This is an important book. It details not just the injustices faced by the first African-American Secret Service agent to guard the president, but gives first-hand confirmation by a government agent of the existence of a plot to kill John F. Kennedy in Chicago just three weeks before that dirty deed was executed in Dallas.
The plot involved a patsy similar to Lee Harvey Oswald - an ex-Marine named Thomas Arthur Vallee, who was arrested after police found an M-1 rifle, handgun, and 3,000 rounds of ammunition in his vehicle. There were four men with high-powered rifles who planned to shoot at Kennedy's vehicle as he drove to Soldier Field from the airport along a route that included the building where Vallee worked. The plot was unearthed thanks to an FBI informant who went only by "Lee" - was that actually Oswald? - and tips by a police lieutenant on Vallee and a landlady who discovered rifles in a room she rented to four men. Agents and police arrested Vallee and two other suspects, but the names of the latter two men were never released.
Kennedy's Nov. 2, 1963, trip to Chicago was canceled at the last minute. His life was extended by three weeks as a similar plot succeeded in Dallas with ex-Marine Oswald as patsy.
Bolden was a whistleblower of this plot and Secret Service security lapses. Less than a week before JFK's death, Bolden was suddenly ordered to report to Washington, D.C., where the IRS offered him an undercover position for an investigation of Congressional aides. That would require his old identity be entirely erased, even his birth certificate. He declined to the anger of superiors. He returned to Chicago fearful that JFK was about to be killed. The Chicago plot was never told to Dallas Secret Service agents, who as a House committee concluded in 1979, were lax in guarding the president on Nov. 22, 1963.
Shortly after JFK died, Bolden raised the possibility of a connection between the November 2 Chicago plot and the Dallas assassination to some Secret Service agents in Chicago. Most of them agreed, but Maurice Martineau, assistant special agent in charge of the Chicago office, ordered they forget about the plot and said that Oswald was the lone gunman with no connection to Chicago.
In January 1964, the Secret Service took the extraordinary step of ordering all agents to turn in their identification booklets for replacement. Bolden suspected this was because Secret Service credentials had been used to forge some possible conspirators identities on Nov. 22.
In May 1964, Bolden was in D.C. for training when he tried to contact a Warren Commission lawyer to tell him what he knew. His call was overheard by a fellow agent apparently assigned to monitor Bolden. The next day, Bolden was ordered back to Chicago on pretenses of participating in an investigation of a counterfeiting ring, but he was arrested by agents when he arrived and accused of trying to sell Secret Service files.
The first trial resulted in a hung jury, while the second resulted in a conviction after testimony from a counterfeiter who later admitted to perjury and said prosecutors ordered him to lie. Bolden was sent to federal prison, where he was committed to a psychiatric ward and subjected to mind-altering drugs. He was aided by his wife, Warren Commission critic Mark Lane and an assistant to New Orleans prosecutor Jim Garrison, who helped stop the ill treatment.
Bolden continued to speak out after being released from prison and successfully got this book published. It should be made into a movie.