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Absolute proof that both Lyndon Johnson and his Secret Service agent Rufus Youngblood were involved in the JFK assassination


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Posted (edited)
3 hours ago, Pete Mellor said:

Kevin, there is no 'perhaps' regarding the seating arrangements in the V.P. car or the V.P. follow-up.

The LBJ/Youngblood 'heroic leaping into the back seat story' is a total lie.  The only person in that vehicle that I feel I could trust to speak the truth would be Ralph Yarborough.  He stated that LBJ was hunched forward listening to Youngblood's radio.  He also observed Gordon Arnold having hit the ground on the knoll & said he could smell gunpowder when the car was level with the knoll, adding, "he didn't think that possible if the shot came from the 6th floor of the TSBD." 

Sure, there was no love lost between LBJ, Connally and Yarborough and LBJ was hassling JFK that morning in the Hotel Texas to not travel with Yarborough.  Was he trying to have Yarborough in the presidential limousine?

Lyndon Johnson wanted Jackie to ride in his car in the Texas motorcades. Source: George Smathers who conversed with JFK on Air Force One on the flight back from Florida on Monday, Nov. 18, 1963

           QUOTE

           On Monday, Kennedy returned to Washington on Air Force One. His back hurt. Lying on his stateroom bed, he summoned George Smathers from the front of the plane: “God, I wish you could think of some way of getting me out of going to Texas…. Look how screwed up it’s going to be. You’ve got Lyndon, who is insisting that Jackie ride with him. You’ve got Ralph Yarborough, who hates Lyndon, and Johnson doesn’t want Yarborough with him. Connally is the Governor.

          “They are all prima donnas of the biggest order, and they’re all insisting that they either ride with me or Jackie. The law says the Vice President can’t ride with the President. I’ve got to start off my speech saying what a fine guy Johnson is, what a fine guy Connally is, and then Yarborough, and they all don’t like each other. I just wish to hell I didn’t have to go. Can’t you think of some emergency we could have?”

           UNQUOTE

           [Michael Beschloss, The Crisis Years: Kennedy and Khrushchev 1960-1963, pp. 665-666]

Edited by Robert Morrow
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18 hours ago, Robert Morrow said:

Agreed. There is no confirmation OTHER than Sen. Ralph Yarborough that LBJ and his personal Secret Service agent Rufus Youngblood were listening to a walkie talkie turned down low mere moments before a bullet or bullets blow off JFK's head.

It is just the word of Sen. Ralph Yarborough and I think he is credible.

 

It is the word of Ralph Yarborough relayed through Jim Marrs.

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22 hours ago, Pete Mellor said:

Kevin, there is no 'perhaps' regarding the seating arrangements in the V.P. car or the V.P. follow-up.

The LBJ/Youngblood 'heroic leaping into the back seat story' is a total lie.  The only person in that vehicle that I feel I could trust to speak the truth would be Ralph Yarborough.  He stated that LBJ was hunched forward listening to Youngblood's radio.  He also observed Gordon Arnold having hit the ground on the knoll & said he could smell gunpowder when the car was level with the knoll, adding, "he didn't think that possible if the shot came from the 6th floor of the TSBD." 

Sure, there was no love lost between LBJ, Connally and Yarborough and LBJ was hassling JFK that morning in the Hotel Texas to not travel with Yarborough.  Was he trying to have Yarborough in the presidential limousine?

How did the smell of gunfire reach the street against the direction of a 20 mile per hour wind when no one on the north side of Elm St. smelled it?

Why isn’t Gordon Arnold visible in the Willis photo that displays the figure of what has been labelled “Black Dog Man”?

Why didn’t Lee Bowers describe the men he saw behind the fence as wearing a police uniform and a construction helmet as proclaimed in the Badgeman theory?

How did no one notice the assassin in a police uniform emerge from behind the fence, already broken down in tears, encounter Gordon Arnold on the ground, kick him, demand he remove the film from his camera and then retreat behind the fence? Wouldn’t this conspicuous act defeat the purpose of being disguised as a policeman, especially when he should have been focused on discretely escaping?

What Yarborough most likely saw was others on the north side of Elm falling to the ground and it was twisted into the account presented in TMWKK.

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1 hour ago, Kevin Balch said:

It is the word of Ralph Yarborough relayed through Jim Marrs.

You are telling me nothing I do not know. Judge the credibility of Jim Marrs and Sen. Ralph Yarborough however you wish.

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In 1969 Air Force General Joseph J. Cappucci told military friends Col. Bill Amos and Jan Amos that Lyndon Johnson killed JFK

Bio on Cappucci - http://www.af.mil/AboutUs/Biographies/Display/tabid/225/Article/107495/brigadier-general-joseph-j-cappucci.aspx

On 11/21/2013 (the day before the 50th anniversary of the JFK assassination) in Dallas while standing in Dealey Plaza, I met an 84 year old Dallas woman named Jan Amos. Her husband was Col. Bill Amos and he was assigned to Air Force intelligence in the 1960's.

 In 1969, several months after Ted Kennedy-Chappaquidick incident, the topic of the Kennedys came up among her social group over drinks. Needless to say her social group of Air Force men and their wives pretty much hated the Kennedys.

 At this point Gen. Joseph J. Cappucci, a man very high up in Air Force counter-intelligence and a man who had a personal friendship with J. Edgar Hoover said that Lyndon Johnson had murdered John Kennedy.

 That was the first that Jan had heard that bit of blockbuster information.

 After the intimate party had broken up, probably from the Hilton in Rome, Italy, Col. Bill Amos told his wife Jan Amos "Jan, you are never to repeat a word that Gen. Capucci spoke."

 Gen. Cappucci had clearly indicted Lyndon Johnson for the JFK assassination and said that his close personal friend J. Edgar Hoover had confirmed this to him.

 

Gen. Joseph J. Cappucci, the head of Air Force counterintelligence & a close friend of FBI J. Edgar Hoover, told Jan Amos and her husband Col. William Henry Amos, that Lyndon Johnson killed JFK. Cappucci was the direct superior to Col. William Henry Amos. Cappucci made these comments after a party at the Hilton Hotel in Rome in 1969.

Go to the 6 minute mark of Robert Morrow’s July 31, 2014 interview with Jan Amos at her condominium in Dallas:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CetTAKiGY1Y

Gen. Joseph Cappucci was very close to FBI director J. Edgar Hoover who in turn was very close to Lyndon Johnson. Col. Bill Amos was the bright star working directly under Cappucci at that time, but he was an alcoholic and later had to leave the military.

After Cappucci made these comments indicting LBJ for JFK’s murder, on the way home Col. William Henry Amos told his wife Jan Amos to never utter a word of what she had heard. A disgusted Cappucci said “No wonder Lyndon Johnson had JFK killed” and he said this after the topic of Ted Kennedy and Chappaquiddick had come up. Mary Jo Kopechne, a passenger of Sen. Ted Kennedy, had drowned at Chappaquiddick on July 18, 1969.

Additionally, Jan Amos reveals that in 1964 President LBJ gave a direct order to the military to seize and destroy all copies of “A Texan Looks at Lyndon: A Study in Illegitimate Power” by J. Evetts Haley on military bases and commissaries nationwide. Col. Amos was given direct orders by his superiors to incinerate every single copy of this book which correctly implied that LBJ was murdering people to cover up the Billie Sol Estes LBJ-kickback scandal of the early 1960’s. Col. William Amos told his wife Jan that LBJ was the rudest and most uncouth bastard he had ever been around or worked for.

Jan Amos later moved back to Dallas and worked in high end clothing retail where she became friends and a personal shopper for the wives of the social elite of Dallas. She knew the Murchison and Perot families and numerous prominent Dallas families.

 

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15 hours ago, Kevin Balch said:

How did the smell of gunfire reach the street against the direction of a 20 mile per hour wind when no one on the north side of Elm St. smelled it?

Why isn’t Gordon Arnold visible in the Willis photo that displays the figure of what has been labelled “Black Dog Man”?

Why didn’t Lee Bowers describe the men he saw behind the fence as wearing a police uniform and a construction helmet as proclaimed in the Badgeman theory?

How did no one notice the assassin in a police uniform emerge from behind the fence, already broken down in tears, encounter Gordon Arnold on the ground, kick him, demand he remove the film from his camera and then retreat behind the fence? Wouldn’t this conspicuous act defeat the purpose of being disguised as a policeman, especially when he should have been focused on discretely escaping?

What Yarborough most likely saw was others on the north side of Elm falling to the ground and it was twisted into the account presented in TMWKK.

Where do you get the 20 mph wind?  The rain had passed, the sun was out, I've never seen the tree leaves or coats, dresses fluttering in the wind.  The prevailing wind in north central Texas in the fall/winter is from the N-N/W pushing even a light breeze towards Dealy Plaza.  I thought others near the knoll smelled gunpowder, even some on the overpass saw smoke they rushed towards it.

I don't know about a construction helmet but Bowers reportedly told his minister as well as a close friend he did not tell the Warren Commission everything he saw.  Presumably because he was told or warned not to.  Then he spoke to Mark Lane.  His wife said "they told him not to talk."

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8 hours ago, Ron Bulman said:

Where do you get the 20 mph wind?  The rain had passed, the sun was out, I've never seen the tree leaves or coats, dresses fluttering in the wind.  The prevailing wind in north central Texas in the fall/winter is from the N-N/W pushing even a light breeze towards Dealy Plaza.  I thought others near the knoll smelled gunpowder, even some on the overpass saw smoke they rushed towards it.

I don't know about a construction helmet but Bowers reportedly told his minister as well as a close friend he did not tell the Warren Commission everything he saw.  Presumably because he was told or warned not to.  Then he spoke to Mark Lane.  His wife said "they told him not to talk."

Look at the the dresses of Moorman, Hill and Babushka Lady.

The nominal windspeed was 12-15 mph with gusts of 20+ out of the WSW.

https://www.wunderground.com/history/daily/us/tx/dallas/KDAL/date/1963-11-22

Edited by Kevin Balch
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Posted (edited)
47 minutes ago, Kevin Balch said:

Look at the the dresses of Moorman, Hill and Babushka Lady.

The nominal windspeed was 12-15 mph with gusts of 20+ out of the WSW.

https://www.wunderground.com/history/daily/us/tx/dallas/KDAL/date/1963-11-22

There was most definitely a wind in Dealey Plaza very close to the time of the JFK assassination. And it was coming from the WSW because a weather front was moving across Texas. In fact as JFK's limo was rounding the corner from Main and taking a right onto Houston Street I think a gust of wind almost knocked off John Connally's hat.

There were multiple "gun powder" nose witnesses in Dealey Plaza - and remember the wind was in general coming from the WSW which would have taken any gunsmoke coming out the TSBD and blown it TOWARDS the East and away from Dealey Plaza, so obviously you and take this information and combine it with the smoke clearly seen on the NBC Wegman film and conclude this wind was blowing gunpowder smoke from the Grassy Knoll into Dealey Plaza and the street.

Here are some of the "Nose Witnesses" who smelled gunpower in Dealey Plaza at the time of the JFK assassination:

From "Murder From Within" by Fred Newcomb on the gunpowder "nose witnesses:"

***Motorcycle escort officer Billy J. Martin, riding one-half car length from the left rear fender of the Presidential limousine, recalled, “You could smell the gunpowder… you knew he wasn’t far away. When you’re that close, you can smell the powder burning. Why you—you’ve got to be pretty close to them… you could smell the gunpowder… right there in the street.”63 (Figure 3-7) “Nose” witnesses Sen. Ralph Yarborough rode in the second car behind the limousine. He smelled gunpowder in the street64 and said it clung to the car throughout the race to Parkland Hospital.65 He later commented, “. . . you don’t smell gunpowder unless you’re shooting at something up wind and it blows it back in your face…”65-a As noted, the motorcade headed into a breeze—photographs show bystanders’ skirts billowing in the wind. At Parkland Hospital Yarborough told reporters “the third shot may have been a Secret Service man returning fire”.65-b Two cars behind Yarborough was the Cabell car. Elizabeth Cabell said she “. . . was acutely aware of the odor of gunpowder.”66 She added Congressman Ray Roberts, seated next to her, had mentioned it also.67 According to press photographer Tom C. Dillard, two cars behind the Cabell car, he “. . . very definitely smelled gunpowder when the cars moved up to the corner [of Elm and Houston Streets].”68 Bystander Virgie Rackley stood in front of the depository building close to the street. “She recalled that after the second shot, she smelled gunsmoke…”69 At the time of the shots, patrolman Joe M. Smith moved from the intersection of Elm and Houston Streets toward the triple underpass.70 Patrolman Earle V. Brown, stationed 100 yards west of the underpass, heard the shots and then smelled gunpowder as the car sped beneath him.71 A police officer who was on the sixth floor of the depository shortly after the shooting failed to smell any gunpowder there.72 One newspaper summed it up: “. . . seconds later the cavalcade was gone. The area still reeked with the smell of gunpowder.”73 Shots from the sixth floor of the depository building would have caused no gunpowder smell in the street. ***

Fred T. Newcomb and Perry Adams (2011-11-03). Murder From Within: Lyndon Johnson's Plot against President Kennedy (Kindle Locations 1376-1377). AuthorHouse. Kindle Edition.

Edited by Robert Morrow
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