, I dropped Mr.

Nicoletti back off at the Dallas Cabana. And he got with Johnny, they therefore went back over there, I told them where the car would be pulled up alongside the building there and parked. He told me that they would come out of the building and they would get in that car.

They got into the building, they were there on their own. He knows what my job is, they will be in the car. Q- Where did you drop them off? Then I took a left-hand turn. I went down close to the freeway there. There is a gas station there. But they had a car there. This is where they had told me to stop, this is where he told me he would be getting out at.

They start walking across the parking lot. Q- Now this is before.? A- This is after the assassination. Q- After? Q- After you were walking around Dealey Plaza? A- After we walked around Dealey Plaza. There is still another hour to go probably before the assassination is gonna go down.

Q- Go back and make that statement: After we walked around for about an hour…. After we walked around Dealey Plaza I took Mr. Nicoletti back to the hotel, let him out of the vehicle, he went up and got with Johnny Roselli.

I took the car back to where it was supposed to be, made arrangements. If I have to, I steal a car and move it out of there. And at this point he told me: If we come out, I want the car close so I can get into it right away.

Because he would be carrying a rifle underneath this topcoat, his jacket, his topcoat. And would come out of there and secure that in the trunk. He would put it in the trunk, he had a key to the trunk.

They had a car waiting there. I never watched them walk across the parking lot to it. As soon as they got out, the door closed, I drove away. I went back to Mesquite , Texas. Q- Okay, again now, that was after all the shooting. A- That was after all the shooting. Q — So with Nicoletti you had walked around, you had determined the shooting positions, you take him back to the Cabana and he went up and met with Roselli.

Did you stay at the hotel or did you go back to the plaza? A- After I took Charles Nicoletti back to the hotel, I went back to the plaza, secured the car, got my briefcase out with the gun, with the Fireball in it. I went into the railroad yard. I secured that over there, put it away, so nobody would see it. I reversed my jacket inside out, I had taken my hat, grey fedora, … and my jacket was a grey poplin , we had these car jackets back then, they were like waist length, not a short jacket, they kind of come down a little bit, no car jacket like.

You might even remember that material, the poplin material? Grey color, had a shine to it. A pair of grey pants with it. And I reversed the jacket, it had the all-set plaids in it, kind-a-like checkers on the inside.

And I walked around the railroad yard and was waiting for the time to pass. The time was coming on. And then I go to the crowd, I went over there by the fence, I got there a little bit, a few minutes early, I reached down and I had taken the scope off the weapon. And I look up, I look over the fence and I was looking for people thru the scope. What I was looking for, was not to see who I knew, but I was looking for people that would be carrying a bulge, like a butt under the arm, I am looking for somebody with a weapon.

This way I have an idea. Q- Security people? Bulge along their hip, behind their back, like under the arm in a shoulder holster. But then I was amazed when I recognized several people out of the past that were in Dealey Plaza. Did I go talk to them? No, but I recognized them and see them there. Q- Who was that? A- I remember Aldo Vera, remember seeing him there. Aah, a lot of people say Jack Ruby was never there, but he was there before the motorcade got there, I know that for a fact, and even though I never knew Jack Ruby, but I was as close to him as I was to you in the coffee shop but I never spoke to him, I was never introduced to him.

Never said a word to Jack Ruby. But there is several people that I saw. Q- How about Frank Sturgis? A- Frank Sturgis, he was there. Q- How did you know Frank Sturgis?

I also knew Orlando Bosch. He was on scene. Q- How do you figure all those people were in Dealey Plaza? Maybe they know a building is going on fire or something. We had a few people out of the racetrack that got hurt that way, they were out of Maywood Park , they got hurt in a stampede like that. But basically speaking, if somebody knows something is going to happen, they have a tendency to go see it.

Most people are curious. You slow the car down and look out the window. Everybody does it. So a lot of people had come there for that reason, probably because they had heard these rumors and stuff that he was going to be assassinated in Dallas. That was no secret. Even the National Security Agency knew that. Q- What about Eugene Brading?

A- Eugene Braden? He was there that day. He was the … Eugene Braden was there for a specific reason: He had the contacts inside the Dal-Tex building. Q- So you probably stood behind that fence there for some little time?

A- Oh, only for a few …, I stayed away from the fence, I stayed basically in the yard, walk over to the fence, look over, stand a minute, then walk back away again.

But I was observing the area. Q- Were you a smoker at the time? A- Oh yes, I did smoke. Q- Were you smoking cigarettes that morning? A- I had smoked that day. I probably stepped on several cigarette butts and left them there. Most of them Pall Mall. Q- Was it muddy back there? A- It was very muddy. Let me put it this way: A couple of times I even took my shoes, put them above up the little country ledger and scraped the mud off the bottom of them. I hated getting mud on them.

Q- What clothes was Frank Sturgis wearing? Remember the World War II bomber jackets that pilots used to wear? He was wearing one like that. James Files points to Jim Marrs bomber jacket Like that, like the one you got right there.

He had the brass buttons on it, I remember that. You see that flashing you know. Q- Which location in Dealey Plaza was he standing? I was to the right of those. Q- Draw me a map! But he was to the left and just standing off the sidewalk, he was standing in the grass itself.

Q- And this was shortly before the assassination or …. A- This was just a few minutes before the motorcade got there. Q- That fence is kind of an L-shape. Q- So where were you?

A- I was an eight or ten feet down there, there was a tree branch that hung right over me, I was behind that, kind of gave me a little camouflage. Q- Okay, uh. A- No, I never paid no attention. I never noticed the ambulance. So then what happened? The motorcade came? So I had walked away from the fence and I come back over, secured everything, got it ready, I could hear the rumble, the people murmuring, so you know the motorcade is approaching.

So I got ready and opened it up. As far as I could see at this point, the president has not been hit in the head at this time.

I am not asking why. Okay, whatever you say. At this point, as he starts to approach and come behind that freeway sign. And at this point … either I shoot or I put it in the suitcase and leave. One or the other. I took the shot. I fired one shot, one shot only. Q- where were you aiming.? A- Oh, I was aiming for his right eye, which to me is the left side of his head looking head on.

As I squeezed, take off my round, his head moved forward, I missed and I come in right along the temple. Just right behind the eye. Q- Here or in the hairline? I know I hit behind the eye. Somewhere within a half inch diameter right there pointing again.

Q- So there were actually two shots almost simultaneously? A- You think he got hit as you squeezed? It was already in process, the head started forward. To me. Nicoletti shoot Kennedy, but I know he was the man in the Dal-Tex building, the man supposed to be doing the shooting. Therefore the head started forward and as far as I am concerned Mr. Nicoletti hit him at that point.

As I squeezed off my round, the head started forward, I hit it and blew the head backwards. Q- So the exit went where in the rear?

Q- Yeah, but where was the exit? On the right side or on the left side? A- Aah, partially, most of it on the right side I guess, back there where this section came right out. I did not like John F.

Q- Did you ever see autopsy pictures? I wanna say the book they sent me was probably called High Treason. Q- Can I show you a picture and ask you for your comments? A- You are gonna make me put my glasses on? What do you think of that picture? A- What is my conclusion? A-That is my conclusion! Q- Hold on! Take your glasses off! And at this point … loss of sound. At this point, I got to figure what she was picking up was a piece of the skull. Q- Did you see anybody splattered with blood and matter?

I am only assuming, I will say they probably got splattered because there was stuff everywhere. But one other thing I want to point out about the Remington. Now then, for this type of weapon there is very little recoil. And I have had a lot of criticism over the years over this here. Especially when you are using an extended barrel weapon with a scope on it.

Q- We have verified all that. A- Okay, but ah. Q- Okay! So did the motorcade ever come to a stop? I know I was waiting, It kept moving, it had to be moving but very slow. But like I say, when the car got even almost up to that Stemmons freeway sign there, and that was one of them old ones, not like these new ones they got today with a nice little skinny metal post and a little sign, these had these wooden legs on or what are you gonna call it. The posts that held it were wood. Anyway, I had my shot.

I took my shot. Q- Did you ever notice if any of those rounds hit that sign? A- No. Q- Were you nervous in any way? A- Was I nervous? A lot of people may find this hard to believe, but you have got to understand something: The first time you go into the field of fire, when you go into a firefight in combat, you might be nervous or skimmish. But after you have been initiated into the field of fire or whatever you gonna call it, combat, firefight, a lot of people got different names for it, skirmishes, you get used to it, you get over it.

You know, and to me … a lot of people are going to think I am probably sick, but when you get into a firefight, that was the ultimate high. A firefight to me, being in the service, that was one of the greatest things there was. It was the ultimate high. When I was young I used to love to go shoot deer, rabbit, squirrels, whatever I could get, pheasants.

But after you went into the jungles and you have hunted men and you stalked a man down and you have hunted a man down on equal terms where he can kill you, you loose interest to go shoot a defenseless animal. I have come to where I loved animals much more than that. Q- Were there any, while you were behind the fence, mostly before the shooting started, was there anyone in your vicinity? A- Aah, there was nobody behind that stockade fence but me at that point.

All the time I was there, I was alone. But in front of the fence the two people that I was mostly concerned about, they were a couple of guys wearing suits, roughly on top of the grassy knoll there, and they were a little away in front of me, 15 maybe 20 feet away, whatever, you know, I did not know who they were. Q- In front of the fence would be at the side of the railroad yard? The stockade fence. They are between the fence and the sidewalk.

Between me and the motorcade. They are on top of the knoll there. They are kinda like looking over everybody and watching people. So I figured maybe they were just a couple of businessmen.

People that wanted to see the president go by. A lot of people are strange, everybody wants to see celebrities go by. And uh. They stopped him and he never came no farther. He went back down off the knoll. Q- You were told not to worry? Q- Okay, so you are feet or so down from the corner towards the railroad yard? A- Eight or ten feet, some like that, yeah, from the end where.

Q- Were you halfway in between. Halfway is a little more down to my right. That would have been halfway down. Did you ever notice a GI? A guy in a cap and uniform? A- No, I did not. Did you notice people on the railroad bridge? A- I am pretty well under cover. The only time that people could have seen me from the viaduct or from the railroad yard, was when I walking down the tracks next to some of the boxcars.

Q- So you recall that nobody was with you behind the fence? A- I said before, there was nobody behind the stockade fence with me. I am the only person back there. Anybody else back there is over at the railroad yard by the trains. Q- How about down by the corner there. Did you have a clear view? Could somebody have been down by that corner that you might not have seen? A- They could have been down there.

A couple of cars drove through while I was there. As long as nobody got out and nobody come by me, they were of no concern. Q- But shortly before there was no one?

A- Right before the assassination, there was nobody standing next to me. Q- How about three minutes before the assassination? A- Not by me. I was alone back there. I had no other party standing by me. Somebody was there in the yard or down at the other end, you know, 30 or 40 feet away, that has no bearing to me because I paid them no attention.

Q- Well, there is this eyewitness report of the guy in the railroad tower, Lee Bowers. One of them fits the description of you. But I was alone and there was nobody with me. Q- All right, so as you walk away and these two guys cover for you, describe your actions then.

Q- You have already reversed your jacket? Q- How long did it take to do all this? A- Just a few seconds. Q- Put your glasses back on. Is there any chance that is you off the wall back there? Q- I have a blowup here! This would be probably 50 seconds after. It could have been. Q- Is that the direction you took? Did you walk back towards the depository?

A- Yeah, right! I went in that direction. Q- And there was nobody around you even at that point? If I see somebody aah. Q- This is. A- Right! Q- Were you on the south side or the north side of the street? Is that the tree you were talking about? A- Yep, you can see the branches from back over here coming right down over the wall.

A- Right there! Q- In this picture there is a uuh.. Right here next to that tree. And if you blow it up it looks. Do you remember which side of the tree you were on? Was it to your left or your right? A- I could be mistaken, I believe… no, the tree was to my right. It had to be to my right. Q- Yes, the sign is here. This is the blowup. This is sky and this is sky and this is the shape. Do you see a hat in there? A- Do I see what? Q- A hat. A- Not to me!

Q- Okay, but this spot is right next to the tree- Did you ever notice those people? A- Aah, there was people out there … looking at another picture I remember more people than that being around.

But aah. I remember people falling down, laying down, jumping down, whatever you wanna call it. Q- What about these two guys right here pointing at umbrella man and his accomplice? Did you notice them? Or did any of those look familiar or did any of those look like some of the guys that you saw, that you recognized? A- They could have been.

Q- By the time the motorcade got there, the sun was out, pretty bright. It was warm right? A- Yep. Yep, it was nice out. It broke to be a nice day. Q- It was nice. Did you see anybody with an umbrella? A- Aah. Q- Why not? A- Why not? All you can do is point it. Q- Ah. A- Oh yeah. The agency, they had those, yeah. Not only did they use hem. Q- In it was the CIA, right?

In the CIA had an umbrella weapon and then tell us what you just said. To me the weapon was strictly an in-house weapon where you had to be right on top of the target.

There is no way you can stand out on a sidewalk and take an umbrella and point it at a moving target without aiming. I mean this is a lot of fantasy here. I thought the umbrellas, and they come out with them and they had the little darts in them, they had the poison on the end of them where you could jab a guy going downstairs or in a house or in a room, any place where there is a lot of people moving, mulling around together.

You can walk up to somebody and you can shoot a fairly small 22 caliber round in him. On my right, this one right here, that sure favors Frank Sturgis. Q- It favors Frank Sturgis? A- Yeah, right here. Look at the hairline. Q- The hairline? All right, so you walk away. Oh, by the way, where did you park the Chevrolet? You parked the Chevrolet on Houston Street?

Right next to the Dal-Tex building. Q- Ah.. Did you park on that street? A- I parked on the street right next to it, yeah. Q- Was it head-in parking, or was it a parking lot, or was it straight. A- Well, what you want to call it. A parking space, parking lot. Cars were parked there. Q- A row of cars? A- Rail of cars, row of cars. I backed it in there and parked it so he Nicoletti could have access to the trunk. Q- So the back end to your. A- Yeah, Well, front end pointing forward.

Q- Yeah, forward towards the road. A- When I came out of there, I made a right hand turn. Q- Onto Houston? A- Onto Houston, yeah, going north. Q- All right. Q- So as you walked past, did you just walk straight to the car? A- I went straight to the car. I went right to the car. I had one thing on my mind. Anybody approaching me with the determination to stop me, to question me, detain me, whatever you wanna call it, or anything else, all I wanna do now is to reach my destination, which is the car, put the case in the backseat there, on the floor, like Chuck and me had already figured out, I want to get in the car, start it up and drive away.

Q- Was the car empty when you got there? A- No sir. Q- As soon as you got in the car, you could start up.? A- As soon as I got to the car I opened the door, set the case in the back behind the front seat, got right in the car, lit the ignition and gone. Q- Did anybody say anything at that point? A- Nobody said nothing to me. At that point we pull out and as we went down the street heading for the intersection, the only thing that was said to me was.

I said I had one choice. I said at this point, you told me we were going for a headshot, there had been no headshot. I said I was just following my orders.

Q- Did he say anything to that? A- That was the end of it. He told me at the intersection to make a left and pull over at the gas station. Q- Did you take that as criticism? A- I took it as criticism. Q- Did he criticize you very often? The only thing he asked me if I thought I overreacted. A- He accepted it. Q- The shell casing — Go back there to the point after you fired the round and tell us about ejecting the shell.

At this point I am fixing to lose my field of fire. When I took my shot and I knelt back down at the briefcase, I injected the point casing in there, I picked up another live round, put it in and closed the bolt on it. I took the shell casing and I bit down on it.

I took it out and I looked at it and I set it on the stockade fence. And there was an indentation from my teeth on the shell casing, on the ridge by the orifice?

And I walked away. Q- Why did you do that? Nothing can go wrong. And I did that because.. We did a few other jobs and we did some.

I might put a quarter on the forehead and we put him in the ground, you know, we might bury him somewhere.. Two bit gambler. I might put a nickel and a dime in each eye socket, a nickel in one eye, a dime in the other one. You know. Q- You would leave that as a kind of your calling card? A- Aah, more or less, you might say that. Nicoletti had laughed at me when I do things like that.

You can say calling card, trait, whatever you wanna do. He used to laugh at me over it and he told me: Jimmy, just do the job, you do it and forget about it! Q- Would Mr.

Nicoletti have been okay with you doing this in Dealey Plaza? A- Oh, if he would have known I did that in Dealey Plaza , right now he is probably turning over in his grave for me doing something that stupid. But uh.. Nicoletti criticized me one other time. Q- Jimmy. Q- Have you got any speculation, any idea for a second. A- I have no idea whatsoever. I ejected the shell casing. Mine was a Remington cartridge, manufactured prior to , I bit it, I set it on the stockade fence. I had no empty shell casings for a with me at all.

Q- The shell casing by the way, was found not in the exact spot where you left it, but a little bit further at the other side of the fence. A- Well, I look at it this way: Whoever was searching, somebody looking, anybody could have looked at it, they could have thrown it over there, somebody could have stepped on it.

Who knows? I know where I put it! Q- The guns that you brought to Dallas , was the Fireball the only Fireball? Q- You had another Fireball? A- No, I only had one Fireball! But I had a couple of rifles in the car.

I had a shotgun in the car, I had a couple of other handguns. I brought down probably half a dozen of different weapons. Q- My impression though is: That was the only. A- That was the.

Like I said, I has a total of six rounds, okay? I got six rounds for the Remington Fireball. I had no empty casings there. The other casings that I brought down with that, I had had six special loads, but the round that I fired were standard rounds and I had no empty casings with me. Those were disposed when I was out there in Mesquite. Q- Because they can match? A- Yes they can. Q- Do you have any idea about the possibility of other hit-teams in Dealey Plaza that day?

To my knowledge, and to my knowledge only, I never knew of another hit team that was in the area for Kennedy that day. If there was another team there, I have no knowledge of it whatsoever. Q — But it could be? A- Anything is possible. And like I say, I never saw Charles Nicoletti pull the trigger. But he was the shooter from what I understand with him.

Q- You saw Richard Cain there. Could he have been a shooter? A- Richard Cain. He was on location and so was a guy by the name of Milwaukee Phil. His name is Philip Alderisio. Q- You think Lee Harvey Oswald fired any shots that day?

A- Lee Harvey Oswald never fired a shot. And if anybody knows what a paraffin test is, and we have actual court documents on where Lee Harvey Oswald was given a paraffin test by the Dallas Police Department, and on this document it plainly states: Deceased: J. Deceased John F. Suspect: Lee Harvey Oswald. And they took a paraffin test. His face, his hand , his arm, I guess the side of his neck,..

And anybody that goes to a firing range or fire a weapon, knows that if you fire a 38 revolver or any type of revolver, the blow-back is coming by this part of your hand pointing at top of hand and your wrist. The only reason he had those nitrates in the palm of his hand is because he was holding spent shell casings when I calibrated the scope.

There were still traces of that. Q- Okay, so you left Mr. Nicoletti and Roselli off this gas station where they had a car. Do you remember what type of car it was? There was a car there. I mean, they said they had a car there, but there were several cars there parked up on the side. I did not wait, I did not watch them walk across the lot. They exited the car. When Mr.

Nicoletti closed up the door. Pause in taping. A- Okay, when I pulled out from the intersection, I made a left-hand turn there at the intersection, I went down by the gas station. When I pulled over at the gas station to let them out of the car, I left them out of the Chevy I am in. They opened the door as they exited it.

As Mr. I told him: Okay Boss! He closed the door, they walked across to go into the parking of the gas station there. There were several cars parked over there. I have no idea, no knowledge which particular car they went to.

Files during which Mr. Files confessed that he fired the fatal last shot into the right front temple of John F. A transcript of Mr.

Files's confession follows. Included in the transcript is documentation and research in italic font based on existing evidence uncovered by leading JFK assassination researchers and authors. The purpose of this writing is to compare the confession of James E. Files to a majority of the evidence that has been uncovered in the last 34 years relative to the assassination. Readers are invited to review the following and to judge the veracity of Mr.

Files's confession for themselves. Each reference is assigned a number and is listed by that number in the bibliography. When a reference is cited in the text, the references's bibliographic number is given. Page numbers, if any, appear after the reference number. If the entire reference is being cited, then only its number is given. For example, Mark Lane's book Rush to Judgment is listed as reference number 4 in the bibliography.

If the entire book is being cited, the citation will look like this: 4. If pages are cited from the book, the citation will appear as follows: The only exceptions to this method are when information is cited or quoted from the Warren Commission's report and from the appendices to the report of the House Select Committee on Assassinations.

Thus, for example, 6 HSCA refers to pages of volume 6 of the appendices to the Select Committee's report. A: My name is James Files and I changed my name basically at the end of for purposes of I took the name Files in , my real name is James Sutton. Q: Say that again. A: My real name is James Sutton but I changed my name in late due to the fact that at that time I wished to get married and raise a family.

Q: And what is your name now? I raised a family under that name, James Files. Q: Did you change your name for any particular reason or anything involved in your past? A: I changed my name for a particular reason because I had been working with a radical Cuban group and what we wanted to do at that time was to protect my identity so they wouldn't know who I really was when I got married because of my family life.

I didn't want anyone to retaliate on the things that we were doing so I took on a different name that was authorized to me through a government agency. Q: Were you ever in the armed services?

A: I was in the 82nd Airborne. I went in ' January and in July 10 of , I believe it was July 10, we shipped out to Laos.

I was 82nd Airborne. A: My duties at that time I was there strictly as an advisor.. There was just a handful of Americans working with the Laotians at that time. Q: How long did you serve there? A: I was there through Q: You mentioned to me at one time that you were in jeopardy of being court martialed could you elaborate on that a little bit?

A: I really don't wish to elaborate on that part of the court martial. It had to do in the field but not of cowardice, it was something that I did to hold face with the Laotian Army.

Q: Could you tell me how you first became involved in organized crime activities? A: Well, I first became Nicoletti had taken a shine to my driving and he'd watched me on several occasionsand he had asked me once if I would drive him one evening.

I took him out and test drove his car that we'd just picked up.. Q: Who was Charles Nicoletti?



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