Jefferson Morley
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
What are the new facts? What are the old facts? What are the bad facts? So people want to know more about this approach. I think they should check out the JFK facts sub stack. We've got a team of writers. So Chad Nagel is a writer who I met recently through the American Conservative, actually. I'm not a conservative, but I like Chad's writing about the JFK story.
What are the new facts? What are the old facts? What are the bad facts? So people want to know more about this approach. I think they should check out the JFK facts sub stack. We've got a team of writers. So Chad Nagel is a writer who I met recently through the American Conservative, actually. I'm not a conservative, but I like Chad's writing about the JFK story.
Very factual, very well informed historically. So he's a staff writer. And then we have another staff writer, Peter Voskamp, and he covers presidential politics. So he covers RFK Jr., He covers Trump. He covers Biden. Wherever the JFK story intrudes into our presidential politics, we have a writer who's there. He's not advocating for RFK, nor is he criticizing him.
Very factual, very well informed historically. So he's a staff writer. And then we have another staff writer, Peter Voskamp, and he covers presidential politics. So he covers RFK Jr., He covers Trump. He covers Biden. Wherever the JFK story intrudes into our presidential politics, we have a writer who's there. He's not advocating for RFK, nor is he criticizing him.
Very factual, very well informed historically. So he's a staff writer. And then we have another staff writer, Peter Voskamp, and he covers presidential politics. So he covers RFK Jr., He covers Trump. He covers Biden. Wherever the JFK story intrudes into our presidential politics, we have a writer who's there. He's not advocating for RFK, nor is he criticizing him.
He's trying to report who is this guy? What's he saying? What does that mean? Then we've got a managing editor, a guy named Steve Byrne, who's a veteran journalist of the Detroit Free Press. And he's kind of our hardcore newspaper guy, copy editor, fact checker. Kind of I let him he's kind of the traffic cop in terms of when do we publish. And so he's an essential part of the team. And then.
He's trying to report who is this guy? What's he saying? What does that mean? Then we've got a managing editor, a guy named Steve Byrne, who's a veteran journalist of the Detroit Free Press. And he's kind of our hardcore newspaper guy, copy editor, fact checker. Kind of I let him he's kind of the traffic cop in terms of when do we publish. And so he's an essential part of the team. And then.
He's trying to report who is this guy? What's he saying? What does that mean? Then we've got a managing editor, a guy named Steve Byrne, who's a veteran journalist of the Detroit Free Press. And he's kind of our hardcore newspaper guy, copy editor, fact checker. Kind of I let him he's kind of the traffic cop in terms of when do we publish. And so he's an essential part of the team. And then.
The head of our research is Margo Williams. She's a Pulitzer Prize winning researcher for the Washington Post and the New York Times, two Pulitzer Prizes. And so she's our research and fact checking person. So, you know, we're serious journalists. So that's kind of where we're coming from. In larger perspective, people want to know my work.
The head of our research is Margo Williams. She's a Pulitzer Prize winning researcher for the Washington Post and the New York Times, two Pulitzer Prizes. And so she's our research and fact checking person. So, you know, we're serious journalists. So that's kind of where we're coming from. In larger perspective, people want to know my work.
The head of our research is Margo Williams. She's a Pulitzer Prize winning researcher for the Washington Post and the New York Times, two Pulitzer Prizes. And so she's our research and fact checking person. So, you know, we're serious journalists. So that's kind of where we're coming from. In larger perspective, people want to know my work.
It's really important to know my books, which are not JFK assassination books. My three books about the CIA are biographies of men who were at the top of the CIA in the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s. Three men.
It's really important to know my books, which are not JFK assassination books. My three books about the CIA are biographies of men who were at the top of the CIA in the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s. Three men.
It's really important to know my books, which are not JFK assassination books. My three books about the CIA are biographies of men who were at the top of the CIA in the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s. Three men.
My first book, Our Man in Mexico, is about Winston Scott, who was the chief of the CIA station in Mexico and who was in charge of the surveillance of Oswald when Oswald visits Mexico City shortly before the assassination. My second book, The Ghost, is about James Angleton, the chief of counterintelligence in the CIA from 1954 to 1974. And he was the man who controlled the Oswald file at the CIA.
My first book, Our Man in Mexico, is about Winston Scott, who was the chief of the CIA station in Mexico and who was in charge of the surveillance of Oswald when Oswald visits Mexico City shortly before the assassination. My second book, The Ghost, is about James Angleton, the chief of counterintelligence in the CIA from 1954 to 1974. And he was the man who controlled the Oswald file at the CIA.
My first book, Our Man in Mexico, is about Winston Scott, who was the chief of the CIA station in Mexico and who was in charge of the surveillance of Oswald when Oswald visits Mexico City shortly before the assassination. My second book, The Ghost, is about James Angleton, the chief of counterintelligence in the CIA from 1954 to 1974. And he was the man who controlled the Oswald file at the CIA.
And then my third CIA book is Scorpion's Dance about the relationship between Richard Nixon, the 35th president, and Richard Helms, the eighth director of the CIA. And that book tells the story of how the Kennedy assassination resonates after 1963, right up through Nixon's presidency and into the Watergate scandal. So
And then my third CIA book is Scorpion's Dance about the relationship between Richard Nixon, the 35th president, and Richard Helms, the eighth director of the CIA. And that book tells the story of how the Kennedy assassination resonates after 1963, right up through Nixon's presidency and into the Watergate scandal. So
And then my third CIA book is Scorpion's Dance about the relationship between Richard Nixon, the 35th president, and Richard Helms, the eighth director of the CIA. And that book tells the story of how the Kennedy assassination resonates after 1963, right up through Nixon's presidency and into the Watergate scandal. So