Reference:
Miami Herald on line Posted on Thu, Jan. 31, 2008
One-time Miami soldier of
fortune dies
BY JOHN DORSCHNER
A '60s-era Miami soldier of
fortune
and a key figure for conspiracy theorists around the world,
Gerald
Patrick Hemming, is dead at 70.
His death was confirmed
Thursday
morning by the Cape Fear Valley Medical Center in
Fayetteville, N.C.
His son, Felipe, told The Miami Herald that he was found
dead in his
North Carolina home on Tuesday evening.
A shadowy figure who enjoyed
talking
about paramilitary operations and anti-Castro activities
during the
1960s, Hemming became known in his later years mostly for
statements he
made about the Kennedy assassination to the Warren
Commission and to
many investigative journalists.
A Google search of Hemming's
name and the Kennedy assassination turns up more than 4,000
hits.
Robert K. Brown, publisher of
Soldier
of Fortune magazine, said he knew Hemming well during the
1960s.
``Gerry was an especially charismatic guy who on first
impression came
across very well. He was looked up to by a lot of Cuban
exile groups.
He was a big man, spoke fluent Spanish, a very intelligent
guy. . . .
''But Gerry tended to get
carried away
with this conspiracy stuff,'' Brown said, ``and it was hard
to tell
where the fact ended and the fiction started.
''He knew so many things,''
said
Felipe Hemming, who works for Miami-Dade fire rescue. ``He
was still
researching when he died. . . . My dad was an operator. He
wasn't a guy
on the side of the road making up stories.''
Others disagree. Don Bohning,
who was
The Herald's Latin America editor for many years, said, ``I
never
believed a word he had to say.''
In 1959, after Castro came to
power,
Hemming spent considerable time hanging out in Havana, often
in the
company of William Morgan, an ex-U.S. paratrooper who went
to Cuba to
join the rebel forces in the Sierra del Escambray to fight
the Batista
dictatorship.
A confidential U.S. Army
report from
March 1960 reports that Hemming was ``stationed with Cuban
rebel air
force in Pinar del Rio. Claims he is a T-33 jet pilot with
mission to
intercept U.S.-based planes which fly over Cuba bent on
destroying cane
fields. Was formerly stationed in Isle of Pines.
``Subject wears Army
fatigues, is
armed with a pistol, and wears a U.S. paratrooper bade. He
states he
has been in Cuba for two years. He wears no insignia of
rank.''
Hemming may have claimed
being in the Castro military at the time, but other experts
question that information.
However, Olga Morgan, the
widow of
William Morgan, recalls Hemming warning her husband to leave
Cuba, or
he would be killed by the Castro regime. 'He said, `Cuba is
no good for
you, with the new government. You need to get out. You have
a family.'
''
Morgan didn't heed Hemming's
advice. He was executed by a Cuban firing squad in March
1961.
In his 2005 book, The Castro
Obsession, Bohning wrote that in the early 1960s, Hemming
was among the
soldiers of fortune who hung around the Time-Life
bureau in
Miami. An ex-Marine, six-foot-five, Hemming had organized a
paramilitary force based in the Florida Keys called
the
Intercontinental Penetration Force.
At one point, Bohning wrote,
Hemming
used Time-Life stationery to write to the military aide of
President
Kennedy, seeking ''advice and constructive criticism'' for
his forces.
''There is no indication any was forthcoming,'' Bohning
wrote.
Hemming is survived by six
children, said his son, Felipe.
A graveside service is
planned for 2
p.m. Monday at Sandhills State Veterans Cemetery in Spring
Lake, N.C. A
memorial service in South Florida may take place later.
Herald investigations editor
Mike Sallah contributed to this report.
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