Aaron Russo was born into a Sephardic Jewish family in Brooklyn, New York, USA on February 14, 1943. Before moving to New York, his family lived in Spain, Italy, and Greece. Russo was raised on Long Island. During his early years, Aaron Russo worked for his family's undergarment business, and while in high school, promoted Rock and Roll concerts at local theaters. At the age of 24, he opened his own nightclub. #Early_Life Everette Howard Hunt, Jr. (October 9, 1918 January 23, 2007) was an American author and intelligence officer. He worked for the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and later the White House under President Richard Nixon. Hunt was born in Hamburg, New York, United States, of English and Welsh descent.[2][3] An alumnus of Nichols School in Buffalo, New York and a 1940 graduate of Brown University, Hunt during World War II served in the U.S. Navy on the destroyer USS Mayo, United States Army Air Forces, and finally, the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) which he worked for in China.[1] During and after the war, he also wrote several novels under his own name — East of Farewell (1942), Limit of Darkness (1944), Stranger in Town (1947), Bimini Run (1949) (with a hero named “Hank Sturgis“), and The Violent Ones (1950) — and, more famously, several spy and hardboiled novels under an array of pseudonyms, including Robert Dietrich, Gordon Davis and David St. John. Hunt won a Guggenheim Fellowship for his writing in 1946. In 2007 Hunt's son released an audio tape of his father naming President Lyndon B. Johnson and others as the orchestrators of the John F. Kennedy assassination.[1] #Early_life_and_career In the documentary JFK II, E. Howard Hunt is fingered as one of JFK's November 22, 1963 assassins, according to an article in Spotlight magazine.
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