No; there is no credible evidence that Shaw knew Ferrie
The only other evidence of such a relationship consists of two 1949 photographs from a benefit party for New Orleans radio station WDSU, alleged to depict Clay Shaw and David Ferrie side by side. In the more famous of the two, "Ferrie" has been positively identified as WDSU broadcaster Robert Brannon, who died in 1962. He does indeed bear a striking resemblance to Ferrie, but not the Ferrie of 1949, who did not yet visibly suffer from alopecia, the disease that later caused the loss of his hair. The "Ferrie" figure in the second photograph has been identified as dentist J. Mofield Roberts, and does not bear any particular resemblance to Ferrie. (In 1949, Ferrie had not yet moved to New Orleans.
Author Patricia Lambert has unexpectedly discovered evidence that demolishes the Clinton witnesses' story. Lambert tracked down onetime Garrison investigator Anne Hundley Dischler, who had never been interviewed previously, and whose name seems to have been intentionally obscured by Garrison's office. Dischler still had the three stenographic pads of field notes she had accumulated during her brief tenure on the Clinton investigation in 1967. Her notes reveal the Clinton story to be a fabrication. http://www.jfk-online.com/jfk100clinton.html
Scritto da: JimGarrison 10/05/2007 20.47 girando per internet pero ho ytovato delle foto come le spiega?
Possibile che tutti quelli che smontano la tesi ufficiale sono mendaci?
Scritto da: Diego Verdegiglio 16/05/2007 22.58 Già. In via ipotetica.