"A sniper hears the bullet regardless of the silencer. Mark wanted the silencer removed."
In November of 1962 one hundred and twenty-five men--new recruits barely out of boot camp--from the Army, Navy, and Marines were taken to the U.S. Naval Training center in San Diego. For ten days, each as uninformed as the recruit next to them, they were shuttled to an unnamed facility to undergo psychological profiling under the watch of--what was then called, their instructors. On the eleventh day fifty remained. The 50, given new identities, were flown to North Carolina where they endured physical and mental assessment till thirty remained, then twenty, then ten.
The psychological evaluations the ten were subjected to could only be called torture. The physical torments made boot camp seem like preschool. At the end, six remained. Six men who over the course of the next year would become an elite squad of military snipers. An assassination team with an undisclosed mission--to them.
Mark--eighteen, less than four months in the U.S. Navy--was one of the six chosen to fire three bullets on November 22, 1963. "If Kennedy gets in the way...shoot him." is his confession.
John Gold (1966-Present) was born in Somerville, NJ. For 11 years he served his country honorably, but an unfortunate accident left him permanently disabled. Always a civil servant, John was a police officer, firefighter, and EMT serving his community. In 2001, John was called to the ministry and did personal counseling. In 2014 he graduated from the prestigious Ringling College of Art + Design earning his BFA in filmmaking. Today John lives in Greenville, SC. as a minister, author, and filmmaker.