15-03-2016, 08:16 AM
(This post was last modified: 15-03-2016, 05:26 PM by Jim DiEugenio.)
What makes Alyea so interesting is this:
According to Larry Hancock, Alyea still thinks the WC is correct.
Even though he has supplied so much vital evidence showing that the DPD altered the crime scene evidence.
As any lawyer will tell you, that is very crucial in arguing a felony.
I mean, the whole idea of the sniper's nest was really important in incriminating Oswald. As was the dispersal pattern of the shells, which loons like Dale Myers still stand by. The FBI when they experimented with the MC rifle proved that it was just about impossible for the shells to be arranged in a very short dispersal pattern. Apparently that rifle had a very strong ejector mechanism to it. Because not only did the shell eject a long distance, but they then bounced off the floor a long distance.
It seems to me that Fritz was fully aware that what he was looking at was pre arranged. So Alyea says that either he or Studebaker picked up the shells and then threw them around.
Alyea is also really interesting on the arrangement of the boxes. He told Allan Eaglesham that nope, they were not like that when he first got up there. And he was the first civilian up there.
If this case ever gets reopened, he is an important witness.
According to Larry Hancock, Alyea still thinks the WC is correct.
Even though he has supplied so much vital evidence showing that the DPD altered the crime scene evidence.
As any lawyer will tell you, that is very crucial in arguing a felony.
I mean, the whole idea of the sniper's nest was really important in incriminating Oswald. As was the dispersal pattern of the shells, which loons like Dale Myers still stand by. The FBI when they experimented with the MC rifle proved that it was just about impossible for the shells to be arranged in a very short dispersal pattern. Apparently that rifle had a very strong ejector mechanism to it. Because not only did the shell eject a long distance, but they then bounced off the floor a long distance.
It seems to me that Fritz was fully aware that what he was looking at was pre arranged. So Alyea says that either he or Studebaker picked up the shells and then threw them around.
Alyea is also really interesting on the arrangement of the boxes. He told Allan Eaglesham that nope, they were not like that when he first got up there. And he was the first civilian up there.
If this case ever gets reopened, he is an important witness.