NotesForNewInves.html
Notes for a new investigation
Notes for a new investigation
by Sylvia Meagher Esquire, December 1966, pp. 211 ff.
The woman who indexed the entire twenty-six volumes of The Warren
Report emerges from her task with this advice: reopen the
hearings and finish the job. For a starter . . .
CALL THE IMPORTANT WITNESSES NOT HEARD BY THE COMMISSION
Concerning Oswald’s Activities . . .
Pierce Allman, television newsman: Oswald had said that
someone had approached him outside the Depository after the
shooting and asked to be directed to the nearest phone.
Oswald’s account corresponds with the actual experience of
Pierce Allman, and this conflicts with the Commission’s
reconstruction of Oswald’s “escape.”
Mary Dowling, waitress at Dobbs House: She told the F.B.I.
that Oswald and Tippit were in the restaurant at the same time,
two days before the assassination, and that Tippit especially
noticed Oswald when he complained about his food. The Warren
Report says that the two men were not acquainted and had never
even seen each other.
John Rene Heindel, ex-Marine acquaintance of
Oswald’s: Heindel was known by the nickname
“Hidell” to Oswald and to other Marines. The Warren
Report says that there is no real “Hidell” and that
it was only an alias invented by Oswald for his own purposes.
Alonzo Hudkins, reporter for the Houston Post: He
gave the Secret Service information suggesting that Oswald was
being paid $200 a month by the F.B.I. as an informant holding
assigned number “S172.”
Milton Jones, bus passenger: He told the F.B.I. that
Dallas policemen had boarded the bus and searched the passengers
just after Oswald had debarked, which was before anyone noticed
Oswald’s absence from the Depository.
Sandra Styles, Depository office employee: With Victoria
Adams, she ran down the back stairs of the Depository immediately
after shots were fired but did not encounter
Oswald—supposedly running down at that time—nor Roy
Truly and policeman M. L. Baker, supposedly running up.
. . . The Shots and Related Circumstances
James Chaney, motorcycle policeman: He rode in the
motorcade and reportedly saw Governor Connally hit by a separate
bullet after the President was first shot. This conflicts with
the Commission’s single-bullet theory.
Julia Mercer: About 75 minutes before the assassination,
while driving toward the triple underpass, she saw a man walk up
the grassy knoll carrying what appeared to be a rifle case.
Approximately 196 people known to have witnessed the
assassination at the scene who were never questioned by the
commission. (Named in Appendix to Mark Lane’s Rush to
Judgment.)
. . . The Tippit Shooting
There is considerable confusion and contradiction about the time
that Tippit was shot, the description of the killer, the
movements of the suspect, and the actions of the eyewitnesses.
The following people could have given important information.
T. F. Bowley, the only witness at the Tippit scene who
looked at his watch to check the time when he saw Tippit’s
body. Bowley said in an affidavit taken by the Dallas police that
Tippit was already dead at 1:10 p.m., while the commission says
that he was shot at 1:15 p.m. If Bowley was correct about the
time, Oswald could not have walked from his rooming house to East
10th Street in time to kill Tippit.
Radio-car patrolman R. C. Nelson: Tippit drove to central
Oak Cliff, supposedly on a simultaneous instruction to him and
Nelson. But Nelson went to the Depository, casting doubt on
whether either of them was really ordered to Oak Cliff.
Radio-car patrolman H. W. Summers: He obtained a
description of the Tippit suspect from an unknown
bystander—who said that the suspect had “black wavy
hair,” was 5’11” tall, and carried a .32
automatic pistol.
Marie Tippit, widow of J. D. Tippit: She probably saw her
husband about an hour before he was killed, when he came home for
lunch. Also, she could have given information on such things as
their unlisted phone and Tippit’s “work at
home” in the evenings.
Frank Wright and his wife: They lived across the street
half a block from the spot where Tippit was killed. Mr. Wright
heard the shots, saw a man standing right at Tippit’s car
who “ran as fast as he could go,” got into a small
old grey 1950–1951 coupe, and “drove away as quick as you
could see.” Mrs. Wright phoned the police to report the
shooting; it was her call that resulted in the dispatch of the
ambulance.
Ambulance drivers Clayton Butler and Eddie Kinsley were
never questioned either.
. . . Oswald’s Arrest
There are many unanswered questions as to who pointed Oswald out
to the police, who drew a gun, whether Oswald tried to shoot an
officer, and what was said by whom. The following witnesses
present at the theatre might have thrown light on those matters:
Bob Apple, insurance investigator.
Detective Paul Bentley: He found a forged
“Hidell” card on Oswald. Bob Barrett, F.B.I.
agent. Jim Ewell, reporter.
Detective E. E. Taylor: he stayed behind at the theatre
after the arrest to make a list of the names and addresses of the
patrons. The list is not among the Commission’s exhibits.
Police officers Baggett, Buhk, Cunningham, Lyon, Stringer,
and Toney.
. . . Oswald’s interrogation
Although Dallas Police Captain Fritz “kept no notes”
or transcript of the interrogation of Oswald, and the reports
submitted by Fritz and Federal agents (primarily from memory)
were incomplete and in some vital respects
contradictory—e.g., Oswald’s trip to Mexico, where he
was at the time of the shooting, and his “Hidell”
alias—the following persons were not asked to submit
reports or to testify: Jim Allen, former Assistant
District Attorney; Secret Service agents Grant, Howard,
Kunkel, Patterson, and Warner; FBI agent Joe
Myers; U.S. Marshall Robert Nash; Chuck Webster,
Professor of Law.
. . . The Walker Shooting
In addition to the Kennedy-Tippit killings, the Warren Commission
also “convicted” Oswald of attempting to murder
General Edwin A. Walker in April, 1963. But they neglected to
take testimony from:
Walter Kirk Coleman, a teen-age neighbor of General
Walker, who saw two men flee the scene by car after the shot was
heard. Oswald could not drive, and the Report said he was alone.
Detective Ira Van Cleave, who participated in the original
investigation of the Walker shooting and who told the press at
that time that the bullet had been “identified as a
30.06,” which rules out Oswald’s Carcano rifle.
. . . The Autopsy
In view of the conflicting descriptions of the wound in the
President’s back by the F.B.I. and the autopsy surgeons,
witnesses who saw the body could have given crucial information.
Admiral George Burkley, Presidential physician. He was in
the motorcade, then at Parkland Hospital, and later at the
autopsy, and he received the autopsy report submitted by the
pathologists.
Francis X. O’Neill, Jr., F.B.I. agent: He was
present throughout the autopsy and his description of the wound
in the President’s back conflicts with the official autopsy
report.
James W. Sibert, F.B.I. agent: Same as O’Neill
above.
John T. Stringer, Jr., medical photographer: He
photographed the President’s body.
Fourteen other Armed Forces or Federal officials named in
the F.B.I. Report, and four funeral-home workers who
prepared the body for burial.
. . . The Stretcher-Bullet (See Planted Bullet
Theory.)
Richard E. Johnsen, Secret Service Agent: He was handed
the stretcher bullet by O. P. Wright, chief of personnel,
at Parkland Hospital, before the Presidential party departed.
Wright was not called either.
. . . A Possible Conspiracy
F.B.I. agent Warren De Brueys: Before the assassination he
reported on Oswald’s activities in New Orleans; he was
present at Oswald’s interrogation; and he investigated
allegations suggesting that Oswald expected to receive a large
sum of money.
Robert Adrian Taylor, a former service-station attendant:
He claimed that Oswald had given him a rifle in lieu of payment
for car repairs in the Spring of 1963. The Warren Report
mistakenly asserts that Taylor retracted his identification of
Oswald.
R. W. Westphal and other Dallas policemen prepared reports
immediately after the assassination in which Oswald’s old
Elsbeth Street address was specified when the police had no known
access to that address and although they claim they had no record
of Oswald before November 22, 1963.
Information About Jack Ruby
Lt. George Butler: He was present when Ruby murdered Oswald, and
he gave contradictory information to the F.B.I. and to the press
about Ruby’s past criminal associations and activities.
Wanda Joyce killiam, waitress at Ruby’s Carousel Club: Her
husband, Hank Killiam, was a friend of Oswald’s
fellow-roomer on Beckley Street, John Carter. Killiam was found
dead in Florida, his throat cut, in March, 1964.
Ray Rushing, evangelist: He attempted to see Oswald on Sunday
morning and says that he rode up in the police elevator with Jack
Ruby at nine-thirty a.m. when, according to the Commission, Ruby
was at home.
Names Unknown
About ten or more witnesses present at the Texas Theatre when
Oswald was arrested, named on a list compiled by detective E. E.
Taylor.
Caterer at the Depository, who sold lunches to employees and
might have sold lunch to Oswald on the day of the assassination
or on other occasions.
“No. 279 (Unknown)” who, according to the Dallas
Police radio log, actually found the jacket discarded near the
Tippit scene, although The Warren Report credits Captain
Westbrook with the discovery.
Post-office employees at the main office, where Oswald maintained
P.O. Box 2915, who were not questioned about specific records or
recollections of the delivery of packages addressed to “A.
Hidell” containing the rifle and the revolver.
Inmates, County Jail, who were permitted to watch the motorcade
from a window and may have observed significant happenings at the
sixth-floor window or other Depository windows.
Gunsmiths, Aberdeen Proving Grounds and Klein’s Sporting
Goods, Inc., concerning the opinion by the Aberdeen gunsmith that
the scope on the assassination rifle “was installed as if
for a left-handed man” (Oswald was right-handed).
Witnesses we could have done without
Mrs. Anne Boudreaux knew a woman who had been
Oswald’s baby-sitter for two weeks when he was
two-and-a-half years old, but never knew Oswald or his mother
(four pages or testimony).
Mrs. Viola Peterman was a neighbor of Marguerite Oswald in
1941, when Lee was “a good little child” of two
years, but she hadn’t seen or heard from the Oswalds for
twenty-three years (seven pages).
Professor Revilo Pendleton Oliver, called to discuss his
article “Marxmanship in Dallas,” spent thirty-five
pages proving he had no information to contribute to any aspect
of the investigation.
RESTUDY THE EVIDENCE, STAGE NEW TESTS
The Commission’s failure to follow up leads, its
dependence on unrealistic tests and its omission of vital
evidence necessitate further research, such as:
1. Tracing and examination of the unseen autopsy
photographs and X-rays.
2. Rifle and marksmanship tests on the basis of a
reenactment of the shots from the Depository, using dragged car
and dummies, and riflemen whose capabilities correspond with
Oswald’s level of skill.) (The Warren Commission used
experts.)
3. Tracing of the rifle obtained by Robert Adrian Taylor
(see above) to determine whether the weapon was ever in the
possession of Oswald or persons associated with him.
4. Tracing of laundry tag on the jacket discarded near the
Tippit scene (number “B 9738”) to determine whether
Oswald or someone else had it cleaned.
5. Reenactment of Oswald’s taxi ride, in a metered
vehicle, to determine the actual time. In reenactments performed
for the Warren Commission the estimate was progressively reduced
from eleven to nine to six minutes.
6. Re-auditing of the police radio log to make an
authoritative transcript which would resolve the conflicts among
the three transcripts made for the Warren Commission.
7. Auditing of tapes of statements to the press by
Parkland Hospital doctors describing the President’s head
wounds (tape of the first press conference is said to be
“lost”).
8. Tracing of Tippit’s clipboard, never requested by
the Warren Commission although it is visible in a photograph of
his car before it was removed from the scene of the shooting.
9. Scrutiny of all test bullets fired in the
wound-ballistics experiments with human cadavers, goats, and
gelatin blocks (260 rounds of ammunition were obtained for use in
those tests but only two of the test bullets are shown by the
Warren Commission for comparison with the stretcher bullet).
10. Examination of all unpublished films and photographs
of the assassination (i.e., the missing Zapruder frames; the
Moorman photograph encompassing the Depository; the Betzner
photos showing the fence area on the grassy knoll; the Robert
Hughes film showing the sixth-floor window; the Ralph Simpson
film).
11. Investigation of the repositioning and ultimate
disappearance of the Stemmons Freeway sign which obscured the
President from Zapruder’s camera for some fifteen frames of
the film—of vital importance to the “Traffic-Sign
Theory.”
12. Tests of authenticity of the palm print lifted from
the rifle barrel.
13. Examination of all withheld F.B.I. and Secret Service
reports of interviews with witnesses, including Parkland Hospital
personnel (some thirty interviews with the doctors and others,
none of which is published in the Exhibits).
14. Examination of all transcripts of off-the-record
passages of testimony.
15. Neutron activation analysis of the bullet fragment
removed from Governor Connally’s wrist and also of the
bullet found on the stretcher (exhibit No. 399). This will
determine once and for all whether the stretcher bullet actually
caused Connally’s wounds (as the Warren Report says), and
thus whether the single-bullet, lone-assassin thesis is tenable.