Happy Fourth of July 🇺🇸

(You OK? Day 7)

Photo by Juan Mayobre on Unsplash

July 4, 2025

It’s the fourth of July, and we’ve reached the end of our week-long journey. So what have we learned? We learned that I consistently wait until around 9 or 9:30 at night to get these bad boys out. We learned that I can’t help but get all wordy even when I say I’m going to keep things brief. On a personal level, I’ve learned that I should probably hold off on making promises that require a week-long effort, especially if it involves sitting in my sweats and writing a blog post on a morning when I really should be sleeping in or having breakfast in bed. (Happy birthday to me!) And, oh yes. We learned that Ron Tammen’s FBI documents have proven themselves to be seismic in their significance. 

Today I’m going to present several additional documents I’ve recently found to be interesting. Each will be accompanied by a few sentences of background info, which is more in line with how I wanted these posts to be when I started this series last Saturday. We won’t be coming to any big conclusions right now. Observations, maybe; conclusions, hardly. Here we go!

1. Hey look! It’s L’Allier

In my April 19, 2025, post, we learned all about Rolland L’Allier, the FBI’s French-speaking legal attaché in the 1950s who headed up the Domestic Intelligence Division’s Liaison Section in 1960-62. I raised the question of whether he may have scribbled on the first page of Ron’s FBI records based on his distinctive abbreviated L’A. Here’s his full signature, written in regular pencil, on one of Carlos Marcello’s records.

Click on image for a closer view; L’Alllier’s signature is on the bottom left, as well as the bottom right.

2. Hey look! It’s that Ci notation from a while ago

When we first began discussing the numbers in the upper-righthand corner, I pointed out a notation on a visa application for Marina Oswald. The document originated with the State Department, but this was the FBI’s copy, because it has marks all over it that are distinctively FBI. In the box midway down, on the righthand side, the words “VISA SECURITY CASE” are typed, and above that are the letters Ci and the numbers 8-1. Recently, I found a couple more Ci’s, which are written in blue pencil on Carlos Marcello’s records. It might be a person, but I’m thinking it may also stand for Counterintelligence, which was part of the Domestic Intelligence Division.

Marina Oswald’s Ci

Click on image for a closer view

Carlos Marcello’s Ci’s

Click on image for a closer view
Click on image for a closer view

3. Someone has circled Carlos Marcello’s ST- and REC- numbers on a couple of his documents; also, the word “classifying” is written nearby in blue and underlined in green

I’m thinking that these two docs tell us that the FBI indeed views the ST- and REC- numbers as a unit or complementary pair, just like we’d surmised. For the most part, they belong together. Have I seen an REC- number by itself? I have. Have I seen two different REC-numbers on one record? Not gonna lie, I’ve seen that too. But I’ve never, ever seen an ST- number without an accompanying REC- number. Also, the fact that someone wrote “classifying” nearby indicates that the pair of circled ST- and REC- numbers has something to do with how the FBI’s Classifying Unit, which is in the Records Division, categorized the case. 

Click on image for a closer view
Click on image for a closer view

4. Like Ron, Carlos Marcello had a sealed enclosure too, but the word “Sealed” is handwritten.

I don’t see many FBI records with the word “Sealed” on them, which tells me that they’re especially secret. Here’s one for Carlos Marcello.

Click on image for a closer view

5. So far, I’ve found only two people who have the same “SEALED ENCL” stamp as Ron Tammen.

I believe that the sealing of an enclosure was considered a big deal for the FBI, and for someone to have the foresight to use the “SEALED ENCL” stamp means that it wasn’t just an afterthought. I think they meant to seal those contents from the get-go. Here are two people on which the FBI used the same stamp as Ron’s. One you met on Day 2 of this series. The other one was famously kidnapped by the Symbionese Liberation Army on February 4, 1974.

Ron Tammen

Click on image for a closer view

Wayne B. Williams

Click on image for a closer view

Patty Hearst

Click on image for a closer view

OK, I think that covers it for today. Have a happy Fourth, everyone. Get your rest, stay hydrated, and let’s keep fighting the good fight for democracy.

Thanks to the Mary Ferrell Foundation for making these documents available.

7 thoughts on “Happy Fourth of July 🇺🇸

  1. My apologies if this comment is on the wrong post but I found a former FBI agent named McDowell Lee who went on to be a politician. He died in 2014 so he seems to be the right age range, but I can’t find a middle initial. One of the things I found googling his name said he worked in Ohio and Pennsylvania. I’m not sure if that could fit with the elusive MSL?

    1. Thanks for the tip, WSU! I’ll look into it. He’s not showing up on the 2019 Dead List even though he died in 2014, but they’ve been known to miss some people. Again, thanks!

      1. I’m still trying to search for obituaries that mention FBI and scanning the names. I know we don’t particularly want to find a deceased MSL so maybe it’s a good sign that McDowell Lee is the only one I’ve been able to find. I got excited for a minute when I found a Milton Ladd but he turned out to be a Charles Milton Ladd, so not him.

  2. Hi Jennifer,

    First of all, thank you so much for your incredible work and persistence, I’m following your posts all the way from Hungary in Europe and I’m completely invested in this fascinating mystery.

    I was wondering if you’ve ever considered (or maybe already tried) collaborating with a legal advocacy group, contacting a journalist or a member of Congress, or even launching a public campaign to support declassification efforts. To me, it’s absolutely maddening to think that documents may exist, possibly even containing the answers, yet we still can’t access them after all these decades!

    I’d truly love to see this mystery solved one day, and I think your investigation deserves as much support and visibility as possible.
    (If you’ve already explored these options, please excuse my curiosity, I’m just cheering you on from afar.)

    1. Hi Veronika,
      Thanks so much for your kind and supportive comments. To answer your question, I’ve approached a couple members of Congress seeking assistance on specific issues that had arisen and they were both helpful. I am considering doing so again. Also, I have collaborated with one or two other researchers on topics that we both have in common, which also has been tremendously helpful. But tbh, I don’t really have time to organize a large-scale effort. Right now, there is quite a bit of information that’s already been released, so I’m continuing to dig into those records as well as submit new FOIA requests. If I come to a standstill, that’s when I pursue other routes. As a lifelong introvert, I tend to do my best work quietly. Mind you, I can — and do, and will—get noisy if I have to.😊💪

      1. Thanks so much for your kind reply and as a fellow introvert, I totally get it! 😊 I honestly think introverts are the best when it comes to deep, determined research, we may work quietly, but we don’t give up easily, so I really believe you’ll get to the bottom of this. 👏🏻

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