This book (2002) by Gregory Douglas is based on documentation compiled by Douglas’ friend, Robert T. Crowley, former Assistant Deputy Director for Clandestine Operations of the CIA.
These actual files, stating the goal of removing the Kennedy Brothers in 1963 by a team, are in the possession of Gregory Douglas, the author of this book.
"One is impressed by the book's internal coherence. It should trigger a fresh Congressional inquiry into this national tragedy." -- Fredrick J. Norris, LtCdr., US Naval Attaché, ret.
"The book is so astounding… how did the CIA persuade... government officials to... overthrow the... government? It is all here!" -- Military Magazine, Summer 2002
"The materials revealed in Mr. Douglas' book deserve front page news. A monumental achievement." --Back Channels magazine, Summer 2002
About the Author
Gregory Douglas was born in Germany in 1933. He and his family immigrated to the United States in 1934. He is a nephew of a certain Heinrich Müller who happen to have become Chief of the German Secret State Police "Gestapo" in 1934. It was not before 1963 that, by pure chance, Gregory Douglas found out about his uncle's presence in the U.S. Due to them being related and having similar character features, Gregory Douglas quickly became Müller's best friend. Until Müller died in 1983, they spent many years together discussing the past and poring over stacks of documents Müller had salvaged when he left Europe in 1948. It was due to this connection that Douglas got in touch with Robert T. Crowley who, together with Colonel James Critchfield, controlled the former Gestapo Chief when he was employed by the CIA in the late 40s.
Douglas has published four works on his uncle, Hitler's Gestapo Chief, Heinrich Müller ("The 1948 Interrogation of Gestapo Chief Heinrich Müller", vols. 1-3, "Müller Journals: The Washington Years"), which were translated into German, Russian, and Japanese. Müller was hired in 1948 by the CIA and the Truman administration in order to fight Stalinist infiltration in the U.S. It was this Müller who instigated the McCarthy hysteria. The material for these books partly stems from Heinrich Müller himself, and partly from Robert T. Crowley, whose involvement with Gestapo-Müller was confirmed in 2001 by Joseph Trento in his "The Secret History of the CIA."
Mr. Douglas is a contributor of the "Military Advisor" magazine and to historical journals both in the United States and Europe. As an investigative reporter, Mr. Douglas wrote a series of articles on art frauds that resulted in exposure of the notorious Rodin frauds, and was instrumental in uncovering massive thefts from a secure Department of State archive in Berlin in 1995. In 2000, his historical research led him to the discovery of a treasure of gold coins buried beside an Austrian lake by a fleeing Nazi leader, Odilio Globocnik. Douglas currently lives in Illinois.
These actual files, stating the goal of removing the Kennedy Brothers in 1963 by a team, are in the possession of Gregory Douglas, the author of this book.
Bob Dobbs
"One is impressed by the book's internal coherence. It should trigger a fresh Congressional inquiry into this national tragedy." -- Fredrick J. Norris, LtCdr., US Naval Attaché, ret.
"The book is so astounding… how did the CIA persuade... government officials to... overthrow the... government? It is all here!" -- Military Magazine, Summer 2002
"The materials revealed in Mr. Douglas' book deserve front page news. A monumental achievement." --Back Channels magazine, Summer 2002
About the Author
Gregory Douglas was born in Germany in 1933. He and his family immigrated to the United States in 1934. He is a nephew of a certain Heinrich Müller who happen to have become Chief of the German Secret State Police "Gestapo" in 1934. It was not before 1963 that, by pure chance, Gregory Douglas found out about his uncle's presence in the U.S. Due to them being related and having similar character features, Gregory Douglas quickly became Müller's best friend. Until Müller died in 1983, they spent many years together discussing the past and poring over stacks of documents Müller had salvaged when he left Europe in 1948. It was due to this connection that Douglas got in touch with Robert T. Crowley who, together with Colonel James Critchfield, controlled the former Gestapo Chief when he was employed by the CIA in the late 40s.
Douglas has published four works on his uncle, Hitler's Gestapo Chief, Heinrich Müller ("The 1948 Interrogation of Gestapo Chief Heinrich Müller", vols. 1-3, "Müller Journals: The Washington Years"), which were translated into German, Russian, and Japanese. Müller was hired in 1948 by the CIA and the Truman administration in order to fight Stalinist infiltration in the U.S. It was this Müller who instigated the McCarthy hysteria. The material for these books partly stems from Heinrich Müller himself, and partly from Robert T. Crowley, whose involvement with Gestapo-Müller was confirmed in 2001 by Joseph Trento in his "The Secret History of the CIA."
Mr. Douglas is a contributor of the "Military Advisor" magazine and to historical journals both in the United States and Europe. As an investigative reporter, Mr. Douglas wrote a series of articles on art frauds that resulted in exposure of the notorious Rodin frauds, and was instrumental in uncovering massive thefts from a secure Department of State archive in Berlin in 1995. In 2000, his historical research led him to the discovery of a treasure of gold coins buried beside an Austrian lake by a fleeing Nazi leader, Odilio Globocnik. Douglas currently lives in Illinois.
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