Hale Boggs

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Person.png Hale Boggs  Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(Lawyer, politician)
BornThomas Hale Boggs
February 15, 1914
Long Beach, Mississippi
Died1972-10-16 (Age 58)
Alaska, United States
Alma materTulane University
ReligionRoman Catholic
Children • Cokie Roberts
• Thomas Hale Boggs Jr
• Barbara Boggs Sigmund
SpouseLindy Boggs
Member ofAmerican Committee on United Europe, The Warren Commission
Victim ofpremature death
PartyDemocratic
Relatives • Steven V. Roberts
• Rebecca Roberts
• Daniel J. Hartman
• Paul Sigmund
• Lee Roberts Jr
• David Sigmund
• Stephen Sigmund
• DeLesseps Story Morrison

Employment.png House Majority Leader

In office
January 3, 1971 - January 3, 1973

Employment.png House Majority Whip

In office
January 10, 1962 - January 3, 1971

Hale Boggs was a US politician who was on the Warren Commission.

Warren Commission

In a conversation with an aide, Boggs said: “[FBI Director J. Edgar] Hoover lied his eyes out to the [Warren] Commission – on Oswald, on Ruby, on their friends, the bullets, the gun, you name it.” Later that month Boggs went on to say: “Over the postwar years, we have granted to the elite and secret police within our system vast new powers over the lives and liberties of the people. At the request of the trusted and respected heads of those forces, and their appeal to the necessities of national security, we have exempted those grants of power from due accounting and strict surveillance.”[1]

Boggs dissented from the Warren Commission’s majority who supported the single bullet theory. In the 1979 novel The Matarese Circle, author Robert Ludlum portrayed Boggs as having been killed to stop his investigation of the Kennedy assassination.”

Bernard Fensterwald and Michael Ewing in Coincidence or Conspiracy? wrote that “It is a myth that the Warren Commission was united in its conclusion that a lone assassin killed President John F. Kennedy. On the seven-member Warren Commission, there were three dissenters: Senator Sherman Cooper, Senator Richard Russell, and Congressman Hale Boggs. As Dallas journalist Jim Marrs pointed out, Boggs was "The most vocal critic among Commission members. Boggs became frustrated with the panel’s total reliance on the FBI for information. Speaking of the ‘single-bullet theory,’ Boggs once commented, "I had strong doubts about it." On April 1, 1971, House Majority Leader Boggs delivered a blistering attack on [FBI Director] J. Edgar Hoover, charging that under his directorship the FBI had adopted ‘the tactics of the Soviet Union and Hitler’s Gestapo.’"

Qualifying Statement

“This is somewhat like the position the Warren Commission took when Richard Russell, Hale Boggs and John Sherman Cooper refused to sign the draft of the Warren Report until a qualifying statement was inserted. The statement read, ‘Because of the difficulty of proving negatives to a certainty the possibility of others being involved with either Oswald or Ruby cannot be established categorically but if there is any such evidence it has been beyond the reach of all the investigative agencies and resources of the United States and has not come to the attention of this Commission.’”
Richard E. Sprague (1985)  [2]

Several years after [Hale Bogg’s] death in 1972, a colleague of his wife Lindy (who was elected to fill her late husband’s seat in the Congress) recalled Mrs. Boggs remarking, "Hale felt very, very torn during his work [on the Commission]... he wished he had never been on it and wished he’d never signed it [the Warren Report]."[citation needed]

Death

Bogg's airplane, so the official narrative, vanished in Alaska and was never found. With him 3 others vanished as well: the pilot, Representative Nick Regich, and Regich’s aide. Hale’s widow “expressed doubts about it being an accident.”[citation needed]

Concerns=

The Los Angeles Star, on November 22, 1973, reported that before his death Boggs claimed he had ‘startling revelations’ on Watergate and the assassination of John F. Kennedy.”


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