13-08-2013, 10:19 PM
Jim Hargrove, it is excellent to bookmark your new/old site and put the author's work on a very special wish list.
I have always found http://www.ctka.net/pr198-jfk.html to be killer and apparently Jim Douglass did as well.
David Josephs, your gif of the two is wonderful; the nose knows.
Biggy Small, who can shapeshift from 5'9" to 5'11".
A classic dodge of tradecraft.
Now in Grey Wolf we see Hitler's double shamming a bunker demise; don't cry for me, Argentina.
Oswald was doubled from 1952, then overlaid with ad hoc hoax, e.g., the plight of Yates, the Mexico City chimera.
From the official site, a stunning jewel alluded to by Gil Jesus and if not mistaken George Michael Evica:
An Unexplainable Document
The Postal Money Order allegedly used to purchase the rifle that supposedly killed JFK is perhaps the most unexplainable document published by the Warren Commission. A quick look at this money order shows that it was never deposited nor cashed at a bank. It does not have a single bank stamp on the front or reverse side. Yet the WC wants us to believe that this uncashed, never-deposited money order was used to purchase the rifle that supposedly killed President Kennedy. All monetary instruments deposited to banks or financial institutions (1962-63) were stamped by the bank into which the item was deposited, stamped by a correspondent bank, and stamped by the originating bank or institution when the item was returned. US Postal Money Orders, after passing through banks and the Federal Reserve System, are stamped when returned to Federal Postal Money Order Centers (FPMOC). But the FBI did not locate this money order at a FPMOC. This money order first appeared in the hands of Robert Jackson, an employee of the National Archives who lived in Alexandria, VA. Jackson delivered the money order to SA Harold Marks in Washington, DC. The initials on the back of the money order were made by Jackson, Marks, and other Federal officials who took possession of the money order. The WC accepted this money order as "proof" that Oswald purchased this mail-order rifle from Klein's Sporting Goods in Chicago. Apparently, not a single member of the WC or it's attorneys or staff questioned the authenticity of this money order. To verify authenticity, the WC only needed to ask the US Postal Department to conduct "payment research" on the money order. There is no cost for this service, but the results may have been a bit difficult for the WC to explain.
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I have always found http://www.ctka.net/pr198-jfk.html to be killer and apparently Jim Douglass did as well.
David Josephs, your gif of the two is wonderful; the nose knows.
Biggy Small, who can shapeshift from 5'9" to 5'11".
A classic dodge of tradecraft.
Now in Grey Wolf we see Hitler's double shamming a bunker demise; don't cry for me, Argentina.
Oswald was doubled from 1952, then overlaid with ad hoc hoax, e.g., the plight of Yates, the Mexico City chimera.
From the official site, a stunning jewel alluded to by Gil Jesus and if not mistaken George Michael Evica:
An Unexplainable Document
The Postal Money Order allegedly used to purchase the rifle that supposedly killed JFK is perhaps the most unexplainable document published by the Warren Commission. A quick look at this money order shows that it was never deposited nor cashed at a bank. It does not have a single bank stamp on the front or reverse side. Yet the WC wants us to believe that this uncashed, never-deposited money order was used to purchase the rifle that supposedly killed President Kennedy. All monetary instruments deposited to banks or financial institutions (1962-63) were stamped by the bank into which the item was deposited, stamped by a correspondent bank, and stamped by the originating bank or institution when the item was returned. US Postal Money Orders, after passing through banks and the Federal Reserve System, are stamped when returned to Federal Postal Money Order Centers (FPMOC). But the FBI did not locate this money order at a FPMOC. This money order first appeared in the hands of Robert Jackson, an employee of the National Archives who lived in Alexandria, VA. Jackson delivered the money order to SA Harold Marks in Washington, DC. The initials on the back of the money order were made by Jackson, Marks, and other Federal officials who took possession of the money order. The WC accepted this money order as "proof" that Oswald purchased this mail-order rifle from Klein's Sporting Goods in Chicago. Apparently, not a single member of the WC or it's attorneys or staff questioned the authenticity of this money order. To verify authenticity, the WC only needed to ask the US Postal Department to conduct "payment research" on the money order. There is no cost for this service, but the results may have been a bit difficult for the WC to explain.
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