Amazing... You go from (1) "I think there was such a broadcast." to (3) speculating about what "some station news director at the local NBC News station, at WFAA" possibly heard and did, to concluding it did actually happen and declaring a new hero.... all in one post and all without a shred of evidence! WOW
Too bad there is no record whatsoever of any radio broadcast that Brewer could have heard at the time he said he heard it. Had there been one it would have surfaced by now.... but it didn't!
Amazing I changed my mind with new information? Not at all. I do that all the time. It’s only certain people who are not affected by the facts, who are not affected by new information, but just keep believing in what they believe. But I’m not one of them. Before learning of what Officer E. G. Sabastian was saying at 1:28 pm, yes, I thought there might or might not have been such a broadcast. But now I think there definitely was and that someone must have decided to put this on the air.
Would such a tape have surfaced by now? No, it wouldn’t. Not if it had been erased, as usually happens to recordings of radio broadcasts. Which generally get recorded over by a future broadcast. It’s gone. Other stations saved at least some of their broadcast but lost part of it.
By your logic, the local NBC News station on 820 AM didn’t make any broadcast that day. Because if it did, a recording of it would have surfaced by now. It did make a broadcast that day and it almost certainly reported before 1:28 pm that a policeman had been shot. We know this because if it didn’t happen, Officer E. G. Sabastian would not have been talking about such an NBC news report at 1:28 pm.
Of the various recordings that have survived:
NBC’s New York TV broadcast didn’t start to record until 3 minutes and 53 seconds after the first news flash, so they started recording audio until 12:45 CST, and video by 12:51 CST.
NBC’s New York Radio starts recording, after 1:00 EST, it is naturally giving us east coast times. This would be after 12:00 noon CST. By 10:33 into this recording, the first bulletin came in, so it must have started recording by 12:35 am, roughly. So, the recording did not start recording a 12:00 noon but more like 12:25 pm or a little later.
A local pop music station LIF does have a pretty complete record from 11:30 am CST to 2:47 pm CST.
Another local pop music station KBOX’s recording didn’t start until they announced that it was now official, President Kennedy is dead. Clearly this recording missed the first hour or more and we don’t have any recording before 1:40, or 1:30.
A local ABC News station records, 570 AM starts recording at 7:00 am CST, but it is clear that there are big gaps, because at 2:55:30 minutes, it announces the time as 11:54 and by 2:55:50, it makes the first announcement about the Dealey Plaza shooting. So, the ABC recording has big gaps in it, at least until 12:35 CST.
All in all, the recordings of the radio broadcasts were a hit or miss affair. Some recordings were saved, some were lost. It appears that some stations saved some tapes but lost others, because the recordings don’t start until an hour after the shooting at Dealey Plaza. It took awhile for people to start realizing that they need to save these tapes and some were lost, and not just at the local NBC radio station.
If a witness recalls a radio report occurring roughly around 1:28 pm, but first makes a statement about this two weeks later, he might be confused. But if a witness recalls a media report occurring roughly around 1:28 pm, and talks about it immediately, he can’t be confused. I can believe Johnny Brewer got confused. But Officer E. G. Sabastian? No way. There was a radio announcement of a policeman’s shooting before 1:30 pm by the local NBC News station. Question 1:
What if we had a recording of Mr. Brewer’s voice at 1:28 pm saying that he just heard over the radio that a police officer was shot. Would there still be a debate over whether it was possible that he was mistaken on this question? The only reason there has been a debate on this is because Mr. Brewer did not make an immediate statement on this but instead his first preserved statement came two weeks later. It is reasonable to question a 2-week-old memory. But not an immediate memory, of hearing an NBC broadcast that had not occurred yet.
Question 2:
Why isn’t a recording by Officer E. G. Sabastian considered proof that such an early radio announcement was made?