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- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
- Path: sparky!uunet!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" [10/11]
- Message-ID: <1992Jul23.144324.6394@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: Thu, 23 Jul 1992 14:43:24 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 1062
-
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- 9
-
-
- Oswald's Rifle Capability
-
-
- The lunchroom encounter was Oswald's alibi; it proved that he
- {could not} have been at the sixth-floor window during the shots.
- The Warren Commission falsely pronounced Oswald the assassin. In
- so doing, it alleged that Oswald had the proficiency with his rifle
- to have fired the assassination shots. Obviously, in light of the
- evidence that proves Oswald innocent, his rifle capability has no
- legitimate bearing on the question of his involvement in the
- shooting. In this chapter I will examine the Commission's handling
- of the evidence related to Oswald's rifle capability. It will be
- demonstrated that the Commission consistently misrepresented the
- record in an effort to make feasible the assertion that Oswald was
- the assassin.[1]
- The first consideration germane to this topic is the nature of
- the shots, assuming theoretically that all originated from the
- sixth-floor window by a gunman using the Mannlicher-Carcano. For
- such a rifleman, "the shots were at a slow-moving target proceeding
- on a downgrade in virtually a straight line with the alignment of
- the assassin's rifle, at a range of 177 to 266 feet" (R189).
- According to the Commission, three shots were fired, the first and
- last strikes occurring within a span of 4.8 to 5.6 seconds; one
- shot allegedly missed, although the Commission did not decide
- whether it was the first, second, or third. While the current
- analysis ignores evidence of more than three shots from more than
- one location, I can make only a limited departure from reality in
- working under the Commission's postulations. My analysis of the
- wounds proved beyond doubt that the President and the Governor were
- wounded nonfatally by two separate bullets. This demands, in line
- with the Commission's three-shot-theory, that all shots hit in the
- car. The Zapruder film reveals that the first two hits occurred
- within a very brief time, probably shorter than the very minimum
- time needed to fire two successive shots with the Carcano, 2.3 to 3
- seconds. The fatal shot came about four seconds after the one that
- wounded Connally.
- The Report repeatedly characterizes the shots as "very easy" and
- "easy." However, the experts who made these evaluations for the
- Commission did not consider two essential factors that cannot be
- excluded from any hypothesizing: 1) the President was a living,
- moving target, and 2) the shots had to be fired in a very short
- period of time. First quoted in the Report is FBI ballistics
- expert Frazier:
-
- From my own experience in shooting over the years, when
- you shoot at 175 feet or 260 feet, which is less than 100
- yards, with a telescopic sight, you should not have any
- difficulty hitting your target. (R190)
-
- Frazier testified at the New Orleans trial of Clay Shaw, where he
- modified his previous Commission testimony. How would the added
- consideration of a moving target affect his previous assessment?
-
- it would be a relatively easy shot, slightly complicated,
- however, if the target were moving at the time, it would
- make it a little more difficult.[2]
-
- The next "expert" quoted is Marine Sgt. James A. Zahm, who was
- involved in marksmanship training in the Marine Corps:
-
- Using the scope, rapidly working the bolt and using the
- scope to relocate your target quickly and at the same time
- when you locate that target you identify and the crosshairs
- are in close relationship to the point you want to shoot at,
- it just takes a minor move in aiming to bring the crosshairs
- to bear, and then it is a quick squeeze. (R190)
-
- Zahm never used the C2766 Carcano; his comments related to four-
- power scopes in general as aids in rapid shooting with a bolt-
- action rifle. Another expert, Ronald Simmons, was directly
- involved in tests employing the Carcano. Although this is not
- reflected in the Report, he told the Commission that, contrary to
- Zahm's generalization of a "minor move" necessary to relocate the
- target in the scope, such a great amount of effort was needed to
- work the rifle bolt that the weapon was actually moved {completely}
- off target (3H449). There is yet another factor qualifying Zahm's
- evaluation. This was brought out during Frazier's New Orleans
- testimony:
-
- Mr. Oser: . . . when you shoot this rifle . . . can you
- tell us whether or not in rebolting the gun you had to move
- your eye away from the scope?
- Mr. Frazier: Yes, sir, that was necessary.
- Mr. Oser: Why was that necessary?
- Mr. Frazier: To prevent the bolt of the rifle from
- striking me in the face as it came to the rear.[3]
-
- At best, the Report drastically oversimplified the true nature
- of the shots. It is true that shots fired at ranges under 100
- yards with a four-power scope are generally easy. However, the
- assassination shots, in accordance with the Commission's lone-
- assassin theory, were fired in rapid succession (indeed the first
- two would have occurred within the minimum time needed to operate
- the bolt) and at a moving target. The difficulty of such shots
- becomes apparent when it is considered that operation of the bolt
- would have thrown the weapon off target and caused the firer
- temporarily to move his eye from the sight.
- One is prompted to ask what caliber of shooter would be required
- to commit the assassination alone as described above. Simulative
- tests conducted by the Commission, while deficient, are quite
- illuminating.
- The Commission's test firers were all rated as "Master" by the
- National Rifle Association (NRA); they were experts whose daily
- routines involved working with and shooting firearms (3H445). In
- the tests, three targets were set up at 175, 240, and 365 feet
- respectively from a 30-foot-high tower. Each shooter fired two
- series of three shots, using the C2766 rifle. The men took 8.25,
- 6.75, and 4.60 seconds respectively for the first series and 7.00,
- 6.45, and 5.15 for the second (3H446). In the first series, each
- man hit his first and third targets but missed the second. Results
- varied on the next series, although in all cases but one, two
- targets were hit. Thus, in only two cases were the Commission's
- experts able to fire three aimed shots in under 5.6 seconds as
- Oswald allegedly did. {None} scored three hits, as was demanded of
- a lone assassin on November 22.
- These tests would suggest that three hits within such a short
- time span, if not impossible, would certainly have taxed the
- proficiency of the most skilled marksman.[4] In his testimony
- before the Commission, Ronald Simmons spoke first of the caliber of
- shooter necessary to have fired the assassination shots on the
- basis that only two hits were achieved:
-
- Mr. Eisenberg: Do you think a marksman who is less than
- a highly skilled marksman under those conditions would be
- able to shoot within the range of 1.2 mil aiming error [as
- was done by the experts]?
- Mr. Simmons: Obviously, considerable experience would
- have to be in one's background to do so. And with this
- weapon, I think also considerable experience with this
- weapon, because of the amount of effort required to work the
- bolt. (3H449)
-
-
- Well, in order to achieve three hits, it would not be
- required that a man be an exceptional shot. A proficient
- man with this weapon, yes. But I think with the opportunity
- to use the weapon and to get familiar with it, we could
- probably have the results reproduced by more than one firer.
- (3H450)
-
- Here arises the crucial question: Was Lee Harvey Oswald a
- "proficient man with this weapon," with "considerable experience"
- in his background?
- While in the Marines between 1956 and 1959, Oswald was twice
- tested for his performance with a rifle. On a scale of expert-
- sharpshooter-marksman, Oswald scored two points above the minimum
- for sharpshooter on one occasion (December 1956) and only one point
- above the minimum requirement for marksman on another (May 1959)--
- his last recorded score. Colonel A. G. Folsom evaluated these
- scores for the Commission:
-
- The Marine Corps consider that any reasonable application
- of the instructions given to Marines should permit them to
- become qualified at least as a marksman. To become
- qualified as a sharpshooter, the Marine Corps is of the
- opinion that most Marines with a reasonable amount of
- adaptability to weapons firing can become so qualified.
- Consequently, a low marksman qualification indicates a
- rather poor "shot" and a sharpshooter qualification
- indicates a fairly good "shot." (19H17-18)
-
- There exists the possibility that Oswald's scores were either
- inaccurately or unfairly recorded, thus accounting for his
- obviously mediocre to horrendous performances with a rifle.
- However, there is other information independent of the scores to
- indicate that Oswald was in fact {not} a good shot. In his
- testimony, Colonel Folsom examined the Marine scorebook that Oswald
- himself had maintained, and elaborated on his previous evaluation:
-
- Mr. Ely: I just wonder, after having looked through the
- whole scorebook, if we could fairly say that all that it
- proves is that at this stage of his career he was not a
- particularly outstanding shot.
- Col. Folsom: No, no, he was not. His scorebook
- indicates . . . that he did well at one or two ranges in
- order to achieve the two points over the minimum score for
- sharpshooter.
- Mr. Ely: In other words, he had a good day the day he
- fired for qualification?
- Col. Folsom: I would say so. (8H311)
-
- Thus, according to Folsom, Oswald's best recorded score was the
- result of having "a good day"; otherwise, Oswald "was not a
- particularly outstanding shot."
- Folsom was not alone in his evaluation of Oswald as other than a
- good shot. The following is exerpted [sic] from the testimony of
- Nelson Delgado, one of Oswald's closest associates in the Marines:
-
- Mr. Liebeler: Did you fire with Oswald?
- Mr. Delgado: Right; I was in the same line. By that I
- mean we were on the same line together, the same time, but
- not firing at the same position . . . and I remember seeing
- his. It was a pretty big joke, because he got a lot of
- "maggie's drawers," you know, a lot of misses, but he didn't
- give a darn.
- Mr. Liebeler: Missed the target completely?
- Mr. Delgado: He just qualified, that's it. He wasn't as
- enthusiastic as the rest of us. (8H235)
-
- The Report tried desperately to get around this unanimous body
- of credible evidence. First Marine Corps Major Eugene Anderson
- (who never had any association with Oswald) is quoted at length
- about how bad weather, poor coaching, and an inferior weapon might
- have accounted for Oswald's terrible performance in his second
- recorded test (R191). Here the Commission scraped the bottom of
- the barrel, offering this unsubstantiated, hypothetical excuse-
- making as apparent fact. Weather bureau records, which the
- Commission did not bother to check, show that perfect firing
- conditions existed at the time and place Oswald last fired for
- qualification--better conditions in fact, than those prevailing
- during the assassination.[5] As for the quality of the weapon
- fired in the test, it is probable that at its worst it would have
- been far superior to the virtual piece of junk Oswald allegedly
- owned and used in the assassination.[6] Perhaps Anderson guessed
- correctly in suggesting that Oswald may have had a poor instructor;
- yet, from the time of his departure from the Marines in 1959 to the
- time of the assassination in 1963, Oswald had {no} instructor.
- For its final "evaluation," the Report again turned to Anderson
- and Zahm. Each man is quoted as rating Oswald a good shot,
- somewhat above average, as compared to other Marines, and an
- "excellent" shot as compared to the average male civilian (R192).
- That the Commission could even consider these evaluations is beyond
- comprehension. Oswald's Marine scores and their official
- evaluation showed that he did not possess even "a reasonable amount
- of adaptability to weapons firing." If this is better than average
- for our Marines, pity the state of our national "defense"! The
- testimonies of Folsom and Delgado--people who had {direct}
- association with Oswald in the Marines--are not mentioned in the
- Report.
- Thus, Oswald left the Marines in 1959 as a "rather poor shot."
- If he is to be credited with a feat such as the assassination, it
- must be demonstrated that he engaged in some activity between 1959
- and 1963 that would have greatly developed his rifle capability and
- maintained it until the time of the shooting. The Report barely
- touched on the vital area of Oswald's rifle practice. In a brief
- two-paragraph section entitled "Oswald's Rifle Practice Outside the
- Marines," the Report painted a very sketchy picture, entirely
- inadequate in terms of the nature of the issue (R192-93). In all,
- Oswald is associated with a weapon eleven or twelve times, ending
- in May 1963.
- Let us examine each of the Commission's assertions from this
- section of the Report:
-
-
- 1. During one of his leaves from the Marines, Oswald
- hunted with his brother Robert, using a .22 caliber bolt-
- action rifle belonging either to Robert or Robert's in-laws.
-
- A footnote to this statement refers to Robert Oswald's testimony
- at 1H327, where essentially the same information is found.
-
-
- 2. After he left the Marines and before departing for
- Russia, Oswald, his brother, and a third companion went
- hunting for squirrels and rabbits. On that occasion Oswald
- again used a bolt-action .22 caliber rifle; and according
- to Robert, Lee Oswald exhibited an average amount of
- proficiency with that weapon.
-
- Here again the Report cites Robert Oswald's testimony at 1H325-
- 327. Although Robert did say that Lee showed "an average amount"
- of proficiency (1H326), his other descriptions of the occasion
- would indicate that none of the men showed any proficiency at all
- that day. This excursion took place in a "briar patch" that "was
- very thick with cottontails." Among the three men, eight rabbits
- were shot, "because it was the type of brush and thorns that didn't
- grow very high but we were able to see over them, so getting three
- of us out there it wasn't very hard to kill eight of them." Robert
- further illuminated the proficiency of the shooting when he
- revealed that it once took all three men firing to hit one rabbit.
-
-
- 3. While in Russia, Oswald obtained a hunting license
- joined a hunting club and went hunting about six times.
-
- As mentioned in chapter 1, Liebeler criticized the inclusion of
- this statement in the Report, for Oswald hunted with a shotgun in
- Russia. Wrote Liebeler, "Under what theory do we include
- activities concerning a {shotgun} under a heading relating to
- {rifle} practice, and then presume not to advise the reader of
- that?"[7] The sources given for the above-quoted statement are CEs
- 1042, 2007, and 1403 (which establish Oswald's membership in the
- club) and 1H96, 327-28, and 2H466. The latter references to the
- testimony do not support the Report's implication that Oswald's
- Russian hunting trips helped to further his marksmanship abilities.
- In the portion of her testimony cited (1H96), Marina Oswald said
- that Oswald hunted only once during the time she knew him in the
- Soviet Union. This prompted a brief exchange not complimentary to
- Oswald's performance with his weapon during the hunt:
-
- Mr. Rankin: Was that when he went hunting for squirrels?
- Mrs. Oswald: If he marked it down in his notebook that
- he went hunting for squirrels, he never did. Generally they
- wanted to kill a squirrel when we went there, or some sort
- of bird, in order to boast about it, but they didn't.
-
- Robert Oswald testified that Lee hunted "about six times" in Russia
- (1H327-328). He too revealed the poor nature of Oswald's
- performance:
-
- We talked about hunting over there, and he said that he had
- only been hunting a half dozen times, and so forth, and that
- he had only used a shotgun, and a couple of times he did
- shoot a duck.
-
- The third reference to testimony is most revealing. The source is
- Mrs. Ruth Paine, who related what Marina had told her:
-
- She quoted a proverb to the effect that you go hunting in
- the Soviet Union and you catch a bottle of Vodka, so I judge
- it was a social occasion more than shooting being the prime
- object. (2H466)
-
- Information not mentioned or cited in the Report corroborates
- the informal nature of Oswald's hunting in Russia as well as his
- usual poor performance with his weapon. CD 344 contains the
- transcript of a Secret Service interview with Marina recorded
- Sunday night, November 24, 1963, at the Inn of the Six Flags Motel
- at Arlington, Texas. This was Marina's first interview conducted
- while she was in protective custody. When asked about Oswald's
- membership in the hunting club, she made this response through an
- interpreter:
-
- While he was a member of this hunting club, he never
- attended any meetings. He simply had a card that showed his
- membership. She said Lee enjoyed nature and as a member of
- the club he was entitled to free transportation in an
- automobile which enabled him to go out of town.[8]
-
- Marina added that Lee owned a "hunting gun" in Russia but "he never
- used it."
- Other information came from Yuri I. Nosenko, a Soviet KGB staff
- officer who defected in February 1964 and apparently participated
- in or knew of the KGB investigation of Oswald in Russia. CD 451
- contains an interview with Nosenko, but it is currently withheld
- from research. Liebeler, who saw CD 451 during his Commission
- work, composed a staff memorandum on March 9, 1964, repeating some
- of the information obtained from Nosenko. According to the
- memorandum, "Oswald was an extremely poor shot and it was necessary
- for persons who accompanied him on hunts to provide him with
- game."[9]
-
-
- 4. Soon after Oswald returned from the Soviet Union he
- again went hunting with his brother, Robert, and used a
- borrowed .22 caliber bolt-action rifle.
-
- Robert Oswald is again the source of this information. The
- hunting trip in question took place at the farm of Robert's in-
- laws. However, according to Robert, "we did just a very little bit
- [of hunting]. I believe this was on a Sunday afternoon and we
- didn't stay out very long" (1H327).
-
-
- 5. After Oswald purchased the Mannlicher-Carcano rifle,
- he told his wife that he practiced with it. Marina Oswald
- testified that on one occasion she saw him take the rifle,
- concealed in a raincoat, from the house on Neely Street.
- Oswald told her he was going to practice with it.
-
- Marina Oswald is the source of this above-quoted information.
- The footnote in the Report refers to 1H14-15; CE 1156, p. 442; CE
- 1404, pp. 446-48.
- Marina's progression of statements relevant to Oswald's rifle
- practice is truly amazing. The Report quotes her incompletely and
- dishonestly, choosing only those statements which support the
- belief that Oswald practiced with the Carcano. The following is a
- chronological listing of Marina's relevant words:
-
- {12/3/63, FBI report of interview with Marina:} "MARINA
- said she had never seen OSWALD practice with his rifle or
- any other firearm and he had never told her that he was
- going to practice." (22H763)
-
- {12/4/63, FBI report of interview with Marina:} "She
- cannot recall ever hearing Oswald state that he was going to
- fire the rifle in practice or that he had fired it in
- practice." (22H785)
-
- {12/4/63, Secret Service report of interview with
- Marina:} "The reporting agent interviewed Marina Oswald as
- to whether she knew of any place or of a rifle range where
- her husband could do some practicing with a rifle, and
- whether she ever saw her husband taking the rifle out of the
- house. She said that she never saw Lee going out or coming
- in to the house with a rifle and that he never mentioned to
- her doing any practice with a rifle." (23H393)
-
- {12/10/63, Secret Service report of interview with
- Marina:} "Marina Oswald was asked if she ever saw her
- husband doing any dry practice with the rifle either in
- their apartments or any place else, and she replied in the
- negative." (23H402)
-
- {12/16/63, FBI report of interview with Marina:} "She
- cannot recall that [Oswald] ever practiced firing the rifle
- either in New Orleans or in Dallas." (22H778)
-
- {2/3/64, Marina makes her first appearance before the
- Commission:}
-
- Mr. Rankin: Did you learn at any time that he had been
- practicing with the rifle?
- Mrs. Oswald: I think he went once or twice. I didn't
- actually see him take the rifle, but I knew he was
- practicing.
- Mr. Rankin: Could you give us a little help on how you
- knew?
- Mrs. Oswald: He told me. And he would mention that in
- passing . . . he would say, "Well, today I will take the
- rifle along for practice." (1H14-15)
-
- {2/17/64, FBI report of interview with Marina:} "MARINA
- advised OSWALD had told her after the WALKER incident that
- he had practiced with his rifle in a field near Dallas. She
- said further that in the beginning of January, 1963, at the
- Neely Street address, he on one occasion was cleaning his
- rifle and he said he had been practicing that day. [The
- rifle was not mailed until the end of March 1963.]
- "MARINA was asked if she had ever seen OSWALD take the
- rifle from the house and she replied that she had not. She
- was asked if she had ever known the rifle to have been gone
- from the house at the same time OSWALD was gone from the
- house. She replied that she could not recall any such
- incident. She was then asked if it were true then that she
- had never seen OSWALD take the rifle from the house nor knew
- any occasion when he might have had the rifle at a place
- other than at home. She then admitted that she did know of
- such an occasion. She said this occasion occurred on an
- evening in March, 1963. On this evening, she and JUNE
- [their daughter] and OSWALD left the house at about 6:00 PM.
- OSWALD had his rifle wrapped up in a raincoat. . . . When
- OSWALD returned about 9:00 PM, he told her he had practiced
- with his rifle." (22H197)
-
- {2/18/64, FBI report of interview with Marina:} "She
- advised she had been mistaken on February 17, 1964, when she
- said she had recalled OSWALD cleaning his rifle at Neely
- Street, at which time he made the statement he had been
- practicing. She said she is now able to place the date . .
- . as being shortly before the WALKER incident. . . . At one
- of the four or five times that she observed OSWALD cleaning
- his rifle at their home on Neely Street . . . he told her he
- had been practicing with the rifle but he did not say when
- he had practiced. On the other occasions of his cleaning
- the rifle . . . he did not say he had been practicing.
- MARINA deduced that he might have been practicing with the
- rifle." (22H785)
-
- {6/11/64, Marina again testifies before the Commission:}
-
- "Lee didn't tell me when he was going out to practice. I
- only remember one time distinctly that he went out because
- he took the bus. I don't know if he went to Love Field at
- that time. I don't--after all this testimony, after all
- this testimony, when I was asked did he clean his gun a lot,
- and I answered yes, I came to the conclusion that he was
- practicing with his gun because he was cleaning it
- afterwards." (5H397)
-
- Sen. Cooper: Did he ever tell you that he was practicing
- with a rifle?
- Mrs. Oswald: Only after I saw him take the gun that one
- time. (5H398)
-
- Thus Marina, until three months after the assassination, denied
- any knowledge whatsoever of Oswald's rifle practice; he never told
- her he practiced, and she knew of no practice. When she first
- appeared before the Commission, her story changed. She suddenly
- knew of one or two instances when Oswald mentioned he was going to
- practice, although she never saw him take the rifle from the house.
- Subsequent to her testimony, she changed her story again. After
- telling the FBI she saw Oswald clean the rifle before he even
- ordered it, she "admitted" an incident in which she saw Oswald
- remove the rifle {concealed in a raincoat} to practice {at night}.
- The following day her memory conveniently improved as she retracted
- her statement that she had seen Oswald with the rifle as early as
- January 1963. She added at this time that although Oswald had
- actually admitted practicing only once, she "deduced" he had
- practiced other times. This, essentially, was the final version of
- her story.
- {Marina was an entirely incredible witness}. No honest jury
- could have believed any of her statements; for everything she
- said, there almost always existed a contradictory statement that
- she had made earlier. The Commission merely chose her most "juicy"
- descriptions of rifle practice and cited them, ignoring completely
- the other statements. The official use of Marina's testimony could
- best be described in Aldous Huxley's words, "You pays your money
- and you takes your choice."
-
-
- 6. According to George De Mohrenschildt, Oswald said he
- went target shooting with that rifle.
-
- The footnote to this assertion refers to portions of the
- testimonies of George De Mohrenschildt, the Oswalds' "friend" in
- Dallas, and his wife, Jeanne. The combined stories of the De
- Mohrenschildts are so ridiculous as to make Marina's appear
- reliable and consistent.
- In his testimony, George De Mohrenschildt had been relating the
- incident in which he and his wife paid a late-night visit to the
- Oswalds shortly after the Walker incident (as described in the
- previous chapter). De Mohrenschildt described how his wife had
- seen a rifle in the closet and offered "facts" unsubstantiated by
- any of the Commission's evidence:
-
- Mr. De Mohrenschildt: And Marina said "That crazy idiot
- is target shooting all the time." So frankly I thought it
- was ridiculous to shoot target shooting in Dallas, you see,
- right in town. I asked him "Why do you do that?"
- Mr. Jenner: What did he say?
- Mr. De Mohrenschildt: He said, "I go out and do target
- shooting. I like target shooting." (9H249)
-
- Despite the lack of corroborative evidence, De Mohrenschildt's
- story might have remained plausible had his wife not attempted to
- substantiate it. In the portion of her testimony cited but {not}
- quoted in the Report, she revealed--to the exasperation of staff
- member Jenner--the details of the incident {ad absurdium:}
-
- Mrs. De Mohrenschildt: I just asked what on earth is he
- doing with a rifle?
- Mr. Jenner: What did she [Marina] say?
- Mrs. De Mohrenschildt: She said, "Oh, he just loves to
- shoot." I said, "Where on earth does he shoot? Where can
- he shoot?" when they lived in a little house. "Oh, he goes
- in the park and shoots at leaves and things like that." But
- it didn't strike me too funny, because I personally love
- skeet shooting. I never kill anything. But I adore to
- shoot at a target, target shooting.
- Mr. Jenner: Skeet?
- Mrs. De Mohrenschildt: I just love it.
- Mr. Jenner: Didn't you think it was strange to have
- someone say he is going in a public park and shooting
- leaves?
- Mrs. De Mohrenschildt: But he was taking the baby out.
- He goes with her, and that was his amusement.
- Mr. Jenner: Did she say that?
- Mrs. De Mohrenschildt: Yes; that was his amusement,
- practicing in the park, shooting leaves. That wasn't
- strange to me, because any time I go to an amusement park I
- go to the rifles and start shooting. So I didn't find
- anything strange.
- Mr. Jenner: But you shot at the rifle range in these
- amusement parks?
- Mrs. De Mohrenschildt: Yes.
- Mr. Jenner: Little .22?
- Mrs. De Mohrenschildt: I don't know what it was.
- Mr. Jenner: Didn't you think it was strange that a man
- would be walking around a public park in Dallas with a
- high-powered rifle like this, shooting leaves?
- Mrs. De Mohrenschildt: I didn't know it was a high-
- powered rifle. I had no idea. I don't even know right now.
- (9H316)
-
- The Commission did not see fit to include in the Report the fact
- that the extent of the De Mohrenschildts' knowledge of Oswald's
- "rifle practice" was that he fired at leaves while walking his baby
- daughter through public parks. Had this been included, no one
- could have believed the De Mohrenschildts.
-
-
- 7. Marina Oswald testified that in New Orleans in May of
- 1963, she observed Oswald sitting with the rifle on their
- screened porch at night, sighting with the telescopic lens
- and operating the bolt.
-
- For this the Report cites Marina's testimony at 1H21-22, 53-54,
- and 65 and CE 1814, p. 736. However, CE 1814 has nothing to do
- with Marina Oswald, or rifle practice (23H471).
- Marina's testimony about the bolt-working sessions on the porch
- of the Oswald's New Orleans home was another spectacle of blatant
- self-contradiction, again none of which was reflected in the
- Report. In three days, Marina gave three opposing accounts
- represented in the Report as consistent. On February 3, Marina
- said:
-
- I know that we had a kind of a porch with a--a screened-in
- porch, and I know that sometimes evenings after dark he
- would sit there with his rifle. I don't know what he did
- with it. I came there only by chance once and saw him just
- sitting there with his rifle. I thought he is merely
- sitting there and resting . . .
- Mr. Rankin: From what you observed about his having the
- rifle on the back porch, in the dark, could you tell whether
- or not he was trying to practice with the telescopic lens?
- Mrs. Oswald: Yes. (1H21-22).
-
- On February 4, Marina offered a version of the porch practice
- different from that put forth in the Report:
-
- Mr. Rankin: Did you ever see him working the bolt, the
- action that opens the rifle, where you can put a shell in
- and push it back--during those times [on the porch]?
- Mrs. Oswald: I did not see it, because it was dark and I
- would be in the room at that time. But I did hear the noise
- from time to time--not often. (1H54)
-
- Finally, on February 5, Marina reached the height of her confusion
- and merely retracted the statement attributed to her in the Report:
-
- Mr. Rankin: You have told us about his practicing with
- the rifle, the telescopic lens, on the back porch at New
- Orleans, and also his using the bolt action that you heard
- from time to time. Will you describe that a little more
- fully to us, as best you remember?
- Mrs. Oswald: I cannot describe that in greater detail.
- I can only say that Lee would sit there with the rifle and
- open and close the bolt and clean it. No, he didn't clean
- it at that time. Yes--twice he did clean it.
- Mr. Rankin: And did he seem to be practicing with the
- telescopic lens, too, and sighting the gun on different
- objects?
- Mrs. Oswald: I don't know. The rifle was always with
- this. I don't know exactly how he practiced, because I was
- in the house, I was busy. I just knew that he sits there
- with his rifle. I was not interested in it. (1H65)
-
- It is important to note that Marina originally denied any such
- New Orleans porch practice to the FBI. An FBI report of an
- interview with Marina on December 16, 1963, states that "She never
- saw [Oswald] clean [the rifle] nor did he ever hold it in her
- presence [in New Orleans] as best as she can recall" (22H778).
- If Marina's stories of porch practice are true (and here the
- reader may believe whichever version he likes), then Oswald
- practiced sighting with his rifle {in total darkness} on a screened
- porch. If this call be called "practice," it certainly cannot be
- applied to normal daylight firing.
- The seven assertions as quoted above from the Report constitute
- the known extent of "Oswald's Rifle practice." Only one had
- substantiation. The others are either misrepresentations of the
- evidence or are merely unsupported altogether. Oswald performed
- badly on the hunts in which he participated. He did not even use a
- rifle in Russia although, to the Commission, intent on associating
- Oswald with a rifle as frequently as possible, a shotgun was the
- same as a rifle. Marina's assertions that Oswald practiced with
- the Carcano are rendered invalid by her earlier statements that
- Oswald never practiced. Even if the one incident she finally
- conceded was true, Oswald would have had a total of 64 minutes to
- practice (26H61). The De Mohrenschildts' description of Oswald's
- target shooting at leaves in the park warrants no serious
- consideration. As Marina admitted to the Commission, she did not
- know what Oswald did with the rifle when he sat with it on the
- porch of their New Orleans home (if he ever did this at all, as
- Marina originally denied).
- Taking the issue further than did the Commission, we can be
- reasonably certain that Oswald engaged in {no} rifle practice in
- New Orleans during the summer of 1963 or in Dallas up until the
- time of the assassination.
- If Marina was consistent in any of her statements, it was her
- denial that Oswald practiced with the rifle in New Orleans. While
- she recalled no such incident, she felt that Oswald could not have
- practiced without telling her.
-
- because as a rule he stayed home when he was not working.
- When he did go out, she did not see him take the rifle.
- (22H778)
-
- Marina told this to the FBI on December 16, 1963. She stuck to
- this story before the Commission, saying she knew "for sure" Oswald
- did not practice in New Orleans (1H21).
- More reliable information relating to possible New Orleans
- practice comes from Adrian Alba, a New Orleans garage owner who
- spoke with Oswald about rifles during the summer of 1963. On
- November 25, 1963, Alba told the FBI that
-
- he knew of no rifle practice which OSWALD had engaged in
- while in New Orleans, adding that from his conversation with
- OSWALD he did not believe that OSWALD belonged to any of the
- local gun clubs. He added that it would have been almost
- impossible for OSWALD to practice with a rifle around New
- Orleans unless he belonged to a gun club. (CD7:203)
-
- Alba repeated this information in his deposition before staff
- member Liebeler. He explained why Oswald could not have practiced
- in New Orleans unless he belonged to a gun club (which he did not).
- According to Alba, if someone attempted to practice in the only
- possible regions other than the clubs, "they would either run you
- off or arrest you for discharging firearms" (10H224).
- There is no credible evidence in any form to indicate that
- Oswald practiced with his rifle after moving back to Dallas from
- New Orleans in October 1963. If the rifle was stored in the Paine
- garage as the Commission asserts (though proof of this is lacking),
- then the possibility that Oswald could have taken the rifle for
- practice is virtually nil. Likewise, Marina was emphatic that
- Oswald never practiced during the time she lived with the Paines.
- For what little reliance, if any, can be put in her testimony, I
- quote her relevant words:
-
- he couldn't have practiced while we were at the Paine's,
- because Ruth was there. But whenever she was not at home,
- he tried to spend as much time as he could with me--he would
- watch television in the house. (1H53)
-
- There is no evidence indicating that the rifle was in Oswald's
- possession during this period. The woman who cleaned his small
- room on North Beckley never saw it there, although she did not go
- into the drawers of the "little wooden commode or closet" in the
- room (6H440-441). While several witnesses thought they had seen
- Oswald practicing at a rifle range in Dallas throughout September
- to November 1963, the evidence strongly indicates that the man
- observed neither was nor {could} have been Oswald, as the Report
- admits (R318-30). Various FBI and Secret Service checks failed to
- turn up any evidence of rifle practice by Oswald in the Dallas area
- (see CEs 2694, 2908, 3049).
- And this was Oswald the marksman--from the time he received his
- first weapons training in the Marines, where he went from a fairly
- good to a rather poor shot, to his few hunting trips with Robert
- Oswald, where he manifested his lack of skill with a rifle, to his
- presumed hunting in the Soviet Union with other than a rifle but
- the same absence of any proficiency, to the time of his assumed
- possession of the rifle, when no credible evidence indicated that
- he ever engaged in practice.
- This obviously was not the caliber of shooter defined by expert
- Simmons as necessary to have pulled off the assassination alone.
- The presumed lone assassin, according to Simmons, had to have
- "considerable experience" in his background, especially
- "considerable experience with" the Carcano, and had to be "a
- proficient man with this weapon." Oswald was none of these. The
- only reliable evidence now known demonstrates that he was simply a
- poor shot who never did a thing to improve his capability.
- As we have seen, the Commission consistently misrepresented the
- evidence relevant to Oswald's rifle capability. In its conclusion
- to this section of the Report, it retained its propensity for
- conjuring up what it wanted without regard to evidence. It
- concluded this:
-
- Oswald's Marine training in marksmanship, his other rifle
- experience and his established familiarity with this
- particular weapon show that he possessed ample capability to
- commit the assassination. (R195)
-
- The Commission, in essence, told the public that "rather poor
- shot" Oswald did what shooters in the NRA Master classification,
- the highest rating, could not do. It must have caused great
- concern among those who spend hours of concentrated practice each
- day trying to maintain proficiency with a rifle to learn that
- Oswald outdid the best and "established familiarity" with his rifle
- by {never} practicing, probably never even playing with his rifle!
- Oswald did not have the capability to fire the assassination
- shots as the official theory proclaims. That he was a competent
- marksman is a pure myth created by the Commission in flagrant
- disregard of the evidence.
-
-
-
- __________
-
- [1] Analyses of the nature of the shots and related topics have
- appeared in "Whitewash," chap. 4; Lane, chap. 9; Epstein,
- chap. 9; Meagher, chap. 4.
-
- [2] Frazier 2/21/69 testimony, p. 67.
-
- [3] Ibid., p. 148.
-
- [4] See also the excerpts from the Liebeler 9/6/64 Memorandum as
- discussed in chap. 1.
-
- [5] U.S. Department of Commerce, Weather Bureau, "Local Climatological
- Data," for San Diego, California, May 1959, and Los Angeles,
- California, May 1959.
-
- [6] I have seen this rifle at the National Archives and it does appear
- rather dilapidated. Fingerprint expert Latona called it "a cheap
- old weapon" (4H29). Ballistics expert Robert Frazier went into
- more detail on the condition of the rifle:
-
- Mr. Eisenberg . . . . How much use does this weapon show?
-
- Mr. Frazier. The stock is worn, scratched. The bolt is relatively
- smooth, as if it had been operated several times. I cannot
- actually say how much use the weapon has had. The barrel is--was
- not, when we first got it, in excellent condition. It was, I would
- say in fair condition. In other words, it showed the effects of
- wear and corrosion. (3H394)
-
- [7] Liebeler 9/6/64 Memorandum.
-
- [8] CD 344 was discovered in the National Archives by Harold Weisberg
- and is discussed in "Whitewash II," pp. 15-19.
-
- [9] This memorandum was shown to Epstein by Liebeler. References to it
- may be found in "Inquest," p. 146, and the "Saturday Evening Post,"
- April 6, 1968, p. 72.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- * * * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- Conclusion
-
-
-
-
- Throughout twelve hours of interrogation over the weekend of the
- assassination, Lee Harvey Oswald steadfastly denied that he had
- shot the President (R613, 627). He repeated that denial before
- hundreds of newsmen crowded into the narrow corridors of the police
- headquarters: "I'm just a patsy," he exclaimed (20H362, 366).
- Even as he lay dying on a stretcher, the police pressed him for a
- final confession. But Oswald merely shook his head; he would die
- protesting his innocence (12H185).
- Oswald's plea was ignored amid the clamor of official voices,
- which hastened to assure the public of Oswald's guilt.
- The Dallas Police wasted no time in announcing their verdict.
- Of course, it is preposterous to assume that even the most
- competent police force could have solved one of the century's most
- complex crimes overnight. Yet this was precisely the claim made by
- the Dallas Police when, on the day after the assassination, they
- told the world that Oswald was beyond doubt the lone assassin.
- Two weeks later the FBI claimed that it too had conclusively
- determined that Oswald was the lone assassin. This was indeed an
- unwarranted conclusion since, in its "solution" of the crime, the
- FBI failed to account for one of the President's wounds and a shot
- that missed the car. The FBI seems never to have anticipated that
- concerned citizens would probe its thoroughly flawed report. It
- made sure that everyone knew the conclusion reached in the report
- by leaking to the press everything it wanted known. The report
- itself, however, the FBI decided to keep secret.
- The FBI's ploy had one salient effect: it preempted the Warren
- Commission and left the Commission little choice but to affirm the
- FBI's conclusions. The alternative was for the Commission to
- conduct a genuinely independent investigation and announce that the
- FBI had erred. In 1964, given the FBI's reputation as the greatest
- law-enforcement investigative agency in the world and the
- pervasive, although then unspoken fear of J. Edgar Hoover's power,
- this was an unthinkable alternative for the conservative Commission
- members. The choice was made to rely on the FBI--in effect, to let
- the FBI investigate itself.
- Thus, from the very beginning of its investigation, the
- Commission planned its work under the presumption that Oswald was
- guilty, and the staff consciously endeavored to construct a
- prosecution case against Oswald. One Commission member actually
- complained to the staff that he wanted to see more arguments in
- support of the theory that Oswald was the assassin. There could
- have been no more candid admission of how fraudulent the
- "investigation" was than when a staff lawyer secretly wrote, "Our
- intention is not to establish the point with complete accuracy, but
- merely to substantiate the hypothesis which underlies the
- conclusions that Oswald was the sole assassin." In its zeal to
- posthumously frame Oswald--and falsify history--the staff often
- considered ludicrous methods of avoiding the facts--as in the
- suggestion of one staff lawyer that "the best evidence that Oswald
- could fire as fast as he did and hit the target is the fact that he
- did so."
- The Commission, in presuming Oswald guilty, abdicated its
- responsibility to the nation. But did the Commission, in spite of
- its prejudices, arrive at the truth? Does the evidence establish
- that Oswald was the assassin?
- The medical evidence actually disassociates Oswald's rifle from
- the wounds suffered by President Kennedy and Governor Connally.
- The nature of the bullet fragmentation within the President's
- wounds rules out full-jacketed military bullets such as those
- allegedly fired by Oswald. Bullet 399, discovered at Parkland
- Hospital and traced to Oswald's rifle, could not, in any
- conceivable way, have produced any of the President's wounds.
- Likewise, 399 could not have produced the Governor's wounds without
- having suffered some form of mutilation; bullets simply do not
- smash through two or three bones and emerge in the condition of
- 399, with no apparent distortions and no disruption of their
- microscopic markings.
- The medical evidence leads one to believe that Oswald's rifle
- played no role in the shooting and that all the evidence that seems
- to link Oswald to the shooting was in fact planted. The only
- evidence that might conclusively show whether bullet 399 and the
- two fragments traced to Oswald's rifle were actually involved in
- the wounding of either victim is the spectrographic and neutron
- activation analyses, and they are withheld from the public. One
- need not be an expert analyst to deduce that the government would
- hardly suppress this evidence if it corroborated its account of the
- assassination. The only credible explanation for the suppression
- of this crucial scientific evidence is that it must establish
- conclusively what the medical evidence established to but a
- reasonable degree--that Oswald's rifle played no role in the
- shooting.
- The evidence of the rifle, the cartridge cases, and the bullets
- is significant because it creates the powerful assumption that
- Oswald was the assassin. The medical evidence, in disassociating
- Oswald's rifle from the crime, makes it apparent that unknown
- persons deliberately planted the recovered ballistic items with the
- intention of leaving evidence that would point to Oswald as the
- murderer. Such planting of evidence does not necessarily imply an
- enormous conspiracy, as some of the Commission's defenders have
- suggested. Two accomplices, one at the Book Depository and one at
- Parkland Hospital, are all that would have been required.
- Conditions at both sites were so chaotic at the time that such
- accomplices could easily have escaped detection.
- Once it is established that Oswald's rifle was not involved in
- the shooting, there is not a shred of tangible or credible evidence
- to indicate that Oswald was the assassin. The evidence proves
- exactly the opposite.
- The circumstantial evidence relating to Oswald himself is almost
- entirely exculpatory. Every element of it was twisted by the
- Commission to fit the preconceived conclusion of Oswald's guilt. I
- have documented that, through its staff and its Report, the
- Commission:
-
- 1. Drew undue suspicion to Oswald's return to Irving on
- November 21, although the evidence indicated that
- Oswald did not know the motorcade route and broke no
- set pattern in making the return;
-
- 2. Ignored {all} evidence that could have provided an
- innocent excuse for Oswald's visit;
-
- 3. Wrongly discredited the reliable and consistent
- testimony of the only two witnesses who saw the package
- Oswald carried to work on the morning of the
- assassination; because their descriptions meant that
- the package could {not} have contained the rifle, the
- Commission claimed to have made this rejection on the
- basis of "scientific evidence," which did not exist;
-
- 4. Concluded that Oswald made a paper sack to conceal the
- rifle, citing no evidence in support of this notion and
- suppressing evidence that tended to disprove it;
-
- 5. Concluded that the sack was used to transport the
- rifle, although its evidence proved that the sack never
- contained the rifle;
-
- 6. Used the testimony of Charles Givens to placed [sic]
- Oswald at the alleged source of the shots {35 minutes
- too early,} even though Givens described an event that
- physically could not have taken place;
-
- 7. Claimed to know of no Depository employee who saw
- Oswald between 11:55 and 12:30, basing its claim on an
- inquiry in which it (through General Counsel Rankin)
- had the FBI determine whether any employee had seen
- Oswald {only} at 12:30, completely suppressing from the
- Report three distinct pieces of evidence indicating
- Oswald's presence on the first floor during the period
- in question.
-
- 8. Failed to produce any witness who could identify the
- sixth-floor gunman as Oswald; both rejected and
- accepted the identification of one man who admitted
- lying to the police, who constantly contradicted
- himself, and who described physically impossible
- events; and ignored evidence of clothing descriptions
- that might have indicated that Oswald was {not} the
- gunman;
-
- 9. Reconstructed the movements of Baker and Truly in such
- a way as to lengthen the time of their ascent to the
- second floor;
-
- 10. Reconstructed the movements of the "assassin" so as to
- greatly reduce the time of his presumed descent; a
- valid reconstruction would have proved that a sixth-
- floor gunman could {not} have reached the second-floor
- lunch-room before Baker and Truly;
-
- 11. Misrepresented Baker's position at the time he saw
- Oswald entering the lunchroom, making it seem possible
- that Oswald could have just descended from the third
- floor, although, in fact, the events described by Baker
- and Truly prove that Oswald must have been coming {up}
- from the {first} floor (as Oswald himself told the
- police he did);
-
- 12. Misrepresented the nature of the assassination shots by
- omitting from its evaluation the time factor and other
- physical obstacles, thus making it seem that the shots
- were easy and that Oswald could have fired them;
-
- 13. Misrepresented the evidence relevant to Oswald's rifle
- capability and practice, creating the impression that
- he was a good shot with much practice, although the
- evidence indicated exactly the opposite. The
- conclusion dictated by all this evidence en masse is
- inescapable and overwhelming: Lee Harvey Oswald never
- fired a shot at President Kennedy; he was not even at
- the Depository window during the assassination; and no
- one fired his rifle, the Mannlicher-Carcano, on that
- day. Beyond any doubt, he is innocent of the monstrous
- crime with which he was charged and of which he was
- presumed guilty. The official presumption of his guilt
- effectively cut off any quest for truth and led to the
- abandonment of the principles of law and honest
- investigation. At {all} costs, the government has
- denied (and, to judge from its record, will continue to
- deny) Oswald's innocence and perpetuated the myth of
- his lone guilt.
-
- With this, a thousand other spiders emerge from the walls.
- It can now be inferred that Oswald was framed; he was
- deliberately set up as the Kennedy assassin. His rifle was found
- in the Depository. We know that it had to have been put there; we
- also know that it was not Oswald who put it there. {Someone else
- did.}
- We know that a whole bullet traceable to Oswald's rifle turned
- up at Parkland Hospital; we also know that this bullet was never
- in the body of either victim. {Someone had to have planted it at
- the hospital.} The same applies to the two identifiable fragments
- found in the front seat of the President's limousine.
- We know that someone shot and killed President Kennedy; we also
- know that Oswald did not do this. The real presidential murderers
- have escaped punishment through our established judicial channels,
- their crime tacitly sanctioned by those who endeavored to prove
- Oswald guilty. The after-the-fact framing of Oswald by the federal
- authorities means, in effect, that the federal government has
- conspired to protect those who conspired to kill President Kennedy.
- It is not my responsibility to explain why the Commission did
- what it did, and I would deceive the reader if I made the slightest
- pretense that it was within my capability to provide such an
- explanation. I have presented the facts; no explanation of
- motives, be they the highest and the purest or the lowest and the
- most corrupt, will alter those facts or undo what the Commission
- indisputably has done.
- The government has lied about one of the most serious crimes
- that can be committed in a democracy. Having lied without
- restraint about the death of a president, it can not be believed on
- anything. It has sacrificed its credibility.
- Remedies are not clearly apparent or easily suggested.
- Certainly, Congress has an obligation to investigate this
- monumental abuse by the executive. But first and foremost, the
- people must recognize that they have been lied to by their
- government and denied the truth about the murder of their former
- leader. They must demand the truth, whatever the price, and insist
- that their government work honestly and properly.
- Until then, the history of one of the world's most democratic
- nations must suffer the stigma of a frighteningly immoral and
- undemocratic act by its government.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- --
- 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.
-
-
-
-