Oswald: No power lunch

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Offline Alan Ford

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Re: Oswald: No power lunch
« Reply #294 on: September 12, 2021, 12:00:41 PM »
The sixth floor would NOT have been chosen by anyone NOT confident that the space could be kept clear of employees. It certainly would NOT have been chosen by a lone wolf gunman, such as Mr Oswald is alleged to have been.

Mr Oswald was not on the sixth floor during any of the period the poor Warren Gullibles need him to be there. He was downstairs the entire time.

Others however were on the sixth floor------------------and they controlled the space, flashing fake credentials to any employee who may have happened to come up.

Question! Why did manual workers NOT choose the sixth floor, despite having earlier agreed to do so? See above!

Question! Why did Mr Bonnie Ray Williams leave the sixth floor, and wildly change his story as to WHEN he did this? Because he was told to leave the floor by men he believed at the time to be security detail.

Question! Why did Messrs Norman & Jarman NOT choose the sixth floor and instead choose the fifth? Because they saw Mr Williams on his own up at the FIFTH floor window and decided to join him.

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« Last Edit: September 12, 2021, 12:09:46 PM by Alan Ford »

Offline Walt Cakebread

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Re: Oswald: No power lunch
« Reply #295 on: September 12, 2021, 04:35:56 PM »
More Soopah-Doopah-Mytton-Cherrypicking!

Bookhout Interrogation Report, 11/23:



And then of course we have this in Captain Fritz's own handwriting:



At no point did Mr Oswald claim he ate lunch WITH these two men.

He did however claim he consumed the remainder of his lunch (sandwich/apple/Coke) in the presence of PLENTY other employees out on the front steps---------because he had gone outside to the watch the P. Parade

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Thank You Mr Ford....  Most folks will see that Captain Fritz was lying when he replied to Ball....However you can be sure that Johnny Myton will continue to believe the lie.

Mr. BALL. He mentioned who he was having lunch with, did he not?
Mr. FRITZ. Yes, sir; he told me he was having lunch when the President was shot.
Mr. BALL. With whom?
Mr. FRITZ. With someone called Junior, someone he worked with down there, but he didn't remember the other boy's name.

Mr. BALL - Did you see Lee Oswald?
Mr. JARMAN - No; I didn't.
Mr. BALL - After his arrest, he stated to a police officer that he had had lunch with you. Did you have lunch with him?
Mr. JARMAN - No, sir; I didn't.

Bookhout Interrogation Report, 11/23:



And then of course we have this in Captain Fritz's own handwriting:



At no point did Mr Oswald claim he ate lunch WITH these two men.
« Last Edit: September 12, 2021, 04:37:57 PM by Walt Cakebread »

Offline Jack Nessan

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Re: Oswald: No power lunch
« Reply #296 on: September 12, 2021, 04:49:02 PM »
LHO claimed to have been upstairs working and came down to see what was the commotion. In the second floor lunch room he encountered Officer Baker. So much for seeing what the commotion was he needed a pop more. All LHO's alibis are based on using the colored co workers.

USPS Inspector Holmes:

 HOLMES. He said when lunchtime came he was working in one of the upper floors with a Negro.
The Negro said, "Come on and let's eat lunch together."
Apparently both of them having a sack lunch. And he said, "You go ahead, send the elevator back up to me and I will come down just as soon as I am finished."
And he didn't say what he was doing. There was a commotion outside, which he later rushed downstairs to go out to see what was going on. He didn't say whether he took the stairs down. He didn't say whether he took the elevator down.
But he went downstairs, and as he went out the front, it seems as though he did have a coke with him, or he stopped at the coke machine, or somebody else was trying to get a coke, but there was a coke involved.
He mentioned something about a coke. But a police officer asked him who he was, and just as he started to identify himself, his superintendent came up and said, "He is one of our men." And the policeman said, "Well, you step aside for a little bit."

He never made it ti see what the commotion was all about. Apparently having a cold pop was more important.

Offline Jack Nessan

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Re: Oswald: No power lunch
« Reply #297 on: September 12, 2021, 04:59:56 PM »
I hereby reopen my cordial invitation to Mr Nessan (or any other Warren Gullible) to reconcile the Warren Report timeline for Ms Adams with the below-------------------------

Miss ADAMS. When I got there (the front of the building, A.F.), I happened to look around and noticed several of the employees, and I noticed Joe Molina, for one, was standing in front of the building, and also Avery Davis, who works with me, and I said, "What do you think has happened?" And she said, "I don't know."

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You brought up Molina and Davis, you explain whatever this is.  Zero desire to get involved in your nonsense.

Offline Walt Cakebread

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Re: Oswald: No power lunch
« Reply #298 on: September 12, 2021, 05:16:41 PM »
LHO claimed to have been upstairs working and came down to see what was the commotion. In the second floor lunch room he encountered Officer Baker. So much for seeing what the commotion was he needed a pop more. All LHO's alibis are based on using the colored co workers.

USPS Inspector Holmes:

 HOLMES. He said when lunchtime came he was working in one of the upper floors with a Negro.
The Negro said, "Come on and let's eat lunch together."
Apparently both of them having a sack lunch. And he said, "You go ahead, send the elevator back up to me and I will come down just as soon as I am finished."
And he didn't say what he was doing. There was a commotion outside, which he later rushed downstairs to go out to see what was going on. He didn't say whether he took the stairs down. He didn't say whether he took the elevator down.
But he went downstairs, and as he went out the front, it seems as though he did have a coke with him, or he stopped at the coke machine, or somebody else was trying to get a coke, but there was a coke involved.
He mentioned something about a coke. But a police officer asked him who he was, and just as he started to identify himself, his superintendent came up and said, "He is one of our men." And the policeman said, "Well, you step aside for a little bit."

He never made it ti see what the commotion was all about. Apparently having a cold pop was more important.

Lee Oswald was in the Domino room on the 1st floor at the time the presidents parade passed by the TSBD.  THIS IS A FACT!

Offline Jack Nessan

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Re: Oswald: No power lunch
« Reply #299 on: September 12, 2021, 05:53:07 PM »
Holmes is the only one who includes all aspects of the case. Lunch room encounter, Givens on the sixth floor, and the conversation between LHO and other workers riding the elevator down and the offer to return the elevator back up when everyone left.

Offline Alan Ford

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Re: Oswald: No power lunch
« Reply #300 on: September 12, 2021, 07:02:25 PM »
You brought up Molina and Davis, you explain whatever this is.

No, Ms Adams brings them up in her testimony

Quote
Zero desire to get involved in your nonsense.

Translated: you have zero ability to neutralize the issue raised by Ms Adams' mention of Mr Molina and Ms Davis.

Ms Adams saw both Mr Molina and Ms Davis in front of the building. If you were familiar with Mr Molina and Ms Davis' accounts of their actions post-shooting, you would know that Ms Adams' mention of them blows your silly 'She left the 4th floor at 12:35' timeline out of the water.

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« Last Edit: September 12, 2021, 07:08:39 PM by Alan Ford »