The far right pose below is one that did not turn up until 1976, and it turned up in the possession of Roscoe White's widow. Roscoe had been brought aboard the DPD team in September of 1963 and there are some critics who believe that he was one of the shooters in Dealey Plaza. One thing for sure, though, about Roscoe White, is that he was an expert at photo manipulation.
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Another oddity about this third photo is explained here by David Josephs:
"The existence of 133-C is not acknowledged until 1977 yet somehow the Dallas Police Dept with the help of Roscoe White has placed Det. Brown in the exact pose of 133-C. They create a cut-out image of Oswald also in the exact same pose as 133-C. Yet 133-C, according to the evidence, is not something the DPD, FBI or WC is aware of until 14 years later. Finally, when Oswald's image from 133-C is pasted back into the 133-C Oswald pose, the image is terribly skewed and obviously not "original" or matching.
"How can the DPD or FBI be aware of this pose, enough so as to place a man exactly in that pose for test photos,and how come the image and the cut-out are so badly aligned? Until these questions are answered, one must consider the possibility that these images and poses existed well before they were discovered and that the DPD or FBI made sure that only one of these negatives survives so they cannot be shown to be EXACT, as opposed to similar."
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