Saturday, June 28, 2014

"Bus transfer No. 4459 was found in Oswald's left shirt pocket by Detective Sims at 4:05 pm on November 22nd (along with five live rounds of .38 caliber pistol shells --- WC Sims Exhibit A, Vol 21, pg 514."

The above is a quote from John Armstrong, but there are any number of others who have said the same thing. The fact is: the bus transfer ticket went into the official record at 4:05 pm on Friday, November 22, and from that moment on, they were committed to it. 

The dye was cast. They crossed the Rubicon. All other bridges were burned. 

So, they didn't begin to hear what Oswald had to say about his movements until they started talking to him at 3:15. But, 50 minutes later, they had a story all worked out that he had taken the Bus 1213 on the Marsalis line, boarding at St. Paul and Elm. 

So, how they did they formulate this story so fast? How could they possibly have arrived at it so fast and obtained the fraudulent transfer ticket so fast? Isn't it obvious to everyone that, if the story was fraudulent, then they had to start working on it before they heard a peep out of Oswald? 

And why work so hard to sell this story. Since Oswald was agreeing with them, that he rode the bus and cab, why bother with a transfer ticket? There didn't have to be one. Oswald was not to ride the bus again, so he didn't really need a transfer ticket. And since he wasn't disputing what the police were saying about how he got home, why bother with the ticket?

Backes, who came up with the idea to concoct a phony bus and cab ride for Oswald? Whose idea was it? I want a name. And did the person who conceived of it also write the particulars about it or were others assigned to do that? And what time was Operation Bus and Cab launched? Do you admit that it must have been BEFORE the time of Oswald's first interrogation? Was it perhaps even before he was apprehended at the theater? So, what motivated them to do that before they even knew what Oswald was going to say?   

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