I have a chapter in my JFK assassination book called: The Nash - TopicsExpress



          

I have a chapter in my JFK assassination book called: The Nash Rambler Station Wagon: here are some excerpts from it: Just a few minutes before the presidential limousine arrived in Dealey Plaza on November 22, 1963 and shots rang out, Richard R. Carr was present there seeking employment at the new County courthouse. As Carr ascended the elevator to the upper floors where he was to locate the foreman in charge of hiring, he stopped at the sixth floor and noticed the sixth floor of the Texas School Book Depository directly across the Plaza. Carr saw a heavy-set man looking out a window next to the window on the far east end of the Texas School Book Depository (the window next to the alleged sniper’s nest where Lee Harvey Oswald is alleged to have fired shots). According to Richard Carr, this heavy-set man was wearing a tan sport coat with hat and glasses. This author believes that this individual was Malcolm Wallace. See the chapters herein entitled “Malcolm ‘Mac’ Wallace” and “The Revelations of Roderick A. McKenzie, III.” Just a few minutes later, Carr heard what sounded like a firecracker. He then turned to look in the direction of the triple underpass from which he believed the shot originated. He then saw people running and acting chaotically in the Plaza. Richard Carr then immediately began to descend the stairs and run out into the street. The man in the tan sports jacket Carr has just previously seen on the sixth floor of the Texas School Book Depository Building rapidly approached Carr on the sidewalk. The man in the tan sports coat then reached Commerce Street (the main thoroughfare one street parallel with Elm Street, the street upon which Kennedy was shot). The heavy-set man in the tan sport coat with hat and glasses then turned left (east) onto Commerce Street. On the next street over from Commerce Street was Record Street, which intersects with Commerce Street. There Randolph Carr spotted a Nash Rambler station wagon with a luggage rack on top with Texas license plates parked facing north. In the driver’s seat of the Nash Rambler station wagon was a young, darkly complected man. The heavy-set man with the tan sports coat then opened the rear door and entered into the Rambler station wagon. The vehicle then took off in a northerly direction on Record Street. Intersecting with Record Street just one block away was Elm Street on which the Texas School Book Depository was located.
Posted on: Tue, 19 Nov 2013 19:24:29 +0000

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