Was Lee Oswald the passenger in Whaley's Taxi?

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Author Topic: Was Lee Oswald the passenger in Whaley's Taxi?  (Read 197769 times)

Offline Walt Cakebread

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Re: Was Lee Oswald the passenger in Whaley's Taxi?
« Reply #42 on: February 07, 2018, 10:53:01 PM »

No. I didn't.

Do you rember posting this on 2 /2/18 @11:03 Mr Brown?

Do you rember posting this on 2 /2/18 @11:03 Mr Brown?

"Oswald wanted the cab to pass by the rooming house so he could determine if law enforcement was already there waiting for him."

Online Bill Brown

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Re: Was Lee Oswald the passenger in Whaley's Taxi?
« Reply #43 on: February 07, 2018, 10:57:17 PM »
well then..what happened to this post...


..only left as a quote

My post is STILL THERE.


Online Bill Brown

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Re: Was Lee Oswald the passenger in Whaley's Taxi?
« Reply #44 on: February 07, 2018, 10:59:07 PM »
Do you rember posting this on 2 /2/18 @11:03 Mr Brown?

Do you rember posting this on 2 /2/18 @11:03 Mr Brown?

"Oswald wanted the cab to pass by the rooming house so he could determine if law enforcement was already there waiting for him."

Yes, I posted that and I stand by that.

But, you're mistakenly attributing far more than that to me.

I've already explained this.  Get a clue.

Offline Walt Cakebread

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Re: Was Lee Oswald the passenger in Whaley's Taxi?
« Reply #45 on: February 08, 2018, 12:24:37 AM »
Yes, I posted that and I stand by that.

But, you're mistakenly attributing far more than that to me.

I've already explained this.  Get a clue.

What part of ....."Oswald wanted the cab to pass by the rooming house so he could determine if law enforcement was already there waiting for him."...shouldn't be attributed to you... the author?

Offline John Anderson

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Re: Was Lee Oswald the passenger in Whaley's Taxi?
« Reply #46 on: February 08, 2018, 12:55:17 AM »
Oswald tells the driver to go past his boarding house so he can check it out.
That doesn't mean the cops knew his address that early on.
It means Oswald was being cautious.

Online Bill Brown

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Re: Was Lee Oswald the passenger in Whaley's Taxi?
« Reply #47 on: February 08, 2018, 12:58:50 AM »
What part of ....."Oswald wanted the cab to pass by the rooming house so he could determine if law enforcement was already there waiting for him."...shouldn't be attributed to you... the author?

I said that, yes.  It's there for all to see (except for Michael Capasse, apparently) and I stand by it.

But that is not what you're claiming I said.  Even though you quote my exact words, you can't seem to grasp exactly what I said.  Strange.

Below is what you seem to think I am saying, even though I have never said it.

"But you did say that they could have arrived before Lee and Lee arrived at 1:00 pm...." - Walt Cakebread


To spell it out for you, I said that Oswald wanted the cab to go past the rooming house so he could see if the authorities were there.

I never said that I felt the authorities could possibly be there at that early stage.

If you feel that someone is saying that the authorities could have been there that quickly, then take it up with the person who is saying such a thing.  I haven't said it.

Offline Walt Cakebread

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Re: Was Lee Oswald the passenger in Whaley's Taxi?
« Reply #48 on: February 08, 2018, 01:19:23 AM »
Oswald tells the driver to go past his boarding house so he can check it out.
That doesn't mean the cops knew his address that early on.
It means Oswald was being cautious.

Huh???.....  How could the cops go to any location without knowing the address??

And....   You imagine that Lee was being cautious ..and you ASSUME that he was being cautious because you imagine that he suspected the cops might be there waiting for him.

That idea is utterly nuts!.....   Lee knew that nobody knew that he had a rented room at 1026 N. Beckley.  So WHY would he imagine that the police could have arrived at his room faster than he did???

Has it ever occurred t you that IF IF Lee had been the passenger in Whaley's cab and he was worried about being intercepted and he hesitated to get to his room and out again a fast as possible, he would have been placing himself in greater jeopardy by walking the four blocks , back to the rooming house, right out in the open and wasting that time.