Posted on 11/24/2008 11:07:50 AM PST by lewisglad
Edwards, a Lawrence resident and former Lawrence police officer, has co-authored a book telling the story of one of those eyewitnesses. The publication coincides with the anniversary of Kennedys assassination, which occurred 45 years ago today in Dallas.
Beyond the Fence Line, which he wrote with Marysville teacher Casey J. Quinlan, is about Ed Hoffman, who cannot hear or speak and whose accounts were largely ignored for years because of his difficulty communicating.
Now, his story is told in detail in a 233-page book that includes many diagrams explaining his experience. Though hes told his story through shorter publications and has presented at the annual conference on the assassination sponsored by JFK Lancer Productions and Publications, an organization that supports alternative theories to the assassination that also published the book, this is the first in-depth look at his experience.
It is a wonderful feeling, Hoffman says via e-mail. I have been to the conference almost every year and have been able to tell my story, but I have often worried that when I am gone, the story will no longer be available for those interested. I now have it in print, and it will always be available for anyone to read and/or study.
The incident
Edwards, who now works in security for Nebraska Furniture Mart in Kansas City, Kan., first met Hoffman almost 20 years ago after Hoffmans story began circulating. Edwards has published several papers regarding the Kennedy assassination and was looking to do more research.
Hoffmans story is this, according to Edwards:
Hoffman broke a tooth while working at his job at Texas Instruments in Dallas. While driving to his dentist, he stopped in the Dealey Plaza area to watch the presidents motorcade drive by.
He stood on a bridge near the plaza and saw a pair of men talking by a railroad switchbox.
He saw a man in a business suit and fedora raise a rifle, saw a puff of smoke and ran down a fence line. The shooter stopped and tossed the rifle to another man, who took the weapon apart, put it in a canvas bag and walked away.
A few seconds later, Hoffman saw the presidents motorcade drive by, with obvious wounds to Kennedys head.
Hoffman attempted to tell several police officers including his uncle, who was on the force about what he saw, but his inability to talk and hear made it difficult.
Also, his family wanted to protect him from scrutiny or physical danger. After all, the government concluded that Oswald acted alone in the assassination, and the case was closed.
Unusual book
Debra Conway, president of JFK Lancer Productions and Publications (Lancer was the Secret Services code name for Kennedy), says Beyond the Fence Line is rare in that it focuses entirely on one witness account.
Typically in a book about witnesses, every chapter will have a different witness, she says. Whether we want to believe it or not, originally the witnesses were, and still are, very fearful about talking about what they had seen.
Conway, who lives in a Dallas suburb, says she realizes some people view conspiracy theorists as being crazy.
Its hard, she says. And I always say I wear my tinfoil hat with pride. You have to get past that and wear it with pride. There are reporters (and) there are professional historians who wont get near this case.
The Internet, she says, has made it easier for anyone with a theory to publish his or her thoughts. But she says Edwards and Quinlan have done their homework.
These authors did a tremendous job, she says.
A story told
Edwards says Hoffman is a sincere man and that the details in his story can be corroborated by other witness accounts from Nov. 22, 1963. Much of the book is spent explaining those connections.
Edwards believes as many as a dozen potential shooters were at the site to kill Kennedy that day.
But hes not confident the entire truth will ever be uncovered.
I hate to use the cliché that its the crime of the century, he says. Its killing the president in broad daylight, with hundreds and hundreds of witnesses. And the government seemed to brush it under the carpet.
For his part, Hoffman says hes always been angered that more people didnt listen to his story, even 45 years later.
It has always been frustrating to me that my story wasnt taken more seriously. From the first few hours following the assassination, no one took me seriously, he says. I knew I had valuable information and tried in every way to tell those who needed to know.
Now, the memories are as vivid as they were back then, he says.
I am sure that Lee Harvey Oswald was not the lone assassin that day, he says. Without a doubt.
Did anyone see the Oliver Stone film on 11.22, JFK? He blew the lone gunman theory to shreds.
Everytime someone pays attention to one of these nonsense books...the KGB laughs.
“Puff of smoke”? Were they using black powder??
It was apparently used to create a diversion, so the other shooter(s) could complete their assignment. Just reporting what I’ve read/heard.
Their other political assassination, Jimmy Hoffa is still unsolved.
The "witness" in your post claims a shot was fired from the front of the vehicle, perhaps the fatal head shot. Question: where did the bullet go?
Fact for your researches: the bullet from the fatal head shot was found in the limo. Where? And does that location, and other damage it did to the car, favor the "official" account or that of this "witness"?
It will be interesting to read the book, appearently this guy is an ex-cop and didn’t say anything for years.
—bflr—
JFK was a movie with little basis in fact other than it was barely entertaining.
I’m still wondering his Oswald fired off so many shots in so few seconds.
excuse me...please tell me you are “J/K” LOL
Stone's fiction had more holes than a colander.
As a Marine Corps Viet Nam combat veteran, I too thought for many years that there was more than one shooter BUT I have come to the conclusion that Oswald's plan was being at the right place, the lone shooter and JFK being there at the wrong time; Oswald was successful in his assassination attempt of JFK...And Jack Ruby just happened to be in the right place at the right time. Now that's not to say that there weren't others who wanted JFK dead but Oswald was the lone shooter and Ruby was the lone shooter...no conspiracies.
You’re a spiritual being having a human experience.???? If you believe in Oliver Stone, you must also be wearing love beads, painting your face, and wearing tie-dye.
“Did anyone see the Oliver Stone film on 11.22, JFK? He blew the lone gunman theory to shreds.”
Stone invented facts, events and characters. He blew nothing to shreds but the reputations of the actors in the movie.
Coupled with the 6.5 Carcano cartridge this little puppy is accurate,with low recoil, quick handling, and superb for followup shots, and powerful enough for anything up to whitetail deer. When slung properly as taught in the Marines, there is virtually zero recoil.
Could Oswald pull off 3 shots in about 6.8 seconds for 75 yards and less?
With what I have learned over the years about firearms and what the Marines teach. Oswald could have gotten off the three very easily.
“He saw a man in a business suit and fedora raise a rifle, saw a puff of smoke and ran down a fence line”
It was Dick Cheney who, after firing the fatal shot, boarded Elvis’ Halliburton-funded spaceship and they escaped through a time portal to Sept. 11, 2001 so they could fire the killer lasers that blew up the World Trade Center. There. It’s solved. /heavy, heavy sarc
“I find it very suspicious that so many of the assassination witnesses are dying off.”
Maybe because they’re, like, OLD now??
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