{"id":754,"date":"2026-06-20T13:40:50","date_gmt":"2026-06-20T13:40:50","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/commercialrelocationpros.com\/?p=754"},"modified":"2026-06-20T13:40:50","modified_gmt":"2026-06-20T13:40:50","slug":"the-eternal-allure-of-the-rabbit-hole","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/commercialrelocationpros.com\/?p=754","title":{"rendered":"The Eternal Allure of the Rabbit Hole"},"content":{"rendered":"<section>\n<p><span>Sylvia Meagher was<\/span> 44 years old in the fall of 1965 and lived alone, except for her cat, Allegra, named after the ballet dancer Allegra Kent. She commuted from her one-bedroom apartment in the West Village to the United Nations, where she\u2019d been working for nearly two decades at the World Health Organization. Although Meagher was a bureaucrat, her sensibilities were bohemian. She was acquainted with many of the painters, musicians, and writers who lived near her. In her foyer, Meagher displayed a painting of a nude figure given to her by a neighbor, the expressionist Alexander Dobkin. But the focal point of her living space was a bookcase laden with 26 reference volumes bound in dark-blue cloth. These were the supplemental materials of the Warren Commission Report. Only a few hundred private citizens in the United States purchased a copy of the 18,000-page, 54-pound series as soon as the Government Printing Office made it available. Far fewer had read it end to end. Perhaps only Meagher had nearly memorized it.<\/p>\n<p>Read more <a href=\"https:\/\/commercialrelocationpros.com\/?p=752\">Are GLP-1s Performance-Enhancing Drugs?<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Released in September 1964, the Warren Report was the government\u2019s official story of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. The report\u2019s key finding was that an odd, angry, 24-year-old assassin, Lee Harvey Oswald, had acted alone, for reasons nobody could quite figure out. The public evidence\u2014exhibits, hearings, et cetera\u2014was piled into the supplementary volumes. The government did not furnish an index, making casual inquiry incredibly difficult.<\/p>\n<p>During the year since she\u2019d received delivery of her crate of the volumes, Meagher had been reading and rereading. She\u2019d remade her living room into an office, with filing cabinets for notes and correspondence, and a large desk positioned near the fireplace. She took a volume on the subway each day and made notes on a clipboard; she worked during her commute, during her lunch hour, at night when she got home, and every weekend. One of her friends, the French journalist Leo Sauvage, called her \u201cthe only person in the world who really knows every item hidden in the 26 volumes of Hearings and Exhibits.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Meagher was neither a conspiracy theorist nor a wannabe detective. She considered herself a \u201ccritic\u201d of the Warren Report. A New Deal liberal with a far-left social circle, she had been subjected to questioning by a loyalty board during the Red Scare, putting her at odds with her government. When the president\u2019s assassin was identified as a pro-Castro Marxist\u2014not a segregationist or a radical right-winger, as many initially assumed\u2014she felt compelled to walk through the existing evidence, piece by piece, and demonstrate where things fit and where they didn\u2019t. She spent more than a year creating an index for the 26 volumes. At the same time, based on her clipboard work, she wrote her own analysis of the case, which was published in 1967 as <em>Accessories After the Fact: The Warren Commission, the Authorities, and the Report<\/em>. And much later, hundreds of her letters and most of her personal notes ended up archived at Hood College, a small liberal-arts college in Maryland.<\/p>\n<p>Through twists and turns of curiosity (and mid-pandemic boredom), I ended up reading Meagher\u2019s papers and becoming obsessed with her obsession. Digging into the Warren Commission\u2019s evidence, in Meagher\u2019s time, was regarded as something more than eccentric. A journalist called people like her\u2014the bookkeepers and graduate students and stay-at-home moms who journeyed to the National Archives in search of answers about the assassination\u2014a \u201ckeening pack of speculators.\u201d It was generally considered antipatriotic and morbid to interrogate the official account.<\/p>\n<p>Today, there is nothing fringe about checking the facts or \u201cjust asking questions\u201d of an official story. Everybody does it. You could credit the critics of the Warren Report for a great act of citizenship, but you could also credit them with inventing an American pastime: They discovered that there is something thrilling about a document dump, and picking through boxes and boxes of government files. We have often associated these habits with conspiracy theorists, truthers, and the nation\u2019s most paranoid, but in the modern era of digitized records, anyone can jump down a rabbit hole anywhere, anytime, even on their phone. Online influencers can invent careers by plumbing the court docket in a celebrity lawsuit (see the Blake Lively\u2013Justin Baldoni case). Members of Congress can make national headlines by demanding minutiae from the Hunter Biden\u2013laptop saga. The public can scroll through thousands of pages of records related to the crimes of Jeffrey Epstein, looking for mentions of President Trump.<\/p>\n<p>Even when there is no promise of revelation, the search can be its own justification. Mine took me into a semisecret world that I could barely explain to my friends and family. The conspiratorial view of American history was both enticing and maddening, and I sometimes felt like the more I learned, the more I didn\u2019t know.<\/p>\n<p>T<span>he federal government\u2019s records<\/span> on the Kennedy assassination are housed in one of the largest archival facilities in the world: the National Archives at College Park, Maryland. In contrast to the dark and uncomfortable spaces that Warren Report critics would have visited in the original Archives building, on Pennsylvania Avenue, the reading room in Maryland is a dream. It has fantastic natural light enabled by so much glass\u2014two-story windows wrap the entire space\u2014that it was closed one morning while I was there because of a tornado warning.<\/p>\n<p>On my first day there, to work on a book about Meagher and her friends, I learned that the JFK files are much more annoying to access than many of the others in that building. Only select Archives employees are permitted to go into those stacks; one staffer suggested to me that this is because anyone can disappear in there, sucked down rabbit holes, if there are no guardrails.<\/p>\n<p>By the end of the first afternoon, I knew why. I was stumbling across amazing material, just in the boxes they\u2019d brought to me in the reading room. They didn\u2019t shed any light on the Kennedy assassination, exactly, but they shed light on everything around it. For instance, I spent at least an hour captivated by the paper trail left by the FBI as they tried to figure out how Dorothy Kilgallen, a New York tabloid reporter and game-show panelist, had gotten ahold of Jack Ruby\u2019s testimony to the Warren Commission before it was published. The following year, she died in a bedroom of her Upper East Side townhouse at the age of 52, apparently from \u201cacute ethanol and barbiturate intoxication.\u201d Naturally, some people didn\u2019t buy that it was a simple overdose.<\/p>\n<p>I told my fianc\u00e9 that there was more that I really needed to see, which I thought was true, but really I just wanted to keep looking. I ended up extending my research trip by nearly a week. One detour led me to Paul Krassner, a founding member of the Yippies, a radical (and radically goofy) New Left group. In 1976, Krassner was promising to sue the FBI over a fake reader letter it had sent to <em>Life<\/em> magazine in 1968, as part of its COINTELPRO anti-subversive program, calling him a \u201craving, unconfined nut.\u201d This document was in the JFK files because it also mentioned Krassner\u2019s infamous parodic account of the assassination, which depicts Lyndon B. Johnson engaging in necrophilia with JFK\u2019s corpse aboard Air Force One. (Was this relevant to my book? No.)<\/p>\n<p>One day, I was captivated by a story turned up by a Warren Report critic named Shirley Martin, a housewife in rural Oklahoma who was \u201ccommonly regarded as a busybody,\u201d according to FBI agents who were monitoring her. While she was hoping to disprove the government\u2019s theory that Oswald had attempted to assassinate the ultra-conservative General Edwin Walker in April 1963, she\u2019d heard a rumor that Walker had entertained his own theories as to who was responsible. He had allegedly hired a private detective to find suspects, and the detective\u2014in a twist worthy of a Coen-brothers movie\u2014offered one suspect $5,000 to try to kill Walker, just to see if he would do it. The suspect asked for a fake passport and a getaway driver, appearing to take the plot seriously, but the detective was convinced that he was merely trying to con him out of the $5,000. (Relevant to my book? Actually, yes. I used the episode to illustrate how close Martin\u2019s digging brought her to real, dramatic events.)<\/p>\n<p>Sylvia Meagher, the woman who memorized the Warren Commission\u2019s evidence, once described the experience of being carried away on a research tangent: \u201cIn the search for one document or one fact, the eye discovers and is trapped by a totally unrelated and fascinating document.\u201d Meagher complained that she wouldn\u2019t have enough time to spend on the case even if she didn\u2019t have an actual career. Merely investigating Lee Harvey Oswald\u2019s whereabouts throughout 1963 could\u2019ve been its own full-time job. The alleged gunman had been spotted all over the continent in the last few months of his life, according to a flood of reports fielded by the Warren Commission. People thought they saw him in the guest book at the American Museum of Atomic Energy in Tennessee; checking in to the Skyline Motel in Pulaski, Virginia; passing out Fair Play for Cuba pamphlets in Montreal, \u201caccompanied by a short, homely, heavy woman who took unusually long steps when walking,\u201d according to one citizen. The commission considered a report from a magician-ventriloquist who\u2019d been in residency at Jack Ruby\u2019s Carousel Club for two weeks before the assassination, and was certain that Oswald had been a volunteer for a memory trick that involved 20 audience members shouting out one word each in rapid succession. Meagher kept such reports in a folder she labeled \u201cFalse Oswalds.\u201d In 1966, she helped the UC San Diego philosophy professor Richard Popkin with his famous <em>New York Review of Books<\/em> essay \u201cThe Second Oswald,\u201d which popularized the idea of Oswald decoys, and she later refined it in her own book.<\/p>\n<p>Read more <a href=\"https:\/\/commercialrelocationpros.com\/?p=750\">The Forgotten Founding Father<\/a><\/p>\n<p>The concept of multiple Oswalds is central to the plot of Don DeLillo\u2019s 1988 novel, <em>Libra<\/em>, which is also about archival rabbit holes; one of the book\u2019s characters is an in-house historian at the CIA who sits alone with ever-growing towers of documents, which he refers to as \u201cthe data-spew of hundreds of lives.\u201d DeLillo was not the only literary giant to be drawn into that spew. Joan Didion, in her 1987 book, <em>Miami<\/em>, reprinted footnote 67 of volume X of a 1978 report from the House Select Committee on Assassinations; she identified a connection between a pair of anti-Castro Cuban brothers who fired a bazooka at the UN building in 1964, while Che Guevara was inside giving a speech, and a woman who claimed they had traveled with Oswald to Dallas the previous year.<\/p>\n<p>Norman Mailer hosted an assassination discussion group in the late 1980s called the Dynamite Club, which met in both Washington, D.C., and New York. Among the participants were the Watergate conspirator G. Gordon Liddy; novelists such as DeLillo and James Grady, the author of <em>Six Days of the Condor<\/em>; and assorted journalists, including Edward Jay Epstein, a <em>New Yorker<\/em> contributor who published a bombshell book about the Warren Commission in 1966.<\/p>\n<p>The Dynamite Club was more parlor game than detective work. \u201cInteresting conversations,\u201d DeLillo said to me over email in 2024. \u201cBut I don\u2019t recall that we reached any particular conclusion.\u201d I\u2019d written to ask if he was interested in Meagher\u2019s work. He replied that he was looking at his bookshelf from his chair, and that her book was up there, along with about 60 other books on the case, plus the 26 volumes of Warren Commission evidence. \u201cAcquiring the 26 volumes was a complicated matter,\u201d DeLillo said, \u201cbut helpful to my work on <em>Libra<\/em>; and the volumes are also a kind of museum of voices\u2014America speaking.\u201d To illustrate his point he included various quotations from Marguerite Oswald, Lee\u2019s mother, in parentheses. (\u201cBut, after all, I am going through a whole life, and it is very hard.\u201d)<\/p>\n<p>Meagher examined only a fraction of the government\u2019s documentation of the Kennedy assassination. In the years after her book was published, millions more pages were declassified, always under pressure from the public. And because government agencies all communicated about the assassination for decades, and brought it up constantly in relation to later events, thousands of extraneous documents were marked as assassination-related. Now the files are a cross-section of U.S. history. If you cut into them and pull out a wedge, you get a little bit of everything. Looking for X, you stumble on Y. Meagher was likely at work at the UN the day that the brothers Guillermo and Ignacio Novo fired their portable rocket launcher at her office building from across the East River; its eight-pound shell, which had been manufactured by the U.S. Army, fell 200 yards short of the target, into the water. It\u2019s easy to develop a conspiratorial view of history, because everything in the past is connected. And the more you read, the more you sense something just beyond your reach.<\/p>\n<p>E<span>ventually, a rabbit hole<\/span> will clog with documents. Sylvia Meagher\u2019s one-bedroom apartment became stuffed with files on assassinations beyond JFK\u2019s: Robert F. Kennedy, Martin Luther King Jr., and the 1972 attempt on Alabama Governor George Wallace. Her friend and fellow Warren Report critic Harold Weisberg filed countless Freedom of Information Act requests and sued the government repeatedly when its responses didn\u2019t satisfy him. He accrued hundreds of thousands of JFK-related documents, which he stored at his chicken farm in Maryland. Meagher\u2019s friend Mary Ferrell remodeled her house in Dallas to hold her assassination-related papers; that collection formed the basis of a monumental online depository that has become an indispensable research tool for generations of Warren Report critics.<\/p>\n<p>In the internet age, such a massive public resource may not seem remarkable. But a culture of collecting, organizing, and searching a trove of government files didn\u2019t create itself. People often point to the JFK assassination as the moment when conspiracy theorizing became an American pastime, but it was also the beginning of the age of documents, Mark Fenster, a law professor at the University of Florida and an expert in government transparency, told me. The Warren Report critics \u201cwere part of a direct challenge to the government based on the idea that if we can just get these documents, we can find the real truth,\u201d he said. \u201cSadly, that is a dream that has never been realized and may never be realized.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Some people still pursue that dream in the dry, dogged manner that Meagher did. Others, like me, jump in and out, enjoying the indulgence of cutting into something that is somehow both discrete (one batch of files on one narrow topic) and never-ending (more pages than you could possibly read). Across the years that I spent digging into the Kennedy assassination, I accrued dozens of books on the case, each with a somewhat different theory of events, and many of them convincing for an hour, or an afternoon, or a week, or more. Six decades after the fact, even a straitlaced researcher such as myself can still wonder about a thing or two\u2014an ex-CIA guy here, a Cuban paramilitary group there.<\/p>\n<p>Still others prefer to make the pursuit of truth by document into a spectacle. Early in his second term, Trump released more files about the Kennedy assassination, promising that, after 60 years of secrecy, people would now learn \u201cTHE TRUTH.\u201d (Due to the hasty declassification, they mostly learned the Social Security numbers of former congressional staff.) And before his reelection, he blithely promised to release government records relating to Jeffrey Epstein, seeming to enjoy the positive response that he received whenever he mentioned the idea. But last summer, the promise blew up in his face: When the Justice Department finally released many of the files, a slew of mysterious redactions and omissions\u2014some having to do with the president himself\u2014prompted more conspiracy theorizing. Trump moved on to UFOs.<\/p>\n<p>When I jumped (quite casually) down the Epstein rabbit hole, I used a free website that re-creates his email inbox\u2014a tacky but useful restaging of years of correspondence with power brokers and cultural luminaries. There, I came across a bunch of emails between Epstein and a name I recognized from my days in the JFK files: Paul Krassner, who had once written unspeakable things about the 35th president\u2019s corpse, and who later published some of the first conspiracy theories to connect the JFK assassination with Watergate. To my surprise, Krassner and Epstein corresponded until May 2019, two months before the latter\u2019s arrest. In numerous friendly exchanges, Epstein expressed interest in Krassner\u2019s writing, including a work-in-progress novel about the late comedian Lenny Bruce.<\/p>\n<p>Starting when he needed dental surgery, Krassner often emailed to ask Epstein for money, which he apparently received. \u201cI hope our contract will continue until I\u2019m dead,\u201d Krassner wrote in December 2017. The two men, in fact, died within weeks of each other less than two years later\u2014Epstein in a jail cell in Manhattan and Krassner at home in Southern California. It was unclear from the emails whether they ever met in person. Their relationship had been totally unknown to the general public during their lives, as far as I could tell, and barely anyone noticed their correspondence once it was discoverable.<\/p>\n<p>No, this discovery didn\u2019t matter much. It was just a sliver of trivia buried in a data dump, a tunnel connecting two rabbit holes. But it reminded me that anything can have a special glow if you\u2019re the one to find it\u2014if you\u2019re the one who thought to look for it. How did I come across Krassner in the Epstein files? It\u2019s incredibly dumb, but you already know the answer. I\u2019d searched <em>Kennedy assassination<\/em>, just to see.<\/p>\n<p><small><i>Want to hear more from Kaitlyn Tiffany? Tune in as she joins <\/i>The Atlantic<i>\u2019s editor in chief, Jeffrey Goldberg, on June 25 for a virtual discussion about her new book. Register <\/i><i><span>here.<\/span><\/i><\/small><\/p>\n<p>Read more <a href=\"https:\/\/commercialrelocationpros.com\/?p=746\">The Wall the Tohono O\u2019odham Don\u2019t Want<\/a><\/p>\n<\/section>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>While researching a woman who went deep on the JFK assassination, I was pulled in too.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":753,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[17],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-754","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-technology"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.7 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>The Eternal Allure of the Rabbit Hole - Commercial Relocation Pros<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/commercialrelocationpros.com\/?p=754\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"The Eternal Allure of the Rabbit Hole - 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