Post by Rob Caprio on Jun 10, 2024 21:01:15 GMT -5
All portions ©️ Robert Caprio 2006-2025
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John Fahey was an outside salesman for Cal Tek Industries, and he had a business appointment at 8:30 a.m. on June 4, 1968, at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles with another salesman from the company, Reg White. Fahey arrived late as he didn't reach the hotel until 9:00 a.m. and he said that he could not locate White.
Fahey began to look around and stopped to look into a shop window and then noticed a blonde woman doing the same thing, and he spoke with her about the dresses in the window. Here is what he told the FBI on June 7, 1968.
Quote on
A casual conversation ensued, and then she asked if he knew where the Post Office was. He did not, so she asked another man, who directed her to the Post Office in the hotel. He did not see the woman again until he was seated at the counter in the hotel coffee shop, when she came in, sat down beside him, and started to talk to him.
He offered to buy her breakfast, she agreed, and they moved to a booth. She ordered a full breakfast; he had coffee and toast. She introduced herself as VIRGINIA, and he gave her his first name, JOHN. In the course of the conversation she stated variously that her name was VIRGINIA, ALICE, and BETTY, and kept saying she did not know if she could trust him. She repeated this several times. He assured her she could, and she finally told him her name was GILDERDINE OPPENHEIMER (phonetic). He believed this was a German name and spoke to her in a few German words. She said she did not understand German, but spoke English and Arabic. She stated she came from Virginia, and when he said his mother was from Virginia, she changed her story, saying she was from New York. (RFK Assassination: L.A.F.O. No. 56-156: Volume 15, pp. 246-247)
www.maryferrell.org/showDoc.html?docId=118221#relPageId=246
Quote off
Fahey said that she kept changing her story just like she had with her name and where she originated from. She was obviously hungry as well as she ordered a full breakfast. He assumed that she was German from her name, but she said she didn't understand the language. She could have been of German origin but lived somewhere else like South Africa as there are Oppenheimers located there. In fact, some say the Oppenheimers run Africa like the Rockefellers run this country. It would explain why she could speak English and Arabic as North Africa is Muslim.
She kept telling him that she had a problem and needed to talk with someone. She wanted to leave the country and go to Australia. She asked Fahey if he could get her a passport to use. (Ibid., p. 247) If she was from South Africa, why didn't she have a passport already? How did she get to the United States without one? Or did she have one but didn't want to use it because she wanted to travel incognito?
She then went into, according to Fahey, a number of things that would be considered illegal.
Quote on
She indicated experience with passports, stating she knew how to change pictures and names, to obtain the Social Security Number of a deceased person, get a birth certificate, and then obtain a passport. She asked if he had connections in Australia, and he said he did not. She indicated she wanted to go to Australia alone. When he asked what trouble she was in, she kept repeating that she did not want to get him involved. He asked if she lived in the hotel, and she stated she did not.
She asked his preference in a presidential candidate, and he refused to tell her. She stated KENNEDY was "no good", and he replied, hoping to draw her out, that it did not matter to him, as he was for Mc Carthy. She then stated, "They are going to get him", referring to Senator KENNEDY. At this time, the woman stated that they were being watched. Fahey looked towards the entrance of the coffee shop, and saw one of the two men he had passed coming into the hotel, staring at them. The man did not stop staring when he looked.
FAHEY stated when he first saw the picture of SIRHAN SIRHAN on television, he believed it was the man staring at them. Upon being shown photographs of SIRHAN SIRHAN and his brother, MUNIR SIRHAN, he stated the photograph of MUNIR looked more like the man staring at them because of the youthful, thin face, but he could not identify the photograph of MUNIR to be the man who was staring at them. (Ibid., p. 247)
www.maryferrell.org/showDoc.html?docId=118221#relPageId=247
Quote off
This tells us this woman had some experience with doctoring official documents. She also seemed to want go to Australia. What was the purpose of all of this? Was the man watching them either Sirhan or Munir Sirhan? IF so, why were they watching Fahey and the woman?
Fahey then told the woman he was leaving for Oxnard for the day, and she said she wanted to go with him. Why did she want to go? Also remember that a phone call in Oxnard was heard at 12:10 p.m. on November 22, 1963, where a woman was heard predicting the death of President John F. Kennedy (JFK). Was this a coincidence or was there some base that this woman could make contact with for the events later that night? Furthermore, on May 28, 1968, RFK had spent several hours in Oxnard checking out a lead to his brother's death. What could have he learned that might have possibly sped up his own death?
The report continues with her comments about the RFK event that night.
Quote on
The woman asked if he was going to attend the "victory reception" in the hotel that night, and he said no. She stated, "If you, you will be really surprised. They are going to take care of KENNEDY". Fahey asked her how she knew, and she stated she did not want him to be involved. (Ibid., p. 248)
www.maryferrell.org/showDoc.html?docId=118221#relPageId=248
Quote off
This is either an uncanny guess or she had some inside knowledge of what was going to happen that night. The term "taking care of" is a known Mafia term for rubbing someone out, so was she part of the syndicate?
Fahey said the whole trip up Highway 101 she was very nervous and kept looking behind them. He said her hands were wet with perspiration. She then told him that they were being followed, and he noticed a dark blue Volkswagen sedan following them. To make sure Fahey varied his speed and it became clear that they were being followed. He eventually lost the Volkswagen and headed towards to Oxnard.
Fahey tried to learn how many were in the group who were "going to get Kennedy", she just said that they used radios to communicate. He asked her if she was involved in the group, and she said, "once you get involved, you belong, or they take care of you." This again sounds like the mob or intelligence to me. Fahey began to become uneasy and asked where she lived in Los Angeles, and she said that she lived on Kenmore but had been there for only a few days. On the way back to Los Angeles they stopped at Trancas restaurant around 5:15 p.m. where they ate. The woman wanted a drink, but Fahey would not buy her one. She said that she had a long night ahead of her and wanted one. Fahey refused. (Ibid., p. 248)
She refused to be dropped off on Kenmore and asked where Olympic (Boulevard) was as she wanted to get out there. Finally, she said she wanted to be dropped off at the Ambassador Hotel and again asked him if he would attend the "victory reception." He said no. It was about 7:30 p.m. when he dropped her off. (Ibid., p. 249)
Fahey said she did not ask him for any money, and he noticed during the day that her wallet had a "thick sheaf of bills" in it. (Ibid.) This means she was no pauper. He described the man driving the Volkswagen as follows: Caucasian, stocky build, gray hair combed straight back, blue eyes, early forties and had the appearance of being heavy.
The woman he described as Caucasian (slightly Arabic) with fine features, 27-28 years of age, 5'6", dirty blonde hair, which was well kept, fair complexion, dark eyes, very good build, very attractive figure, and wore tan clothing and carried a tan handbag. (Ibid., p. 250)
On June 12, 1968, Fahey gave another statement and this one gives a little more detail in some areas.
Quote on
And she said -- that's when she said "Well my name isn't Alice, my name is Jean." And I says -- "Well", and she says "There's reasons why I had to give you different names." She says "I can't go by my real name." (RFK LAPD Microfilm, Volume 95, p. 231; p. 4 in original)
www.maryferrell.org/showDoc.html?docId=99838#relPageId=231
Quote off
This is when she then said she couldn't get him involved because she didn't know if she could trust him. Obviously, another reason she didn't want to give her real name is she would be wanted later on if he went to the police following the assassination. This interview tells us better how he saw her wallet. She said she would pay for breakfast and took out her wallet. Fahey said her clothes and wallet were of fine material and he noticed a large amount of money in her wallet which consisted of big bills like $50s and $100s. (Ibid., p. 232; p. 5 in original)
She also knew a shortcut to the lobby from the coffee shop, but when asked if she had been there before she said no. Did she know of this shortcut due to the planning that went on to kill RFK?
He would say that she was "very pretty with a prominent nose" and we saw this comment about the woman seen in various places in the days leading up to the assassination. (Ibid., p. 234; p. 7 in original) Fahey described it as a "hooked" nose. He would say she was between 125-127 pounds. During this interview he mentioned that she told him if he were to get involved then "they would take care of you."
This shows that Fahey was very lucky to be around after he took her to Oxnard as they could have assumed that she told him the plans. This interview mentions a second car following them which was a Ford. It also mentions that she said her real name was either "Gildeen Oppenheimer" or Gilda Dean Oppenheimer." (Ibid., p. 236; p. 9)
If she was the "polka-dot dress" woman, she had to have a change of clothing in the Hotel or someone brought her the dress to wear as she had on a tan dress when Fahey dropped her off. She would have had to put on a wig as well since that woman was described to have dark hair. Fahey said something interesting about the woman that could come in handy for her. He said that her eyes seemed to change colors as he said she had blue eyes, but if you looked at her real quick, they appeared to be brown. He mentioned three colors for her eyes -- blue, brown and green. (Ibid., p. 249; p. 22 in original)
He mentioned that she said that they were going to get him a number of times and he just thought she was nuts, sick or drunk. He didn't believe her. Another thing that is interesting is that she kept saying that Kennedy would win, but this was not known for sure as he entered the race late and McCarthy had done a lot of work in California. Why was she so sure he would win?
Whatever happened to this woman? Did either the FBI or Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) ever try and find her? Probably not. If you have read my articles about the JFK assassination, then you know how this one will end. Here it is.
Quote on
Admitted he did not see Sirhan or Munir. Does not believe that the girl was or is involved. Hernandez (RFK LAPD Microfilm, Vol 7, p. 323)
www.maryferrell.org/showDoc.html?docId=99687#relPageId=323
Quote off
When did he say either of these things in his two interviews? Never is the correct answer. Good old "Hernandez" was supposedly tied to the CIA by the way. They also found some old supervisor of his to run him down as well.
Quote on
Nelson stated that Fahey seemed emotionally unstable. (RFK LAPD Microfilm, Vol 15, p. 303)
www.maryferrell.org/showDoc.html?docId=99697#relPageId=303
Quote off
What made Nelson qualified to make this statement? Who knows, but the FBI loved this kind of tactic. Everyone who ever saw or heard things that went counter to the official story could NEVER be a normal, stable person. Never.
Who do you think this woman was?
cdn.aarp.net/content/dam/aarp/entertainment/television/2018/04/1140-bobby-kennedy-1968.web.jpg
media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/prod/210827193559-02-robert-kennedy-assassination-file-restricted.jpg
i0.wp.com/robscholtemuseum.nl/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/RFK-Girl-in-Polka-Dot-Dress-Sirhan-Sirhan-In-Ambassador-Hotel-the-Night-of-the-Shooting-foto-Gary-Revel.jpg
i.pinimg.com/originals/60/47/f1/6047f109a7064790e10a9ef9294bb862.jpg
John Fahey was an outside salesman for Cal Tek Industries, and he had a business appointment at 8:30 a.m. on June 4, 1968, at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles with another salesman from the company, Reg White. Fahey arrived late as he didn't reach the hotel until 9:00 a.m. and he said that he could not locate White.
Fahey began to look around and stopped to look into a shop window and then noticed a blonde woman doing the same thing, and he spoke with her about the dresses in the window. Here is what he told the FBI on June 7, 1968.
Quote on
A casual conversation ensued, and then she asked if he knew where the Post Office was. He did not, so she asked another man, who directed her to the Post Office in the hotel. He did not see the woman again until he was seated at the counter in the hotel coffee shop, when she came in, sat down beside him, and started to talk to him.
He offered to buy her breakfast, she agreed, and they moved to a booth. She ordered a full breakfast; he had coffee and toast. She introduced herself as VIRGINIA, and he gave her his first name, JOHN. In the course of the conversation she stated variously that her name was VIRGINIA, ALICE, and BETTY, and kept saying she did not know if she could trust him. She repeated this several times. He assured her she could, and she finally told him her name was GILDERDINE OPPENHEIMER (phonetic). He believed this was a German name and spoke to her in a few German words. She said she did not understand German, but spoke English and Arabic. She stated she came from Virginia, and when he said his mother was from Virginia, she changed her story, saying she was from New York. (RFK Assassination: L.A.F.O. No. 56-156: Volume 15, pp. 246-247)
www.maryferrell.org/showDoc.html?docId=118221#relPageId=246
Quote off
Fahey said that she kept changing her story just like she had with her name and where she originated from. She was obviously hungry as well as she ordered a full breakfast. He assumed that she was German from her name, but she said she didn't understand the language. She could have been of German origin but lived somewhere else like South Africa as there are Oppenheimers located there. In fact, some say the Oppenheimers run Africa like the Rockefellers run this country. It would explain why she could speak English and Arabic as North Africa is Muslim.
She kept telling him that she had a problem and needed to talk with someone. She wanted to leave the country and go to Australia. She asked Fahey if he could get her a passport to use. (Ibid., p. 247) If she was from South Africa, why didn't she have a passport already? How did she get to the United States without one? Or did she have one but didn't want to use it because she wanted to travel incognito?
She then went into, according to Fahey, a number of things that would be considered illegal.
Quote on
She indicated experience with passports, stating she knew how to change pictures and names, to obtain the Social Security Number of a deceased person, get a birth certificate, and then obtain a passport. She asked if he had connections in Australia, and he said he did not. She indicated she wanted to go to Australia alone. When he asked what trouble she was in, she kept repeating that she did not want to get him involved. He asked if she lived in the hotel, and she stated she did not.
She asked his preference in a presidential candidate, and he refused to tell her. She stated KENNEDY was "no good", and he replied, hoping to draw her out, that it did not matter to him, as he was for Mc Carthy. She then stated, "They are going to get him", referring to Senator KENNEDY. At this time, the woman stated that they were being watched. Fahey looked towards the entrance of the coffee shop, and saw one of the two men he had passed coming into the hotel, staring at them. The man did not stop staring when he looked.
FAHEY stated when he first saw the picture of SIRHAN SIRHAN on television, he believed it was the man staring at them. Upon being shown photographs of SIRHAN SIRHAN and his brother, MUNIR SIRHAN, he stated the photograph of MUNIR looked more like the man staring at them because of the youthful, thin face, but he could not identify the photograph of MUNIR to be the man who was staring at them. (Ibid., p. 247)
www.maryferrell.org/showDoc.html?docId=118221#relPageId=247
Quote off
This tells us this woman had some experience with doctoring official documents. She also seemed to want go to Australia. What was the purpose of all of this? Was the man watching them either Sirhan or Munir Sirhan? IF so, why were they watching Fahey and the woman?
Fahey then told the woman he was leaving for Oxnard for the day, and she said she wanted to go with him. Why did she want to go? Also remember that a phone call in Oxnard was heard at 12:10 p.m. on November 22, 1963, where a woman was heard predicting the death of President John F. Kennedy (JFK). Was this a coincidence or was there some base that this woman could make contact with for the events later that night? Furthermore, on May 28, 1968, RFK had spent several hours in Oxnard checking out a lead to his brother's death. What could have he learned that might have possibly sped up his own death?
The report continues with her comments about the RFK event that night.
Quote on
The woman asked if he was going to attend the "victory reception" in the hotel that night, and he said no. She stated, "If you, you will be really surprised. They are going to take care of KENNEDY". Fahey asked her how she knew, and she stated she did not want him to be involved. (Ibid., p. 248)
www.maryferrell.org/showDoc.html?docId=118221#relPageId=248
Quote off
This is either an uncanny guess or she had some inside knowledge of what was going to happen that night. The term "taking care of" is a known Mafia term for rubbing someone out, so was she part of the syndicate?
Fahey said the whole trip up Highway 101 she was very nervous and kept looking behind them. He said her hands were wet with perspiration. She then told him that they were being followed, and he noticed a dark blue Volkswagen sedan following them. To make sure Fahey varied his speed and it became clear that they were being followed. He eventually lost the Volkswagen and headed towards to Oxnard.
Fahey tried to learn how many were in the group who were "going to get Kennedy", she just said that they used radios to communicate. He asked her if she was involved in the group, and she said, "once you get involved, you belong, or they take care of you." This again sounds like the mob or intelligence to me. Fahey began to become uneasy and asked where she lived in Los Angeles, and she said that she lived on Kenmore but had been there for only a few days. On the way back to Los Angeles they stopped at Trancas restaurant around 5:15 p.m. where they ate. The woman wanted a drink, but Fahey would not buy her one. She said that she had a long night ahead of her and wanted one. Fahey refused. (Ibid., p. 248)
She refused to be dropped off on Kenmore and asked where Olympic (Boulevard) was as she wanted to get out there. Finally, she said she wanted to be dropped off at the Ambassador Hotel and again asked him if he would attend the "victory reception." He said no. It was about 7:30 p.m. when he dropped her off. (Ibid., p. 249)
Fahey said she did not ask him for any money, and he noticed during the day that her wallet had a "thick sheaf of bills" in it. (Ibid.) This means she was no pauper. He described the man driving the Volkswagen as follows: Caucasian, stocky build, gray hair combed straight back, blue eyes, early forties and had the appearance of being heavy.
The woman he described as Caucasian (slightly Arabic) with fine features, 27-28 years of age, 5'6", dirty blonde hair, which was well kept, fair complexion, dark eyes, very good build, very attractive figure, and wore tan clothing and carried a tan handbag. (Ibid., p. 250)
On June 12, 1968, Fahey gave another statement and this one gives a little more detail in some areas.
Quote on
And she said -- that's when she said "Well my name isn't Alice, my name is Jean." And I says -- "Well", and she says "There's reasons why I had to give you different names." She says "I can't go by my real name." (RFK LAPD Microfilm, Volume 95, p. 231; p. 4 in original)
www.maryferrell.org/showDoc.html?docId=99838#relPageId=231
Quote off
This is when she then said she couldn't get him involved because she didn't know if she could trust him. Obviously, another reason she didn't want to give her real name is she would be wanted later on if he went to the police following the assassination. This interview tells us better how he saw her wallet. She said she would pay for breakfast and took out her wallet. Fahey said her clothes and wallet were of fine material and he noticed a large amount of money in her wallet which consisted of big bills like $50s and $100s. (Ibid., p. 232; p. 5 in original)
She also knew a shortcut to the lobby from the coffee shop, but when asked if she had been there before she said no. Did she know of this shortcut due to the planning that went on to kill RFK?
He would say that she was "very pretty with a prominent nose" and we saw this comment about the woman seen in various places in the days leading up to the assassination. (Ibid., p. 234; p. 7 in original) Fahey described it as a "hooked" nose. He would say she was between 125-127 pounds. During this interview he mentioned that she told him if he were to get involved then "they would take care of you."
This shows that Fahey was very lucky to be around after he took her to Oxnard as they could have assumed that she told him the plans. This interview mentions a second car following them which was a Ford. It also mentions that she said her real name was either "Gildeen Oppenheimer" or Gilda Dean Oppenheimer." (Ibid., p. 236; p. 9)
If she was the "polka-dot dress" woman, she had to have a change of clothing in the Hotel or someone brought her the dress to wear as she had on a tan dress when Fahey dropped her off. She would have had to put on a wig as well since that woman was described to have dark hair. Fahey said something interesting about the woman that could come in handy for her. He said that her eyes seemed to change colors as he said she had blue eyes, but if you looked at her real quick, they appeared to be brown. He mentioned three colors for her eyes -- blue, brown and green. (Ibid., p. 249; p. 22 in original)
He mentioned that she said that they were going to get him a number of times and he just thought she was nuts, sick or drunk. He didn't believe her. Another thing that is interesting is that she kept saying that Kennedy would win, but this was not known for sure as he entered the race late and McCarthy had done a lot of work in California. Why was she so sure he would win?
Whatever happened to this woman? Did either the FBI or Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) ever try and find her? Probably not. If you have read my articles about the JFK assassination, then you know how this one will end. Here it is.
Quote on
Admitted he did not see Sirhan or Munir. Does not believe that the girl was or is involved. Hernandez (RFK LAPD Microfilm, Vol 7, p. 323)
www.maryferrell.org/showDoc.html?docId=99687#relPageId=323
Quote off
When did he say either of these things in his two interviews? Never is the correct answer. Good old "Hernandez" was supposedly tied to the CIA by the way. They also found some old supervisor of his to run him down as well.
Quote on
Nelson stated that Fahey seemed emotionally unstable. (RFK LAPD Microfilm, Vol 15, p. 303)
www.maryferrell.org/showDoc.html?docId=99697#relPageId=303
Quote off
What made Nelson qualified to make this statement? Who knows, but the FBI loved this kind of tactic. Everyone who ever saw or heard things that went counter to the official story could NEVER be a normal, stable person. Never.
Who do you think this woman was?