Mr. HOSTY. Yes; that is my recollection that we looked it [where Oswald was working] up in her telephone book to show it at 411 Elm Street, Dallas, Tex.
Are you saying the FBI"s stated full knowledge that Oswald had a custom made snipers nest directly above the President's motorcade as a fringe benefit of his daily employed presence at the school Book depository was found out by "fantasy" ?
By the way what did the FBI do when they discovered that Oswald who by their own admission was under investigation as being a Russian asset & also who they knew had a criminal conviction record for illegal firearms, and violent assault, would be viewing the presidents motorcade from his workplace on the 6th floor of the book depository where he could literally spit on the president , when the President's Secret Service Advance Team came calling wanting to know the local threats .
I'll bet the FBI could not wait to warn the Secret Service advance Team that based on the current criminal investigation of Oswald being a Russian asset , as well as his violent criminal history of assault , and illegal firearms that the motorcade should stay away from his perfect snipers nest in the book depository ?
Right ?
That is a YES or a NO by the way ?
"April 11, 1958 Court-Martial: Partly Printed Document. Two two-sided pages, 8" x 12.5", Atsugi Japan, April 11, 1958. Being the "Charge Sheet" which contains Oswald's typed information as the accused, as well as names of witnesses, information provided by commanding officers, Oswald's punishment, and other remarks. On October 27, 1957, Oswald accidentally shot himself in the left elbow with his personal .22 derringer. Possession of such a firearm was in direct violation of "a lawful general order... by having in his possession a privately-owned weapon that was not registered." Following a three-week stay at the Yokosuka Naval Hospital and various unrelated delays, Oswald's court-martial commenced on April 11, 1958, at which time Commanding Officer and Convening Authority Lt. Col. N.D. Glenn made his judgment. Oswald was demoted from private first class to private and ordered "To be confined at hard labor for 20 days, to forfeit $25.00 per month for two months and to be reduced to the grade of private... Approved and ordered executed, but the confinement at hard labor for twenty days is suspended for six months, at which time, unless the suspension is sooner vacated, the sentence to confinement at hard labor for twenty days will be remitted without further action."
June 24, 1958 Court-Martial: Partly Printed Document Signed. Two two-sided pages, 8" x 12.5", Atsugi Japan, June 24, 1958. This "Charge Sheet" contains Oswald's typed information as the accused, the names of witnesses, information provided by commanding officers, Oswald's punishment, and other remarks. Just two months after his first court-martial, Oswald was brought before a second military court on charges that he insulted and assaulted a superior officer."
I honestly have no idea what point you are trying to make.
1. An 18-year-old kid manages to shoot himself in the elbow at his locker in the barracks with a .22 Derringer that he possesses in contravention of military regulations. The discharge occurs while he is reaching into his locker for shaving cream. He is charged with "wrongful conduct" but not charged with the more serious "misconduct' because it's a minor incident.
2. The same kid, while drunk, accidentally (that was the court finding) spills a drink on a Technical Sergeant, who then shoves him, and the two end up in a minor altercation outside. He is convicted of only one of the charges against him - "using provocative words."
3. For 3+ years in the USSR and U.S., the individual's only brush with the law is for disturbing the peace in violation of a New Orleans municipal ordinance, for which he is fined $10.
4. He was not "under investigation for being a Russian asset." As a former defector with a Russian wife who openly engaged in pro-Castro activities, he was of routine interest to the FBI with no indication he was dangerous or a Russian asset.
5. At the time of the JFKA, he was working as a temporary order filler in a grungy warehouse with some 95 other people, most of whom were employees of well-known publishing companies. He did not have a "workplace on the 6th floor" - it was simply one of the floors from which he filled book orders. There was no "sniper's test" until the day of the JFKA. Every window in every building along the motorcade route was a potential sniper's nest (not to mention all the other locations from which CTers think shots were fired!).
Yet you portray him as someone the FBI should have recognized as John Wilkes Booth, Jr. The fact is, the security for the motorcade was remarkably lax and any number of other gunmen could have popped JFK from any number of other buildings (or storm drains, or picket fences, or triple overpasses, or curbside umbrellas).
Yes, in retrospect it was a massive security failure, both in terms of the motorcade and the failure to at least bring Oswald to the attention of the SS. But you are doing the sort of long-after-the-fact, ad hoc "analysis" that is the lifeblood of conspiracy thinking. The day before the JFKA, Oswald was nothing more than an oddball the SS should probably at least have known about (along with God knows how many others in proximity to the motorcade). With CT 20-20 hindsight, however, he was "obviously" the most dangerous guy in Dallas and should have been chained and shackled a week in advance.
I still don't understand what point you're making. If you think Oswald was such an obvious, known threat to the CIA and FBI that their malfeasance was even greater than the rest of us think it was - well, OK, but so what? Since you interjected this line of thought into the "patsy" thread, I assume it's your position that Oswald was innocent and the FBI not only intentionally failed to alert the SS to his presence in the TSBD but somehow conspired with the real assassins to ensure he would be arrested - is that it? Maybe others are following your point, but I'm not.