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William Guy Banister (March 7, 1901 – June 6, 1964) was an employee of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), an assistant superintendent of the New Orleans Police Department, and a private investigator.
One of Oliver Stone's key conspirators in JFK is New Orleans private investigator and former FBI agent Guy Banister, portrayed by Ed Asner. Banister was working for the CIA, manipulating Lee Harvey Oswald for the conspirators, (1) and also had ties to the Office of Naval Intelligence (ONI). (2)
Guy Banister, a former FBI agent and New Orleans police official, appears frequently in accounts of Jim Garrison's investigation of President John F. Kennedy's...
Guy Banister and David Ferrie. James Ellroy couldn’t invent a better henchmen duo: a G-man and an eccentric anti-Castroite turned New Orleans crime-boss consigliere who wore a bad wig and...
Guy Banister, a former FBI official and onetime assistant superintendent of the New Orleans police department, had had a 'stormy' career, according to the New Orleans States-Item of May 5, 1967. After he had left police work officially, if not earlier, Banister was active for years as a top U.S. intelligence agent in the South and in Latin America.
In Oliver Stone's JFK, one of the most crucial witnesses is Jack S. Martin (portrayed by Jack Lemmon), the private investigator pistol-whipped by Guy Banister (Ed Asner) the evening of November 22, 1963.
Last time on Solving JFK, we got to know the basics about Guy Banister, a former FBI Agent and extreme anti-communist, who had a detective agency in New Orleans, but didn’t take standard detective agency work. Instead, Banister appeared to be wrapped up in anti-Castro activities.
Students of the JFK assassination are well aware of the name Guy Banister. In September 1963, Lee Harvey Oswald spent time in New Orleans, his hometown, and while he was there, he rubbed shoulders …
Guy Banister, the FBI, New Orleans and the JFK Assassination — Reynolds, Robert Grey, — I believe that the successful plot to murder President John F. Kennedy took shape in New Orleans during the summer of 1963.
For one thing, Guy Banister was one of the most militant right–wing anti–Communists in New Orleans. He was a former FBI official and his headquarters at 544 Camp Street was a clearinghouse for Cuban exile and paramilitary right–wing activities.