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Who Killed John Lennon?

Who Killed John Lennon?

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Army Dreamers.
Review: A fascinating case~(was Lennon bumped off by Mark Chapman via someone else?, higher up who wanted to put the nozzle on a politically out-spoken singer-songwriter with an army of adoring young fans?)~Fenton Bresler tracked it for 8 years,conducting unprecedented interviews & extracting a ream of previously unreleased government documents. Though the paper trail to support the theory is still thin,the best one is an airline ticket found in Mark Chapman's hotel room; a Hawaii-New York connection departing December 5. But Chapman had actually purchased a Hawaii-Chicago ticket to depart December 2,with no connecting flight. The ticket found after his arrest had apparently been altered. None of his friends knew that he traveled on to New York. They thought he went to Chicago for a 3-day stay.

Arthur O'Connor,the detective who spent more time with Mark Chapman immediately following the murder than anyone else,saw things another way. He said "It is definately illogical to say that Mark committed the murder to make himself famous. He didn't want to talk to the press from the very start...It's possible Mark could have been used by somebody. I saw him the night of the murder. I studied him intensely. He looked as if he could of been programmed."

An alternative insight into bewildering history. I hope it comes back in-print someday.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Only in America
Review: Fenton Bresler combs through the horrific murder of John Lennon with intimate intensity. Here's A tale of human behaviour sprinkled with government power turned paranoia. I was,i guess, held in trance-like form with every turning page,& when I closed the book I closed a black hole too. I recommend it. Because I must ask in our supposedly free society...Is this just a case of Mark-Chapman killing for some fame? :of a rock star gunned down like BLAM BLAM by a crazy mixed-up fan?...or was the murder of John Lennon deeper than that. I look back And i see that the right-wing Reagan years were like no other previously ;a new period in favour of high rise mondo-Capitalism,New Romantics on MTV--(where the music industry business is changed forever),Enter George Bush-ism & the "Just say no" lecture-- (whilst,of course,those wonderous CIA people operate major drug smuggling affairs/missions with no second thought).
So to me ,During a period such as this,why would the Capitalist FBI bully boys let BeatleJohn Lennon jump on his much anticipated "Double Fantasy" come-back world-tour singing maybe "Give Peace A Chance" & "WAR IS OVER" to a whole new generation of slackers who disliked the Reagan period even more than I did,& hey! John may of slipped into a Beatle-reunion mood & used the event as another world-peace ad (in the 80's perhaps).
I'm sure,& i feel it in my heart,that the intelligence community hypothesis back then & there was "why not entomb this politically out-spoken singer-songwriter guy & move on to bigger things like destroying the environment for money & festering war war bloody war in Iraq or somewhere else where big bombs can be dropped". But Hey,enough of my yackin'. In any case I urge you,the reader,to make up your own mind & please just check out this fine little volume of idea's & i'll guarantee you'll have some fun too. just Order now from Amazon.com .

I Love this book,it opens your eyes & should be given away free with every Happy Meal.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: WHo's a phonY?
Review: Fenton Bresler peels back the layers of hell & combs through the murder of John Lennon with intensity. I was held in trance-like form with each turning page,I closed the book & closed a black hole too. I recommend it.

Is this just a case of killing for fame? :of a rock star gunned down like a pig by a crazy mixed-up fan?...or was the murder of John Lennon a most profitable venture for a heavily corrupted Government/Intelligence community hoping to wipe away a reasonably un-obstacled J.Carter period in favour for deep-canyon-mondo-Capitalism,George Bush-ism,new romantics on MTV,& "Just say no"-- while the CIA does major drug smuggling ops. & arms deals with Iran to fund the Contra's.

During a period such as this,why let BeatleJohn Lennon sing "Give Peace A Chance" & "WAR IS OVER" to a whole new generation huh?..,why not entomb a politically out-spoken singer-songwriting & move on to bigger things like destroying the environment for money & festering a war in Iraq.

But Hey,enough of my yackin', just check this fine little volume out & you'll have fun too. I Love this book,it opens your eyes. It should be given away free with every Happy Meal.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Mind Games.
Review: Fenton Bresler's fascinating book examines how John Lennon's killing,in Dec.'1980,could very well be politically motivated...that it was'nt just the act of another "angry lone nut".

America needs books like this & I hope it comes back in-print.
I really like this book because its important to read it ok, have a read of it, you'll love it like i do.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: There is hope in speaking truth to power
Review: John Lennon's death never DID make sense to me outside of the context of some kind of conspiracy. When he died, I was 27 years old. I had lived through the trauma of JFK's, RFK's and MLK's assassinations. I did not believe they were lone nut killings either, they were too important, and the question "who benefits?" usually leads to an obvious motive and an obvious suspect, even if it can't be proven. Once he was dead, I understood that John Lennon was the last hope of a dying spirit, the spirit of the 60s, the hope of a generation that had dreamed of creating a world of freedom, love and non-violence. That, to me, was the motive of a generation unwilling to pass the torch of life onto the next generation, the very baby boom they had created at the end of WWII to expand their own egos, yet were unwilling to acknowledge as having minds of their own and perhaps valid resentments having grown up with the values of a war torn parentage. This book dovetails nicely with the other books I have read and reviewed (see more about me) and the evidence is startling and massive to validate Bresler's theory that Chapman was, indeed, a mind controlled killer. The fact is, the CIA's shenanigans go far beyond MK-ULTRA, and have not stopped yet. They are gathering power as you read this, and looking the other way will not stop them. I'm not sure what will, but letting anyone else do your thinking for you won't. Learn as much as you can and know your own mind. Question authority, as the mantra from the 60s challenged, and do not allow the dreams and visions of the flower children to be silenced. They are not dead. They did take root. The toxic poison that surrounds us all is a deadly threat, but as long as we are open to learning and knowing and speaking truth to power, there is hope.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: read this book
Review: Read this book not for its literary value, but for the rather shocking facts it reveals. Bresler is the only individual to have seriously investigated the Lennon assassination - no one in law enforcement did. Since Chapman confessed and refused the plea of his lawyer to plead insane, there was no trial, hence no investigation. Bresler makes the case that he was a programmed assassin, manipulated by the CIA (with whom Bresler shows he had close proximity, even if contact can't be proved). Did you know that he spent June 1975 in Beirut? Lennon was murdered because the CIA was about to launch its Central America war (its War of the Decade), and it needed to dispose of the one individual popular enough - and inclined enough - to galvanize a popular movement. If you don't believe they're capable of it, try "The Search for the Manchurian Candidate: the CIA and Mind Control" by John Marks.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: read this book
Review: Read this book not for its literary value, but for the rather shocking facts it reveals. Bresler is the only individual to have seriously investigated the Lennon assassination - no one in law enforcement did. Since Chapman confessed and refused the plea of his lawyer to plead insane, there was no trial, hence no investigation. Bresler makes the case that he was a programmed assassin, manipulated by the CIA (with whom Bresler shows he had close proximity, even if contact can't be proved). Did you know that he spent June 1975 in Beirut? Lennon was murdered because the CIA was about to launch its Central America war (its War of the Decade), and it needed to dispose of the one individual popular enough - and inclined enough - to galvanize a popular movement. If you don't believe they're capable of it, try "The Search for the Manchurian Candidate: the CIA and Mind Control" by John Marks.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Nothing to Kill or Die For
Review: This well researched book explores a possible political component to the 1980 murder of John Lennon. Outspoken and involved in political causes, the late former Beatle had a dossier by the FBI. He was considered an insurgent rebel by many politicos of the day.

Bresler's book does an excellent job of following the man who killed John Lennon. He accurately chronicles the assassin's movements during the latter part of 1980 and his boyhood overidentification with the former Beatle. Bresler does not skip a beat, his work takes his readers along that sad, psychotic trail Lennon's killer took in late 1980.

The assassin, caught in a love-hate obsession concerning John Lennon appears to be confused about his own identity. A former Beatles fan, the killer would, by 1966 turn against them because of John Lennon's comment that the Beatles were more popular than Jesus. Irate and confused, the killer appeared to try to suppress his natural love for their music while justifying his hatred of John.

It is indeed the killer's behavior that calls attention to his desire to emulate the late Beatle. The assassin marries a woman who is Japanese; he expresses an enjoyment for the same types of art and music that Lennon publicly endorsed. By late 1980 the lines between reality and fantasy blurred; on his last day of work, the killer signed out of his company log book as "John Lennon." He then left Hawaii where he was then living for New York. An extremely confused man, he overidentifies with Holden Caulfield, the young protagonist of "Catcher in the Rye" infamy. He, like Holden declares a moratorium against "phonies" and in his mind, John Lennon is one of those phonies His fantasies ultimately consume him and the results are...devastating.

Bresler does an excellent job of chronicling the series of events that took place when and after John Lennon was murdered; he also does an excellent job of debunking many of the tabloid biographies of the day, e.g. Goldman and Guiliano's biographies of the late Beatle. John's youngest son, Sean, for example comes down hard on the Goldman book which portrays John as punitive and uncomfortable around children as a "total lie." He said that John did indeed enjoy being kissed by Sean and his older half brother Julian and that Goldman's statement otherwise was untrue.

I was impressed with the accuracy and objectivity of this work. It will certainly hold a reader's interest and is an invaluable source of information. I'm lucky to have this. It would be nice to see this back in print.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Nothing to Kill or Die For
Review: This well researched book explores a possible political component to the 1980 murder of John Lennon. Outspoken and involved in political causes, the late former Beatle had a dossier by the FBI. He was considered an insurgent rebel by many politicos of the day.

Bresler's book does an excellent job of following the man who killed John Lennon. He accurately chronicles the assassin's movements during the latter part of 1980 and his boyhood overidentification with the former Beatle. Bresler does not skip a beat, his work takes his readers along that sad, psychotic trail Lennon's killer took in late 1980.

The assassin, caught in a love-hate obsession concerning John Lennon appears to be confused about his own identity. A former Beatles fan, the killer would, by 1966 turn against them because of John Lennon's comment that the Beatles were more popular than Jesus. Irate and confused, the killer appeared to try to suppress his natural love for their music while justifying his hatred of John.

It is indeed the killer's behavior that calls attention to his desire to emulate the late Beatle. The assassin marries a woman who is Japanese; he expresses an enjoyment for the same types of art and music that Lennon publicly endorsed. By late 1980 the lines between reality and fantasy blurred; on his last day of work, the killer signed out of his company log book as "John Lennon." He then left Hawaii where he was then living for New York. An extremely confused man, he overidentifies with Holden Caulfield, the young protagonist of "Catcher in the Rye" infamy. He, like Holden declares a moratorium against "phonies" and in his mind, John Lennon is one of those phonies His fantasies ultimately consume him and the results are...devastating.

Bresler does an excellent job of chronicling the series of events that took place when and after John Lennon was murdered; he also does an excellent job of debunking many of the tabloid biographies of the day, e.g. Goldman and Guiliano's biographies of the late Beatle. John's youngest son, Sean, for example comes down hard on the Goldman book which portrays John as punitive and uncomfortable around children as a "total lie." He said that John did indeed enjoy being kissed by Sean and his older half brother Julian and that Goldman's statement otherwise was untrue.

I was impressed with the accuracy and objectivity of this work. It will certainly hold a reader's interest and is an invaluable source of information. I'm lucky to have this. It would be nice to see this back in print.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This book asks very disturbing and challenging questions
Review: When I first saw this title I said, "No, no, no. I'm not ready for this. I still haven't come to terms with several other murder conspiracies and I don't need this one." I was inclined to take the story at face value, that which was offered by the major media at the time. I certainly did not want to think there was something more sinister behind the Lennon killing. When I picked up the book out of curiosity I found not the ravings of a "conspiracy nut," but a very coherent and rational investigation into the murderer. It had been "an open and shut" case, so few questions were ever raised about it. But the book reminded me that some of the reports about it had made me wonder at the time. I had not pursued the questions then and believed that I was being told the truth. Like others who loved John Lennon, I was grief stricken at the time and not inclined to ask a lot of questions. But when news reports described Chapman's movements the week of the murder, they said he traveled to Hawaii, to Chicago, sold some paintings, then came to New York. I wondered: if this guy is such a loser as they describe, who can barely get a job, where does he get the money to travel widely and deal in art? This book picks up that thread and examines Chapman, where he came from, how he spent his life before he entered history as another "lone assassin" and where, indeed, he did find the means to travel and purchase expensive works of art. The resulting picture is not pretty, does not inspire confidence in our government agencies. Some of the FBI documents on the surveillance of Lennon, which were obtained through the Freedom of Information Act, reflect the frightening cloak-and-dagger mindset of agents of the bureau as they watch and take notes on Lennon as he goes to the deli to buy yogurt during a recording session, or whatever else his daily routines entailed. Whatever your final conclusion, it is hard not to be disturbed by how these people are spending your tax money. I wish the book were still in print.


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