Eugene Dinkin
discovered subliminal messages before assassination

Pfc Eugene Din kin was stationed in Met, France in the 599th Ordinance Group. His security clearance allowed him to work in the crypt section of his unit. He had studied psychology at the University of Chicago and some of the things he saw coming though the communications caused him some concern.
There were articles in the Army publication Stars and Stripes that guided readers to see Kennedy as weak and soft on communism. The arrangement of stories and illustrations appeared to lead the reader to believe the president was bad for the country and removing him would be a good idea. He didn't tell his superiors for fear they were involved, but he did tell some of his buddies. It was not long before he was transferred from the crypt section to duties that did not require his level of clearance.
He came to the conclusion the president would be assassinated sometime around November 28, 1963 and that it would be blamed on a communist or a black man. He continued to see other reinforcing information in publications he received.
On October 16, Dinkin wrote a letter to Attorney General Robert Kennedy explaining what he had found, however the letter was intercepted by Jame Angleton.
On October 25th he went to the US Embassy in Luxembourg. Chargé d’Affaires Cunningham refused to see him or review his information but did talk to him on the phone. With nothing accomplished, Dinkin went back to his base in France where he was informed that he would receive a psychological evaluation on November 5.
Because of the he went AWOL to the Geneva Diplomat newspaper and tried unsuccessfully to speak with the editor. He found a Newsweek reporter who was not interested in the information.
On November 6 he went to the press room of the United Nations office in Geneva. He talked to various reporters and one, Alex des Fontaines, a stringer for Time-Life took his information and filed a story- on November 26, 1963.
On November 8 he returned to his base in France and was placed in detention until November 13. At that time he was contacted by a man who identified himself verbally as part of the Defense Department. He expressed interest in Dinkin's findings and asked where his proof was located. Pleased that someone was listening to him he told the man where the documentation was stored. And he never saw the material again.
An internal communication dated November 8 referred to Dinkin and his information. A month after the Warren Commission began their work, he had his mother write to Robert Kennedy because he believed his name would keep it from going through. As it turned out, his letter was answered by Assistant Attorney General Herbert J Miller Jr. It went nowhere. According to James DiEugenio and Lisa Pease, in their book The Assassins, Miller was part of the cover up operation. The response he received was a song and dance about how they had no jurisdiction in the case and he should take it up with the Army.
With the attention Eugene Dinkins was getting and the information about him being passed around, neither the Army, CIA nor the FBI bothered to inform the president.
On December 5, 1963 Eugene Dinkins as admitted to Walter Reed Hospital and subjected to various psychiatric tests and evaluation. The conclusion was that he was psychotic and paranoid. After four months of testing and abuse he was discharged from the Army
He had tried to save the president's life but his warnings fell on the ears of the uninterested or those who had something to hide He could do no more.
The Assassinations: Probe Magazine on JFK, MLK, RFK and Malcolm X
by James DiEugenio, Lisa Pease
"Probing deep into four hidden histories... the material released should dispel any notions of 'lone nuts' or coincidence... These articles cut a clear path through the thick jungle of disinformation that has grown around these events and expose the truly hideous teratomas that thrive and bloom under the canopy of 'national security.'"—New York Press
You can find more information from James DiEugenio here.