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- Path: uuwest!spies!mips!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!cis.ohio-state.edu!rutgers!sgigate!odin!dave
- From: dave@sgi.com (dave "who can do? ratmandu!" ratcliffe)
- Newsgroups: alt.conspiracy.jfk
- Subject: missing a critical testament Re: CHRONOLOGY OF EVENTS
- Message-ID: <1992Apr24.151613.25269@odin.corp.sgi.com>
- Date: 24 Apr 92 15:16:13 GMT
- References: <65.193.uupcb@csusac.ecs.csus.edu>
- Sender: news@odin.corp.sgi.com (Net News)
- Organization: Silicon Graphics, Inc.
- Lines: 2207
- Nntp-Posting-Host: ratmandu.esd.sgi.com
-
- i tried mailing this to boyd directly but was unsuccessful:
-
-
- In article <18.193.uupcb@csusac.ecs.csus.edu> you write:
- >
- > .....
- >12:37 p.m. Parkland Hospital is notified by telephone that the
- > President is enroute to their location. The begin to
- > prepare Trauma Room 1 for the Presidents arrival.
- >
- >12:40 p.m. Oswald, according to the Warren Commission, boards a
- > westbound bus, some seven blocks away from the Book
- > Depository. Note, that Oswald, had to walk past
- > several bus stops to be in the exact spot he caught the
- > bus, which by the way was heading back into town!
- > Oswald could have caught that bus at any of the stops
- > along the route he would have had to take.
- >
- >12:45 p.m. Officer J. D. Tippit and Officer R. C. Nelson, both
- > patrol-car drivers, are ordered into the central Oak
- > Cliff area. There was no actual acknowledgement of the
- > orders from either patrolman.
- > .......
- >
- ........
- >1:08 p.m. Officer Tippit calls into headquarters but this time,
- > the police dispatcher does not respond.
- >
- >1:16 p.m. A private citizen, T. F. Bowley, using officer
- > Tippitt's radio, reports the shooting of the officer.
- >......
-
-
- from the looks of what you've included above, i'm guessing
- you have not read roger craig's manuscript. his story is
- very important in a number of areas. relative to yer
- chronology, yer missing his description of a man he believes
- looks and is dressed like oswald running down the include the
- the west corner of the TSBD to a slow-moving rambler at 12:40
- p.m., and that craig noted that it was 1:06pm when he learned
- that Tippit had been shot. if you have access to a postscript
- printer, i can send you a pure postscript version of this file
- that you can simply "lp" and generate "prettified" hardcopy
- output.
-
-
-
-
-
- Article: 529 of sgi.talk.ratical
- From: dave@ratmandu.esd.sgi.com (dave "who can do? ratmandu!" ratcliffe)
- Subject: "When They Kill A President," by Roger Craig
- Keywords: unpublished manuscript written by a man who *didn't* change his story
- Organization: Silicon Graphics, Inc.
- Date: Mon, 23 Mar 1992 15:21:34 GMT
- Lines: 2159
-
-
- Roger Craig was a deputy Sheriff in Dallas at the time of the assassination
- of President Kennedy. He was a member of a group of men from Dallas County
- Sheriff James Eric "Bill" Decker's office that was directed to stand out in
- front of the Sheriff's office on Main Street (at the corner of Houston) and
- "take no part whatsoever in the security of that motorcade." Once he heard
- the first shot, Roger Craig immediately bolted towards Houston Street. His
- participation in the formative hours of the investigation during the rest
- of that day and into the evening included observations and experiences that
- would have singlehandedly destroyed the Warren Commission fairy tale before
- a grand jury or a Congressional investigation.
-
- Roger Craig was named the Dallas Sheriff's Department "Officer of the Year"
- in 1960 by the Dallas Traffic Commission. He received four promotions
- while he was deputy Sheriff. Among the most important events he witnessed:
-
- * at approximately 12:40 p.m., deputy Craig was standing on the
- south side of Elm Street when he heard a shrill whistle coming
- from the north side of Elm and turned to see a man--wearing
- faded blue trousers and a long sleeved work shirt made of some
- type of grainy material--come running down the grassy knoll
- from the direction of the TSBD. He saw a light green Rambler
- station wagon coming slowly west on Elm Street, pull over to
- the north curb and pick up the man coming down the hill. By
- this time the traffic was too heavy for him to be able to reach
- them before the car drove away going west on Elm.
-
- * after witnessing the above scene, deputy Craig ran to the
- command post at Elm and Houston to report the incident to the
- authorities. When he got there and asked who was involved in
- the investigation, a man turned to him and said "I'm with the
- Secret Service." Craig recounted what he had just seen. This
- "Secret Service" man showed little interest in Craig's
- description of the people leaving, but seemed extremely
- interested in the description of the Rambler to the degree
- this was the only part of the recounting that he wrote down.
- (On 12/22/67, Roger Craig learned from Jim Garrison that this
- man's name was Edgar Eugene Bradley, a right wing preacher from
- North Hollywood, California and part-time assistant to Carl
- McIntire, the fundamentalist minister who had founded the
- American Counsel of Christian Churches. Then-governor Ronald
- Reagan refused to grant the extradition request from Garrison
- for the indictment of Bradley during the New Orleans Probe.)
-
- * immediately after this Craig was told by Sheriff Decker to help
- the police search the TSBD. Deputy Craig was one of the two
- people to find the three rifle cartridges on the floor beneath
- the window on the southeast corner of the sixth floor. All
- three were no more than an inch apart and all were lined up in
- the same direction. One of the three shells was crimped on the
- end which would have held the slug. It had not been stepped on
- but merely crimped over on one small portion of the rim. The
- rest of that end was perfectly round.
-
- * he was present at when the rifle was found, and, along with
- Deputy Eugene Boone who had first spotted the weapon, was
- immediately joined by police Lt. Day, Homicide Capt. Fritz, and
- deputy constable Seymour Weitzman, an expert on weapons who had
- been in the sporting goods business for many years and was
- familiar with all domestic and foreign makes. Lt. Day briefly
- inspected the rifle and handed it to Capt. Fritz who asked if
- anyone knew what kind of rifle it was. After a close
- examination, Weitzman declared it to be a 7.65 German Mauser.
- Capt. Fritz agreed with him.
-
- * at the moment when Capt. Fritz concurred with Weitzman's
- identification of the rifle, an unknown Dallas police officer
- came running up the stairs and advised Capt. Fritz that a
- Dallas policeman had been shot in the Oak Cliff area. Craig
- instinctively looked at his watch. The time was 1:06 p.m.
- (The Warren Commission attempted to move this time back beyond
- 1:15 to plausible claim Oswald had reached the Tippit murder
- scene in a more humanly possible time-frame than would be the
- case if Tippit had the encounter with his murderer any earlier.)
-
- * Later in the afternoon Craig received word of Oswald's arrest
- and that he was suspected of being involved in the Kennedy's
- murder. He immediately thought of the man running down the
- grassy knoll and made a telephone call to Capt. Will Fritz to
- gave him the description of the man he had seen. Fritz said
- Craig's description sounded like the man they had and asked
- him to come take a look. When he saw Oswald in Fritz's
- personal office Deputy Craig confirmed that this was indeed
- the man, dressed in the same way, that he had seen running
- down the knoll and into the Rambler. They went into the
- office together and Fritz told Oswald,
-
- "This man (pointing to me) saw you leave." At which time
- the suspect replied, "I told you people I did." Fritz,
- apparently trying to console Oswald, said, "Take it easy,
- son--we're just trying to find out what happened." Fritz
- then said, "What about the car?" Oswald replied, leaning
- forward on Fritz' desk, "That station wagon belongs to
- Mrs. Paine--don't try to drag her into this." Sitting
- back in his chair, Oswald said very disgustedly and very
- low, "Everybody will know who I am now."
-
- The fact that Fritz said "car" and this elicited Oswald's
- outburst about a "station wagon"--that no one else had
- mentioned--confirms the veracity of Roger Craig's story.
-
- * junior counsel for the Warren Commission Dave Belin, was the
- man who interview Roger Craig in April of 1964. After the
- being questioned in what Craig recounts as a very manipulative
- and selective way, Belin asked "Do you want to follow or waive
- your signature or sign now?" Craig noted, "Since there was
- nothing but a tape recording and a stenographer's note book,
- there was obviously nothing to sign. All other testimony which
- I have read (a considerable amount) included an explanation
- that the person could waive his signature then or his statement
- would be typed and he would be notified when it was ready for
- signature. Belin did not say this to me." After Craig first
- saw the transcript in January of 1968 he discoverd that the
- testimony he gave had been changed in fourteen different
- places.
-
-
- Deputy Sheriff Roger Craig never changed his account of what he witnessed
- and experienced on Friday, November 22, 1963. (The passage where he
- describes the methodology employed by David Belin in selectively recording
- his testimony is highly illuminating and provides us with a glimpse of how
- the "W.C." interviewed witnesses in a very controlled way.) He remained
- convinced, for the rest of this life, that the man entering the Rambler
- station wagon was Lee Harvey Oswald. He was fired from the Sheriff's
- office on July 4, 1967, and from that day forward he never again could
- find steady work. Multiple attempts were made on his life, his wife
- finally left him, and in the end, he was alleged to have shot himself to
- death on May 15, 1975.
-
-
-
-
- the following is an unpublished manuscript written by the late Roger Craig:
- ___________________________________________________________________________
-
- WHEN THEY KILL A PRESIDENT
- By
- Roger Craig - (c) 1971
-
-
-
- This book is dedicated to my wife Molly,
- who meant it when she said
- "for better or worse."
-
-
-
-
-
- I
-
-
- Our president John Kennedy went down to Dallas town
- Where the hired assassins waited and there they shot him down,
- Because he dreamed of peace and plenty and he talked it 'round
- His dream goes marching on.
-
-
- The Dallas County Court House at 505 Main Street was indeed a
- unique place to come to hear what was WRONG with John F. Kennedy
- and his policies as President of these United States.
- This building housed the elite troops of the Dallas County
- Sheriff's Department (of which I was one), who, with blind
- obedience, followed the orders of their Great White Father: BILL
- DECKER, Sheriff of Dallas County.
- From these elite troops came the most bitter verbal attacks on
- President Kennedy. They spoke very strongly against his policies
- concerning the Bay of Pigs incident and the Cuban Missile crisis.
- They seemed to resent very much the fact that President Kennedy was
- a Catholic. I do not know why this was such a critical issue with
- many of the deputies but they did seem to hold this against
- President Kennedy.
- The concession stand in the lobby of the court house was the
- best place to get into a discussion concerning the President. The
- old man who ran the stand evidenced a particular hatred for
- President Kennedy. He seemed to go out of his way to drag anyone
- who came by his stand into a discussion about the President. His
- name is J. C. Kiser.
- He was a little man with a short mustache and glasses that he
- wore right on the end of his nose. He was a particularly good
- friend of Sheriff Decker, and he held the concession in the lobby
- for many years. Like Decker, he was unopposed when his lease came
- up for renewal. It was common knowledge that Bill Decker made it
- possible for him to remain there as long as he wished. This sick
- little man not only had a deep hatred for John F. Kennedy, he also
- hated the black people, even those who spent their money at his
- stand. He would often curse them as they walked away after making
- a purchase from him. He flatly refused to make telephone change
- for them even though he would be simultaneously making change for a
- white person.
- *This little man* was a typical example of the atmosphere that
- lingered in this building that housed LAW AND ORDER in Dallas
- County.
- Many of the deputies had a dislike for the President--some more
- so than others. However, there *were* those who would not degrade
- themselves by taking verbal punches at our President. One of these
- was Hiram Ingram. Although devoted to Bill Decker, he was also a
- good friend of mine. We often discussed the political debates that
- took place in the lobby. Hiram had a great dislike for this sick
- little man who seemed to lead the attack on the President. He also
- had little respect for the deputies, attorneys and court house
- employees who tolerated or even agreed with this philosophy of
- attacking John F. Kennedy.
- Hiram Ingram was a small man--in stature. He was always ready
- with a friendly smile and greeting. He began his association with
- the County during the Bonnie and Clyde era--when he was an
- ambulance driver and inside employee at a local funeral home. In
- fact, Hiram prepared Bonnie and Clyde for burial after they were
- brought back to Dallas from the ambush in Louisiana.
- Hiram and I were very close--one of those friendships which
- develops when some people first meet. I had known Hiram for about
- four years at the time of the assassination. He was working in the
- Civil Division and shortly after November 22, 1963 he had a heart
- attack. When he returned to work Decker put him on the Bond Desk,
- where I would later be and work closely with Hiram. I worked the
- day shift one month and the evening shift the following month.
- Hiram worked only evenings. So every other month we worked
- together. This gave us time to talk and discuss the events in
- Dallas and even the Sheriff's Office itself. The Department was
- not well organized.
- To clear some of the bonds and bondsmen we would have to call
- Decker at home--no matter what time of the day or night--for his
- approval or ANY decision. This applied only to certain bondsmen.
- Decker had his chosen few who were not questioned. Hiram was a
- very dependable employee and should not have had to clear the minor
- decisions with our Great White Father, Bill Decker.
- As the months passed and Hiram and I worked together we built a
- mutual respect for each other. When Decker fired me on July 4,
- 1967 Hiram was infuriated but, like any employee of Decker's, he
- couldn't say anything in my defense for fear of having *his*
- employment cut short or his reputation ruined. One of Decker's
- favorite past times was ruining reputations.
- Our friendship did not end with my termination. We continued to
- talk from time to time and Hiram was very helpful when Penn Jones
- wanted information concerning records at the Sheriff's office.
- However, in March of 1968 Hiram explained to me that information
- was getting more difficult to get for some reason. Fortunately by
- this time I had already supplied Penn Jones and Bill Boxley
- (investigator for Jim Garrison) with much information from Hiram.
- About two weeks later, near the end of March 1968, I heard that
- Hiram had fallen at home and broken his hip and was in the
- hospital. I went to see my good buddy to cheer him up and received
- the shock of my life. Hiram was under oxygen and could not have
- *any* visitors. Three days later he was dead--of cancer. He had
- been working just prior to the fall. I think that we owe a debt of
- gratitude to this great man who, in his own quiet way, helped us
- all so much.
- Thus . . . we have the atmosphere that was to greet the
- President of the United States upon his arrival in Dallas.
- However, things were to get even worse before he arrived.
- The battle ground had been picked and the UNwelcome mat was out
- for President Kennedy. Unknown to most of us, the rest of the plan
- was being completed. The patsy had been chosen and placed in the
- building across from the court house--where he could not deny his
- presence *after it was all over*. This was done with the apparent
- approval and certainly with the knowledge of our co-workers, the
- F.B.I., since they later admitted that they knew Lee Harvey Oswald
- was employed at the School Book Depository Building located on the
- corner of Elm Street and Houston Street across from the Sheriff's
- Office.
- The security had been arranged by the Secret Service and the
- Dallas Police--our boys in blue. The final touch was put on by
- Sheriff James Eric (Bill) Decker. On the morning of November 22,
- 1963 the patrolmen in the districts which make up the Dallas County
- Sheriff's Patrol Division were left in the field, ignorant of what
- was going on in the downtown area, which was just as well. Decker
- was not going to LET them do anything anyway.
- About 10:30 a.m. November 22, 1963, Bill Decker called into his
- office what I will refer to as his street people--plain-clothes
- men, detectives and warrant men, myself included--and told us that
- President Kennedy was coming to Dallas and that the motorcade would
- come down Main Street. He then advised us that we were to stand
- out in front of the building, 505 Main Street and represent the
- Sheriff's Office. We were to take NO part whatsoever in the
- security of that motorcade. (WHY, JAMES ERIC?) So . . . the stage
- had been set, all the pawns were in place, the security had been
- withdrawn from that one vulnerable location. Come John F. Kennedy,
- come to Elm and Houston Streets in Dallas, Texas and take your
- place in history!
- The time was 12:15 p.m. I was standing in front of the court
- house at 505 Main Street. Deputy Sheriff Jim Ramsey was standing
- behind me. We were waiting for the President of the United States.
- I had a feeling of pride that I was going to be not more than four
- feet from the President but deep inside something kept gnawing at
- me. I said to Jim Ramsey, "He's late." Jim's reply stunned me.
- He said, "Maybe somebody will shoot the son of a bitch." Then I
- realized the crowd was hostile. The men about me felt that they
- were FORCED to acknowledge his presence. Although he was the
- President, they were making statements like, "Why does he have to
- come to Dallas?"
- Something else was bothering me . . . being a trained officer, I
- always looked for anything which might be amiss about any situation
- with which I was confronted. Suddenly I knew what was wrong.
- There were no officers guarding the intersections or controlling
- the crowd. My mind flashed back to the meeting in Decker's office
- that morning, then back to the lack of security in this area.
- Suddenly the motorcade approached and President Kennedy was
- smiling and waving and for a moment I relaxed and fell into the
- happy mood the President was displaying. The car turned the corner
- onto Houston Street. I was still looking at the rest of the people
- in the party. I was soon to be shocked back into reality. The
- President had passed and was turning west on Elm Street . . . as if
- there were no people, no cars, the only thing in my world at that
- moment was a rifle shot! I bolted toward Houston Street. I was
- fifteen steps from the corner--before I reached it two more shots
- had been fired. Telling myself that it wasn't true and at the same
- time knowing that it was, I continued to run. I ran across Houston
- Street and beside the pond, which is on the west side of Houston.
- I pushed a man out of my way and he fell into the pond. I ran down
- the grass between Main and Elm. People were lying all over the
- ground. I thought, "My God, they've killed a woman and child," who
- were lying beside the gutter on the South side of Elm Street. I
- checked them and they were alright. I saw a Dallas Police Officer
- run up the grassy knoll and go behind the picket fence near the
- railroad yards. I followed and behind the fence was complete
- confusion and hysteria.
- I began to question people when I noticed a woman in her early
- thirties attempting to drive out of the parking lot. She was in a
- brown 1962 or 1963 Chevrolet. I stopped her, identified myself and
- placed her under arrest. She told me that she HAD to leave and I
- said, "Lady, you're not going anywhere." I turned her over to
- Deputy Sheriff C. I. (Lummy) Lewis and told him the circumstances
- of the arrest. Officer Lewis told me that he would take her to
- Sheriff Decker and take care of her car.
- The parking lot behind the picket fence was of little importance
- to most of the investigators at the scene except that the shots
- were thought to have come from there.
- Let us examine this parking lot. It was leased by Deputy
- Sheriff B. D. Gossett. He in turn rented parking space by the
- month to the deputies who worked in the court house, except for
- official vehicles. I rented one of these spaces from Gossett when
- I was a dispatcher working days or evenings. I paid Gossett $3.00
- per month and was given a key to the lot. An 3 interesting point
- is that the lot had an iron bar across the only entrance and exit
- (which were the same). The bar had a chain and lock on it. The
- only people having access to it were deputies with keys. Point:
- how did the woman gain access and, what is more important, who was
- she and WHY did she HAVE to leave?
- This was to be the beginning of the never-ending cover up. Had
- I known then what I know now, *I* would have personally questioned
- the woman and impounded and searched her car. I had no way of
- knowing that an officer, with whom I had worked for four years, was
- capable of losing a thirty year old woman and a three thousand
- pound automobile. To this day Officer Lewis does not know who she
- was, where she came from or what happened to her. STRANGE!
- Meanwhile, back at the parking lot, I continued to help the
- Dallas Officers restore order. When things were somewhat calmer I
- began to question the people who were standing at the top of the
- grassy knoll, asking if anyone had seen anything strange or unusual
- before or during the President's fatal turn onto Elm Street.
- Several people indicated to me that they thought the shots came
- from the area of the grassy knoll or behind the picket fence. My
- next reliable witness came forward in the form of Mr. Arnold
- Rowland. Mr. Rowland and his wife were standing at the top of the
- grassy knoll on the north side of Elm Street. Arnold Rowland began
- telling me his account of what he saw before the assassination. He
- said approximately fifteen minutes before President Kennedy arrived
- he was looking around and something caught his eye. It was a white
- man standing by the 6th floor window of the Texas School Book
- Depository Building in the southeast corner, holding a rifle
- equipped with a telescopic sight and in the southwest corner of the
- sixth floor was a colored male pacing back and forth. Needless to
- say, I was astounded by his statement. I asked Mr. Rowland why he
- had not reported this incident before and he told me that he
- thought they were secret service agents--an obvious conclusion for
- a layman. Rowland continued. He told me that he looked back at
- the sixth floor a few minutes later and the man with the rifle was
- gone so he dismissed it from his mind.
- I was writing all this down in my notebook and when I finished I
- advised Mr. and Mrs. Rowland that I would have to detain them for a
- statement. I had started toward the Sheriff's Office with them
- when lo and behold I was approached by Officer C. L. (Lummy) Lewis,
- who asked me "What ya got"--a favorite expression of most
- investigators with Bill Decker. I explained the situation to him
- and told him of Rowland's account. Being the Good Samaritan he
- was, Officer Lewis offered to take the Rowlands off my hands and
- get their statements. This worked out a little better than my
- first arrest. The Warren Commission decided not to accept Arnold
- Rowland's story but at least they did not lose them. Hang in
- there, Lummy!
- The time was approximately 12:40 p.m. I had just turned the
- Rowlands over to Lummy Lewis when I met E. R. (Buddy) Walthers,
- a small man with a very arrogant manner. He was, without a doubt,
- Decker's favorite pupil. He wore dark-rimmed glasses and a small-
- brimmed hat because effecting them meant that he would resemble
- Bill Decker. Walthers had worked for the Yellow Cab Company of
- Dallas before coming to the Sheriff's Office, about a year before I
- began working there. His termination from the cab company was the
- result of several shortages of money. He came to the Sheriff's
- Department as a patrolman but because of his close connection with
- Justice of the Peace Bill Richburg--one of Decker's closest allies
- --Buddy soon was promoted to detective. He had absolutely no
- ability as a law enforcement officer. However, he was fast
- climbing the ladder of success by lying to Decker and squealing on
- his fellow officers.
- Walthers' ambition was to become Sheriff of Dallas County and he
- would do anything or anybody to reach that goal. It was very clear
- Buddy enjoyed more job security with Decker than anyone else did.
- Decker carried him for years by breaking a case for him or taking a
- case which had been broken by another officer and putting Walthers'
- name on the arrest sheet. Soon after he was promoted to detective
- he became intimate with such people as W. 0. Bankston, the
- flamboyant Oldsmobile dealer in Dallas who furnished Decker with a
- new Fire Engine Red Olds every year and who was arrested several
- times for Driving while Intoxicated but never served any jail time.
- Buddy's acquaintances also included several independent oil
- operators throughout Texas, several anti-Castro Cubans and many
- underworld characters--especially women! He was frequently
- crashing parties which were given by wealthy friends of Decker's--
- of course while he was *on* duty. He often became drunk and
- belligerent at these parties and at one point, when asked to leave,
- he threatened to pull his gun on the host. This information can be
- verified by Billy Courson, who was Buddy's partner at that time.
- Walthers hit the big time when, in 1961, two Federal Narcotics
- Agents came to Decker's office with charges that Buddy was growing
- marijuana in the back yard of his home at 2527 Boyd Street in the
- Oak Cliff section of Dallas. This could be considered conduct
- unbecoming to a police officer--but not for Buddy! After a secret
- meeting between the Federal Agents, Decker and Buddy, the matter
- was dropped and--needless to say--covered up, thus enabling Buddy
- to continue his career as Decker's Representative of Law and Order
- in Dallas County.
- However, the Dallas Police began receiving complaints that Buddy
- was shaking down underworld characters for loot taken in several
- burglaries and selling the stuff himself. After several reports
- the Dallas Police began to investigate and, finally, obtained a
- search warrant for Buddy's home. Their BIG mistake was securing
- the warrant from Judge Richburg--which was bad enough--but Buddy's
- wife also worked for Richburg and this made matters worse.
- Strangely enough, they did not find anything. However, a few weeks
- later they were a little more careful and made a surprise visit to
- Buddy's home, where they indeed recovered such things as toasters,
- clothing and various items--just as their informers had said. It
- would seem they had him *this time*, wouldn't it? But not so.
- Buddy explained that he had recovered the merchandise from where it
- had been hidden and had not had time to make a report on them and
- turn them in to the Property Room! The Dallas Police didn't buy
- this story but the pressure was again brought to bear by our
- Protector, Bill Decker, and the Dallas Police were left out in the
- cold--no charges filed! They were certainly furious but what could
- they do? If WE as citizens cannot fight the Establishment, how can
- the Establishment fight the Establishment?
- It was clear in my mind--and if the people with whom I worked
- COULD talk, I am sure they would agree--that Buddy had a powerful
- hold on Decker. I base this on the fact that Buddy's popularity
- with Decker greatly increased after the assassination. Buddy was a
- chronic liar--he was always telling Decker things he thought were
- happening in the County which he was checking on. Things which he
- was *not* doing. He also told Decker that he was in the theater
- when Oswald was captured and that he, in fact, helped the Dallas
- Police. This was completely untrue. Buddy never entered the Texas
- Theater--his partner, Bill Courson, did.
- Buddy also told Decker about a family of anti-Castro Cubans
- living in the Oak Cliff area and said that he was watching them.
- This part may have been true because we received the same
- information from the Dallas Police Intelligence Division. But one
- day Buddy made a visit to the house in Oak Cliff and when the
- Police and Sheriff's Deputies went to question them a few days
- later, they were gone. Did Buddy warn them? After all, he was
- very, very close to Jack Ruby. In fact, every time Buddy was in
- trouble with one of Jack Ruby's employees--especially Nancy
- Perrin Rich--Decker would send Buddy to straighten things out and
- put Nancy in her place--with the help of Judge Richburg. Touching
- Jack Ruby was a no-no!
- There were many other things which made Buddy suspect as a not-
- so-law abiding lawman, such as the swimming pool he built in his
- back yard (on *his* salary?). The concrete was furnished by a
- local contractor free of charge. Buddy used many pills he carried
- in the trunk of his unmarked squad car for trading with certain
- underworld characters--pills for information. I learned from what
- I consider a reliable source that these pills had been confiscated
- (although no reports were made nor the pills turned in). Most of
- those involved in this exchange were women. It would seem that
- Buddy Walthers could not be terminated from the Sheriff's
- Department, no matter what.
- One incident in 1966 which would have resulted in the firing of
- any other deputy occurred when Buddy was sent to Nevada to transfer
- a suspect wanted in Dallas. It seemed Buddy was given a certain
- amount of travel money which he lost at the gambling table in Las
- Vegas. Broke and in trouble, Buddy called none other than W. O.
- Bankston, who wired him enough money to bring his prisoner back to
- Dallas. Many times I wondered who was REALLY Sheriff but Buddy was
- about to reach the end of his rope.
- In late 1968, when the Clay Shaw trial was being prepared, there
- was talk of bringing Buddy to New Orleans to testify. Well, that
- was a blow to the power which ruled Dallas. They could not have
- this half-wit on the witness stand. When the word reached Dallas,
- Decker was working on a double-murder which occurred in *his*
- county and had a lead on the suspect in January of 1969. The Shaw
- trial was scheduled for February and Decker sent Buddy and his
- partner, Alvin Maddox (who was about as efficient as a nutty
- professor), to a motel on Samuell Boulevard in Dallas to question
- a Walter Cherry about the killings. Cherry was an escaped convict
- and a suspect in the double-murder. Decker sent them to talk to
- Cherry without a warrant. When they entered the room at the motel
- Buddy was shot dead and Maddox wounded in the FOOT. Coincidence?
- Maybe! At any rate Buddy had been silenced. One more point for
- Dallas!
- Back to November 22, 1963. As I have earlier stated, the time
- was approximately 12:40 p.m. when I ran into Buddy Walthers. The
- traffic was very heavy as Patrolman Baker (assigned to Elm and
- Houston Streets) had left his post, allowing the traffic to travel
- west on Elm Street. As we were scanning the curb I heard a shrill
- whistle coming from the north side of Elm Street. I turned and saw
- a white male in his twenties running down the grassy knoll from the
- direction of the Texas School Book Depository Building. A light
- green Rambler station wagon was coming slowly west on Elm Street.
- The driver of the station wagon was a husky looking Latin, with
- dark wavy hair, wearing a tan wind-breaker type jacket. He was
- looking up at the man running toward him. He pulled over to the
- north curb and picked up the man coming down the hill. I tried to
- cross Elm Street to stop them and find out who they were. The
- traffic was too heavy and I was unable to reach them. They drove
- away going west on Elm Street.
- In addition to noting that these two men were in an obvious
- hurry, I realized they were the only ones not running TO the scene.
- Everyone else was running to see whatever might be seen. The
- suspect, as I will refer to him, who ran down the grassy knoll was
- wearing faded blue trousers and a long sleeved work shirt made of
- some type of grainy material. This will become very important to
- me later on and very embarrassing to the authorities (F.B.I.,
- Dallas Police and Warren Commission). I thought the incident
- concerning the two men and the Rambler Station Wagon important
- enough to bring it to the attention of the authorities at the
- command post at Elm and Houston.
- I ran to the front of the Texas School Book Depository where I
- asked for anyone involved in the investigation. There was a man
- standing on the steps of the Book Depository Building and he turned
- to me and said, "I'm with the Secret Service." This man was about
- 40 years old, sandy-haired with a distinct cleft in his chin. He
- was well-dressed in a gray business suit. I was naive enough at
- the time to believe that the only people there were actually
- officers--after all, this was the command post. I gave him the
- information. He showed little interest in the persons leaving.
- However, he seemed extremely interested in the description of the
- Rambler. This was the only part of my statement which he wrote
- down in his little pad he was holding. Point: Mrs. Ruth Paine,
- the woman Marina Oswald lived with in Irving, Texas, owned a
- Rambler station wagon, at that time, of this same color.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- * * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-
- II
-
-
- From the book depository and of course that grassy knoll
- And the Dal Tex building's shooter fulfilled his deadly role
- The noon day sun was witness as they took their awful toll
- His dream goes marching on.
-
-
- I learned nothing of this "Secret Service Agent's" identity
- until December 22, 1967 while we were living in New Orleans. The
- television was on as I came home from work one night and there on
- the screen was a picture of this man. I did not know what it was
- all about until my wife told me that Jim Garrison had charged him
- with being a part of the assassination plot. I called Jim Garrison
- then and told him that this was the man I had seen in Dallas on
- November 22, 1963. Jim then sent one of his investigators to see
- me with a better picture which I identified. I then learned that
- this man's name was EDGAR EUGENE BRADLEY. It was a relief to me to
- know his name for I had been bothered by the fact that I had failed
- to get his name when he had told me he was a Secret Service Agent
- and I had given him my information. On the night of the
- assassination when I had come home and discussed the day with my
- wife I had, of course, told her of this encounter and my failure to
- get his name.
- As I finished talking with the Agent I was confronted by the
- High Priest of Dallas County Politics, Field Marshal Bill Decker.
- Decker had, apparently, been standing directly behind me and had
- overheard what I was saying. He called me aside and informed me
- that the suspect had already left the scene. (How did you know,
- James Eric? You had just arrived.) Decker then told me to help
- them (the police) search the Book Depository Building. Decker
- turned toward his office across the street, then suddenly stopped,
- looked at me and said "Somebody better take charge of this
- investigation." Then he continued walking slowly toward his
- office, indicating that it was *not* going to be him.
- When I entered the Book Depository Building I was joined by
- Deputy Sheriffs Eugene Boone and Luke Mooney. We went up the
- stairs directly to the sixth floor. The room was very dark and a
- thick layer of dust seemed to cover everything. We went to the
- south side of the building, since this was the street side and
- seemed the most logical place to start.
- Luke Mooney and I reached the southeast corner at the same time.
- We immediately found three rifle cartridges laying in such a way
- that they looked as though they had been carefully and deliberately
- placed there--in plain sight on the floor to the right of the
- southeast corner window. Mooney and I examined the cartridges very
- carefully and remarked how close together they were. The three of
- them were no more than one inch apart and all were facing in the
- same direction, a feat very difficult to achieve with a bolt action
- rifle--or any rifle for that matter. One cartridge drew our
- particular attention. It was crimped on the end which would have
- held the slug. It had not been stepped on but merely crimped over
- on one small portion of the rim. The rest of that end was
- perfectly round.
- Laying on the floor to the left of the same window was a small
- brown paper lunch bag containing some well cleaned chicken bones.
- I called across the room and summoned the Dallas Police I.D. man,
- Lt. Day. When he arrived with his camera Mooney and I left the
- window and started our search of the rest of the sixth floor.
- We were told by Dallas Police to look for a rifle--something I
- had already concluded might be there since the cartridges found
- were, apparently, from a rifle. I was nearing the northwest corner
- of the sixth floor when Deputy Eugene Boone called out, "here it
- is." I was about eight feet from Boone, who was standing next to a
- stack of cardboard boxes. The boxes were stacked so that there was
- no opening between them except at the top. Looking over the top
- and down the opening I saw a rifle with a telescopic sight laying
- on the floor with the bolt facing upward. At this time Boone and I
- were joined by Lt. Day of the Dallas Police Department and Dallas
- Homicide Captain, Will Fritz. The rifle was retrieved by Lt. Day,
- who activated the bolt, ejecting one live round of ammunition which
- fell to the floor.
- Lt. Day inspected the rifle briefly, then handed it to Capt.
- Fritz who had a puzzled look on his face. Seymour Weitzman, a
- deputy constable, was standing beside me at the time. Weitzman was
- an expert on weapons. He had been in the sporting goods business
- for many years and was familiar with all domestic and foreign
- weapons. Capt. Fritz asked if anyone knew what kind of rifle it
- was. Weitzman asked to see it. After a *close* examination (much
- longer than Fritz or Day's examination) Weitzman declared that it
- was a 7.65 German Mauser. Fritz agreed with him. Apparently,
- someone at the Dallas Police Department also loses things but, at
- least, they are more conscientious. They did replace it--even if
- the replacement was made in a different country. (See Warren
- Report for Italian Mannlicher-Carcano 6.5 Caliber).
- At that exact moment an unknown Dallas police officer came
- running up the stairs and advised Capt. Fritz that a Dallas
- policeman had been shot in the Oak Cliff area. I instinctively
- looked at my watch. The time was 1:06 p.m. A token force of
- uniformed officers was left to keep the sixth floor secure and
- Fritz, Day, Boone, Mooney, Weitzman and I left the building.
- On my way back to the Sheriff's Office I was nearly run down
- several times by Dallas Police cars racing to the scene of the
- shooting of a fellow officer. There were more police units at the
- J. D. Tippit shooting than there were at President John F.
- Kennedy's assassination.
- Tippit had been instructed to patrol the Oak Cliff area along
- with Dallas Police Unit #87 at 12:45 p.m. by the dispatcher. Unit
- #87 immediately left Oak Cliff and went to the triple underpass,
- leaving Tippit alone. Why? At 12:54 p.m., J. D. Tippit, Dallas
- Police Unit #78, gave his location as Lancaster Blvd., and Eighth
- St., some ten blocks from the place where he was to be killed. The
- Dallas dispatcher called Tippit at 1:04 p.m. and received no
- answer. He continued to call three times and there was still no
- reply. Comparing this time with the time I received news of the
- shooting of the police officer at 1:06 p.m., it is fair to assume
- Tippit was dead or being killed between 1:04 and 1:06 p.m. This is
- also corroborated by the eye witnesses at the Tippit killing, who
- said he was shot between 1:05 and 1:08 p.m.
- According to Officer Baker, Dallas Police, he talked to Oswald
- at 12:35 p.m. in the lunch room of the Texas School Book
- Depository. This would give Oswald 30 minutes or less to finish
- his coke, leave the building, walk four blocks east on Elm Street,
- catch a bus and ride it back west in heavy traffic for two blocks,
- get off the bus and walk two more blocks west and turn south on
- Lamar Street, walk four blocks and have a conversation with a cab
- driver and a woman over the use of Whaley's (the cab driver) cab,
- get into the cab and ride to 500 North Beckley Street, get out and
- walk to 1026 North Beckley where his (Oswald's) room was located,
- pick up something (?); and if that is not enough, Earlene Roberts,
- the housekeeper where Oswald lived, testified that at 1:05 p.m.
- Oswald was waiting for a bus in front of his rooming house and
- FINALLY, to make him the fastest man on Earth, he walked to East
- Tenth Street and Patton Street, several blocks away and killed J.
- D. Tippit between 1:05 and 1:08 p.m. If he had not been arrested
- when he was, it is my belief that Earl Warren and his Commission
- would have had Lee Harvey Oswald eating dinner in Havana!
- I was convinced on November 22, 1963, and I am still sure, that
- the man entering the Rambler station wagon was Lee Harvey Oswald.
- After entering the Rambler, Oswald and his companion would only
- have had to drive six blocks west on Elm Street and they would have
- been on Beckley Avenue and a straight shot to Oswald's rooming
- house. The Warren Commission could not accept this even though it
- *might* have given Oswald time to kill Tippit for having two men
- involved would have made it a conspiracy!
- As to Lee Harvey Oswald shooting J. D. Tippit, let us examine
- the evidence: Dallas Police Unit #221 (Summers-refer-police radio
- log) stated on the police radio that he had an "eye ball" witness
- to the shooting. The suspect was a white male about twenty-seven,
- five feet, eleven inches, black wavy hair, fair complexioned, (not
- Oswald) wearing an Eisenhower-type jacket of light color, dark
- trousers, and a white shirt, apparently armed with a .32 caliber,
- dark-finish automatic pistol which he had in his right hand. (The
- jacket strongly resembles that worn by the driver of the station
- wagon).
- Dallas Police Unit #550 Car 2 was driven to the scene of the
- Tippit murder by Sgt. Gerald Hill. He was accompanied by Bud
- Owens, Dallas Police Department, and William F. Alexander,
- Assistant D.A. for Dallas. Unit #550 Car 2 reported over the
- police radio that the shells at the scene indicated that the
- suspect was armed with a .38 caliber automatic. 38 automatic
- shells and 38 revolver shells are distinctly different. (Oswald
- allegedly had a 38 revolver in his possession when arrested?)
- After much confusion in the Oak Cliff area the Dallas Police
- were finally directed to the Texas Theater where the suspect was
- reported to be. Several squads arrived at the theater and quickly
- surrounded it. At the back door was none other than William F.
- Alexander, Assistant D.A., and several Dallas Police officers with
- guns drawn. While Dallas Police Officer McDonald and others
- entered the theater and turned on the lights and the suspect was
- pointed out to them, they started searching people SEVERAL rows in
- front of Oswald, giving him a chance to run if he wanted to--right
- into the blazing guns of waiting officers!
- This man had to be stopped. He was the most dangerous criminal
- in the history of the world. Here was a man who was able to go
- from one location to another with the swiftness of Superman, to
- change his physical characteristics at will and who pumped four
- automatic slugs into a police officer with a *revolver*--indeed a
- master criminal!
- Well, back to the facts? Oswald was captured by Officer
- McDonald, who was out cold from one blow from the suspect and woke
- up to find he had arrested the suspect! (Nice going, Mac).
- Later that afternoon I received word of the suspect's arrest and
- the fact that he was suspected of being involved in the President's
- death. I immediately thought of the man running down the grassy
- knoll. I made a telephone call to Capt. Will Fritz and gave him
- the description of the man I had seen and Fritz said, "that sounds
- like the suspect we have. Can you come up and take a look at him?"
- I arrived at Capt. Fritz office shortly after 4:30 p.m. I was
- met by Agent Bookhout from the F.B.I., who took my name and place
- of employment. The door to Capt. Fritz' personal office was open
- and the blinds on the windows were closed, so that one had to look
- through the doorway in order to see into the room. I looked
- through the open door at the request of Capt. Fritz and identified
- the man who I saw running down the grassy knoll and enter the
- Rambler station wagon--and it WAS Lee Harvey Oswald.
- Fritz and I entered his private office together. He told
- Oswald, "This man (pointing to me) saw you leave." At which time
- the suspect replied, "I told you people I did." Fritz, apparently
- trying to console Oswald, said, "Take it easy, son--we're just
- trying to find out what happened." Fritz then said, "What about
- the car?" Oswald replied, leaning forward on Fritz' desk, "That
- station wagon belongs to Mrs. Paine--don't try to drag her into
- this." Sitting back in his chair, Oswald said very disgustedly and
- very low, "Everybody will know who I am now."
- At this time Capt. Fritz ushered me from his office, thanking
- me. I walked away saddened but relieved that it was the end of the
- day and I could go home, where I could try--at least for a little
- while--to put the tragedy and the day's events out of my mind. I
- was soon to find out that *my* troubles had only begun--for I had
- seen and heard too much that fateful day.
- Saturday, November 23, 1963, I spent the day at home talking to
- my wife, Molly, about Friday's events and playing with Deanna and
- Terry, not knowing that the very next day would bring another
- tragic event which would affect not only my job but my entire
- future.
- Like many other Americans, I was watching television on Sunday
- morning, November 24, 1963 when Jack Ruby shot Lee Harvey Oswald.
- I would like to clear up one thing at this point concerning Ruby's
- access to the basement of the city jail. The Warren Commission
- concluded that Dallas Police Officer R. E. Vaughn, through
- negligence, let Jack Ruby into the basement. What they did not say
- is that Officer Vaughn was questioned extensively after the
- shooting and even submitted to a polygraph test, which he passed,
- showing that he *did not* let Jack Ruby go down the Main Street
- Ramp of the city jail. I have known Officer Vaughn for many years
- and feel that he is honest, conscientious and one of the finest
- people I have ever known. I feel that he was unjustly accused.
- However, bombing Vaughn was the easiest way out for Earl Warren's
- Commission.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- * * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-
- III
-
-
- The industrial and military complex can't survive
- Without their little horror wars they artfully contrive.
- If they push us to the big one then we won't come out alive
- His dream goes marching on.
-
-
- Things were fairly normal for me for the next few months, with
- the exception of curious persons who popped into the Sheriff's
- Office from time to time to ask me questions about the
- assassination.
- On the first anniversary of the assassination a team of newsmen
- from NBC New York came to Dallas. They wanted to do a documentary
- on the assassination and they contacted Jim Kerr of the "Dallas
- Times Herald," who told them of me.
- Jim approached me and said that the NBC people were interested
- in what I had to say and would I talk to them? Jim Kerr indicated
- to me that he had it all set up. However, because I knew how Bill
- Decker felt about anyone in his Department talking about this
- particular event, I told him I would have to get Decker's
- permission. NBC had been calling me since October 1964 asking to
- talk to me but I would not commit myself.
- When they arrived during the week of November 22, I went to
- Decker to ask permission to do the story. Decker promptly sat me
- down in the private office, closed the door and sat there looking
- at me for several minutes. It was difficult to tell if Decker was
- looking at you--with that glass eye of his--but at the same time
- you had the uneasy feeling that he was looking straight through
- you. Decker began to talk with that even, never-rising voice which
- commanded attention and gave you the feeling that it was dangerous
- to interrupt or even question him.
- Decker told me to tell these people (Jim Kerr and NBC) that I
- was a Deputy Sheriff--not an actor--and for me to keep my mouth
- shut. He then went on to say, "Tell them you didn't see or hear
- anything." He then went back to the papers on his desk and I knew
- he was through--and so was I. I relayed the message to Jim Kerr,
- who was very disappointed--and even mad, but he, like me, knew that
- he must not challenge Decker's law.
- From that day forward Bill Decker began to watch my every move.
- People in the office who, before this, very seldom spoke to me,
- began to hang around watching my every move and listening to
- everything I said. Among these were Rosemary Allen, E. R. (Buddy)
- Walthers, Allen Sweatt and Bob Morgan--Decker's four top stoolies.
- Combine the foregoing with the run-in I had with Dave Belin,
- junior counsel for the Warren Commission, who questioned me in
- April of 1964, and who changed my testimony fourteen times when he
- sent it to Washington, and you will have some idea of the pressures
- brought to bear.
- David Belin told me who he was as I entered the interrogation
- room (April 1964). He had me sit at the head of a long table. To
- my left was a female with a pencil and pen. Belin sat to my right.
- Between the girl and Belin was a tape recorder, which was turned
- off. Belin instructed the girl not to take notes until he (Belin)
- said to do so. He then told me that the investigation was being
- conducted to determine the truth as the evidence indicates. Well,
- I could take that several ways but I said nothing. Then Belin
- said, "For instance, I will ask you where you were at a certain
- time. This will establish your physical location." It was at this
- point that I began to feel that I was being led into something but
- still I said nothing. Then Belin said, "I will ask you about what
- you *thought* you heard or saw in regard." Well, this was too
- much. I interrupted him and said, "Counselor, just ask me the
- questions and if I can answer them, I will." This seemed to
- irritate Belin and he told the girl to start taking notes with the
- next question.
- At this point Belin turned the recorder on. The first questions
- were typical. Where were you born? Where did you go to school?
- When Belin would get to certain questions he would turn off the
- recorder and stop the girl from writing. The he would ask me, for
- example, "Did you see anything unusual when you were behind the
- picket fence?" I said, "Yes" and he said, "Fine, just a minute."
- He would then tell the girl to start writing with the next question
- and would again start the recorder. What was the next question?
- "Mr. Craig, did you go into the Texas School Book Depository?" It
- was clear to me that he wanted only to record part of the
- interrogation, as this happened many times.
- I finally managed to get in at least most of what I had seen and
- heard by ignoring his advanced questions and giving a step-by-step
- picture, which further seemed to irritate him.
- At the end of our session Belin dismissed me but when I started
- to leave the room, he called me back. At this time I identified
- the clothing wore by the suspect (the 26 volumes refer to a *box*
- of clothing--not *boxes*. There were two boxes.)
- After I identified the clothing Belin went over the complete
- testimony again. He then asked, "Do you want to follow or waive
- your signature or sign now?" Since there was nothing but a tape
- recording and a stenographer's note book, there was obviously
- nothing to sign. All other testimony which I have read (a
- considerable amount) included an explanation that the person could
- waive his signature then or his statement would be typed and he
- would be notified when it was ready for signature. Belin did not
- say this to me.
- He said an odd thing when I left. It is the only time that he
- said it, and I have never read anything similar in any testimony.
- "Be SURE, when you get back to the office, to thank Sheriff Decker
- for *his* cooperation." I know of no one else he questioned who he
- asked to *thank* a supervisor, chief, etc.
- I first saw my testimony in January of 1968 when I looked at the
- 26 volumes which belonged to Penn Jones. My alleged statement was
- included. The following are some of the changes in my testimony:
-
- * Arnold Rowland told me that he saw two men on the
- sixth floor of the Texas School Book Depository 15
- minutes before the President arrived: one was a Negro,
- who was pacing back and forth by the *southwest* window.
- The other was a white man in the *southeast* corner,
- with a rifle equipped with a scope, and that a few
- minutes later he looked back and only the white man was
- there. In the Warren Commission: *Both* were *white*,
- both were *pacing* in front of the *southwest* corner
- and when Rowland looked back, *both* were gone;
-
- * I said the Rambler station wagon was *light green*.
- The Warren Commission: Changed to a *white* station
- wagon;
-
- * I said the driver of the Station Wagon had on a *tan*
- jacket. The Warren Commission: A *white* jacket;
-
- * I said the license plates on the Rambler were *not*
- the same color as Texas plates. The Warren Commission:
- Omitted the *not*--omitted but one word, an important
- one, so that it appeared that the license plates *were*
- the same color as Texas plates;
-
- * I said that I *got* a *good look* at the driver of the
- Rambler. The Warren Commission: I did *not* get a good
- look at the Rambler. (In Captain Fritz's office) I had
- said that Fritz had said to Oswald, "This man saw you
- leave" (indicating me). Oswald said, "I told you people
- I did." Fritz then said, "Now take it easy, son, we're
- just trying to find out what happened", and then (to
- Oswald), "What about the car?" to which Oswald replied,
- "That station wagon belongs to Mrs. Paine. Don't try to
- drag her into this." Fritz said *car*--station wagon
- was not mentioned by anyone but Oswald. (I had told
- Fritz over the telephone that I saw a man get into a
- station wagon, before I went to the Dallas Police
- Department and I had also described the man. This is
- when Fritz asked me to come there). Oswald then said,
- "Everybody will know who I am now;" the Warren
- Commission: Stated that the last statement by Oswald
- was made in a dramatic tone. This was not so. The
- Warren Commission also printed, "NOW everybody will know
- who I am", transposing the *now*. Oswald's tone and
- attitude was one of disappointment. If someone were
- attempting to conceal his identity as Deputy and he was
- found out, exposed--his cover blown, his reaction
- would be dismay and disappointment. This was Oswald's
- tone and attitude--disappointment at being exposed!
-
-
- Shortly after the Kerr and Belin incidents, the Sheriff took me
- out of the field and assigned me to the Bond Desk. This meant that
- I was sitting directly in line with Decker's office door, where he
- could watch me. It made me feel a little like a goldfish in a
- bowl!
- While I was on the Bond Desk I noticed Eva Grant (Jack Ruby's
- sister) was making daily visits to Decker's office. During this
- time Eva and I came to be on good terms. It was convenient for her
- to speak to me when she came in because of the position of my
- desk--close to the door leading into the Sheriff's Department. As
- time went on Eva Grant would stop me in the hall every time I went
- for a cup of coffee or took a break. Decker became very concerned
- over this and it was not long before I realized that ever time Eva
- and I talked we were joined by someone. In addition to this, Buddy
- Walthers would be standing close by and listening. (This is
- another example of his talents as a peace officer--that he would
- make himself so conspicuous.) First he would stand and listen, and
- then head into Decker's office.
- After a few days of this and armed with information from this
- so-called detective--who couldn't track an elephant through the
- snow with a nose bleed--Decker called me into his office and
- pointed to a chair without saying a word. Well, knowing he wasn't
- giving me the chair or asking me to look it over, I sat down.
- After a long silence he finally said, "What about it?" This was
- Decker's way of telling you he knew it (whatever it was) and he
- wanted you to "confess". I felt sure Eva Grant was going to be the
- subject of conversation but I was determined to make him start the
- interrogation--after all he wanted the answers and, apparently,
- Buddy had not heard as much as he thought he had.
- Finally he gave in and said, "You've been talking to Eva Grant."
- I said, "Yes sir." Decker then said, "What about?" I replied,
- "She is concerned about Jack's depressed state of mind and worried
- about the fact that he looks ill." Decker said, "That's none of
- your business." I replied with the only thing that Decker would
- accept--I said, "No sir." Apparently sure that he had convinced me
- once again that there was no law except Decker's law, he pointed to
- the door and I left. He was a man of few words!
- The next day Eva and I had another talk. She was getting more
- and more concerned about Jack's health. She had been to see Decker
- several times trying to secure medical help for her brother. By
- this time the rumor was all through the Sheriff's office that Jack
- was, indeed, ill. Most of this information came from the deputies
- assigned to guard him. The deputies were Walter Neighbors, James
- R. Keene, Jess Stevenson, Jr., and others. Finally Decker
- permitted a doctor to see Jack, a psychiatrist, who said Jack Ruby
- had a cold!
- A few weeks passed, during which time I received same telephone
- calls concerning the assassination and my testimony. These calls
- came from various people from different parts of the country who
- were, apparently, just interested. These calls somehow were
- reported to Bill Decker. Not having a reason to fire me, he did
- the next best thing, he had a monitoring unit connected to the
- telephone system so that he could periodically check any telephone
- calls.
- I will not go into the events leading to Jack Ruby's death.
- Much has already been written about this but I would like to say
- that Jack Ruby made several statements to guards, jail supervisors
- and assistant D.A.'s in which he said "they are going to kill me."
- These statements became a private joke among these people and they
- discussed them freely in the hall of the court house. When the
- Sheriff from Wichita Falls, Texas came to observe the prisoner he
- was about to take charge of, due to Ruby's change of venue, he
- refused to accept the prisoner on the grounds that Ruby was very
- ill. Then, and only then, did Decker send Ruby to Parkland
- Hospital where he died a few short days later (some cold!).
- I was not too concerned about the minor attention I was
- receiving from Decker regarding the assassination and its aftermath
- until August 7, 1966. At 2:03 a.m, I was approached by Hardy M.
- Parkerson, an attorney from New Orleans, La. Mr. Parkerson was
- interested in the assassination and the Jack Ruby trial. I was
- working late nights on the Bond Desk when he came to the Sheriff's
- office. He asked me several questions relating to these tragic
- events and I answered him as honestly as I could and he thanked me
- and left.
- However, on October 1, 1966 Mr. Parkerson wrote to me advising
- me that I was receiving more publicity than I might be aware of.
- He mentioned in his letter that he had picked up a book on a New
- Orleans newsstand. The book was entitled, "The Second Oswald" by
- Richard H. Popkin and my report had been mentioned in the book.
- This disturbed me as I knew my popularity with Decker was fading
- anyway.
- On October 18 I received another letter from Mr. Parkerson. It
- seemed that he had come across another book on a New Orleans
- newsstand which mentioned my name. This one was "Inquest" by
- Edward J. Epstein. Then I began to worry a bit. Of course other
- names were mentioned also in these books but I was concerned
- because of my employer's attitude and the fact that I was in
- definite conflict with the Warren Commission in my testimony.
- In February of 1967 the lid blew off. District Attorney Jim
- Garrison announced publicly his probe into the John F. Kennedy
- Assassination. It wasn't long--in fact, a matter of hours--until
- Decker walked up to me and asked, "Have you been talking to Jim
- Garrison?" I told him that I had not, which was the truth. Decker
- then said, "Somebody sure as hell has." That was the beginning of
- the end of my career as a law officer and my future in Dallas
- County.
- As more and more books critical of the Warren Commission began
- to hit the newsstands throughout the country and I received calls
- and visitors asking questions my future with the Sheriff's Office
- became VERY SHAKY. Finally, on July 4, 1967 Bill Decker called me
- into his office and told me to check out. Knowing there was no
- grievance board and that Decker was the supreme ruler of his
- domain, I left the Sheriff's Office for good.
- I was saddened by the loss of eight years in a job that I had
- given my ALL to. But I was soon to find out that this was only the
- down payment on the price that I was to pay for the truth! I
- immediately began looking for work and found that the Commerce Bail
- Bond Company was just opening an office and needed someone to help
- in the office as Les Hancock, the owner, was just starting out.
- Mr. Hancock and I had a long talk and he agreed that I would be
- an asset to the business because he knew nothing about it and I was
- familiar with bonds and most of the people at the Sheriff's Office
- as well as those wishing to make bond. Les and I seemed to get
- along very well. I posted most of the bonds and kept track of our
- clients. Posting the first few bonds with the county went slowly
- --although the money was in escrow, Decker wanted to personally
- approve *all* bonds posted by me. I did not mind this delaying
- tactic because all it involved was a little extra time for me. The
- bonding business was going very well--within two months we were
- making money.
- I kept up as much as possible on Jim Garrison's probe and
- decided to write him and tell him what I knew--if it would help
- him. Jim Garrison answered my letter and asked me to call him, at
- which time he made arrangements for my trip to New Orleans.
- Les Hancock tried to persuade me not to go, saying I shouldn't
- get involved (a little late). I arrived in New Orleans in late
- October and was picked up at the airport by Bill Boxley, one of
- Jim's investigators, and four men who *didn't* work for Jim.
- Boxley took me to a motel where I was to meet Jim and the other
- four men followed--apparently, they were not invited. Most of my
- talks with Jim were at his office while my "tails" (apparently
- government agents) searched my room. I must apologize to them for
- not bringing what they could "use."
- I had several meetings with Jim Garrison. He showed me numerous
- pictures taken in Dealey Plaza on November 22, 1963. Among them
- was a picture of a Latin male. I recognized him as being the same
- man I had seen driving the Rambler station wagon in which I had
- seen Oswald leave the Book Depository area. I was surprised and I
- asked Jim who the man was. Jim did not know but he did say this
- man was arrested in Dealey Plaza immediately after the
- assassination but was released by Dallas Police because he could
- not speak English! This was, to me, highly unusual. In my
- experience as a police officer I had never known of a person (or
- prisoner) being released because of a language barrier.
- Interpreters were, of course, always available.
- We also discussed the 45 caliber slug found on the south side of
- Elm Street, in the grass, by E. R. (Buddy) Walthers. Buddy had
- indeed found such a slug. He and I discussed it the evening of
- November 22, 1963. Buddy also gave a statement to the Dallas Press
- confirming this find (found among bits of brain matter). However,
- he later denied finding it--after Decker had a long talk with him
- and subsequent to newsmen questioning the Sheriff about the
- evidence.
- Jim Garrison also had a picture of an unidentified man picking
- up this 45 slug and Buddy is also in that photograph. I asked
- Buddy about this many times--after his denial--but he never made
- any comment.
- Jim also asked me about the arrests made in Dealey Plaza that
- day. I told him I knew of twelve arrests, one in particular made
- by R. E. Vaughn of the Dallas Police Department. The man Vaughn
- arrested was coming from the Dal-Tex Building across from the Texas
- School Book Depository. The only thing which Vaughn knew about him
- was that he was an independent oil operator from Houston, Texas.
- The prisoner was taken from Vaughn by Dallas Police detectives and
- that was the last that he saw or heard of the suspect.
- Incidentally, there are no records of any arrests, either by the
- Dallas Police Department or the Sheriff's Office, made in Dealey
- Plaza on November 22, 1963. Very strange! *Any* and *all* arrests
- made during my eight years as an officer were recorded. It may not
- have been entered as a record with the Identification Bureau but a
- report was always typed and a permanent record kept--if only in our
- case files. A report on any questioning shows a reason for your
- action and protects you against false arrest. I am saying that
- there is *absolutely* no record in the case files or any place
- else.
- Upon returning to Dallas from my first contact with Jim
- Garrison, I was picked up by another "tail". I was followed
- constantly after that. My wife could not even go to the grocery
- store without being followed. Sometimes they would go so far as to
- pull up next to her and make sure she saw them talking on their
- two-way radios. They would also park across from my house and sit
- for hours making sure I knew they were there.
- On the morning of November 1, 1967 I received a call from a
- friend of mine. He owned a night club at Carroll and Columbia
- Streets in Dallas. Bill said that he wanted to see me and would I
- meet him in front of the club. Bill had called me many times when
- I was a deputy as he was frequently in financial trouble and I
- would have the citation issued for him held up until he was in a
- position to accept them. Some people in Dallas did receive Special
- Treatment in the matter of citations. Bill was not one of these
- but I did this for him because I knew that by holding it up a day
- or so I could save his credit rating--and the creditor would be
- paid without having a Judgment entered. We were friends and it was
- a natural--and practical thing to do.
- When Bill called me on November 1 he said he wanted to talk to
- me about money he owed the Bonding Company where I worked--for
- getting one of his employees out of jail on traffic tickets. He
- had asked that I meet him at 9:00 a.m. At about 8:30 a.m. "me and
- my shadows" started for the club, arriving at approximately 9:00
- a.m.
- When I parked in front of Bill's club "my shadows" began one of
- the sweetest set-ups I had ever seen. One car, a tan Pontiac,
- parked one block in front of my car, racing me, and the other, a
- white Chevrolet with a small antenna protruding from the roof, kept
- circling the block again and again, never stopping. There were two
- men in the Chevrolet. I couldn't get a good look at the driver but
- the other man was in his early thirties. He had dark hair, was
- nice looking and wore a black-and-white checked sport coat.
- Bill had never been late before for an appointment with me but
- he was this time. When it was nearing 10:15 I began to worry that
- those poor bastards would get dizzy from driving around and around
- --and might hit someone.
- Finally, at 10:15 a.m. Bill arrived and we went to the Waffle
- House across the street for coffee. There, as big as life, sitting
- on a stool was the man in the sport jacket--from the white
- Chevrolet. Well . . . we sat down and had coffee. We talked
- about how each of us was doing--just shot the bull--and Bill never
- did bring up the subject which he had said he wanted to discuss
- with me!
- When we finished we started to leave and the man in the sport coat
- jumped up and beat us out of the door. We paid our checks and
- walked out the door and my shadow was nowhere in sight--believe
- me, I looked. We crossed the parking lot and stopped at the
- traffic light, as it was red against us. For some reason I stepped
- down off the curb before the light changed. As I did, Bill fell
- flat on the sidewalk. I was about to find out why. At that very
- instant a shot rang out behind me and the hair just above my left
- ear parted. I felt a pressure and sharp pain on the left side of
- my head. I bolted for my car leaving Bill lying on the ground. I
- heard him say, "You son of a bitch" and I jumped into my car and
- drove home as fast as possible. When I arrived home I told my wife
- what this good friend had done for me. I pondered the idea of
- moving my family to some safe place.
- A curious note: my friend (?) Bill was deeply in debt and about
- to lose his business at the time of the shooting. However, about a
- month later he was completely out of debt, his business was doing
- great and he had invested in two other businesses which were doing
- very well. (Payment was, apparently, not withheld just because the
- trigger man missed.) I decided to get in touch with Jim Garrison.
- I tried all day and finally reached him around ten that evening.
- After I told him what had happened he said someone would be at my
- home within the hour.
- At approximately 11 p.m. someone knocked on the door and I
- opened it with my left hand, holding my 45 automatic in my right
- hand. Standing there was a small but well-built man in his late
- forties or early fifties. He said, "My name is Penn Jones. Jim
- Garrison called me." My hand tightened on the 45 when my wife,
- Molly, took hold of me and said, "I've seen him on T.V. *He is*
- Penn Jones." With that I relaxed and he remained Penn Jones!
- Penn Jones listened to my story and then began making telephone
- calls to newsmen and wire services that he had contact with,
- explaining to me that the best protection for me was open coverage
- on the incident. After a long talk with Penn Jones I found that I
- had a great deal of respect and admiration for this man. Although
- small in stature, I felt he would fight the devil himself to find
- the truth about the assassination.
- The next day, November 2, 1967, when I went to work at Commerce
- Bail Bonds I was approached by two reporters and a photographer
- from Channel 8 in Dallas. They had picked the story up on the news
- wire and wanted a personal interview. After the interview my boss,
- Les Hancock, called me into his office and told me he didn't think
- that I should have done the interview (giving no specific reason).
- The next few days Les' attitude was very cold and he would barely
- speak to me. Then, on the 7th of November he called me into his
- office once again. This time he told me the business wasn't doing
- well and he would have to let me go because he was closing the
- office. Of course, I knew better than this--after all I had access
- to all the records and I knew the business was making money. A few
- days later I found out Les merely moved to another location and
- his business continued as usual.
- However, this knowledge did not help me for I was back pounding
- the pavement looking for work. In the meantime I had been in
- contact with Jim Garrison. He informed me that there was an
- opening at Volkswagon International in New Orleans and that I might
- try there. By this time my health had begun to be affected. I had
- undergone a serious stomach operation in August of 1963 and I
- suffer from chronic bronchitis and emphysema (not to mention Dallas
- County Battle Fatigue).
- My family and I made the trip to New Orleans, where I was
- interviewed by Willard Robertson, the owner of the company. Mr.
- Robertson told me he was looking for a Personnel Manager and
- because of my background of dealing with the public he hired me.
- After a long trip back to Dallas where we gathered up our meager
- belongings we moved to New Orleans and I felt good--I was working
- again!
- We had been there but a few days when all of our neighbors and
- half the people where I was working knew who I was. This was due
- to the newspaper and television coverage of Jim Garrison's probe
- into the assassination. Again came the never-ending questions,
- which I did not mind because outside of Dallas people were
- sincerely interested and I certainly did not mind doing what I
- could to clear up any doubts they had. The people at the office
- treated me very well.
- Unfortunately, after about a month I realized that I was not
- doing anything but going in to the office and coming home--nothing
- in between. Although I appreciated Jim Garrison recommending me
- for the job, I knew by this time that he had done this because he
- was concerned about my safety and wanted me out of Dallas. Because
- this company did not really need a Personnel Manager and I couldn't
- take the money for a job I was not doing, I submitted my
- resignation to Mr. Robertson and my family and I returned to Dallas.
- We arrived back in Dallas on a cold and snowy seventh of
- January, 1968, and moved in with Molly's parents as we had very
- little money and nowhere to stay. The next few days I spent
- looking for work. I tried every ad and every lead I could find.
- The people who interviewed me always seemed interested but like all
- companies, they wanted to check out my references. When I failed
- to receive any results from my efforts, I called some of the places
- where I had placed applications to see what was wrong. I always
- received the same answer, "the position had been filled." Finally,
- I decided something was WRONG and I suspected one employment
- reference, Bill Decker. I had a friend write Decker asking for an
- employment reference--he never received an answer!
- My next move was to have someone call Decker and ask for a
- reference and this took some doing. Writing him was one thing but
- talking to him on the telephone was another. He would bait you on
- the telephone and, before you knew it, he knew who you were and
- whether you were legitimate or not.
- Many people in Dallas liked Decker for the favors he could do
- for them but those who did not like him were afraid of the
- tremendous power he possessed in Dallas County. They were afraid
- to oppose him in any issue for fear that this man could, indeed,
- affect their professional careers. A good example is the charge,
- "Hold for Decker." This meant that when Decker wanted to talk to
- you or some friend of his disagreed with an arrest (without
- warrant), you were detained in the county jail until Decker wished
- to talk or release you. NO attorney in Dallas County would dare
- apply for a writ of habeas corpus to secure your release.
- Well, to get back to my "minor" problem, I finally found
- someone to call Decker for a reference and when he did Decker
- informed him that, "Mr. Craig had worked for me and I would not
- re-hire him and that is all I've got to say about Mr. Craig." So .
- . . I had worked for the Sheriff for eight years and yet, without a
- reference, it was as though those years had never existed. How do
- you explain this kind of situation to a prospective employer?
- After many more exhaustive interviews, I found a company, on
- February 1, 1968, which had just opened a branch office in Dallas
- and was in BAD need of security guards to work in department stores
- where they had new contracts. When I applied for the job I told
- them of my background in law enforcement, leaving out the details
- of my separation with the Sheriff's Office. I only showed them the
- watch I was wearing, which is inscribed: Roger D. Craig, First
- Place, Sheriff's Department 1960. (The award was for Officer of
- the Year). They were impressed and with a sigh of relief I was
- hired without the customary background check.
- My first assignment was a department store in East Dallas, where
- I held the very important position of keeping the shopping baskets
- out of the aisles. (Don't knock it--I was working 12 hours a day
- and making a whopping $1.60 per hour).
- By this time my creditors were knocking on my door day and
- night. All of the furniture we had, which was not much, we lost
- and then "along came Jones."
- I had contacted Penn when I arrived back in Dallas and after I
- lost the car he let me use his 1955 Ford, which he wasn't driving,
- and I was back in business!
- Because of the crowded quarters at Molly's parents, we began to
- search for an apartment. We found many and were turned down every
- time. Some people said they did not want to rent to families with
- children. Others would accept us and then when we were ready to
- move in, they would say it was already rented and they had
- "forgotten." Finally, in mid-February we found a couple on Tremont
- Street, who were not afraid to rent to us. Oh, they knew who I was
- but they said it did not matter--they had kept up on the
- assassination.
- Our only outlet for our tensions were the Sunday trips we made
- to the Penn Jones home in Midlothian, Texas. During these visits I
- would try to bring Penn up to date on the latest from the Dallas
- Police Department and Sheriff's Office. I was able to give him
- some help from time to time because I could keep in touch with
- these offices through officers there who were still friendly toward
- me. It was fun and relaxing to get together with Penn and his wife
- L.A., who is a delightful person with a great sense of humor. The
- two of them made you feel as though the whole world was right
- there.
- On one of these visits Penn told me he was going to appear on
- the Joe Pyne show in Los Angeles and asked if I would go with him.
- Needless to say, I owed Penn Jones much over the previous months
- and if I would be an asset, I was certainly prepared to go, I told
- him. I got a leave of absence from my employer, Penn made the
- arrangements and we were off to Los Angeles.
- The Los Angeles trip was a success as far as I was concerned,
- especially when we spoke to the young people at U.C.L.A. They were
- very concerned about the assassination and were kind to Penn and
- me. The only disappointment came in the form of Otto Preminger,
- who was sitting in for Joe Pyne that night. I think his statement
- to the audience speaks for itself. He said that he believed
- whole-heartedly in the Warren Report and when I asked him if he had
- read the Warren Report, he said "no"! After a week of appearances
- on television and radio my lungs were beginning to give me trouble
- and I returned to Dallas with Mrs. Jones, while Penn went on to San
- Francisco.
- After a few weeks back on my important job of keeping the
- shopping carts in line I found that at a dollar and sixty cents an
- hour I had too much month left at the end of the money. We were
- behind on our rent and, oh well, back to the want ads.
- We found a couple who were looking for someone to live in and
- care for their elderly mother, rent free. After all this time
- there was something free? Getting settled did not take very long-
- -with just a few clothes. This worked out fairly well. I worked
- twelve hours a day and Molly did all of the washing, ironing,
- cooking and cleaning--in addition to caring for Terry, Deanna and
- Roger Jr. (who had been staying previously with his grandmother).
- Did I say free?
- In the meantime Penn had returned from San Francisco and during
- a visit to our house he told me he could get me a job in Midlothian
- working at an oil refinery and that the pay was $500.00 per month.
- I hated to give up the prestige of my present position but money
- was money. I gave my employer notice and on April 15, 1968 I
- started work at the refinery. This was not crude oil but used
- motor oil--we re-re-processed it. The work was new to me and I had
- never re-refined used motor oil before. I found that I was a
- little soft. I had to dump three thousand pounds (50 fifty-pound
- bags) of clay into hot oil every morning and pump it back into the
- still which cooked it. This whipped me into shape quite
- rapidly. I was not concerned with the physical work involved for I
- knew that I had a chance to support my family and that was what
- counted.
- The work went smoothly until the second Thursday of May, 1968
- when, while trying to start an engine at the plant, I slipped and
- broke my arm--"good ole lady luck." I had my arm set and missed
- one day of work. On Monday morning I returned to work, knowing I
- could not live on workmen's compensation, which was about $40.00
- per week. I painfully continued to work with the arm in a cast for
- the next six weeks.
- During this six week period my boss had offered to let me move
- into a house he owned in Midlothian so that I would be closer to
- work. I took him up on the offer because I was driving sixty miles
- each day to work and back and Molly was worried about me driving
- and working with the broken arm and--again I was being followed.
- During this time a Dallas Sheriff's car stopped me and asked
- where I was going. I had known this deputy for several years and
- there was no reason for his behavior. Molly's health was getting
- worse. She had serious stomach disorders and the strain of past
- events had not helped--so we moved. Now we were in Midlothian and
- I was driving four miles to work and back.
- During the time I was still driving back and forth from Dallas
- to Midlothian--or the job--I noticed that I was being followed by a
- blue and white pick-up, occupied by a white male. One day, after
- being followed by this truck for several days, as the truck was
- approaching the driver stuck a revolver out the window and was
- about to fire, when another car pulled up behind me and he withdrew
- the pistol.
- My hours were never the same two days in a row but this man
- seemed to know the precise hour I would leave work. Penn Jones and
- I tried to set a trap for this man but, apparently, he knew it and
- got away. I never saw him after that.
- It was six weeks since I had broken my arm and this was the day
- I was to have the cast taken off. I felt good as it had been quite
- a burden. On that morning I reported for work and started
- preparing the pumps and tanks for cooking the oil when lady luck
- smiled down on me once again. I started to light the furnace and
- it blew up, burning my face and a good deal of hair and my arms.
- This was around the first of July, 1968. After the doctor treated
- me, he advised me that I would have to wear the cast another two
- weeks because he was afraid that I would get an infection in the
- burned area if the cast were removed. I do not want to leave the
- impression that my conflict with the Dallas establishment was the
- direct cause of these accidents. However, had the door not been
- closed to me in Dallas, I would not have had to turn to work with
- which I was not familiar.
- In August of 1968 (while living in Midlothian) I received a
- visit in the middle of the night from a man in his fifties who said
- he was out of gas. I was already in bed and Molly was catching up
- on some of my court records when this man came to the door. Molly
- told him I was in bed with a sprained ankle and would not be able
- to help him. She directed him to the neighbors down the road. He
- went straight to his car, which was parked beside our house, got
- in, started it right up and drove off! Apparently, he was not out
- of gas but wanted us to know we could be found. This was about the
- time Penn was printing some pretty hot editorials in his paper with
- information I had supplied. I guess someone didn't like it.
- I made some friends in Midlothian and was getting along fairly
- well. I had a job, a place to live and was able to purchase a used
- car.
- The City Council was taking applications for a city judge.
- After talking it over with Penn Jones and some of my other friends,
- I went before the council for an interview, and, I must say, it was
- somewhat of a surprise when they appointed me. The future was
- beginning to show some promise. I continued the work at the
- refinery and pursued my new duties at city hall.
- On August 5, 1968, Bill Seward, the only other employee at the
- refinery, was discussing a better way to process the oil with Dale
- Foshee, the owner. They were going to try something new in an
- attempt to obtain a better quality of oil. Dale purchased a new
- type of clay which would absorb more waste from the used oil as it
- cooked. Neither of these men told me that this new clay contained
- a substantial amount of some sort of acid. This meant that when I
- dumped it (the clay) into the hot oil tank, as I did every morning,
- and did not wear any sort of breathing devise, I inhaled a great
- deal of the dust from this new product.
- Shortly after I started cooking the oil I noticed I was having
- trouble breathing. I did not pay much attention to it and
- finished the day's work. That night the acid really got to me and
- I found myself passing out. I tried lying my head right in the
- window to get enough air--but still could not. Penn Jones came to
- the house and he and Molly rushed me to the hospital in Mansfield,
- Texas, about ten miles from Midlothian. I stayed under an oxygen
- tent for two days. On the fourth day I felt much better and was
- released from the hospital.
- I had learned, about a week before going to the hospital, that
- the Justice of the Peace in Midlothian was resigning and I was
- persuaded by friends to seek that position. I had talked with the
- county commissioners before I went to the hospital and they made
- their final decision on the day I came home from the hospital. I
- was sworn in as Justice of the Peace on August 8, 1968. I would be
- an appointee until the November election. Now I was working at
- the refinery, holding the position of City Judge and also Justice
- of the Peace. The city paid me $50.00 a month and the Justice of
- the Peace position brought in about $50.00 a month. I was not
- getting rich but look at it this way, I was the entire
- establishment in Midlothian!
- The business for the city was very routine and went rather
- smoothly. However, the Justice Court was another matter. I was
- having to correspond with the surrounding counties and they were
- all cooperative, with one exception (you guessed it), Dallas
- County. Some warrants, citations and subpoenas were sent to the
- Dallas County Sheriff for service. Needless to say, they were
- returned "unable to locate"!
- So the door was still closed to me in Dallas--even in matters of
- the law which these officials were sworn to uphold. Now, also
- Decker knew where I was and it was not long before my creditors,
- with whom I had been trying to make arrangements to pay a little to
- each month, had obtained judgments against me in the Dallas courts
- and I had been served with the papers. Now there was no hope of
- clearing my credit without paying everyone in full, which was
- impossible (I'll bet his glass was really shining). The next few
- weeks I managed to avoid my contact with the Good People of Dallas,
- hoping that they would forget about me--a fat chance!
- In October 1968, my oldest son (Roger, Jr.) wasn't doing well in
- school and he decided to run away from home. I was, of course,
- very concerned about him--he was only fourteen years old. I
- contacted the "Dallas Morning News" to see if they would print his
- picture. I might have just as well invaded Russia. My name was
- immediately connected with Jim Garrison and before I
-
- [ unfortunately, there is a gap here in the manuscript
- between the botton of page 52 and the top of page 53.]
-
- coming up. This would not have been important except for the fact
- that being Justice of the Peace served as a deterrent from
- harassment by certain people, whose names I need not mention.
- It was November and I still had been unable to find a house to
- rent. Midlothian was a very small town and there were just no
- houses to rent. Anyway, the election was over and I had won by
- twenty votes. No doubt, twenty people who did not read the paper
- or watch television. I continued working at the gas station and
- living in my former employer's house. The election had done at
- least one thing for me. Dale still wanted me to move but was not
- pressing as hard. The days which followed were hard--we had rain
- and some sleet and working in this was beginning to affect my
- health. Molly was ill and Deanna, who had suffered from chronic
- bronchitis since birth, was not doing any better than we were.
- December was on us before I knew it and Mr. Roberts, the owner,
- decided to retire from the gas station. This meant, of course,
- that I was back on the street.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- * * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-
- IV
-
-
- Our President is lying up there cold beneath his flame
- He is calling out for vengeance and to do so in his name.
- To keep the peace forever and erase our nation's shame
- His dream goes marching on.
-
-
- This time there were no jobs to be found. However, business in
- the Justice Court was somewhat improved due to the opening of a sub
- station in Midlothian by the Highway Patrol. I could not pay the
- rent or meet the bills but the increase was enough to buy
- groceries. I had resigned as City Judge so that there would be no
- conflict of interest between the two positions (City and County
- Court).
- It was at this time that I was notified by District Attorney,
- Jim Garrison, that he would need me in the upcoming Clay Shaw trial
- --another wrench in the machinery. The night after I was notified
- of this I received a telephone call and the voice asked if I was
- going to go to New Orleans. When I answered, "yes", he just said,
- "get a one-way ticket" and then hung up. I brushed this off as
- just another crank. I'd had those calls before. However, the next
- day I received another call. This time it was a different voice.
- This one asked if I were going to New Orleans and when I said,
- "yes", all he said was, "Remember you have a family" and hung up.
- I must admit this worried me. After that I would get up during the
- night and check the family and house--not a very pleasant way to
- live.
- During this turmoil I at last had a prospect of getting back
- into that illusive pastime called "employment"--it was again Penn
- Jones to the rescue--and I say this with the greatest respect and
- admiration! Penn had been corresponding with a friend of his in
- Boulder, Colorado, regarding helping me find employment out of
- Texas, which seemed the only thing left. The friend suggested to
- Penn that I make a trip to Boulder to check into some leads so the
- Jones family made the arrangements and I was off to Boulder. This
- was in January 1969.
- I arrived in Boulder and was met by members of the Students for
- a Democratic Society, whose names I will not mention. (J. Edgar
- Hoover should not have his work made so easy.) They took me from
- the airport and arranged for my lodging. The next three days I
- filled out applications at various places, including the Boulder
- Police Department and Sheriff's Office because those were the
- positions I was most qualified for and I believed I could be a cop
- and still have compassion for my fellow men. If they would not
- accept me that way, I could always quit--after all, I was an expert
- at being out of work.
- After I had exhausted all possibilities, I thanked the people
- who had been so kind to me and returned to Midlothian, Texas to
- wait. I had been home about one week when I received word from the
- Boulder Sheriff's Department that there would be an opening soon
- and if I wanted the job, it was mine. Satisfied that the out of
- Texas bit was going to pay off, the Penn Jones, bless them,
- financed the trip back to Boulder. This time the family went with
- me. We drove straight through from Midlothian to Boulder. The
- second day in Boulder we found an apartment or two we might be
- able to afford until I started getting regular pay checks. I felt
- good about having a chance at a new start as I went to see Under
- Sheriff Cunningham.
- When I arrived at the Sheriff's Department, Cunningham took me
- to his office, asked me to sit down and closed the door. It was
- then that I began to get that feeling I'd had so many times before
- when I was about to get the purple shaft. Sure enough, I had
- managed to lose a job before I even started. Mr. Cunningham began
- to ask me about my background with the Dallas Sheriff's Department
- (which he already knew from my previous visit) and the reason for
- my termination. Then he brought out his big gun, "What about Jim
- Garrison?" Well, knowing I'd been had, I told him I was going to
- have to testify in the Shaw trial (which I'm sure he already knew).
- I'd heard about every excuse there was for not hiring me but he
- should have handed me this one in a gift-wrapped "surprise"
- package. "Mr. Craig," he said, (I had been Roger until then)
- "we've had a little situation here" and he went on--it seemed that
- one of their jailers had seduced a sixteen-year old girl while she
- was in their custody--WOW--and with *that* and my connection with
- the Garrison probe, the heat would be more than they wanted to
- handle. He was sorry. So was I--all the way back to Texas.
- When we arrived back in Midlothian we were all exhausted and
- very *disappointed*. Molly had the flu, Deanna a bad cold and the
- strain of the past few weeks had taken its toll on me. I was
- having trouble with my stomach and lungs and was down to 138
- pounds. It was February 1, 1969. We had just enough money left
- from the trip to perhaps rent a house and buy a few groceries.
- Dale Foshee was pressing me again to move and I had nowhere to go
- and no prospects of a job. Like a wounded animal, I could only
- think of returning to familiar surroundings--the place that I had
- spent most of my adult life.
- We drove to Dallas and by some streak of luck sneaked by a
- property owner and managed to rent a house. Before this poor,
- misguided soul could change his mind, we gathered up our belongings
- in Midlothian and moved back to Dallas, where I again applied my
- trade of LOOKING for work.
- I spent the following days filling out many applications and
- some of the interviews were even promising. I was very careful not
- to mention any part of my involvement in the assassination.
- However, on February 13, 1969 I was summoned to New Orleans to
- testify in the Clay Shaw trial. On the 14th when I finally took
- the stand the defense tried very hard to discredit me by saying
- that I worked in New Orleans and was, in fact, *still* working in
- that city under an assumed name. Failing to discredit me, they
- accomplished the next best thing, the distorted version appeared in
- newspapers and wire services throughout the country.
- When I returned to Dallas on February 16, 1969 I was to realize
- the full impact of this distorted news story for when I contacted
- the job possibilities I had before I testified I found all doors
- closed. On March 4--after several days of no openings, or being
- told that I was not qualified, or that they would call me, which
- they never did--I found a job with Industrial Towel and Uniform
- Company of Dallas. This was a rental company and they needed men
- so that all I had to do was pass a polygraph test to prove I was
- not a thief, which I passed!
- NOW I was a Route Salesman. Ponder that awhile--a Judge reduced
- to picking up dirty laundry. Oh, well, work is work! Still weak
- and underweight from being sick during January and February, I was
- determined to make it on my new job.
- I left home at 5:45 a.m. and arrived at the plant a little after
- 6:00 a.m., put my route slips in order, loaded my truck and started
- my deliveries. I got back to the plant about 4:30 p.m., unloaded
- the dirty linens, turned in my money and charge slips and got back
- home around 6:30 p.m. This was the season for cold, rainy
- weather--wouldn't you know? I had been to a doctor who gave me
- some medication for the chest infection I had developed and the
- medicine kept me going until March 14--when I, literally, ran out
- of gas.
- On March 18, Molly called Penn and told him that I was not
- any better. Penn began to make arrangements for me to be admitted
- to the Veterans Hospital, where he was to meet me. By this time I
- was out of it and Molly called an ambulance. I had completely
- passed out by the time it had arrived. I knew that I was going to
- the V.A. Hospital but when I woke up a short time later I knew I
- was not at the V.A. Hospital. Those dirty bastards had taken me to
- Parkland Hospital, which has a reputation for saving people
- comparable to my employment record for the past two years. I
- gathered what strength I had, got off the stretcher and staggered
- down the hall.
- Molly had reached Penn, who was waiting at the V.A. Hospital, and
- he was madder than hell as he hated Parkland Hospital even more
- than I did. So, I finally wound up at the V.A. Hospital via Penn's
- car, where I spent the next ten days. I was released from the
- hospital on March 28, 1969 with instructions not to work out in the
- weather until my lungs had improved. This, of course, eliminated
- my job as a route salesman.
- I knew an inside job was going to be hard to find from my
- experience during the past two years. First of all, I knew that
- when my rererences were checked Decker would not give me a
- favorable recommendation--if he even gave one at all. Second, my
- unstable employment record during the past two years had resulted
- in a disastrous credit rating. Eight years of experience in
- various responsible duties at the Sheriff's Office were gone. They
- had, indeed, done their work well!
- After many weeks of search I still had no job and was again
- behind on the rent. At this point we took two cameras, one 8
- millimeter movie and one Minor still, our projector and screen and
- sold them for enough to rent a cheaper house. We moved into a
- three room house on Gurley Street which wasn't much but it kept out
- the rain!
- One day I got a wild idea. I would go down to the Federal
- Building and apply for a government job--those people will hire
- anybody--well, almost anybody. I passed the civil service test and
- was told they had a job coming up in the office and I was qualified
- for it. I was to go back in two days to begin work. Things were
- certainly looking up. I went over to my father-in-law's and drank
- all of his beer to celebrate.
- The two days passed and I headed for my government job, which
- was to be handling correspondence from other government agencies--
- they do a lot of writing to each other. Well, when I arrived I was
- ushered into one of those cubby hole offices AGAIN, where I was
- told that they had received a memo telling them the budget was
- being cut and my job was being eliminated (I hadn't even started).
- Oh, well, at least I was losing "more important" jobs now.
- On June 1 I answered an ad for an Assistant Manager's job at a
- liquor store, where the only qualification was that I pass another
- polygraph test, which I did, proving that I had not yet turned to
- stealing. The next day I reported for work to find that I was a
- delivery boy again. My job was restocking private clubs throughout
- Dallas who bought merchandise from the store. I soon made friends
- with all the club owners and every time I would make a delivery,
- they would insist on buying me a drink. I was making $1.87 an
- hour. I wasn't the highest paid delivery boy in town but after a
- few stops I was probably the happiest!
- In the meantime being out of work from March until June 1, I was
- again behind on the rent as well as the car payment on my used 1965
- Buick. The landlord had asked us to move. I tried to explain my
- situation and the fact that I was *now* working and would try to
- catch up on the rent but he didn't care--I had to go. It was two
- weeks before I received a pay check. I don't know how we made it
- but we did. Molly then found a house for us to rent and I paid the
- first month's rent. I didn't worry about the car payment any
- longer for two days after I started to work the bank repossessed
- the car. We then again went back to driving one of Penn's cars.
- During the slow periods of the weeks which followed I was always
- searching the paper and talking to people--trying to find a better
- paying job with a little security. I was working eleven hours a
- day, six days a week so it took me some time to locate one and I
- also had to be careful not to let people know too much about me
- because the general attitude in Dallas was not to get involved in
- the assassination. (A little late for Dallas).
- On September 18, 1969 I applied at Peakload, Inc., a temporary
- employment service, who was looking for a dispatcher. The job
- consisted of taking orders from companies which needed temporary
- help for a few days, selecting the men from the hall who were best
- suited to the customer's needs, then seeing that they were
- delivered by our driver and picked up promptly after work. Al
- Nagel, the office manager, was from Minnesota and knew little of
- the events in Dallas and nothing of the people involved in the
- assassination so I slipped by and was hired. Now I was doing
- something which I enjoyed and the pay was $500.00 a month with
- time and one-half for over 48 hours. The next few weeks went by
- swiftly. I was working six days a week and making enough money to
- pay the rent, buy groceries and clothes for the kids.
- On November 10, 1969 I was taken to the V.A. Hospital again.
- This time with neuritis, which the doctors said was caused by a
- vitamin deficiency over a long period of time, and bronchial
- pneumonia. This time I was not too concerned because Al Nagel
- liked my work and I was sure that I had a future with Peakload
- regardless of this temporary set back.
- Well, after twenty-four days of what seemed like endless
- injections of vitamins, penicillin and streptomycin (one hundred
- and twenty-eight in all) I was sent home on December 4, 1969. The
- next day I called Al Nagel to tell him that I would return to work
- in a couple of days--when I got my strength back. Al informed me
- that I no longer had the job--that I had been replaced.
- My final check from Peakload paid the rent for a month and
- bought a few groceries but Christmas was coming and I had managed
- somehow not to let the kids down--up until now. While I was in the
- hospital Penn Jones brought a letter he had received from Madeline
- Goddard. She had, apparently, read much on the assassination and
- sent her best wishes and support to us. Also in the letter was the
- answer to this Christmas. Madeline had enclosed a check for
- $100.00.
- She did not realize it, I'm sure, but that kept us from throwing
- my hands up in the air and giving up. The next few weeks were a
- repetition of earlier days--no jobs, no money, no prospects (there
- must be a song in there somewhere). Our only means of eating those
- days was Madeline Goddard's generosity; God bless Madeline and her
- generous heart.
- Penn Jones had a few acres of land in Boyce, Texas, a short
- distance from Midlothian and he had persuaded us to move into the
- smaller of two houses on this land. We decided to go so that I
- could recuperate and regroup my thoughts. By this time, January
- 24, 1970, I was very depressed and ready to throw in the towel.
- Penn and his son, Penn III, moved our belongings into the small
- three-room house and I must say that the fresh air and freedom from
- Dallas and its citizens was a welcome change. After a few days I
- felt better and began exploring our new surroundings. Penn had
- seventy-eight head of cattle on the place and I was feeding twenty
- bales of hay to them every morning. As my strength came back I
- also tackled various small, clean up jobs around the farm. It was
- the least I could do--the rent was free and Penn paid the light and
- water bills. We bought what butane we had to buy for heat and
- cooking. How about this--in 1948 I ran away from home at age 12
- and spent the next four years working on farms and ranches in the
- west and northwest--now twenty-two years later I was back on the
- farm! There were days, however, when the rain and sleet would keep
- me inside, only venturing out when I had to (mostly to feed the
- cows).
- The highlight of each day was when the mail man came as we were
- now corresponding with Madeline Goddard regularly and always looked
- forward to her letters. I do not know what we would have done if
- it hadn't been for this wonderful person. If I live to be a
- hundred, I couldn't repay her!
- Roger, Jr., was sixteen now and living with his grandparents in
- Dallas. Terry and Deanna were going to school in Waxahachie, seven
- miles away. They had to walk about three quarters of a mile to the
- school bus stop so in bad weather we would drive them to school.
- This was no easy job in the 1955 Ford of Penn's, which had seen
- better days. I certainly do not mean to sound ungrateful--Penn
- Jones and his wife were wonderful to us--we will always hold them
- close.
- It was April when the larger house on the land in Boyce became
- vacant and Penn said that we could move into it. We needed the
- room and I would be closer to the stock and the feed for them was
- also in the barn near that house. Living in the bigger house was
- much easier and it was about this time that Penn decided to try to
- raise Holstein calves. There were no jobs in this small county and
- maybe we could make some money on this venture.
- Molly, Terry, Deanna and I drove Penn's Travelall truck to
- Cleburne, where we picked up the calf Penn had bought on a pilot
- project. At three days old, the calf was a big baby at 80 pounds
- or more. Every morning at 7:00 a.m. Molly fixed the calf's bottle
- and we took turns feeding him until he decided that Molly was his
- mother. Cute--but something she wasn't ready for!
- We continued taking care of the cattle for several weeks and
- during this time two calves were born. We named one, a little bull
- calf, "Jones" and the other a heifer calf, Deanna named "Susie."
- They became her only playmates. However, I wasn't making one red
- cent and the only help we received was from Madeline who, God
- knows, was carrying the burden of feeding my family.
- On May 15 a decision had to be made. It was apparent that the
- calf project wasn't going to materialize and Penn was talking of
- selling some of the land and cattle. It looked as though Penn was
- having financial problems and I did not want to add to them. So,
- Molly and I talked and decided the best thing for us was to drive
- to Dallas and make arrangements to stay with someone and for me to
- try *one more time* (there's that song title). We talked to my
- mother, who said we could move in with her until I found a job and
- a place to live.
- As we drove back to Boyce we spoke of our apprehension about
- moving but when we drove into the yard we knew it was the thing to
- do. The front door of the house was standing wide open. I knew
- what was gone even before I got out of the car. I was right. The
- 30-40 Krag rifle (the only one I had managed to hang onto), Terry's
- 30.30 Winchester, which he had received as a gift, his 410 shotgun,
- and the 12 gauge automatic shotgun Penn had loaned me were all
- missing. These were our only means of protection in this place so
- far in the country with no telephone or close neighbors. Now we
- had been stripped of that. Coincidence? Maybe. I was very uneasy
- and the sooner we got out of there, I felt, the better.
- It took two days and two sleepless nights to arrange the move
- but we did it and were back in Dallas and staying with my mother.
- By this time my physical health was somewhat improved and my mental
- attitude was back to normal. This was due to the words of
- encouragement I had received from Madeline and others who had
- written to us over the past months to let me know that there were
- people in this country who cared. I was ready for any opposition
- from the Political Monster which ruled Dallas and even the very
- lives of those so-called Business and Civic leaders who did not
- have the guts to stand on their own two feet! As I thought over
- the past years, I was even amused that *I*, a man of limited
- education and no social position in this City of Purity, had struck
- fear into the hearts of its *great* leaders by just speaking to
- them on the street!
- Although I had not worked steadily since my termination from the
- Dallas County Sheriff's Department, I did not forget my obligation
- as an American. Thus, when asked by certain critics of the Warren
- Report to help, I did what I could. Imagine the turmoil it will
- cause when and if the Dallas Police read this and find out I have
- copied and turned over to a certain editor several names, addresses
- and telephone numbers of people connected with the assassination of
- John F. Kennedy which were LOCKED in the files of the Dallas Police
- Intelligence Division. Not to mention the files which were
- photostated and smuggled out of the Dallas County Mail under Bill
- Decker's nose (all after I left the Sheriff's Department). Even
- though I have not made any money in the past few years, I hope I
- was able to help those who have spent so much time investigating
- the assassination, who certainly haven't made any money either!
- The last week of May, 1970 I got lucky. The ad in the newspaper
- read, "Wanted Dispatcher for temporary labor company". The Company
- was Peakload. I quickly made a call to the chief dispatcher, with
- whom I had worked previously, and found he was working sixteen
- hours every day. He was so happy to hear from me, because of his
- workload, that he offered to come and get me so that I could go to
- work that day. The company had a new office manager, Jim Morris.
- I went in immediately to apply--at the urging of the chief
- dispatcher, Bill Funderburke--and for an interview with Jim Morris,
- the manager. He was from Ft. Worth and knew more about the
- assassination and me than I would have preferred (from the
- questions he asked me concerning Bill Decker, Jim Garrison and
- others who had made the news). However, the office was in trouble
- as they had not been able to keep an evening dispatcher for more
- than three or four weeks at a time since I worked there in 1969.
- With a word of caution as to my activities, Jim put me to work.
- This made Bill very happy as the pressure was now off him. I knew
- the work, the customers and most of the men I would be dealing with
- so Peakload did not have to worry about breaking in a new man. The
- rest of May and early June passed uneventfully but around the
- middle of June Molly went into Baylor Hospital, through the clinic
- as we could not afford a private doctor or the high rate of regular
- hospital services (I had only worked a short time and we still had
- a balance owing on Molly's surgery in August 1969). On June 26
- Molly underwent major surgery. She had been under a tremendous
- strain the past years and was physically and mentally exhausted.
- During this period I had managed to gather enough money to buy a
- 1962 Ford from a friend. It was not the best car in the world but
- it was only a hundred and fifty dollars and it did run. I paid
- $50.00 down and was to pay him the rest in a month or so. I also
- rented a small apartment and it seemed good to once again be by
- ourselves in our own home. But our new found *Wealth* was short
- lived.
- Shortly after this, a self-professed private detective in
- Dallas, by the name of Al Chapman, had written a story about new
- evidence in the assassination which he had sold to the "National
- Enquirer." In this article he quoted me as saying that I had given
- certain information to him and had personally identified a picture
- of a man and car saying it was Lee Harvey Oswald and his
- accomplice.
- The entire story, with reference to me, was completely false. I
- had never been interviewed by this man and had at no time seen the
- picture to which he referred. Al Chapman, prior to the
- assassination, was a custodian for a church in Oak Cliff. There is
- a good deal of mystery about him for he will not reveal his
- business or residential address. Nor is the name of the church
- available. Although he is a part-time private investigator, he has
- no license.
- The story was all over the office and Jim was concerned as he
- had been keeping up on anything written involving these events.
- Before long the F.B.I. and the Dallas Police were making regular
- visits to the office on the pretext of looking for "Jim Jones" or
- "Tom Smith" or any excuse they could use to let me know they could
- also read! The heat was on. Jim was constantly there--everytime I
- looked up--which was unusual. This leech, this skid row bum, and I
- *am* referring to Al Chapman, in his lust for money, not caring
- whom he hurt, had not only sold his story but my future with
- Peakload as well.
- On July 17, 1970, I reported for work to find another man doing
- my job. I was told by this "replacement" that Jim wanted to see
- me. As I sat in Jim's office I knew what was coming. Jim said,
- "Roger, you've done a good job but it is time for a change." I
- asked him for an explanation but all he would say was that it was
- time for a change and he was sorry!
- Bill Decker died in August. The County Commissioners appointed
- his executive assistant, Clarence Jones, to fill the job until
- November, when he had to run for election (with the backing of the
- Democratic Party). For the first time since Decker's reign, the
- Republicans nominated someone to oppose a Democrat for the office.
- The man was Jack Revel, former Chief of the Dallas Police
- Intelligence Division. This meant that the voters had the choice
- between two evils. Well, Clarence Jones was elected--his campaign
- signs and posters read, "Elect Clarence Jones - In the Tradition of
- Bill Decker"! It would be nice if Jack Revel would be upset enough
- over his loss of the election to make public some information--but
- this is very wishful thinking indeed.
- Meanwhile, I am still out of a job (but still looking). I would
- like to think that the people of Dallas will change and rise up
- against the dishonest and irresponsible tyrants who govern in their
- name--but I do not see it happening in the near future. Dallas is
- my home but I will always feel like an outsider because I simply
- will not adjust to the idea that for Dallas, for Texas, for America
- this must serve as DEMOCRACY.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- A Few Odd and Interesting Facts
-
-
- Allen Sweatt, Decker's Chief criminal investigator, let me know
- that he was aware of my friendship with Hiram Ingram and that he
- did not like it one bit.
- Before I departed the Sheriff's Office for good Allen Sweatt and
- I talked a couple of times and he revealed to me that he knew Lee
- Harvey Oswald. He also told me that Oswald worked for the F.B.I.
- as an informer, that he was paid $200.00 a month and his code
- number was S 172.
-
-
- ROBERT PERRIN AND NANCY PERRIN RICH
-
- When Penn Jones wanted the records of Robert Perrin, the ex-
- husband of Nancy Perrin Rich, I had to find a new source of
- information. (I won't release this name for obvious reasons.) It
- seems that Nancy Perrin was connected with Jack Ruby, Clay Shaw and
- Lee Oswald at about the time of President Kennedy's death.
- Robert Perrin was reported to have committed suicide in New
- Orleans, La. The autopsy showed no visible scars, marks or tattoos
- and Penn knew that Perrin had been arrested in Dallas and wanted me
- to get the records of the arrest along with his description. After
- some doing I finally obtained the record. It showed that Perrin
- had several tattoos and part of his right index finger was missing.
- None of this information showed up on the autopsy report. It would
- be interesting to know who WAS buried in Robert Perrin's place and
- where Robert Perrin is now, wouldn't it?
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- ADDENDUM
-
-
- The favorite pastime in Dallas
- Is a game they call murder with malice.
- They don't ask your leave.
- But not to deceive. . . .
- To tell you would be - well, too callous.
-
-
-
- CAR ACCIDENT
-
- On Wednesday, October 27, 1970 I went to downtown Dallas to Jack
- Revel's campaign headquarters to pick up some campaign signs. The
- headquarters were not open and I decided to visit a friend who
- works at a restaurant across the street. While talking with my
- friend the conversation turned, as it so often does, to the
- assassination. He and I had discussed this in the past.
- During the course of our conversation a man who I had not met
- before entered into the conversation. He, of course, did not know
- me (not to my knowledge). I told him that I was from out of town
- and that I was interested in facts that hadn't been printed and in
- persons that had known Jack Ruby and Lee Oswald. This man said, "I
- knew Oswald and Ruby. I can tell you anything you want to know
- about them."
- At this point I became very interested and I told him again that
- I'd sure like to know first hand what they were like. He said, "I
- knew Ruby well--I had seen Oswald a couple of times in Ruby's
- place." I then said, "Well, in Ruby's business--the night club--I
- imagine a lot of people were seen there." He sort of chuckled and
- said "Huh--Jack Ruby's business was spelled Mafia." He then said,
- "I can show you a used car lot where Ruby collected a lot of
- gambling money over on Ross Avenue" (it was the 4600 block of Ross
- Avenue). So I offered to drive him over there and he said, "No--do
- you have your car here?" I did. He said I should follow him,
- which I did. I parked my car on the same side of the street as the
- car lot, a short distance down and walked back to his car. I
- opened the door of his car on the passenger side and he pointed to
- the car lot and said, "That's where a lot of the money comes in
- from the gambling operation and Jack picked it up here."
- He said, "If you really want to know what's going on in Dallas
- you have to talk to someone who's been around--and I've been around
- in those circles." Then he said, "Just leave your car parked there
- and come with me--I'll show you something that's REALLY
- interesting." He drove me to 300 1/2 South Ewing in the Oak Cliff
- area to an apartment that had been a family dwelling and was
- converted into apartment units. I should mention here that Jack
- Ruby's address at the time of the assassination was 323 South
- Ewing.
- The apartment at 300 1/2 South Ewing is upstairs and when we
- walked into the apartment there was a distinct feeling of an
- unlived-in atmosphere. The furnishings were bare. There was a
- couch, chair and coffee table--no lamps, no ash trays, nothing on
- the walls. The man had been smoking so it was odd that there were
- no ash trays. He said, "How about a cup of coffee?" We went into
- the kitchen, he opened the cabinet and said, "Oh well, I guess I'm
- out of coffee." He was also out of everything else as there was
- nothing in the cabinet.
- The arrangement of the apartment was unusual as you had to go
- through the bedroom to the kitchen, which was very small. The
- closet door was open in the bedroom. However, there were no
- clothes in it. At that time I became slightly nervous about the
- situation.
- We went back into the bedroom from the kitchen. While in the
- bedroom he said, "I want to show you something." He opened the top
- drawer of the dresser and pulled out a shoulder holster--there was
- a 32 revolver with a three inch barrel in the shoulder holster. He
- pulled the 32 out of the holster and said, "what do you think about
- that?" I remarked that you don't see many 32's with a barrel like
- that. He put the 32 back in the drawer and went around to the side
- of the closet which was not visible when you went into the kitchen.
- At that time he produced two rifles--one was a bolt action which
- looked like a 30.06, the other was a high power automatic which
- appeared to be a 257 caliber.
- I remarked that they were nice rifles and I would like to have a
- good deer hunting rifle. He then laid those two on the bed and he
- said, "You haven't seen anything yet." He then got down on the
- floor and he pulled 5 more rifles from under the bed. Each of
- these were equipped with scopes. He then pulled a cardboard box
- about 13 inches long and 10 inches deep also from under the bed.
- The box was closed and on the side was printed "Ammunition - Handle
- With Care." He then slid the rifles and ammunition back under the
- bed. I said jokingly, "What are you gonna do--start a war?" He
- said, "Could be."
- At that time he looked at his watch and said "excuse me just a
- minute, I have to go down to the landlady's apartment and make a
- phone call--I promised some people I would call them" (there was no
- telephone in the apartment). He was gone for about ten minutes.
- During this time I made a mental inventory of the apartment. After
- he returned he asked me if I was ready to go back to my car. There
- was a pay phone on the corner from the apartment and I asked him to
- pull over so that I could call the people who owned the car (I had
- told him that it was borrowed while I was in Dallas), that I wanted
- to let them know that the car was okay. From the pay phone I
- called my wife and gave her the man's name and address and told her
- of the situation. His name--as he gave me is A.E. Allen, 300 1/2
- South Ewing, Dallas, Texas.
- Before we went to his apartment, or the apartment, I told him
- being from out of town that I didn't know much, but that I had
- heard that Ruby was in the gun running business. He said that Ruby
- wasn't actually buying and selling weapons. That people in higher
- positions made the arrangements for the buying and selling of
- weapons. That Ruby was mainly the go-between for delivering the
- money and making arrangements for the storage of the weapons until
- they were shipped out.
- During the course of the evening he made the statement several
- times that, "if you want to stay healthy, don't say anything to
- anybody in Dallas about the assassination unless you're damn sure
- you know who you're talking to."
- He then said that there were a lot of people in Dallas who were
- out to "get" him because he knows too much. ?
- One of the strangest things that he did was to drive on East
- Jefferson to a used car lot and stop. There were two men inside
- the office and he went in and talked to them. I stayed in the car
- and could see them through a window of the office. He was in there
- only a few minutes. His car was a light blue Oldsmobile 66 model.
- When he came out of the office he got into a gray Olds sitting on
- the lot and he drove it onto the drive stopping just before he
- entered the street--he motioned to me--I was watching him. I got
- out of the blue Olds and he took me back to my car in the gray
- Olds. ?
- On the way to my car across town, he kept repeating there's a
- lot more to this (the assassination) than they'll ever know. In
- taking me to my car he cut across to Ft. Worth Avenue. While
- driving slowly along he pointed out certain private clubs--saying
- that he wasn't allowed in one or the other. My first thought was
- that he was trying to give me the impression that he was
- knowledgeable about the workings of the Dallas underworld.
- However, it really seems that he was using a delaying measure--
- since it took from 10:00 p.m. until 11:15 p.m. to drive me to my
- car--an ordinary 15 minute drive at that time.
- When I got out of his car at mine he said, "I'll call you
- tomorrow." Earlier in the evening he had implied he was going to
- give me more information. I had given him a number to reach me by.
- Needless to say I did not hear from him after the incident that
- followed!
- I had locked my car when I parked it. When I got into it I
- turned the key over to start the engine. At this point there was a
- muffled type explosion and then smoke came out the sides of the
- hood. The hood had a double latch and didn't blow. Fire was
- coming through the air vents under the dash and a pillow was
- burning inside the car.
- I jumped out of the car and raised the hood. The engine, hoses,
- firewall and even under the bell housing was all ablaze. Several
- persons came up and someone called the fire department. A man
- named Bill Booken was walking by at about the time it happened.
- The fire department used 2 cans of chemical to extinguish the fire.
- This was one of the hottest fires I had ever seen. There was no
- smell of gasoline before or after, there was no back fire as the
- car had not started and afterwards the gas lines were checked and
- there were no leaks. There was an air breather on the car and in
- fact, there was no mechanical reason for the explosion.
- This happened at 4625 Ross Avenue. Mr. Booken took me to
- Anderson's Restaurant at 4909 Ross Avenue where I called my wife
- and she arranged for my brother Duane to come after me. I didn't
- know that I had been injured until I felt the warm blood running
- down my shirt after my brother picked me up. I had lost quite a
- lot of blood by the time I went to the emergency room. I was there
- for three hours. A police report was made. I had received 5
- puncture type wounds in the chest area. One vein had been severed
- and had to be tied and stitches taken in the wounds. X-rays were
- also made. I went to our family physician the following day and
- had the stitches removed the following Monday. It was never
- completely determined what hit me. Another close call! The doctor
- at the emergency room said I was lucky the wounds had not been
- lower and our family physician said I was lucky the wounds were not
- in the neck. So . . . I suppose I'm just lucky all the way round!
-
-
-
-
- --
- daveus rattus
-
- yer friendly neighborhood ratman
-
- KOYAANISQATSI
-
- ko.yan.nis.qatsi (from the Hopi Language) n. 1. crazy life. 2. life
- in turmoil. 3. life out of balance. 4. life disintegrating.
- 5. a state of life that calls for another way of living.
-