27-04-2015, 01:58 PM
JFK researcher Leo Sauvage asked Dallas Assistant District Attorney Jim Bowie whether a telephone call by Julia Postal had led to Oswald's arrest. Bowie told him there was a call from the cashier, but also that there were "Half a dozen calls!" Assuming this is correct, it seems pretty clear that everyone from Langley to the CIA station in Mexico City must have been calling the Dallas cops to get 26 of them to descend on the Texas Theater to collect that missing 90 cents!
For many years, John believed Lee's function was to lead the cops from 10th & Patton to the Texas Theater, but his thinking recently changed, prompting some of the new updates to the November 22 page of HarveyandLee.net. Harvey, wearing the brown shirt he was arrested in, probably arrived there a few minutes before 1:10. Soon he starts moving aimlessly around the theater, sitting next to one patron and then another, presumably seeking a contact.
Lee, wearing the white T-shirt all the Dallas police radio dispatches cited for the Tippit murder suspect, arrives at the theater around 1:20. For argument's sake, let's say Lee has already given his Eisenhower-style jacket and the Oswald/Hidell wallet to Westbrook, who is in the process of entering both into evidence at 10th & Patton. But Lee still has the revolver he used to kill Tippit. What does he do with it?
His job is to get the Tippit murder weapon into the patsy's hands, the final on-the-spot piece of the frame-up puzzle for "Lee Harvey Oswald." But exactly how does he do that?
Curiously, the call to the police does not go out from Postal (and others) until 1:45, nearly half an hour after the last Oswald arrived at the theater. So what was going on all that time?
John believes that the Tippit murder weapon was being transferred from Lee Oswald to Harvey Oswald via the "contact" Harvey was obviously seeking all the time he was at the theater. It may have been the pregnant lady Butch Burroughs saw Harvey Oswald sit next to. A minute or two after Harvey sat next to the pregnant lady, she walked out the theater, probably walking by the shoe store and giving the signal to Tommy Rowe and/or Johnny Brewer (most likely Rowe) that Harvey was now ready to be arrested. BRING ON THE 26 COPS, THE TRAP IS FULLY SET!
For many years, John believed Lee's function was to lead the cops from 10th & Patton to the Texas Theater, but his thinking recently changed, prompting some of the new updates to the November 22 page of HarveyandLee.net. Harvey, wearing the brown shirt he was arrested in, probably arrived there a few minutes before 1:10. Soon he starts moving aimlessly around the theater, sitting next to one patron and then another, presumably seeking a contact.
Lee, wearing the white T-shirt all the Dallas police radio dispatches cited for the Tippit murder suspect, arrives at the theater around 1:20. For argument's sake, let's say Lee has already given his Eisenhower-style jacket and the Oswald/Hidell wallet to Westbrook, who is in the process of entering both into evidence at 10th & Patton. But Lee still has the revolver he used to kill Tippit. What does he do with it?
His job is to get the Tippit murder weapon into the patsy's hands, the final on-the-spot piece of the frame-up puzzle for "Lee Harvey Oswald." But exactly how does he do that?
Curiously, the call to the police does not go out from Postal (and others) until 1:45, nearly half an hour after the last Oswald arrived at the theater. So what was going on all that time?
John believes that the Tippit murder weapon was being transferred from Lee Oswald to Harvey Oswald via the "contact" Harvey was obviously seeking all the time he was at the theater. It may have been the pregnant lady Butch Burroughs saw Harvey Oswald sit next to. A minute or two after Harvey sat next to the pregnant lady, she walked out the theater, probably walking by the shoe store and giving the signal to Tommy Rowe and/or Johnny Brewer (most likely Rowe) that Harvey was now ready to be arrested. BRING ON THE 26 COPS, THE TRAP IS FULLY SET!
HarveyandLee.net
Chief Justice Earl Warren: "Full disclosure was not possible for reasons of national security." – 1964
CIA accountant James B. Wilcott: Oswald received "a full-time salary for agent work for doing CIA operational work." – 1978
HSCA counsel Robert Tanenbaum: “Lee Harvey Oswald was a contract employee of the CIA and the FBI.†– 1996
Chief Justice Earl Warren: "Full disclosure was not possible for reasons of national security." – 1964
CIA accountant James B. Wilcott: Oswald received "a full-time salary for agent work for doing CIA operational work." – 1978
HSCA counsel Robert Tanenbaum: “Lee Harvey Oswald was a contract employee of the CIA and the FBI.†– 1996