Dale Myers, the Warren Commission of J.D. Tippit

3 days ago
63

More agreeable than other shills, at least, and clear story, although he framed it in a misleading way and was selective about which facts he brought up and lied about others. I overlaid a map when he goes into the details and the intro is quick and to the point, so that should help. The reason not many researchers dig into Tippit is they can tell right away it's an absolute BS of a story.
The witness in the intro, Jack Tatum, is discussed later in the interview. One interesting thing is he calls the jacket white, when almost every other Tippit witness said Oswald wore a dark jacket. But Myers doesn't like him, so maybe he's a good witness. One of the benefits of an interview like this is you learn what witnesses are compromised if Myers likes them. Most Tippit witnesses saw a larger, older man with bushy not receding hair that wasn't brown. That wasn't Oswald!
Full Episode Out Of The Blank #1127-
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e0Hzc6JDObs
TIMELINE from Grok-
### Chronology of Lee Harvey Oswald's Movements After the JFK Assassination#####
The official chronology is based on the Warren Commission's investigation, which relied on eyewitness testimonies, physical evidence, and timed reconstructions. President Kennedy was shot at approximately 12:30 p.m. CST on November 22, 1963, in Dealey Plaza, Dallas, Texas. Below is a detailed timeline of Oswald's movements starting immediately after the shots were fired, focusing on times and places. All times are approximate and in CST.
| Time | Place | Description of Movement/Activity |
|------|-------|--------------------------|
| 12:30–12:31 p.m. | Texas School Book Depository (TSBD), 411 Elm Street, Dallas (sixth floor to second floor) | Oswald descends from the sixth-floor southeast corner window (where shots were fired) via the rear stairway to the second-floor lunchroom. He hides the rifle among boxes on the sixth floor before descending. |
| 12:31–12:32 p.m. | TSBD, second-floor lunchroom | Oswald is encountered by Dallas Police Officer Marrion L. Baker and TSBD superintendent Roy Truly. He appears calm and not out of breath. Truly identifies him as an employee, and they let him go. |
| 12:32 p.m. | TSBD, second-floor clerical office | Oswald walks through the office toward the front stairway, carrying a Coca-Cola bottle. Clerical supervisor Mrs. R. A. Reid informs him the President has been shot; he mumbles a response. |
| 12:33 p.m. | TSBD front entrance, exiting to Elm Street | Oswald exits the building via the front door and walks east on Elm Street for about seven blocks to the corner of Elm and Murphy Streets. |
| 12:33–12:40 p.m. | Elm Street bus route, Dallas (boarding at Elm and Murphy) | Oswald boards a westbound Marsalis bus amid heavy traffic caused by the assassination. He rides briefly, sitting halfway to the rear. |
| 12:44 p.m. | Lamar and Elm Streets, Dallas | Oswald exits the bus and walks south to the Greyhound Bus Station at Lamar and Jackson Streets. |
| 12:47–12:48 p.m. | Greyhound Bus Station, Lamar and Jackson Streets, Dallas | Oswald enters a taxicab driven by William Whaley and requests a ride to 500 North Beckley Avenue in the Oak Cliff area. |
| 12:54 p.m. | Near 1026 North Beckley Avenue (Oak Cliff), Dallas | Oswald is dropped off by the taxi about half a block from his rooming house. He walks to the house. |
| 1:00 p.m. | Rooming house at 1026 North Beckley Avenue, Dallas | Oswald enters his rented room, stays for 3–4 minutes (changing clothes and arming himself with a revolver), and leaves while zipping up a light-colored jacket. |
| Shortly after 1:00 p.m. | From 1026 North Beckley Avenue toward East 10th Street and Patton Avenue, Dallas | Oswald walks briskly southeast for about 0.9 miles. |
| 1:15–1:16 p.m. | East 10th Street and Patton Avenue, Dallas | Oswald encounters and fatally shoots Dallas Police Officer J. D. Tippit with a .38 caliber revolver after Tippit stops him (matching the suspect description broadcast by police). |
| 1:16–1:22 p.m. | From East 10th Street and Patton Avenue south on Patton Avenue, Dallas | Oswald flees on foot south on Patton, emptying cartridge cases from his revolver and muttering words overheard by witnesses. |
| 1:22–1:24 p.m. | West on Jefferson Boulevard, near a gasoline station at 400 East Jefferson, Dallas | Oswald continues fleeing west, discards his jacket (later found in a parking lot behind the station), and heads toward the Texas Theatre. |
| 1:40–1:45 p.m. | Texas Theatre, 231 West Jefferson Boulevard, Dallas | Oswald ducks into the theater without paying, acting suspiciously to avoid police. He sits alone in the rear. |
| 1:50 p.m. | Texas Theatre, Dallas | Oswald is arrested after resisting officers, attempting to fire his revolver during a struggle. He is taken into custody. |
| After 1:50 p.m. (November 22) | Dallas Police Headquarters, 106 South Harwood Street, Dallas | Oswald is transported to headquarters for interrogation. He denies involvement in the shootings and is charged with Tippit's murder at 7:10 p.m. and Kennedy's at 1:30 a.m. on November 23. |
| 11:21 a.m. (November 24) | Basement of Dallas Police Headquarters, Dallas | While being transferred to the county jail, Oswald is fatally shot by Jack Ruby in the abdomen. |
| Shortly after 11:21 a.m. (November 24) | Parkland Memorial Hospital, Dallas | Oswald is rushed by ambulance to the hospital (the same where Kennedy died) and pronounced dead at 1:07 p.m. from hemorrhage caused by the gunshot wound. |
*********THE CASINGS (Brave AI)-
the evidence of casing substitution points to the Dallas Police Department, not the FBI.

Officer J.M. Poe marked the casings at the scene, but could not identify them later—and witnesses who found the casings could not match them to the ones in evidence. The casings in evidence bear initials ("RD", "DC") not linked to any known officers in the official chain.

While the FBI analyzed the casings, they did not collect them initially. The break in chain of custody occurred earlier, under Dallas PD handling.

So, the failure lies with local police procedures, not FBI tampering—though the FBI accepted flawed evidence without sufficient scrutiny.
[Interesting because the FBI later tampered with a bunch of the FBI's evidence, which I learned from The Lone Gunman Podcast, you can tell which document FBI swapped in by something on the numbers. If there's interest I'll go and find it at some point]
Legally, evidence with a broken chain of custody is inadmissible. In the Tippit case:
-No chain of custody forms exist for the cartridge cases.
-The casings were not photographed in situ.
-The witnesses who found the casings (Benavides, Davis sisters) could not identify the ones in evidence.
-Officer Poe, who marked the casings, could not find his initials on the evidence.
-Poe misidentified Q-75—a casing linked to Virginia Davis—as one he received from Benavides, creating a clear contradiction.
-The casings in evidence bear initials ("RD", "DC") not linked to any known officers in the case.
-The bullets removed from Tippit’s body (3 Winchester, 1 Remington-Peters) do not match the casings (2 Winchester, 2 Remington-Peters)—suggesting a fifth shot or substitution.
Under legal standards, this destroys authenticity and admissibility. Without proof the casings are the same ones found at the scene, they are legally meaningless.

From a common sense standpoint, the pattern of inconsistencies—missing marks, mismatched initials, unexplained evidence gaps—strongly supports the conclusion that Oswald was framed.

Loading comments...