June 13-15, 1997
Georgetown University, Washington, DC
Speakers include: Dr. William Pepper, Esq. (attorney for James Earl Ray), Dr. Cyril H. Wecht, Philip Melanson, Ph.D., Wayne Smith, Ph.D., Peter Dale Scott, and many others.
Call for Papers: Send 500 word abstracts on current research findings for review and possible presentation to Program Chair Wayne Smith, Ph.D., c/o COPA, P.O. Box 772, Washington, DC 20044. Deadline is May 15, details on request.
Topics: Analysis of JFK autopsy doctors interviews by Assassination Review Board Reopening the M.L. King assassination, new trial for James Earl Ray Latest developments in Robert F. Kennedy Assassination Assassination Records Review Board - can it finish its job? JFK assassination records - what's still missing? Annual visit and report from Review Board to researchers Release of records: JFK Act model for other issues (MLK, CIA/Crack, Guatemala)
For registration information, contact COPA at 202-785-5299 or call 202-310-1858 - Conference Hotline. Also visit our new website at http://www.nicom.com/~copa or email us at copa@nicom.com
This year's conference may be one of the most important we've yet held. There are new developments in the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. assassination case that need to be analyzed and discussed. The Coalition is joining the King family in urging that the case be re-heard, and demanding that the government files be released. We hope the conference participants will join us in this call. In the JFK case, the Assassination Records Review Board (ARRB) is expected to release its depositions of the autopsy doctors, potentially the most crucial evidence yet to come out, in time for our conference. We'll certainly want to analyze and react to that if it's out, and to urge its near-term release if it is not.
In addition, unless an all-out effort can be mounted to extend the life of the ARRB for another yet, it may cease to exist this October. We can't let that happen. At the conference, we plan to mount a major lobbying effort to insure its extension. We will also be evaluating the work that remains to be done in terms of full disclosure of files in the JFK case. There are also new developments in areas we have covered before, including the Robert F. Kennedy case, other political assassinations, the CIA-linked assassinations abroad, the CIA/crack cocaine and Mexican drug scandals, and new legislation that will use the JFK Act as a model for release of other records.
We renew our call for papers dealing with the assassinations of Martin Luther King, John F. Kennedy, Robert F. Kennedy and any others that may move current research forward. Past topics have ranged from forensics, ballistics, previous investigations, investigative leads and evolving theories based on newly released or re-evaluated materials. Papers on all those topics will be welcome at the 1997 conference also.
Researchers, academics, medical and forensic experts, and concerned citizens are invited to submit abstracts of the papers they propose to present. The abstract should give a clear idea of what the presentation of fifteen to twenty minutes will be about and how it will proceed. They should contain the salient points of the presentation, indicate whether audio-visual aids will be used (and equipment required), and be detailed enough so that the review committee can arrive at a reasonable and informed judgment as to whether the presentation is suitable. It would also be helpful if the abstract posed the questions that the presentation will answer, or at least address. It is also crucial to emphasize which facts, data or raw material is new. The committee will give priority to new material.
Abstracts should be no more than 500 words, and may be considerably less. If an abstract takes serious issue with past research, the alleged errors must be pointed up and the sources or data which call the research into question must be cited. Disagreements must be couched in civil terms.
The Coalition Conference and Program chairs, in consultation with the Executive Committee, will make final decisions on acceptance of abstracts for presentation, with the assistance of peer review by researchers of their choice. In some cases, abstracts may be returned for revisions to meet stated standards or for clarification. Once accepted, abstracts will be gathered and printed for Conference registrants and for later distribution and sale by the Coalition.
Please submit abstracts in hard copy and/or on Microsoft Word on Mac or Word Perfect on IBM 3.5 inch disks, or save as ASCII on other software. Send to Program Chair Wayne S. Smith, c/o COPA, PO Box 772, Washington, DC 20044.
Hard copies may also be sent by mail. Please also submit full papers, if such exist, for reproduction in a volume of work for sale by the Coalition, with your permission. Abstracts must be submitted no later than May 15, 1997.
Conference Update:
Call 202-310-1858 today for our Hotline update information, registration packet
Early Bird Registration good to May 15 only to members ($200)
Special room rates through COPA ($50/night, single or double) good to May 30
Optional Awards Dinner ($35 per person)
Non-members add $35 to above
Registration from May 16-May 30 $225 for members, non-members add $35
Late Registration after May 30, $250, room rates may increase
Student discount registration good to May 30 ($75 + $25 to non members)
Day and session rates available on site
Additional options available from Georgetown University
10 meal cafeteria ticket $77, or individual meals at comparable prices
Marriott Hotel on campus (arrange through COPA) for block discount
Fast food and commercial restaurants on campus and nearby
Gym and swimming pool $10
Questions? Call 202-785-5299 or email copa@nicom.com
Visit our website at http://www.nicom.com/~copa
Coalition on Political Assassinations
PO Box 772
Washington, DC 20044
Washington, DC - The recent, historic meeting of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.'s son, Dexter King and James Earl Ray, the alleged assassin of Dr. King underscored both the legacy of nonviolence and truth that Dr. King exemplified and the need for a re-hearing of the case and a resolution to the serious questions that remain concerning guilt and responsibility for Dr. King's death. A national coalition of researchers, authors and medical experts, the Coalition on Political Assassinations, is supporting the current call by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.'s family and civil rights leaders for a re-hearing of the case against alleged assassin James Earl Ray. In addition, the Coalition is calling for full disclosure of all government records relating to the assassination and official investigations. Thousands of independent researchers agree that serious unresolved questions remain in the murder of Dr. King, and the guilt of James Earl Ray.
"Even if the Tennessee Court of Appeals fails to grant testing of the alleged murder weapon and fatal bullet," notes researcher and author Philip Melanson, Ph.D., a board member of the Coalition, "or the tests are inconclusive, other legal options exist that go beyond the legal appeal rights of James Earl Ray in this case. Even if Ray dies from his current illness, the case should not." Melanson points to several other legal options, including a Tennessee law that would allow the family of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. to appoint a "private prosecutor" who can then call witnesses and hear evidence.
"At the federal level, US Attorney General Janet Reno can convene a grand jury to hear evidence, or appoint a special prosecutor," Melanson notes, "and we will initiate a national petition to encourage her to act on the case."
Dr. Cyril H. Wecht, MD, JD, president of the Coalition, and former president of the American Academy of Forensic Sciences, notes that, "Regardless of the legal status of the case, we must push Congress and the Clinton administration to release all government files pertaining to the death of Dr. King and the subsequent investigation by federal agencies and the House Select Committee on Assassinations. It is unjustified that these files remain locked away while files pertaining to the murder of John F. Kennedy are being released. We need full disclosure in all major political assassinations."
The Coalition has called for full release of all government agency and investigative files relating to Dr. King's life and death, including some 650-750,000 pages still kept secret by the House of Representatives as part of the House Select Committee on Investigations probe in the 1970s. Tens of thousands of citizens have already signed a national petition for their release. Under House Rule 36, HSCA Chairman Louis Stokes sealed these files for a period of 50 years, until 2028.
The Coalition is calling for a campaign to insure a public re-hearing of all the facts of the case against Ray, as well as new evidence pointing to the real conspirators. "Should all other legal avenues fail," says Melanson, author of several books on the murder of Dr. King, "the American public has a right to hear the facts of the case. We will work to insure that public forums make this evidence visible to the average citizen. History and the legacy of Dr. King demand no less."
The Coalition on Political Assassinations includes the Assassination Archives and Research Center and the Committee for An Open Archives in Washington, DC, and Citizens for Truth About the Kennedy Assassination" in Los Angeles, California, with thousands of members in the United States and around the world who seek to open the files and resolve the questions surrounding the murders of John and Robert Kennedy, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and others.
Justice Demands Reopening of the Martin Luther King Assassination Case: New Forensic Tests and Trial for James Earl Ray, Full Disclosure of Government Records
(Washington, DC 3/25/97) Dr. William Pepper, the attorney for James Earl Ray, with the support of the wife and family of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., as well as many civil rights leaders who were associated with Dr. King, has succeeded in convincing Tennessee Criminal Courts Judge Joseph Brown that new scientific testing methods may be able to establish the innocence or guilt of James Earl Ray, and that their results may allow a new trial for the accused assassin of Dr. King, who has long maintained his innocence of the murder and his role as a patsy in the case. The final decision rests with the Tennessee Court of Appeals, which has the power to administer the new forensic tests on the rifle and bullets allegedly used to kill Dr. King, and to require a new trial for James Earl Ray. If the Appeals Court fails to act in a timely fashion in favor of James Earl Ray, he may succumb to a life-threatening liver disease which has twice made him comatose. Under Tennessee laws, Ray's rights to new tests or a trial will end if he should die first.
Dr. Pepper, a featured speaker at the 1996 national conference of the Coalition on Political Assassinations (COPA) is joining with our organization in calling for a quick, favorable decision in these matters by the appeals court, and a full trail for James Earl Ray, who pled guilty at his 1969 trail and then attempted to reverse his plea following conviction. Hard ballistic evidence has failed to date to conclusively link Ray to the murder, or the alleged murder weapon to the bullet that killed Dr. King. The House Select Committee on Assassinations (HSCA) concluded that Ray had been the assassin, but had not acted alone in planning the murder. However, their conclusions were not based on solid forensic evidence, but on Ray's guilty plea and subsequent testimony to the HSCA. William Pepper, Esq. will speak on the case again this year at the National Conference of COPA, June 13-15, 1997 at Georgetown University in Washington, DC.
In addition, the HSCA Chairman, Congressman Louis Stokes, used House Rule 36 to seal all investigative files and records used in their study of the King assassination until 2028. These files number 650-700,000 pages in the National Archives, and should be fully available for release. Other records doubtless exist in the files of government agencies relating to the assassination, the COINTELPRO program of the FBI, and military intelligence spying on Dr. King and other civil rights leaders. Dr. Pepper's investigation suggests that film and photographic records of the assassination are hidden in government repositories. The Committee for an Open Archives, a member group of the Coalition on Political Assassinations, has distributed a national petition since 1990 for the release of these records and repeal of House Rule 36, which allows Congressional committee chairs to seal investigative files for 50 years. The Coalition now calls on Congress to implement full disclosure of all records relating to the King assassination, using as a model the JFK Assassination Records Act of 1992. The establishment of an independent civilian review board, including distinguished members of African-American community, legal scholars, historians and archivists, and independent researchers in this case is required to restore public confidence and to pursue historical truth.
Members of COPA and others are urged to write or fax the Tennessee Court of Appeals, demanding that new ballistics and forensic tests be performed, and that a new trial be granted immediately for James Earl Ray. A sample letter written by author and researcher Philip Melanson, Ph.D. follows, and can be copied for your use or rewritten. In addition, we urge you to contact your local Congressional and Senate representatives to urge that the appropriate government operations and oversight committees draft new legislation to release the files relating to the still unsolved murder of Dr. King. Justice and history demand no less.
Tennessee Court of Appeals
P O Box 909
Jackson, TN 30302
(901) 423-76453 (FAX)
I urge the court to act swiftly and positively in the pursuit of truth and justice in the tragic assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Allowing new scientific tests to be performed on the alleged murder weapon and fatal bullet, and ordering a trial for alleged assassin James Earl Ray are essential in resolving the serious, unanswered questions concerning Dr. King's death. Inaction or negative decisions by this court would constitute a disservice to the King family, the public and our nation's history, as well as to our system of justice.
Letters and faxes to Congress should be addressed to:
Senator Ted Stevens, Chairman
Senate Governmental Operations Committee
Senate Dirksen Building, Room 340
Washington, DC 20510
(202) 224-4751 or 224-9603 (FAX)
Congressman Dan Burton, Chairman
House Government Reform & Oversight Committee
2157 Rayburn House Office Building
Washington, DC 20515
(202) 225-5074 or 225-3974 (FAX)
For more information on your local representatives who serve on these committees, call or contact COPA, P O Box 772, Washington, DC 20044 (202) 785-5299 or 584-2010 (FAX). Our on-line address is copa@nicom.com or on the Web at http://www.nicom.com/~copa. The Coalition on Political Assassinations represents thousands of forensic and ballistics experts, medical doctors, academics, authors, researchers and citizens who believe that serious questions remain in regard to the deaths of John and Robert Kennedy and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. We support full disclosure of all government files relating to these murders, and work toward a resolution of these mysteries. Our regular membership is $35 annually, and includes occasional issues of our newsletter Open Secrets.

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