was jonestown a cia medical experiment? - ch. 5

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      Orignal page 167 Jonetown

      V A CALIFORNIA CONCENTRATION CAMP

      About a hundred miles north of San Francisco lies a  patchwork quilt of small horse farms and rolling vineyards  known as Mendocino County. The county is known,  internationally, for its production of fine wine grapes and  nationally for its production of high-quality marijuana: the  county's leading cash crop. Most of the region's sparse  population is concentrated in the cultivated flat lands  between the Coastal and Mayacamas mountain ranges in an area  the native Pomo Indians named "Deep Valley" or Ukiah. Ukiah,  the county seat, was a sleepy rural community of 10,000 in  1965 when the Reverend Jim Jones and his followers arrived  in the heat of mid-summer. The Peoples Temple would remain  headquartered in the Ukiah area for the next nine years,

      during which time they would infiltrate every aspect of  county government, sway political elections, purchase a  sizable portion of the real estate and businesses and, in  short, become the ultimate power in Mendocino County; the  only safe place in the United States.

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      Orignal page 168 Jonetown

      The Temple's advance team had primed the local press for the  pilgrims' arrival. George Hunter, the managing editor of the_   _  _  _ _ _   _  _ U_k_i_  a_  h_  _D_a_  i_  l_ y_ _ _  J_  o_ u_r_n_  a_  l_ , and his reporter wifeKathy were  offered gifts intended to produce the favorable press  coverage necessary if the Caucasian locals were to tolerate  what would be their only Black neighbors. Kathy Hunter wrote  the front page article that introduced the Peoples Temple to  Ukiah in the July 26, 1965 edition of the_   _  U_ k_i_  a_ h_   _D_a_  i_ l_  y_   _  _  _ _ _   _  _ J_o_u_  r_  n_ a_l_.

      Represented in the group and indicative of the  substantial background of the membership are  nurses, teachers, a pilot, a traffic engineer,  an electronics man, salespeople and private  businessmen. One of the new- comers has already  purchased an apartment house, another has bought  a Ukiah motel, and still another is negotiating  the purchase of a rest home here.

      Far from being a closed, tightly knit group  living in a communal existence, members of the

      church live their own lives as part of the  community as a whole, held together only by  their belief that all men-- white, black,  yellow, or red--are one brotherhood.[62]

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      ____________________

      [62]  Klineman, Butler and Conn, p. 73.

      Orignal page 169 Jonetown

      As early as February of 1965, the Temple's advance team had  initiated negotiations to purchase the Evangelical Free  Church on the corner of Bush and Henry streets in Ukiah.  Jones would hold services in the building until November of  1965 when he withdrew his offer to purchase what was the  only available church in town. The Temple reportedly broke  off negotiations when their Indiana corporations lost their  licenses because they failed to file the required annual  reports. Actually, they had formed a new corporation, "The  Peoples Temple of the Disciples of Christ of Redwood Valley"  that could have easily purchased the church. The stated  purpose of the new corporation, chartered on November 26,  1965, was to "further the word of God" but apparently not at  the Evangelical Free Church building. Jones abandoned his  first California headquarters after occupying it for five  months, presumably rent-free.

      Jones next acquired the free use of a classroom at the  Ridgewood Range, a religious colony located about ten miles  north of Ukiah. The Peoples Temple met in that classroom for  about two years until late 1967 when the Christ's Church of  the Golden Rule, who owned the building, ordered the Temple  off their property, reportedly fearing that Jones was trying  to take over their church. The Temple then met in a 4-H  exhibition barn at the Mendocino County Fairgrounds until  early 1968 when Jones moved the services to the house he had  purchased for his family in Redwood Valley, a remote village  about seven miles outside Ukiah. The group first met in  Jones' two-car garage under conditions so crowded as to

      discourage outsiders from dropping in on Temple services.  Ukiah is primarily middle-class conservative Caucasians.  Even though the locals could

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      Orignal page 170 Jonetown

      have provided sizable contributions, Jones did not recruit  or even want their membership as they had no place in the  experiment. There were Caucasian management personnel but  few, if any, were from Mendocino County. Just about all of  Jones' White lieutenants were hand-picked from Indiana and  other parts of California. The only Blacks in Ukiah were  those who Jones had brought from Indiana. Their numbers  would increase as Jones succeeded in recruiting Blacks from  the Oakland ghettos to relocate in Ukiah, live in Temple-  owned housing, sign up for welfare with a Temple aide in the  county office and provide the labor, the money and the

      subjects for the experiment being planned. Temple aide Edith  Parks described the period when Jones was turning away the  locals who were sampling the services of his new church in a  letter to Virginia Morningstar, dated April 26, 1968 which  began "burn this." Thankfully, she did not.

      ... All work at something. They have to, rent  is $90-$125 for small houses and groceries are  so high. Most of them pay 25 percent tithes. It  will take care of them all later some way. Jim  is turning them away from church. 85 for Easter.  35 last Sunday. People are awakening and are  worried but he says it is too risky! He sends

      them back to their own churches and tells them  to pray and work where they are. There isn't  time to re-educate new ones, even those who have

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      Orignal page 171 Jonetown

      been taught far ahead of our "type" of religion.  A few have even been allowed to come and they  jumped in with both feet. You don't have to  teach them anything. They know & they know who  he is & what he is here for. He knows every  thought, act or deed. In the message Sunday he

      said everything that is to happen in the future  has been seen & met for all who will meet  conditions they must. He knows just what will  happen to each one, even how they will die ...

      It will happen yet, right here, too. If only I  could write it all but the American people have  already been conditioned to go the way they are  going and acting, so they will think we need the  laws that will be put through Congress, each one  taking away more of our rights! Just watch who  is for them! Reagan is a full-fledged  fascist.[63]

      Edith Parks' letter was indicative of the prevailing  attitude of the Temple's Caucasian aides. She was more  political than religious and strangely cryptic in her  communications. Why was it "too risky" to allow just anyone  to join? Why was there not enough "time to re-educate new  ones?" Had the life expectancy of the

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      ____________________

      [63]  Ibid. pp. 77-78.

      Orignal page 172 Jonetown

      Peoples Temple been set as early as 1968? Probably. By

      describing those who were allowed to join as knowing the  truth about Jones and his mission, she reveals the extent of  her own knowledge. Note her use of the third person "they".  "They" must work. "They" pay tithes. Jones knew how "they"  would die. Edith Parks and her family had joined the Peoples  Temple in its early stages in Indianapolis and would play an  important role in the final hours of Jonestown. Even though  she was a lifetime member, she did not include herself in  the ranks of the Black congregation. This "us and them"  attitude, though contrary to the Temple's public doctrine of  racial integration, was the true relationship between the  Caucasian hierarchy and the Black Parishioners.

      Temple membership doubled to three hundred in the first  three years in Ukiah but by 1968 they still had no permanent  headquarters other than the cramped quarters of Jones' two-  car garage. The church in town would first appear the  logical solution but, even though it was affordable and  accommodating, Jones let the deal fall through as the  property was too public. Anyone in town might wander in off  the streets. Likewise the exhibition barn at the fairgrounds  was much too public. The Ridgewood Range provided the  private classroom setting Jones needed to indoctrinate his  Caucasian lieutenants but it would not serve as the Black  church they were planning.

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      So it was with three hundred people in his garage that Jones  set out to build his first California church in the summer  of 1968. The first step was to submit a building permit to  construct a forty-one foot swimming pool next to his Redwood  Valley home. Immediately upon completion of the pool, a  second

      Orignal page 173 Jonetown

      permit was issued to build a roof over the pool with the  stated purpose of creating a youth center. When the roof was  finished in October, Jones applied for and received a third  permit to enclose the structure as a church. Possibly the  only church in America built over a swimming pool. The word  "church" is really not approhriate. There were no crosses or  statues or pictures of deities or saints. The redwood  structure was rustic and modern and not at all like a  church. Only a star-shaped stained glass window, which was

      more Satanic than Christian, gave the impression that this  was a house of worship. The rural setting of Jones' estate  provided the privacy required to conduct his business in  secret and stands as an example of the Temple's introverted  personality. It was a closed group that did not attempt to  recruit or even mingle with the locals. Though the location  of the Redwood Valley Temple is understandably desirable,  the roundabout method of construction used to build a church  over a swimming pool is without apparent reason. The indoor  pool was used for recreation, quasi-baptisms and  occasionally punishment, but its role as the focal point of  the Redwood Valley Temple has never been fully understood.

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      As in Indiana, Jones used the threat of an unseen enemy to  bind his congregation together and, in this case, provide a  logical reason for his plans to fence and fortify the Temple  compound. In May of 1968, he placed a half-page ad in the_   _  _  _ _ _   _  _ U_k_i_  a_  h_  _ _D_ a_  i_ l_y_ _  _ J_ o_u_r_  n_  a_ l to answer allegations andthreats he  said were generated by the local John Birch Society after he  had led his people in a march to protest the Vietnam War.  Since the Ku Klux Klan was not active in Northern  California, Jones selected the John Birch Society as

      representative

      Orignal page 174 Jonetown

      of the White supremacists who opposed the alleged  socialistic politics of the Temple. Actually, Jones was  close friends with Walter Heady, the society's local

      president. Heady often visited the Temple and was even  allowed to address the congregation and present films. Jones  often consulted Heady on political matters and the two men  would maintain communication for years to come. Kathy  Hunter, reporter, wife of the editor and co-owner of the  Ukiah Daily Journal, reciprocated for the half-page ad by  penning an article which appeared in the paper's June 3,  1968 edition under the headline, "Local Group Suffers Terror  in the Night."

      A telephone rings in the middle of the night,  but when it is answered the only sound is  someone's breathing on the other end--then the

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      click of a receiver. Or it rings and, in a  measured voice--all the more chilling because of  its utter lack of emotion--comes the threat:  'Get out of town if you don't want to get blown  out of your classroom window.' Besides his  duties to his parish and his many community  services, Jones also teaches in Anderson Valley  and Ukiah.[64]

      Temple members continually complained to the authorities

      about night riders who shot out windows and threw dead dogs  onto the Temple grounds. All the

      ____________________

      [64]  Ibid. p. 84.

      Orignal page 175 Jonetown

      attacks were staged. The dogs were among the unfortunate  strays gathered by the Temple's animal shelter. Not content  with the public's acceptance of persecution, Jones arranged  two attempts on his life during his 1968 campaign to  publicly justify his ever increasing militarism.

      Bill Bush was a professional hair dresser who had recently  moved to Ukiah to open a beauty shop with his partner Jim  Barnes. Bush also donated his services at the Mendocino  State Mental Hospital where he worked with many members of  the Peoples Temple. He lived with his common law wife

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      Beverly and their son Billy in the first floor apartment of  a duplex house. His partner, Jim Barnes lived upstairs with  his children and Temple member Jerry Livingston. According  to the accepted story, Livingston seduced Bush's wife who,  along with young Billy, was spending most of her time at the  Peoples Temple. There is speculation that Livingston had  actually seduced Jim Barnes but, in any event, one Sunday  morning Bill Bush arrived at the Temple's front steps, mad  as hell at the loss of his lover. He demanded that Jones  allow him to see his son. Jones frustrated Bush at first by

      refusing to answer, then teased him to the point where Bush  lost his temper and a scuffle ensued. Don Sly, the Temple's  swimming Instructor and knife expert, intervened and  produced a knife he claimed to have wrestled from Bush. Ten  years later Don Sly would once again be called upon to stage  a phony knife attack, this time against Congressman Ryan.  Even though Bush was probably innocent, the following  morning he was arrested for assault with a deadly weapon  after the police had received dozens of depositions from  Temple members attesting to what they termed was attempted  murder. The crime was front-page

      Orignal page 176 Jonetown

      news in the_ _ U_  k_ i_a_h_   _ D_ a_i_l_  y_   _ J_o_u_  r_  n_ a_l but as soon as thealleged  threat against Jones had been established, he dropped all  charges and Bush was released after Paying a misdemeanor  fine.

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      Another staged death threat occurred during one of the  Temple's evening services when Jones stepped out into the  parking lot for a breath of fresh air. There were several  witnesses standing nearby when a shot rang out. Jones  grabbed his stomach, blood spurted from between his fingers  and he fell to the pavement. Only bodyguard Jack Beam was  allowed to attend to the fallen leader who lay so still as  to suggest to those in view that he was dead. All at once  Jones rose to his feet and presumably back from the dead.  "I'm not ready. I'm not ready," he proclaimed to the

      bewildered witnesses. A few minutes later he returned inside  to address a tumultuous congregation. He wore a clean shirt  and waved the bloody one, challenging anyone to analyze the  blood he claimed was his. It probably was. It was common  practice for Temple nurses to draw real human blood to use  in their fake faith healings. The next day, the bloody shirt  was put on display in a glass case installed near the podium  as a constant reminder of both the unseen enemy and Jones'  supernatural powers. The Temple's special effects department  had prepared the blood-filled plastic bag that hung like a  long necklace under his shirt. When the unidentified gunman  fired the shot from his hiding place, Jones simply slapped  the bag to break it and release the blood.

      Throughout his career, all the phony death threats against  Jones were contrived to strengthen his hold on the  congregation and to give public the impression that he was  either persecuted or paranoid

      Orignal page 177 Jonetown

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      which would help to explain the otherwise unexplainable end  he had planned for the Peoples Temple. The two assults in  the summer of 1968 also served to explain to the locals why  Jones was fortifying the Temple compound. A chain-link  fence, complete with barbed wire, was installed around the  perimeter and a guard tower built by the front gate. Armed  guards patrolled the fence with German shepherds twenty-four  hours a day. Mrs. Vera Rupe was one of the first neighbors  to notice the security guards who made no attempt to conceal  their weapons as they paced the fence or drilled in the

      parking lot. She and her husband filed a complaint with the  police charging the Temple with possission of illegal  submachine guns and harassment. They claimed the guards  spied on them with binoculars and the search lights on the  tower kept them awake at night. Jones had powerful allies in  the sheriff's office who not only ignored the complaint, but  issued no less than six concealed weapon permits to Temple  guards. The armed guards, barbed wire, search lights and  attack dogs made the compound look like a concentration camp  and in many respects it was. The fortifications were  intended not only to keep people out but also to keep people  in.

      Through his connections in government Jones arranged to be  appointed to several positions of power in Mendocino. He  first approached the superintendent of the Anderson Valley  School District located in Boonville some fifty miles  southwest of Redwood Valley. A deal was struck in which  Jones would enroll sixteen Temple children in the school  district in exchange for a position teaching social studies  to sixth graders in Boonville. The district received  thousands more in state aid and Jones received a paying job  that was more

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      Orignal page 178 Jonetown

      important to his plans than has been previously recognized.  The meager salary Jones received from his teaching job could  not have justified the cost of transporting sixteen children  one hundred miles a day. He had several other reasons for  teaching in Boonville. The Temple students were inner-city

      Blacks whose presence in the Ukiah School District was  unique and disruptive. Jones defused a potentially difficult  situation in his own back yard by transporting the Blacks  fifty miles away in what might be the ultimate in forced  busing. Mike Cartmell was the Caucasian leader of the  displaced students and his instructions were to make certain  that the Temple students did not socialize with the  exclusively White Boonville children. It was segregation and  not integration that would keep the peace in Boonville.  Jones taught there for about two years until June of 1969  when he resigned and withdrew the Temple children. One  report claims that he had a homosexual relationship with one

      of his students during this period. Jones counseled the boy  after having been apparently responsible for his parents'  divorce. The two would spend weekends in San Francisco where  Jones demanded a minister's discount on the hotel room he  registered under "The Rev. Jim Jones and Son." Though there  were no eyewitnesses to such activities, what really matters  here is not how Jones recruited his sixth graders but that  he was recruiting them. The timetable was perfect. Some  eight years later, as Jones was moving his Temple to South  America, his sixth graders had just graduated from Santa  Rosa Junior college. They went on to join the ranks of the  guards and medical staff of the experiment.

      Sixth graders are of particular interest to the CIA for it  is at this level of education that the

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      Orignal page 179 Jonetown

      federal government studies every student in the country in  the only mandatory national examination: the I.Q. test. Many  argue its validity but nevertheless the federal government  has required the I.Q. test for decades. It was originally  developed in the early nineteen hundreds as a means [TAR not  true?] to evaluate the mental capacity of immigrants from  southern Europe. The U.S.government was afraid that Italians  would dilute the human stock of America and so they  developed this entrance exam to exclude what they perceived  as the mentally deficient. Unlike most tests that measure  one's ability to regurgitate information, the I.Q. test  measures one's potential to learn. It is a logical

      progression, designed to evaluate not what a person knows,  but his ability to ascertain and solve problem situations  common to all languages and cultures. At home point in time  the federal government required school systems to administer  the test to sixth graders and forward the forms to  Washington where they are now computer corrected. The  students and even their 'schools are often denied access to  the test results. The I. Q. test is not given to further the  education of the student or to help the schools. The I. Q.  test is given to further the interests of the agencies of  the federal government, like the CIA, whose business it is  to track the talented.

      A hundred miles was a long way to travel each day; could  there have been a specific attraction in Boonville?  Boonville is the only community in the United States to have  developed its own language. Years earlier, this remote town  had invented "Boontling" a truly American language that  served to bind the community together as well as confuse and  deceive outsiders. Boonville has a national reputation

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      Orignal page 180 Jonetown

      for keeping to itself yet the Rev. Jim Jones broke the  barriers and even recruited from its ranks. Perhaps it was  he who was being tested under difficult circumstances; a  test he apparently passed. In the end, Jones did retain the  services of some of his sixth grade class. Some came to  Jones because the CIA had assigned them. Some came because  they were duped and some came because they were brainwashed

      in a painstakingly slow process that began in the sixth  grade.

      Jones used the same scenario to get a job teaching American  history and government in Ukiah's fledgling adult education  program. The evening classes were closed to all but the  Temple hierarchy and remains as an example of how Jones used  an existing system to his own ends. He would have taught his  class anyway. With the arrangement, he received the free use  of a classroom and even a salary for his efforts. Rather  than draw from the CIA's labor pool, Jones would maintain  ultimate security and actually create some of the operatives  that would aid him in the experiment.

      In 1967, Superior Court Judge Robert Winslow appointed Jones  foreman of the Mendocino County Grand Jury. The following  year, he was appointed to the Juvenile Justice Commission,  an advisory board to the courts. Between the two positions  he had the ability to bring charges for or against anyone in  the county, especially considering his close relationship  with Assistant District Attorney Tim Stoen.

      In May of 1967, Jones formed the Legal Services Foundation  of Mendocino County, a nonprofit group offering free legal  services to the needy, most of whom were his followers who  needed the services of an attorney to petition the courts

      for welfare support, to

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      Orignal page 181 Jonetown

      transfer property, or to settle a divorce or child custody  case. In August, Marceline Jones resigned her seat on the

      foundation's board of directors to make way for her husband  to be appointed vice president. Also in August, the  foundation acquired the free use of an office in Ukiah and  their first directing attorney, the former Assistant  District Attorney Tim Stoen. Tim Stoen always played an  important role in the Peoples Temple as Jones' second-in-  command and the Temple's legal counsel. Some say he remains  so to this day, but must believe Stoen's claims that he  defected from the Temple in 1976. However, back in April of  1969, Tim Stoen was on a mission for Jim Jones when he left  the Legal Services Foundation to accept a position with the  Legal Aid Society of Alameda County where he was assigned to  the West Oakland Black ghetto. Stoen counseled Blacks who

      were on welfare and in trouble with the law; the perfect  demographic for the experiment. Many were offered a fresh  start in the country atmosphere of Redwood Valley. A Temple  aide in the Mendocino County Welfare Department would  register the recipient who would sign over his check to the  Peoples Temple in exchange for the housing, food and  camaraderie he enjoyed under its care. His time was then  free to work as a volunteer in whatever project the Temple  had undertaken. The test persons themselves would provide  the money and the labor for the experiment in which they  would die.

      There was always something to do in the political

      department. Temple members wrote letters in support of or in  opposition to nearly every political issue of the day in the  local, state and national arenas. Temple aides had  infiltrated every county government office. Many of the  elected officials owed

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      Orignal page 182 Jonetown

      their positions to Jones who controlled sixteen percent of  the votes in Mendocino.

      The Temple paid cash for the only shopping center in Redwood  Valley and opened "Valley Enterprises" where propaganda was  created and printed for public relations, recruitment and  donations. The center also housed the Temple's bus garage as  Jones had purchased eleven used Greyhound buses to transport  his people. "More Things" on State Street in Ukiah was  another Temple business that sold the personal Temple

      possessions members who donated, not only of the Temple  household articles and jewelry, and jewelry, but also their  labor as sales clerks. "Relics and Things" was opened in  1976 on School and Henry Streets as a last-ditch effort to  divest the congregation of any personal wealth before  transporting them off to Guyana.

      Patty Cartmell the head of Jones' intelligence operations  founded the  "Ukiah Answering Service;" operations, home-operated  business that employed seven Temple members to monitor the  phone messages of the county's professionals and the radio  communications of the sheriff's department. It was one of

      Cartmell's more overt intelligence operations.

      The Temple also operated a number of convalescent homes and  a forty acre foster care ranch for boys that added many  Social Security and welfare checks to its income. Over fifty  of the Temple's seniors were convinced to cash in their  life-insurance policies and donate the money to the Temple.  Aides sold photographs Jones as talismans. According to of  Birdie Marable, "I made $80 to $100 a meeting." The mailings  from Valley Enterprises were generating about 800 per day in  donations mailed to the Temple. At least thirty-two  expensive real estate properties were

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      Orignal page 183 Jonetown

      donated, the Temple, greatly adding to its wealth. One such  San Francisco apartment house was in turn sold for $127,000.  Jessie Boyd, an elderly Black member, gave twenty-five  percent of her meager income to the Temple and still she was  forced to bake and contribute seven or eight cakes a week.

      Later she recalled,

      I bought all the fixings myself, and the church  would take it over to the Safeway or Albertson's  and sell each one for five dollars.

      I can't tell you how much I may have given in  little bits of cash.[65]

      Other elderly women sewed quilts that the Temple sold for  about fifty dollars each. Temple children, unskilled and  underage, were taken to San Francisco and dropped off on a  busy corner to beg for donations. At the end of the day, a

      bus would pick up the kids and the money canisters for the  ride back to Redwood Valley. To avoid punishment, the child  had to provide at least five dollars for every hour spent on  the streets. The money, in small and large increments,  continued to flow into the Temple at many times the rate  necessary to offset its six hundred thousand dollar annual  budget. Tim Stoen was concerned that bank or government  officials might become suspicious and investigate the origin  of such large sums of cash so he advised Jones to open no  less than fifteen bank accounts to evenly distribute the  wealth. He was quoted as saying, "I told him to move the  money around.

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      ____________________

      [65] 

    65 Marshall Kilduff and Ron Javers, _ 

    T_ 

    h_e _ 

    S_u_i_ 

    c_ 

    i_d_e _C_u_ 

    l_ 

    t (New  York: Bantam Books, 1978), p. 87.

      Orignal page 184 Jonetown

      It was stacking up and was going to cause big trouble."[66]

      Members who worked in the private or public sector outside  the Temple were required to donate between five and fifteen  percent of their income. Jones raised this figure to  twenty-five percent to help pay for a stockpile of food,  medicine, weapons and ammunition he said they would need to  survive the winter of the post-nuclear war he predicted was  close at hand. He told the congregation that he had located  the perfect site for their bomb shelter; a cave in the hills  a few miles away. Perhaps some expressed skepticism about  its existence but, in any event, Jones led a contingent of  his followers to inspect the site. After a long walk, the

      group came upon a depression in the earth, surrounded by a  fence and warning signs. At the center of the depression was  a small hole in the ground, just large enough for a man to  enter. An aide was lowered down into the hole but after one  hundred and fifty feet of rope, he never found the bottom of  what was apparently a bottomless pit. Jones still insisted  that all would be safe in the cave but he neglected to tell  his Black congregation the local lore about the grotto. It  seems that many years earlier, a Black man had reportedly  raped a White woman in a nearby stagecoach station and a  group of White vigilants threw the accused down the hole to  his certain death. Ever since that day, the cave was known  to the locals as the "Nigger Hole." Jim Jones had an unusual

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      sense of humor.

      In exchange for their donations of money and labor, the  Temple provided its members with at least the bare  essentials of food and housing. Members lived in Temple  communes that were no more than over-crowded

      ____________________

      [66]  Ibid., p. 85.

      Orignal page 185 Jonetown

      tenement houses. Each was charged rent that when totaled and  weighed against expenses, netted the Temple an additional  eight to ten thousand dollars a month. The Temple also  operated dormitories at Santa Rosa Junior college where as  many as twenty-five Caucasian members were packed into a  cardboard-partitioned, single family house. Student board at  Santa Rosa added another twenty-eight thousand dollars to  the coffer every year.

      Feeding his flock was a monumental task that Jones lessened  by milking government poverty programs. Each member applied  for and received government food rations thanks in no small  part to the Temple aides who had infiltrated such government  funded programs. The surplus powdered milk incident is a  prime example.

      On March 5, 1971, Mrs. Eunice Mock, supervisor of the  Mendocino County surplus commodities program, and a  colleague were driving along a county road near Redwood  Valley when they spotted two open pick-up trucks loaded with  between fifty and eighty cases of USDA powdered milk. Mrs.

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      Mock was the sole distributor of such commodities in  Mendocino County and, since she had no knowledge of such a  substantial order, she suspected fraud and followed the  trucks until they pulled over to the side of the road. One  of the truck drivers, Temple member James Bogue, approached  Mock's car to ask why she was following them. When she asked  about the cases of milk that were clearly stamped "USDA",  Bogue said that it was for the poor and none of her  business. She copied down the license numbers and drove off  to file a complaint with the authorities who discovered that

      one of the trucks was registered to the Peoples Temple. When  confronted, Bogue said that the milk was not from Mendocino  but was intended for the

      Orignal page 186 Jonetown

      county's poor and that he was "incensed with the idea that  the church was involved." His rebuttal did not satisfy the  Department of Agriculture that dispatched two fraud

      investigators to speak with Jones in Redwood Valley. Jones  denied that the truck was owned by the Temple. He also  denied any knowledge of the milk in question and avoided  further questioning by grabbing his chest as if in pain and  retiring to his parsonage where he phoned Tim Stoen for  help. Stoen was in the middle of an important county Board  of Supervisors meeting but left abruptly when he received  the message. He arrived at the Temple and immediately  questioned the rights of the investigators and defended  Bogue, Jones and the Temple. Reports vary slightly from one  account to the next but apparently both the investigators  and the Board of Supervisors questioned the priorities of  the Assistant District Attorney who said that his church

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      came first and the county second. He proved his point by  having County Supervisor Al Barbero Phone San Francisco  Supervisor Dianne Feinstein to enlist her help in stopping  the investigation. Feinstein was called because the powdered  milk had originated in a San Francisco warehouse operated by  the Community Health Alliance, a nonprofit, government-  funded organization headed by Temple member Peter Holmes.  Obviously, Holmes had been using his position to steal food  from the government to feed the Peoples Temple; a practice  that would have continued had it not been for the chance

      encounter with Mrs. Mock. As it was, the Temple returned the  milk to San Francisco and the USDA continued its  investigation for several weeks after which the Department  of Health seized control of the warehouse and Peter Holmes  resigned. No charges were

      Orignal page 187 Jonetown

      ever filed. Neither the theft nor the Temple's involvement  was ever reported in the news.

      Aside from the donations it received from the outside and  the tithes it received from its members inside, the Temple  was financed almost exclusively by agencies of the federal  government through tax-funded jobs, poverty programs and  give-aways. Many members were employed at the Mendocino  State Mental Hospital or in the school system or the welfare  office, all under the U.S. Department of Health, Education  and Welfare. Under the Department of Justice, there were

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      Temple members in law enforcement, in the grand jury and the  district attorney's office. Black members contributed their  government checks from the Social Security Administration  and the welfare division of HEW. The USDA provided food and  the California Highway Patrol provided inexpensive, high-  powered police cruisers that Jones purchased at auction and  issued to his aides as company cars. Though they removed the  CHP emblem from the car doors, they neglected, possibly  intentionally, to repaint the familiar "black and whites."

      Throughout his career, Jones received millions of dollars  from the federal government, millions he used to finance the  experiment in Jonestown. In the end, even the tractor that  transported the assassins to the site of congressman Ryan's  murder was "U.S. government surplus." Had Jones only  mastered the system and taken advantage of its bureaucratic  inefficiencies, or did he have inside help? A phone call  from the Washington D.C. headquarters of a government agency  to its state or local office, asking them to co-operate with  the Peoples Temple, would have been sufficient for Jones to  perpetrate the massive fraud. To this day, no federal agency  has ever

      Orignal page 188 Jonetown

      expressed any remorse or responsibility for financing  Jonestown or even any embarrassment at having been duped  into doing so.

      April 4, 1968 was a turning point. The assassination of Dr.  Martin Luther King, Jr. created a void in the Black

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      leadership; a void Jim Jones rushed to fill. As stated,  there were few, if any, Blacks in Mendocino County so Jones  looked south to the ghettos of Oakland and San Francisco for  his victims. Tim Stoen and other trusted aides had already  been planted in key government positions in the Bay Area  when Jones set out to recruit the Black subjects for the  experiment. He held services in San Francisco and Oakland  inner-city school auditoriums, churches, meeting halls and  theaters attracting as many Black welfare recipients as  possible. From the outside, Jones' rainbow family and

      multiracial Peoples Temple appeared to be the cutting edge  of the integration movement but, from the inside, both the  old and new Black recruits were segregated from the  Caucasian leadership. This obvious inequality would be  recognized and recorded only once when, a few years later in  1976, eight Black members would send a letter of resignation  to Jim Jones, in which they complained,

      You said that the revolutionary focal point at  present is in black people.... There is no  potential in the white population according to  you. Yet, where is the black leadership, where

      is the black staff and black attitude? Black  people are being tapped for money, practically

      Orignal page 189 Jonetown

      nothing else. How can there be sound trust from

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      black people if thare's only white nit-picking  staff, hungrily taking advantage to castrate  black men? Staff creates so much guilt that it  breaks the black spirit of revolution (if the  blacks have any). There's no revolutionary  teaching taught the way it used to be. At one  time you told us to read, yet now staff comes in  to steal books from those who have them. All the  staff concerns itself with is sex, sex, sex.  What about socialism? How does 99 1/2 percent

      of People's Temple manage to know zero about  socialism?[67]

      Sex was just about the only reward that Jones and his aides  received for their efforts. Caucasian aides enjoyed a higher  standard of living than did the Black congregation but the  Temple never paid in cash, only services and a prolific sex  life was the favored remuneration. Sex was a common topic of  Temple services as Jones was continually bragging about his  superhuman abilities. His female aides gave absurd testimony  as to the pleasures of Jones' "divine penis," but his sexual  exploits were not confined to women as he had homosexual

      relationships with many of his male assistants who were then  blackmailed into slavery. Jones was so promiscuous as to  require an appointment secretary just to schedule his  affairs. Patty Cartmell

      ____________________

      [67]  67 James Reston, Jr., _  O_ u_r _ F_a_t_  h_  e_ r _  W_ h_o _A_r_ t _I_ n _H_ e_ l_ l_:_  T_ h_ e  _  L_ i_ f_e _ a_n_d _D_e_ a_  t_ h _  o_ f _J_ i_  m _J_o_ n_  e_ s (New York: TimesBooks,  1981), p. 245.

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      Orignal page 190 Jonetown

      and later Carolyn Layton, who Jones jokingly referred to as  his "fucking secretary," would telephone a member to ask,  "Father hates to do this but he has this tremendous urge and  could you please...?" All of the chosen were Caucasian.

      Despite its interracial image, mixed marriages were not  permitted in the Temple and there is no evidence to even  suggest that Jones or his White aides ever had sex with a  Black member. There is not a single case of a mulatto child  being born to a Temple member.

      All sexual relationships had to first be approved by the  Temple's Relationship Committee, giving Jones additional  control over the congregation that was often denied sex,  even between married couples. Members who stepped out of  line were often humiliated by requiring them to elaborate on  their sexual experiences or strip naked and copulate in

      front of the entire congregation. Steve Addison, who was  accused of having sex without prior approval was once called  to the podium and ordered to perform cunnilingus on an  overweight woman in the midst of her menstrual period. As  Addison dropped to his knees to accept his punishment, Jones  shouted, "Piss! Piss!" and the woman urinated in his face.  "Throw up! Throw up!" he yelled, and the woman forced her  fingers down her throat until she vomited on his head.

      Sex was also used to reward and blackmail politicians both  in California and later in Guyana where Jones would provide  a number of Temple women to government officials who were  then shown photographs of their encounter and reminded that

      if they refused to co-operate Temple their public careers  would with the be ruined.

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      Jones claimed to be the only true heterosexual in the Temple  and often called for a show of hands of all homosexuals. If  a member did not raise his hand, he would be ridiculed for  dishonesty. If he did raise his hand, he ran the risk of  being singled out for praise. The subject was impossible to  avoid. Many members were forced to sign confessions  attesting to homosexuality or child molesting that were  later used to blackmail the signatory.

      The Peoples Temple was not a religion. Jim Jones did not  believe in God who he said was powerless to effect any

      change on the earth. He claimed the Bible was "dotted  through and through with fabrications, inconsistencies and  incongruities which insult the normal intelligence of  readers." He would throw the Bible on the floor, step on it,  tear out the pages and talk about using them for toilet  paper. Once he burned a Bible during a service just to show  that there would be no reprisal from the "Impotent Sky God."  He called it the "Black Book" which may be the only time in  his public career that Jones used the word "black" in a  derogatory manner as he went so far as to change "blackmail"  to "whitemail and "black market" to "white market" so as not  to offend his congregation. Temple services had many of the  trappings of a church, there was organ music and gospel

      singing but that is about as far as it went. Jones' sermons  were mainly political, taking stories from the newspaper to  prove his point that the Blacks were losing their rights as  citizens. The Peoples Temple was not a church but a social  experiment disguised as a church.

      In 1970, Jones' old friend Prime Minister Forbes Burnham  left the British Commonwealth, established diplomatic  relations with Cuba and so lost

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      Orignal page 192 Jonetown

      all U.S. aid. It was a critical year for Guyana and the  prime minister called for help from his old CIA buddy. Jones  first flew to Cuba, where he met with Fidel Castro after  which he continued on to Georgetown, Guyana for his meeting  with Burnham. What was accomplished on this trip is  uncertain.

      Jones was not the only Temple member who traveled. His fleet  of eleven used Greyhound buses carried the congregation on  weekly trips to San Francisco, Oakland, and Los Angeles  where in a single weekend the Temple might receive as much  as twenty thousand dollars in donations. As a show of  strength, Jones always took his Redwood Valley congregation  on such tours. The buses were said to have been over-  crowded, with people riding in the overhead storage racks  and down below in the baggage compartment. Members  complained that the air conditioners and toilets did not  work and that they were driven too long without food or  rest. Jones had a special bus with air conditioning, a

      working bath and a private, bulletproof compartment. Each  summer, members were given the opportunity to take a cross-  country vacation and many boarded the Temple buses bound for  national parks, monuments and other points of interest;  sites never seen by these inner-city Blacks. The Temple's  advance team arranged to rent auditoriums and leafletted the  major cities to herald the group's arrival. Jones put on his  usual show with its many collections all across the country.  Such a trip was expected to net one to two hundred thousand  dollars. The 1973 cross country trip was the most  noteworthy. The buses stopped in Washington, D.C. where the  Temple called on congressmen and succeeded in getting a  description of the Peoples Temple entered in the

    _ _ _ 

    C_o_n_ 

    g_ 

    r_ 

    e_s_s_ 

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    o_ 

    n_a_l_ 

    R_ 

    e_c_o_ 

    r_ 

    d_ 

    . But the

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      Orignal page 193 Jonetown

      highlight of the trip was the publicity Jones received when

      his Temple buses unloaded hundreds of members on the steps  of the Capitol to pick up the litter around the grounds. The_   _  _  _ _ _   _  _ W_a_s_  h_  i_ n_g_t_  o_  n_  _ _P_ o_  s_ t recorded the publicity stunt intheir  editorial page, dated August 18, 1973 in which was written,

      The hands-down winners of any-body's tourist-of-  the-year award have got to be the 660 wonderful  members of the Peoples Temple... this spirited  group of travelers fanned out from their 13  buses and spent about an hour cleaning up the  [Capitol] grounds.

      In addition to the summer vacations and the revival tours,  the Temple buses also carried members to the voting polls  and anywhere else Jones wanted to demonstrate his power.  When a group of reporters in Fresno were tried for refusing  to divulge their sources, Jones sent hundreds to rally in  support of the "Fresno Four" as he called them. It was  ironic that this manipulator of the media would defend the  freedom of the press, but irony was his trademark. In 1976,  the buses arrived at San Francisco's Golden Gate Bridge  where members disembarked to stage a demonstration in  support of the proposed anti-suicide fences. Over the years,  about six hundred people have jumped to their death from the  bridge, two-thirds the number who would commit mass suicide

      in Jonestown; the same people who donated their energies in  a public demonstration acknowledging the government's  responsibility to help avert suicide.

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      In spite of all of his questionable and outright illegal  activities in private, Jones enjoyed respectable reputation  in public. In 1975 he was chosen one of [TAR NOTE: an inside  org?] "The 100 Outstanding Clergyman in America" by the  Foundation for Religion in American Life. In 1976, the_   _ L_  o_s_   _  _  _ _ _   _  _ A_n_g_  e_  l_ e_s_ _ H_  e_ r_a_l_  d_   _ E_x_a_  m_  i_ n_e_r named him Humanitarian ofthe Year"  but the most impressive title came in January of 1977, when

      Jones was given the "Martin Luther King Humanitarian Award."  He must have had a good laugh about that.

      END 05

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