15
The Sirhan B. Sirhan Literary Negotiations, Etc., Inc. by Steven V. Roberts Read this and learn to love William Manchester B ob Kaiser did not wait up for the results of the California primary election. The next morning he turned on the television set. "I saw Sander Vanocur describing the scene, saying, 'Here's the hallway where the shooting took place,' " he recalled. "I thought 'shooting,' they were shooting a film, and we were going to see the film now. And then all of a sudden it hit me—the look on his face, and then the cut immediately to the Ambassador pantry where you saw the wild shadow film of the chaos and the melee in the pantry. I woke my wife and said, 'Jesus Christ, Karen, somebody's shot Kennedy.' " Kaiser was a free-lance writer in Los Angeles who had once worked in the Time bureau and knew the men at Life. He remem- bered the morning this way: "I called Life and said, 'Do you guys need any help ?' Jordan Bonfante, the bureau chief, was out of town but his assistant said, 'Of course I need help, come on down, in fact, get downtown and see if you can't get close to the cops and find out if they know yet who the assassin was.' So I got down- town, and by the time I got down there they had revealed that it was a kid named Sirhan Sirhan." Two years later Kaiser was reading the galley proofs of R.F.K. Must Die!, a six-hundred-forty-page book he had written about Sirhan Sirhan and the assassination of Robert F. Kennedy. It was a book• that Sirhan, by then under sentence of death, was trying to stop in the courts. And it was a book that Kaiser believed would, or at least should, reopen one of the century's most celebrated murder cases. The story of how Kaiser wrote the book is interest- ing in itself. It is also a story that raises important questions about the right of a defendant to a fair trial, and how that trial should t... R A - Sam Yorty's egregious fulminations about the assassin's Com- munist affiliations, to wait for Robert Kennedy's last breath on earth. Meanwhile, Sirhan had asked the American Civil Liberties Union to find him a private attorney. A. L. Wirin, the head of the A.C.L.U., agreed, a decision which caused massive resignations among members whose belief in civil liberties apparently did not extend to an Arab assassin. Kaiser sought out Wirin. "I soon realized," Kaiser said, "that really nobody was able to tell us much and that the assassin would be the guy to get to, that would be the real coup. I got to Wirin and I said, 'Al, can I get to Sirhan,' and he said no. I said I was surprised to hear that because I had just talked to Grant Cooper about the assassin's constitutional rights and he still had a constitutional right of free speech. Wirin was intrigued, not with my little lesson in constitutional law, but with the fact that I knew Grant Cooper. He had been trying to get an attorney for Sirhan and couldn't. This was about four or five days after the assassination. He had tried to get the Los Angeles County Bar Association to appoint one of their members and they wouldn't do it, and so what he wanted was somebody like myself to go after Grant Cooper." Cooper was one of the most respected criminal lawyers in town, a greying, flinty character with a passion for fishing, who looked a little like Spencer Tracy playing Clarence Darrow, suspenders and all. Kaiser's pitch to Cooper contained a sweetener : the at- torney would not lose money on the case if Kaiser were allowed to interview Sirhan. He could then write several exclusive magazine articles and make enough to cover the case's expenses. Cooper agreed to the arrangement, but under one condition: that his role not be made. nnhlie until after he finished representing a wealthy defend-

Etc., Inc. Literary Negotiations, The Sirhan B. Sirhanjfk.hood.edu/Collection/Weisberg Subject Index Files/K... · 2011-12-08 · which would give him visibility and notoriety. "I

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Page 1: Etc., Inc. Literary Negotiations, The Sirhan B. Sirhanjfk.hood.edu/Collection/Weisberg Subject Index Files/K... · 2011-12-08 · which would give him visibility and notoriety. "I

The Sirhan B

. Sirhan L

iterary Negotiations,

Etc., Inc.

by Steven V. R

oberts R

ead this and learn to love William

Manchester

Bob

Kaiser d

id n

ot wait u

p for th

e results of th

e Californ

ia p

rimary election

. Th

e next m

ornin

g he tu

rned

on th

e television

set. "I saw

San

der V

anocu

r describ

ing th

e scen

e, saying, 'H

ere's the h

allway w

here th

e shootin

g took place,' " he recalled. "I thought 'shooting,' they w

ere sh

ooting a film

, and

we w

ere going to see th

e film n

ow. A

nd

then

all of a su

dd

en it h

it me—

the look

on h

is face, and

then

the cu

t im

med

iately to the A

mb

assador p

antry w

here you

saw th

e wild

sh

adow

film of th

e chaos an

d th

e melee in

the p

antry. I w

oke m

y w

ife and

said, 'Jesu

s Ch

rist, Karen

, someb

ody's sh

ot Ken

ned

y.' "

Kaiser w

as a free-lance w

riter in L

os An

geles wh

o had

once

work

ed in

the T

ime b

ureau

and

kn

ew th

e men

at Life. H

e remem

-b

ered th

e morn

ing th

is way: "

I called L

ife and

said, 'D

o you gu

ys n

eed an

y help

?' Jordan

Bon

fante, th

e bu

reau ch

ief, was ou

t of tow

n b

ut h

is assistant said

, 'Of cou

rse I need

help

, come on

dow

n,

in fact, get d

own

town

and

see if you can

't get close to the cop

s an

d fin

d ou

t if they k

now

yet wh

o the assassin

was.' S

o I got dow

n-

town

, and

by th

e time I got d

own

there th

ey had

revealed th

at it w

as a kid

nam

ed S

irhan

Sirh

an."

T

wo years later K

aiser was read

ing th

e galley proofs of R

.F.K

.

Mu

st Die!, a six-h

un

dred

-forty-page b

ook h

e had

written

abou

t S

irhan

Sirh

an an

d th

e assassination

of Rob

ert F. K

enn

edy. It w

as a b

ook• th

at Sirh

an, b

y then

un

der sen

tence of d

eath, w

as trying

to stop in

the cou

rts. An

d it w

as a book

that K

aiser believed

wou

ld,

or at least shou

ld, reop

en on

e of the cen

tury's m

ost celebrated

m

urd

er cases. Th

e story of how

Kaiser w

rote the b

ook is in

terest-in

g in itself. It is also a story th

at raises imp

ortant q

uestion

s abou

t th

e right of a d

efend

ant to a fair trial, an

d h

ow th

at trial shou

ld

t... R

A

-

Sam

Yorty's egregiou

s fulm

ination

s abou

t the assassin

's Com

-m

un

ist affiliations, to w

ait for Rob

ert Ken

ned

y's last breath

on

earth. M

eanw

hile, S

irhan

had

asked

the A

merican

Civil L

iberties

Un

ion to fin

d h

im a p

rivate attorney. A

. L. W

irin, th

e head

of the

A.C

.L.U

., agreed, a d

ecision w

hich

caused

massive resign

ations

amon

g mem

bers w

hose b

elief in civil lib

erties app

arently d

id n

ot exten

d to an

Arab

assassin. K

aiser sough

t out W

irin. "

I soon

realized," Kaiser said, "that really nobody w

as able to tell us much

and

that th

e assassin w

ould

be th

e guy to get to, th

at wou

ld b

e the

real coup

. I got to Wirin

and

I said, 'A

l, can I get to S

irhan

,' and

h

e said n

o. I said I w

as surp

rised to h

ear that b

ecause I h

ad ju

st talk

ed to G

rant C

ooper ab

out th

e assassin's con

stitution

al rights

and

he still h

ad a con

stitution

al right of free sp

eech. W

irin w

as in

trigued

, not w

ith m

y little lesson in

constitu

tional law

, bu

t with

th

e fact that I k

new

Gran

t Coop

er. He h

ad b

een tryin

g to get an

attorney for S

irhan

and

could

n't. T

his w

as abou

t four or five d

ays after th

e assassination

. He h

ad tried

to get the L

os An

geles Cou

nty

Bar A

ssociation to appoint one of their mem

bers and they wouldn't

do it, an

d so w

hat h

e wan

ted w

as someb

ody lik

e myself to go after

Grant C

ooper." C

ooper w

as one of th

e most resp

ected crim

inal law

yers in tow

n,

a greying, flin

ty character w

ith a p

assion for fish

ing, w

ho look

ed

a little like S

pen

cer Tracy p

laying C

larence D

arrow, su

spen

ders

and

all. Kaiser's p

itch to C

ooper con

tained

a sweeten

er : the at-

torney w

ould

not lose m

oney on

the case if K

aiser were allow

ed to

interview

Sirh

an. H

e could

then

write several exclu

sive magazin

e articles and m

ake enough to cover the case's expenses. Cooper agreed

to the arran

gemen

t, bu

t un

der on

e cond

ition: th

at his role n

ot be

mad

e. nn

hlie u

ntil after h

e finish

ed rep

resentin

g a wealth

y defen

d-

Page 2: Etc., Inc. Literary Negotiations, The Sirhan B. Sirhanjfk.hood.edu/Collection/Weisberg Subject Index Files/K... · 2011-12-08 · which would give him visibility and notoriety. "I

all-of a sud

den

it hit m

e—th

e look on

his face, an

d th

en th

e cut

imm

ediately to th

e Am

bassad

or pan

try wh

ere you saw

the w

ild

shad

ow film

of the ch

aos and

the m

elee in th

e pan

try. I wok

e my

wife an

d said

, 'Jesus C

hrist, K

aren, som

ebod

y's shot K

enn

edy.' "

K

aiser was a free-lan

ce writer in

Los A

ngeles w

ho h

ad on

ce w

orked

in th

e Tim

e bu

reau an

d k

new

the m

en at L

ife. He rem

em-

bered

the m

ornin

g this w

ay: "I called

Life an

d said

, 'Do you

guys

need

any h

elp?' Jord

an B

onfan

te, the b

ureau

chief, w

as out of

town

bu

t his assistan

t said, 'O

f course I n

eed h

elp, com

e on d

own

, in

fact, get dow

ntow

n an

d see if you

can't get close to th

e cops

and

find

out if th

ey kn

ow yet w

ho th

e assassin w

as.' So I got d

own

-tow

n, an

d b

y the tim

e I got dow

n th

ere they h

ad revealed

that it

was a k

id n

amed

Sirh

an S

irhan

."

Tw

o years later Kaiser w

as readin

g the galley p

roofs of R.F

.K.

Mu

st Die!, a six-h

un

dred

-forty-page b

ook h

e had

written

abou

t S

irhan

Sirh

an an

d th

e assassination

of Rob

ert F. K

enn

edy. It w

as a b

ook, th

at Sirh

an, b

y then

un

der sen

tence of d

eath, w

as trying

to stop in

the cou

rts. An

d it w

as a book

that K

aiser believed

wou

ld,

or at least shou

ld, reop

en on

e of the cen

tury's m

ost celebrated

m

urd

er cases. Th

e story of how

Kaiser w

rote the b

ook is in

terest-in

g in itself. It is also a story th

at raises imp

ortant q

uestion

s abou

t th

e right of a d

efend

ant to a fair trial, an

d h

ow th

at trial shou

ld

be financed. R

obert B

lair Kaiser is th

irty-nin

e, one of th

ose willin

g victims

of Sou

thern

Californ

ia wh

o wou

ld u

sually rath

er play ten

nis or go

skiin

g th

an

work

. He jo

ined

the J

esuits a

s a y

ou

ng m

an

an

d

end

ured

the clerical life for ten

years—th

e first two of w

hich

were

devoted to picking grapes—before abandoning his vow

s. He started

work

ing on

a new

spap

er in P

hoen

ix and

with

in several years b

e-cam

e Tim

e's acting b

ureau

chief in

Rom

e, covering th

e Vatican

C

oun

cil and

writin

g a book

abou

t Pop

e John

. Mean

wh

ile, his first

marriage b

roke u

p an

d h

e return

ed to th

e magazin

e's Los A

ngeles

bu

reau. H

e took a leave of ab

sence in

1966 to work

for Th

omas

Brad

en, a frien

d of th

e Ken

ned

ys, wh

o was ru

nn

ing for L

ieuten

ant

Govern

or of Californ

ia. Brad

en lost—

he n

ow w

rites a new

spap

er

colum

n w

ith F

rank

Man

kiew

icz, Rob

ert Ken

ned

y's former p

ress secretary—

bu

t Kaiser d

ecided

to qu

it Tim

e and

start free-lancin

g. "

In M

arch of 1968 I w

as just gettin

g going—

I had

struggled

for a year an

d a h

alf and

Pierre S

alinger called

me an

d said

, 'Wou

ld

you go to w

ork for B

ob K

enn

edy in

Neb

raska? W

e wan

t someon

e to ru

n th

e press op

eration,' "

Kaiser recalled

. "S

o I kin

d of gave

it twen

ty-four h

ours' th

ough

t and

said, 'L

ook, I'd

like to h

elp,

mayb

e later.' An

d later n

ever came. W

ith th

at kin

d of h

istory I w

as more cu

rious th

an m

ost guys w

ho w

ere outsid

e, and

I wan

ted

to know m

ore about the assassination." A

fter he got d

own

town

on th

e morn

ing of Ju

ne 5, K

aiser spen

t several days trooping around tow

n with a herd of other reporters—

to watch

the S

irhan

s' poor little h

ouse ou

t in P

asaden

a, to hear

extend

to an A

rab assassin

. Kaiser sou

ght ou

t Wirin

. "I soon

realized," K

aiser said, "that really nobody was able to tell us m

uch an

d th

at the assassin

wou

ld b

e the gu

y to get to, that w

ould

be th

e real cou

p. I got to W

irin an

d I said

, 'Al, can

I get to Sirh

an,' an

d

he said

no. I said

I was su

rprised

to hear th

at becau

se I had

just

talked

to Gran

t Coop

er abou

t the assassin

's constitu

tional righ

ts an

d h

e still had

a constitu

tional righ

t of free speech

. Wirin

was

intrigu

ed, n

ot with

my little lesson

in con

stitution

al law, b

ut w

ith

the fact th

at I kn

ew G

rant C

ooper. H

e had

been

trying to get an

-

attorney for S

irhan

and

could

n't. T

his w

as abou

t four or five d

ays after th

e assassination

. He h

ad tried

to get the L

os An

geles Cou

nty

Bar A

ssociation to appoint one of their mem

bers and they wouldn't

do it, an

d so w

hat h

e wan

ted w

as someb

ody lik

e myself to go after

Grant C

ooper." C

ooper w

as one of th

e most resp

ected crim

inal law

yers in tow

n,

a greying, flin

ty character w

ith a p

assion for fish

ing, w

ho look

ed

a little like S

pen

cer Tracy p

laying C

larence D

arrow, su

spen

ders

and

all. Kaiser's p

itch to C

ooper con

tained

a sweeten

er: the at-

torney w

ould

not lose m

oney on

the case if K

aiser were allow

ed to

interview

Sirh

an. H

e could

then

write several exclu

sive magazin

e articles and m

ake enough to cover the case's expenses. Cooper agreed

to the arran

gemen

t, bu

t un

der on

e cond

ition: th

at his role 'n

ot be

mad

e pu

blic u

ntil after h

e finish

ed rep

resentin

g a wealth

y defen

d-

ant in

a high

ly pu

blicized

card-ch

eating case at th

e local Friars'

Clu

b. U

ntil C

ooper cou

ld p

ub

licly enter th

e case, an attorn

ey of record w

as needed. Several lawyers had volunteered to the A

.C.L

.U.

and Cooper selected R

ussell Parsons.

Wh

y did

Kaiser get in

volved in

a case so man

y others—

lawyers,

writers, and, later, publishers—

shunned as they would a leper? P

art of it w

as his ten

uou

s association w

ith th

e Ken

ned

ys. An

d p

art of

it, he ad

mitted

to me, w

as his "

overween

ing am

bition

." H

e did

n

ot Wan

t mon

ey; at first he even

thou

ght of tu

rnin

g over all the

proceed

s from h

is work

. Wh

at he d

id w

ant w

as the story, a story

wh

ich w

ould

give him

visibility an

d n

otoriety. "I w

as a free-lance

writer, h

ere in L

.A., an

d it w

as the story of th

e year in L

.A., an

d

if a guy cou

ldn

't get that story. . . . If a free-lan

cer could

n't get

it then

prob

ably n

o one cou

ld h

ave gotten it. I th

ink

it wou

ld h

ave b

een m

uch

hard

er for a staffer at Tim

e or Life or T

he N

ew Y

ork

Tim

es to get anyw

here as close as I d

id. H

ere I was an

emissary

from W

irin to C

ooper, tryin

g to find

Sirh

an an

attorney. T

o get th

e story

an

edito

r mig

ht sa

y th

at's a

ll righ

t, bu

t mayb

e he

wou

ldn

't. Mayb

e he'd

say you h

ave no b

usin

ess getting th

at in-

volved in a story." raiser m

ade a gen

tleman

's agreemen

t with

Coop

er to get his in

-terview

s with Sirhan. A

month later he got a call from

Jordan Bon-

fante at L

ife. Ru

ssell Parson

s, the attorn

ey of record, h

ad h

ired

an investigator named M

ichael McC

owan, an ex-cop w

ho had once been convicted of robbing the 'U

.S. Mails. M

cCow

an is a flamboyant

Ph

oto

gra

ph

on

pag

e 1

32 b

y D

an

Wyn

n

ES

QU

IRE

: NO

VE

MB

ER

131

Page 3: Etc., Inc. Literary Negotiations, The Sirhan B. Sirhanjfk.hood.edu/Collection/Weisberg Subject Index Files/K... · 2011-12-08 · which would give him visibility and notoriety. "I

on iro

an "I th

ink I w

as

disg

usted

with

myself fo

r not

bein

g ab

le to p

ull o

ne h

undred

percen

t of th

e truth

out o

f him

,

and I tu

rned

the d

isgust to

ward

him

. I should

hav

e blam

ed m

yself

for p

erhap

s not h

avin

g m

ore

finesse, b

ut I b

lamed

him

for

bein

g so

closed

and fo

r not h

avin

g

enough sen

se to co

nfid

e in h

is

psy

chiatrist, w

ho co

uld

hav

e

help

ed h

im...

V.

_,0,4011P

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type, w

ith sh

ow

man

-like tastes in

cars and clo

thes, an

d, acco

rdin

g

to B

onfan

te, he w

as back

in N

ew Y

ork

tryin

g to

sell Sirh

an's sto

ry

to a magazine. W

hen Kaiser heard that, he exploded, som

ething he

does rath

er often

. Then

Parso

ns tu

rned

affable—

partly

becau

se

McC

ow

an h

ad n

ot b

een ab

le to sell an

yth

ing—

and ag

reed to

take

Kaiser, w

ho w

as still thin

kin

g in

terms o

f a mag

azine p

iece, to

Sirhan's cell for an interview

. The defense team

had to hire KaisM

as an o

fficial investig

ator, b

ecause n

o n

ewsm

en w

ere allow

ed to

see the d

efendan

t. At first K

aiser thought it w

as just a ru

se;

later he w

ound u

p d

oin

g co

nsid

erable w

ork

on th

e case. In ad

di-

tion, G

rant C

ooper recalled

, mak

ing K

aiser an in

vestig

ator p

ro-

hib

ited th

e pro

secutio

n fro

m su

bpoen

aing h

im. It also

placed

the

writer u

nder all co

urt o

rders g

overn

ing p

retrial publicity

, and

thus h

elped

pro

tect Sirh

an.

On A

ugust 1

5, K

aiser had

his first in

terview

. He rem

embered

it this w

ay : "I h

ad th

is session w

ith S

irhan

, about tw

o o

r three

hours. P

arsons ask

ed n

inety

-five p

ercent o

f the q

uestio

ns an

d th

ey

were all lead

ing q

uestio

ns an

d it so

unded

like I h

ad g

ot a re-

hearsed

thin

g. W

e got o

ut o

n th

e sidew

alk an

d P

arsons said

,

'Well, th

at interv

iew o

ught to

be w

orth

$100,0

00.' A

nd I said

,

'Russ, th

at was n

o in

terview

. In th

e first place y

ou ask

ed all th

e

questio

ns; in

the seco

nd p

lace that w

as a canned

, spiel; in

the

third

place I'v

e got to

learn a lo

t more ab

out h

is back

gro

und, h

is

family

and h

is gro

win

g u

p, h

is thoughts o

n lo

ve an

d w

ar and

religio

n an

d ev

eryth

ing else, to

sell anyth

ing.' " T

wo m

ore in

ter-

views produced little new

material. M

eanwhile, according to K

aiser,

Parso

ns an

d M

cCow

an w

ere exertin

g p

ressure o

n, h

im to

write a

book in

stead o

f an article. T

hey

wan

ted m

ore m

oney

, and b

esides,

McG

owan had already been

turned down by m

any of the big maga-

zines. R

eluctan

tly, K

aiser agreed

. He w

as already co

nvin

ced th

at

Sirhan w

as too "shallow" to provide m

aterial for a biography. More-

over, K

aiser recalled, "S

irhan

had

n't rem

embered

anyth

ing o

f the

assassinatio

n itself, in

the p

antry

. I did

n't k

now

wheth

er to b

elieve

that o

r not, b

ut if th

at was h

is story

and if h

e stuck

to it th

en

I would

n't h

ave th

e feelings o

f the assassin

as he lev

eled th

e gun

or an

yth

ing lik

e that. S

o I w

asn't to

o clear w

hat th

e heck

the b

ook

was g

oin

g to

be ex

cept th

at I knew

I could

get in

volv

ed an

d stay

involv

ed an

d w

rite a histo

ry m

ore o

f the case an

d o

f all the o

ther

peo

ple aro

und it, an

d th

at's the w

ay it tu

rned

out."

Kaiser's ag

ent at th

e time w

as Don C

ongdon, w

ho w

as also

William

Manchester's agent. B

oth of them had been m

ade so wary

by M

anch

ester's treatmen

t at the h

ands o

f the K

enned

ys th

at the

contract d

rafted b

y K

aiser's lawyers gave th

e writer ab

solu

te con-

trol over the manuscript. Indeed, few

publishers today would com

-

missio

n a b

ook in

which

the su

bject h

as the rig

ht to

censo

r the

man

uscrip

t; Man

chester left to

o m

any scars. K

aiser's only

oblig

a-

tion was to "m

ake every effort to consult with the principals of the

story

, inclu

din

g S

irhan

B. S

irhan

, his fam

ily an

d h

is attorn

eys,

double-ch

eckin

g th

e facts with

them

and h

is interp

retation o

f +lint

hp

ma

y n

rod

uce a

work

or w

ork

s in k

eepin

g

work

ed it aro

und so

that I w

ould

take less p

ercentag

e than

I had

orig

inally

wan

ted an

d th

at the law

yers w

ould

take less an

d th

e

family

would

take m

ore. I n

ever felt rig

ht ab

out th

at."

But th

e agreem

ent w

as mad

e: one th

ird fo

r Kaiser, tw

o th

irds

for the family. O

ut of the two thirds, one half w

ent to the lawyers,

with

their ex

pen

ses com

ing o

ff the to

p. (B

y m

idsu

mm

er, $32,0

00

had been turned over by Kaiser, m

ainly from television, advances

on th

e book, an

d m

agazin

e sales here an

d ab

road

. The fam

ily h

ad

kept $6,000, the rest going for legal expenses. C

ooper was still out

$10,000 of his own m

oney. Another $19,000 w

as in escrow, w

aiting

for all legal complications to be settled.)

Even before K

aiser went back to N

ew Y

ork to sell the book, he

ran into trouble. Don C

ongdon called and said he could not repre-

sent him anym

ore. According to K

aiser, Congdon explained: "W

e

had

a big

crisis meetin

g h

ere and m

y p

artners d

on't w

ant m

e to

get involved in this book because the Harold M

atson Com

pany does

not want to be know

n as the agency which gets rich on the death of

Kennedys." W

hen he finally reached New

York, K

aiser and his new

agent, Maxim

ilian Becker, w

ent to see Robert G

utwillig, his editor

at World

and N

ew A

merican

Lib

rary. K

aiser already h

ad a co

n-

tract with

the co

mpan

y fo

r two o

ther b

ooks, in

cludin

g o

ne ab

out

nuns. "I was thinking in the area of a $25,000 to $75,000 advance,"

Kaiser said

. "Holt h

ad ju

st giv

en C

oretta K

ing an

advan

ce of

$500,0

00 fo

r her sto

ry, so

I did

n't th

ink $

25,0

00 w

as exorb

itant.

I was very naive and took the naive new

sman's approach: here's the

story

, who w

ants it?"

Coin

ciden

tally, G

utw

illig h

ad h

elped

start the w

ave o

f "killer"

books flo

odin

g th

e mark

et at the tim

e by u

rgin

g G

erold

Fran

k to

write T

he B

osto

n S

tran

gler. H

e had

then

become so

meth

ing o

f an

expert in

the g

enre, d

ealing w

ith cases w

hich

involv

ed law

yers

such

as F. L

ee Bailey

and P

ercy F

orem

an. A

mong th

e books

he h

ad p

rom

oted

were o

ne o

n th

e Coppolin

o m

urd

er case in

New

Jersey an

d an

oth

er about a g

entlem

an k

now

n as th

e "Pied

Pip

er of T

ucso

n." In

fact, just th

e week

befo

re Kaiser cam

e to

tow

n, G

utw

illig h

ad m

et with

William

Brad

ford

Huie, th

e writer

who w

as tryin

g to

ped

dle th

e story

of Jam

es Earl R

ay. B

ut th

e

edito

r was startin

g to

hav

e second th

oughts. "I h

ad real q

ualm

s

about th

ese books in

terms o

f quality

," said G

utw

illig, w

ho n

ow

work

s for P

layboy. "I w

as also concerned—you couldn't in any w

ay

prove these books were helping to create a clim

ate of violence—but

you didn't know w

ho was reading them

, particularly in paperback.

They had enorm

ous sales and were syndicated in m

agazines. Then

Bob K

enned

y w

as killed

, and w

hile I w

asn't clo

se to h

im, I k

new

him fairly w

ell, and I was em

otionally involved with him

. I decided

when he w

as killed that I would get out of the violence business in

publishing. When K

aiser came to m

e with this arrangem

ent he had

mad

e with

the law

yers, I really

jum

ped

out o

f my sk

in. I g

ot v

ery

upset an

d to

ld h

im it w

as a terrible th

ing to

do. W

e were g

ivin

g

peo

ple a licen

se to k

ill. First th

ing y

ou d

o is k

ill som

ebody, th

en

you get a lawyer, an

d th

en y

ou g

et a publish

er. I had

been

quite

Page 8: Etc., Inc. Literary Negotiations, The Sirhan B. Sirhanjfk.hood.edu/Collection/Weisberg Subject Index Files/K... · 2011-12-08 · which would give him visibility and notoriety. "I

Parso

ns an

d M

cCo

wan

were ex

erting

pressu

re on

him

to w

rite a b

oo

k in

stead o

f an article. T

hey

wan

ted m

ore m

on

ey, an

d b

esides,

McC

owan had already been turned dow

n by many of the big m

aga-zin

es. Relu

ctantly

, Kaiser ag

reed. H

e was alread

y co

nv

inced

that

Sirhan w

as too "shallow" to provide m

aterial for a biography. More-

over, K

aiser recalled, "S

irhan

had

n't rem

embered

anyth

ing o

f the

assassinatio

n itself, in

the p

antry

. I did

n't k

now

wheth

er to b

elieve

that o

r no

t, bu

t if that w

as his sto

ry an

d if h

e stuck

to it th

en

I would

n't h

ave th

e feelings o

f the assassin

as he lev

eled th

e gun

or an

yth

ing

like th

at. So

I wasn

't too

clear wh

at the h

eck th

e bo

ok

w

as going to

be ex

cept th

at I knew

I could

get in

volv

ed an

d stay

in

volv

ed an

d w

rite a histo

ry m

ore o

f the case an

d o

f all the o

ther

peo

ple aro

un

d it, an

d th

at's the w

ay it tu

rned

ou

t." K

aiser's agen

t at the tim

e was D

on C

ongdon, w

ho w

as also

William

Man

chester's ag

ent. B

oth

of th

em h

ad b

een m

ade so

wary

b

y M

anch

ester's treatmen

t at the h

and

s of th

e Ken

ned

ys th

at the

contract d

rafted b

y K

aiser's lawyers g

ave th

e writer ab

solu

te con-

trol o

ver th

e man

uscrip

t. Indeed

, few p

ublish

ers today

would

com

-m

ission

a bo

ok

in w

hich

the su

bject h

as the rig

ht to

censo

r the

man

uscrip

t ; Man

chester left to

o m

any

scars. Kaiser's o

nly

ob

liga-

tion w

as to "m

ake ev

ery effo

rt to co

nsu

lt with

the p

rincip

als of th

e sto

ry, in

cludin

g S

irhan

B. S

irhan

, his fam

ily an

d h

is attorn

eys,

do

ub

le-check

ing

the facts w

ith th

em an

d h

is interp

retation

of

these facts, so

that h

e may

pro

duce a w

ork

or w

ork

s in k

eepin

g

with the best canons of objective reporting and historical accuracy."

Kaiser h

ad also

been

frigh

tened

by

McC

ow

an. "I d

on

't kn

ow

w

heth

er the g

od

s will co

nd

emn

me o

r no

t," he recalled

, "but I

figu

red, let's m

ake an

exclu

sive ag

reemen

t, so th

e family

can't

be sellin

g o

ther rig

hts o

ut th

e side d

oor. A

nd I lo

aded

the co

ntract

with

every

possib

le right I co

uld

thin

k o

f, even

though I h

ad n

o

idea o

r sense th

at I was ev

er goin

g to

exercise th

em. B

ut. I g

ot

TV

rights, rad

io rig

hts, m

ovie rig

hts, fo

reign rig

hts, y

ou k

novtf,

all the rig

hts. S

o after th

e case was o

ver, w

hen

NB

C in

terview

ed

Sirh

an, th

ey h

ad to

neg

otiate w

ith m

e and

they

had

to p

ay m

e $

17

,50

0, w

hich

I then

pu

t into

the k

itty an

d it w

as split u

p lik

e ev

eryth

ing

else was sp

lit up

. Wh

ereas if I had

n't th

ou

gh

t of th

at, th

e family

would

have p

robab

ly b

een th

e ones to

neg

otiate th

e rig

hts w

ith N

BC

, and

the fam

ily w

ou

ld h

ave g

otten

richer th

an

they

are no

w. S

o in

a way

I feel like k

ind

of a b

astard, I really

sort

of went in there and took everything aw

ay. On the other hand, w

hat good w

ould

an ex

clusiv

e agreem

ent w

ith S

irhan

be in

, say, p

rint,

if they

could

turn

around an

d m

ake all so

rts of o

ther d

eals. So it

either h

ad to

be ex

clusiv

e or n

oth

ing."

Th

e big

gest h

assle came o

ver th

e allocatio

n o

f pro

fits. "I nev

er felt rig

ht ab

out

givin

g a

dim

e to S

irhan

, to S

irhan

's family

," K

aiser con

ceded

. "I wo

rked

ou

t the assig

nm

ent-o

f-pro

ceeds ag

ree-m

ent o

rigin

ally so

that th

e family

would

hav

e a min

uscu

le amount

—about sixteen percent—

and that the lawyers w

ould get most o

f it. B

ut I g

ot in

to a b

ig fig

ht w

ith A

del S

irhan

over th

at and w

e finally

Co

incid

entally

, Gu

twillig

had

help

ed start th

e wav

e of "k

iller" books flo

odin

g th

e mark

et at the tim

e by u

rgin

g G

erold

Fran

k to

w

rite Th

e Boston

Stran

gler. He had then becom

e something of an

exp

ert in th

e gen

re, dealin

g w

ith cases w

hich

inv

olv

ed law

yers

such

as F. L

ee Bailey

and

Percy

Fo

reman

. Am

on

g th

e bo

ok

s he h

ad p

rom

oted

were o

ne o

n th

e Coppolin

o m

urd

er case in

New

Jersey an

d an

oth

er abo

ut a g

entlem

an k

no

wn

as the "P

ied

Pip

er of T

ucso

n." In

fact, just th

e week

befo

re Kaiser cam

e to

tow

n, G

utw

illig h

ad m

et with

William

Brad

ford

Huie, th

e writer

wh

o w

as tryin

g to

ped

dle th

e story

of Jam

es Earl R

ay. B

ut th

e ed

itor w

as starting to

hav

e second th

oughts. "I h

ad real q

ualm

s ab

out th

ese books in

terms o

f quality

," said G

utw

illig, w

ho n

ow

w

orks for Playboy. "

I was also concerned—

you couldn't in any way

prove these books were helping to create a clim

ate of violence—but

you didn't know w

ho was reading them

, particularly in paperback. T

hey had enormous sales and w

ere syndicated in magazines. T

hen B

ob K

enned

y w

as killed

, and w

hile I w

asn't clo

se to h

im, I kn

ew

him fairly w

ell, and I was em

otionally involved with him

. I decided w

hen he was killed that I w

ould get out of the violence business in publishing. W

hen Kaiser cam

e to me w

ith this arrangement he had

mad

e with

the law

yers, I really

jum

ped

ou

t of m

y sk

in. I g

ot v

ery

up

set and

told

him

it was a terrib

le thin

g to

do

. We w

ere giv

ing

peo

ple a. licen

se to k

ill. First th

ing y

ou d

o is k

ill som

ebody, th

en

you g

et a lawyer, an

d th

en y

ou g

et a publish

er. I had

been

quite

friend

ly w

ith K

aiser and

he b

ecame v

ery u

pset. H

e felt the b

oo

k

was p

art of h

istory

, so o

n an

d so

forth

. I told

him

I cou

ldn

't any

longer, m

ake th

at kin

d o

f justificatio

n, an

d I released

him

from

his

op

tion

. I felt stron

gly

that it w

as a bad

bo

ok

that w

ou

ldn

't sell. He

thought it w

ould

be a classic w

ith a cap

ital K."

Fro

m K

aiser's view

po

int, th

e meetin

g w

as just as an

gry

and

u

nh

app

y. "I h

ad th

is lon

g sessio

n w

ith G

utw

illig an

d E

d K

uh

n,

the p

residen

t of W

orld

Pu

blish

ing

," Kaiser said

. "Bo

th o

f them

ju

st did

n't feel rig

ht ab

ou

t this th

ing

. Th

ey co

uld

n't articu

late their feelings but I knew

they were real feelings because I rem

em-

ber Kuhn even crying, tears com

ing down his cheeks, just thinking

about th

e a

ssassin

atio

n. W

hen G

utw

illig sa

id h

e d

idn't fe

el

righ

t abo

ut it, I said

, 'Lo

ok

, wh

at's that g

ot to

do

with

any

thin

g?

You guys are in business to m

ake money for your stockholders and

if it's a go

od

bo

ok

that p

eop

le wan

t to read

I just d

on

't un

derstan

d

how your feelings could get in the w

ay. This is a professional thing.

I feel abo

ut it to

o. I lo

ved

Ken

ned

y, I ad

mired

him

, I tho

ug

ht h

e w

ou

ld b

e Presid

ent. B

ut I'm

curio

us, an

d I th

ink

the w

orld

is curious, and w

e may never know

. Sirhan m

ay never even get to trial. T

he way assassin

s get to trial in

this co

un

try th

ere's abo

ut a fifty

-fifty

chan

ce he'll g

et to trial. A

nd ev

en in

a trial we m

ay n

ot k

now

w

hat h

appen

ed.' B

ut G

utw

illig to

ld m

e he d

idn't th

ink I'd

get an

y-

thin

g n

ew, th

at it was u

nim

portan

t anyw

ay, an

d th

at it would

take

me a y

ear to d

o. H

e wasn

't listenin

g. H

e'd m

ade u

p h

is min

d th

at he w

asn't going to help S

irhan's defense." (Con

tinu

ed on page 205)

13

4

ES

QU

IRE

: NO

VE

MB

ER

Page 9: Etc., Inc. Literary Negotiations, The Sirhan B. Sirhanjfk.hood.edu/Collection/Weisberg Subject Index Files/K... · 2011-12-08 · which would give him visibility and notoriety. "I

Th

nm

aa

Wa

hl is

wa

arin

n a

tits by P

eter Max an

d a D

ry & N

atural look

by Com

mand.

Copyrig

ht 1

970, A

lberto

-Cu

lver Co

., Melro

se Park

, III.

(Contin

ued

from

page 1

S4)

How

does so

meo

ne lik

e Sirh

an p

ay

for an

adeq

uate d

efense? G

rant

Cooper w

as u

neasy

about th

e a

r-ran

gem

ent w

ith K

aiser, but h

e saw

no a

ltern

ativ

e. "I h

ave a

gre

at d

eal

of d

ou

bt a

s to th

e w

isdo

m o

f the

contra

ct a

s it h

as d

evelo

ped,"

sa

id C

ooper, w

ho w

as fire

d

by

Sirh

an

afte

r the tria

l. "A

nd

I certa

inly

wo

uld

no

t have fe

lt right ta

kin

g a

ny

mo

ney

for m

yself. E

very

thin

g

I get after ex

pen

ses is goin

g

to th

e Un

iversity

of S

ou

thern

C

alifo

rnia

law

school. B

ut

know

ing th

e k

ind o

f trial it

was g

oin

g to

be, an

d k

now

ing

the k

ind o

f defe

nse

we h

ad

to p

ut o

n, it w

as a

bso

lute

ly

necessary

that w

e hav

e mo

ney

fo

r exp

enses. A

nd w

here th

e hell else w

as it goin

g to

com

e fro

m?"

Sirh

an, o

r anyone else, can

b

e represen

ted b

y th

e pub

lic defe

nder, b

ut C

ooper fe

els

that is an

imperfect so

lutio

n.

"We'v

e g

ot a

good p

ublic

defen

der's o

ffice in L

os A

n-

gele

s, bu

t they a

re c

ircu

m-

scribed

on th

e budget sid

e as to

what th

ey c

an sp

end fo

r expert w

itnesse

s and th

e

like," sa

id th

e la

wyer. A

nd

as Sirh

an h

imself rem

arked

w

hen

he in

sisted o

n a p

rivate

atto

rney, "

The p

ublic

de-

fender g

ets paid

at the sam

e w

indow

as the p

rosecu

tor."

"I felt th

e m

oney sh

ould

have b

een ra

ised th

rough

som

e sort o

f public arran

ge-

men

t," said G

utw

illig. "If th

e A

.C.L

.U. h

ad ag

reed to

keep

th

e case, it should

hav

e gone

out a

nd ra

ised th

e m

oney ;

there sh

ould

be so

me so

rt of

agen

cy lik

e that su

bsid

izing

cases." In

fact, $1

6,0

00

was

rais

ed

am

on

g A

meric

an

A

rab

s for S

irhan

, bu

t that

covere

d le

ss than o

ne th

ird

of th

e expen

ses. In an

y case,

it is un

realistic to ex

pect th

e public

to c

ontrib

ute

to th

e

defen

se of a m

urd

erer. Dar-

as rather m

orib

und. D

utto

n w

as look-

ing fo

r nonfictio

n b

ooks o

n cu

rrent

top

ics. "Jack an

d I h

it it off," recalled

K

aise

r. "We w

ere

bo

th C

ath

olic

s, and h

e h

ad re

ad m

y b

ook o

n P

olo

) Jo

hn, an

d w

e had

mutu

al friends in

th

e liberal C

atholic co

mm

unity

and

he felt k

ind o

f morally

oblig

ated to

m

ake an

offer. B

ut h

e thought h

e'd

mak

e the lo

west p

ossib

le offer so

he

would

n't h

ave to

publish

the b

ook. H

e offered

$7,5

00 an

d it w

as the o

nly

goddam

n o

ffer we h

ad. I rem

ember

calling h

im u

p fro

m th

e airport o

n

my

way

ou

t of to

wn

sayin

g, 'Y

ou

've

got y

ourself a b

ook,' an

d h

e was so

su

rprised

." M

acra

e w

as n

ot su

rprise

d th

at

Kaiser h

ad g

otten

no

big

offers; h

e w

as su

rprise

d th

at D

utto

n w

as th

e

on

ly c

om

pan

y to

mak

e a

bid

. He

loo

ked

on

the p

roje

ct a

s "fa

irly

specu

lative" an

d w

as not ev

en su

re "w

hat so

rt of b

ook w

ould

evolv

e." B

ut in

gen

eral the id

ea was to

stud

y

the p

sych

olo

gical m

akeu

p o

f a killer

and th

e way

in w

hich

a modern

police

forc

e in

vestig

ate

s a m

ajo

r crim

e.

Macrae d

id n

ot feel th

e pro

ject was

eth

ical, a

lthough h

e a

gre

ed w

ith

Kaise

r that a

bio

gra

phy o

f Sirh

an

was n

ot a g

ood id

ea. "We d

idn't w

ant

to tak

e advan

tage o

f the assassin

a-tio

n o

f Robert K

enned

y, fo

r whom

all o

f us h

ere had

enorm

ous resp

ect.

TH

E S

IRH

AN

B. S

IRH

AN

L

ITE

RA

RY

NE

GO

TIA

TIO

NS

, ET

C., IN

C.

Page 10: Etc., Inc. Literary Negotiations, The Sirhan B. Sirhanjfk.hood.edu/Collection/Weisberg Subject Index Files/K... · 2011-12-08 · which would give him visibility and notoriety. "I

Th

om

as D

ah

l Is we

arin

g a

tie b

y Pe

ter M

ax a

nd

a D

ry & N

atu

ral lo

ok b

y Co

mm

an

d.

Copyright 1970, A

lberto-Culver C

o., Melrose P

ark, Ill.

Introducing: New

CO

MM

AN

D

Dry&

Natural H

air Control

for Men.

To

da

y's loo

k is na

tura

l, ea

sy, ind

ividu

al. A

nd

tod

ay's d

esig

n-

ers cre

ate

styles th

at re

flect th

at lo

ok. C

om

mand h

as cre

ate

d

ne

w D

ry & N

atu

ral H

air C

on

trol to

kee

p yo

ur h

air lo

okin

g n

at-

ura

l, ea

sy a

nd

ind

ivid

ua

l ...an

d k

ee

p it in

pla

ce

, too

. Dry

&

Natu

ral is n

eve

r stiff or sticky. It h

as n

o sw

eet sce

nt to

get in

th

e w

ay. D

ry & N

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ral. It's fo

r tod

ay's lo

ok in

me

n's h

air.

Get your first Com

mand D

ry & N

atural look FREE

In ca

se so

meone b

eat yo

u to

the co

u-

pon, you can get your first Dry &

Natural

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EE

just by sending 250 (to cover th

e co

st of h

and

ling) to

:

Co

mm

an

d D

ry & N

atu

ral, D

ep

t. E, B

ox

79

4, H

insd

ale

, Illino

is 60

52

1

r

Co

mm

and

s Dry &

Natu

ral D

ept. E

, Bo

x 794, Hin

sdale, Illin

ois 60521

I'd lik

e m

y firs

t Dry

& N

atu

ral lo

ok F

RE

E. I'm

enclo

sin

g

25

0 to

cove

r the

cost o

f ha

nd

ling

.

Nam

e

Addre

ss

City

State

Zip

Ple

ase

allo

w 2

to 3

weeks fo

r delive

ry; Inclu

de yo

ur Z

ip C

ode

I.

to insure prompt service. O

ffer expires March 30, 1971.

ES

QU

IRE

: NO

VE

MB

ER

gele

s, .bu

t they

are

circ

um

-scrib

ed o

n th

e bu

dg

et side as

to w

hat th

ey c

an sp

end fo

r expert w

itnesse

s and th

e

like," sa

id th

e la

wy

er. A

nd

as S

irhan h

imse

lf rem

ark

ed

when

he in

sisted o

n a p

rivate

atto

rney

, "T

he p

ub

lic d

e-

fender g

ets paid

at the sam

e w

indow

as the p

rosecu

tor."

"I felt th

e m

oney sh

ould

h

av

e b

een

raise

d th

rou

gh

so

me so

rt of p

ublic arran

ge-

men

t," said G

utw

illig. "If th

e A

.C.L

.U. h

ad ag

reed to

keep

th

e case, it shou

ld h

ave g

on

e out a

nd ra

ised th

e m

oney;

there sh

ould

be so

me so

rt of

agency lik

e th

at su

bsid

izin

g

cases." In fact, $

16,0

00 w

as ra

ised

am

on

g A

meric

an

A

rabs fo

r Sirh

an, b

ut th

at

covere

d le

ss than o

ne th

ird

of th

e exp

enses. In

any

case, it is u

nrealistic to

expect th

e p

ublic

to c

ontrib

ute

to th

e

defe

nse

of a

mu

rdere

r, par-

ticularly

on

e so u

np

op

ular as

Sirh

an. B

ut G

utw

illig fe

els

the p

ub

lishers h

av

e h

ad

it: "I d

on't th

ink p

ublish

ers

will g

o o

n m

uch

lon

ger in

effect p

ayin

g fo

r the d

efense

of alleg

ed m

urd

erers, becau

se th

at's w

hat w

e're

doin

g. In

fa

ct, w

e're

actu

ally

su

b-

sidiz

ing p

eople

to m

urd

er

each o

ther in

the m

ost flam

-boyan

t way

possib

le. Som

e-th

ing else b

oth

ers me, to

o. If

you h

ave a sen

sational m

ur-

dere

r—a L

ee O

swald

or a

S

irhan o

r a Ja

mes E

arl R

ay

—he m

ight b

e able to

afford

a fa

irly e

xpensiv

e d

efe

nse

. B

ut so

me p

oor b

lack w

ho's

accused

of m

urd

ering so

me-

one in

the g

hetto

gets th

e

pu

blic

defe

nd

er. It se

em

s hig

hly

ineq

uitab

le." A

fter G

utw

illig tu

rned

Kaise

r do

wn

, so d

id a

bo

ut

eig

ht o

ther p

ub

lishers; se

v-

era

l did

not e

ven b

oth

er to

se

e h

im. H

e ta

lked

to th

e

secre

tary

of B

ern

ard

Geis,

pu

blish

er of so

me o

f the m

ost

no

torio

us b

oo

ks o

f recen

t years

. Then h

e s

aw

Jack

Macra

e, w

ho

had

recen

tly

gone to

E. P

. Dutto

n, a h

ouse

Macrae d

escribed

at the tim

e

Page 11: Etc., Inc. Literary Negotiations, The Sirhan B. Sirhanjfk.hood.edu/Collection/Weisberg Subject Index Files/K... · 2011-12-08 · which would give him visibility and notoriety. "I

Can

you p

ick ou

t your S

cotch?

We d

idn't w

ant to

pro

fit from

it. But

we w

anted

to g

et the sto

ry o

ut, an

d

it was m

y g

uess th

at Kaiser w

ould

be a

ble

to d

ig th

e sto

ry o

ut a

nd

pre

sent a

fair in

terp

reta

tion o

f the

even

ts." K

aise

r's diffic

ultie

s did

not e

nd

there

. He trie

d to

inte

rest

Life

in

buyin

g th

e m

agazin

e rig

hts, a

nd

thre

e e

dito

rs disc

usse

d m

akin

g a

n

offer o

f $200,0

00. A

few d

ays later

one o

f the e

dito

rs calle

d a

nd sa

id:

"We h

ad tw

o lo

ng m

eetings o

n th

is an

d w

e were o

verru

led b

y th

e hig

hest

peo

ple in

the co

mpan

y. T

heir arg

u-

men

t was illo

gical, b

ut it w

on o

ut.

Basically

they

felt it would

be b

ad

public relatio

ns to

put m

oney

into

a pot th

at would

aid S

irhan

's defen

se. L

ife and o

ther m

agazin

es w

ere

offered

excerp

ts from

the co

mpleted

book an

d tu

rned

them

dow

n. L

adies' H

ome Journal p

rinted

two ch

apters.

Kaiser th

en w

ent to

see The S

atu

r-day E

vening Post, w

hich

was talk

ing

about $

25,0

00 fo

r two p

ieces. H

e

wro

te the fo

llow

ing acco

unt o

f the

meetin

g in

his jo

urn

al: "Otto

Fried

-rich

asked

som

e smart-ass q

uestio

ns

about m

y p

ositio

n, w

heth

er I'd

be

able

to w

rite a

nyth

ing b

efo

re th

e

final ap

peals h

ad b

een ex

hau

sted. I

got u

p feelin

g lo

usy

this m

orn

ing an

d

I was u

nin

clin

ed to

arg

ue w

ith

him

, I just to

ld h

im it w

as in

the

contract th

at I could

write after th

e S

uperio

r Court trial. 'W

ell,' he said

, 'I m

ade a ru

le long ag

o n

ever to

pay

fo

r anyth

ing b

efo

re I sa

w it, w

ith

one eg

teptio

n: u

nless it w

as Jacque-

line K

enned

y's m

emoirs w

ritten b

y

a Nobel P

rize win

ner.' T

hen

he left

the ro

om

." (Kaise

r eventu

ally

did

agre

e to

do tw

o a

rticle

s for

The

Post, o

ne b

efo

re th

e tria

l and o

ne

afte

r. But h

e fin

ished th

e first o

ne

too la

te to

get it p

ublish

ed b

efo

re th

e trial, and b

y th

e time S

irhan

was

sente

nced to

death

, T

he P

ost

was

in its g

rave.)

When

Kaiser flew

to N

ew Y

ork

,

he le

ft the S

irhans in

Califo

rnia

w

ith v

isions o

f zeros d

ancin

g in

their

heads. W

hen h

e re

turn

ed h

e h

ad

$2,5

00 as th

e first installm

ent fro

m

Dutto

n an

d a p

rom

ise of $

1,0

00 in

ex

pen

se money

from

The P

ost, and it

was se

vera

l month

s late

r, when

Cooper p

ublic

ly e

nte

red th

e c

ase

, th

at th

e w

riter w

as a

llow

ed to

resu

me h

is interv

iews.

As th

e case moved

slow

ly to

ward

trial, finally

set for Jan

uary

of 1

969,

Kaiser b

ecame m

ore en

mesh

ed in

it. K

now

ledge, h

e quick

ly realized

, was

pow

er, and h

e set out to

accum

ulate

more

than a

nyone e

lse. U

sing th

e

"con-m

an" sid

e of h

is perso

nality

, he

got all th

e psy

cholo

gists an

d p

sych

i-atrists w

ho ex

amin

ed S

irhan

to tak

e him

into

the c

ell, u

sually

with

his

tape reco

rder g

oin

g. A

s he recalled

: "I fo

und th

at it w

as u

sefu

l not

only

to g

et in

side, b

ut to

turn

my

material, b

ack to

the law

yers. I p

ro-

vid

ed th

em w

ith m

y m

ind, I. read

the

F.B

.I. report, six

thousa

nd p

ages

worth

, and th

e police rep

orts, fo

ur-

teen file d

rawers fu

ll,, and I d

igested

and in

tegra

ted it a

nd, h

ad it a

t the

tips o

f my fin

gers. S

o w

hen

Cooper

or B

erm

an [E

mile

Zola

Berm

an, a

th

ird law

yer b

rought in

by C

ooper]

would

say, w

hat h

appened a

t such

and su

ch a tim

e, I knew

. And w

hen

D

r. Bern

ard D

iamond cam

e into

the

case, the p

sych

olo

gist fro

m B

erkeley

, he fo

und th

at I w

as th

e c

hie

f re-

posito

ry o

f know

ledge. It w

as kin

d

of a

circ

ula

r thin

g. I w

ante

d th

e

know

ledge so

that I c

ould

write

a

better b

ook, b

ut h

avin

g th

e know

l-ed

ge, I b

ecame m

ore o

f an in

timate

of th

e p

eople

insid

e th

e c

ase

, and m

ore v

aluab

le to th

em, alm

ost in

dis-

pensa

ble

. By re

aso

n o

f that fa

ct I

was allo

wed

into

their co

nferen

ces, an

d I w

ould

learn m

uch

more th

an I

would

hav

e know

n h

ad I b

een o

n th

e outsid

e or ju

st a writer w

ith w

hom

th

ey w

ere cooperatin

g."

Kaise

r, like m

ost o

f us, h

as a

to

den

cy to

exag

gerate h

is ow

n im

-M

rtance. W

hen I a

sked G

rant

Cooper ab

out th

e writer's ro

le in th

e case h

e said: "K

aiser mad

e sugges-

tions o

n w

hat to

pics to

cover, so

me

very

solid

constru

ctive su

ggestio

ns,

but so

me w

ere used

and so

me w

ere not." D

id K

aiser ewer w

rite a speech

fo

r Cooper? "O

h n

o, n

o, n

o," said

the

lawyer.

Kaise

r did

oth

er th

ings to

help

him

self. He h

ad th

e Sirh

ans u

nder

an e

xclu

sive c

ontra

ct, a

nd w

hen

oth

er reporters ap

pro

ached

the fam

-ily

for in

terview

s, he co

uld

beco

me

-quite ag

itated. F

euds d

evelo

ped

with

a few

new

smen

, who cam

e to d

islike

him

inten

sely, an

d o

ne ev

en rem

em-

bers th

at K

aise

r thre

ate

ned to

get

him

in th

e book. H

e did

n't.

Kaise

r's bad h

um

or w

as a

ggra

-vated

by h

is gro

win

g h

atred o

f the

man

he w

as, in effect, w

ork

ing fo

r, S

irhan B

ishara

Sirh

an: "I h

ave a

hell o

f a te

mper, I c

an re

ally

tear

people

apart. In

this th

ing I w

as

alway

s swallo

win

g m

y to

ngue an

d

not resp

ondin

g, an

d p

retendin

g to

be

very

sym

path

etic when

Sirh

an w

as te

lling m

e th

ings b

y n

oddin

g a

nd

draw

ing h

im o

ut in

stead o

f telling

him

what a real p

rick I th

ought h

e w

as."

As th

e tria

l pro

gre

ssed,

Kaise

r's feelin

gs a

gain

st Sirh

an

multip

lied. I ask

ed h

im w

hy, an

d h

e rep

lied th

is way

: "I th

ink I w

as d

isguste

d w

ith

myself fo

r not b

eing ab

le to p

ull o

ne

hundred

percen

t of th

e truth

out o

f him

, and I tu

rned

the d

isgust to

ward

him

. I should

hav

e blam

ed m

yself fo

r perh

aps n

ot h

avin

g m

ore fin

esse, but

I blam

ed h

im fo

r bein

g so

closed

and

for n

ot h

avin

g en

ough sen

se to co

n-

fide in

his p

sych

iatrist, Dr. D

iamond,

who co

uld

hav

e help

ed h

im. . . . In

-ste

ad h

e p

ut h

is trust in

the A

rabs

at th

e tria

l who g

ot to

him

and

urg

ed h

im to

beco

me an

Arab

hero

an

d to

use th

e trial as a pro

pag

anda

foru

m fo

r their g

rievances a

gain

st Isra

el, w

hic

h I th

ought w

as a

con-

coctio

n all th

e way

. "I w

as also p

issed o

ff at Sirh

an's

basic in

gratitu

de to

Diam

ond fo

r all th

e work

he'd

done, an

d C

ooper, to

o.

They

did

not m

atter a hill o

f bean

s to

Sirh

an, n

or d

id h

is fam

ily. O

ne

time d

urin

g th

e trial one o

f his b

roth

-ers w

as struck

by a car an

d an

oth

er bro

ther w

as thro

wn in

jail, charg

ed

with

fightin

g w

ith th

e police in

the

hosp

ital. (He w

as later -acquitted

.) W

hen S

irhan h

ears a

bout it, a

ll he

says is, 'W

hat a

re th

ose

basta

rds

tryin

g to

do to

me?' H

e doesn

't even

ask

how

his b

roth

ers are. "H

e seemed

totally

wrap

ped

up in

him

self, and it m

ay b

e that m

y stan

-dard

s are too h

igh an

d th

at I expect

too m

uch

of a fello

w w

ho is p

aranoid

sch

izophren

ic, accord

ing to

most o

f th

e docto

rs who ex

amin

ed h

im. S

o

that w

as a

facto

r. But th

e b

iggest

thin

g w

as pro

bab

ly ju

st that h

e had

kille

d K

ennedy. I still c

an't w

atc

h

one o

f those T

V d

ocu

men

taries about

Robert K

enned

y w

ithout cry

ing. A

nd

this g

uy h

ad n

o rem

orse ab

out k

illing

Kennedy. A

t one p

oin

t he sa

id, 'I

did

n't k

now

he h

ad so

man

y ch

ildren

.' A

nd th

at seemed

to b

e the clo

sest he

ever cam

e." A

fter th

e tria

l, Sirh

an b

ecam

e

more

and m

ore

agita

ted a

bout th

e

book. In

fact, h

e to

ld h

is law

yers

Page 12: Etc., Inc. Literary Negotiations, The Sirhan B. Sirhanjfk.hood.edu/Collection/Weisberg Subject Index Files/K... · 2011-12-08 · which would give him visibility and notoriety. "I

books w

ith im

punity

anym

ore, n

ot

even

on g

rounds o

f obscen

ity.

In p

ublic

, Sirh

an's a

ttorn

eys a

t-tack

Kaiser. B

ut th

ey d

o n

ot seem

to

be p

ressing th

e suit. A

fter they

lost

in L

os A

ngeles, th

e lawyers ask

ed fo

r sev

eral postp

onem

ents in

New

York

, an

d b

y th

is writin

g th

e suit h

ad n

ot

yet b

een h

eard. M

eanw

hile, th

e law-

yers d

rew u

p a list o

f fifty-six

poin

ts th

ey w

ante

d c

hanged in

Kaise

r's m

anuscrip

t. (Dutto

n's law

yers h

ad

pro

vid

ed

them

with

a c

op

y, o

ver

Kaiser's o

bjectio

ns—

a double b

low

fo

r the a

uth

or sin

ce h

e h

as to

pay

th

e publish

er's lawyers as w

ell as his

own.) K

aiser agreed

to m

ake tw

o co

rrec-tio

ns. In

one in

stance h

e chan

ged

the

word

"lik

ely

" to

"possib

le."

In

anoth

er h

e a

dded "P

ale

stinia

n" in

fro

nt o

f "Arab

" in a d

escriptio

n o

f S

irhan

. Th

e fifty-six

po

ints h

ad b

een

dra

fted m

ain

ly b

y A

bdeen Ja

bara

, w

ho

orig

inally

go

t into

the case as a

represen

tative o

f the A

rab v

iewpoin

t an

d co

nsisten

tly p

ush

ed S

irhan

to see

him

self as an A

rab h

ero. A

num

ber

of th

e su

ggestio

ns c

oncern

that

aspect o

f the case; fo

r instan

ce, the

lawy

er wan

ted "Jew

ish co

mm

and

o"

ch

an

ged

to "Z

ion

ist terro

rist" an

d

asked

that m

ore b

ackg

rou

nd

be in

-clu

ded

on

the A

rab-Isr:Ieli w

ar. In

do

zens o

f places, Jab

ara ob

jects to

Kaise

r's inte

rpre

tatio

ns b

y sa

yin

g,

"It is the p

laintiff's p

ositio

n th

at the

readers w

ould

draw

their o

wn co

n-

clu

sion

s from

the fa

cts p

rese

nte

d,

and n

ot h

ave th

em d

rawn fo

r them

." A

t the sam

e time, th

e lawyers are

prep

aring S

irhan

's appeal fo

r a new

tria

l. All c

apita

l case

s are

auto

-m

atically rev

iewed

by th

e Califo

rnia

Su

pre

me C

ou

rt; ev

en

if the c

ou

rt uphold

s the v

erdict, n

um

erous av

e-nues o

f appeal rem

ain o

pen

. It took

gran

ted, th

e Kaiser b

ook w

ould

prej-

ud

ice his rig

ht to

a fair and im

par-

tial ju

ry. H

e a

lso c

onte

nds th

at

Kaiser u

sed p

sych

iatric repo

rts with

-o

ut p

ermissio

n, an

d th

at the au

tho

r, as an

investig

ator fo

r the d

efense, is

still bound b

y th

e lawyer-clien

t rela-tio

nsh

ip to

keep

certain th

ing

s con

-fid

ential. M

oreo

ver, S

irhan

main

tains

that h

e w

as n

ot c

om

pete

nt to

sign

th

e c

ontra

ct w

ith K

aise

r, and th

at

the law

yers w

ho

adv

ised h

im to

sign

had

conflictin

g in

terests, since th

ey

stoo

d to

pro

fit from

the b

oo

k. A

s a resu

lt, the su

it conten

ds, th

e contract

was in

valid

iff the first p

lace. T

he su

it was filed

both

in L

os A

n-

geles an

d N

ew Y

ork

. In A

pril, L

os

Angele

s County

Superio

r Court

Judge R

ichard

Schauer issu

ed a

tem

porary

restrainin

g o

rder ag

ainst

the b

ook a

nd h

eard

the a

rgum

ents

a few d

ays later. H

e rejected o

n th

e sp

ot S

irhan

's plea fo

r a prelim

inary

in

junctio

n ag

ainst p

ublicatio

n, n

otin

g

that th

e S

irhans a

nd th

eir la

wyers

had

mad

e n

o e

ffort to

retu

rn th

e

$3

2,0

00

they

had

already

received

u

nd

er the co

ntract th

ey claim

ed w

as in

valid

. M

ost la

wyers a

gre

e w

ith Ju

dge

Sch

auer th

at Sirh

an's su

it has little

valid

ity. T

he ju

ry a

t his tria

l felt

he w

as com

peten

t enough to

plan

a m

urd

er, a

nd th

us h

e w

as p

robably

co

mp

etent en

ou

gh to

sign

a con

tract. E

ven

if he w

as inco

mp

etent, sev

eral m

emb

ers of h

is family

also sig

ned

. M

oreo

ver, th

e contract sp

ecifically

gives K

aiser the rig

ht to

pu

blish

his

book after th

e Superio

r Court trial,

and m

akes n

o m

entio

n o

f waitin

g

for th

e appeal. In

fact, an ad

den

dum

to

the co

ntract m

akes clear th

at pro

-ceed

s from

the b

oo

k w

ou

ld h

elp

fin

ance an

app

eal. Mo

st imp

ortan

t, ju

dg

es just d

o n

ot g

o aro

un

d b

ann

ing

was in

carcerated o

n D

eath R

ow

in

San

Quen

tin, h

e was co

nfin

ed to

a cell th

at measu

red fiv

e by

eleven

feet an

d co

ntain

ed a b

ed, a tab

le, a stoo

l, a w

ashbasin

and a to

ilet. The clo

sest priso

ners w

ere four cells aw

ay, an

d

he h

ad to

scre

am

to c

om

munic

ate

, w

ith th

em

. Even d

urin

g e

xerc

ise

perio

ds h

e is se

para

ted fro

m tIv

e,

oth

er in

mate

s by a

fence. "I c

an't .

say

that h

e h

as m

ad

e a

ny

frien

ds,"

said

Ward

en

Lo

uis N

elso

n, "b

ut I

thin

k th

at p

eople

go u

p a

nd ta

lk to

h

im. H

e c

erta

inly

has m

ad

e so

me

acquain

tances." A

ll visito

rs have

been

barred

, excep

t his law

yers an

d

his

fam

ily, a

nd

the la

tter h

av

e

neith

er th

e tim

e n

or th

e m

oney to

m

ake freq

uen

t trips. In

fact, his fo

ur

bro

thers in

sist they

cannot g

et work

an

d th

at the fam

ily is liv

ing in

near-

poverty

. Sirh

an h

as a

sked fo

r sub-

scriptio

ns to

a nu

mb

er of n

ewsp

apers

and

mag

azines, in

clud

ing

several in

A

rab

ic, a

nd

he re

ad

s a g

oo

d d

eal.

Occasio

nally

he w

atc

hes a

TV

set

hu

ng

from

the w

all ou

tside h

is cell. "I can

't say," said

Geo

rge S

hib

ley,

"that h

e's very

hap

py w

here h

e is." G

rant C

ooper p

ut it th

is way

: "I can

sym

path

ize with

the p

oo

r gu

y.

Put y

ourself in

the p

ositio

n o

f Sirh

an

or an

yone else sittin

g o

n D

eath R

ow

w

ith n

oth

ing

to d

o. T

he d

eath p

enalty

h

ang

s ov

er his h

ead lik

e the S

wo

rd

of D

amo

cles. He h

as no

thin

g to

loo

k

forw

ard to

. All h

e has to

do

all day

lo

ng is th

ink o

f his o

wn p

roble

ms.

. . . No

w h

e's up

there an

d th

e fellow

w

riting

this b

oo

k w

on

't let him

see th

e m

an

usc

ript. H

e m

ust im

ag

ine

that th

e reason h

e won't let h

im see

it is that h

e is treated u

nfairly

. Po

or

bastard

, I feel sorry

for h

im."

The m

ain

conte

ntio

n o

f Sirh

an's

suit is th

at h

e is n

ow

requestin

g a

new

trial, a

nd if s

uch a

trial is

after he g

ot to

San

Quen

tin th

at the

book b

oth

ered h

im m

ore th

an an

y-

thin

g else. O

ne ex

plan

ation w

as that

Kaise

r had w

ritten a

n a

rticle

for

Life

durin

g th

e tria

l in w

hic

h h

e

qu

oted

Sirh

an as say

ing

, "Co

op

er is d

efe

nd

ing

a p

un

k lik

e m

e." A

del

Sirh

an

co

nv

inced

his b

roth

er th

at

Kaiser h

ad called

him

a punk, ev

en

tho

ug

h K

aise

r was u

sing

Sirh

an

's ow

n w

ord

s. Then, w

hen K

aise

r started

writin

g, S

irhan

dem

anded

to

see the m

anu

script. C

oo

per, w

ho

felt h

is first ob

ligatio

n w

as to h

is client,

tried

to w

ork

ou

t an

arra

ng

em

en

t w

hereb

y h

e, Cooper, w

ould

adju

di-

cate all disp

utes. K

aiser agreed

not

to p

ut an

yth

ing in

the b

ook to

jeop-

ard

ize S

irhan's

appeal, b

ut h

is

law

yers to

ld h

im n

ot to

sho

w th

e

man

usc

ript to

an

yo

ne. S

irhan

was

already u

pset b

y th

e way

his law

yers

had

han

dled

the case an

d th

e verd

ict th

ey h

ad g

otten

("We co

uld

n't h

ave

done an

y w

orse," C

ooper co

nced

ed).

When

Cooper m

ade n

o h

eadw

ay w

ith

Kaiser, S

irhan

was so

enrag

ed th

at he fired

his th

ree attorn

eys an

d h

ired

three n

ew o

nes: L

uke M

cKissack

, a lo

cal lawyer w

ho h

as represen

ted th

e B

lack P

anth

ers and

orig

inally

vo

lun

-teered

to d

efend S

irhan

, Geo

rge E

. S

hib

ley o

f Lon

g B

each, an

d A

bd

een

Jabara o

f Detro

it. Th

e latter two

are of A

rabic ex

traction. B

y S

eptem

ber,

Kaiser h

ad fin

ished

his m

anuscrip

t and d

eliv

ere

d it to

Dutto

n, w

hic

h

orig

inally

plan

ned

to p

ublish

it last sp

ring. B

ut th

e man

uscrip

t was still

bein

g ed

ited in

March

—th

e publish

er cu

t ou

t three h

un

dred

pag

es—w

hen

S

irhan's n

ew

atto

rneys file

d a

suit

that ask

ed fo

r an in

jun

ction ag

ainst

the b

ook

and

$2,0

00,0

00

in d

amag

es. S

irhan

's fears abo

ut th

e bo

ok

and

his alm

ost fan

atical desire to

stop it

grew

ou

t of h

is con

ditio

n. W

hen

he

It isn't easy. T

hese five leading Scotches look pretty

Page 13: Etc., Inc. Literary Negotiations, The Sirhan B. Sirhanjfk.hood.edu/Collection/Weisberg Subject Index Files/K... · 2011-12-08 · which would give him visibility and notoriety. "I

Cary

l Chessm

an tw

elve y

ears to ex

hau

st

all th

e p

ossib

ilities a

nd S

irhan c

ould

tak

e almost as lo

ng. S

irhan

, of co

urse,

does n

ot claim

to b

e innocen

t. Thro

ugh-

out th

e tria

l the d

efe

nse

main

tain

ed

that it w

as o

nly

ask

ing fo

r a v

erd

ict

of seco

nd d

egree m

urd

er based

on th

e th

eory

that S

irhan h

ad "d

imin

ished

capacity

" to m

ake a

"matu

re" p

re-

med

itated ju

dgm

ent to

kill K

enned

y.

But in

their re

quest fo

r a n

ew

trial,

Sirh

an's law

yers are m

akin

g th

ree main

poin

ts:

1. Ju

dge H

erb

ert V

. Walk

er w

as in

erro

r when

he refu

sed to

accept a b

ar-gain

betw

een th

e d

efe

nse

and th

e

pro

secutio

n. T

he p

rosecu

tion h

ad ag

reed

to a life sen

tence in

stead o

f the d

eath

pen

alty an

d th

e defen

se agreed

to p

lead

first-deg

ree murd

er. But Ju

dge W

alker,

conscio

us o

f the d

oubt an

d co

nfu

sion

that h

ad su

rrounded o

ther a

ssassin

a-

tions, w

ante

d th

e fu

ll story

spre

adV

n

the reco

rd.

2. T

he c

ourt e

rroneously

accepte

d

illegally

seized ev

iden

ce, particu

larly

Sirh

an's n

oteb

ook, w

hich

was tak

en

from

his h

om

e w

ithout a

searc

h

warra

nt.

3. T

he c

ourt w

as w

rong in

pre

-ven

ting th

e defen

se from

intro

ducin

g

exte

nsiv

e e

vid

ence re

gard

ing th

e

Pale

stinia

n w

ar a

nd its e

ffects o

n

Sirh

an.

Whatev

er hap

pen

s to S

irhan

's ap-

peal, K

aiser's book is sch

eduled

to

appear im

min

ently

, and th

e auth

or

feels th

at th

e e

vid

ence h

e p

rese

nts

should

"reopen

the case." In

his fin

al chapte

r, Kaise

r ask

s the q

uestio

n:

"Why d

id S

irhan

kill K

enned

y?" H

e re

counts a

num

ber o

f fam

iliar re

a-

sons, w

hich

he d

oes n

ot b

uy, an

d th

en

adds: "I b

elieve th

ere were so

me co

-co

nsp

irators, so

me w

itting, so

me all

too u

nw

itting." T

he "u

nw

itting"

ones, K

aise

r asse

rts, inclu

de th

e

Bla

ck P

anth

ers a

nd o

ther g

roups

who h

ave h

elped

create a "climate

of v

iolen

ce" in th

e country

. But w

ho

are the "w

itting" o

nes? K

aiser does

not sa

y. W

hen I a

sked h

im a

bout

these statem

ents in

the last ch

apter,

Kaiser an

swered

this w

ay :

"My m

ain

reaso

n fo

r sayin

g th

e

case is open

and o

ught to

be o

pen

in

the m

inds o

f the p

ublic

is that m

y

contin

uin

g co

nversatio

ns w

ith S

irhan

in

dic

ate

that h

e's c

overin

g u

p, th

at

he k

now

s a h

ell o

f a lo

t more

than

he's w

illing to

tell. I'm

most in

-trig

ued b

y h

is asse

rtions th

at 'th

e

F.B

.I. doesn

't know

every

thin

g' an

d

that 'th

ey d

id 'a

lousy

job o

n th

eir

investig

ation.' H

e doesn

't know

what

the in

vestig

ation w

as, he d

idn't read

six

thousan

d p

ages o

f F.B

.I. reports,

and y

et h

e k

now

s they d

id a

lousy

jo

b o

f investig

ation. I can

only

con-

clu

de th

at th

ere

is som

e im

porta

nt

perso

n o

r perso

ns in

volv

ed w

ith h

im

that th

e F

.B.I. h

ave n

ot c

om

e u

p

with

. Becau

se if they

had

com

e up

with

them

Sirh

an w

ould

hav

e know

n

about th

em.

"There is a seco

nd reaso

n. W

hen

D

r. Dia

mond p

uts h

im u

nder h

yp-

nosis an

d say

s, 'Sirh

an, d

id an

ybody

help

you in

this, d

id an

yone tell y

ou

to k

ill Kennedy,' h

e b

alk

s; it takes

him

six seco

nds to

answ

er that q

ues-

tion. W

here

as th

e o

ther q

uestio

ns

that d

on't in

volv

e the assassin

ation

he an

swers im

med

iately, an

d th

at's a b

eautifu

l indic

atio

n. T

alk

to a

ny

psy

chia

trist about w

hat b

lockin

g

mean

s. Under h

ypnosis, if I ask

you a

questio

n th

at shock

s you, y

ou're go-

ing

to h

edge, a

nd d

o th

e n

orm

al re

liable

witn

esse

s reporte

d se

ein

g

Sirh

an th

ree differen

t times p

rior to

th

e a

ssassin

atio

n a

t pla

ces w

heT

e.

Ken

ned

y w

as supposed

to b

e. In at

least one case th

e witn

esses said h

e had

a girl w

ith h

im. M

oreo

ver, o

ne

of th

e best w

itnesses to

the assassi-

natio

n, V

incent D

iPie

rro, in

sisted

that h

e h

ad se

en a

girl w

earin

g a

polk

a-dot d

ress standin

g n

ext to

Sir-

han

in th

e pan

try o

f the A

mbassad

or

befo

re the m

urd

er. But p

olice co

uld

never fin

d th

e g

irl. What d

oes th

is m

ean? O

nly

, Kaise

r says in

the

book, th

at it is p

ossib

le th

at som

e-body else w

as in

volv

ed in

Sirh

an's

efforts to

kill K

enned

y. "I still h

ad

a feeling," K

aiser wro

te, "that so

me-

where

in S

irhan's re

cent p

ast th

ere

w

as a shad

ow

y so

meo

ne. . . . R

obert

Ken

ned

y h

ad en

emies w

ho co

uld

hav

e ch

osen

Sirh

an, w

ith h

is anti-au

thor-

ity fe

elin

gs a

nd h

is inert p

ara

noia

, as a

possib

le to

ol." N

ow

here

does

Kaise

r state

explic

itly w

ho th

at

"shadow

y so

meone" w

as. H

e d

oes

criticize the p

olice fo

r not ex

plo

ring

Sirh

an's frie

ndsh

ips w

ith a

man

who alleg

edly

had

Mafia co

nnectio

ns,

anoth

er who in

troduced

Sirh

an to

the

occu

lt, and a th

ird w

ho w

as Sirh

an's

ex-ro

om

mate. H

e also criticizes th

em

for th

eir "n

aiv

e" in

vestig

atio

n o

f a

report th

at Jimm

y H

offa h

ad h

ired

som

eone to

kill K

enned

y—

a report

started b

y o

ne o

f Hoffa's fello

w in

-m

ate

s at L

ew

isburg

Sta

te P

enite

n-

tiary

in P

ennsy

lvania

. But it w

as

only

when

I pressed

Kaiser fu

rther

that h

e a

dm

itted h

e th

ought th

ere

m

ight b

e a link b

etween

Hoffa an

d

the th

eory

that so

meone h

ad "p

ro-

gram

med

" Sirh

an. H

e had

virtu

ally

no ev

iden

ce for h

is susp

icions, h

ow

-ev

er, excep

t for a stran

ge ch

aracter nam

ed Jerry

Ow

en, a p

reacher w

ith

an arrest reco

rd w

ho to

ld th

e police

that h

e had

pick

ed u

p S

irhan

hitch

-hik

ing th

e d

ay b

efo

re th

e m

urd

er.

Ow

en, it se

em

s, managed a

priz

e-

fighte

r who w

ork

ed o

ut in

a L

os

Angeles g

ym

ow

ned

by th

e Team

-ste

rs. It was th

e m

ost te

nuous o

f connectio

ns, b

ut K

aise

r was still

intrig

ued

: "It lo

oked

like O

wen

's story

about

pic

kin

g S

irhan u

p w

as a

cover. It

looked

like h

e was try

ing to

hav

e an

alibi in

case anybody h

ad seen

him

w

ith S

irhan. I a

sked S

irhan a

bout

him

, but I ask

ed h

im after th

e cops

had

asked

Adel, h

is bro

ther, to

ask

Sirh

an ab

out O

wen

. And S

irhan

had

Page 14: Etc., Inc. Literary Negotiations, The Sirhan B. Sirhanjfk.hood.edu/Collection/Weisberg Subject Index Files/K... · 2011-12-08 · which would give him visibility and notoriety. "I

started b

y o

ne o

f Hoffa's fello

w in

-m

ates at Lew

isburg

State P

eniten

-tia

ry in

Pennsy

lvania

. But it w

as

only

when

I pressed

Kaiser fu

rther

that h

e a

dm

itted h

e th

ought th

ere

m

ight b

e a link b

etween

Hoffa an

d

the th

eory

that so

meo

ne h

ad "p

ro-

gram

med

" Sirh

an. H

e had

virtu

ally

no

evid

ence fo

r his su

spicio

ns, h

ow

-ev

er, excep

t for a stran

ge ch

aracter nam

ed Jerry

Ow

en, a p

reacher w

ith

an arrest reco

rd w

ho to

ld th

e police

that h

e had

pick

ed u

p S

irhan

hitch

-hik

ing th

e d

ay b

efo

re th

e m

urd

er.

Ow

en, it seem

s, man

aged

a prize-

fighte

r who w

ork

ed o

ut in

a L

os

Angeles g

ym

ow

ned

by th

e Team

-ste

rs. It was th

e m

ost te

nuous o

f connectio

ns, b

ut K

aise

r was still

intrig

ued

: "It lo

oked

like O

wen

's story

about

pick

ing S

irhan

up w

as a

cov

er. It lo

ok

ed lik

e he w

as tryin

g to

hav

e an

alibi in

case anybody h

ad seen

him

w

ith S

irhan

. I ask

ed

Sirh

an

ab

ou

t him

, but I ask

ed h

im after th

e cops

had

asked

Adel, h

is bro

ther, to

ask

Sirh

an ab

ou

t Ow

en. A

nd

Sirh

an h

ad

told

Adel to

tell th

e c

ops th

at h

e

did

n't k

now

Ow

en an

d th

at he w

as at h

om

e all day

on

Mo

nd

ay, Ju

ne 3

, the

day

Ow

en said

he

had p

icked u

p

Sirh

an. W

ell, S

irhan w

as n

ot a

t hom

e all day

on M

onday

, that w

as a lie w

e subseq

uen

tly u

nco

vered

. He

put th

ree hundred

and fifty

miles o

n

his c

ar th

at d

ay. S

o w

hen I a

sked

Sirh

an th

e first time ab

ou

t Ow

en h

e said

, 'Oh

, is that th

e preach

er gu

y?'

Noth

ing to

it. "I k

ind o

f kep

t Ow

en filed

in th

e back o

f my m

ind. W

hen I g

ain

ed

more rap

port w

ith S

irhan

, and w

e w

ere talkin

g ab

ou

t con

spiracy

an-

gles an

d o

ther p

eople th

at may

hav

e put h

im u

p to

it, with

or w

ithout h

is know

ledge, I said

, do y

ou w

ant m

e to

follo

w u

p o

n so

me o

f these lead

s as an

investig

ator fo

r the d

efense.

And h

e said, 'W

ell, gee, n

one o

f my

friends w

ould

do an

yth

ing lik

e this.'

I was p

articularly

interested

in T

om

trigued b

y h

is asse

rtions th

at 'th

e

F.B

.I. doesn

't know

every

thin

g' an

d

that 'th

ey d

id a

lousy

job o

n th

eir

inv

estigatio

n.' H

e do

esn't k

no

w w

hat

the in

vestig

ation w

as, he d

idn't read

six

thousan

d p

ages o

f F.B

.I. reports,

and y

et h

e k

now

s they d

id a

lousy

jo

b o

f investig

ation. I can

only

con-

clu

de th

at th

ere

is som

e im

porta

nt

perso

n o

r perso

ns in

vo

lved

with

him

th

at th

e F

.B.I. h

ave n

ot c

om

e u

p

with

. Becau

se if they

had

com

e up

with

them

Sirh

an w

ould

hav

e know

n

about th

em.

"There is a seco

nd reaso

n. W

hen

D

r. Dia

mond p

uts h

im u

nder h

yp-

nosis an

d say

s, `Sirh

an, d

id an

ybody

help

you in

this, d

id an

yone tell y

ou

to k

ill Ken

ned

y,' h

e b

alk

s; it tak

es

him

six seco

nds to

answ

er that q

ues-

tion. W

here

as th

e o

ther q

uestio

ns

that d

on't in

volv

e the assassin

ation

he an

swers im

med

iately, an

d th

at's a b

eautifu

l indic

atio

n. T

alk

to a

ny

psy

chia

trist about w

hat b

lockin

g

mean

s. Under h

ypnosis, if I ask

you a

questio

n th

at shock

s you, y

ou're g

o-

ing to

hedge, a

nd d

o th

e n

orm

al

thin

g y

ou're g

oin

g to

do. S

irhan

did

th

is all th

e tim

e. W

henever w

e g

ot

into

questio

ns ab

out o

thers, h

e would

eith

er b

lock o

r answ

er n

oth

ing o

r ev

en g

o to

sleep."

Kaise

r seem

s to b

e ju

mpin

g to

co

nclu

sions. S

irhan

's talk ab

out th

e F

.B.I. co

uld

be m

ere brav

ado. T

he

psy

chia

tric te

sts are

more

inte

rest-

ing. W

hy d

id S

irhan

blo

ck? D

r. Dia-

mond p

osite

d th

e th

eory

, Kaise

r re

counts in

the b

ook, th

at S

irhan

was an

extrem

ely su

ggestib

le perso

n

who h

ad so

mehow

"pro

gra

mm

ed"

him

self to

kill K

en

ned

y b

y sc

rib-

blin

g o

ver a

nd o

ver a

gain

in h

is noteb

ook th

at "R.F

.K. m

ust d

ie." On

the n

ight o

f the a

ssassin

atio

n h

e

could

hav

e put h

imself in

to a tran

ce an

d fo

llow

ed th

e instru

ctions h

e had

prev

iously

written

dow

n fo

r him

self. K

aiser agrees w

ith th

e "pro

gram

-m

ing" th

eory

, but ta

kes it o

ne ste

p

farther. H

e found it sig

nifican

t that

Wh

ere-to

-bu

y-it?

Call 8

00-5

53-9

550 to

ll tree.

208 E

SQ

UIR

E: N

OV

EM

BE

R

See I.R

•I•S d

eta

ils on

last p

age.

Dear S

ub

scribers:

Hav

e you m

oved

recently

? D

id y

ou let u

s know

? If n

ot, p

lease turn

to p

age 6

4 a

nd fill o

ut th

e coupon.

It will facilitate g

etting co

pies to

you.

Decem

ber, as y

ou k

now

, is alway

s filled w

ith g

oodies.

Page 15: Etc., Inc. Literary Negotiations, The Sirhan B. Sirhanjfk.hood.edu/Collection/Weisberg Subject Index Files/K... · 2011-12-08 · which would give him visibility and notoriety. "I

Rath

ke, th

e guy w

ho in

trodu

ced S

ir-h

an

to th

e occu

lt. He w

as p

retty

adam

ant ab

out 'D

on't talk

to Rath

ke,

he's a

go

od

gu

y.' T

hen

I ask

ed h

im

abou

t Jerry Ow

en, an

d h

e said, 'W

ell, m

aybe O

wen

could

lead you

to some-

bo

dy

wh

o h

ad

influ

ence o

ver m

e.' I w

as p

leased

with

that m

uch

at th

e tim

e—I k

new

Sirh

an w

ould

turn

off if I a

sked

pro

bin

g seco

nd

or th

ird

qu

estion

s—so

I left it, thin

kin

g I

wou

ld co

me b

ack

to it so

me o

ther

time a

nd

I nev

er really

did

. An

d

there it is, it's o

ne o

f those stu

pid

th

ing

s. . . ."

Kaiser p

oin

ts to o

ther th

ings in

th

e bo

ok

wh

ich b

olster h

is belief in

a co

nsp

iracy

. For in

stan

ce, Sirh

an

claim

ed th

at he d

ecided

to kill K

en-

ned

y wh

en h

e saw a T

V d

ocum

entary

tha

t link

ed th

e Sen

ato

r to Isra

el. B

ut th

e televisio

n sh

ow

did

not a

p-

pea

r in L

os A

ng

eles un

til Ma

y 2

0,

an

d S

irhan

had

written

in h

is note-

book

that h

e had

to kill K

enn

edy on

M

ay

18

. Th

e no

tebo

ok

con

tain

ed

other in

teresting tid

bits. O

n alm

ost ev

ery p

age w

here K

enn

edy is m

en-

tioned

, so is mon

ey. On

e of the p

ages also con

tains th

e note, "

Hello T

om,

wou

ld y

ou

meet m

e at th

e airp

ort,

I'm co

min

g u

p T

uesd

ay

." A

t an

-oth

er poin

t Sirh

an w

rote, "L

et us d

o it, let u

s do it."

"

Now

it cou

ld b

e the ed

itoria

l 'w

e.' " K

aiser told m

e, "b

ut th

e note-

book

is very

intrig

uin

g. W

hen

Ber-

man

read th

e noteb

ook for th

e first tim

e in C

ooper's office, w

e were read

-in

g it together, w

e had

n't seen

it un

-til th

at m

om

ent. B

erman

finish

es rea

din

g th

e pa

ges a

nd

say

s, 'Hell,

there w

as so

meb

od

y in

this w

ith

Sirh

an

.' Th

at w

as h

is con

clusio

n.

Parson

s finally ad

mitted

right at th

e en

d o

f the ca

se that h

e was a

fraid

th

ere was p

robab

ly someon

e else in

it with

Sirh

an.''C

ooper b

elieved th

at S

irh

an

acte

d a

lon

e. B

ut h

e to

ld

Ka

iser tha

t he d

id n

ot b

elieve S

ir-h

an's story—

that h

e was m

otivated

by K

enn

edy's su

pp

ort for Israel. As

for D

r. Dia

mon

d's th

eory

that S

ir-h

an

wa

s "p

rog

ram

med

," eith

er by

h

imself or som

eone else, C

ooper told

K

aiser last Jun

e: "W

ell, it may h

ave b

een tru

e. Bu

t I cou

ldn

't sell it to a

j ury."

Kaiser is a

lso co

nvin

ced th

at it

was official p

olice policy to m

inim

ize th

e idea

of a

con

spira

cy. A

ttorn

ey

Gen

eral Ram

sey Clark

, for instan

ce, a

nn

ou

nced

on

ly fo

ur h

ou

rs after

Sirh

an w

as iden

tified th

at there w

as n

o consp

iracy. At th

at time, h

e could

n

ot p

ossib

ly h

ave k

now

n w

heth

er th

ere wa

s on

e or n

ot. K

aiser a

lso

fou

nd

a p

olice in

vestig

ato

r wh

o b

e-liev

ed a

con

spira

cy w

as p

ossib

le. W

hen

he a

sked

the co

p w

hy

he d

id

not p

ursu

e the in

qu

iry, K

aiser g

ot

the fo

llow

ing a

nsw

er: "I tried

to,

bu

t wh

en H

ough

ten [R

obert H

ough

-ten

, chief of th

e investigation

] foun

d

out I th

ough

t there w

as one, h

e took

me o

ff the im

porta

nt in

terview

s. I w

an

ted to

go u

p a

nd

talk

to T

om

R

ath

ke b

ut h

e wo

uld

n't let- m

e, he

tho

ug

ht I w

as ju

st too

ho

t on

the

con

spira

cy th

ing

." K

aiser a

dd

ed:

"T

he in

vestig

ato

rs hO

d g

oo

d jo

bs

and

top salaries an

d th

ey did

n't w

ant

to rock th

e boat. A

nd

if the su

perior

tells them

that's th

e way it's g

ot to

b

e, boy th

ey're going to d

o it. Th

ey're n

othin

g if not ob

edien

t."

Wh

at does th

is all add

up

to? Th

e possib

ility th

at S

irha

n d

id n

ot a

ct alo

ne, a

nd

mayb

e not ev

en th

at.

Kaiser's d

oub

ts are similar to m

any

vo

iced a

bo

ut th

e Wa

rren C

om

mis-

sion

. In e

ach

case

there a

re d

is-crep

ancies, h

oles, thin

gs that d

o not

qu

ite fit. Bu

t no on

e has yet to p

rove

an

altern

ativ

e theo

ry ex

pla

inin

g

either assassin

ation. T

he d

iscrepan

-cies cou

ld w

ell be th

e result of slop

py

police w

ork, im

precise ob

servations

by w

itnesse

s, an

d th

e r

efu

sal o

f ev

ents to

follo

w a

logica

l, ord

erly

pattern

. Som

e peo

ple, in

clud

ing

Gra

nt C

oop

er an

d J

ack

Macra

e of

Du

tton, th

ink

Kaiser d

oes not su

b-.

Ran

tiate his argu

men

t for reopen

ing

the case. K

aiser wrote th

e last chap

-ter, h

e said, for th

e followin

g reason:

"E

verythin

g wou

ld fit n

icely if the

`program

min

g' theory is correct. If

there w

as no p

rogramm

ing th

en a lot

of thin

gs are un

explain

ed. N

ow th

ere m

igh

t be a

noth

er exp

lan

atio

n fo

r th

em, b

ut I d

on

't kn

ow

wh

ere it is. It's lik

e som

eon

e ha

s giv

en m

e a

chem

istry set and

they've said

with

th

ese elemen

ts you can

mak

e Styro-

foa

m, y

ou

've ju

st go

t to fig

ure o

ut

the form

ula. A

nd

I do every com

bi-

na

tion

an

d I still d

on

't get S

tyro

-foam

. An

d th

en som

ebod

y comes u

p

to m

e an

d sa

ys, 'H

a, h

a, w

e fooled

you

, we d

idn

't giv

e you

all th

e ele-m

ents you

need

ed.' A

nd

that's w

here

I feel I am

on

this th

ing, th

at I'v

e got som

e of the elem

ents b

ut n

ot all of th

em. I

feel like I've tried

all the

com

bin

atio

ns a

nd

there a

re som

e m

issing elem

ents."

S

o we are left w

ith th

is pictu

re of R

obert K

aiser, furiou

sly mixin

g his

chem

icals, sifting th

rough

his d

ata, lo

ok

ing fo

r those elu

sive "

missin

g

elemen

ts." W

hy is h

e driven

? Wh

y is h

e look

ing so

hard

? "

I see thin

gs,

becau

se of my b

ackgrou

nd

as a Jesu-

it, in a

mu

ch m

ore o

rdered

kin

d o

f w

orld,"

he said

. "G

od created

it and

so forth

. Th

e sun

and

the m

oon an

d

the sta

rs all h

ave th

e ord

er. I can

't live w

ith ch

aos. Besid

es, I wan

ted to

mak

e sense ou

t of a senseless th

ing,

and

mayb

e that's p

erverting."

Mayb

e it is. Bu

t mayb

e the m

ore im

portan

t thin

g is not w

hat K

aiser fou

nd

bu

t the fact th

at he b

othered

to look

. It is perfectly u

nd

erstand

-a

ble th

at so

ma

ny

com

pa

nies felt

qu

easy

ab

ou

t pu

blish

ing

his b

oo

k,

especially w

hen

their d

eep d

evotion

to Rob

ert Ken

ned

y was rein

forced

by

their d

eep co

nv

iction

tha

t the

book

wou

ld n

ot sell. Bu

t the attitu

de

wh

ich K

aiser encou

ntered

, both

at th

e pu

blish

ing h

ouses an

d th

e maga-

zines, a

mou

nted

to so

meth

ing lik

e cen

sorsh

ip o

f un

pop

ula

r idea

s an

d

un

desirab

le peop

le. Th

ere was sim

i-lar trou

ble in

getting S

irhan

a law-

yer. T

he L

os A

ngeles C

ou

nty

Bar

Asso

ciatio

n d

id n

ot w

an

t to g

et its h

and

s dirty. E

ven som

e mem

bers of

the A

.C.L

.U., w

ho

se record

in d

e-fen

din

g u

np

op

ula

r cau

ses is better

than

most, resen

ted th

e organization

h

elpin

g S

irhan

. Gra

nt C

oop

er was

no

t wild

ab

ou

t tak

ing

the ca

se, bu

t h

e felt obligated

; he h

as spok

en d

oz-en

s of tim

es in recen

t yea

rs on

the

respon

sibility of th

e lawyer to rep

re-sen

t even

the m

ost d

isrepu

tab

le clien

ts. T

ime an

d again

Kaiser h

eard th

e sa

me lita

ny: "

We th

ink

som

eon

e sh

ou

ld p

ub

lish th

e book

, bu

t. . . . W

e thin

k h

e shou

ld h

ave a good law

-y

er, bu

t. . . . We th

ink

he sh

ou

ld

have en

ou

gh

mon

ey to

get a

fair

trial, b

ut. . . ."

An

y sy

stem is tested

b

y the h

ard cases, n

ot the easy on

es. A

nd

both

the ju

dicial system

and

the

med

ia came p

erilously close to failin

g in

the case of S

irhan

Bish

ara Sirh

an.

Bob

Kaiser is n

o selfless hero. H

e got h

is story, and

his n

otoriety. He m

ight

even m

ake som

e mon

ey. B

ut it is to

be n

oted

tha

t, wh

ile oth

ers were

givin

g ex

cuses, h

e got

involved

, even if h

is motive w

as over-w

eenin

g a

mb

ition

. *

These speakers can blow

out a m

atch.