Penn
Jones and the Thomas Merton Death Cover-Up
In the late spring of 1969 Penn Jones, Jr.,
traveled to Thailand, purportedly to investigate Thomas Mertons death. John Howard Griffin, a friend of Merton
who had been chosen to write Mertons authorized biography, later wrote to John
Moffitt, the poetry editor of the Jesuit America
magazine who had shared the cottage where Merton died in Thailand, to
inform him that Jones had photographed the room where Merton had died, and a
Hitachi fan was there, just like the one that was lying across Merton in the
photograph taken by the witness Fr. Celestine Say.
Jones
also traveled to the Philippines where he met with Fr. Say and Fr. Bernardo
Perez. Say later wrote to Moffitt that
Jones implied to him during that visit that he suspected that there was a
strong possibility that Merton had been murdered and that it could be related
to the assassinations of Martin Luther King and Kennedy (He didnt say which
Kennedy.).
Griffin, famous for his book, Black Like Me, and Jones were close friends who lived only 12 miles
apart in Texas. Jones owned a small
newspaper in Midlothian. He was a
professional journalist, best known as a pioneer John F. Kennedy assassination
conspiracy theorist. Jones wrote Forgive My Grief, a four volume critical
review of the Warren Commission Report on the Assassination of President John
F. Kennedy. Griffin wrote the
preface of Volume One in 1966.
Jones also co-edited The
Continuing Inquiry newsletter with Gary Mack, the curator of the Sixth
Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza. The museum, as the name implies, is on
the sixth floor of the former Texas School Book Depository where Lee Harvey
Oswald is said to have been positioned when he shot
President John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963, according to the Warren
Commission Report and its virtually unanimous advocates in the press.
Griffin had been a contributor to The Continuing Inquiry, and he once wrote about the FBIs influence
over Catholic Church leaders, Cardinal Spellman of New York in particular.
James W. Douglass, author of JFK and the Unspeakable, mentioned the Penn Jones investigation
of Mertons death in the published version of his keynote address to the
International Thomas Merton Society meeting on June 13, 1997. In that version Douglass said that he
had posed the question of Mertons death to Roberto Bonazzi,
the biographer of John Howard Griffin and also a friend of Penn Jones. Bonazzi
responded that Jones had gone to Bangkok and investigated Mertons death, and
he had found no evidence of murder.
Curiously, though, in his actual oral presentation, he addressed
Mertons death only in response to a question, and
then he spoke of the suspicions of foul play raised by Andrew Young in his
book, An Easy Burden.
We asked Bonazzi by email about
this Jones investigation of Mertons death. Bonazzi told
us that Griffin believed that when Jones went to Bangkok and investigated
Mertons death and came up with nothing, that had
settled the matter that the death was an accident. But after Jones returned from Thailand,
he apparently wrote nothing at all about Mertons death. Bonazzi
knew of nothing that Jones had written on the subject, and we have been unable
to find anything, either.
Douglass may have been nave to accept the second-hand word
of Jones. The Jones investigation
of Mertons death raises many questions.
If Griffin thought it proved Mertons death was an accident, how
so?
Who paid for Joness trip to Asia? It was very expensive in 1969 to fly to
Thailand and the Philippines. *
What could Jones possibly have hoped to find by traveling to Thailand
and visiting Mertons room six months later?
If Jones had obtained the official death certificate and
doctors certificate while he was in Thailand, he might have accomplished
something. He could have learned,
for instance, that these documents falsely stated that Mertons body was taken
to the hospital for an autopsy in accordance with the law. He would have also seen that none of
them concluded that Merton had died from an accident, but from heart failure. But those documents had been given to Fr.
Rembert Weakland, who
presided over the monastic conference where Merton had died, and they had also
been mailed to Abbot Flavian Burns of Mertons home Gethsemani Abbey in Kentucky. Jones, therefore, did not have to travel
all the way to Thailand to obtain them.
Jones might have obtained the original Thai police report and
investigative records, but there is no indication that he did. It looks, rather, as if the expert JFK
assassination researcher failed to obtain even the most basic official Thai
documents on Mertons death. If
Jones, the journalist, interviewed any witnesses other than Say, he said
nothing about it.
Celestine Say, A Threat
to the Cover-Up?
Jones told Say that he strongly suspected Merton was
murdered. Then Jones told Griffin
that he found no evidence of murder.
What changed his mind? There
is something very peculiar about Jones traveling all the way to the Philippines
for apparently no other purpose than to tell Say that he suspected that there
was a good possibility Merton had been murdered.
It looks very much like Joness primary purpose in traveling
to Asia was not to nose around the crime scene but, rather, to learn whether
Say represented any sort of a threat to the cover-up. Griffin told Moffitt that Say had given
more information to his investigator than he did to either of them in his
letters. Considering how much Say
revealed in his letters this is an intriguing statement. And for some reason Griffin didnt tell
Moffitt the name of his investigator.
In a later letter, Griffin wrote to Moffitt that Say had
spoken to his investigator. We know from Say that Jones visited him in the
Philippines. Griffin said only that
his investigator visited Say in the Philippines. Jones reported to Griffin that he had
seen a Hitachi fan in the room where Merton died. Jones and the investigator both reported
to Griffin, so there is hardly any doubt that they are the same person. Nailing the matter down further, in a later
short note to Moffitt, Griffin revealed that Jones was that investigator. He
just never said that this was the same person who interviewed Say in the
Philippines. In that note, by the
way, Griffin related from his investigator that, contrary to the assertion of the
dubious witness who should have been treated as a suspect, Fr. Franois de Grunne, who had said that they had all been removed because
of the danger that they had been shown to represent, all of the Hitachi fans
were still in place at the Thai retreat center.
It is interesting that Jones would tell Say that he believed
that Merton was assassinated since Jones was working for Griffin. Griffin was always quick to reject the
possibility of assassination. It
looks very much like Jones was trying to draw Say out to confide in him any
opinion or knowledge that he might have that could cause trouble for the cover-up.
Penn Jones Resembles
Chris Ruddy
The existence of agents who offer false opposition to
nefarious or odious actions by the government is hardly an unknown
phenomenon. Penetrating the
leadership of an enemy is part of the CIAs admitted tradecraft. If the enemy happens to be American
citizens who suspect the CIA of domestic skulduggery,
it follows that they would use the technique on them, as well. From the JFK assassination to 9/11 to
the case of a number of the highest profile alternative media government
critics, suspicions of such supposed fake opposition abounds.
The experience of both authors with one such person in the
Vincent Foster case carries us beyond mere suspicion. We speak of the former reporter for the New York Post, the Pittsburgh Tribune Review and current editor of Newsmax, Christopher Ruddy. Ruddy gained prominence as virtually the
only reporter in the country to look into the Foster death critically.
Both David Martin and Hugh Turley, the latter in particular,
gave a great deal of their time in assisting Ruddy when he came to the
Washington, DC, area. He almost
always stayed at Turleys house, and since he never rented a car, Turley would
always pick him up at Washingtons National Airport when he flew in from New York
on the Delta Shuttle and drive him around for his appointments.
Ruddy was also responsible for Martin beginning work on what
became the six-part online article, Americas Dreyfus Affair, the Case of the Death
of Vincent Foster,
after Martin had told Ruddy of some similarities that he had seen in the two
cases. At the time, the mainstream media dismissed Ruddy as a wild-eyed
conspiracy theorist. He was even a
guest on CBSs 60 Minutes where, to the average viewer, he appeared to be humiliated
by Mike Wallace.
Now he has disavowed his previous hard-hitting work, leaving
a lot of explaining to do, like all of the evidence of foul play that he
presented in his book, The Strange Death
of Vincent Foster. But his
newfound respectability has served him well. As a big contributor to the
Clinton Foundation, he has become very close to this power couple that at one
time everyone thought he was out to get.
He is also eagerly sought out for interviews by the mainstream press to
offer his insights and wisdom on major affairs of the day. His opinions are particularly valued
because he is a friend of fellow New York native and West Palm Beach, Florida,
resident, President Donald Trump, and is thought to be an informal adviser.
What could be responsible for Ruddys
transformation? Actually, it is
very clear that he is the same Christopher Ruddy that he always
was. As an independent truth seeker
he was just playing a role. Some
things he accomplished in that role were to monopolize and personify the
opposition to the government and the mainstream press, to discover what the
genuine independent truth seekers were up to, and to determine where those
perpetuating the cover-up might encounter problems that needed to be addressed.
Penn Jones, Jr., went through a similar apparent mellowing
process, from being one of the first journalists to dig up evidence that
appeared to contradict the Warren Commissions two-lone-crazed-gunmen (Lee
Harvey Oswald and Jack Ruby) conclusion to working with Gary Mack at the Sixth
Floor Museum. As far as
transformations go, Macks was the more Ruddy-like of the two. A Dallas television journalist, Mack
started out as a conspiracy theorist in the JFK assassination case, but by
the time he died in 2015 at the age of 68, he had come around so far to the
side of the government that he merited a glowing obituary in The New York Times.
Jones never went quite so far as Mack, and we might be
accused of tarring him with guilt by association. After all, we once worked closely with
Christopher Ruddy. But as soon as
we figured out what Ruddy was about, we put as much distance between him and
ourselves as possible. Jones, on
the other hand, got closer to Mack after Mack had really dropped all pretense
of being an independent seeker of truth in the JFK case. Also, like John Howard Griffin and
Christopher Ruddy, and unlike the current authors, they were both professional
American journalists.
Returning to Joness early 1969 Asian odyssey, if there were
precipitating events causing Joness handler Griffin to send him off to the
Philippines, they might have begun with an article published in the Philippines
based on the accounts of Say and Fr. Bernardo Perez. That article raised doubts about the
Thai police conclusion of death due to heart failure, because there had been no
autopsy and Merton had no history of a heart condition. Then Say
sent what had to be an alarming March 1969 letter to Abbot Flavian
with the photograph he had taken of the body and asking about the autopsy
results. The following month Perez
wrote a long article for the Philippine
Free Press that called Mertons death absurd if it was indeed caused by
electrocution. These events surely would have made Griffin curious to learn if
Say and Perez suspected Merton had been murdered.
If there were reasons for Say and Perez to be suspicious
they needed to be addressed. As
Griffin told Moffitt, he had a responsibility to dispel the suspicions or
resolve the contradictions. Jones would report back to Griffin, probably much
to Griffins relief, that Say and Perez did not suspect murder.
Say informed Moffitt about the visit from Jones and told him
it just seemed too far-fetched that Merton was murdered and that it was
connected to the Kennedy and King assassinations. Say told Moffitt that he believed that Mertons
death was caused by a heart attack or electrocution.
Say only asked about the autopsy because he wanted to know
if there was any clarification of whether the death was the result of a heart
attack or of electrocution. One
monk had told Say that he practically killed [Merton] for not coming to his
rescue earlier. Say felt regret that he had not been able to save Merton. If he had known for certain that Merton
had died of a heart attack, it might have eased his conscience.
Say probably never imagined that Merton was already dead
when Say got to the cottage and that the crime scene had been quickly and
neatly arranged. It had apparently
not occurred to him that an autopsy might have found additional wounds not
consistent with an accident or a heart attack, such as the wound in the back of
Mertons head, unmentioned by the police, that authorized biographer Michael Mott says had bled
considerably. Perhaps it was
fortunate that Say was not suspicious.
If Say had suspected that Merton was murdered it might have been
unwise—even dangerous—to share his suspicions with Jones.
As noted, we have found no evidence that Jones ever did
anything in the wake of Mertons death that is worthy of being called any sort
of an investigation. There is only the unwarranted inference made by Roberto Bonazzi
and second hand by James Douglass that if Jones, the JFK researcher, found no
evidence of murder that alone proves that Mertons death was an
accident.
Few people ever suspect journalists would act as agents to
cover up state-sponsored secret assassinations. One of the few people who was astute enough in 1968 to have suspected such things
would have been Thomas Merton.
* Phillip Nelson, who has written two books on the John F.
Kennedy assassination makes these further observations in his review of The Martyrdom of Thomas Merton: That
sudden trip, in and of itself, is most curious, considering that Jones was not
a wealthy man and most reports indicated that he ran his weekly newspaper on a
very small budget.
Among Penn Jones other close friends or
associates [besides Gary Mack] were Hugh Aynesworth,
a Dallas reporter and strong supporter of the Warren Commissions most
ludicrous findings, and many other similarly-deluded researchers including Dave
Perry, also a close associate of Gary Mack, who tried, unconvincingly, to
discredit Dr. Charles Crenshaws testimony about having received a telephone
call from the new president Lyndon Johnson while attempting to save Lee Harvey
Oswalds life. Jones was also similarly connected to Bud Fensterwald, who many truth-seeking researchers believe was
a CIA operative. Another associate of Jones was Gordon McLendon, a Dallas-based wealthy owner of major radio
stations in some of the largest cities in the country, whom many researchers
have connected to CIA operative David Atlee Phillips and wealthy oilman (and
suspected financier behind JFKs assassination) Clint Murchison and Bobby
Baker, Lyndon Johnsons conduit to Mafiosi throughout the country. McLendon had also known and associated with Jack Ruby.
Moreover, Jones was also very closely
connected to Mary Ferrell, whom researcher Harrison Edward Livingstone
described at length in his 1993 book Killing the Truth: Deceit and Deception in
the JFK Case. Livingstone
summarized his opinions (with which many other long-time researchers agree) by
calling her the gatekeeper and the head of a sophisticated private
intelligence operation . . . a de facto secret society in Texas, run
by powerful people there, to protect the name and reputation of Texas and to
protect those who were involved in the murder of John Kennedy. [Livingstone,
pp. 386–396].
December 10, 2018
Adapted from Chapter 18 of The
Martyrdom of Thomas Merton: An Investigation by Hugh Turley and David
Martin.
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