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1
Via a "Lone Assassin" scenario, every single thing Lee Harvey Oswald did after President Kennedy was shot makes perfect sense. Such as the following laundry list of things telling us the President's murder was the act of one lone killer, firing from his sixth-floor perch:

1.) Lee Oswald couldn't drive (not very well at any rate; he had a few lessons from Ruth Paine, and was not impressive behind the wheel according to Mrs. Paine). Therefore, he's left to his own resources after shooting the President, and forced to rely on other modes of transportation for his getaway.

2.) Even if he COULD drive, Oswald had no vehicle to take him from Point A (Dealey Plaza) to Point B (anyplace else) after the shooting. And in a "Lone Nut" scenario, it's highly doubtful that he's going to go up to Wesley Frazier (who gave him a lift that morning) and ask: "Hey Wes, can you give me a ride home Friday? I'm gonna plug the Chief Executive around lunchtime and need a getaway driver. OK with you?"

3.) LHO is not the least bit surprised when having Marrion Baker's gun pointed at him just minutes after the assassination. Lee is quite calm and cool. This calm reaction is an odd one if he were completely innocent of the shooting and had no idea of what just happened out on Elm Street.

IMO, Lee Oswald wasn't surprised by Baker's confronting him for one simple reason -- he expected the police to be entering the building quickly; and he had no reason to say to the officer, "What the heck is going on here?! Why am I being stopped?!" -- because he KNEW what was going on, because HE himself caused it. Any innocent bystander in that same situation is going to get scared, and at the very least ask "What's going on? What did I do?"; but not Oswald; he never uttered a word.

4.) LHO departs work quickly (within 3 minutes of the shooting), not caring in the least about all the turmoil and police activity going on outside the building.

5.) Oswald takes the only transportation available to him, in his flight from the scene -- a public bus. When the bus gets clogged in traffic, he changes to a taxi cab (highly unusual for the penny-pinching Mr. Oswald; in fact, a researcher might be searching forever if he were to try and verify a single other occasion when Lee Oswald spent money on a cab ride within the United States).

6.) Lee has the taxi driver take him NOT to the front door of 1026 N. Beckley (his residence) -- but instead to a point three blocks BEYOND his home. He actually passes his house first in the cab, which, IMO, is an obvious attempt to see if any cops are waiting for him there yet, and so that the cab driver (William Whaley) won't know exactly where his passenger lives.

7.) Oswald then grabs a handgun at his home, puts on a jacket (to conceal the weapon more easily), and hustles out of the roominghouse, not saying a word to housekeeper Earlene Roberts (who noted his hurried behavior).

8.) Upon encountering Officer J.D. Tippit on 10th Street within 15 minutes of leaving his roominghouse, Oswald shoots and kills the officer almost immediately (after very little conversation).

And to the many CTers who think it was impossible for LHO to have made it to 10th & Patton in time to kill Tippit, I'm wondering how those CTers explain the fact that Oswald DID make it to that same area of 10th & Patton in time to be seen (and positively identified) by witnesses like Ted Callaway, Sam Guinyard, Barbara Davis, and Virginia Davis (among others)? I guess most conspiracists want to believe that all of those witnesses were dead wrong and they really saw only an "Oswald Imposter" leaving the murder scene just a matter of seconds after Officer Tippit was shot. (Crazy.)

9.) Oswald knows he's got really big troubles now (as if killing JFK weren't enough already). He knows multiple witnesses saw him kill Tippit, but he's only got so much ammunition with him (he cannot eliminate ALL these witnesses). So he'll save his last bullets for when it really counts -- on more cops. Which is EXACTLY what he attempted to do once he was cornered in the Texas Theater at approx. 1:50 PM on 11/22.

10.) In the theater, Oswald tries to kill police officer Nick McDonald with the same gun he used on Tippit a half-hour earlier. But, luckily, McDonald and other officers are able to wrest the gun away from their suspect before it can be successfully fired, saving Oswald from yet another possible murder charge that day.

11.) Oswald's first words when cornered are also indicative of guilt -- "It's all over now!" and/or "This is it!" are the quotes that
have been attributed to LHO within the movie theater. (Can you imagine a totally INNOCENT person uttering either of the above declarations? I can't. Both comments scream "guilty conscience".)

12.) When questioned by the police, Oswald tells one lie after another regarding crucial information -- such as lying after being asked each of the following questions: "Do you own a rifle?", "Who is A.J. Hidell?", and "Did you bring a large package to work this morning?"

If Oswald had really been the "patsy" (as he shouted out to the press in the DPD hallways), then WHY didn't he reveal some names for the police to check out? Don't tell me Oswald was involved in this massive plan to assassinate the President and yet he had not one shred of an idea as to what any of his co-conspirators looked like or what any of their names (even fake names) might have been?!

In short -- The "Patsy" theory is simply pure out-and-out hogwash!

What do all of the above points add up to (in their totality)? -- In a certain sector of the "It Was A Conspiracy" world, these points (somehow) add up to a "Patsy" who not only didn't murder the President, but is also innocent of the even-more-provably-committed-by-Oswald murder of Officer Tippit.

In that same portion of the "CT" world, the above items also add up to a man (Oswald) who is apparently totally oblivious to the fact that he is being "used" by hired, professional assassins, and who hadn't the slightest idea that he would be used in this manner right up to the time of the actual shooting itself. Otherwise, Mr. Oswald would never have even shown up for work at the Depository on Friday morning (if he had possessed even the slightest notion, that is, of the covert "plot" that would be implicating HIM, and him alone, after 12:30 PM on November 22nd, 1963).

And only AFTER the assassination itself does Oswald "get smart" (evidently) and put the pieces together, and realize he's just
been "used" as the "Patsy" in this thing.

His "Patsy" remark has launched a mile-high pile of additional conspiracy theories -- and I do think it was smart of Oswald to announce to the TV cameras "I'm just a patsy!" for the world to hear. A very smart move indeed. Because it accomplished exactly what he had probably intended for it to accomplish -- i.e., it diverted some attention away from Oswald himself.

That ONE single word out of Oswald's mouth ("Patsy!") has sent conspiracists scrambling in all directions looking for "connections" to a plot -- any plot. None of which has been verified to this day to have the slightest bit of truth in them (among the theories placed on the table to date).

Zero pieces of credible, verifiable, provable information have been unearthed to date that tie Lee Harvey Oswald to any of the various proposed conspiracy theories.

The above "points", every single one, IMO, add up to the actions of one lone killer of President Kennedy and Officer Tippit. A man, on foot, who tries desperately to flee the scenes of his two crimes and avoid capture, even attempting to kill yet another person along the way (but failing in that attempt before being handcuffed).

No conspiracy theorist can possibly deny the fact that each of the points I've stressed above could certainly (at the very least) be easily reconciled within an "Oswald Did It And Did It By Himself" point-of-view.

If conspiracy promoters do choose to deny the fact that Lee Harvey Oswald's post-12:30 actions on November the 22nd could possibly be looked upon as the actions of ONE LONE KILLER, then I feel they are not being honest about what Oswald's actions truly reveal.

Also....

Here's a question that doesn't seem to come up in conversation very often:

If Lee Oswald was being "set up" to take the fall for the President's murder (as so many conspiracy theorists believe was the case), I'm wondering how in the world the plotters conveniently arranged Oswald's unusual Thursday night trip to Irving, Texas, to visit his wife at Ruth Paine's house on 11/21/63?

Did the conspirators somehow put Oswald under some kind of a spell, and then they told him to go to Irving on Thursday and tell a lie about wanting to retrieve curtain rods?

And there surely isn't a conspiracist on the planet who will try and say that Lee Oswald really DIDN'T go to Irving with Buell Wesley Frazier on November 21st, is there?

So, we know for a fact that Oswald did make an unusual trip to Ruth Paine's home on November 21st. And we also know that that location—Ruth Paine's house—is the place where Oswald's rifle was being stored in the garage.

And unless you are a person who is buried a mile deep in conspiracy nonsense, then another fact becomes crystal clear -- Lee Harvey Oswald LIED to Buell Frazier about the "curtain rods".

Now, via the scenario of Oswald being a totally innocent "patsy" regarding everything that happened in Dallas the following day (November 22, 1963), I'm just wondering how the conspiracy theorists can provide a series of reasonable and logical (and believable) answers to these questions:

1.) How did those amazing plotters get Oswald to go to Irving on 11/21/63?

2.) And how did those very efficient plotters get Oswald to tell the lie about the curtain rods? (Because all reasonable people know that LHO's "curtain rod" tale was, indeed, a lie....mainly due to the fact that no curtain rods were ever found in the Book Depository; plus the fact that if there had been any curtain rods at all, Oswald would have said so to the police; but, instead, he denied he ever mentioned anything about curtain rods to Buell Frazier.)

3.) And then how did those conspirators who were framing their patsy get Mr. Oswald to take a bulky brown package into the Depository on November 22nd? (Which is a package, as I just mentioned, that we know for a fact did NOT contain curtain rods.)

Those three questions are very important questions to answer in a reasonable manner if you're a conspiracist who truly thinks Oswald was just an unwitting patsy in the assassination of the President.

Because unless Oswald was trying to set himself up as a patsy, it's rather difficult to find any logical or reasonable answers to those three questions I just posed that would lead to a conclusion that Lee Oswald was completely innocent in the events that took place in Dallas on November 22nd. Particularly when those three questions are evaluated and assessed in conjunction with all of the OTHER things that incriminate Oswald in JFK's murder, e.g., the Carcano rifle, the shells, the paper bag on the sixth floor, LHO's prints being all over the place where Kennedy's killer was located, etc.

In short -- Oswald's OWN ACTIONS on November 21, 1963, provide some extremely powerful circumstantial evidence to indicate that Lee Harvey Oswald was anything but an innocent patsy when it comes to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.

DVP
2
TWENTY UNAVOIDABLE QUESTIONS ABOUT THE [YURI "THE KGB HAD NOTHING TO DO WITH FORMER MARINE SHARPSHOOTER AND U-2 RADAR OPERATOR OSWALD"] NOSENKO CASE

by Tennent “Pete” H. Bagley

There are reasons to believe that the KGB officer Yuri Nosenko genuinely defected in 1964. Here are some that are cited by those who believe it:

a) As every intelligence professional is aware, neither the KGB nor any other intelligence service would, all other things being equal, send one of its own genuine
staff officers as a false defector into enemy hands.  The risk would be too great that he might be influenced or pressured there to tell the important secrets he knows and to expose the very things his deception operation was intended to hide. 

b) The Soviet regime sentenced Nosenko to death in absentia and several KGB sources have said that the KGB was looking for him with the intent to assassinate him.

c) Real KGB staffers suffered real punishment as a result of his defection or as a result of misbehavior uncovered by the KGB’s investigation of the defection.

d) After he was cleared of CIA’s suspicions, Nosenko remained the rest of his life in the United States, became an American citizen, and long helped Western operations against the KGB -- things hardly compatible with a motive to deceive.
 
e) Later defectors from the KGB have testified to the genuineness of his defection and its damage to the Soviet regime. 

f) Repeated CIA reviews and analyses of the case over thirty years have again and again cleared Nosenko of all suspicion.   

g) CIA insiders have stated under oath that Nosenko has told only the truth – with only occasional, normal human errors or exaggerations-- and that he has neither said nor done anything contrary to KGB practices as reported by other genuine defectors.

h) Nosenko named a lot of KGB SCD officers and exposed many “cases.”

1. These are only generalities, of course, and even if they were all fully pertinent to this particular case (which they are not), no generality could ever dispel the specific questions that arise in a counterintelligence investigation.  (It is in errors of detail that deception operations betray themselves.) One might suppose that CIA — given its faith in Nosenko -- has considered and found satisfactory and mutually compatible answers to each and every one of these questions (although no evidence of this has ever appeared in public print). If CIA has not, its faith in Nosenko rests on shaky ground. No objective observer with a grain of skepticism could endorse that faith without clarifying these points of doubt. 

2. Among the questions that must be answered are the following twenty, with reference to the pages where they are discussed in the 2007 book Spy Wars.

(Should these find satisfactory and consistent answers, another twenty will follow.)

1. Nosenko claimed that through the entire years 1960-61 he was deputy chief of the American-Embassy section of the American department of the Second Chief Directorate (SCD) of the KGB – the job which gave him access to all the most important information he gave CIA, especially because he there personally supervised all work against the Embassy’s code clerks and security officer (John Abidian). Then:

a) Why, during that period, was Nosenko performing low-level tasks for the Tourist department, as he himself described and as was independently confirmed in at least one case (“F”)?  While supposedly supervising the SCD’s top-priority work against the American Embassy, Nosenko was handling street-level homosexual provocateurs, recruiting homosexual tourists (one as far away as Sofia), helping the Tourist Department chief in a meeting with an American travel agent, and going abroad as watchdog for Soviet delegations.  (Spy Wars, pp. 94-95, 160-62, 235, 250, 280)   

b) Why did KGB insiders, including one former member of that section and Oleg Kalugin, later deny that he ever held that position? (pp. 160, 210, 235-36)
 
2. How and why did Nosenko preserve and bring to Geneva in 1964 his KGB authorization for travel, in December 1963, to search for the fleeing KGB officer
Cherepanov?  (pp. 87, 167-68, 250) Sub-questions:

a) If he was not deputy chief of the SCD’s American-Embassy section (Question No. 1, above), why was he sent to search for Cherepanov? (pp. 87, 167-68, 250)

b) Why was the authorization (signed by the SCD chief Gribanov) made out to “Lt. Col. Nosenko”, a rank which he had claimed to CIA, whereas under detailed
questioning he admitted he was only being a captain?  Is it only coincidence that he had already falsely asserted in 1962 that he was then a major? (pp. 250-51)

3. Why was Nosenko ignorant of the operational mission to Helsinki of his direct subordinate Kosolapov, as part of an operation to recruit an American Embassy
cipher clerk?  (pp. 157-60, 242)

4. Why did Nosenko fail to tell CIA in 1962 about his surveillants’ recent spotting of American Embassy Security Officer Abidian visiting Penkovsky’s dead drop?  (pp. 16, 147, 203)

5. Why, in 1964, did Nosenko err by a full year – in a manner directly contradicting his career story — about the date of Abidian’s visit to that dead drop?  (p. 88-89, 147-50, 186, 203-4) 

6. If Nosenko had the specific task of watching over Abidian, how does one explain his ignorance of Abidian’s trip from Moscow to his ancestral homeland Armenia? (When Nosenko himself could not answer this question, he felt it threatened his whole life history.) (pp. 186-87)

7. Why did Nosenko in 1962 give false information about (and not know the circumstances of) his boss Kovshuk’s trip to the United States five years earlier, a trip which was actually connected with a penetration of CIA? (pp. 67-71, 185) Is it mere coincidence that while telling CIA of this trip, Nosenko’s two closest associates in Geneva, Guk and Kislov, were precisely the two KGB operatives who had worked with Kovshuk on that trip?  And that Nosenko, having read Kislov’s KGB file, certified that Kislov had no connection with the KGB? (pp. 65-67)

8. How does one explain Nosenko’s telling CIA in 1962 that he knew details of and even participated in the KGB attempt to recruit CIA officer Edward Ellis Smith, and his denial in 1964 of any knowledge of the name or the case?  (p. 188) Or, similarly, his knowing in 1962 and forgetting eighteen months later about KGB relations with the Finnish president? (p. 186)

9. How does one explain Nosenko’s mention in 1962 of the name “Zepp” – which at that moment was of intense interest to KGB counterintelligence – and then forgetting it by early 1964?  (pp. 15-16, 150-55, 162, 203)

10. Was Nosenko really in Geneva in 1962 and 1964 as the security watchdog of a Soviet conference delegation, as he claimed, contrary to expert testimony and contrary to later statements by his KGB bosses?  (pp. 5, 237, 253)

11. How does one explain Nosenko’s many changes of stories about his KGB career, even his date of entry, and the later evidence that the stories were false?   (pp. 93, 160-62, 235, 248-50)

12. How does one explain Nosenko’s inability (or unwillingness?) to describe even the most routine KGB procedures? (pp. 83-86, 191-92, 251-55)

13. Is it true, as Nosenko authoritatively reported, that the KGB first uncovered Oleg Penkovsky, CIA’s great spy, in late 1961 or early 1962 by chance Moscow
surveillance of a British diplomat?  (pp. 21-22, 86-87, 235, 243)

14. Is it true, as Nosenko highlighted to CIA in 1962, that the KGB first uncovered Pyotr Popov, CIA’s great spy in the GRU (Soviet Military Intelligence), by chance surveillance of an American diplomat mailing a letter in Moscow in late January 1959?  (pp. 11-12, 24, 68-75, 242-43) How does one equate this with the KGB’s later admissions:

1) that the GRU chief was fired from his post as a result of Popov’s treason, almost two months before the letter mailing, 

2) that KGB surveillants spotted Popov meeting CIA twice, at least two weeks before the letter mailing, and 

3) that it had earlier recruited Edward Ellis Smith, the CIA officer who had supported the Popov case in Moscow?  (p. 16-17, 70-71, 189, 241-43)

15. Did Nosenko really have his claimed inside knowledge about Lee Harvey Oswald in the Soviet Union – despite later contradiction by a KGB chairman and other KGB veterans including Oleg Kalugin? (pp. 83-86, 95-96, 191, 210, 249) If not, where did he get his information?  And why does he continue to make that claim to this day?

16. Did the KGB recruit in Moscow any American Embassy code clerk prior to Nosenko’s defection?  (pp. 156-59, 241-42)  If so, how does one explain Nosenko’s
authoritative claim to the contrary?

17. How does one explain that this ten-year KGB CI operations officer was unable to disclose to the U.S. a single KGB spy who at the time of uncovering, a) was still active and

b) had current access to US or NATO-country official secrets and previously been unsuspected by Western counterintelligence?

18. Why was Nosenko unaware, or not telling, that his close KGB associates at various times were members of the SCD’s department for operational deception? (And why did Nosenko not report on the existence of this department?)  For example,

a) His friend Yuri Guk meeting Nosenko before and after each CIA meeting in Geneva in 1962 (pp. 6, 9, 66, 236); 

b) Aleksandr Kislov rooming with Nosenko in Geneva in 1962 (p. 7, 66, 70-71, 235, 236); 

c) Vladimir Chelnokov taking him on an operational mission to Odessa in 1960 (p. 235).

19. Is it mere coincidence that Nosenko replayed to CIA in 1962 each of these specific cases that had just been compromised to the Americans six months earlier by Anatoly Golitsyn?

a) Preisfreund (pp. 25, 28, 158-59)

b) Vassall (pp. 14, 24, 97, 179, 187, 189, 206, 261)

a) Belitsky (pp. 17, 25, 179)

b) Kovshuk’s “trip” to Washington (pp. 24, 65-66, 69, 75-78)

c) Nine others including a Canadian and a French ambassador and a French businessman (pp. 4, 14, 25, 165, 206).

20. Why did it take the KGB five years, after his partial exposure in the U. S. press, to uncover as an FBI spy the KGB New York officer Aleksandr Kulak (“Fedora”), who had confirmed some of Nosenko’s (false) stories?  And then only after Kulak had died of cancer?  How does this equate with CIA’s claim that its own analysts previously unaware of the case had managed to identify Kulak in less than one hour using the same published information and obviously having less file information than the KGB about Soviet personnel in New York?  (p. 163-65, 170)

While an objective observer seeks facts or rationalizations to answer each of these twenty questions (in a manner consistent with his answers to the other questions), a twenty-first question will have occurred to him, early on.  How and why could so many questions – even any two or three of them -- have arisen about any genuine defector? The questions alone suggest that Nosenko was hiding important KGB operations, including its breaking of American secret ciphers (via recruited American code clerks) and KGB penetration of the staff of CIA. 
                                   
END

https://archive.org/details/SpyWarsMolesMysteriesAndDeadlyGames
3
I’m going to keep an open mind about it until I can prove beyond doubt that it is as ludicrous as it appears to be or until Andrew proves it via
rigorous demonstration that 3/4ths of LNs agree with. 😬
A reasonable unbiased person looking objectively at the evidence realizes that the evidence against Oswald is very strong. It is really overwhelming.  There is also strong evidence that three shots were fired from the SN.  Several witnesses saw the rifle in the SN and three men on the floor below heard the three shots from above them. So it is easy to conclude from the evidence that Oswald was the sole assassin.

The problem is trying to reconcile the Zfilm with three shots from a bolt action rifle. Without the Zfilm there would likely not have been a need to invent the SBT.

LNs have been persuaded that Connally was reacting to being shot in the torso by z230.  I don’t know why that is.

When I first studied the issue I read the evidence of Connally and tried to match his evidence to the zfilm.  I had no difficulty seeing that, according to Connally’s evidence, JBC was reacting to the first shot at z230 by turning around just as he said he did after hearing the shot and realizing that an assassination was unfolding.  Further reading of the evidence of witnesses who described the shot spacing made it abundantly clear that there was only one shot by z230; that the second shot which was closer to z313 than to the first.  Then the zfilm started to make sense.

So after the midpoint between the first and last shots is where the evidence says to look for an indication of the second shot hitting JBC in the torso. The motion of JBC beginning at about z271-272 and immediately falling back as Greer turns around fits the evidence perfectly. The hair on the right side of JFK’s head flying up at z273 fits what George Hickey saw at the time he heard the second shot. There are several other indications all pointing to JBC being hit in those frames.

But it is hard to see if you are not willing to even consider it.
4
If one is foolish enough to consult AI - which I am not, but my bmboficated research assistant Cuddles LaFong is  ::) - it appears that my guess of a disociative state may be in the ballpark. AI says "Yes, violent criminals are sometimes extremely calm after committing their acts. While public perception often assumes a perpetrator would be frantic, panicked, or guilt-ridden, forensic psychologists, criminologists, and law enforcement officers frequently document intense post-crime composure." AI says lots more, but I will spare you. I suppose that after deciding the JFKA was what he was going to do and that he would probably die in the aftermath, Oswald could have been in something like a disociative state even during his visit to Irving.
5
Is there a CT'er who has a better answer than “He was completely innocent and really had no idea what was going on?”--Lp

Yes, LHO was part of a quickly formed, low-budget conspiracy, around the (bad) luck that the JFK motorcade (revealed publicly on Nov. 19) would make a hairpin turn right in front the TSBD, with its largely empty upper floors, and clear view to a kill.

A perfect set-up. The best place in Dallas to perp the JFKA, and LHO already "had an in."

LHO had a proclivity for shooting at major public figures---see the Walker shooting. He needed convincing?

In fact, LHO had worked out a reasonable escape plan from the immediate TSBD premises, and did escape from there. So good enough on that score.

As for longer-term LHO plans, everything is speculation. In my layman's view, LHO was mentally ill.

Perhaps G-2 had promised LHO passage to Cuba, but actually planned to wax LHO.

LHO was "left holding the bag." Maybe. LHO planned to write his manifesto in Cuba?

A post JFKA-ride was promised to LHO, but fell through---possibly.

The 1,800-mile border to Mexico was wide-open back then, and boats left for Cuba from Mexico daily.

Who knows?

All he had to do was wipe his Carcano down with his already-off shirt, hide it (the Carcano), put his shirt back on while going down the stairs, and get to the second-floor lunch room before anyone saw him -- maybe even with a pre-purchased bottle of Coke-Cola (Larry Hancock's expression) to use as a prop.

Regarding Fancy Pants Rants assertion that he couldn't have PERPED ("BC's" expression) the JFKA because he gave his taxicab to a woman, should he have kept it for himself and appeared to be in a big rush?
6
Is there a CT'er who has a better answer than “He was completely innocent and really had no idea what was going on?”--Lp

Yes, LHO was part of a quickly formed, low-budget conspiracy, around the (bad) luck that the JFK motorcade (revealed publicly on Nov. 19) would make a hairpin turn right in front the TSBD, with its largely empty upper floors, and clear view to a kill.

A perfect set-up. The best place in Dallas to perp the JFKA, and LHO already "had an in."

LHO had a proclivity for shooting at major public figures---see the Walker shooting. He needed convincing?

In fact, LHO had worked out a reasonable escape plan from the immediate TSBD premises, and did escape from there. So good enough on that score.

As for longer-term LHO plans, everything is speculation. In my layman's view, LHO was mentally ill.

Perhaps G-2 had promised LHO passage to Cuba, but actually planned to wax LHO.

LHO was "left holding the bag." Maybe. LHO planned to write his manifesto in Cuba?

A post JFKA-ride was promised to LHO, but fell through---possibly.

The 1,800-mile border to Mexico was wide-open back then, and boats left for Cuba from Mexico daily.

Who knows?

You are pointedly ignoring the subject of this thread. I'm not looking for conspiracy theories. I can weave those all day long. I'm looking for how Oswald's seemingly out-of-character preternatural composure before and after the JFKA is explained in the context of a conspiracy theory (or the LN narrative, for that matter).
7
To argue against myself - "A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds," as Ralph Waldo Emerson said - the two obvious outliers are the murder of Tippit and the supposed incident in the Texas Theater. This was not the preternaturally calm and collected Oswald. I have considerable doubt that the TT incident took place as the arresting officers described - it just doesn't make sense - but the murder of Tippit is a huge outlier. This seems more like the real Oswald. Perhaps he was backed into a corner, figuratively speaking, and felt he had no choice. All very weird.
8
Is there a CT'er who has a better answer than “He was completely innocent and really had no idea what was going on?”--Lp

Yes, LHO was part of a quickly formed, low-budget conspiracy, around the (bad) luck that the JFK motorcade (revealed publicly on Nov. 19) would make a hairpin turn right in front the TSBD, with its largely empty upper floors, and clear view to a kill.

A perfect set-up. The best place in Dallas to perp the JFKA, and LHO already "had an in."

LHO had a proclivity for shooting at major public figures---see the Walker shooting. He needed convincing?

In fact, LHO had worked out a reasonable escape plan from the immediate TSBD premises, and did escape from there. So good enough on that score.

As for longer-term LHO plans, everything is speculation. In my layman's view, LHO was mentally ill.

Perhaps G-2 had promised LHO passage to Cuba, but actually planned to wax LHO.

LHO was "left holding the bag." Maybe. LHO planned to write his manifesto in Cuba?

A post JFKA-ride was promised to LHO, but fell through---possibly.

The 1,800-mile border to Mexico was wide-open back then, and boats left for Cuba from Mexico daily.

Who knows?



9
Blissfully, TG is so far in my rearview mirror that I actually don't remember even starting this thread.

I've really, really missed you, Fancy Pants Rancid!
10
Blissfully, TG is so far in my rearview mirror that I actually don't remember even starting this thread.

So many JFKA rabbit holes, so little time.
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