 Card number 20, card number 20. Wow, look at this artwork. Look at this artwork. The Permanentix plot. Just beautiful. I wonder where all these original art pieces are. I would pay an arm and a leg for these. But I would pay a pretty hefty price for these. Let's see what the text, if the text has changed or not. Somebody's doing yard work. 1967 starts the same. We've got a break here. Shaw was director and linked to CIA. Let's see if we can find that. This looks different. This looks different, gang. We're gonna read the revised version. Even ends differently. Okay, gang, we're gonna read the revised version because it's more up-to-date. Because this is about information. We want to learn as much as we can, right? So we go with the revised version. Card number 20, the Clay Shaw, or not the Clay Shaw, or Clay Shaw, the Permanentix plot. Clay Shaw. In 1967, New Orleans district attorney, Jim Garrison, arrested new Orleans businessman, Clay Shaw, for conspiring with Oswald and the recently deceased, David Ferry, to kill John Kennedy. The ensuing scandal laid bare Shaw's closest, closeted homosexuality. But although Garrison convinced the jury that Kennedy was the victim of a conspiracy, he failed to prove that Shaw was involved with Oswald, or Ferry, or that he was linked to the CIA. Shaw was director of New Orleans's International Trade Mart, a subsidiary of the Rome-based central Mondale commercial. CMC was in turn linked to Permanentix, a company which French intelligence agents said funneled $200,000 to the French secret army organization from 1962 coup attempt against Charles de Gaulle. Allegedly, both Shaw and Schlumberger court president, John de Menel, sat on the board of Permanentix. Garrison's case hinged on proving Shaw used the alias Clay Bertrand in quotes. In 1964, New Orleans lawyer, Dean Andrews, told the Warren Commission that on November 23, 1963, one Clay Bertrand asked him to represent Oswald, who had earlier visited Andrews, Andrews' office in the company of some Latin gay kids, in quotes. Along with names of the prominent European fascists, Shaw's address book contained the listing, quote, Lee Odom, P.O. Box, 19106, Dallas, Texas, end quote. Oswald's address book contained the same P.O. Box number with no name attached, but Andrews, who also represented mafia boss Carlos Mancillo, refused to diverge Bertrand's identity, saying it would be quote, Bon Voyage, Dino, end quote, if he did. In 1977, at least one of Garrison's claims was vindicated when a CIA document surfaced showing that Shaw, a former OSS colonel, had indeed had a long history with the CIA. Clay Shaw, Clay Shaw, Schlumberger pops up a lot, hey?