The Assassination of Representative Leo J. Ryan
and the Jonestown, Guyana Tragedy
May 15, 1979
THE ASSASSINATION
OF REPRESENTATIVE
LEO J. RYAN AND THE JONESTOWN,
GUYANA TRAGEDY
REPORT OF A
STAFF INVESTIGATIVE GROUP
TO THE COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN AFFAIRS
U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
MAY 15, 1979
FOREWORD
This investigative factfinding report has been submitted to the Committee on
Foreign Affairs by the Staff Investigative Group. Per my directives and
pursuant to the committee's investigative authority, the Staff Group conducted
a comprehensive inquiry into the international relations aspects of the
activities of the People's Temple, the tragic events that led to the murder of
Representative Leo J. Ryan and other members of his party, and the mass suicide/murder
of the followers of People's Temple that occurred in Jonestown, Guyana on
November 18, 1978.
The findings and recommendations in this report are those of the Staff
Investigative Group and do not necessarily reflect the views of the membership
of the Committee on Foreign Affairs.
Clement J. Zablocki, Chairman.
INTRODUCTION
A. Ryan Trip Background
The chain of events which led to Representative Leo J. Ryan's death in
Guyana on November 18, 1978 began 1 year earlier almost exactly to the date. The
spark that ignited his interest was a San Francisco Examiner article of
November 13, 1977, involving an old friend and constituent, Mr. Sam Houston of
San Bruno, Calif. Headlined "Scared Too Long," the story recounted
the death of Sam Houston's son, Bob, beneath the wheels of a train on October
5, 1976, 1 day after he had announced his decision to leave the People's
Temple. The article explained that Mr. Houston was "speaking out"
because he was outraged by the way the Temple had treated his son, about whose
"accidental" death he had lingering doubts. He was also speaking out
because his two granddaughters, who were sent to New York on a
"vacation," ended up at the People's Temple agricultural mission in
Jonestown, Guyana-never to return. Sam Houston was also described as speaking
out because he didn't have much time left. Doctors would be removing his
cancer-choked voice box within a few days. Finally, Sam Houston said he was
speaking out because he was "tired of being scared."
Representative Ryan read that story and soon thereafter took the initiative
to contact the Houstons and visited their home. Reinforced by the fact that a
relative had been involved in an unusual church group, Mr. Ryan decided at that
time that the matter needed to be looked into.
Over the next 6 to 8 months several other developments took place which
increased his interest in the activities of the People's Temple. One was
another San Francisco newspaper story recounting the defection from People's
Temple of Debbie Blakey, including excerpts from her sworn affidavit of June
15, 1978, noting mass suicide rehearsals at Jonestown. Further impetus came in
letters he received from concerned relatives of People's Temple members, some
of whom were constituents, asking his assistance and alleging, among other
things, social security irregularities, human rights violations, and that their
loved ones were being held in Jonestown against their will. He subsequently met
with a group of these concerned relatives in August 1978. As his interest in People's
Temple became more widely known, he also began receiving extensive mail and
petitions favorable to People's Temple. He also hired a young California
attorney to interview former People's Temple members and concerned relatives.
His specific instruction was to look for possible violations of Federal and
California State laws.
The cumulative effect of this effort undertaken by Representative Ryan led
him to request a meeting on September 15, 1978, with Viron P. Vaky, Assistant
Secretary, Bureau of Inter-American Affairs, U.S. Department of State, and
other State Department officials. What he had earlier considered merely the
"possibility" of going to Guyana appears to have become firm in his
mind at that meeting. On October 4, 1978, he requested House Foreign Affairs
Committee Chairman Clement J. Zablocki's permission to go to Guyana. He
explained his interest in part stemmed from his membership on this committee's
Sub-committee on International Operations, as a result of which he had become
increasingly aware "of the problems related to protecting the lives and
property of U.S. citizens abroad." A key paragraph in his letter stated:
It has come to my attention that a community of some
1,400 Americans are presently living in Guyana under somewhat bizarre
conditions. There is conflicting information regarding whether or not the U.S.
citizens are being held there against their will. If you agree, I would like to
travel to Guyana during the week of November 12-18 to review the situation
first-hand.
In response to Chairman Zablocki's request, and in compliance with committee
travel guidelines, Mr. Ryan subsequently attempted to interest other committee
members in accompanying him. Although Hon. Edward J. Derwinski was originally
scheduled to do so, he subsequently had to cancel those plans because of
unavoidable conflicts in his schedule.
Prior to his departure for Guyana on November 14, Mr. Ryan and members of
his staff and this committee's staff received briefings and met with State
Department officials on October 2, 25, and November 9 and 13. Chief among the
topics discussed in those briefings was the Privacy act because both the
Embassy and the State Department were highly sensitized by legal actions taken
under this statute by the People's Temple and because some 1,000 Americans
living in Jonestown were protected by the provisions of this act. Logistical
problems in getting to Jonestown and other related matters were also reviewed.
During approximately this same period the media became aware of Mr. Ryan's
trip as did members of the Concerned Relatives of People's Temple members in
San Francisco. By the time he departed for Guyana on November 14, the group of
newspaper and television media accompanying him grew to 9 and the Concerned
Relatives delegation numbered 18. In this connection, it is important to note
that neither the media nor Concerned Relatives were a part of Mr. Ryan's
official Codel.1
Rather, the official party was made up of Mr. Ryan, Mr. James Schollaert, staff
consultant for the House Foreign Affairs Committee; and Miss Jackie Speier, of
Mr. Ryan's personal staff and whose expenses were not paid for by the U.S.
Government.
On November 1, Mr. Ryan sent a telegraph to Jim Jones outining his plans and
expressing his desire to visit Jonestown. On that same date, Mr. Ryan wrote to
Hon. John Burke, U.S. Ambassador to Guyana, informing the Ambassador of his
proposed date of arrival in Georgetown (November 14), and relaying to
Ambassador Burke the text of his telegram to Jones. On November 5 the U.S.
Embassy advised Mr. Ryan that the People's Temple wanted Mr. Ryan to work with
People's Temple legal counsel, Mark Lane, on the appropriate arrangements for
the Ryan Codel to visit Jonestown.
The Embassy also relayed to Mr. Ryan that the People's Temple had informed
an Embassy official that Mr. Ryan could visit Jonestown provided: (1) that the
Codel was "balanced"; (2) that there would be no media coverage
associated with the visit; and (3) that Mr. Lane be present during the visit.
Attempts by Mr Schollaert to negotiate these matters with Mr. Lane on
Representative Ryan's behalf were unproductive.
On November 6, Mr. Lane wrote a letter to Mr. Ryan outlining logistical
difficulties if the Ryan Codel decided to visit Jonestown and informing Ryan
that Lane would be unable to be in Jonestown at the time Ryan wished to visit
the settlement. Lane also made inferences in the letter to a
"witchhunt" against the People's Temple by the U.S. Government. On
November 10, Mr. Ryan responded to Lane's letter, expressing regret at Lane's
remarks about the Codel's motives and informing him that despite Lane's
scheduling conflicts, the Codel planned to leave for Guyana on November 14.
Further negotiations between Representative Ryan and Messrs. Lane and Charles
Garry, also legal counsel to the People's Temple, resumed in Georgetown after
the Codel's arrival.
B. Summary of Events of November 14-19, 1978
The Ryan Codel, together with its unofficial contingent of media and
Concerned Relatives, arrived in Georgetown, Guyana at approximately midnight
November 14. The official Codel group proceeded into Georgetown where Mr. Ryan
was a house guest of U.S. Ambassador John Burke and Miss Speier and Mr. Schollaert
registered at the Pegasus Hotel. Despite confirmed reservations, the Concerned
Relatives group was unable to obtain rooms at the same hotel and spent the
night in the lobby. With one exception, the media group cleared customs and
took rooms at the Pegasus Hotel. The exception, Mr. Ron Javers of the San
Francisco Chronicle, was detained overnight at the airport because he lacked an
entry visa and for what was later described as on orders from "higher
ups."
Over the next 2 1/2 days the following incidents took place:
- With the assistance of
Embassy personnel, Mr. Javers was eventually allowed to enter, other
members of the media group were summoned to the Ministry of Immigration,
and attempts were made to shorten their visas from 5 to 1 day;
- Representative Ryan, Miss
Speier, and Mr. Schollaert received briefings from members of the U.S.
Embassy team;
- Mr. Ryan paid a courtesy call
on Guyanese Foreign Minister Rashleigh Jackson to discuss United
States-Guyanese bilateral relations;
- Mr. Ryan arranged a meeting
between Ambassador Burke and the Concerned Relatives group at which they
voiced their concerns and allegations regarding their relatives in
Jonestown;
- Mr. Ryan made an unannounced
visit to the People's Temple Headquarters in Georgetown at 41 Lamaha
Gardens; Mr. Charles Krause of the Washington Post accompanied Mr. Ryan
but did not enter the headquarters;
- Some of the Concerned
Relatives groups also attempted to talk with People's Temple
representatives at the Lamaha Gardens People's Temple facility but were
generally unsuccessful;
- Because negotiations between
Representative Ryan and Messrs. Lane and Garry were still unresolved, the
plane originally chartered to go to Jonestown on Thursday, November 16,
was rescheduled for Friday, November 17;
- By late Friday morning Mr.
Ryan advised Messrs. Lane and Garry that he was leaving for Jonestown at
2:30 p.m. regardless of Jones' willingness to allow the Ryan party to
visit Jonestown. He also assured Lane and Garry of two seats on the plane
if they decided to accompany him;
- Mr. Ryan, Miss Speier, Deputy
Chief of Mission Richard Dwyer, Messrs. Lane and Garry, all nine media
representatives, four individuals representing the Concerned Relatives
group, and Mr. Neville Annibourne, a Guyanese Information Officer, left
for Jonestown at approximately 2:30 p.m., Friday, November 17, Guyana time
(12:30 p.m., e.s.t., Washington, D.C.).
On the group's arrival at the Port Kaituma airstrip the chronology of events
which ensued was as follows:
- They were met initially by a
Corporal Rudder, described as a Guyanese Regional Official assigned to the
Northwest territory. He advised them that he had orders "from
Jonestown" not to allow anyone off the plane except Messrs. Lane and
Garry. Representatives of the Jonestown People's Temple facility also at
the airstrip met privately with Lane and Garry and it was eventually
decided that only they together with Mr. Ryan, Miss Speier, Mr. Dwyer, and
Mr. Annibourne could proceed into Jonestown;
- Mr. Ryan eventually obtained
Mr. Jones' approval for the media group and Concerned Relatives to enter
Jonestown and the People's Temple truck was sent back to Port Kaituma to
transport them. They arrived in Jonestown after dark. Only Mr. Gordon
Lindsay, a former free-lance reporter for the National Enquirer, and on
this trip, working as a consultant to NBC, was denied entry. A previous
unpublished story by Mr. Lindsay critical of People's Temple had incurred
Jim Jones' wrath and accounted for the refusal to allow him into
Jonestown. Mr. Lindsay thereupon immediately returned with the plane to
Georgetown;
- Dinner was served to the
entire delegation and they viewed a musical presentation by People's
Temple members. Throughout this period the reporters were casually
interviewing Mr. Jones; Mr. Ryan and Miss Speier were contacting and
talking to People's Temple members whose names had been provided them by
relatives in the United States. Although the evening was generally
informal and casual, the emotional atmoshere was described as at a
"fever pitch." At one point, Mr. Ryan addressed the assembled
People's Temple audience of approximately 900 and received an extended,
standing ovation in responce to his comment that "for some of you,
for a lot of you that I talked to, Jonestown is the best thing that ever
happened to you in your lives";
- Sometime during the evening,
a People's Temple member passed a note to NBC Reporter Don Harris
indicating the individual's desire to leave Jonestown. Harris hid the note
and later showed it to Mr. Ryan. That same evening another People's Temple
member made a similar verbal request of DCM Dwyer to leave
"immediately," which he passed on to Mr. Ryan;
- At approximately 11 p.m. the
media group and Concerned Relatives were returned to Port Kaituma for
makeshift accomodations after Jim Jones refused to allow them to spend the
night in Jonestown. Only Ryan, Speier, Dwyer, Annibourne, Garry, and Lane
stayed in Jonestown the night of Friday, November 17;
- Following their arrival in
Port Kaituma, three members of the media were approached by local
Guyanese, including one reported to be a local police official. The
Guyanese related stories of alleged beatings at Jonestown, complained that
local Guyanese officials were denied entry to and had no authority in
Jonestown, and described a "torture hole" in the compound.
On Saturday, November 18, the following chronological order of events took
place:
- Following breakfast, Ryan,
Speier, and Dwyer continued their round of interviews with People's Temple
members in the process of which they were approached by a People's Temple
member who indicated to them secretly that she and her family wished to
leave Jonestown;
- The media group and Concerned
Relatives returned to Jonestown from Port Kaituma aboard the People's
Temple truck at approximately 11 a.m., several hours later than the
schedule promised by Mr. Jones on Friday night. The media began to seek
access to various Jonestown facilities. They also continued their
interviews of Jim Jones and People's Temple individuals;
- At about 3 or 3:30 p.m. a
total of some 15 People's Temple members who had indicated their desire to
leave boarded the truck for return to the Port Kaituma airstrip. Only Mr.
Ryan and People's Temple lawyers Lane and Garry planned to remain in
Jonestown 1 more night. It was at this point that an unsuccessful knife
attack was made on Mr. Ryan's life. The attacker, identified as Don Sly,
was fended off by Mr. Lane and others but cut himself in the process and
Mr. Ryan's clothes were spattered with blood. After receiving Mr. Jones'
assurance that the incident would be reported to local police, Mr. Ryan
assured Jones that the attack would not substantially influence his
overall impression of People's Temple. Despite the attack, Mr. Ryan
reportedly planned to remain in Jonestown and eventually left only after
virtually being ordered to do so by DCM Dwyer. In turn, Mr. Dwyer planned
to return to Jonestown later in an effort to resolve a dispute between a
family who was split on the question of leaving Jonestown;
- Because of the unanticipated
large number of defectors, an unexpected request was made to the Embassy
in Georgetown at about noon Saturday for a second plane. A considerable
effort was required by Embassy personnel to obtain the aircraft on such
short notice;
- The entire group, including
the defectors, arrived at the Port Kaituma airstrip between 4:30 and 4:45
p.m. The planes, which were scheduled to be there on the group's arrival,
did not arrive until approximately 5:10 p.m. A six-passenger Cessna was
loaded and had taxied to the far end of the airstrip when one of the
passengers in that plane, Larry Layton, a self-styled
"defector," opened fire on its passengers. At approximately the
same time, a People's Temple tractor and trailer which had arrived at the
airstrip shortly before, was positioned near the twin-engine Otter
aircraft onto which some had already boarded. The trailer occupants waved
off local Guyanese who had gathered about and opened fire on the Ryan
party. Mr. Ryan, three members of the media, and one of the defectors were
killed; Miss Speier and nine others were wounded-five seriously. According
to information received by the Staff Investigative Group, the shooting
started at 5:20 p.m. (3:20 p.m. Washington time) and lasted about 4 to 5
minutes. The larger aircraft was disabled but the smaller Cessna took off
in the ensuing confusion. The attackers left the airstrip and the
survivors sought various cover and protection through the night under the
direction of DCM Dwyer;
- The evidence the Staff
Investigative Group has indicates that very shortly after the Ryan group
left Jonestown, Jones was in a highly agitated state. In an apparent
attempt to calm the situation his wife, Marceline, urged everyone to go to
their cabins to rest. But shortly thereafter everyone was ordered back to
the Pavillion. On the basis of the evidence we estimate that the mass
suicide/murder ritual began at about 5 p.m. on Saturday afternoon, Guyana
time. It ultimately claimed 909 lives, including that of Jim Jones. Word
of the Jonestown deaths reached Port Kaituma about 2 a.m. Sunday morning
with the arrival of two survivors, Stanley Clayton and Odell Rhodes. At
approximately 7:40 p.m., Saturday, Sherwin Harris, a member of the
Concerned Relatives Group, was informed by Guyanese police officials that
his ex-wife Sharon Amos and three of her children were found dead at the
People's Temple headquarters in Georgetown;
- Shortly after takeoff the
Cessna aircraft radioed the Georgetown tower with news of the attack and
Guyanese officials were informed. At about 6 p.m. Saturday, Prime Minister
Forbes Burnham telephoned Ambassador Burke to request that he come
immediately to his residence where he received word of the shooting.
Ambassador Burke returned to the Embassy at 7:55 p.m., dictated a cable to
the State Department which was sent at 8:30 p.m. (6:30p.m., e.s.t.
Washington time). The text of that cable was subsequently read over the
phone to a State Department official in Washington at approximately 8:40
p.m.;
- The first contingent of
Guyanese Army rescue forces arrived in Port Kaituma shortly after dawn
(approximately 6 a.m.) on Sunday, November 19. The complete contingent of
120 soldiers were on the scene 1 hour later. The first Guyanese rescue
aircraft landed at Port Kaituma without medical supplies or personnel at
about 10 a.m. All of the wounded and most of the survivors were airlifted
by Guyanese from Port Kaituma before the end of the day. On arrival in
Georgetown, the wounded were transferred to waiting U.S. Air Force medical
evacuation aircraft.
- Earlier reports of the mass
suicide/murders at Jonestown were confirmed late Sunday morning when
Guyanese Army contingents arrived there.
1. "Codel" is an abbreviation for an official Congressional
Delegation traveling overseas.