Here's another very weird thing that can't be brushed off. When the Dallas Police wrestled the shooter to the ground, they should have handcuffed him on the spot, before taking him anywhere. That is standard police practice everywhere: when you have a violent offender to get him in restraints-immediately- so that he can't hurt you or anyone else. Instead, they dragged him into the jail office before cuffing him. And how did they know what they were doing? Doesn't it seem like some of them would have gone to handcuff him there? And of course, once he's handcuffed with his hands behind his back, then you can just stand him up and walk him away because he is no longer a threat. That's what should have happened. But instead, the Penguins, as I call them, just swarmed him for the purpose of hiding him from view, and then they crowded him into the office. And by the way, there were two doors to the office. There was a narrow door in the corner, and big wide double doors right behind them. Considering how crowded it was, wouldn't it have been easier to take him in through the double doors? But no one yelled anything. No one gave directions. Yet, it was very coordinated, and everyone knew just what to do. How? Because it was all planned in advance. They got away with this for 50 years. It was in 2013 that someone first noticed that there was something terribly wrong about the whole narrative of the Oswald shooting, and it wasn't me.
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