November 24, 1963 - Interviews with Lee Harvey Oswald's Beauregard Junior High School Classmates
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- Опубликовано: 2 окт 2022
- Interviews with Lee Harvey Oswald's Beauregard Junior High School Classmates in New Orleans, Louisiana.
(The assassination of President John F. Kennedy)
Only two days after 11/22/63... they must have acted very fast in finding his old classmates, interviewing and broadcasting the story
You have no idea ....
Amazing how fast everyone was in a studio for interviews after by media’s....
Amazing how media’s lied to protect Abraham zapruder.
I loved his interview as he admits to shooting jfk and not filming jfk ..
To media’s/ zapruder is a hero ...
So they protect real to reel ...
@@elizajayne2888 Live was so dangerous in early 1960s. 😬😬😬
Great Point !!!! This was a Pre fabrication to the fullest extent !!
They had his number for years !!!
Makes you wonder
@@kevinharris5737 Marina Oswald turned 81 years old last July.
You are under the mistaken impression that no one other than Lee Harvey Oswald left the Texas School Book Depository at the time of President Kennedy’s assassination. The following persons who also worked at TSBD left the building without notifying building supervisor Roy Truly:
Danny Arce, 18, left at 1:00 pm, accompanied by the police, to go to City Hall.
Carolyn Arnold, 20, left at 12:25 pm and did not return.
Virgie Rachley, 18, left at 11:45 am and returned at 12:40 pm but was denied entry.
Jack Carson, 56, president of TSBD, left at 12:10 pm and did not return.
Betty Drago, 27, left at 12:20 pm but found the door locked when she returned. She stayed outside TSBD until 2:30 pm before going home.
Buell Wesley Frazier, 19, famously gave Oswald a lift to work that day. He left TSBD between 1:00 and 2:00 pm, about the same time Truly claims he made his roll call.
Charles Givens, 38, returned to TSBD after the shooting but was refused entry by a Dallas policeman. An APB was put out for him, and he was later interviewed at City Hall by Captain Will Fritz.
Truly was aware of Given’s absence, having seen him prior to the assassination. Truly also saw Oswald prior to his encounter with him in the second-floor lunchroom.
Using that logic, Oswald should have been exonerated as well.
Gloria Holt, 18, left at 12:10 pm and did not return.
Stella Jacob, 20, left at noon and did not return.
Judy Johnson, 20, was standing outside TSBD when the shooting began.
She remained in the area until 2:00 pm then went home.
Dolores Kounas, 32, left at 12:15 pm and stayed outside until 3:00 pm.
Sharon Nelson, 19, left at 12:20 pm and never returned. She lived at 409 East 9th Street, near the site where Officer J.D. Tippit was gunned down.
Roberta Parker, 55, left at a time unknown, and said she wasn’t allowed back in until 3:30 pm.
Bonnie Richey, 20, left the building at 12:20 pm and never returned.
Lloyd Viles, 41, left at 12:15 pm and returned at 2:55 pm.
Vida Whatley, 45, left at 12:15 pm to go shopping. She tried to re-enter TSBD at 1:00 pm but was denied entry by the police. She went home.
Bonnie Ray Williams, 20, accompanied Arce to the police station at 1:00 pm.
Yes it was Roberta, age 55 who was the killer! I always suspected it. I don't know how to adequately convey how you conspiracy clowns have enriched my life with your entertainment value.
so they left before the shooting making your point meaningless? cool beans
so what? they didn't shoot the President
Lee Harvey Oswald is my prophetic duo😁😁
much thx !
Oo! You’ve gotta watch the quiet ones! Trial by television. One day, Lee Oswald will be vindicated as totally innocent of this horrendous crime.
like hell. Get a little bit informed. lol
@Peter fraser here is a little info. You are a paid government troll spreading disinformation to cover for the government's darkest secret
@@alrifr5786 And that is a stupid and bizarre idea you came up with; it doesn't make the tiniest bit of sense - not unlike the weirdo theories you must have.
@@peterfraser9070 LOL....yeah crazy. There are about 4 or 5 of you who have for years trolled around RUclips and attempt to discredit anyone who dares question the official government cover-up of their murder of JFK. You are all experts at your disinformation campaign and say the exact same crap. You are a butt boy for government treason.
@@alrifr5786 Sad to think there have only been 4 or 5 rational people who care about what really happened and don't treat it as a game.
I would’ve dedicated my entire life to figuring out how to talk the middle girl into marrying me, thus leaving me no time to get into any other trouble. Holy smokes.
How old are you dude, damn. Gross
1:55 xD
Jesus christ! He was into art and civics so this makes him a bad guy.
Hey, I read he wore the wrong kind of jeans and kids laughed at him....what more proof do you need????
Duh, I think the part about being a murderer is what did it...
Not Os ...
Not Oz ...
Az .... Abraham zapruder shooting jfk ...
in your fantasies
First shot was too high ...
Second shot was too low ...
Third shot was just perfect ...
Three shots from the knoll shooter...
Because of Judy garland...
Nobody shot from the knoll. Get a clue.
"First shot was too high ...
Second shot was too low ...
Third shot was just perfect ..." It was what CIA assets call the "Goldilocks shot".
Are you saying Judy Garland was in on this? I sure hope not, but it's possible, I guess. The poor thing was all hopped up on pills.
Not Judy Garland.
The Sam Giancana faction, maybe because of Marilyn, but the CIA did it for self-preservation, because JFK wanted to shut them down.
They were very angry over the Cuba failures, & they wanted a major war in Vietnam, while JFK did not.
The mob in general, felt they had been betrayed, after putting JFK in the WH, that RFK became a union buster as A.G.
Also, the mob, like the CIA, were still furious over losing Cuba..
Former CIA chief Allen Dulles probably oversaw it all.
JFK had fired Dulles, & he wanted to get even.
Bush Sr was probably involved.
He was CIA & was in Dallas that day, under an assumed name.
@@juditharnett3356 No, don't poo poo the Judy Garland angle; she may have had her issues, but Judy Garland could do anything Judy Garland put her mind to.