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Martin Weidmann, it is not correct that the reason I reject the crime scene Oswald wallet first known in Hosty’s book in the late 1990’s is because that is what I want to believe. No, it is because witness claims always must be assessed case by case and that is how it looks to me evidentially as a judgment, on evidence grounds alone. If anything, I have a bias to want to read the evidence in a way that Oswald is innocent, which I have to attempt consciously not to interfere with objectivity (if that is possible). But what about yourself. You will agree, I believe, that upon first encounter of the Barrett story from 1990’s with its sensational claim, that cannot automatically, right off the bat, be known true or false. No witness saying something out of the blue 30 years later makes it true just because he said it. Agreed?

Then the next question is what did tip you to belief that 30-years later witness claim was true? Was a factor in there that you want it to be true (your own question to you)?

A first question in assessing a witness making a new sensational claim 30 years later for the first time (publicly) is always asked by investigative journalists. Did this witness tell others privately of this earlier or from the original time? Answer in Barrett’s case: no. Second question investigative journalists ask: is there positive corroboration from other evidence or witnesses to the late sensational claim? Answer: none known at that time. There was a wallet, that is not in dispute, but there is no positive evidence it was considered crime scene evidence by police, and there is a plausible explanation for it (as I hsve outlined related to the Tippit revolver incident recovery). Therefore the Barrett story is not needed to explain what otherwise has no conceivable reasonable other explanation.

Is it the personal character and credibility of the witness, Barrett? An argument can be made that he tried to incriminate Oswald at earlier times through a false claim, of which the later 30-year claim is similar in genre (intended to incriminate Oswald on Tippit). But never mind that—30 years is time for honest witnesses to confuse details in memory. Anyone who has a grandfather who likes to tell stories of the past knows that. It isn’t dishonesty, it’s fallibility in human recall and narrative construction with the passage of time.

What to you tipped the 1990s Barrett claim from a status of initial uncertainty and justified skepticism (because: sensational; new 30 years later) to conviction or confidence that his claim was true, in terms of positive evidence (not “it could be true” argument, but what you saw as positive evidence that it was true)? What says to you: other 30 years-later stories solely dependent on witness claims with no physical evidence [referring in this case to Oswald ID at the crime scene, not existence of a wallet] are urban legends. What tilted you to conclude this case was different; this witness was not only honest but also accurately honest, in this claim first made public or known made privately either, 30 years after the fact? A question of self-examination of epistemology—why do we come to think we know what we think we know?

Martin Weidmann, it is not correct that the reason I reject the crime scene Oswald wallet first known in Hosty’s book in the late 1990’s is because that is what I want to believe. No, it is because witness claims always must be assessed case by case and that is how it looks to me evidentially as a judgment, on evidence grounds alone.

Fair enough, but the Barrett story finds, at least to some extend, corroboration in the TV footage showing a uniformed police officer (likely Croy) and another man are looking at what seems to be a wallet. For a Hidell ID being found in the wallet Bentley took from Oswald in the car there is no corroboration whatsoever.

If anything, I have a bias to want to read the evidence in a way that Oswald is innocent, which I have to attempt consciously not to interfere with objectivity (if that is possible). But what about yourself. You will agree, I believe, that upon first encounter of the Barrett story from 1990’s with its sensational claim, that cannot automatically, right off the bat, be known true or false. No witness saying something out of the blue 30 years later makes it true just because he said it. Agreed?[/b]

Yes, I agree that when somebody comes forward with a story, thirty years after the fact, it can not automatically be relied upon as being true or false. People build up false memories all the time and sometimes they make false claims on purpose, for whatever reason. But I don't see Barrett as somebody who would do that. So, the first question that needs to be asked is; why would a retired FBI agent suddenly tell a story about a 30 years old event, when he possibly wasn't even aware of the fact that there was footage that to some extend corroborates his story. That's the coincidence I can not get passed to dismiss Barrett's story outright.

But there is more circumstantial evidence. Together with Capt Westbrook, C.T. Walker was at the Tippit crime scene before going to the Texas Theater. This means that if there was a wallet found at the Tippit scene, Walker was there to witness it.

Now let's compare stories;

Story 1: Bentley said he took a wallet from Oswald in the car but does not mention finding a Hidell ID. In his report he says he initialed the revolver (allegedly taken from Oswald) and turned it over tl Lt. Baker, together with "his identification". Gerald Hill says in his WC testimony this happened at around 4:00 PM.

Story 2: C.T. Walker says in his WC testimony that he had the revolver and the suspects identification when Oswald was brought into the homicide bureau. Guy Rose said in his testimony that he arrived at City Hall just after Oswald had been brought in and that he was given a wallet by an unidentified person (which could be a patrolman). He then talked to Oswald and found the Hidell ID in the wallet. This all happened somewhere between 1:30 and 2:00 PM. We know from the receipt that the wallet and the S & W revolver were submitted to the evidence bureau at 3:35 PM

I don't see how the wallet in both stories could be the same one. So, what's a possible explanation? If we disregard the obvious contradiction of the revolver's chain of custody, and only focus on the wallet; it needs to be considered that C.T. Walker was at the Tippit crime scene. The only way I can fit Bentley's wallet story and Walker's wallet story in one narrative is by concluding that Bentley did in fact take a wallet from Oswald, which did not contain the Hidell ID, and kept it until turning it over to Lt Baker at around 4:00 PM, and Walker had the wallet found at the Tippit scene which he brought into City Hall where it was given to Guy Rose and subsequently was submitted to the evidence bureau at 3:35 PM.

If anybody can come with with another plausible explanation to square the two stories, I would love to hear it!
 
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CT beanie back on (whew, I'm getting dizzy): I noticed you said this same thing as having been some sort of epiphany for you in the video with Fred Litwin. In my Mafia scenario, the lads didn't have to plant Oswald in the TSBD or know anything in advance about the motorcade route. Why would this be a necessity?

If they intended to us Oswald as either the shooter or the patsy, they would need him in a place where he could do the deed. As it was, the route wasn't made public until Monday of that week. That would have meant they had four days to locate a suitable shooter/patsy. What evidence is there that anybody in the Mafia knew Oswald was working in the TSBD? Even if they knew, that is a very small amount of time to convince Oswald to be the shooter. If he was intended to be the patsy, how did they get him to make the preparations to retrieve his rifle from Irving, then make the trip on Thursday night to fetch the rifle, and smuggle it into the TSBD the next day. The same questions apply no matter who one hypothesizes was behind the assassination.

On, the other hand, it is perfectly plausible that Oswald upon learning the motorcade would be passing directly in front of his workplace would hatch a scheme to take out JFK for reasons known only to him. It was a crime of opportunity.

If you disagree  with my analysis, present a plausible explanation for how the Maffia, or anybody else could have hatched this plot using Oswald as either the shooter or the patsy.
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It all comes down to opportunity and motive. Could Oswald have arrived at 10th street in time to kill Tippit?

Yes.
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What was he even doing there?

He never told us. It's a little late to ask him now.
Quote

And if he shot Tippit to evade arrest why not leave after Tippit was down? Why go back and shoot him in the head to ensure he was dead? It doesn't make sense to me. The coup the grace shot is a complete mystery to me.

It doesn't need to make sense to you. It made sense to Oswald. He was calling the shots in this episode.

This is a logical fallacy CTs often fall into. They can't understand why Oswald made the decisions he did and did the things he did. They put themselves in Oswald's shoes and think they wouldn't have done that. That's nice but irrelevant. Oswald did the things he thought was best for him. It doesn't matter if it makes sense to anybody but him.
[/quote]
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This is a genuine puzzle to me as well. The LN narrative presumably would be "He wanted to be sure Tippit was dead and couldn't get to his radio." But since there were several witnesses, this scarcely seems compelling. The close-range coup de grace is the sort of thing we hear all the time that supposedly suggests some sort of prior relationship and personal rage.
The autopsy found no "powder tattooing" at the margins of the head wounds.

Rose's autopsy report here: https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth338568/m1/9/

"Gunshot stippling and tattooing are patterns of tiny skin injuries left by gunpowder particles when a firearm discharges at close range. These marks help forensic examiners estimate the distance between the muzzle and the target, reconstruct the angle of fire, and determine whether the wound occurred before or after death. For attorneys on either side of a criminal case, the presence or absence of these patterns often drives the narrative: a close-range shot tells a very different story than a distant one, and getting the interpretation wrong can mean the difference between a conviction and an acquittal."

Source/link: https://legalclarity.org/gunshot-stippling-and-tattooing-range-of-fire-and-court-use/

From Myers:



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It all comes down to opportunity and motive. Could Oswald have arrived at 10th street in time to kill Tippit? What was he even doing there? And if he shot Tippit to evade arrest why not leave after Tippit was down? Why go back and shoot him in the head to ensure he was dead? It doesn't make sense to me. The coup the grace shot is a complete mystery to me.

This is a genuine puzzle to me as well. The LN narrative presumably would be "He wanted to be sure Tippit was dead and couldn't get to his radio." But since there were several witnesses, this scarcely seems compelling. The close-range coup de grace is the sort of thing we hear all the time that supposedly suggests some sort of prior relationship and personal rage.
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So you think asking you to tell us what you think happened is frivolous? That says a lot.
Well, it's a start. So now tell us how the Mafia knew 6 weeks in advance of the assassination to place Oswald in the TSBD overlooking a motorcade route that had not yet even been planned.

CT beanie back on (whew, I'm getting dizzy): I noticed you said this same thing as having been some sort of epiphany for you in the video with Fred Litwin. In my Mafia scenario, the lads didn't have to plant Oswald in the TSBD or know anything in advance about the motorcade route. Why would this be a necessity?
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I did not realize you were proposing a crime scene wallet might be the one turned in later as the Oswald wallet in evidence, and not the one said to have been taken from Oswald in the car.

In my previous posts I made it clear enough that this was a possibility.

Let's examine what we actually know;

Hill and Bentley were sitting on either side of Oswald on the back seat of the car, when Hill asked Bentley to look for identification. Bentley found a wallet and, according to Hill, mentioned Lee Oswald. Not a word about Hidell by any of the officers in the car until Hill, during his WC testimony on April 8, 1964, vaguely remembers another name, which could have been Hidell, was also mentioned in the car. There is not a single report (including the one filed by Bentley on 11/22/63) that actually mentions an Hidell ID being found in that wallet.

On the other hand we have FBI agent Barrett who not only clearly states that Westbrook was holding a wallet and asked him about Hidell and Oswald at the Tippit crime scene but also called the suggestion that the wallet with the Hidell ID in it was taken from Oswald in the car, "hogwash".

This is were it gets complicated. When the car arrived at City Hall, Bentley went to the homicide bureau to write a report (the one in which he does not mention Hidell!) before being taken to the hospital. What happened to the wallet that Bentley has is anybody's guess. Bentley writes in his report that he gave the identification to Lt. Baker, after he had initialed the revolver together with Hill. The problem is that, according to Hill, that happened at around 4:00 PM. And then we have officer Walker who had been at the Tippit crime scene, who claims in his WC testimony that when Oswald was brought into the homicide bureau (at around 1:15 PM , IIRC) he (Walker) had the revolver and the Hidell identification.

So, now we turn to Guy Rose, who had been called in and arrived just as Oswald was being brought in. He was the first officer to talk to Oswald and just before that happened an unidentified patrol officer gave him a wallet and told him it belonged to the suspect. That's the wallet in which Rose found the Hidell ID.

So, here is the discrepancy; if Bentley gave the wallet to Lt Baker at around 4:00 PM, how could Rose have had it at just past 1:00 PM when he talked to Oswald and how could the wallet containing the Hidell ID be submitted to the evidence room at 3:35 PM.

Do you understand the problem now?

But may I ask, are you meaning this as evidence Oswald was present at the crime scene with Hidell ID?

No. It's only potential evidence that a wallet containing the Oswald and Hidell ID was at the Tippit crime scene. How it got there is anybody's guess.

Do you think Oswald shot Tippit?

What I think is not really important, but since you asked; I think it's a mistake to jump to conclusions.

It all comes down to opportunity and motive. Could Oswald have arrived at 10th street in time to kill Tippit? What was he even doing there? And if he shot Tippit to evade arrest why not leave after Tippit was down? Why go back and shoot him in the head to ensure he was dead? It doesn't make sense to me. The coup the grace shot is a complete mystery to me.

Do you think he accidentally dropped his wallet at the scene, or handed his wallet to Tippit?

I have no idea. Once again, you assume that it was Oswald himself who carried that wallet but we don't know that.

30 years later for a first mention of something that would be expected memorable from the beginning is the key fact making this urban legend genre.

I've already said this once before. What if Barrett, for 30 years, had no knowledge there was even a problem with the wallet until he talked to Hosty? Vicki Adams wasn't heard from for decades because she wasn't aware what the WC had said about her reliablity or lack thereof. As the case was closed in 1964, Barrett, like most people, would have gotten on with his life and most likely never had a reason to second guess the WC report.

This Oswald wallet at the crime scene very parallel to the Mike Howard claim. They’re both equally unbelievable and for exactly parallel reasons.

No. The wallet story has footage showing it being held at the Tippit scene. There's also circumstantial evidence to support the possibility of wallets being switched.

The only reason for you to call them both unbelievable is that you don't want to believe them. It is as simple as that.

I think Greg is just being too cautious, and not because he doesn't want to believe them. Greg's extreme caution makes it all the more important when he concludes that an item of evidence supports the conspiracy view.

I agree that plenty of witnesses did not come forward until many years later because they simply did not realize the importance of their information. Hosty and Barett were both "hostile witnesses."

My bottom line is that I simply cannot believe it's just a cosmic coincidence that a wallet was found next to Tippit's car.

I also find it very hard to believe that someone as intelligent as Oswald would have been abjectly stupid enough to be walking around with a fake Hidell ID in his wallet after supposedly shooting JFK with a rifle ordered by an "A. Hidell." I mean, come on. If this isn't a case of crucial evidence being far too pat, I don't know what would be.
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Oh, surprise, surprise: One of our two worst resident know-nothing trolls is offering another unserious, frivolous reply.

So you think asking you to tell us what you think happened is frivolous? That says a lot.
Quote

It is indeed ironic that three of the seven members of the WC, which you claim got everything right, rejected the single-bullet theory, the very foundation of the lone-gunman theory. One of those three, Congressman Hale Boggs, said that FBI director J. Edgar Hoover "lied his eyes out to the Commission, on Oswald, on Ruby, on their friends, the bullet, the gun, you name it." Another of the three, Senator Richard Russell, rejected the lone-gunman theory and the SBT and believed there was a conspiracy. Another of the three, Senator Sherman Cooper, did not believe that Oswald acted alone, did not believe the single-bullet theory, said there was corruption in the WC, said the WC knew about Jack Ruby and the Mafia but did not care, and said that the "true believers" on the Commission stated they were acting for “God and country.”

Who were the plotters? We know who some of them were:

-- Mafia kingpin Carlos Marcello, who told two people, one of them a federal informant, that he was involved in the assassination.

-- Mafia kingpin Santo Trafficante, who was overheard on federal wiretaps talking about the need for JFK to die, and revealed his knowledge of/role in the plot to two people.

The four best books on the evidence that Marcello and Trafficante were involved in the plot are Dr. David Kaiser's The Road to Dallas, Dr. David Scheim's The Mafia Killed President Kennedy, Dr. Richard Mahoney's The Kennedy Brothers, and Lamar Waldron's The Hidden History of the JFK Assassination.

-- Mafia operative Jack Ruby, whose foreknowledge of the assassination was revealed in FBI documents released in 2017. The documents reveal that a federal informant reported to his federal contact in 1977 that Ruby knew about the assassination in advance. The informant logically thought that this vital information would be of interest to the newly formed HSCA, and he assumed the FBI would make the HSCA aware of this information. The Dallas FBI office forwarded the documents about the informant's disclosure to FBI HQ, but FBI HQ did not give them to the HSCA and did not even tell the HSCA about them.

-- High-ranking CIA officer and avowed Kennedy hater William King Harvey. Mark Wyatt, who served as Harvey's aide in 1963, told his children and a French journalist that he saw Harvey on a flight to Dallas in November 1963, and that Harvey made comments to him soon after the assassination that indicated Harvey had either known about the murder in advance or had been involved in it. Wyatt’s daughter urged him to testify to the HSCA, but he could not bring himself to do it because of his sense of loyalty to the CIA.

-- CIA hitman David Sanchez Morales, who proudly admitted to two close associates in 1973 that he and some other CIA personnel "took care" of Kennedy in retribution for Kennedy's alleged treason in the Bay of Pigs operation. The two witnesses were Morales' lifelong friend, Ruben Carbajal, and Morales' attorney, Bob Walton. Morales made this admission to them at the same time in the same room. Both Carbajal and Walton confirmed this to HSCA investigator Gaeton Fonzi. Fonzi discussed this in his book The Last Investigation.

I'm pointing out these things for the sake of others, not because I have any hope that you will read any of the books that document this evidence.

Well, it's a start. So now tell us how the Mafia knew 6 weeks in advance of the assassination to place Oswald in the TSBD overlooking a motorcade route that had not yet even been planned. How did the conspirators get access to Oswald's Carcano rifle?

These questions will do for now. I'm sure I'll have more once I see your replies.

It's easy to propose a vague plot. The devil is in the details. That's what I never see CTs able to do. Hence the two questions I posed.

FYI. One of the first conspiracy books I read was Mafia Kingfish: Carlos Marcello and the Assassination of John F. Kennedy. That was about 35 years ago. I didn't find it very compelling. Two others were  David Lifton's Best Evidence and Mark Lane's Plausible denial. It's not nice to speak ill of the dead so I just won't say anything at all about them.
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-- Mafia operative Jack Ruby, whose foreknowledge of the assassination was revealed in FBI documents released in 2017. The documents reveal that a federal informant reported to his federal contact in 1977 that Ruby knew about the assassination in advance. The informant logically thought that this vital information would be of interest to the newly formed HSCA, and he assumed the FBI would make the HSCA aware of this information. The Dallas FBI office forwarded the documents about the informant's disclosure to FBI HQ, but FBI HQ did not give them to the HSCA and did not even tell the HSCA about them.

Yawn.

The man's insane. Reading his posts will only make you stupider.

Let’s examine this “Ruby foreknowledge” CT bombshell:

1. Our hero was Robert Murray Vanderslice, born in 1926 and died (in Dallas) in 1979.

2. He was an IRS tax informant, focusing on bookies, from 7/23/76 to 2/18/77 (six months). He was paid $135 for his services and $2.89 for expenses.

3. His last contact with the IRS was on 1/24/77. The IRS special agent to whom he was assigned, Lawrence Sandri, said he had never mentioned Ruby or anything about the JFKA.

4. At a restaurant lunch with the IRS local Intelligence Division Manager, Arlen Fuhlendorf, early in 1977 (some 14 years after the JFKA), he started talking about stripper Candy Barr (who did have a non-romantic, non-employment relationship with Jack Ruby a decade before the JFKA).

5. This somehow led to a discussion of Ruby. Vanderslice told Fuhlendorf that on the morning of the JFKA, Ruby had contacted him to watch the motorcade and had asked if he’d like to “watch the fireworks.” In CT world, this remark can have no meaning other than Ruby’s foreknowledge of the JFKA.

6. They watched the motorcade together from a corner near the Postal Annex. Following the JFKA, Ruby left, without comment, for the Dallas Morning News.

7. At the same lunch, Vanderslice divulged that he had been arrested and incarcerated at the Dallas County Jail at the same time Ruby was there. As a jail trustee, he said, he got to know Ruby better – but he said nothing further about the supposed foreknowledge or motorcade incident.

8.  Fuhlendorf told the FBI that “as far as he knew” Vanderslice had been a reliable tax informant, but he did not know if he was truthful about Ruby. He initially reported the lunch conversation in a memorandum to the IRS national office for transmission to the HSCA, but the IRS returned the memo and told him to contact the Dallas office of the FBI. (The memorandum never surfaced.)

9. Vanderslice went to astounding lengths to avoid repeated efforts by both the FBI and IRS to contact him about his Ruby tale. Fuhlendorf thought he might have “been untruthful” or perhaps had “second thoughts” and had gotten “cold feet” after being told he might have to testify before the HSCA.

10. Because Vanderslice’s tale was inconsistent with Ruby’s WC testimony and that of a Dallas Morning News advertising department employee concerning Ruby’s activities on 11-22-63, and because Vanderslice was clearly avoiding both the FBI and IRS, the FBI abandoned further efforts to contact him.

11. On the last attempted contact, his wife said he was in Wichita Falls, “trying to make a buck here and there.”

Ho-hum, such is the stuff of which conspiratorial bombshells are made in MTG’s goofy end of the CT spectrum.

“Foreknowledge of the assassination.” BWAHAHA.  :D :D :D :D

Not exactly a major exercise in factoid-busting, I’ll concede, but an interesting 30 minutes of mental exercise for your intrepid Factoid Buster.

Minor addendum: When the Vanderslice tale surfaced with the 2017 document release, it was of course of considerable news interest. THE VAST MAJORITY of news outlets, including major MSM, described Vanderslice - in headlines, no less - as an "FBI informant." Sexier than "small-time IRS tax informant," I guess. More like "FBI non-informant," as it turned out.

I reposted the above in response to He's Insane as recently as June 3.

You're welcome. Carry on.
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Just who were these "plotters" and how do you know what they were thinking?

Oh, surprise, surprise: One of our two worst resident know-nothing trolls is offering another unserious, frivolous reply.

It is indeed ironic that three of the seven members of the WC, which you claim got everything right, rejected the single-bullet theory, the very foundation of the lone-gunman theory. One of those three, Congressman Hale Boggs, said that FBI director J. Edgar Hoover "lied his eyes out to the Commission, on Oswald, on Ruby, on their friends, the bullet, the gun, you name it." Another of the three, Senator Richard Russell, rejected the lone-gunman theory and the SBT and believed there was a conspiracy. Another of the three, Senator Sherman Cooper, did not believe that Oswald acted alone, did not believe the single-bullet theory, said there was corruption in the WC, said the WC knew about Jack Ruby and the Mafia but did not care, and said that the "true believers" on the Commission stated they were acting for “God and country.”

Who were the plotters? We know who some of them were:

-- Mafia kingpin Carlos Marcello, who told two people, one of them a federal informant, that he was involved in the assassination.

-- Mafia kingpin Santo Trafficante, who was overheard on federal wiretaps talking about the need for JFK to die, and revealed his knowledge of/role in the plot to two people.

The four best books on the evidence that Marcello and Trafficante were involved in the plot are Dr. David Kaiser's The Road to Dallas, Dr. David Scheim's The Mafia Killed President Kennedy, Dr. Richard Mahoney's The Kennedy Brothers, and Lamar Waldron's The Hidden History of the JFK Assassination.

-- Mafia operative Jack Ruby, whose foreknowledge of the assassination was revealed in FBI documents released in 2017. The documents reveal that a federal informant reported to his federal contact in 1977 that Ruby knew about the assassination in advance. The informant logically thought that this vital information would be of interest to the newly formed HSCA, and he assumed the FBI would make the HSCA aware of this information. The Dallas FBI office forwarded the documents about the informant's disclosure to FBI HQ, but FBI HQ did not give them to the HSCA and did not even tell the HSCA about them.

-- High-ranking CIA officer and avowed Kennedy hater William King Harvey. Mark Wyatt, who served as Harvey's aide in 1963, told his children and a French journalist that he saw Harvey on a flight to Dallas in November 1963, and that Harvey made comments to him soon after the assassination that indicated Harvey had either known about the murder in advance or had been involved in it. Wyatt’s daughter urged him to testify to the HSCA, but he could not bring himself to do it because of his sense of loyalty to the CIA.

-- CIA hitman David Sanchez Morales, who proudly admitted to two close associates in 1973 that he and some other CIA personnel "took care" of Kennedy in retribution for Kennedy's alleged treason in the Bay of Pigs operation. The two witnesses were Morales' lifelong friend, Ruben Carbajal, and Morales' attorney, Bob Walton. Morales made this admission to them at the same time in the same room. Both Carbajal and Walton confirmed this to HSCA investigator Gaeton Fonzi. Fonzi discussed this in his book The Last Investigation.

I'm pointing out these things for the sake of others, not because I have any hope that you will read any of the books that document this evidence.

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