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http://www.orwelltoday.com/jfkoswaldmagicroute.shtml
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/oswald/commission/#wc_warren
Bob Schiefer's Margareta Oswald Story
November 24, 1963 - Sergeant Patrick Dean interviewed in Dallas ...
► 4:56► 4:56
www.youtube.com/watch?v=6YOcymSKhxE
Jan 2, 2013 - Uploaded by HelmerReenberg
Dallas Police Department Sergeant Patrick Dean was in theDallas police headquarters' basement during the fatal transfer of Lee Harvey Oswald. ... A reporter who knew Jack Ruby has an interesting encounterby ... LEE HARVEY OSWALD EXHUMATION-1981 - ABC News report localby blindjfk22,623 ...
[ chapters ]
Introduction
The Motorcade
The Shooting
The Arrest
A Killing on Live TV
Justice Served?
Lee Harvey Oswald
Jack Ruby
Other Key Figures
Whodunit
The Search Goes On
http://harveyandlee.net/NID98.htm
JOHN ARMSTRONG'S NID98 SPEECH
November 10, 2013, TVNewser, Jim Lehrer Recalls JFK Assassination: ‘I Went Right to Oswald. Did You Kill the President?’
The Daily Beast talks to a handful of reporters, including Jim Lehrer and Bob Schieffer, about their memories from the day JFK was assassinated. Lehrer, a reporter for the at the time, recalls interacting with the President’s assassin at the police station — and the mistake he almost made covering the story:
Jim Lehrer’s story on the security surrounding the president’s visit had featured a map of the motorcade route and had run on the first page of the Dallas Times-Herald that morning. A copy was later found among Oswald’s effects. Lehrer, then a young reporter, recalled now the informality in the police station, where they were moving Oswald from one office to another, “and I went right to Oswald. ‘Did you kill the president?’ ‘I didn’t kill anybody,’” he replied. “I wrote that down,” Lehrer said. Asked if he believed him, Lehrer said, “Not my job to be judge and jury.”
The police brought Oswald out “so people could see they weren’t beating him up. He had some scars from when they arrested him. They wanted to show there were no new scars,” Lehrer recounted. “I stood next to Jack Ruby. I didn’t even know who he was.” The Dallas Times-Herald was putting out new editions every 60 or 70 minutes, and Lehrer got a tip from an FBI agent that a Secret Service agent had been killed along with Kennedy. He called it in, but the tip turned out to be wrong, a mistake that bothers Lehrer to this day. “In today’s world, that would have gone out like that,” he says. A Rewrite man on his own spiked the story after talking to Parkland. “I saved your ass and your job,” he told Lehrer.
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November 7, 2013, The Daily Beast, Reporting the JFK Assassination: 'No Miranda Rule, No PR People', by Eleanor Clift,
Fifty years on, journalists who were in Dallas that day, from Bob Schieffer to Jim Lehrer, recall the shock of the news, getting a call from Mrs. Oswald, and questioning the assassin.
Reporters on the scene in Dallas 50 years ago recall details of President Kennedy’s assassination with a vividness that is still fresh today, as is their shock then that such a horrific event could happen in America. No one alive in 1963 had experienced a shooting on such a scale, and the terror and confusion that marked that November afternoon played out in the way the news was gathered and dispensed.
The border with Mexico was closed. People worried the assassination might signal the start of World War III. In Fort Worth, home to a Strategic Air Command base, people feared they’d be among the first targets in a nuclear exchange. Kennedy had just stared down the Russians over missiles in Cuba. Maybe the U.S. would have to bomb Havana.
"There was no Miranda rule, no PR people. We dealt directly with the cops," said Bob Schieffer, then a cub reporter working the night shift police beat at the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. He was still asleep when his brother woke him to say the president had been shot. With most of his colleagues dispatched to Dallas, Schieffer was left to answer the phones when a woman called asking for a ride to Dallas.
"Lady, we don't run a taxi service here, and besides, the presidents been shot," he said, almost hanging up on her. "I know," she replied, "I think it's my son they've arrested." The caller was Lee Harvey Oswald's mother. At the National Press Club panel Where Were You When Kennedy Was Shot? this week, Schieffer said it was "odd but not unbelievable" that Marguerite Claverie Oswald would call the newspaper. The Star-Telegram had done stories about Russian defectors, and newspapers then were a bigger part of the community than they are today.
Schieffer commandeered a Cadillac that a colleague was reviewing for a local car dealer, and together they fetched the assassin's mother and drove her to Dallas. Mrs. Oswald was carrying a blue travel case, the kind you'd put a bowling ball in, he said, and she complained incessantly about how everybody would feel sorry for her son's wife, they'd give her money, and she, the mother, would be left to starve. Schieffer didn't use all of her quotes. "I gave her the benefit of the doubt," he said. She'd just been told her son shot the president.
At the police station, nobody questioned him, assuming he was a detective when he asked for a holding room, "someplace we can put her where reporters won't bother her," he said. "I was only 26," he added by way of explanation. "So they found me a little office." He helped arrange for Mrs. Oswald to see her son. As he ushered her into a room where Marina Oswald was waiting, "a guy standing over in the corner says, 'Who are you? Son, get out of here,' and I think he meant it," Schieffer chuckled. "It was the biggest interview I almost got, and one of the greatest adventures any reporter could have."
Radio reporter Sid Davis was in the first press bus, eight car lengths behind the presidential limousine. The bus was directly under Oswald's sixth-floor window when the shots rang out. Reporters could see the limo speed off, and they shouted at the bus driver to keep up, but he couldn't. Davis ran into the street waving his portable Olivetti typewriter in the air. A kind soul recognized he was a reporter, picked him up, and drove him to Parkland Hospital. He saw the agents trying to clean the back of the president's car. "Don't look," Time columnist Hugh Sidey told him. "It's too horrible."
The priest who gave Kennedy last rites told reporters, including Davis, that the president was dead and that he had told Mrs. Kennedy her husband’s soul had not yet left his body. “I knew a priest would know if a person is dead,” Davis said, adding, "There is no way any human being could survive that wound." But he didn’t broadcast the information, waiting instead for the official announcement several minutes later from a teary-eyed Malcolm Kilduff, the ranking press secretary on the trip.
Jim Lehrer's story on the security surrounding the president's visit had featured a map of the motorcade route and had run on the first page of the Dallas Times-Herald that morning. A copy was later found among Oswald’s effects. Lehrer, then a young reporter, recalled now the informality in the police station, where they were moving Oswald from one office to another, "and I went right to Oswald. 'Did you kill the president?' 'I didn't kill anybody,'" he replied. "I wrote that down," Lehrer said. Asked if he believed him, Lehrer said, "Not my job to be judge and jury."
The police brought Oswald out "so people could see they weren't beating him up. He had some scars from when they arrested him. They wanted to show there were no new scars," Lehrer recounted. "I stood next to Jack Ruby. I didn't even know who he was." The Dallas Times-Herald was putting out new editions every 60 or 70 minutes, and Lehrer got a tip from an FBI agent that a Secret Service agent had been killed along with Kennedy. He called it in, but the tip turned out to be wrong, a mistake that bothers Lehrer to this day. "In today's world, that would have gone out like that," he says. A Rewrite man on his own spiked the story after talking to Parkland. "I saved your ass and your job," he told Lehrer.
A lot of careers were made that day, and the desperate need for a phone was a recurring theme. “If you didn’t have a phone, you didn’t have a story,” said Schieffer. UPI’s legendary Merriman Smith, first with the story, sat in the front seat of the wire car next to the phone. As the motorcade sped to the hospital, he filed the bulletin that would go around the world, and after each phrase asked that it be repeated back to him. He wouldn’t give up the phone to the AP columnist in the back seat, ensuring a tussle. Back in Washington, Smith showed off his bruises at the National Press Club bar.
"I went right to Oswald. 'Did you kill the president?' 'I didn’t kill anybody,'" he replied. "I wrote that down," Lehrer said. Asked if he believed him, Lehrer said, "Not my job to be judge and jury."
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The JFK Assassination Diary: My Search For Answers to the Mystery of the Century Paperback
by Edward Jay Epstein
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V. Accounts of Bullets Hitting In the Plaza Area
Dealey Plaza Conspiracy Witness
Oswald, David Ferrie and the Civil Air Patrol, From: House Select Committee on Assassinations
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patsy.txt HSCA Vol. XII 69 APPENDIX MANUSCRIPT BY GEORGE DE MOHRENSCHILDT
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hscaalmn.txt TESTIMONY OF JOSE ALEMAN
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hscabadn.txt TESTIMONY OF DR. MICHAEL BADEN, PATHOLOGIST AND CHIEF MEDICAL EXAMINER FOR THE CITY OF NEW YORK
hscabarg.txt TESTIMONY OF JAMES E. BARGER
hscacall.txt D. RUBY'S TELEPHONE RECORDS FROM 1963*
hscacamp.txt iii. Joseph Campisi
hscacher.txt ROSE CHERAMIE
hscacoop.txt TESTIMONY OF JOHN SHERMAN COOPER AND JOHN J. McCLOY
hscademo.txt GEORGE DE MOHRENSCHILDT
hscadurn.txt
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JFK assassination spawned conspiracy theory industry
By Mark Waller, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune, NOLA.com
November 15, 2013, 12:28PM
James Tague was on his way to a lunch date with a young woman in Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963, when traffic halted. He got out of his car and stepped onto Dealy Plaza, where he spotted a limousine with flags on the front fenders, and it occurred to him that he had read about President John F. Kennedy... Full story »
The top 5 conspiracy theories on JFK's assassination
By Adriane Quinlan, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
November 15, 2013, 12:28PM
The government inquiry into the assassination of President John F. Kennedy pinned Lee Harvey Oswald as the lone gunman responsible. But in the past 50 years, as Mark Waller writes, various theories have placed the blame elsewhere. Here are five of the most popular. Cubans Fidel Castro, as well as the Cuban exiles who fled Castro, could have wanted to... Full story »
JFK assassination conspiracy: Dean Andrews' lies got Jim Garrison's attention
By John Pope, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayun
November 15, 2013, 12:27PM
Dean Andrews Jr. was a New Orleans lawyer who spoke freely, if not truthfully, and he was not averse to making up facts if the mood struck him. Andrews, a corpulent man who always wore sunglasses, "appears to see the world as a huge joke," New Orleans lawyer Milton Brener wrote in "The Garrison Case: A Study in the... Full story »
JFK assassination conspiracy: Former FBI agent Guy Banister was on fringes of investigation
By John Pope, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
November 15, 2013, 12:26PM
Guy Banister, a former FBI agent and New Orleans police official, appears frequently in accounts of Jim Garrison's investigation of President John F. Kennedy's assassination, even though he died more than two years before the Orleans Parish district attorney launched his inquiry. Banister, who was well known for his right-wing views, was working as a private investigator when Kennedy... Full story »
JFK assassination conspiracy: David Ferrie was linked to Lee Harvey Oswald, Clay Shaw in New Orleans
By John Pope, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
November 15, 2013, 12:26PM
No doubt about it, David Ferrie was odd. Starting with his appearance: He had no hair, so he glued on eyebrows and wore a red wig. And then there was his background, a history of failure at one job after another. Ferrie, a Cleveland native, had been a candidate for the Catholic priesthood but was discharged for what was... Full story »
JFK assassination conspiracy: Perry Russo fingered Clay Shaw -- while hypnotized
By John Pope, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
November 15, 2013, 12:25PM
At first, Perry Raymond Russo looked like a solid-gold witness for District Attorney Jim Garrison in his investigation of President John F. Kennedy's assassination. At a 1967 hearing on whether there was enough evidence to try New Orleans businessman Clay Shaw, who had been booked with criminal conspiracy to kill the president, Russo, a 25-year-old insurance salesman, testified that... Full story »
JFK assassination conspiracy: Jack Ruby shot Lee Harvey Oswald at Dallas police headquarters
By John Pope, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
November 15, 2013, 12:25PM
Even though President John F. Kennedy's assassination on Nov. 22, 1963, spawned a slew of conspiracy theories and questions that were both unanswered and unanswerable, this fact is beyond dispute: Two days later, Jack Ruby pumped a bullet into Lee Harvey Oswald's gut, killing the man who had been arrested in connection with the slaying of the 35th president... Full story »
50 years after JFK assassination, New Orleans remains hotbed of conspiracy theories
By Adriane Quinlan, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
November 15, 2013, 12:25PM
In the 1950s, the roller rink in the Lower 9th Ward played pop hits. But the songs were stripped of all danger and longing. They didn't blast from a radio. They were played on an organ. A church organ. More than 50 years later, when most of the events of his youth no longer make sense, Alvin Beauboeuf remembers... Full story »
Key locations in New Orleans for JFK, Oswald conspiracy theories: Map
By Dan Swenson, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
November 15, 2013, 12:25PM
JFK conspiracy trail in New Orleans Full story »
Dan Rather not invited to join CBS Kennedy assassination coverage
By The Associated Press
November 05, 2013, 10:45AM
The 50th-anniversary coverage of the Kennedy assassination on CBS News won't include the recollections of its longtime anchor, Dan Rather. Full story »
Memories of JFK's assasination elicit anecdotes from NOLA.com readers
By Rebecca Alexander, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
October 25, 2013, 11:34AM
"It's the moment everyone remembers: the second he or she heard that President John F. Kennedy had been shot," writes Adriane Quinlan in a story titled "Where were you when JFK was shot? Share your story." And NOLA.com readers did just that. From emails to responses in the comment stream and Facebook comments, Adriane's story produced an outpouring of... Full story »
Where were you when JFK was shot? Share your story
By Adriane Quinlan, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
October 22, 2013, 8:25AM
It's the moment everyone remembers: the second he or she heard that President John F. Kennedy had been shot. Assassinated by a sniper's bullet as he rode in an open motorcade through Dallas on Nov. 22 1963, President Kennedy was a youthful, hopeful president. His death shocked the nation. And the subsequent investigations into his assassination have largely focused... Full story »
Lee Harvey Oswald's purported mistress's tour draws conspiracy devotees
By Doug MacCash, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
October 21, 2013, 10:43AM
Because Oswald grew up in New Orleans and returned here in the months before the assassination, the city has been entwined in conspiracy stories Full story »
How did investigations into JFK's assassination touch your life?
By Adriane Quinlan, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
October 18, 2013, 11:47AM
In 1939, on Oct. 18, Lee Harvey Oswald was born in New Orleans. He was by all accounts a quiet kid, raised by a single mother. But on Nov. 22, 1963 - 50 years ago next month - Oswald and the city of his birth made loud headlines. Charged with the crime of assassinating president John F. Kennedy, Oswald... Full story »
JFK assassination spawned conspiracy theory industry
By Mark Waller, NOLA.com | The Times-PicayuneNOLA.com
November 15, 2013, 12:28PM
James Tague was on his way to a lunch date with a young woman in Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963, when traffic halted. He got out of his car and stepped onto Dealy Plaza, where he spotted a limousine with flags on the front fenders, and it occurred to him that he had read about President John F. Kennedy... Full story »
The top 5 conspiracy theories on JFK's assassination
By Adriane Quinlan, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
November 15, 2013, 12:28PM
The government inquiry into the assassination of President John F. Kennedy pinned Lee Harvey Oswald as the lone gunman responsible. But in the past 50 years, as Mark Waller writes, various theories have placed the blame elsewhere. Here are five of the most popular. Cubans Fidel Castro, as well as the Cuban exiles who fled Castro, could have wanted to... Full story »
JFK assassination conspiracy: Dean Andrews' lies got Jim Garrison's attention
By John Pope, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
November 15, 2013, 12:27PM
Dean Andrews Jr. was a New Orleans lawyer who spoke freely, if not truthfully, and he was not averse to making up facts if the mood struck him. Andrews, a corpulent man who always wore sunglasses, "appears to see the world as a huge joke," New Orleans lawyer Milton Brener wrote in "The Garrison Case: A Study in the... Full story »
JFK assassination conspiracy: Former FBI agent Guy Banister was on fringes of investigation
By John Pope, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
November 15, 2013, 12:26PM
Guy Banister, a former FBI agent and New Orleans police official, appears frequently in accounts of Jim Garrison's investigation of President John F. Kennedy's assassination, even though he died more than two years before the Orleans Parish district attorney launched his inquiry. Banister, who was well known for his right-wing views, was working as a private investigator when Kennedy... Full story »
JFK assassination conspiracy: David Ferrie was linked to Lee Harvey Oswald, Clay Shaw in New Orleans
By John Pope, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
November 15, 2013, 12:26PM
No doubt about it, David Ferrie was odd. Starting with his appearance: He had no hair, so he glued on eyebrows and wore a red wig. And then there was his background, a history of failure at one job after another. Ferrie, a Cleveland native, had been a candidate for the Catholic priesthood but was discharged for what was... Full story »
JFK assassination conspiracy: Perry Russo fingered Clay Shaw -- while hypnotized
By John Pope, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
November 15, 2013, 12:25PM
At first, Perry Raymond Russo looked like a solid-gold witness for District Attorney Jim Garrison in his investigation of President John F. Kennedy's assassination. At a 1967 hearing on whether there was enough evidence to try New Orleans businessman Clay Shaw, who had been booked with criminal conspiracy to kill the president, Russo, a 25-year-old insurance salesman, testified that... Full story »
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Related Clips
President John F Kennedy's assassin, Lee Harvey Oswald, is shot dead during a jail transfer at Dallas police headquarters.
Jack Ruby shoots at Oswald during the transfer.
Oswald rushed to Parkland Memorial hospital and taken out of a vehicle as he lies on a stretcher.
US President John Kennedy's accused assassin Lee Harvey Oswald being shot at Dallas Jail in Dallas, Texas.
An armored car backs up at Dallas jail.
Lee Harvey Oswald walks under police guard in Dallas Jail.
Cameramen record the event. Jack Ruby shoots Lee Harvey Oswald.
An ambulance carrying unconscious Oswald rushes to Parkland Memorial Hospital.
The murder of Lee Harvey Oswald, the accused assassin of US President John F Kennedy.
The basement of the Dallas Police Headquarters in Dallas, Texas.
Dallas detectives, police officers and guards in the basement.
Jack Ruby seen standing to right side among press persons just before Oswald is led into the corridor. Detective Jim Leavelle and others emerge with Oswald.
Jack Ruby leaps in front of Oswald, and shoots him with a snub nosed Colt Cobra .38.
The detectives and policemen grab Ruby and Oswald and quickly take them away.
Confusion in the basement. Media persons click pictures and record films.
Detectives hold off the media. Waiting police vans and cars outside the building.
Entrance to the Police Headquarters. Crowds gather in vicinity of the Dallas Police Headquarters.
Officials gather inside. Uniformed police officers gather to discuss events and write their reports.
American flags are flown at half staff on buildings all over the city, in mourning over the death of President Kennedy.
Inside Police Headquarters, Lee Harvey Oswald is marched through the hall under arrest, and taken to the office of the Chief of Detectives.
Sign on the Door reads: 'K. N. Howard, Chief of Detectives, and O.R. Brown, Captain.'
A diagram of the sixth floor of Texas school book depository building shows the position of the boxes on the floor and at the window used by the assassin to fire at President Kennedy.
The window where Oswald sat was quiet low and had two boxes placed one over the other.
Assassin shot from over the boxes at the President.
A reconstruction shows a car with two motorcycle policemen passing through the Elm street.
A photograph taken by the Secret Services Commision shows through a scope the position on President Kennedy's neck where bullet struck.
The bullet that exited Kennedy's neck and entered Governor Connely's neck.
Another photograph through scope shows the position of the second bullet that struck Kennedy's head.
In all three shots were fired . One shot missed the car and its occupants.
An amplified picture of the simulated motorcade through the scope of four power 18 mm ordinance rifle, the one used by Oswald to fire at President Kennedy.
A diagram shows the route taken by Lee Harvey Oswald to escape after assassinating President Kennedy in Dallas, Texas.
Oswald moved out of the Texas school book depository building at 12.33 P.M. just three minutes after assassinating Kennedy.
He traveled by bus at and a cab to reach his rooming house at 1.00P.M. and moved out from the house after three minutes.
At Tippit he shot at a chasing officer and ran away.
He was seen acting suspicious near the Texas theatre and was arrested entering the theatre at 1.50 P.M.
A diagram by Dallas police shows the exit route taken by Oswald to get down from the sixth floor of Texas school book depository building after assassinating President Kennedy.
A reconstruction shows an agent moving towards the down stairway with a simulated gun.
He hides the gun in front of the down stairway and moves down the stairway to the second floor and into the employees lunchroom where Dallas police officer Baker confronted Oswald.
A reenactment of the assassination of United States President John F. Kennedy on 22 November 1963 in Dallas in Texas.
The reenactment identifies main roads and buildings around the area where President John F. Kennedy was assassinated.
Identifies the major land marks - Elm street, Main street and Houston street, Dealy plaza, Dallas county jail building, Texas school book depository building, Dell Tech smart building.
President was shot dead while on his way to Stemmens expressway near Dealy plaza over the Elms street. Assassin Lee Harvey Oswald shot at the President. fromTexas school book depository building.
A diagram drawn by the Dallas police department shows the sixth floor of the Texas school book depository building in Dallas in Texas.
The diagram shows that the building has two service elevators one facing the east and other facing west.
It has two stairways -up and down. The assassin's gun was found in front of the down stairway.
A reconstruction shows that Oswald sat next to the window in south east corner of the building concealed by boxes to shoot at President Kennedy.
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Fifty years on, journalists who were in Dallas that day, from Bob Schieffer to Jim Lehrer, recall the shock of the news, getting a call from Mrs. Oswald, and questioning the assassin.
Reporters on the scene in Dallas 50 years ago recall details of President Kennedy’s assassination with a vividness that is still fresh today, as is their shock then that such a horrific event could happen in America. No one alive in 1963 had experienced a shooting on such a scale, and the terror and confusion that marked that November afternoon played out in the way the news was gathered and dispensed.
The border with Mexico was closed. People worried the assassination might signal the start of World War III. In Fort Worth, home to a Strategic Air Command base, people feared they’d be among the first targets in a nuclear exchange. Kennedy had just stared down the Russians over missiles in Cuba. Maybe the U.S. would have to bomb Havana.
"There was no Miranda rule, no PR people. We dealt directly with the cops," said Bob Schieffer, then a cub reporter working the night shift police beat at the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. He was still asleep when his brother woke him to say the president had been shot. With most of his colleagues dispatched to Dallas, Schieffer was left to answer the phones when a woman called asking for a ride to Dallas.
"Lady, we don't run a taxi service here, and besides, the presidents been shot," he said, almost hanging up on her. "I know," she replied, "I think it's my son they've arrested." The caller was Lee Harvey Oswald's mother. At the National Press Club panel Where Were You When Kennedy Was Shot? this week, Schieffer said it was "odd but not unbelievable" that Marguerite Claverie Oswald would call the newspaper. The Star-Telegram had done stories about Russian defectors, and newspapers then were a bigger part of the community than they are today.
Schieffer commandeered a Cadillac that a colleague was reviewing for a local car dealer, and together they fetched the assassin's mother and drove her to Dallas. Mrs. Oswald was carrying a blue travel case, the kind you'd put a bowling ball in, he said, and she complained incessantly about how everybody would feel sorry for her son's wife, they'd give her money, and she, the mother, would be left to starve. Schieffer didn't use all of her quotes. "I gave her the benefit of the doubt," he said. She'd just been told her son shot the president.
At the police station, nobody questioned him, assuming he was a detective when he asked for a holding room, "someplace we can put her where reporters won't bother her," he said. "I was only 26," he added by way of explanation. "So they found me a little office." He helped arrange for Mrs. Oswald to see her son. As he ushered her into a room where Marina Oswald was waiting, "a guy standing over in the corner says, 'Who are you? Son, get out of here,' and I think he meant it," Schieffer chuckled. "It was the biggest interview I almost got, and one of the greatest adventures any reporter could have."
Radio reporter Sid Davis was in the first press bus, eight car lengths behind the presidential limousine. The bus was directly under Oswald's sixth-floor window when the shots rang out. Reporters could see the limo speed off, and they shouted at the bus driver to keep up, but he couldn't. Davis ran into the street waving his portable Olivetti typewriter in the air. A kind soul recognized he was a reporter, picked him up, and drove him to Parkland Hospital. He saw the agents trying to clean the back of the president's car. "Don't look," Time columnist Hugh Sidey told him. "It's too horrible."
The priest who gave Kennedy last rites told reporters, including Davis, that the president was dead and that he had told Mrs. Kennedy her husband’s soul had not yet left his body. “I knew a priest would know if a person is dead,” Davis said, adding, "There is no way any human being could survive that wound." But he didn’t broadcast the information, waiting instead for the official announcement several minutes later from a teary-eyed Malcolm Kilduff, the ranking press secretary on the trip.
Jim Lehrer's story on the security surrounding the president's visit had featured a map of the motorcade route and had run on the first page of the Dallas Times-Herald that morning. A copy was later found among Oswald’s effects. Lehrer, then a young reporter, recalled now the informality in the police station, where they were moving Oswald from one office to another, "and I went right to Oswald. 'Did you kill the president?' 'I didn't kill anybody,'" he replied. "I wrote that down," Lehrer said. Asked if he believed him, Lehrer said, "Not my job to be judge and jury."
The police brought Oswald out "so people could see they weren't beating him up. He had some scars from when they arrested him. They wanted to show there were no new scars," Lehrer recounted. "I stood next to Jack Ruby. I didn't even know who he was." The Dallas Times-Herald was putting out new editions every 60 or 70 minutes, and Lehrer got a tip from an FBI agent that a Secret Service agent had been killed along with Kennedy. He called it in, but the tip turned out to be wrong, a mistake that bothers Lehrer to this day. "In today's world, that would have gone out like that," he says. A Rewrite man on his own spiked the story after talking to Parkland. "I saved your ass and your job," he told Lehrer.
A lot of careers were made that day, and the desperate need for a phone was a recurring theme. “If you didn’t have a phone, you didn’t have a story,” said Schieffer. UPI’s legendary Merriman Smith, first with the story, sat in the front seat of the wire car next to the phone. As the motorcade sped to the hospital, he filed the bulletin that would go around the world, and after each phrase asked that it be repeated back to him. He wouldn’t give up the phone to the AP columnist in the back seat, ensuring a tussle. Back in Washington, Smith showed off his bruises at the National Press Club bar.
"I went right to Oswald. 'Did you kill the president?' 'I didn’t kill anybody,'" he replied. "I wrote that down," Lehrer said. Asked if he believed him, Lehrer said, "Not my job to be judge and jury."
_____________________________________________________________________________
The JFK Assassination Diary: My Search For Answers to the Mystery of the Century Paperback
by Edward Jay Epstein
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Oswald, David Ferrie and the Civil Air Patrol, From: House Select Committee on Assassinations
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patsy.txt HSCA Vol. XII 69 APPENDIX MANUSCRIPT BY GEORGE DE MOHRENSCHILDT
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hscaalmn.txt TESTIMONY OF JOSE ALEMAN
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hscabadn.txt TESTIMONY OF DR. MICHAEL BADEN, PATHOLOGIST AND CHIEF MEDICAL EXAMINER FOR THE CITY OF NEW YORK
hscabarg.txt TESTIMONY OF JAMES E. BARGER
hscacall.txt D. RUBY'S TELEPHONE RECORDS FROM 1963*
hscacamp.txt iii. Joseph Campisi
hscacher.txt ROSE CHERAMIE
hscacoop.txt TESTIMONY OF JOHN SHERMAN COOPER AND JOHN J. McCLOY
hscademo.txt GEORGE DE MOHRENSCHILDT
hscadurn.txt
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hscamcad.txt
hscamcla.txt
hscamili.txt
hscamira.txt
hscanpol.txt
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hscarank.txt
hscarevl.txt
hscarpol.txt
hscaruby.txt
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___________________________________________________________________________
JFK assassination spawned conspiracy theory industry
By Mark Waller, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune, NOLA.com
November 15, 2013, 12:28PM
James Tague was on his way to a lunch date with a young woman in Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963, when traffic halted. He got out of his car and stepped onto Dealy Plaza, where he spotted a limousine with flags on the front fenders, and it occurred to him that he had read about President John F. Kennedy... Full story »
The top 5 conspiracy theories on JFK's assassination
By Adriane Quinlan, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
November 15, 2013, 12:28PM
The government inquiry into the assassination of President John F. Kennedy pinned Lee Harvey Oswald as the lone gunman responsible. But in the past 50 years, as Mark Waller writes, various theories have placed the blame elsewhere. Here are five of the most popular. Cubans Fidel Castro, as well as the Cuban exiles who fled Castro, could have wanted to... Full story »
JFK assassination conspiracy: Dean Andrews' lies got Jim Garrison's attention
By John Pope, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayun
November 15, 2013, 12:27PM
Dean Andrews Jr. was a New Orleans lawyer who spoke freely, if not truthfully, and he was not averse to making up facts if the mood struck him. Andrews, a corpulent man who always wore sunglasses, "appears to see the world as a huge joke," New Orleans lawyer Milton Brener wrote in "The Garrison Case: A Study in the... Full story »
JFK assassination conspiracy: Former FBI agent Guy Banister was on fringes of investigation
By John Pope, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
November 15, 2013, 12:26PM
Guy Banister, a former FBI agent and New Orleans police official, appears frequently in accounts of Jim Garrison's investigation of President John F. Kennedy's assassination, even though he died more than two years before the Orleans Parish district attorney launched his inquiry. Banister, who was well known for his right-wing views, was working as a private investigator when Kennedy... Full story »
JFK assassination conspiracy: David Ferrie was linked to Lee Harvey Oswald, Clay Shaw in New Orleans
By John Pope, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
November 15, 2013, 12:26PM
No doubt about it, David Ferrie was odd. Starting with his appearance: He had no hair, so he glued on eyebrows and wore a red wig. And then there was his background, a history of failure at one job after another. Ferrie, a Cleveland native, had been a candidate for the Catholic priesthood but was discharged for what was... Full story »
JFK assassination conspiracy: Perry Russo fingered Clay Shaw -- while hypnotized
By John Pope, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
November 15, 2013, 12:25PM
At first, Perry Raymond Russo looked like a solid-gold witness for District Attorney Jim Garrison in his investigation of President John F. Kennedy's assassination. At a 1967 hearing on whether there was enough evidence to try New Orleans businessman Clay Shaw, who had been booked with criminal conspiracy to kill the president, Russo, a 25-year-old insurance salesman, testified that... Full story »
JFK assassination conspiracy: Jack Ruby shot Lee Harvey Oswald at Dallas police headquarters
By John Pope, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
November 15, 2013, 12:25PM
Even though President John F. Kennedy's assassination on Nov. 22, 1963, spawned a slew of conspiracy theories and questions that were both unanswered and unanswerable, this fact is beyond dispute: Two days later, Jack Ruby pumped a bullet into Lee Harvey Oswald's gut, killing the man who had been arrested in connection with the slaying of the 35th president... Full story »
50 years after JFK assassination, New Orleans remains hotbed of conspiracy theories
By Adriane Quinlan, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
November 15, 2013, 12:25PM
In the 1950s, the roller rink in the Lower 9th Ward played pop hits. But the songs were stripped of all danger and longing. They didn't blast from a radio. They were played on an organ. A church organ. More than 50 years later, when most of the events of his youth no longer make sense, Alvin Beauboeuf remembers... Full story »
Key locations in New Orleans for JFK, Oswald conspiracy theories: Map
By Dan Swenson, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
November 15, 2013, 12:25PM
JFK conspiracy trail in New Orleans Full story »
Dan Rather not invited to join CBS Kennedy assassination coverage
By The Associated Press
November 05, 2013, 10:45AM
The 50th-anniversary coverage of the Kennedy assassination on CBS News won't include the recollections of its longtime anchor, Dan Rather. Full story »
Memories of JFK's assasination elicit anecdotes from NOLA.com readers
By Rebecca Alexander, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
October 25, 2013, 11:34AM
"It's the moment everyone remembers: the second he or she heard that President John F. Kennedy had been shot," writes Adriane Quinlan in a story titled "Where were you when JFK was shot? Share your story." And NOLA.com readers did just that. From emails to responses in the comment stream and Facebook comments, Adriane's story produced an outpouring of... Full story »
Where were you when JFK was shot? Share your story
By Adriane Quinlan, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
October 22, 2013, 8:25AM
It's the moment everyone remembers: the second he or she heard that President John F. Kennedy had been shot. Assassinated by a sniper's bullet as he rode in an open motorcade through Dallas on Nov. 22 1963, President Kennedy was a youthful, hopeful president. His death shocked the nation. And the subsequent investigations into his assassination have largely focused... Full story »
Lee Harvey Oswald's purported mistress's tour draws conspiracy devotees
By Doug MacCash, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
October 21, 2013, 10:43AM
Because Oswald grew up in New Orleans and returned here in the months before the assassination, the city has been entwined in conspiracy stories Full story »
How did investigations into JFK's assassination touch your life?
By Adriane Quinlan, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
October 18, 2013, 11:47AM
In 1939, on Oct. 18, Lee Harvey Oswald was born in New Orleans. He was by all accounts a quiet kid, raised by a single mother. But on Nov. 22, 1963 - 50 years ago next month - Oswald and the city of his birth made loud headlines. Charged with the crime of assassinating president John F. Kennedy, Oswald... Full story »
JFK assassination spawned conspiracy theory industry
By Mark Waller, NOLA.com | The Times-PicayuneNOLA.com
November 15, 2013, 12:28PM
James Tague was on his way to a lunch date with a young woman in Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963, when traffic halted. He got out of his car and stepped onto Dealy Plaza, where he spotted a limousine with flags on the front fenders, and it occurred to him that he had read about President John F. Kennedy... Full story »
The top 5 conspiracy theories on JFK's assassination
By Adriane Quinlan, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
November 15, 2013, 12:28PM
The government inquiry into the assassination of President John F. Kennedy pinned Lee Harvey Oswald as the lone gunman responsible. But in the past 50 years, as Mark Waller writes, various theories have placed the blame elsewhere. Here are five of the most popular. Cubans Fidel Castro, as well as the Cuban exiles who fled Castro, could have wanted to... Full story »
JFK assassination conspiracy: Dean Andrews' lies got Jim Garrison's attention
By John Pope, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
November 15, 2013, 12:27PM
Dean Andrews Jr. was a New Orleans lawyer who spoke freely, if not truthfully, and he was not averse to making up facts if the mood struck him. Andrews, a corpulent man who always wore sunglasses, "appears to see the world as a huge joke," New Orleans lawyer Milton Brener wrote in "The Garrison Case: A Study in the... Full story »
JFK assassination conspiracy: Former FBI agent Guy Banister was on fringes of investigation
By John Pope, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
November 15, 2013, 12:26PM
Guy Banister, a former FBI agent and New Orleans police official, appears frequently in accounts of Jim Garrison's investigation of President John F. Kennedy's assassination, even though he died more than two years before the Orleans Parish district attorney launched his inquiry. Banister, who was well known for his right-wing views, was working as a private investigator when Kennedy... Full story »
JFK assassination conspiracy: David Ferrie was linked to Lee Harvey Oswald, Clay Shaw in New Orleans
By John Pope, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
November 15, 2013, 12:26PM
No doubt about it, David Ferrie was odd. Starting with his appearance: He had no hair, so he glued on eyebrows and wore a red wig. And then there was his background, a history of failure at one job after another. Ferrie, a Cleveland native, had been a candidate for the Catholic priesthood but was discharged for what was... Full story »
JFK assassination conspiracy: Perry Russo fingered Clay Shaw -- while hypnotized
By John Pope, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
November 15, 2013, 12:25PM
At first, Perry Raymond Russo looked like a solid-gold witness for District Attorney Jim Garrison in his investigation of President John F. Kennedy's assassination. At a 1967 hearing on whether there was enough evidence to try New Orleans businessman Clay Shaw, who had been booked with criminal conspiracy to kill the president, Russo, a 25-year-old insurance salesman, testified that... Full story »
___________________________________________________________________________
Related Clips
President John F Kennedy's assassin, Lee Harvey Oswald, is shot dead during a jail transfer at Dallas police headquarters.
Jack Ruby shoots at Oswald during the transfer.
Oswald rushed to Parkland Memorial hospital and taken out of a vehicle as he lies on a stretcher.
US President John Kennedy's accused assassin Lee Harvey Oswald being shot at Dallas Jail in Dallas, Texas.
An armored car backs up at Dallas jail.
Lee Harvey Oswald walks under police guard in Dallas Jail.
Cameramen record the event. Jack Ruby shoots Lee Harvey Oswald.
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The murder of Lee Harvey Oswald, the accused assassin of US President John F Kennedy.
The basement of the Dallas Police Headquarters in Dallas, Texas.
Dallas detectives, police officers and guards in the basement.
Jack Ruby seen standing to right side among press persons just before Oswald is led into the corridor. Detective Jim Leavelle and others emerge with Oswald.
Jack Ruby leaps in front of Oswald, and shoots him with a snub nosed Colt Cobra .38.
The detectives and policemen grab Ruby and Oswald and quickly take them away.
Confusion in the basement. Media persons click pictures and record films.
Detectives hold off the media. Waiting police vans and cars outside the building.
Entrance to the Police Headquarters. Crowds gather in vicinity of the Dallas Police Headquarters.
Officials gather inside. Uniformed police officers gather to discuss events and write their reports.
American flags are flown at half staff on buildings all over the city, in mourning over the death of President Kennedy.
Inside Police Headquarters, Lee Harvey Oswald is marched through the hall under arrest, and taken to the office of the Chief of Detectives.
Sign on the Door reads: 'K. N. Howard, Chief of Detectives, and O.R. Brown, Captain.'
A diagram of the sixth floor of Texas school book depository building shows the position of the boxes on the floor and at the window used by the assassin to fire at President Kennedy.
The window where Oswald sat was quiet low and had two boxes placed one over the other.
Assassin shot from over the boxes at the President.
A reconstruction shows a car with two motorcycle policemen passing through the Elm street.
A photograph taken by the Secret Services Commision shows through a scope the position on President Kennedy's neck where bullet struck.
The bullet that exited Kennedy's neck and entered Governor Connely's neck.
Another photograph through scope shows the position of the second bullet that struck Kennedy's head.
In all three shots were fired . One shot missed the car and its occupants.
An amplified picture of the simulated motorcade through the scope of four power 18 mm ordinance rifle, the one used by Oswald to fire at President Kennedy.
A diagram shows the route taken by Lee Harvey Oswald to escape after assassinating President Kennedy in Dallas, Texas.
Oswald moved out of the Texas school book depository building at 12.33 P.M. just three minutes after assassinating Kennedy.
He traveled by bus at and a cab to reach his rooming house at 1.00P.M. and moved out from the house after three minutes.
At Tippit he shot at a chasing officer and ran away.
He was seen acting suspicious near the Texas theatre and was arrested entering the theatre at 1.50 P.M.
A diagram by Dallas police shows the exit route taken by Oswald to get down from the sixth floor of Texas school book depository building after assassinating President Kennedy.
A reconstruction shows an agent moving towards the down stairway with a simulated gun.
He hides the gun in front of the down stairway and moves down the stairway to the second floor and into the employees lunchroom where Dallas police officer Baker confronted Oswald.
A reenactment of the assassination of United States President John F. Kennedy on 22 November 1963 in Dallas in Texas.
The reenactment identifies main roads and buildings around the area where President John F. Kennedy was assassinated.
Identifies the major land marks - Elm street, Main street and Houston street, Dealy plaza, Dallas county jail building, Texas school book depository building, Dell Tech smart building.
President was shot dead while on his way to Stemmens expressway near Dealy plaza over the Elms street. Assassin Lee Harvey Oswald shot at the President. fromTexas school book depository building.
A diagram drawn by the Dallas police department shows the sixth floor of the Texas school book depository building in Dallas in Texas.
The diagram shows that the building has two service elevators one facing the east and other facing west.
It has two stairways -up and down. The assassin's gun was found in front of the down stairway.
A reconstruction shows that Oswald sat next to the window in south east corner of the building concealed by boxes to shoot at President Kennedy.
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Lee Harvey Oswald is arrested and held at Police Headquarters, Dallas, Texas
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