Monday, January 6, 2014

The fact is that there was a man watching the procession. 


So, if he wasn't Fritz, he was somebody. 


And he's standing by an open door, and it looks like he's waiting for them to reach him. And if you look at the map, Fritz' office was adjoining that supply/interview room. Is it possible that a door connected them? Maybe the door sign got left out of the schematic. 


What we know is that that big cop in the white hat spent a lot of time at that door. If it was just an empty supply room, what was there to see? What was he fussing over? He worked there, right? He must have seen the room before, right? Why did he lead Oswald all the way back there only to look at an empty room and then decide to do something else with Oswald? What did he expect to find? Why did he go there in the first place? The whole trek wound up there at that room, so what was it all for? Did he really not know what it was going to be? Don't you think somebody must have told him to bring Oswald there? Or do you think the cop was acting on his own accord? And what exactly did he do with Oswald after that? bpete assumes that he put Oswald in the other interview room that is caddie-corner to it, but that is only an assumption. The mechanics of it really doesn't work too well. And most important, why don't we see the procession backing up, going in reverse, walking by Lovelady again, in the opposite direction, in order to deliver Oswald to that other room? We don't see any of that. 

You think that little room is where Oswald was placed and interviewed? You think that is where Fritz and Hosty and Bookout grilled him? The interview didn't start until 3:15 and this was like 2:01. So, you think that for an hour and fourteen minutes, Oswald just sat in that room waiting for them? 


 So, the whole notion that the walk-by movie makes sense and that we can understand it is preposterous. The big cop walks Oswald back to this supply room where they were trapped in a corner, and then apparently, he changed his mind and backed the whole procession up in order to put him somewhere else, though it hardly seems likely that he stuck him in an even smaller windowless room for an interrogation that was not going to begin for 1 hour and 14 minutes. And according to bpete, all the photogs crowded in the tight corner to shoot at Oswald inside the little room, although some photogs preferred to shoot at other photogs who were shooting at Oswald. And that's all supposed to make sense. It doesn't. The whole thing is a spliced, hacked, sewn-together conglomeration of frames. And it's all for the sake of creating the illusion that Lovelady was there.  He was not! 



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