I don't think folks have fully grasped the potential significance of this exchange in Mr Buell Wesley Frazier's testimony:
Mr. BALL - On that day you did notice one article of clothing, that is, he had a jacket?
Mr. FRAZIER - Yes, sir.
Mr. BALL - What color was the jacket?
Mr. FRAZIER - It was a gray, more or less flannel, wool-looking type of jacket that I had seen him wear and that is the type of jacket he had on that morning.
Mr. BALL - Did it have a zipper on it?
Mr. FRAZIER - Yes, sir; it was one of the zipper types.
Mr. BALL - It isn't one of these two zipper jackets we have shown?
Mr. FRAZIER - No, sir.
The fact that Mr Frazier had seen this jacket on Mr Oswald before 11/22/63 means that he is not basing his memory on but a fleeting glimpse that morning.
If his recollection of the jacket Mr Oswald wore to work that morning is correct, then we have never seen (at least knowingly) that jacket..................
Friends, the claim that Mr Lovelady can be seen walking down the Elm small street in Couch is
undermined devastated by the fact that
a) Mr Lovelady appears to be still on the steps in Darnell
b) the 'Shelley' beside him in Couch is in fact Mr Danny Arce
c) the 'plaid' on his shirt is far from established given the 'plaid' on other folks in that grainy film
d) the 'shirt' itself looks too long in the tail to be the shirt Mr Lovelady wore that day
Given that Mr Oswald, at the time of the shooting, may have been wearing the
flannel, wool-looking jacket that Mr Buell Wesley Frazier puts on him that morning, but that has
never been seen since, it is quite possible that this man is in fact none other than Mr Oswald himself, following Mr Shelley, who (after his encounter with Ms Gloria Calvery out by the "corner of the park") has already gone a ways ahead down that little side road towards the railroad tracks:
If so, then those who insist that this is Mr Lovelady in Couch have fallen victim to the very switcheroo I have posited in this thread:
the LHO-resembling Mr Lovelady was prevailed upon to pretend that HE was the male employee who accompanied Mr Shelley down to the tracks shortly after the shots rang out