Vancouver Sun

King family insists activist’s death was part of a plot

Members of King family still insist James Earl Ray wasn’t responsibl­e

- TOM JACKMAN

In the five decades since Martin Luther King Jr. was shot dead by an assassin at age 39, his children have worked tirelessly to preserve his legacy, sometimes with sharply different views on how best to do that. But they are unanimous on one key point: James Earl Ray did not kill Martin Luther King.

For the King family and others in the civil rights movement, the FBI’s obsession with King in the years leading up to his slaying in Memphis on April 4, 1968 — pervasive surveillan­ce, a malicious disinforma­tion campaign and open denunciati­ons by FBI director J. Edgar Hoover — laid the groundwork for their belief that he was the target of a plot.

“It pains my heart,” said Bernice King, 55, the youngest of Martin Luther King’s four children and the executive director of the King Center in Atlanta, “that James Earl Ray had to spend his life in prison paying for things he didn’t do.”

Until her own death in 2006, Coretta Scott King, who endured the FBI’s campaign to discredit her husband, was open in her belief that a conspiracy led to the assassinat­ion. Her family filed a civil suit in 1999 to force more informatio­n into the public eye, and a Memphis jury ruled that the local, state and federal government­s were liable for King’s death. The full transcript of the trial remains posted on the King Center’s website.

“There is abundant evidence,” Coretta King said after the verdict, “of a major, high-level conspiracy in the assassinat­ion of my husband.” The jury found the Mafia and various government agencies “were deeply involved in the assassinat­ion ... Mr. Ray was set up to take the blame.”

But nothing changed afterward. No vast sums of money were awarded (the Kings sought only $100), and Ray was not exonerated.

King ’s two other surviving children, Dexter, 57, and Martin III, 60, fully agree that Ray was innocent. And their view of the case is shared by other respected black leaders.

“I think there was a major conspiracy to remove Dr. King from the American scene,” said Rep. John Lewis, D - Ga., a 78-year-old civil rights icon. “I don’t know what happened, but the truth of what happened to Dr. King should be made available for history’s sake.”

Andrew Young, the former UN ambassador and Atlanta mayor who was at the Lorraine Motel with King when he was shot there, agrees. “I would not accept the fact that James Earl Ray pulled the trigger, and that’s all that matters,” said Young, who noted that King ’s death came after the killings of John F. Kennedy and Malcolm X and just months before the slaying of Robert F. Kennedy.

“We were living in the period of assassinat­ions,” Young said.

Conspiraci­es have long gripped the American imaginatio­n, from JFK’s assassinat­ion in 1963 to Deputy White House Counsel Vince Foster’s suicide in 1993 to Democratic National Committee staffer Seth Rich’s slaying in 2016.

Dave Garrow, a Pulitzer Prizewinni­ng biographer of MLK, said that “the King children are part of a larger population of American people who need to believe that the assassinat­ion of a King or a Kennedy must be the work of mightier forces” rather than victims “of small-fry, lifetime losers.”

“People need to see something of a balance between effect and cause,” Garrow said. “That if something has a huge evil effect, it should be the result of a huge evil cause.”

Even those who believe that Ray, who died in prison in 1998, killed King tend to think that he received assistance from someone, whether it was his two brothers or the FBI or the Mafia.

Because Ray suddenly pleaded guilty in 1969, less than a year after the shooting, there was no trial. The largest government investigat­ion, led by the House Select Committee on Assassinat­ions under chief counsel Robert Blakey, theorized in 1979 that Ray committed the killing in the hope of collecting a $50,000 bounty offered by supporters of then-presidenti­al candidate George Wallace in St. Louis, where Ray’s brothers lived.

But there was no definitive evidence to prove the theory, and the Wallace supporters were dead by 1979. Blakey said recently he had tried to prove a conspiracy but could not. If the FBI or CIA was involved, they had destroyed the documentat­ion of it by 1979, he said.

“I have no stake in our outcome,” Blakey said. “You come up with a better outcome, with evidence to support it, I’ll support your theory.” He remains adamant that Ray was the gunman but likely had help that should have been investigat­ed in 1968 and was not.

John Campbell, who investigat­ed the case for years in the Shelby County, Tenn., district attorney’s office, said that Ray’s version of events “kept changing.” His office issued a report in 1998 saying Ray was responsibl­e.

“I’m not saying he didn’t have help,” Campbell said. “But he didn’t have the FBI, the CIA, the Memphis police or the Mafia.”

After Coretta King and her family pleaded with President Bill Clinton in 1998 to reinvestig­ate the case, Attorney General Janet Reno assigned civil rights special counsel Barry Kowalski, who previously prosecuted the Los Angeles police officers in the Rodney King beating, to review the newest conspiracy allegation­s. In 2000, even after reviewing the results of the 1999 civil trial in Memphis, Kowalski concluded that Ray was guilty and that there was no government conspiracy.

Astride all this controvers­y for the last 40 years has been William Pepper, a New York lawyer and civil rights activist who knew and worked with King. Pepper first visited Ray in prison in 1978 along with Ralph Abernathy, one of King ’s closest associates. Pepper became convinced of Ray’s innocence and continued to investigat­e the case even after Ray died.

Pepper wrote three books outlining the conspiracy, most recently “The Plot to Kill King ” in 2016, which were largely ignored by the media.

He has spoken around the world to anyone who will listen, including recently at the National Civil Rights Museum at the Lorraine Motel, where King was killed. Pepper was sued once for defamation, by an Army soldier he accused of participat­ing in the conspiracy, and a South Carolina judge entered an US$11 million default judgment against him in 2000.

In recent years, Pepper has tracked down witnesses in Memphis who support his theory of the case: that J. Edgar Hoover used his longtime assistant, Clyde Tolson, to deliver cash to members of the Memphis underworld, that those shadowy figures then hired a sharpshoot­ing Memphis police officer, and that officer — not Ray — fired the fatal shot.

The King family has lauded Pepper repeatedly, and he was honoured by the Southern Christian Leadership Conference for his “unceasing commitment in the pursuit of justice.”

And so after 50 years, the King assassinat­ion seems destined to remain mired in controvers­y, the subject of infinite debate over whether Ray was a lone gunman inspired by racism, a hired assassin aided by secret government forces, or simply a patsy manipulate­d to kill a civil rights hero.

Ray was born in 1928 and grew up outside St. Louis. His chosen profession was theft and armed robbery, and after his third felony conviction in 1959, he was sentenced to 20 years in the Missouri State Penitentia­ry. He escaped from the prison in April 1967, and some believe he had help from prison authoritie­s, as part of the opening stanza of the conspiracy.

Ray moved around while on the lam, staying in Chicago, Los Angeles, Mexico and Canada over the next year. He has claimed that while in Montreal he met a man named Raul, of varying physical descriptio­ns over the years, who enlisted him in several small gun-running schemes, and instructed him to buy a rifle in Birmingham, Ala.

On the afternoon of April 4, Ray checked into a boarding house in Memphis, with a bar called Jim’s Grill on the first floor. He paid $8.50 for a week’s stay. The rear of the boarding house faced the Lorraine Motel across Mulberry Street.

King was standing on the balcony of the Lorraine outside room 306 when a single rifle bullet was fired into his lower jaw at 6:01 p.m. He died an hour later at St. Joseph’s Hospital. The rifle Ray had purchased in Birmingham was found near the front of the boarding house with Ray’s fingerprin­ts on it. Those are about the only facts that aren’t in dispute.

According to the criminal justice system of the state of Tennessee, James Earl Ray fired the shot from the second-floor bathroom of the boarding house. He then grabbed some belongings in a blanket, stashed the rifle in it, left the building and dropped the bundle in the doorway of a nearby building.

He drove away in a white Ford Mustang before the area was barricaded, went to Atlanta and then to Canada and England before being arrested in July 1968.

Ray pleaded guilty to the murder of King nine months later, on March 10, 1969. He signed a detailed stipulatio­n of facts to the shooting, having had weeks to review it, asking only that a reference to his activities for George Wallace be deleted.

In court, Ray answered the standard series of questions about whether he was knowingly and voluntaril­y admitting he committed murder. In exchange for his plea, prosecutor­s did not seek the death penalty and Ray was sentenced to 99 years in prison. Officially: case closed.

Within days, Ray filed a motion to withdraw his plea, claiming he had been coerced by his attorney and the FBI. Three decades of legal machinatio­ns never succeeded in reopening the case, but they revealed new details and led to new theories of how King might have been killed.

At the same time, the misconduct of J. Edgar Hoover and the FBI was coming to light. Hoover had ordered surveillan­ce, wiretaps and listening devices placed in King ’s rooms starting in 1963, apparently infuriated by King’s criticism of the FBI for not having black agents or investigat­ing civil rights cases.

Recordings and photos of King having sex with women other than his wife were offered to reporters and government officials, often by Hoover himself, and sent to King associates. Hoover once told a group of reporters, on the record, that King was “the most notorious liar in the country.”

Coretta King and Abernathy, aware of the FBI campaign, immediatel­y suspected FBI involvemen­t after King ’s death. But Ray’s sudden guilty plea stopped all official investigat­ions.

James Lawson, a Memphis pastor and civil rights institutio­n who helped mentor King, said he began visiting Ray in the Memphis jail in 1969 when Ray complained about being held in solitary confinemen­t. He continued to visit Ray until his death and presided over his funeral.

“There were things in Memphis that were suspicious and raised questions in my mind,” Lawson said. “I never saw those questions answered.”

Lawson assisted Pepper and the King family over the years in their investigat­ion, during which Dexter King and Andrew Young participat­ed in interviews with witnesses.

“I’m satisfied beyond a shadow of a doubt,” Lawson said, “that James Earl Ray neither pulled the trigger nor plotted to kill Martin Luther King.”

Ray began to claim that the man he knew only as Raul was present in Memphis on April 4, and that Ray himself was at a nearby gas station when the shot was fired. No one saw the actual shot fired. The screen from the bathroom window was found on the ground below.

Some witnesses, including thenNew York Times reporter Earl Caldwell, said they saw a man moving in the thick bushes behind Jim’s Grill, below the bathroom. For reasons unknown, Memphis public works employees cut down the bushes and destroyed a possible crime scene the very next morning.

Ballistics tests could not prove that the rifle dropped outside the boarding house, a Remington .30-06 Gamemaster, either did or didn’t fire the fatal shot, because the gun did not create distinctiv­e grooves on the bullet, as most guns do.

“That weapon was not the weapon,” Martin Luther King III said. “You’re going to kill somebody and then drop the gun right there?”

Ray claimed that he had given the gun to Raul, but only Ray’s fingerprin­ts were on the gun.

Pepper and his investigat­ors worked for years to locate Raul and eventually they identified an autoworker from Yonkers, N.Y., as the man they believe manipulate­d Ray. The man denied any involvemen­t and cooperated with Justice Department investigat­ors in 1999, who found work records showing he could not have travelled widely to meet Ray in 1967 and ’68. Pepper said the CIA could have fabricated the records.

Then Loyd Jowers, the owner of Jim’s Grill, began claiming publicly that he was involved in a conspiracy to kill King. He had consistent­ly denied any knowledge of the case for a quarter-century, but now he alleged the gunman was a Memphis police officer who fired from the bushes behind the grill, then handed Jowers the murder weapon. Jowers stashed the rifle behind the bar and said it was later picked up by Raul and tossed in the Mississipp­i River.

More Memphis witnesses came forward, including a former girlfriend of Jowers, who said she saw him with the rifle shortly after the gunshot rang out, and saw him break it down and place it in the bar.

In 1997, Dexter King went with Pepper to meet Ray in prison, and was photograph­ed shaking Ray’s hand. Pepper said Dexter King asked Ray, “Did you kill my father?” and that Ray answered, “No, I didn’t.” He said Dexter King told Ray, “We will do everything in our power to see that justice prevails.”

Not everyone in the Kings’ circle agrees with the full extent of Pepper’s investigat­ion, but they agree that Ray was framed.

“It’s still a mystery to me,” Bernice King said. “I don’t believe James Earl Ray killed my father. It’s hard to know exactly who. I’m certainly clear that there has been a conspiracy, from the government down to the mafia ... there had to be more than one person involved in all of this. I think it was all planned.”

 ?? AFP/GETTY IMAGES/FILE ?? Civil rights leader Martin Luther King’s children say they believe he was the target of a plot involving several U.S. government agencies and the Mafia.
AFP/GETTY IMAGES/FILE Civil rights leader Martin Luther King’s children say they believe he was the target of a plot involving several U.S. government agencies and the Mafia.
 ??  ?? Habitual criminal James Earl Ray was sentenced to 99 years in prison in 1969 for the murder of Martin Luther King Jr. Ray, however, maintained he had been coerced by his attorney and the FBI into pleading guilty.
Habitual criminal James Earl Ray was sentenced to 99 years in prison in 1969 for the murder of Martin Luther King Jr. Ray, however, maintained he had been coerced by his attorney and the FBI into pleading guilty.
 ??  ??
 ?? THE WASHINGTON POST ?? William Pepper, who has written three books about King’s death, has been investigat­ing the assassinat­ion for 40 years. He believes there were larger forces involved in the shooting.
THE WASHINGTON POST William Pepper, who has written three books about King’s death, has been investigat­ing the assassinat­ion for 40 years. He believes there were larger forces involved in the shooting.
 ?? WASHINGTON POST ?? ABOVE: The front page of The Washington Post for April 5, 1968.
WASHINGTON POST ABOVE: The front page of The Washington Post for April 5, 1968.
 ?? JOE RAEDLE/GETTY IMAGES ?? RIGHT: The Lorraine Motel in Memphis, where Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was murdered on the balcony outside room 306, is now part of the National Civil Rights Museum, which recently marked the 50th anniversar­y of King’s assassinat­ion.
JOE RAEDLE/GETTY IMAGES RIGHT: The Lorraine Motel in Memphis, where Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was murdered on the balcony outside room 306, is now part of the National Civil Rights Museum, which recently marked the 50th anniversar­y of King’s assassinat­ion.
 ?? AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Coretta Scott King and her husband Martin Luther King on Dec. 9, 1964 in Oslo where the US clergyman and civil rights leader received the Nobel Peace Prize. Martin Luther King was assassinat­ed on April 4, 1968 in Memphis, Tennessee. Coretta King...
AFP/GETTY IMAGES Coretta Scott King and her husband Martin Luther King on Dec. 9, 1964 in Oslo where the US clergyman and civil rights leader received the Nobel Peace Prize. Martin Luther King was assassinat­ed on April 4, 1968 in Memphis, Tennessee. Coretta King...

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