02-04-2015, 06:48 PM
Albert Doyle Wrote:Tracy Riddle Wrote:As for Roger Craig, I've learned to be a little more skeptical of some of his stories. This is what Harold Weisberg wrote to a fellow researcher in 1970:
“Roger Craig may be a brave guy and all of that, but he is also full of what is generally reserved for toilets. I have gone over his annotation of his testimony, as printed, and his account of the changes is utterly impossible. I spent too many years working with court reporters, particularly, the firm the Commission used, to find it possible to credit this in any way. More, have traced that testimony all the way from Dallas to the Government Printing Office, and it is printed as it was taken down, I have copies of the typescript sent to the GPO, and I have the letter of transmittal to DC the bills for taking it, the whole story. Roger is, despite Penn's [Penn Jones] great love for him, at best simply wrong, in the newer areas, what he embellished his original testimony with. Now I have met Roger, and he is a finelooking, clean-cut kind of guy who appears to be truthful, serious and all that-just like dozens of guys I once guarded in an Army locked ward in a large mental institution. He does not impress me as the kind of guy who is out to make trouble. But he is.”
Tracy: What does this have to do with Craig's basic account of seeing Oswald walk out to the station wagon and his later encounter at the police station?
Because he said it was a Nash Rambler, and Oswald claimed it belonged to Ruth Paine. Paine obviously owned a Chevy BelAir. It's true that the two station wagons are superficially similar to each other.