25-11-2014, 08:29 PM
(This post was last modified: 25-11-2014, 11:10 PM by Albert Doyle.)
I think it would be incumbent upon DiEugenio to answer Edward Haslam's reply. This does (appear) to swing the momentum back in JVB's favor:
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Quote:Lee went to Jackson twice. The first time was on Aug. 29 when he took the bio-weapon to the hospital. He road in Clay Shaw's black Cadillac with David Ferrie. They drove down the road to Clinton to wait for a phone call saying the the prisoner had left Angola. What caught them by surprise was that CORE had scheduled a black voter registration drive for Aug. 29 to follow up on the inertia of MLK's "I have a dream" speech on Aug. 28, so the area in front of the courthouse was full of people, and not empty as they had anticipated. That is where town marshal John Manchester saw them, as Bill Davy reports in his book.
Once they got their phone call, they headed back to Jackson where they intercepted the van from the prison on the road and followed it onto the grounds of the East Louisiana Hospital to make the guards think that they were part of the convoy from Angola. Once the prisoner was in the hospital, they injected him with the cancer weapon. Then they returned to New Orleans. Two days later, on Aug. 30, they needed to see if the cancer had kicked in, so a special blood test was needed to see if the cancer was active. This was an exotic test at the time, but it was something that Judyth was trained to do at Roswell Park Cancer Center in Buffalo, NY.
On Aug. 31, Lee drove Judyth up to Jackson in an old Kaiser, a car he borrowed from Guy Banister who parked it several blocks from his office and used it for his agents to drop off information and materials without coming to his office. That is the car that the barber saw in front of his barber shop with a woman sitting in the front seat and a baby carriage in the back seat. During the hair cut, the barber gave Lee the name of the state representative in Jackson, Reeves Morgan. Lee then drove to Morgan's house where his daughter Mary also saw the old car with a woman sitting in the front seat.
Garrison's team knew there was a young woman traveling with Oswald in Jackson, and they knew it was not Marina. They said they wanted to find her and to bring her into the court room to ask her questions, but they could not find her. This info is from the transcript of the closing arguments of the Shaw trail.
I, too, went to Jackson twice and spoke to the barber each time. He was Registrar of Voters with an office in Clinton at the time. I found nothing in what he said that contradicted Judyth's story. In fact, he told me that he did see a woman sitting on the front seat of the old car after Oswald left the barber shop, but due to the angle of the parked car, he could not see the driver.
Lee and Judy returned (3.5 hour drive) to New Orleans and Lee dropped her off at 10:00 pm. An hour later, at about 11:00 pm someone broke into Mary Sherman's apartment and stole thousands of dollars worth of equipment. But Mary was not there. She had left that morning for London for a month.
Finally, I know both Jim DiEugenio and Bill Davy and have a great deal of respect for them as researchers, but they have not taken the time to research the details of Judyth's story, as I have. Their expertise lies elsewhere. It is my conclusion that Judyth's story is real. And her experience in Jackson, combined with Dr. Ochsner's reaction to her protest about experimenting on a unwitting patient, is why she dropped out of cancer, and never touched science again after leaving New Orleans.
Frankly, it sounds to me like you listened to a radio interview and jumped to a lot of conclusions about Judyth. I encourage you to read ME & LEE carefully and with an open mind. And until you do, it would be nice if you stopped posting your half-baked criticisms of her.
Ed Haslam
author of DR. MARY'S MONKEY
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