Thursday, June 26, 2014

Backes is crazy. The Fritz Notes were taken during the interrogations. It is insane to think that Fritz repeatedly interrogated Oswald and didn't write a thing down until after Oswald was dead.

How could he possibly remember it all? How could anybody?

For example, here is page 4 of the Fritz Note which includes Oswald's address in New Orleans:


 So, Fritz remembered 4706 Magazine St? He remembered William B. Riley Company? He remembered the B? He remembered the name of Mr. Abt? That's a very unusual name. If it had been Smith or Jones or Collins, it would have been easy to remember, but Abt? 

I'm pretty sure Will Fritz was not a member of Mensa, and he wasn't a savant either. And there is no reason to think he knew Bill Shelley or knew who Bill Shelley was. It was a name he got from Oswald.  

Let's remember that FBI Agent Hosty also told the WC that he took no interrogation notes with Oswald, then 31 years later, he included them in his book. And Postal Inspector Harry Holmes reported the following as a quote of Oswald who at the time was speaking to Fritz:

"I’ve told you all I’m going to about that card. You took notes, just read them for yourself, if you want to refresh your memory.”

That was in reference to the ID in his possession of Alec Hidell. But, the rest speaks for itself. 

And I don't doubt that they lifted the palm print from Oswald after he was dead. 

But, the Fritz Notes are of vital important. They're the most important discovery of JFK evidence of the last 20 years.  They confirm Oswald's presence in the doorway- by his own admission. And they also confirm that Oswald told police that he rode the bus and cab. 

Where is the evidence that Oswald ever said that a friend picked him up from Dealey Plaza? And since it wasn't a crime for a friend to pick him up in Dealey Plaza and drive him to the Texas Theater, why didn't this friend come forward afterwards and say so? And if the police wouldn't listen, why didn't this person go to the press? If it was a friend of Oswald, wouldn't he want to vindicate him? If he knew the police were concocting a story about Oswald riding a bus and cab, why wouldn't he want to help his dead friend obtain justice? After all, if he could prove that police were lying about that- and surely he could- then wouldn't it suggest that they were lying about Oswald having killed Kennedy? Why wouldn't he come forward to help his friend?  

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