John Armstrong asked me to create this graphic. It is his strong conviction that Tippit probably drove Oswald to the Texas Theater from his room. There is an alley behind the theater, and there used to be walking path from the alley to Jefferson. John believes that Tippit drove Oswald to the alley, then Oswald took the narrow walk path out to Jefferson, and then he turned right and had a 50 to 60 feet walk to the entrance of the theater, where he bought a ticket from Julia Postal.
That whole white structure is the Texas Theater, and you can see the space between it and the next building on the far right. So, there's an alley behind the theater, the space between the buildings used to feature a walking path. So that, according to John, is how Oswald reached Jefferson, and then he had only a very short walk to the entrance of the theater.
I think it's very plausible. Remember that they have never told us anything about what Oswald said about how he got to the theater, and it is one of the most glaring omissions in the official story. Yet, they must have asked him. How could they not? And he must told them. How could he not? So, the fact that it is completely absent from the official record is very troubling.
Apparently, whatever he told them was too damaging to the official story to repeat. So, why didn't they make something up for him to have said? I think the reason is that you had interrogators from the Dallas Police, the FBI, and even a postal inspector, and they didn't know each other- at least not that well. The only way they could lie and say that Oswald said X is for them to collaborate and decide to lie together. If they were going to lie, they all had to tell the same lie. But, as I said, they didn't know each other that well, and I'm sure they didn't want to operate on a level of impropriety- let alone criminality. In other words, they interacted with each as though everything was on the up-and-up. There was never a point where someone said, "Alright, so how are we going to frame this guy? What shall we say he told us about how he got to the theater?" Nobody sunk to that level. It was all done with the decorum of propriety and legality. But, whatever Oswald told them about how he got to the theater, they all knew better than to repeat it in public. And fortunately for them, nobody put them on the spot about it, and asked, "What did Oswald say about how he got to the theater?"
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