It's fortunate that we know the heights and weights of both Oswald and Lovelady. Oswald was weighed and measured by the Dallas Police, and they found him to be 5'9", 131 pounds. I learned that directly from Professor Gerald McKnight, of Hood College, the author of Breach of Trust, and one of the early and most ardent advocates of Oswald in the doorway. I spoke to him, at length, over the phone, several times. He died in 2021.
Lovelady was weighed and measured by the FBI, and they reported him to be 5'8" 170 pounds.
So, we're talking about a 40 pound difference, in which the shorter man was the heavier one.
And, it is certainly reasonable to assume that such a Laurel and Hardy difference would show up in photographs, just as it does in films.
But, when you look at Doorman and Oswald, they look exactly the same in their physicality. They both look lean and asthenic. They look like they were the same weight. That's because they were the same weight, being the same man.
Folks, the Bloodied will never admit it, but it undeniably true that Doorman was Oswald. And when I say "undeniably" I mean except for the ability of anybody to claim anything. Like the little boy with cookie crumbs all over his face and hands, who continues to deny that he raided the cookie jar, these people will persist in their denials. But, I am pointing to logic here, that there is no weight and size difference between these two men. There is simply no way that one was 40 pounds heavier than the other and an inch shorter.
You know that I made a movie about the trial over the murder of Mary Pinchot Meyer, who was the last mistress of JFK. And in the trial, famed Civil Rights Attorney Dovey Roundtree hammered the jury with the fact that the State's star witness, Henry Wiggins, claimed that the man he saw was 5'8" and 185 pounds, while the defendant Raymond Crump was only 5' 3 1/2" and 130 pounds. That's what it said on his driver's license.
I have the transcript of the trial. It can't be found online. So, I went to the cousin of Mary Pinchot Meyer, Mike Pinchot, and got it from him. I am posting part of Dovey's Closing Argument to the jury. She told them to look at the defendant, whom she referred to as Exhibit A, and ask themselves if he is 185 pounds. And if he's not, then they need to acquit him.
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