31-12-2020, 07:31 PM
(This post was last modified: 31-12-2020, 07:36 PM by Milo Reech.)
The preceding post may be speculative, but the crossing of Jefferson Blvd in front of the Dudley Hughes ambulance by an LHO lookalike is supported by statements made by driver Butler & passenger Kinsley. Both observed the man. Kinsley identified him as LHO. Butler could not identify him as anybody.
In his tendentious way Myers recently argued on his blog that this man was not LHO but Warren Reynolds, a startling proposition. For one thing, Reynolds belonged to that select group of male Dallasites who bore no resemblance whatsoever to LHO. For another, Myers plays fast & loose with the documented record.
The radio transcript has this item from Patrolman R. W. Walker:
"We have a description on this suspect over here on Jefferson. Last seen about 300 block of East Jefferson. He's a white male, about thirty, five eight, (Siren) black hair, slender, wearing white jacket, a white shirt and dark slacks. (Sirens)"
http://www.billdrenas.com/articles/dpd01-00.pdf 1:22
"Over here" means Walker was at the Jefferson location near the Texaco station where the Brocks worked, not "over there" at Patton & 10th.
Whoever Walker's informant was, this person saw something no one else reported seeing (certainly not Reynolds), spotting the fugitive in the "300 block of East Jefferson." Reynolds had lost sight of him behind the gas station, then left with everyone else when the library news broke.
Myers tries to overcome the facts two ways. One is to claim "the sirens in the background of the transmission prove that Walker was speaking with Reynolds at Tenth and Patton." The other is based on information purportedly provided by Walker in a private interview 20 years after the event.
The former is not worth considering until someone shows that sirens could not have been heard on Jefferson. The latter defies analysis since the source cannot be reviewed. It's from Myers' reserve of unpublished verbal subject matter, at times transmitted from the dead via intermediaries. The extent of this private stock is unknown, but it will come as no surprise if the next edition of "With Malice" is subtitled "Tales from the Crypt."
https://jfkfiles.blogspot.com/2020/11/wa...acket.html
In his tendentious way Myers recently argued on his blog that this man was not LHO but Warren Reynolds, a startling proposition. For one thing, Reynolds belonged to that select group of male Dallasites who bore no resemblance whatsoever to LHO. For another, Myers plays fast & loose with the documented record.
The radio transcript has this item from Patrolman R. W. Walker:
"We have a description on this suspect over here on Jefferson. Last seen about 300 block of East Jefferson. He's a white male, about thirty, five eight, (Siren) black hair, slender, wearing white jacket, a white shirt and dark slacks. (Sirens)"
http://www.billdrenas.com/articles/dpd01-00.pdf 1:22
"Over here" means Walker was at the Jefferson location near the Texaco station where the Brocks worked, not "over there" at Patton & 10th.
Whoever Walker's informant was, this person saw something no one else reported seeing (certainly not Reynolds), spotting the fugitive in the "300 block of East Jefferson." Reynolds had lost sight of him behind the gas station, then left with everyone else when the library news broke.
Myers tries to overcome the facts two ways. One is to claim "the sirens in the background of the transmission prove that Walker was speaking with Reynolds at Tenth and Patton." The other is based on information purportedly provided by Walker in a private interview 20 years after the event.
The former is not worth considering until someone shows that sirens could not have been heard on Jefferson. The latter defies analysis since the source cannot be reviewed. It's from Myers' reserve of unpublished verbal subject matter, at times transmitted from the dead via intermediaries. The extent of this private stock is unknown, but it will come as no surprise if the next edition of "With Malice" is subtitled "Tales from the Crypt."
https://jfkfiles.blogspot.com/2020/11/wa...acket.html