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THE FINAL TRUTH Solving the Mystery of the JFK Assassination THE FINAL TRUTH Solving the Mystery of the JFK Assassination Edward Bauer Published by Edward J. Bauer Publishing Ridge, MD THE FINAL TRUTH: Solving the Mystery of the JFK Assassination E-BOOK FIRST EDITION 2012 Copyright © 2012, 2014 Edward J. Bauer All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. No part of this book may be used, reproduced, stored or retrieved in an information or data storage and retrieval system or transmitted in any form, or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, facsimile (fax), recording or otherwise, in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the author except brief quotations embodied within reviews or articles by recognized reviewers. Published in the United States by Edward J. Bauer Publishing, Ridge, MD. Excerpts from SECRETS OF A HOMICIDE: THE JFK ASSASSINATION © 1995-2012 Dale K. Myers. Used by permission of Dale K. Myers. Internet: www.jfkfiles.com Front Cover: Author's artistic enhancement of Public Domain photographs. Back Cover: Author's artistic enhancement of still frame from Dallas Cinema Associates, Inc. film President Kennedy's Final Hour and Public Domain photographs. E-BOOK FIRST EDITION Publication Data Bauer, Edward J. The Final Truth: Solving the Mystery of the JFK Assassination / Edward J. Bauer. —1st ed. 236 p. 0 cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-0-615-70588-0 1. Kennedy, John F. (John Fitzgerald), 1917‒1963 —Assassination. 2. Oswald, Lee Harvey. I. Title. Dedicated to all those in whom tragedy brings out the best. Contents List of Illustrations vii List of Tables x Preface xi Introduction 1 Chapter 1 ‒ Basic Principles 6 Chapter 2 ‒ Oswald's Background 8 Chapter 3 ‒ The Dynamics of Shooting at a Moving Target 30 Chapter 4 ‒ Oswald's Detailed Actions on the Sixth Floor 36 Chapter 5 ‒ Three Shots 45 Chapter 6 ‒ The Zapruder Film 50 Chapter 7 ‒ The Third Shot 57 Chapter 8 ‒ The Second Shot 74 Chapter 9 – The Jiggle Factor in the Zapruder Film 86 Chapter 10 – Marksmanship 92 Chapter 11 – The First Shot 96 Chapter 12 – The First Shot: Why Was It Fired? 98 v Chapter 13 – The First Shot: When Was It Fired? 107 Chapter 14 – The First Shot: Where Was It Fired? 128 Chapter 15 ‒ Oswald’s Escape Plans 137 Chapter 16 – Conclusions 154 Chapter 17 ‒ Conspiracy? 162 Chapter 18 ‒ Unanswered Questions and the Death of Oswald 164 Chapter 19 – Heroes 170 Appendix A 173 English translation of Lee Oswald’s note to Marina with instructions should anything happen to him re: Gen. Walker Appendix B Timeline sequence of bullet mark on Main Street curb 175 Appendix C 177 Harold Weisberg’s six JFK assassination-related court cases filed against the FBI/U. S. Dept. of Justice under the FOIA Appendix D Dallas Cinema Associates, Inc. 178 Acknowledgements 180 Notes 182 Bibliography 204 Index 210 vi List of Illustrations Private Lee Harvey Oswald, USMC. Lee Oswald and ‘admirers’ in Minsk, USSR. More Minsk Merriment. Marina Oswald in Minsk. Marina and Lee in Minsk. (1) Marina and Lee in Minsk. (2) Magazine ad for Klein’s Sporting Goods Commission Exhibit (CE) 139. The Mannlicher-Carcano carbine owned and used by Oswald. CE 143. Oswald’s revolver. Newspaper article on Gen. Edwin A. Walker. Photo taken by Oswald of General Walker’s home. CE 1. The note Lee left for Marina, in Russian. Oswald arrested in New Orleans for disturbing the peace. Oswald’s fake ID cards using the name Alek James Hidell. On the evening of the assassination, Ruth Paine, Marguerite, Marina and baby Audrey Rachel. Oswald’s cramped boarding house room on North Beckley Ave. CE 2695. The Dallas Times Herald article. Dallas Police Detective L. D. Montgomery holding the paper gun sack. CE 356. Texas School Book Depository Building. Comparison of the firing angles. Close-up of the previous diagram, showing lines-of-fire. CE 875. Photo from the Secret Service, from the sniper’s lair. The sniper’s nest. The fourth bullet, found in the firing chamber of Oswald’s Mannlicher-Carcano. Blowup of the Dillard photo. Blowup of the Powell photo. The assassination weapon, hidden among boxes. Stairs leading down from the 6th floor, Oswald’s escape route. vii Merriman Smith with President Kennedy. FBI Exhibit K51. The actual Bell & Howell Zoomatic movie camera used by Abraham Zapruder. Cropped, sharpened version of the Phillip Willis photograph. Jay Watson of WFAA-TV, Dallas, interviews Abraham Zapruder only two hours after the assassination. CE 567. Two views of the nose portion of the bullet from the third shot. CE 569. The base portion of the bullet from the third shot. CE 840. Two lead bullet fragments found under the left jump seat of the Presidential limousine. The Harper Bone Fragment, approximately actual size. Actual map on which Billy Harper marked the “approximate location” where he found the skull fragment. View from atop the Zapruder-Sitzman pedestal. View from the 2nd floor of the Union Terminal Railroad Tower. French Chemist Paul Vieille and Swedish Chemist Alfred Nobel. Original Mary Moorman photo. Supposed location of badgeman. Badgeman, after photo ‘enhancement.’ Zapruder frame Z230. The ‘single bullet’ has struck. Dr. Robert Shaw, chief of thoracic surgery at Parkland Hospital. Croft photo showing elevated seating positions. The Warren Commission. CE 399. The ‘single bullet.’ Zapruder frame Z318. Frame Z227. An A-17 type target. CE 541(3). Oswald’s Carcano firing chamber and bolt. CE 555. Diagram of sight adjustment mechanism of Oswald’s 4-power scope. Oswald’s Mannlicher-Carcano displayed. CE 550. FBI test results of Oswald’s rifle. CE 239. Oswald’s Marine Corps Score Book. Zapruder frame Z133. Croft photo taken at about Z161. The four filmers whose cameras were rolling. viii Texas School Book Depository. The sixth floor sniper’s lair. Blowup of Elsie Dorman filming. Blowup of Oswald’s window and boxes. Bell frame B010. Blowups of four consecutive Bell fames. Three frames of the Towner film. Burn marks in three of the Hughes fames. View through the same rifle scope Oswald used. Fresh bullet mark on the south curb of Main Street. CE 887. Photo of FBI Special Agent Lyndal L. Shaneyfelt in the sixth floor sniper’s den. Harold Weisberg’s initial request for results of the FBI’s spectrographic analysis. Oak Cliff: Oswald’s path on foot and bus routes. Downtown Dallas bus routes. Part of Commission Document 1128. (1) Part of Commission Document 1128. (2) CE 378. The Marsalis bus route driver’s log. Landlady Gladys Johnson and house manager Earlene Roberts. Oswald’s path from his rooming house to the Texas Theater. Dallas Police Officer J. D. Tippit’s patrol car at 10th and Patton. CE 885, composite. Frames Z207 and Z212. CE 1796 and CE 1797. Oswald in custody. A disheveled Oswald after interrogation. Law enforcement taking Oswald from the Texas Theater to an awaiting patrol car. ix List of Tables 3rd Shot Table 2nd Shot Table Sound Travel-Time Table Frame Comparison Table Jiggle Range Table x Preface The greatest crime mystery of modern times has now been solved. Yet two most vital questions must be answered before this work can be expected to achieve legitimacy: “where were the tools that would crack this greatest mystery?” and “why was this author the one to solve it?”. The solution to this great riddle, it turns out, was not in technology but in the human mind. Not in more detailed scrutinizing of dusty photographs but in a flash of insight. Not in the electron microscope study of the Zapruder film until we can see Jackie Kennedy sneezing and Nellie Connally winking but in the creative inspiration we all possess that gives us the unexpected ability to take a two from way over here and a two from far over there and come up with that elusive four. The final truth was there all along. We had the ability to find it all along. But we were searching in the wrong place. We were all waiting for the next generation of supercomputer-enhanced razor sharp super stabilized images of the Zapruder film to reveal all the answers. That wait would have been endless. We were depending on the latest technology to do our thinking for us. Technology must be a supplemental aid to our thinking, not a replacement for it. In the grand scheme of things, there are certain to be many more mysteries and problems ahead, most far more significant to human existence than the JFK assassination. Let us not forget the lessons that this one teaches us. Those answers, as these were, will lie within each of us. And only there. xi The second question had to be answered for myself as well as others. Why me? Each of us has been in a ‘why me?’ situation before. We know how important it is to answer that question. What combination of circumstances prepared this author for being struck by that lightning bolt of insight? First, relatively few external pressures of a serious nature. Had there been the concerns of a 9-to-5 job taking up most of the week, this great mystery would not have been solved. If there hadn’t been the unceasing support and encouragement of family, friends and neighbors, this author would never have followed up on that thunder clap of inspiration. As well, one’s environment has a significant impact on one’s thinking. The ideas and conclusions in this book were products of peaceful, tranquil, idyllic surroundings. The sounds one notices most are the chirping of the birds and the gentle waves lapping upon the shore of the Chesapeake Bay. All senses are heightened in such places. Creativity and insights flourish. Then there’s the fortunate combination of experience. Indispensable real-world, hands-on experience. The author’s familiarity with firearms, where other researchers were only theorizing, separates this work from thousands of others. In fact, we as a society are moving further away from having been able to solve this great mystery. Publicly admitting to an ignorance of all things martial seems to be more the rule than the exception. If the JFK assassination had not been solved here and now, it may never have been. In addition, a lifetime of practice in the art of written public communication, in both the formal printed form and the often fragmented aural style of film, television and radio. This background formed the foundation of the author’s belief in his capability of such an undertaking. xii Finally, the happenstance of age. We 8th graders had just begun to appreciate the importance of our past and present when our history and current events teacher interrupted the Thanksgiving play that the 7th graders were putting on for us. “Today is a day that will go down in history. President Kennedy and the Governor of Texas have been shot.” For this author’s age group, it was a direct experience from the beginning. We were immersed in the story, following the shifting ‘conventional wisdom’ over the years as it was buffeted here and there by each new discovery. Historian Sir John Keegan held that one can never truly learn history by just reading. You have to experience it. Walk the battlefield. Although fate is not an accomplishment in which one can take pride, there’s no substitute for experience. One may ask if sources for this work included personal interviews of any of the participants. Other authors have held such conversations, even as the assassination receded by decades into the past. But at this point, half a century after the fact, interviews in most cases will do more harm than good. There are no bombshells out there waiting to be detonated. No witnesses have been sitting on secrets all these years, ready to reveal them only now. Memories get hazier over the years, not sharper. But even more dangerous, witnesses tend to embellish the truth as years go by. Aging Civil War veterans, after years of retelling their stories, were themselves unable to remember what was real and what was embellishment. Therefore, the weight of credibility must be given to statements made as close to the actual observations as possible, which is what this work has endeavored to do. That is not to say more evidence won’t be uncovered. Just within the past few years, a crucial and controversial motion picture has been unearthed: a sharp, clear color film of the Presidential limousine advancing toward its appointment with xiii destiny at Dealey Plaza. Even more films and still photos may percolate into the public eye in the not-too-distant future. But evidence that must first pass through the filter of the human mind after all these years must be viewed prudently as suspect. In the end, however, it is not authors who write history, but readers, by their judgment and consensus. Writing history is a grave responsibility. It takes effort and a skeptical mind. It takes years and is not found in movie theaters. The import of history cannot be stressed enough. For history doesn’t teach us about the past, it teaches us about the future. Edward Bauer July 4, 2011 September 25, 2011 xiv Introduction Rather than re-tread old ground, we shall begin with certain assumptions. Several commissions, committees and panels, dozens of respected historians, researchers and journalists, and untold experts in fields such as thoracic surgery, forensic pathology, marksmanship, ballistics, criminology, physics, and other disciplines have combined their knowledge, talents and expertise to describe in detail the Kennedy assassination. Their conclusions are straightforward and without fanfare. The President was struck by two bullets, one of which also struck Governor Connally, fired from behind and above, and that Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone in committing this crime. Mere hours after the assassination, five Dealey Plaza witnesses signed statements for the Dallas County Sheriff’s Department that they saw a man fitting Oswald’s description on the sixth floor of the Texas School Book Depository (TSBD) Building, two of whom actually saw the man firing a rifle. No witnesses came forth with descriptions of any other gunmen at any other location until many years later, after a multitude of ‘conspiracy theory’ books became big sellers. All of our memories need refreshed now and then. Here are brief excerpts from the five witnesses who observed Lee Oswald in his sniper’s perch. (1) Howard Leslie Brennan: “I could see the large red brick building [the TSBD] across the street from where I was sitting. . . . In the east end of the building and the second row of windows from the top I saw a man in this window. . . . He was a white man in his early ’30s, slender, nice looking, slender and would weigh about 165 to 175 pounds. He had on light colored clothing but definitely not a suit. . . . I looked up at the 1 building. I then saw this man I have described in the window and he was taking aim with a high powered rifle. I could see all of the barrel of the gun. I do not know if it had a scope on it or not. I was looking at the man in this window at the time of the last explosion. Then this man let the gun down to his side and stepped down out of sight. He did not seem to be in any hurry. I could see this man from his belt up. There was nothing unusual about him at all in appearance.”1 (2) Amos Lee Euins: “I saw the President turn the corner in front of me and I waved at him and he waved back. . . . I heard a shot. I started looking around and then I looked up in the red brick building [the TSBD]. I saw a man in a window with a gun and I saw him shoot twice. He then stepped back behind some boxes. I could tell the gun was a rifle. . . . I just saw a little bit of the barrel, and some of the trigger housing. This was a white man, he did not have on a hat.”2 (3) Robert E. (Bob) Edwards: “I happened to look up there at the building, the Texas School Book Depository Building, and I saw a man at the window on the fifth floor [he later amended this to mean the sixth floor]. . . . there was a stack of boxes around him, I could see. [Ron] remarked that he must be hiding from somebody. . . . I noticed that he had on a sport shirt, it was light colored, it was yellow or white . . . and his hair was rather short; I thought he might be something around twenty-six.”3 (4) Ronald B. Fischer: “About thirty seconds before the motorcade came by, Bob turned to me and said that there was a man on the fifth floor [he later corrected it to the sixth floor] of the Texas School Book Depository Building. . . . and I looked up and saw the man. I looked up at the window and I noticed that he seemed to be laying down there or in a funny position anyway, because all I could see was his head. I noticed that he was light-headed and that he had on an open-neck shirt. . . . I noticed that his complexion seemed to be clear, and that he 2 was in his twenty’s [sic].”4 (5) Arnold Louis Rowland: “I looked up at the Texas Book Depository building and noticed that the second floor from the top had two adjoining windows which were wide open, and upon looking I saw what I thought was a man standing back about 15 feet from the windows and was holding in his arms what appeared to be a hi powered rifle because it looked as though it had a scope on it. He appeared to be holding this at a parade rest sort of position. This man appeared to be a white man and appeared to have a light colored shirt on, open at the neck. He appeared to be of slender build and appeared to have dark hair.”5 And finally, Texas Governor John Bowden Connally himself. Although he did not see Oswald, he used a lifetime of experience to place the source of the gunfire. “I have all my life been familiar with the sound of a rifle shot, and the sound I heard I thought was a rifle shot at the time I heard it. I didn’t think it was a firecracker, or a blowout or anything else. I thought it was a rifle shot. I have hunted enough to think that my perception with respect to directions is very, very good, and this shot I heard came from back over my right shoulder, which was in the direction of the School Book Depository, no question about it. I heard no other.”6 Less than 48 hours after the death of President Kennedy, assassin Oswald himself was gunned down by Dallas nightclub owner Jack Ruby, igniting a firestorm of rumor, speculation and accusation. To douse this conflagration once and for all, President Lyndon Baines Johnson five days later ordered a commission headed by Chief Justice of the United States Earl Warren to write the definitive history of this confusing event. Less than 10 months later, the 888-page Warren Report was presented to President Johnson. Far from being extinguished, the smoldering embers re-lit and the swath of flames spread farther and faster, aided by the accelerant of articles, 3 books and movies, lacking in straightforwardness but with great fanfare. In the intervening five decades, these events have evolved into the most momentous mystery tragedy of the modern era, a mesmerizing entertainment production of historic proportions with a cast of characters that would make Shakespeare envious. As well as being perhaps the most difficult to solve puzzle of all time. Shhh. The curtain is about to rise. 4 “In a matter of a few seconds, this incident occurred that changed all of our lives, changed the course of history for many people in what many divergent ways you never know.” —Governor John B. Connally, Parkland Hospital, 11/27/63 5 Chapter 1 Basic Principles Lee Harvey Oswald, ultimate malcontent. Central character in the greatest mystery of the twentieth century, and one of humanity’s all-time villains. Yet to solve this unsolvable puzzle, we need to put ourselves in the very shoes of Oswald, as distasteful as that may be. Think like he thought. Act as he acted. Adopt his personality and point-of-view. If we can become that friendless 24-year-old, we can begin to untie this Gordian Knot. And if we can put aside our previous opinions and adopt a calmer, more reasoned approach, the sword will at first loosen and then ease from the rock. One of Abraham Lincoln’s less appreciated character traits was his ability to always see the other person’s perspective. Whether it be friend or enemy, political or personal, significant or not. Doing so, Lincoln realized, would not only dissipate needless anger and calm all parties, but it would also be an example for his fellow citizens, contemporary and future. There might be more conciliatory agreement about the motive, thoughts and actions of Lee Oswald if we put ourselves in his shoes. Confederate General Robert E. Lee was doubtless the most successful military commander of the American Civil War. For much of the conflict, he defeated a string of Union generals— John Pope, George McClellan, Ambrose Burnside, Joe Hooker— primarily due to his ability to walk around to the other side of the map. To see things as his opposite commander saw them: his strengths and weaknesses, any external forces acting upon him, any political pressures he may be under, the size and experience of his army, the morale of 6 his soldiers, his supply lines and any other factors that might influence his decisions. Lee ‘became’ his opposite commander. And as a result, he would invariably anticipate his adversary’s movements, or lack thereof in the case of McClellan, and react accordingly. We must do the same thing with Oswald. We must not only see things with Lee Harvey Oswald’s eyes, we need to understand his point-of-view. We must move to the Soviet Union with him and become infatuated with Marxism. We must join the U. S. Marines and learn marksmanship. We must also recognize the source of his insecurities, which were the cause of many of his actions. Only then can we discern the final truth. 7 Chapter 2 Oswald’s Background Admittedly, Lee Oswald was raised in an atmosphere of “negleck,” as he put it.1 Lee tried to mature without a father and with different roofs, different schools and different peers every year or less at the whim of his less-than-stable mother. Little wonder he had no friends as a child and would have none as an adult. He sought solace in the written word. Lee would develop an affinity for books, magazines, brochures, leaflets, anything that had a message his searching mind could understand. He was even willing to expose his thoughts to opinions with which he did not agree. Researchers have built a convincing case describing how such an abysmal and unfulfilling life could have led the man to commit this horrific crime. But we must avoid the pitfalls of over-simplifying him. Recently a professor, who will remain here anonymous, published a study purporting to prove that Adolph Hitler had bad table manners. Let’s call it the Hitler Syndrome. Some people’s minds need to simplify everything down to a mother goose nursery rhyme level. Not only did the mean ol' ogre eat children, but he had bad breath, body odor and dandruff. Real life is not that simplistic, professor. The real Hitler was responsible for the deaths of millions of good people in World War II. The real Hitler loved children. The real Hitler cared so little for human life that he caused the mass deaths of his own German soldiers by ‘no surrender’ orders at Stalingrad and suicidal attacks during the Bulge offensive. The real Hitler had a soft spot in his heart for dogs. Simplifications of Hitler and his ilk may be the reason we have failed to notice and take action against the subsequent 8 public-relations-savvy Hitlers that have pushed their way onto the stage. Let’s not make the same mistake with Lee Harvey Oswald. Let’s put a brain back into the guy. As a youth, Lee scored 118 on an IQ test2 (the average is 100) and “he had better than average ability in arithmetical reasoning for his age group.”3 Everybody’s smart about something. Oswald was very knowledgeable and capable about marksmanship, among other things. He was described, before the assassination, as a clean cut young man. And he was. He addressed reporters who shouted questions at him as “sir.” He was certainly not an incompetent oaf about everything, as some would have him painted. Spelling was not one of Oswald’s strong points, but hitting a target with a rifle was. Lee’s life was an unending series of cycles. His lack of success he blamed on his circumstances. He became disillusioned and angry. His readings told him the grass was greener elsewhere. So he picked up and made changes. At first he was gung-ho, motivated and happy in his new environment. Then, when his obvious genius was not appreciated by an ever widening circle of admirers, he again slipped into disenchantment and then anger. And the cycle began anew. Lee's older brother Robert had served in the United States Marine Corps, and the fed-up-with-school and 4,5 desperate-to-leave-home Lee tried to follow, but was rejected as too young. An excruciatingly long year took forever to pass, and a few days after his seventeenth birthday, Oswald was a U. S. Marine. He served from the fall of 1956 to the fall of 1959, being exposed to many different cultures and political philosophies during his tour of duty. 9 Private Lee Harvey Oswald, USMC. Pvt. Oswald’s instruction in marksmanship began with a full week of training in the basics: sighting-in, or ‘zeroing,’ the firearm, proper aiming at a target either by using the crosshairs in a telescopic sight or by lining up the ‘iron’ sights— the gunsight near the muzzle with that near the breech— (not an easy task when every heartbeat could wildly throw off your aim), and the correct procedure for squeezing, not pulling, the trigger. After a period of dry firing without ammunition,6 .22 caliber small-bore ammunition was first used. Then it was on to the outdoor range where the targets were set at 200, 300 and 500 yards. Each trainee fired 50‒70 rounds a day for five days. This intensive learning period lasted a full 3 weeks.7 For the first time in his life, Lee was genuinely happy. His peers were like-minded, or so he hoped, and more importantly, they would remain his companions for at least three years, something he had never experienced in the twelve different schools he attended.8 At first, Oswald made a sincere attempt cultivate friendships among his fellow Marines, but his slight stature, lack of height, small, narrow chin and high-pitched voice were ripe for ridicule. There had 10 been a cartoon character of the 1920s and ’30s, Oswald the Rabbit, and Lee was dubbed “Ozzie Rabbit,” which must have hurt tremendously. As Oswald’s disillusion with his situation grew, his motivation waned. He was found Guilty by courts-martial twice, once for possession of an unauthorized pistol he had secreted in his gear,9 with which he accidentally wounded himself, the other for challenging an officer to a fight.10 He also was charged with assaulting that officer by pouring a drink on him, but was found Not Guilty.11 He later suffered an emotional breakdown while on guard duty. His rifle scores fell off slightly, from 212 (sharpshooter, the second highest grade) to 191 (marksman, the third highest).12 Following his discharge, he returned to his mother’s residence in Fort Worth, Texas. Five days later he was on his way to the Soviet Union. Lee Oswald and ‘admirers’ in Minsk, USSR. 11 More Minsk Merriment. At first he was quite the center of attention, as photographs show. No friends, but certainly admirers, which was just fine with Lee. Yet eventually that esteem, based solely on the novelty of this American defector, wore off. Instead of the group of admirers growing, as he had fully expected, it dwindled to just a few. His feelings toward the Communist Socialism of the U.S.S.R. soured. It must have been déjà vu for Lee as the Soviet authorities never took him seriously and even denied his request for Soviet citizenship. Three days after his twentieth birthday he received word that his six-day visa would not be extended and that he had to be out of the Soviet Union by 8pm that evening. As much for political theater as to end his problems, Lee attempted suicide by slashing his left wrist. Even that failed. He was discovered unconscious and rushed to the hospital where a series of blood transfusions ensured his recovery. Oswald’s first real love interest was a co-worker in Minsk, Ella Germann. His awkward marriage proposal on her doorstep was rejected without tact. He later found comfort in the attention of a Russian pharmacology student, Marina Prusakova. Marina’s background was similar to Lee’s. She grew up without a father,13 fled an unstable home life, and moved to a strange city with no established circle of friends. Each craved the attention that comes with being attached to 12 someone exotic. Six weeks later they were married. Marina Oswald in Minsk. Marina and Lee in Minsk. Just as Oswald’s admirers passed for friends, his relationship with Marina passed for a real marriage. His alcoholic father died two months before his birth and Lee spent his formative years with little concept of how a stable, loving marital relationship should work. He refused to teach Marina English, even though she was eager to help him learn Russian. Having argued constantly with his mother, Lee did the same with his wife. The arguments turned to beatings. Marina already feared that her husband didn’t love her, even as he secretly made plans to return with her to America. 13 Marina and Lee in Minsk. His attempts to deal with the bureaucracies resulted in neither country wanting him, the Soviet KGB calling him “a useless man”14 and the U. S. State Department seeing him as “an unstable character, whose actions are entirely unpredictable.”15 Nevertheless, Lee and Marina arrived by ship at Hoboken, New Jersey in mid-June of 1962. Just over seventeen months later, Lee Harvey Oswald would kill the President of the United States. Oswald had a vastly inflated self-image. Without basis, he felt that he was more intelligent, more important and even more famous than he was. He fully expected to be surrounded by reporters and photographers upon his arrival in the U. S. and was shocked when none showed up. At this point, after a lifetime of rejection and failure, Oswald made a major change in his approach to converting the world to Marxism. Letters to bureaucrats, the occasional radio or television interview, passing out leaflets weren’t working. Although not abandoning this approach, Lee would make a critical addition to his repertoire, the use of force. In the 14 spring of 1963, he clipped a coupon from a magazine, filled it out using a Post Office box and the name A. Hidell, enclosed a money order for $21.4516 and bought a rifle, complete with telescopic sight. This was the least expensive rifle the magazine had to offer, even with the optional 4-power scope. Already thinking like a seasoned criminal, Lee knew he couldn’t show his face in any gun store for later identification; he had to buy it mail order. (Although it took investigators less than 16 hours after the crime to track down the paper trail of this purchase.17) Oswald intended on using this rifle for more than mere sport. 15 Magazine ad for Klein’s Sporting Goods. Oswald bought the “6.5 Italian Carbine,” left column, third from top. The weapon Lee purchased was a Mannlicher-Carcano, an Italian-made single shot bolt-action rifle, capable of firing high-powered ammunition. The projectiles were hefty, a quarter inch in diameter and over an inch long. And the full round— shell, powder and projectile— was three inches long and packed a wallop. This firearm could be used with accuracy over great distances, especially with the 4x scope. To provide stability when firing, Lee fashioned a home-made sling/shoulder strap and secured it to the weapon. 16 Commission Exhibit (CE) 139. The Mannlicher-Carcano carbine owned and used by Oswald. A carbine is a small, short rifle. This was a typical early twentieth century rifle. It could only fire one round at a time, after which the bolt had to be opened to eject the empty shell and closed again to position the next round securely in the firing chamber. Rounds could be inserted manually one-at-a-time while the bolt was open or fed automatically via the magazine, which in this model could hold up to six rounds. There is some confusion about the correct name: Mannlicher-Carcano or simply Carcano. The only official name was the year of first manufacture, Model 1891, or M91. The gun was developed by Salvatore Carcano and quickly became known as the Carcano. Like most products, including weapons, many versions were designed, one of those having a mechanism for feeding the rounds into the firing chamber similar to an Austrian rifle called the Mannlicher. So the term Mannlicher-Carcano was applied to the version Oswald used, the word Mannlicher being as much an adjective as a proper noun. At this time, Oswald also ordered a pistol, a .38 caliber Smith & Wesson Model 10, specifically the Victory Model manufac17 tured in the U. S. during World War II. The gun purchased by Oswald had a 5-inch barrel that had been shortened to 2 1/4 inches for concealment.18 CE 143. Oswald’s revolver. concealment. Note shortened barrel for Lee took time off from his job at Jaggars-Chiles-Stovall to pick up both guns on Monday, March 25th, 1963.19 He knew he was not going to use the rifle for hunting like he told Marina;20 he would use it to kill human beings. Let’s follow Oswald’s planning processes here. He’d need to carry his weapon to various destinations to use it, but with no car and no discretionary income to afford a taxi, he had to utilize the services of the Dallas Transit Company, the bus. He’d need to take it to remote sites such as Love Field airport21 for target practice and familiarization with the nuances of the weapon and its telescopic sight. Several times at least. Yet he understood straightaway that his new rifle would be useless to him until he could conceal it on public transportation. Within a day or so of receiving his rifle he found the perfect carrying contrivance, a green military raincoat,22 one he could have picked up inexpensively at an army surplus store. It would also serve to protect the sensitive weapon from adverse weather conditions. This combination of secrecy and protection was necessary before the weapon could leave his 18 apartment. He would use it often.23 Oswald already had his first human target in mind, retired U. S. Major General Edwin A. Walker, a high-profile anti-Communist. On March 5, 1963, Walker gave a speech in Savannah, Georgia as part of a speaking tour, where he called upon President Kennedy to use military force to remove the Communist regime of Fidel Castro from Cuba. “I challenge the President to take one U. S. Army division, the 82nd Airborne of Fort Bragg, North Carolina, properly supported, and liquidate the scourge that has descended upon the island of Cuba.”24 It would be the first but not the last time a news report would spur Oswald to attempt to murder those with whom he disagreed. Articles such as this appeared in newspapers across the country during Gen. Walker’s speaking tour in March of 1963. 19 Photo taken by Oswald of General Walker’s home, part of Lee’s thorough planning to assassinate the General. He spent two months meticulously planning to end Walker’s life,25 making copious notes including maps and photos of his victim’s house, even studying bus schedules.26 He went so far as to leave a long, detailed list of instructions in Russian for Marina should he be arrested or killed.27 (In fact, these preparations, found among Lee’s possessions after his arrest, led investigators to determine that it was Oswald who fired the shot at Gen. Walker.) 20 CE 1. The note Lee left for Marina, in Russian, with specific instructions on what to do should he not return from the Walker shooting. (For translation, see Appendix A.) The logistics of Oswald’s mission were complex, and he paid heed to each detail. Lee and Marina lived in the middle-class neighborhood of Oak Cliff, southwest of downtown Dallas. General Walker resided in the more affluent suburbs north of the city, between Oak Lawn and Highland Park. The distance between their apartment at 214 W. Neely Street and the general’s home at 4011 Turtle Creek Boulevard was roughly seven miles. That’s 14 miles round trip— too far to walk, not to mention lugging a rifle. So how would he accomplish this without leaving a trail of witnesses? Lee’s meticulous planning anticipated every detail. He suspected that any bus drivers or passengers might be questioned by police concerning the day of the shooting, so he would take the Mannlicher-Carcano, wrapped in his raincoat, three days earlier28,29 and bury it under some leaves.30 He also suspected that the area surrounding the Walker property would be searched by authorities, perhaps using police canine search teams,31 so he would hide the gun almost a mile from Walker’s house. He would then wait three days after the 21 shooting to retrieve the rifle, again hidden in his raincoat, and return with it by bus to his apartment.32 Only 15 days after first holding his Mannlicher-Carcano, Oswald attempted to kill the general by firing through a window of his house. He fired a single shot, and quickly ran from the scene. Lee returned home late and scared, not knowing if his aim was true.33 The next morning, a newspaper he purchased told him he had missed,34 the bullet barely grazing the general’s arm. Another bitter disappointment. But Lee always returned to his basic purposeful and methodical nature. He would carefully analyze why his single shot at Walker, which seemed a sure hit at less than a hundred feet, missed. The simple explanation was that the single bullet Oswald fired hit the window frame, thus sparing General Walker’s life. But that reverses cause and effect. The striking of the window frame was the effect of the miss, not the cause. It was ‘how’ the shot missed, not ‘why’ it missed. With all the time he needed, having a fence as a stable gun platform,35 and using a 4-power scope from that close a distance, Oswald would have easily seen the window frame silhouetted by the interior room light and taken aim to avoid hitting it. He even told Marina that he took very careful aim.36 Yet the bullet went astray. Through his extensive knowledge of firearms and marksmanship, he deduced the true cause of that missed shot. He would not let that mistake happen again. Two weeks after the shooting, Oswald moved to New Orleans, the place of his birth, with Marina following a month later. But not to lie low until the heat was off. Far from it. He began to drum up publicity, forming a New Orleans chapter of the pro-Castro Fair Play for Cuba Committee, of which he was the only member. He informed local radio and television stations of his availability for interviews, and even secured two 22 helpers in passing out leaflets, with news cameras rolling, of course. His arrest on August 9th for disturbing the peace did generate a brief flurry of publicity, including a radio interview and later a debate on the WDSU radio program “Conversation Carte Blanche.” In this radio debate, Oswald’s habitual lies were publicly exposed for the first time. His opponents had access to an FBI file with details of his defection to the USSR and his undesirable discharge from the Marines.37 This public embarrassment had the effect of detaching Lee’s mind even further from reality, and he took solace this time in his guns. Predictably, the groundswell of support he had expected from this publicity failed to materialize and his efforts at soliciting help from other pro-Castro groups in the U. S. were rebuffed. Oswald arrested in New Orleans for disturbing the peace. 23 Fake ID cards made by Oswald in the name of Alek James Hidell, one of his noms de guerre. Left, a phony Selective Service card (aka Draft card), and right, a false Armed Forces Service card showing honorable service with the USMC. His reaction was typical Lee Oswald. He was convinced that this string of failures would end and his problems solved by moving to Communist Cuba. There he would ‘join the revolution’ and fight alongside ‘comrade’ Fidel Castro. Marina was by now eight months pregnant with their second, so Lee arranged for Ruth Paine, with whom she had stayed during Lee’s absence, to drive her back to Dallas while he went by bus to Mexico City for a visa to Cuba. He told Marina she could join him in Cuba once the baby was born. Much has been made of Oswald’s trip to Mexico City: theories involving secret meetings, Oswald imposters and other tales, all of which have been disproven by serious work ethic research. In the end, his trip there was much ado about nothing. He went to the Soviet and Cuban embassies, tried to get the visa, was diplomatically refused, and returned to Dallas in early October. One upshot of this journey was that Oswald became just as disenchanted with Cuba as he had been with the Soviet Union and the United States.38 The other would involve his marital status. By the middle of the month, Lee had landed a job with the Texas School Book Depository Company at their Elm Street location, filling book orders. The building was named for the prime tenant but was still called by some the old Sexton Building39,40 even though that hadn’t been its name for two 24 years. Oswald learned of the job opening from Marina’s kind-hearted landlady, the aforementioned Ruth Paine. Although from Pennsylvania and a Quaker, Ruth was an active member of the local Russian community, and befriended Marina because she felt her need to have a friend. Ruth must have seemed like a living guardian angel to Marina. She spoke Russian with her and was a shoulder to lean on when Marina desperately needed escape from Lee’s beatings. Their friendship was one of co-dependency, as Ruth was undergoing marital strife with her husband Michael. Upon his return from Mexico City, Lee ran into an unexpected roadblock. Marina had become settled and happy in her living arrangement at Ruth Paine’s home in Irving, about twelve miles west of Dallas. She informed him than until he changed his violent revolutionary ways, both domestically and internationally, he could find his own lodgings. Oswald’s response indicated his priorities. He stayed at the YMCA for a brief period, then at the boarding house of Mary Bledsoe for less than a week— which soon would have major ramifications— and finally at what would be his last residence, a room the size of a large closet at 1026 North Beckley Avenue in Dallas. On weekends, he secured a ride with a co-worker to see the family at Ruth’s home in Irving. Marina permitted Lee these weekend visits, primarily for the sake of their two young children, but that was all. 25 Shortly after the assassination, l-to-r: Marina Oswald’s landlady Ruth Paine, Lee’s mother Marguerite, Lee’s wife Marina and their month-old baby Audrey Rachel. Oswald’s cramped boarding house room on North Beckley Avenue. Mrs. Gladys Johnson, landlady. Workers at the Texas School Book Depository had access to 26 newspapers left scattered on the tables in the lunchroom. Recently-hired order-filler Lee Oswald was often observed reading them.41 During that fateful third week of November, he would have read, with keen interest, these articles: CE 2695. The Dallas Times Herald version of the UPI story published November 19, 1963. Oswald would have read this the next day, 48 hours before the assassination. 27 Nov. 19, 1963: “Kennedy All But Invites Castro Ouster – Promises U. S. Aid If People Overthrow Premier — WASHINGTON (UPI) – President Kennedy all but invited the Cuban people today to overthrow Fidel Castro’s Communist regime and promised prompt U.S. aid if they do.”42 Nov. 20, 1963: “Kennedys to Visit Texas – Seen Prologue to 1964 Campaign — DALLAS (UPI) – President and Mrs. Kennedy fly into Texas Thursday in the Democrats’ prologue to the 1964 presidential campaign.”43 Nov. 21, 1963: “SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (UPI) – . . . The Chief Executive and his wife, Jacqueline, flew here from Washington to open a two-day, five-city Texas tour.”44 It is impossible to determine exactly when Oswald made the decision to take the course he did. Probably Tuesday the 19th or Wednesday the 20th, by which time he would have read about Kennedy’s call for Cuban Premier Fidel Castro’s overthrow and also that the President’s motorcade would be passing directly in front of his workplace. He would have to sneak his Mannlicher-Carcano into work, but for that he’d need to construct a different carrying sack. The old one, his green raincoat, could be traced to him without difficulty by investigators. That evidence would have been significant proof of his guilt. He’d have to fashion a more ‘generic’ bag. It is likely Oswald used paper and tape from the shipping room in the Book Depository to construct this one.45,46 Then he’d ask co-worker Buell Wesley Frazier for a ride back to Ruth Paine’s home— on Thursday instead of the usual Friday— to retrieve the rifle. He’d tell Wesley it was curtain rods for his boarding house room. 28 Dallas Police Detective L. D. Montgomery outside the TSBD holding the paper gun sack made by Oswald for carrying his rifle to work on November 22. Back in Irving for what only he knew would be his last visit as husband and father, Lee was relaxed and pleasant, spending time with his own as well as Ruth’s children. Yet he was there to take inventory: one disassembled Mannlicher-Carcano carbine, serial number C2766, with 4-power scope, one ammunition magazine, his last four rounds of ammo (not quite what he wanted but he’d have to make do; no sense showing your face around gun stores the day before you planned on shooting the President) and one homemade paper bag for carrying both rifle parts. Plus back at his rooming house: one snub-nosed .38 caliber Smith & Wesson revolver, serial number V510210, and adequate ammo for that gun. He was ready. It wasn’t until Lee had left the next morning that Marina noticed on her dresser some money and Lee’s wedding ring, which he had never left at home since they were married.47,48 [End of Free Sample Chapters.] 29