Mark, please consider two things about the arrest of Shooter. First, Dallas police did not handcuff him immediately. They hustled him into the jail office without handcuffing him, and that is outrageous. Police always handcuff a violent offender before taking him anywhere. There are no exceptions, except this one. Then, they claimed to handcuff him as soon as they got him inside, but did they? Who knows? We don't see it. And why didn't they handcuff him in the garage? They never said.
Second, how did that cluster of police know what the plan was? How did they know that the plan was to take him inside through the narrow door in the corner? No one said anything. No one gave any direction or issued any order. So, how did they all know what to do? Plus, they could have gone through the wide double doors and reached the same place, the jail office, and it would have been much easier. So, why didn't they do that? And how is it that none of them got the idea to do that?
How did they even manage to get in using that corner door because at a minimum, there had to be one cop on his left side, restraining his left arm, and one cop on his right side, restraining his right arm. It would have been impossible for such a threesome to negotiate that narrow entrance together.
It should be obvious from the above that the Dallas Police were in on it, and they were. But, they weren't in on it with Ruby. There was no conspiracy between them and Ruby. That's impossible because they went on to testify against him in a death penalty case. If they conspired with him, they would have to trust him to keep his mouth shut- forever, but how could they trust him if they were trying to put him to death? Wouldn't they fear that he would tell his lawyers that the Dallas Police were in on it with him? If that were the case, they would have had to kill him right away. It would have been too risky not to.
There is so much wrong with what the Dallas Police did: not cuffing the Shooter in the garage; knowing exactly what to do without getting or needing direction; telling inconsistent stores, for instance, most said that Oswald never regained consciousness, but Combest said that he did, and he was able to communicate with him, that he asked Oswald whether he had anything to say, and Oswald shook his head no. Combest also said that he, Leavelle, and Graves carried Oswald into the jail office, but Graves definitely had nothing to do with it. Leavelle's story was that he and another officer carried Oswald inside, and he couldn't remember who that officer was. And it was that very afternoon, just a few hours later, that he couldn't remember. Graves denied carrying Oswald. All these officers said that Oswald's hands were cuffed, and then he had another cuff installed to link him to Leavelle. But, in the Jackson photo, you'll see that Oswald's hands were not cuffed. There is no cuff at all on his left wrist. Then there is the fact that Graves said he rode in the ambulance to the hospital, when he clearly did not; he drove his own squad car. Then there is the fact that they turned left on Commerce when all they had to do was turn right and then right again on Hardin, and it would have been a straight shot to Parkland Hospital. Going down to the Pearl Expressway and then back on Main was making a circle. Who does that when a man is bleeding to death?
You can't ignore these behaviors, and you can't explain them either. They are the smoking gun. There was a conspiracy, and it involved the Dallas Police and the FBI. Ruby was just the target of it. He didn't know anything, and he didn't do anything. He was out of it mentally. If he knew anything, they would have had to kill him, not let him live 3 years.
The CIA under Dulles spent all that money in the 1950s developing the MK-ULTRA program so that they would have mind control subjects to use for their nefarious purposes, and I'm saying that Jack Ruby was one. We know that the program relied on drugs, particularly amphetamines, and Ruby was taking amphetamines. He was getting them from some Dallas doctor. How come we don't know who that doctor was?
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