May 15, 1979, House of Representatives Report on Jonestown--Findings
May 15, 1979, The Assassination of Representative Leo J. Ryan and the Jonestown Tragedy, Report of the Staff Investigative Group to the Committee on Foreign Affairs, U.S. House of Representatives,
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May 15, 1979,
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May 15, 1979
REPORT OF A STAFF INVESTIGATIVE GROUP TO THE COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN AFFAIRS
U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
MAY 15, 1979
[3,134 words]
FOREWORD
This investigative factfinding report has been submitted to the Committee on Foreign Affairs by the Staff Investigative Group. Per my directives and pursuant to the committee's investigative authority, the Staff Group conducted a comprehensive inquiry into the international relations aspects of the activities of the People's Temple, [an extremely narrow and artificial mandate, although murder does have its international relations aspects, what transpired in Jonestown should have engaged every level of government in investigating, with Congress acting as lead.] the tragic events that led to the murder of Representative Leo J. Ryan and other members of his party, and the mass suicide/murder of the followers of People's Temple that occurred in Jonestown, Guyana on November 18, 1978 .
The findings and recommendations in this report are those of the Staff Investigative Group and do not necessarily reflect the views of the membership of the Committee on Foreign Affairs.
Clement J. Zablocki, Chairman.
INTRODUCTION
A. Ryan Trip Background
The chain of events which led to Representative Leo J. Ryan's death in Guyana on November 18, 1978 began 1 year earlier almost exactly to the date. The spark that ignited his interest was a San Francisco Examiner article of November 13, 1977, involving an old friend and constituent, Mr. Sam Houston of San Bruno, Calif. Headlined "Scared Too Long," the story recounted the death of Sam Houston's son, Bob, beneath the wheels of a train on October 5, 1976, 1 day after he had announced his decision to leave the People's Temple. The article explained that Mr. Houston was "speaking out" because he was outraged by the way the Temple had treated his son, about whose "accidental" death he had lingering doubts. He was also speaking out because his two granddaughters, who were sent to New York on a "vacation," ended up at the People's Temple agricultural mission in Jonestown, Guyana-never to return. Sam Houston was also described as speaking out because he didn't have much time left. Doctors would be removing his cancer-choked voice box within a few days. Finally, Sam Houston said he was speaking out because he was "tired of being scared." [actually Ryan and Houston were old friends. Houston being an Associated Press photographer also tends to bring up the possibility that the nine members of the news crew may have been in some collusion or conspiracy.]
Representative Ryan read that story and soon thereafter took the initiative to contact the Houstons and visited their home. Reinforced by the fact that a relative had been involved in an unusual church group, Mr. Ryan decided at that time that the matter needed to be looked into.
Over the next 6 to 8 months several other developments took place which increased his interest in the activities of the People's Temple. One was another San Francisco newspaper story recounting the defection from People's Temple of Debbie Blakey, including excerpts from her sworn affidavit of June 15, 1978, noting mass suicide rehearsals at Jonestown. Further impetus came in letters he received from concerned relatives of People's Temple members, some of whom were constituents, asking his assistance and alleging, among other things, social security irregularities, human rights violations, and that their loved ones were being held in Jonestown against their will. He subsequently met with a group of these concerned relatives in August 1978. As his interest in People's Temple became more widely known, he also began receiving extensive mail and petitions favorable to People's Temple. He also hired a young California attorney to interview former People's Temple members and concerned relatives. His specific instruction was to look for possible violations of Federal and California State laws.
The cumulative effect of this effort undertaken by Representative Ryan led him to request a meeting on September 15, 1978, with Viron P. Vaky, Assistant Secretary, Bureau of Inter-American Affairs, U.S. Department of State, and other State Department officials. What he had earlier considered merely the "possibility" of going to Guyana appears to have become firm in his mind at that meeting. On October 4, 1978, he requested House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Clement J. Zablocki's permission to go to Guyana. He explained his interest in part stemmed from his membership on this committee's Sub-committee on International Operations, as a result of which he had become increasingly aware "of the problems related to protecting the lives and property of U.S. citizens abroad." A key paragraph in his letter stated:
It has come to my attention that a community of some 1,400 Americans are presently living in Guyana under somewhat bizarre conditions. There is conflicting information regarding whether or not the U.S. citizens are being held there against their will. If you agree, I would like to travel to Guyana during the week of November 12-18 to review the situation first-hand.
In response to Chairman Zablocki's request, and in compliance with committee travel guidelines, Mr. Ryan subsequently attempted to interest other committee members in accompanying him. Although Hon. Edward J. Derwinski was originally scheduled to do so, he subsequently had to cancel those plans because of unavoidable conflicts in his schedule.
Prior to his departure for Guyana on November 14, Mr. Ryan and members of his staff and this committee's staff received briefings and met with State Department officials on October 2, 25, and November 9 and 13. Chief among the topics discussed in those briefings was the Privacy act because both the Embassy and the State Department were highly sensitized by legal actions taken under this statute by the People's Temple and because some 1,000 Americans living in Jonestown were protected by the provisions of this act. Logistical problems in getting to Jonestown and other related matters were also reviewed.
During approximately this same period the media became aware of Mr. Ryan's trip as did members of the Concerned Relatives of People's Temple members in San Francisco. By the time he departed for Guyana on November 14, the group of newspaper and television media accompanying him grew to 9 and the Concerned Relatives delegation numbered 18. In this connection, it is important to note that neither the media nor Concerned Relatives were a part of Mr. Ryan's official Codel.1 Rather, the official party was made up of Mr. Ryan, Mr. James Schollaert, staff consultant for the House Foreign Affairs Committee; and Miss Jackie Speier, of Mr. Ryan's personal staff and whose expenses were not paid for by the U.S. Government.
On November 1, Mr. Ryan sent a telegraph to Jim Jones outlining his plans and expressing his desire to visit Jonestown. On that same date, Mr. Ryan wrote to Hon. John Burke, U.S. Ambassador to Guyana, informing the Ambassador of his proposed date of arrival in Georgetown (November 14), and relaying to Ambassador Burke the text of his telegram to Jones. On November 5 the U.S. Embassy advised Mr. Ryan that the People's Temple wanted Mr. Ryan to work with People's Temple legal counsel, Mark Lane, on the appropriate arrangements for the Ryan Codel to visit Jonestown. [a very newly hired attorney]
The Embassy also relayed to Mr. Ryan that the People's Temple had informed an Embassy official that Mr. Ryan could visit Jonestown provided: (1) that the Codel was "balanced"; (2) that there would be no media coverage associated with the visit; [how could "the media accompaniment" have "grown" to nine if one of the conditions of the visit was no media coverage of the visit? And if media were to accompany Ryan as far as Georgetown, why were eight of the nine allowed by Jim Jones into Jonestown? This wasn't an early reality version of Glee was it? Unless of course, the intent was to specifically document the nature of their own demise.] and (3) that Mr. Lane be present during the visit. Attempts by Mr. Schollaert to negotiate these matters with Mr. Lane on Representative Ryan's behalf were unproductive.
On November 6, Mr. Lane wrote a letter to Mr. Ryan outlining logistical difficulties if the Ryan Codel decided to visit Jonestown and informing Ryan that Lane would be unable to be in Jonestown at the time Ryan wished to visit the settlement. Lane also made inferences in the letter to a "witchhunt" against the People's Temple by the U.S. Government. On November 10, Mr. Ryan responded to Lane's letter, expressing regret at Lane's remarks about the Codel's motives and informing him that despite Lane's scheduling conflicts, the Codel planned to leave for Guyana on November 14. Further negotiations between Representative Ryan and Messrs. Lane and Charles Garry, also legal counsel to the People's Temple, resumed in Georgetown after the Codel's arrival. [conveniently they fail to mention who was functioning as Ryan's legal counsel, which of course was Miss Jackie Speier, "whose expenses were not paid for by the U.S. Government" for some freakish reason.]
B. Summary of Events of November 14-19, 1978
The Ryan Codel, together with its unofficial contingent of media and Concerned Relatives, arrived in Georgetown, Guyana at approximately midnight November 14. The official Codel group proceeded into Georgetown where Mr. Ryan was a house guest of U.S. Ambassador John Burke and Miss Speier and Mr. Schollaert registered at the Pegasus Hotel. [she may have registered at the hotel but it doesn't take a rocket scientist to see she slept with Ryan with Burke's approval.] Despite confirmed reservations, the Concerned Relatives group was unable to obtain rooms at the same hotel and spent the night in the lobby. With one exception, the media group cleared customs and took rooms at the Pegasus Hotel. The exception, Mr. Ron Javers of the San Francisco Chronicle, was detained overnight at the airport because he lacked an entry visa and for what was later described as on orders from "higher ups."
Over the next 2 1/2 days the following incidents took place:
With the assistance of Embassy personnel, Mr. Javers was eventually allowed to enter, other members of the media group were summoned to the Ministry of Immigration, and attempts were made to shorten their visas from 5 to 1 day;
Representative Ryan, Miss Speier, and Mr. Schollaert received briefings from members of the U.S. Embassy team;
Mr. Ryan paid a courtesy call on Guyanese Foreign Minister Rashleigh Jackson to discuss United States-Guyanese bilateral relations;
Mr. Ryan arranged a meeting between Ambassador Burke and the Concerned Relatives group at which they voiced their concerns and allegations regarding their relatives in Jonestown;
Mr. Ryan made an unannounced visit to the People's Temple Headquarters in Georgetown at 41 Lamaha Gardens; Mr. Charles Krause of the Washington Post accompanied Mr. Ryan but did not enter the headquarters; [huh? Not at all plausible.]
Some of the Concerned Relatives groups also attempted to talk with People's Temple representatives at the Lamaha Gardens People's Temple facility but were generally unsuccessful;
Because negotiations between Representative Ryan and Messrs. Lane and Garry were still unresolved, the plane originally chartered to go to Jonestown on Thursday, November 16, was rescheduled for Friday, November 17;
By late Friday morning Mr. Ryan advised Messrs. Lane and Garry that he was leaving for Jonestown at 2:30 p.m. regardless of Jones' willingness to allow the Ryan party to visit Jonestown. He also assured Lane and Garry of two seats on the plane if they decided to accompany him;
Mr. Ryan, Miss Speier, Deputy Chief of Mission Richard Dwyer, Messrs. Lane and Garry, all nine media representatives, four individuals representing the Concerned Relatives group, and Mr. Neville Annibourne, a Guyanese Information Officer, left for Jonestown at approximately 2:30 p.m., Friday, November 17, Guyana time (12:30 p.m., e.s.t., Washington, D.C.).
On the group's arrival at the Port Kaituma airstrip the chronology of events which ensued was as follows:
They were met initially by a Corporal Rudder, described as a Guyanese Regional Official assigned to the Northwest territory. He advised them that he had orders "from Jonestown" not to allow anyone off the plane except Messrs. Lane and Garry. Representatives of the Jonestown People's Temple facility also at the airstrip met privately with Lane and Garry and it was eventually decided that only they together with Mr. Ryan, Miss Speier, Mr. Dwyer, and Mr. Annibourne could proceed into Jonestown;
Mr. Ryan eventually obtained Mr. Jones' approval for the media group and Concerned Relatives to enter Jonestown and the People's Temple truck was sent back to Port Kaituma to transport them. They arrived in Jonestown after dark. Only Mr. Gordon Lindsay, a former free-lance reporter for the National Enquirer, and on this trip, working as a consultant to NBC, was denied entry. A previous unpublished story by Mr. Lindsay critical of People's Temple had incurred Jim Jones' wrath and accounted for the refusal to allow him into Jonestown. Mr. Lindsay thereupon immediately returned with the plane to Georgetown;
Dinner was served to the entire delegation and they viewed a musical presentation by People's Temple members. Throughout this period the reporters were casually interviewing Mr. Jones; Mr. Ryan and Miss Speier were contacting and talking to People's Temple members whose names had been provided them by relatives in the United States. Although the evening was generally informal and casual, the emotional atmosphere was described as at a "fever pitch." At one point, Mr. Ryan addressed the assembled People's Temple audience of approximately 900 and received an extended, standing ovation in response to his comment that "for some of you, for a lot of you that I talked to, Jonestown is the best thing that ever happened to you in your lives";
Sometime during the evening, a People's Temple member passed a note to NBC Reporter Don Harris indicating the individual's desire to leave Jonestown. Harris hid the note and later showed it to Mr. Ryan. That same evening another People's Temple member made a similar verbal request of DCM Dwyer to leave "immediately," which he passed on to Mr. Ryan;
At approximately 11 p.m. the media group and Concerned Relatives were returned to Port Kaituma for makeshift accommodations after Jim Jones refused to allow them to spend the night in Jonestown. Only Ryan, Speier, Dwyer, Annibourne, Garry, and Lane stayed in Jonestown the night of Friday, November 17;
Following their arrival in Port Kaituma, three members of the media were approached by local Guyanese, including one reported to be a local police official. The Guyanese related stories of alleged beatings at Jonestown, complained that local Guyanese officials were denied entry to and had no authority in Jonestown, and described a "torture hole" in the compound.
On Saturday, November 18, the following chronological order of events took place:
Following breakfast, Ryan, Speier, and Dwyer continued their round of interviews with People's Temple members in the process of which they were approached by a People's Temple member who indicated to them secretly that she and her family wished to leave Jonestown;
The media group and Concerned Relatives returned to Jonestown from Port Kaituma aboard the People's Temple truck at approximately 11 a.m., several hours later than the schedule promised by Mr. Jones on Friday night. The media began to seek access to various Jonestown facilities. They also continued their interviews of Jim Jones and People's Temple individuals;
At about 3 or 3:30 p.m. a total of some 15 People's Temple members who had indicated their desire to leave boarded the truck for return to the Port Kaituma airstrip. Only Mr. Ryan and People's Temple lawyers Lane and Garry planned to remain in Jonestown 1 more night. It was at this point that an unsuccessful knife attack was made on Mr. Ryan's life. The attacker, identified as Don Sly, was fended off by Mr. Lane and others but cut himself in the process and Mr. Ryan's clothes were spattered with blood. [A feigned drama. What was the motivation? After Ryan's positive remarks the previous evening had been received with an extended standing ovation? Lawyers aren't known for their physical prowess fending off violence anyway. And Sly is pretty dense if all he did was cut himself and spew blood on his "hated" target.] After receiving Mr. Jones' assurance that the incident would be reported to local police, Mr. Ryan assured Jones that the attack would not substantially influence his overall impression of People's Temple. Despite the attack, Mr. Ryan reportedly planned to remain in Jonestown and eventually left only after virtually being ordered to do so by DCM Dwyer. In turn, Mr. Dwyer planned to return to Jonestown later in an effort to resolve a dispute between a family who was split on the question of leaving Jonestown; [now that is one of the only believable details--a family divided is real-world.]
Because of the unanticipated large number of defectors, an unexpected request was made to the Embassy in Georgetown at about noon Saturday for a second plane. A considerable effort was required by Embassy personnel to obtain the aircraft on such short notice; [and a little 6-passenger Cessna was sent, insufficient for their needs, so don't get a hernia patting yourself on the back.]
The entire group, including the defectors, arrived at the Port Kaituma airstrip between 4:30 and 4:45 p.m. The planes, which were scheduled to be there on the group's arrival, did not arrive until approximately 5:10 p.m. A six-passenger Cessna was loaded and had taxied to the far end of the airstrip when one of the passengers in that plane, Larry Layton, a self-styled "defector," opened fire on its passengers. At approximately the same time, a People's Temple tractor and trailer which had arrived at the airstrip shortly before, was positioned near the twin-engine Otter aircraft onto which some had already boarded. The trailer occupants waved off local Guyanese who had gathered about and opened fire on the Ryan party. Mr. Ryan, three members of the media, and one of the defectors were killed; Miss Speier and nine others were wounded--five seriously. According to information received by the Staff Investigative Group, the shooting started at 5:20 p.m. (3:20 p.m. Washington time) and lasted about 4 to 5 minutes. The larger aircraft was disabled but the smaller Cessna took off in the ensuing confusion. The attackers left the airstrip and the survivors sought various cover and protection through the night under the direction of DCM Dwyer;
The evidence the Staff Investigative Group has indicates that very shortly after the Ryan group left Jonestown, Jones was in a highly agitated state. [Why?] In an apparent attempt to calm the situation his wife, Marceline, urged everyone to go to their cabins to rest. [This was midday. Doesn't everybody work 18 hours a day, six days a week? This nap time is for kindergarteners. ] But shortly thereafter everyone was ordered back to the Pavilion. On the basis of the evidence we estimate that the mass suicide/murder ritual began at about 5 p.m. on Saturday afternoon, [In advance of the start to shooting, let alone a failure to finish the job.] Guyana time. It ultimately claimed 909 lives, including that of Jim Jones. Word of the Jonestown deaths reached Port Kaituma about 2 a.m. Sunday morning with the arrival of two survivors, Stanley Clayton and Odell Rhodes. At approximately 7:40 p.m., Saturday, Sherwin Harris, a member of the Concerned Relatives Group, was informed by Guyanese police officials that his ex-wife Sharon Amos and three of her children were found dead at the People's Temple headquarters in Georgetown;
[Her children? Weren't they HIS children too? If not, then what was he doing there? Sharon Amos was a very high level member of the cult---in effect she ran the Georgetown end of the operation. She certainly wasn't about to decamp under a former husband's urging.]
Shortly after takeoff the Cessna aircraft radioed the Georgetown tower with news of the attack and Guyanese officials were informed. At about 6 p.m. Saturday, Prime Minister Forbes Burnham telephoned Ambassador Burke to request that he come immediately to his residence where he received word of the shooting. Ambassador Burke returned to the Embassy at 7:55 p.m., dictated a cable to the State Department which was sent at 8:30 p.m. (6:30 p.m., e.s.t. Washington time). The text of that cable was subsequently read over the phone to a State Department official in Washington at approximately 8:40 p.m.;
The first contingent of Guyanese Army rescue forces arrived in Port Kaituma shortly after dawn (approximately 6 a.m.) on Sunday, November 19. The complete contingent of 120 soldiers were on the scene 1 hour later. The first Guyanese rescue aircraft landed at Port Kaituma without medical supplies or personnel at about 10 a.m. [That was dumb.] All of the wounded and most of the survivors were airlifted by Guyanese from Port Kaituma before the end of the day. On arrival in Georgetown, the wounded were transferred to waiting U.S. Air Force medical evacuation aircraft. [The timing of all this is suspect. The Guyanese couldn't manage a timely medical response with removal given only a 90-minute flight, but the U.S. could have a Medevac plane on the ground ready and waiting?]
Earlier reports of the mass suicide/murders at Jonestown were confirmed late Sunday morning when Guyanese Army contingents arrived there.
[It is a totally bogus contention that the airport in Port Kaituma was without radio contact with the capital, and existed in some sort of permanent state of incommunicado with the outside world. This excuse justified the curtailed the flow of information to U.S. officials and hence the public. But it is not rational for a frontier outpost near the international border, and in an area with heavy mining interests would function in this fashion. Jonestown could communicate with California by shortwave radio.]
[It is a totally bogus contention that the airport in Port Kaituma was without radio contact with the capital, and existed in some sort of permanent state of incommunicado with the outside world. This excuse justified the curtailed the flow of information to U.S. officials and hence the public. But it is not rational for a frontier outpost near the international border, and in an area with heavy mining interests would function in this fashion. Jonestown could communicate with California by shortwave radio.]
1. "Codel" is an abbreviation for an official Congressional Delegation traveling overseas. (Back)
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May 15, 1979,
On the basis of the factual evidence obtained by the Staff
Investigative Group, we render the following findings. In doing so we recognize
that we are the beneficiaries of retrospect on the events which proceeded
November 18, 1978. In this respect, we have striven to utilize these advantages
without falling victim to the pitfalls accompanying them. We have sought to be
objective and balanced but not frozen from judgement. In attempting to be fair
and understanding, we have not been timid. [Like the reporters at the State Department news briefings, couching questions with, "not to be accusatory."]
A. Jim Jones and People's Temple
Background
Whatever Jim Jones ultimately became and whatever can be
said of him now, there is little clear insight into what motivated him to begin
his ministry in Indianapolis in the mid 1950's. Some contend he was always a
committed Socialist who used religion as a vehicle to further his political
beliefs and objectives. Others hold that Jones began as a genuine believer in
Christianity but eventually became a nonbeliever or an agnostic. His own
often-expressed claim that he was the dual reincarnation of Christ and Marx
reflects the dichotomy. Wherever the truth may lie on his religious beliefs, at
the outset, he was seemingly genuine in his ardent support for such social
causes as the welfare of older people, racial integration, and rehabilitation
of alcoholics and drug addicts. His advocacy of such causes singled him out,
and partially in response to the resistance he encountered in established
churches where he had accepted pastorates, he began his own church, the
People's Temple. By 1965 he had generated enough notoriety and displeasure in
Indiana to cause him to decide to move his activities to California accompanied
by a small band of Indiana followers. One reason he chose Ukiah, Calif. and its
Redwood Valley area was because he had once read that its unique geographical
assets made it one of three locations in the world thought to be safe from a
possible nuclear holocaust.
By 1972 he decided to once again relocate People's Temple to
the richer and more active political pastures of San Francisco and bought an
old church building on the edge of the black ghetto area. [It Was the Albert Pike Memorial Hall!!] A second People's
Temple church was established in Los Angeles. In 1974 he began creating in the
jungles of Guyana the agricultural community known as Jonestown. What finally
drove him there together with the majority of his flock in mid-1977 was the
publication of a New West magazine article which exposed many of his
operations, a fact which he saw as part of the alleged mounting conspiracy
against him. [No, all the accusations were ancient, at least since Kinsolving published half his work in 1972, but probably going back to the displeasure shown him in Indiana. He was huckster and a carny barker and a bum. The conspiracy he saw or felt against him had to do with the withdrawal of covert protection and support from the political, media and business realms, help which once could squash the Examiner series, or seal his homosexual solicitation rap in a public park.]
Tactics of Jim Jones
The mental deviations and distortions and the psychological
tactics which culminated and were most manifest in the holocaust of Jonestown
on November 18 were rooted in Indiana and perfected in California. Who and what
was Jim Jones? We believe it is accurate to say he was charismatic in some
respects; in fact, he was especially adroit in the area of human psychology.
As we have studied him and interviewed those who knew him
well and had come under his influence, we have concluded that he was first and
foremost a master of mind control. Among the tactics he practiced with
engineered precision are the following recognized strategies of brainwashing:
- Isolation
from all vestiges of former life, including and especially all sources of
information, and substituting himself as the single source of all
knowledge, wisdom, and information;
- An
exacting daily regimen requiring absolute obedience and humility extracted
by deception, intimidation, threats, and harassment;
- Physical
pressure, ranging from deprivation of food and sleep to the possibility
and reality of severe beatings. As a compliment to the physical pressures,
he exerted mental pressures on his followers which he subsequently
relieved in an effort to demonstrate and establish his omnipotent
"powers." For example, he inculcated fictional fears which he
would eventually counterpoint and dispel and thereby establish himself as
a "savior." One of his favorite tactics was to generate and then
exploit a sense of guilt for clinging to life's luxuries, for wanting
special privileges, and for seeking recognition and reward;
- So-called
"struggle meetings" or catharsis sessions in which recalcitrant
members were interrogated, required to confess their
"wrongdoing," and then punished with alternate harshness and
leniency. Interrogation could be gentle and polite, but more often it
involved harassment, humiliation, revilement, and degradation. Vital to
this strategy were two of Jones' favorite techniques. The first involved
an exhaustive and detailed record for each member kept on file cards and
generated by his vast intelligence network. A member would suddenly be
confronted by Jones with knowledge of some action he was unaware had been
observed. Jones would stage his "mystic" awareness of that
action and then direct the outcome to his desired end. The second
technique was to establish in each of his followers a mistrust of everyone
else. Consequently, no one dared voice a negative view-even to the closet
family member or friend-for fear of being turned in. Often as not, trusted
aides were directed to test individuals by expressing some comment
critical of Jones or the lifestyle in Jonestown to see if the person would
report the incident. The end result was that no one person could trust
another. As a result everyone feared expressing even the slightest negative
comment. The system was so effective that children turned in their own
parents, brothers informed on sisters, and husbands and wives reported on
spouses. [I have a friend who was raised in the Bruderhof Christian commune in England. and the prohibition against expressing anything negative is common to the genre. This isn't very healthy, I think, but it isn't mid-control.]
Inherent in these principles which Mr. Jones masterfully and
regularly employed was his central strategy of "divide and conquer"
through which he consolidated his power over people. [The only henchmen he trusted were his passel of 18 and 19-year old "sons" who reaped enormous unfair privileges in this style of socialism.]
In addition to these tactics, however, Mr. Jones regularly
used other devices and methods to achieve his ends:
- Requiring
People's Temple members to contribute as much as 25 percent of their
income and sign over to the People's Temple their properties and other
assets;
- At
times dictating marriage between unwilling partners and at other times not
allowing cohabitation between married couples;
- Undermining
and breaking a child's ties with parents. In progressive degrees the child
was led to mistrust the parents and become more and more secretive in his
actions and evasive to his parent's questions;
- As a
symbol of their trust in him, followers were required to sign statements admitting
homosexuality, theft, and other self-incriminating acts; often as not
People's Temple members would also sign blank pages which could be filled
in later. Depending on Jones' need or objective, such documents were
frequently used in attempts to defame defectors;
- Rumor spreading in an attempt to ruin reputations or generally implant disinformation, thereby making true facts difficult if not impossible to establish; [sounds like the CIA to me.]
- Infiltration of groups opposed to People's Temple and surveillance of suspected People's Temple enemies; [I'm rubber, you're glue, what you say bounces off me and sticks on you.]
- Intense
public relations efforts ranging from letter-writing campaigns to
attempted control of news media in an effort to influence public opinion
with a favorable image of People's Temple; like-wise, an aggressive
program of seeking out political leaders and other influential members of
a community in order to cull their favor and establish identification with
them. [It certainly worked! Pot calling the teakettle black.]
In the process of manipulating the control board of this
extraordinary system Jones suffered extreme paranoia. One can speculate that
while it may have been initially staged, [Huh?] his paranoia ultimately became a
self-created Frankenstein that led not only to his fall but the tragic death of
more than 900 others, including Representative Leo J. Ryan. [Don't make faces or it'll stick like that.] His paranoia ranged
from "dark unnamed forces," to individuals such as Tim Stoen and
other defectors from the People's Temple, to organizations such as the
Concerned Relatives group, and ultimately to the U.S. Government in the form of
the CIA and the FBI--all of which he ultimately believed were out to destroy
him. [ Tim Stoen ran Jim Jones' welfare cheating scheme. He was a criminal Capo.]
Further, in establishing this analysis of Jim Jones it is
worth noting that he apparently had several bisexual perversions. Finally,
there is some irony in the fact that although he controlled considerable wealth
(estimated at $12 million) he sought out special privileges but none of the
usual trappings of wealth such as fancy cars or expensive houses. In short, Mr.
Jones was more interested in ideas than in things. He was not driven by greed
for money but for power and control over others. That control continues to be
exerted even after his death on the minds of some of his followers. It is
graphically illustrated by the suicide of Michael Prokes, one of Jones' closest
associates, during a March 13, 1979, press conference in California in which he
defended Jones and cited the achievements of People's Temple and Jonestown.
Motivation of People's Temple Members
The tactics and techniques of Jim Jones outlined above found
fertile ground and were greatly facilitated because of the background and
motivation of those who joined People's Temple. Generalities, of course, are
always difficult if not dangerous. However, on this basis of the information
which has come to us in the course of this investigation one can draw the
following general profile of many who became People's Temple members and
followers of Jim Jones:
- Some
of the young adults were college graduates out of upper middle-class
backgrounds which provided privilege and even luxury. Their parents were
often college-educated professionals or executives. Frequently, their
families were active in demonstrations against the Vietnam war, campaigns
for racial equality, and other social cuases. In some cases, the young
People's Temple member had been alienated by the "emptiness" of
his family's wealth.
- A
larger number, especially young blacks, had their roots in the other end
of the American social and economic spectrum. The products of poor ghetto
neighborhoods and limited education, some had been drug addicts,
prostitutes, and street hustlers.
- An
even greater percentage were elderly, again predominantly black, who had
come out of the San Francisco ghetto. [No, they were harvested from cities all over American, especially poor towns in the South--many without family connections so as to be disposable.] They found in Jim Jones an abiding
and protective concern. Despite the harshness of life in Jonestown, they
regarded it as preferable to the poor housing they had left behind. They
also found a warm sense of family and acceptance within the People's
Temple community that they did not have before joining.
- A
goodly number of middle-class blacks and whites came out of strong
fundamentalist religious family backgrounds and were attracted by what
they saw as the evangelical nature of People's Temple. [Who did they evangelize in Guyana?]
- By
contrast, many of the younger people had little if any religious
motivation in joining People's Temple. Rather, they tended to be compelled
by humanitarian interests. Altruistic and idealistic, they were impressed
by Jones' involvement in social causes and what they saw as the
"political sophistication" of People's Temple. To the extent
that a religious motivation was involved, it was seen chiefly in terms of
Jones' seeming concrete application of Judeo-Christian principles. [Huh?] Over
time, the dimension of their motivation was not only nonsectarian but
eventually became embodied in the Socialist-Marxist-agnostic philosophy
which Jones espoused.
People's Temple as a "Church"
Out of the findings outlined above regarding Jim Jones and
members of his People's Temple, emerges one additional finding. It relates to
the question of whether or not People's Temple was a "church" in the
generally accepted sense of that word. Again, on the basis of testimony and
compelling evidence collected in the course of this investigation we offer the
following conclusion on that question:
- Although
People's Temple may have been a bona fide church in its Indiana and early
California origins, it progressively lost that characterization in almost
every respect. Rather, by 1972 and following in progressive degrees, it
evolved into what could be described as a sociopolitical movement. Under
the direction and inspiration of it founder and director and the
Marxist-Leninist-Communist philosophy he embraced, People's Temple was in
the end a Socialist structure devoted to socialism. Despite that fact,
People's Temple continued to enjoy the tax-exempt status it received in
1962 under Internal Revenue Service rules and regulations. The issue of
People's Temple's status as a "church" is also significant in
connection with First Amendment protections it sought and received.
Obviously, the latter issue is a difficult and complex matter beyond the purview
of this committee and its investigation. [What! That is your fucking purview, Congressional misfits!]
Also outside the parameters of this committee's inquiry is
whether in fact People's Temple was a "cult." Once again, recognizing
that the problem is complex and laced with emotions and strong connotative
overtones, the committee's investigation went only to the extent of seeking the
opinions of respected legal scholars. [The parameter you should be addressing is the tax and welfare fraud, but that would indict too many politicians.]
B. Conspiracy Against Jim Jones and People's Temple?
Was there a conspiracy against Jim Jones perpetrated by the
U.S. Government or some other organization? That was one of the questions on
which the Staff Investigative Groupattempted to obtain evidence during the
course of this inquiry. On the basis of the information received, the following
findings are offered:
- Jones'
idea that there were elements opposed to his views and objectives dates
back to his early days in Indiana. In fact, it was the adverse reaction he
encountered relative to his racial integration and other policies that led
him to establish his own church, the People's Temple [No, it was the chicken liver cancer removals and the walking on water; plus the abuse of poor, ignorant folk. He had no problem with government when he was made Director of Public Housing in San Francisco. Plenty of charitable dollars to loot in that scam.]
- When
the People's Temple relocated in Ukiah, Calif. in 1965 Jones' complaints
of opposition increased. They ranged in progressive degree from alleged
vandalism against People's Temple property, poisoning of his pets, and
various threats against Jones, to a shooting attack on Jones' life (from
which he "miraculously" recovered by his own power). No
substantiation was ever found on any of these complaints reported to and
investigated by Ukiah police.
- The
mood of Jones' allegations of anti-People's Temple conspiracy grew darker
when the group moved to San Francisco in 1972. At that time its chief
target was the media as well as unspecified "forces." Reported
attempts to dissuade Jones from the notion were apparently unsuccessful.
- Jones'
idea of a U.S. Government plot against him, embodied mainly in the CIA and
FBI, took full bloom after he and the vast bulk of People's Temple members
moved to Guyana in 1977. Opposition of the Concerned Relatives group was
eventually attributed to CIA backing as were periodic "alerts"
he called to protect the People's Temple Jonestown community from
mercenaries in the jungle around Jonestown.
- Jones'
two lawyers offer contradictory opinions on the question of a possible
conspiracy against People's Temple and Jones. For example, Mark Lane told
the committee's investigators: "***there is no doubt in my mind that
various people sought to destroy Jonestown and that people in various
government agencies manipulated Jones. Jones, himself, saw the efforts to
manipulate him into an overreaction but somehow he was unable to control
his own responses ***. I believe that a responsible investigation by the
Congress would seek to determine why various elements within the United
States Government including those in the State Department withheld from
Congressman Ryhan and the rest of us who accompanied him to Jonestown the
fact that they knew the place was an armed camp and that Jones was capable
of killing the Congressman and many others." On the other hand,
Charles Garry said: "***I want to unequivocally tell you in the year
and a half since July 1977, with the years of experience I have had with
governmental conspiracy and government wrongdoing, particularly the FBI, I
found no evidence to support any of the charges that were made by People's
Temple. I found no evidence to support any of that."
[Mark Lane probably only worked for Jones in just this one narrative undertaking, whereby, like 9-11, America could be terrorized by the sense of the "diabolical" since communism and angry Negroes were getting old hat. What opinion would Lane have arrived at as a recent per diem worker? His tone of self-assurance is because he's spitting out script elements on cue.
]
- Granting
the strong likelihood of Jones' paranoia, compounded by his manipulative
abilities, Jones staged and exploited the idea of a conspiracy as a means
of generating fear in his adherents and thereby gaining further control
over them. The tactic also served to keep any opponents on the defensive
and even had the apparent effect of sensitizing the U.S. Embassy in
Guyana.
- No conclusive evidence is available to indicate that the CIA was acquiring information on Mr. Jones or People's Temple. [Too bad nobody took stock of his pound-a-month cyanide club plan habit. Plus the affidavit from five months earlier swearing he was "practicing" suicide. Not enough time to swing into gear?]
- In this same connection it should be noted that under Executive Orders 11905 of February 18, 1976 and 12036 of January 24, 1978, which prohibit intelligence gathering on U.S. citizens, the CIA was legally proscribed from engaging in any activities vis-a-vis People's Temple.
- The Department of Justice, on the other hand, has indicated to the Staff Investigative Group that the FBI did look into an allegation from a constituent of Senator S.I. Hayakawa that "Jim Jones was coaxing individuals into traveling to Georgetown, Guyana, where they were being held against their will for unknown reasons." The FBI interviewed the constituent, but found that "relatives of the constituent had traveled to Guyana voluntarily, and no evidence of forced confinement was developed." The investigation was thereupon terminated "because no violation of the Federal kidnaping statute had occurred."
The Staff Investigative Group was also informed by the
Criminal Division of the Justice Department that it received a "citizen
complaint" in December 1977, claiming "that a relative was being held
in bondage in Georgetown, Guyana by Pastor Jim Jones." The facts spelled
out in the complaint indicated no criminal violations within the Justice
Department's jurisdiction. Accordingly Justice's information on the complaint
was sent to the State Department.
C. Opponents and Media Intimidated; Public Officials Used
As part of Jones' constant and pervasive effort to control
people and events, the evidence obtained by the Staff Investigative Group
established that he persistently intimidated and harassed those who left
People's Temple and anyone else, especially the media, who he felt were opposed
to his interests. This clear pattern of intimidation and harassment was
reinforced and compounded into success by the widely held belief by People's
Temple defectors and opponents, that government officials were friendly toward
People's Temple or had in some way been compromised. Consequently, attempts at
early efforts to alert the public to the nature of People's Temple's activities
were largely ignored and/or rejected.
[He lets in eight journalists and keeps out only one (because of an "unpublished" article! Jones did have sources then!) although none of the eight caught the knife attack on Ryan, but NBC got some good cinema verite at the talent show and the airport.]
[He lets in eight journalists and keeps out only one (because of an "unpublished" article! Jones did have sources then!) although none of the eight caught the knife attack on Ryan, but NBC got some good cinema verite at the talent show and the airport.]
Typical of some of Jones' tactics to intimidate and harass
People's Temple defectors who were actively opposed to him were the following:
- Undermining
of their credibility as witnesses by spreading falsehoods and releasing
the so-called "confession" they had signed while members of
People's Temple;
- Fear
campaigns generated through break-ins, late night phone calls, and
unsigned letters threatening beatings and even death. One such break-in
carried out against a couple who had left People's Temple was done with
the help of their daughter who remained in the organization.
As a result of such tactics People's Temple defectors were
frequently frozen in fear and severely hampered in their efforts to counteract
Jones. The problem is illustrated in the following example which points up the
desperate lengths to which opponents of People's Temple were driven as well as
the degree to which officials in San Francisco appear to have been involved.
Afraid to contact any public officials for fear that they were tied-in or
friendly to Jones, one individual went to the length of writing consumer
advocate Ralph Nader because he could not think of anyone else he could trust.
The letter to Nader outlined many of the allegations against People's Temple
which were later proven true. It also indicated that the letter writer feared
for his life. it closed as follows:
If you want to help us, please write in the personal column of the Chronicle to "Angelo" and sign it Ralph and then we will respond and talk to you.
Rather than do that, Nader sent the letter to the District
Attorney's Office in San Francisco. By some means, the letter filtered back to
People's Temple and the writer soon thereafter received a threatening phone
call that said "We know all about your letter to Angelo."
In another instance People's Temple defectors hired a
private detective to surreptitiously observe their meeting with Jones'
representatives in a public subway station. Their objective was to have an
eyewitness in the event of violence. [Hmmm. Sounds like what Ryan intended in bringing along the news men.]
With respect to Jim Jones' and People's Temple efforts to
stifle the San Francisco media some of the following methods were employed:
- The
threat of lawsuits. In almost all instances in which this tactic was used
it was based on the People's Temple possession of copies of stories in
draft form prior to publication obtained through break-ins or provided to
People's Temple by infiltrators within the media's office. [That explains it, I guess.]
- Threatening
phone calls to reporters and their families, accepted by one as serious
enough to warrant relocating children, moving into hotels, and obtaining
guns for self-protection.
- Extensive
letter-writing campaigns intended to dissuade publishers and editors from
printing stories being prepared by aggressive reporters. The soft-sell
nature of this tactic was aimed at creating diversionary arguments
contending that the story in question would reflect badly on San Francisco
or prevent People's Temple "from continuing its good work with the
'disaffected and disaffiliated' in society." One such campaign
produced letters supportive of People's Temple from San Francisco Mayor
George Moscone, Lieutenant Governor Mervyn Dymally, the head of the San
Francisco school system, and members of the California State Assembly. It
would appear that such campaigns were particularly effective with the San
Francisco Chronicle and the National Enquirer.
- Encouraging
San Francisco merchants and businesses to remove their advertising from
"offending" publications. The chief target of such an effort was
the New West magazine immediately prior to its publication in August 1977,
of an article critical of Jones. The editor of the magazine persisted and
the article is generally credited with breaking Jones' stronghold on San
Francisco and led him to go to Guyana immediately before it appeared.
- The
picketing of newspaper offices which had run stories on Jones regarded as
anti-People's Temple. One such effort, combined with the threat of a law
suit, led to the cancellation in 1972 by the San Francisco Examiner of an
eight-part series of articles, only half of which had already appeared.
The end result was to make most editors and publishers highly sensitive
and cautious regarding any critical stories involving Jones and the
People's Temple.
Finally, as to the question of whether or not certain
officials had in fact been compromised by Jones, the Staff Investigative Group
believes the evidence is mixed. What is indisputably clear and solidly based on
evidence is that many such officials were perceived of by Jones' opponents as
extremely friendly to or enthusiastically supportive of Jones, thereby precluding
them or their offices from pursuing actions against Jones in an impartial
manner. In this regard, it should be kept in mind that Jones had endowed
himself with the cloak of official legitimacy through his appointment by Mayor
Moscone as director of the San Francisco Housing Authority. In addition
political figures in San Francisco appear to have been enticed by Jones'
ability to turn out hundreds of his followers to attend rallys, conduct
mailings, man phone-banks, and otherwise provide support to political election
campaigns, including some direct contributions.
Similarly, the media were not immune from Jones' wiles and
attemped flatteries. For example, Jones made contributions of various sums
totaling $4,400 to the San Francisco Examiner, the San Francisco Chronicle, and
10 other newspapers to be used as they saw fit in the "defense of a free
press," Although the Examiner returned the money to the People's Temple,
the management of the Chronicle sent the check to Sigma Delta Chi, the national
journalism society, which in turn rejected suggestions that it be returned to
People's Temple.
D. Awareness of Danger; Predicting the Degree of Violence
One area on which this inquiry concentrated under Chairman
Zablocki's mandate dealt with the questions of whether (a) Representative Ryan
had been adequately advised of the potential for danger, and (b) how accurately
anyone could have predicted the degree of violence employed. On the basis of
evidence gathered we have reached conclusions on both counts:
- Representative
Ryan was advised on more than one occasion of the possibility of violence
inherent in his trip to Jonestown. However, he tended to discount such
warnings with the thought that his office as a Congressman would protect
him. Moreover, he was apparently willing to face whatever danger might be
present, citing as a reason his own previous investigative experiences and
his determination not to be influenced by fear.
- The
warnings Mr. Ryan did receive regarding the prospect for violence came
chiefly from his own staff and the Concerned Relatives group. When the
issue was raised in the State Department briefings prior to the trip, Mr.
Ryan did not challenge State's assessment that potential danger was
"unlikely." In fact, State's briefings for the Ryan Codel dwelled
almost exclusively on the legal problems relative to the trip as well as
the logistical difficulties involved in reaching the remote and isolated
jungle compound.
- No one
interviewed by the Staff Investigative Group ever anticipated the degree
of violence acutally encountered. Many expected that there might be
adversarial encounters, arguments, or shouting; the worst anticipated was
that someone might "get punched in the mouth."
- From a
variety of sources, Representative Ryan and some representatives of the
media were cautioned that they were regarded as adversaries of People's
Temple and Jones. They were further informed that Jones was paranoid. It
is appropriate to note here that Mr. Ryan apparently did not advise anyone
in the State Department or the U.S. Embassy in Guyana that one of the
purposes of his trip was to help possible defectors leave Jonestown with
him on November 18.
- Some
members of Mr. Ryan's staff as well as the media group had gut feelings on
the possibility for violence. They ranged from advising Mr. Ryan that
Jones had a "capacity" for violence, to a general concern based
on allegations of guns in Jonestown, and finally, to the thought that a
bomb might be placed on the plane on which the entire party flew to
Guyana. At the most extreme end of such intuitive hunches and feelings was
Miss Jackie Speier's premotion of fear that led her to write her own will.
- To the
extent that violence was considered a possibility by the Ryan Codel, there
is evidence to suggest that Mr. Ryan may have looked on the accompanying
media group as a "shield"; conversely, to the extent there was
any apprehension in their ranks, the media regarded Mr. Ryan's status as a
Congressman as their best protection. For other members of the media, the
principal potential danger considered was the jungle against which they
protected themselves by taking special supplies.
E. U.S. Customs Service Investigation
One key element relating to the question of whether the Ryan
Codel had adequate awareness of the potential for danger as well as the degree
of violence which ultimately ensued involves a 1977 U.S. Customs Service
investigation of reported illegal gun shipments and other contraband to
Jonestown. In the course of this inquiry, therefore, the Staff Investigative
Group obtained evidence which warrants the following findings on the subject:
- Working
on allegations interspersed amid many "bizarre" tales about
People's Temple, the investigation was begun in February 1977. One of the
allegations contended that more than 170 weapons once stored in Ukiah had
been transferred to People's Temple San Francisco headquarters and then
possibly on to Jonestown.
- The
investigation was compromised 1 month after it began, not through any
inadvertence on the part of the Customs Service, but when an individual
conveyed some information on the matter to Dennis Banks, head of the
American Indian Movement, in an effort to dissuade Banks from any further
contact with Jones. That conversation was apparently taped and word was
passed to Jones. Complete details of the investigation's report were
further compromised when a copy of the report was sent to Interpol. From
Interpol it was by normal procedure, shared with the Guyanese police.
According to information provided us, Guyanese Police Commissioner C. A.
"Skip" Roberts reportedly showed a copy to either Paula Adams or
Carolyn Layton, two of Mr. Jones' trusted aides, one of whom passed the
information to Mr. Jones.
- Although
the Customs Service investigation was not diluted or diminished in any
way, it is clear that it was carried out in an unusually sensitive mode
because of what was perceived to be Jim Jones' considerable political
influence in San Francisco. Surveillance relating to the investigation was
virtually impossible to carry out because of the tight security screen
Jones placed around the Geary Street headquarters of People's Temple in
San Francisco.
- The
investigation was concluded in August-September 1977 after a shipment of
crates destined for Jonestown was opened and inspected by the Customs
Service in Miami in August 1977. Shortly thereafter a report on the
investigation was filed with negative results. Nonetheless, investigators
apparently felt enough residual suspicion to send copies of the report to
Interpol and the U.S. Department of State "because (the)
investigation disclosed allegations that Jones intends to establish a
political power base in Guyana, and that he may currently have several
hundred firearms in that country***."
- The
copy of the Customs Service report was received in the State Department's
Office of Munitions Control on September 1, 1997 and on September 6, 1977
a copy was forwarded to the Department's Bureau of Inter-American Affairs.
although standard routing procedures provided that a copy should have been
sent to the U.S. Embassy in Guyana there is no indication a copy ever was
sent. In addition, only the Guyana desk officer saw the report: none of
the more than 26 State Department officials we interviewed saw the report
until after November 18, 1978, although one professed
"awareness" of it earlier.
F. Conspiracy To Kill Representative Ryan?
Relative to the likelihood of a People's Temple-Jim Jones
conspiracy to kill Representative Ryan, the Staff Investigative Group has
reached the following conclusions based on evidence available to us:
- The
possibility of any prior conspiracy tends to be diminished by the fact
that Gordon Lindsay, a reporter whom Mr. Jones regarded as an arch enemy
of People's Temple, was not allowed to enter Jonestown with the Ryan
party.
- Still
not to be discounted entirely, however, is the possible existence of a
contingency conspiracy. In this connection, there are reports of an
"understanding' in Jonestown that if efforts to delude Ryan as to the
true conditions at Jonestown failed he would have to be killed, supposedly
by arranging for his plane to crash in the jungle after leaving Jonestown.
While circumstantial evidence is available on this theory we have not
found any hard evidence.
- Providing
some moderate credence to the idea of a contingency conspiracy is the fact
that the Jonestown mass suicide/murder ritual started before the Port
Kaituma assailants returned to confirm the shootings of Representative
Ryan and others.
- Also
lending some substance to the contingency conspiracy theory are
unconfirmed reports that a large shipment of cyanide, used in the mass
suicide/murder, arrived in Jonestown 2 days before Ryan's visit. Also
related is the reported statement of a Jonestown survivor that several
days before Mr. Ryan arrived in Jonestown he heard Jones say that the
Congressman's plane "might fall from the sky."
- In
an effort to obtain detailed information on Mr. Ryan's upcoming trip,
Jones placed a phony defector within the ranks of the Concerned Relatives
group in San Francisco 1 month before the Codel's departure for Guyana.
The "defector" was seen back in Jonestown when the Ryan party
arrived. The late awareness that the defector was false produced a
heightened sense of danger in the minds of some making the trip.
G. The Privacy Act and the Freedom of Information Act
Throughout this investigation there were repeated references
made as to the pervasive role of the Privacy Act and, to a lesser degree, the
Fredom of Information Act in the tragedy at Jonestown. The Staff Investigative
Group made a careful and thorough review of the issue which resulted in the
following findings:
- The
Privacy Act figured prominently in several important aspects of the State
Department's and U.S. Embassy's briefings and relations with the Ryan
Codel and their handling of all matters relating to People's Temple.
- Officials
within both the State Department and the Embassy clearly tended to confuse
the Privacy Act with the Freedom of Information Act, thereby inhibiting
the comprehensiveness of written reports and exchanges of information.1 One
key Embassy official, for instance, was operating under the mistaken
assumption that People's Temple was seeking cables reporting on consular
visits to Jonestown under provisions of the Freedom of Information Act.
- Representative
Ryan's legal advisers contended that the State Department's interpretation
of the Privacy Act was unreasonably narrow and restrictive and further
felt that fact had ramifications on what the Codel wished to accomplish.
Those differences, which began in Washington and continued in Guyana,
resulted in somewhat strained relations between the State Department and
the Codel.
- The
State Department's interpretation of the Privacy Act led them to deny Ryan
access to certain information and documents relative to People's Temple.
That problem could have been avoided or at least alleviated if Mr. Ryan
had followed the Department's advice to obtain a letter from the chairman
of the Committee on Foreign Affairs authorizing him such access under an
exemption clause in the act. That exemption provision permits disclousure
to any committee of Congress "to the extent of matter within its
jurisdiction." Reflecting the State Department's lack of knowledge of
the law and its application, it is pertinent to note that on February 28,
1979, the State Department was unaware of the exemption provision in
denying to Chairman Zablocki requested information germane to the
investigation.
- Prior
to the Codel's departure, the U.S. Embassy in Guyana reflected its own
acute sensitivity regarding the Privacy Act by urging that Mr. Ryan be fully
informed of the act's limitations. That sensitivity was reinforced by the
Embassy's request that a Department legal expert accompany the Codel, a
request denied by State because of travel freeze restrictions and the
heavy press of other work.
- Among
the Embassy officials interviewed there is almost unanimous agreement that
the Privacy Act is complex, difficult to understand, and confusing.
Accordingly, they believe that regular guidance is required to guarantee
proper implementation.
- Initial
State Department guidance on the Privacy Act provided to the U.S. Embassy
in Guyana was so highly techhnical and legalistic that it had little if
any practical value, a problem compounded by subsequent communications. It
was not until November 18, 1977, almost 3 years after the Privacy Act
became law, that the Embassy was provided with what could be regarded as
practical guidance. However, even that communication contained the
following prefatory comment: "Due to its rapid passage by Congress in
December 1974 without hearings, less than the usual legislative history
exists to guide executive departments in interpreting history exists to
guide executive departments in interpreting it.***." Available at
that time was a 1,500-page volume, "Legislative History of the Privcacy
Act of 1974," which incorporated committee reports, markup sessions,
excerpts from floor debate and other pertinent source materials.
- In
day-to-day operations and application, the Privacy Act impacts more on the
State Department's consular section than on its diplomatic officers.
- Given
the confusion surrounding the Privacy Act and the lack of practical and
understandable guidance, it appears that Embassy consular officers in
Guyana found the act difficult to implement properly. In contrast, most of
their Washington counterparts, in both political and consular sections of
the Department, did not perceive the Embassy's problems and felt the
guidance provided was adequate.
- Also
contributing to those official's ability to effectively implement the
Privacy Act vis-a-vis the People's Temple was the understanding they held
that as a religious organization People's Temple merited added protection
under the act. Disregarding for now the question of whether or not
People's Temple was a religion, few of the officials knew that the act's
prohibition on maintaining records describing the exercise of the first
amendment rights also provides and exception for matters pertinent to law
enforcement activities. Further, there appeared to be little general
awareness among State Department Personnel of other exemptions provided in
both the Privacy Act and the Freedom of Information Act from mandatory
agency disclosure of information.
- The
legal recourse Jones and People's Temple had under the Privacy Act and
Freedom of Information Act to obtain Embassy cables had the chilling
effect on Embassy personnel of making their communications to the State
Department on People's Temple less candid than they might have otherwise
been. That effect was reinforced when the Embassy learned on December 2,
1977, that People's Temple had in fact filed a total of 26 actions under
the Privacy Act, for documents relating to specified People's Temple
members. As a byproduct of these restraints it is reasonable to conclude
that the Embassy's inhibitions to more candidly and accurately report
their impressions of the true situation in Jonestown ultimately influenced
the State Department's ability to more effectively brief the Ryan Codel.
Also not to be discounted is the strong possibility that, knowing the law
and the effect it could produce, Jones used the legal claim actions as a
tactic in order to achieve the very effect it did.
- Overall,
many State Department officials appeared to be highly aware of the civil
and/or criminal penalty provisions of both acts. That fact reinforced
their perceived image of both acts as threatening and troublesome in that
failure to comply could present them with serious personal legal problems.
In turn, that thought made them doubly cautious in their dealings with
People's Temple. [Oh please. Not a single soul in government service paid any price for failures leading up to 9/11--do you really think the web of secrecy and lies that protects their day-to-day work lives would somehow come asunder? What about the Embassy official who was sleeping with a member of the Peoples Temple?]
H. Role and Performance of the U.S. Department of State
The role and performance of the State Department in this
matter was the central issue earmarked for investigation in Chairman Zablocki's
mandate to the Staff Investigative Group. The points of reference surrounding
that issue span 4 years and are complex and many. Given this reality, a major
part of the investigation was devoted to this aspect of the issue. The
following conclusions and findings based on evidence gathered are:
- The
U.S. Embassy in Guyana did not demonstrate adequate initiative, sensitive
reaction to, and apprecitation of progressively mounting indications of
highly irregular and illegal activities in Jonestown. The Embassy's one
attempt to confront the situation and affect a solution did not occur
until June 1978. Essentially embodying what could at best be described as
the Embassy's heightened suspicion of problems with People's Temple, the
effort was made in the form of a cable to the State Department requesting
permission to approach the Guyanese Government and "request that the
government exercise normal adminintrative jurisdiction over the community,
particularly to insure that all of its residents are informed and
understand that they are subject to the laws and authority of the
Government of Guyana***." The State Department, failing to detect any
linkage between Log 126 and the then recent defection of Temple member
Debbie Blakey and other incidents, rejected the request in a terse cable
because such an overture "could be construed by some as U.S.
Government interference." (Debbie Blakey defected from the People's
Temple in Georgetown, Guyana on May 12, 1978, with the assistance of U.S.
Embassy officers Richard McCoy and Daniel Weber. Prior to her departure to
the United States, she submitted a written statement to the Embassy
warning, among other things, of the possibility of a mass suicide in
Jonestown.)
- The
Department's negative response to Log 126 had the net effect of
reinforcing the Embassy's already cautious attitude in all dealings with
the People's Temple. Despite the fact that an affirmative response was
anticipated, the Embassy surprisingly made no effort to challenge the
Department's negative decision. Equally surprising was the Department's
failure to contact the Ambassador and determine what specifically
triggered his request. Testimony from Department witnesses indicates that
the lack of specificity in Log 126 was the primary reason for the negative
response in Log 130. Such specificity (e.g., Blakey defection) was
deliberately avoided, according to the Ambassador, because of Privacy Act
considerations. The upshot of this exchange was a lamentable breakdown in
communication with neither side making any further efforts to discuss or
follow up on the matter.
- Mitigating
factors were present wihich require acknowledgment. For example, it is
understandable that the Embassy did not have an investigative or judicial
function. It also felt compelled to abide by U.S. laws as well as strict
State Department rules and regulations while simultaneously respecting the
hospitality of Guyana. Embassy personnel were also faced with the
challenge of trying to remain objective in the face of two opposing groups
of Americans often presenting contradictory stories; a factor reinforced
by numerous letters, articles, and documents reflecting equally pro and
con dimensions on Jones and the People's Temple. Out of that balance the
Embassy concluded only that People's Temple prior to November 18, 1978,
was a "controversial" or "unusual" group.
- Nevertheless,
absent in the Embassy's dealings with People's Temple were the vital
elements of common sense and an honest and healthy skepticism. Despite the
acknowledged handicaps under which it worked the Embassy could have
exerted sounder overall judgment and a more aggressive posture. One
important result of such an effort would have been more accurate and
straightforward reporting on the People's Temlple situation which, in
turn, could have given the State Department a stronger and wider base on
which to draw in biefing Representative Ryan and his staff. In this
connection, the Privacy Act and the Freedom of Information Act, each of
which was discussed in a previous section, played important roles.
- It is
proven beyond doubt that Jones staged a show for selective visitors to
Jonestown which made it difficult to get a realistic and accurate picture
of what was actually happening there. The aability of the Embassy to break
through this facade was severely hampered by several factors. First, the
"Embassy provided in advance to People's Temple, the names of most
but not all of the individuals who were to be interviewed by visiting
consular officers. That practice allowed Jones to rehearse those people on
what to say and how to act. Second, such "staging" practices
were greatly facilitated by the limited time spent in Jonestown by
visiting U.S. Embassy officials-an average of 5-8 hours on four different
occasions between August 30, 1977, and November 7, 1978.
- In
conducting normal consular activities in Jonestown and in other
interactions with People's Temple, Embassy officials were restricted by
constitutionally mandated safeguards prohibiting interference with free
exercise of religious beliefs and with legally sanctioned religious
organizations. Recognizing that this issue is not within the direct
purview of the committee's investigation, we nevertheless note (as
observed earlier) that many People's Temple members were originally
motivated less by religious considerations than by a general social
idealism. In addition, it is clear that People's Temple had little
specific dimension or few surface trappings which would have made it a
"church."
- There
was a laxness in State Department procedures for distributing certain
important documents relative to People's Temple, thereby inhibiting the
opportunity for taking appropriate action. Chief among these was the U.S.
Customs Service report on possible gun shipments to Jonestown. Others
include the April 10, 1978, affidavit by Yolanda D.A. Crawford, a People's
Temple defector, describing beatings and abuses in Jonestown; the
affidavit signed in May 1978 by Debbie Blakey, another People's Temple
defector, describing suicide rehearsals and other serious charges; and
finally the New West magazine article of August 1, 1977, which exposed
Jones. A wider awareness of these and similar materials would have
significantly enhanced the State Department's ability to evaluate the
situation. As a reflection of the problem it is interesting to note that a
number of State Department officials interviewed readily volunteered the
observation that prior to his trip to Guyana "Mr. Ryan knew more
about People's Temple and Jonestown than we did."
- State
Department organization and day-to-day operations created a distinction
between its consular activities and its diplomatic responsibilities.
Inadequate coordination between those two functions led to a situation in
which matters involving People's Temple were regarded almost exclusively
as consular. Despite mounting indications that the People's Temple issue
was spilling over into the United States-Guyana diplomatic area, the
mentality persisted of relegating it to the consular side.
- In
the area of crisis management following the tragedy of November 18 the
State Department and Embassy performed with distinction. Particularly
praiseworthy in this regard were the brave and dedicated efforts of
Richard Dwyer in aiding and providing leadership under trying
circumstances to survivors of the Port Kaituma shooting. Equally admirable
were the Department's and Embassy's efforts in evacuating the wounded,
providing assistance to others, and keeping Washington officials
adequately informed of developments. Also commendable was the competent
and efficient work of Department of Defense personnel in assisting the
wounded and others and returning them to the United States.
- As to
allegations that a female member of People't Temple in Guyana had engaged
in a sexual liaison with former U.S. Consul Richard McCoy and had made
tape recordings of their sexual activities in an attempt to compromise
McCoy, it is our firm judgment, based on our findings, that such
allegations are false.The woman in question has in fact testified and
signed an affidavit categorically denying all such charges. She further
stated that, "To the best of my knowledge, no member of People's
Temple engaged in any sexual activity with Richard A. McCoy" and that
the People's Temple relationship with McCoy was one of "mistrust and
strained discussion though not openly hostile." Nor is there any
evidence to indicate that any other person affiliated with the U.S.
Embassy in Guyana had at any time been compromised by the People's Temple.
I. Involvement of the Government of Guyana
On the issue of People's Temple involvement with the
Government of Guyana, the Staff Investigative Group renders the following
incomplete findings:
- There
is evidence of a strong working relationship between the People's Temple
and some officials of the Government of Guyana, especially in the areas of
customs and immigration. It is obvious that a special privileged status
allowed People's Temple to bring that special privileged status allowed
People's Temple to bring items into Guyana outside of the usual customs
procedures, often with cursory inspection at best. Many shipments were
inspected perfunctorily or not at all. It is likely that People's Temple
brought large sums of money and guns into Guyana in suitcases and
false-bottom creates as a result of such customs inspections. As a matter
of fact, some of these concerns were expressed by Guyanese officials.
- Guyanese
immigration procedures were also compromised to the advantage of People's
Temple on several occasions, chiefly in two key areas. First, People's
Temple members were able to facilitate entry of their own members or
inhibit the exit of defectors by having access to customs areas at Timehri
Airport in Georgetown closed to all other citizens. Second, clearly
arbitrary decisions were made to curtail the visas and expedite the exit
of individuals regarded as opponents of People's Temple. Only upon the
strenuous efforts of the U.S. Embassy were some of these decisions
ultimately reversed and then at the last minute.
- There
are in the investigative record repeated charges of a sexual liaison
between People's Temple member Paula Adams and Laurence Mann, Guyana's
Ambassador to the United States. It has encounters with Mann. Transcripts
of some of those tapes were apparently made for Mr. Jones and periodically
turned over to high officials in the Guyanese Government.
- There
is also evidence, incomplete and inconclusive, that unknown officials of
the Guyanese Government may have taken action to influence the outcome of
the Stoen custody case proceedings in the Guyanese court system.
- Testimony
from some witnesses suggest that support extended to the People's Temple
by Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Development Ptolemy Reid was born
of an ideological compatibility with an endorsement of the Temple's
Socialist philosophy. While such support was exploited in the sense that
it had the ultimate effect of furthering People's Temple objectives, it
did not appear to be generated for illegal reasons.
- Note-In
reference to these findings regarding the relationship of the Government
of Guyana to the People's Temple, the Staff Investigative Group was
precluded from confirming or dispelling various allegations by the refusal
of the Guyanese Government to meet and talk with the Group, per Chairman
Zablocki's requests of March 2 and 16, 1979. Consequently, to our regret,
some of the findings noted above must remain partial and incomplete. There
is no doubt in our mind, however, that our inability to interview Guyanese
Government officials leaves this report with a conspicuous void.
J. Social Security; Foster Children
Although this inquiry's scope did not require investigating
allegations that the People's Temple stole or fraudulently used its members
social security benefits, some information regarding these charges did surface
during the course of the probe that is worth noting.
At the time of the tragedy of November 18, 1978, a total of
199 social security annuitants reportedly lived in Jonestown. Altogether their
annuities amounted to approximately $37,000 per month. It is readily apparent
that this income contributed substantially to the maintenance of the Jonestown
operations. The Social Security Administration (SSA) is presently conducting a
review of its responsibilities and performances in paying benefits to Temple
members. In this regard, the Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare has
submitted an interim report to the committee. In essence, the report indicates
that to date no wrongdoing on the part of the temple has been discovered. It
does cite, however, four cases that are being investigated because the beneficiaries'
checks were being forwarded to Guyana from the United States without Social
Security Administration's records revealing their correct addresses. The Social
Security Administration review is continuing and upon its completion the
committee is to receive a copy of the final report.
The interim report indicates, inter alia, that the Social
Security Administration is responsible for administering Section 207 of the
Social Security Act (43 U.S.C. 407) which provides, "the right of any
person to any future payment under this title shall not be transferable or
assignable, at law or in equity***." Consequently, whenever a social
security annuitant requests that his or her checks be mailed to someone else's
address the Social Security Administration looks into the possibility of assignment.
Such an inquiry was launched after Temple members moved to Guyana and asked
that their monthly payments be mailed in care of the Jonestown settlement's
post office box address.
The U.S.Embassy in Georgetown, Guyana was asked by the
Social Security Administration to query Jonestown residents as to why they
wanted their checks sent to the settlement's post office address and whether
any of the beneficaries had assigned the right to future payments to the
People's Temple.
In response to the Social Security Administration's request,
U.S. Consul Richard McCoy, during January and May 1978 visits to Jonestown,
determined that the post office box address was being used for the convenience
of the beneficiaries, that each annuitant interviewed was receiving and controlling
the use of his monthly payment, and that none had assigned their checks to the
Temple. McCoy's successor, Douglas Ellice, accompanied by Vice Consul Dennis
Reece, also checked into social security matters during a November 7, 1978,
visit to Jonestown.
McCoy did find Jonestown social security beneficiaries who
were heavily influenced to turn over their monthly benefits to the Temple.
Nevertheless, in his estimation, these individuals volutarily gave their money
to the Temple. In addition, he reported that all of the beneficiaries he saw in
Jonestown appeared to be adequately housed, fed, and in relatively good health.
Given these findings, the Social Security Administration decided to continue
the procedure of mailing the monthly checks to the Jonestown post office box
address.
Section 1611 (f) of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1811
(f)) stipulates that:
***no individual shall be considered an eligible individual for Supplemental Security Income (SSI) benefits, for any month during all of which such individual is outside the United States***
According to the Social Security Administration interim
report:
***as soon as it was learned that members of the People's Temple were moving to Guyana, the Social Security Administration district office in San Francisco, working with postal officials and officials of the People's Temple, went to extraordinary lengths to ensure Social Security Administration was notified when a member who was entitled to social security benefits moved abroad. This action proved very effective. When members who had been entitled to SSI benefits left the United States, action was taken to stop the SSI payments.
To date, the Social Security Administration has discovered
only one instance of a Temple beneficiary going to Guyana without notifying
Social Security Administration authorities. This individual's checks were
received and cashed by her husband [what the fuck is up with that? How many marriages were split up like this (the Layton pere et mere come to mind) and why, why, why???] who continued to live in the United States.
The Social Security Administration has found nothing to indicate that the
failure to report the wife's move to Guyana involved People's Temple officials.
The Staff Investigative Group has been informed by the
Social Security Administration that its ongoing review of payments to Temple
members is focusing on the following:
(a) Did any of the Retirement Survivors Disability Insurance
(RSDI) beneficiaries living in Jonestown die there before November 18, 1978,
without the knowledge of the Social Security Administration?
(b) Were any SSI payments made to a beneficiary for months
after the month that individual left the United states? (As mentioned earlier,
such payments are illegal.)
Some 656 social security checks were found uncashed and
undeposited in Jonestown after the November 18 tragedy. According to one State
Department official, the vast majority of the approximately $160,000 in checks
recovered in Jonestown were August, September, and October 1978 social security
checks.
[Well then, the figure of " $37,000 per month" in total government subsidies can't be right. At minimum, it would be more like $53,333 a month, a not inconsiderable difference, and that's assuming no one at the Temple did any banking for three fucking straight months.]
[Well then, the figure of "
The Social Security Administration claims it will be several
months before the process of identifying the remains of the Jonestown dead is
finished. At last report, 173 social security beneficiaries have been
positively identified as dead. Eight others are known to have survived. The
balance of 18 are still unaccounted for but the presumption is that they are
among the unidentified deceased.
Possibly as many as 150 foster children have been alleged to
have died in Jonestown during the mass suicide/murder ritual of last November.
Senator Alan Cranston's Subcommittee on Child and Human Development is
conducting an investigation of these charges with the assistance of the GAO.
Preliminary indications are that 12 California foster children may be
identified as having died. Greatly complicating the identification process is
the fact that neither dental nor fingerprint records exist on most of the
children. At this writing, it is hoped that the GAO investigators may be able
to provide at least a preliminary report of their findings to Senator
Cranston's subcommittee by the end of May 1979 for a hearing that will be held
in Los Angeles.
The Staff Investigative Group was informed by State
Department witnesses that the U.S. Embassy in Guyana was never asked by
California welfare officials to check on the welfare and whereabouts of
California foster children reportedly living in Jonestown. The U.S. Embassy,
however, was aware that some foster children may have been living there and
asked the Department of State to determine whether it was legal for such wards
of the State to leave the United States. One Department witness stated that he
queried appropriate California authorities and was told that court permission
was required to take them out of the State. This same official also discerned
some reluctance on the part of these authorities to talk about the subject.
K. Future Status of People's Temple
Although it was beyond the purview of the inquiry as
mandated by Chairman Zablocki, the Staff Investigative Group obtained evidence
and impressions relative to the possible future status of People's Temple and
some related matters which the Group believes are useful to establish for this
record.
Accordingly, it is our judgment at this time that the
possibility of People's Temple being reconstituted cannot be discounted. This
belief is based in large measure on the distinction seemingly held by surviving
People's Temple members between Jim Jones as an individual and what People's
Temple represented as an organization.Thus, while some remaining People's
Temple members express varying degrees of regret, dismay, and disapproval over
what Jim Jones did, they still seem to embrace the principles and objectives
which they believer People's Temple sought to achieve. There is also some
evidence to suggest that a power struggle may be underway within the ranks of
surviving People's Temple sought to achieve. There is also some evidence to
suggest that a power struggle may be underway within the ranks of surviving
People's Temple members in an attempt to establish a new leader. Only time will
determine whether in fact such a development may take place.
While the existence of a reported "hit squad"
whose purported purpose is to eliminate Jones' staunchest opponents cannot be
concretely documented it should not totally discounted. this group has been
described as including some of Jones' most zealous adherents. There is evidence
to suggest Jones and some of his key lieutenants discussed and had
"understandings" to eliminate various individuals, including national
political leaders. Time may diminish the possible threat of this factor in any
and all future activities and investigations aimed at People's Temple.
Footnote
1. Much of the confusion
over these two acts results from the sometimes conflicting principal purposes
for which each was enacted. The Privacy Act guarantees the privacy of public
records maintained on an individual and limits access, except for the concerned
party, to these records by other individuals and government agencies. The
Freedom of Information Act guarantees an individual access to records pertinent
to the operations of the Federal Government but safeguards the privacy of
individuals cited in those records. (Back)
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