Sunday, August 15, 2010

Oswald Escort to Celebrate 90th Birthday

by HUGH AYNESWORTH / Special Contributor to The Dallas Morning News

James Leavelle was handcuffed to Lee Harvey Oswald that November morning when Jack Ruby lunged forward to put one well-placed .38 bullet into the accused presidential assassin.

The photograph of that moment by Robert Jackson of the Dallas Times Herald not only won a Pulitzer Prize – it became one of the most reprinted photos in history. And it made Leavelle, a Dallas homicide detective, perhaps the most recognized police officer ever.

The famous lawman will celebrate his 90th birthday Saturday with a private party at the Dallas Police Pension Building.

Many know about how Leavelle was escorting Oswald toward a waiting police car to transfer him to the Dallas County jail on Nov. 24, 1963. Not so many are aware that he had narrowly escaped injury during the Pearl Harbor attack some 22 years before that.

Leavelle, a 1939 graduate of Detroit High School in East Texas, had been in the U.S. Navy a few months and was a supply officer aboard the USS Whitney on Dec. 7, 1941.

The Whitney was a small ship called a destroyer tender, assigned to keep the bigger ships stocked with food, ammunition and other needed supplies.

With dozens of destroyers and larger ships in the harbor at the time, the Whitney was relatively unscathed. But Leavelle and his shipmates watched helplessly as the attackers strafed and bombed the larger craft.

Though he wasn't injured in the attack, he remained on duty and was later injured seriously when tossed by a raging typhoon onto the ship's steel deck. He was hospitalized back in the U.S. for eight months.

That was how he met his wife, Taimi, a nurse at the Navy hospital. They married in 1942 and still live in Garland.

Leavelle recalls fondly the 65th anniversary convention of survivors of the Pearl Harbor attack, held in Hawaii in 2006. He was interviewed by dozens of newsmen and made one of the major speeches. About 100 American servicemen attended, along with a handful of Japanese pilots who had fought in the Pacific.

Many there wanted to talk to him about the events surrounding the Kennedy assassination – particularly about the time he spent with Oswald. He had been assigned to the investigation following the murder of police officer J.D. Tippit, whom Oswald had gunned down as he escaped from downtown Dallas.

"When I interrogated him, it was about the officer's murder, not the president's. He had not been accused of that yet," Leavelle recalled. "He kept telling me, 'I didn't shoot any officer.' "

Leavelle was one of a small group of officers who worried about transferring Oswald to the Dallas County jail, because of a rash of telephone threats against the onetime Russian defector. But he said Police Chief Jesse Curry told him that he "had promised the media to move him publicly, and he was going to do it that way."

Leavelle was told to handcuff himself to Oswald. As they walked into the basement area to exit into the police garage, where a squad car was idling, Leavelle said to Oswald, "Lee, I hope that if anybody shoots at you, they are as good a shot as you were."

He said Oswald grinned and replied, "Nobody's going to be shooting at me."

An ambulance rushed Oswald to Parkland Hospital , where President John F. Kennedy had died almost exactly two days before. Leavelle kept trying to revive Oswald, trying to get a pulse. "But he never did gain consciousness," he said. "We were about halfway to the hospital, when he took a deep breath and then relaxed. I think that is when he died."

The officer's last moments with Oswald prompted thousands of questions for Leavelle later, as a stunned world searched for answers. "They'd say, 'Did he confess? Did he admit it?' But he never uttered a word."

After Leavelle retired from the Dallas police force in 1974, he became a polygraph operator for a number of years.

These days, he seldom goes to his mailbox without finding a handful of letters there to greet him. His telephone rings constantly from those who want to interview him or just praise him. Recently, he received four letters asking for autographs, including one from a Russian newsman who sent a picture to be signed.

His fame occasionally embarrasses him. "Some people want to make a hero or a celebrity out of me," he said. "I am neither. I was just doing my job."

Hugh Aynesworth, a Dallas freelance writer, covered the Kennedy assassination for The Dallas Morning News.

Source: Dallas Morning News

Thursday, August 5, 2010

Oswald’s Mail-Order Revolver Purchase; Critical Allegations Prove False

by DALE K. MYERS


Oswald’s .38 Smith & Wesson revolver. (NARA)

[Editor's Note: This article was originally published on August 14, 1998 to address allegations questioning Lee Harvey Oswald's ownership of the .38 caliber Smith & Wesson revolver used to murder Dallas police officer J.D. Tippit.]

Despite considerable evidence to the contrary, some critics have questioned whether Lee Harvey Oswald really owned the revolver used to shoot Officer J.D. Tippit. Recently, allegations have been made based on a 1974 unpublished manuscript by Fred T. Newcomb and Perry Adams titled, Murder From Within.

According to Newcomb and Adams, a 1964 Senate Judiciary Subcommittee looking into mail-order firearms trafficking published a chart which showed that
Seaport Traders, the firm Oswald ordered his .38 caliber Smith and Wesson revolver from, never shipped any .38 revolvers to Dallas, Texas in March 1963 - the month of Oswald's order. Newcomb and Adams concluded that "Oswald's gun, in effect, did not exist."

Although critics have clung to Newcomb and Adams' assertions as proof positive of forged documents, cover-ups, and the alleged framing of Oswald, little has been done to substantiate Newcomb and Adams’ claims. In fact, a review of the record shows Newcomb and Adam's allegations to be false and misleading.

Was Oswald a Dodd Committee Investigator?

Newcomb/Adams begin their analysis by pointing out that Oswald ordered both his rifle and pistol "at a time when a Senate subcommittee was investigating the gun mail-order business." [1] The subcommittee referred to is the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee to Investigate Juvenile Delinquency, which was chaired by Senator Thomas J. Dodd. Parts 14 and 15 involved hearings looking into Interstate Traffic in Mail-Order Firearms. Hearings for these sessions were held January 29 and 30; March 7, and May 1 and 2, 1963 (PT.14); as well as, March 26, and April 24 and 25, 1964 (PT.15). [2] Newcomb/Adams note that the subcommittee hired "investigators" to place mail-orders with mail-order gun firms in order to determine if they were following federal and state laws. [3]

There is no doubt that Newcomb/Adams want the reader to believe that Oswald was one of these "investigators" working for the subcommittee when he ordered the rifle and pistol. They point out that both of the firms Oswald ordered from (Klein's and Seaport Traders) were under investigation by the Dodd Committee at the time of the orders. Newcomb/Adams add that Oswald placed these orders despite the fact that both the rifle and revolver were available in several Dallas gun shops at the time. These facts are apparently supposed to be evidence of Oswald's role as an "investigator." [4]

Newcomb/Adams' claim that Oswald's role as an investigator "went further than merely placing orders." According to the unpublished manuscript, "if Oswald could engage in visible and provocative activities and still buy mail-order guns, then the Dodd Committee could use this record" during their hearings. [5] Newcomb/Adams' proceed to list Oswald's "provocative activities." They paint a picture of a young "investigator" pouring through and clipping out mail-order gun coupons, while getting involved in various pro-Castro activities. [6] Yet, all of the "provocative" activities cited by Newcomb/Adams took place after Oswald ordered the weapons. [7] The Dodd Committee, on the other hand, was clearly interested in mail-order guns that had been sold to persons who already possessed a criminal record or were under age. Considering the record, Newcomb/Adams' claim that Oswald's activities fit the profile of one of the Dodd Committee's investigators is unquestionably false.

The Gun That Did Not Exist?

Next, Newcomb/Adams shift focus to Oswald's possession of a .38 caliber Smith & Wesson revolver at the time of his arrest. They cite the Dodd Committee hearings and claim that a chart based on ATF-prepared Seaport Trader records, shows that the gun dealer "did not ship a .38 Smith and Wesson revolver to Dallas in 1963." The chart, Dodd Committee Exhibit 28, is reproduced in the manuscript to underscore the claim. [8] This oft-cited passage has been used as the cornerstone of critical claims that the revolver attributed to Oswald was a "plant," dropped into Oswald's hand at the Texas Theater (or switched with Oswald's "real" gun), and that the paper trail later presented was fabricated to frame Oswald. Yet the record - and Newcomb/Adams' own manuscript - shows that Exhibit 28 was based on an incomplete record.

On April 24 & 25, 1964 the Dodd Committee questioned George W. Rose, owner of Seaport Traders. [9] Rose was chastised by Dodd for failing to turn over all records requested by the Committee. [10] Rose had turned in a list, while the Committee had requested true copies of all invoices representing shipments in the years 1961, 1962, and 1963. [11] Alcohol and Tobacco Tax Unit (ATU) agents went to Rose's office after numerous attempts to get Rose to cooperate, and pieced together the shipping record for the years cited. [12] The Committee found the ATU-compiled record to be incomplete - not all shipments had been included. [13] A chart, based on the incomplete record, was published as part of Committee's hearings:

All of this information was noted by Newcomb/Adams in their manuscript, including a copy of the chart. Yet, Newcomb/Adams concluded that since the "chart shows Seaport did not ship a .38 Smith & Wesson revolver to Dallas in 1963," that "Oswald's gun, in effect, did not exist." [14] Such a conclusion is, of course, inconsistent with the facts.

The chart prepared for the Dodd Committee was based on an incomplete record supplied by Seaport Traders. This fact is discussed throughout Rose's testimony and was duly noted by Newcomb/Adams. How then can Newcomb/Adams substantiate their claim that no .38 Smith & Wesson revolver was shipped to Dallas in 1963? The contradiction seems to have escaped the pair of researchers, as well as their critical supporters.

The fact that Seaport Traders did not turn over to the Dodd Committee a record of the revolver shipment to Oswald was no doubt due to one simple fact: the FBI had taken possession of the documents nearly four months prior to the committee's questioning of Seaport Trader owner, George W. Rose.

Los Angeles based FBI agents searched the records of George Rose & Company, Inc. on Saturday, November 30, 1963 [15] and located the original purchase and shipping records relating to the V510210 revolver, including the mail-order coupon filled out by Oswald. These records were confiscated and sent to the Dallas FBI office the same day. [16] George Rose, owner of Seaport Traders, was subpoenaed by the Dodd Committee on March 2, 1964. At the same time, the Dodd Committee requested true copies of all records pertaining to the years 1961, 1962, and 1963. [17] Two weeks before Rose's April 24th appearance, the committee had still not received the records they had subpoenaed. [18] A week later, ATU agents went to the George Rose & Company premises and pieced together the list which was eventually entered as evidence. [19] This list proved to be an incomplete record of the items requested. [20] Regardless of the state of Seaport Traders' records, the Oswald order could not have been part of those submitted to the Dodd Committee because records for the Oswald order had already been turned over to the FBI.

Shipping Firearms With Railway Express Agency

Newcomb/Adams further charge that "no record exists to show that Hidell/Oswald ever took possession of [the rifle and pistol]." [21] The charge infers that there should be a record, when in fact, none was required. Robert C. Hendon, Vice President in Charge of Operations, Railway Express Agency (REA) did propose to the Dodd Committee a change in the law which would require a consignee to sign a delivery receipt which would be retained by the carrier. [22] But, at the time of the Oswald order, REA Express rules did not require such a signature. Regulations only governed the declaration of the contents of a package and the methodology of delivery. Hendon testified:

"…we have always required that shipments of small arms be handled through our moneys department and that each employee handling such shipments sign a receipt for same. Our rules and regulations require that the contents of every shipment be declared by the shipper and stated in the express receipt. In fact, such declaration is necessary in order to permit the proper ascertainment of transportation charges." [23]

This declaration was duly noted on the Seaport Trader shipping documents: "1 Crtn Pistol." [24]


Figure 1. Michaelis Exhibit 4

Texas law states that one who wishes to purchase a pistol or handgun must first obtain from a justice of the peace, county judge, or district judge of the county of his residence a certificate of good character. [25] Although REA Express would withhold shipments to consignees who failed to display a license or permit in states requiring same, REA regulations do not specifically address whether a shipment would be withheld if a certificate of good character was not presented. [26] Hendon did testify that REA Express "has approximately 32,000 of its own employees, with individuals retiring or leaving the service each day, being replaced by new employees...It would be practically impossible to exercise such close control over and communication with all of our delivery employees to keep within the requirements of the law..." [27] Undoubtedly, there is no way of knowing how many packages containing firearms were delivered without a strict adherence to the law of any particular state.

Newcomb/Adams stated that REA Express was required to "compare a customer's signature with his signature on a legal document, such as a driver's license." [28] They cited the Dodd Committee hearings, yet the page referred to does not support the claim. REA Express did issue general rules and instructions to all employees as they pertain to the shipment of firearms. Those rules are:

Rule 255: Employees must use their best judgment in respect to identification and unless fully convinced of the claimants' identity, must decline to make delivery and should report the circumstance to a superior or agent. The utmost courtesy must at all times be observed in requiring identification.

Rule 257: If consignee is an entire stranger and is unable to obtain personal identification, he must furnish evidence that the shipment was sent to him - first, by correctly describing the contents thereof before shipment is opened, which must be done in the presence of employee effecting delivery; and, second, by surrendering shipping receipt, if in consignee's possession. If employee still has any doubt as to the party being the proper consignee, the goods must be held and agent notified. Letters, postal cards, or bank books should not be accepted as positive identification.

Rule 715: Hand-to-hand check must be made and receipts taken on form 5024 or other approved register forms for the following described shipments: Firearms - small pistols and revolvers. [29]

Oswald could meet Rule 255 by simply showing the false picture identification card in the name of A.J. Hidell - which he had in his possession at the time of his arrest, or meet Rule 257 by describing the contents of the package. Either way, he could take delivery of the revolver, without signing anything.

In the end, Newcomb and Adams' suggestion that Oswald was working for the Dodd Committee is false and unsupported by the events they cite. Their claim that Seaport Trader records show that no .38 Smith & Wesson revolvers were shipped to Dallas in 1963 ignores the fact that records of the Oswald transaction were already in the hands of the FBI at the time of the Dodd Committee Hearings. Finally, contrary to their manuscript, there is a substantial paper trail that connects Oswald to the pistol ordered from Seaport Traders.

How Oswald Ordered the Revolver

The .38 Smith & Wesson revolver used in the Tippit murder was originally purchased by Seaport Traders from Empire Wholesale Sporting Goods, Ltd., on October 13, 1962. Seaport Traders received it on January 3, 1963 and had it modified. [30]


Figure 2. Warren Commission Exhibit (CE) 135

Oswald ordered the .38 Smith and Wesson revolver under an assumed name (A.J. Hidell) using a mail-order coupon. [31] The coupon was dated "1/27," no year. The coupon and a $10.00 deposit was received by Seaport Traders on March 13, 1963. The order was filled by Emma Vaughan and shipped March 20, 1963. [32] The package sent contained a modified .38 Smith & Wesson revolver, serial number V510210.

The package was shipped C.O.D. to: A.J. Hidell, P.O. Box 2915, Dallas, Texas, with a balance of $19.95 due, plus C.O.D. charges. Two REA Express documents accompanied the shipment: (1) a description of the contents of the package [33], and (2) a C.O.D. document directing REA to remit the amount collected to Seaport Traders. [34]


Figure 3. Michaelis Exhibit 5

Upon arrival at the REA Express office in Dallas, notice was given to the consignee, Hidell. REA Express VP, Robert Hendon testified that in a similar case, "a card was sent to the name and address" on the package. [35] Presumably, a card was sent to Oswald's P.O. Box, notifying him that a package was to be picked up at the REA Express Office, located at 515 South Houston Street - at the north end of the Houston Street viaduct. Oswald's P.O. Box was at the Main Post Office in the Federal Building, 1114 Commerce Street, on the south side, seven blocks east of Houston at Murphy. Both locations were along bus routes easily accessible from Oswald's Neely Street address. [36]


Figure 4. Michaelis Exhibit 2

Once Oswald received the notification card at his P.O. Box, he simply took a bus back to the REA Express office - presented the notification card, the balance due, and some form of identification - and accepted delivery of the revolver.

After REA Express had delivered the package to Oswald, the C.O.D. remittance document [37] and the amount collected from Oswald, was forwarded to Seaport Traders. Once received, the C.O.D. remittance document was attached to the red copy of the invoice [38], indicating that the money had been collected and the package delivered. [39] These documents were placed in the Seaport Trader files, where they were discovered by FBI agents on November 30, 1963. [40]

The paper trail created by Oswald's purchase of the .38 Smith & Wesson revolver under the name A.J. Hidell is clear and direct. The actions taken by Seaport Traders and REA Express in response to Oswald's order are consistent with each company’s rules and regulations at the time and serve as evidence that the order was processed and delivered as described. The fact that the revolver shipped to Oswald's P.O. Box was in his possession at the time of his arrest is further evidence that the transaction occurred as demonstrated.

In conclusion, there can be no doubt that Oswald ordered and later took possession of the V510210 revolver.


Footnotes:

[1] Murder From Within, Fred T. Newcomb and Perry Adams, 1974, Unpublished Manuscript, p.269
[2] U.S. Congress, Senate, Subcommittee to Investigate Juvenile Delinquency of the Senate Judiciary, Hearings to Study the Interstate Traffic in Mail-Order Firearms, 88th Congress, 2nd Session, 1963, Pt. 14: S1448-11, Pt.15: S1561-1
[3] Newcomb/Adams, op. cit., p.269
[4] Ibid., p.269-270 [Note: Newcomb/Adams also note that Oswald told police during his interrogation that he "bought the revolver in Fort Worth." But, doesn't this contradict their thesis that Oswald is a "mail-order investigator?" Newcomb/Adams never point out that the evidence shows Oswald's alleged Fort Worth purchase is a lie.]
[5] Ibid., p.270
[6] Ibid., p.270
[7] Ibid., p.270-272
[8] Ibid., p.273
[9] Subcommittee to Investigate Juvenile Delinquency, S1561-1, op. cit., pp. 3647-3727
[10] Ibid., pp.3684-3686
[11] Ibid., p.3689
[12] Ibid., p.3689
[13] Ibid., p.3689
[14] Newcomb/Adams, op. cit., p.273
[15] 7H373
[16] FBI RIF 124-10164-10113; 7H379
[17] Subcommittee to Investigate Juvenile Delinquency, S1561-1, op. cit., p.3646, 3686
[18] Ibid., p.3687
[19] Ibid., p.3688
[20] Ibid., p.3689
[21] Newcomb/Adams, op. cit., p.270
[22] Subcommittee to Investigate Juvenile Delinquency, S1448-11, op. cit., p.3463
[23] Ibid., p.3460
[24] Michaelis Exhibit 4
[25] Subcommittee to Investigate Juvenile Delinquency, S1448-11, op. cit., p.3461
[26] Ibid., p.3461
[27] Ibid., p.3463
[28] Newcomb/Adams, op. cit., p.270
[29] Subcommittee to Investigate Juvenile Delinquency, S1448-11, op. cit., p.3466
[30] 7H375
[31] CE135
[32] 7H376; Michaelis Exhibit 4
[33] Michaelis Exhibit 4
[34] Michaelis Exhibit 5
[35] Subcommittee to Investigate Juvenile Delinquency, S1448-11, op. cit., p.3465
[36] The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza, Research Center, Dallas White Pages, 1964 [Note: Archivist Gary Mack notes that the REA Express phone number was RI2-5431 and the post office number was RI9-3140.]
[37] Michaelis Exhibit 5
[38] Michaelis Exhibit 2
[39] 7H378-379
[40] 7H378