Interview With Ted Callaway Who Witnessed Aftermath Of The Shooting J D Tippit

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Author Topic: Interview With Ted Callaway Who Witnessed Aftermath Of The Shooting J D Tippit  (Read 13851 times)

Offline Jim Hawthorn

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... lets face it the commission NEVER thought for a second that we would be here even now studying ever word they uttered 60 years later . they expected the gullible public (with the aid of the mainstream media ) to swallow what ever they were given to swallow without question . and the vast majority DID .even jim garrison swallowed it until he looked closer .

Yes, and Gerald Ford admitted to French President Valérie Giscard d'Estaing in a private conversation:

The ex-French President speaking in 2013:

To Le Parisien newspaper: "Naïvely, I asked him - 'Do you know who assassinated Kennedy.' and without blinking he replied 'Yes. It wasn't an isolated mad gunman that killed the President of the United States."

To RTL radio: "It wasn't satisfying. We came to a first conclusion: it wasn't an isolated crime, it was something organised. We were sure that it was organised. By who, we didn't discover.
Therefore, there was an organisation that feared President Kennedy and decided to get rid of him."
« Last Edit: February 28, 2024, 09:04:08 AM by Jim Hawthorn »

Online Charles Collins

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Yes, and Gerald Ford admitted to French President Valérie Giscard d'Estaing in a private conversation:

The ex-French President speaking in 2013:

To Le Parisien newspaper: "Naïvely, I asked him - 'Do you know who assassinated Kennedy.' and without blinking he replied 'Yes. It wasn't an isolated mad gunman that killed the President of the United States."

To RTL radio: "It wasn't satisfying. We came to a first conclusion: it wasn't an isolated crime, it was something organised. We were sure that it was organised. By who, we didn't discover.
Therefore, there was an organisation that feared President Kennedy and decided to get rid of him."


I don’t know much about VGE. But I would suggest that he fantasized that Ford told him that. And that perhaps he also had a “thing” for Diana…


Giscard d'Estaing wrote his second romantic novel, published on 1 October 2009 in France, titled The Princess and the President.[62] It tells the story of a French leader having a romantic affair with a character called Patricia, Princess of Cardiff.[62] This caused many rumours that the book was based on a real-life affair between Giscard d'Estaing and Diana, Princess of Wales.[62] He later said that such an affair never happened and that the book was fictional.[63]


https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Val%C3%A9ry_Giscard_d%27Estaing

Online Martin Weidmann

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I don’t know much about VGE. But I would suggest that he fantasized that Ford told him that. And that perhaps he also had a “thing” for Diana…


Giscard d'Estaing wrote his second romantic novel, published on 1 October 2009 in France, titled The Princess and the President.[62] It tells the story of a French leader having a romantic affair with a character called Patricia, Princess of Cardiff.[62] This caused many rumours that the book was based on a real-life affair between Giscard d'Estaing and Diana, Princess of Wales.[62] He later said that such an affair never happened and that the book was fictional.[63]


https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Val%C3%A9ry_Giscard_d%27Estaing

But I would suggest that he fantasized that Ford told him that.

And that suggestion would be based on what, exactly?

Wishful thinking, perhaps?

Offline Bill Brown

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Differences in witness’ accounts are normal and typical and should be expected. Human memories and perceptions are imperfect and are not like instant replay with several different camera angles available (like we have become accustomed to in televised sports). If all the witness accounts totally agreed with each other, I personally would suspect that something was amiss. The fact that there are inconsistencies is indicative of normal imperfect human memories and perceptions. Therefore I think this should give us reason to believe that the investigation was not a coverup. The fact that the WC chose to publish the testimonies and exhibits is the reason for the number of inconsistencies. If LHO had lived, and there had been a trial, I think that there would have been fewer testimonies and exhibits and that there would have been many of them that never would have been introduced in the trial.

Charles, you're absolutely right.

Also, keep in kind, both Barbara Davis and Virginia Davis were standing at the front door watching a man with a gun cut across their front yard just moments after the shooting.  They were both watching the same man as they stood practically shoulder to shoulder with each other.  One said the man was wearing a light-tan jacket and the other said the man was wearing a black coat.  Only a fool would believe that these two women saw two different men.  Once you accept that, then it is obvious that an eyewitness can describe a jacket differently than another eyewitness even though both were looking at the same jacket.  Therefore, their point is entirely moot.

It happens all the time.  But our conspiracy advocate friends around here would have everyone believe that every single eyewitness should give the exact same description as each other or else something is amiss.  It's pure foolishness.
« Last Edit: March 13, 2024, 08:45:33 AM by Bill Brown »

Online Martin Weidmann

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Charles, you're absolutely right.

Also, keep in kind, both Barbara Davis and Virginia Davis were standing at the front door watching a man with a gun cut across their front yard just moments after the shooting.  They were both watching the same man as they stood practically shoulder to shoulder with each other.  One said the man was wearing a light-tan jacket and the other said the man was wearing a black coat.  Only a fool would believe that these two women saw two different men.  Once you accept that, then it is obvious that an eyewitness can describe a jacket differently than another eyewitness even though both were looking at the same jacket.  Therefore, their point is entirely moot.

It happens all the time.  But our conspiracy advocate friends around here would have everyone believe that every single eyewitness should give the exact same description as each other or else something is amiss.  It's pure foolishness.

When five people watch a car crash, you'll get five different stories about what happened. That's to be expected as not everybody pays attention to the same details.

When two people see a man for merely seconds, it is IMO, although not completely impossible, highly unlikely they can both identify the same man, when they can't even agree on the color of a jacket. Benavides saw the killer much better and was still unsure he would be able to identify the man. I have been in his position, several years ago, when I saw a robbery happening right in front of me. Everything happened very fast and although I thought I had seen the man clearly enough, when police brought a man they had arrested back to the scene, I couldn't say for sure that it was the same man.

Yet, in this case we are to believe that all the witnesses who attended the line up were able to actually identify the same man? Talk about pure foolishness.
« Last Edit: March 13, 2024, 09:39:54 AM by Martin Weidmann »

Offline Bill Brown

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When five people watch a car crash, you'll get five different stories about what happened. That's to be expected as not everybody pays attention to the same details.

When two people see a man for merely seconds, it is IMO, although not completely impossible, highly unlikely they can both identify the same man, when they can't even agree on the color of a jacket. Benavides saw the killer much better and was still unsure he would be able to identify the man. I have been in his position, several years ago, when I saw a robbery happening right in front of me. Everything happened very fast and although I thought I had seen the man clearly enough, when police brought a man they had arrested back to the scene, I couldn't say for sure that it was the same man.

Yet, in this case we are to believe that all the witnesses who attended the line up were able to actually identify the same man? Talk about pure foolishness.

Straw man,
Completely unrelated to the point Charles Collins made and which I replied to.

Online Martin Weidmann

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Straw man,
Completely unrelated to the point Charles Collins made and which I replied to.

No. It's just a reality you don't like