"Assuming"? ----What is your major malfunction? The recordings are preserved on youtube....
@ 2:05:30 the report JFK is dead [announcement came at 1:38 CST] @2:33 in the recording the report of the Oak Cliff shooting....Do the math---------
This recording starts at the announcement of JFK's death [1:38 CST]
NOTE--- 24:30 = [minutes later] the report states "Moments ago a policeman was reported shot shot down at 10th and Patton in the Oak Cliff area...."
It seems that hearts are broken that Brewer lied...get over it....move on.
The Dallas police Dictabelt recording of the radio transmissions show the dispatcher and one other policeman reporting that NBC News had reported that a Dallas police officer had been shot and killed. This brief talk took place at 1:27 to 1:28 CST, 13 to 14 minutes after the shooting. This is about 7 to 8 minutes before Oswald first showed up at the shoe store.
So, for us to conclude that the police were hearing things, we would need, at a minimum, a recording of the NBC news radio station during this time. Something that Mr. Freeman has not provided us with yet.
Now, about the two recording Mr. Freeman has provided us with:
The KBOX recording is worthless because it doesn’t start until it is officially known and announced that the President is dead. These announcements were not made by the media until 1:35 or later so this recording tells us nothing of what was broadcast between 1:15 and 1:36.
The KLIF broadcast is more useful, it starts at 11:30 CST. But was it the NBC News station? We have no information that Mr. Brewer was listening to this station. But a couple things of interest:
At 1:49:00, which corresponds to 1:19 CST, 4 minutes after the shooting of Officer Tippit, KLIF reported “And new here’s a late report from Dallas police. One secret service agent was killed in the assassin’s attempt. This was a false report, but it could cause Mr. Brewer to remember hearing about someone else being killed. This could cause some confusion in Mr. Brewer’s mind. Two weeks later he may assume he heard a report of the killing of a police officer, not of a secret service agent.
On KLIF, there is no report of a police officer being shot. However, at 1:54:19, or 1:24 CST, they said “KLIF is only accepting news from official sources, those whom we are in contact daily.” This implies they had the policy not to rely information from other sources, like NBC News. So KLIF might report the Officer Tippit shooting much later. But we don’t know if all Dallas radio stations have this policy.
I remember that many stations had a different policy. They could report flashes from other news agencies, so long as they gave them credit. So, an ABC radio station might report:
“NBC News has just reported that a Dallas police officer was shot in the Oak Cliff area”.
But KLIF had a different policy, so it did not report the officer shooting until later.
All and all, Mr. Freeman has done the minimum, to prove that no Dallas radio station reported on this shooting before 1:35 CST. He only provided the recording of two stations. One of which starts too late to be of any use on the question. Neither is, as far as I can tell, the NBC News Radio station that was being discussed on the Dictabelt tape.
It is possible that Mr. Freeman was lying, or more likely, mistaken about hearing about a police officer was shot before Oswald ducked into his foyer. He might have been listening to KLIF. But we have no information what radio station he was listening to. He might have been listening to the NBC News station, or some radio station willing to forward the news flashes of other networks.
Mr. Freeman needs to do more work to prove that is was impossible for Mr. Brewer to have heard about the shooing of Officer Tippit in the Oak Cliff area. He needs to provide us with a continuous recording of the local NBC station during the time of 1:10 to 1:40.
P.S.
David Von Pein has a recording of the New York NBC station, I assume, because it uses EST times, not CST. We need a recording of the local Dallas NBC station.