This is an image of Oswald being led from the first interrogation in Fritz' office to the first lineup. The time was about 4 pm on Friday afternoon. That's Detective Elmer Boyd leading him, who was hired as a bodyguard by LBJ every time he came to Dallas. I put Doorman's image next to Oswald so that you can see the likeness of the man, the clothing, and the expression, that Oswald stare.
And keep in mind that on Doorman, they slapped the top of Lovelady's head on Oswald, using a picture of Lovelady from the 1950s, which they had. But still, they couldn't hide the fact that that's Oswald.
Look at the shirt; look at the t-shirt. It all matches. What, do you think Lovelady dressed like Oswald too?
What if I made a billboard of this and paid to display in famous places, such as on Sunset Boulevard in Hollywood? Do you think that would shake things up? I bet the thought of it would rattle some people's 4th of July celebrations and put them off their hotdogs.
But, look at the short guy with the hat covering his face. That's James Bookhout. Why was he wearing his hat like that? He wasn't. It wasn't even his hat. That was the hat of the homicide detectives: Fritz' men. Bookhout wasn't one of them, and he didn't wear their hat. They put that hat in the picture to cover his face. That's because he was James Bookhout, who played the Garage Shooter, masquerading as Jack Ruby.
Do you see that notebook in his hand? That was Bookhout's notebook. Bookhout is the only one who claimed to take written notes during the Oswald interrogations.
Oswald was in the doorway during the shooting of JFK, and Bookhout wielded the gun during the televised spectacle of shooting Oswald in the garage, who was then shot later. Those are indisputable facts, which you should think about this 4th of July, in lieu of hotdogs and fireworks, because we Americans been living a lie for too long. It's time to get real.
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