Post by John Duncan on Mar 24, 2023 17:26:36 GMT -5
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June, July 1963 -- LEE Oswald With Jack Ruby In Dallas
By John Armstrong
Dorothy Marcum was dating Jack Ruby in the summer of 1963 and her aunt worked for Ruby. Dorothy told the FBI she knew for a fact that LEE Oswald and Jack Ruby knew each other, because Oswald worked for Ruby in June and July (1963).
In the summer of 1963 Jack Ruby was interviewing Fracise Irene Hise for a job as a waitress when a young man came into the Carousel Club. Ruby acknowledged the man by saying, "Hi, Ozzie" and later joined him to the back room after finishing the interview with Francis. After Ruby hired Miss Hise the same young man came into the bar and asked if he could buy her a drink. After the assassination Miss Hise recognized "Ozzie" as "Lee Harvey Oswald." ("Ozzie" was the nickname given to LEE Oswald by fellow Marines in Japan).
Clyde Malcolm Limbough worked for Jack Ruby three years and recalled that LEE Oswald was in Ruby's office in the back of the Carousel Club on three separate occasions.
Robert Roy was Jack Ruby's auto mechanic and said that Oswald and Ruby definitely knew each other. Roy said that when Oswald dropped Ruby's car off for repairs at his shop he drove Oswald back to Ruby's "burlesque house." When Roy was asked how many times he had driven LEE Oswald to Ruby's club, he said, "several times."
Ruby used to park his car, a 1960 Oldsmobile (1963 Texas license tag PD 768; 1962 Texas license tag NL 4783), at Gibbs Auto Service on Field Street and occasionally allowed friends and associates to borrow his car. Leon E. Woods, the manager of Gibbs Auto, kept a record of people who took Ruby's car from the garage and gave the "checkout and check-in book" to the FBI, which was NEVER returned. When Dallas reporter Earl Golz asked the FBI about Gibbs Auto Service and the "check-in/checkout book," they told Golz they knew nothing about it.
Other Ruby employees who claim to have seen Oswald at Ruby's Carousel Club include William Crowe, Wally Weston, Dixie Lynn, and Kathy Kay. In all, there were dozens of people who saw LEE Oswald and Ruby together in the summer of 1963-*precisely when HARVEY Oswald was working at Reily Coffee and residing with his wife and child on Magazine Street.*
During the last week of July (1963 Western Union employee Marshall Hicks delivered several telegrams to "LEE Harvey Oswald" at the Rotary Apartments, 1501-1503 W. 7th Street in Dallas. The FBI made no
attempt to locate copies of these telegrams.
Dallas Police Detective H.M. Hart, of the Criminal Intelligence Division, received information from a Dallas Police confidential informant who knew Ruby. The informant said that in September, 1963, Ruby rented an apartment at 223 South Ewing, for LEE Oswald (next door to Ruby's apartment building). The informant said the manager of the apartment asked Oswald to move because the manager did not like
Oswald.
The significance of these Ruby/Oswld sightings is that they occurred in the spring and summer of 1963, while HARVEY and Marina were in New Orleans. It was LEE Oswald who knew and associated with Jack Ruby in the summer of 1963 and was familiar with CIA operatives, anti-Castro
Cubans in Miami, Robert McKeown, and Cuban exiles from the Lake Poncharrtrain camps. These sightings help us establish the time frame during which plans were formulated to use LEE Oswald to set up HARVEY Oswald as the "patsy" in the assassination of President Kennedy.
After the assassination Jack Ruby provided several clues that hinted at the extent of his knowledge about Oswald and the President's murder:
# When Henry Wade said that Oswald belonged to the "Free Cuba Committee" (in New Orleans), it was Jack Ruby who corrected him and said, "That's Fair Play for Cuba Committee, Henry."
# After Ruby shot Oswald he told his psychiatrist that he was involved in a conspiracy to murder the President.
# Ruby told one of his jailers, Al Maddox, "In order to understand the assassination, you have to read the book 'A Texan Looks at Lyndon.'"
# During a break in his trial for killing Oswald Ruby said, "Everything pertaining to what's happening has never come to the surface. The world will never know the true facts of what occurred,
my motive. These people had so much to gain, and have such ulterior motives to put me in the position I'm in, they will never let the true facts come aboveboard to the world."
"Harvey and Lee" pg 554-55
murderpedia.org/male.R/images/ruby_jack_leon/ruby_137.jpg
i.pinimg.com/736x/e7/d0/d8/e7d0d886a37f205dc568b86fa80ec231--dallas-morning-news-the-club.jpg
June, July 1963 -- LEE Oswald With Jack Ruby In Dallas
By John Armstrong
Dorothy Marcum was dating Jack Ruby in the summer of 1963 and her aunt worked for Ruby. Dorothy told the FBI she knew for a fact that LEE Oswald and Jack Ruby knew each other, because Oswald worked for Ruby in June and July (1963).
In the summer of 1963 Jack Ruby was interviewing Fracise Irene Hise for a job as a waitress when a young man came into the Carousel Club. Ruby acknowledged the man by saying, "Hi, Ozzie" and later joined him to the back room after finishing the interview with Francis. After Ruby hired Miss Hise the same young man came into the bar and asked if he could buy her a drink. After the assassination Miss Hise recognized "Ozzie" as "Lee Harvey Oswald." ("Ozzie" was the nickname given to LEE Oswald by fellow Marines in Japan).
Clyde Malcolm Limbough worked for Jack Ruby three years and recalled that LEE Oswald was in Ruby's office in the back of the Carousel Club on three separate occasions.
Robert Roy was Jack Ruby's auto mechanic and said that Oswald and Ruby definitely knew each other. Roy said that when Oswald dropped Ruby's car off for repairs at his shop he drove Oswald back to Ruby's "burlesque house." When Roy was asked how many times he had driven LEE Oswald to Ruby's club, he said, "several times."
Ruby used to park his car, a 1960 Oldsmobile (1963 Texas license tag PD 768; 1962 Texas license tag NL 4783), at Gibbs Auto Service on Field Street and occasionally allowed friends and associates to borrow his car. Leon E. Woods, the manager of Gibbs Auto, kept a record of people who took Ruby's car from the garage and gave the "checkout and check-in book" to the FBI, which was NEVER returned. When Dallas reporter Earl Golz asked the FBI about Gibbs Auto Service and the "check-in/checkout book," they told Golz they knew nothing about it.
Other Ruby employees who claim to have seen Oswald at Ruby's Carousel Club include William Crowe, Wally Weston, Dixie Lynn, and Kathy Kay. In all, there were dozens of people who saw LEE Oswald and Ruby together in the summer of 1963-*precisely when HARVEY Oswald was working at Reily Coffee and residing with his wife and child on Magazine Street.*
During the last week of July (1963 Western Union employee Marshall Hicks delivered several telegrams to "LEE Harvey Oswald" at the Rotary Apartments, 1501-1503 W. 7th Street in Dallas. The FBI made no
attempt to locate copies of these telegrams.
Dallas Police Detective H.M. Hart, of the Criminal Intelligence Division, received information from a Dallas Police confidential informant who knew Ruby. The informant said that in September, 1963, Ruby rented an apartment at 223 South Ewing, for LEE Oswald (next door to Ruby's apartment building). The informant said the manager of the apartment asked Oswald to move because the manager did not like
Oswald.
The significance of these Ruby/Oswld sightings is that they occurred in the spring and summer of 1963, while HARVEY and Marina were in New Orleans. It was LEE Oswald who knew and associated with Jack Ruby in the summer of 1963 and was familiar with CIA operatives, anti-Castro
Cubans in Miami, Robert McKeown, and Cuban exiles from the Lake Poncharrtrain camps. These sightings help us establish the time frame during which plans were formulated to use LEE Oswald to set up HARVEY Oswald as the "patsy" in the assassination of President Kennedy.
After the assassination Jack Ruby provided several clues that hinted at the extent of his knowledge about Oswald and the President's murder:
# When Henry Wade said that Oswald belonged to the "Free Cuba Committee" (in New Orleans), it was Jack Ruby who corrected him and said, "That's Fair Play for Cuba Committee, Henry."
# After Ruby shot Oswald he told his psychiatrist that he was involved in a conspiracy to murder the President.
# Ruby told one of his jailers, Al Maddox, "In order to understand the assassination, you have to read the book 'A Texan Looks at Lyndon.'"
# During a break in his trial for killing Oswald Ruby said, "Everything pertaining to what's happening has never come to the surface. The world will never know the true facts of what occurred,
my motive. These people had so much to gain, and have such ulterior motives to put me in the position I'm in, they will never let the true facts come aboveboard to the world."
"Harvey and Lee" pg 554-55