Investigative
Findings on the Death of
Jim Morrison
by
Alex Constantine
From the book
THE COVERT
WAR ON ROCK
Available at:
FERAL
HOUSE
THERE IS MENACE
UNDER THE MUSIC, BUT SOMETHING IS BEING HELD BACK.
A SENSE OF
ANGER, RAGE AND BETRAYAL. BENT OVER THE MIKE, MORRISON,
WHO FOUR DAYS
LATER WOULD GIVE HIS LAST CONCERT THEN ABANDON
THE BAND,
LEAVING ROCK BEHIND, IS AT HIS PROVOCATIVE, INFLAMMATORY,
CONFRONTATIONAL
BEST, REPEATING HIMSELF OVER AND OVER AGAIN.
"ROCK IS DEAD.
ROCK IS DEAD. IT'S DYING. IT'S OVER.
IT'S OVER.
ROCK N ROLL
IS DEAD."
IF NOSTALGIA
ISN'T WHAT IT USED TO BE, NEITHER IS ROCK. WEIGHED DOWN
BY ITS OWN
MYTHOLOGICAL PAST, TOP-HEAVY BECAUSE OF THE UNNATURAL
LONGEVITY
OF TOO MANY BANDS, BLOATED BECAUSE OF THE SIZE OF
THE CORPORATIONS
THAT DOMINATE THE INDUSTRY, ROCK MUSIC
HAS ALWAYS
BEEN TOO SUCCESSFUL FOR ITS OWN GOOD.
Michael Epis, Australian Critic
Jim Morrison's
body was found by Pamela Courson,
Morrison's
common-law wife, in the bathtub at their flat
in Paris,
France in the early morning hours of July 3rd, 1971 --
exactly
two years after the death of Brian Jones. (1)
The New
York Times reported, "Jim Morrison, lead singer
of The
Doors rock group, died last Saturday in Paris,
his public
relations firm said today." The death was
initially
attributed to "natural causes", "pneumonia", and
finally
(but by no means conclusively) "heart failure". (2)
"Details
were withheld pending the return of Mr. Morrison's
agent from
France. Funeral services were held in Paris today.
In his
black leather jacket and skin-tight vinyl pants,
Jim Morrison
personified rock music's image
of superstar
as sullen, mystical sexual poet.
The surviving
Doors, Robbie Krieger, Ray Manzarek and
John Densmore,
discussed Morrison's death in an interview
conducted
on February 11, 1983 by BBC-2's Robin Denselow
at the
Institute of Contemporary Arts in London. Manzarek
recalled
his state of denial upon learning of Morrison's death,
and weighed
the possibility of political assassination.
Manzarek:
We got a phone call. I got a phone call
Saturday morning saying
Jim Morrison is dead in Paris ...
Yeah, yeah, yeah ... sure,
right. John had talked to
him a couple of weeks
beforehand and he's dead.
Q: What about CIA involvement?
Manzarek:
Well, I've heard that theory, yeah,
Janis Joplin, Jim Morrison,
Jimi Hendrix.
Black man, white man,
white woman.
You know, the flowering
of American
youth in poetry and art
and music ...
trying to stop it all.
It's conceivable ...
Densmore:
There was definitely some political weirdness
at Miami, that (obscenity
charge) coming down.
Krieger:
And there was an FBI file on Morrison that we
got a hold of, so the
government was aware of The Doors ...
Morrison's
spontaneous political outbursts in rock press
interviews
attracted FBI attention: "I like ideas about the
breaking
away or overthrowing of established order,"
he announced.
"I am interested in anything about revolt,
disorder,
chaos -- especially activity that seems to have
no meaning.
It seems to me the road toward freedom --
external
revolt is a way to bring about internal freedom." (3)
In another
interview, Manzarek considered possible motives
for eliminating
the anarchistic Lizard King:
They were going to stop
all of rock n roll by stopping The Doors.
As far as Americans were
concerned, he was the most dangerous ...
Janis Joplin was just
a white woman singing about getting drunk
and laid a lot, and Jimi
Hendrix was a black guy singing, "Let's get high".
Morrison was singing "We
want the world and we want it now."
There was plenty of hounding.
FBI harrassment,
in fact, rendered Morrison so anxiety-ridden
that he
contracted an ulcer by his mid-20s -- a condition not
exactly
conducive to overthrowing the established order.
"Paranoia"
struck deep, and biographers James Riordan and
Jerry Prochnicky
confirm that Morrison was a "marked man".
The busts took their toll
on Morrison ... By 1970 he was still reeling
from the effects of one
federal trial and about to face another.
And the FBI had marked
him. It was they who made the charges
in Miami stick ... Morrison
was guilty before he was arrested.
But the particular crimes
were not the problem. The real issue
was because he was guilty
of being Jim Morrison, a larger-than-life
symbol of rebellion to
the youth of America, and thereby a threat.
The busts cost Morrison
a great deal of money, but more than that
they wore him down and
sapped his enthusiasm for life.
"The vice squad would
be at the side of the stage with our names
filled in on the warrants,
just waiting to write in the offense,"
Manzarek recollected.
"Narks to the left, vice squad to the right,
into the valley of death
rode the four ... They wanted to stop
Morrison. They wanted
to show him that he couldn't get away with it.
Like Brian
Jones and Jimi Hendrix before him, and many
rock musicians
to follow, Morrison was consumed by
"paranoia"
as historian Marianne Sinclair observes:
Inevitably, Morrison and
the Doors became a focus for attack
and victimization by the
conventional forces of society ...
Doors' performances were
frequently cancelled at the last minute
through the efforts of
local do-gooders, and audiences were regularly
clubbed by policemen during
concerts ... This was too much for Morrison,
within whom the forces
of destruction had already been long at work.
A heavy user of LSD and
an alcoholic who could get drunk at any
time of the day or night
on whatever happened to be handy,
Morrison seemed hell-bent
on killing himself young. He once
described his drinking
as "not suicide, but slow capitulation".
What he was capitulating
to was his own need to block out
the sense of frustration,
despair and growing paranoia. (6)
Morrison's
death was followed by press reports noting federal
interest
in Morrison's life, political views and, significantly,
all independent
investigations of his death.
Researcher Thomas Lyttle gathered up leads in the international press:
One of the more explicit
appeared in the Scandinavian magazine Dagblatte.
This article detailed
French intelligence efforts to assassinate Jim Morrison in Paris.
In France,
the Documentation Exterieure et De Contre Espionage
(SDECE)
performs internal security functions. Under DeGaulle,
it was
SDECE's policy to resist and oppos the CIA, with the exception
of a small
contingent within the bureau enlisted to collaborate
secretly
with Langley. Under Pompidou and d'Estang, the domestic
French
intelligence service was ordered to cooperate fully with
US intelligence
agents and would have been drawn into any
assassination
plans in Paris conceived by the CIA. (8)
SDECE assassins
are highly-trained and were certainly capable
of killing
Morrison discreetly, leaving no trace of their complicity.
There are
precedents. In 1962, an SDECE agent code-named
Laurent
rigged the Rome-bound flight of a plane, and Italian
oil millionaire
Enrico Mattei died in the crash. The magnate's
offense:
a planned take-over of French interests in Algerian
oil.
Time magazine reporter William McHale was also
killed.
(9) At the behest of their American counterparts in
Virginia,
the "murder committee" of de Centre Espionage
was undeniably
capable of eliminating a troublesome
rock celebrity
and burying the evidence.
Bob Seymore
pieced together official documents for The End,
his book
on the peculiar circumstances surrounding Morrison's
death,
and soon found himself immersed in a sea of contradictions
and unanswered
questions. One of the most troubling was his
belief
that Pamela Courson withheld evidence, and that friends
Alan Ronay,
Agnes Varda and Bill Siddons "know more than they
have revealed
in public". Morrison biographer Danny Sugarman
told Seymore
that he had government documents through
Freedom
of Information Act requests for files pertaining
to Morrison's
death. Seymore writes:
I asked if Danny had seen
such documents, then why
were there no details
of any of them in his book?
He said that Pamela
had told him things about Jim's
death that he promised
he would never divulge ... (10)
Sugarman
is married to indicted Contragate co-conspirator Fawn Hall,
Oliver
North's secretary at the National Security Council, who shredded
an 18-inch
file of documents linking the Reagan administration to the
diversion
of funds from Iran arms sales to the Nicaraguan contras on
November
21, 1986, and quipped before a Congressional committee,
"Sometimes
you have to go above the law" (ironic in light of her
admission
to the DEA during a federal drug investigation in 1989 that
she "used
cocaine many times" in her three years as an NSC staffer) --
and he
has concealed evidence that would shed light on Morrison's death.
Why suppress
evidence of this significance to the historical record?
Supposedly
because Sugarman "promised Pam" he would conceal
and suppress
certain facts, as he explained to Seymore.
Danny Sugarman
predictably rejects all "conspiracy theories"
out of
hand, but he is himself involved in a conspiracy of silence,
ignoring
not only official intelligence files but the aforementioned
reports
on prior attempts by French intelligence agents to murder
Jim Morrison
-- a documented "finger on the trigger", a conspiracy --
and instead
stating that Morrison did, per the official verdict,
suffer
some sort of cardiopulmonary arrest at the tender age
of 27 in
Paris. But when pressed to account for the gaping
discrepancies
in the case -- for instance, heart failure causes
anguished
thrashing and ordinarily does not leave a smile,
such as
the one reported by Courson and the paramedics,
on the
victims's face -- Sugarman concedes that Morrison's
death "could
have involved a number of factors", and
when cornered
by Seymore, reluctantly conceded:
You could say that the
CIA and other intelligence agencies
may have had a hand in
the deaths of Hendrix, Janis Joplin
and then Morrison.
Simply for the reason that they were
the leaders of a generation
during the 1960s. (11)
You could
also say that Morrison was viewed as an
anarchistic
defiler of "restless youth" in some
loops on
the Washington Beltway, according
to Sugarman's
own best-selling biography:
Jim was certainly popular
enough, and more threateningly,
smart enough to cause
the powers that be ample reason
to take some sort of action
to prevent his subversive influence.
Surely the authorities
were wary of him. (12)
THE DOORS OF DECEPTION
How wary?
Enough to keep secret files on Morrison.
Enough
to spread false rumors to the effect that he had faked
his own
death to deflect attention from political assassination.
The "conspiracy",
as charted by Sugarman and others, was a hoax
hatched
by Morrison to "fake his own death". A book, The Bank
of America
of Louisiana,
appeared in 1975, supposedly written
by Morrison,
the source of the rumor. (13) In No One Here Gets
Out
Alive, a sensational history larded with drug-and-sex debauchery,
Sugarman
and Hopkins devote an entire chapter to "evidence"
that Morrison
had survived Paris and launched a new life
free from
the encumbrances of celebrity and the FBI.
The rumor
was a deliberate obfuscation conducted by unknown
covert
operators. The proper question is "Who killed Morrison?",
not "Is
he still alive and working for the Bank of America?"
Author Thomas Lyttle writes:
In the first few years
after Morrison's death, the owner of B of A Communications,
named James Douglas Morrison,
claimed to be operating as an intelligence agent
for a number of domestic
and international groups including the CIA, NSA,
Interpol, Swedish Intelligence
and others. There are also connections
between James Douglas
Morrison and various occult groups with probably
intelligence connections
... JM2 also claims to be the "dead" rock star
and former singer for
The Doors. The new JM2 dropped the old JM1
rock and roll identity
to become "James Bond".
The author has in fact
seen what appears to be stacks of official-looking
documents and letters
between the CIA, various governmental agencies,
national news groups like
CNN and NBC and JM2, involving what looked
like personal meetings,
projects and ephemera. Of special interest is that when
I viewed parts of the
files, all the reports had a paper-thin metallic band affixed
to them with colored UPC
bar codes. There is no way for me to authenticate
the claims of JM2, but
everything looked extremely official and very elaborate ...
A courtroom transcript
which I have seen implicates the FBI and CIA in
several coverups regarding
JM2's intelligence career. These show that
there seems to be a systematic
destruction of files relating to JM2's
spy activities ... Also
in my possession are files concerning JM2's rogue
financial activities with
the Bank of America, and news reports regarding
lawsuits by and against
JM2 for bank fraud and espionage.
There also appear to be
hundreds if not thousands of miscellaneous files ...
These involve the CIA,
Danish intelligence, and others. There are also an
active passport and banking
IDs under the name of James Douglas Morrison.
Is this all for real or
is this an elaborate hoax? ... The important thing
to note for the sake of
this study is that someone or some group is
actively pursuing and
setting up a mass "urban legend" regarding
James Morrison.
They are painstakingly documenting it also.
Whether this is a hoax
or not is not as important as the fact
that a lot of official-looking
information is being generated
surrounding the muth and
legend of Jim Morrison. (14)
Any account
of the second Morrison's career (according to
Daniel
Brandt's NameBase website, an index of names related
to intelligence
activity, the CIA employs one James Douglas Morrison,
an active
agent stationed in France) would be incomplete without the
names of
the Morrison double's Agency contacts, particularly William
Colby,
a CIA director under Richard Nixon. Since 1972, Morrison's
double
has left a surreal international trail of paper. The documents
include
letters to and from Louisiana Governor Edwin Edwards and
late CIA
director William Colby, through the Washington, DC
law firm
of Colby, Miller and Hanes.
The day
before his death, the original Jim Morrison sent a telegram
to Jonathan
Dolger, a publishing contact in New York, about changing
the cover
of a book of poetry written by the Door. Bob Seymore, trying
to piece
together Morrison's final days in Paris, phoned Dolger
and discovered
that someone else was interested in that telegram:
"Oh, my God," (Dolger)
said. It was as though he had been woken up from an
old nightmare. I
asked him about the telegram but he said that he no longer
had it. At first
he thought maybe his former employers had it in their files ...
Then he realized that
a man whose name he had forgotten contacted him to
ask if he could have the
telegram Jim sent. This was a month after Jim died
and the person said he
was with Jim when he died ... (15)
There are
a score of unknowns to resolve before writing
Morrison
off as a crazed narco-rocker bent on self-destruction:
*
The cause of Jim Morrison's death was an unspecified "heart failure",
so states
the forensic examiner's report, not an "attack" or "seizure".
The heart
failed, quit. Dr. Vasille noted "a little blood round the
nostrils",
indicating a hemorrhage, inconsistent with heart failure.
Paramedics
from the local Fire Brigade reported that Morrison
was still
smiling when they arrived, also not consistent
with the
officially-stated cause of death.
*
Dr. Derwin, the singer's personal physician, told representatives
of the
media industry: "Jim Morrison was in excellent health before
traveling
to Paris." (16) Pam Courson, the last person to see him alive,
wrote in
her signed statement to Paris police that the night before
his death,
Morrison "looked in good health, he seemed very happy". (17)
*
No autopsy was performed -- a probable violation of
French
law and certain violation of French custom.
*
Two persons could answer questions about the odd death:
Ms. Courson
died of "apparent overdose" herself on April 24, 1974 --
a few days
before a judge would have ruled in her favor concerning
a dispute
over the distribution of the Morrison inheritance,
a decision
that would have brought her, as Morrison's common-
law wife
and sole heir, a quarter of the Doors' income and an
immediate
payment of half a million dollars (18) -- and
Dr. Max
Vassille, the medical examiner, consistently turns
down all
interviews related to Morrison's death.
*
Pamela's friends, James Riordan reports in Break on Through,
believe
she was murdered: some "suspect foul play, saying that
although
Pam had been using heroin, she could not shoot herself up.
She always
had to have someone else do it. Whoever did it, they claim,
knew he
or she was injecting her with a lethal (dose),", a "hot-shot". (20)
Jim Morrison
died in a bathtub, this much is certain
based on
the statements of Courson, friends of Morrison
close to
the case, and Paris officials.
Dr. Vassille
estimated the time of death to be 5:00 AM.
Paramedics
arrived at the flat at exactly 9:24 AM, an
interval
of nearly four and a half hours, but the bath water,
they reported,
was still "lukewarm". So Morrison probably
died two-three
hours later than the death certificate claims.
This
would place the time of death closer to 7-8 AM.
Pamela Courson
told police that Morrison had choked in his sleep,
that she
shook him awake. He was in wretched condition and
told her
that a bath might make him feel better. This was roughly
2:30 in
the morning. Courson told police that she fell asleep and
awoke to
discover the body in the bathtub at about 5AM. The timeline
revised
by water temperature leads to the inescapable conclusion
that he
was alive after the estimated time of death.
The statements
of witnesses and officials clash, and this often
happens
when fear or coercion forces them to fabricate cover stories.
It's entirely
possible that Courson was threatened, or feared to implicate
others,
and this is why Sugarman mumbles that she and all close to the
case "knew
more about Morrison's death" than they ever revealed --
exactly
as witnesses to the murder of Brian Jones did under duress
for thirty
years. Dr. Vassille may have been forced by Pamela Courson's
statements
to find the time of death at 5AM. This and his refusal to talk
to the
press suggest that the medical examiner was also under pressure --
orders
from superiors, threats to himself or his family --
and suppressed
information regarding Morrison's death.
What were
they concealing? Patricia Keneally believes that her
husband-by-pagan-ceremony
overdosed on heroin. She sides with
the late
Albert Goldman on this particular point, although in
general
she steadfastly rejects the "noxious lie-o-rama" allegations
that "Albert
Golddigger" made concerning the deceased Door.
Dr. John
Morgan has written more than 100 articles and books on
clinical
pharmacology, and "declares Jim to have quite likely died,
in his
opinion, of a prolonged heroin overdose, an overdose drawn
out into
respiratory depression over several hours because Jim
did not
shoot the smack but snorted it," Keneally wrote in 1997.
Other medical specialists consulted by her agreed with this diagnosis,
finding
"nasal or esophageal varices as the likely cause of Jim's
reported
profuse bleeding". Dr Morgan: "Pam's versions certainly
indicate
that he was snorting heroin. A nasal or oral dose would
delay the
decline into respiratory death." The OD was gradual and
evidently
not traumatic, to judge by the smile on his face when found.
The consensus
among most investigative reporters, medical consultants,
and Morrison's
circle of friends is also that he overdosed on heroin.
Pamela's
closest friend at the time of Morrison's death, Diane Gardiner,
told biographer
James Riordan that Courson had "confessed" to her.
Courson
"told me a lot about Jim's death. It's true that he got
into some
of Pam's drugs and overdosed." (22)
Pamela told
Gardiner * that
Morrison -- who mortally feared the
narcotic
after the death of Janis Joplin and ordinarily avoided it --
was deeply
depressed and intended to numb the pain by helping
himself
to her provisions: "She started telling me something about
Jim's death
being her fault and that he had found out she was doing
heroin,
and 'You know Jim, of course he wanted to try it.' Then she
looked
at me and said, 'It was my stash -- Jim didn't know how to
score.
He knew how to drink.' She said that later he didn't feel well
and decided
to take a bath and she nodded out. But when I pressed
her for
details, she suddenly denied the whole thing." (23)
A similar
account was told by Alan Ronay, a friend of Jim Morrison's
since UCLA
film school, one of the last to see the rocker alive.
Ronay told
a reporter for Paris Match in 1991 that Morrison was
still alive
when Pam awoke and found him in the bath, a version
that conforms
to the revised timeline. Ronay said that Pamela pulled
him aside
after the medical examiners arrived and confided that Morrison
had been
snorting heroin for 48 hours when she and Morrison fell asleep
listening
to the first Doors LP. He was choking in his sleep and struggling
for air,
and she woke him up and helped him to the bath. She fell asleep
and woke
up again to find that he hadn't returned to bed, discovering
him bleeding
from the nose and vomiting blood into a pot. Then he told
her that
he felt better and she should go back to bed. He died shortly
thereafter.
Pamela told Ronay, "Jim looked so calm. He was smiling." (24)
Did he ingest
poisoned opiate or a "hot shot"? If the posthumous
revelations
are correct, Jim Morrison and Pamela Courson were both
killed
by lethal doses of heroin. The absence of an autopsy report
precludes
any attempt to determine the true cause of Morrison's death,
and some
of the troubling questions raised here may never be resolved
completely
if Danny Sugarman, the CIA rumor mongers, and an indifferent
press have
their way, which raises one more pertinent question:
What's
it to them?
NOTES
(1)
Laura Jackson, "Golden Stone: The Untold Life and Tragic Death
of Brian
Jones", New York: St. Martin's Press, 1992, pg. 214.
Jackson
places the exact time of death sometime between
1130 on
July 2 and midnight on July 3, the official date.
(2)
Doctor Max Vassille, forensic doctor, stated in his medical report
that Morrison's
death was "natural due to heart failure" --
Bob Seymore,
"The End: The Death of Jim Morrison"
London,
Omnibus Press, 1991, pp. 61, 63
(3) Quoted in the original Elektra Records bio release, 1967
(4)
James Riordan and Jerry Prochnicky,
"Break
on Through: The Life and Death of Jim Morrison"
New York:
William Morrow, 1991, pg. 375
(5) Riordan Prochnicky, pg 376
(6)
Marianne Sinclair, "Those Who Died Young"
Longdon:
Plexus Publishing, 1979
(7)
Thomas Lyttle, Rumors, Myths, and Urban Legends
Surrounding
the Death of Jim Morrison, in "Secret and Supressed"
Jim Keith,
editor, Portland: Feral House, 1993, pg 117
(8)
Henrik Kruger, "The Great Heroin Coup: Drugs, Intelligence,
and International
Fascism", Boston: South End Press, 1980, pg 49
(9) Kruger, pg 47
(10) Seymore, pg 44, 78
(11) Ibid
(12)
Jerry Hopkins and Danny Sugarman,
No One
Here Gets Out Alive,
New York:
Warner, 1981, pg 372
(13)
Jim Morrison, The Bank of America of Louisiana,
(no city
listed): Zeppelin Publishing Corp, 1975
(14)
Lyttle, pg 117-18. The impersonations, Lyttle explains,
"were part
of sociological experiments like Artichoke or MKULTRA"
(pg 119),
CIA mind control projects of the 1950s
(15) Seymore, pg 77
(16) Lyttle
(17) Seymore, pg 56
(18)
Hopkins / Sugarman, pg 376-77
Also, Pamela
Des Barres, "Rock Bottom: Dark Moments in Music Babylon",
New York:
St. Martin's, 1996, pg 211
(19) Seymore, pg 77
(20) Riordan and Prochnicky, pg 484
(21)
Patricia Keneally, "An Open Letter to Jim's Fans",
October,
1997
(22) Riordan / Prochnicky, pg 458
(23) Ibid
(24) Des Barres, pg 211
SUBCIN NOTE
The *
after Diane Gardiner's name is there to indicate
a mistake
by the author, in the book he says "Sugarman",
but obviously
he meant "Gardiner" instead.
So I have
taken the liberty of changing it to the correct person.
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