Dr. Ronald Jones was the chief surgery resident in Parkland Memorial Hospital’s emergency room on November 22, 1963.
He was among the team of doctors that worked on the resuscitation of President Kennedy in Trauma Room One. Less than 48 hours later, he was part of the surgical team that treated Lee Harvey Oswald.
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About 6 months after JFK’s assassination, junior counsel, Arlen Specter, representing the Warren Commission, took Dr. Jones aside in the hallway at Parkland Hospital, after a meeting that included discussion about the supposed exit wound being an entrance wound, and told him:
"We have people who will testify that they saw him [JFK] shot from the overpass. We do not believe they are credible witnesses... and I don’t want you saying anything about it."
28:40
Interesting find. Yet another one of those strange events that one would never expect in a normal and correct murder investigation. A prosecutor (what Specter clearly was) telling a witness not to speak about a particual aspect of the case.
It brings to mind that Tomlinson, who found the bullet at Parkland, also claimed to have received a call telling him to stay silent.
And then there was the pre-testimony discussion between Specter and FBI agents Sibert and O'Neill, who were present at the autopsy and wrote a report about it. After that discussion Specter suddenly decided that their testimony before the WC was no longer needed.
And this is supposed to be a simple case where a lone nut shot the President. Yeah, right!