More troubling for Baker & Truly's credibility than Dallas Deputy Sheriff's John Wiseman's affidavit sharing that access to the roof was locked from the inside, thus negating their phantom experience atop the roof, is the following exchange an hour later when a Dallas Fire Engine crew brought a ladder to the scene to make an attempt to access the roof from Deputy Sheriff John Wiseman's viewpoint, where they were also unsuccessful as they experienced an even greater challenging issue that made the rooftop inaccessible...here's what that ladder crew team ran into...
@ 1:33PM (an hour after Baker & Truly's bs about being atop that roof for 10-15 minutes, their words, not mine, but no great surprise since they were already lying about a phantom 2nd floor encounter in the lunchroom) the fire engine ladder crew reported to their dispatcher the following challenge while trying to access the roof, quote,
"Sheetmetal has to be raised", unquote. Yet Baker & Truly magically were teleported not only upon a roof that was locked from the inside but also managed to magically make the sheetmetal a non issue as well.
It's amazing what some people will do and say for thirty pieces of silver about a phantom 2nd floor encounter in the lunchroom and being atop an otherwise locked roof from the inside. Oh, dear @ the desperation of a hastily contrived script mired in the stench of horse manure to frame an innocent party (the wrongly-accused).
"Few men have the virtue to withstand the highest bidder" -- George Washington
Rather interesting that Roy Truly did not sign his original affidavit, nor was it witnessed by a Notary either ---->
Guess at that point he was hedging his bets and making sure he could leave the hastily contrived script open for do-overs, retakes, etc.
https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/...8979/m1/1/
too bad he and Baker parroted back a phantom 2nd floor lunchroom encounter and a make-believe romp upon an otherwise locked roof from the inside reinforced with sheetmetal. That fiction couldn't pass the test of time amid a much more closer examination of their fictitious exploits.
The wrongly-accused did not shoot anybody. Anybody.
@ 1:33PM (an hour after Baker & Truly's bs about being atop that roof for 10-15 minutes, their words, not mine, but no great surprise since they were already lying about a phantom 2nd floor encounter in the lunchroom) the fire engine ladder crew reported to their dispatcher the following challenge while trying to access the roof, quote,
"Sheetmetal has to be raised", unquote. Yet Baker & Truly magically were teleported not only upon a roof that was locked from the inside but also managed to magically make the sheetmetal a non issue as well.
It's amazing what some people will do and say for thirty pieces of silver about a phantom 2nd floor encounter in the lunchroom and being atop an otherwise locked roof from the inside. Oh, dear @ the desperation of a hastily contrived script mired in the stench of horse manure to frame an innocent party (the wrongly-accused).
"Few men have the virtue to withstand the highest bidder" -- George Washington
Rather interesting that Roy Truly did not sign his original affidavit, nor was it witnessed by a Notary either ---->
Guess at that point he was hedging his bets and making sure he could leave the hastily contrived script open for do-overs, retakes, etc.
https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/...8979/m1/1/
too bad he and Baker parroted back a phantom 2nd floor lunchroom encounter and a make-believe romp upon an otherwise locked roof from the inside reinforced with sheetmetal. That fiction couldn't pass the test of time amid a much more closer examination of their fictitious exploits.
The wrongly-accused did not shoot anybody. Anybody.