So your story now is that in 1963 someone had a police "scanner" in their office as a hobby to listen to the police broadcasts?
Stop misrepresenting what I said.
And you don't believe a police motorcycle radio can be heard from 150 feet away even though Rowland indicated he could hear the broadcast down the street.
Rowland wasn't 150 feet away from the motorcycle and he most certainly wasn't on the 6th floor of a building with all, except one, windows closed.
You suggested that Rowland was on something called Elm and Main and "far away" from the TSBD. LOL. Now that you realize that was false you are still claiming a radio broadcast from a police motorcycle can't be heard in a wide open space even just 150 feet away? Why do you keep repeating the same baseless claim that it was not possible to hear the police radio on the 6th floor with the window open? Sound waves go up you know. There is no scientific prohibition on someone sitting in a building with the window open from hearing the same noise that an individual on the street is hearing. Good grief. And your ever evolving story about the radio is exactly as I stated it. You suggested that the radio referenced by Mrs. Reid in her husband's office was, for some inexplicable reason, a police radio to overhear the motorcade progress report! HA HA HA. How exactly did this office worker obtain this police radio or scanner or Magic 8 ball or whatever you are suggesting is being referenced by the term "radio," This is hilarious Bigfoot nonsense.