Oswald said he ate lunch with 'Junior' and Jarman denied it
Where do you get this BS?..... Neither Hosty nor Fritz jotted down such an important piece of information.
Secret Service agent Thomas Kelley wrote:
"He said he ate his lunch with the colored boys who worked with him.
He described one of them as ‘Junior’, a colored boy, and the other
was a little short negro boy." (WR, p.626)
If Lee had told them that he had ate lunch with Junior Jarmam both Fritz and Hosty would have noted that critical piece of information and then checked with Jarman to verify or refute Lee's statement.
Lee DID tell Fritz and Hosty that he had seen Junior and "a short statured" colored walk by the 1st floor lunchroom as he was eating his lunch.
FBI agent James Bookhout, wrote:
"OSWALD stated that on November 22, 1963, he had eaten lunch in the
lunch room at the Texas School Book Depository, alone, but recalled
possibly two Negro employees walking through the room during this
period. He stated possibly one of these employees was called ‘Junior’
and the other was a short individual whose name he could not recall
but whom he would be able to recognize." (WR, p.622)
Both Jarman and Norman kept their lunches on a shelf inside one of the windows in the Domino Room ("I put it in the window" and "I left it in the window of the domino room"). Oswald is clearly telling Bookhout about the "lunch room" and that he saw Jarman and Norman "walking through the room" to where they routinely stored their sandwiches.
Oswald thought he was smarter than the authorities he hated. I think it was only when he was in custody--having not been killed by police--that he gave any thought to an "alibi". Oswald, on the sixth floor, heard Jarman and Norman arrive below the open window of the Sniper's Nest and figured they must have come from the Domino Room. Lil'Lee imagined they had just finished eating, and he thought his "alibi" would be helped by claiming he saw them walk through to get their lunches (as he knew they did so routinely). Maybe Oswald figured a white man's word in a Texas court would hold up against that of two black men.
......And they verified that they had in fact walked by the lunchroom at about 12:27.
No,
they didn't. The closest is Jarman saying: "That was about 12:25 or 12:28."