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Re: Basic Facts Of The Case
R. A states...
"His wife to this day has *never* denied he owned that rifle"
Ben states "Simply untrue. Her original assertions were that Oswald didn't own a rifle."
Yeah, you know when she was trying to defend her husband as the whole crime unfolded before the world.....
But she later said he did own a rifle and she said he used to practice in the back yard dry firing it.......
"Was picked out of a line up by Howard Brennan for shooting JFK." - Yet another lie. It's true that he later changed his assertions to support this - but his original claim was that the person he saw was not in any lineup. Since both statements contradict each other - one of them was a lie.
The only issue would be to determine what is more likely to be the lie. Quite clearly, the SECOND statement is more likely to be the lie. Quite a bit of testimony has come down to us describing the fear & intimidation in 1963-64 ... The government needed Brennan to testify that he'd seen Oswald. They got it.
"(Although tried to sound unsure because he was worried for his (and his family's) safety.)" Yet he immediately ran to a police officer to describe what he saw. This is a contradiction that believers cannot explain. Clearly Brennan needed to come up with some sort of explanation for his earlier refusal to identify Oswald... Brennan's description of the assassin's clothing matches what others testified to... but we know Oswald wasn't wearing.
"He was picked out of a line up by multiple people for shooting Tippit."- it's also true that despite the rather abysmal setting of the lineups - practically forcing people to the "correct" conclusion - other witnesses, indeed the closest witnesses, refused to identify him.
Tippit was truly a gift for the Warren Commission - since the evidence of a Lone Assassin shooting the President was so weak - being able to point to murderous ability was a godsend to the commission.
"His pistol (as best as possible with that barrel) was shown to be the one that shot him." - Actually, the FBI testified that they couldn't match the bullets to that pistol... so the Warren Commission went 'expert hunting' - and found an expert who would so testify. Then the Warren Commission quite desperately moved the time of the shooting to a point where it might have been possible for Oswald to have made it to that point. And they had to get him off the bus (which provided him with an alibi) and get him into a taxi in order to get there on time. Nor is there any real chain of custody on the pistol:
Carroll grabbed a pistol from a mob of men - all of whom carried at least one pistol... no chain of custody...
"He fought (and tried to kill) the police officers who arrested him." - Yet the press reported Oswald's shouted: "I protest this police brutality and I am not resisting arrest!"... that Oswald attempted to kill Officer McDonald's is a fabrication of the Warren Commission that isn't demonstrated by the underlying evidence.
"He spent the whole weekend lying to the police." - This assertion is based on the presumption that the Warren Commission's theory is correct. For example, when Oswald said he didn't own a rifle, this was merely the truth... it contradicted the frameup, of course - but the Warren Commission could never show that Oswald actually owned a rifle with credible evidence.
"He wasn't a patsy for anyone because he *never* named any confederates that assisted him."- How would anyone know? We have days worth of questioning ... and a page or two of 'notes'. I daresay if I questioned you for only a single hour on a topic, I could produce 10 pages of notes quite easily.
So we see once again that a believer's assertion is simply begging the question. One presumes the facts first... But this doesn't get us to the truth... (I'm getting a sense of deja vu... I know I've been forced to say this before!)
"(And before anyone starts up that nonsense about the interrogations: he spoke directly to his brother, mother, wife, the media.....and named *nobody*.)" - the length of time he was allowed to speak to family or media was a fraction of the time he spent in questioning.
Oswald was almost certainly destined for killing for one very simple reason - he could unravel the plot. With Oswald alive, the Warren Commission would have been totally unable to produce their fiction... Oswald would have been able to name names and explain events. He would have been able to point to his CIA handler. He would have been able to explain why he asked for a particular FBI agent, and spent several hours with him when he'd been jailed. Oswald knew many things that are to this day unexplained.[/quote]
Already answered that one. (See above.)[/quote]
Unfortunately no.
This is a frequent tactic of believers, who consistently refer (without citation) to some past mythical answer... and if, by a process of elimination you can find the "answer" they refer to - it turns out never to be a complete answer.
I invite anyone, critic or believer, to QUOTE Anderson's answer to the above post.[/quote]