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Jfk file driver shooter bill cooper9/8/2023 ![]() When Hansson caught wind of these escapades, a shit-storm soon erupted between himself, Cooper and Lear. After getting his mitts on Dallas Revisited, Lear began showing the film (without permission) at his lectures, and passed along a copy to Bill Cooper, who not only afterwards trotted it out like his own baby, but also started selling copies of it at his speaking gigs. Little did Hansson know, but by this time Lear had fallen out of favour with his father, Bill Lear, losing access to those deep family pockets. Hansson approached John Lear (assuming he had deep pockets) and shared a copy of Dallas Revisited in the prospect of getting him to invest in his research. The Truth Betrayed had been produced by a researcher named Lars Hansson, who later noted in his essay Lear and Loathing in Las Vegas that the videotape was intended “to serve only as a preliminary research tool to spur potential investors to underwrite a thorough professional investigation into the theory that the driver of the presidential limousine, William Greer, actually turned around and fired the fatal shot at JFK… It was never intended at any time to be considered a final statement on the issue, much less to be shown publicly and/or distributed as such.” Cooper, not unlike Jones, was known to take a nip or two (and sometimes more) before going off on long-winded rants, occasionally berating the show’s callers.Ĭooper’s sketchiest claim to fame was a videotape he peddled at speaking gigs called The Truth Betrayed: Dallas Revisited which presented “evidence” that JFK had been killed by the driver of the presidential limousine, a secret service agent named William Greer with an “electrically operated, gas powered assassination pistol built by the CIA” containing a shell fish toxin dart. The Hour of the Time was a primitive precursor to Alex Jones’ Infowars, who obviously owes a lot of his bombastic bull-in-a-china-shop style to Bill Cooper. In the early ’90s, Cooper launched a shortwave radio show called The Hour of the Time, which quickly took the Great American Heartland by storm, providing fodder for those hungry for the latest scoop about New World Order conspiracies. Cooper also took aim at the editors of UFO Magazine, Vicky Cooper and Don Ecker (who published a two-part Cooper exposé), referring to them disparagingly as “Don Pecker” and “Sticky Pooper.” In Behold A Pale Horse, Cooper claimed that damn near anyone who ever disagreed with his conspiratorial worldview was part of a sinister disinformation campaign, whom included in its ranks such ufological stalwarts as Bob Lazar, Budd Hopkins, Stan Friedman, Bill Moore, Jaime Shandera, George Knapp, Linda Howe and Bruce Maccabee. ![]() 1Ĭooper-as to be expected-took exception with Lear setting him straight, then turned the tables telling Lear that he was the one who was actually lying, which was Cooper’s usual comeback when presented with facts that didn’t square with his version of reality. ![]() I pulled him aside and asked him what the hell he thought he was doing? I told him there was no way he could have read the Krill Papers in 1973 because I’d just written them along with John Grace only a few months before. He said he’d seen them when he was in Naval Intelligence. Bill was telling the host that the Krill Papers were real. I was standing offstage a bit when I heard Bill talking to the host about the Krill Papers. John Lear, who was a by-stander for the PM Magazine interview, recalled: Krill.” Cooper claimed that the initials “O.H.” meant “original hostage” and that “The Krill Papers” were among a number of top-secret briefing papers he smuggled out in his lunchbox in 1973 while serving in the Navy. ![]() As part of this secret program, an ET had been left behind on Earth identified as “Krll” or “O.H. While chatting up the host of the show prior to taping, Cooper mentioned the “ The Krill Papers,” an infamous ufological document that concerned a secret human-ET exchange program. Cooper’s conspiratorial cosmology included the secretive Majestic-12 group, which consisted of a twelve member body that-according to Cooper’s sources-were the senior members of a larger Illuminati-like thirty-two-member group called the Jason Society that had been commissioned by President Eisenhower to “find the truth of the alien question.”Įxcerpted from Adam Gorightly’s Saucers, Spooks and Kooks: UFO disinformation in the Age of Aquarius, available in paperback from Amazon US and Amazon UK, and also as a Kindle eBook.ĭuring his meteoric ascent into UFO superstardom, Cooper was interviewed by the syndicated television program PM Magazine.
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