How Could LHO Walk One Mile After Leaving His Room & Shoot A Cop In 13 Minutes?

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Author Topic: How Could LHO Walk One Mile After Leaving His Room & Shoot A Cop In 13 Minutes?  (Read 141611 times)

Offline Jerry Freeman

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CTers think their opinions are evidence
I am not a "CT" I am a skeptic. Find any post I have ever made stating any conspiracy theory ;D

Online Martin Weidmann

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I am not a "CT" I am a skeptic. Find any post I have ever made stating any conspiracy theory ;D

Same here, but for the LNs you are automatically a CT heretic when you don't swallow their fairytale hook, line and sinker!

Offline John Iacoletti

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Any shooter (not being under fire himself, that is) will pause to look at his results, paper or live.

So that's just an assumption then.

Quote
In fact your anybody-but-Oswald was seen to be pausing briefly at the window post shots... as if to check his results, according to a certain witness.

What witness?  What window?

Offline Bill Chapman

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No, I think you're either an eyewitness to somebody being shot or you are not.

 ::)

Not that you're splitting hairs. And then splitting the split hairs.

No... not you.

Offline John Iacoletti

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::)

Not that you're splitting hairs. And then splitting the split hairs.

No... not you.

What would be you is stealing Bugliosi's rhetoric without attribution.

Offline Joe Elliott

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They did. How long is he supposed to have stood around?
Let's say, for argument's sake, two minutes. . . .
Let's say, for argument's sake, half a minute...

Which is the more reasonable estimate of the time Earlene Roberts, the housekeeper, observe Oswald at the bus stop?

Now remember, when Oswald came in, she was turning on the TV because she heard that the president had been shot. With about the biggest story of her lifetime, would she turn away from the TV to observe Oswald waiting at a bus stop? For 2 minutes? For 30 seconds? For any amount of time?

Earlene Roberts affidavit of December 5, 1963:

?Oswald went out the front door. A moment later I looked out the window. I
saw Lee Oswald standing on the curb at the bus stop just to the right, and on the
same side of the street as our house. I just glanced out the window that once.
I don?t know how long Lee Oswald stood at the curb nor did I see which direction
he went when he left there.?

Of course the amount of time Earlene Roberts observed Oswald at the curb is the amount we would expect, about 1 or 2 seconds.

Earlene Roberts said she saw Oswald standing on the curb at the bus stop, maybe waiting for a bus or taking a moment to decide on what to do next.
Earlene Roberts did not know if he stood there for five seconds, thirty seconds, two minutes or ten minutes? She only glanced at him. Naturally, she was mostly concentrating on the TV.

The only way to prove that Oswald did not have enough time to walk to the Officer Tippit murder scene is to assume, for argument sake, that Oswald waited for a certain amount of time, like two minutes. Heck, why not assume, for argument?s sake, twenty minutes? Then he couldn?t have made it without a time machine.

Offline John Iacoletti

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The only way to prove that Oswald did not have enough time to walk to the Officer Tippit murder scene is to assume, for argument sake, that Oswald waited for a certain amount of time, like two minutes. Heck, why not assume, for argument?s sake, twenty minutes? Then he couldn?t have made it without a time machine.

No more arbitrary than assuming for argument's sake that he made it to 10th and Patton in 11 minutes (or in 3 minutes).