Creative Speculation
Related: About this forum32 Reasons and Arguments There Was No Conspiracy Behind Oswald Killing Kennedy
Bugliosi's book Reclaiming History can be divided into three parts. The first, "Four Days In November," named after the 1964 documentary film, recounts the timeline of events as can best be determined by all the sources Bugliosi had available to him.
The second part concerned the evidence that Oswald was the person who killed John F. Kennedy. After extensive treatments of various issues, he sums up that evidence with 53 pieces of evidence that together show Oswald's guilt and culpability for killing JFK. He owned and was the sole possessor of both weapons involved in his crimes, the JFK assassination and the murder of Officer Tippit. His actions before and after show his planning and his flight from the JFK assassination. The physical evidence ties him and only him to the crimes. Witnesses saw him in the commission of both crimes. And his lies during interrogation sealed the picture of his guilt.
The third part concerns the various allegations that Oswald was involved in a conspiracy to kill JFK. Again, after going through many issues on the subject, Bugliosi wraps up this final part with a summation of the reasons and arguments showing that Oswald acted alone. Those 32 reasons are what I shall summarize in this thread, each reason getting its own subthread.
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)That's truncated to fit in the title form. Here's the quote from page 1439:
Emphasis is Bugliosi's.
As Bugliosi points out, prosecutors in court must always present direct and substantive evidence of those persons or groups acting in concert to carry out a crime. Otherwise, they are going to lose their case, right? The burden of proof is on those alleging the conspiracy, and for a conviction, they must present solid evidence and make reasonable inferences based on that evidence. Here's the evidence this guy killed the state's witness. Here's the evidence of the hit guy meeting with the boss. Here's the phone calls from a wiretap. Here's the surveillance footage of them together. Here's the path the money takes from the boss to the hit man. Boom, conspiracy.
There is nothing like this in the entire corpus of JFK conspiracy literature. Bugliosi gives an example of what this would look like:
One example of these assumptions is the idea Oswald was an unwitting participant in a conspiracy. Building on this, another assumption is made that Oswald becomes aware of this conspiracy to frame him of the assassination as it is happening, and on this a final assumption that this is why he ran from the Texas School Book Depository. Where is any evidence to support any of these assumptions? There is none. The assumptions are taken as givens and then the evidence that does exist is laboriously fitted into and around these assumptions, never allowed to be questioned or falsified. It's as painful to watch sometimes as the efforts of creationists who work to preserve the validity of their peculiar creation myths as science.
Of course, absence of evidence is not evidence of absence. But after 50 years of painstaking examination of the minutia of this case, there still is no credible evidence of any conspiracy? No one on the conspiracy side can manage to come up with a viable theory that satisfies most of the conspiracy advocates at all, much less us "lone gunman" advocates. And as the other reasons and arguments and evidence here will show, there is plenty of evidence that there is no conspiracy.
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)Bugliosi mentions this quickly and moves on. This is what I think he means by this:
This argument is in addition to no evidence of these groups' involvement. There was simply too much that could go wrong and too much to lose by any of the usual suspects mentioned by JFK conspiracy theorists. What level of assurance of success could have been had to proceed with such an outlandish plot (to kill Kennedy and frame Oswald)? What level of assurance would you require? Such a plan could only have been seen as "unlikely and far-fetched."
Ask yourself, seriously, what would it take for you to clear the hurdle to have become part of any such plot? Now think of the institutional hurdles that any such suspect organization would have to overcome on top of persuading individual members of the conspiracy. Every group ever mentioned as suspects would have such inhibitions, such risk aversion. This isn't some lout muscling in on your territory. This is the President of the United States. This is precisely why only one President out of four has ever been assassinated by a conspiracy - and those conspirators did not recognize Lincoln as their president.
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)The conspiracy advocates have minutely examined all the most promising groups to have been a part of a conspiracy, and still no credible evidence has been presented against any of them. Who else is left? The Girl Scouts? Any other group of people or institutions will only be even more remote than the ones already posited.
We have the suspects gathered. There can be none other within the realm of plausibility. And yet the credible evidence only points to one person: Lee Harvey Oswald in the TSBD sixth floor window with his Mannlicher-Carcano rifle.
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)I report this knowing what will be said: Tuskegee. The Manhattan Project. Engima. Jimmy Hoffa.
The list of conspiracies that remained secret for extended periods of time, and may yet be secret is long. But the list of conspiracies that unravel upon the commission of the crime is even longer. Once the atom bomb exploded, the Manhattan Project's secrecy had a short shelf life, for example. And a conspiracy holding up against dedicated investigation is even more unlikely.
Yet for the 50 years JFK's assassination has been unceasingly investigated by anyone with a mind to do so, no credible evidence of anyone other than Oswald committing the crime has been unearthed. No credible confessions. Nothing has been achieved but the support of a vague, unsupported doubt. No whistleblowers. No peripheral players cashing in on Oprah.
Yes, conspiracies have held. But the experience of humanity has been that on the whole, conspiracies break loose. Credibility is not strained by the conspiracy being exposed, but in the conspiracy holding.
And so the fourth argument against conspiracy in the JFK assassination is the implausibility of such a conspiracy secret.
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)I've mentioned this before: On recognizing JFK would be riding below the TSBD windows that day, Oswald only had to get his rifle to the TSBD and shoot the President. And even this simple plot is full of complexity and what ifs.
But a plot to assassinate Kennedy AND frame Oswald increases the complexity exponentially. Add to this the general incompetence level of any government or institutional endeavor - the Challenger disaster is cited by Bugliosi, as is the long career of Aldrich Ames.
Again, which is more probable here? That a flawless conspiracy to assassinate the President and frame Oswald went off without a hitch by an untold number of necessary conspirators, or that Oswald alone shot the President?
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)Oswald couldn't have been part of any conspiracy before October 1, 1963. At that point, he was still trying desperately to get into Cuba via the Cuban embassy in Mexico City. If he'd succeeded, he couldn't have been in Dallas to assassinate Kennedy. In fact, JFK's trip to Dallas was announced on September 26, 1963, when Oswald was on a bus to Mexico City.
Kennedy's route past the TSBD wasn't determined until November 18, and it was announced in the Dallas Morning News the next day. So Oswald getting a job at the TSBD October 15 had nothing to do with a conspiracy. In fact, says Bugliosi, "any conspiracy involving Oswald as the hit man would have had to be hatched no earlier than November 19, just three days before Kennedy's death."
Is there anyone who claims to believe the CIA, or the mob, or the anti-Castro Cubans, or whoever recruited Oswald to kill Kennedy three days before the assassination? That's the only time they could have done it.
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)Oswald was taking driving lessons from Ruth Paine and had applied for a learner's permit November 16. Is this the act of a man who knows he'll be leaving almost all his cash and his wedding ring for his wife on the morning of the assassination? This "speaks loudly for the proposition that Oswald's intent to murder the president was formed somewhat on the spur of the moment not long before the day of..."
Oswald rented a post office box at the Terminal Annex near the TSBD for two months on November 1. Oswald was notorious for being tightfisted with money and could not afford to rent an apartment for he and his family to live together. It strains credibility for Oswald to have spent cash on a second month he would not have used, had he known he was part of an assassination conspiracy.
Other things Bugliosi lists: joining a local chapter of the ACLU and asking the director of information for the American Communist Party how he could help "heighten (the ACLU's) progressive tendencies." He also wrote a letter on November 9th to the Soviet embassy, asking about Marina's and his entrance visas, and mailed it on the 12th.
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)You're the hired hit man for the biggest murder case in American history. Are you preparing for the hit and making yourself available to your employers for last-minute changes and consultation? Or are you going to see your wife to beg her to come live with you in Dallas?
None of this makes sense if Oswald is the hired hit man in a conspiracy. Is he not going to do the job if Marina will move the family in with him in Dallas? How does he report that back to his employers? "Sorry, guys, can't kill the President, I'm getting back with the wife, we're moving to Dallas, no hard feelings!"
(Most likely Oswald's intent to kill the president was conditional. This is in no way an attempt to blame Marina, since she could not and did not know what Oswald would go on and do as a result. But it was a pretty shitty thing for Oswald to do. Indeed, I could also see Oswald knowing what his actions would bring down on Marina and their family, and having Marina reject him one last time being a way he could blame her for that part of it.)
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)Oswald was, as Bugliosi puts it, "a highly unreliable, highly disturbed, and emotionally unhinged political fanatic." It's something Bugliosi spends a lot of time demonstrating. He was not someone a group like the CIA or the Mafia would have hired to carry out the most important murder of their institution's history. He was living in a tiny room and couldn't take care of himself or his own family!
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)Jean Davison calls this (Bugliosi's description) "the ultimate weakness of the conspiracy theorists' contention that Lee Harvey Oswald was framed... their erroneous conception of Oswald." Far from being a "piece of chaff," Oswald was the exact opposite. He was belligerent in his independence from others. He described himself as having "a mean streak of independence." He bristled at rules and regulations and seemed to dislike any authority. Any attempt to manipulate him into place would have drawn his ire and bullheadedness, and so also he would not have welcomed the constraints of working together with others to carry out the assassination.
Marina also testified and told her biographer that he would never have taken part in a conspiracy to kill the president. Said Priscilla McMillian, "Lee had no use for the opinions of anybody but himself. He had only contempt for other people."
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)It's only the thousands of conspiracy theorists, none of whom knew Oswald or Ruby, that say they did. Who would know them better, their family and friends or the people who were neither?
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)Robert Kennedy Jr's recent assertion aside, let's let Robert Kennedy speak for himself. He always supported the Warren Commission's conclusion. His statement on September 27, 1964:
This was not said as a private citizen. This was while he was the US Attorney General. As such and as the brother of a beloved, assassinated president, he could have brought tremendous pressure on the Commission and the FBI for not doing enough or not doing the right things. He never did. In fact, he told the commissioners in August 1964 that he knew of no "credible evidence to support the allegations" of a conspiracy, foreign or domestic, and that he had no suggestions for an additional investigation before releasing the report.
Edward Kennedy in 1975 said that he was fundamentally satisfied with the findings of the Warren Commission.
John F. Kennedy, Jr. could barely sit at the table with Oliver Stone when the director of "JFK" brought up the notion of conspiracy, not even to score a interview for the second issue of his new magazine George.
The brothers and the son of the assassinated president accepted the conclusion of no conspiracy. They would have the strongest reasons of all to press for the truth if they felt they did not have it. And with the power they had, both in the government and public opinion, they could have done so. They never did. Their familiarity with the evidence satisfied them.
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)If Oswald had been hired as the hit man, are we expected to believe he didn't get a large part of his fee up front? The man had under $200 to his name on the morning of the assassination. He lived in a converted telephone room of the boarding house on North Beckley. He paid $8 a week for the privilege. His wife and children were living off the charity of her landlady.
This cuts into the patsy hypothesis as well. Oswald was supposed to be a double agent, working to infiltrate the Soviet Union and then various Communist groups in America, right? That's how THEY knew to set him up to take the fall. So Lee Harvey Oswald was such an incredible patriot that he was doing all that work for free?
There is no evidence that Oswald was spending more money than he was making at his various menial jobs. He had to borrow money to pay for the trip back to the United States for Marina and himself. He owned a single woolen Russian-made suit, completely inappropriate for Texas weather. They were practically starving in New Orleans. They never had an extra penny anywhere. Ever.
I'll go further: is Marina living the life of Reilly today? From what I understand, she married again, she works at a shop, and she raised her children. Is there any evidence at all that she's got a pot of cash somewhere? No?
How about that?
treestar
(82,383 posts)One thing CTs lack is any connection of Oswald to the supposed source of the conspiracy - that is, some definite connection or meeting in the weeks before the assassination. By now anyone of that kind would have been followed up.
Surely there would be money, etc. And how to plan it when the parade route changed, or even plan it at all before Oswald got the job at the book depository?
It's all possible but not really provable. Yes, maybe one of the conspirators was in charge of hiring at the book depository. Or had the ability to change the parade route. But anything is possible.
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)Yeah!
Think about it: this is the most important hit job in the history of the United States. What group would send their assassin out with a $19 mail-order rifle? With only four bullets in the six-round clip?
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)Since Oswald would be a link to the group itself.
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)This group allegedly sent Ruby out to kill Oswald, right? To keep him quiet, right? He knew something and had to be silenced, right?
I know a better way to keep Oswald quiet. HELP HIM ESCAPE.
Oswald sitting in Cuba with a cigar and a mojito is going to find it very easy to not say anything to the authorities.
Patsy or killer, if Oswald knew something on the conspirators, he's a liability in the hands of the authorities. What's the guarantee the patsy Oswald wouldn't cooperate with authorities and tell what he knew, loudly, with much protestation about his rights and the corruption of the United States? Frame him or hire him, you'd want him to stay quiet, and so logic dictates that you would help him get away (or find a way to kill him on the spot).
So if you've hired Oswald to do the murder, why wouldn't you give him (along with a high-quality weapon) a silencer? Silencers were of high enough quality in 1963 that the gunshots might not even have been heard over the crowd noise. Would Howard Brennan even have known where to look to see the killer take the third shot? A silencer would have helped Oswald escape.
Instead, this mysterious group then had to arrange a second assassination of Oswald to silence him.
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)Soft-point bullets are more likely to break apart in the body and cause more damage, and hence a greater likelihood of death. The murder weapon could only use 6.5mm FMJ bullets. The Hague Conventions specify an army only use these types of bullets because there's a greater chance that the bullet will pass through the body without breaking up. That means it will only incapacitate rather than maim and kill.
A conspiracy from the usual suspects would have known this and have been able to produce a rifle with soft-point bullets to further guarantee the kill. Indeed, as Bugliosi points out, a good reason to suspect James Earl Ray was involved in a conspiracy to kill Martin Luther King, Jr is that he used a brand-new $700 rifle ($2000 in today's money) that did use soft-point bullets, one of which killed MLK. By contrast, Oswald had a $19 rifle, which would have been $57 today, that only used full metal jacket bullets.
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)Good enough to make the shot? Yes. Were there others more likely to make the shot? Yes. If you were trying to assassinate the president, would you have chosen someone with Oswald's known ability to fire a weapon accurately, or would you have spent up to get a better marksman?
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)This is the most important hit ever, right? Most of the organizations mentioned (the mob, CIA, military-industrial complex) would have had associations with plenty of people with proven track records to take Kennedy out. But there's no evidence Oswald ever worked as a hit man for any of them. His one attempt at killing a public figure (General Walker) before JFK wasn't successful!
These groups are going to employ someone like Oswald to take out the President? Hogwash.
zappaman
(20,612 posts)Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)cpwm17
(3,829 posts)I look forward to the rest of this post.
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)How likely is it that you would let your hired assassin try to assassinate some other public figure first? If you were the hit man with a long relationship with your client, how likely is it that you would attempt another public assassination months before the big hit?
Furthermore, what ideological group would have had enough animus to both Walker and Kennedy that they would want either or both dead? It's a very narrow framework that lets you aim a rifle at both men. How many people in the world could, not to mention organizations of these people?
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)If Oswald was part of a conspiracy, how likely is it that he would be threatening to blow up the FBI office for harassing his wife just a couple of weeks before the assassination? Was his preparation for the biggest job in his life so immaterial that this is something that would concern him?
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)If he were part of a conspiracy, that is. Why would an hired assassin court any attention, particularly that of the FBI?
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)In the first two weeks of October, Oswald made four different applications for employment in Dallas, all businesses that would have no access to the eventual motorcade route. Only one rejected him for his perceived political beliefs. One rejected him for having no sales experience. One could not recall the reasons why, and the last saw his stalling about an honorable discharge record as reason to reject him.
Clearly if Oswald had gotten those jobs, he would not have been able to commit the crime or even be plausibly framed. Were all these people in on the conspiracy to make sure Oswald ended up in the TSBD? Would Oswald's real employers, the ones not paying him to assassinate the president, have let him take a job where he had no access to the future motorcade route?
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)Roy Truly, Oswald's supervisor, said that when Oswald was hired, he showed up at the same time as another new hire. There were two jobs available - one in the TSBD building we all know about on Houston and Elm, and another warehouse at 1917 Houston. Again, it was removed from the motorcade route.
What conspiracy would have allowed their plans to risk utter destruction by Truly's arbitrary choice of where to assign Oswald? How could they have known where Truly would assign Oswald?
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)Last edited Wed Apr 17, 2013, 12:53 AM - Edit history (1)
A job that would have taken him away from his plum perch atop the motorcade. Both Marina and Ruth Payne reported this, although they differ on when Oswald went to apply.
Some conspiracy.
It's also my understanding that as a temporary employee, Oswald was actually supposed to have ended his employment at the TSBD just before the assassination. But they found him some more work to do. I'll check on that, but I don't see that in this chapter of Bugliosi's book.
ETA: From Truly's testimony to the Warren Commission:
A shorter fall rush or no floor work and Oswald would have been let go of his temporary job.
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)If Oswald worked alone, choosing a perch where a tree interfered with critical seconds in the assassination window makes sense. What other choice would Oswald have? There would be no other (much less better) opportunity for him.
But if the assassination was the work of the CIA, the FBI, the Mafia, or who have you, why would they choose a location with such an obstruction? In the many places Kennedy had visited and would be visiting on this trip, this would the location that guaranteed the most success?
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)Any conspiracy using Oswald as the hit man would have needed to have communicated with Oswald or have some reliable and secretive way of doing so. But Oswald's life does not seem to have such accessibility to anyone.
The one phone at the boarding house was a pay phone and communal. No one could recall Oswald ever receiving phone calls. The housekeeper said that Oswald would stay in his room 95% of the time. And he almost never went out, except to wash his clothes or twice attending a meeting (a speech of General Walker's and a meeting of the local ACLU). Oswald's boarding house was renting to 17 different people including him, so privacy was at a minimum.
Oswald never received or made phone calls at Ruth Payne's house, either. And no one ever saw Oswald using the phone at work, something he would have to have had permission to use anyway.
So unless he was flawless in using the phone at work without anyone seeing him, the only times that Oswald was really free to call his handlers in the conspiracy would have been after work on a pay phone before getting to the boarding house. And they would never have a reliable way of contacting him.
Does this seem likely to you?
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)Even as a patsy. Especially as the hit man.
Yet Oswald was left to his own devices in his escape, trying to catch a bus, abandoning it for a taxi cab, with $13.87 in his pocket.
And then when Oswald was captured, how could any conspiracy allow him to be interrogated for twelve hours over a three-day period? Especially when Jack Ruby had a shot Friday evening, the same day as the assassination. He was armed, and Oswald was walked within three feet of him. But does Ruby shoot him? No, allowing Oswald to be interrogated for two more days. How could Ruby know he would ever get another chance to silence Oswald?
So maybe this same conspiracy hadn't hired Ruby yet to take the shot? Can anyone honestly believe that? No, of course not. Any conspiracy so incredibly competent to erase all evidence of its existence would have hired the guy to silence Oswald well in advance. But the fact that Ruby didn't take the shot on Friday is persuasive evidence that Ruby shot Oswald for his own purposed on Sunday. Which means no one was trying to silence Oswald. Which means he acted alone.
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)Let's face it: Oswald walked into the TSBD warehouse with the rifle that killed Kennedy Friday morning. No one stopped him. Easy as pie. Why didn't he hide his revolver on the premises Thursday morning?
This was a planned event, right? This was a conspiracy for the ages, yes? Why didn't Oswald have his revolver at the TSBD? How could he be assured of being able to escape the TSBD after the assassination? Why did he have to leave after the assassination and go get it at his boarding house?
The answer is simple. Oswald didn't have the revolver at work Thursday because it was only on Thursday that he made the decision to go for the assassination. But there was no time to prepare for his escape. He had to go to Irving to get his rifle that night or never.
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)Again this applies whether he was a patsy or the hit man.
Oswald had to know he was facing the death penalty. He also had to know, if he was part of a conspiracy, that his co-conspirators had left him to his own devices. As a patsy, Oswald would also have been highly motivated to provide what evidence he could to implicate the people that had worked to position him to take the fall.
Of course, if there were no co-conspirators, there would have been no one he could offer up to save his own skin.
This goes for Ruby, too. If Ruby was hired by the mob (or whoever) to silence Oswald, why did no one ever try to silence him? He was immediately captured. Bam, there goes the conspiracy, right back in the same place as before: their hired hit man being interrogated by the police. Why wouldn't they have tried to silence Ruby?
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)Bugliosi, page 1460:
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)Other than explainable ones like Oswald being interviewed by the FBI after returning from Russia, there's no evidence of any lasting or abiding relationship or association with any of the "usual suspect" groups. So not only is there no credible evidence of any of these groups conspiring to kill Kennedy, there's no evidence of Oswald's associations with these groups that would lend support for his conspiring with them past the threshold of reasonable doubt.
NoMoreWarNow
(1,259 posts)jaysus.
zappaman
(20,612 posts)NoMoreWarNow
(1,259 posts)though I am sure most of these are BS or only partial "truths"
NoMoreWarNow
(1,259 posts)about intelligence operations and covert operations.
Frank_Norris_Lives
(114 posts)When I was growing up in the 'hood, we were cool and there was this kid from a few doors down, Chucky, who wanted to belong. But at the same time he was erratic and undesirable. But the shit we got this kid to do, kind of shames me now. He took the fall for a couple of our setups. He was high malleable much as I suppose Oswald was. Buliosi's failings are to first proceed from the assumption that Oswald acted alone and then to continually expect rational behavior from someone unstable.
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)Oswald didn't want to belong to any group, unlike your poor Chucky.
Frank_Norris_Lives
(114 posts)Good god, man, he joined the MARINES.
Please. Just. Stop.
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)NoMoreWarNow
(1,259 posts)covert operations in all of American history.
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)Care to try again?
NoMoreWarNow
(1,259 posts)When you ignore or throw out all evidence for a conspiracy.
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)ocpagu
(1,954 posts)It feels like some people are expecting an official CIA press-release stating "we killed Kennedy"...
I even remember a thread by a guy saying that the ultimate proof that there was no conspiracy involved in 9-11 was the fact that "no one came out and said 'I was part of it'".
Yeah, sure, because we all expect criminals to willingly confess their crimes...
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)And yet Oswald's claim that he was a patsy is accepted as the gospel truth by some JFK conspiracy advocates.
treestar
(82,383 posts)At some point, they can't keep from telling, that happens often too. Or they tell a cellmate.
ocpagu
(1,954 posts)Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)Trajan
(19,089 posts)Frankly, I'll keep an open mind regarding the subject matter, but I do object to this gross violation of the Fair Use Doctrine, and the DU TOS regarding the use of copyrighted material ...
You are limited to posting no more than FOUR (4) (IV) (IIII) paragraphs of copyrighted material - You have posted about 50 or more ...
You have a problem here ...
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)I believe you may be exaggerating the number of direct quotes I've made.
There are four in this entire thread from the book. So, a little bit less than 50.
In the previous thread, I made 6 direct quotes from the book. However, I don't think any of the quotes are full paragraphs. Maybe one is. I don't recall and I could check.
But your number of 50 is bullshit, Trajan. Thanks for playing, though.
cpwm17
(3,829 posts)MrMickeysMom
(20,453 posts)...how many posts in the same thread are written by the same person? Well, let's give a hat tip to THAT one!
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)Last edited Fri Nov 22, 2013, 05:48 AM - Edit history (2)
is the 50th anniversary of JFK's assassination)
MrMickeysMom
(20,453 posts)I thought it was the anniversary of the Guinness record of how many times one can posts to one's OP.
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)as I explained in the OP. You did look at the OP, didn't you?
MrMickeysMom
(20,453 posts)Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)This way, I'm encouraging discussion of each separate point. And I'm not flooding the forum with around 100 threads.
Don't hurt yourself.
MrMickeysMom
(20,453 posts)Oops..
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)of the Meta bullshit game?
Well, thanks for the kick.
Ghost in the Machine
(14,912 posts)Who, exactly, were the witnesses who saw him in the school book depository, on the 6th floor, in the "snipers nest", with the rifle to his shoulder firing out the window at the President??
This is the first time I've ever heard of a witness actually seeing him in the act of doing this. Could you please provide names and links to their statements/depositions/testimonies?
Thanks in advance...
Peace,
Ghost
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)Here's my thread summarizing Bugliosi's evidence of Oswald as only shooter.
http://www.democraticunderground.com/11354552
Here's Brennan's testimony to the Warren Commission:
http://jfkassassination.net/russ/testimony/brennan.htm
Mr. BELIN. You thought it was backfire?
Mr. BRENNAN. Of a motorcycle.
Mr. BELIN. Then what did you observe or hear?
Mr. BRENNAN. Well, then something, just right after this explosion, made me think that it was a firecracker being thrown from the Texas Book Store. And I glanced up. And this man that I saw previous was aiming for his last shot.
Mr. BELIN. This man you saw previous? Which man are you talking about now?
Mr. BRENNAN. The man in the sixth story window.
Mr. BELIN. Would you describe just exactly what you saw when you saw him this last time?
Mr. BRENNAN. Well, as it appeared to me he was standing up and resting against the left window sill, with gun shouldered to his right shoulder, holding the gun with his left hand and taking positive aim and fired his last shot. As I calculate a couple of seconds. He drew the gun back from the window as though he was drawing it back to his side and maybe paused for another second as though to assure hisself that he hit his mark, and then he disappeared.
And, at the same moment, I was diving off of that firewall and to the right for bullet protection of this stone wall that is a little higher on the Houston side.
I think the fair use restriction doesn't apply here and I can reproduce more of the testimony:
Mr. BRENNAN. No; I don't. A possibility seven more or less one.
Mr. BELIN. All right.
Did you see anyone in the lineup you recognized?
Mr. BRENNAN. Yes.
Mr. BELIN. And what did you say?
Mr. BRENNAN. I told Mr. Sorrels and Captain Fritz at that time that Oswald--or the man in the lineup that I identified looking more like a closest resemblance to the man in the window than anyone in the lineup.
Mr. BELIN. Were the other people in the lineup, do you remember--were they all white, or were there some Negroes in there, or what?
Mr. BRENNAN. I do not remember.
Mr. BELIN. As I understand your testimony, then, you said that you told him that this particular person looked the most like the man you saw on the sixth floor of the building there.
Mr. BRENNAN. Yes, sir.
Mr. BELIN. In the meantime, had you seen any pictures of Lee Harvey Oswald on television or in the newspapers?
Mr. BRENNAN. Yes, on television.
Mr. BELIN. About when was that, do you believe?
Mr. BRENNAN. I believe I reached home quarter to three or something of that, 15 minutes either way, and I saw his picture twice on television before I went down to the police station for the lineup.
Mr. BELIN. Now, is there anything else you told the officers at the time of the lineup?
Mr. BRENNAN. Well, I told them I could not make a positive identification.
Mr. BELIN. When you told them that, did you ever later tell any officer or investigating person anything different?
Mr. BRENNAN. Yes.
Mr. BELIN. When did that happen?
Mr. BRENNAN. I believe some days later--I don't recall exactly--and I believe the Secret Service man identified hisself as being Williams, I believe, from Houston. I won't swear to that-whether his name was Williams or not.
Mr. BELIN. All right.
Mr. BRENNAN. And he could have been an FBI. As far as I remember, it could have been FBI instead of Secret Service.
But I believe it was a Secret Service man from Houston.
And I--
Mr. BELIN. What did he say to you and what did you say to him?
Mr. BRENNAN. Well, he asked me he said, "You said you couldn't make a positive identification."
He said, "Did you do that for security reasons personally, or couldn't you?"
And I told him I could with all honesty, but I did it more or less for security reasons--my family and myself.
Mr. BELIN. What do you mean by security reasons for your family and yourself?
Mr. BRENNAN. I believe at that time, and I still believe it was a Communist activity, and I felt like there hadn't been more than one eyewitness, and if it got to be a known fact that I was an eyewitness, my family or I, either one, might not be safe.
Mr. BELIN. Well, if you wouldn't have identified him, might he not have been released by the police?
Mr. BRENNAN. Beg pardon?
Mr. BELIN. If you would not have identified that man positively, might he not have been released by the police?
Mr. BRENNAN. No. That had a great contributing factor--greater contributing factor than my personal reasons was that I already knew they had the man for murder, and I knew he would not be released.
Mr. BELIN. The murder of whom?
Mr. BRENNAN. Of Officer Tippit.
Mr. BELIN. Well, what happened in between to change your mind that you later decided to come forth and tell them you could identify him?
Mr. BRENNAN. After Oswald was killed, I was relieved quite a bit that as far as pressure on myself of somebody not wanting me to identify anybody, there was no longer that immediate danger.
Mr. BELIN. What is the fact as to whether or not your having seen Oswald on television would have affected your identification of him one way or the other?
Mr. BRENNAN. That is something I do not know.
Mr. BELIN. Mr. Brennan, could you tell us now whether you can or cannot positively identify the man you saw on the sixth floor window as the same man that you saw in the police station?
Mr. BRENNAN. I could at that time I could, with all sincerity, identify him as being the same man.
Mr. BELIN. Was the man that you saw in the window firing the rifle the same man that you had seen earlier in the window, you said at least a couple of times, first stepping up and then going back?
Mr. BRENNAN. Yes, sir.
Ghost in the Machine
(14,912 posts)contradictions and inconsistencies. Yeah, I know he first said he saw LHO, and gave a general description but, based on his testimony, he was at least 175 feet away**, if not more, then (based on my experience of office buildings having 10' ceilings) he would have had to be looking upwards at least 56' high, based on LHO's height. Did he have binocular lenses in his glasses? Here's a map of where he said he was sitting: "Brennan was sitting atop a low concrete wall located at the intersection of Elm Street and Houston Street on the western edge of downtown Dallas"
At first, he told the police he couldn't identify LHO in a line-up, but after going home and watching the news, seeing LHO's face plastered all over the news, he could suddenly pick him out of a line-up?? How dumb do they think most people are??
Later in, he went on record as saying he initially lied about not being able to pick LHO out because he "feared that he and his family might be in some danger if the assassination turned out to be the result of some wider plot". Does that mean he thought there was some kind of conspiracy??
Then we also have this, from the House Select Committe on Assassinations:
Lee Harvey Oswald was white, slender, and 24 years old. According to his autopsy report (Warren Commission Hearings, vol.26, p.521 [Commission Exhibit 3002]), he was five feet nine inches (175 cm) tall, and weighed about 150 pounds (10 stones, 10 pounds; 68 kg).
Arnold Rowland and Ronald Fischer both described the man they saw as slender, and Fischer added that he looked to be 22 or 24 years old. All three descriptions could reasonably have applied to Oswald, but could also have applied to any number of young white men.
Howard Brennan was not, however, an especially reliable witness:
He claimed that the man was standing up when aiming the rifle, but the sash window made this impossible; it was open only up to about waist height.
He claimed that I was looking at the man in this window at the time of the last explosion, but later explicitly denied that he had seen the man fire the gun.
He claimed on the afternoon of the assassination that I believe that I could identify this man if I ever saw him again, but he was unable to pick out Oswald at an identification parade a few hours later, despite having seen Oswalds photograph on television in the meantime.
Although the Warren Commission enthusiastically promoted Brennan as the star witness in its case against Oswald, the House Select Committee on Assassinations was more sceptical, and declined to use Brennan.
http://jfk-archives.blogspot.com/2010/06/howard-brennan.html
**"Brennan was sitting atop a low concrete wall located at the intersection of Elm Street and Houston Street on the western edge of downtown Dallas" I'm figuring he was sitting somewhere near the corner of Dealey Plaza, between where JFK was hit and the SBD.
I read several articles on this guy before responding, so it looks like we're at a stalemate on this one. You'll believe him because he backs up your worldview on what happened that day, as reported by the Warren Commission. I choose NOT to believe him because of the lies, inconsistencies and holes in the story. Got anything else??
Peace,
Ghost
Bolo Boffin
(23,872 posts)Which means he could have seen Oswald just fine. It was Howard's description of the shooter that went out over Dallas police radio. Officer Tippit stopped Oswald based on that description and was gunned down in cold blood in front of several witnesses.
As you'll see at the link to the 53 Reasons post, I talked about the relative weakness of this point with alcibiades_mystery. If this was the only evidence against Oswald, we'd throw the case away. But all the evidence combined shows Oswald was the only person shooting in Dealey Plaza that day.
Ghost in the Machine
(14,912 posts)This right here really jumps up and down waving a BIG red flag:
So let me get this wrapped around my mind.... Brennan sees Oswald shout out, on National TV, I'm a patsy!!, then sees him shot in cold blood by a known Mafia figure... and decides NOW is a safe time, for himself and his family, to speak up about what he saw?? He has no inkling in his head that a known Mafia figure would belong to a larger syndicate or "family" out there? If that was me, I would probably still not know anything today!
"But all the evidence combined shows Oswald was the only person shooting in Dealey Plaza that day."
I never mentioned any other shooter, did I?? All I asked about was the witnesses that actually SAW Oswald in the snipers nest, with the gun in his hands, shooting at the President, so thank you Bolo.
Peace,
Ghost
Ace Acme
(1,464 posts)He looked like a weasel.
conectad0
(1 post)May not have been Oswald.
Perhaps one should "look" that was Oswald.
If this were so do not expect to find evidence of this. Or anything.
All point to Oswald. And there dies research. I think it would be more logical.
Why talk about conspiracy ?.
A perfectly planned operation does not have to be a conspiracy.
It is simply an operation.
Who is to blame? anyone with the money to finance the operation.
Reasons? More money.
____________________
Quizás no haya sido Oswald.
Quizás solo debía "parecer" que fué Oswald.
Si esto fuese así no esperen encontrar pruebas de ésto. Ni de nada.
Todo señalará a Oswald. Y allí muere la investigación. Me parece que sería lo más lógico.
Porqué hablar de conspiración?.
Una operación perfectamente planeada, no tiene porqué ser una conspiración.
Simplemente es una operación.
A quien queda por culpar? a cualquiera que tenga el dinero para financiar la operación.
Motivos? Más dinero.
shawnehamilton
(2 posts)Does it matter to you that the House Select Committee on Assassinations concluded in 1979 that there had been a probable conspiracy to kill John Kennedy?
zappaman
(20,612 posts)Again...
MrMickeysMom
(20,453 posts)Don't bother these guys in the middle of their work day That fact and other facts don't mean much to them.
MicaelS
(8,747 posts)I visited the 6th Floor Museum, and stood next the window were Oswald fired from. I know guns and shooting, and immediately thought to myself. "Shit, this was a terrifically easy shot. Even with that POS Carcano, it was an easy shot."
zappaman
(20,612 posts)Close, and slowly moving away in a straight line so he never leaves your site? Piece of cake and even then he missed with the first shot!
MrMickeysMom
(20,453 posts)John Mcadams - Laughing stock of the Internet?
http://www.prouty.org/mcadams/
HA! HA! HA! HA! HA! HA!
frankfacts
(80 posts)I think he was recruited for covert field work while still an arctic radar tech, same job George Carlin held in the AF around the same period. It could have been patsy/assassin Carlin instead of patsy/assassin Lee Harvey! Maybe they'd had Oswald doing stand-up, then, instead.