LETTERS READ: The Only Person Brought to Trial for Conspiracy to Assassinate President John F. Kennedy

Published: April 1, 2022, 5 p.m.

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Wrapping-up the previous programming season, Doing Business in New Orleans, we present the story of Clay Shaw. On March 1, 1967, New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison arrested him on conspiracy charges. Shaw was a beloved, successful, local businessman, and closeted queer man.

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On January 29, 1969, Garrison tried Shaw in Orleans Parish Criminal Court on three conspiracy charges. A little over a month later the jury took less than one hour to acquit Shaw.

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After, \\u201c\\u2026jurors expressed their bewilderment as to motive. Respectable socialite Clay Shaw, it strained credulity as to why he would become involved in the murder of the President. Jim Garrison believed that Shaw was acting as Oswald\\u2019s shepherd in New Orleans, under instructions from CIA. But he couldn\\u2019t prove it, certainly not beyond a reasonable doubt.\\u201d \\u2014Joan Mellen.

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Many theories swirl around these, now infamous, Big Easy characters. Both Shaw and Garrison. This reading strives to represent the man who was Clay Shaw and, to a lesser extend, who was Garrison.

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Robert Valley reads as the voice of Shaw, David Zalkind is Jim Garrison. Audio production is by Steve Chyzyk, Sonic Canvas Studio.

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PHOTO: 1956. Clay Shaw dressed for Mardi Gras. From an original 35mm slide in a boxed tray labelled, \\u201cCarnival, 2/14/56. Sally Del Sue Ray.\\u201d Property and copyright of Letters Read.

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