Post by Rob Caprio on May 1, 2019 21:36:23 GMT -5
All portions ©️ Robert Caprio 2006-2024
i.ytimg.com/vi/CnhM42Mr1wM/hqdefault.jpg
What was the rush to remove J.D. Tippit’s (JDT) body all about?
I will use a WC defender source too for this question. Bill Drenas wrote an article in 1997 called Car 10 Where Are You? and some have called it the most comprehensive coverage of the JDT shooting. I am using a March 1998 follow-up article by him that was published in Assassination Chronicles (Volume 2, #1). On page 3 of the article we see this comment by him.
Quote on
By the time the first police unit reached the murder scene it was 1:22 P.M. and the ambulance was probably AT, or APPROACHING, the hospital. (Emphasis added)
jfk.hood.edu/Collection/Weisberg%20Subject%20Index%20Files/T%20Disk/Tippit%20J%20D%20Miscellaneous/Item%2002.pdf
Quote off
He then explains this by saying the ambulance was near the murder scene and responded quickly, whereas the police units were much further away and could ONLY arrive four minutes AFTER JDT’S body had been removed!
This is astounding! Isn’t it normal procedure and practice for the BODY NOT to be REMOVED until the police and the Crime Scene Unit had arrived and searched and documented the area and body? Aren’t photographs supposed to be taken and an outline made around the body to note were it was to help determine the direction the shots came from? I think so, but here we see a rush to get his body out of there. Why? The writer even says this simply explains why NO photographs of the body (where it lay) were taken! This is UNHEARD of in most civilized crimes scene investigations. Why was this allowed to happen here? Furthermore, without these photographs you cannot claim LHO, or anyone, shot JDT from a particular angle as you CAN’T support this with the body’s position.
The writer also says by 1:22 P.M. the ambulance was probably at, or approaching, the hospital by that time, but what is odd is JDT’s Death Certificate shows that he died at 1:15 P.M.. Here is a copy of it.
www.kennedysandking.com/images/2018/tippit-dieugenio/tippit-death-certificate.png
This shows JDT was shot long before the official time and that the body was removed longer than four minutes before the first police unit arrived. What was the rush? Shouldn’t a fellow officer have been given the respect of a FULL search and investigation of the crime scene? I would think so, but we did NOT see it happen here. We also did NOT see in the Dallas Police Department (DPD) transcripts any reports of “knocking on doors” to find out what happened. Like the situation in Dealey Plaza (DP) we see the DPD and FBI standing around waiting for witnesses to come to them to give information.
i.ytimg.com/vi/CnhM42Mr1wM/hqdefault.jpg
What was the rush to remove J.D. Tippit’s (JDT) body all about?
I will use a WC defender source too for this question. Bill Drenas wrote an article in 1997 called Car 10 Where Are You? and some have called it the most comprehensive coverage of the JDT shooting. I am using a March 1998 follow-up article by him that was published in Assassination Chronicles (Volume 2, #1). On page 3 of the article we see this comment by him.
Quote on
By the time the first police unit reached the murder scene it was 1:22 P.M. and the ambulance was probably AT, or APPROACHING, the hospital. (Emphasis added)
jfk.hood.edu/Collection/Weisberg%20Subject%20Index%20Files/T%20Disk/Tippit%20J%20D%20Miscellaneous/Item%2002.pdf
Quote off
He then explains this by saying the ambulance was near the murder scene and responded quickly, whereas the police units were much further away and could ONLY arrive four minutes AFTER JDT’S body had been removed!
This is astounding! Isn’t it normal procedure and practice for the BODY NOT to be REMOVED until the police and the Crime Scene Unit had arrived and searched and documented the area and body? Aren’t photographs supposed to be taken and an outline made around the body to note were it was to help determine the direction the shots came from? I think so, but here we see a rush to get his body out of there. Why? The writer even says this simply explains why NO photographs of the body (where it lay) were taken! This is UNHEARD of in most civilized crimes scene investigations. Why was this allowed to happen here? Furthermore, without these photographs you cannot claim LHO, or anyone, shot JDT from a particular angle as you CAN’T support this with the body’s position.
The writer also says by 1:22 P.M. the ambulance was probably at, or approaching, the hospital by that time, but what is odd is JDT’s Death Certificate shows that he died at 1:15 P.M.. Here is a copy of it.
www.kennedysandking.com/images/2018/tippit-dieugenio/tippit-death-certificate.png
This shows JDT was shot long before the official time and that the body was removed longer than four minutes before the first police unit arrived. What was the rush? Shouldn’t a fellow officer have been given the respect of a FULL search and investigation of the crime scene? I would think so, but we did NOT see it happen here. We also did NOT see in the Dallas Police Department (DPD) transcripts any reports of “knocking on doors” to find out what happened. Like the situation in Dealey Plaza (DP) we see the DPD and FBI standing around waiting for witnesses to come to them to give information.