20-08-2011, 11:25 PM
Bernice Moore Wrote:[size=12]TheTramp photographers[size=12] were JACK BEERS AND GEORGE Smith Forth Worth Star Telegram.. [/SIZE][/SIZE]
[size=12][size=12],JACK WHO worked for THE dallas morning news took 33 photos around and inside of the TSBD and the [/SIZE][/SIZE]
[size=12][size=12]tramps...and WILLIAM ALLEN WORKING FOR THE DALLAS TIMES HERALD TOOK 73 of DEALEY AND OF THE TSBD AS WELL AS 3[/SIZE]
of the tramps....
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Below is another man that was arrested, or escorted for questioning, so far is a "no namer"
That is Asst D.A....William Alexander getting into a patrol car....also taken by Jack Beers..
which is attached....SEE ARROW...
Some may be interested in the information and article link below......
NUMBERs 32-35.* Policeman with "tramps." None of these pictures were seen by the Warren Commission.
In the case of the "tramps," those three men who were rounded up on orders of Police Inspector J. Herbert Sawyer (the man in charge of security activity at Dealey Plaza), we find a sequence of astounding actions. A Sergeant D.V. Harkness was ordered to stop a freight train and remove the men. Harkness arrested the three men and turned them over to policemen Marvin Wise and Billy Bass, who marched them all the way from the west side of the Book building, around the north side of the Plaza, and into the vehicle entrance of the Sheriff's office. Few people realize this entire procedure took place almost on the steps of the Sheriff's office. While Wise and Bass were marching these men to the Sheriff's office, William Allen, George Smith, and Jack Beers of the Dallas Times Herald, the Fort Worth Star Telegram, and the Dallas Morning News, took several pictures of them. Their remarkable pictures show clearly that Wise and Bass took them to the Sheriff's office. Yet Harkness and Sheriff Harold Elkins couldn't remember that there were any other policemen with Harkness. This is utterly ridiculous in the face of so many clear pictures. Why was this done? And why weren't these amazing pictures shown to the Commission so that it could order the men before them. And worse still, there is absolutely no record anywhere that these men were booked that day. There are no "blotter" records at all. The men have simply vanished.
I have been given a list of the names of these men. Also, the pictures show three policemen. Did the Sheriff, or someone in that office, spirit them away? And why did the Sheriff, who had all of these men in his custody, permit them to get away within minutes of the time that the President of the United States had been shot and killed on his doorstep? These are tough questions, but let's go a bit further. Why didn't the all-powerful Warren Commission -- which included the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, the former Director of Central Intelligence, the man who is now our President, etc. -- why didn't they have an opportunity to see these pictures? The photos would have led them to ask these questions and then to demand answers.
http://www.john-f-kennedy.net/thegunsofdallas.htm
b:willy:
Long-coat man is yet another character with a suspicious appearance. It appears as though there is a rigid object under his suit coat. I'm sure he, as well as the tramps, Braden, etc., had federal ID cards and a contact person for whom police supervisors were to call. Under the guise of undercover agents, they were let go, I think. How else can you explain the questions you raised? Remember Roger Craig telling how Sheriff Decker told his plainclothes deputies to "in no way, take part in the security of the motorcade."