At one point officer Liar states this...
BOGGS- Let me ask you a question. How far away, approximately, were these people who were running and falling and so forth from the entrance to the Building?
Mr. BAKER - Well, now, let me say this. From this position here.
Mr. BELIN - That is position "B" on Exhibit 361?
Mr. BAKER - There were people running all over this here.
Mr. BELIN - And you are pointing to the street and the parkway all in front of the School Building?
Mr. BAKER - Yes. You see, it looked to me like there were maybe 500 or 600 people in this area here.
Wow. So super cop hears gun shots over the noise of his Harley, with his helmet on, clear enough to know what building they came from. Then revvs his motorcycle like s super hero and parks 10 feet from the light, 45 to 50 feet from the door, stands around looking at all the people by the underpass for a few minutes, then makes his way through 500 to 600 people into the building, where he & Mr. Truly talk for a minute, then wait for the elevator. And it when it doesn't come, they go up the stairs headed for the roof, but make a stop on the 2nd floor to look around, where he spots Oswald.
Then he hollers at Oswald, who calmly walks back to officer super liar, just 2 minutes after shooting the president from the 6th floor.
I would be embarrassed for believing that nonsense...and the people who do believe it, should be.
Even the Warren Commission ruled out Oswald as the assassin.
In an Executive Session on December 16, 1963, more than two months before any witness testimony was taken, members of the Warren Commission discussed President Kennedy having been shot from the front.
Warren Commission member Gerald Ford stated, “But that person must have taken the shot over here some place.”
John McCloy, in referring to President Kennedy being shot from the sixth-floor window of the TSBD, responded to Ford: “Still I don’t see how he could have been hit in the front from here.” Hale Boggs then stated, “That’s the big question, yes.”
McCloy then stated, “I inquired about this and they said that nobody was permitted on the overpass.”
After McCloy wondered how President Kennedy “could have been hit in the front from here,” and after McCloy mentioned the “overpass” that was in front of President Kennedy, McCloy made a statement about the sixth-floor window from which Oswald allegedly fired, and it is clear that McCloy knew that President Kennedy was shot from the front.
McCloy stated, “I think we ought to take a look at the grounds and somebody ought to do it. And get the picture of this angle to see if it is humanly possible for him to have been hit in the front from a shot fired from that window.”
If it had been a clear case of President Kennedy being shot from behind, there would have been no reason for McCloy to refer to the sixth-floor window and ask “if it is humanly possible for him to have been hit in the front from a shot fired from that window,” and he would have no reason to say, “I don’t see how he could have been hit in the front from here.”
If it had been a clear case of President Kennedy being shot from behind, McCloy would have no reason to bring up “the overpass” that was in front of President Kennedy when he was assassinated.
Warren Commission member Hale Boggs was adamant that “the big question” was “how he could have been hit in the front from here.”
Contrary to what was in the final report of the Warren Commission, the Executive Session on December 16, 1963, shows that Commission members knew with absolute certainty that President Kennedy was shot from the front.