16-12-2016, 01:11 AM
Scott Kaiser Wrote:Oh, and by the way I called and recorded my conversation with an officer at the Federal Reserve Bank of San Antonio 210-978-1200. The officer I spoke to informed me he was very familiar with the procedures on handling the old puch out 1963 USPMO's.
His exact words were before sending the batch of PMO's back to the USPS they EACH get recorded and double checked against the USPS forms for acuracy before endorsement. I asked where does the FRB endorse the PMO? I wanted him to tell me, he replied, ALL PMO's get endorsed on the back side usually under the cashing banks endorsement, this should NOW put this to rest.
This is more background of what your source describes, and in a final attempt to penetrate your defenses against comprehension,
this is a deeper explanation, and it was obsolete and irrelevant related to all postal money orders sold in Dallas after January 4, 1963.:
https://bulk.resource.org/gao.gov/91-375/0000AA67.pdf
Image of relevant page of .pdf document linked directly above:
The 1960 testimony in the image above was given by the same postal official, J. Harold Marks, the Secret Service claimed to
have obtained the original $21.45 postal money order from on the evening of November 23, 1963.:
http://maryferrell.org/showDoc.html?docI...nd%20order
Image and link above taken from my post on November 13, 2016
Quote:..........
In addition, we now have an explanation from an original source, for the
much higher serial number on the $21.45 PMO than several numbers issued on
Dallas PMOs three months earlier, in Dec., 1962.:
See page 2, article image link is below link to 4 page .pdf document.:
http://www.uspostalbulletins.com/PDF/Vol83_Issue20338_19621129.pdf#search=%22money%20order%22
Image of page 2 article announcing money order issuance changes for 5 Jan, 1963:
http://jfk.education/images/1963DallasPostalMoneyOrderSerialNumbersIofIII.jpg
Postmasters were instructed to burn 1962 issued (blue tinted) money order
forms after close of business on 4 Jan., 1963:
http://www.uspostalbulletins.com/PDF/Vol83_Issue20342_19621227.pdf#search=%22money%20order%22 -pages 4 and 5
Image of .pdf page 5. Burn instructions in right column:
http://jfk.education/images/1963DallasPostalMoneyOrderSerialNumbersIIIofIII.jpg
Both the older, blue-tinted money order forms and the post Jan. 4, 1963
yellow tinted forms were also tabulator cards. The former were
individually viewed by an operator during Federal Reserve bank batch
processing and the face amount displayed on each postal money order was
maually key punched in round hole machine code on the right side of each
postal money order by an FRB key-punch operator. This process became
obsolete and discontinued for FRB processing of all postal money orders
issued by Dallas region post offices after 4 Jan., 1963.:
(a page describing FRB PMO manual key-punching, from a brief, 1960
congressional committee hearing. The term "raised" is interchangeable with
the terms "forged" or "counterfeited")
https://bulk.resource.org/gao.gov/91-375/0000AA67.pdf
Link to image of relevant page of .pdf document linked directly above:
http://jfk.education/images/1962andEarlierFRBpostalMO.jpg
So, we know the Federal Reserve Bank key-punched round holes into PMOs
issued in Dallas before 5 Jan., 1963, but as of yet we have no documents
specific to what other FRB marks were affixed to postal money orders
processed by FRB before or after 5 Jan., 1963.
Peter Janney's uncle was Frank Pace, chairman of General Dynamics who enlisted law partners Roswell Gilpatric and Luce's brother-in-law, Maurice "Tex" Moore, in a trade of 16 percent of Gen. Dyn. stock in exchange for Henry Crown and his Material Service Corp. of Chicago, headed by Byfield's Sherman Hotel group's Pat Hoy. The Crown family and partner Conrad Hilton next benefitted from TFX, at the time, the most costly military contract award in the history of the world. Obama was sponsored by the Crowns and Pritzkers. So was Albert Jenner Peter Janney has preferred to write of an imaginary CIA assassination of his surrogate mother, Mary Meyer, but not a word about his Uncle Frank.