29-11-2014, 06:38 PM
Edward Haslam wrote:
I don't know what to make of Haslam's interpretation or accuracy, however he does make it sound like the woman was the passenger.
The detective in me makes me ask if the car was associated with the laundromat why would the woman be sitting outside? In the early 60's women did the wash. Why would a woman drive to the laundry and then sit outside? A southern men's barber shop however. And, if JVB was a legitimate bioweapons operative, it would also be understandable that she didn't expose herself.
Quote: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.
I don't know what to make of Haslam's interpretation or accuracy, however he does make it sound like the woman was the passenger.
The detective in me makes me ask if the car was associated with the laundromat why would the woman be sitting outside? In the early 60's women did the wash. Why would a woman drive to the laundry and then sit outside? A southern men's barber shop however. And, if JVB was a legitimate bioweapons operative, it would also be understandable that she didn't expose herself.