But within three minutes of the assassination, he did realize that, because he did leave the building,
As did a number of other employees, calling it the day.
Within three minutes of the assassination? No, that's false. Nobody except Oswald was inside the building at the time of the shooting and left to go home within three minutes of the assassination. Why did Oswald do that? How did he even know there was an assassination attempt, if he was sitting in the lunch room eating his lunch at the time of the shooting? How did he know the shots came from the Depository within three minutes of the shooting, and that there'd be no more work that day?
...he did take a bus and a cab in an effort to get back to the rooming house,
In an effort? Yes, there were a traffic jam beacause of the assassination so he took a cab after offering it to a lady who seemed to be in a hurry.
Which doesn't mean he wasn't in a hurry too.
He took the bus. And then a cab. He apparently was about to surrender the cab to a woman, and did offer it to her, but the cab driver [William Whaley] said another one would be along. (Oswald might have figured it was easier to surrender the cab and catch the next one than wait while the cab driver called her another cab as she requested). Why his urgency to get home by taking a cab? Why the urgency to leave the bus - how did he know the traffic jam wouldn't clear momentarily -- remember, he left without witnessing the assassination within three minutes of the shooting). And why did he take the cab PAST his rooming house by a few blocks?
== QUOTE ==
Mr. WHALEY. Yes, sir. The front seat. And about that time an old lady, I think she was an old lady, I don't remember nothing but her sticking her head down past him in the door and said, "Driver, will you call me a cab down here?"
She had seen him get this cab and she wanted one, too, and he opened the door a little bit like he was going to get out and he said, "I will let you have this one," and she says, "No, the driver can call me one."
So, I didn't call one because I knew before I could call one would come around the block and keep it pretty well covered.
== UNQUOTE ==
Not so nice weareing your dirty working clothes when not working, no.
That's a major concession you don't even realize the import of. I'll be returning to this point in the future to remind you that you conceded he changed his clothes at the rooming house.
Oswald admitted it in custody. He *knew* the police knew he had the gun pulled from his hand in the theatre, so he wasn't stupid enough to try to lie about that. (Unlike conspiracy theorists, who don't know what Oswald admitted in custody and what he denied). He did lie about where he bought it, saying he bought it in Houston. But he didn't.
and then, within 15 minutes of leaving the rooming house, shoot an officer dead
The witnesses others here are quoting back to you in detail as well as the hard evidence of the shells found at the scene matching his revolver to the exclusion of all other weapons of the world.
and then attempt to shoot another about 35 minutes after that?
There are at least three different stories of how this incident developed, which one do you like the most?
What three different stories? Do you mean witnesses recalled the incident differently and you're pretending those differences are somehow meaningful? Start at the top, tell us which three 'stories' you're referencing, and which one you favor, and why.
Why did Oswald repetingly yell: ”I’m not resisting arrest! I’m not resisting arrest!”, while trying to kill the arresting officer?
That's a false claim from the website you're cribbing from. He only started complaining about police brutality and claiming he was not resisting arrest AFTER he was handcuffed.
== QUOTE ==
Mr. BREWER - And somebody hollered "He's got a gun."
And there were a couple of officers fighting him and taking the gun away from him, and they took the gun from him, and he was fighting, still fighting, and I heard some of the police holier, I don't know who it was, "Kill the President, will you." And I saw fists flying and they were hitting him.
Mr. BELIN - Was he fighting back at that time?
Mr. BREWER - Yes; he was fighting back.
Mr. BELIN - Then what happened?
Mr. BREWER - Well, just in a short time they put the handcuffs on him and they took him out.
Mr. BELIN - Did you see police officers hit him after they got the handcuffs on him?
Mr. BREWER - No; I didn't see them.
Mr. BELIN - Did you see any police officer hit Oswald after Oswald stopped fighting?
Mr. BREWER - No.
Mr. BELIN - Did you hear Oswald say anything?
Mr. BREWER - As they were taking him out, he stopped and turned around and hollered, "I am not resisting arrest," about twice. "I am not resisting arrest." And they took him on outside.
== UNQUOTE ==
No? It seems to be your theory? Problems with your short time memory? Seven seconds and it’s all gone?
I'm pointing out the problems with your argument that Oswald left the building within three minutes of the shooting without witnessing the assassination. These points are either
1. A logical extension of your arguments or
2. Based on the known evidence.
Now, let's remind you of your argument about the rifle: It wasn't his.
Not according to the evidence/lack of evidence, no, it wasn’t his rifle.
Right, that's your argument. That's what I said. So why does he leave the building in a hurry? He has no knowledge of an assassination attempt. He was quietly eating lunch on the first floor according to his statements in custody, right?
He didn't order it or possess it, and the paper trail and the backyard photos are fakes.
The rifle paper trail is fake. The backyard photo could be fake or it could have been taken in the belief it served the purpose in creating his legend as a commie rebel in order to infiltrate commie rebels.
Regardless of the details you're quibbling over, what you're claiming is the paper trail and the photographs don't establish he ordered, paid for, and possessed the rifle. So when a rifle was left behind on the sixth floor (whether a Mauser as you were arguing a month ago, or the C2766 rifle Kleins paperwork indicates was shipped to PO Box 2915) Oswald couldn't have known about that at 12:33 on 11/22/63. Right? So why'd he leave the building so quickly to go to the rooming house and collect his revolver? It wasn't because he thought there'd be no more work, because he couldn't even know about the assassination attempt from the lunchroom.
Also, he didn't bring his rifle to the building that morning.
Correct:
1. He didn’t own a rifle to bring.
2. The Fraizer siblings couldn’t identify the taped paper bag allegedly used to carry the rifle.
3. The Frazier siblings described Oswald carrying the bag in ways that excluded it from containing a broken down Carcano = too short.
4. The Frazier siblings described a much shorter bag with no tape on it looking like a common grocery bag, way shorter than the alleged bag who was allegedly used to bring the murder weapon to the TSBD.
5. The alleged rifle bag had no traces of weapon oil in it, in spite of the Carcano being well oiled when allegedly found on the sixth floor.
6. No one knows who actually found the bag on the floor in the ’snipers nest’.
7. No photograph of the bag on said floor before allegedly picking it up.
8. Shall I continue?
No need. Most of the above is wrong in substance (It was J.C.Day's assistant who picked up the bag and moved it before photographing it. Proper crime scene rules are not to replace the evidence into the scene once it's been moved). But that's not the issue here I'm trying to get you to address.
It's quite simple: Why did Oswald leave the Depository in such a hurry with such a need to get to the rooming house to get his revolver, if he had no knowledge that his rifle was used to kill JFK? Really, he couldn't know more than Roy Truly or Billy Lovelady or Richard Caster or any other employee of the building. None of them left to go home within three minutes of the shooting and get a revolver. Only Oswald. What did he know at 12:33 that none of the other employees knew?
So when the rifle shots rang out, he couldn't be thinking, "Oh no, I just gave my rifle to that guy to borrow for the weekend!" (or anything of that nature).
Well, since he didn’t own a rifle, why should he think that?
And if your argument is true that he didn't own a rifle and didn't commit the shooting, you should be able to explain why he left work within three minutes of the shooting, not to return. So explain why. It's only your pretense that other employees did the same thing as quickly. You won't be able to name one other employee who did what you concede Oswald did.
So, just tell us: What and how did he realize "he was about to be used as a patsy" within three minutes of the assassination that caused him to leave the building in such a hurry, he did take a bus and a cab to get back to his rooming house and he did grab his revolver and shoot a cop, didn't he?
See above. He probably realized that he was set up as a patsy when the reporters started to yell questions to him about his whereabouts during the assassination of JFK. As he himself explain in the short press conferens he gave.
Nothing above explains that. And if he only realized he was a patsy *AFTER* his arrest, as you're explaining now, that doesn't explain why he left the building within three minutes (not knowing about his rifle being planted, no knowing there was a shooting, not knowing the President was dead) and went back to his rooming house to get his revolver.
The reason for being arrested was that he was a suspect in the killing of police officer J.D. Tippit.
We know that. That doesn't explain why he left the building so quickly.
What was his first clue "he was about to be used as a patsy", do you think?
Doesn't help you. You're claiming he realized he was a patsy after his arrest. He needs to realize it within the first three minutes of the shooting. You just admitted your argument makes no sense, because you have Oswald acting at 12:33pm on knowledge you claim he didn't obtain until about 2:10 pm.
Or is that another one for the "more on this later" pile?
I’m doing my best responding to the barrage of insults and claims coming from you and your fellow members of the Mighty Church of the Lone Nut. My very best.
And as others have told you, you're failing miserably.
Evidence is evidence. Faith is faith. I have repeatedly shown you the evidence (including some in this very post) and you have repeatedly ignored it, and repeated your false claims. The only 'church' here is the one that you are repeating the mythology of in every post you make.
Your arguments are at cross purposes.
Explained in detail above. In summary, by arguing Oswald didn't bring his weapon to the building, you remove all reason for him to leave as quickly as he did, so you're unable to explain why he left at 12:33pm.
But you're used to that, aren't you?
No. Should I be? Explain.
You should be. You advance arguments that conflict with each other plenty of times. All your arguments are to one end, to try to make Oswald appear innocent. But to do that you fling whatever you can against a wall, hoping some of it will stick.
Hank