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Northside East Tenth Street
#1
The official script writers faced a two-fold problem relative to Tippit's murder. On one hand they had to set back the start time and compress the interim. On the other they had to restrict the cast to a pliable subset of neighborhood characters. The former required a distorted bus schedule, transcript mutilation, slow watches & human motion in space out of time; the latter isolation chambers for players who fail the test of coincidence, invisible to others despite being thrust upon the same stage at the same time.

Obvious example -- pseudo-eyewitness Benavides, seen by no one at the time the shots were fired, chosen in large part because Bowley was rejected and someone had to make the radio call, and his bright yellow pick-up was due on site soon enough. For WC purposes he was a competent radio operator, a skill lost by the time HSCA went about its business of modifying the WR script concerning Tippit's murder while attempting to prop up its invalid hypothesis by overlaying defective participants with improved models.

Callaway operated in another isolation chamber inside Scoggins' cab -- unrecognized by both Scoggins & Russell, an identification easily ascertained by a quick visit to Dootch Motors, directly across Patton from Scoggins' domino club and directly across Jefferson from Russell's POE.

Plotting was further complicated by investigative multiplicity and inevitable intrusion of personna non grata into the official playlist, which brings us to Frank Cimino of 405 East 10th Street. He was something of an accidental witness, evidenced only by a statement given to the FBI, spurned by DPD, SS, WC & HSCA, who had good reason to act as if he did not exist.

The DPD shunned the odd-numbered side of East 10th Street, with the sole exception of reserve Sergeant Croy whose sense of suspicion was aroused by a woman who may have been watering a yard at a northside residence. His keen mind at once entertained the possibility that she might have lived there, a problem he could have solved if not for the failure of discerning the precise nature of her activity. [WC XII p.203]

Cimino resided directly across the street from the Tippit murder, heard the shots, heard the screams, donned his shoes and rushed outside to encounter Markham --

...dressed like a waitress ... out in front of his residence shouting, "Call the police." She also advised a man had just shot a police officer and stated he had run west on Tenth Street and pointed in the direction of an alley which runs between Tenth Street and Jefferson off Patton Street. [DL 89-43]

First to encounter Markham post-shooting, Cimino otherwise saw nobody. However, here we have an example of temporal compression. Despite the sense of immediacy conveyed by the terse wording of the report, his emergence from the house was not instantaneous. An interval of several minutes elapsed between hearing the shots and arriving at the body during which Markham traveled from the NW corner of Patton & 10th to the front of his residence, with attendant delays. She did not move from the corner until the gunman had already turned onto Patton. This event unfolded in stages, as Mrs. M painstakingly repeated for Congressman Ford, enumerated:

1. After he shot the policeman he turned around, came back around toward Patton Street. He wasn't he didn't seem to be in a no hurry.
2. he was fooling with his gun in his hands, and he seen me, and he stops.
3. I put my hands over my face and closed my eyes, because I knew he was going to kill me. I couldn't scream, I couldn't holler. I froze.
4. after I put my hands up, and when I had opened my fingers and my eyes and slowly pulled them down, he was trotting off.
5. He ran back, turned and came back down 10th to Patton Street. He cut across Patton Street like this.... Then he was still in sight when I began to scream and holler and run to this police car, well, to Mr. Tippit.
[WC III p.321]

At this point the shoes went on and Cimino went out to a scene of death & near solitude. He heard Markham, examined the corpse, observed the holster & gun, and "about this time people came from all directions." Among them Bowley, who looked at his watch and noted the time, 1:10, about to take over the radio from a nondescript individual in the squad car "who stated he didn't know how to operate it." [DPD affidavit 12/2/63] In fourteen years this man will acquire Mexican features, the HSCA feigning identification instead of taking the trouble to establish it. [HSCA interview 11/12/77]

Cimino missed what next door neighbor Doris Holan saw during the interval between shots & screams --

Mrs Holan also noticed something else that had not previously, ever been reported. A second police car in the driveway, which went all the way back to the alley, moving forward slowly towards Tippit's car on Tenth. Near the police car she also saw a man in the driveway walking toward the street where Tippit was parked.

She went downstairs at once and over to Tippit. The man in the driveway continued to the street, walked in front of Tippit's patrol car, paused and looked down at Tippit's head, and retraced his path up the driveway. At the same time, the police car changed direction and backed up in the driveway to the alley running parallel to Tenth, behind the houses on 404 and 410.
[Brownlow interview]

The second police car is not mentioned in Cimino's report. Tippit's car #10 may have blocked his view of the alley [CE 522], or it was deliberately omitted. Holan said nothing about either Benavides or his truck. She did not see him because he was not there. If his truck had been parked in the WR position [CE 1968] it would have blocked her view of Tippit. DPD photo 91-001/016 shows the sight line from the south side of 10th street.

Unknown what Holan did next, but she may have receded back into the northside landscape, picked up a hose and watered the grass, thereby boggling Croy.
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#2
I do wonder, as I wander, uh, if Ms Holan was uh, the only witness that reported seeing a uh, second police car at the scene, in a driveway, at the time of the shooting of DPD Officer JD Tippet? And, if so, was she interviewed by anyone uh, other than Mr Brownlow. Just seeking a clarification.

Larry
StudentofAssassinationResearch

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#3
Guinyard also reported seeing a second police car at the scene, information likewise from Michael Brownlow. This item turns up in various locations around the internet --

Mrs. Holan's account of a second police car is supported by the comments of Sam Guinyard, who told Brownlow in 1970 that he saw a police car in the alley shortly after the police shooting. The man in the driveway was apparently also seen by others: a resident of the neighborhood, who wishes to remain anonymous, told Prof Pulte, in 1990, that he had heard about a man in the driveway who approached Tippit's car.


I do not know if she was interviewed by anyone other than Brownlow/Pulte.
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#4
Milo Reech Wrote:Guinyard also reported seeing a second police car at the scene, information likewise from Michael Brownlow. This item turns up in various locations around the internet --
Mrs. Holan's account of a second police car is supported by the comments of Sam Guinyard, who told Brownlow in 1970 that he saw a police car in the alley shortly after the police shooting. The man in the driveway was apparently also seen by others: a resident of the neighborhood, who wishes to remain anonymous, told Prof Pulte, in 1990, that he had heard about a man in the driveway who approached Tippit's car.


I do not know if she was interviewed by anyone other than Brownlow/Pulte.

A little short of solid proof, in my opinion.::thumbsdown::

Larry
StudentofAssassinationResearch

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#5
I agree, but there isn't much in the way of solid proof in any of this. In similar fashion the argument for Benavides' presence 15 feet from the killing lacks corroboration. When the FBI compiled a list of "WITNESSES TO THE SHOOTING" [CO-2-34,030 12/1/63] bus driver McWatters made the cut but not Benavides.

Detective Leavelle's Supplementary Offense Report (11/22/63) states, "Another witness who saw the officer lying in the street, but did not see suspect, was a Domingo Benavides," and goes on to describe him in action picking up "2 spent 38 hulls," nothing about being there when the shots were fired. Leavelle also states that Benavides gave an affidavit ("All of the above witnesses, with the exception of Scoggins, made affidavits"). This affidavit was either lost or destroyed, the latter much more likely than the former, for the sake of script revision.

When Bowley was rejected as a WC witness (strong Ruby ties and he told the time) Benavides' role was augmented to make the radio call. This led to the peculiar stage direction of having Benavides enter the same scene twice. The interlude he described of walking down the alley toward his mother's house is puzzling until one realizes it was a preemptive strike against the presence of a second squad car. It also served as a hedge against others who witnessed his actual arrival, such as Guinyard, but in this instance the revised script went awry. Guinyard gave the game away when he testified that Benavides arrived on tenth street in his truck (not on foot) long after the shots were fired, just in time to gather the hulls.

For the offical story Benavides was invaluable: the "eyewitness" who eyewitnessed nothing, crouched behind the dashboard at the killing scene, duration unspecified & elastic, on hand to suit the convenience of whatever plot element was about to be concocted.
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#6
For resolution of the murder of DPD Officer JD Tippet, I would think first one has to approach the case as unsolved, simply because no one was tried and convicted. Had LeeHarveyOswald gone to trial, when forced to testify under oath and cross examined some "strong" witnesses for the prosecution may have "weakened" somewhat, and some not provable "stories" may not have been told.
In any event, it is unlikely that a second DPD automobile was actually seen at the scene. But, it should be of interest that the Officer JDT murder occurred in somewhat close proximity to JackLeonRuby's apartment, especially considering the murder of handcuffed and in police custody LHO by JLR just two days later.

Larry
StudentofAssassinationResearch

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#7
LR Trotter Wrote:But, it should be of interest that the Officer JDT murder occurred in somewhat close proximity to JackLeonRuby's apartment, especially considering the murder of handcuffed and in police custody LHO by JLR just two days later.


I suppose this is so in a vague way, but I'd like to know more. What is the precise relationship between Ruby's residence & Tippit's murder apart from a loose geographical coincidence?
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#8
Milo Reech Wrote:
LR Trotter Wrote:But, it should be of interest that the Officer JDT murder occurred in somewhat close proximity to JackLeonRuby's apartment, especially considering the murder of handcuffed and in police custody LHO by JLR just two days later.


I suppose this is so in a vague way, but I'd like to know more. What is the precise relationship between Ruby's residence & Tippit's murder apart from a loose geographical coincidence?

​If a "loose" geographical coincidence, it is a "loose but strange" geographical coincidence. In any event, I have questions, but no real answers. To know the absolute truth about the DPD Officer JD Tippet murder could carry a lot of weight concerning that day's events.

Larry
StudentofAssassinationResearch

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