Clearly?

Btw Found the Dallas Newspaper with that photo yet, -------keep looking! Thumb1
JohnM
Perhaps Whaley did see an ID bracelet on the wrist of his passenger who was wearing a BLUE JACKET and BLUE trousers.
ID Bracelets were very common ...... a large percentage of young men wore them....
But the Fact remains Lee Oswald could not have been Whaley's passenger because Lee was wearing a reddish brown shirt with a BUTTON DOWN COLLAR and he was NOT wearing a BLUE JACKET. And in addition to the clothing problem....The WC investigators determined that Lee Oswald couldn't have arrived at the taxi stand at the Greyhound bus depot any earlier than 12:48. Whaley said that it was 12:30 when he started to go into the depot to buy a package of cigarettes and it was at that time that he noticed the young man who was wearing a BLUE JACKET approaching his cab.
Luckily the WC provided us with a nice overview of Oswald's (alleged) movements on page 158 of their report:
https://www.history-matters.com/archive/jfk/wc/wr/html/WCReport_0091b.htmThe WC investigators found that Lee Oswald had not yet departed from the TSBD at 12:33 ( 12:33 is about the time that Whaley departed from the Greyhound bus depot with the young man who was wearing a BLUE JACKET.) The Wc investigators found that Lee Oswald boarded Mc Watter's bus at 12:40, and disembarked at 12:44. They found that Lee Oswald then walked the two blocks to the Greyhound bus depot taxi stand and enter a CITY cab at 12:48. Just as Lee was climbing into the cab a lady approached and asked the driver if he would call a cab for her. Lee was dressed in a reddish brown shirt and dark grey trousers.
Lee told Captain Fritz that he and the taxi driver talked as they rode along and the driver told him that JFK had been shot. This clashes with Whaley's statement that his passenger was taciturn and unresponsive to his attempt at creating a conversation. Whaley said that He mentioned the sirens wailing in the vicinity and inquired if the man knew the reason for the sirens. Clearly Whaley didn't know that JFK's motorcade was traveling down Main and the lead elements had their sirens wailing. The question from Whaley also time stamps the event at about 12:30. Lee told Captain Fritz that the taxi fare was 85 cents, and Whaley said that the fare for his passenger was 95 cents. 85 cents is the correct fare for the 2.2 mile trip. There are many contradictions between Whaley's tale and Lee Oswald's account of his taxi ride..... And the logical conclusion is.... Whaley was a big BSer.... and Lee Oswald was not his passenger.