According to
Jim Marrs,
William Torbitt, writer of the underground manuscript known as the
Torbitt Document, or
Nomenclature of an Assassination Cabal, was an
attorney in Waco, Texas, whose real name was David Copeland and who,
Marrs claims, told him in an interview that the information written
under the alias had been given him by two federal employees, one with
the Secret Service and the other with the FBI. We have also heard that Copeland was a prosecutor of criminals
and may have learned details from men he represented who were connected
to organized crime or hired as assassins. But was all this cover to
protect the real source of the information?
The following research into who David Copeland, alias William Torbitt, was shows us that:
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| B-24 Bomber made in Fort Worth, TX |
- His first wife
designed B-24 bombers in Fort Worth for Convair. It was this very plant
where she worked during World War II, while she was married to
Copeland, where Max Clark headed the security at the time he told George
De Mohrenschildt that returned defector, Lee Harvey Oswald, was a "harmless lunatic."
- After his divorce from Wife No. 1, she married a former prisoner of war who had been held in Germany before war's end and then advanced to the rank of Lt. Col. in the Air Force during the cold war, stationed in German outposts.
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| Fashion Logo |
- Wife No. 2 became a fashion designer/manufacturer for children's apparel and was often in Dallas, the center of the Texas cotton textile mart, which employed a number of "White Russians" known to have been somehow connected, if only collaterally, with the Kennedy assassination--people who were discussed in the Torbitt Document.
The curious reader wants to know:
David Copeland's Family
David
Goddard Copeland died in 1981. We can piece together his life from
various studies and notices that appear online. His parents
James P. Copeland and Sarah "Sallie" Goddard married in 1909 in Belfalls, a small farming community in Falls County, east of Temple, Texas. He died
in 1967 in Kerrville, Texas, not far from LBJ's ranch in Johnson City.
Sallie had been born in 1886 in Bosque County near Waco and was the
youngest daughter of
Dr. Andrew Goddard, from Chattanooga, Tenn., who came to Texas after being a prisoner during the Civil war.
In Alabama he married Nancy Parker and brought her to Cedar Bayou, Texas near present-day Baytown, where he taught school. Together they reared fifteen children. After two of their children died from whooping cough, the Goddards relocated to the Bosque River area west of Waco. In 1880 Dr. Goddard was elected president of the Sunday School Institute of Waco Association, and according to the 1897
history of that organization, he and his wife were
"members of Dr. [B. H.] Carroll's church. Their residence is No. 1904 South Seventh street."
Dr.
Goddard was a medical doctor but in later years wrote an astronomy
column for the newspaper in Waco. He also was county surveyor, in which
he was succeeded by his son Joe Goddard.
A
Waco news article in 1955 reported on a family reunion held at the
home of David Copeland's mother -- 425 University Avenue--close to the
Baylor campus. David, already an attorney, and his wife Jayne then
lived at 4217 Erath in Waco, some miles west of Baylor. David was a
criminal defense attorney whose name sometimes appeared in the Waco
paper owned by LBJ's close supporter Charles Marsh. She and the Goddard
family were also the
subject of a feature article written by Helen Baldwin that appeared in 1964.
Copeland
was campaign manager for Democratic nominee for state attorney
general, Tom Moore from Waco, who was supported by former U.S. Senator
Tom Connally, also from Waco.

When
Copeland ran for a place on the Texas Supreme Court in 1964, he was
described as "a former Waco assistant district attorney, campaigner for
Houston attorney Don Yarborough and a member of the Texas Association
of Plaintiffs Attorneys." Four years later he opposed the favorite-son
status of former governor John Connally, while leading the Texas
campaign of anti-war candidate Eugene McCarthy.
David Copeland's First Wife, Aline
Copeland was married first to
Aline Buehrer, who died in 2010:
Aline Doris Campbell August 26, 1920 - October 22, 2010 Aline Doris
Campbell of Alamo, formerly of Waco, passed away Friday, October 22,
2010 at St. Catherine Center. Graveside services will be 11:00 a.m, Nov.
13, at Waco Memorial Park. Aline was born August 26, 1920 in Brenham,
Texas, the only child of Fred and Flora Buehrer. She graduated from
Brenham High School in 1938. She attended Baylor University and
graduated in 1942 with a Bachelor of Music Degree. To support the War
effort, she worked in the design department of Consolidated Aircraft in
Fort Worth, which produced the B-24 bombers. Following the war, she was a
Registered Music Therapist at the VA Regional Medical Center in Waco
and Director of Morale, Welfare and Recreation programs at James
Connally AFB, Waco. She was preceded in death by her parents, Fred and
Flora Buehrer of Brenham; her beloved son, David G. (Kippie) Copeland,
Jr.; her late husband, Lawson D. Campbell; and her first husband, David
G. Copeland. She is survived by her first cousin, Franklin Raschke and
wife, Genevieve, of San Antonio; niece, Kathy Copeland Papke of Austin;
nephew, Randy Copeland of Houston; cousin, John Toland and wife,
Deborah, of Tucson, AZ; cousin, Nancy Fontaine Woods of Braddford,
England; and cousin, John Barrett of Austin. Memorials may be made to
the Wounded Warriors Project.
Aline's grandfathers were Swiss and German, though both men married Americans.
The history of the
Consolidated Aircraft plant is described as follows:
Air Force Plant 4 was opened in 1941. It was operated by the Fort
Worth Division
of Consolidated Aircraft Company (later Convair) for assembly of the
B-24 bomber. In 1942, during World War II, Air Force Plant 4 became
operational when Consolidated Aircraft began manufacturing the B-24
Liberator bomber. Over 3,000 B-24s were constructed in the first 2 years
of operation. Later, the plant
produced 124 B-32s, the successor to the B-24. Later, the plant began
producing aircraft components, as well as delivering completed aircraft.
Many innovative aircraft were produced at AFP 4, including the
first intercontinental bomber (B-361, the first supersonic bomber
(B-58), and the first swing-wing aircraft (F-111). In 1953, General
Dynamics took over operation of the manufacturing facility. Since then,
Air Force Plant 4 has produced the B-36, B-58, F-111 and F-16 aircraft.
Between 1947 and 1954, 383 B-36s were built, and afterwards the
Mach-2-capable B-58. By 1966, the plant had expanded to 4.7 million
square feet, and by 1968 it had expanded further to 6.5 million square
feet, to accommodate production of the F-111.
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| B-24 Bomber plant in Fort Worth |
After Aline and David Copeland divorced, she married Lawson D. Campbell,
who would retire from the Air Force as a lieutenant
colonel and, upon his death in 2008, be buried at
Fort Sam Houston National Cemetery, San Antonio. He enlisted in the Air Force in 1942 and was held as a prisoner of war
in Germany beginning in 1944 for almost a year.
He was an Air Force communications officer, whose photo and one of his German wife, Erika Horn, are shown at a website dedicated to the 601st-615th Aircraft Warning Battalion
stationed in Germany during the 1950's:
Captain Campbell, our next Communications Officer, was also revered
by many who worked for him. At the 601st reunions there are always stories
told about how he handled various situations. He was humorous, but could
also be very firm. Arthur Harman wrote:
"...a snapshot taken of, then, Major Lawson D. Campbell, around 1959
or, perhaps, 1960-61. It was taken in his office at Ramstein Germany where
he commanded the local communications organization and facilities." ...
Erika Horn. Later Erika Campbell
Long-time German National employee. Officially, a civilian
clerk/typist Unofficially, the Commander's secretary
Wrote and spoke idiomatically perfect American English with no trace
of a German or British accent
Married Capt. Lawson Campbell, 610st [sic] Communications Officer, in Kassel
in 1959 and went to live with him in the States.
Jayne Copeland--David's Second Wife
Copeland's
second wife, Jayne Baker Copeland, would get into the news when she
started her own clothing manufacturing company several years before
Kennedy's assassination.

David and Jayne Copeland divorced in 1978, three years before he died. In 1981 Jayne married
Milton Douglas Solomon. Both are now deceased. According to Milton's obituary, he was
"General Manager for Barber Boats and Motors in
Dallas, Texas. Following a long and successful tenure at Barber Boats, Milton
retired with his wife, Jayne Baker Solomon, to the city of his birth and his
circle of cherished friends."
The obituary for Jane's mother, Lillie Baker, stated:
"She partnered with her daughter and only child Jayne in the design and
manufacturing of the Jayne Copeland line of children’s wear. She later
opened and operated Lillie’s Bridal and Formals on South 8th Street
where customers fondly regarded her as 'Miss Lillie.' She retired at
age 80 after 25 years in the bridal business to devote her time to her
great-grandchildren. Lillie is survived by her daughter Jayne
Solomon and son-in-law Milton Solomon, grandchildren Kevin Copeland,
Michael Copeland and Kasey Frederick. She leaves four adored
great-grandchildren: Jessica Steakley, David Copeland, Kristin Copeland
and Max Pfeiffer-Frederick, as well as brothers Robert, Eldridge, and
Charles Blain."
From this
information about Lillie's surviving siblings we learn that Lillie Mae
Blain had married William Judson Baker, who died in 1950. Jayne's name
was listed in Texas birth records as Evelyn Jane Baker. In 1930 the Waco
directory listed W. Judson Baker and wife Lillie living with his
parents, two brothers and two sisters, at 1912 Franklin Avenue. Judson
and Lillie worked at an ice cream stand, which sold "frozen custard."
Four years later the couple lived at 1000 S. 8th Street, and his parents
lived on the same street a few blocks to the east, an address now
within the Baylor campus. Before his in 1950 at age 40, Jayne's father,
Judson Baker, was a used car dealer in Waco who had started a Christmas
"fling," in 1946 by throwing dimes off the roof of his office to the
scores of children below. In 1947 he switched to pennies, throwing
40,000 off his roof.
The Jayne Copeland line of clothing continues, as does the widespread fame of
William Torbitt's document.