Edward Jay Epstein

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Person.png Edward Jay Epstein   WebsiteRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(businessman, academic, journalist)
Edward Jay Epstein.jpg

JFK Assassination

In 1966, while still a graduate student at Cornell University, he published Inquest: The Warren Commission and the Establishment of Truth, an influential critique of the Warren Commission. It accepted that Lee Harvey Oswald did kill John F. Kennedy, but challenged the single-bullet theory and cited evidence to suggest that more than one gunman was involved (thus presaging the 1978 fallback official narrative of the House Select Committee on Assassinations).

His 1992 obituary of Jim Garrison recalls the man with fondness, but concludes that "In each of these cases, he had, like a true Cabalist, drawn conspiratorial conclusions by attributing to innocent numbers, plucked out of a phone book, the sinister properties of hidden numbers that he claimed were encoded in them".[1]

Control of diamonds

Edward Jay Epstein wrote in 1978 that "If one man can be said to control the world's diamonds it is Harry Frederick Oppenheimer."[2]

 

Events Participated in

EventStartEndDescription
Colloquium on Analysis and Estimates30 November 19791 December 1979Spooky 1979 Washington conference
Colloquium on Counterintelligence24 April 198026 April 1980Spooky 1980 Washington conference

 

Related Document

TitleTypePublication dateAuthor(s)Description
Document:Decoding Edward Jay Epstein's 'LEGEND'Wikispooks PageRobin RamsayRobin Ramsay claims that Edward Jay Epstein's Legend is disinformation.
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References


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