Seven percent of conspiracy-loving Americans blame the Central Intelligence Agency for Kennedy's death. After the failed Bay of Pigs Invasion of Cuba in 1961, Kennedy and the CIA were on rough terms, leading conspiracy-minded individuals to suspect the CIA retaliated by having the president killed. CIA conspiracies often overlap with mob conspiracies because of revelations that the agency worked with organized crime on its Castro schemes. * The Cubans were also a popular candidate for conspiring on the President’s life. The American government made numerous attempts at killing the infamous Fidel Castro, but it is believed that Castro got to JFK first.
Possibly theory’s to the cover up have been: that the mafia black-mailed the government or in exchange for the cover up they would kill Castro. Castro’s Cuba Another popular theory is that Fidel Castro killed Kennedy by hiring Oswald. The motive for would have been that the CIA supported the mafia in their attempt to kill Castro and Castro said to JFK that his attempts would back fire on him. Faults in this theory is that as point out by Castro in 1991 is that ever since the Missile Crisis himself and John Kennedy had been improving relations and that if they had killed JFK Cuba would have suffered too much. The Soviets The motive for the soviets is that Khrushchev was humiliated in the missile crisis and could have easily instigated the assassination and people say that a soviet
Galan also was becoming became popular for his open criticism and complains for of the drug cartels' violence. He had promised to extradite the drug dealers to the United States and decided to run for the presidential elections of 1987, [Therefore, he became a president candidate for the presidency in 1986,] but his political standards led to his death because the drug dealers murdered him in the same
Noriega, being the power-thirsty man he is, was suspected of the murder of Torrijos. He was proven not guilty, and was eventually succeeded (not directly from Torrijos) to general and commander of the National Guard (which eventually gets merged with the navy to form Panama Defense Forces) in 1983. He was officially the leader of Panama. Noriega was being pumped money from drug trafficking and $500,000 a year from the C.I.A. Noriega fell from power when the U.S. found hard evidence of drug trafficking and found out that Noriega has passed socialist laws.
The story also has some holes in it, Mark claiming that he didn’t give his name to the 911 Dispatcher because he was scared; making the officers suspicious. There were a lot of holes in story. 4. Roy Foltrigg: US government lawyer whose job is to prove that Barry Muldano killed the senator. He tries everything to make Mark talk and at the end he proposes to take Mark to court in New Orleans where he was sure that they could make him talk.
The plan was part of a larger conspiracy intended to rally the remaining Confederate troops to continue fighting. Booth had two accomplices, Lewis Powell and George Atzerodt, who had plotted to kill Secretary of State William H. Seward and Vice President Andrew Johnson respectively. Booth’s plan was to simultaneously strike down the top 3 in command of the Union government in order to throw it into disarray. Booth succeeded in his part of the plan by shooting President Lincoln while he was watching Our American Cousin at Ford’s Theatre in Washington, D.C. Lincoln died the next morning. Powell only managed to wound Secretary of State Seward and Vice President Johnson was
What the hell do you think I was thinking of, the goddamn business? Is that as far as your mind can see, the business?” (2.557). It’s apparent that Chris has very opposite ethical views than his father, who will do anything for himself and his family. Joe blames the deaths of the pilots on his coworker because he would go to prison and his business would be destroyed, leaving his family with nothing. He tries convincing Chris to see the way he sees when he tells him, “You lay forty years into a business and they knock you out in five minutes, what could I do, let them take forty years, let them take my life away?” (2.542).
No matter where the student is, or what he is listening to, he cannot escape the commercialism. After initially discounting the validity of what the student is saying, the speaker recalls a dream he had the night before, “And then I remember that when I stabbed my father in a dream last night” (13). The speaker uses “father” as a metaphor for America, and “stabbed” as a metaphor for exposing the truth about commercialism in America. The speaker recalls that “It was not blood but money / That gushed out of him, bright green hundred-dollar bills” (14-15). This is a metaphor how America has become infected with the greed of big corporations.
In Man on Fire, Creasy (the main character) has bad past as a killer. He has a chance to work in Mexico for a child, named Peeta as a bodyguard from his friend’s suggestion. As the relationship between Creasy and Peeta goes deeply as a friend, Peeta is kidnapped and killed by unknown people. Creasy makes a decision to kill the enemies because of Peeta’s death Finally, he realizes that there is Peeta’s father connected with kidnapping and Peeta is still alive. Finally, Creasy trades his life for Peeta’s life at the end of the movie.
The tycoon wanted to drill in waters native to an endangered species, the pelican. Also this wealthy man happened to be friends with the president; with these two men out of the way the president was able to pick the two new justices. Not only is he swimming in oil money but his friend gets to appoint the new justices. Once she writes this she lets her lover/ professor read it. Who then gives it to his best friend, His friends has ties to the FBI and once he gets it, the paper gets its way to the president who doesn’t want the theory investigated because it would ruin his image.