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- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
- Path: sparky!uunet!usc!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" [11/11]
- Message-ID: <1992Jul24.134050.21689@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: Fri, 24 Jul 1992 13:40:50 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 1283
-
-
- * * * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- Appendix A
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Tentative Outline of the Work of the
- President's Commission
-
- {Author's note: This "Tentative Outline" was attached to a
- "Progress Report" dated January 11, 1964, from Commission Chairman
- Earl Warren to the other Commission members, and reveals the extent
- to which the Commission's conclusions were formulated prior to its
- investigation.}
-
- I. {Assassination of President Kennedy on November 22, 1963 in Dallas}
-
- A. Trip to Texas--Prior to Assassination
- 1. Initial plans for trip
- a. relevent dates [sic]
- b. itinerary
- c. companions
- d. motorcade to luncheon
- e. other
- 2. Events of morning of November 22
- a. arrival at airport--time, etc.
- b. motorcade--crowds, time, etc.
-
- B. Assassination (based on all available statements of witnesses,
- films, photographs, etc.)
- 1. Shots
- a. number of shots fired
- b. time elapsed during shots
- c. direction of shots
- d. location of car at time
- 2. Postures and apparent injuries to President Kennedy and
- Governor Connally
- a. President Kennedy
- b. Governor Connally
-
- C. Events Immediately Following the Shooting
- 1. Treatment at hospital
- 2. Activities of Dallas law enforcement
- 3. Return of entourage to Washington
- a. President Johnson's trip to airport
- b. trip of Mrs. Kennedy with body of late
- President to airport
- c. swearing-in
- 4. Removal of President Kennedy's body to
- Bethesda Naval Hospital
- 5. Removal of car to Washington--condition and repairs
-
- D. Nature and Extent of Wounds Received by President
- Kennedy (based on examinations in Dallas and Bethesda)
- 1. Number of individual wounds received by
- President Kennedy
- 2. Cause of death
- 3. Time of death
- 4. Evaluation of medical treatment received in
- Dallas
-
- II. {Lee Harvey Oswald as the Assassin of President Kennedy}
-
- A. Brief Identification of Oswald (Dallas resident,
- employee of Texas School Book Depository, etc.)
-
- B. Movements on November 22, 1963 Prior to Assassination
- 1. Trip to work
- a. time
- b. package
- c. other significant facts, e.g. any conversations, etc.
- 2. Entry into Depository
- a. time
- b. package
- c. other significant facts
- 3. Activities during morning
- a. nature of his work
- b. location of his work
- c. other significant facts, e.g. any conversations, etc.
- 4. Movements immediately prior to 12:29 P.M.
-
- C. Movements after Assassination until Murder of Tippit
- 1. Presence within building
- a. location
- b. time
- c. encounter with police
- d. other relevant facts
- 2. Departure from building
- a. time
- b. direction of movement
- c. other relevant facts, e.g. crossing police line, etc.
- 3. Boarding of bus
- a. time and place of boarding
- b. duration of ride
- c. other relevant facts, e.g. dress, appearance,
- conversations, etc.
- 4. From bus to taxi
- a. time and place
- b. distance and route of cab
- c. time to destination
- d. other relevant facts obtained from cab driver or
- other witnesses or sources
- 5. Arrival at rooming house
- a. time
- b. actions within rooming house
- c. departure and direction
- 6. Route until encounter with Tippit
- a. time
- b. distance
-
- D. Murder of Tippit
- 1. Encounter of Oswald and Tippit
- a. time
- b. location
- 2. Evidence demonstrating Oswald's guilt
- a. eyewitness reports
- b. murder weapon
- c. autopsy and ballistics reports
- d. paraffin tests
- e. other, e.g. statements (if any)
-
- E. Flight and Apprehension in Texas Theater
- 1. Movement until entry into theater
- a. time
- b. actions, e.g. reloading weapon
- c. other relevant facts, e.g. recovery of jacket
- 2. Apprehension in theater
- a. movements of Oswald in theater
- b. notification and arrival of police
- c. arrest of Oswald
- d. removal to station
-
- F. Oswald at Dallas Police Station
- 1. Interrogation
- a. time, manner and number of interrogation sessions
- b. persons present
- c. persons responsible
- d. results
- 2. Other investigation by Dallas police
- a. line-ups and eyewitness identification
- b. seizure of Oswald's papers
- c. other
- 3. Denials and other statements by Oswald
- 4. Removal to County Jail on November 24, 1963
- 5. Killing of Oswald by Ruby
-
- G. Evidence Identifying Oswald as the Assassin of
- President Kennedy
- 1. Room of Texas School Book Depository identified as
- source of shots
- a. eyewitness reports
- b. trajectory of shots
- c. evidence on scene after assassination
- d. other
- 2. Oswald placed in Depository (and specific room?)
- a. eyewitness reports
- b. fingerprints on objects in room
- c. facts reviewed above
- 3. Assassination weapon identified as Oswald's
- a. discovery of rifle and shells
- b. obtaining and possession of gun by Oswald
- c. whereabouts of gun on November 21 and November 22
- d. prints on rifle
- e. photographs of Oswald and rifle
- f. General Walker ballistic report.
- 4. Other physical evidence
- a. clothing tests
- b. paraffin tests
- 5. Prior similar acts
- a. General Walker attack
- b. General Eisenhower threat
- 6. Permissible inferences from Oswald's:
- a. flight from Depository
- b. statements on bus
- c. murder of Tippit
-
- H. Evidence Implicating Others in Assassination or
- Suggesting Accomplices
- 1. Evidence of shots other than from Depository?
- 2. Feasibility of shots within time span and with use
- of telescope
- 3. Evidence re other persons involved in actual
- shooting from Depository
- 4. Analysis of all movements of Oswald after
- assassination for attempt to meet associates
- 5. Refutation of allegations
-
- III. {Lee Harvey Oswald: Background and Possible Motive}
-
- A. Birth and Pre-school Days
- 1. Family structure (death of father; statements of
- persons who knew family; interviews of mother,
- brother, and members of family)
- 2. Where family lived (statements as to childhood
- character of Oswald from neighbors who recall family
- and child)
- 3. Standard of living of family (document factors which
- would have bearing upon development)
- B. Education
- 1. Schools (reports from each school attended regarding
- demeanor, grades, development, attitude to fellow
- students, activities, problems, possible aptitude
- for languages, sex life, etc.)
- 2. Reports of fellow students, associates, friends,
- enemies at each school attended
- 3. Reports from various neighbors where Oswald lived
- while attending various schools
- 4. Special report from juvenile authorities in New York
- City concerning Oswald.
- a. report of case worker on Oswald and family
- b. psychiatrist who examined him, treatment and
- results, opinion as to future development
- C. Military Service
- 1. Facts regarding entry into service, assignments,
- stations, etc. until discharge
- 2. Reports of personnel from each station regarding
- demeanor, character, competence, activities, sex
- life, financial status, attitude, etc.
- 3. Report on all activities while in Japan
- 4. Report and document study of Russian language
- a. where and when
- b. books used
- c. instruction or self-taught
- d. any indication of degree of accomplishment
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- * * * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- Appendix B
-
- Memorandum to J. Lee Rankin
- from David W. Belin
-
-
- {Author's note: This memorandum by staff lawyer Belin speaks for
- itself. A month later, on February 25,1964, Belin wrote in another
- memorandum, "At no time have we assumed that Lee Harvey Oswald was
- the assassin of President Kennedy." See chapter 2.}
-
-
- MEMORANDUMJanuary 30, 1964
- TO:J. Lee Rankin
- FROM:David W. Belin
- SUBJECT:Oswald's knowledge that Connally would be in the
- Presidential car and his intended target.
-
-
- According to the Secret Service Report, Document No. 3, page 11,
- the route of the motorcade was released on the evening of November
- 18 and appeared in Dallas newspapers on November 19 as shown in
- Exhibits 6D and 6E (Document No. 3 is the December 18 Secret
- Service Report).
- In examining these exhibits, although the general route of the
- motorcade is shown, there is nothing that shows that Governor
- Connally would be riding in the Presidential car.
- In determining the accuracy of Oswald, we have three major
- possibilities: Oswald was shooting at Connally and missed two of
- the three shots, the two misses striking Kennedy; Oswald was
- shooting at both Kennedy and Connally and all three shots struck
- their intended targets; Oswald was shooting only at Kennedy and
- the second bullet missed its intended target and hit Connally
- instead.
- If there was no mass media coverage that Connally would be
- riding in the Presidential car, it would tend to confirm the third
- alternative that Kennedy was the only intended target. This in
- turn bears on the motive of the assassination and also on the
- degree of markmanship [sic] required, which in turn affects the
- determination that Oswald was the assassin and that it was not too
- difficult to hit the intended target two out of the three times in
- this particular situation.
- In any event, I believe it would be most helpful to have the FBI
- investigate all newspaper, television and radio reports from
- November 18 to November 22 in Dallas to ascertain whether or not in
- any of these reports there was a public announcement that Connally
- would be riding in the Presidential car. If such public
- announcement was made, we should know specifically over what media
- and when.
- Of course, there is another element of timing: If Connally's
- position in the motorcade was not released until the afternoon of
- November 21, then when Oswald went home to get the weapon, he would
- not have necessarily intended Connally as the target.
- Finally, we would like to know whether or not there was any
- release to the public news media that Connally would ride in any
- car in the motorcade, regardless of whether or not it was the
- Presidential car.
- Thank you.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- * * * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- Appendix C
-
-
- Memorandum to J. Lee Rankin
- from Norman Redlich
-
-
- {Author's note: This is one of many similar outlines of the Warren
- Report, drafted long before the Commission's "investigation" ended,
- and before virtually all of the relevant testimony was taken. It
- proves that the Commission worked to substantiate a preconceived
- conclusion naming Oswald as the sole assassin.}
-
-
- MEMORANDUMMarch 26, 1964
- TO:J. Lee Rankin
- FROM:Norman Redlich
- SUBJECT:Proposed Outline of Report
-
-
- I attach a proposed outline of our final report. This plan
- envisages a main report and supplementary materials to be published
- as one volume. This will be followed by appendixes to be published
- when prepared. These appendixes will contain the supporting
- material for the report such as the transcript of testimony,
- important underlying investigatory material, and photos of
- important exhibits not published with the original report.
- I have listed the staff members who I feel should have
- responsibility for the particular sections of the report. Although
- I have assigned small sections of the report to Mr. Williams, Mr.
- Eisenberg, and myself, the major responsibility lies with other
- members of the staff. I am assuming that Mr. Williams as your
- Administrative Assistant, and I as your Special Assistant, together
- with Mr. Eisenberg, will have responsibility for review, editing,
- avoidance of duplication, and other technical details of putting a
- report into publishable condition.
- With your permission, I would like to distribute this outline to
- the staff.
-
- PROPOSED OUTLINE OF REPORT
- (Submitted by Mr. Redlich)
-
- I. Statement of Objectives and Standards (Mr. Rankin)
- (The Report should start with a brief statement setting forth the
- Commission's view of its objectives and standards used to achieve
- them. It is important to clarify the Commission's position as a
- fact-finding body and to indicate wherein our findings differ
- from a judicial determination of criminal guilt.)
-
- II. Brief Summary of Major Conclusions (Redlich and Willens)
- (The purpose of this section is to provide the reader with a
- short statement of our major conclusions without having to read
- through the entire document.)
- A. Basic Facts Concerning Assassination of President Kennedy and
- Shooting of Governor Connally
- B. Identity of the Assassin
- C. Conclusions Concerning Accomplices
- D. Conclusions Concerning Motive
- E. Ruby's Killing of Oswald and Conclusion as to Possible Link
- to Assassination
- III. The Assassination--Basic Facts (Adams and Specter)
- A. Physical Setting
- 1. Description of Motorcade
- 2. Description of Area where Shooting Occurred
- B. Shooting
- 1. Number of Shots
- 2. Medical Effect of Each Shot
- 3. Point from which Shots Fired
- 4. Statistical Data
- a. Elapsed time of shooting
- b. Distance travelled by Presidential car
- c. Speed of car
- d. Distance travelled by each bullet
- 5. Events Immediately following Shooting
- a. Reaction of Secret Service
- b. Trip to Parkland
- c. Events in Parkland
- d. Trip to Love Field
- e. Return to Washington
-
- IV. Lee H. Oswald as the Assassin (Ball and Belin)
- (This section should state the facts which lead to the conclusion
- that Oswald pulled the trigger and should also indicate the
- elements in the case which have either not been proven or are
- based on doubtful testimony. Each of the factors listed below
- should be reviewed in that light.)
- A. Identification of Rifle as Murder Weapon
- B. Oswald's Ownership of Weapon
- C. Evidence of Oswald Carrying Weapon to Building
- 1. Fake Curtain Rod Stroy [sic]
- 2. Buell Frazier's Story
- 3. Possible Presence in Paine's Garage on Evening of
- November 21, 1963
- D. Evidence of Oswald on Sixth Floor
- 1. Palm Prints on Carton
- 2. Paper Bag with Oswald Print
- E. Eyewitness Testimony
- F. Oswald After Assassination--Actions in Building
- G. Oswald After Assassination--Actions up to Tippit Shooting
- H. Shooting of Tippit and Arrest in Theatre
- 1. Eyewitnesses
- 2. Gun as Murder Weapon
- 3. Oswald's Ownership of Gun
- I. Statements After Arrest
- J. Prior Actions
- 1. Walker Shooting
- 2. Possible Nixon Attempt
- 3. Practice with Rifle
- K. Evidence of any Accomplices in Assassination
- L. Appraisal of Oswald's Actions on November 21 and 22 in Light
- of Assassination
- (This will be a difficult section, but I feel we must face up
- to the various paradoxical aspects of Oswald's behavior in
- light of his being the assassin. I suggest the following
- items for consideration.)
- 1. Did He Have a Planned Escape?
- 2. Why did he pass up the Opportunity to get money on
- November 21 when he returned to Irving?
- 3. Discussion with Marina about getting apartment in Dallas
- 4. Asking fellow employee, on morning of November 22, which
- way the President was coming.
-
- V. Possible Motive (Jenner, Liebeler, Coleman, Slawson)
- A. Brief Biographical Sketch of Oswald (Fuller Biography in
- Supplement)
- B. Any Personal Animosity Toward Kennedy or Connally
- C. Do his Political Beliefs Furnish Motive
- D. Link to Domestic Left-Wing Groups
- 1. Fair Play for Cuba
- 2. Communist Party
- 3. Conclusions to be Drawn from such Links
- E. Link to Right-Wing Groups
- F. Possible Agent of Foreign Power
- G. Possible Link to Underworld
-
- VI. Killing of Oswald by Ruby (Hubert and Griffin)
- A. Facts of the Killing
- 1. Actions of Ruby starting with November 22
- 2. Description of Events on November 24
- B. Discussion of Possible Link with Assassination of President
- Kennedy
- C. Other Possible Motives
- 1. Brief Biographical Sketch (Fuller Sketch in Supplement)
- 2. Ruby as Self-styled Patriot, Hero, Important Man
- 3. Possibility of Ruby being Mentally Ill
-
- SUPPLEMENT TO BE PUBLISHED WITH REPORT
- A. Visual Aids To Help Explain Main Body of Report (All Staff
- Members Concerned)
- B. Organization and Methods of Commission (Willens)
- C. Security Precautions to Protect Life of President (Stern)
- 1. What Was Done on This Trip
- 2. Broader Recommendations in This Area
- (I recognize that this area has been the subject of extended
- discussion and it might be desirable to move this section to
- the main body of the Report)
- D. Detailed Facts About President's Trip up to Assassination
- (Adams, Specter, Stern)
- E. Biography of Oswald (Jenner, Liebeler, Coleman, Slawson)
- F. Biography of Ruby (Hubert and Griffin)
- G. Oswald Relationship with U.S. Government Agencies (Redlich,
- Stern, Coleman, Slawson)
- H. Discussion of Widely Circulated Theories (Redlich and
- Eisenberg)
- I. Other Important Documents We May Wish to Publish as Part of
- Supplement, I suggest the following:
- 1. Autopsy Reports
- 2. Summary of Testimony of Experts on Physical Evidence
- (Eisenberg)
- 3. Charts and Other Data Presented by Experts (Eisenberg)
- 4. Reports of Medical Examination on Governor Connally
- 5. Report of FBI and Secret Service on Location of
- President's car at Time of Shots (Redlich and Eisenberg)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- * * * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- Appendix D
-
-
- A Later Memorandum to J. Lee Rankin
- from Norman Redlich
-
-
- {Author's note: This memorandum by staff lawyer Redlich explicitly
- states that the object of the investigation was not to determine the
- truth as far as it could be known, but rather to substantiate a
- preconceived conclusion.}
-
-
- MEMORANDUMApril 27, 1964
- TO:J. Lee Rankin
- FROM:Norman Redlich
-
-
- The purpose of this memorandum is to explain the reasons why
- certain members of the staff feel that it is important to take certain
- on-site photographs in connection with the location of the approximate
- points at which the three bullets struck the occupants of the
- Presidential limousine.
- Our report presumably will state that the President was hit by the
- first bullet, Governor Connally by the second, and the President by
- the third and fatal bullet. The report will also conclude that the
- bullets were fired by one person located in the sixth floor southeast
- corner window of the TSBD building.
- As our investigation now stands, however, we have not shown that
- these events could possibly have occurred in the manner suggested
- above. All we have is a reasonable hypothesis which appears to be
- supported by the medical testimony but which has not been checked out
- against the physical facts at the scene of the assassination.
- Our examination of the Zapruder films shows that the fatal third
- shot struck the President at a point which we can locate with
- reasonable accuracy on the ground. We can do this because we know the
- exact frame (no. 313) in the film at which the third shot hit the
- President and we know the location of the photographer. By lining up
- fixed objects in the movie fram [sic] where this shot occurs we feel
- that we have determined the approximate location of this shot. This
- can be verified by a photo of the same spot from the point were
- Zapruder was standing.
- We have the testimony of Governor and Mrs. Connally that the
- Governor was hit with the second bullet at a point which we probably
- cannot fix with precision. We feel we have established, however, with
- the help of medical testimony, that the shot which hit the Governor
- did not come {after} frame 240 on the Zapruder film. The Governor
- feels that it came around 230 which is certainly consistent with our
- observations of the film and with the doctor's testimony. Since the
- President was shot at frame 313, this would leave a time of at least 4
- seconds between two shots, certainly ample for even an inexperienced
- marksman.
- Prior to our last viewing of the films with Governor Connally we
- had assumed that the President was hit while he was concealed behind
- the sign which occurs between frames 215 to 225. We have expert
- testimony to the effect that a skilled marksman would require a
- minimum of time of 2 1/4 seconds between shots with this rifle. Since
- the camera operates at 18 1/3 frames per second, there would have to
- be a minimum of 40 frames between shots. It is apparent therefore,
- that if Governor Connally was hit even as late as frame 240, the
- President would have to have been hit no later than frame 190 and
- probably even earlier.
- We have not yet examined the assassination scene to determine
- whether the assassin in fact could have shot the President prior to
- frame 190. We could locate the position on the ground which
- corresponds to this frame and it would then be our intent to establish
- by photography that the assassin could have fired the first shot at
- the President prior to this point. 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.
- I had always assumed that our final report would be accompanied by
- a surveyor's diagram which would indicate the appropriate location of
- the three shots. We certainly cannot prepare such a diagram without
- establishing that we are describing an occurrence which is physically
- possible. Our failure to do this will, in my opinion, place this
- Report in jeopardy since it is a certainty that others will examine
- the Zapruder films and raise the same questions which have been raised
- by our examination of the films. If we do not attempt to answer these
- questions with observable facts, others may answer them with facts
- which challenge our most basic assumptions, or with fanciful theories
- based on our unwillingness to test our assumptions by the
- investigatory methods available to us.
- I should add that the facts which we now have in our possession,
- submitted to us in separate reports from the FBI and Secret Service,
- are totally incorrect and, if left uncorrected, will present a
- completely misleading picture.
- It may well be that this project should be undertaken by the FBI
- and Secret Service with our assistance instead of being done as a
- staff project. The important thing is that the project be undertaken
- expeditiously.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- * * * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- Appendix E
-
- Report of the FBI's First
- Interview with Charles Givens
-
-
- {Author's note: This is the actual report of the FBI's first
- interview with Charles Givens. Givens is reported as saying nothing
- about the alleged encounter with Oswald on the sixth floor that he was
- to describe to the Commission much later. Rather, he is reported to
- have told the FBI on the day of the assassination that he saw Oswald
- on the first floor at the same time he later told the Commission he
- saw Oswald on the sixth floor. This FBI report was not published by
- the Commission or mentioned in the Warren Report.
-
-
- FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION
-
- Date 11/23/63
-
- CHARLES DOUGLAS GIVENS, 2511 Cochran Street, advised he was
- employed by the Texas School Book Depository, Houston and Elm Street,
- from October 1, 1963, to present time. GIVENS said he has worked at
- this same position as a wrapper on several occasions prior to this
- employment.
- On November 22, 1963, GIVENS worked on the sixth floor of the
- building until about 11:30 A.M. when he used the elevator to travel to
- the first floor where he used the restroom at about 11:35 A.M. or
- 11:40 A.M. GIVENS then walked around on the first floor until 12
- o'clock noon, at which time he walked onto the sidewalk and stood for
- several minutes, then walked to the Classified Parking Lot at Elm and
- Records Street. GIVENS then walked to Main Street to watch the parade
- and after the President and the group had passed, he walked back to
- the parking lot, at which time he heard several shots fired from the
- direction of the building at which he is employed. He attempted to
- return to work but was told that he had been released for the balance
- of the day.
- GIVENS advised that a white male, known as LEE, was employed in the
- same building and worked as a wrapper or order filler. He said he saw
- this same person's picture on television on the afternoon of November
- 22, 1963, who was supposed to have been the person being investigated
- for the shooting of the President. LEE worked on all floors of the
- building, and on November 22, 1963, GIVENS recalls observing LEE
- working on the fifth floor during the morning filling orders. LEE was
- standing by the elevator in the building at 11:30 A.M. when GIVENS
- went to the first floor. When he started down in the elevator, LEE
- yelled at him to close the gates on the elevator so that he (LEE)
- could have the elevator returned to the sixth floor. GIVENS said that
- during the past few days LEE had commented that he rode to work with a
- boy named WESLEY.
- GIVENS said all employees enter the back door of the building when
- JACK DOUGHERTY, the foreman opens the door at about 7 A.M. On the
- morning of November 22, 1963, GIVENS observed LEE reading a newspaper
- in the domino room where the employees eat lunch about 11:50 A.M.
-
- __________________________________________________________________
-
- 11/22/63 Dallas, Texas DL 89-43
- on ____________ at _________________ File # ____________
-
-
-
- WILL HAYDEN GRIFFEN
- by Special Agent _________________________ and
- BARDWELL D. ODUM (HM)
-
- Date dictated 11/23/63
- ____________
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- * * * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- Appendix F
-
-
- FBI Report on Mrs. R. E. Arnold
-
-
- {Author's note: The Warren Commission stated in its Report that it
- knew of no Book Depository employee who claimed to have seen Oswald
- between 11:55 and 12:30 on the day of the assassination. This was
- false, as this FBI report from the Commission's files reveals. The
- Warren Report never mentions Mrs. Arnold and this FBI document was
- omitted from the Commission's published evidence.}
-
- FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION
-
- Date 11/26/63
-
- Mrs. R. E. ARNOLD, Secretary, Texas School Book Depository, advised
- she was in her office on the second floor of the building on November
- 22, 1963, and left that office between 12:00 and 12:15 PM, to go
- downstairs and stand in front of the building to view the Presidential
- Motorcade. As she was standing in front of the building, she stated
- she thought she caught a fleeting glimpse of LEE HARVEY OSWALD
- standing in the hallway between the front door and the double doors
- leading to the warehouse, located on the first floor. She could not
- be sure that this was OSWALD, but said she felt it was and believed
- the time to be a few minutes before 12:15 PM.
- She stated thereafter she viewed the Presidential Motorcade and
- heard the shots that were fired at the President; however, she could
- furnish no information of value as to the individual firing the shots
- or any other information concerning OSWALD, whom she stated she did
- not know and had merely seen him working in the building.
-
- __________________________________________________________________
-
- 11/26/63 Dallas, Texas DL 89-43
- on ____________ at _________________ File # ___________
-
-
- RICHARD E. HARRISON/rmh
- by Special Agent ___________________________
-
- Date dictated 11/26/63
- ____________
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- * * * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- Bibliography
-
-
-
-
- {Books}
-
- Belin, David. "November 22, 1963: You Are the Jury." New York:
- Quadrangle Books, 1973.
- Bishop, Jim. "The Day Kennedy Was Shot." New York: Funk and
- Wagnall, 1968.
- Bonner, Judy. "Investigation of a Homicide." Anderson, S.C.: Drake
- House, 1969.
- Buchanan, Thomas. "Who Killed Kennedy?" New York: Putnam's Sons,
- 1964.
- Burrard, Major Sir Gerald. "The Identification of Firearms and
- Forensic Ballistics." London: Herbert Jenkins, 1951.
- Central Broadcasting System. "CBS News Inquiry: `The Warren
- Report.'" Parts I-IV, broadcast over CBS Television Network June
- 25-28, 1967.
- ______. "CBS News Extra: `November 22 and the Warren Report,'"
- broadcast over CBS Television Network September 27, 1964.
- Chapman, Gil and Ann. "Was Oswald Alone?" San Diego: Publisher's
- Export Co., 1967.
- Curry, Jesse. "Personal JFK Assassination File." Dallas: American
- Poster and Printing Co., Inc., l969.
- Cutler, R.B. "The Flight of CE 399: Evidence of Conspiracy."
- Manchester, Mass.: R.B. Cutler, 1969.
- Dingle, Herbert. "Practical Applications of Spectrum Analysis."
- London: Chapman and Hall, Ltd., 1950.
- Epstein, Edward J. "Inquest." New York: Viking Press, 1966.
- ______. "Counterplot." New York: Viking Press, 1969.
- Fiddes, Frederick and Smith, Sydney. "Forensic Medicine." London:
- J. and A. Churchill, Ltd., 1955.
- Flammonde, Paris. "The Kennedy Conspiracy." New York: Meredith
- Press, 1969.
- Ford, Gerald and Stiles, John. "Lee Harvey Oswald: Portrait of the
- Assassin." New York: Simon and Schuster, 1965.
- Fox, Sylvan. "The Unanswered Questions About President Kennedy's
- Assassination." New York: Award Books, 1965.
- Garrison, Jim. "A Heritage of Stone." New York: Putnam, 1970.
- Gonzales, Thomas, Helpern, Milton, Vance, Morgan, and Umberger,
- Charles. "Legal Medicine, Pathology and Toxicology." New York:
- Appleton-Century-Crofts, Inc., 1954.
- Hagie, C. E. "The American Rifle for Hunting and Target Shooting."
- New York: The Macmillan Co., 1946.
- Houts, Marshall. "Where Death Delights." New York: Coward-McCann,
- 1967.
- Jay, David, ed. "The Weight of the Evidence: The Warren Report and
- Its Critics." New York: Meredith Press, 1968.
- Joesten, Joachim. "Oswald: Assassin or Fall Guy?" New York:
- Marzani and Numsell Publishers, 1964.
- Jones, Penn Jr. "Forgive My Grief I." Midlothian, Tex.: Midlothian
- Mirror, Inc., 1966.
- ______. "Forgive My Grief II." Midlothian, Tex.: Midlothian Mirror,
- Inc., 1967.
- ______. "Forgive My Grief III." Midlothian, Tex.: Midlothian Mirror,
- Inc., 1969.
- Kaiser, Robert Blair. "RFK Must Die." New York: E.P. Dutton, 1970.
- Kirkwood, James. "An American Grotesque." New York: Simon and
- Schuster, 1970.
- Lane, Mark. "Rush To Judgement." New York: Holt, Rinehart and
- Winston, 1966.
- ______. "A Citizen's Dissent." New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston,
- 1968.
- Lewis, Richard and Schiller, Lawrence. "The Scavengers and Critics of
- the Warren Report." New York: Dell Books, 1967.
- Lifton, David. "Document Addendum to the Warren Report." El Segundo,
- Calif.: 1968.
- Long, Rowland H. "The Physician and the Law." New York: 1968.
- Lucas, A. "Forensic Chemistry and Scientific Criminal Investigation."
- New York: Longmans, Green and Co., 1935.
- Manchester, William. "The Death of a President." New York: Harper
- and Row, 1967.
- Marcus, Raymond. "The Bastard Bullet." Los Angeles, Calif.: Rendell
- Publications, 1966.
- Meagher, Sylvia. "Accessories After the Fact." New York: The
- Bobbs-Merrill Co., Inc., 1967.
- ______. "Subject Index to the Warren Report and Hearings and
- Exhibits." New York: Scarecrow Press, 1966.
- Morin, Relman. "Assassination: The Death of President John F.
- Kennedy." New York: Signet Books, 1968.
- Nash, George and Patricia. "Critical Reactions to the Warren Report."
- New York: Marzani and Munsell, 1964.
- National Broadcasting Company. "There Was a President." New York:
- Random House, 1966.
- Newman, Albert. "The Assassination of John F. Kennedy: The Reasons
- Why." New York: Clarkson N. Potter, Inc., 1970.
- Popkin, Richard. "The Second Oswald." New York: Avon Books, 1966.
- Roberts, Charles. "The Truth About the Assassination." New York:
- Grosset and Dunlap, 1967.
- Sauvage, Leo. "The Oswald Affair." Cleveland: The World Publishing
- Co., 1965.
- Smith, Merriman, et al. "Four Days." New York: United Press
- International and American Heritage, 1964.
- Snyder, Le Moyne. "Homicide Investigation." Springfield, Mass.:
- 1953.
- Sparrow, John. "After the Assassination: A Positive Appraisal of the
- Warren Report." New York: Chilmark Press, 1967.
- Thompson, Josiah. "Six Seconds in Dallas." New York: Bernard Geis
- Associates, 1967.
- Warren, Earl, et al. "Report of the President's Commission on the
- Assassination of President Kennedy." Washington, D.C.:
- Government Printing Office, 1964.
- ______. "Hearings Before the President's Commission on the
- Assassination of President Kennedy." Washington, D.C.:
- Government Printing Office, 1964.
- Weisberg, Harold. "Whitewash: The Report on the Warren Report."
- Hyattstown, Md.: Harold Weisberg, 1965.
- ______. "Whitewash II: The FBl-Secret Service Cover-Up." Hyattstown,
- Md.: Harold Weisberg, 1966.
- ______. "Photographic Whitewash: Suppressed Kennedy Assassination
- Pictures." Hyattstown, Md.: Harold Weisberg, 1967.
- ______. "Oswald in New Orleans." New York: Canyon Books, 1967.
- ______. "Post Mortem." Frederick, Md.: Harold Weisberg, 1971.
- ______. "Frame-Up: The Martin Luther King/James Earl Ray Case." New
- York: Outerbridge and Dienstfrey, 1971.
- "Winchester-Western Ammunition Handbook." New York: Pocket Books,
- Inc., 1964.
-
-
- {Articles}
-
- Bickel, Alexander. "The Failure of the Warren Report." "Commentary"
- (October 1966).
- Epstein, Edward J. "The Final Chapter in the Assassination
- Controversy." "New York Times Magazine" (May 20, 1969).
- Fonzi, Gaeton. "The Warren Commission, the Truth, and Arlen Specter."
- "Philadelphia Magazine" (August 1966).
- Ford, Gerald. "Piecing Together the Evidence." "Life" (October 2,
- 1964).
- Garrison, Jim. "Playboy Interview: Jim Garrison." "Playboy" (October
- 1967).
- Jackson, Donald. "The Evolution of an Assassin." "Life" (February
- 21, 1964).
- Kempton, Murray. "Warren Report: Case for the Prosecution." "The New
- Republic" (October 10, 1964).
- Knebel, Fletcher. "A New Wave of Doubt." "Look" (July 12, 1966).
- Lane, Mark. "Playboy Interview: Mark Lane." "Playboy" (February
- 1967).
- Lattimer, John K. and Jon. "The Kennedy-Connally Single Bullet
- Theory: A Feasibility Study." "International Surgery" (December
- 1968).
- Lifton, David and Welsh, Robert. "A Counter-Theory: The Case For
- Three Assassins." "Ramparts" (January 1967).
- Lynd, Staughton and Minnis, Jack. "Seeds of Doubt: Some Questions
- About the Assassination." "The New Republic" (December 21, 1963).
- MacDonald, Dwight. "A Critique of the Warren Report." "Esquire"
- (March 1965).
- "A Matter of Reasonable Doubt." "Life" (November 25, 1966).
- Meagher, Sylvia. "The Curious Testimony of Mr. Givens." "The Texas
- Observer" (August 12, 1971).
- "November 22, 1963, Dallas: Photos by Nine Bystanders." "Life"
- (November 24, 1967).
- ______. "The Warren Commission's Private Life." "The Texas Observer"
- (April 3, 1970).
- Olson, Don and Turner, Ralph. "Photographic Evidence and the
- Assassination of President John F. Kennedy." "Journal of Forensic
- Sciences" (October 1971).
- Oswald, Robert L. "Oswald: He was my Brother." "Look" (October 17,
- 1967).
- Salandria, Vincent. "The Warren Report." "Liberation" (March 1965).
- ______. "The Impossible Tasks of One Assassination Bullet." "The
- Minority of One" (March 1966).
- "Truth About Kennedy Assassination: Questions Raised and Answered."
- "U.S. News and World Report" (October 10, 1966).
- Turner, William. "The Inquest." "Ramparts" (June 1967).
- ______. "The Garrison Commission on the Assassination of President
- Kennedy." "Ramparts" (January 1968).
- Welsh, David. "In the Shadow of Dallas." "Ramparts" (November 1966).
- Wise, David. "Secret Evidence on the Kennedy Assassination."
- "Saturday Evening Post" (April 16, 1968)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- * * * * * * *
-
- [The index has been included verbatim from the original book. Hence the
- page numbers are not correct for this copy of the book, but it was felt
- the subjects noted here would still be useful as reference --ratitor ]
-
-
-
-
-
- Index
-
-
- Accessories after the fact in assassination 33
- Accomplices in assassination, 81- 82
- Accountability of government, 24, 41
- Aebersold, Paul C., 19
- Alba, Adrian, 244-45
- Alibi for Oswald, 221, 225
- Ammunition. {See} Military ammunition; Sporting ammunition
- Anderson, Eugene, 231
- Arce, Danny, 183
- Archives. {See} National Archives
- Arnold, Mrs. Carolyn, 184-87, 276-77
- Assassin's rifle. {See} Rifle
- Atomic Energy Commission, 19, 20, 21, 23
- Autopsy on President Kennedy, 37, 121
- Autopsy photos and Xrays, 37-39, 115, 117, 121-22
-
- Bag. {See} Paper bag
- Baker, Mrs. Donald, 186
- Baker, M. L., 63, 199, 201-9, 213, 218-21, 252-53
- Ball Joseph 84-86, 163, 181, 205
- Ballistics evidence, 48
- Ballistics tests, 50; simulating head wounds, 111-14
- Belin, David, 29-30, 84-86, 90, 169, 196, 197-98, 222, 288-89
- Bernabei, Richard, 126, 129, 283
- Blanket, 170-71
- Boggs, Hale, 17, 26, 80, 222
- Bolt practice by Oswald, 242-43
- Bookhout, James, 182
- Boone, Eugene, 212, 213
- Boswell, Dr. J. Thornton, 118-19
- Brandeis, Louis, 41
- Brennan, Howard, 61-62, 188, 190-98,199
- Bullet fragments, 19-20, 21-22; in car, 98, 107, 114, 146, 254;
- from Governor Connally, 99-100, 103, 131, 132; in President
- Kennedy's head, 38-39, 117; in President Kennedy's neck, 121-25,
- 145
- Bullet 399, 22, 95-96, 99-101, 103, 121, 124, 128, 129, 131, 133,
- 134, 136-45, 250; planted, 253
- Bullet wounds 50, of Governor Connally, 131-45, of President
- Kennedy's anterior neck, 79, 123,125,145; of President Kennedy's
- back, 126, 145; of President Kennedy's head, 108-20; of
- President Kennedy's neck, 120-29
- Bullets. {See} also Military ammunition; Sporting ammunition
- Bullets and fragments, 48
- Bullets, high-velocity, 119
-
- Cabell, Mrs. Earle, 188
- Cadigan, James, 171-72
- Calvery, Gloria, 204-5
- Cartridge cases, 37, 49, 69, 107, 127-28, 129, 147
- Castro, Fidel, 29, 30
- CBS News, 193,197, 205, 213
- Central Broadcasting System. {See} CBS News
- Central Intelligence Agency. {See} CIA
- CIA, 29, 30, 38
- CIA, President's Commission on domestic activities of, 29-30, 39
- Clark, Ramsey, 105,114-15; panel assembled by, 37, 39, 115, 117,
- 118, 121
- Clothing: description, 288; worn by gunman, 198-99; worn by
- President Kennedy, 20, 99, 103; worn by Oswald, 198-99
- Cohen, Jacob, 281
- Congress, 9, 11, 30-31, 40, 255
- Connally, John, 25, 84
- Cooper, Sen. John Sherman, 26 80, 134-35, 222, 238
- Couch, Malcolm, 188, 203, 205, 208, 209, 289
- Craig, Roger, 212
- Crawford, James, 188
- Cuban refugee at Parkland Hospital, 146
- Curry, Jesse E., 74, 100
- Curtain rods, 56, 146, 158-60, 174; story about, 58, 88
-
- "Dallas Morning News," 152-53, 154
- Dallas police, 37, 74, 90, 160, 171, 180-82, 195, 199, 205, 248;
- line-ups of, 195, 199, 200; radio logs of, 187
- "Dallas Times Herald," 83, 152
- Daniels, Gene, 159-60
- Dealey Plaza, 46
- Deception, political, 10-13
- Delgado, Nelson, 230-31, 232
- De Mohrenschildt, George, 223, 239-41, 244
- De Mohrenschildt, Jeanne, 223 240-41, 244
- Department of Justice, 78; withholding of spectographic analysis by,
- 22, 100, 106
- Dickey, Charles, 128, 142
- Dillard, Tom, 203
- Dissection: lack of at autopsy, 121
- Dolce, Dr. Joseph, 139
- Dougherty, Jack, 173-74
- Dragoo, Mrs. Betty, 186
- "Dumdum" bullet, 110
- Dulles, Allen, 15, 16-17, 26, 82, 89, 111, 134-35, 137, 198
- Dziemian, Dr. Arthur J., 140
-
- Edgewood Arsenal, 112
- Edwards, Don, 30
- Edwards, Robert, 189, 198
- Eisenberg, Melvin, 20, 143, 229
- Eisenhower, Dwight, 10
- Ely, John Hart, 230
- Enos, William, 142
- Epstein, Edward Jay, 28, 31, 35-36
- Euins, Amos, 188, 189-90, 195
- Executive sessions of Warren Commission: 12/5/63, 77; 12/16/63, 18,
- 79-80; 1/21/64, 82-83; 1/22/64, 15, 16; 1/27/64, 17, 19;
- 4/30/64, 89
- "Eyewitness identification of assassin," 61
-
- FBI, 15-23, 30, 37, 76-77, 90, 163, 171, 179-80, 181, 185, 196, 204,
- 239, 243, 244, 248-49; "agent" at hospital, 145-46; ballistics
- findings of, 18; report on assassination, 76 77, 249
- Federal Bureau of Investigation. {See} FBI
- Fensterwald, Bernard, 284
- Fiber evidence, 170-71; in bag 58; on rifle, 55
- Fillinger, Halpert, 116, 118, 119, 121, 122, 142, 144
- Finck, Col. Pierre, 111, 121
- Fingerprints: on boxes, 60, 65, 175; on paper bag, 167-68
- Fischer, Ronald, 191, 198
- Folsom, Col. A. G., 229-30, 232
- Ford, Gerald, 26, 29, 36, 111, 197
- Fox, Sylvan, 28
- Fragments. {See} Bullet fragments
- Frankford Arsenal, 142
-
- Frazier, Buell Wesley, 56-57, 58, 151, 156, 160, 162, 163-67, 170,
- 174
- Frazier, Robert, 23, 53, 70, 101-4, 119, 125, 143, 226-27
- Freedom of Information Act, 22-23, 106
- Fritz, Will, 74, 160, 182
- Full-jacketed bullets. {See} Military ammunition
-
- Gallagher, John, 20, 101-2
- Garrison, Jim, 28-29, 34-35, 115
- Givens, Charles, 61, 153, 176-78, 252, 274-75, 287-88
- Goldberg, Alfred, 86
- Gregory, Dr. Charles, 133, 137-38, 142
- Gregory, Dick, 29, 34
-
- Hart, Philip, 278-79
- Helpern, Dr. Milton, 142
- Henchcliffe, Margaret, 146
- "A. Hidell," 55
- High-velocity bullets. {See} Bullets
- Hoover, J. Edgar, 16, 17, 19, 20, 21-22, 30, 77, 100, 105, 159, 172,
- 179, 185, 249
- Howlett, John, 210, 212
- Humes, Dr. James J., 109-11, 115, 118, 124
- Hunt, E. Howard, 29
- Hunting rounds. {See} Sporting ammunition
- Huxley, Aldous, 239
-
- Interrogation sessions of Oswald, 182-83, 248
- Irving, Texas, 56, 58, 156, 157-58, 161-62, 251
-
- Jacketed bullets. {See} Military ammunition
- Jackson, Robert, 188, 203, 206
- Jarman, James, 154, 185-86, 288
- Jenner, Albert, 82, 240-41
- Johnson, Miss Judy, 186
- Johnson, Lyndon B., 25, 26, 78
- "Junior," 182-84
- Justice Department. {See} Department of Justice
-
- Katzenbach, Nicholas, 77
- Kellerman, Roy, 117
- Kelley, Thomas, 182
- Kennedy, Edward, 278
- Kennedy, John: Bay of Pigs, 10
- Kleindienst, Richard, 106, 282
-
- Landlady of Oswald's rented room, 160
- Lands and grooves, 143-44
- Lane, Mark, 28, 31, 33-35, 190
- Lawyers, 11, 13
- Liebeler, Wesley, 58, 60, 67, 68, 69-71, 91, 156, 231, 233, 235, 245
- "Life" magazine, 197
- Light, Dr. F. W., 139
- Limousine: examination of, 47; at hospital, 147
- Lineups. {See} Dallas Police
- Loftus, Joseph, 78
- Long, Rowland, 115
- "Long and bulky package," 162-74
- Lovelady, Billy, 204-5
- Lumumba, 30
- Lunchroom, on second floor, 202
-
- McCloy, John J., 17,18, 26, 80, 90, 110-11, 134-35, 139, 191
- Mannlicher-Carcanco. {See} Rifle
- "Marksman" rating of Oswald, 230
- Meagher, Sylvia, 28, 31, 33, 155, 158, 161-62, 287
- Media. {See} Press
- Medical evidence: limitations of, 107-8 ; meaning of, 107, 249-50
- Military ammunition, 109, 114, 116, 117-18, 120, 121, 122, 123-24,
- 129, 131, 147
- Miller, Herbert J., 19
- Missed shot, 37, 249
- Mitchell, John, 106, 284
- Molina, Joe, 204-5
- Mooney, Luke, 211, 212
- Morgan, Dr. Russell, 122
- "Motive" of Oswald, 82, 84
- Motorcade: prior knowledge of route of, 151-55; position of at
- 12:15, 186-87
- Muchmore, Mary, 51
-
- National Archives, 15, 105, 129, 140, 159, 179
- Neutron Activation Analysis, 19-23, 250
- "Newsweek," 78
- "New York Times," 74, 78
- Nichols, Dr. John, 113, 142
- Nix, Orville, 51
- Nixon, Richard, 29
- Norman, Harold, 183-84
- Nosenko, Yuri I., 235
- Note to FBI from Oswald, 30
-
- Olivier, Dr. Alfred G., 139-40
- On-site tests. {See} Reconstruction of shots
- Oser, Alvin, 104, 125, 227-28
- Oswald, Marina 68, 83, 154, 156 157-58, 161, 170, 223, 233-46
- Oswald, Robert, 232-33, 234-35, 246
- Outline of Warren Commission work, 80-82, 257-63
- Outlines of Warren Report, 86-88, 266-70
-
- Paine garage, 245
- Paine home: police search of, 157
- Paine, Ruth, 56, 156, 158, 161, 170, 234, 245
- Palmprint: on bag, 57-58; on rifle, 55
- Paper bag, 57-58, 151, 163, 167-73, 251; prints on, 57-58, 167-68
- Paraffin casts, 21
- Parkland Memorial Hospital, 25 107, 145, 146, 251; Cuban refugee
- employed at, 146; doctors employed at, 116, 132; "FBI agent" at,
- 145-46
- Patsy, Oswald as, 248
- Perry, Dr. Malcolm, 119
- "Philadelphia Inquirer," 74
- Photograph of Oswald with rifle, 55
- Piper, Eddie, 180-81, 209
- "Planted" evidence, 147-48, 251, 254
- Police. {See} Dallas Police
- Popkin, Richard, 28, 36
- Presidency, 10
- Press, 9, 11-13; reaction to Warren Report, 27; suspicious of
- Warren Report criticism, 29; presumption of Oswald's guilt by, 75
- Psychology, 221
-
- Rachey, Bonnie, 186
- Radio: in Oswald's possession 154
- Randle, Linnie Mae, 57, 162-64, 165-66
- Rankin, J. Lee, 16-17, 19, 23, 26, 80, 82-83, 89, 91, 159, 179-81,
- 185, 234, 237, 242-43, 252
- Reconstruction: of assassin's movements, 209-14; of movements
- after the shots, 64, 202-21, 252; of shots, 52, 88-89, 271-73
- Redlich, Norman, 33, 87-89
- Reid, Mrs. Robert, 153, 222-23
- Revill, Jack, 177
- Rifle, 18, 49, 50, 52, 54-55, 56-57, 58, 95, 106, 107, 151, 156, 162,
- 167, 170-72, 191, 210, 225, 227 235-39, 246, 249-50, 253, 289;
- ammunition for, 140; capability of, 66; capability tests with
- 228-29; disassembled, 164, 166; fibers on, 55; hiding of,
- 212-16, palmprint on, 55; photograph of Oswald with, 55; test
- firing for accuracy, 70-71; practice with by Oswald, 232-46
- Roberts, Mrs. Earlene, 154
- Roosevelt, Franklin D., 10
- Rowland, Arnold, 186-87,189,198
- Ruby, Jack, 25, 27, 146
- Russell, Sen. Richard, 17, 26, 79
- Russia: hunting by Oswald in, 233-35, 243, 246
-
- Salandria, Vincent, 27, 283
- Sauvage, Leo, 27, 161
- Sawyer, Herbert, 177
- Secret Service, 16, 181, 190, 234
- "Sharpshooter" rating of Oswald, 230
- Shaw, Clay: trial of, 28-29, 35, 103, 115, 226-27
- Shaw, Dr. Robert, 134-37, 142
- Shelley, Bill, 178, 204-5
- Shires, Dr. Tom, 133
- "Short charge," 128
- Shotgun practice by Oswald, 233-35
- Shots: as "easy," 67; nature of, 225-28; number of, 53; time span
- of, 54
- Simmons, Ronald, 227, 229, 246
- Single-bullet theory, 53, 226
- Sirica, John, 14
- Slawson, W. David, 83
- Snyder, LeMoyne, 115, 123
- Soft-nosed ammunition. {See} Sporting ammunition
- Sorrels, Forrest, 195
- Soviet Union. {See} Russia
- Specter, Arlen, 83, 101-3, 110, 133, 136, 138-39, 189
- Spectographic analyses, 18-19, 22, 47, 95-106, 147, 250, 284
- Sporting ammunition, 114, 116, 118, 123-24, 129, 131
- Staff of Warren Commission, 15, 18, 21, 26, 34, 35, 40, 188, 249
- "St.Louis Post-Dispatch," 74
- Stombaugh, Paul, 170
- Sturgis, Frank, 30
-
- Tape from Depository dispenser, 169
- Texas School Book Depository, 47, 56, 147, 151, 251; discovery of
- curtain rods in, 159
- Thompson, Josiah, 28, 36-37
- "Time," 77
- Tippit, J. D., 25, 32, 38, 66, 81
- Trevor-Roper, Hugh, 34
- Trujillo, 30
- Truly, Roy, 63, 153, 159, 201-9, 216-20, 222, 252-53
- "Twenty-six volumes," 27
-
- Underwood, Jim, 203
-
- Varminting bullets, 120
- Vestibule on second floor, 202, 214, 217
-
- Wade, Henry, 75
- Walker Edwin A.: shot fired at, 66, 81, 221, 237, 240
- Walther, Mrs. Carolyn, 189, 198
- Warren, Earl, 18, 26, 32, 34, 79, 80, 82-83
- "Washington Post," 13, 77
- Watergate, 9, 13, 29
- Weberman, A. J., 29
- Wecht, Cyril, 37-39, 121, 142, 280-81
- Weigman, David, 206
- Weisberg, Harold, 15, 16, 19, 21, 22-23, 28, 31-33, 36, 105-6, 142,
- 146, 153, 168, 184-85, 208, 284
- Weitzman, Seymour, 212, 213
- West, Troy Eugene, 168-70
- Williams, Bonnie Ray, 153
- Window, evidence near, 59-60
- Witnesses of sixth-floor gunman, 47
- Wounds. {See} Bullet wounds
-
- Zahm, James A., 227, 231
- Zapruder, Abraham, 51; film by, 36, 51, 54, 116, 226
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- --
- 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.
-
-
-
-