So, was Officer E. G. Sabastian correct that the death of an officer was reported by the media? We have no reason to believe he was not correct. Various local news stations did monitor the police radio frequencies. They could have learned of this shooting very early. Radio stations would broadcast news that had not yet been officially confirmed, like the shooting of a Secret Service man at Dealey Plaza, which was not an official report, or even a true report.
He was incorrect. NBC News made no such report. You can hope that he heard it somewhere and you can hope that Brewer heard it somewhere, but that doesn’t make it a fact.
We can’t insist that everything Officer E. G. Sabastian or the KBOX broadcast has to be 100% correct to conclude early media report based on the shooting of Officer Tippit. After all, many early descriptions of the shooting at Dealey Plaza said both the President and the Governor were shot and a Secret Service agent was killed. Well, based on the faulty statement about a Secret Service agent being killed, can we conclude that these reports were a totally erroneous reports, that had nothing to do with the shooting at Dealey Plaza? No way. It would be a huge coincidence that this was a totally erroneous report, and it was just by chance that it included details like the President and the Governor being shot.
Similarly, errors in the initial reports about the Officer Tippit shooting. The report was from NBC News. A detective was shot. The body was taken to Parkland hospital. None of these early errors, which are so common in early news reports, should cause us to conclude that these were just totally erroneous reports that had nothing to do with the shooting of Officer Tippit. And it was just a coincidence that the partly faulty report, of a Dallas police officer, who was a detective, being shot, matched up with the real event of a Dallas police officer, a non-detective, Officer Tippit, being shot.
Officer E. G. Sabastian mistaken statement that “NBC News reports . . .” was an error. But a very easy error to make. Because the local “NBC News” announcers also often broadcast for “ABC News”. So, if WFAA, broadcasting at that time for ABC made such an announcement, it would be an easy error to make. So, there is no reason to conclude that Officer E. G. Sabastian was not relaying to dispatch information he just got over commercial radio.
Do you think that Brewer hallucinated two IBM men?
No. I think he confused different memories from different days. The events of that Friday, and the events of some Saturday, when two employees from IBM, possibility looking at shoes, decided to hang around a bit. It is very easy to scramble memories after 33 years.
Officer E. G. Sabastian is much less likely to be totally mistaken. This was not a 33-year-old memory. This was a recorded real time statement, made just after he heard, or thought he heard, a news flash while patrolling in his squad car.
P. S.
That would imply that you know what time it was when Brewer saw the man in front of his store.
The exact times are not known. Only approximations.