Post by Rob Caprio on Jan 3, 2020 21:14:35 GMT -5
All portions ©️ Robert Caprio 2006-2024
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Julia Ann Mercer saw some odd things on November 22, 1963, and the Warren Commission (WC) failed to call her or to investigate how the police handled her signed affidavit outlining what she saw.
She was driving west along Elm Street toward the Triple Underpass on the morning of the assassination when she saw "a truck parked on the right-hand side of the road." (XIX, p. 483) The truck was partly on the curb at the spot where the base of the Grassy Knoll (GK) is located on Elm Street. Keep in mind this was an illegal act to stop on the road and park like this, especially so when the President was due there in a short time, but no one bothered them. She saw two men with the truck, and it blocked traffic due to how it was parked. She had to wait for the left lane to clear so she could pull out and move on.
She described the truck as a green Ford pick-up with a Texas plate. (Ibid.) On the driver's side, in black, were the words "Air Conditioning." (Ibid.)
Along the back of the truck were "what appeared to be toolboxes." (Ibid.) Mercer saw a heavy-set middle-aged man in a green jacket "slouched over the wheel" of the truck while the other man "reached over the tailgate and took out from the truck what appeared to be a gun case." (Ibid.) The case was about 8" at its widest point and tapered down to a width of about 4 to 5". It was brown in color, had a handle and was about three and a half to four feet long. (Ibid.) This man walked away from the truck and headed towards the grassy hill which forms part of the Triple Underpass. (Ibid.)
Mercer would give a detailed description of the man with the long case. She described him as follows:
He was "a white male, who appeared to be in his late 20s or early 30s and he was wearing a grey jacket, brown pants, and a plaid shirt." (Ibid., pp. 483-484)
www.jfk-assassination.net/images/Mercer_Sheriff1.gif
www.jfk-assassination.net/images/Mercer_Sheriff2.gif
She would say she was sure she could identify them if she ever saw them again. As amazing as this all is the really amazing thing is this was done in the VIEW OF THREE Dallas Police Department (DPD) officers who neither felt a need to inquire about the truck parking illegally along the curb or why a man was possibly carrying a gun case to an area the President would be passing in a short time.
We know this because located in the same area of the WC volumes (XIX, p. 483) we see this point mentioned as she said she saw three policeman "standing talking (sic) near a motorcycle on the bridge" just ahead of her and the truck. So, all this happened in front of three officers and NONE of them investigated this after the assassination? IT is bad enough they did NOTHING prior to the assassination, but then they decided NOT to find out who these three derelicts were afterwards.
The WC apparently felt NO need to inquire further either as they never called Ms. Mercer (WCR, p. 492) before them to relate her story, or even sent a WC investigator to speak with her. They did NOT mention the incident or include her name in the report (all the while including her signed affidavit). They did NOT try and ID the three officers to see what they had to say, and why they did NOTHING while allowing a truck to park illegally and watching a man carrying something that resembled a gun case into Dealey Plaza (DP).
Just one of a thousand things that show the WC had NO interest in learning the truth about President John F. Kennedy's (JFK) murder. They put blinders on and focused on one pre-conceived idea and made everything try and fit this idea. Unfortunately for them it is quite apparent what they did, and the evidence they used makes it abundantly clear to us that they provided us with a false conclusion.
upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/ba/Garrison_Jim.jpg
fwcdn.pl/ppo/54/72/5472/324050.1.jpg
Julia Ann Mercer saw some odd things on November 22, 1963, and the Warren Commission (WC) failed to call her or to investigate how the police handled her signed affidavit outlining what she saw.
She was driving west along Elm Street toward the Triple Underpass on the morning of the assassination when she saw "a truck parked on the right-hand side of the road." (XIX, p. 483) The truck was partly on the curb at the spot where the base of the Grassy Knoll (GK) is located on Elm Street. Keep in mind this was an illegal act to stop on the road and park like this, especially so when the President was due there in a short time, but no one bothered them. She saw two men with the truck, and it blocked traffic due to how it was parked. She had to wait for the left lane to clear so she could pull out and move on.
She described the truck as a green Ford pick-up with a Texas plate. (Ibid.) On the driver's side, in black, were the words "Air Conditioning." (Ibid.)
Along the back of the truck were "what appeared to be toolboxes." (Ibid.) Mercer saw a heavy-set middle-aged man in a green jacket "slouched over the wheel" of the truck while the other man "reached over the tailgate and took out from the truck what appeared to be a gun case." (Ibid.) The case was about 8" at its widest point and tapered down to a width of about 4 to 5". It was brown in color, had a handle and was about three and a half to four feet long. (Ibid.) This man walked away from the truck and headed towards the grassy hill which forms part of the Triple Underpass. (Ibid.)
Mercer would give a detailed description of the man with the long case. She described him as follows:
He was "a white male, who appeared to be in his late 20s or early 30s and he was wearing a grey jacket, brown pants, and a plaid shirt." (Ibid., pp. 483-484)
www.jfk-assassination.net/images/Mercer_Sheriff1.gif
www.jfk-assassination.net/images/Mercer_Sheriff2.gif
She would say she was sure she could identify them if she ever saw them again. As amazing as this all is the really amazing thing is this was done in the VIEW OF THREE Dallas Police Department (DPD) officers who neither felt a need to inquire about the truck parking illegally along the curb or why a man was possibly carrying a gun case to an area the President would be passing in a short time.
We know this because located in the same area of the WC volumes (XIX, p. 483) we see this point mentioned as she said she saw three policeman "standing talking (sic) near a motorcycle on the bridge" just ahead of her and the truck. So, all this happened in front of three officers and NONE of them investigated this after the assassination? IT is bad enough they did NOTHING prior to the assassination, but then they decided NOT to find out who these three derelicts were afterwards.
The WC apparently felt NO need to inquire further either as they never called Ms. Mercer (WCR, p. 492) before them to relate her story, or even sent a WC investigator to speak with her. They did NOT mention the incident or include her name in the report (all the while including her signed affidavit). They did NOT try and ID the three officers to see what they had to say, and why they did NOTHING while allowing a truck to park illegally and watching a man carrying something that resembled a gun case into Dealey Plaza (DP).
Just one of a thousand things that show the WC had NO interest in learning the truth about President John F. Kennedy's (JFK) murder. They put blinders on and focused on one pre-conceived idea and made everything try and fit this idea. Unfortunately for them it is quite apparent what they did, and the evidence they used makes it abundantly clear to us that they provided us with a false conclusion.