31-03-2015, 04:03 AM
All those scenarios involving the Ralph Leon Yates story sound plausible to me. At least Yates described a package long enough to hold the broken down Carcano.
The least plausible of all the tales, imo, is the officially accepted Frazier version. Besides the fact that there were no fingerprints, that the package described seemed to be too short, that no one at the Depository confirmed it, and that Oswald already had a curtain rod in his Beckley room, there is this ....
Remember all that crap (I THINK it was from Linnie Mae) about watching from the kitchen window as Oswald loaded the package into Wesley's car? As the following exhibits suggest, even the FBI/Warren Commission had a hard time believing that.
In the diagram below, the area shaded green represents Frazier's car. Because the wall of the carport was solid, it would be pretty difficult to see what was going on there.
In the photo below, the arrow points to Frazier's car. You can see the solid wall between the car and the carport and the kitchen area.
The suggestion that the Frazier tale may have been created out of perceived necessity before the Yates saga filtered through the system sounds pretty plausible to me, but no doubt we'll never be certain.
The least plausible of all the tales, imo, is the officially accepted Frazier version. Besides the fact that there were no fingerprints, that the package described seemed to be too short, that no one at the Depository confirmed it, and that Oswald already had a curtain rod in his Beckley room, there is this ....
Remember all that crap (I THINK it was from Linnie Mae) about watching from the kitchen window as Oswald loaded the package into Wesley's car? As the following exhibits suggest, even the FBI/Warren Commission had a hard time believing that.
In the diagram below, the area shaded green represents Frazier's car. Because the wall of the carport was solid, it would be pretty difficult to see what was going on there.
In the photo below, the arrow points to Frazier's car. You can see the solid wall between the car and the carport and the kitchen area.
The suggestion that the Frazier tale may have been created out of perceived necessity before the Yates saga filtered through the system sounds pretty plausible to me, but no doubt we'll never be certain.
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