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1445 lines
73 KiB
Plaintext
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PROOF THAT OSWALD DID NOT SHOOT JFK:
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THE BAKER-OSWALD ENCOUNTER
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Michael T. Griffith
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1996
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@All Rights Reserved
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The fact that Officer Marrion Baker saw Lee Harvey Oswald on
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the second floor of the Texas School Book Depository (TSBD)
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building less than 90 seconds after President Kennedy was shot is
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proof that Oswald could not have been the assassin. Officer
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Baker claimed that he spotted Oswald just inside the foyer door
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leading to the second-floor lunchroom. Baker said he saw Oswald
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through the foyer door's window. If so, then Oswald could not
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have been on the sixth floor during the shooting, and therefore
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could not have shot President Kennedy from the window identified
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by the Warren Commission (WC) as the point from which all the
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shots were allegedly fired.
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Let us begin by analyzing Officer Baker's actions after he
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heard the shots. Here is how the WC described what Baker did
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after he heard gunfire:
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When the shots were fired, a Dallas motorcycle
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patrolman, Marrion L. Baker, was riding in the
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motorcade at a point several cars behind the
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President. He had turned right from Main Street
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onto Houston Street and was about 200 feet south of
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Elm Street when he heard a shot. Baker, having
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recently returned from a week of deer hunting, was
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certain the shot came from a high-powered rifle.
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He looked up and saw pigeons scattering in the
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air from their perches on the Texas School Book
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Depository Building. He RACED his motorcycle to the
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building, dismounted, scanned the area to the west
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and pushed his way through the spectators toward the
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entrance. There he encountered Roy Truly, the building
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superintendent, who offered Baker his help. They
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entered the building, and RAN toward the two elevators
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in the rear. Finding that both elevators were on an
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upper floor, they DASHED up the stairs. (WCR 5, emphasis
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added)
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The evidence is clear that on the day of the shooting
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Patrolman Baker encountered Oswald less than 90 seconds after the
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shots were fired. During the WC's reenactments, Baker's fastest
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time was 75 seconds; this was the time for his second, and final,
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simulation. Although Baker claimed to the Commission that his
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75-second reenactment time was the "minimum" time in which he
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could have reached the second-floor landing, the evidence
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strongly indicates otherwise. For example, Baker admitted to the
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WC that in that test he merely "kind of ran" outside the Book
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Depository and that he moved only at "kind of a trot" inside the
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building. And these were not the only aspects of the WC's
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simulations that were unrealistic.
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Roy Truly, the building manager who ran ahead of Baker
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through the building, likewise said his simulation time was the
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minimum time. But Truly did not seem certain about this.
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When asked if his simulation pace had even been "about" the same
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as his pace on the day of the shooting, Truly replied, "I THINK
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so" (3 H 228, emphasis added). If he wasn't positive that the
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simulation pace had even been "about" the same as his 11/22/63
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pace, one wonders how he could have been certain that his
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simulation time was the "minimum" possible time. At one point he
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described his simulation pace as a WALK, but then said it was a
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"trot." Whenever Truly referred to his 11/22/63 pace through the
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building, he consistently used the word "ran" (e.g., 3 H 221,
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222, 223, 224, 227). As with Baker's simulation speeds, the
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evidence indicates that Truly's reenactment pace was slower than
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his pace on the day of the assassination.
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Pauline Sanders' testimony and Baker's own filmed statements
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in 1988 indicate that Baker ran quite fast after he dismounted
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from his motorcycle. In the frames from the Couch film in which
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Baker is visible, he is seen to be running rapidly. During the
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WC's reenactments, moving slower, and quite possibly starting
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slightly earlier than he did on the day of the shooting, Baker
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made it to the TSBD's entrance in just 15 seconds.
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WC supporters note that the simulations did not attempt to
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duplicate Baker's pushing people aside en route to the entrance,
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and that therefore in the reenactment Baker made it to the
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entrance as fast or faster than he did on the day of the
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shooting. But it stands to reason that this action took no more
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than 5-6 seconds, and possibly as little as 2-4 seconds.
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Whatever small difference in time this action would have made in
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the simulation was substantially, if not completely, offset by
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the fact that in the simulation Baker moved more slowly than he
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did after the shooting.
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WC defenders also note that the Commission's simulations did
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not take into account the fact that Baker and Truly had to push
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their way through a few people as they approached the front of
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the TSBD. Truly, however, indicated it took he and Baker very
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little time to do this, and that therefore omitting this action
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from the simulation didn't really matter:
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I said when the officer and I ran in, we were
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shouldering people aside in front of the building,
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so--we possibly were slowed a little bit more
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coming in than we were when he and I came in March
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20th [during the simulation]. I DON'T BELIEVE SO.
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BUT IT WOULDN'T BE ENOUGH TO MATTER THERE. (3 H
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228, emphasis added)
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WC supporters point out that the simulations did not take
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into account the fact that Baker looked down Elm Street for a
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moment before he ran toward the TSBD's entrance. But this action
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surely took no more than a second or two. Moreover, Baker said
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he did this WHILE HE WAS DISMOUNTING (3 H 248). The omission of
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this momentary action, like the omission of the action of pushing
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people aside, was at least somewhat offset by the fact that Baker
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moved considerably slower in the simulations than he did on the
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day of the shooting. Baker's FASTEST pace outside the building
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during the simulations was only "kind of a run." Yet, in the
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Couch film Baker is seen to be running at a rapid pace.
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During the abovementioned 1988 filmed interview, Baker said
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it took him only "a very few seconds" to reach the TSBD's
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entrance. If Baker was referring to the time it took him AFTER
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he dismounted his motorcycle, this would still indicate that
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he was running at a rapid pace and that it didn't take him very
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long at all to reach the entrance, since it would have taken him
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no more than 10 or 15 seconds, and perhaps less, to "race" his
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bike 200 feet, dismount, and briefly look down the street.
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Similarly, Truly indicated that it didn't take Baker very long at
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all to reach the entrance. Truly told the Commission that as
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soon as the third shot rang out the crowd around him began to
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scream and surge backward, pushing him back to the first step of
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the stairs leading to the building's front entrance; then, he
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heard a policeman holler. As Truly was pushed back to the first
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step, "JUST MOMENTS LATER--I saw a young motorcycle policeman run
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up to the building, up the steps to the entrance of our building"
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(3 H 221, emphasis added). (Notice Truly said Baker was
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"running"--not "trotting" or "kind of trotting," but RUNNING,
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which is what we see Baker doing in the Couch film.)
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Now let us examine Baker's movements from the time he went
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through the entrance until the time he headed up the stairs. On
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November 22, Baker said the following in a sworn statement:
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As I entered the door I saw several people standing
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around. I asked these people where the stairs were.
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A man stepped forward and stated he was the building
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manager and that he would show me where the stairs were.
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I followed the man to the rear of the building and he
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said, "Let's take the elevator." The elevator was hung
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several floors up so we used the stairs instead.
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As mentioned, in the WC's reenactments Baker's FASTEST time
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was 75 seconds, and that was when he "kind of ran" outside the
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building and moved at "kind of a trot" inside the building. Yet,
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both Baker and Roy Truly described exactly what one would expect
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under the circumstances--a mad dash. In fact, they were running
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so fast that when they encountered a swinging office door on the
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first floor that jammed momentarily because the door's bolt had
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slid out, Baker ran into Truly's back (3 H 222, 249). So a more
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reasonable estimate for Baker's trip to the point where he said
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he saw Oswald would be 60-65 seconds. One could make a strong
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case that Baker reached the second-floor landing in 50-60
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seconds. But, for the sake of argument, let's assume a time
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closer to 60 seconds. Therefore, a fair estimate for the time it
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took Baker to go from the front door to the first-floor stairs
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would be around 30-40 seconds. As will be discussed below, it
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could have taken him LESS than 30 seconds.
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It should be kept in mind that lone-gunman theorists have
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argued that the alleged lone assassin could have made it from the
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sniper's nest to the sixth-floor stairs in well under 30 seconds.
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(One WC supporter suggested to me that the gunman could have
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reached the sixth-floor stairs in 16 seconds.) As we'll see
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below, this idea is problematic, given all the things the
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gunman allegedly did or would have had to do. However, if we
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were to assume that the gunman merely bolted from the window,
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stopped for only a few seconds to hide the rifle, and then
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continued his dash, he could have reached the sixth-floor stairs
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in less than 30 seconds. So, if at least 150 feet could have
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been covered in well under 30 seconds on the sixth floor, there
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is certainly no reason that Baker and Truly could not have made
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it to the first-floor stairs in the same amount of time. (From
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the front door to the elevator shaft would have been a distance
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of around 90-100 feet. Moving at just a moderate running pace,
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the average man can easily cover this distance in around 15
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seconds or less. From the elevators to the stairs leading up to
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the second floor would have been about 18 feet.)
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Baker's trip breaks down as follows (bearing in mind that,
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on balance, this timing breakdown is generous to the lone-gunman
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theory): 15-25 seconds to go from his bike to the entrance, 25-40
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seconds to reach the first-floor stairs, and 5-10 seconds to go
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up one flight of stairs. (However, I would guess that it took
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the running Baker closer to 5 seconds to reach the second-floor
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landing area.) More specific times are provided in the time
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lines presented below.
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Baker said he spotted Oswald from the second-floor landing
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just after he (Baker) reached the landing, when he looked
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through the small window of the foyer door. Recounted Baker,
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. . . I was coming out this one on the second
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floor, and I don't know, I was kind of sweeping
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[visually] this area as I come up, I was looking
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from right to left and as I got to this door here
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I caught a glimpse of this man, just, you know, a
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sudden glimpse. . . . (WCR 151)
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Baker said Oswald was about 20 feet away when he caught a
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glimpse of him, which would have put Oswald right next to the
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foyer door. Baker, according to the Warren Commission, then
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walked through the foyer door and saw Oswald in the lunchroom
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(WCR 151). Oswald had continued walking and thus was still
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about 20 feet from Baker. [1] Is this how it happened? There
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are problems with Baker's account.
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With the foyer door shut, the window would have been at a
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45-degree angle to Baker. In all probability, that door, which
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was an automatic door, was already closed when Baker looked
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through its small window. However, in his WC testimony, Baker
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suggested that the door "might" have been moving. There is
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reason to question his word on this point. Among other things,
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this was the first and only time that Baker suggested the door
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might have been in motion. Truly said nothing about the door
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having been in motion, and his testimony indicates that he looked
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at the door when he reached the landing (the door would have
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been right in the middle of his field of view; more will be said
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on this point further below).
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If the door was still moving, it must have been nearly shut,
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or else Baker would have had an even harder time seeing anything
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through the window. Baker himself said that the door "might have
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been . . . closing AND ALMOST SHUT AT THAT TIME." In other
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words, even Baker indicated that if the door was in fact moving
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it was "almost shut at that time." Additionally, if Oswald was
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20 feet from Baker when Baker spotted him, then Oswald would have
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been no more than a foot past the foyer door, in which case the
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door--with its slow automatic closing mechanism--would not have
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had enough time to close or nearly close if Oswald had just gone
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through it.
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Another problem with Baker's account is that Baker said he
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wasn't even sure if Oswald had gone through the foyer door (3 H
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255). Now this is very odd indeed. If Baker spotted Oswald
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through the foyer door a second or two after reaching the top of
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the stairs, and if the door was "almost shut" when Baker looked
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at it, and if Oswald was no more than a foot beyond the door at
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the time (as he would have had to be for Baker to see him),
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how, then, could Baker have had any doubt about whether Oswald
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had walked through that door? (If someone wants to propose that
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Baker was referring to the lunchroom door, though he clearly
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wasn't, then his uncertainty becomes even more astounding. How
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in the world could Baker have had any doubt that Oswald had just
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gone through the lunchroom door to reach the lunchroom?)
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Perhaps the most serious problem with Baker's account is
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that if Oswald was only a foot past the foyer door when he
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spotted him, then Roy Truly, who was running AHEAD of Baker,
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surely would have seen Oswald either coming off the stairs, or
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walking across the landing toward the door, or opening the door.
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The Commission itself admitted that Oswald must have gone through
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the foyer door only "a second or two" before being spotted by
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Baker:
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Since the vestibule [foyer] door is only a few
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feet from the lunchroom door, the man [Oswald]
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must have entered the vestibule door only a second
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or two before Baker arrived at the top of the
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stairwell. Yet he must have entered the vestibule
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door before Truly reached the top of the stairwell
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[leading to the second-floor landing], since Truly
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did not see him. (WCR 151)
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But the Commission never explained HOW Oswald could have
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done this. If Oswald had gone through the foyer door BEFORE
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Truly reached the top of the stairs, he would have been several
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feet beyond the door by the time Baker reached the landing, and
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thus would not have been visible to Baker through the window.
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And, if Oswald had entered the door "only a second or two" before
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Baker reached the top of the stairwell, then Truly could not have
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missed seeing him. Nor did the Commission explain how Baker
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could have been the least bit unsure about whether or not Oswald
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had gone through the foyer door if Baker spotted Oswald right
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next to the door and if the door was in any kind of motion at the
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time.
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Truly told the WC that he had already started up the stairs
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to the third floor when he noticed that Baker was no longer
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running behind him. Truly also said there was slightly more
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distance between him and Baker on the second floor than there was
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on the first floor. So, it is reasonable to assume that Truly
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gained a view of the second-floor landing a minimum of 2 seconds
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before Baker did. Truly's account suggests that Baker was
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beginning to tire on his way up the stairs. (This is
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understandable, given the fact that Baker had been running very
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fast virtually every second after he got off his bike.) Baker
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himself said that when he arrived to the landing and began to
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scan it, Truly "had already started around the bend to come to
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the next elevation going up" (3 H 255). Thus, if Oswald had gone
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through the foyer door "a second or two" before Baker spotted
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him, Truly could not possibly have missed seeing Oswald coming
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off the stairs, or approaching the door, or starting to open the
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door.
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Truly told the Commission that he was already in the process
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of "going around" to the third-floor stairs at the time Baker
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would have seen the alleged movement in the foyer door's window
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(3 H 226; cf. 3 H 223-224). Interestingly, Truly testified that
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he knew nothing about Baker's having supposedly spotted movement
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through the door's window until a few days before he testified (3
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H 226). Said Truly, "I never knew until a day or two ago that he
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said he saw a movement, saw a man going away from him" (3 H 226).
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Does it not seem odd that Baker would not have mentioned this to
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Truly when he asked Truly if he knew Oswald when they were
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standing there in the lunchroom? Does it not seem somewhat
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curious that Baker didn't say anything about this to Truly as the
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two of them continued up the stairs and to other parts of the
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building? One can't be faulted for wondering why Baker, if he
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had just seen Oswald right next to and walking away from the
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foyer door, didn't ask Truly, when Truly arrived to the
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lunchroom, something along the lines of "Hey, I just saw this guy
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walking away from that door over there, so are you sure he's OK?"
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Nor can one be faulted for wondering why Baker, as he and Truly
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continued their search of the building, didn't say to Truly,
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"About that guy we just saw downstairs in that lunchroom, you
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know I saw him right next to that foyer door, and he was walking
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away from it. So are you sure he's legit? You're sure he's OK?"
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At this point it should be noted out that in two of his
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statements Baker said Oswald was walking away from him when he
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spotted him. But, in another statement, Baker said Oswald was
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STANDING in the lunchroom when he saw him there. Moreover, on
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November 22, Truly said Baker didn't see Oswald until Baker
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"stuck his head into the lunchroom area." After studying a
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photograph of the view Baker would have had of the foyer door
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just after he reached the second-floor landing, I do not believe
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Baker spotted Oswald in the manner he described to the WC. This
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photo can be seen on page 286 of Gary Savage's book JFK: FIRST
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DAY EVIDENCE (photo number 140). It is clear from this picture
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that in order for Baker to have "spotted" any kind of "movement"
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by Oswald near that door, Oswald would have had to be no more
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than a foot beyond the door. But, again, the door would not have
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had time to close or nearly close by that time, and Truly could
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not have missed seeing Oswald coming off the stairs or crossing
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the landing as he approached the door. Another telling
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photograph is CE 741, which is a picture taken of the foyer door
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from inside the lunchroom. This photo likewise makes it clear
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that Oswald would have had to be no more than a foot past the
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foyer door in order for Baker to have seen any "movement" on his
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part through the door's window (see Savage 289, photo number
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143). I believe Baker ran over to the door in order to glance
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through the window and then saw Oswald in the lunchroom.
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Nevertheless, I have assumed for the sake of argument that Baker
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spotted Oswald just after he reached the second-floor landing.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the Commission's reenactments of Oswald's alleged
|
||
|
movements from the sixth floor to the second floor, the fastest
|
||
|
time of the Oswald stand-in, SSA John Howlett, was 74 seconds.
|
||
|
In this test, Howlett moved at "a fast walk" so that he would not
|
||
|
be out of breath when he reached the lunchroom. This was
|
||
|
necessary because Baker said that Oswald did not appear to be out
|
||
|
of breath but looked "calm and collected." However, Howlett
|
||
|
skipped or fudged on several actions that Oswald allegedly
|
||
|
performed on the sixth floor. For example, instead of carefully
|
||
|
hiding the rifle, as the evidence clearly shows Oswald would have
|
||
|
had to do, Howlett simply "leaned over as if he were putting a
|
||
|
rifle there" (3 H 239, 253; although another account of the
|
||
|
simulation claimed that Howlett did carry a rifle and just leaned
|
||
|
over and dropped it). In addition, Howlett did not chamber a
|
||
|
round in a rifle, as Oswald allegedly did after supposedly firing
|
||
|
the fatal head shot. Nor did Howlett slowly withdraw a rifle
|
||
|
from the window and casually step away from it, as Oswald
|
||
|
allegedly did. Nor did Howlett remain at the window for a few
|
||
|
seconds to gloat over his feat, as Oswald allegedly did. Nor did
|
||
|
Howlett have to squeeze through the tight entrance to the
|
||
|
sniper's nest, as Oswald would have had to do. Nor did Howlett
|
||
|
attempt to simulate even a cursory effort to wipe off the rifle.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Many WC supporters claim that the rifle was not wiped off at
|
||
|
all after it was fired. To be specific, WC apologists opine that
|
||
|
"Oswald" made no effort whatsoever to wipe off the weapon after
|
||
|
he fired it. This is an unlikely scenario. It is hard to
|
||
|
believe that any gunman in that situation would have failed to at
|
||
|
least hurriedly wipe off those parts of the rifle that he had
|
||
|
just handled during the act of shooting. When the alleged murder
|
||
|
weapon was found, the trigger, the rear part of the trigger
|
||
|
guard, the magazine, and the bolt were completely devoid of even
|
||
|
partial prints or smudges. Yet, the forward end of the trigger
|
||
|
guard, i.e., the magazine housing, had some partial prints on it.
|
||
|
However, the gunman would not have made those prints during the
|
||
|
act of shooting since they were located in an area that he would
|
||
|
not have touched while operating the weapon. It is true that the
|
||
|
rifle's metal was not an ideal surface to retain prints, but
|
||
|
prints were found on the magazine housing, yet not even a smudge
|
||
|
was found on the bolt, on the trigger, on the rear part of the
|
||
|
trigger guard, or on the magazine. Before Lt. J. C. Day of the
|
||
|
Crime Lab would allow Captain Fritz to operate the bolt, he
|
||
|
examined it with a magnifying glass and did not report seeing
|
||
|
even a tiny smudge thereon (4 H 258-259). WC supporters do not
|
||
|
believe the alleged lone gunman used gloves. So, why were prints
|
||
|
found on the magazine housing, while not even a smudge was found
|
||
|
on those parts of the rifle that the assassin would have
|
||
|
handled--and handled strongly--during the shooting? It will be
|
||
|
assumed in the time lines that the gunman hurriedly tried to wipe
|
||
|
off those parts of the weapon that he would have handled while
|
||
|
firing it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
How could Oswald have come down the stairs without being
|
||
|
seen by Roy Truly? WC supporters have never been able to provide
|
||
|
a plausible answer to this crucial question. If, as the WC
|
||
|
claimed, Oswald went through the foyer door a second or two
|
||
|
before Baker reached the landing, then (1) Truly should and would
|
||
|
have seen him, and (2) the door would not have had time to shut
|
||
|
or nearly shut behind Oswald by the time Baker looked at it. The
|
||
|
simple fact of the matter is that Oswald could not possibly have
|
||
|
come down the stairs without being seen by Truly. This fact
|
||
|
alone proves that Oswald did not shoot JFK. Moreover, Oswald
|
||
|
could not have done all the things the WC said he did on the
|
||
|
sixth floor and still have made it to the second-floor lunchroom
|
||
|
in time to be seen by Baker just after Baker reached the landing.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It should be noted that Truly and Baker were looking for
|
||
|
someone, a gunman. One can perhaps debate the exact degree to
|
||
|
which Truly was "searching," but there is no doubt that he looked
|
||
|
at the second-floor landing as he was moving and that he would
|
||
|
have seen anyone who might have been near or at the foyer door.
|
||
|
Truly was asked by WC counsel if he was looking straight ahead to
|
||
|
see anyone on his way up the stairs, or if he was just intent on
|
||
|
ascending the stairs (3 H 223). Truly replied,
|
||
|
|
||
|
If there had been anybody in that area, I would
|
||
|
have seen him on the outside. But I was content--I
|
||
|
was trying to show the officer the pathway up, where
|
||
|
the elevators--I mean where the stairways continued.
|
||
|
(3 H 223)
|
||
|
|
||
|
So although Truly didn't go over and look through the door,
|
||
|
since he was trying to get Baker up the stairs, he did see the
|
||
|
landing area and would have seen anyone IN THAT AREA, i.e., on
|
||
|
the landing, had someone been there. Coming up the stairs and
|
||
|
onto the landing, the foyer door would have been virtually in the
|
||
|
middle of Truly's view of the landing area. If Oswald had been
|
||
|
in BAKER's view in the door's window, and if the door had been
|
||
|
nearly shut when Baker spotted him, then, at the very least, the
|
||
|
door would have been halfway open when Truly saw it, and at least
|
||
|
half of Oswald's body in profile would have been in plain view of
|
||
|
Truly.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When Truly said he would have seen anyone in the landing
|
||
|
area "on the outside," he probably meant he would have spotted
|
||
|
anyone ON THE OUTSIDE OF THE DOOR. One leading WC supporter
|
||
|
acknowledged this point to me in e-mail. This is important
|
||
|
because it suggests the door was CLOSED when Truly saw it. If
|
||
|
the door was closed when Truly saw it, and if Oswald had gone
|
||
|
through it after allegedly coming down the stairs, then Oswald
|
||
|
would have been well out of Baker's view by the time Baker
|
||
|
reached the second-floor landing. If the door had been even
|
||
|
partially open when Truly saw it, one would expect that he would
|
||
|
have mentioned this in his testimony. But he never once
|
||
|
suggested that the door was anything but closed when he saw it,
|
||
|
and his testimony suggests that the door was in fact shut when he
|
||
|
reached the landing.
|
||
|
|
||
|
---------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
New Lone-Gunman Theories About the Baker-Oswald Encounter
|
||
|
---------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
A few WC supporters have suggested that Oswald got inside
|
||
|
the foyer door even BEFORE Truly reached THE LANDING. Among
|
||
|
other things, this theory would require us to believe that our
|
||
|
alleged fleeing assassin, who was supposedly desperate to provide
|
||
|
an alibi for himself, inexplicably just stood right next to the
|
||
|
door while Truly came up the stairs, while Truly reached the
|
||
|
landing, while Truly looked at the landing area (including the
|
||
|
door), while Truly started up the third-floor stairs (or at least
|
||
|
arrived to within a few feet of the foot of those stairs), and
|
||
|
while Baker came up the stairs at least a couple seconds behind
|
||
|
him. What's more, this theory would appear to refute Baker's
|
||
|
tentative claim that the foyer door was in motion when he looked
|
||
|
at it, since the door was apparently closed when Truly saw it.
|
||
|
If so, this would mean that Oswald unbelievably just stood there
|
||
|
and waited for the door to close, and that this suicidal 3-6
|
||
|
second wait occurred even BEFORE Truly had a view of the landing.
|
||
|
Why would Oswald have waited by the foyer door when he was
|
||
|
supposedly trying to give himself an alibi by getting as far
|
||
|
away from the stairs as possible? Why wouldn't Oswald have moved
|
||
|
away from the door upon hearing Baker and Truly running up the
|
||
|
stairs? If one assumes Oswald didn't hear them running up the
|
||
|
stairs, then surely he would have started to move away from the
|
||
|
foyer door when Truly came through the stairway door to the
|
||
|
landing, in which case Oswald would not have been visible to
|
||
|
Baker when Baker looked through the foyer door's window a few
|
||
|
seconds later. The very idea that any fleeing gunman would have
|
||
|
stood by the foyer door seems wholly implausible. His most
|
||
|
important mission in life at that time would have been to get as
|
||
|
far away from the stairs as possible, and, correspondingly, to
|
||
|
get out of the line of sight of anyone who might look through the
|
||
|
foyer door's window.
|
||
|
|
||
|
An even more implausible scenario, offered by a few WC
|
||
|
supporters, goes something like this:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Oswald was coming down the stairs when Truly called
|
||
|
for the elevator. Upon hearing Truly holler, or
|
||
|
perhaps after hearing Baker and Truly running up
|
||
|
the stairs, Oswald ducked into the lunchroom and
|
||
|
then moments later went back to the foyer door to
|
||
|
see if the way was clear to continue on down the
|
||
|
stairs (in the hope of exiting the building
|
||
|
from the rear door). When Oswald went back to the
|
||
|
foyer door, he might have even begun to open it,
|
||
|
but then, after seeing Truly, turned around and was
|
||
|
just in the process of starting to walk back toward
|
||
|
the lunchroom when Baker spotted him, which would
|
||
|
explain why Baker said he might have seen the door
|
||
|
in motion.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For starters, why would Oswald have returned so quickly
|
||
|
to the foyer door? Why wouldn't he have stood away from the door
|
||
|
so as to be out of sight but close enough to hear Baker and Truly
|
||
|
run up the stairs? Then, once they had passed, he could have
|
||
|
gone down the stairs in the hope of leaving the building from the
|
||
|
rear exit. Why would Oswald have started to open the door before
|
||
|
he was sure the way was clear? If it is suggested that he
|
||
|
started to open the door just before Truly reached the landing
|
||
|
but then pulled back when he saw and/or heard Truly, then Oswald
|
||
|
would have had ample time to duck away from the door, and thus
|
||
|
get out of sight, by the time Baker reached the landing.
|
||
|
|
||
|
If it is theorized that Oswald didn't start to open the door
|
||
|
but that he merely began to turn around when he saw Truly, he
|
||
|
still would have had time to duck out of view by the time Baker
|
||
|
reached the landing. And wouldn't Oswald have heard Baker and
|
||
|
Truly running up the stairs as they neared the landing? If so,
|
||
|
why would he have even gotten close to the foyer door? Wouldn't
|
||
|
he have stayed away from the door, out of view, until he heard
|
||
|
Baker and Truly continue up the stairs?
|
||
|
|
||
|
What's more, in his WC testimony Baker indicated that Oswald
|
||
|
had his back to the door when he spotted him. This claim causes
|
||
|
several problems for the traditional lone-gunman version of the
|
||
|
Baker-Oswald encounter. It also creates difficulties for any
|
||
|
theory that puts Oswald on the second floor before Truly reached
|
||
|
the landing. For example, if Oswald had returned to the foyer
|
||
|
door and started to push it open but then pulled back when he saw
|
||
|
or heard Truly, why on earth would he have bothered to turn
|
||
|
around before heading back to the lunchroom? Why wouldn't he
|
||
|
have simply stepped backwards as soon as he saw or heard Truly?
|
||
|
For that matter, why wouldn't he have just ducked below the
|
||
|
window as soon as he saw or heard Truly? Then, he could have
|
||
|
easily rushed back into the lunchroom and been out of sight when
|
||
|
Baker reached the landing. And, again, wouldn't Oswald have
|
||
|
heard Baker and Truly running up the stairs as he began to return
|
||
|
to the foyer door? And wouldn't he have therefore stayed away
|
||
|
from the door, and out of sight, until he heard Baker and Truly
|
||
|
continue up the stairs? Also, how could Oswald have reached the
|
||
|
second floor so quickly in the first place? How could Baker
|
||
|
and Truly have reached the elevator shaft or the stairs before
|
||
|
Oswald reached the second-floor landing if Oswald arrived there
|
||
|
as early as some WC supporters have suggested he did? According
|
||
|
to some WC defenders, Oswald only had to chamber a bullet, bolt
|
||
|
out of the sniper's nest, sprint across the sixth floor, stop
|
||
|
momentarily and literally "throw" the rifle into its hiding
|
||
|
place, and then dash down the stairs. Such a scenario would
|
||
|
require the following time line:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Action Time
|
||
|
---------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
Fires last shot.......................00:00-00:00
|
||
|
Chambers one round....................00:00-00:01
|
||
|
Exits sniper's nest...................00:01-00:04
|
||
|
Sprints 150 feet across sixth floor
|
||
|
to rifle's hiding place............00:04-00:18
|
||
|
Stops, turns to face rifle's
|
||
|
hiding place, and throws rifle
|
||
|
down...............................00:18-00:21
|
||
|
Turns around and runs to sixth-floor
|
||
|
stairway...........................00:21-00:23
|
||
|
Dashes down four flights of stairs
|
||
|
and reaches second-floor landing...00:23-00:36
|
||
|
|
||
|
Obviously, this scenario is markedly unrealistic. However,
|
||
|
if we assume it is correct, how can we accept the theory that
|
||
|
Oswald was on the stairs when Truly yelled for the elevator or
|
||
|
when Baker and Truly were running up the stairs to the second
|
||
|
floor? Baker and Truly could not have reached the elevator shaft
|
||
|
so soon after the shots were fired. These are just some of the
|
||
|
problems associated with any theory that assumes Oswald somehow
|
||
|
made it to the second floor before Truly reached the landing.
|
||
|
|
||
|
If Oswald had reached the second floor in less than 40
|
||
|
seconds, why wouldn't he have just continued going down the
|
||
|
stairs and exited the building's rear door? Baker and Truly
|
||
|
could not have even been at the elevator shaft by that time. So
|
||
|
why would Oswald have bothered to go to the second-floor
|
||
|
lunchroom?
|
||
|
|
||
|
A third scenario proposed by some WC supporters involves the
|
||
|
idea that Oswald WALKED from the window to the rifle's hiding
|
||
|
place. According to this theory, Oswald "walked briskly" after
|
||
|
he allegedly fired the shots.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Wouldn't Harold Norman and the two other men who were with
|
||
|
him just below the sniper's nest have heard a grown man "walking
|
||
|
briskly" above them? Walking quickly creates almost as much
|
||
|
noise as running makes. Yet, the three men didn't hear a sound
|
||
|
come from the sniper's nest after the shooting.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And wouldn't Oswald have RUN for dear life? One would think
|
||
|
that he would have wanted to get as far away from the sniper's
|
||
|
nest as quickly possible. Why, then, wouldn't he have run from
|
||
|
the sniper's nest and then dashed down the stairs? Again,
|
||
|
though, walking briskly makes almost as much noise as running
|
||
|
makes. How could Norman, with his supposedly superhuman hearing,
|
||
|
not have heard a grown man speed-walking across the floor?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Anyway, if Oswald had walked briskly, and if we accept for
|
||
|
the sake of argument the other assumptions about his movements
|
||
|
made the WC supporters who advance this theory, he would have
|
||
|
been behind the foyer door around 50 seconds after the shooting.
|
||
|
If we assume that Oswald exited the foyer door 10-15 seconds
|
||
|
later but then turned around when he heard Truly yell or heard
|
||
|
Baker and Truly running up the stairs, a number of problems come
|
||
|
to mind: For starters, if he heard Truly yell, he would have had
|
||
|
plenty of time to get back in the lunchroom and well out of
|
||
|
Baker's sight.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The only other option is to assume that Oswald heard Baker
|
||
|
and Truly coming up the stairs and had just barely gone back
|
||
|
through the foyer door when Baker looked at it. But, and this is
|
||
|
an important point, then we're right back to square one with
|
||
|
having to explain how Truly could have missed seeing Oswald and
|
||
|
how Oswald would or could have been visible to Baker by the time
|
||
|
Baker looked at the door.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Only if Oswald had been standing right next to the door
|
||
|
would Baker have had any chance of "spotting" him through the
|
||
|
door's window. This scenario becomes even more problematic with
|
||
|
Baker's claim that Oswald was walking away from the door, in
|
||
|
which case the door would not have had time to close or nearly
|
||
|
close behind him by the time Baker allegedly spotted him. This,
|
||
|
in turn, brings us right back to the issue of how Truly possibly
|
||
|
could have missed seeing Oswald since Oswald would, at the very
|
||
|
least, have been in the middle of the doorway, with the door
|
||
|
plainly open, when Truly saw the door. Truly said if there had
|
||
|
been anyone in the landing area, he would have seen him; and to
|
||
|
judge from Truly's testimony, the door was shut when he looked at
|
||
|
it. And if the door was shut when Truly looked at it, and/or if
|
||
|
Oswald had ducked back through the door when he heard Baker and
|
||
|
Truly running up the stairs, he would not have been visible
|
||
|
through the foyer door's window by the time Baker looked toward
|
||
|
the door.
|
||
|
|
||
|
One could, out of desperation, assume that Oswald just stood
|
||
|
there inside the door and didn't start to move away until a
|
||
|
second before Baker looked at the door, but this idea is
|
||
|
impossible from the outset unless we also assume that Oswald was
|
||
|
back inside the door BEFORE TRULY reached the landing area. But
|
||
|
surely Oswald would have stepped away from the door (if not
|
||
|
ducked down) when he saw Truly arrive to the landing, and thus he
|
||
|
would not have been visible through the window when Baker reached
|
||
|
the landing. And, if Oswald, incredibly, just stood by the door
|
||
|
until a second before Baker looked at it, how could Oswald have
|
||
|
been facing AWAY from the door, i.e., with his back to the door,
|
||
|
when Baker supposedly spotted him through the window?
|
||
|
|
||
|
------------------------------------
|
||
|
Victoria Adams: An Important Witness
|
||
|
------------------------------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
Another problem confronting WC supporters is the fact that
|
||
|
Victoria Adams went down the stairs shortly after the last shot
|
||
|
was fired, and neither saw nor heard anyone else on those
|
||
|
stairs. Miss Adams was with Sandra Styles on the fourth floor
|
||
|
during the shooting. After the shots were fired, she said that
|
||
|
she and Miss Styles waited 15-30 seconds by the window and then
|
||
|
"ran" down the stairs to the first floor. Miss Adams testified
|
||
|
that as she entered the first floor from the stairway she saw
|
||
|
Bill Lovelady and William Shelley standing near the elevator.
|
||
|
Realizing the implications of Miss Adams' account, the WC
|
||
|
suggested that Miss Adams' recollection of her movements was in
|
||
|
error--and not by just a little bit, but by "several minutes."
|
||
|
This is highly unlikely. Moreover, Lovelady and Shelley gave
|
||
|
sworn statements on the day of the shooting that tend to support
|
||
|
her account.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Miss Adams said that from her position on the fourth floor
|
||
|
she "ran" down the back stairs to the first floor very soon after
|
||
|
the last shot. She told the Commission that "at the most" it
|
||
|
took her no longer than a minute to reach the bottom of the
|
||
|
stairs on the first floor after she waited at the window. She
|
||
|
further informed the Commission that she RAN down the stairs.
|
||
|
|
||
|
If Miss Adams remained at the window for 15-30 seconds
|
||
|
before taking "no more than a minute" to reach the first floor,
|
||
|
she could have arrived there before Baker and Truly did, as these
|
||
|
time lines show:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Action Time
|
||
|
-------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
Last shot is fired....................00:00-00:00
|
||
|
Waits at window.......................00:00-00:15
|
||
|
Reaches fourth-floor landing..........00:15-00:30
|
||
|
Reaches bottom of first-floor
|
||
|
stairs.............................00:30-00:42
|
||
|
Moves several feet away from
|
||
|
first-floor stairs.................00:42-00:44
|
||
|
|
||
|
From her position on the fourth floor, Miss Adams would have
|
||
|
had to run about 60 feet, which a normal female of her age could
|
||
|
have done in 15 seconds or less. After that, she only had to go
|
||
|
down three flights of stairs. Since she was going DOWN, and
|
||
|
since it is always easier to go down stairs than to go up them,
|
||
|
it is entirely possible that she "ran" down the stairs in 12
|
||
|
seconds. Even we want to stretch her stair-running time to 15
|
||
|
seconds, that could still get her away from the first-floor
|
||
|
stairs before Baker and Truly neared the stairs. Surely no one
|
||
|
will dispute the fact that a healthy young female adult could
|
||
|
have "run" and gotten several feet away from the first-floor
|
||
|
stairs in 3 seconds. In any event, let's add a second here and
|
||
|
there and see what we get:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Action Time
|
||
|
-------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
Last shot is fired....................00:00-00:00
|
||
|
Waits at window.......................00:00-00:15
|
||
|
Reaches fourth-floor landing..........00:15-00:30
|
||
|
Reaches bottom of first-floor
|
||
|
stairs.............................00:30-00:45
|
||
|
Moves several feet away from
|
||
|
first-floor stairs.................00:45-00:47
|
||
|
|
||
|
As we can see, I've added 3 seconds to the time it took her
|
||
|
to go down the stairs, and 2 seconds to the time it took her to
|
||
|
move several feet away from the first-floor stairs. Even with
|
||
|
the extra time, she still could have reached the first floor
|
||
|
before Baker and Truly entered the landing area. Now, let's bend
|
||
|
a little more and see what we get:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Action Time
|
||
|
-------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
Last shot is fired....................00:00-00:00
|
||
|
Waits at window.......................00:00-00:17
|
||
|
Reaches fourth-floor landing..........00:17-00:32
|
||
|
Reaches bottom of first-floor
|
||
|
stairs.............................00:32-00:47
|
||
|
Moves several feet away from
|
||
|
first-floor stairs.................00:47-00:49
|
||
|
|
||
|
Even in this time line, we see that Miss Adams still could
|
||
|
have reached the first floor 3 seconds before Baker and Truly
|
||
|
reached the first-floor landing area.
|
||
|
|
||
|
What if Miss Adams literally raced from the window after
|
||
|
pausing at it for 15 seconds? The following would be the fastest
|
||
|
scenario:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Action Time
|
||
|
-------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
Last shot is fired....................00:00-00:00
|
||
|
Waits at window.......................00:00-00:15
|
||
|
Reaches fourth-floor landing..........00:15-00:30
|
||
|
Reaches bottom of first-floor
|
||
|
stairs.............................00:30-00:39
|
||
|
Moves several feet away from
|
||
|
first-floor stairs.................00:39-00:40
|
||
|
|
||
|
What about Lovelady and Shelley? Judging from their
|
||
|
November 22 statements, they made it to the first floor in well
|
||
|
under a minute. Lovelady, who was standing on the steps of the
|
||
|
Depository, said that after the shots were fired he went
|
||
|
back into the building. Shelley said that after he heard shots,
|
||
|
he ran across the street, encountered a girl who said JFK had
|
||
|
been shot, and then went back to the TSBD to call his
|
||
|
wife. One would imagine that Shelley was anxious to phone his
|
||
|
wife with this shocking news and that therefore he moved at a
|
||
|
fairly quick pace. So both Lovelady and Shelley, according to
|
||
|
their November 22 statements, could have been on the first floor
|
||
|
in time to be seen by Miss Adams 40-50 seconds after the
|
||
|
shooting.
|
||
|
|
||
|
WC defenders argue that since Miss Adams did not report
|
||
|
hearing Truly yell for the elevator and did not see Baker and
|
||
|
Truly, she must have been on the stairs much later than she
|
||
|
thought she was. However, this is not necessarily correct.
|
||
|
There were other people in that area of the first floor (the
|
||
|
vicinity of the stairs) at the time, and if Miss Adams reached
|
||
|
the foot of the first-floor stairs at the early times that I've
|
||
|
suggested, then Baker and Truly would have been a good 20 feet
|
||
|
away from her when she arrived. With the other people that were
|
||
|
there, and given the excitement at the time, it is understandable
|
||
|
that Miss Adams didn't notice Baker and Truly, just as she
|
||
|
undoubtedly didn't notice certain other people who were there.
|
||
|
Under such circumstances, nobody takes note of every single
|
||
|
person around them. Similarly, Shelley was very unsure that he
|
||
|
had seen Miss Adams on the first floor, and Lovelady said he
|
||
|
"couldn't swear" that he had seen her, yet she noticed both of
|
||
|
them.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As for Miss Adams not hearing Truly yell, this is entirely
|
||
|
understandable. The elevator shaft was some 15-20 feet from
|
||
|
the stairs, and the shaft and the stairs were separated by a
|
||
|
wall. Miss Adams' running down the stairs would have created
|
||
|
noise by itself, which might have further obscured the sound of
|
||
|
Truly's voice. And, if she was near or at the foot of the stairs
|
||
|
when Truly yelled, noise from the other people who were on the
|
||
|
floor could have also partially obscured the sound of Truly's
|
||
|
voice. There is also the distinct possibility that Miss Adams
|
||
|
reached the first floor BEFORE Truly yelled for the elevator, as
|
||
|
the above time lines show.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As mentioned, Sandra Styles was with Miss Adams on the
|
||
|
fourth floor and accompanied her down the stairs. Yet,
|
||
|
incredibly, the Commission not only failed to call her as a
|
||
|
witness, but it didn't even have the FBI obtain a statement from
|
||
|
her concerning her movements after the shooting. Sylvia Meagher
|
||
|
rightly asks, "Why was . . . Sandra Styles--who was in a position
|
||
|
to confirm or contradict . . . [Miss Adams'] testimony--not
|
||
|
called before the Commission and questioned?" (Meagher 73).
|
||
|
Surely it must have occurred to the WC that Miss Styles was a
|
||
|
crucial witness. One can't help but suspect that the Commission
|
||
|
ignored her because it feared she would confirm that Miss Adams
|
||
|
went down the stairs less than a minute after the shots rang out.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It should be noted that it is possible that Oswald could
|
||
|
have come down the stairs without being seen or heard by Miss
|
||
|
Adams. This seems unlikely, but it is possible. The value
|
||
|
of Miss Adams' testimony is that if she made it to the first
|
||
|
floor around 40-50 seconds after the shots were fired, this would
|
||
|
appear to refute, or at least cast strong doubt on, any attempt
|
||
|
to put Oswald in or near the lunchroom before Truly had a view of
|
||
|
the second-floor landing. If nothing else, her testimony
|
||
|
indicates that she was on the fourth-floor stairs no later than
|
||
|
50 seconds after the shooting but neither saw nor heard anyone
|
||
|
else on the stairs.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now let us consider three timing scenarios to reinforce the
|
||
|
fact that Oswald could not have made it from the sixth floor to
|
||
|
the second-floor lunchroom without being seen by Truly or in time
|
||
|
to be seen by Baker within inches of the foyer door just after
|
||
|
Baker reached the second-floor landing.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Before we do so, a word needs to be said about Oswald's
|
||
|
supposed route and the distance he would have had to cover in
|
||
|
going from the sniper's nest to the rifle's hiding place. In
|
||
|
previous versions of this article, it was assumed for the sake of
|
||
|
argument that Oswald would have had a straight path from the
|
||
|
sniper's nest to the rifle's hiding place (as is claimed by
|
||
|
Gerald Posner in his book CASE CLOSED). This would have required
|
||
|
him to walk or run around 75 feet to arrive at the spot where the
|
||
|
rifle was hidden. However, photos taken of the sixth floor
|
||
|
shortly after the shooting prove that this would have been
|
||
|
impossible (see, for example, Savage 165-172; Groden 65). The
|
||
|
photos show that the sixth floor was crowded with rows of stacks
|
||
|
of book boxes, and that Oswald would have had to run down the
|
||
|
east wall and then along the north wall in order to reach the
|
||
|
rifle's hiding place. This was the only clear path to the
|
||
|
rifle's hiding place (cf. Savage 294; Savage posits the same
|
||
|
route). Using this route, Oswald would have had to cover at
|
||
|
least 150 feet to go from the sniper's nest to the stack of boxes
|
||
|
where the rifle was later found. Yet, although I assumed a
|
||
|
distance of only 75 feet for this journey in earlier versions of
|
||
|
this article, I have NOT lengthened the times for it. I have
|
||
|
done so in order to give the lone-gunman theory the benefit of
|
||
|
the doubt.
|
||
|
|
||
|
------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
SCENARIO #1: TIMES FAVORABLE TO THE LONE-GUNMAN THEORY
|
||
|
------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
Notice that in this scenario it is assumed that Oswald RAN
|
||
|
across the sixth floor and down the stairs, and that he only took
|
||
|
8 seconds to hide the rifle. These times, along with two or
|
||
|
three others, are more than generous in order to give the
|
||
|
lone-gunman theory the benefit of the doubt, and all of the
|
||
|
listed times are reasonable and consistent with the evidence.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"OSWALD" TIME LINE #1:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Alleged Action Time
|
||
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
Fires last shot.........................................00:00
|
||
|
Chambers another round............................00:00-00:01
|
||
|
Stays at window to gloat over feat................00:01-00:05
|
||
|
Slowly withdraws rifle, casually moves away from
|
||
|
window, walks around boxes stacked next
|
||
|
to window, and reaches entrance to sniper's
|
||
|
nest...........................................00:05-00:11
|
||
|
Squeezes out of sniper's nest.....................00:11-00:13
|
||
|
Runs approximately 150 feet across the sixth
|
||
|
floor and reaches spot where rifle was
|
||
|
found..........................................00:13-00:29
|
||
|
Wipes off the rifle...............................00:29-00:33
|
||
|
Hides the rifle...................................00:33-00:41
|
||
|
Turns from rifle's hiding place and then runs
|
||
|
approximately 7 feet to the top of the
|
||
|
sixth-floor stairs.............................00:41-00:43
|
||
|
Runs down four flights of stairs and reaches
|
||
|
the bottom stair on the second-floor stairs....00:43-00:59
|
||
|
Opens door to second-floor landing and goes
|
||
|
through it.....................................00:59-01:00
|
||
|
Runs approximately 20 feet across the
|
||
|
second-floor landing to the foyer door.........01:00-01:02
|
||
|
Opens foyer door and goes through it..............01:02-01:03
|
||
|
|
||
|
TRULY TIME LINE #1:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Action Time
|
||
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
Last shot is fired......................................00:00
|
||
|
Baker races motorcycle, dismounts, runs to
|
||
|
TSBD, and comes through building's
|
||
|
entrance.......................................00:00-00:25
|
||
|
Leads Baker across the first floor and arrives
|
||
|
to entrance to first-floor stairs..............00:15-00:55
|
||
|
Opens and goes through door to first-floor
|
||
|
stairs.........................................00:55-00:56
|
||
|
Runs up stairs and gets far enough
|
||
|
to see second-floor landing....................00:56-01:02
|
||
|
|
||
|
Thus, even after making generous allowances in favor of the
|
||
|
lone-gunman theory, we see that Truly would have had a view of
|
||
|
the second-floor landing BEFORE Oswald would gone through the
|
||
|
the foyer door. Not only would Truly have seen Oswald going
|
||
|
through the door, but he would have also seen the slow
|
||
|
automatic door closing behind Oswald.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Of course, if Oswald had RUN 150 feet from the sniper's nest
|
||
|
to the rifle's hiding place, raced down four flights of stairs,
|
||
|
and then bolted across the second-floor landing to dash through
|
||
|
the foyer door, he surely would have been at least somewhat out
|
||
|
of breath, and not "calm and collected," when Baker encountered
|
||
|
him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Furthermore, as indicated above, it is possible that Baker
|
||
|
and Truly took less than 40 seconds to get to the foot of the
|
||
|
first-floor stairs. We have assumed that it took "Oswald" only
|
||
|
16 seconds to run the roughly 150 feet from the sniper's nest to
|
||
|
the spot where the rifle was hidden. Why, then, would it have
|
||
|
taken Baker and Truly, who were running at a fast pace, 40
|
||
|
seconds to reach the entrance to the first-floor stairs? I think
|
||
|
one could plausibly argue that it took them as little as 25
|
||
|
seconds to do so, bearing in mind that they probably spent 5-10
|
||
|
seconds calling for and trying to use the elevator before they
|
||
|
decided to go up the stairs. Or, one could bend a little more
|
||
|
and assume it took them 35 seconds to reach the first-floor
|
||
|
stairs. This is a plausible estimate.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now let us see why Baker's story about seeing Oswald 20 feet
|
||
|
away just after Baker reached the second-floor landing would, if
|
||
|
true, prove that Oswald did not shoot Kennedy. Keep in mind that
|
||
|
Oswald would have been opening and then walking through the foyer
|
||
|
door 62-63 seconds after the shots were fired.
|
||
|
|
||
|
BAKER TIME LINE #1:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Action Time
|
||
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
Last shot is fired......................................00:00
|
||
|
Races motorcycle, dismounts, runs to
|
||
|
TSBD, and comes through building's
|
||
|
entrance.......................................00:00-00:15
|
||
|
Goes with Truly across the first floor and
|
||
|
arrives to entrance to first-floor stairs......00:15-00:55
|
||
|
Truly opens door to first-floor stairs and
|
||
|
Baker follows..................................00:55-00:57
|
||
|
Runs up stairs and reaches second-floor
|
||
|
landing about 2-3 seconds after Truly
|
||
|
does...........................................00:57-01:04
|
||
|
|
||
|
It is apparent that Oswald would have just finished walking
|
||
|
through the foyer door when Baker reached the second-floor
|
||
|
landing and began to scan the area, and that therefore the foyer
|
||
|
door would have just barely started to close behind Oswald when
|
||
|
Baker looked at it. Also, Truly was running well ahead of Baker
|
||
|
by that time and would have easily spotted Oswald crossing the
|
||
|
landing, or reaching for the door, or going through the door.
|
||
|
|
||
|
What follows is a time line that is extremely favorable to
|
||
|
the lone-gunman theory, which we will call Oswald Time Line #2.
|
||
|
In it we have eliminated some of Oswald's alleged actions and
|
||
|
have shortened the times given for a number of the remaining
|
||
|
activities. However, we have also taken the reasonable step of
|
||
|
allowing a few seconds--actually only 2 seconds--for the slow
|
||
|
automatic door to close or "nearly close" behind Oswald. We have
|
||
|
further assumed that it took Baker and Truly somewhat less than
|
||
|
40 seconds to reach the first-floor stairway. Then, let us
|
||
|
compare this second Oswald time line with more plausible
|
||
|
time lines for Baker and Truly. Although these Baker and Truly
|
||
|
time lines are more plausible, and hence less favorable to the
|
||
|
lone-gunman hypothesis, they will include the assumptions that
|
||
|
(1) it took Baker 15 seconds to reach the TSBD's entrance, and
|
||
|
(2) that Truly didn't have a view of the second-floor landing
|
||
|
until 7 seconds after he started running up the stairs. I would
|
||
|
like to emphasize that the following time line is NOT realistic,
|
||
|
since, as stated above, it omits some of Oswald's alleged actions
|
||
|
and contains shortened times for a number of his remaining
|
||
|
supposed activities.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"OSWALD" TIME LINE #2:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Alleged Action Time
|
||
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
Fires last shot.........................................00:00
|
||
|
Chambers another round............................00:00-00:01
|
||
|
Slowly withdraws rifle, casually moves away from
|
||
|
window, and walks around boxes stacked next
|
||
|
to window......................................00:01-00:06
|
||
|
Reaches outer/outside edge of sniper's nest
|
||
|
and exits nest.................................00:06-00:09
|
||
|
Runs approximately 150 feet across the sixth
|
||
|
floor and reaches spot where rifle was
|
||
|
found..........................................00:09-00:23
|
||
|
Hurriedly wipes off those parts of the rifle
|
||
|
that he handled during the shooting............00:23-00:28
|
||
|
Hides the rifle...................................00:28-00:34
|
||
|
Turns from rifle's hiding place and then runs
|
||
|
approximately 7 feet to the top of the
|
||
|
sixth-floor stairs.............................00:34-00:36
|
||
|
Runs down four flights of stairs and reaches
|
||
|
the bottom stair on the second-floor stairs....00:36-00:49
|
||
|
Opens door to second-floor landing and
|
||
|
goes through it................................00:49-00:50
|
||
|
Runs approximately 20 feet across the
|
||
|
second-floor landing to the foyer door.........00:50-00:52
|
||
|
Opens foyer door and goes through it..............00:52-00:53
|
||
|
Automatic-closing foyer door closes nearly
|
||
|
all the way behind him.........................00:53-00:55
|
||
|
|
||
|
If the foyer door was like most automatic doors, it could have
|
||
|
taken as much as 5 seconds, or more, to close or nearly close.
|
||
|
But, for the sake of argument, we have assumed it only took 2
|
||
|
seconds to do so.
|
||
|
|
||
|
TRULY TIME LINE #2:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Action Time
|
||
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
Last shot is fired......................................00:00
|
||
|
Baker races motorcycle, dismounts, and comes
|
||
|
through TSBD entrance..........................00:00-00:15
|
||
|
Leads Baker across the first floor and arrives
|
||
|
to entrance to first-floor stairs..............00:10-00:40
|
||
|
Opens and goes through door to first-floor
|
||
|
stairs.........................................00:40-00:41
|
||
|
Runs up stairs and gets far enough on stairs
|
||
|
to see second-floor landing....................00:41-00:48
|
||
|
|
||
|
BAKER TIME LINE #2:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Action Time
|
||
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
Last shot is fired......................................00:00
|
||
|
Races motorcycle, dismounts, runs to TSBD,
|
||
|
and comes through building's
|
||
|
entrance.......................................00:00-00:15
|
||
|
Goes with Truly across the first floor and
|
||
|
arrives to entrance to first-floor stairs......00:10-00:40
|
||
|
Truly opens door to first-floor stairs and
|
||
|
Baker follows..................................00:40-00:42
|
||
|
Runs up stairs and reaches second-floor
|
||
|
landing about 2-3 seconds after Truly
|
||
|
does...........................................00:42-00:51
|
||
|
|
||
|
Even these Baker and Truly time lines are not as fast as
|
||
|
they could be (and probably should be), yet we still see that
|
||
|
Oswald could not have made it from the sixth floor without being
|
||
|
seen by Truly and in time to be spotted by Baker.
|
||
|
|
||
|
--------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
SCENARIO #2: MORE PLAUSIBLE TIMES FOR OSWALD'S ALLEGED ACTIONS
|
||
|
--------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
In this scenario, "Oswald" does not run across the sixth
|
||
|
floor and down the stairs; he walks at a fast pace, as did SSA
|
||
|
Howlett for his FASTEST time in the WC's reenactments. Also,
|
||
|
notice that it is assumed that the hiding of the rifle took 10
|
||
|
seconds. This is a very reasonable time, since the evidence
|
||
|
clearly shows that the weapon was very carefully concealed. The
|
||
|
weapon was surrounded by boxes on all sides and was held upright
|
||
|
by at least one box. This time line also assumes that the door
|
||
|
to the second-floor landing was open.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"OSWALD" TIME LINE #3:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Alleged Action Time
|
||
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
Fires last shot.........................................00:00
|
||
|
Chambers another round............................00:00-00:01
|
||
|
Stays at window to gloat over feat................00:01-00:05
|
||
|
Slowly withdraws rifle, casually moves away
|
||
|
from window, walks around boxes stacked next
|
||
|
to window, and reaches entrance to sniper's
|
||
|
nest...........................................00:05-00:10
|
||
|
Squeezes out of sniper's nest.....................00:10-00:11
|
||
|
Runs approximately 150 feet across the sixth
|
||
|
floor and reaches spot where rifle was
|
||
|
found..........................................00:11-00:30
|
||
|
Wipes off the rifle...............................00:30-00:36
|
||
|
Hides the rifle...................................00:36-00:46
|
||
|
Turns from rifle's hiding place and then runs
|
||
|
approximately 7 feet to the top of the
|
||
|
sixth-floor stairs.............................00:46-00:49
|
||
|
Runs down four flights of stairs and reaches
|
||
|
the bottom stair on the second-floor stairs....00:49-01:06
|
||
|
Steps off bottom stair and walks approximately
|
||
|
20 feet across second-floor landing to
|
||
|
foyer door.....................................01:06-01:10
|
||
|
Opens foyer door and goes through it..............01:10-01:12
|
||
|
|
||
|
This time line is a telling blow against the lone-gunman
|
||
|
theory when it is kept in mind that Truly surely was on the
|
||
|
second-floor landing 60 seconds after the shots were fired, as
|
||
|
shown in Truly Time Line #1. It should also be remembered that
|
||
|
in the WC's simulations, the Oswald stand-in, skipping some
|
||
|
actions and fudging on others, made it from the sniper's nest to
|
||
|
the lunchroom in 1 minute and 14 seconds.
|
||
|
|
||
|
---------------------------------------
|
||
|
SCENARIO #3: CONSIDERING THE COUCH FILM
|
||
|
---------------------------------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
Officer Baker appears in the Couch film. He is seen running
|
||
|
toward the TSBD. In the segment of the film in which he appears,
|
||
|
he is within a few seconds of the building's entrance. According
|
||
|
to W. Anthony Marsh, the Couch film shows that it might have
|
||
|
taken Baker as long as 30 seconds to reach the front door.
|
||
|
Howard Roffman, on the other hand, suggests the film shows that
|
||
|
it took Baker 10-15 seconds to do so. I propose a compromise
|
||
|
figure of 25 seconds, although I believe the film could indicate
|
||
|
that Baker reached the door a little sooner than this.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When Baker parked his motorcycle, he was only 45 feet from
|
||
|
the TSBD's front entrance (WCR 149, 152). By the time he
|
||
|
appears in the Couch film he has clearly long since dismounted
|
||
|
(he parked his motorcycle about 10 feet from the traffic signal,
|
||
|
at the northwest corner of Elm and Houston, which would have put
|
||
|
him only seconds away from the entrance to begin with). He's
|
||
|
seen running toward the TSBD and appears to be very close to the
|
||
|
entrance, since, among other things, he's near a car that is
|
||
|
parked on the NORTH side of Elm Street, i.e., the side closest to
|
||
|
the building, and he's clearly beyond and well to the right of
|
||
|
the traffic light (Trask 424; compare with Trask 500, 548, 551,
|
||
|
and 587, and with WCR 62).
|
||
|
|
||
|
Even allowing for Baker's having to push his way through a
|
||
|
few people at the foot of the entrance, I don't see how it could
|
||
|
have taken him longer than 5 or 6 seconds to reach the front door
|
||
|
from the point at which he appears in the Couch film. If you
|
||
|
correlate the Couch frame on page 424 of Trask's PICTURES OF THE
|
||
|
PAIN with the photo on page 62 of the WCR, it's clear that Baker
|
||
|
was very close to the entrance in this frame when Couch captured
|
||
|
him on film.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The exact time that Couch filmed Baker running toward the
|
||
|
TSBD cannot be established. Couch said he started filming
|
||
|
immediately after he saw a rifle barrel being slowly withdrawn
|
||
|
from the sixth-floor window. Baker appears in the segment that
|
||
|
Couch filmed while Couch was still in the car. The in-car
|
||
|
segment is only 22.5 seconds long, and the frames with Baker in
|
||
|
them are NOT the last ones that Couch took from the car. Since
|
||
|
Baker was only a few seconds away from the Depository's entrance
|
||
|
when Couch filmed him, and given the fact that the Baker segment
|
||
|
was not the last in-car footage, a time of 25 seconds seems
|
||
|
reasonable.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Moreover, what if the fatal head shot came AFTER the rifle
|
||
|
was withdrawn from the window? Since there is considerable
|
||
|
evidence that the fatal head shot was fired from the front, it is
|
||
|
possible that the gunman in the sixth-floor window withdrew his
|
||
|
rifle after he hit the President in the back or after firing all
|
||
|
the shots he was supposed to fire. In other words, the
|
||
|
sixth-floor shooter could have been withdrawing his rifle by
|
||
|
around frame 225 of the Zapruder film, i.e., nearly five seconds
|
||
|
before Kennedy was shot in the head.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In any event, in the time lines below we will use the figure
|
||
|
of 25 seconds for Baker's dash to the front door. At the same
|
||
|
time, however, we will also use more realistic times for Baker
|
||
|
and Truly's sprint from the front door to the first-floor stairs,
|
||
|
and for their dash up the stairs.
|
||
|
|
||
|
TRULY TIME LINE #3:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Action Time
|
||
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
Last shot is fired......................................00:00
|
||
|
Baker races motorcycle, dismounts, runs to TSBD,
|
||
|
and comes through building's
|
||
|
entrance.......................................00:00-00:25
|
||
|
Leads Baker across the first floor and arrives
|
||
|
to entrance to first-floor stairs..............00:25-00:50
|
||
|
Opens and goes through door to first-floor
|
||
|
stairs.........................................00:50-00:51
|
||
|
Runs up stairs and gets far enough
|
||
|
to see second-floor landing....................00:51-00:56
|
||
|
|
||
|
If the landing door was closed, it would have taken Truly an
|
||
|
extra second or two to gain a view of the landing area.
|
||
|
|
||
|
BAKER TIME LINE #3:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Action Time
|
||
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
Last shot is fired......................................00:00
|
||
|
Baker races motorcycle, dismounts, runs to TSBD,
|
||
|
and comes through building's
|
||
|
entrance.......................................00:00-00:25
|
||
|
Runs with Truly across the first floor and
|
||
|
arrives to entrance to first-floor stairs......00:25-00:50
|
||
|
Truly opens door to first-floor stairs and
|
||
|
Baker follows..................................00:50-00:52
|
||
|
Runs up stairs and reaches second-floor
|
||
|
landing about 2-3 seconds after Truly
|
||
|
does...........................................00:52-00:59
|
||
|
|
||
|
When we compare these times lines with the first and third
|
||
|
Oswald time lines, we once again see that Oswald could not have
|
||
|
gone through the foyer door without being seen by Truly and in
|
||
|
time to be spotted by Baker.
|
||
|
|
||
|
If we consider the second Oswald time line, which is much
|
||
|
too favorable to the lone-gunman theory (so much so that it is
|
||
|
unrealistic), we see that Truly would have arrived far too LATE
|
||
|
for the WC's version of the event to be possible, since the
|
||
|
Commission admitted that if Oswald had come down the stairs and
|
||
|
had gone through the foyer door, then he would have had to walk
|
||
|
through the door just "a second or two" before BAKER reached the
|
||
|
second-floor landing. This problem becomes even more pronounced
|
||
|
if we assume that it took Baker 5 more seconds, i.e., 30 seconds,
|
||
|
to reach the front door.
|
||
|
|
||
|
On the other hand, if we add 5 seconds to the time for
|
||
|
Baker's run to the entrance, which would give us 30 seconds for
|
||
|
that action, and then compare that figure with the first and
|
||
|
third Oswald time lines, we see that Oswald still would have
|
||
|
been unable to reach the foyer door without being seen by Truly
|
||
|
and without, at the very least, having the door clearly and
|
||
|
visibly open when Baker looked at it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And I would ask the reader to remember that the times given
|
||
|
for Oswald's alleged run from the sniper's nest to the rifle's
|
||
|
hiding place were originally proposed for a journey of only
|
||
|
around 75 feet. So it cannot be said that I haven't made every
|
||
|
effort to be fair to the lone-gunman scenario. The problem is
|
||
|
that the WC's theory about how Oswald came to be in the second-
|
||
|
floor lunchroom is impossible. He could not have made it there
|
||
|
in time to be "spotted" by Baker and without being seen by Truly.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Oswald wasn't seen or heard by Victoria Adams or Roy Truly
|
||
|
on the stairs because he never came down those stairs. He was at
|
||
|
the soda machine buying a Coke, just as he told the authorities
|
||
|
during his interrogations, which was one reason that early news
|
||
|
reports put the Coke in his hand when Baker saw him, as did Chief
|
||
|
Curry on November 23, and as Baker himself initially did during
|
||
|
his last sworn statement to the FBI.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The simple, irrefutable fact of the matter is that Lee
|
||
|
Harvey Oswald could not have shot President Kennedy because he
|
||
|
could not have been at the alleged sniper's nest at the time of
|
||
|
the shooting. He was in the second-floor lunchroom buying a
|
||
|
Coke.
|
||
|
|
||
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
WAS SOMEONE IN THE SIXTH-FLOOR WINDOW AT THE SAME TIME OSWALD
|
||
|
WAS SPOTTED DOWNSTAIRS IN THE LUNCHROOM?
|
||
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
Harold Norman was watching the motorcade from the window
|
||
|
directly beneath the sniper's window. With him were Bonnie Ray
|
||
|
Williams and James Jarman. Norman told the WC that he could hear
|
||
|
shells hitting the floor above him during the shooting (WCR, p.
|
||
|
70). This was quite an accomplishment given the fact that the
|
||
|
TSBD's floors were built to support tons of book boxes, and given
|
||
|
the noise being emitted at the time from the motorcycles and the
|
||
|
crowd less than 180 feet from the window. (Incredibly, Norman
|
||
|
also said he could hear the rifle's bolt being operated!)
|
||
|
Nevertheless, the Commission said it confirmed in a simulation
|
||
|
that Norman could have heard shells hitting the floor, although
|
||
|
the simulation was not done over the noise of a cheering crowd
|
||
|
and of 18 motorcycles idling along less than 180 feet away.
|
||
|
However, if we assume that Norman really did hear shells hitting
|
||
|
the floor above him during the shooting, then it is surely
|
||
|
significant that neither Norman nor Williams nor Jarman mentioned
|
||
|
hearing any movement above them after the shots were fired.
|
||
|
Jarman, in fact, was asked if he heard "any steps" or "any noise
|
||
|
at all" above him after the shots were fired. "No, sir," he
|
||
|
replied, "none."
|
||
|
|
||
|
In light of the testimony of Mrs. Lillian Mooneyham, this is
|
||
|
not surprising. Mrs. Mooneyham was a law clerk who worked in
|
||
|
the Criminal Courts Building. She told the FBI soon after the
|
||
|
assassination that she saw a man standing in the sixth-floor
|
||
|
window 4-5 minutes after the shots had been fired (see, for
|
||
|
example, Marrs 52-53). From her position at the window on the
|
||
|
west side of the County Courts Building, Mrs. Mooneyham had an
|
||
|
excellent view of the TSBD. She was a highly credible witness
|
||
|
who reported what she had seen in a straightforward,
|
||
|
matter-of-fact manner. The Commission made no effort to refute
|
||
|
her account. It could not attack her credibility, nor could it
|
||
|
claim that she could not have seen what she said she had seen.
|
||
|
So, what did the Commission do with this credible and important
|
||
|
account? Nothing. The Commission simply ignored it, and did not
|
||
|
even call Mrs. Mooneyham as a witness.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In 1968 researcher David Lifton obtained an FBI report from
|
||
|
the National Archives which said that a witness at a window on an
|
||
|
upper floor of a nearby building had told a Dallas lawyer that
|
||
|
she saw "some boxes moving" in the sixth-floor window, presumably
|
||
|
within minutes of the shooting (Lifton 367).
|
||
|
|
||
|
In 1979 photogrammetric experts hired by the House Select
|
||
|
Committee on Assassinations studied photographs of the
|
||
|
sixth-floor window taken within moments of the shooting and
|
||
|
concluded the pictures showed "an apparent rearranging of boxes
|
||
|
within 2 minutes after the last shot was fired at President
|
||
|
Kennedy" (6 HSCA 109). Obviously, Oswald could not have been
|
||
|
moving boxes around in the window less than 2 minutes after the
|
||
|
shooting, nor could he have been the man who was seen by Mrs.
|
||
|
Mooneyham.
|
||
|
|
||
|
So not only could Oswald not have made it to the lunchroom
|
||
|
in the required amount of time, but we also have credible
|
||
|
testimony and evidence that someone other than Oswald was in the
|
||
|
sixth-floor window moments after the shots were fired.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Recommend Reading for Important Facts Mentioned Herein
|
||
|
------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
1. The alleged murder weapon was very carefully hidden and could
|
||
|
not have been simply "thrown" to its hiding place as some WC
|
||
|
defenders have suggested: Weisberg, CASE OPEN, pp. 110-117.
|
||
|
|
||
|
2. Victoria Adams' account of her movements after the shots were
|
||
|
fired is accurate and is not refuted by the WC testimony of
|
||
|
Lovelady and Shelley: Meager, ACCESSORIES AFTER THE FACT, pp. 72-
|
||
|
74.
|
||
|
|
||
|
3. The WC's reenactments of the Baker-Oswald encounter were
|
||
|
flawed and unrealistic, and actually proved that Baker reached
|
||
|
the second-floor landing much earlier than he did in the
|
||
|
reenactments: Weisberg, SELECTIONS FROM "WHITEWASH," pp. 53-57;
|
||
|
Weisberg, CASE OPEN, pp. 117-124.
|
||
|
|
||
|
4. Oswald would have had to literally "squeeze" out of the
|
||
|
alleged sniper's nest: Meagher, ACCESSORIES AFTER THE FACT, p.
|
||
|
42; Trask, PICTURES OF THE PAIN, p. 525. Some have disputed this
|
||
|
fact because, Luke Mooney, the police officer who said he had to
|
||
|
"squeeze" through the entrance to the nest, was somewhat heavy-
|
||
|
set. However, the boxes that formed the entrance were at leg
|
||
|
level, and Mooney's legs, to judge from his appearance, were
|
||
|
probably right about the same size as Oswald's legs (see Trask,
|
||
|
PICTURES OF THE PAIN, p. 521). If nothing else, Oswald would
|
||
|
have had to slow down and negotiate his way through the narrow
|
||
|
entrance to the nest.
|
||
|
|
||
|
5. Oswald did not appear to be out of breath but was "calm and
|
||
|
collected" when Baker saw him: Meagher, ACCESSORIES AFTER THE
|
||
|
FACT, p. 71.
|
||
|
|
||
|
6. The sixth-floor shooter remained at the window for a few
|
||
|
seconds and then slowly withdrew the rifle as he casually moved
|
||
|
away from the window: Posner, CASE CLOSED, p. 248; Hurt,
|
||
|
REASONABLE DOUBT, p. 89; Brown, THE PEOPLE V. LEE HARVEY OSWALD,
|
||
|
pp. 113-117.
|
||
|
|
||
|
7. The foyer door (and therefore its window) would have been at a
|
||
|
45-degree angle to Officer Baker from his position on the
|
||
|
second-floor landing: Groden, THE KILLING OF A PRESIDENT, p. 121;
|
||
|
Weisberg, SELECTIONS FROM "WHITEWASH," p. 56; Savage, FIRST DAY
|
||
|
EVIDENCE, pp. 286, 289.
|
||
|
|
||
|
8. In two statements, Baker said Oswald was walking away from him
|
||
|
when he saw him in the lunchroom, but in another statement, his
|
||
|
final one, Baker said he saw Oswald standing in the lunchroom,
|
||
|
and on the day of the shooting, Roy Truly said that Baker didn't
|
||
|
see Oswald until Baker "stuck his head into the lunchroom area":
|
||
|
Weisberg, SELECTIONS FROM "WHITEWASH," p. 54; Meagher,
|
||
|
ACCESSORIES AFTER THE FACT, pp. 72, 74 n.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Notes
|
||
|
-----
|
||
|
|
||
|
1. The Warren Commission seemingly contradicted itself on exactly
|
||
|
where Baker was when he observed Oswald in the lunchroom. On
|
||
|
page 151 of the WCR, we read that Baker saw Oswald in the
|
||
|
lunchroom AFTER Baker went through the foyer/vestibule door.
|
||
|
However, on page 3 of the report, we read that Baker saw him in
|
||
|
the lunchroom when Baker "rushed" to the foyer door, and the
|
||
|
Commission's own diagram of Baker's movements likewise puts Baker
|
||
|
just in front of the door when he observed Oswald.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bibliography
|
||
|
------------
|
||
|
Brown, Walt, THE PEOPLE V. LEE HARVEY OSWALD, New York:
|
||
|
Carroll & Graf Publishers, 1992.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Groden, Robert J., THE KILLING OF A PRESIDENT: THE COMPLETE
|
||
|
PHOTOGRAPHIC RECORD OF THE JFK ASSASSINATION, THE CONSPIRACY, AND
|
||
|
THE COVER-UP, New York: Viking Studio Books, 1993.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hurt, Henry, REASONABLE DOUBT: AN INVESTIGATION INTO THE
|
||
|
ASSASSINATION OF JOHN F. KENNEDY, New York: Holt, Rinehart,
|
||
|
and Winston, 1985.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lifton, David, BEST EVIDENCE, New York: Carroll & Graf, 1988
|
||
|
|
||
|
Marrs, Jim, CROSSFIRE: THE PLOT THAT KILLED KENNEDY, New
|
||
|
York: Carroll & Graf Publishers, 1989.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Meagher, Sylvia, ACCESSORIES AFTER THE FACT, New York:
|
||
|
Vintage Books edition, 1992.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Posner, Gerald, CASE CLOSED: LEE HARVEY OSWALD AND THE
|
||
|
ASSASSINATION OF JFK, New York: Random House, 1993.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Savage, Gary, FIRST DAY EVIDENCE, Monroe, Louisiana: The
|
||
|
Shoppe Press, 1993,
|
||
|
|
||
|
THE WARREN COMMISSION REPORT, Washington, D.C.: Government
|
||
|
Printing Office, 1964. I am using the Barnes & Noble printing of
|
||
|
the report.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Trask, Richard, PICTURES OF THE PAIN: PHOTOGRAPHY AND THE
|
||
|
ASSASSINATION OF PRESIDENT KENNEDY, Danvers, Massachusetts:
|
||
|
Yeoman Press, 1994.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Weisberg, Harold, NEVER AGAIN, New York: Carroll & Graf
|
||
|
Publishers, 1995.
|
||
|
|
||
|
-----, SELECTIONS FROM "WHITEWASH," New York: Carroll & Graf
|
||
|
Publishers, 1994.
|
||
|
|
||
|
-----, WHITEWASH, Hyattstown, Maryland, 1966.
|
||
|
|
||
|
---------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Michael T. Griffith is a two-time graduate of
|
||
|
the Defense Language Institute in Monterey, California, and the
|
||
|
author of three books on Mormonism and ancient texts. His
|
||
|
articles on the JFK assassination have appeared in DATELINE:
|
||
|
DALLAS and in DALLAS '63. (CompuServe ID: 74274,650; Internet
|
||
|
address: mtgriff@ironrod.win-uk.net or 74274.650@compuserve.com)
|
||
|
|