Cohn had 2 connections to Jack Ruby in 1963...
'member the 2016 convention? Trump, "the outsider,"
https://www.nytimes.com › 1984/03/06 › transaction-on-...
Mar 6,
1984 — Thomas J. Barrack Jr., who gained an Administration job a few months later, ... In response to questioning from Senator
Howard Metzenbaum, ...
Still owns ranch next door to Reagan's,
Mr. Bolan was, next to Roy M. Cohn, the quieter half of an odd couple at a potent law firm and a major player in Republican politics in New York.
www.nytimes.com
Thomas A. Bolan, who
played the silent partner to the flamboyant Roy M. Cohn in their politically potent law firm for three decades but was a power broker in his own right, died on Friday at his home in Flushing, Queens. He was 92.
...
Mr. Bolan was a founder of the Conservative Party in New York,
a patronage dispenser in the state for President Ronald Reagan, an adviser to Senator Alfonse M. D’Amato and a confidant of William F. Buckley Jr., serving as a board member of his National Review magazine.
Mr. Bolan and Mr. Cohn were an odd couple.
...
After Reagan was elected in 1980, Mr. Bolan headed his transition team in New York and was named a director of the Overseas Private Investment Corporation, the independent federal agency that helps American businesses invest in emerging markets. When Mr. D’Amato won election to the Senate that year, Mr. Bolan was the only aide who accompanied him on his first visit to Washington. He played a prime role in the senator’s recommendations for federal judges.
He represented a range of clients,
including Donald J. Trump, but unlike Mr. Cohn, he shied away from mobsters and even spurned a lunch invitation from one who was Mr. Cohn’s client....
...
In 2005, he pleaded guilty to failing to disclose that the foundation had made false representations to the Mississippi Insurance Department.
When the disciplinary committee of the Appellate Division of State Supreme Court in Manhattan ordered him to explain why he should not be censured, suspended or
disbarred, Mr. Bolan’s response, in character, contrasted strikingly with that of Mr. Cohn when Mr. Cohn was faced with the same situation. ...
Mr. Bolan, who was 81, submitted an affidavit
acknowledging “that he could not successfully defend himself against the charges.”
He politely requested permission to resign..."