JFK Assassination Forum
JFK Assassination Plus General Discussion & Debate => JFK Assassination Plus General Discussion And Debate => Topic started by: Rick Plant on February 10, 2022, 01:51:50 AM
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Buell Frazier recently spoke about his recollections on one of the worst days in American history, November 22, 1963. Frazier has aged considerably since his last public appearance and he was more candid in this conversation than I've ever seen from him before. The majority of this conversation is a repeat of what he's told us over the years as he confirmed he didn't see Lee Harvey Oswald on the steps watching the parade. Frazier does make a new revelation that he's never told us before about witnessing a gunman dressed in immaculate fine clothing. He stated he's never told us before out of fear. He also believes there was a conspiracy to kill Kennedy and he speculates on how that evidence will finally come to light. Buell doesn't look too well to me, so it's good he was able to publish his book and speak during the 58th anniversary of the Kennedy assassination. The new revelation starts at 26:20 but the entire conversation is worth watching.
To commemorate the 58th anniversary of the Kennedy assassination on November 22, 2021, The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza presented a special conversation with former Texas School Book Depository employee Buell Wesley Frazier. Nineteen years old in 1963, Frazier trained fellow Depository employee Lee Harvey Oswald and drove Oswald to work occasionally, including on November 22, 1963. After witnessing the assassination, Frazier was detained and questioned by Dallas police. He later testified at length before the Warren Commission, particularly regarding the package that he observed Oswald carrying that morning.
Steering Truth: A Conversation with Buell Wesley Frazier
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I think he made it up.
Fred
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Frazier appears to feel guilt about his unintentional role in the events that led to Oswald getting his job at the TSBD and then driving him to the building on the morning of the assassination. That guilt appears to make him angry and influence his evolving story of events. You have to feel bad for the guy. He was trying to do a good deed and Oswald turned him into the person in history who will forever be remembered as the guy who drove the assassin and his weapon to the TSBD. The poster boy for no good deed goes unpunished.
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I wonder if Frazier told this gunman story during his interrogation.
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He sounds sincere at least but the obvious question is, why did he wait so long to talk about the unknown gunman that he saw?
I also take away from the conversation that he isn't convinced that Oswald did it.