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Download Free RFK Must Die: The Assassination Of Bobby Kennedy

2007
    (  Documentary  )


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Casts:

Bradley Ayers aka
Frank Burns aka
Ruben Carbajal aka
Evan Freed aka
Richard Helms aka (archive footage)
Haynes Johnson aka
Robert Blair Kaiser aka
Robert F. Kennedy aka (archive footage)
Ed Lopez aka
Michael McCowan aka
Luke Putres aka Sirhan
David Rabern aka
Paul Schrade aka
Munir Sirhan aka
Sirhan Sirhan aka (archive footage)
Wayne Smith aka
Herbert Spiegel aka
Lawrence Teeter aka
Robert Walton aka
Richard Helms aka (archive footage)
Robert F. Kennedy aka (archive footage)
Sirhan Sirhan aka (archive footage)


An important film that raises many questions and should be seen
Speculation about the 1968 assassination of Senator Robert F. Kennedy
is fueled by the new documentary RFK Must Die: The Assassination of
Bobby Kennedy by Shane O'Sullivan, an independent researcher. The film
is an expansion of a BBC broadcast in 2006 by Mr. Sullivan attempting
to prove that CIA operatives were present at the Ambassador the night
of the assassination and may have been involved in the events that took
place that horrible night. Sullivan believes that the CIA targeted
Kennedy because of his role in the Bay of Pigs invasion, his pledge to
end the War in Vietnam, and his vow to reopen the investigation into
the murder of his brother if he became President.

Though Sirhan Sirhan was arrested, tried, and convicted for the RFK
killing and is now serving a life sentence for murder, he still
maintains that he has no recollection of the shooting and his easy
susceptibility to hypnosis has led to speculation that he may have been
a programmed "Manchurian Candidate". Additionally, other tantalizing
facts have emerged that raise questions as to whether or not others may
have been involved in the shooting. Seven bullets were removed from
bodies, an eighth bullet was traced through two ceilings, and two more
bullets (labeled as such on FBI photographs) were identified as lodged
in the door frame of the pantry by both LAPD and FBI personnel, yet
Sirhan's gun could hold only eight bullets. Astonishingly, these door
frames and ceiling tiles containing bullet holes were destroyed by the
LAPD shortly before the trial of Sirhan Sirhan along with 2,410
photographs taken during the investigation.

This information is doubly disturbing fact in light of the subsequent
coroners report that declared that all three of the bullets striking
Kennedy entered from the rear and no more than one to three inches from
Kennedy's ear (Sirhan was estimated to be between three to six feet in
front of the Senator). The three senior CIA officials identified in the
film are David Morales, Gordon Campbell, and George Joannides and two
of them can be seen moving away from the hotel pantry shortly after the
shooting. Morales was known to be a violent and ruthless man with an
explosive temper. He was involved in the capture and killing of Ché
Guevara and had boasted to friends after both Kennedy brothers had been
killed, "I was in Dallas when we got the son of a bitch and I was in
Los Angeles when we got the little bastard."

O'Sullivan talked to Bradley Ayers, a retired Army officer who had been
stationed at JM-Wave, the CIA's base operation in Miami and had trained
Cuban exiles together with Morales. Ayers identified Morales and
Campbell with what he described as 95% accuracy as being in the
ballroom the night Kennedy was shot. Although several identified
Morales from the photos including two very respectable witnesses: Wayne
Smith and Ed Lopez, the evidence presented is conflicting. Some who
knew Morales say that it is not him and from the evidence shown, to me
the case is less than compelling. The identification of Campbell is
also questionable though some who have seen CIA photographs of Campbell
say that the man in the footage resembles him, but they are uncertain.

What cannot be argued, however, is that there are several very
officious looking individuals present who are obviously not enjoying
themselves and look as if they definitely do not belong there.
O'Sullivan says that the CIA owes an explanation to the public about
the reason the men were present. They were definitely not secret
service agents and if they are who O'Sullivan says they are, the
mystery deepens. While the photographic evidence presented is
inconclusive, RFK Must Die is an important film that raises many
questions and should be seen, if for no other reason than to listen to
an "interview" by Hank Hernandez, an LAPD officer who had previously
worked for the CIA.

The person being interrogated is Susan Serrano, a young
Mexican-American who claimed she had seen two people including a girl
with a polka dot dress leave the pantry from a rear balcony shouting,
"We killed him, we killed him". She is told repeatedly by Hernandez
that she did not see what she claims and he tells her in an
intimidating manner to change her story. For those saturated with
official government cover-ups, it is still a frightening revelation.
For a new generation too young to remember 1968 and too idealistic to
think the worst about government complicity, it may be an eye opener..

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