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Blood, Money, & Power: How LBJ Killed JFK
 
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Blood, Money, & Power: How LBJ Killed JFK [Paperback]

Barr McClellan
1.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Paperback: 416 pages
  • Publisher: Skyhorse Publishing (1 Feb 2011)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 161608197X
  • ISBN-13: 978-1616081973
  • Product Dimensions: 22.7 x 15.2 x 2 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 1.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 298,293 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Product Description

Review

It s hard not to read this work and not shout Guilty as hell! --Walt Brown, editor of "JFK/Deep Politics Quarterly"

Product Description

Blood, Money, & Power exposes the secret, high-level conspiracy in Texas that led to President John F. Kennedy s death and the succession of Lyndon B. Johnson as president in 1963. Attorney Barr McClellan, a former member of L.B.J. s legal team, uses hundreds of newly released documents, including insider interviews, court papers, and the Warren Commission, to illuminate the maneuvers, payoffs, and power plays that revolved around the assassination of Kennedy and to expose L.B.J. s involvement in the murder plot.In addition to revealing new information, McClellan answers common questions surrounding the assassination of our thirty-fifth president. Who had the opportunity, motive, and means to assassinate J.F.K.? Who controlled the investigation and findings of the Warren Commission? This historically significant book is proof that absolute power, money, blood, corruption, and deception were at the heart of politics in the early 1960s, and it represents the very best investigative journalism has to offer.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 31 people found the following review helpful
The usual hogwash 8 Mar 2005
By A Customer
Format:Hardcover
If you are remotely interested in buying this book, you will probably find it fascinating. Yet more pointless speculation, 'backed up' with spurious, irrelevant or non-existent facts, in the desperate attempt to either: (a) invest the murder of a fallen hero (!!, yes, hero, he wasn't a reactionary, mafia-tied, corrupt, morally deficient playboy, he was a defender of liberty and champion of democracy everywhere, donch'a know??) with some meaning, or: (b), more likely, make a pot of money for the author from credulous idiots who lap all or any conspiracies up without a hint of cynicism.
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0 of 9 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
The old 'LBJ did it' chestnut is given another ponderous airing in this 1994 book by the disbarred lawyer Barr McClellan - that's right - he's dishonest.

He was nabbed for forging a $35,000 deed of trust in October of 1982. He had to repay it.

All the usual nonsense is here and it's all been heard before.

All of the usual 'characters' are here, too.

Madeline Brown, another convicted forger - she actually forged a family will! Nice!

Billy Sol Estes, Mac Wallace, all and sundry are implicated in the plot that never was.

Don't waste any money on buying it or any time in reading it - it's pure fantasy.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com:  105 reviews
120 of 122 people found the following review helpful
A coup d'etat -- the murder of JFK by his vice-president LBJ 5 Oct 2003
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
I found this book to be utterly compelling, forgiving the "faction" sections in favor of the real facts presented. Barr McClellan, former attorney of Lyndon B. Johnson, steps forward and claims that LBJ assassinated JFK. The evidence better be good.

The key piece of evidence given is a latent fingerprint. It was taken from a box, possibly used as a sniper's mount, on the 6th Floor of the Texas Schoolbook Depository Building (TSDB) where Oswald allegedly shot at Kennedy.

But the fingerprint is not Oswald's.

An expert chosen by McClellan was shown the latent print with no prior knowledge of its context, and found that it matched a fingerprint on record for a Texan named Mac Wallace. The affidavit of this expert, Nathan Darby, is impressive, as are his credentials. Darby found a minimum of 14 matching points, whereas the FBI had inferior prints and far fewer matching points from the barrel of the gun Oswald ostensibly used. (Publishers Weekly, in their recent review, referred to this key latent print as a questionable "smudge," and devalued the book as a result. But on what basis? The reader should note that the Warren Commission took this latent print extremely seriously; so seriously that they circulated an internal memorandum among themselves -- exhibited in the book -- expressing "anxious" concern over it.) That memorandum and the latent fingerprint set the stage.

Together they are certainly worthy of examination -- and of a book, if the right links can be proven. That this book is written by Barr McClellan, Texas insider and former lawyer for Johnson, makes the potential all the more compelling. From behind the wall of the attorney-client privilege, the details come forward.

The question then becomes this:

If the latent print proves Mac Wallace was on the sixth floor of the TSDB, then what was Wallace's relationship to LBJ's inner circle?

Wallace, it turns out, was the lover of Josefa Johnson, LBJ's sister. Wallace murdered Douglas Kinser, her other lover, in a fit of rage. The trial was handled by LBJ's attorneys, Edward Clark and associates. (Clark, a Texas super-lawyer, was the kingmaker behind Johnson and the leader of their group. He made Barr McClellan the youngest partner in his law firm.)
Wallace was convicted of the murder, but walked away with a suspended sentence.

Soon after his conviction, Wallace was hired at LTV, a company owned by D.H Byrd, a player in Texas big oil.
Clark got him the job. It so happens that Byrd owned the Texas School Book Depository building.

The connections do not end there.

Read the book for the whole story. It's really worth the time. The chain of causation explaining Wallace's link to the Clark-LBJ inner circle is fascinating -- and very probably incriminating. The beginning of the text is a little circuitous, but McClellan hits his stride soon enough and lays the evidence bare. Walt Brown - a very good, solid JFK author and noted assassination expert -stands behind McClellan.

Bottom line for this reader: If Darby's 42 years as a fingerprint expert are valuable; and if the Warren Commission did not see this print as a "smudge," but as a key piece of evidence to be reckoned with - and they documented it as such -- then McClellan has some very real evidence and a strong case. See for yourself, I say. There is enough evidence presented in the book to enable careful readers to form an opinion of their own.

(Note: The details of LBJ's life are also compelling on their own. Here is a bio on him written by someone who represented his political and money interests.)

89 of 90 people found the following review helpful
Valenti pressures the History Channel, and proves the point! 8 April 2004
By E. Parkinson - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Anyone questioning the veracity of Barr McClellan's information would be fully convinced after watching the embarassing job of back-peddaling that Jack Valenti and other powerful Johnson administration millionaires forced upon the History Channel in a rebuttal of November's broadcast of "the Guilty Men" documentary (based in part on some of the evidence in McClellan's insightful book). Three dubious "historians" were paid to rebut the evidence in McClellan's book and the History Channel documentary... but instead of dissecting any of McClellan's 68 exhibits of courtroom quality evidence, they chose instead to attack his character through complete falsehoods about McClellan's past. They glossed over McClellan's 14 years as a member of the Clark Law Firm (handling all of the legal, personal and professional business transactions for L.B.J.), and blatantly lied about the circumstances surrounding McClellan's departure from the firm and their attempts to discredit him with accusations (...)(which were fully dismissed and characterized as harrassing abuses of power by the Clark-Texas-Power mob). Now the Texas / Johnson apologists have pressured the History Channel to present a one-hour "discussion" about the facts presented in McClellan's book and the "Guilty Men" documentary. So why didn't they discuss the evidence? Could it be that it's easier to attack the messenger than disprove the obvious message? I've been ashamed of Johnson and his organized mob for decades... now I'm ashamed that the History Channel would succumb to the bullying of rich and powerful old men, all of whom made millions on the back of Johnson, and on the blood of our soldiers killed in Vietnam. Kudos to McClellan for not being intimidated by this old-generation of corrupt Texas politicians.
147 of 169 people found the following review helpful
Incredible revelations! 22 Oct 2003
By Sue M. Bruns - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
November 22, 1963: As a senior history major at The University or Texas, I was not a supporter of JFK nor was I interested in his scheduled visit to Austin later that day. Then the unthinkable occurred - the assassination of OUR President.

Fall, 1972: a history professor at Southwest Texas State (LBJ's college) loaned me a book to read concerning the Zapruder film. The Warren Commission was not really satisfactory, and after reading the book about the assassination and the "magic bullet" my doubts increased.

October, 2003: BLOOD, MONEY AND POWER - is this what really happened? Did LBJ kill JFK?? This book is an intriguing and disturbing presentation of that possiblity. There are incredible revelations made by the author, Barr McClellan. Names are named, events are detailed, and the motive (of course) is obvious. It's time to finally uncover the truth. No man is above the law. Let's "recall" LBJ's legacy through the proper legal channels to determine his guilt or innocence.

You don't have to be a conspiracy nut to read this book. It's a "good un".

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