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Mark Lane (born February 24, 1927 in New York City) is a U.S attorney and author of many books, including the bestseller, Rush to Judgment. This book was one of two major books published in the immediate wake of the JFK assassination which questioned the conclusions of the Warren Commission. Rush to Judgment was made into a documentary film in 1966. He later wrote the book A Citizen's Dissent documenting his response to the Warren Commission's governmental findings on the Kennedy assassination.

In the 1968 presidential election, Lane appeared on the ballot as a third party vice-presidential candidate, running on the Peace and Freedom Party ticket with Dick Gregory.

During the civil rights movement, he was the only elected official to be arrested for opposing segregation as a "Freedom Rider".

The 1973 movie Executive Action is largely based on Lane's writings concerning the Kennedy assassination.

Lane was a lawyer for Jim Jones' People's Temple and was one of the few survivors of the Jonestown mass murder/suicide. Lane was injured defending the life Congressman Leo Ryan in a stabbing in Guyana. Lane survived and Ryan was later shot and killed. Lane survived by escaping into the jungle and tying strips of undergarments to trees. He writes about Jonestown in his book The Strongest Poison.

He also wrote Murder In Memphis with Dick Gregory (previously titled Code Name Zorro, after the CIA's name for King) about the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr., in which he alleged a conspiracy and/or government coverup. He is the author of the book Arcadia in which he details the effort to prove that James Richardson, a black migrant worker in Florida, had been falsely accused of killing his seven children by unlawful actions on the part of the authorities involved. Richardson had been on death row for the crime, but after the book was published he received a new trial in which he was found not guilty. Richardson was released from prison after 21 years and Richardson's babysitter later confessed to the murders.

Lane represented the right-wing group Liberty Lobby as an attorney when the group was sued over an article in The Spotlight newspaper implicating E. Howard Hunt in the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. Hunt sued for defamation and won a substantial settlement. Lane represented the Liberty Lobby was successfully got this judgement reversed on appeal. This became the basis for Lane's book Plausible Denial.

It was later said that the KGB was providing Lane with funds for research and travel. Christopher Andrew and Vasili Mitrokhin, The Sword and the Shield: The Mitrokhin Archive and the Secret History of the KGB, Basic Books, 1999. Excerpted here. Mark Lane refutes this.*Letter to The Nation from Lane

Lane still practices law and lectures on many subjects. His favorites being the importance of the United States Constitution (mainly the Bill Of Rights and the First Amendment) and civil rights.

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1927 births | Living people | American lawyers | John F. Kennedy assassination | United States vice-presidential candidates

 

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