Did Will Fritz and the Dallas Police create the Marsalis bus transfer story to neutralize the corroborated testimony of Roger Craig seeing Oswald leave Dealey Plaza in a car?
Why was a bus transfer for the number 23 Lakewood Line found on Oswald if he’d been on a number 30 Marsalis Line bus?
Even Commission lawyers Burt Griffin and Leon Hubert had suspicions about the tall tales of Larry Crafrard and, among other things, his incredible journey from Dallas to Michigan.
Did Ruby employee Larry Crafard impersonate Lee Harvey Oswald in the lead up to the JFK murder? And did the Warren Commission seriously consider this?
Were the threats to kill Oswald genuine, or were they part of a secret plan to get the Dallas Police to improve their protection of the defendant, who was loudly proclaiming his innocence?
Paul Abbott revisits a tangent from the first edition of his book, ‘Death to Justice – The Shooting of Lee Harvey Oswald’, involving the threats to kill Oswald before his eventual murder on Sunday, November 24th, 1963.
John Washburn concludes his essay on when the police arrived at 1026 Beckley, why they covered up the early time of arrival, and how they knew Oswald was there.
John Washburn explores the evidence that the authorities knew who Oswald was and that he was at the Beckley Street rooming house way before the official story says they knew it. In addition, they were there much earlier also.
Jeff Meek is the only American journalist writing a regular column on the JFK case. This is his second collection of his work on important subjects like Gaeton Fonzi and Jim Gocheanaur.
Australian Paul Abbott has now penned the first book that is devoted almost completely to the murder of Lee Oswald by Jack Ruby. One has to wonder what took so long. He makes the case against infamous Dallas cops; Patrick Dean and Blackie Harrison.
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