Alleged Assassin's Bullet Narrowly Missed Former U.S. Army General Edwin Walker in April of 1963
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- Опубликовано: 9 апр 2024
- On April 10, 1963, Former U.S. Army General Edwin Walker reported that he was the target of an assassination attempt at his home in Dallas, TX, but escaped serious injury when a bullet fired from outside hit a window frame and fragmented. After its investigation into the assassination of John F. Kennedy, the Warren Commission concluded that Walker's assailant had been Lee Harvey Oswald. As Walker was sitting at a desk in his dining room, a bullet struck the wooden frame of his dining-room window. Walker was injured in the forearm by fragments. Marina Oswald later testified that her husband had told her that he traveled by bus to General Walker's house and shot at Walker with his rifle. The very same rifle Oswald would allegedly use to assassinate President John F. Kennedy in November that year. Marina said Oswald considered Walker to be the leader of a "fascist organization." This footage from the NBC 5 Archive/The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza Collection shows police inspecting the scene at Walker's home with audio of Walker speaking to the press after nearly being killed by a bullet supposedly shot by Lee Harvey Oswald.
Oswald left a written note with Marina of what to do if he was arrested for the attempted assassination of Edwin Walker in case he was “taken prisoner.” Oswald missed due to a ricochet off the window frame he fired in to, missing Walker’s head by an inch. Marina testified that Oswald came back that night dirty and sweaty, and wanted to watch the news. Marina held on to the note that is now in the national archives.
You'll never serve as a juror....
@@TheListOf Serving as a juror has nothing to do with the JFK assassination or its investigations.
@4kfrank276 You judging Lee Oswald with no proof introduced in a court of law has EVERYTHING to do with you never being picked to sit on a jury.
Walker sure got some press exposure that way.
Was. Not. Lee.
He left a note with Marina to tell her what to do when he was arrested. The bullet ricochet off the window frame. He hid the rifle and was dirty and sweaty when he returned to Marina, and he admitted to her that he was the attempted murderer. It's called evidence.
@4kfrank276 Total rubbish! I hope you're never picked to sit on a jury! You should be ASHAMED of yourself! How embarrassing it must be to be you.
Sweetie, you can allege til the cows come home. There's not ONE shred of proof that Lee shot at anyone!
You are spouting HEARSAY, which is inadmissible in a court of LAW. Take your court of opinion and fire it straight up your WAZOO!!!
@@4kfrank276 Hearsay is inadmissible in a court of law in the USA....
@@TheListOf A written note, and someone’s testimony is not “hearsay” you need to look up the definition of hearsay.
@4kfrank276 A written note is not proof, nor was the letter EVER subjected to forensic analysis or a handwriting specialist, and it was never admitted into a court of law. Lee was NEVER charged for the attempted shooting of Walker. "Someone's testimony" in a court of LAW? NEVER HAPPENED. It's HEARSAY. LEE NEVER STOOD TRIAL.
Get your facts straight, kiddo.
No one believes you.
No solid evidence that LHO made an attempt on Gen Walker.
No solid evidence that Lee Harvey Oswald shot at anybody.
He left a note with Marina to tell her what to do when he was arrested. The bullet ricochet off the window frame. He hid the rifle and was dirty and sweaty when he returned to Marina, and he admitted to her that he was the attempted murderer. It's called evidence.
@@4kfrank276 There was nothing in the note explaining why anyone would be arrested. FBI fingerprint expert Sebastian Latona found 7 prints on the note, not one of which belonged to either Lee or Marina.
As for Marina's credibility -
In 1978, the HSCA collected all of her statements to the FBI, SS, WC and HSCA and created a report entitled "Marina Oswald Porter's Statements of a Contradictory Nature". The list ran for 29 pages.
One of the Commission’s attorneys, Norman Redlich, wrote in a memo to J. Lee Rankin that “neither you nor I have any desire to smear the reputation of any individual. We cannot ignore, however, that Marina Oswald has repeatedly lied to the [Secret] Service, the FBI, and this Commission on matters which are of vital concern to the people of this country and the world.”
@@81overon The not was written by Lee Oswald through writing analysis. It was found with Marina's possessions after the JFK assassination, and she admitted that Oswald wrote the note. People lie all the time, especially when she knew her husband was the attempted assassin of Edwin Walker without telling the authorities including Ruth Paine whose house she lived in. THE HSCA was a highly unorganized investigation, and the acoustic investigations found their findings of a second shooter to be invalid.
@@4kfrank276 You're copying and pasting the same comment, 🧌. Try to be less lazy and more creative in your BS!
Nonsense
If Oswald was all sweaty and worked up after this, why was he cool, calm, and collected in the TSBD right after Kennedy shooting.
Must be he wasn't a shooter.
Because the night he shot at walker was unusually hot and humid - according to Marina, Lee said he walked the entire way (or at least escaped the scene on foot, and buried the gun somewhere). Do you see how that's different than a quick jog down 4 flights of stairs that even the old guys on the WC could easily do in 75 seconds without being winded.
@@billydgb "According to Marina..."
HEARSAY IS NOT ADMISSABLE IN A COURT OF LAW.
@@TheListOf Marina testified to both the WC and the HSCA regarding the Walker shooting. And PS, testimony from a spouse is not hearsay, it's actually considered very credible. Maybe you should ask yourself why you guys WANT it to be a conspiracy... there's tons of evidence to prove it wasn't.
@@TheListOf Marina's testimony to the WC and the HSCA regarding the Walker shooting was not considered hearsay, she knew Lee better than anybody on the planet at that time... the note was heavy evidence to prove she was telling the truth, as well as the photos Lee had taken of Walkers house. So NO, her testimony was not hearsay, it was highly credible.
@@billydgb There was nothing in the note explaining why anyone would be arrested. FBI fingerprint expert Sebastian Latona found 7 prints on the note, not one of which belonged to either Lee or Marina.
As for Marina's credibility -
In 1978, the HSCA collected all of her statements to the FBI, SS, WC and HSCA and created a report entitled "Marina Oswald Porter's Statements of a Contradictory Nature". The list ran for 29 pages.
One of the Commission’s attorneys, Norman Redlich, wrote in a memo to J. Lee Rankin that “neither you nor I have any desire to smear the reputation of any individual. We cannot ignore, however, that Marina Oswald has repeatedly lied to the [Secret] Service, the FBI, and this Commission on matters which are of vital concern to the people of this country and the world.”
Bullshit!