Maybe it's just me - really - but I often have a difficult time following the connections you're trying to make.
If we stipulate that Tippit was about to become the father of an illegitimate child by a Ruby-affiliated stripper who was about to become unemployed - a massively generous stipulation, I'm sure you'll agree - how in your thinking would this put Tippit in a "desperate bind" on November 22nd and how would it connect to a police car with two uniformed officers and a three-digit number toot-tooting in front of the Beckley rooming house and then driving off?
For that matter, how would it connect to Tippit stopping Oswald and negligently allowing himself to be shot? I'm really not following the logic.
Police are the perfect assassins & the perfect victims of assassination
Both circumstances can be owed up to their chosen profession .
Policemen are murdered all the time and nobody would ever question it happened for any other reason than the uniform they are wearing.
Likewise a policeman can gun down a fleeing dangerous criminal and no one would ever suspect an ulterior motive for the police doing so.
If after all he and Oswald's socializing Tippit FINALLY got out of the car because he considered Oswald a dangerous criminal why would he have not called for back up as is standard procedure?
He is in a car , Oswald on foot there was no way Oswald was going to escape anywhere.
Why did Tippit break such basic fundamentals of police protocol , walking right into the line of fire and getting himself killed , when he could have had that entire area swarming with police cars with one call.
Every action screams the fact that Tippit was trying to get Oswald in the car as quietly and with as little notice as possible.
It was no coincidence after A seasoned policeman broke every fundamental rule trying to get Oswald in a police car, getting himself killed in the process that Oswald was only hours from himself getting shot down surrounded by police in a police station.
None was more acquainted with that fact that with Oswald & Tippit dead he represented the most obvious lose end to be taken care of than Jack Ruby.
Who do you think Jack Ruby was so afraid of killing him now that he was in custody ?
Ruby knew the drill only to well .
Jack Ruby tells Earl Warren his life is in danger
Jack Ruby tells Earl Warren his life is in dangerRuby told Earl Warren that he would "come clean" if he was moved from Dallas and allowed to testify in Washington. He told Warren "my life is in danger here". He added: "I want to tell the truth, and I can't tell it here." Warren refused to have Ruby moved and so he refused to tell what he knew about the assassination of John F. Kennedy.