Category: Assassination Theory
- The Wall Street Suicide Myth
The Wall Street Suicide Myth theory held that the famous stories of bodies plunging from financial windows in 1929 concealed a deeper crime: many of the supposed “jumpers” had not chosen death at all, but had been pushed by a hidden New York financial cabal to silence them, stage public panic, or eliminate liabilities. The historical basis beneath the myth is complex. There were some suicides associated with the crash era, and sensational reporting quickly magnified them into the image of a suicidal Wall Street. But contemporary officials also pushed back against exaggerated tales of a mass epidemic of jumpers. The conspiracy version went further still, arguing that the small number of visible deaths were misrepresented murders.
- Chicago Mayor Assassination (Anton Cermak)
The Chicago Mayor Assassination theory held that Anton Cermak was not merely the accidental victim of Giuseppe Zangara’s failed attempt on Franklin D. Roosevelt, but the real target of a contract killing tied to organized crime. In the strongest form, Zangara was either a hired shooter or a useful screen for a more directed hit arranged by interests threatened by Cermak’s anti-racketeering posture and political consolidation in Chicago. The historical basis was real enough to sustain the suspicion: Cermak was wounded during the Roosevelt attempt in Miami on February 15, 1933, later died, and rumors linking the attack to Capone-era underworld politics circulated quickly. The conspiracy version made Miami not the scene of a missed presidential killing, but of a successful gang assassination.