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ARTICLE: WHO ASSASSINATED PRESIDENT KENNEDY?

Document Type: 
SPECIALCOLLECTION [1]
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Records Related to the Assassination of Senator Robert F. Kennedy [2]
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00414467
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RIFPUB
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U
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31
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June 6, 2025
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June 12, 2025
Publication Date: 
May 1, 1970
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104-10209-10235 � Part 1. Introduction Yilus A 'need Prtildenf Kennedy? Co Neswej,we 22. 1163. in 'Dallas. Texas. President. Johr F. Kennedy. while riding in an open limousine thra..gh Linsley Plaza and waving to the surrounding creeds. -as shot to death. Lee Marvey Oswald. an ex-nariae, ease former visitor to the Soviet Union. MOS ariested that afternoon in is movie theatre in another section of Dallns; that eight he 5.82 charged with shooting President hennedy from the sixth floor easternoost aindow of the 7e.es School nook Deposi- tory building overlooking Plaza. This act �salmi(' denied steadily througn two days of question- ing (no recoro of questions and answerS was ever preserved/. Two days later while Oswald was being transferred from one jail to another, he was shot. by J4C( Patsy. a GAUPS night-club owner in the basement of the Dallas pollee station, while mil- lions of Americans watched vu television. The com- missIon of investigation, appointed by President Lynn B. Jonnson, and headed by Chief Justice Earl Warren of the U. S. Supreme Court, published its rerert in September 196.1, end concluded that Oswald was the sole assassin and that there was no conspir- ecy. In view of the authority of the Warren Commis- Sat conclusion was accepted by many Americana for a long time. But the conclusion cannot be con- sicezed true by any person who carefully considers the crucial evidence -- such as the physics of the sheotin.y. the timing of a turz,er of events, and other important sod undeniable facts. In other words. Oswald Was not the sole assassin, and there MPS 5 conspiracy. 7nis reticle will develop that thesis, prove it to be true on the basis of substantial, conclusive evidence. and in particular some analysis of the photographic evidence. There was in fact a conspiracy. Oswald played a role in the conspiracy, although there is con- clusive evidence that on Novemaer 22, 1963, he did no sooting at President Kennedy, and that. just as he claimed when he was in the Dallas jail, he was � 'patsy." At least three gunmen (and proba- bly (our) -- none of whom were in the sixth floor easternmost window of the Texas School Book Depos- itory building where the Warren Commission placed Oswald -- fired a total of six shots at President Kennedy. One of these shots missed entirely; one bit Governor John B. Connally, Jr. of Texas. riding . with Kennedy; and four hit President Kennedy. one in his throat. one in hie back. and two in his head. (The bulk of the undeniable evidence for these statements about the shots consists of: (a) the physics of the motions of Kennedy and Con- nall) shown in some 60 frames of the famous film by Anrahism Zapruder; (b) the locations of the in- juries in Kennedy and in Connally; and (c) more than 100 pictures. consisting of more than 30 still photographs end more than 70 frames of mo- vies.) Were than 50 persons were involved in the con- spiracy at the time of firing the shots. These persons included members of the Dallas police force (bat not all of the Dallas police -- and that ad- Xcze 'ram tne PuNssher: In order to sue/ode the cr:iile kJ Richard r. Sprap.e in this issue of Com- puters and AutO,deiOn, it pals necessary to type the oracle in the typeface of cw. 'Across the Vditor'e Ask' eeotion, rather than the usuat tiTefaco for our artiolee. Vs regret any.rethwtion 1,n legibitity that iner,i ham :smutted. 30 ._. counts for some or eveett). elements of toe :.... Central lute:Ili:race Agency. snme anti-Castro Canoe exiles, some siveaturers from Ncw Orleans, an4 iome ether grn,ps. After the assassination. Soe;0, ' yeti highly plated persons in the. United Statet . government became accessories to the erimi!. in other words. te,y participated in assodunu% Con- ceAlnent of imi.ortant facts. in shielding the i....r. petrators of the crime, and in :Treading � %hie., layer of rewritten history (in the manner .1 George Orwell's famous novel '1904") over the'whnie 'crime.. Of course, asserting these statements m.kes them neither true ner believable. Without very strong. evidence, it would be evil to make such statements. As to believability, prior to District Att,rney Jim Garrison's trial Of Clay Shaw in New (reins in Feb. and itarch. 1969. public opinion p'. Is in the Unite� States showed that over 75 percent of the people in the United States believed s .at there was a conspiracy. (he press. radio. and .1 almost everywhere in the United States reported r.ir .-sasn's investigation and the New Orleans trial iv a very diStorted aay. Furthermore. Garrison did ID prove to the satisfaction of the New Orleans Jur/ that Clay Shaw was involved in the conspiracy. 'wen though he proved that Shaw knew and net Osaald. � The news media of the United States (exce;: for two reaspapers in New Orleans/ reported the trssl in such a way as to show that no conspiracy feasted. The media largely succeeJed in chanqing ii.%. :.,611c opinion. if at fudge from the falling oft of the poll percentages. But the United States' m,oia nave been proved wrong many tires before, and they will be provem wrong again in this case. for example. tne press of the United States almost entirely refused to br- lieve for five years 119(43 to 1904) that the Wra.ant brothers had flown in a flying machine heavier 'Lan air.. Only after the Wright brothers had won spec- tacular air races and demonstrated other successful flights in France. did the majority of the "hard- headed" American press believe that the Wright broth- ers had flown: But the evidence cited or referred to in this article, and the existing photographic ce:idence and its analysis. a little of which is published here. establishes the fact of conspiracy. This evidence along with other evidence should and can initialize a major change in the beliefs of the people of the United States. As for beliefs of the people of Europe. it has long been and still is accepted there that President John F. Kennedy was assassinated by a conspiracy. What is the Evidence? The evidence for the statement -- "the Warren Commission conclusions are false" -- is now over- whelming. There now exists not only a mountain of new evi- dence, but also considerable new analysis n: the old evidence, the evidence which the ConnissiOn it- self published in the 26 volumes of Evidence and Hearings accompanying the Warren Report. ::,ch of the new evidence and tho new analyses of the old evidence are available for any serious researcher's inspection: if any such person is interested. he should write me. There are four prime sources of new evidence and analysis: 1. Researchers all over the United States, sone affiliated with the National Cr,,ittee to Investigate Assassinations (hCTIA), others acting independently but cooperating with the NCT1A, hove obtaliteci'new evidence from witnesses, and even from conspirators -- including admissions and confessions. COMPUTERS end AUTOMATION for May. 1970 Document Number ..-1-5-521 - \\ Vt for FOIA Review on FIB 1979 I APPROVE!' FOR RELEASE 1934 CIA RISIORICAL 14}1131 PfifARAAI � 1 , 01 4.11,Al is reproduced or described im this article. 3. Researchers have proomeed scientific. sol- idly-hosed onalyses of the old and new evident, and published these analyses Is books and orticies. 4. The office .of District Attorney .11m Garrison In i.e. Orleans has, kyles his direction. . corned on (and contiaaes to carry on) an extensive Investigation of President Ken- y's assassination. Moils of this evi- dence has been made available to the NCTIA. Tots article conce ttttt es on sooe of the photo- graphic evidence and problems of computerized ys is . flowerer. for the benefit of readers who would like to exiimine some of the other evidence. a rem very important and int ttttt ing references will be mentioned next. Four Important Refevence Books One valuable book is Sly Seconds in lialln:i, by ' Professor Josiah Thompson. a professor of philosophy at ilaverford College. Hoverford. Pa., published in 1948 by Bernard Gets and Associates. New York. 323 paves. Thompson made a thorough and competent anal- ysis of the happenings during the six seconds when Pressocht Kennedy and Governor Connally of Texas were shot. With the cooperation of We magazine during the first part of his investigation. he los*..eo at the clear original of the Lapruder film. (After that. Life magazine locked the film up and denied any further access. until Garrison subpoenaed the film for the New Orleans trial of Clay Shaw.) 7nomason showed that at least three gunmen shot at the President, and that one of the fatal shots come from the front and not the back. Another im.,eccobly scholar1y book is Aecessoriel after the Fact. by Sylvia Meagher. published in 1967 by eabbs Merrill Co., Inalanapolis, Ind.. OTT pages. She presents a most thorough analysis of the t gaps, conflicts, contradictions. and failures to ) investigate, that are clearly revealed by careful $ study of the Warren Commission Report and the 26 ; volumes of supporting documents. ) A third iryortant book is Inquest: the Warren iComoission an] thr Estahlishment of Truth, by Ed- .. . ward Jay Epstein. published by the Viking Press. 4 Now York, N.Y.. 1966. 224 pp. Epstein makes � preg- nant remark at the beginning of his Chapter 9. "The i/major problem in the writing of the Report was the 4 selection of the evidence. From the tens of thou- , Sands of pages of evidence. which facts were to be I included and which (acts excluded?" This book is ) an illuminating account of what actually did happen 4in the work of the staff of the Marva Commission. - a and why and how they could have reached the wrong .!conclusions. :i A fourth significant book is Farewell America, k by Jaws Hepburn, published in Canada and in Del- gluts by Frontiers Publishing Co.. Vaduz, Liechten- stein. 1968, 418 pp. (One cannot be Sued in Liech- 0 tenstein.) This book is apparently based largely Con information collected by certain former members of the French intelligence service, who penetrated lithe plot to assassinate President Kennedy. Accord- ling to the book Jacket, the author. James Hepburn, .ettended the London School of Economics and later graduated from the Institute of Political Studies :in Paris. (However. "Hepburn" is � pseudonym.) The book gives a large amount of information about the plot to assassinate Kennedy, its background. and parallels in history. The book alimges that � ,J. Edgar Hoover knew of the plot beforehand and did ;nothing to stop It. It also alleges that a Texas loll millionaire, some other oil men. some Tessa sod IcomPurcas and AUTOMATION for May. 197'0 1 1 ..... C4toCf& us the uaiios city governmeat. many members of the Dallas Police De- . pertmcnt. and many members of the CIA. the FOI. and the Secret Service, all were involved in the'plot. I do not agree with nor believe some of these elle-. potions. Appendix 1 of this book lists many 'classified' documents in the National Archives of the United States, such at no. 931, a secret CIA document en- titled 'Oswald's access to information abnut the 0-2' (the spy plane). Appendix 2 lists more refer- ences. entitled 'reports, memoranda, and documents" 'such as "flossier Richard R. Helms'. "General Dyna- mics Dossier F-111" but how to get access to these references is nowhere meatlooed. Pages .3(40 to 324 contain a remarknble account of twenty-yeare activity by the CIA. Ruch of the information in the book is clearly true; other information is probable or plausible: some information is clearly in the category -possible but hard to believe" and by no means proved. For reasons that may be guessed, this book is very hard to obtain in the United States but it can be bought in other countries. Althoogh it hos Li- brary of Congress catalog no. 60-57391. at the Li- brary of Congress it is 'not available". Comvercial importation of the book has been blocked by the U.S. Customs and the U.S. Post Office. A movie with the same title has been made by the publishers of the book: the movie. -Farewell America-. has been shown In several Europe-A cities, but no copies of the film ere S.o far svailsble In the United States. A number of important reference Looks are includ- ed in the partial bibliograpny at the end of this article. Among the more important authors are Harold Weisberg. Parts flammance, Mark Lane. Rose- mary James, Joachim Joesten. end Raymond Marcus. A fuller bibliography is available from the NCTIA. The Now ()deans Trial of Clay Shaw One of the largest additional installments of new public evidence came out of three weeks of court testimony given in New Orleans. Feb. and March. 1�69. when District Attorney Jim Garrison charged Clay Shaw with having a part in the conspiracy to assassinate President Xer.edy. The trial was accurately and very fully reported in The Times Picayune, Feb. 7. 19o9 to March 2. 1969. the leading daily paper in New Orleans. published since 1047. The record of the trial as published ii The Tires Picayune contains many indications that: 1. Clay Shaw did know and meet with Lee Harvey . Oswald (dead). David Ferrie (dead). and Jack Ruby (dead), and exchange money with - them. Teelve witnesses saw them together in twos and threes. at 'serious times and _places. 2. There were at least three gunmen in Healey Plaza firing at President Kennedy on Novem- ber 22. 1963, from at least two directions. and therefore there was a conspiracy. What Garrison failed to prove to the satisfaction el the New Orleans Jury was that Clay Shaw was involved in the conspiracy in Dallas. The hUansi Police Tape Among the pieces of new public evidence is the "Miami Police Tape." In September 1963. President John F. Kennedy gave a speech in Miami. Florida. Prior to this time a Miami police informer who had infiltrated the National States Rights Party inter- viewed one of its chieftains, a gr. Milteer, in a hotel room In Miami. Unknown to Milteer the room had been bugged by the Miami police and the Inter- view was taped. Tho informer drew Milteer out on 31 � Ii " ' . the subject of 4SSailiaatiOill. Milteer said that jack Kennedy was going to be looted either 1R, :Miami or in :owe other city by individuals who-Were' Connected mita right wing gre..ms including-theMie- .ute men nod the. Netionel States Rights PertY. lie � said it would be done with a high-power rifle from a high point in � city building and that a patsy. would be piekel up by the police afterwards. He � said � ran using the name ikown was the most likely . one to do it. lie added that Brown had been followw � ing Martin Luther King around the country for,teveral months trying to assassinate him too. The Miami police turned the information over to the I'M, who informed the Miami police that they hed turned it over to the Secret Service. Kennedy was well protected in Miami and exposed himself as little as possible, apparently partly as a result of the Secret Service receiving the infor- mation. On the morning of November 22. 1963. Miltcer tel- ephoned the informer to say that Jack Kennedy was coming that day to Dallas, and would probably never be seen in Miami again. The informer interpreted this to mean that Kennedy would be shot in Dallas. and says that he reported this information to the Miami police. The Miami pollee in turn reported the information to the Miami office of the EDI. After the assassinettvo. the Miami police as- sured that either the FBI or the Secret Service were folicwing up on these lends. So the Miami po- lice remained silent. When District Attorney Jim Garrison ccntacteo them in late 1966, prior to pub- lic announcement of his investigation. the Miami po- lice learned of Garrison's evidence about a conspir- � ocy. Tony became very disturbed. and then decided in January 190 to make the tape public. (Garri- son's investigation did not become public until February 1967.) The Miami tape was played for a group of newsmen in the Miami police headquarters in January 1967. Stories about the tape appeared in several newspapers, but not in The New York Timel nor in other leading newspapers. in spite of the Importance of the story. The FBI and the Secret Service had all the above Information from the Wiamipolice prior to the forma- tion of the Warren Commission: Yet none of the a- bove information appears in the Warren Commission Report. in the 26 accompanying volumes, or in the Warren Commission erchives which have been made public. Chvesbra Message to the FBI Among other evidence collected by Garrison (and confirmed by Mark Lane) is the fact that Oswald tele- .; phoned the Dallas. Texas, office of the FBI on No- vember 20. 1963. end told them that President Ken- nedy was going to be assassinated on November 22. An Fill teletype message was sent that day to J. Edgar Hoover with that information. A repeat teletype message with that information was also sent on that day to the New Orleans office of the FBI. apparently because of Oswald's former presence in New Orleans. A clerk in the New Orleans office of the FBI re. vcaled the eAstence of the teletype message, and gave a deposition to that effect to Garrison. He also revealed the existence of that teletype mes- sage to Attorney Hark Lane after Garrison's inves- tigation was made public. No statement about this message appears in the Warren Commission Report. In the twenty-six accempanying volumes, or isk the Warren Compassion Archives. Tiso Radio Cornownicator One of the i lug events prior to the trial of Clay Sher in 1969 was the finding of � was named 32 Jim Hicks. He ;honed up voluntnrily in G rrr i r on's office. Garrison and one-of the rrrrrr eters. Jones Harris.. sudeeni:. realized that they hod ""7� his picture before, as one of the pt,r,nni in Dwaiey Mare near the time of the fatal shooting (See Fig. II). Hicks admitted that he mns tEe radio Com� municator among the rifle teams since they were out of sight from ench other, and of course each �tean would need to know what was going on. Jim Hicks had set up a Communications Center at the Adolphus Hotel prior to the assassination. The photograph Harris had seen Is a picture of Jim Hicks in Lesley Plaza just after the shots, with his radio in his left rear trouser pocket and anten- na banging down outside. (See the foreground of Figure Il.) Since the time of his adOirS1001. Jim Hicke has been locked up in an Air Force Hospital for the Insane located in Oklahoma. Strange Events In the Warren Commission's activities, there are many strange events. extraordinary patterns of behavior, and important unanswered questions to which the Warrtn Commission paid almost no atten- tioa. There are more than SG instances of these strange events -- where the '.inrren Commission did not look, or looacd aside, as if they were trying not to see. Among these are the following: 1. Crucial records were burned Or destroyed. For example. Commander J. J. chief autopsy surgeon, personally burned in his fireplace on Nov. 21. 1963 his preliminary draft of the autopsy report. The Warren Commission accepted this action as natural. 2. Crucial physical evidence was destroyed. as Iii (a) washing of Governor Connally's bul- let-penetrated clothing, before it was ex- amined by the Commission's staff. and (b) the prompt rebuilding of the presiuential limousine, to that it could no longer be examined for bullet corks; etc. The Warren Commission accepted these actions without questioning. 3. The Warren Commission did not examine the autopsy X-rays and photographs of Presides% Kennedy. In fact, the photographs were not even developed until two years after President Kennedy's death. The Kennedy family and Burke Marshall. their luwyer. assisted in locking them up. 4. The Warren Commission accepted the sudden appearance of a pristine bullet (Commis- sion Exhibit 399) fitting Oswald's gun. 04 the wrong stretcher in Parkland Hospital, and the COMMiStiOn assumed that it "fell" Out of Governor Connally. S. The Warren Commission (in an adnitt:d error) published Zapruder frames 314 and 7.115 in reversed order, so that the motion of JEK's head after the fatal shot his reversed. !s. The Warren Commission ignored the visible and violent backward motion of President Kennedy's head shown in the Zaprud,r film . at the instant of the fatal shot -- a mo- tion that conclusively shows that the Presi- dent was fatally shot from the front. 7. The Warred Commission failed to investigate . many possible motives for shooting President Kennedy, and who would profit thereby. Etc. Perhaps the strangest of 811 the events are some events that took place after the Warrea Commission made their report: 1. President Lyndon B. Johnson issued an @zeta-- . tire order locking up in the Axel:Ojos of COMPUTERS and AUTOMATION for May. 1970 9 AV* r .�,4�7�W � � 4e. A���� s � I � � " � � .� �� � .., � � ! ; , ...... -.I . .. . 4, ... e .!........� . . .1 - i . ...-,,, . .. .� � .' � -� "'" .i'v- � ��.- I... . '.. � ... . ,. I i . ...1 � ... ... i '..i. .,� ,r - A /lb - � I � ..4 . j e .... ' . . � 1.(c,t. vdV.......,*. ... , .4 .. .'' . .... \ .-...:.. ."_...1. �� 4- .%����,!�ci, I.. �: . � �(....... _ : . - . � � .:...... . --........... ..->rk . _ ...- - .. -, . �.��� i .. � ���,:../.,�.""-,,,..,��.. - � � : i� � . - , (.--,3 � .. .. 1 1"11-1".."*""�-�""-.---...�..:�... '......�.... . � irr.:�* -----:---' C........-- N. � . � � � �.� . . �� i ' � , ... w w � ./ . � � t . � � w. ....... ..... �. � ..w w-' , w '� � . 1 ..............7.....s.77. 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Tio. 87) Plaza shortly sifter the tuition. showing Jim Hicks. the radio comeausicator smog the fir- lag r 33 :,�:�,�; . i... � - .1 .. ...- ����." 1... V - :. ....IN... A , 1 I i I I ft : f ! : : � I I ! !� :1 '11 : I ill I � I � the United States for 75 years as 'confi- dentinl. secret, and top secret.' over 100 important relevant reports and memoranda. The list of the titles of these extraordi- nary documents was obtained and published in the Saturday Evening Post on April 6. 2. Chief Justice Earl Worsen hos steadily re- fused to consider any new evidence. As re- cently us 190 he told newsmen. "I know of ISO new evidence. and have seen no new evi- dence." It Is a fact that such new evi- dence exists in large quantities. This strange attitude may be coupled with War- reel steady silence in response to letters. Wo scientist, no honest man, ever refuses to look at new evidence. The kind of action which locks a- way old evidence, and refuses to look at new evi- dence. is not the kind of action of honest scien- tists and honest men. nssically. the Warren Commission picked up the Dallas police hypothesis. that Lee Harvey Oswald was the sole assassin and there was no conspiracy. Once they chose this hypothesis (and they chose it very early), they assiduously tried to confirm it. partly by selecting evidence. Partly by suppressing information which they knew. and partly by altering evidence to tho opposite -- in other words, falsi- fying evidence. Their caneidate for assassination vehemently denied ((or two days before being killed by Jack Ruby) participating in or knowing about the assassination of President Kennedy. He also posi- tively stated that he had been once 4 potsy. a fell guy. He also said that the photograph of him hold- ing a rifle was a fake. saying. "That's my heed but not my body." (That photograph Is demonstrably a fokeA Over 50.000 items of evidence exist which support and mutually confirm a contrasting hypothesis. This hypothesis is that there was a conspiracy, and that at least four persons shot at President Kennedy. and that more than 50 persons were involved in the con- spiracy. In fact. about 6 persons who participated In the conspiracy have admitted their participation and described what happened in their own involve- ment. All of these items of evidence collected con- firm the information in all of the photographs, and are very largely consistent. I do not allege that the CIA. the Secret Service. Lyndon 8. Johnson. and. certain other prominent individuals participated in the conspiracy before the assassination occurred. I do assert that these individuals and agencies. after the assassination occurred, participated in covering up and concealing the conspiracy and there- by became accessories after the fact. The evidence referred to is available under appropriate circum- stances to an untainted Con'gressional investigation. Part 2. The Photographic Evidence Over 510 Photographs The assassination of President John F. Kennedy was the most photographed murder in history. Ap- proximately 75 photographers took a total of approxi- mately 510 photographs. either before or during or within an hour after the events in Dealey Plaza. and either there or nearby or related to those events. The word "photograph" in' this context includes both still photos and movie sequences. The number of frames in a movie sequence ranges from about 10 to about 500; and in the count of 510 photographs given above. the 10 to 500 frames of a single movie se- quence are counted Just as one photograph. The to- tal number of frames is over 25.000. 34 The Warren Commission examined 26 photographs. about 5 percent of the 510. The FIll examined :bout 50 photographs. or 4004( 10 percent. The most fa- . nous of all the ptotooraphs is the Zapruder film; which had over 4114 frames. Many of the photographs were token by profes- sional photographers. About Zvi of the photographers were professionals who worked for newxpapers, tele- vision networks, and pholograpnic a5encieS. � The Warren Commission did not interview a sine).* one or the professional photographers, nor did the Warren Commission see any of their photngra;ns. Fifteen of these professionals were actually in the Kennedy motorcade, no further than 6 car icnolks behind the Kennedy car. Five of these photogra:,n- ers were television network caeeramen. The e. Commission looked at none of their photographs. Two of the photographers were from the hhite House. One of these ran (Thomas Atkins) was the regular photographer for the Khite House. He made � a special film for -?,ndon B. Johnson. Atkins used his own film plus some footooc obtained from the television photographers. Johnson looked at the film and then put it away. This film is now stored with the Kennedy Memorial Library materials if, a warehouse in Washington. D.C.; it is stated to be "unovailohle" to researchers. The Commission did not se this film, n.. did they interview Atkins. Because the professionals used movie cameros of professional quality. their films are exceedingly revealing and valuoble as primary evidence. The Warren ConniSsiOn looked at none cf these films. During the past several years. / have collected copies of over 200 of these photographs. and I have looked at and taken notes on another 200 of these photographs, witho..a obtaining copies of them. Some of the remaining 100 hove either not been found or have been locked up or destroyed by the owners, who are fearful of the information they show. Or they have been locked up by the FBI, who have either placed them in files inaccessible to the public or possibly have destroyed them. (See Table 2.) Chart 2 Of thi� article shows the tines of about 50 of the photographs taken in Dealey Plaza during Kennedy's passage through it. Table 3 of this article lists over 510 photo- graphs so far identified and known to exist or to have existed -- with possibly a few borderline cases. Most of the "official" photographs of the Warren Commission, or of the FBI, or of the Dallas Police, which are in the Warren Commission Report or in the 26 volumes of the Warren Commission's Evidence and Hearings. ere not included in the list of Table 3. because such photographs were taken more than one hour after the shots were firea. The 6th Floor Easternmost Window According to the Warren report. Oswald was sup- posed to have fired a rifle from the 6th floor easternmost window of the Texas School Book Deposi- tory Building. (See Chart 1) Among the photographs there are several that show this window. Accompany- ing this article are copies of two photographs, one showing this window exactly 5.7 seconds before the first shot and one showing this window exactly 3.5 seconds after the last shot. (See Figs. 6 and 7) The first photograph (Table 3. No. 0) was taken by photographer Hughes. and shows the window with only a box appearing in it. The second (Table 3. No. 121) was taken by photographer Dillard and shows the window with only the box in it. There is a photo- graph taken by Norman Similes taken during the shooting which is now in the possession of the FBI (see Tables 2 and 3. No, 494). A possible reason for the FBI not to reveal or display this photograph ii, that It was taken between the first and the last !: COMPUTERS and AUTOMATION for May. 1970 shots,. And shows the .window empty except for the box. Oswald and his rifle. are not In this windCw -- which would be complete proof that he was not there. Nor- man Similas. and also an editor of til,mrti magazine in Canada, sow this photo. however, and both state that tLe window wns empty. Evese,without the availability of the Similes pho- to, the'.6ther two pictures destroy the Warren Con, mission's findings and the testimony of their key witnesses. The witne..-s. notably Howard Drennan. sold that. the assassin was leaning out of the win- dow arid poking the rifle well out of the window , both before end after the shots were fired. The Warren Commission offers other evidence. The evidence consists of: three bullet casings ..found` on the floor near that window: the three boxes arranged in the window to look like a gun rest; and the bullet (Commission Exhibit 3q)J which Supposedly passed through both Kennedy and Connally. All this evidence con be demonstrated to be faked. Photographs coupled with testimony prove that the Dallas authorities 'altered the "sixth floor TS110" evidence. The alterations were as follows: The original setting up of the bullet casings was too obviously faked. Sheriff Roger Creig'ar- rived on the Scene first and sow the three-casings. side by side, neatly pointing in the same lion, just inches apart. fly the time the "official" iolice photographer. Mr. Studebaker (who in reality was an amateur photographer with only two months experience), took pictures of them, the casings had been scattered around the floor by some member of the police force. Similarly, the original position of the boxes making up the so-called "gun rest". was so obvious- ly inadequate, that the police moved them to look a lot more like a gun rest. Jack Beers, Callas qorn.. inn News photographer, took photos of the boxes at 4 pa whale they were still in their original posi- tion. This fact is confirmed by several photos taken at the time of the shots from outside the building showing the corner of the topmost box stacked three high. Cy the time Studebaker took photos of the boxes. used as Exhibits by the - Commission, it was after dark, and the waxes laud been rearranged so that they were only two deep, with the third one moved onto the window sill. Checking the position of the corner of this box as it would appear from the outside of the building, shows that it is in A quite different east-west lateral location than the corner actually showed itself to be in the pho- tos taken at 12:30 pm to 1 pm. (Dillard. Hughes. Beers, Keever. Willis, Murray). The net result of all this evidence collectively is the following proved conclusion: No one fired .12/ shot; on November 22. 1963 betwten noon and one pm from the sixth floor easternmost window of the IS80. The Zapruder Movie Of all the photographs token in (holey Plaza oa that fateful day, the color movie sequence of some .400 frames taken by Abraham Znpruder is the most important. It shows from the right hand side of the motorcade the entire sequence of events. from President Kennedy rounding the curve from Houston St. into Elm St., through all the shooting. until -the big presidential limousine left with the dead president going under the triple overpass off to Parkland Hospital. This film almost by itself, with careful, scientific analysis, establishes the time; of five of the shots. The Warren Commission received the original of the Zapruder film to took at. on loan from Life magazine, which bought It from Zspradar. .COMPV/E.A5 and AUTOMATION foe May. 1970 From that time on. the film has never publicly snown, hut remained in the locked files of Rut a direct copy of the original was subpoenaed .nnd shown NINE tires by Assistant aistrict Attorney Alvin Oser in Ncw Orleans in February 069, at the trial of Clay Shaw. The judge. the jury, the news. ' paper reporters, snd the spectators in the court room all became convinced that Oser and .7.arr150n Lad demonstrated a conspiracy to kill President Kennedy. Allen one sees and studies in detail the Zapruder film in its clear version and examines the Other photographs showing the effects of the shots, one becomos convinced of two statements: 1. Th," were sis shots, of which five hit per.. sons in the Kennedy car: of these five the first went through the throat of frnsidnnt Kennedy: the second struck Kennedy in the back: the third struck Governor Connally in the right shoulder: the fourth and fifth struck Pi.sident Kennedy nearly si- multnneously In the head and blew Out his brains. The remaining shot missed and struck a curbstone on Vain St. 2. The last of the five shots (coming from the grassy knoll area), and one of the two fatal shots, struck Kennedy from the front and to the right, hurling his Lead to tho left and backwards with great force, in ac- cordance with the laws of physics. (for a scientific analysis. see Sit S,conds io Pallas.) Either one of these statements renders Impossible the Warren Commission Report's conclusion, that only three shots were fired, the second One missing en- tirely and striking the curb of Vain St. Coviously. if there was a conspiracy. It becomes vitally necessary to prevent the American people from seeing the Zapruder film, clear and complete, and especially in motion. For over six years. ex- cept in New Orleans. this has been achieved. How- ever, currently, bootleg copies of the Zapruder film are on sale here and there in the United States at prices ranging from $10 to $50. available for private and illegal showings, since Life magazine owns the original and has never given permission for copies of the film to be sold. Many of these bootleg copies, because of lack of clarity, do not demonstrate the first statement: but they do demon- strate convincingly the second statement, the back- ward thrust of President Kennedy's head at the time of the fatal shot. Life magazine would be able to earn millions of dollars from showing the Zlpruder film. la three days of showing the Zapruder film, uncut, clear, and not tampered with, on national television, eve- ry person in the United States who watched televi- sion could see for himself that more than three shots were fired (which makes the Warren Commission conclusions nonsense) and could see that the fatal Shot thrust Kennedy's head backwards with great force (proving that he was hit from the front, and not the back, which also makes the Warren Commis- sion conclusions nonsense). Although the Marren Commission report was silent on this last point. some defenders have tried to explain away the back- ward motion by conjecturing a speedup in the car's motion Causing a "snap backward". The Zapruder film by itself shows this is not true. One can clearly see that the car does not speed up at the time, and that Mrs. Kennedy's head does not snap at all. Other explanations have been offered, such as a whiplash motion, caused by Kennedy's. neck brace, or a reverse explosion as the bullet from the rear exited Kennedy's head in front. Josiah Thompson's � analysis la Six Seconds In Dallas, p beyond a 35 � skanow of a donbt. (het p....15 the force of a high velocity bullet striking keeeedy'e head from the [Knot Could pre4wee the Wend Akeeleration beckeard sheen in inpreaer frames 515 through 315. and measurable therefrom. P.ere than � dnren other photos confirm that there were oOfe than three shots. � . . � Other Activitlet at the Time of the Shots phntegraphs taken at the time of the shots ..... (see Chart 2) ehee many other significant and in'- portent ectivities. Coupled with the testimony of � photnernehers and other witnesses, the photos prove the Barren enemissien wrong on several other pninte. To describe all of these points in detail regetres note Spoco then it here avelinble. But the follow. � ing list suemerires these activities and conclu- slots (See also Chart 1 for timing and directioa - Of shots). S. The first shot, fired by ova Si from be- hin4 the fence on the gressy knoll. hit Kennedy In the throat at Z1119 (7 nuebers in the text And on the Ms, refer to frnee Is of the Zapruder Film. The frames were 1/11t second apnrt. The Z flusnberu on the mtet show the location of Kennedy la each Zn,tuder (rame). . The second shot, fired by elan g6 from the second floor window of the 0A1 Tex build- ing, struck Kennedy in the back sit Z226. . The third stint, fired by man g0 from the T'saS School Hook Orpnsitory (15110) hit - Connally in the beck AL Z230. The fourth shot fired by non g6 from the Ottl 7cx Building struck the curb on the soeth side of Hain St. at about Z205. The fifth shot fired by mnn .0 from the TSfed hit Kennedy in the head at 7.312e. The sixth shot fired by can .5 from the grassy knoll hit Kennedy in the head at 7313. Wan 22 'crested" 4 puff of smoke as an ap- parent diversion (as it turned out, the diversion was not needed) and then ran back beyond the position of man gl and jumped over the fence. The timing of the first Shot established by three photos -- Zapructer. Aillis (Table . TSB�. They turn south in front of the ISM (Fig. 4) and proceed down Houston St. to the sheriff's 3. No. 05), and Oetzner (Table 3, No. 101)....1. -- to be 2109, was such that the view of office. The vehicle entrance to the office is . Kennedy from the sixth floor easternmost .. b. C. , a. f. 9. 1. window of the 15110. was completely oh- scared by a large oak tree. (011 on Chart -' � 1) A. .'�-�� � � 1.*A c411 who looked very like Oswald ran dews the grassy knoll ten minutes after " the shots were fired and drove away down Elm St. with a Latin-appearing man in a light-colorea station wagon with a lug- gage rack. To someone not familiar with all of the millions of details of the Kennedy assassination, this seems unrelat- ed. However, other evidence indicates � the man may have been an anti-Castro ad- venturer impersonating Oswald. and that the Latin may have been another of the self- . . Castro Cubans. � ������� �"� � � � ly the mon irk* fired the fatal shot, shot Zwi. G. Ills position has berm show. A, the nap in area 114, The photos Show that he esenped hy means of.* white car. which bed heen previeuely parked just � few feet from his position. . This suhjcct tins been investigated at tenith by . the TeSenefhft. hut the InVeStigntien hal not been finished. It may be that the inVeSticntiOn Cannot be edequetely concluded until cneputerised analysis of the information in the photographs (see Part 3) has progressed ouCh further. The photos also thew where and how men '2.3 C. 4 ran away after the shots. The "Tramps and the "Phoney Potseensn' Approximately a half hour afire the shots were fired. Sergeant 0. V. Rareness of the hallat roues- was instructed by inspector Sawyer of the Itallai Police (in cc�sand of Oceley PIAZ* pollee activi- ties After the assassination) to go hock to the. ralirnnd tracks (see Map nnd Fig. 1) vol Stop freight train which was being moved out end search it. (The nepenximete time is established by the angles Of the shadows in the pho(ousaphs, by the testimony of :;ergeant Harkness to the Warren Coe. . - mission. Vol. 6. p. 312. snd by the timine of Allen's sequence of photos.) The area where the freight cars were located is to the north 444 west of the TS:la, nod north of the grassy knoll siren, Sergeant Harkness says he arrested some "tramps' . or "hoboes" whOn he found in one of the box cars in the railroad area. lie says he took them to the station and does not say what station he meant. However, Sheriff Elkins said that a policeman brought three "tramps" into the Sheriff's office. (See map and Fig. 1.) The route that Harkness would naturally take if he went to the Sheriff's office with the three "tramps" is exactly the route portrayed in the series of four photographs (Figs. 2.3.4. and 5)., shown in this article. In Figs. 2. 4 end 5. two ". policemen can be seen escorting three "tramps" ..enstward from the direction of the railroad yards along the Elm Street extension in front of the Most Who Ran Poway -- - Many photographs were taken within an hour ter the shots, which show that Certain men on the ' grassy knoll ran away after the firing, sod these � . *photographs show how they ran away. For extuplo, torero' photographs (Table 3, Nos.. 3, 19. and 52) show * Cortalo mos who has bees 36 � located at the center of the block on the last side. of Houston St. botween Elm St. and Main St. The entrance is directly in front of the fire sin as they proceed toward it In Fig. S. Why is this significant? First. there Is no re- cord at all of the arrest of these men -- there is no record of their official booking nor of their release, even though Sheriff Elkins testified that he turned them over to Captain Will Fritz of the . Dallas Police in the police station. Furthermore. there Is no record in the Dallas police force of lb. "phoney" policeman at the right in Fig. 2. He it wearing non-regulation shoes or possibly r.hberS: and in his right car is either � radio communica- tions device or a hearing aid. Sergeant linrkness nnd Sheriff Elkins With indi- cate there wns no other policeman with Harkness when he arrested the "trnmps" and when he turned , them over to Elkins. Other information Indicates that one or more of these "tramps" were members of right wing groups .and were actually included among the gunmen who shot or shot at President KenAcdy. If any reader of this article notices any person resembling any one of the "tramps" or the "phoney" policeman, It would be useful for him to tend Information to ma. (Text dOntinuddr on pogo 60) / COMPUTERS end AUTOMATION foe May. 19/0 a. ..��������� L.,��?.�� "//j //7;"�/. b . � � ������, . eV' � r , �\�16, � � � '4'.71).� � 5 01�' � � \N 00'. :�� I � � �� � � ef . VT- c' , e. � N._ \ J. � � � � r: e." * � � pf::$ r�-� -; 1/1 � ,---� � - �-, � ���� �� � ���� ���� � . ���� � � � ' � ri"."...." � \ � \ � Y, � �� e � � � f � ' I . AS: � .���-�, � k � . � , :.A. . p - Y � � ::(-�-�-�:'� ." s. � //4.e! � .1. � * � � . � ,-- \ � _ ;fr. `--1.� � � . ""'!? - f � f �7� ��� _ - � \ � � Vtl� 6..6 t" 6 #' � - ,-���;9"--xv;-��.'" ; 4 % - . co, � � \ � !^� .11 � 1 . v � y , � e.". � # � .(e.):;��� - � . Path taken by Harkness with "Tramps" ���������: �I� r \ � � � . _.\ se � . . . � . � � , .� � � . � � � � � � � C--1. � .: � � . �.".� � " fr, . � � � � r: .` � 1,�/:,','-^r � 7,�-;'-'7":, � 6, � � :��,' � ...��� -r? -)% ''...2:-'--,:i _,,fTd`-'_. .. � , ,t 41 II :� -- -� _... t. . t____------,....:.::: .2...1 � ' v:. 1...:: 11\._ :...! . . , � , - �-� ....--: -� '1����� .� .- -..s � - . 'i ..\�� _..--.... 1 � + 1 � \ 1,:::�::-...:�.4.,:e�4 . ;07Y, d:;;" 1 i 1 % .*--� ..-;-..- � .����--.�.-'� � e---..., - � � --- .....--` � .. - ,...-_,(// . <,..-,�-�,....: ,��1-' -_, ,..-......�:�...---...s.../', /-",, -/ - .'" � .';`'' .4.'.4 o! � � �*t. ,- I- �'�-� -i7v..., e. --.? ,...- �, v. e. - . - ... P-/. --'y 1 i'' ".--- � � ,, �/ e . I 1. � ... . . -,..".Z., ' ....:."7 .. ..-- � - - . V - -.0 - .4 � �- :�� v--/� � �:.;�� . /7 � .f��� � - F.. ' ::�������� 0100 I' I .1, r 1111'11 ....,er.. -,�...-?). �- .."4.,- .,4, ,:-.15.--.�1:::':fl' , ; 4 ....,� 7.�� ��, ,-.�.--, A .. � ,--- � , , '1,:i7�4��--0 ..4..\:"..:,�.:,,\..V/f.- )1,7 .::-:* ... � . ;�. � -: e OA . N''''.. 1 t. -..., .. . \ .. . ...)11 w . � "N ' ;#...,:�,...# ,,,. - i .f.-1;:i ; i jc 617' ���''!.. � � � � . � � . ./� � � t:�`/��c'. r".�:44'=. � � %"' ' v.--; 1'y � - . : � � ' � at � .- - ! � \�� � . � � � � ;4, . v. � �� , A. � .1 � 4 ��������\- i� . Vehicle entrance to Sh9riff's Office Figure 1 I Helicopter view of Dceley Plaza and its buildings, with the path of the arrested "Tromps" narked. Numbers on the photograph indicate where photographs in Figures 2, 3. 4 and 5 were taken. i0eAPIJTERS and AUTOMATION foe Mey. 1970 [ 37 . . 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" �L"�������� -.1', -0. � � � � : � � ." � � � �./.........'���1t� � . , � I � ..�.ftir,0����1:1,� � � .� � � . ; 1 ; � ; . 1 f.;� , � � 341 '74-ge .. ..� . � ; � /7-A (1 � .��� ; � -1 , �-� � ," : , ���� COMPUTERS and AUTOMATION foe M.15 1970 4 1 ' .� I. � ....L..� � � ���� 111, Om � � ;. �����: �:" � 7; � "2 7 - ������ cr.-a � : '1. � � fr A � � � s� ' � . � - -..4 ( ,....- -1 ....; ��� t<2. C...2. . J. ..i..............AWI �����������,..����-.!�j*,��� . - ,_ ������������� ����"...1 . \ . :: ../. . � � ei ... ' � � � t.,......;.: " #.1���\ � I. : ' -----7) ' :. .1: .t..1: � ' ...\ � . ' (1 / I 1 : N� ;.�i I.' ''. . (;(.1 ���...-.. �:::�"--''''.:". :""......... � " ----- ...r-.7-1'. "-- �... � 1 / , i ..---��������"-��-......, -:���������--: .."-- � . .. ... , . '7 .-7'''.......... � -e/ '''.. . ..� . � ..' ...........,...... C.................;;�.2.�;;:::: ......e..:. .................. l' '.:...."*;::.; .. ftm...:,... m� Li 71 n. . -:...:13 _____� , , : ..... . ej r�-��-_�_,:-.i :II ___,1 � : : i_ri...77___,- . � -... ..; � .__-____I 1...'__I ....:....--1 i......J] L:3 _1 Figu-re 3 o DJ . � � Figures 2. 3. 4 and 5 �:� t. These four pictures of the "Tramps" and various policemen were taken by George Smith and William Allen (see 2 Table 3. Nos. 195. 197. 251 and 252). Sergeant Harkness appears in Figures 2. 4 and 5 (at the left in Figures , .2 and 4. and in the front in Figure 5). The "Phoney" Policeman also appears in these seme three figures (at the right In Figure 2. and at the rear in Figures 4 and 5). There is no record of this man being a member of the Dallas Police Force. Be is the only Dallas policeman of those appearing in the hundreds of photographs taken Nov. 22 who is wearing an earpiece or radio communication device in his right ear (see Figure 2). Why? He is the only one who is wearing rubbers. Why? His pistol handle appears to be different from Harkness' pistol. Why? It would be I lag to discover this man's identity, and ask him some questions. .00�ATUTER5 and AUTOMATION fog Atiy, 1970 39 II ---����� ����-�� 1 14' :�-�-��.. - co t � .'. � � t� . { � . ... ...2 � � as ......".. �-��� �������,.. .. pe4: ...Sem, Na ��� �eye. � i : r�r � T . :�:.--�,. ,.-....,..., ...�--:. -...., . , 71 i �:.. ..1������,-'.: �Z ..K.: / � 1.:-r� . � � . t ' .l..--��� : � : :�� A...4J- �� 1! � :1 �:.�.: . ....�����:-.... 7�� . . '--..."'..7..-� 4.1'N � ..... , ., . r- �! II $ - - ../.-�-�Ii. ........�.:,. . . : ...........; -�;...,...�...........r.c.. li � . ...- . � A V,. ; � ' � 1 � -' � � � . � ;�.c� ..tss',) t�����-k . .."'�', 7.=*:. 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' /.. � :' � : I. ���.7...: .1 ...-i::.;�� � ���:_. !,. . . ���� . .,, . ::. . _ - . � ... 1 tt Q16 � -.�:�-� � /N.' � ' : I �-� -7 � � ����� � � � � � ������� � i�- III � � -11 , \ , 1 .��-��7 ; - � ; . � \ �� � � - � � � � � ; . �t� s-� � . ; � ��4��������� - N\ 7�����%. Table I INCE Ak0 CAII0C TO LOCATION Of PERSOSS ASO SIGNIFICANT 00AC1S IN TPZ SPATIAL CHART Of GOBLET PLAZA (Sr. Cheri 1..pages 40 sad 49) I. Arras os tbe voart. The 'Cello' Is divided ibt� bidate 20 tees ty ((el, ,ech Ifbtied by 0 letter A to K from up to belle. 'I Is omitted, sod a owwber 1 to 15 fro* left to rival. .Locetion es toe chart are specified by eeeee letter ood 00101.V I.- 6,1,, lonnted roo the border. of the ..p. 2. t. bsert. The hafte of � r I. the follo.led lode. refers to tie 'mottos of such p . either I* em piece if he stayed for the .kele time, or to one tan one place if he need from *me tonne* to nether. A plural perms sem, eeeeee to ter� Or wOre � ttttt with the *too Ilat 1414. 3. ! v.hers. A ...bet' follOwtot the Mao of � pertoo refers to the fil, tor tell) onber of � Mill photograph. or the frees oo.ber of a aerie tedoeece totes by sec\ persoe. Ne.burs preceded by Z refer .to fume runlets of the bolos NITS' flto Uhl& by Abrade. Zsproder 4(8.11..2 Is ores 0 7. 4. motorcade. The lesdlog peril's of the motorcade lowlveled Presi- dio.' J. F. heasedy Is allows diagrammatically 7 to 8 seconds before "..111511. iittent 2. 3 Allyn' 6 tat 2 :SS) Allyn' 7 (al Z 346) 'Oabushhe Lady (rho took Is entire nolo of the motorcade froe tbo op- posite Aldo from ZApruatir) 0,11 4. 2 Poll 3 L�Sii!21 J 13 (8 60 IF 8 N II N II �13 Ii 2 C13 � 3 C12 001.1. 1 to 3 643 Dem. 4 is 9 G II trek.' a) r 9 O 013 bullet meri(s) se cork J 3. N 6 COwolrbe St. campasf dl isms Comm'''. Gov J. B.. back shot (et Z 230) Dallas Comity Crialtial Comte Bldg. Dells' Covaty eeeee ds Bldg. tulles Covety Sherifr� Office 041-3.ox Oldg. Dillerd 1 Dorman. Kra. 1-6 38 El. St. 114.015 El* St. exteeoloa . ' A-1116-12 Dellis Causty4' off map. me K 15 Idg. wage bldg. mat to 7500 grassy kooll liester(s) hill. Jem Holland II St. Madam 661 two (Maids Hughes 1, 2 Neghes 3 &gam 6 a 46 (rots, or 061/4. aeootoy behind the' osi tree. fro* 2 161 .ta 2 207 Kamiedy at: Z 133 Z 161 Z 109 (troll Alton Z 226 (loch abet) Z 230 Z 255 Z 205 Z312 (head 060 313 (2e4 imod Mot) Z 346 2 400 Z 433 Z (65 445 hell. greasy Nola St. C 9 MOs � ... Were eel ttttt &AMC, h111�111 mot been deterulwed 1-8 15 N�* 41. f lot Mat it Z 189 0-1 45 Mlea 42 ^ 1$ Nee al A 15 106 el. maybe of 6th abet C13 at Z 313 A 11 Nu ad. at alp la 041-Taz Bldg. sovrce of 2.4 shot it Z 226 tied 4th shot et z zes ea. o7 Nast 88, source of 3rd shot � A 6-10 it Z 238 am4 5th Mot et 1312 4 d ttI;C 10 Nom ulth (ubrolla Phials' 0 Cl *MIR I .1 9 Mortis 2 N 2 material picked op by A-11 13-14 bilthods old 6464,41 � 6 1464f646 �14 lloch..r1 it 12 &Moan a ^ SO 2,4 ow tee first shot. The .oteert4e S. 6, ot, Hoosiers St. o.W Oat. St. All these cert. of c were 40.4 there. fors *sceptre ff ttttt petitions el liter times. Ift, ooly site teeniest ttttt for lalre po ttttt es ef tor -n tttttt or. the 1.6.180. of reeeldritt heowedy's heod So the lead ter. likete head 10001.6.$ 0re by � eetwore of dol. .1�52 rlw St. The.. i4. ::: :oas .ste csrstally deternoed by the rat: they ore iesetlfme by Me frs.e 5,5400,4.. ert of the color .le file m . ire by Lb Lep- locating were used by tbe barrels Carlon,. I. their Is. VeAtIgetioo. Soceeillier triton were lilt, semed opart. S. Note. The lef lot oho.* 1* the elogrso of tho oomirmee (c-, 44. .1 15) le am mamma I. this loess. The 'afar...Um she.* la the legged (0-E 1-4) lo set repeated la this lode,. Mom of the ctogrophle inforoatIce (sock se Imetlem Cf tree". *alto traffic lion, loll. oarks ea tort.. Olt.) It as, repeated la Ibis lodes. (.0.7L11111 0 10-11 s: 11 0 11 D 10 E. 9 F.. 31.15 OS 17 E 17 O6 1st A 15 D All O8 ' N 13 G 13 C 12 86 9 G 13 II . Pees t er Deject 6e014 4( ) his I. 2s kis 211 Omaltes alleded viodo. perking Orr, sod relirmd )ltd put( of amok* (farms fa 9 phetos) railroad yard sod partial an.. scale Is feet Mots, swarms of: $51 2tie 3rd lth 5th 6th 51tmas sone. puff of (shoed to 9 photo) Stemmas freeway alga Ugric (Mao mts bit lea 04 face by � frodowat of o shot) Uses School flook Deposi- tor, Bldg. It Ill Elm St. (rtiO) 500. dtli fl moat wiedcm, from end' harm Commissten alleged Lee Oseeld fired 3 Tommy, J. I Towner. 7. 1 Toweer. T. 2 Nabrello" Has Willis 5, 6 Zaprrocc (16c6t1o6 lot Abraslum Zaprudor duriag tlio satire color movie Math ho took) 04 4-5 � T 11-E 4-5 8-9 E 'A 15 A 11 A 15 A 11 O6 O7 IL 7 toe II 3 A10.13 A13 C 13 C 13 0 12 O6 0 11 O7 COMPUTERS and AUTOMATION lar May. 2970 )46,. � NOTES FOR FICCRC 10. An excellent .example of the many things that can be learned even from � single photograph. Is provld- cd by Figure 10. This photograph was taken by a professional .Rssociated Press photographer. Jemdl AltcOnS (Table 3. No. 57). This photograph was used by the Warren Commission is Yarborough Exhibit A. Vol. XXI, Posies 701-702. However. the Warren Com- mission staff did not point Out very much of the pertinent information contained in the photograph. President Kennedy (ol) appears in the limousine pa.. icily hidden by the rear view 'mirror. Three shots have already struck him and Governor Connally by the time this photograph was taken. The exact timing of the photograph is established by the po- sition of the left front tire of tie limousine with respect to the white road stripe on Elm St. (22) By comparing this position with the corresponding positions of the limousine as the limote.iine appears In the Znpruder film, it has been determined that this photo was snapped at exactly the same instant OS Zopruder's frame 2n5. Since shots were fired at Z109. Z226, 7.230 and Z2313. the Altgens photo was exposed 66 Zapruder frames after the first shot 43.6 secends) and SO frames before the last shot (3.2 secs). In view of the fact that only 3.6 seconds had elapsed following the first shot, it is not surpris- ing that very few people in the picture show signs of realizing that anything has happened. Note the smiling faces and applauding hands along the curbs. Some of the Secret Service men reacted slowly. The two rem on the right-hand running board of JFK', followup car (a3) obviously have heard something and are looking back. The two on the left-hand running board (44) seem to be oblivious to every-Aim,. The one in front. Clint Hill, was later to run up to the limousine and push Mrs. Kennedy back into the rear seat when she climbed up on the back hood of the Car. The motorcycle policeman next to JFK on the right. D. L. Jackson ('5) seems to realize JFK has been hitt at any rate, he is looking right at JFK. The fatal shot. 3 seconds later, zoomed from the grassy knoll right over Jackson's helmet and struck JFK on the right side of his forehead. Jackson was never in- terviewed by anyone and seems to have completely disappeared from the Dallas police force shortly after the assassination. Lyndon Johnson's secret service men, on the other hand, reacted very fast.. Rufus Youngblood testified that he pushed Johnson down on the floor of the car as soon as he heard, the shots. The po- sitions where Youngblood and Johnson would have bean sitting in the photo (z6) are vacant, proving thnt Youngblood did indeed do Jost what he said. in 3.6 seconds. Agent Kivett in Johnson's follow-up car can also be seen reacting quickly (27) as be opens the left rear door, preparing to jump out. Governor Connally had been hit at Z frame 238. about one second before the photo was taken. He can be seen with his face contorted, turned to his right - (48). and slumping toward the sill of the limousine. Mrs. Kennedy had, by this time, turned to 600 her husband in pain, ead grasped his elbow with her COMPUTERS and AUTOMATION for May, 1970 PAGES 44 AND 45 white gloved hand 1191.. Secret Service Agent Kel- lerman didn't react until well after this photo. This is .net too surprising since Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson (Lady Bird) (210) is smiling at the crowds as if molting had happened, even though her husband is lying on the floor next to her with Agent Young- blood on top of him. Hor911 (.11) Just to tho left and rear of the Presidential limousine doesn't seem to know anything is wrong, although he could be looking at JFK. Later he was hit in the face with blood and grey matter from the fatal shot which came from the right front and drove the fleshy debris of Ken- nedy's bend back and to the left toward Hargis. The only reason thc Altgens photo appears as 4 Commission Exhibit is that some sharp-eyed critic noticed a ran who looked Just like Lee ilarvey Oswald standing In the duorway of the Texas School Book ae- pository Building In the background of the photo (212). The Commission was therefore forced to con- sider this point and they contended that the nwin Wee Billy Lossoiady, who was an associate of Oswald's at the building. Four years later. I was able to prove that the Warren Commission was right, by using several other photographs in combleation. Cntil then, the contro- versy still raged among Commission defenders and re- searchers. One of the most significant parts of the Altgena photo is the part showing the Dal Tex building in the background and an open, darkened window on the second floor (413). Harold Weisberg. one of the re- searchers. first called attention to this wi'low and the possibility that one or more shots might have been tired from it. A man (414) appears in this photo, fallen back on the fire escape directly above the open window. Just five seconds earlier in the Hughes film se- quence. he was sitting in a normal position. This man has not been found to be. interviewed. The group. of three people (415) in the window to the south of him have not realized anything remarkable has hap- pened and are waving and clapping and looking at the President. The probable explanation of tat man's action was his much closer proximity to the noise directly below ti:m created by a shot from the Dal-Tex window. The second shot most probably came from this window as well as the curb shot. A Latin-appearing can who closely resembles one of the Cubans known to be involved in the New Orleans part of the conspiracy appears in the same vicinity (416). Some researchers claim that he is using a microphone and a two-way radio. However. I believe these objects to be part of the opened vent window on the Johnson secret service follow-up car. The large oak tree (417) is the one referred to above In this article, as the tree which blocked the view of Kennedy from the 6th floor easternmost window In the Texas School Book Depository, at the time of the first shot (Z 189). The Warren Commis- sion Report admits the oak tree blocked the view from Z 161 to Z 207 (see Chart 1 and Chart 2). -S 47 CUA.R-T .of Id0Q_TUCAU,1 UALP of Dt.S.L.itY PLAZA DALLAS. Sh.0.21�2�5 enototropktro post.tion.% of. John. obi c.c.ta. toff-A.1-5. corrourulini 11.,10 pro� 7.7-1�10d. 154.3, LEA sty t? � z....3) . V don n....�.�-bcr 4 dot ko....to..) C � 1.40,2Lnikk. f�rt.� to hit Mons whom, stool t�ook. nor es ct bun do�Tegmiswi � : poppte..� t telrg1) pOkit sThern t..4.3..r *watt Marl{ 0.11. kAt ii..o.groenmu.lic � not to icolt. dznittu�orAo.�c. � not rascal& tn.� � ar �-�� ors sT�po � up �101,,,el Gu�nallti ,Co. o TtAA.f. � J peal... � pLet...."1�." Sk. C-ottoe � ...cu.:Lev-1,4r j.� Cc..4d...M.0-1 4 A 1.1 Yo�A AN 40.4. 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'1' j . � :14.�� . v. .i.. -. . . ,. tl�:\ LI V�'l '.� F..* -.., � ec..aa t-5. i .� 77; I ... � .,.. Q.T., I-��:.: R.,..,..i..... �: eat3 v__�� - � 6-,-...i.xt. z ,,..t...,�,. ',3'� � � I � � " � � � ' � � � - ASA ix! - � .t1 gustot.1: � �:''� boace�2-� 11����������1 � 143.6,mone � � � Aticr�-�11.? a * � � , . � � � � �� Same .1 if M.A.. � 4 ij 2:�.0 07 1_4 LS .4 St A � DULL/4A." iir�LLL/C".""/". car S sz,*.St 5 1, (secc.-4 tc.t.( 1./.rs. ; nit/ , Pit..1.� LA, S t Ktise��41, Stest4.... Car � 1 'Gum" Mary ri (L � 1.1,11.0t.i d ������. Satrtt Scristi. C-41/ � 2. Gnr �� I Masior 4 lilt's C.., � I PrAms / 1 I COMArs... I cot 1:1 Tina 'Umbrella Man" Tsai, 2 Some interesting things happen when one hegins to analyze the many pictures taken by different. photographers from different directions standing In different places, but all taken in the same small intervnl of 10 or 15 seconds, and all in the same small area of ()talc,- Plaza and its environs. One of the things that happens is that the pic- tures confirm each other, 640 880M What people were doing. One outcome of the analysts is that we see other persons who also were taking pictures: then they tool can be Identified and located, and their pictures also can be found, and copies of their pictures can . be obtained from them also. An example of 4 result of even further analysis of the pictures in three dimensions of space and one dimension of time is that we discover the story of "the man with the umbrella". . Khen we fist see the "man with the umbrella". .J ,he is holding it closed. Tnis is when the Kennedy car rounds the corner from houston St. into Elm St. f;ext he is holding it open and low over his head: the time is shortly before the first shot (see Fig. 9). Note that the weather is sunny. "slight breezes isInd gusts": it is a sunny November day in Dallas; lhe time is noon; the temperature is '680 Fahren- heit, and there is no ordinary reason at all for holding an open black umbrella over one's head. The rein that had occurred earlier in the morning stopped about ten twenty, sag the temperature is not high enough to be shading oneself. No one else in all of Dcaley Plaza appears to have bee- t holding an open umbrella. Next, he raises the umbrella. still open, high up. about two feet higher: this is shortly before the last slot and the umbrella shows up in the Zapruder film. A few seconds after the last shot, we see him holding the umbrella folded (Table 5. No. 259). Then a few minutes la- ter, we have three pictures of him, still standing In the same place, still holding the umbrella fold- ed up. (Table 3. Nos. 48. 49. and 50) khereas everybody else in that area has dispersed rapidly. he is still standing in the same place. looking In all directions. He has stood in a position to have been seen from all the places from which shots were fired. Yet he is in front of the Stemmons Freeway sign -- so that people on the western side . ,of: the sign can't readily see him, and people in front of the sign are facing away from him. st'We can draw two tentative conclusions: .7 1. Visual coordination as well as radio coor- dination of the firing teams was necessarya because of the separation of the team mem- bers by several hundred yards. the noise and confusion of the motorcade. and the � crowd of spectators. The "man with the umbrella" might.be the visual coordinator. 2. Also, it was likely that an on-the-scene commander-was required in order to make the last-minute go-no-go decision. This man may have been the on-the-scene corm- mander. The Warren Commission did not see the "umbrella man" in the photographs, did not find him, did not Interview him, and did not enter him in any of its records anywhere. Neither did the FBI nor the Dal- las authorities. Again, one asks why? It was a reasonably simple matter for an amateur to find !am in the photographs. Josiah Thompson found him and mentioned laim.lia�hls book, Six Seconds in Dal- � Ins.(see.pages,227-228). Thompson even appealed for him, if innocent, to come forward and identify himself,. That. so far...has not happened. � SOKE IMPORTASr rwrocasems 00.isto ar tux fat AND enAfARANit loll 004 If � rp.ate:ro:Ast, ssan 111.16 f5.4f ir I *dam 51�II Keoeeer reeo41,4 ti, Pee tttttttt 0.1. Id� of the Oat. Tee Oolletoo ISIO state flee( eleOeo. ells tee v.. to the rte. doe, tette", of teem Devoid ireeto of ire pro- create. tires lb. VA*, 040 111 Ike free Zefrod�r1 ISL3. effete,' tit* sloth floor ,.5 40'. aopty eacopt fel troz Keneedo further Ws ere El. St. o Still photogropkt S o *octet 8 o block and .,hit. 10 to IS ..c. Wets ttttt rite,. 20 ale. rifler tee okeet 10 oo. hew. 22. 1563 abeet tee Ile. of tko skate beteeee (teat .ad lost about 21 tad. after tbet tkoto The 'Babushka lady's" Movie _ As mentioned above, the pictures show other per- sons also taking pictures. One of these other per- sons has been called the "Babushka lady" i.C.C4uSe she is wearing a babushka (a triangular head scarf). She took a movie as did Zapruder. but she took hers from the left hand side of the motorcade: and she was able to take all the scenes beginning with the rounding of President Kennedy's car from Houston St. on to Elm St., and ending with the dead presi- dent's limousine passing under the overpass to go to the hospital. Her movie would be particularly valuable for it would probably show all tnat was going on on the grassy knoll. She may have been Mrs. Beck, at the time S stu- dent at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor who was visiting In Dallas. After her movie was developed. Mrs. Beck talked about it to the Detroit Free Press. Then the Detroit FBI attempted to find her. The information at present stops there. However, from observing similar actions of the FM. one would suspect that they found her. obtained her movie, and either destroyed it or filed it away un- available to researchers. (See Table 2.) . Until it can be confirmed that the "Babushka . Lady" is Mrs. Beck, their films are listed separate- ly in Table 3 (Nos. 376 6 500). Some Other Conclusions %great many other conclusions can be drawn from or are significantly supported by the photographic evidence. A few examples are: COMPUTERS and AuTomx; ioN fee May. len ,a. 1. About ten wtn are shc..n being arrested. 12. At lerst two other rifles ore sho..n being ' found before Oswald'; rifle was found. :3. "Oswald" is shown fa two fake photovaphs with lila bolding � rifle. N'acel Oswild was 'hewn the photos he said. "That's wy heed but se�eboay else's body." That Oswald / was riot in this case has been clearly dcooastrated by Fred NewcOm5, a LOS Ange- les researcher. 4. Oswald did not shoot Officer J. D. 7.1.01, of the Valles police force: two otkpr flea did. Oswald was not near the sMonting site at the time!. - S. Osxeld's supposed discovery and arrest in the Texas Theatre. the 00r1e theater where he went, was staged and prearrso;ed. Continuing analysis and continued searching for more photos will no doubt produce new coeclusions and findings for $one tine to come. (Text concinuad on povi 56, Zapruder free* 'ember' Shorn on Spatial Chart: Motorcade Locution: Octet, lion St. Tier Scale: Minutes Chart 2 SCHEMATIC TIKINC. CHART OF 19h/TOORArKS. SOTIES. AND MKS 151 DEAUT rtAzA 440t70 12t30 Pit hOYEXUER 22. 1963 JFK ea Houstoe St. ;.� z :Fr ea Cl.' S . ! JFA rest Overpass Caner. Cars and 84841, as Elat St. Other Curs Past �Teri:au Seconds Shots: .44 behind "tke" oak tree as seen frost "the Osnale window Window ce?ty Ouches 654 Dilisrd 1): Seconds tit4t.c. Second' ill � ta�tographers sad Their Photocrapit .Zepreder Ki � Machmore Hookas Mortis Mar la 0 1(1 1(64 Coll ' Aiwa. Rickirby Coach �. toad Dolma* Dillard Westin Altos's 1,3 Rood Moorwo � Seeman 1 K4 1 SA 192 His 2A 296 KilChaOre 2 200 322 Segke" 0 Hach's l Hognes 2 51567 51634 Santis I % 65 -� 138 Willis 4 � Altgass 1-6 Maroon 2 Willis 3 . 202 Six 25 W�rtin 7' Altgeas 1-7 i Willis 6 Wilgus ( 4th Breaks) iluc3es 3 Willis 7 Neches 4 Sortie 3 5.11 2 Oorwaa Sealer COMPUTERS end AUTOMATION for May, 1970 Dillard 1 . . Illekeiby 1 t 2 Galosh l 2 3 4 5 6 7 Road � � � � 6 � 4 6 6 75 9 � I Si Ta13. 3 KAIM LIST Of OVER 500 PHOTOCLIIMS AhD MX 75 flo77134KAPHEA3 1 t 1 ! Photo . Pornographer Seq. hai. Type i ha. C. No. No. rhst. Shoos 1 me 2K 3 MC 4K s mC 6K 7 mC ing8os,4 K 13 MC 14 MC IS IC 16 NC IT mC 10 K 19 mC 20 siC 21 mC 22 MC 23 IC 24 MC 23 MC 26 MC 27 SC 20 MC 29 MC 30 K 31 K 32 lc 33K 34 K 35 MC 36K 37 KC 38 -MC 39 MC 40 MC 41 K 42 PC 43 PC 44 PC 43 PC 46 PC 47 o 40 VC 49 PC 50 PC 51 PG 32 Pli 53 1141 34 P8 -55 PO 56 P8 57 PO 50 PB 59 Pil 60 ea 61 PO 62 P8 63 ea 64 PO 63 1141 66 Ps 41 pa $2 7xprodara 1 .1711 OA F1041.11. 11.10 Overpese 61..3 1 JTC ow ite.itea St. befog. ttttt 2A JFK en so St jest before. dueled G after 6..1 soot 28 Crossy tneli sad con O4 (IN jest after r..1 shot 1 Jrn 00 110511041 St. 2 Jrg tie Jest before. Sontag C. ofter head 0,01 O .17-C on it free itai. St. 2/3 of ny to 1 AC on to 15..0 t.rty 9 NC � 2 CA.,. can re Henn. St. - Kea so Del Tv. tit, esc�f.- . fluted 10 MC 3 Grassy knoll suet soots 11 hC 4 C..', 6.011 of 17 MC 5 Co4way COrt11 111.111.. Del Teot inio II', .100 6 rorkieg Let � 7 Vlore looking south free orcedo O Vo.lied Lot 9 ISM Din. - 101, � tn 15.%1 Vooroft, C Doi let 0.rtie.8 0.2/re on mentos St. (foe. OCA Fit.) � 1 3,0 le ((cot ef 11147. � 20 C.stsy ¬! G Cl. St. after shots 28 Grassy 8.011 G LI. St. rater 'heti 3 Parting Lot � 4 Cop on motorcycle wit. novo MOcheore.3 C. Elmo P. TWO Iloth (100E WI, � O. Letelody Is (root of ma � 6 C. 6,014 1 le.ed Cl. St. ^ 7 Vie. horth oa Houstoe fon Elm � 6 Vie. Non% ea now. 4 TSCO doorway � 9 frost of 7500 - Cops 01a1 shotgun 10 Del Tea Bldg - Cop oite lenge* - Police torS ' net ***** .4 0 L. finer neer ****** ot H 000000 C Elm 1 Top It luo - 2 ceps ose tine flre on C site � 2 Me St. be 1000 a.d Dot Tex - Rifle being tgao11(41 Della 1 JFK ea ii 5t. 2 JFK 1. front of 1300 � 3 JFK opprosekleg triple overt.. es CI. It. � 4 Grassy heel! ores Jest after ***** $ Crony 8,011 ores nter 00000 � 6 C f Pins otter 00000 7 Glossy 'moll area _ . o 0 ?less fro. Bldg. ea south later In dsy 9 flare fro. Bldg. en rents later le day Behd.8 1 ycles ranking 4 Mole 2 JFK fOoodlog Oomsten G sale � 3 JFG es Monne 4 Cressy knoll G Cl. St. after shots $ Crony noll C. Li. St. after shots � 6 Grassy knoll G Cleo St. after :7.:12 � 7 Crusty boll sfter sssss 6 Cressy knoll after Otis 9 Cressy knell slier sbets Naorm96.9 I Motorcycle cep remedied cooler Elm G. nee. tee .3 2 Grassy knoll C JFK at time .f head shot Altoona* 1-2 Len Motorcycles in mot...cede Os Mela St. 1.3 JFK approachleg H St. en Mole � 1-4 JFK turning toner at Hogston G Maio � I-5 JFK halfway dken Henna toward Cl. � 1-6 JIK after f C. before fatal shot. Open wino.. fire escape. Ool Tee � 1-7 JFK *mimicking triple eveopess. C. Hill *a COE 1-8 Arcade C kooll fro. Sone Of Elie after $ests 2-4 Ism 5:06 PM Morener 22 2-5 ism 5:06 PM Clock non 2-6 1503 5:06 PM Clock sens 2-13 1500 from some positioe es Alton, 1-6 2.14 2500 (roe use pont!** 2.4S 1$00 fro. Ism positie. 5:16 PM Clock shows 2-19 lloo free um posItin 3:19 PM Clock non 2-201100 free nes onitne 3119 PM � � � Photo ..Phst.gropeor Seq. No. Tyro Mee 4 Me. No. rh.t� 570.5 ti3O, Al!geos 2-20 T5DD I... so., peittiee 3:19 eh 3-7 23mt fro. center .1 pion 5:01 rtr Clock the-s 70 rn � 3_n T5.1,5 fro. (role( Or piers Ti rn � 3-9 T.*, fro. center 01 pi.. 72 rn o 3-i0 Th141 (coo c.nter of plot. 73 rn ^ 3-11 TSGU from c,okler of plots 74 rn ^ 3.12 (rns coot., of pion 75 rn 4-10 Tr.pl. eve/Toss fro. so.e position so . *11)0.5 1-4 76 I'D 4-11 TrIrle ncrpost too. 50.0 poiltio4 77 ro 4-12 Triple ererposs fro.5 ea, positne 70 ra 4-16 7500 5:16 PO fro. so..e p5.11100 es Alpo.' 8.6 Clock soo.s 79 PO 4-1T 7500 5,16 ru (row posttStta ol 00 VA Alt)'.. 1-6 Cloth shoo, 4-18 iS,J1 !..14 rm (so. I�oe, positiOo OS title. 1-6 Cloth shoos Cl PC 1111361.11 1 Jse e. vain St. 03 VC 3 Pk 05 II 2 Jrx oo 11101100 t. s!. ot rc � 4 .1:0 i. (fool or -.1 0) Pc � 5 JIG oft,. first 11..t 61. Pc 6 II. St. C gross, nt,.: sftir shot. DI PC ' 01 Tr4In Poor.sy 7 Si. It. r .r:. after sssss (sIt 9 Honton St. le.siol r. fro. (is. 75.03 Oal Ter 90 PC 10 'Mit front - 000rwoy C 5 non.. - Arrest �ed possible rifle 91 rc II iwuttt, St. leekleg from Cl. St. 92 PC � 12 ISM) isli of ill fro. IS 4 Mile :31PC : . 13 Via ssssss OutisdO 041 Tea Bldg. 14 %hate station .skos ee fie nowt 12:45 9$ rc Is Scent smosod 1$03 96 PC � 16. Scenes around tsna 97 PC ' IT Scenes arecood 7500 90 PC 16 Sceset oromand 15110 99 (13 Getnor.12 1 JFK on Ii 100 PO � 2 JFK le front of 13110 101 en 3 JFK en Cl. lb.,. nee of first not : 401.3": Both.o.13 I JFK peer Love Field 104 ea ' 2 OK ea 114111 approsachieg NOoStOos 3 Lead 105 re ycles sppreachied bout. P6 5 Arcade after ttttt 4 JFK roved lag corner rule G 107 re AP Prepaer.14 Hospital *stain ?stilted P0-tog- 1 Grove of 'acre 47 (80107. I Copy of Moornea 2 -Clearer tne publish* ripher.15 /09 PO AP (Soled- 1 Officers C names Snide 1500 at 6th rapher.16 floor wieder 110 PO AP Panic- I G10.9 or officials e.1 Pickup truck an 14041,11 31r-coons F y TSB� in backgroural Token from cooing car - 1:04 fn. 6...22 Ill re - 112 111 2 Triple overpass fen same car oe west 3 Cloten of overpass - 1:04 FM from clic approschleg 113 PO ' 4. 1500. Oal Tex. Conty keens 1110. from mooring COO es Mole St. ace, overpass - 1:01(14 1:4 ra $ MO. 001 Tel fencer oe Kola St. 115 PS ' 1:04 PM fleck inn ' .6 Cressy beell 6 Triple overpass fro. car oa Gala St. .114 P8 ' T. Ism. Dal Tex [rancor olt Maio - 1:04 PM ttttt Ity smiled coroer of Elm D. allthr.10 I .0-K early I. intercede 2 JFK early is motorcade 117 P6 � 3 JFK en Stemmees fre.ay - Possible man . nth rifle In background - Corn. $loe shoes JFIC's-C. Mill.* foot eticklog nt of car 118 145 Itichilreya, 1 (Life) Arced* &meat Copola after ttttt l3 people* 116 PO ' . 2 Arcade t rketsgrapurs takiag ploy:wee (Co.. 2) 120 P8 0111ard.20 1 Ma 6th nen wieder (rem Coe 3 (Oelles Al ' Meraleq 121 2 Isao 6t8 Inn endow free Coe 3 COMPUTERS ond AUTOMATION for May. 1070 i al Points:4,r Seg. No. Typer boom 4 No. No. ra.t. Shows 122 Co Oillard.20 3 Overpass C t..Wfl cars on Cl 123 ro ��. 4 145 Cm - Mani palatial Sc bullet otlet �24 ro J. LeIrd.21 1 (fl.11as Itorniog hers) Scrim at fortload hospital *25 ro � 3 II coa:act prints of 7580 late it Nove.gmr 22 3 11 Ceoltiet prints of fockland Hospital 4 0 contort p ..... at Pollee station 5 16 contact prints of scene, �rown0 Part. loot Nospitn1 129 CO 2. 0rara.22 1 (patios Ilotolon 6,...,11 It. Mootpoomr, nor- ryinl lore paper bal 2 It. mantoo.err .ito boo 3 Lt. Johnson corryirl dr. Pepper bottle 4 ilaaes inside I5A111 6to flan, wlodoo 5 W.E. Cornett C JAL 5.110. lerpal 6 Larry !lover ea.Uouttoo $t. � Arti where 07..144 rifle found 3 A..% .nere 01..sld's rifle (sand 9 7.0 nec is police car - Cabo. 10 5-m: .ez being 1e4 1.-ar 7S00 by c)ps ii ihree trnwra brio.) /re o.or frow 7243 12 Three troops being led nay (ror Tsaa � 13 Rifle being carried away fro. 7500 by It. bay � 14 Pifie being carried immy from 1200 by It. nay 15 Rifle being carried ii.sy from 7503 ty Lt. Oar 16 T., ladles G boy Ioarlog 7500 17 Vie. from 4th nor. wIrrlow - Nov. 22 FX 10 Gs.hld arrival at Felice Station 19 Cep with skalcon looking up at 7580 � 20 Group around 11.".0 � 21 Old white bolted woo led ewer from Tsao � 22 Scent otoun4 C Inside IMO 011rw of soot side of Moult.* � 23 Tsnn from point on Houston � 24 3 bates stacked up at 1520 6-h floor trio- de. � 25 Scene �roun4 C. Ingide 75C-1 � 26 Scene oround G losine Tsno � 27 Scene around G Inside Tsno � 20 Scene around G loside /sno � 29 Scene �round C. 'Aside 75110 � 30 Scene ground G 'aside Tsno ^ 31 Scene ground G Inside Tsna � 32 Scene �round C. Inside 7500 � 33 Scene �rouiwl G Inside ISIX) 126 rat 127 18 120 rc 130 CO 131 to 132 ro 133 Cl 134 Ps. 135 rn 136 Cl) 137 to 130 rn 139 191 140 V8 141 1.8 142 (-11 143 PO 144 to 145 VA 146 Cl) 147 VO 140 CO 149 Cl) 150 rn 151 ro *52 re 153 PO 154 PB 153 (8 156 to 157 ro 156 re 159 Pb 160 P8 161 PO 162 PB Vm. �1104.23 1-3 /Dallas Tines Herold) 12.39 Cl 0/sitters god vetoed officio' picking up semetlitog from grohnd 143 PB ^ 1-4 t2,40 rm (Hertz clock shoos) Walther* is.d group near spot where sm.:thin picked up - South of Cl. near islet 164 P8 � 1-5 12:41 PM Cressy 1.1.11 free cent*, of plots 16$ Fit � 1-6 Group sear (not of steps es Cl. - 15113 G Dal Tex In background - C. Brehm belog loterviewed 12:42 Cl �66 PS 1-7 Group seer foot of steps is Cl. . Greta, kooll in bockgroani - C. -Brehm being I. lowed 12:42 rm 461 PB 1-0 Group seer foot of stops oathm - Coster of plaza in bactground 12:42 FM 168 IN . 1-1S Cop with 'Retools - Del Tex in bockgro.rid - Elm G Houston 12:43 FM 169 PB � 1-16 Cop with shotcyft - View east Oa Cl. Cron Mansion 12:44'eM 170 PS � 1-17 (around 12:45 Cl) 751113 from smith of Elsa on 171. pa � 1-18 ISM from Baulk of Elm vs Hassles (eloper vicml 172 pa � 1-19 Crowd held back - Cormier Cl. G Himstim oot. � sIde County Records Bldg. 173 PB � e 1-20 0.1 Tex, cops with shotguns from corner Elm G II 174 111 � ' I ' 2-3 Cops G crowds in treat of Del Tex fire escape . se ttt in photo 175 re " , 2-4 Cop with 'hotpot' to front of Dot Tex 176 P8 2-5 6t% floor tandem - Rao ..calgeigg 177 ro ''d. '1 2-6 6th floor window - man we ttttt ng cartons � 178 PO i 2 -7)nth floor window - moo measuring 179 P8 � 2-8 Cops checking cars lined wp to less. perk. leg lot 12:54 FM iao P8 ^ 2-14 12:55 PM Sheriff waving out of 6th fleet � window next to "the" wisdom 181 po ^ 2-15- tttttt 182 PS � 2-16 12:2.3 rm Cops with shotgmos 081 Ton 111 ' background (looks like rrrrr 2-15) Ina �8 2-17 Lorry Pierer 6.1.8 frisked 104 Po � 2-10 Lorry Pierer Si... VP 185 ra 2-19 r Ing wiedow 486 pa � 3-3 1:00 Pb Larry Florist 12 Skorlies atioe COMPUTERS �8d AUTOMATION for May. 1979 Photo ,.,Fhotogropher Seg. ha. Typo bone' C. Na. ha. rant'. 300.0 07 Cl Vs. C.,) PR 94 re 91 PR 92 rit 93 en 94 PO 95 11.8 96 VO 97 CO 90 Cl) 49 1.4 203 P8 201. PO 242 po 203 ro 204 P8 205 PEI 204 P8 207 P8 244 PO 241 P8 210 Cl) 211 PO 212 PO 213 PO 214 Fa 215 ro 216 ro 217 CO 210 Cl) 219 PO 220 ra 221 PO 222 PO 223 Pe 224 P8 225 PS 226 pa 221 P8 228 PB 229 re 230 TS 23/ P8 232 P8 233 1"8 �11,11.23 3-6 Lirry floret is 'oeriff!4 3-7 Later fin,. is s.eriff14,/ffice � 3-0 Lorry flatter I. ....WON office � -3.9 Lorry fiord( is 5.eriff1e offico � 3-10 Lorry Floret. an .oeriff.4.4ffiCo .-11 1.0i Uto. � 41154octl 3-.2 7..1.1 fro. close./ , � ^ 3-13 Too cop, in VA. doer., ^ 3.14 Tater -tra..ps' fro. S.A. ystas Is (root of 7S1111 ^ 3.15 User "tra.ps" ea Hoeft.% 54... � 3-16 inter 'ira.ps- beteg led twin!. Om. riff's oil's. � 4-7 (toilet bate ore (orb � 4-3 0.11et .trk on cart. ^ 4-4 It. nonto.wry .its boo C. It. JeOesoo elle bottle 4-5 It. hinotiomeiy silkLag G Li. Jobbug wIth 6ottle � 4-6 It. .7.nason .ito bottle C. lanes each � 4-7 Lt. Joholoo ottit bottle IvoCn sock ^ 4-14 notes Inside Cift floor O 4-15 noses losIdt 6ta floor wink.. ^ 4-14 boars inside 6t0 (lone wtodbo o 4-17 Vie. or.. Lin /raw btit floor viol. � 4-1d Vie. Co., 410 frt. 6ln floor winsow ^ 4-19 Vie. do...n Li. (104 615 floor toladow 5-1 Fear b . f car 5-2 Cop In front of 751.1 C. grows. 5-5 CrOup In ((Oat T!no 5-1 Cops in 12110 Gonne., S-f Felice cars sal cr....J behin4 7tr.1 ( 5-6 Palle. Cott �tel cre.d behifti 2910 (north) 5-4 Polito Crre Ittrl creed 60.1.4 rjp:rj ( 5-d N-oro C. 1_4114 Ps' ender arrest to LI. St. 5-9 (O.nre LIntl� �to C loblon in 1,01 1C� 4111. .5-10 Wilt* C. lotto oto Is police COI 5-1/ It. Per cerrylog rifle out of IS:'.') 5-12 Lt. bay carrying rifle toward 11 4 5-13 It. Day carrying rifle to.ord Naval C. Elm 5-14 It. nay carrying rifle approaching cor- ner � 5-15 Lt. Day carrying rifle ing Houstist 5-16 It. Day carryireg rifle c:ossing H 5-17 It. nay Carrying rift. la (root of Dal Tex � 3-18 It. Day c ttttt wg rifle Is (root of Dal Tow ^ 6-3 Two rower, owl sae leaving a noose � 6-4 Two women and .ao getting a police car - Another photogropher shows � 4-5 Two beee.01 Ott on. getting Is pollee clic . Another pnotographer Shows ^ 6-6 Too wr�wa end san is police car So- other photagrorter shows 6-7 Two vinowo and maii arriving at police ilta4100 6-8 Two women swains rrrrr log at pollc� 234 P8 4-87.o women owl woo Ia police wottlog room 235 PB 3.McAulty.24 I (Ft. Worth Star Tele/ire.) Coo arrested Ii Ft. Sort% *ear police car 2 Man near ciir to ft. Werth - haw. 22 PM 3 Han being 1�0 O..] tran C�t 14.C4b1OCka$ I (Ft. Worth Star Telegram) Spot vitro bullet bit gross 239 ro � 2 Spot .here bullet hit cross 240 ro � 3 Spot *lure bullet hit gross 241 ro � 4 Spot where lillet hit gross 242 P8 � S Parkland Hospitril - irony people In :root 243 111 � 6 Portland itospitol . Many people to front 244 PO 7 Parkland Hospitel - man,' People is :i9" 245 t3 3.C6block.24 1 (Ft. Worth Star Telegram) Dealer P/igs from Helicopter late of Nev.22 246 PS ^ 2. Helicopter etc. of [realty Pismo from east of 0.1 Ten 247 P8 � 3 Helicopter view of Dealey rrrrr tram woos of overpass 4 Porkiand Hospital. Jilt car 5 Porklond Nospitol. rrrrr cars 6 glow of Railroad tracks fro. Tsar; 1 (rt. North Ste, Telepre.) Three se, fres R.R. Cella( in float 7180 *odor �rrest 2 Three see free R.R. track, In (root 7580 ender arrest It. Montponery trith Dog Lt. Monigonery with beg Lt. Johnaop with sack ond bottle 6 Lt. Joholoo sit% sock and bottle Am owroor 6-0 floor TWO loalde 1 (#1. Worth Star 'IOU/grow) Photogrop rrrr �ol comer* 441 CAN 2 sorts mitoses:to 236 PO 237 113 238 11) 248 141 249 P8 250 P8 251 PEI 252 PS 253 P8 254 191 253 rn 256 po 257 pa 250 PS. . � C. 5alth.27 '3 4 53 1 rrrrrr 1 ..drorogrephor Sr. ho. Type � halve 4 ho. Is.. tbet� Shona Laois .1Postagraphef Sec. ho. Type Prwre C. he. %v. 259 ra Vrrigeoli.29 1 Sce.c oa CI.. grotty diell. 17.11.7 daronray pro. C.4 1 310 40 260 10 . 2 xe...aos oe gr.... . Cop 1 G 2 ea Eln St. 314 10 261 IT forray.30 .4 1 Older 262 CO . 1-2 Clank � 310 I'll 263 re . 4-3 ti. C. Hour's. G Dol Tea fros Is frost if 311 rn 15110 12:33 322 264 ro 1-4 323 Ph 26$ re 1-3 P.rfin3 Lot -Meth fettles 12:34 324 CO 246 FD 1-4 P�rking Lot - S..ra erection 1234 325 CO 267 PO 1.7 El. St. lot. - fro. wed end locative east 12:34 314 CO 24.0 to � 1-0 (enter el ri44. (4.. knoll 12:35 371 CO 269 fa � 1-9 Eloseup of large group ea ttttt curl. of 3:0 CO LI. 12:35 3:9 rn 270 to 1-10 Cial.up of tootle sort's ride CI. St.- 334 ra rsen to b.(4.(.... 12:36 341 CO 271 PB � 1-11 Lang shot foes.; owerpass fee. Slept OS 332 CO II.. 12:37 331 10 272 pa 1-12 *freer. L knoll from f Pls.. 12.38 273 Ca � 1-13 Pollee eczniae spot o. gre.nd - Herta 334 5.7 clock stamas toe tirx 12:39 335 13 274 LB � 1.14 Sam as 13 - Scala (Is neer aerie, o.tlot 336 PO - %either' 110tin clesrette 12:39 311 P0 27$ re � 1.15 halthers plciroj 59 something fro. greurni 12.39 310 PO 276 Pa 1-16 Walthers holding sometillog in hls hs.d 331 111 12:39 340 r3 277 PIS � 1-17 Soother official td.chIng spot oe ground 341 to 12:40 342 re 270 PO 1-18 raiser stentlop atoond spot oe ground 30 to 11:40 341 ra 279 /II 1-19 Pollee p1c01n; op other objects fros two 345 to spots - Ele:k sows the tire 12 40 346 re 240 PS � 1-70 Tsui) Pls.. C knell from Converse St. . 317 re front doorway 1.erded by too cops 12:41 340 541 201 PO 1-21 TSOD flare G Irell from Crwriorce St.12:41 2C2 re o 1-22 front door of 'MI) fro, sour. of El. 12:42 349 rn 203 P0 1-23 Front door of 752.7 from t Els 12142 356 PO 264 Pa � 1-24 Frost door of rsz.a Closeup 12:42 351 PO 205 rn � 1.2$ front door of ISCO - Closoup 12:43 352 Pb 206 Pit � 1.26 Moo, boy In relics car . f7S110 353 to 12:43 354 ra 207 pa 1-27 Front door 751.3 - Close.. -Walther" is 355 Fa doorway 12:43 356 re 208 Pb 1.70 Vieo east ra. (Is St. Cr,. Houstea G Els 351 Vol Tex C. Cede, Records 11141. 12:43 350 209 re � 1-29 (softly ReCecds !Dag. Corner 12:43 359 Pll 290 pa � 4.30 View worth ea 14:44.0. Cr.. tooth old. .f Els St. 12:44 360 P8 291 PS � 244 Ism Cr-. Hecate G isle 12:44 361 Pa 292 PS 142 15110 frost/. deer., fry. Moist C. Ells 362 Pil 12:45 363 re 293 ra 1-13 7500 (Emit C. ...mop fro. Measles G El. 12:45 364 .ra � 294 PS � 1.34 rsno doorway . Crime la frost 12:45 295 PS � 1.35 Crap 1.1th Saelgell . Del Tex Bldg. fa bock. grimed 12:45 365 P8 296 ra 1.36 View aorth Boost.. fro. Els St. 12:45 � 366 PS 297 re � 2-3 View of overpass from El. 12:40 367 298 pi � 4. 0-4 Crowd en Cl. 4. Clipola from south � 1 �a tIn 12:40 299 P8 � , 1500 front door - Reporter tope recording ie. with 6 12:42 368 300 Pa 2-6 Ism) front door 12:42 301 Pa " s 2.7 7560 front doer 12:42 369 PS 302 P8 � 2-8 Neither, beim t lowed la frost of 75110 12:45 370 Pa 303 P8 2-9 Walther. beteg lotcrelewed Is frost of 371 PG 7500 12:45 304 141 2.10 reliceese dr 6th floor yelling out sin. 372 rtl door. p�i.tont�it8 (Mora:Imre 12455 373 MC 305 2-11 Policews. os 6i0 floor yelling e.t .1. - dm C. piloting to 6th floor sled.. 12153 374 NC 304 Pa 2-12 Three ladies ea top floor fini *scope 375 PC Landis, of ON Ts. 12:56 -� 307 PS 2-13 Cops with ...ie..a is frost of Dal Tex 376 IC 308 PS � 12:56 2-14 Cops with 'hotel.* NI treat of MI To. 377 P8 12:54 378 re 309-09 . � 2-IS Cops with shote.as la frost of Dal To.. 379 Pa 12:56 310 PS 2.16 Cops with :Mote... Is frost if 0.1 Tex 380 PC 12:56 311 PS . 2-17 Larry Floret' being Interviewed In Sheriff' 301 PC - office 1:06 :312 PS ." ; 2-18 Larry Firarer belag Istorriewd Is Sheriff' 302 PC office 1:06 303 Pc '313 re ?" � 2-19 Poor we. is 5.erlfra offlgo 1:06 384 PC 314 ra 315 Pa � ". . 230 Larry Pierer 1:06 2.21 Larry Flom 1:46 385 386 PC rc 316 re .t ";! . ' 2-22 Larry Pierer 1:06 347 ra 3-23 Cep. beside Oil Tut Mg. w Smote. St. .3137 rc. /. 8160 1.00 54 'root. M..* Ovirroy.30 2-24 Cep. betod. Hot Tee Bldg. . II Si. Sele Crewp is frost of 0.1 Teo . Closes, lt(f/ (Corley osst to boy (1154 2.2., 'aria) plaCe s5-4,��� 1'24 1:24 � 1tactu) place fle.o�i����� 2-73 &aril) place 24 2-71 Lacey Clare, is N�crrff's office 1:24 2-57. Larry Florer In office 1:50 3-2 Gres. 5515,00.4,04 Tee I2:24. 3-3 front of 754.3 4. 41. St. Cll. looting -tot 12-56 3-4 5.ro ttttt dr .i.oltea free Plo 32:57 � 3-5 Stew snot. es 0051105 fro. Els 12:57 " 3-4 I. Sheriff's offrce 1:re. ^ 3-7 1. Sheriff's office 1:04 3-4 la Snesafrs .ffice 4:00. � 3-9 le Skeriff's office 1:06 � 3-10 goofy 05.50. es,/ to Sheriff'. office 1:05 3-11 Sae. across Nero fro. la 1:07 ^ 342 Par en bottles St. Snoth of Sala 1:12 � 3-0 Oar ow 140.11on St. . So.th of halo 1:12 � 3-14 Cab driver te.ato..1 where 7be.gat film 1:23 � 3-15 Is Sheriff'. office 1:30 � 4.4 1..etp501 fl, bovstea 4-5 Cverpass (rcm lift 4. 1 � Ciernass Cr.-. Slo P. lo.astea � 4.7 hest end - Soy fleet � A-a Z... host end - All floor. 4-9 4.vston P. 41. activ.ty 4-.0 vn.strer 14. actively � 4-31 G tin sc ttttt y 4-12 hmsto. 4. LI. y houtton C. //a activity - Feasible or- toot ^ 4-24 1,4V1 Cast end - Top floors ^ 4-25 15a41 Cast end . Top floors � 4.10 154111 Cast tw1 - Top floors � 1-17 75110 Cast end . Tap (leers . nett shows 1.25 7.11111 Cast rfri Top floors � 4-19 rsen East - Top floors �443isius List Cl - Top floors � 4.21 1901 lost Cii - Top floors Atki...31 1 he...as .4 the gr000d 2 on grouse Camollare.32 1 Newman. 05gr..sd . Stigmas. Cfavte. Altera. � 2 New.ans on grated . Clefre, � 3 PerlrIog lot � 4 Plaza 4. (Is St. fro. knoll � $ Cram1 oa ttttt side of Lie from 6e.11 - Cab.stka Lady opposes 6 Cre.4 on �corp..s ustchleg e�ilig owl Stevan.. Free.oy LP1. 33 1 Lt. Montgomery carrylog piper bp owt of 1515) 071. 34 2 Officers IS frost of 1500 re� 3 Copy of Mn. Alto* 1.3 oith captie. reoding: 'Dallas police select crowed for bullet belidel to hove lodged le the ttttt ' UPI. 35 4 Negro girl cryliag Porklaad Hospital S &mt.. girl crylog outside Per1:m.1 Hospital Stoughto..36 hot sure he toot anythiwg Cm. 7. 8mrrows.37 1 Comer. ears oe Hermits.. St. frot Co. 2 (Ar) � 2 Cower. cars 0. ko.std. St. Cr,. CSA 2 0ormaa.38 1 JEK ow Roost.. -Glimpses on 14. befdr� ' 2 MOS! glirpses 60 46611i66 after shots Uredentlfled.20 1 15100,. A. of Mv. 22- 6th floor arie- Photog.(Foley) doss 'Ndr. Sock.42 ON sore fib o 'clot' ...Totem erring Shot! .41 1 T910 610 Neer wi.dow MAKs first sheot Powell. 42 C floe hi. Velklamd.43 1 AS ea Stemmas Freeway . 11464 *I 1544 G rocking lot 1444CasS�11.44 1 Group of police tttttt og�tlog as .14 ocgro outside me ' 2 Group of police I patio; am old mgr. mtside 1500 . 3 Sceoe I. Dooley Plot. . 4 Scene Is Coale, Plass � 3 Storm at TIppitt shamming . 4 Seem at TIppItt shoot1sg 1 Oswald lit Tem6411,44tr� Just beflire arrest � 8 Oswald is Toms Theatre jut after street COMPUTERS and AUTOMATION for May. 1970 ***** Whotelrarker Seq. he. Type `am C be. Mo. Photo She.' � 300 PS locksoo.45 1 (Ti-, Herald/ Photo of eons oo SIc St. 309 T A.J.L'ilooto.46 1 Static. ortl-TV (And) r..toi,.p.., - Cop (Stryloo, 50e17s5 toward Pill 390 �T 2 Decker Dr...ao. Cop ulth SOof,no 311 T Is:., Osen.�, 3 Tt,k1 coerwor wear Ia.. Ilan. alt Millie 10 3�,2 T � 4 6th fie., .lodo. fro. mderonala 393 T 5 Larry rioter led te.erd Ro.ston 1. Cleo 394 T � 6 Decker Ut1o) 1 ***** le.ed le front of 7548 39$ T / four cope .1t5 shottpous - Del Ti. le 1.nc/;row.1 316 7 6 Lorry litre, belwns led do...1 Roasts. St. � 3 et,00 pootogrophers sne. op 317 T 9 Lorry Vlore! 3411rj late earase ***** &CO Of Setrifra 0142. 310 T 10 Ire ceps podia, cove witness let* isna 341 7 II Posilcly too ,e4 placed I. police ear is frost af TSCO 400 T 12 S..- toe sea 1115ir50.3 doe. Cl. St. 401 7 13 KoK1CO,C ...gr. led to police car so Cl. Si. 402 T 14 too kelog placed Is cow - 555thar 403 T T. Alyos.47 1 Olfik-TV it:d:1 Vie. If Mess C knoll from 0 I. Oahe - 500.4 novlog toward toil: 434 T 2 Sceoe svtaide TSA3 (OS T 3 Sceno solute 15(41 40e.. T 4 Scene otatide TSNO 407 T 5 Scene value. 294D 435 6 Pollee %twain throng% W. floor 401 7 Police looltog ant 655 fli.r on 1 St. 410 T 8 Cop stick, Lead oat [...4.4 fbal St. 411 T 9 s..a tro.t..3 lunch sock 4 1... pepper L4112t 412 T 10 Mlle en (.45 floor 411;10 � ...hiding plate - Sheriff* G poll*. canal.. spot 413 T 11 Close.; of rift* posed for Moto - Sight rite I-It 414 T 12 ,011(foal�01,11 rifle op -Second cop points it bolt 415 7 13 Croup near boxes .here rill. found . bews.e. 1014157 416 T 14 Lt. Day dosting live shell for (lager - priets. 8.11.1 risible 4IT T � 15 Sheriffs t�IkIng is 6t5 floor 418 T R.Relleed.44 1 fur(Al-TV ADC) (rime Oldg. le Ook Cliff . bier. tttttt te thought to be w. Mem sorzlioug epos It . Coold be library if 1 temple 419 T TW. pollee core speeding �losi rosidee- 1 tiel street I. Oak Cliff - Pills. go let, old frame 6.1141.0 420 7 $ 'Cep holding up light grey Jacklet . Meer parking lot 421 T 4 Mee is ttttt sleeve. talkleg seer used � � 422 7 ; car lot 5 Several police cars (r cope Olaf Tippitt 1 'Lott's; Site - Cop Saes tooted polled car ee1d1a9 gee butt 423 7 6 Croup; tttttt d iirouad TIppltt�t ter. Piece of paper or t dusk- bond ho detail 171.9 on dash - 424 7 Cops eximise TIppitt's billfold (accord - log to Selland who is log/ - Not. 1 pad issIde - Cops point to It - Cop holding TIrpitt's pistol beside his car 425 T 6 Group avowed 71ppitt sheetiog site (over. exposed) 426 7 9 Cronrd ero�od pollee CO, la basleelf see. ties - it drives limey wIth someme Is back seat 427 T 10 Police cars driving op to Tessa Theatres .428 T 11 Texas T biotin sp at tower 429 7 �2 TemOS 'Desire - Cops goieg is - Car polls may 430 7 13 losIde Tees, ttttttt Very dark - Lights blinking - Cops bottle Omeld toward leside doorway 431 7 � 14 Cro.d gathered arovod police car outside Tesas Theatre - Os-aid lasido I. back sest - It drives *wiry 432 T 5. Coech.49 1 (VISA-TV A8C1 In CAO 3 - motorcade Oa Sala Si. approaching Boost.. 5t. ' 4337 2 frost of 1580 � Crowd ee earth side of 14. Elm is CAM 3 rovede elsroor Horstom 6 Elm 434 T � II CAA I. CAM 2. photographers um knell - !Immo' *a graved - mea with umbrella fo:ded Officer Haygood op_ proechiog meth cork . Hargis rvenieg 144,41450.th It 414 St. im EAR 3 &Val do.v Els COMPUTERS end AUTOMATION For Noy. 1970 Photo oirh�tog Me. Typo hem C 4.. 435 T K. Comch.49 436 I � 437 T � 438 7 � Seq. ho. Poet. Sae., 4 Co., .114 croolvor drown Sooth cu. S 1,3ba1h5e 1545. Su'ooff. 11411. No ttttt . Tog., Soils. if 1.1� - !..eeplog 10 sweeps. 6 VA01,,,,ApAffS OA 5.011 � o.,,,,aot ott 7 bayznoukcytng-te Jtop CyCle acer forb ( heir�e� r. Coece I 1�fe erasing to silos Ca% . I 439 Cro.-1 is North side of GI. - Toles fro. arcoir 440 T 9 Cro+4 en North slde of CDs . Take% fro* Dowsion 4 elm 441 T 10 Ce0.4 in North sine of (1. - Tat., r,is es, drlvinl on IA. (All of show. are 141,4 prier to 1235 it - how. 221 442 T � II 7570 GIs floor lo1...1o.� 1.14t. Cope lockin, out 443 T 12 1541 fro% center of Pier. - lasso I. ea . 6(0 (100r oto../eo f�n, do.. 00 knoll - Then to (Oen, Of lloo.11 on C. b0r0 to OVAIVASS � 1 At-CALI. Stats m00101 on Ovo t p ttt 444 7 A3 ',rode :A several people i� II 445 7 � 14 ISFSA Cow.- tttttt shows rifle C telescople sic," r1.11ar to Di�wlav 111,0 Is lists sr411 bolt octloo 446 7 � 15 Center 01 1'1 �r� fro, knoll 44/ 7 � 16 Copwio. F.croder's pOsitlen G ((rad* (Se 41 to 16 otowe worn ttttt be- t0er0 4 fw - Nor. 22/ 448 7 C. C4044(.80 1 (Airlk, 11 fort worth/ Jo( on nolo 501 V. 7 Corner housto. 4 %sin - Teke% I in (rose of sfterstf's office 449 T 2 Cop witt revolver C cro.d on Cis 1ASA 1 a4'. I.o ol [ter fetal not 450 3 ActIvitr In pastier) lot 451 T lookinl chit on tie St. Eat. tmard 7580 452 T � 5 In front of 75111:1 453 T � 6 loside Tsna umez Neor 454 � 7 Inside 75110 � Sloth floor 455 � 8 Arrest C possible rifle (sone *601111e 101 456 9 Larry florer tttttt 457 10 Scene of Plaza 458 II Scene in frost of TSU) 4$9 12 Sc... of knoll (Ali of above try Des Cook .ere ttttt prier to 1:30 Pe � hoe. 24) 460 T T.0 .81 1 (CBS) From CAM 1 11051151 St. War* the 461 T 2 Knoll after ttttt - C joeeped .11.1 of CA0 I 462 T � 3 Closeop of StoP444 463 4 4 Arcade (2. 3. 4 oboe* wore takes within 2 nlootee after fatal shot) 464 TT.**6 .6�41�rwool.52 1 (11311.8.CRS) TSB� alga over door...7 465 Seed ttttt .63 2 Sixth floor wiodow (roe dlreetly beneeth 466 3 Cope .4th shotguns - Del Tex I. hack- er...0 467 T � 4 Cops with shotgves - INI Too io back- , groom - folic. photogropher lemin TSOD 468 5 Fire eoglee morlog Month le Cl. on Moos. ton 469 6 Caps with shotguns 470 T Fifth floor Iliad�. Tula from directly be. tt or tt 471 T 8 Cop with shotgun C. police. offIclal Dol Tex la background 472 T 9 Sloth floor arlodow from beneath - Pans dtsm to vier Weft se El. St. Ext. Sevesel eops szoidng feet - Police tor In tttttt cop gettlog out 473 O 10 Cop looking op at Tsna with sketgea 474 7 ll Cop looluleg op at 7500 with Moto. 475 2 12 Sore cop leohlog op at Comity accords Bldg. 4/6 � 13 Several pee going into 7583 doom., 477 T � 14 7540 from H St. - Nies in in 6th floor window. 478 T � 15 Several sore meo going Imo TSRO doorway 479 T 16 Cop C two police �Ukelele elmolog foot fro, seer TSAI) deem.y toward garage e tttttt e of Coast; Record 8141. 400 IT Fleenor going into 7503 earrylog loddor 481 T 18 Arrest G posslblo riflo le frost ef 7580 (rem as Willis 101 483 T. � 19 Oecher.belog 1 le..ed Am frost of 7583 Ethers la Merrell TO Fete tttttt service sea C Roper 041g 101 front of ism (Mows in r) 483 T 2.0rateo11.84 1 fIRAP�ADC1 Elm St activity ottot he .4 1 r�l� J.4;44 tot of Cm1 3 � Use Use 1 als. oftor fatel shot $S /Mt. .,taetooropher Sag. P. 2114 � 1.6t f. leo. M. Pitele Si.... 44t4 4.5 406 I Jai...411.94 7 497 1 0.0wees.SS 043 7 409 7 CkLO.54 490 491 442 493 494 495 496 497 498 MC 7.74.o.r.57 PC PC MC VC PC Pfi 0.Moornao.61 PS J.he..se.62 rB 7.romse4.63 P.Pessaall.57 8.Sintl..60 2 let lot 3 lo fro. of Ism f .44 Lie 4 le wur pre" re.. - Old Co. C.. Houle - 811101$ I CCCCC I fml041.04.41 to front of 1110 2 better bring ttttt tr.td lo frost of 7$110 I trootograpiker 004100,11 Two ..es ,welti0.N7 1.11 shutcc of fence to..rd 014 8.11410-9 o. Hog Irons C Shnabt.fy - (0.11. tee teary or church I. tisk Cliff rrrrr tee- pee% ots Lettered to be hiding Jik tv�P41 P; terror 1,,vatait C. tie JFIC ..st4l. toc.o fildtte�C Lie CA.. cots joleg d.c clo 12.1^9 1111.400 Oveirr� SS if< 00 Li' - 7804) in S.a1.0e....1 JIB. on Ulm - Overpass la Lee,. �od Jfk in ear after soots (Solo to '9) JIM on Steanons (Sold to Al) ifs kt tloe of fatal shot - Ave Great soya flouted hoe this ph.. - Not sere it 2 1 2 1 449 7 Uolocatifled Appears la ma. Alice 196 Photo;. 64 SOO 7 NI C7714 be flohosh. La.ly - Appears ie moey Asy.65 pit eeeeeeeeee earth ead sesth of Lie rrobobly took mole of (*lel &kat "Lt;end for Type of Photo: M - movie: P - Still note: 7 - Telts1- . Sloa 10010;e. C - Color: it C, 8511. 2There are 10 eeeee photo2rtpices. � lo the (CA flie Is .4- ditto, to atrtto C. Re ttttt 4140.1. Associated feels. Teoeobeced takteg oaly Oru of tat photos se eCtestly toSh is Ocaley rl.:s. He jock acres It the ti.e of too motorcade 51.4 21 acre after S PO. The actual roll a04 (tame eeoLers oe the wet; tttttt no streo. ...Janes 1 esed too Cameras. CPA telcfoto sod ore wide ewgle. 71. rolls Of omobeeed et bets... ter tno comer.. Rolle 1.3 . Camera I: Rolls 2.4. etc - COmefe 2. Nomemer, the ledl- .41.1 photos to pot alteroste coorro 2 no toed omch less fro.. rpeatly thee Cowers I. Thee plot.. o* Rolls 2.4.6.0. sod 10 fors are isterlp0051d utth Aolls 1.3.5.9. sod 9 or. � soue or lest reecoo basis. Ooly the (lets listed lodlcsto the trot s-lueace. 71141 roil Boo photo ...Dors listra ors ttttt soos�rtimy 0, tat sums& films. Ooly rolls 1 'krona 4 ore listed here. Aolls 5-10 sere expelled glass es hon. 23 or toter. Sr th* olght eof My. 22 lo locatloos ethos thee Dooley Mass. 1.01 7 Pol4. stifled 502 7 Cal...stifled 1.03 ? 4...erass SO4 7 Vaideotified 800.0.59 505 7 1.6.14eo11fted .70 506 1 Ueldrailfirti SOT 1 Uolocottfled KA14.72 500 1 Grort.73 509 1 Uattleatlited han.Te 510 7 Voleeatifled Photod.75 SII 1 Uoldeotlfled 000.1.16 root. Somme Appears Is 1 App..o, la oortlo 3 sem 5000���� 00 ..y. in t�hlog pittores ttt t t ..116 It ees. her tahlog plltorti App.srs Is Altgeos 1-4 Ap. lo Murray 01 Horst.. L. tlo Ap, to 1-72. 1-23. 2-5. 2.4 00.4 2.7 la 7S03 do".'; Mt lure be sons I. - hike to �182 Took LI* St. photo t...(ore est tttttt Of. (lend MAI rorly 1e rantort�de. y�ct 8�80 C. stripper? .4,4.1 os (.00 Itea 148107 Poole. for. *pp,' floor of Cot Ter Oloy. Sorrels look p tt Ste Swayer 74... (.0324 611 8 Jo* 5cell.70 1500 seem - RAD peologrepher In edditioe ttttt ere fere stare nl�ck Stior ph,t12� ft** took rir ttttt Coot DilPir 14 Malt ShC I II, rnter� sea An. f.hulte. 14,1014 took � tote& o(20.0 mlack end ultile, 3; no stilt photos Orel.? the h.e.ber 22.:4 ywr104. A f.t of taese e. la.tn tke of ttttt ea end estninp of Kostotter 22 se, tat rest ea ho�tot., 5*4 24. There art scenes at Oealey Plaza. 750.1. Sheriff'. :::ice.-FolIce *tette.. roller ports (erten-etc... Citneid.s ro,-..; ttomikc sod roe,. Osoelee p.bilc ap24ii0e10ee. 004 .17.: 71. St. from Det Test fildg. through telescopIC sight. Their p8,005 are cot tttttt so this Itat becomes they mere mot ttttt ea Nomeober 22 la Orate; Mese. .5 Mao with lige saying '5.0.8. Jock Keiteerly" is itendlog co South Carts Of Elm. (*clog posIttoo of me 1.118 ret.olla. past. i.e. spout 1 sleet* after ttttt . 40.110 be s 84.41 (of I.C. wife' alt. '"Ooder000d eed Seed ttttt ehored 10.0 saav c.otes. U.dermood bet- cooed It fro. 50.4 .10.0 shortly after ttttt ocee (trod. lies It. it la sot ttttt lo slack sot took last sesotoces. Part 3. The Application of Computers to the Photographic Evidence Correlation of the Evidence It is highly desirable Co apply the powers of the computer to analysis of the evidence. And since "the evidence" ii a very large order. It makes sense to begin with the "photographic evidence. Suppose we estimate at 200 the number of frames in an average photograph which is a movie or tele- vision sequence. In Table 3 (the main list) there . is a record of about 44 movie sequences. and 101 television footages. 145 in total. This means that there are over 25.000 frames, plus approximately 350 still photographs, to be analyzed. Over 200 persons. objects, etc.. are mentioned 'briefly in the simple short descriptions of the photographs in Table 3. As more photographs are studied. other persons and objects can be identi- fied. The different items need to be identified by codes; a sample of the coding scheme that would be applicable is shown In Table 4. The sheer volume of record keeping for 200 to 300 objects and persons appearing in 25.000 frames requires a computer.' The analysis of what appears 56 In groups and series of photos end frames also re- quires computerized correlation. How will the information for a photograph be en- tered into a computer? One reasonable way of pro- ceeding is to make a "coding sheet" for each photo- graph, preparatory to giving it to a clerk (or in- put into computer language. The coding sheet and instructions will look something like that shown in Table 5. Suppose we have put together a computerized data base of the photographic evidence in this form. What will be thc sorts of questions which computer programs will enable us to answer? Here are a few samples: -- Which are the pictures that show object ... or event -- Where was man ... from time ... to time- - When did movable object .., leave the scene? Essentially, when one is using an ordinary file and not using a computerized data base, the infor- mation in the file is accessible only by the main sequencing -- in this case, the number of the pho- tographer and the number of the picture or movie frame that he took. Cross referencing is possib:e. but difficult, time-consuming, and clumsy. When- one uses a computerized data bank, cross referen- cing becomes very easy and fast. In fact, it may provide so much more facility in getting at the COMPUTERS and Auroommcm foe May, 1970 � Tottle 4 court:Tex CODCS ff* Iftunfts AND 00JEC1S 19 THE 144070C1L145 ..- 7111.11CNIAT LIST Of COLES ir. C. Boreal% boy C. little Po C.' cop 2 sort taps (officers) couple Rove Craig 113 Latta w.� Cob.6�1 224 It. 4.7 115 Dotter fate tttttt aerate. Wow ftremea L. floret liaycood foffIcor) Hargis Cllot 4111 lt. J J.C.teheedy lodlea (..cm.a) B. Loretto/ woo ttttt ted age Ii shirt al r1/1116 102 .40 looldeol.i 101 we.. wit% tivt Int ww.i.gowery wolorcycle cop 104 Ne,r. 144 . 00.glo girl 111ho 110 fraport�rs1 111 officlels 112 old hear* . L. 0 14 (crowd) f ttttt7.00(0 116 lace 11,01 117 aterlffl./ 110 J. 5. 561th 111 Secrets 120 stripper 121 Sauwers 122 ToTot.. 121 TirP11 174 troupe 123 .e... foltieeet./ 12, 541100,s 127 120 osito.holred woo orcade ore* ...here touillett rifle fouad bee oa 1 St. Commerce St. curb TS4J doorway ;sett cope!. 712. floor fire ;wood dtk floor .1.4.1. of Tsao It. Worth prep tttttt de of Sheriff's hollillep 6rosty imoll locust/0 St. Love field Maio St. 214 215 216 227 1.-Isti sr fl.set 701 70,5. soros, Its floor :02 75,7; b41. tat .:111ff 293 owerpois (triple 245 cierposal 24)0 r lot 207 plass 208 pollee feettiog reeer. 210 7o2lres4 tracks 211 resideettal street 212 sheriff's office 213 *pet o'er. 0o42e1 hlt gest' (ballot wort) Stemuloo freemeep 140er used car let west copels 129 121 1,2 111 114 115 154 117 114 139 14/ 241 141 143 144 145 144 144 149 154 151 152 151 1.14 154 210 214 220 221 222 223 :24 225 226 227 220 2:9 230 231 232 n.tre place Covoty C (purity Setords Dol-Toa fro.* boneless 6.1141odi 341 lihrorr or coorek 342 old 3,13 tortlaue 44.spI0ol 314 pollee atetloo 3.23 lea. I 306 '1511 1Teaug School book Depooltoryl carryloe thectleg tors climblog Cffling natilag for fisporprisite gall *KAM'S heed lilt WA *ti-l1.11-b_c "t* 41: I .ellog 412 tolerate. 413 leant., 414 116ttleg dig 415 me ttttt .2 424 lop. f.tataillg 417 tel , log 435 0.01.7 yelllag bock real billfold babes bullet bullet work Camera (ree) � C�fa t111,1 clgirette clock (1krta) Congretalooal Sar 42 Cork.. itga dash board Dr. rapper kW. fence fire ;Nagle* (00t gait head J.F.K. car llot grey Jacket 93' cot Ilw! shell 5n1 orgercale 511 wotorcyclefu1 364 oote pad paper bag frisch/ paper or p0 pickup truck police cars 1,%2 rear b....per $20 rifle 511 Stat. eetlet 512 shadow 513 shot waft/ 5:4 shrubbery 5IS telvitspie sight $16 517 robrello 516 esideetified objeel(s) 519 white [tattoo uses $20 wiadows 521 307 3eot 361 3:4 31t 312 411 4:4 421 4:2 4:3 4:4 4:5 416 417 522 n:t n:7 5:4 514 nit 332 333 534 SiS 1.34 537 540 541 available information and answering questioas. that it yields a revolutionary Increase in .bat one can deduce. Directions. Locations, and Ter11019 In addition to the content of the photographs as reported in Table 3 five more items of information need to be entered on the computer record of each frame or still photo: - the identification of the photographer who took the photograph; -- the location of the photographer when he took it; -- the direction in which he took the picture; -- the time when he took the picture -- the identity of the person doing the anal- ysis or submitting data about the picture. The FBI and the Warren Commission staff made a careful analysis of the timing of the frames in the Zapruder film, and correlated these times with the positions of the presidential limousine and other cars in the motorcade. (See Chart 1). Consequent- ly. there exists an accepted time scale at 1/18 sec- ond intervals which applies to the in the photographs: the scale cons of eigateentas of a second (named with frame numbers of the Zapruder film) during the crucial 6.6 seconds of the fatal Interval. I was able to extend this reference tech- nique by using four other movies stretched gad to. COMPUTERS and AUTOMATION fee May. 1970 end in time to cover the period from the moment Kennedy rounded the corner of Houston and liain Sts. up to the beginning of the Zapruder film. A preliminary correlation of the tines of various movie sequences and still photographs is shown in Table I. for the peried of Kennedy's travel through Dealey Plaza. In addition. Jim Murray's photo- graphs form an excellent time reference base at less than 30 second intervals for nearly an hour after the last shot, beginning at three minutes after the last shot (see Table 1). The period from the end of the Zapruder film (roughly tea seconds after the last shot) up to the first of Murray's photos (about 3 minutes)0 is covered by several movies and TV sequences. Clearly, a human clerk would find it difficult and tiring to enter the bulk of the applicable in- formation for each frame of a long sequence. But a computer program should be able to eater a large part of the applicable information into the comput- er record for each frame. The computer should he able to compute and keep ' records of the timing of all events, in seconds or minutes before or after the time of the first shot. Image Enhancement end Candation Another-possibility which computer graphics makes possible is Image enhancement. This Is an activity in which the human eye is expert. For ex- 57 you. For example. it is easy to find where it.circle is located if you know definitely that a circle is � in 'the picture. Out if you do not :crow what you ere looking for. then it Is easy to find and see things that are not there. rOr era-plc. there 'are 7experit- who can make people out .of or make bushes out of people, or see canals on the surface of gars. " In.tte case of the photographs taken at the time of the Kennedy assassination. we hOve.'however. 0 different situation. Sapprise that four photographs taken at just the some tlMe show a particular spot - on the grassy knoll from almost the same direction: it should be possible to use technilaes of image enhancement and correlation, and thus see more clearly exactly what was at that spot. For here we are patting together not the information contained in just one picture, but the Information contained in four pictures. Several photos .taken from different angles could also enhance an image in three dimensions. (The puff of smoke. for example). Objectival of the Computer Search of the Phoimvaphic Evidence iihat are the sorts of questions that might be answered from a thorough'. computerized. sear:h of the, photographic evidence? Some of these gu:stioas Cr.: 1. Can rifles be seen in firing positions? 2. Can the faces of ti..e gohneh oe seen? 1. According to the Warren Report. 56 witnesses (a majority) thought the shots came from a grassy knoll. Some of them saw a "puff of smoke" -- do the photographs shed a puff of smoke? (At least nine photographs do.) 4. Do the photographs show that shots came from the knoll? (Yes.) S. Does the testimony of the witnesses is to what they did, agree with what the cameras Showed that they did? (One Dallas police officer testified that after the shots he ran up the grassy knoll. But he is shown In some of the photographs. and he 010 no such thing -- he just leaned against a lacp post.) 6. Can 22nmen be traced through a series of photos? T. Given a certain object or event in a partic- ular place. which photos shculd show it during a particular time? There is no doubt at all that a large number of steps can be taken towards the visual re-creation of that fatal scene, through the study of over 350 still photographs and over 25.000 frames. � The task of computerized analysis of the photo- graphs has been started, but there is a long way to go. A great deal of good detective work should be able to be accomplished through computer record- keeping and analysis of the photographic evidence Ii the 'nation of President Kennedy. Part 41. Appendices Acknowledgements and Notices I will% to express thanks to the following research- ers and authors who contributed to the collection and analysis of the photographic evidence and who Stimulated me to undertake the work on the photo- . graphs: Richard Berniabel, Richard Billings. Lil- lian Castellano. Bernard Fensterwald, Margaret Field, Jim Garrison, Trent Gough. Jones Harris. David Litton, Ray Marcus. Sylvia Meagher, Gary Murr. Fred Newcomb. Vincent Salandria. Gary Schoener. Jo- COMPUTERS and AUTOMATION for May. 1970 GOO/NC SHUT /04 ClorVitil-45S1SILD AbALTSIS OF ete3IT4espaS IIILLIM1hAPT Field A. Ideattfirattons I. faetogroph hurler 2. Type ef phetesreph 3. Peet., 4. Sec..ece iwsbtf S. tens. *be soot/odd phate,lraph C*41.3 lostroctioAs Vs, � graph ...her s. ..t. list Vie r for P still (Soto. C for color. Ii for black sod stile. T for telesisis. feeto20 Use photograph., o.milree I. 0412 list US* photograph seconda Pasbef IS meta Stet Vie oaaIrst Ide�tifylog x.eteer occordiog to � presteuely established key 6. ... A .. of the Phatoera'a: 1. Fnotm) .. pa ttt (notes patters wily of V./urn stew other photevapharo (tatog ;Ultras./ 2. Other p Cl. the pZCloto 0ho ore not pootesrephers) 3. bestow' or platee , 4, Se1141als '3. �50515 4/ael situ., 6. Objeote 7. Placa of thy piste� Use the gstd shoo. ly graph lee cop. letter fleet. thee *ember t. O. Time.! I us. Its. code. Prewlevelp. adopt � scale of (tactic., el seconds. le. !feted elth Zaprueee terra somber' Carted the ZA � prvarr movie legates* shoofly the shots; Ilea. seconds. al . and beers before and after the Z sequeece es ma, by op.. proprIste; IS.,, 44,ye sod dates Vie pbytopropher somber. Pfe'llstly. mai. SO lark.. obatie kip to peetelrediSe or. from *Ala list Cr* per.* toCe lo Teblo 4 Capsele suww�ry of palstecreph V. ph.. COde le 74141. 4 Use 4.1141es ...bee la Teble 4 Me code I. Teals 4 Use cede Is Table 4 Use 10 te 30 morels 406- er/bin the cornett fed toportsece of the esvis- papa. secordla2 to specified roles (et .- sat/slip end caseates Apprise. be. of Cho/otter, 3 2 B 2 0 te 12 0 Is, 12 3 t� 12. 0 to 12 3 tio 12 3 to 12 2 60 to 200 Apprealoote &Stint.. mweber el total for on. conaster records 200 to 320 ample, when a picture is printed in a newspaper it Is "screened". i.e.. converted into a collection of small dots -- some of which are white, some of which are black. -- printed in varying intensities, and the human eye looking at the result reassem- bles the dots into a picture. If you take a magni- fying glass. and look at a newspaper picture. the collection of dots becomes completely visible, aud you are filled with as appropriate wonder over how the human eye manages to put them together into � picture. However. if you desire to apply image etthance- meat with computer graphics, you find yourself with a two-edged sword. in this sense: If you know what you are looking for. then image enhancement Can aid Sfi 1. slab Thompson, willinm Turner. and Harold Weisberg. However. what is said in this article is my res;,x4- sibility, not theirs. � � Since a large number of details are covered is this article, nod since there may occur errors of emission or coensission or incomplete or inadeeuite analysis of some of the evidence. 1 would greatly appreciate any co,..w.nts sod corrections any reader nay be kind enough to send me. All corrections will bc published at a later date. If by accident we have infringed on anyone's ccpyright in a publication of a picture, we 'shall be glad to pay the normal commercial rate for tee use of the Picture. . . :f any reader of this article desires to ask some specific questions in regatd to the assasstaa- � lions of President John F. Kennedy. or Martin Lather King. Jr.. or Senator Vnbert Kennedy. about what hail no far I.een found out by the researchers. roMpo,rs !..od.:totrwlatinn will mate an effort to provide brief replies to time questions. Please write to Coo- paters and Automation. Att'n K. nis Washington Sc.. S.ewtonville. 62160; and please enclose a self.. addressed stamped envelope for each question. since the questions may be routed to different researchers for the answers. Unlike the Warren Commission. the researchers on not intend to disband immediately after issuing e set of conclusioas, and to there- after ignore all cuestions. If any reader of Computers and Automation is Interested in contributing computer programming or 1 conputer time or caterints or funds to the invest:- cotton and efforts of the researchers in the s,:71A. he should write to dernard fensterwald. Jr.. r!air- ann. NCT1A. 927 15th St. N.W.. Washington, D-C-2�005. A double-size chart (22 inches by 34 inches: of Dealey Plaza showing the events in Otaley Plaza like that here published is available. It may be ordered for 85 from Cutler Designs, 30 Union St.. Manchester. Mass. 01944. If you desire the chart unfolded, please specify tat it be shipped in a cardboard tube. As additional information becomes available, the large chart will be brought up to date. Epilogue When I have talked from time to time to various audiences on this subject and shown then some of the photographs. I have encountered a number of questions. Some of these questions are here dis- cussed. � Why is it important to get to the bottom of the assassination of President Kennedy. now, after six and a half years have gone by? -- There are several reasons. One is that there is a pattern of assas- sination (with evidence suggesting.conspiracy) of important American leaders; two Kennedys and Martin Luther King. for example. A second reason is to save America -- i.e.. the United States as a demo- cratic American society -- by exposing the truth. � Do you think you can save America? -- It can be done but only with great pain. just as there was great pain over the Dreyfus Affair in France. 1894 to 1906. � Why are you yourself so concerned about this? -- Because I personally believe that the assassination and its coverup changed the course of United Statc,s history from a positive one to a negative one in a way that no other event or series of events ever has. I believe we must eventually rid our country and our own minas of the terrible social and poli- tical cancer that would allow this to happen and, worse, to permit the truth about the ssssss inatioa to remain suppressed. � Why did not Senator Robert Kennedy do nom-et/tip about this? -- It is sad that be did not. for COMPUTERS Mod AUTOMATION for May. 1970 � think he would have been alive new if he had. There is little evidence for Any ansuer, hut there are two pcpulam_theories. One theory is that, even though he knew the �truth, he underestimated the forces that stood between him and the presidency of .the Laited States, and that he attuned that. cnce -President.��he Could expose the truth. The ScOod theory, is that his Connections with the Central In- telligence Agency and the failure of an attempt to assassinate fidel Castro resulted in some anti- Castro Cubans find others participaiing in organizing his assassination -- some of the same people who had participated in the assassination of his broth- er. I do not know why Senator Robert Kennedy re- mained silent: why Senator li;.aro .ienneJy remains silent: and why they have both suppressed the autopw $y materials on President John F. Kennedy. � to you think District Attorney Jim Garrison is a madman c. a fool or insane? -- No. I think'tkat he Is cbsoiutely sane. and one of the old-style Anericans left. and that he has a great deal of Courage. He also suffered from underestimating the strength of the forces ranged agaanSt him. In ad- dition, the CIA penetrated his case against Clay Sha.l they were even paying the lawyers of some of the people he arrestdd or attempted to subpoena. . Ile Said. "You can't conduct a trial of a CIA-backed conspiracy in an ordinary U.S. � aty did the national news media cooperate in the attack on Garrison's credibillty? -- This question is hard to answer in a short space. For much light on this important subject, I refer you to Mark Lane's book. A Citizen's Dissent, now in paperback. � Are you telling me that men as distinguished as Chief Justice Earl Warren. John J. :IcCloy, Allen Dulles, Gerald Ford, und others on the - Com- mission can be wrong about their conclusion ex- pressed in the Warren Commission Report? -- Yes. If you want to know how and why, read the book In- gueSt by Edward .1. Epstein. which is a valuable con- tsioution. But Epstein was paid several tens of thousands of dollars (perhaps indirectly from gov- ernment sources) for the article that he published in the Xmw Yorker magazine attacking Garrison. and that article contains over 100 misstatements. Re- cently, one of the Warren Commissioners, Senator Rickard Russell. ha said publicly that he has doubts about some of their conclusions. Also Jesse Curry. Dallas police chief in November 1963, has said publicly the same thing. � Did Lyndon B. Johnson know about the plans for the assassination of President John .F. Kennedy in Dallas before it happened? -- So far no substential evidence has been :Cum: to show that he did. Did J. Edgar Hoover know soout the plans for the assassination of President John F. Kennedy in Dallas before it happened? -- There is conclusive evidence that J. Edgar Hoover knew, and issued no warnings. � What can be done? 1. One of the things that, anyone can do is to read up on this subject, become informed, and talk to his friends. 2. Another thing that may be possible is to organize in a year or two an untainted Con- gressional committee of investigation. which will look into political assassina- tions in the United States. 3. It would be good to persuade President Richard Nixon to issue an executive order to release the classified documents buried in the National Archives for 75 years (by President Lyndon Johnson's executive order), along with the Kennedy autopsy materials. 4. It would be good to dismantle the Ceotria Intelligence Agency -- which President Kennedy before be was assassittated.Said he 59 ..rowwwwwwwwwwwww, S. ucul - to do --.*-1 distribute its functions elsewhere. and in the meantime "Ake it acciauntable for budgetary funds voted by Congress. It would br good to expose J. Edgar Hoover, to toll thr atttntist of the public to his supprrssien of eviennce and his failure to warn President Kenntey of the plot for as- sassinating him in LItS, and to compel Fit resignation. The till knew about the plot well nhend of time -- through Oiwald's Nov. 20 phone coll. and the Miami police's warning, at least. � What about an organizatios dealing with this sub- ject.? -- There is one. As meatinned above. a con- Siderablo o.onwot of tho new �td,..o to"".. from tho work of a group of researchers, who have interyiemed many witnesses, examined man/ documents, and studied many of the photographs. This group of researchers Is loosely coordinated by the National Committee to Investigate Assess'inations, watch has an office in Washington, D.C.. and whose c4sirman is Mernard Fensterwald, Jr. He is a hassington attorney who a few years ago was the teas of the legal staff as- sisting Senator Estes Eefauanr in his investigation into organized crime, be was also Senator Edward Long's attorney in the administrative procedures sub-cornittee of the Government Operations Cormit- tee, Tne NCT1A has been acc.nalating evidence, which is stored in a number of different places. and stands ready to cooperate mith lam enforcement agencies as well as Congress. The committee needs money. particularly for com,:-.terized correlation of the mass of evidence it rus accumulated. The name and address are The National Committee to In- vestigate Assassinations. S27 15th St. N.M.. Wash- ington. 0.C. � What about the mysterious deaths of witnesses? -- One of the researchers who is a member of the committee is Penn Jones, Jr.. Editor. Midlothian Mirror, Midlothian. Texas, who has been compiling and publishing evidence for over siz years. He maintains a list of witnesses who "knew too much" and who have died unexplained deaths. There have been over SO deaths among salt group (according to his definition of it) in the time since November 22. 1963: the chance that taat number of deaths is due to natural causes is cmch less than one out of a million millions. � Have any of the researchers been killed or ,threatened? -- No. not yet. In appraising the forces on each side of this issue, the great weight is still on the side of the American- people, who have not yet been completely "taken over". In fact the capacity of the American people to deal with the misinformation and propaganda being told them through government publicity, government state- ments. and government commrssions seems to be stead- ily improving. The most recent examples are Songmy. Pueblo, Laos. and Cambodia. Besides some branches of the Federal government such as the CIA and FBI, only some of the police departments of the country (such as Dallas. Memphis. Chicago. and Los Angeles) have so far been "taken over' (in the sense of full cooperation with the suppression of evidence about assassination plotters and other political plots). There is a good chance that these police departments can be "taken back", proviced we the people can see more clearly what is happening. There 111 hope. (14Aeography Buchanan. Thomas F / Who Killed Kennedy? / D. P. ' Putnam's Sons, New Yore. N.Y. / 1964 Cutler. R.B. / The Flight of CE 399: Evidence of Conspiracy / R. B. Cutler, Manchester. Mass. / 1969. softbound. 73 pp. ? 60 Epstein. Edward J. / ToTinst: lhe k.rren co--mde. .xinft :all the t.stablisn-.nt of truth VikSrej Pri:%%1 New York. N.Y. / 1n,, hardbound. 224 pp; Fl=de. Paris / vhe venn.dy coneki.r.rx: An cn- eorviiialtinnevi Perirt no the vim Garrison irv.sut- nation / Mereotth lork. N.V. iS6N. hardiiound. Hepburn. J4raos / Farewell a-ienina / Front1ers Put- netting Co., Vaduz (Liecti.ostein) / hard- bound. 410 pi. 56.65 Joesten, Joach,n / inswald: nr Fall Coy? / Marzani C 14.nsell Publoseers. inc.. :.sw Sorg. . / I9O4. hardbound. 170 pp. 53.65 Joesten. Joachim / was Th, Full fulixtitrn titnix Lueus.x. aRts / Marin4 / Peter 1/41.r.;.) .London. England / narcunund. /4.5 pp. $2.50 Jones. Penn. Jr. / Fnreise vy Grief 1 / The Midlo- thian Mirror. Inc.. gio:oloi:in. TeXaS / 19G6. softbound. 1C0 pp, S2.9:. Jones. Penn. jr. / Foreive Mv Crief 11 / The Mid- lothian Mirror, Inc.. Midiotwian. texas / 1667. saftbound. 192 pp, $3.00 Jones. Penn. Jr. / Fnreise Kv Grief fll / The Mid- letLian Mirror, Inc.. Kidictaion, Texas / 1So6. softbound. 66 pp. 5? Kelly. Fred C. / the iirothers / Ballantine Books. New York. N.Y. / 1S5(z. softbound.' 214 Pp. 50.35 Lane, Mark / A Citizen's 3insent / Fawcett Publica- tions. Inc.. Greenwich. Conn. / 19u?. softbound. 320 pp. $0.95 Lane. Mark / Kush to Jude,ent / Holt. Rinehrrt 4nd Winston, New York. N.Y. / 1966. hardboune. 470 pp. $5.65 Marcus. Raymond / The Bastard Mullet i Mendell Pub- lications, 1249 High Point St., Los Angelis. Calif. / 1906 Meagher. Sylvia / Accessories After the Fact; The Warren Cemmissinn, the AotOritleS. ar4 tie Renort / Hobbs-Merrill Co.. Inc., New Yore. N.Y. r7967. hardbound, 477 pp. $4.50 Meagher. Sylvia / Subject Index to the 4arren Re- port, and Rear:hp and henibits / Scarcer...! Press. Nem N.Y. / 1Sob Thompson. Josiah / Six Seconds in Dallas / bernard Geis Associates. New York. N.Y. 1?07. hard- bound. 323 pp. 50.95 Sauvage. Leo / The Oswald Affair: An Examination of the Contradictions and Omissions of the Warren � Report / World Publishing Co.. Cleacland. Ohio / l Weisberg. Harold / Whitewash -- The Report on the Warren Report / H. Wessaerg. Rowse b. Frecerick, Md. / 19u5. softbound. 224 pp. 54.95 Weisberg. Harold / Photec-aphic Whitewash -- Su- pressedKennedy Assassinatton Pictures / H. Weis- berg. Route (1. Frederick. Md. / 1V67. sofnbound. 296 pp. $4.95 Wise. David / "Secret Evidence on the Kennedy Assas- sination". in the Saturday Evening Post. April 6. 1968. pp 70 to 73 1 lie said: "16 feet, or approx- imately 25.000 pages of Warren Commission files remain closed.... A 165-page List of 5asic Source Materials gives the titles of 1555 Commission Documents of which 390 are closed or partially closed. Of the 250 totally closed. 165 are FBI reports. 50 are CIA. 13 are State Department. 11 -are Secret Service, and the rest are from a scat- tering of other agencies." A longer bibliography Is available from the Nat- ional Committee to Investigate A illations. 927 15th St. Washington. D.C. COMPUTM and AUTOMATION for May, 1970 'it,.

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