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Josh Cron

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  1. Florer's only known statement was to the Sheriff's Department on the day of the assassination (19H476). There is also an FBI report from the same day (CD5 pg.45). As far as I know, he has not otherwise been interviewed. I recently spoke with an individual who was watching the parade with Florer at the time the shots were fired. If he was up to anything nefarious that day, it was not occuring during the shooting sequence.
  2. Sergio Arcacha Smith See this thread recently started on the other forum: http://www.jfkassassinationforum.com/index.php/topic,10049.0.html
  3. http://www.intelius.com/results.php?ReportType=1&formname=name&qf=eugene&qmi=b&qn=dinkin&qcs=&focusfirst=1 We found Eugene Barry Dinkin! Eugene Barry Dinkin, 75 Address History Van Nuys, CA Killeen, TX Washington, DC Worked at Army Corps Central Intelligence Agency
  4. Was doing some research today on Eugene Boone and came across these: https://texas2011sixthfloor.pbworks.com/w/browse/#view=ViewFolder&param=SixthFloor Other than Boone, the link has transcripts for the oral histories of Buell Frazier, Bob Jackson, Nick McDonald, Luke Mooney, Carl Day, Hank Norman, Paul Bentley, and Dorothy Bush. Of interest so far: Luke Mooney, 12/4/2002 Gary Mack: Were you... were you among the first people up there? [behind the picket fence] Luke Mooney: No, no. Lord no. I don’t know how many people was up there before me, no telling. Gary: So, you... Luke: But anyway, when I looked around and checked the area and I didn’t see anybody out there that was suspicious, and so I said, “This...” We started over to the entrance to where the freight docks were, and there was two big ‘ole wire gates there made out of cyclone fencing, high, and they were open. And I happened to know a man standing there, and I told him, I said, “Bill, he’s a civilian.” And I says, “I’m shutting these gates. Don’t let nobody in or out.” And so, the other two officers went... took the stairs or went in, and I started up. And I seen that old elevator and two employees that were women, we jumped on that ‘ole freight elevator and we went up one floor and they cut—the best I remember, one floor—they cut the power off. Thank goodness, it was where we could get off. Gary: I’m sorry. They cut the power on or off? Luke: They cut the power off in the building. Gary: Really? Luke: Right. Gary: No... no electricity at all? Luke: No, no power. Gary: Who did that? Luke: I don’t know. Management, I guess, or the maintenance, the engineers, or somebody. Anyway, they cut the power off to the building. We didn’t have no power, no lights, no nothing. Gary: How soon after the assassination did that happen? Luke: Man... Gary: Like five minutes or...? Luke: It wasn’t much over five or ten minutes. Eugene Boone, 11/25/2003 The presidential car was just entering the Triple Underpass. Several of the motorcycles that had been leading the parade, the officers had dropped their motorcycles and it took just a second or two to get those motorcycles out of the way to get the presidential car going toward Parkland Hospital. One of the motorcycle officers and I ran up what’s been referred to in the years since then as the Grassy Knoll area to where the cement abutment for the Overpass and the fence met in the corner. I helped him over the fence, and he helped me. He pulled me over the fence. He went back around over toward the Post Office Annex, and I went out into the freight yards. In a situation like that, you’re looking for something that really doesn’t belong there. You’re looking for something that’s really out of place. And I went through some of the Pullman cars that were over the freight yard and talked with an observer—a railroad employee—that was in the observation tower over there and asked him if he could see anything and he could not. I did talk with a porter who had been over there cleaning up one of the Pullman cars. As a matter of fact, we scared each other. He came walking down beside the car, and I heard the gravel as he was walking on the gravel. And I was on the landing of one of the cars, and as he came abreast of the landing, I had my pistol out and he was just looking right down the barrel of my pistol whenever he came abreast of the car. And I said, “Hold it,” and he said, “Abba, abba, abba” (laughing). And we both were scared (laughing), and it wasn’t but just a moment until I could discover, you know, that he was back there cleaning up the cars and didn’t have anything to do with it. But... but did get an interview from him. There was an interview that was taken from him.
  5. The document in Sean's post lists the ALLRIGHT address as 1208 Commerce. Not along the motorcade route, but close.
  6. Gayle Nix Jackson was kind enough to post this link of upcoming television programs focusing on President Kennedy at jfkassassinationforum.com: http://www.channelguidemagblog.com/index.php/2013/10/31/jfk-assassination-50th-anniversary-tv-programming/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=jfk-assassination-50th-anniversary-tv-programming The Kennedys – Nov. 3 from 12pm-8pm on ReelzChannel. ReelzChannel re-airs its controversial 2011 miniseries, starring Greg Kinnear and Katie Holmes, in its entirety, leading into its new special JFK: The Smoking Gun. JFK: The Smoking Gun — Nov. 3 at 8pm on ReelzChannel. This docudrama is based on the work of veteran police detective Colin McLaren, who spent four years on the forensic cold case investigation of JFK’s assassination. McLaren believes he has found the “smoking gun” that killed the president. JFK: The Lost Bullet – Nov. 8 at 7pm on NGC. This special features home videos from the JFK assassination, including the restored Zapruder film, remastered in high definition and combined together into one film. The digital scans include details in the areas of exposed film between the sprocket holes. Can the obscured information shed light on some of the controversies surrounding JFK’s death? JFK: The Final Hours — Nov. 8 at 8pm on NGC. Premiering a few days ahead of the network’s Killing Kennedy, this two-hour National Geographic Channel documentary retraces the final day of President John F. Kennedy’s life through firsthand accounts from those who were there. Actor Bill Paxton, who, as a child, was among those in the crowd of a Fort Worth hotel parking lot where Kennedy gave one of his last public speeches shortly before his death, hosts the special. “I was 8 years old that day,” recalls Paxton in an NGC release, “and I remember thinking it was like seeing a movie star. There stood a man at the peak of his life and his career, but little did he or any of us know that in three hours he would be murdered in cold blood.” The Lost JFK Tapes: The Assassination – Nov. 8 at 10pm on NGC. This program reveals rarely seen archival footage of the JFK assassination that has been digitally captured and assembled into a detailed timeline. Included is footage capturing the real-time horror of parade-goers who witnessed the killing, the out-of-breath local anchors reporting the breaking news bulletin, the priest who describes administering the president’s last rites and the ongoing, on-air speculation over who fired the fatal shots. Killing Kennedy — Nov. 8 at 8pm on NGC. This film is based on Bill O’Reilly’s bestseller and chronicles the fateful collision course between the disparate lives of President John F. Kennedy (Rob Lowe) and Lee Harvey Oswald (Will Rothhaar). The film also stars Ginnifer Goodwin as Jackie Kennedy, and Michelle Trachtenberg (who speaks about 80 percent of her role in Russian) as Oswald’s wife, Marina. JFK: American Experience — Nov. 11-12 at 9pm on PBS (check local listings). This new, four-hour portrait of John F. Kennedy airs over two nights. It offers a fresh assessment of the man, his accomplishments and his unfulfilled promise, featuring interviews with Kennedy family members as well as historians. Capturing Oswald — Nov. 12 at 10pm on Military Channel. To mark the 50th anniversary of President John F. Kennedy’s assassination, retired homicide detectives and officers from the Dallas Police Department (DPD) break their silence about the events of November 22, 1963, in the Military Channel’s one-hour documentary. Many of them haven’t spoken publicly in years about the tragic events which unfolded on that fateful day but now, for the first time ever, they come together to provide a collective, detailed account of the DPD investigation that had JFK’s alleged assassin in custody within 90 minutes of the shooting. NOVA: “Cold Case JFK” — Nov. 13 at 9pm on PBS (check local listings). This episode of NOVA looks to see what modern science can tell us about the shooting in Dallas and the investigations that followed. A team of foremost experts employs exclusive tests and sophisticated new technology to reconstruct and review the evidence. The program marks the first time since the original investigation by the FBI laboratory that forensic scientists trained and experienced in both firearms identification and shooting-scene reconstruction review and evaluate the ballistics evidence in the JFK assassination. Secrets of the Dead: “JFK: One PM Central Standard Time” — Nov. 13 at 10pm on PBS (check local listings). This special chronicles minute-by-minute the assassination of Kennedy as it was revealed, from the moment the president was shot until newsman Walter Cronkite’s tearful pronouncement of his death one hour and eight minutes later. Rarely seen archival footage from the CBS newsroom and local broadcasts in Dallas are featured. This Week with George Stephanopoulos – Nov. 17 at 10am on ABC. This installment will feature a special tribute to President John F. Kennedy and a live panel discussion on the impact and significance of the Kennedy legacy 50 years later. The Day Kennedy Died — Nov. 17 at 9pm on Smithsonian Channel. Kevin Spacey narrates this two-hour look at the Kennedy assassination that uses eyewitness accounts, rarely seen film and photographs to present a minute-by-minute recounting of the infamous day in Dallas. Among the participants in the film who were actually there that day and offer their accounts are a Secret Service agent who agonized that he was too late; the doctor who tried to save Kennedy; the man wrongly accused of JFK’s murder; a woman who discovered she had sheltered Lee Harvey Oswald the night before; and a bystander who was injured by shrapnel from one of the bullets fired at the president. Letters to Jackie: Remembering President Kennedy — Nov. 17 at 9pm on TLC. This two-hour film revisits the months following the assassination of President Kennedy, when the first lady became the heart of the nation. In response, thousands of U.S. citizens and mourners around the world reached out in support. In the film, celebrities lend their voices to give life to some of the powerful letters Jackie Kennedy received. Among the stars providing voices are Jessica Chastain, Viola Davis, Zooey Deschanel, Anne Hathaway, John Krasinski, Laura Linney, Mark Ruffalo, Octavia Spencer and Channing Tatum. Good Morning America – Nov. 21 at 7am on ABC. The show will provide an exclusive first-look at the newly released audio recordings of police, investigators and on-site reporters from the day President Kennedy was shot. These recordings will be featured in the Discovery Channel special JFK: The Lost Tapes later that evening. JFK: The Lost Tapes — Nov. 21 at 7pm on Discovery Channel; Nov. 22 at 9pm on Military Channel. In this one-hour special, new government tapes from Air Force One offer insight into what happened that fateful day in Dallas, and the inside story of a government struggling to come to grips with a crisis spiraling further out of control with each passing minute. Never-before-heard radio recordings from the Dallas Police Department reveal the desperate search for evidence, the frantic manhunt, and the crucial moments that led to the identification and arrest of Lee Harvey Oswald. Amid it all, news radio reports from around Dallas reveal the panic and chaos that threatened to engulf the city. The Lost Kennedy Home Movies – Nov. 21 at 8pm on H2. Gathered from archives and attics and now seen for the first time, these extremely rare home movies tell the story of the children of Joseph and Rose Kennedy, as they grew up in the 1930s and ’40s through November 1963, and include scenes of the last weekend Jack and Jackie Kennedy spent with Caroline and John Jr., just two weeks before Dallas. JFK — Nov. 21 at 8pm on HDNet Movies. In remembrance of the 50th anniversary of the John F. Kennedy assassination, HDNet Movies airs Oliver Stone’s Oscar-winning 1991 film. Kevin Costner, Sissy Spacek, Kevin Bacon, Tommy Lee Jones, Gary Oldman, Donald Sutherland, Jack Lemmon, Joe Pesci, John Candy, Walter Matthau and Ed Asner star. TCM Commemorates the JFK Assassination 50th Anniversary — Nov. 21 beginning at 8pm on TCM. Turner Classic Movies commemorates the event with a primetime lineup of five documentaries about John F. Kennedy’s election, presidency and tragic death. Also included is a popular drama about Kennedy’s service during World War II. The first four documentaries airing were filmed by Robert Drew in the early 1960s — Primary (1960) focuses on the 1960 Wisconsin Democratic Primary contest between JFK and Hubert Humphrey; Adventures on the New Frontier (1961) looks at the first days of the newly elected President Kennedy; Crisis: Behind a Presidential Commitment (1963) details the Kennedy administration’s showdown with Alabama Gov. George Wallace over racial integration; and Faces of November (1964) focuses on the assassination of JFK as seen through the faces of mourners at his funeral. This is followed by Mel Stuart’s 1964 documentary Four Days in November, an Oscar-nominated chronicle of the assassination and the days after; and the 1963 drama PT 109, starring Cliff Robertson as a young John Kennedy. The Kennedy Assassination: 24 Hours After – Nov. 21 at 10pm on H2. This 2009 special uses never-before-seen transcripts only recently made public to piece together the 24-hour period after the shots were fired. The timeline reveals startling new information about the death of the president and the traumatic transfer of power to his successor, Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson. ABC coverage of the JFK assassination 50th anniversary day ceremonies – Nov. 22 on ABC. On the actual 50th anniversary date, ABC will feature live reporting from Dallas on Good Morning America (7am), followed by a series of reports on World News with Diane Sawyer (6:30pm). Sawyer will have a special report on the lives of Jackie Kennedy Onassis and Caroline Kennedy. Byron Pitts will investigate the many conspiracy theories that have swirled around the JFK assassination, and Pitts will also report on the day’s events from Dallas. ABC’s Nightline (12:35am) travels back to the scene with the millennial generation family members of key participants in the events of Nov. 22, 1963, who discuss the impact the assassination had on their own lives and on the country. Online, ABC News Digital will kick off special live-stream coverage of the 50th anniversary ceremonies at the Sixth Floor Museum in Dallas and the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum in Boston on Nov. 22 across ABCNews.com, GoodMorningAmerica.com and ABC News iPad, iPhone and Android apps. Commander In Chief: Inside the Oval Office: “Kennedy and the Cuban Missile Crisis” – Nov. 22 at 8pm on Military Channel. First aired last year to mark the 50th anniversary of the Cuban Missile Crisis, this episode brings viewers inside the tense and contentious debates that took place in the White House in October of 1962 as the U.S. and the Soviet Union teetered on the brink of nuclear war. Using rare images and declassified audio recordings, this behind-the-scenes story takes viewers deep into chambers of power where President John F. Kennedy resisted forces pushing him towards war and pulled the world back from the edge of destruction. JFK Assassination: The Definitive Guide — Nov. 22 at 8pm on History. In this two-hour special, History reveals the findings from a survey it conducted on the JFK assassination, about which conspiracy theories still run rampant. Among its findings — 74 percent of Americans believe that Lee Harvey Oswald was the fall guy for a larger alternate theory. The program explores the myriad alternative theories that Americans find more plausible. JFK: In His Own Words – Nov. 22 at 9pm on HBO. This encore presentation of the 1988 special features rare footage and audio of JFK, much of which was seen and heard for the very first time in this documentary. Tom Brokaw Special: Where Were You? – Nov. 22 at 9pm on NBC. This two-hour special looks back at the infamous date of Nov. 22, 1963. By combining archival footage with first-person stories of those who lived through the JFK assassination, the program looks to offer a new perspective on the event. According to NBC special correspondent Tom Brokaw, who hosts this special, “The assassination of this vibrant young President who was changing American politics and expectations for the future was a monumental event in a century filled with epic developments. A half century later we’re still bewildered, wondering and trying to cope with who he was and how his death changed us.” Lee Harvey Oswald: 48 Hours to Live — Nov. 22 at 10pm on History. This two-hour special is an account of the intense, final two days of Lee Harvey Oswald’s life — his attempt to flee, his capture by police and the grueling interrogation by the Dallas police detectives prior to being shot by Jack Ruby. -------------------------------------- Adding to that list, the Travel Channel will be airing their program "America Declassified" Sunday, November 3 at 10pm with the episode dedicated to the assassination. A sneak peak can be viewed at the following link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Atq7yfaHKXE&list=UUJUAqHnkDX15IvFoXIGTm2A ------------------------------------- Please add any programs not mentioned here, and I will insert them into this post, so we can all have a schedule handy.
  7. Josh, Can you add any details? Someone who was watching the motorcade with Larry Florer probably has a lot of interesting things to say. Not too much to tell Chris. This individual and Florer, who were coworkers at a "business machine outfit", were watching the motorcade on Main Street from a position near the Main and Houston intersection. After the limousine passed the pair turned and headed back up Main. Soon after he heard three fairly evenly spaced shots that "could have easily been fired by a bolt-action rifle", but had no idea where they were coming from to the extent he couldn't even tell if they were high or low. Assuming the sounds were fireworks, the two seperated and the individual I interviewed returned to work. Roughly an hour later, at work, he recieved a call from Florer who informed him that he had been arrested and requested he come to the police station and "help get this straightened out." By the time he got down to the police station Florer had already been released.
  8. Cross Larry Florer off the list. I just got off the phone with a witness who was watching the motorcade with Florer in Dealey Plaza at the time of the shots.
  9. http://www.giljesus.com/Tippit/police_lineups.htm
  10. Bill and Chris, Did either of you recieve a reply from the Star-News?
  11. Not necessarily Bill. I recently contacted Barry Ernest trying to obtain an obituary for Victoria Adamas, and Mr. Ernest informed me that none existed. And, of course, there is always the possibility that McKinnon's last name has changed between '83 and today.
  12. I've serached extensively for Cheryl McKinnon with no luck. There are no Cheryl McKinnon's of the appropriate age listed in either Texas or California. To my knowledge, the only thing she has written on the assassination is her article in the San Diego Star News from 11/22/83 entitled "My Last Look at Mr. President". It's easy to find if you google the title.
  13. Larry, according to Robert Groden, Menninger visited Groden's home and viewed this photo while writing Mortal Error. He chose to ignore the photographic evidence.
  14. I tried tracking down Aubrey Suggs, figuring if he was a friend of Worrell's that he would have been relatively young at the time of the assassination. He appears to have passed away in June of 1973 at the age of 53. Cause of death unknown to me at this time.
  15. Document 89-43-9865: letter from Charles Gharis to Frank Dyson, Dallas Chief of Police, December 28, 1970, Re the assassination of President Kennedy and the murder of Lee Harvey Oswald. Mr. Frank Dyson Chief of Police City of Dallas, Texas Dear Mr. Dyson, The night before Oswald was shot in the Dallas City Hall I asked ass’t. chief N.T. Fisher out to my house and had him read twice the letter I had written to President John Kennedy in July, 1962. In this letter there was information to the President about his assassination. Oswald’s address was also in this letter. I told Fisher that they were going to kill Oswald there in the City Hall. He told me that it was not the ploice [sic] dept’s to get Oswald to the county jail, that was the sheriff’s worry. I gave Fisher my copy of the letter with the understanding that it would be returned to me. There was also a list of almost “200” mens [sic] names. I asked Fisher for the return of those papers and I was told that they have been misplaced. (That is the type of answer you might give to a one year old infant and certainly not the type to give a person who has done everything to co-operate with your dept.) I am again asking for the return of those papers. Sincerely yours Charles Gharis
  16. Letter from Jim Bowles to Dennis Morissette, 10/3/90 (posted on Morissette’s website jfkassassinationfiles.com): Yes, Harry Weatherford was on the roof with a second deputy, and he had a rifle. They were assigned there for security.
  17. Karl, I don’t necessarily take this Shaw quote as meaning Carr saw the Rambler from the 7th floor of the new courthouse. I think it’s just a case of some improper wording.
  18. Cover-Up by Gary Shaw, undated interview of Roger Craig by Shaw and Penn Jones (pg.144) A man with a gun is known to have been on the roof of County Records Building during the assassination. According to Roger Craig, Deputy Sheriff Harry Weatherford was at this location with a rifle equipped with a telescopic sight… Deputy Sheriff Pat Boyd told Craig that two weeks prior to the shooting of Kennedy and Connally, he (Boyd) had built a silencer for a .30 caliber carbine owned by Weatherford. Interview by Gary Shaw and Larry Harris of an unknown researcher, November of 1975 (pg.144) In 1969 a young assassination researcher interviewed Weatherford, and was taken by the man’s savage demeanor. He asked him point-blank if he had shot Connally or Kennedy. Weatherford snapped, “You little son of a b----, I shoot a lot of people.”
  19. Cover-Up by Gary Shaw, interview by Shaw in April of 1975 (pg.13) Mrs. Walther was not the only person to see a man wearing a brown suit coat on an upper floor of the Depository. Steelworker Richard Randolph Carr was working on the seventh story of the new courthouse building, then under construction at Commerce and Houston Streets. Carr saw, standing on the sixth floor of the Depository, a heavy-set man wearing a hat, tan sportcoat and horn-rimmed glasses. Very shortly after the President was shot Carr observed a Rambler station wagon with a luggage rack parked facing north alongside the eastern side of the Depository and on the wrong side of Houston Street. Two men ran from either inside or from behind the building and entered the Rambler, which left in such a hurry that one of its doors was still open; Carr last saw the station wagon speeding north on Houston. After climbing to the ground, to see what had happened, Carr looked up Houston Street and saw the same man in the tan jacket that he had seen in the Book Depository. Carr told the author that the man was “in an extreme hurry and kept looking over his shoulder.” He was last seen walking rapidly eastward on Commerce Street. Carr was not called to testify before the Warren Commission. But the experience he had with agencies investigating the President’s murder was typical of that of several other witnesses. Carr told the author in a taped interview: “The FBI came to my house - there was two of them - and they said they heard I witnessed the assassination and I said I did. They told me, ‘If you didn’t see Lee Harvey Oswald in the School Book Depository with a rifle, you didn’t witness it.’ I said, ‘Well, the man I saw on television that they tell me is Lee Harvey Oswald was not in the window of the School Book Depository. That’s not the man.’ And he (the FBI agent) said I better keep my mouth shut. He did not ask me what I saw, he told me what I saw.” Not long after the above visit, real harassment began. Like a number of other witnesses, Carr found that it could be frustrating - and downright dangerous - if one tried to contradict the official lie in favor of the facts. One night Carr was paid a visit by twelve Dallas policemen and detectives. With a search warrant they went through the entire home (“They tore up the house,” Carr said), supposedly searching for “stolen articles.” While this was done Carr and his wife were ordered to sit on a couch while two of the policemen held shotguns on them. They took Carr and his son to jail and held the elder overnight. His son was questioned for several hours as they attempted to make him admit that “stolen articles” were in his father’s house. The following day Carr received an anonymous telephone call advising him to “get out of Texas.” The threatening phone calls continued and finally, for the safety of his family, Carr moved to Montana. Things for Carr were no better in Montana. One morning three sticks of dynamite were found wired to the ignition of his automobile. Fifteen days before he was to testify at the Clay Shaw trial in New Orleans, Carr stepped out on his front porch and was almost shot by a gunman; Carr was alerted by a policeman who lived next door and they were able to apprehend the would-be killer. After testifying at the hearing for Shaw, Carr was attacked in Atlanta, Georgia by two men, one of which stabbed Carr in the back and in the left arm; the knife blade actually broke off in his arm. Carr shot one of the assailants three times, killing him. He then fled to relatives in West Virginia where he turned himself in and was later no-billed by an Atlanta jury. Carr and his family were not bothered for several years. But in early 1975, as talk of reopening the JFK investigation increased, they began to receive more threatening phone calls. Now Carr no longer answers the telephone unless he is certain who is calling.
  20. I've never been a big fan of anyone who tried to ban the use of a word. What if OJ Simpson or Bernie Madoff joined the forum? Would I be kicked out for calling them liars?
  21. (continued from the post above) (When asked about how Oswald left the depository) Well, there’s been a lot of rumors. When we were outside the building, before we’d gone in, I remember seeing Lee come from the dock area and walk up the street beside the Texas School Book Depository building and there was so many things going on and I saw him as he walked up and he went across Houston Street and I thought he might have been going to get him a sandwich or something so I really didn’t think anything about it. And I lost him in the crowd. I don’t know what happened from there. (When asked how long after the assassination this was) Oh, five to ten minutes probably… He crossed Houston Street and then started across Elm Street and I turned because someone said something to me and I turned to answer them and then when I turned back and looked in that direction, he was gone. (When asked if he could have come out the front door of the depository) No. (When asked how close to Oswald he got) …probably ten to twelve feet… He didn’t look any different or act any different than he did… He had his jacket on… A jacket, of course, which was "found" in the depository over a week later.
  22. From Frazier's 2002 Oral History for the Sixth Floor: (After Mack asks him if he noticed anything unusual in the plaza before the shooting) The only thing I can remember that I thought was a little unusual - and maybe it wasn’t - but it was a little unusual to me, I thought the motorcycle policemen who were escorting the President’s car - there was several of them and they were - because they was getting pretty close to getting onto the freeway, and I don’t know how long, how many blocks they had gone in this parade - but they were kind of clowning around, cutting their motorcycles on and off to make them backfire and so forth. I thought that was a little unusual… Mack then asks Frazier if they were doing this on purpose, to which Frazier replies in the affirmative.
  23. http://www.thespoiler.co.uk/2009/03/05/revealed-alex-fergusons-memorabilia-collection/ Revealed: Alex Ferguson's memorabilia collection ...According to Manchester Utd’s official magazine Inside Utd, Fergie owns one of the few copies of JFK’s autopsy report. He says: “Given the scale of the event, parts have been documented in the Press but it’s very interesting to read through the whole thing. Especially when you consider what an important piece of documentation it is.”
  24. Warren Commission testimony of James Romack: Mr. BELIN. You said you started walking away. Where did you walk? Mr. ROMACK. Toward the School Book Depository Building. Mr. BELIN. Along what street did you walk? Mr. ROMACK. Well, it wouldn't be no street at the time. Mr. BELIN. Well, if there would be a street? Mr. ROMACK. I guess it would be just about, I don't know whether they are going to split Ross and Houston Street up. Mr. BELIN. Would you be looking straight at Houston Street? Mr. ROMACK. More or less. I would be looking at Houston Street; yes, sir. Mr. BELIN. All right, and what happened as you were walking? Mr. ROMACK. I heard these three rifle shots sound out. ... Mr. BELIN. Where did they sound like they came from? Mr. ROMACK. It sounded, I guess, like it came from that building, but it wasn't on my side of the building. Mr. BELIN. Did it sound like it was up high or low? Mr. ROMACK. I would say they were high. I have never been asked that question, but it did sound like they were running out high, I would say, and the wind was blowing a little bit from the south that day, I can remember. Mr. BELIN. The wind was blowing into your face as you walked, or was it blowing from your back, sir? Mr. ROMACK. It was blowing into my face. Mr. BELIN. Into your face. Warren Commission testimony of Marrion Baker: Mr. BAKER - As we approached the corner there of Main and Houston we were making a right turn, and as I came out behind that building there, which is the county courthouse, the sheriff building, well, there was a strong wind hit me and I almost lost my balance... Mr. BELIN - From what direction was the wind coming when it hit you? Mr. BAKER - Due north.
  25. Duke, just curious, what do you make of this? A Record from Mary Ferrell's Database Record: SUGGS, AUBREY F. Sources: Arch P. Kimbrough interview Mary's Comments: Was standing, with Worrell, on west curb of Houston, 25' north of Main. Witnessed assassination. (He worked for Kimbrough) http://www.maryferrell.org/mffweb/archive/marysdb/showRec.do?mode=searchResult&id=9225
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