JFK Assassination Forum
JFK Assassination Plus General Discussion & Debate => JFK Assassination Plus General Discussion And Debate => Topic started by: Bill Brown on September 19, 2024, 04:38:36 AM
-
https://jfkfiles.blogspot.com/2024/09/jd-tippit-ordinary-hero.html
(https://www.jfkassassinationforum.com/Tippit.gif)
-
Thanks for posting the link to that well-written article. JD Tippit was a brave hero both in WWII and on 11/22/63.
(https://www.jfkassassinationforum.com/Tippit.gif)
-
You think? I reckon we had a guy acting wild pulling over random cars, knee deep.
-
Murray Jackson
-
Murray Jackson
Thanks Duncan, if I understand Murray Jackson correctly, he said that someone, immediately prior to the radio transmission by a citizen, telephoned into DPD a report of a disturbance involving a police officer in that same area. That’s interesting!
-
Thanks Duncan, if I understand Murray Jackson correctly, he said that someone, immediately prior to the radio transmission by a citizen, telephoned into DPD a report of a disturbance involving a police officer in that same area. That’s interesting!
Charles,
Mary Wright heard the shots and called the police "immediately" (her word). Murray Jackson is not aware that Tippit has been shot until Bowley reports it using the patrol car radio. Bowley's report is at 1:16/1:17. This confirms that the time of the shooting occurred just a minute or two before Bowley's report. If the shooting had occurred earlier, then Jackson would have already known about it by the time Bowley made his report because Jackson would have already received notice of the call by Mary Wright. We know Jackson was unaware of the shooting when Bowley made his report because the first thing Jackson does, once Bowley gives the location, is call out for 78 (Tippit's call number).
This is yet one more piece of proof that the shooting occurred at roughly 1:15 and not as early as 1:07 to 1:10.
-
Charles,
Mary Wright heard the shots and called the police "immediately" (her word). Murray Jackson is not aware that Tippit has been shot until Bowley reports it using the patrol car radio. Bowley's report is at 1:16/1:17. This confirms that the time of the shooting occurred just a minute or two before Bowley's report. If the shooting had occurred earlier, then Jackson would have already known about it by the time Bowley made his report because Jackson would have already received notice of the call by Mary Wright. We know Jackson was unaware of the shooting when Bowley made his report because the first thing Jackson does, once Bowley gives the location, is call out for 78 (Tippit's call number).
This is yet one more piece of proof that the shooting occurred at roughly 1:15 and not as early as 1:07 to 1:10.
Thanks Bill. I agree. Do you know where Mary Wright was located at the time of the shots? Could she see what was going on?
-
Thanks Bill. I agree. Do you know where Mary Wright was located at the time of the shots? Could she see what was going on?
I realized I could try to look this up myself. Here is what a search in Dale Myers’ book “With Malice” for Mary Wright turned up:
Frank Wright jumped off his front porch and ran down toward Tippit’s patrol car, as his wife, Mary phoned the police. “I ran to the telephone,” Mary Wright told researchers. “I didn’t look in the book or anything. I ran to the telephone, picked it up and dialed ‘O.’ I said, ‘Call the police, a man’s been shot!’” [408]
Dudley M. Hughes, Jr. took the phone call from the Dallas police, who gave Hughes the address of the shooting — “501 East Tenth” — actually the address of Mary Wright. Hughes filled out the ambulance call slip, put it into a time clock and stamped it 1:18 P.M., November 22nd. [485]
From Dale Myers’ timeline:
[1:15:40] Mrs. Mary Wright and Barbara Davis phone police from their homes.
[1:18:00] Dallas Police relay the call for an ambulance to the Dudley Hughes Funeral Home. The address given is 501 East Tenth, home of Frank and Mary Wright.
From footnote 424:
Two other witnesses – L.J. Lewis and Mary Wright –notified police of the shooting via the telephone. Both calls were received within a minute of Bowley’s transmission, providing strong evidence that the shooting occurred shortly before 1:17 p.m.
-
Tippit was certainly a hero and played a significant role in bringing Oswald to justice. Who knows how long Oswald might have been on the run had Tippit not stopped to question? We can never know all the details of that interaction but Oswald most likely saw Tippit's police car and made some movement that aroused Tippit's suspicion. Tippit pulls over to check it out. Oswald tries to bluff his way out but can't ID himself because he may already be a suspect in the assassination. So he is evasive. Tippit decides to get out of the car and investigate further. Oswald decides to act while he still has the element of surprise. You do have to feel bad for the Tippit family. They not only lost a husband and father but have also been subject to insane conspiracy theories for decades.