Mr. BALL - What did you do when you got to the fifth floor?
Mr. JARMAN - We got out the elevator and pulled the gate down. That was in case somebody wanted to use it. Then we went to the front of the building, which is on the south side, and raised the windows.
Mr. BALL - Which windows did you raise?
Mr. JARMAN - Well, Harold raised the first window to the east side of the building, and I went to the second rear windows and raised, counting the windows, it would be the fourth one.
I seem to remember a comparison done between Hughes and Bronson images that compared windows. One of them (Bronson?) has the ambulance in the frame.
Yes, Mr Jarman claims this, but this doesn't mean we know it to be true. It could be------------like so much else with these guys--------------coached testimony or faulty memory. (They also claimed the southwest window was down after the assassination and had to be raised, whereas we know----from Ms Moorman's pre-assassination polaroid----that it was already open before the motorcade.)
The Bronson frames seem to me to show one of the windows in that southeast end pair already open. That would be the window that Mr Jarman is saying he
didn't open. If Bronson is showing what I'm seeing, why on earth would Mr Norman go to an unopened window rather than the open one beside it? For that matter---------------why would Messrs Norman and Jarman put such distance between one another?
I am suggesting that the answer to both questions may be that Mr Williams was
already at that open window------------and that Messrs Jarman & Norman's prior sighting of him up there explains their otherwise unaccountable decision to go to five
rather than six (which was where people had talked about going to beforehand----and which offered an even better vantage point).
If this is what happened, then Mr Williams (after the assassination, realizing the true sinister role of whoever had kept him off the sixth floor) asked Messrs Norman & Jarman to pretend the three had come up to the fifth floor together. They did so, offering cover for their friend for as long as they could.