Judith Exner

Birthday January 11, 1934

Birth Sign Capricorn

Birthplace Fort Lee, New Jersey, U.S.

DEATH DATE 1999-9-24, Duarte, California, U.S. (65 years old)

Nationality United States

#26091 Most Popular

1934

Judith Exner (January 11, 1934 – September 24, 1999) was an American woman who claimed to be the mistress of U.S. president John F. Kennedy and Mafia leaders Sam Giancana and John Roselli.

She was also known as Judith Campbell Exner, and Judith Campbell.

She was born Judith Eileen Katherine Immoor in Fort Lee, New Jersey; Her parents were Frederick Immoor, an architect of German descent, and Katherine (née Shea), who was of Irish descent.

When she was a child, her family moved to the Los Angeles area, where she grew up in Pacific Palisades.

After her mother nearly died in an auto accident, Judith withdrew from school at the age of 14 and was tutored at home.

Her older sister Jacqueline later became an actress and took the professional name Susan Morrow.

1941

These affairs included one with Danish journalist Inga Arvad between late 1941 and early 1942.

Exner also said that Kennedy brought prostitutes to the White House swimming pool.

Journalists and some historians have also alleged that Kennedy had a number of affairs, citing a memo by FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover as part of the evidence.

Exner said that President Kennedy's Special Assistant David Powers helped set up encounters with President Kennedy.

Powers later stated that Kennedy never had an affair with Exner.

1952

In 1952, at the age of 18, Judith married actor William Campbell; they divorced in 1958.

1960

She claimed to have had an 18-month relationship with then-Senator John F. Kennedy, beginning in 1960, which continued after he was elected President of the United States.

She had a son, David Bohrer, from a later relationship.

According to Michael O'Brien of the Washington Monthly, on February 7, 1960, Frank Sinatra and Campbell were in Las Vegas, where Sinatra introduced her to John F. Kennedy, then a senator from Massachusetts and presidential candidate.

A few months later in 1960, Sinatra introduced Campbell to "Sam Flood," who was actually Sam Giancana, the leading figure in the Chicago Mafia.

She also became involved with him and knew his associate John Roselli.

She said Kennedy had asked her to contact Giancana, and she helped set up a meeting between them during the 1960 presidential election.

For about 18 months in 1960–61, "Exner claimed she served as the president's link with the Mob. She crisscrossed the nation carrying envelopes between the president and Giancana, and arranged about 10 meetings between the two."

She later claimed these messages concerned plans to assassinate the Cuban president Fidel Castro.

1962

She claimed to Smith to have terminated a pregnancy resulting from a last encounter in 1962 with Kennedy.

She said that she had carried payoffs from California defense contractors to the Kennedys, including Robert F. Kennedy.

A witness of Hersh's who appeared to support Exner's story of carrying money to Giancana later dropped his story.

1975

In 1975, Campbell married again, to Dan Exner, a golfer.

Exner received national media attention when she testified in 1975 before the Church Committee investigating CIA assassination attempts on Fidel Castro.

Roselli testified to the committee about Mafia involvement in the CIA attempt on Castro's life.

When the Church Committee report was released in December 1975, it said that a "close friend" of President Kennedy had also been a close friend of mobsters John Roselli and Sam Giancana." Campbell's identity as the close friend was leaked to The Washington Post, which publicized it. William Safire in The New York Times also published it. The Committee had sent Exner a subpoena to make her testify. By then, married to Dan Exner, Judith Exner called a press conference that month and denied any knowledge of Mafia involvement with Kennedy.

1977

In her 1977 memoir, she said that she became one of JFK's mistresses for a period of about two years, frequently visiting him in the White House after he was elected president.

Her account was supported by phone records and other documentation, although Kennedy staff and supporters attacked her veracity when she published her memoir.

In 1977, Exner published Judith Exner: My Story.

In her memoir, she said that her relationship with Kennedy was entirely personal.

She also said that Frank Sinatra later introduced her to Sam Giancana, with whom she also became intimate.

She said that Giancana never asked her for any information related to Kennedy.

She also said that John Roselli was her friend.

Aside from her own alleged affair with JFK, Exner claimed to have knowledge of other women who had affairs with Kennedy.

1988

They separated in 1988.

In a 1988 interview with Kitty Kelley of People magazine, Exner told a very different story about Giancana and Kennedy.

She said that she had lied to the Church Committee and in her memoir out of fear of Mafia retaliation.

1997

In 1997, Exner alleged more details and changed her story, in separate interviews with Liz Smith of Vanity Fair and Seymour Hersh.

She said Kennedy told her of his plans related to Cuba, and used her to carry money to Giancana, as well as to arrange numerous meetings between him, Giancana and Roselli.