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- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
- Path: sparky!uunet!paladin.american.edu!darwin.sura.net!wupost!mont!pencil.cs.missouri.edu!daemon
- From: dave@ratmandu.esd.sgi.com (dave "who can do? ratmandu!" ratcliffe)
- Subject: "Presumed Guilty, How & Why the W.C. Framed Lee Harvey Oswald" [9/11]
- Message-ID: <1992Jul22.134822.17781@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Followup-To: alt.activism.d
- Summary: A factual account based on the Commission's public & private documents
- Originator: daemon@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Keywords: continued endemic denial of our true history consigns us to oblivion
- Sender: news@mont.cs.missouri.edu
- Nntp-Posting-Host: pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Organization: Silicon Graphics, Inc.
- Date: Wed, 22 Jul 1992 13:48:22 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 598
-
-
- * * * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- 8
-
-
- The Alibi: Oswald's Actions after the Shots
-
-
-
-
- The first person to see Oswald after the assassination was Dallas
- Patrolman Marrion Baker, who had been riding a motorcycle behind
- the last camera car in the motorcade. As he reached a position
- some 60 to 80 feet past the turn from Main Street onto Houston,
- Baker heard the first shot (3H246). Immediately after the last
- shot, he "revved up that motorcycle" and drove it to a point near a
- signal light on the northwest corner of Elm and Houston (3H247).
- From here Baker ran 45 feet to the main entrance of the Book
- Depository, pushing through people and quickly scanning the area.
- At the main entrance, Baker's shouts for the stairs were
- spontaneously answered by building manager Roy Truly as both men
- continued across the first floor to the northwest corner, where
- Truly hollered up twice for an elevator. When an elevator failed
- to descend, Truly led Baker up the adjacent steps to the second
- floor. From the second floor, Truly continued up the steps to the
- third; Baker, however, did not. The Report describes the
- situation:
-
- On the second floor landing there is a small open area
- with a door at the east end. This door leads into a small
- vestibule, and another door leads from the vestibule into
- the second-floor lunchroom. The lunchroom door is usually
- open, but the first door is kept shut by a closing mechanism
- on the door. This vestibule door is solid except for a
- small glass window in the upper part of the door. As Baker
- reached the second floor, he was about 20 feet from the
- vestibule door. He intended to continue around to his left
- toward the stairway going up but through the window in the
- door he caught a fleeting glimpse of a man walking in the
- vestibule toward the lunchroom. (R151)
-
- Baker ran into the vestibule with his pistol drawn and stopped the
- man, who turned out to be Lee Harvey Oswald. Truly, realizing that
- Baker was no longer following him, came down to the second floor
- and identified Oswald as one of his employees. The two men then
- continued up the stairs toward the Depository roof.
- "In an effort to determine whether Oswald could have descended
- to the lunchroom from the sixth floor by the time Baker and Truly
- arrived," the Commission staged a timed reconstruction of events.
- The Commission knew that this encounter in the lunchroom such a
- short time after the shots could have provided Oswald with an
- alibi, thus exculpating him from involvement in the shooting. The
- reconstruction could not establish whether Oswald was at the
- sixth-floor window; it could, however, tell whether he was {not}.
- In the interest of determining the truth, it was vital that this
- reenactment be faithfully conducted, simulating the proper actions
- to the most accurate degree possible.
- From beginning to end, the execution of the reconstruction was
- in disregard of the known actions of the participants, stretching-
- -if not by intent, certainly in effect--the time consumed for Baker
- to have arrived on the second floor and shrinking the time for the
- "assassin's" descent.[1]
- To begin with, the reconstruction of Baker's movements started
- at the wrong time. Baker testified that he revved up his
- motorcycle immediately after the {last} shot (3H247). However,
- Baker's time was clocked from a simulated {first} shot (3H252). To
- compare the time of the assassin's descent with that of Baker's
- ascent, the reconstruction obviously had to start after the last
- shot. Since the time span of the shots was, according to the
- Report, from 4.8 to over 7 seconds, the times obtained for Baker's
- movements are between {4.8 and 7 seconds in excess}.
- Although Baker testified that he was flanking the last "press"
- car in the motorcade (3H245), the record indicates that he was, in
- fact, flanking the last {camera} car--the last of the convertibles
- carrying the various photographers, closer to the front of the
- procession than the vehicles carrying other press representatives.
- Baker said he was some 60 to 80 feet along Houston Street north of
- Main when he heard the first shot (3H246). Those in the last
- camera car were also in this general location at the time of the
- first shot (Jackson: 2H158; Couch: 6H156; Dillard: 6H163-64;
- Underwood: 6H169;). During the reconstruction, Baker drove his
- motorcycle from his location at the time of the {first} shot a
- distance of 180 to 200 feet to the point in front of the Depository
- at which he dismounted (3H247). However, since Baker had revved up
- his cycle immediately after the {last} shot on November 22, the
- distance he traveled in the reenactment was entirely too long.
- Since the motorcade advanced about 116 feet during the time span of
- the shots, the distance Baker should have driven in the
- reconstruction was no greater than 84 feet (200 - 116 = 84). This
- would have placed Baker near the intersection of Elm and Houston at
- the time he revved up his cycle, not 180 feet from it as was
- reconstructed. Likewise, the men in the last camera car recalled
- being in proximity to the intersection at the time of the last shot
- (Underwood: 6H169; Couch: 6H158; Jackson: 2H159).
- With 116 feet extra to travel in a corresponding added time of
- 4.8 to 7 seconds, Baker was able to reach the front entrance of the
- Depository in only 15 seconds during the reconstruction (7H593).
- Had the reenactment properly started at the time of the last shot,
- it follows that Baker could have reached the main entrance in 8 to
- 10 seconds. Did Baker actually consume so little time in getting
- to the Depository on November 22?
- The Commission made no effort to answer this question, leaving
- an incomplete and unreliable record. Billy Lovelady, Bill Shelley,
- Joe Molina, and several other employees were standing on the steps
- of the Depository's main entrance during the assassination.
- Lovelady and Shelley testified that another employee, Gloria
- Calvery, ran up to them and stated that the President had been
- shot; the three of them began to run west toward the parking lot,
- at which time they saw Truly and a police officer run into the
- Depository (6H329-31, 339). This story is contradicted by Molina,
- who contended that Truly (he did not notice Baker) ran into the
- main entrance before Gloria Calvery arrived (6H372). Mrs. Calvery
- was not called to testify, and the one statement by her to the FBI
- does not address this issue. From her position just east of the
- Stemmons Freeway sign on the north side of Elm (22H638), it does
- not seem likely that she could have made the 150-foot run to the
- main entrance in only 15 seconds. Yet, adding to this confusion is
- an affidavit that Shelly executed for the Dallas Police on November
- 22, 1963. Here he stated that {he} ran down to the "park" on Elm
- Street and met Gloria Calvery {there} (24H226). Obviously, the
- issue cannot be resolved through these witnesses.
- While Molina felt that Truly ran into the Depository some 20 to
- 30 seconds after the shots (6H372), Lovelady and Shelley estimated
- that as much as three minutes had elapsed (6H329, 339). When
- Counsel Joe Ball cautioned Lovelady that "three minutes is a long
- time," Lovelady partially retracted because he did not have a watch
- then and could not be exact (6H339). Supporting Molina's estimate,
- Roy Truly told the Secret Service in December 1963 that Baker made
- his way to the front entrance "almost immediately" (CD87, Secret
- Service Control No. 491); almost a year later Truly said on a CBS
- News Special that Baker's arrival "was just a matter of seconds
- after the third shot."[2]
- I was able to resolve the issue concerning Baker's arrival at
- the Depository through evidence strangely absent from the
- Commission's record. Malcolm Couch, riding in the last camera car
- (Camera Car 3), took some very important motion-picture footage
- immediately after the shots. Couch, whose car was almost at the
- intersection of Elm and Houston when the last shot sounded,
- immediately picked up his camera, made the proper adjustments, and
- began filming (6H158). Others in Camera Car 3 related how their
- car came to a stop or hesitated in the middle of the turn into Elm
- to let some of the photographers out (2H162; 6H165, 169). Couch's
- film begins slightly before the stop, just as the car was making
- the turn (6H158). From Couch's testimony and the scenes depicted
- in his film, in addition to the testimony of others in the same
- car, it can be determined that Couch began filming no more than 10
- seconds after the last shot.[3]
- The first portion of the Couch film depicts the crowds
- dispersing along the island at the northwest corner of Elm and
- Houston. The camera pans in a westerly direction as the grassy
- knoll and Elm Street come into view. In these beginning sequences,
- a motorcycle is visible, parked next to the north curb of Elm, very
- slightly west of a traffic light at the head of the island. Baker
- testified that he parked his cycle 10 feet {east} of this signal
- light (3H247-48). The position of the motorcycle in the Couch film
- is not in great conflict with the position at which Baker recalled
- having dismounted; it is doubtful that Baker paid much attention
- to the exact position of his motorcycle in those confused moments.
- It would appear that this cycle, identical with the others driven
- in the motorcade, {must} have been Baker's, for it is not visible
- in any photographs taken {during} the shots, including footage of
- that area by David Weigman,[4] and no other motorcycle officer
- arrived at that location in so short a time after the shots. No
- policeman appears on or around the cycle depicted in the Couch
- film.
- Thus, photographic evidence known to, but never sought by, the
- Commission proves that Officer Baker had parked and dismounted his
- motorcycle {within 10 seconds after the shots}. Corroborative
- evidence is found in the testimony of Bob Jackson, also riding in
- Camera Car 3. Jackson told the Commission that after the last
- shot, as his car hesitated through the turn into Elm, he saw a
- policeman run up the Depository steps, toward the front door
- (2H164). This is entirely consistent with Baker's abandoned
- motorcycle's appearing at this same time in the Couch film.
- During the Baker-Truly reconstructions, Baker reached the second
- floor in one minute and 30 seconds on the first attempt and one
- minute, 15 seconds on the second (3H252). Since Baker's simulated
- movements up to the time he reached the main entrance consumed 15
- seconds (7H593), the actions subsequent to that must have been
- reenacted in a span of one minute to about 75 seconds. However,
- since Baker actually reached the main entrance within 10 seconds on
- November 22, the reconstructed time is cut by at least five
- seconds. Further reductions are in order.
- Officer Baker described the manner in which he simulated his
- movements subsequent to dismounting his motorcycle:
-
- From the time I got off the motorcycle we walked the
- first time and then we kind of run the second time from the
- motorcycle on into the building. (3H253)
-
- Baker neither walked nor "kind of" ran to the Depository entrance
- on November 22. From his own description, he surveyed the scene as
- he was parking his cycle, and then "{ran} straight to" the main
- entrance (3H248-249). Billy Lovelady also swore that Baker was
- {running} (6H339). However, Truly provided the most graphic
- description of Baker's apparent "mad dash" to the building:
-
- I saw a young motorcycle policeman {run} up to the building,
- up the steps to the entrance of our building. He {ran}
- right by me. And he was pushing people out of the way. He
- pushed a number of people out of the way before he got to
- me. I saw him coming through, I believe. As he {ran} up
- the stairway--I mean up the steps, I was almost to the
- steps, and I {ran} up and caught up with him. (3H221;
- emphasis added)
-
- Thus, walking through this part of the reconstruction was, as
- Harold Weisberg aptly termed it, pure fakery, unnecessarily and
- unfaithfully burdening Baker's time.[5] The Report, on the other
- hand, assures us that the time on November 22 would actually have
- been {longer}, because "no allowance was made for the special
- conditions which existed on the day of the assassination--possible
- delayed reaction to the shot, jostling with the crowd of people on
- the steps and scanning the area along Elm Street and the Parkway"
- (R152-53). Had the Commission directed any significant effort to
- obtaining as many contemporaneous pictures as possible--including
- those taken by Couch--it could not have engaged in such excuse-
- making. Even at that, how could the Commission dare go to all the
- efforts of staging a reconstruction and then admit--to its own
- advantage--that it deliberately failed to simulate actions? As was
- discussed in chapter 1, this child's play was inexcusable as an
- effort bearing such weight in deciding Oswald's guilt. The Couch
- film eliminates the possibility that the factors mentioned in the
- Report could have slowed Baker down. As for "jostling with the
- crowd of people on the steps," the Report neglected to mention
- other disproof of this as a slowing factor. As Truly testified,
-
- when the officer and I ran in, we were shouldering people
- aside in front of the building, so we possibly were slowed a
- little bit more coming in than we were when he and I came in
- on March 20 (date of the reconstruction). {I don't believe
- so. But it wouldn't be enough to matter there}. (3H228;
- emphasis added)
-
- Once in the building during the reconstruction, the two men
- proceded [sic] to the elevators "at a kind of trot . . . it wasn't
- a real fast run, an open run. It was more of a trot, kind of"
- (3H253). This, again, was not an accurate simulation of the real
- actions. While Truly admitted that the reconstruction pace across
- the first floor was "about" the same as that of November 22, he
- described the former as a trot and the latter as "a little more
- than a trot" (3H228). Baker himself said that once through the
- door, he and Truly "kind of ran, not real fast but, you know, {a
- good trot}" (3H249), not the "kind of trot" he described during the
- reconstruction. A swinging door at the end of the lobby in the
- main entrance was jammed because the bolt had been stuck.
- Apparently, the pace on November 22 was of sufficient speed for
- Truly to bang right into this door and Baker to subsequently
- collide with Truly in the instant before the door was forced open
- (3H222). Likewise, Eddie Piper, a first-floor witness, had seen
- the two men {run} into the building, yell up for an elevator, and
- "take off" up the stairs (6H385).
- In walking through part of the reconstruction, which should have
- been conducted running and was begun at least five seconds early,
- Baker and Truly managed to arrive on the second floor in one
- minute, 30 seconds. In the reconstruction, equally begun too early
- but staged at a pace closer to, though not simulating that of
- November 22, the time narrowed to a minute and 15 seconds. While
- Baker and Truly felt that the reconstructed times were minimums
- (3H228, 253), it would seem that the opposite was true.
- Subtracting the extra seconds tacked on by including the time span
- of the shots reduces even the maximum time to one minute, 25
- seconds. The understandably hurried pace of November 22 as
- manifested in all the evidence would indicate that Truly and Baker
- reached the second floor in under 85 seconds, and the Couch film
- introduces the possibility that it may have taken as little as 70
- seconds, since Baker parked and abandoned his motorcycle within ten
- seconds of the last shot.
- The second part of the reconstruction was supposed to have
- simulated the "assassin's" movements from the sixth-floor window
- down to the second-floor lunchroom. Here the figurative lead
- weights tied to Baker and Truly during the reconstruction of their
- movements are exchanged for figurative roller skates, to shorten
- the time of the "assassin's" descent.
- Secret Service Agent John Howlett stood in for the "assassin."
- He executed an affidavit for the Commission in which he described
- his actions:
-
- I carried a rifle from the southeast corner of the sixth
- floor northernly along the east aisle to the northern
- corner, then westernly [{sic}] along the north wall past the
- elevators to the northwest corner. There I placed the rifle
- on the floor. I then entered the stairwell, walked down the
- stairway to the second floor landing, and then into the
- lunchroom. (7H592)
-
- This test was done twice. At a "normal walk" it took one minute
- and 18 seconds; at a "fast walk," one minute, 14 seconds (3H254).
- This reconstruction also suffered from most serious
- ommissions.[sic]
- The "assassin" could not just have walked away from his window
- as Howlett apparently did. If the gunman fired the last shot from
- the Carcano as the official theory demands, a minimum time of 2.3
- seconds after the last shot must be added to the reconstructed time
- since the cartridge case from that shot had to be ejected--an
- operation that involves working the rifle bolt. Furthermore,
- witnesses recalled that the gunman had been in no hurry to leave
- his window (2H159; 3H144).
- There were also physical obstructions that prevented immediate
- evacuation of the area. Commission Exhibit 734 shows that some
- stacks of boxes nearest to the "assassin's" window did not extend
- far enough toward the east wall of the building to have blocked off
- the window there completely. However, as Commission Exhibits 723
- and 726 clearly show, other columns of boxes were situated behind
- the first stacks; these formed a wall that had no openings large
- enough for a man to penetrate without contortion. Deputy Sheriff
- Luke Mooney discovered three cartridge cases by this window. He
- had to squeeze "between these two stacks of boxes, I had to turn
- myself sideways to get in there" (3H285). The gunman would have
- had to squeeze through these stacks of boxes while carrying a 40-
- inch, 8-pound rifle. Considering these details, we must add at
- least six or seven seconds to the Commission's time to allow for
- the various necessary factors that would slow departure from the
- window.
- To simulate the hiding of the rifle, Howlett "leaned over as if
- he were putting a rifle there [near the stair landing at the
- northwest corner of the sixth floor]" (3H253). The Commission did
- not do justice to its putative assassin who, as the photographs
- reveal, took meticulous care in concealing his weapon. The mere
- act of gaining access to the immediate area in which the rifle was
- hidden required time. This is what Deputy Sheriff Eugene Boone
- went through before he discovered the rifle:
-
- As I got to the west wall, there were a row of windows
- there, and a slight space between some boxes and the wall.
- I squeezed through them. . . . I caught a glimpse of the
- rifle, stuffed down between two rows of boxes with another
- box or so pulled over the top of it. (3H293)
-
- Luke Mooney "had to get around to the right angle" before he could
- see the rifle (3H298). Likewise, Deputy Constable Seymour Weitzman
- reported that "it was covered with boxes. It was very well
- protected as far as the naked eye" (7H107). Another Deputy
- Sheriff, Roger Craig, recalled that the ends of the rows between
- which the rifle had been pushed were closed off by boxes, so that
- one could not see through them (6H269).
- Photographs of the area in which the rifle was found (e.g., CE
- 719), and a bird's-eye view of the hidden rifle itself (e.g., CE
- 517), corroborate what these men have described and add other
- information. CE 719 shows that the rifle was found amid clusters
- of boxes that did not permit easy access. CE 517, in particular,
- is very revealing. It shows that the rifle had been pushed upright
- on its side between two rows of boxes that partially overlapped on
- top, thus eliminating the possibility that the rifle had merely
- been dropped down between the stacks. CE 517 also demonstrates
- that both ends of the rows of boxes were partially sealed off by
- other boxes, indicating a possibility never pursued by the
- Commission--namely, that boxes had to be moved to gain access to
- the weapon. When interviewed by CBS News, Seymour Weitzman
- inadvertently admitted this fact:
-
- I'll be very frank with you. I stumbled over it two
- times, not knowing it was there. . . . And Mr. Bone [sic]
- was climbing on top, and I was down on my knees looking, and
- {I moved a box, and he moved a carton, and there it was}.
- And he in turn hollered that we had found a rifle.[6]
-
- Hence, the concealment of the rifle required much maneuvering.
- In addition to squeezing in between boxes, the gunman had to move
- certain cartons filled with books. The rifle itself had been very
- carefully placed in position. Doubtless this would have added {at
- least} 15, perhaps 20, seconds to the reconstructed time {even if
- the hiding place had been chosen in advance} (of which there is no
- evidence either way).
- If we take the Commission's minimum time of one minute, 14
- seconds (giving the advantage to the official story) and add the
- additional six or seven seconds needed just to evacuate the
- immediate area of the window, plus the 15 to 20 seconds more for
- hiding the rifle, we find that it would have taken {at least} a
- minute and 35 seconds to a minute and 41 seconds for a sixth-floor
- gunman to have reached the second-floor lunchroom, {had all his
- maneuvers been planned in advance}. Had Oswald been the assassin,
- he would have arrived in the lunchroom {at least} five to eleven
- seconds {after} Baker reached the second floor, even if Baker took
- the {longest} time obtainable for his ascent--a minute, 30 seconds.
- Had Baker ascended in 70 seconds--as he easily could have--he would
- have arrived at least 25 seconds before Oswald. Either case
- removes the possibility that Oswald descended from the sixth floor,
- for on November 22 he had unquestionably arrived in the lunchroom
- {before} Baker.
- The circumstances surrounding the lunchroom encounter indicate
- that Oswald entered the lunchroom {not} by the vestibule door from
- without, as he would have had he descended from the sixth floor,
- but through a hallway leading into the vestibule. The outer
- vestibule door is closed automatically by a closing mechanism on
- the door (7H591). When Truly arrived on the second floor, he did
- not see Oswald entering the vestibule (R151). For the Commission's
- case to be valid, Oswald must have entered the vestibule through
- the first door before Truly arrived. Baker reached the second
- floor immediately after Truly and caught a fleeting glimpse of
- Oswald in the vestibule through a small window in the outer door.
- Although Baker said the vestibule door "might have been, you know,
- closing and almost shut at that time" (3H255), it is dubious that
- he could have distinguished whether the door was fully or "almost"
- closed.
- Baker's and Truly's observations are not at all consistent with
- Oswald's having entered the vestibule through the first door. Had
- Oswald done this, he could have been inside the lunchroom well
- before the automatic mechanism closed the vestibule door. Truly's
- testimony that he saw no one entering the vestibule indicates
- either that Oswald was already in the vestibule at this time or was
- approaching it from another source. However, had Oswald already
- entered the vestibule when Truly arrived on the second floor, it is
- doubtful that he would have remained there long enough for Baker to
- see him seconds later. Likewise, the fact that neither man saw the
- mechanically closed door in motion is cogent evidence that Oswald
- did not enter the vestibule through that door.
- One of the crucial aspects of Baker's story is his position at
- the time he caught a "fleeting glimpse" of a man in the vestibule.
- Baker marked this position during his testimony as having been
- immediately adjacent to the stairs at the northwest corner of the
- building (3H256; CE 497). "I was just stepping out on to the
- second floor when I caught this glimpse of this man through this
- doorway," said Baker.
- It should be noted that the Report never mentions Baker's
- position at the time he saw Oswald in the {vestibule} (R149-51).
- Instead, it prints a floor plan of the second floor and notes
- Baker's position "when he observed Oswald in {lunchroom}" (R150).
- This location, as indicated in the Report, was immediately outside
- the vestibule door (see CE 1118). The reader of the Report is left
- with the impression that Baker saw Oswald in the vestibule as well
- from this position. However, Baker testified explicitly that he
- first caught a glimpse of the man in the vestibule from the stairs
- and, upon running to the vestibule door, saw Oswald in the
- lunchroom (3H256). The Report's failure to point out Baker's
- position is significant.
- Had Oswald descended from the sixth floor, his path through the
- vestibule into the lunchroom would have been confined to the north
- wall of the vestibule. Yet the line of sight from Baker's position
- at the steps does not include any area near the north wall. From
- the steps, Baker could have seen only one area in the vestibule--
- the southeast portion. The only way Oswald could have been in this
- area on his way to the lunchroom is if he entered the vestibule
- through the southernmost door, as the previously cited testimony
- indicates he did.
- Oswald could not have entered the vestibule in this manner had
- he just descended from the sixth floor. The only way he could have
- gotten to the southern door is from the first floor up through
- either a large office space or an adjacent corridor. As the Report
- concedes, Oswald told police he had eaten his lunch on the first
- floor and gone up to the second to purchase a coke when he
- encountered an officer (R182).
- Thus, Oswald had an alibi. Had he been the sixth-floor gunman,
- he would have arrived at the lunchroom {at least} 5 seconds {after}
- Baker did, probably more. It is extremely doubtful that he could
- have entered the vestibule through the first door without Baker's
- or Truly's having seen the door in motion. Oswald's position in
- the vestibule when seen by Baker was consistent only with his
- having come up from the first floor as he told the police.
- Oswald {could not} have been the assassin.
- The Commission had great difficulty with facts, for none
- supported the ultimate conclusions. Instead, it found comfort and
- security in intangibles that usually had no bearing on the actual
- evidence. Amateur psychology seems to have been one of the
- Commission's favorite sciences, approached with the predisposition
- that Oswald was a murderer. This was manifested in the Report's
- lengthy chapter, "Lee Harvey Oswald: Background and Possible
- Motives" (R375-424).
- To lend credibility to its otherwise incredible conclusion that
- Oswald was the assassin, the Commission accused Oswald of yet
- another assassination attempt--a shot fired at right-wing Maj. Gen.
- Edwin Walker on April 10, 1963 (R183-87). Thus, Oswald officially
- was not a newcomer to the "game" of political assassination.
- Although I am not in accord with the conclusion that Oswald shot at
- Walker, I find it illuminating that the Commission did not follow
- its inclination for psychology in its comparison of Oswald as the
- Walker assailant to Oswald as the Kennedy assailant.
- Having just torn open the head of the President of the United
- States, as the Commission asserts, how did Oswald react when
- stopped by a policeman with a drawn gun? Roy Truly was first asked
- about Oswald's reaction to the encounter with Baker:
-
- Mr. Belin: Did you see any expression on his face? Or
- weren't you paying attention?
- Mr. Truly: He didn't seem to be excited or overly afraid
- or anything. He might have been a little startled, like I
- might have been if someone confronted me. But I cannot
- recall any change in expression of any kind on his face.
- (3H225)
-
- Officer Baker was more explicit under similar questioning:
-
- Rep. Boggs: When you saw him [Oswald] . . ., was he out
- of breath, did he appear to have been running or what?
- Mr. Baker: It didn't appear that to me. He appeared
- normal you know.
- Rep. Boggs: Was he calm and collected?
- Mr. Baker: Yes, sir. He never did say a word or
- nothing. In fact, he didn't change his expression one bit.
- Mr. Belin: Did he flinch in anyway when you put the gun
- up . . .?
- Mr. Baker: No, sir. (3H252)
-
- Sen. Cooper: He did not show any evidence of any
- emotion?
- Mr. Baker: No, sir. (3H263)
-
- This "calm and collected" "assassin" proceeded to buy himself a
- coke and at his normal "very slow pace," was then observed by
- Depository employee Mrs. Robert Reid walking through the office
- space on the second floor on his way down to the first floor
- (3H279). Presumably he finished his coke on the first floor.
- Documents in the Commission's files (but omitted from the Report,
- which assumes Oswald made an immediate get-away) indicate very
- strongly that, at the main entrance after the shots, Oswald
- directed two newsmen to the Depository phones (CD354).
- According to the evidence credited by the Commission, Oswald was
- not such a cool cucumber after his first assassination attempt.
- Here the source of the Commission's information was Oswald's wife,
- Marina, and his once close "friends," George and Jeanne De
- Mohrenschildt. The incident in question is described in the Report
- as follows:
-
- The De Mohrenschildts came to Oswald's apartment on Neely
- Street for the first time on the evening of April 13, 1963
- (three days after the Walker incident), apparently to bring
- an Easter gift for the Oswald child. Mrs. De Mohrenschildt
- then told her husband, in the presence of the Oswalds, that
- there was a rifle in the closet. Mrs. De Mohrenschildt
- testified that "George, of course, with his sense of humor-
- -Walker was shot at a few days ago, within that time. He
- said, `Did you take a pot shot at Walker by any chance?'"
- At that point, Mr. De Mohrenschildt testified, Oswald "sort
- of shriveled, you see, when I asked this question . . . made
- a peculiar face . . . (and) changed the expression on his
- face" and remarked that he did target-shooting. Marina
- Oswald testified that the De Mohrenschildts came to visit a
- few days after the Walker incident and that when De
- Mohrenschildt made his reference to Oswald's possibly
- shooting at Walker, Oswald's "face changed, . . . he almost
- became speechless." According to the De Mohrenschildts, Mr.
- De Mohrenschildt's remark was intended as a joke, and he had
- no knowledge of Oswald's involvement in the attack on
- Walker. Nonetheless, the remark appears to have created an
- uncomfortable silence, and the De Mohrenschildts left "very
- soon afterwards." (R282-83)
-
- De Mohrenschildt further testified that his "joking" remark "had an
- effect on" Oswald, making him "very, very uncomfortable" (9H249-
- 50). In another section, the Report adds that Oswald "was visibly
- shaken" by the remark (R274).
- The Commission certainly chose a paradoxical assassin. We are
- asked to believe, according to the Commission, that Oswald was
- guilty of attacking both Walker and Kennedy. Yet, this man who
- officially became markedly upset when jokingly confronted with his
- attempt to kill Walker did not even flinch when a policeman put a
- gun to his stomach immediately after he murdered the President!
- The Commission begged for the charge of being ludicrous in
- drawing its conclusions relevant to Oswald and the assassination;
- it insulted common sense and intelligence when it asked that those
- conclusions be accepted and believed.
-
-
-
- __________
-
- [1] The first critical analysis of these reconstructions appeared in
- "Whitewash," pp. 36-38.
-
- [2] "CBS News Extra: `November 22 and the Warren Report,'" p. 28.
-
- [3] To my knowledge, the Couch film is not commercially available. I
- was fortunately able to obtain numerous stills made from
- individual frames of a copy of the Couch film, which was
- originally obtained from the Dallas television station for which
- Couch worked. Due to the legalities involved, these pictures can
- not be reproduced here.
-
- [4] I obtained numerous frames from the Weigman film in the same manner
- as described above. These can not be reproduced either.
-
- [5] Weisberg, "Whitewash," p. 37.
-
- [6] "CBS News Inquiry: `The Warren Report,'" Part I, p. 9.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- --
- daveus rattus
-
- yer friendly neighborhood ratman
-
- KOYAANISQATSI
-
- ko.yaa.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.
-
-
-
-