I've only made it to pg 120 of 1000+ pages, but Armstrong offers the following about Marguerite's best friend's statement:
NOTE: The "beautiful woman with black hair" who "dressed beautifully" was certainly not the older, dumpy, heavy-set, shabbily dressed "Marguerite Oswald" imposter who was photographed in the living room of 126 Exchange in February 1954.
Following the assassination Myrtle and Julian Evans saw this woman on television. When deposed on April 7, 1964 by Warren Commission Attorney Albert Jenner, Myrtle Evans said, "When I saw her on Tv, after all of this happened, she looked so old and haggard, and I said that couldn't be Margie. Julian told the Commission, "When we saw her on television just recently, after all this happened, she looked awful. There s no other way to describe it, the change that has come over her. You wouldn't have recognized her if they hadn't told you who she was; she looked that different. Where her hair used to be black, now it's entirely gray, and she really looks old ..... shes the same age as my wife (57), but she looks about 70 now. "The Commission, understandably, did not ask either Myrtle or Julian to identify the 1954 photograph of the short, dumpy, heavy-set "Marguerite Oswald" as their friend of 25 years.
Neither Julian nor Myrtle, who had known the real Marguerite Oswald since 1935, recognized the heavy-set, shabbily-dressed woman they saw on television. They didn't realize this woman was not their friend who lived next door in New Orleans only 8 years earlier. The woman they saw on television was the "caretaker/mother" of Harvey Oswaldthe same old, dumpy, heavy-set woman who was photographed sitting in the chair of her living room at 126 Exchange Place in 1954. By 1963 this woman s appearance had changed little-she still had grey hair, still looked old, and was still dowdy and plump.
Lee's contemporaneous best friend said roughly the same:
On April 7, 1964, Ed Voebel was deposed by Warren Commission attorney Albert Jenner who asked, "Did you meet his mother?" Voebel said, "I think I met her one time, and for some reason I had a picture in my mind which was different from when I saw her in the paper after all of this happened. I didn't recognize her. She was a lot thinner. and her hair wasn't as gray. as I recall it. when I met her. Of course, this was about 8 years ago, but I can remember she had a black dress on, and she was sitting down smoking a cigarette."
That still leaves the family not speaking up. Armstrong claims Robert was a part of the cover up, but Pic and the Murrets? I will continue reading...