Is it not to wonder
why the FBI did not insist Lovelady wore that shirt when it photographed him and
lied saying it did?
My examination of the
shirt itself showed even more persuasively that the shirt on the man in the
doorway could not be kept buttoned where the shirt Oswald wore that day could also not be kept
buttoned. The shirt itself has a pattern like that of grass weave wall covering that was popular
years ago. It also has what appears like a gold fiber woven in. Its base color,
as the Commission said,
was “rust brown”.
When I published the
enlargement of that corner of the Altgens picture I did not claim it was a
positive identification of Oswald. I overlayed an arrow cut from white paper
with the point near the
face and with this question in the shaft of the arrow: “Lovelady or Oswald?”.
Several months after
I published Whitewash II I had Photographic Whitewash at the printers. It was
complete except for the index my wife was making. She had just finished that when at lunch time on
a Saturday our phone rang. The only space remaining in which I could report that phone
call was about a half of a page at the very end of the index. I wrote what
would fit that space and on
Monday morning took it to the printer to include with what was ready and
the book was printed.
This is the note I added ( page 294 ):
A partial sequence of
Lovelady-Altgens pictures appears in the appendix of Whitewash II. The
question is: Who is the man in the doorway? Is it Lovelady? Oswald?
Someone else? What shirt is he wearing? First is the great enlargement I
had made from the Altgens picture. Then there is the photographically
decapitated picture of Oswald as he was led from the jail elevator.
Unnecessarily removing the top of his head made comparisons
difficult, especially
of the hairlines and facial characteristics. This is one of five consecutive
Shaneyfelt decapitations ( 21H467 ). They are not normal and cannot serve any
constructive purposes.
Next is the FBI - Lovelady picture suppressed
from the evidence but in the Commission’s files. Whatever can or cannot be said
and believed, it cannot be that the man in the doorway is wearing
the shirt the FBI says Lovelady wore. It does seem to
be Oswald’s shirt.
From this it would seem that it cannot have been Lovelady
in the doorway.
However, while this book was being printed, I received a phone call from a
woman identifying herself as Mrs. Billy Lovelady. She expressed great
apprehension for the family safety and protested the FBI evidence, including
this, printed in Whitewash II. She insists it is “my Billy” in the doorway, that
the FBI never asked him what shirt he had worn that day, and that he had
worn a red-and-black check with a white fleck. The
checks, she says, are
about two inches. When I said the Altgens picture shows NO CHECK (read: no plaid), she
replied that it is not as clear as the enlargement “ as big as a desk”,
about 30x40 inches, the FBI showed them the night of Nov. 25, 1963.
Demanding money in return, she promised me a picture of Lovelady in the
checked shirt she says he wore that day and not since
and an affidavit
affirming the above. She alleges testimony was edited, FBI reporting was
inaccurate and not all in the evidence. I include this at the last minute for
what it may be worth or mean.
What Mrs. Lovelady
asked me to pay for that shirt was five thousand dollars. What lingered in my
mind was her description of that shirt she said her Billy wore that day, of a
“large-red-and-black
check” with the checks about two inches in size.
In 1966 when I was
appearing on talk shows talking about Whitewash, I got a letter from a man I
later got to know well, Richard E. Sprague. He was then a vice president of a
major accounting
firm, Touche, Bailey. Sprague told me that in his work he traveled much. He asked me if when he
was on the road and in the Dallas area he might help locate evidence. I
suggested immediately
that he seek the pictures relating to the assassination that the FBI was clearly shunning. I
told him of having seen at the Archives the collection of schmaltzy home
movies that David
Wolper had brought from a group of Dallas amateur home moving picture takers. The group
called itself the Dallas Cinema Associates. I later wrote about them in
Photographic
Whitewash (pages 65, 98-106, 120, 241, 243,. 245, and 249). The woman to see, I told him, was Mrs.
Irving David Gewirtz and the man who had produced what they had done
collectively was
Rudolf Viktor Brenk. The FBI reports I had gave the names and addresses of those who had formed
Dallas Cinema Associates (listed in Photographic Whitewash on page 254)
and I gave them to
Sprague.
Sprague did an
excellent job of locating pictures the existence of which was not generally known and
in time he got the outtakes of the footage used by Wolper.
After Sprague and
Groden got to know each other, with the distinctive nature of those prints on the
Lovelady shirt in mind, I asked Groden, who could make prints from eight millimeter positive
prints as I could not, to examine in particular the over-exposed footage I had seen taken by John
Martin. Martin’s over-exposed footage I was anxious to have studied was of
that TSBD doorway. I
asked Groden to see if he could see in it those red-and-black checks about two inch square.
They were there!
Groden sent me a print made from that Martin film. He uses that print in
his book. As he uses it he has reversed the proportions. That has the effect of
disguising that it was made from movie film. Movie film is wider then it is
high.
With his cropping
Groden uses it twice as high as it is wide. However, there is no mistaking the source. The same
imperfections and artifacts from the very considerable enlargement and the
under-exposure are
clearly visible. Further obscuring what he has done Groden does not include any photo credit for
his use of this film (page 223). Which is to say he steals it. He also does not
say what the film is
or where he got it (page 187).
Instead, opposite
that enlargement of the man in the doorway that is copied from the one I used in
Whitewash II and is close to identical with it, he has this caption:
While examining the
photographic material for the (House Assassins) Committee, I applied
a technique I had developed to the original Altgensnegative. I was able
to prove that contrary to my own (sic!) original opinion, the man was not
Oswald, but a remarkable look-alike, Billy Lovelady. Lovelady’s
testimony verified
that he - not - Oswald - was standing in the doorway at the time of the
shooting. This is confirmed by other photographic evidence (page 186).
It apparently did not
appear to be at all odd that with this a picture book and that an important question
Groden does not include his alleged special “technique” he developed in
the form of any
picture or any picture of that “other photographic evidence”.
That Lovelady “verified”
that Oswald was not there is a plain lie. He did testify that he was there but
not that Oswald wasn’t.
Lovelady did not testify he was standing where that
man in the doorway is standing in
the Altgens picture. He did testify to those with him, by name, and they are
not in that part of the
Altgens picture.
Consistent with the
dishonesty of all of this Groden has at the top of this page
what he captions “The
shirt worn by Lee Oswald on the day of the assassination”. He has the shirt laying flat that
where it is worn and cannot be buttoned he made it appear that the shirt is
fully buttoned, up to and
including the collar.
However, careful examination of the shirt exposes him because only two
buttons are visible on it, the two above the bottom one that is also missing.
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