The sequence of cars in JFKs motorcade were:
- Advance car
- Pilot car
- Lead car
- JFKs limousine
The advance car was driven by Captain Lawrence but this car was not authorized to be part of the motorcade:
Captain LAWRENCE: I was in uniform, but I was driving a plain car which I drive. When the Presidential plane arrived and President Kennedy got off of the plane, I saw that there was going to be a brief ceremony there, and I knew that Chief Lumpkin was going to---I had been told was going to be ahead of this motorcade I got in my car and tried to be a few blocks ahead of him to make sure that everybody was on their assignments, and, of course, the crowd, the huge crowd en route surprised me, especially in the residential area, that all the people had turned out to see the President. Although I was not given this assignment--I proceeded on this route, and I followed it on down to the Trade Mart.
Not only this, but Captain Lawrence who was supposed to be off on the Saturday an Sunday that weekend, begins to follow LHO around in plain clothes:
Captain LAWRENCE: I was scheduled to be off on Saturday and Sunday. These were my days off. On Saturday at approximately 10 a.m., I came down in civilian clothes and I observed a large crowd of people around the county courthouse and I had knowledge from what I had heard on television and I had seen on television and heard on the radio that charges had already been filed against Lee Harvey Oswald.
Captain Lawrence again follows LHO on the Sunday morning:
Captain LAWRENCE: So on Sunday morning I arrived down there and I'm going to guess at the time as approximately 8 a.m. I first went by the office and I picked up some police reserves in my car and took about four of them down there with me, and then I had some motorcycle officers that were not already stationed--upstairs on the third floor--and I had them meet me down there too.
If there was more than one shooter in Dealey Plaza, the arrival of an unauthorized car there just minutes before JFK was to arrive is something i would have thought should have been more thoroughly investigated. Captain Lawrence is not the only mystery police officer driving around that day when you also consider the honking car outside LHOs rooming house at 1pm.
Sorry, I cannot understand just about any of these claims. What is the point here?
According to his and other testimonies, Perdue Lawrence was a captain in the DPD and was the man designated to be in charge of assigning officers and traffic control for the president's motorcade. He was questioned extensively by the WC about the protection provided, how he got the assignment, what he did, and how it was designed/layed out (by him).
Not only was he not in an "unauthorized car" his job was to make sure that the route was free and protected. I don't know how a car "several blocks" ahead of the motorcade - and not "in" the motorcade - would be involved in a shooting. He's not even in Dealey Plaza at the time of the assassination.
As to "following Oswald". He went to the station with other officers to provide protection/security. What evidence is there that he was "following" hm?
He testified to this:
Mr. GRIFFIN. From whom did you receive your instructions in connection with the duties that you were to carry out?
Captain LAWRENCE. My immediate superior was Deputy Chief R. H. Lunday, and I received my instructions from Chief Lunday and Asst. Chief Batchelor; both of them.
Mr. GRIFFIN. When were you first told that you were to be in charge of this traffic control?
Captain LAWRENCE. The first day was on a Tuesday--November 19.
Mr. GRIFFIN. And who told you at that time?
Captain LAWRENCE. Chief Batchelor.
Mr. GRIFFIN. And what did Chief Batchelor tell you at that time that your responsibilities would be?
Captain LAWRENCE. He told me he wanted me to go over this route and to start working with the assignments of men to the intersections on the motorcade route, and he said that he had gone over this route and handed me a list of intersections that he wanted covered and the amount of men he wanted on each intersection and the reason he wanted more than one or two at certain intersections was because of the turning movements of the motorcade, but he also wanted assignments made to certain overpasses and told me the number of men that he would like to have stationed on the overpasses.
His entire testimony is here:
http://mcadams.posc.mu.edu/russ/testimony/lawrence.htm