15-02-2011, 05:22 AM
Stan:
What about the old woman and man with a hat walking away from Dealey Plaza? (at 51 seconds) Far more suspicious. They walk away as everyone heads to the plaza, Does anyone know who they are? I don't think someone posing as an old woman, no matter how overweight she appears, can be ruled out. I've never heard of any theories in which women are involved. I think an elderly slightly obese woman would be a perfect cover. Has anyone heard or read where a woman might have been on the team that killed JFK?
I can't tell if the two "police officers" if that's what they were are stuffing something into a car. It would seem odd if they were the badge man to do so with an audience as large as appears to be watching them. But, as Charles Drago noted, the guy in the tan jacket appears to fit the criteria of a plausiable doppelganger of LHO. I wasn't able to dect the sadness Charles noted but he does appear to be sinewy.
"The cat, having sat upon a hot stove lid, will not sit upon a hot stove lid again. But he won't sit upon a cold stove lid, either." Mark Twain
What about the old woman and man with a hat walking away from Dealey Plaza? (at 51 seconds) Far more suspicious. They walk away as everyone heads to the plaza, Does anyone know who they are? I don't think someone posing as an old woman, no matter how overweight she appears, can be ruled out. I've never heard of any theories in which women are involved. I think an elderly slightly obese woman would be a perfect cover. Has anyone heard or read where a woman might have been on the team that killed JFK?
I can't tell if the two "police officers" if that's what they were are stuffing something into a car. It would seem odd if they were the badge man to do so with an audience as large as appears to be watching them. But, as Charles Drago noted, the guy in the tan jacket appears to fit the criteria of a plausiable doppelganger of LHO. I wasn't able to dect the sadness Charles noted but he does appear to be sinewy.
"The cat, having sat upon a hot stove lid, will not sit upon a hot stove lid again. But he won't sit upon a cold stove lid, either." Mark Twain