I only found 2 in June 2017, the 2nd was quite obscure, in fact, I don't even remember the search terms I used, but for time period I could only find those 2. The 2nd one didn't have any next of kin. Just his marine and police families.
Wow that is gold, working on an additional piece right now, hopefully this completes the story.
According to a another police officer he suffered a sudden heart attack. He had been forced to retire prior, but was at the station daily.
Col. L. Fletcher Prouty
Leroy Fletcher Prouty (January 24, 1917 – June 5, 2001) was Chief of Special Operations for the Joint Chiefs of Staff under President John F. Kennedy in 1962-63. Prouty earned the position after nearly ten years in the Pentagon providing military support to CIA clandestine operations. Prouty was awarded the Legion of Merit for his efforts, and after his retirement in 1964 was further awarded a Joint Chiefs of Staff Commendation Medal by General Maxwell Taylor, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. In the 1970s, Prouty became a writer and historical commentator, focusing on Cold War history, the activities of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), and the Kennedy assassination. The character "X" in Oliver Stone's 1991 movie JFK was based largely on Prouty, who acted as a consultant on the film.
Prouty was a vice president at the General Aircraft Corporation from 1964-1965. He became a vice president of First National Bank in Arlington, VA, and manager of its Pentagon branch. In later interviews, Prouty suggested that his position at the Pentagon branch owed to his background in clandestine work. Prouty was vice president in charge of marketing at First National Bank between 1965 and 1968. He became vice president in charge of marketing at Madison National Bank in Washington, D.C., in 1968, where he continued until 1971.
In 1971, Prouty accepted a position at AMTRAK where he was responsible for developing AMTRAK's government and military marketing division. Starting in 1972, he was Senior Director of Public Affairs for Amtrak, a position he held until his retirement in 1982.
In 1973, Prouty's book The Secret Team: The CIA and Its Allies in Control of the United States and the World was published by Prentice-Hall. According to Prouty, most copies of the book were purchased in bulk under suspicious circumstances - probably by the CIA - and the book promptly disappeared.
In the 1970s, Prouty had difficulty getting his candid views on the operations of American power into the mainstream press. Prouty settled for men's magazines and right-wing magazines as a way to reach the public. Prouty wrote dozens of articles on a variety of topics throughout the 1970s and 1980s.
From 1985-1990, Prouty engaged in an important correspondence with Jim Garrison about the Kennedy assassination. Garrison had been a District Attorney in New Orleans who had investigated circumstances related to New Orleans involvement in the assassination, and as result prosecuted local businessman Clay Shaw in the late '60s. In the 1980s, Garrison (then a judge) and Prouty exchanged several letters in which they compared notes on subjects including Pentagon involvement in the assassination, the possible photographic evidence of General Edward G. Lansdale's presence in Dealey Plaza the day of assassination, and backroom politics of the Vietnam era.
Prouty began criticizing the official account of the Kennedy assassination as early as 1973 in his book "The Secret Team". In the final chapter, Prouty opined that various power factions in the United States:
realized that Kennedy was gaining real knowledge, experience, and political power and that he had to be removed from office before winning the inevitable mandate from the U.S. public, which was certain to be his in 1964.
In 1975, Prouty appeared with Richard Sprague at a news conference in New York to present what they believed was photographic evidence of a conspiracy.[1] According to Prouty, the movement of Kennedy after a bullet struck his head was consistent with a shot from the grassy knoll.[1] He also suggested that the actions of a man with an umbrella, the "Umbrella Man", were suspicious.[1]
Prouty's views on the Kennedy assassination were developed in his 1992 book JFK: The CIA, Vietnam and the Plot to Assassinate John F. Kennedy. In that book, Prouty situates the Kennedy assassination in the context of a power struggle between Kennedy and the national security establishment (CIA, Department of Defense, and Department of State). According to Prouty, Kennedy's decision to withdraw American personnel from Vietnam served as the proximate cause of his assassination, though Prouty concedes:
The Kennedy victory at the polls, in 1960, was perhaps as much a cause of his eventual assassination, in 1963, as anything else. There was no way he could win against the in-place power centers, including that of the military-industrial complex, as President Eisenhower himself had warned.
http://proutypedia.com/wiki/Col._L._Fletcher_Prouty
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Thank you, I didn't have enough room that post, and was considering another post to finish it off.
It's a great find!
The only thing I know about that so far is that he was there daily, another anon, replied to me after I posted, seemed to know who he was, I couldn't quite make out what was being said at first, the reply was seeing it was very emotional.
I felt awful for this Anon, broke my heart.
Thank you, I have it saved, probably do it later today. I really appreciate your help:)
Yes according to the information I was given in that post, it seemed very personal to this individual.
I don't think that was public knowledge, the fact that he asked for it. I remember the narrative was there were personal convo's between him and his wife, he didn't want disclosed, which was a blatant lie. Wonder how many really bought that story.
Thanks for some great breads all! Goodnight:)