Monday, February 17, 2014

THE STENCH OF STUPIDITY

Joseph Backes posted this statement that Lovelady made to the FBI on March 19, 1964. What does it have to do with determining his exact location in the Dallas police station on November 22, 1963 when Oswald was brought there? Absolutely nothing. 
  



But, there are things in it that are very important. He said that he was standing at the top step when JFK passed, and that he was "to the far right against the wall of the entranceway." But, Doorman was standing in the center, as we can see in the Wiegman film.


It only looks like he's against the wall in the Altgens photo because of the parallax effect from Altgens position. The angle made the white column look like it was encroaching on him. It seemed to be cutting off his right shoulder. But again, it was only because of Altgens' angle. But, Lovelady had to know where he really was. So, why did he say what he did? Chances are that he didn't. The FBI agents said it. You can tell that the whole content of the letter isn't his exact words. It's theirs. 

The letter also states that Bill Shelley and Sarah Stanton were standing next to him. That doesn't apply to Doorman either: not as he is seen in the Wiegman film nor the Altgens photo. 

Here's page 2. There are problems with it too:




Note that he says that he and Shelley went "to the spot that President Kennedy's car had stopped." Hey! It sounds like he's saying that the limo stopped during the shooting. So, chalk up another witness who claimed that the driver stopped the limo right as guns were blasting- as if you had to be a Secret Service agent to know that you step on the gas when you know you're being targeted by gunfire. 

But, what Lovelady said about going somewhere with Shelley is similar to what he told the Warren Commission about his "trek to the tracks" but it's worded differently. But again, we shouldn't assume that any of it was his exact words. An FBI agent composed the letter from talking to Lovelady; it is not Lovelady's exact words. 

Remember that the FBI did the exact same thing to Dallas Police officer Marrion Baker: composed a letter for him to sign. Undoubtedly, the same thing happened here. But this still establishes that Lovelady and Shelley definitely went to look around the kill zone, as many spectators did. So, they did not re-enter the building right away. And since that part of the story is true, there is no reason to doubt that they re-entered the building through the back door, as they said in their WC testimony, and never returned to the front. Therefore, Lovelady was never milling around in front during the police checkpoint, as we supposedly see happening in the Martin film and the Hughes film, both of which are fakes, as he was never there at the time.  

And notice that it says that it was 1:45 before they left for City Hall. But, think about what that meant.  It meant leaving the building, dividing up into various police cars which were parked on the street, driving to City Hall, finding a place to park there, leading the various witnesses inside the building, and deciding where to put them and how to proceed. Imagine all that unfolding and then ask yourself if Lovelady could have been sitting in the squad room of the homicide detectives at 2:00 PM. 

Yes, this is a valuable letter, Backass, but it's valuable for me- not you. Idiot. 

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