I said earlier that you would continue to twist and turn the facts as much as possible to keep your own theory (which you always consider to be correct) alive. And you have just proven me to be rightae know Officer Sabastian mentioned the officer" when in fact he did not mention the officer and we know no such thing. All we have is your claim that he asked "That the officer" when in fact the transcript has a questionmark behind his callsign 75.
As I mentioned before, the person who made this transcript did a poor, and/or a rushed job. Yes, there is a question mark with the “75”, as follows:
75 75.
Dispatcher 75.
75 NBC News is reporting DOA.
Dispatcher That’s correct.
75 (?) That the officer?
Dispatcher Yes.
But immediately below that we have on the transcript:
87 (?) (Ptm. R. C. Nelson) 87.
Really, there is a question about the “87” statement being used by Officer Nelson? Who else would be identifying themselves as Officer Nelson over the radio?
The transcript leaves out questions marks when there are serious reasons why the identity of the caller seems to be in error. And puts in questions marks when there should be no doubt as to who is calling in.
You are just trying to win your argument by exhausting the people you talk to, by constantly throwing out new "possibillities", no matter how unlikely, instead of looking honestly at the available information.
The facts are simple. There was no radio broadcast about Tippit being DOA at 1.25. No such recording has ever surfaced, no reporter has ever come forward to take credit for it. It doesn't matter if something was garbled or not, because it never made it on air.
But many stations had not start recording their broadcasts until after 1:25. KBOX, for instance, did not start recording until 1:35, and within the first minute, by 1:36, reported
“We also have one Dallas detective reported dead on arrival at Parkland hospital.”
Yes. It has the usual inaccuracies of early initial reports. A detective, not an ordinary police officer was killed. DOA at Parkland when he was taken to Methodist Hospital. And probably too early for them to know whether he was DOA or not. Just like the other early errors, just such as the President being reported DOA or a Secret Service agent killed.
And for all we know, there were earlier reports. If the recording had started at 1:30 CST, we might have a 1:31 CST announcement about the death of a detective.
The claim that a broadcast about Tippit could have taken place based on "nothing more than the police radio broadcasts which the media monitored" fails simply because there were no such police radio broadcasts prior to Sabastian asking the dispatcher about the DOA reported by NBC News.
No. Before 1:27 there were reports on the death of a police officer being broadcasted over the police radio.
1:16 CST
Citizen There’s been a shooting out here.
. . .
Citizen Between Marsalis and Beckley. It’s a police officer. Somebody shot him. What – what’s . . . 404 Tenth Street
. . .
Dispatcher Attention. Signal 19 (unconscious person), police officer, 510 E. Jefferson.
1:19 CST
Citizen Pardon, from out hear on Tenth Street, 500 block. This officer just shot. I think he’s dead.
Dispatcher 10-4. We have that information. The citizen using the radio. Remain off the radio now.
By 1:19 CST, a radio station could broadcast the news about the death of a police officer, with at least as much reliable information as they thought they had when they were reporting the death of a Secret Service agent.
Your unwillingness to accept the reality that's staring you in the face makes it superfluous for anybody to confront you with the actual facts.
You should talk. “. . . no such police radio broadcasts prior to Sabastian asking the dispatcher about the DOA reported by NBC News”. Right.
If you desperately want to believe that Johnny Brewer heard a report on the radio about an officer being shot before he started following the man to the Texas Theater, then have at it.... believe it as much as you like, but don't pretend there is any evidence for it because there clearly isn't and your Sabastian quote "NBC News is reporting DOA" doesn't alter that one bit.
No. I am not desperate. You’re the one that is desperate. If it was ever proven that there was no such broadcast, which we can’t because we have the KBOX broadcast at 1:36. But as I was saying, if it was ever proven that the was no such broadcast. That officer Sabastian, or some unknown officer thought he heard such a broadcast about the death of a police officer, but was mistaken, it wouldn’t matter one bit. Mr. Brewer would just be one more witness who got his facts jumbled up:
Officer DOA at Parkland.
President Kennedy was DOA.
A Secret Service agent was killed at Dealey Plaza.
It was a Dallas detective that was killed.
Just a small subset of the false statements made by people. We have no reason to suppose that any of these false reports were lies. And we would have no reason that a false statement, made two weeks later by Mr. Brewer was a lie, when it would be so easy to jumble up in his memory when he heard what. We don’t even have any reason to think that this statement was false, let alone a lie.