29 Reasons Why Mac Wallace Was a TSBD 6th Floor Shooter by - TopicsExpress



          

29 Reasons Why Mac Wallace Was a TSBD 6th Floor Shooter by Richard M. Hooke © 1/21/2013 Some of the following reasons, when taken individually, do not necessarily indicate Mac Wallace was on the sixth floor of the TSBD on 11/22/63, at 12:30 pm, but when considered together, the odds of Mac Wallace having been a TSBD 6th Floor Shooter must be about one quadrillion to one: 1 Mac Wallace was convicted of killing Douglas Kinser, October 22, 1951. Texas attorneys, and Lyndon B. Johnson and associates, Ed Clark, John Cofer, and Bob Long got Mac Wallace five years’ probation for first degree murder; so he was beholden to them, ever after. They secured cover jobs, and employment for Wallace, in the defense industry (Ling Electronics, Anaheim, Ca.) until his death in 1971. 2 Mac Wallace was an ex U.S. Marine, and an expert marksman. 3 Mac Wallace was the named killer of Henry Marshall. In 1984, Billy Sol Estes testified, with immunity from prosecution before a grand jury, that he had attended three meetings with LBJ where the need to eliminate Marshall was discussed in order to stop him from disclosing Estes’ fraudulent business dealings and ties with Johnson. Estes named Mac Wallace as the triggerman. The composite drawing in the Marshall killing is of a middle aged man, with horn rimmed glasses, and dark hair; very much resembles Mac Wallace. 4 Mac Wallace matches the description of Richard Randolph Carr who observed a man looking out the sixth floor of the TSBD moments before the shooting. Carr described the man at the third window (from the left), having an athletic, heavyset build, real dark-complexion (appearing to be Spanish or Cuban), horn rimmed (heavy rimmed) glasses with ear pieces, a tan sport coat, and a light felt hat. After the shooting, Carr observed the same man hurriedly walking away from the TSBD, south on Houston to Commerce, then turning on Commerce toward Record Street, looking back over his shoulder, and getting into a 1961 or 1962 Grey Nash Rambler station wagon, parked just north of Commerce, on Record, headed toward the TSBD. The wagon had a Texas license plate, was driven by a young Negro man, and drove off north on Record Street. Richard Carr was not called as a Warren Commission witness. He received death threats over the phone, telling him to leave Texas, or else. Carr eventually moved to Montana. 5 Mac Wallace was reportedly not at work on 11/22/63. 6 Mac Wallace was named, by Billy Sol Estes, before a grand jury; with immunity from prosecution, as the being the killer of : John F. Kennedy, Henry Marshall, George Krutilek, Harold Orr, Ike Rogers, Coleman Wade, John Kinser, Josepha Johnson, Howard Pratt, and Sam Smithwick. Estes testified that LBJ ordered his aid, Cliff Carter, to order Mac Wallace to do the killings. 7 Mac Wallace’s finger prints were found on book cartons in the snipers nest, on the sixth floor of the TSBD. Wallace’s prints were matched (34 points), by finger print expert Nathan Darby, to a print card from the Doug Kinser murder (Wallace was convicted of murdering Kinser). 8 Mac Wallace was witnessed, by Madeleine Duncan Brown, a couple days before the JFK assassination, practicing at The Dallas Gun Club. She said he was an unbelievable shooter, practiced for hours on end; if Wallace pulled the trigger he hit his target; he was simply the best. 9 Mac Wallace was identified by Loy Factor as having recruited him, at the funeral of Sam Rayburn, and as being the organizer of the shooters on the sixth floor of the TSBD on 11/22/63. (There is a photo of Wallace at Rayburn’s funeral). Loy Factor confessed to Glenn Sample and Mark Collom, that Mac Wallace, Lee Oswald , and Loy Factor were the shooters on the sixth floor of the TSBD (Factor maintained he, personally, did not fire) 10 Mac Wallace was dark-skinned, with dark hair, and spoke Spanish, as identified by Loy Factor, Madeleine Duncan Brown, and Rod Mackenzie (aka Ward Alexander). Factor said he assumed Wallace was Cuban or Mexican, and said Wallace was about 6 foot, 200 lbs. 11 A plumbing truck, from Mac Wallace’s father’s plumbing company, was parked in front of the TSBD on 11/22/63. Mac Wallace’s father, Carl, killed himself. 12 John Powell, a prisoner at the Dallas County Jail, just across the street from the “assassin’s window”, also on the sixth floor, said that he and 40 inmates clearly saw two men in the “assassin’s window”, who were adjusting the telescopic sight of the rifle one of them had. One of them appeared to be Latin. 13 Carolyn E. Walther, standing on the west side of Houston, looked up at the TSBD, and saw two men in an upper floor window; one man was light haired and wearing a white shirt and the other was wearing a brown suite coat. 14 James Worrell Jr. was standing in front of the TSBD when he heard the shots, then he ran north on Houston toward Pacific, and saw a male emerge from the building. Worrell said the man had dark hair, a dark sport coat, and began running south on Houston. Bill Shelly, a depository worker also saw a brown coated man run out the back door of the TSBD. 15 Arnold and Barbara Roland saw two men standing on the sixth floor of the TSBD: one in the western window, with a gun, and one in the eastern window; with a dark complexion. 16 Ruby Henderson, standing on Elm, saw two men on the sixth floor. 17 Norman Similas took a picture of the sixth floor that showed two men in the east window. He sent it to the Toronto Telegram but it was never published, and never returned. 18 Mac Wallace was at the “Victory Party”, for J. Edgar Hoover, at Texas oil tycoon, Clint Murchison’s Dallas mansion the night of 11/21/63 where a private meeting was held in the drawing room. In that meeting, Wallace was given the final go ahead, by all present who signed off, on the plan to kill John F. Kennedy. 19 Rod Mackenzie says, after the ‘The Victory Party’, Clyde Tolson drove LBJ, Mac Wallace, John McCloy, David Atlee Phillips, and Cliff Carter to Pat Kirkwood’s “The Cellar”, in Ft. Worth. LBJ stated that Connolly and Yarborough would finally be out of his hair for good, he presumed they would also be killed, and Cliff Carter went through the check list of hit people on hand, saying, “This is the convention of professional killers rather than the Pepsi Cola convention.” The planning had all been done, to the person, who would hit the three people to be shot and the amount of bullets used. Mac Wallace was in charge of the 26 person hit team to kill JFK. 20 Mac Wallace, a couple days afterward, drunk in Joe Campisis Egyptian Lounge bar, in Dallas, confessed, to Rod Mackenzie, having been in charge of the 26 person team that killed John F. Kennedy. Wallace said he had just spent the whole night (before he was in the bar) at ‘The Club House’ H.L. Hunt had outside of town. Mackenzie said Wallace was not working the week following the assassination and was shooting his mouth off about it in the Dallas bars, saying, “Johnson had finally made his move and his part was the major one in the organization of the assassination.” Wallace also said it had been his job to kill Connolly but he had got both Kennedy and Connolly. 21 Cecil Small pulled into the Parkland Hospital parking lot. As he walked from his car, he saw a heavy-set Hispanic man and two female companions, whom he claimed had crossed Commerce Street, in front of him, as he was originally driving through Dealey Plaza, where the man was getting into a station wagon; the man had been carrying what appeared to be a rifle with a scope, partially covered by paper. 22 Madeleine Duncan Brown , LBJ’s mistress, said, “…Malcolm E. Wallace, a former University of Texas student body president who was working as an economist for the Dept. of Agriculture. He (Wallace) was generally known as “Lyndon’s boy” (a hatchet man like Jesse Kellam).” Brown said Wallace was responsible for 18 or 19 murders. 23 Glenn Sample and Mark Collom say, “With my hand to god”, Madeleine Brown said, “I have always felt that Mac Wallace was one of the gunmen in Dealey Plaza that day. Billy Sol (Estes) does too, but he doesn’t want to talk about it. I think he knows a lot more than he lets on – Clint Peoples was convinced of it too.” In a company photo, at the time of the assassination, Wallace was seen in horn rimmed glasses, and to have gained a little weight. Wallace’s parent company was in Dallas so he would often travel there from Ling Electronics in Anaheim, Ca. He was separated from his wife; not living at home at the time of the assassination. 24 Jack Ruby, in a comment to his jailer, said, “In order to understand the assassination you have to read A Texan Looks at Lyndon .” The book attacks LBJ’s character, details the Kinser murder, and the arrest and trial of Mac Wallace. 25 Rod Mackenzie says his controller, Jake Miranda, and Mac Wallace both worked for the Defense Industrial Security Command (DISC) and Permindix Co. (a front company set up to pay agents; partially owned by Clay Shaw of New Orleans) that was also associated with that agency. Mackenzie was also told, by Alice Alexander; who had slept with Mac Wallace, that Wallace was also still working contract for the Office of Naval Intelligence (ONI). Mackenzie says LBJ was a puppet for Permindix and DISC. 26 George Noory , on a Texas radio (HelmerReenberg website) show, in 2006, had an 85 year old caller, name Velma, who said she was living in Dallas at the time and was sitting in her car, parked behind the TSBD, during the assassination. She saw a man run out the back of the TSBD with a gun and get in an old grey, dove colored, Plymouth, one seater. The man, who looked her in the eye, had a felt hat, with a wide band, a suite, black hair, and real heavy eyebrows. She said his gun was a high powered rifle; not bolt action. She said a policeman asked him to move his car, but he did not do it right away. (Mac Wallace had black hair and thick eyebrows) 27 At the University of Texas at Austin, Mac Wallace was a gifted scholar, with an explosive and violent temper. Cliff Carter, a college friend, introduced Wallace to Ed Clark (Texas judge) and Lyndon Johnson. Wallace was student body president at the University of Texas at Austin and known to have communist affiliations. Wallace is a possible suspect in the assassination attempt on General Walker; since it was done with a 30.06 and that was a weapon preferred by Wallace. 28 Mac Wallace, a local boy who attended Woodrow Wilson High School, Dallas, where he was star quarterback of the 1938 football team. His best friend, Ralph Geb, was also on that football team, and a photo (‘dead ringer’) match with the CIA photo, taken at the Russian Embassy, Mexico City, the CIA said was Oswald. (Identified by Gene Noblitt , class of 1938). Wallace had a house in Dallas, at the time of the assassination, as did his father. 29 Ralph Geb , best friend of Mac Wallace, U.S. Air Force Serviceman, was squirreled away, like Mac Wallace, in defense industry jobs until his death in the late 1980’s.
Posted on: Tue, 25 Mar 2014 19:50:23 +0000

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