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From: Jasper
Date: 1/4/03
Time: 12:00:01 AM
Remote Name: 66.72.162.115
Jean, I don’t think there is any question that Fuhrman took many cues for the Bundy murders from the Moxley murder just as he took so many other cues from the movies. O.J.’s stolen golf club may have been intended to explain the wound on Nicole’s head but nobody picked up on it and Fuhrman couldn’t do it without giving himself away. He was already planning to play The Great Detective in the Moxley case. Before the Fuhrman movie I thought that the only golf connection to Democratic politician was to Clinton because O.J. had recently played golf with him. I didn’t follow the Skakel case and I read Fuhrman’s book only two months ago. I didn’t even know that Martha Moxley had been killed with a golf club so I didn’t make the golf club connection to the Kennedys. I think, though, that Fuhrman had a keen interested in Presidents in general. Eisenhower, by the way, who preceded Jack Kennedy, was an avid golfer. The movie links include Ford, Reagan, Truman, Cleveland, Coolidge, Wilson, both Roosevelts, Lincoln, Jefferson, Washington, Jackson and both Adams’. There are probably more of them but I have only been looking for them within the past few months. The one-eye link in so many movies traceable to Fuhrman may be the key. The eye on the pyramid on the one-dollar bill is a Masonic symbol. A great many Presidents were Masons. I wonder if Fuhrman was, too. That could explain a lot When I was working on The Smoking Gun I kept running into some themes that were inexplicable to me at the time. One of those themes had to do with trains. Eventually I came across several train links to Fuhrman and O.J. but I missed the most important one until recently when I saw the 1978 movie The Cassandra Crossing with O.J. Simpson as a fake Catholic priest who kills people with a gun aboard a train (Furman’s co-producers). Other recurring themes like the City of Detroit and pizzas had direct links to Fuhrman. However, when I followed them expecting to find something related to them in Fuhrman’s history, I sometimes ran into things that didn’t follow the logic of my search. They did match other recurring themes in the network of related movies that I called “the Fuhrman collection.” Golf clubs fell into this category. I was looking for an incest link between pizzas and the moon through a love song that was popular in the ’50s when Keri steered me to the movie The Caddy, with Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis. I found it with Dean Martin’s character Joe Anthony (as in “Toney) singing a love song to his mother. I also found a “time travel” link with the Jerry Lewis character turning back the hand of a clock to fool his boss into thinking that he had returned to work from lunch earlier than he had. Now, what do you think of this… Lewis’ steals a set of golf clubs and leaves them scattered on the course (stolen club left on crime scene). There is one pointed reference to one eye (The ABC logo on a camera in Murder in Greenwich) and a fight with Anthony (Toney) over a 6-iron. --Jasper
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