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Wednesday 17 October 2012

THE FRAMING OF LEE HARVEY OSWALD: THE WALKER SHOOTING, PART 2


The Framing of Lee Harvey Oswald:
 the General Walker Assassination Attempt, Part Two

by Judyth Vary Baker

In Part One, we established that it was highly unlikely that Lee Oswald
was ever involved in the General Edwin Walker assassination attempt
occurring in Dallas some seven months prior to the Kennedy
assassination on April 10, 1963. 

Lee H. Oswald was never considered a suspect until after his widow, Marina, was questioned, under suspicious circumstances and without any outside protection from threats, including deportation threats, which we now know influenced her testimony significantly.  Even though the Warren Commission assured her she would not be deported, previous to that, Marina had been threatened, during interrogations by the FBI, with deportation if she did not cooperate (viz: Vol. I, p 79, Vol. I, p. 410).   With Oswald dead, Marina faced possible arrest and execution had she been deported back to the USSR, with her American-born infant left behind, to say nothing of what might have happened to her Soviet-born toddler.

DECEPTION IN THE CASE ABOUNDS

The “Magic Bullet” --found on an unrelated stretcher not belonging to Governor Connally or to Kennedy in Parkland Hospital --is identified, nevertheless, by the Warren Commission as the bullet fired by Lee Oswald from the 6th floor of the Texas School Book Depository Building.

(Note that Wikipedia --influenced by planted disinformaton specialists --tells us: 

Single bullet theory - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Single_bullet_theory
"... The bullet ..... was recovered from Governor Connally's stretcher later at Parkland Hospital." )

Here is the truth: Parkland Hospital employee Darrell Tomlinson found the bullet, which had no blood or tissue on it, today believed to have been a stretcher belonging to a boy, Ronnie Fuller. The stretcher was near Connally's.  Tomlinson's statements can be viewed here:


IN THIS VIDEO, TOMLINSON IS GIVEN FULL OPPORTUNITY TO SAY IT WASN'T CONNALLY'S STRETCHER

 However, another video is available calculated to show something entirely different--someone interviews Tomlinson again, and makes it seem that Tomlinson found the bullet on Connally's stretcher: be VERY alert, because Tomlinson only said he didn't know who was on the stretcher. The interviewer then asks if  Connally's stretcher came down on that elevator, and after Tomlinson agrees, the interview is soon cut off. However, from the first video, we know Tomlinson was talking about the stretcher that was NOT Connally's.


IN THIS VIDEO, TOMLINSON IS CUT OFF BEFORE HE CAN SAY IT WASN'T CONNALLY'S STRETCHER...

  This kind of deception permeates YouTube, Warren Commission apologist arguments, and almost all of the sites that first pop up on the Internet about the Kennedy assassination. 

   Now that you're alert to how cleverly evidence and witnesses can be manipulated, let's move on to look at more evidence in the Walker shooting case, showing how Lee Oswald very likely had nothing to do with the incident at all. It's a long journey, but at its end, you'll see a dozen more examples of an almost fiendish will to convict Lee Oswald using every possible kind of deception, and you will be an expert at how these deceptions were used to frame Lee Harvey Oswald.

Let's start with a blatant lie created by the Warren Commission:

 DID OSWALD FIRE A COPPER-CLAD BULLET AT GENERAL WALKER?

The Magic bullet was supposed to be responsible for creating seven distinct sites of damage to muscles, rib bones and wrist bones, before somehow exiting Connally’s body in the operating room to land onto somebody else’s stretcher out in the hallway. the bullet was copper-jacketed:


 The “Magic Bullet” CE399 (above and right, below) is compared to "The Walker Bullet" --as so labeled by The Warren Commission. But there are huge problems with this bullet.

ORIGINALLY, THE COMPOSITION OF THE BULLETS' JACKETS DIDN'T MATCH --BUT YOU'D NEVER KNOW IT FROM THIS PHOTO!


Despite the photo above, the bullet recovered in the Walker incident by the Dallas police was described as not as copper-jacketed, but as steel-jacketed. HERE IS THE POLICE REPORT:




THE BULLETS' COMPOSITIONS DIDN'T MATCH

Furthermore, the composition of the "Walker bullet" as reported as analyzed by 3/27/64 did not match the composition of a bullet fragment found in the Kennedy limo attributable to a bullet fragment supposedly only able to have come from Oswald's rifle.

This April 10, 1963 report is in the Warren Commission exhibits, stating that the bullet was of ‘unknown caliber” and “steel jacket.”   

The Commission stated that CE573 --The copper jacketed bullet  shown above with CE399 (The "Magic Bullet") was "the Walker bullet" -- even though Walker himself – an eyewitness when the bullet was recovered in his own house--disagreed vehemently.  You can read his letter here:


 Walker to FBI:

"The bullet before your select committee called the Walker bullet is not the Walker bullet. It is not the bullet that was fired at me and taken out of my house by the Dallas City Police on April 10, 1963. The bullet you have was not gotten from me or taken out of my house by anyone at anytime."

Walker then sends a mailogram to Blakey that the bullet recovered was nothing more than a hunk of lead that didn't even resemble a bullet:

"The bullet used and pictured on the TV by US Senate G.Robert Blakey Committee on Assassinations is a ridiculous substitute for 
a bullet completely mutilated by such obstruction, b[e]aring no resemblance to any unfired bullet in shape or form. 

I saw the 
hunk of lead, picked up by a policeman in my house, and I took it from him and I inspected it carefully. There is no mistake. There has been a substitution for the bullet fired by Oswald and taken out of my house."
WALKER COMPLAINS THAT THE BULLET ON DISPLAY IS
  "A RIDICULOUS SUBSTITUTE"
The Warren Commission told Walker he was wrong, and then told the American people that the bullet known as CE573 was the one that Oswald shot at Walker. 

What did Walker have to say about this?  First, Walker believed that Robert Kennedy used Lee Oswald and a second person to shoot him -- two men were seen by a witness Walker trusted as leaving the scene that night in a car, at high speed.  Researcher Gil Jesus has compiled the written objections concerning CE573 that Walker made. They are stunning:
Gil Jesus continues:

In a June,1979 letter to a deputy AG, Walker's attorney noted his client's experience with weapons and ammunition:

"It is more probable than not that a person of this experience would know and recognize the bullet that was fired at him when he and the Dallas police retrieved and examined the spent bullet at the time of the attempted assassination on him.

For these reasons I feel that it is of some weight that the Select Committee and the Department of Justice consider his opinions with respect to the possibility of substituted evidence in the House Committee investigation."


http://jfk.hood.edu/...ing/Item 05.pdf 

The Jan. 12, 20o12 discussion on Education Forum added this important bit of information by researcher Martin Hay:

Walker's belief is, of course, supported by the Dallas Police report which describes the actual bullet as "steel jacket". (24H39)

What is just as interesting, and less well known, is that the Walker bullet was actually metallurgically distinct from the JFK assassination bullets. The assassination bullets had a lead core in which antimony was the major impurity. CE 573 on the other hand had a lead core with tin as the major impurity. The reason for this is that the lead core of bullets is usually made from scrap lead because it's the cheapest lead available. This lead is often hardened by alloying it with antimony. However, during World war II, there was a shortage of antimony and tin was used instead. 

So CE 573 and the assassination bullets were from different batches made at completely different times - the former during WWII and the latter during the post-war period. 

Gil Jesus responded lengthily about a troubling batch of problems about how this bullet actually came into the hands of the Dallas Police:

There's more problems with this piece of evidence. The bullet was also described as a 30.06.  http://i39.tinypic.com/5v2n81.jpg

And there are problems with the chain of custody. Commission Exhibit 1953 is the FBI report on the Walker shooting. 
http://history-matte...H23_CE_1953.pdf

In that report, TWO DIFFERENT DETECTIVES CLAIMED TO HAVE FOUND THE BULLET !!!! ( McElroy and Norvell ) It also claims that Lt. Day received the bullet from Det. B.G. Brown and took it to the Dallas Police Crime Lab at Parkland Hospital for an identification. The bullet remained there from April 25th to December 2, 1963 at which time it as released back to Lt. Day. The FBI got the bullet on December 4th, but didn't turn it over to the Commission until March 21, 1964.

The interesting thing in this document is the reference to the discrepancies in the police reports on page 18.

B . G . NORVELL States, 'Officer B . G . NORVELL found the bullet. . . " and it was given to Det. B.G. BROWN, Crime Laboratory Division . 

Over a year later, 
on May 28, 1964, Detective DON MCELROY advised he found the bullet and turned it over to Officer BROWN . 

On the same date, Officer BROWN stated he obtained the bullet from officer NORVELL.

Officer TUCKER, on June 2, 1964, and formar Officer NORVELL, on June 3, 1964, both stated NORVELL found the bullet and he, in turn, gave it to McELROY, who said he would take it or give it to the Dallas Police Department Crime
Laboratory.


So Norvell says he found the bullet and gave it to Brown.
McElroy says he found the bullet and gave it to Brown.
Then, a few days later, Norvell changes his mind and says that although he found the bullet, he gave it to McElroy.
This version is backed by his partner, Tucker.
But Brown is already on record as saying he received the bullet from Norvell.

There's major problems with this chain of custody not to mention the fact that none of these officers were called to testify regarding the identification of CE 573 as the bullet they recovered. 
Edited by Gil Jesus, 11 January 2012 - 03:58 AM.

The icing on this particular hunk of fake cake is this comment by researcher Hay:

I was always intrigued by this exchange from Robert Frazier's WC testimony:

Mr. Eisenberg. Mr. Frazier, I now hand you a bullet in a pill box which is marked Q-188. I ask you whether you are familiar with this bullet.
I would like to state for the record that this bullet was found in the Walker residence after the attempted assassination of General Walker.
Mr. McCloy. As far as you know, we have no proof of that yet?
Mr. Eisenberg. That is right (3H438)

From what you've posted, it doesn't appear they ever did find that proof. “
More than one person was seen by a young witness at the time of the shooting, leaving the Mormon church parking lot immediately after a shot rang out. Here is what researcher Gil Jesus has to tell us about that witness:
The Witness 
Mr. JENNER. Who is Mr. Coleman? Do you know a man by that name?
Mr. SURREY. Not personally.
Mr. JENNER. Walker Kirk Coleman.
Mr. SURREY. As I just read on the back of your exhibit, he is the boy that reported seeing several automobiles at the time of the assassination.
Mr. JENNER. That is immaterial to this issue.
( 5 H 448 )
Walter Kirk Coleman was the 14-year old neighbor of General Walker. On the evening of April 10, 1963, he was working with his godfather building shelves in his room, when he heard a shot sometime between 9 and 10 pm. He immediately ran from his first floor bedroom and looked over a stockade fence into the Mormon church parking lot that adjoined General Walker's property. He saw two men getting into two cars and leaving the parking lot. On June 3, 1964, FBI agents Robert Barrett and Ivan Lee interviewed young Coleman, he was able to describe the men he saw and the cars.

[Note by JVB: the Warren Commission ignored the fact that this young witness described two men who in NO WAY resembled Lee Oswald. I will show a section of the last page of the 3-page FBI interview first, just below:]



The “Walker Note”
Which brings us back to the final piece of evidence that is supposed to seal Oswald’s being the man who shot at General Edwin Walker: a note, written in Russian, where Oswald tells Marina what to do in case he is killed or arrested. The note is described as written for her guidance just before Oswald shot Walker, in case Oswald would be arrested or killed. For nearly fifty years, the American people have been told again and again that Oswald’s note proves he shot at Walker. It does no such thing. And I can tell you why.


The so-called “Walker note” has two pages, but only one has usually been shown in articles. Above, both pages are shown, with the translation provided by The Warren Commission.  The handwriting seems to be Oswald’s and was identified as such.  There are eleven items that Lee Oswald wrote to his wife. They are translated as follows.

1.  This is the key to the mailbox which is located in the main
post office in the city on Ervay Street.  This is the same street
where the drugstore, in which you always waited is located.  You
will find the mailbox in the post office which is located 4
blocks from the drugstore on that street.  I paid for the box
last month so don't worry about it.

2.  Send the information as to what has happened to me to the
Embassy and include newspaper clippings (should there be anything
about me in the newspapers).  I believe that the Embassy will
come quickly to your assistance on learning everything.  

3.  I paid the house rent on the 2d so don't worry about it.  

4.  Recently I also paid for water and gas.  

5.  The money from work will possibly be coming.  The money will
be sent to our post office box.  Go to the bank and cash the
check.  

6.  You can either throw out or give my clothing, etc. away.  Do
not keep these.  However, I prefer that you hold on to my
personal papers (military, civil, etc.).

7.  Certain of my documents are in the small blue valise.  

8.  The address book can be found on my table in the study should
need same.  

9.  We have friends here.  The Red Cross also will help you [Red
Cross in English].

10.  I left you as much money as I could, $60 on the second of
the month.  You and the baby [apparently] can live for another 2
months using $10 per week.  

11.  If I am alive and taken prisoner, the city jail is located
at the end of the bridge through which we always passed on going
to the city (right in the beginning of the city after crossing
the bridge).


Marina testified that she originally found this note in her husband’s “private room” which was the size of a large closet. She had been told not to enter the room. However, it was Ruth Paine who ‘found’ the note for the Warren Commission, tucked away, she said, in a book the police somehow had managed not to confiscate.  Researcher Gil Jesus has worked hard to understand just what “the Walker Note” really meant. His research on the subject is important:
    “The Commission concluded that Oswald attempted to kill General Walker on April 10, 1963. It was important for the Commission to show that Oswald was the shooter in order to prove that Oswald had a propensity for violence.  In its report the Commission stated:
"....on April 10, he attempted to kill Maj. Gen. Edwin A. Walker (Resigned, U.S. Army), using a rifle which he had ordered by mail 1 month previously under an assumed name. Marina Oswald learned of her husband's act when she confronted him with a note which he had left, giving her instructions in the event he did not return. ." ( Report, pg. 14 )
The Commission based its conclusion on 4 "facts", the first of which was the note.
"Based on (1) the contents of the note which Oswald left for his wife on April 10, 1963, (2) the photographs found among Oswald's possessions, (3) the testimony of firearms identification experts, and (4) the testimony of Marina Oswald, the Commission has concluded that Lee Harvey Oswald attempted to take the life of Maj. Gen. Edwin A. Walker (Resigned, U.S. Army) on April 10, 1963. The finding that Lee Harvey Oswald attempted to murder a public figure in April 1963 was considered of probative value in this investigation, although the Commission's conclusion concerning the identity of the assassin was based on evidence independent of the finding that Oswald attempted to kill General Walker." ( ibid. pg. 187 )
 Commission Exhibit 1 is the note Oswald allegedly left for his wife. It was written in Russian. ..
The Discovery of the note
On November 30, 1963, Ruth Paine discovered two Russian language books, one of which was a housekeeping book whose title translated as "the Book of Helpful Instructions".
There are several problems with this piece of evidence, not the least of which is the fact that it makes no reference to the attempted killing of General Walker. The second problem is that the note is undated. 
Problem # 3: The contents of the note
Several different items referred to in the translation which make no sense to me.
Item # 2 says, "Send the information as to what has happened to me to the Embassy and include newspaper clippings ( should there be anything about me in the newspapers ). " But Marina Oswald could not read English-language newspapers ( 2 H 489 ) and would not have known which clippings to send.  Why would the Soviet Embassy in Washington care about an American citizen being arrested for killing another American citizen ?  It wouldn't.  So it makes no sense.
[NOTE BY JVB: But Gil Jesus does not know about what else might have caused Lee Oswald to worry about being arrested.  I have my own explanation as to why this note was written, which can account for this statement. It is found after the remainder of Gil Jesus’ article, below.]
In Item # 5 says that Oswald's paycheck would be sent to their post office box. He instructs her to go to the bank and cash it. ButOswald's checks from Jaggars-Childs-Stovall were not mailed. In fact, the checks were issued on Wednesdays and found their way back to the bank on Fridays.  Commission Exhibit 1174 is a copy of 26 of Oswald's paychecks from Jaggars-Childs-Stovall. It is found in Volume 22 of the hearings. On page 286 are the last 3 of Oswald's Jaggars checks. Note that the top one was cashed at the Mart Liquor Store on Ervay St. ( yellow box on right )

You'll notice also all of those checks also took only two days to make it back to the bank, regardless of where they were cashed. This means that Oswald's checks were not mailed. Since Oswald had been terminated at the time this note was allegedly written could he have been referring to his last paycheck only ?  I don't believe so because it too required only two days to clear the bank ( red squares ) and for this LAST check to have been mailed, the dates on the bank stamp would have reflected the additional time required to cash the check.  Speaking of stamps, if you look at the stamp on the left side of the last check, issued on April 10th, the month is marked as MAR. Besides, how was Marina Oswald going to cash a check made out to her husband ?
Another item in the translation I have a problem with is Item # 9, where Oswald says that the Red Cross will help you…..[NOTE BY JVB: “Red Cross” might refer to the way Lee was helped with a loan to return to the US and/or may be a code to remind Marina to contact the same officials who made the transit to the US from the USSR financially possible. Gil Jesus considers only the US Red Cross organization, which is probably not what Lee meant, if Lee indeed wrote this note.]

A third item in the translation that makes no sense is Item # 10, Oswald's notifying Marina that "I left you as much money as I could, $60 on the second of the month". If you look at Oswald's next-to-last paycheck, it wasn't issued until April 3rd and wasn't cashed until April 5th. And if he left the $60 from the March 27th check of $ 74.38, how did he pay the rent, the gas and the water ( which he said he paid in the note ) with only $ 14.38 ? 
Problem # 4: Marina's contradictory statements about the note
Marina Oswald told several conflicting and contradictory stories to the Warren Commission concerning the Walker incident. One example of those contradictory stories concerned the note. Commission Exhibit 1785 is the report of interviews by the Secret Service with Marina Oswald regarding the note:

        On December 2, 1963, Marina Oswald was interviewed by Secret Service Agent Leon Gopadze by telephone at which time she "disclaimed any knowledge of such note" ( underlined in red, above ). The following day, however, Marina Oswald was interviewed in person by Gopadze and Unum Brady in person and shown the note. At that time, she changed her story from the previous day and said that the note was written by Oswald prior to his shooting at General Walker. ( underlined in blue ) This report also states that Marina said that the note was left on top of a dresser in their bedroom ( green underline ).  But in 1964, Marina told the Warren Commission that the note was located in Oswald's "private room". ( Report, pg. 187 ) In 1978, Marina was completely uncooperative with the House Select Committee on Assassinations, which questioned her on details of the note:

[Note by JVB: in her testimony, Marina now backs away from knowledge of the note and the Walker shooting to which it had been linked. Gil Jesus goes on:]
“Marina's answers to the questions posed to her by the HSCA were vague and evasive. She had made contradictory statements to authorities about WHERE she had found the note and what she had done with it after she found it. By the time she appeared before the HSCA, her memory of the details of the note was all but gone.
Problem # 5 : The Location of the Note

Oswald had a private room in their Neely St. apartment where he conducted his "fantasy" business. Marina described it in testimony:
"... Lee had a small room where he spent a great deal of time, where he read---where he kept his things..."  ( 1 H 13 )
"....he told me not to enter his room. I didn't know about these photographs, but when I came into the room once in general he tried to make it so that I would spend less time in that room. I noticed that quite accidentally one time when I was cleaning the room he tried to take care of it himself."  ( 1 H 14 )
"Sometimes he would lock himself in his room and write in the book." ( 1 H 17 ) 
"My husband had a small room where he kept all that sort of thing. It is a little larger than a closet." ( 5 H 390 )

That Oswald had NOT left the note FOR MARINA becomes apparent when one reads her testimony, in which she admits that she went into his "private room" and discovered the note.

Mr. RANKIN. How did you first learn that your husband had shot at General Walker?
Mrs. OSWALD. That evening he went out, I thought that he had gone to his classes or perhaps that he just walked out or went out on his own business. It got to be about 10 or 10:30, he wasn't home yet, and I began to be worried. Perhaps even later. Then I went into his room. Somehow, I was drawn into it--you know--I was pacing around. Then I saw a note there. ( 1 H 16 ) 

[Note by JVB:  It is my theory (explained in detail later) that Lee wrote the note in case he would be arrested and killed, but, not expecting such an outcome as probable, kept the note where she would not find it unless such an emergency actually developed. That emergency would have been precipitated by something else Lee had to do, at a time close to the date of the Walker incident, as will be explained later.]

Returning to Gil Jesus' fine essay:

The Commission, in its report, admitted that Marina found the note in Oswald's private room, which she was told to stay out of : "...she had found the note in Oswald's room, where she had gone, contrary to his instructions, after she became, worried about his absence."( Report, pg. 405 ) If the note was meant for her eyes, why would he leave it in a room he told her to stay out of ? 
Problem # 6: The lack of fingerprints  [Note by JVB: would they be too old to find?}
One would think that had the note been handled by both Oswald and Marina, the note should have contained the fingerprints of at least one, if not both of them. But that's not the case. On December 3, the note was sent to FBI Headquarters, where it was examined by the FBI's fingerprint expert, Sebastian Latona. Latona reported to his superiors that although he found SEVEN latent fingerprints on the note, they were "not identical with fingerprints of Lee Harvey Oswald or Marina Nikolaevna Oswald".


One might ask how the Warren Commission handled this evidence -- it suppressed it. When Latona testified before the Commission,he was never asked about the fingerprints on the note. He was never asked if the FBI had tried to identify the fingerprints found and was never asked to give a perfectly good reason why neither Oswald's nor his wife's prints were on it.
In addition, this report was never included in the Commission's 26 volumes of evidence and testimony.
The lack of Marina's fingerprints is on the note is significant, because without them there is no evidence that Marina's version of how she discovered it, her confronting Oswald with it and what she did with it afterwards is in question. All of these things required her handling the note, of which, sans the fingerprints, there is no evidence.
I'm not saying she didn't handle the note. I'm saying that there is no physical evidence that she did.
                                 Ref: http://www.giljesus.com/Walker/note.htm  http://www.giljesus.com/Walker/note.htm
     
[Note by JVB: But I contend that the note was written after the Walker incident, after Lee had paid the bills and just before his final check came in the mail, to which, I believe, he is referring. If this note was written AFTER the Walker incident, we can then account for a number of things that Gil Jesus would not have considered.]

We have seen Gil Jesus’ concern about the last check. It is mis-stamped with March and issued April 10th. The signature on the back of the check is not quite right, either, for some of us who notice such details. Some have declared that this check was created to take the place of the original check, which might indeed have been mailed, but which then would place THE WALKER NOTE at a possibly LATER DATE. And we couldn’t have anyone suspecting that the note was written for some other purpose, could we?  Perhaps it was.

In my book, Me & Lee (see my website where you can order it HERE) I explain what Lee told me about an assignment he was given shortly after Walker was attacked by a shooter.  You can find supporting evidence for what I wrote here:

          A NEW INTERPRETATION OF WHY OSWALD WROTE THE NOTE
[THE WARREN COMMISSION STORY]

You'd be surprised how much detail on Lee's life is available. For example, Mary Ferrell's chronology chronicles a great deal of Lee’s life.  Ferrell’s chronology assumes, however that Lee shot at General Walker. Ferrell writes:

April 7, 1963 (Sunday) - Oswald goes to the vicinity of General Walker's home with his rifle.  He buries the rifle in a field nearby.  (WC Vol 23, p. 402)

The problem with this, of course, is that burying the rifle is a highly unusual way to hide a rifle. Why didn’t Oswald simply bring it home again, wrapped in the raincoat in which he was supposed to have brought it, to begin with, to the Walker residence area by bus?  Asked about when Oswald did target practice, she naively answered that he shot at leaves in the park (against the law and again, highly unlikely). Three days later, Oswald supposedly removed the rifle from its buried location, cleaned off the raincoat-- and then took a shot at walker --all this without anyone seeing him--even the 14-year-old eyewitness who saw two men, neither resembling Lee Oswald, departing quickly in two separate cars right after the shot was fired.

Even Ferrell suspects that Ruth Paine might have supplied this piece of evidence on cue when she writes:
      “As this note is very damning to Oswald, why did he not get it back to destroy it as he did his notebook [this is what Marina told investigators—that Oswald had a notebook, as well, that he destroyed—JVB] with the plans of  the Walker attack?  (WC Vol 23, p. 391) Marina hides the note in a cookbook.  (WC Vol 23, p. 827)  "Book of Helpful Instructions."  (WC Vol 22, p. 766; WC Vol 23, p. 392)
      It was found (?) by Mrs. Michael Paine on 11/30/63 in one of two books which she was returning to Marina through the Arlington police on 12/2/63.  (WC Vol 22, p. 779; WC Vol 24, p. 47; WC Vol 25, p. 723).

Ruth Paine has an interesting connection to the termination of Lee’s employment at Jaggars-Chiles-Stovall, sometimes used as a benchmark to prove that Lee Oswald was becoming unstable, having lost his job or terminating it himself (reports vary, but termination is the usual story).
Ferrell writes:

 April 2, 1963 (Tuesday) - Michael Paine goes to 214 W. Neely to meet the Oswalds for the  first time and to take them to Mrs. Paine's Irving home for dinner.  He and Oswald discuss General Walker, among other topics while waiting for Marina and the baby to get ready.  At Mrs. Paine's request, Oswald writes down the address and telephone number of Jaggars-Chiles-Stovall.  (WC Vol 26, p. 543)

One might ask why Ruth Paine would request this information. The next thing we know, Lee, known to have enjoyed his job and to have worked overtimes on Saturdays, which belies later reports that his work was no good, will either lose his job there or will resign.  By Monday, April 8, Lee applied for another job at the Texas Employment Commission, two days after Ruth Paine invited Marina to live with her “rather than return to Russia.”

Ferrell shows Oswald paid the water and gas bill with a deposit made April 8.  When Oswald, in the note he wrote (apparently) to Marina, said he paid the gas and water bills “recently” it means, therefore, that the note was written not only after April 8, but also that at least a couple of days had passed.  The word assumes a passage of time beyond just one day past the day of the payment. This brings the date of the note up to at least April 10. The Walker attack occurred on April 10. But wait—there’s more. The note said:
           
Ferrell’s item 11:  "If I am alive and taken prisoner, the city jail is located at the end of the bridge  through which we have always passed on going to the city (right in the beginning of the  city after crossing the bridge)."  (WC Vol 16, p. 2)

            So Lee expected to be arrested or even killed. But was the note written because he was going to shoot Walker? Let us review what Mary Ferrell writes next (ignoring her belief that Oswald shot at Walker):

            April 10, 1963 (Wednesday, around 9:00 p.m.) - Oswald shoots at General Edwin Walker from a distance of 35 to 40 yards and misses.  (WC Vol 24, p. 40)
The police were called at 9:10 p.m.  (WC Vol 26, p. 753)

            Walter Kirk Coleman, (erroneously called Newman) 14, 4338 Newton, sees two cars  leave from the alley behind General Walker's house.  (WC Vol 1, p. 36; WC Vol 22, pp.    756, 762, 888; WC Vol 23, p. 772; Dallas Morning News, 4/11/63, p. I-1; Dallas Morning News, 4/12/63, p. I-5; Dallas Times Herald, 4/11/63, p. A-1; Dallas Times Herald,   12/6/63, p. A-1; Dallas Morning News, 12/7/63, p. A-1; Dallas Morning News, 12/19/63,   p. A-7; Dallas Morning News, 1/1/64; Life, 2/21/64, p. 75)

            Witness Walter Kirk Coleman, 15, 4338 Newton, sees white male, 19 to 20, 5' 10", 130#, dark bushy hair, thin-faced with a large nose, real skinny, get into a white or beige 1950 Ford after the shooting on the Morman  (sic) Church parking lot.

            Witness Coleman also sees a white male, 6' 1", about 200#, wearing a dark, long-   sleeved shirt and dark trousers, get into a 1958 black-over-white, two-door Chevrolet, and both the Ford and Chevrolet leave the parking lot.  (WC Vol 23, p. 761) Witness Coleman notices a Renault, or some foreign-made car, parked next to the Chevrolet.  Coleman believes it belongs to the Church caretaker.

            There is a meeting at the Mormon Church on this evening.  (WC Vol 23, pp. 763-  764; WC Vol 26, p. 753), 7:30 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. Scott Hansen, the son of the Mormon bishop, recalls a black-over-white 1958 Chevrolet  and remembers seeing it on a previous Wednesday evening.

            Mrs. Marian Ross Bouve, who is General Walker's neighbor on the other side from the  Church, has a watchdog that is sick for two days.  She believes it was drugged or  poisoned.  (WC Vol 23, p. 767; WC Vol 24, p. 41; WC Vol 26, pp. 437, 439)

A witness describes tow men, neither resembling Lee Oswald, as associated with the shooting. This reminds us how witnesses at the Tippit shooting described two men who did not resemble Oswald.  In both cases, such witnesses were ignored b y the Warren Commission.  Again and again, we hear the verdict “the witness must have been mistaken” in this case.

 Next, we learn information that is not mentioned by those who say Oswald shot at General Walker:

April 11, 1963 (Thursday) - Mrs. Michael Paine visits Marina and takes Marina to her Irving home.  (WC Vol 2, pp. 393, 453; WC Vol 9, p. 359; WC Vol 24, p. 693)

Ferrell speculates that Marina had tried to commit suicide, after which the record shows a fight occurred, with Oswald striking his wife and neighbors complaining.  At about the same time, a recently divorced man – Gary Taylor --visited Marina, which could have caused Oswald’s fury to ignite.  

That Sunday, April 14, George and Jeanne deMohrenschildt came to visit for the last time before leaving for a trip east, and then on to Haiti.  Later, they will tell the Warren Commission they saw a rifle in a closet at the Oswalds.  By now, Marina says that the rifle, which she says Oswald once again had buried OR hidden in bushes, after shooting at Walker, is now back in the apartment.  Note: the only people ever to have asserted that they ever, at any time, saw a rifle in Lee Oswald’s possession were these three persons. Not even Ruth Paine had ever seen it.

WHAT WAS THE REAL REASON FOR THE WALKER NOTE?

Lee told me he put in a request to transfer --possibly on that same day --to New Orleans after being ordered (by deMohrenschildt?) to put a sign around his neck and hand out pamphlets and flyers in a pro-Castro demonstration on a Dallas highway.  Lee told me he feared for his life through such an assignment, because Walker had recently been shot at.  However, he realized that if he turned down the assignment, he could be under suspicion as a turncoat spy. Reluctantly, he agreed to accept the assignment.

However, Lee still feared he could be shot at by police as he stood there, due to their hyper-sensitivity after the Walker incident. Or, barring that, he knew he could be arrested and that the Dallas police, if they learned that he had lived in the USSR and had been a ‘defector’ were so radical that they might well beat him to death or shoot him. 

Lee told me he told his handler(s) that he could more good in establishing himself as pro-Castro –his original long-term assignment-- in his native city, New Orleans, where active anti-Castroites would take notice. At the same time, Marina would have Oswald’s family members nearby to help protect her.  Question: Did Lee make this request through George deMonhrenschildt?

Such a fear could have prompted Lee to write the UNDATED note. It would also explain why Lee did not think the note was worth destroying, since he did return safely from his pro-Castro demonstration.

Ferrell reports on Lee’s pro-Castro demonstration thus:

April 16, 1963 (Tuesday) - Oswald writes to the Fair Play for Cuba Committee New York office.  He says that he passed out their literature on the street the day before and requests that they send him some more.  By giving his Dallas address, does Oswald indicate that he had no plan to move from Dallas, which he does on April 24?  (WC Vol    10, p. 87; @C Vol 20, p. 511; New York Times, 12/9/63, p. C-38; Life, 2/21/64, p. 76)
           
Note that April 15 (the day before) neatly fits the “recently’ we saw in the note regarding when he paid the gas and water bill.  Also, though Lee had requested to be transferred to New Orleans, he had not yet received approval for the transfer.  Lee would avoid exposing the fact that he had first been ordered to make a pro-Castro demonstration in Dallas well before his activities in New Orleans.  Lee hid the Dallas demonstration from the Dallas police, only mentioning his New Orleans activities. Writes Ferrell:

On 11/24/63, Oswald says that he first became interested in the FPCC in New Orleans.     (WC Vol 24, p. 479)

We have additional evidence that Lee did go through with the Dallas pro-Castro assignment, impractical and dangerous as it was, but it is buried in the Ferrell chronology. Only because I was particularly concerned about the reason for the note was I able to realize the importance of this almost buried evidence that Lee made a pro-Castro demonstration, incurring danger to himself, only five days after Walker was shot at, giving us a possible date for the note of April 14 or 15. This correlates with the following information offered by Ferrell, who also estimates that the incident occurred on the 15th:

April 15, 1963 (Monday) - Oswald passes out Fair Play for Cuba Committee literature on Main Street in Dallas.  Oswald had a 'Viva Castro' sign around his neck.  The police  eport (5/15/64) says this happened in late spring or early summer at Main and    Ervay in front of H. L. Green store entrance.  (WC Vol 22, p. 796; WC 23, p. 477;     WC Vol 25, p. 681; Dallas Times Herald, 12/9/63; Life, 2/21/64, p. 76)


In the face of the Warren Commission, the FBI, the CIA and interrogations in another language, Marina ‘s responses suggest she may never have regarded the note as important. Confronted with it by interrogators after it was “found” by Ruth Paine. Marina conceded that the note had to do with the Walker shooting , even though it was undated and the dangerous Viva castro demonstration on Main Street had been conducted shortly after. 

Marina told several versions of her story about the Walker incident, beginning with telling investigators she thought Lee went to a typing class the same night – April 10—that Lee supposedly shot at Walker. Marina said she found the note late that night, at about 11 PM.  First, she said, she found it on a dresser in the bedroom; later, she said she found it in Lee’s ‘closet room.’ She said Lee arrived home about an hour later – too late, we believe, to have used a bus as claimed ---we can find no records of bus services between Dallas and Oak Cliff area that late at night. 

Mary Ferrell writes:

            Marina says that Oswald took different buses to and from General Walker's house.   (WC Vol 23, p. 402; WC Vol 24, p. 48; WC Vol 25, p. 730).  Marina says that Oswald claimed he walked to General Walker's and came home on the bus.  (WC Vol 22, p. 756; WC Vol 23, p. 391).

    Why Oswald would walk that distance, when bus services were available, then ride a bus back, seems illogical.  He had the funds for a bus ride. Marina’s story demonstrates how little we can trust her report until we have better information about such matters as bus services that night.

     Even Ferrell noticed the “typing class” excuse was a poor one, since the class did not meet on Wednesday and Lee left too late to be going to the typing class.  She writes:

            Marina says:  1. Oswald returns to their apartment for supper and leaves between 7:00 p.m. and 7:30 p.m.  (WC Vol 1, pp. 35, 37)  2.  She thinks that Oswald has gone to his typing class.  (WC Vol 23, p. 391) (Oswald attended this class on Monday, Tuesday and Thursday, not Wednesday. And, he had not attended since 3/28/63.  The class met between 6:15 p.m. and 7:15 p.m.


 Fortunately, we can again extract the date of April 15—the day after the deMohrenschildt visit – as the day Lee carried out the Viva Castro! assignment he told me about:

April 21, 1963 (Sunday) - The FBI gets a report in June that Oswald passed out FPCC      literature in Dallas, but it probably only happened on Monday, April 15.  The FBI is told       of the contact by Oswald of the FPCC New York office.  (WC Vol 4, p. 446; WC Vol 5, p. 9; WC Vol 17, p. 773; WC Vol 26, p. 94)

   Interestingly, this report was given to the FBI the day after the Oswalds entertained Ruth Paine at a picnic. It seems Paine keeps getting connected to the “evidence chain”:
           
April 20, 1963 (Saturday) - The Oswalds take Mrs. Michael Paine to Lake Cliff Park for a            picnic.  (WC Vol 2, p. 456; WC Vol 9, p. 350; WC Vol 24, p. 692).


Lee's dangerous assignment only a few days after the Walker shooting could have provided the real basis for the undated note Marina said was connected to the Walker shooting. Considering the pressure Marina was under, we can forgive her saying whatever might have been expected of her, but it is startling that neither Ferrell nor anyone else ever noticed, across the span of five decades, that the act of carrying out a pro-Castro demonstration so soon after the Walker incident might have worried Oswald as to its consequences ---enough to have impelled him to write such a note-- yet, after the assignment was completed, the note was not important enough to seek out and destroy. 

The point is important: Lee Oswald did not think the note was important enough to destroy.  Surely he would have destroyed such a note if it had been truly linked to the Walker incident.  Marina says he destroyed notebooks related to the Walker incident. Ferrell never made the connection, and the Warren Commission conveniently forgot to notice. THEY EVEN LEAVE IT OUT OF LEE'S CHRONOLOGY.  Why are we not surprised?

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