Jim Garrison's closing summation
One of the most important scenes in the Oliver Stone movie "JFK" is the
 closing summation given by New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison.  The 
 dramatic impact of the scene is impressive and  quite convincing that a 
 conspiracy was responsible for the assassination of President Kennedy. 
         Critics of "JFK" say that Garrison made no such speech.  The truth is 
 that three separate closing summations were presented by the New Orleans 
 District Attorney's office. 
         The first was delivered by prosecutor James Alcock.  Alcock reiterated 
 the nuts and bolts of the testimony and evidence presented at trial.  He spoke 
 for an hour and twenty five minutes. 
         The second was delivered by Alvin Oser, another prosecutor in the case. 
 Oser spoke for just over an hour and a half, summarizing the Dallas and Dealey 
 Plaza evidence which supported conspiracy and was heavily critical of the Warren 
 Report 
         At this point, Irvin Dymond, Clay Shaw's attorney, gave his single 
 closing argument.  No defense rebuttal was allowed under then existing Louisiana 
 law.  Dymond concentrated on the tenuous link between the events in Dallas and 
 the actions of his client in New Orleans.  Dymond said he still believed in the 
 integrity of the Unites States government, claiming that a conspiracy at the 
 level Garrison suggested is "inconceivable."  Dymond summarized the physical, 
 photographic and medical evidence used in the Warren Report, criticized the 
 reliability of the witnesses the state had presented and the implausibility of 
 Shaw ever using the alias "Clay Bertrand," or knowing David Ferrie.  Dymond's 
 focus on disassociating the events in Dallas from Clay Shaw is critical.  Dymond 
 stated it wasn't the basic issue in the case.  This is the issue that ultimately 
 decided Shaw's fate.  Dymond's last words were, "I ask you to vote your 
 conscience, follow the law--and don't make a mistake." 
         The state was allowed a rebuttal to the defense summation.  Alvin Oser 
 spoke for fifteen minutes, James Alcock  spoke again for just under half an 
 hour, then Garrison himself would finally have the last word. 
         At 10:55pm, February 28, 1969.  Garrison delivered his 
closing argument. 
 He handed out copies of the text to the press.  
From New Orleans District Attorney Records, 
this is the actual address Garrison 
delivered in court in the trial of Clay Shaw for 
conspiracy to assassinate President Kennedy.  
Thanks to David Stager for finding this.
 
         May it please the court.  Gentlemen of the jury. 
         I know you're very tired.  You've been very patient.  This final day has 
 been a long one, so I'll speak only a few minutes. 
         In his argument, Mr. Dymond posed one final issue which raises the 
 question of what we do when the need for justice is confronted by power. 
         So, let me talk to you about the question of whether or not there was 
 government fraud in this case--a question Mr. Dymond seems to want us to answer. 
         A government is a great deal like a human being.  It's not necessarily 
 all good, and it's not necessarily all bad.  We live in a good country.  I love 
 it and you do too.  Nevertheless, the fact remains that we have a government 
 which is not perfect. 
         There have been indications since November the 22nd of 1963--and that 
 was not the last indication--that there is excessive power in some parts of our 
 government.  It is plain that the people have not received all of the truth 
 about some of the things which have happened, about some of the assassinations 
 which have occurred--and more particularly about the assassination of John 
 Kennedy. 
         Going back to when we were children, I think most of us--probably all of 
 us here in the courtroom--once thought that justice came into being of its own 
 accord, that virtue was its own reward, that good would triumph over evil--in 
 short, that justice occurred automatically.  Later, when we found that this 
 wasn't quite so, most of us still felt hopefully that at least justice occurred 
 frequently of its own accord.
 
         Today, I think that almost all of us would have to agree that there is 
 really no machinery--not on this Earth at least--which causes justice to occur 
 automatically.  Men have to make it occur.  Individual human beings have to make 
 it occur.  Otherwise, it doesn't come into existence.  This is not always easy. 
 As a matter of fact, it's always hard, because justice presents a threat to 
 power.  In order to make justice come into being, you often have to fight power. 
 Mr. Dymond raised the question:  Why don't we say it's all a fraud and 
 charge the government with fraud, if this is the case?  Let me be explicit, 
 then, and make myself very clear on this point. 
         The government's handling of the investigation of John Kennedy's murder 
 was a fraud.  It was the greatest fraud in the history of our country.  It 
 probably was the greatest fraud ever perpetrated in the history of humankind. 
         That doesn't mean that we have to accept the continued existence of the 
 kind of government which allows this to happen.  We can do something about it. 
 We're forced either to leave this country or to accept the authoritarianism that 
 has developed--the authoritarianism which tells us that in the year 2029 we can 
 see the evidence about what happened to John Kennedy. 
         Government does not consist only of secret police and domestic espionage 
 operations and generals and admirals--government consists of people.  It also 
 consists of juries.  And cases of murder--whether of the poorest individual or 
 the most distinguished citizen in the land--should be looked at openly in a 
 court of law, where juries can pass on them and not be hidden, not be buried 
 like the body of the victim beneath concrete for countless years. 
         You men in these recent weeks have heard witnesses that no one else in 
 the world has heard.  You've seen the Zapruder film.  You've seen what happened 
 to your President.  I suggest to you that you know right now that, in that area 
 at least, a fraud has been perpetrated. 
         That does not mean that our government is entirely bad; and I want to 
 emphasize that.  It does mean, however, that in recent years, through the 
 development of excessive power because of the Cold War, forces have developed in 
 our government over which there is no control and these forces have an 
 authoritarian approach to justice--meaning, they will let you know what justice 
 is. 
         Well, my reply to them is that we already know what justice is.  It is 
 the decision of the people passing on the evidence.  It is the jury system.  In 
 this issue which is posed by the government's conduct in concealing the evidence 
 in this case--in the issue of humanity as opposed to power--I have chosen 
 humanity, and I will do it again without any hesitation.  I hope every one of 
 you will do the same.  I do this because I love my country and because I want to 
 communicate to the government that we will not accept unexplained assassinations 
 with the casual information that if we live seventy-five years longer, we might 
 be given more evidence. 
         In this particular case, massive power was brought to bear to prevent 
 justice from ever coming into this courtroom.  The power to make authoritive 
 pronouncements, the power to manipulate the news media by the release of false 
 information, the power to interfere with an honest inquiry and the power to 
 provide an endless variety of experts to testify in behalf of power, repeatedly 
 was demonstrated in this case. 
         The American people have yet to see the Zapruder film.  Why?  The 
 American people have yet to see and hear from the real witnesses to the 
 assassination.  Why?  Because, today in America too much emphasis is given to 
 secrecy, with regard to the assassination of our President, and not enough 
 emphasis is given to the question of justice and to the question of humanity. 
      These dignified deceptions will not suffice.  We have had enough of 
 power without truth.  We don't have to accept power without truth or else leave 
 the country.  I don't accept either of these two alternatives.  I don't intend 
 to leave the country and I don't intend to accept power without truth. 
         I intend to fight for the truth.  I suggest that not only is this not 
 un-American, but it is the most American thing we can do--because if the truth 
 does not endure, then our country will not endure. 
         In our country the worst of all crimes occurs when the government 
 murders truth.  If it can murder truth, it can murder freedom.  If it can murder 
 freedom, it can murder your own sons--if they should dare to fight for freedom-- 
 and then it can announce that they were killed in an industrial accident, or 
 shot by the "enemy" or God knows what. 
         In this case, finally, it has been possible to bring the truth about the 
 assassination into a court of law--not before a commission composed of important 
 and powerful and politically astute men, but before a jury of citizens. 
         Now, I suggest to you that yours is a hard duty, because in a sense what 
 you're passing on is equivalent to a murder case.  The difficult thing about 
 passing on a murder case is that the victim is out of your sight and buried a 
 long distance away, and all you can see is the defendant.  It's very difficult 
 to identify with someone you can't see, and sometimes it's hard not to identify 
 to some extent with the defendant and his problems. 
         In that regard, every prosecutor who is at all humane is conscious of 
 feeling sorry for the defendant in every case he prosecutes.  But he is not free 
 to forget the victim who lies buried out of sight.  I suggest to you that, if 
 you do your duty, you also are not free to forget the victim who is buried out 
 of sight. 
         You know, Tennyson once said that, "authority forgets a dying king." 
 This was never more true than in the murder of John Kennedy.  The strange and 
 deceptive conduct of the government after his murder began while his body was 
 warm, and has continued for five years.  You have seen in this courtroom 
 indications of the interest of part of the government power structure in keeping 
 the truth down, in keeping the grave closed. 
         We presented a number of eyewitnesses as well as an expert witness as 
 well as the Zapruder film, to show that the fatal wound of the President came 
 from the front.  A plane landed from Washington and out stepped Dr. Finck for 
 the defense, to counter the clear and apparent evidence of a shot from the 
 front.  I don't have to go into Dr. Finck's testimony in detail for you to show 
 that it simply did not correspond with the facts.  He admitted that he did not 
 complete the autopsy because a general told him not to complete the autopsy. 
       In this conflict between power and justice--to put it that way--just 
 where do you think Dr. Finck stands?  A general, who was not a pathologist, told 
 him not to complete the autopsy, so he didn't complete it.  This is not the way 
 I want my country to be.  When our President is killed he deserves the kind of 
 autopsy that the ordinary citizen gets every day in the State of Louisiana. And 
 the people deserve the facts about it.  We can't have government power suddenly 
 interjecting itself and preventing the truth form coming to the people. 
        Yet in this case, before the sun rose the next morning, power had moved 
 into the situation and the truth was being concealed.  And now, five years later 
 in this courtroom the power of the government in concealing the truth is 
 continuing in the same way. 
         We presented eyewitnesses who told you of the shots coming from the 
 grassy knoll.  A plane landed from Washington, and out came ballistics expert 
 Frazier for the defense.  Mr. Frazier's explanation of the sound of the shots 
 coming from the front, which was heard by eyewitness after eyewitness, was that 
 Lee Oswald created a sonic boom in his firing.  Not only did Oswald break all of 
 the world's records for marksmanship, but he broke the sound barrier as well. 
        I suggest to you, that if any of you have shot on a firing range--and 
 most of you probably have in the service--you were shooting rifles in which the 
 bullet traveled faster than the speed of sound.  I ask you to recall if you ever 
 heard a sonic boom.  If you remember when you were on the firing line, and they 
 would say, "Ready on the left; ready on the right; ready on the firing line; 
 commence firing," you heard the shots coming from the firing line--to the left 
 of you and to the right of you.  If you had heard, as a result of Frazier's 
 fictional sonic boom, firing coming at you from the pits, you would have had a 
 reaction which you would still remember. 
         Mr. Frazier's sonic boom simply doesn't exist.  It's part of the fraud-- 
 a part of the continuing government fraud. 
         The best way to make this country the kind of country it's supposed to 
 be is to communicate to the government that no matter how powerful it may be, we 
 do not accept these frauds.  We do not accept these false announcements.  We do 
 not accept the concealment of evidence with regard to the murder of President 
 Kennedy. 
         Who is the most believable: a Richard Randolph Carr, seated here in a 
 wheelchair and telling you what he saw and what he heard and how he was told to 
 shut his mouth--or Mr. Frazier with his sonic booms? 
         Do we really have to reject Mr. Newman and Mrs. Newman and Mr. Carr and 
 Roger Craig and the testimony of all those honest witnesses--reject all this and 
 accept the fraudulent Warren Commission, or else leave the country? 
         I suggest to you that there are other alternatives.  One of them has 
 been put in practice in the last month in the State of Louisiana--and that is to 
 bring out the truth in a proceeding where attorneys can cross-examine, where the 
 defendant can be confronted by testimony against him, where the rules of 
 evidence are applied and where a jury of citizens can pass on it--and where 
 there is no government secrecy.  Above all, where you do not have evidence 
 concealed for seventy-five years in the name of "national security." 
         All we have in this case are the facts--facts which show that the 
 defendant participated in the conspiracy to kill the President and that the 
 President was subsequently killed in an ambush. 
         The reply of the defense has been the same as the early reply of the 
 government in the Warren Commission.  It has been authority, authority, 
 authority.  The President's seal outside of each volume of the Warren Commission 
 Report--made necessary because there is nothing inside these volumes, only men 
 of high position and prestige sitting on a Board, and announcing the results to 
 you, but not telling you what the evidence is, because the evidence has to be 
 hidden for seventy-five years. 
         You heard in this courtroom in recent weeks, eyewitness after eyewitness 
 after eyewitness and, above all, you saw one eyewitness which was indifferent to 
 power--the Zapruder film.  The lens of the camera is totally indifferent to 
 power and it tells what happened as it saw it happen--and that is one of the 
 reasons 200 million Americans have not seen the Zapruder film.  They should have 
 seen it many times.  They should know exactly what happened.  They all should 
 know what you know now. 
         Why hasn't all of this come into being if there hasn't been government 
 fraud?  Of course there has been fraud by the government. 
         But I'm telling you now that I think we can do something about it.  I 
 think that there are still enough Americans left in this country to make it 
 continue to be America.  I think that we can still fight authoritarianism--the 
 government's insistence on secrecy, government force used in counterattacks 
 against an honest inquiry--and when we do that, we're not being un-American, 
 we're being American.  It isn't easy.  You're sticking your neck out in a rather 
 permanent way, but it has to be done because truth does not come into being 
 automatically.  Individual men, like the members of my staff here, have to work 
 and fight to make it happen--and individual men like you have to make justice 
 come into being because otherwise is doesn't happen. 
         What I'm trying to tell you is that there are forces in America today, 
 unfortunately, which are not in favor of the truth coming out about John 
 Kennedy's assassination.  As long as our government continues to be like this, 
 as long as such forces can get away with such actions, then this is no longer 
 the country in which we were born. 
         The murder of John Kennedy was probably the most terrible moment in the 
 history of our country.  Yet, circumstances have placed you in the position 
 where not only have you seen the hidden evidence but you are actually going to 
 have the opportunity to bring justice into the picture for the first time. 
         Now, you are here sitting in judgment on Clay Shaw.  Yet you, as men, 
 represent more than jurors in an ordinary case because of the victim in this 
 case.  You represent, in a sense, the hope of humanity against government power. 
 You represent humanity, which yet may triumph over excessive government power-- 
 if you will cause it to be so, in the course of doing your duty in this case. 
         I suggest that you ask not what your country can do for you but what you 
 can do for your country. 
         What can you do for your country?  You can cause justice to happen for 
 the first time in this matter.  You can help make our country better by showing 
 that this is still a government of the people.  And if you do that, as long as 
 you live, nothing will ever be more important. 
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