Gerald Posner
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
You don't do that if you're the conspirators. You do that if you're the lone assassin who's looking for opportunities, the means and opportunity to be able to do it. Oswald doesn't even retrieve the rifle that's tied ballistically to the assassination to the exclusion of every other gun in the world until the night before
When he goes out to get it where his wife is staying from a garage, takes it in the next morning in a long paper bag that he tells the person who's driving him in their curtain rods. And then he brings it to the sixth floor of the depository from where the sniper's nest is set up. He's left alone there by six of his co-workers half an hour beforehand.
When he goes out to get it where his wife is staying from a garage, takes it in the next morning in a long paper bag that he tells the person who's driving him in their curtain rods. And then he brings it to the sixth floor of the depository from where the sniper's nest is set up. He's left alone there by six of his co-workers half an hour beforehand.
When he goes out to get it where his wife is staying from a garage, takes it in the next morning in a long paper bag that he tells the person who's driving him in their curtain rods. And then he brings it to the sixth floor of the depository from where the sniper's nest is set up. He's left alone there by six of his co-workers half an hour beforehand.
And when the assassination is over, guess who's the only person who leaves the depository? Lee Harvey Oswald. All the rest of the employees are there. Why does he leave? He goes back to his rooming house where he collects his pistol that he had slammed on the desk of the KGB agents five weeks earlier in Mexico City.
And when the assassination is over, guess who's the only person who leaves the depository? Lee Harvey Oswald. All the rest of the employees are there. Why does he leave? He goes back to his rooming house where he collects his pistol that he had slammed on the desk of the KGB agents five weeks earlier in Mexico City.
And when the assassination is over, guess who's the only person who leaves the depository? Lee Harvey Oswald. All the rest of the employees are there. Why does he leave? He goes back to his rooming house where he collects his pistol that he had slammed on the desk of the KGB agents five weeks earlier in Mexico City.
And they get stopped by a police officer who has an all-points bulletin out on a general description of Oswald by a construction worker who was the only eyewitness who actually saw him doing the shooting that day and gave the general description, mid-20s, brown hair, Caucasian. And when the police officer stops him, he empties his bag.
And they get stopped by a police officer who has an all-points bulletin out on a general description of Oswald by a construction worker who was the only eyewitness who actually saw him doing the shooting that day and gave the general description, mid-20s, brown hair, Caucasian. And when the police officer stops him, he empties his bag.
And they get stopped by a police officer who has an all-points bulletin out on a general description of Oswald by a construction worker who was the only eyewitness who actually saw him doing the shooting that day and gave the general description, mid-20s, brown hair, Caucasian. And when the police officer stops him, he empties his bag.
revolver and pistol into him, shoots him on the spot, and then he's on the run. He escapes, goes into a movie theater where he's arrested. The idea that this person is not the assassin, to me, is so preposterous on his face. If you're willing to look at the credible evidence, here's the more difficult question.
revolver and pistol into him, shoots him on the spot, and then he's on the run. He escapes, goes into a movie theater where he's arrested. The idea that this person is not the assassin, to me, is so preposterous on his face. If you're willing to look at the credible evidence, here's the more difficult question.
revolver and pistol into him, shoots him on the spot, and then he's on the run. He escapes, goes into a movie theater where he's arrested. The idea that this person is not the assassin, to me, is so preposterous on his face. If you're willing to look at the credible evidence, here's the more difficult question.
Was he shooting the president for his own warped motivations or was he doing it as a plot for others? When you then investigate that, I'm convinced he's doing it for himself because there isn't an intelligence agency or group of plotters like the mafia or that in the world that could trust Lee Harvey Oswald. He was that unstable. But that's a legitimate question. Why is he up there?
Was he shooting the president for his own warped motivations or was he doing it as a plot for others? When you then investigate that, I'm convinced he's doing it for himself because there isn't an intelligence agency or group of plotters like the mafia or that in the world that could trust Lee Harvey Oswald. He was that unstable. But that's a legitimate question. Why is he up there?
Was he shooting the president for his own warped motivations or was he doing it as a plot for others? When you then investigate that, I'm convinced he's doing it for himself because there isn't an intelligence agency or group of plotters like the mafia or that in the world that could trust Lee Harvey Oswald. He was that unstable. But that's a legitimate question. Why is he up there?
Once you tackle Sirhan Sirhan, once you catch any assassin at the scene- John Hinckley, yeah. Well, Hinkley, we know his motivation. He's the only one who was honest with us, who said, I did actually impress Jodie Foster, and guess what? It was right. So that's one of the few cases in which we actually know the motivation. We can say, you know what? In that case, it was correct.
Once you tackle Sirhan Sirhan, once you catch any assassin at the scene- John Hinckley, yeah. Well, Hinkley, we know his motivation. He's the only one who was honest with us, who said, I did actually impress Jodie Foster, and guess what? It was right. So that's one of the few cases in which we actually know the motivation. We can say, you know what? In that case, it was correct.
Once you tackle Sirhan Sirhan, once you catch any assassin at the scene- John Hinckley, yeah. Well, Hinkley, we know his motivation. He's the only one who was honest with us, who said, I did actually impress Jodie Foster, and guess what? It was right. So that's one of the few cases in which we actually know the motivation. We can say, you know what? In that case, it was correct.
It's crazy, it may sound. But in the rest of them, you're always trying to figure out James Earl Ray and others. You're trying to figure out whether they were doing it for themselves or as part of a plot.