Post by Herbert Blenner on Feb 8, 2019 21:16:17 GMT -5
By Their Eyes, Height and Shoulders
by Herbert Blenner | Posted April 13, 2014
by Herbert Blenner | Posted April 13, 2014
Documents including photographic evidence show that Lee Harvey Oswald was impersonated over a span of several years. This conclusion flows from a comparison of the eyes, height and shoulders of subjects represented and misrepresented as Lee Harvey Oswald.
Eye color varies from one person to another. Brown or blue are the most common colors with gray being an unusual color. Many shades of these colors frequently occur. Brown eyes may vary from dark to light. The variations of blue eyes are more complicated. Besides variations of intensity from dark to light blue, the color quality may vary from hazel, slate or gray.
Usually people have eyes with matching colors and tones. This situation is pictured on the Minsk photo of CE 2892 showing Lee Harvey Oswald. The two mug shots of Oswald taken by the New Orleans Police Department and the Dallas Police Department show eyes with matching colors.
Both applications for passports bearing the name of Lee Harvey Oswald contained photographs of an individual with eyes of mismatching colors.
The application of September 10, 1959 - CE 946 showed that the right eye was lighter in shade than the left eye. Likewise the application of June 24, 1963 - CE 781 showed that the mismatch of the eyes occurred in the same manner as on the earlier passport with the right iris being lighter than the left.
Standard forms reflect the rarity of eyes with mismatching colors by omission of separate spaces for the description of each eye. Instead documents provide one space under the heading of eyes. The cited documents of CE 781, CE 946 - Continued, CE 1981 and CE 1989 illustrate this practice.
The official height of Lee Harvey Oswald as determined by the autopsy differs from the height given on other documents. These disagreements are no cause for concern. One can almost expect that random errors would cause the height on one document to differ by an inch or two more or less than the height on another document. However, in this case the differences in height are not randomly distributed. Instead the various documents fall into two distinct categories which have an unchanging two-inch difference in their heights.
Two documents give the height of Lee Oswald as 5' 9''. These are a Marine photograph from the late fifties published as JFK Exhibit F-166 by the HSCA and the autopsy report of November 24, 1963. The Warren Commission published this report as CE 1981.
Four documents list the height of Lee Oswald as 5' 11''. The first document, CE 1989, summarizes the contents of a Department of Defense identification card. This undated item carries an expiration date of December 7, 1962. An application for admission to the Albert Schweitzer College, CE 228, completed while Oswald was still in the Marines is the second document. The third document is the passport application of September 10, 1959, CE 946, completed one day before release from active duty. Likewise the fourth document is the passport application of June 24, 1963, CE 781.
Some people have squared shoulders and others have drooped shoulders. Usually, the shoulder either squared or drooped on one side of the body mirrors the shoulder on the opposite side. This is seen on photos of Oswald. However, other photos show an Oswald with unequal droops of the shoulders.
Three photographs show Lee Oswald had shoulders with equal and moderate droops. These pictures are the Marine photo, JFK Exhibit F-166, taken when Oswald was stationed in Japan, the mug shot taken on August 9, 1963 by the New Orleans Police Department and the Dallas Police Department mug shot of November 23, 1963.
An unequal droop of the shoulders may occur in two ways. The left shoulder may have more droop than the right or the right shoulder may have the excessive droop. The photographs on the passports of September 10, 1959 - CE 946 and June 24, 1963 - CE 781 show excessive droops of the right shoulder.
The various documents describing Oswald enable comparing the eyes, height and shoulders of the subjects.
Comparison of eye color inherently allowed four outcomes. Several photographs showed that both eyes were equally dark while a few pictures showed one eye lighter in shade than the other eye. This latter situation could arise in two ways. Namely the lighter eye is on the right side or on the left side. However, mismatched eyes only appeared with the lighter eye on the right side. The actual photographs place the eyes in two of four possible categories.
Height is rounded to the nearest inch. This practice calls immediate attention to the absence of any document which gives 5' 10'' as the height of Oswald. The absence of reported heights of one inch less than 5' 9'' or one inch more than 5' 11'' is also noted.
Usually people have eyes with matching colors and tones. This situation is pictured on the Minsk photo of CE 2892 showing Lee Harvey Oswald. The two mug shots of Oswald taken by the New Orleans Police Department and the Dallas Police Department show eyes with matching colors.
Both applications for passports bearing the name of Lee Harvey Oswald contained photographs of an individual with eyes of mismatching colors.
The application of September 10, 1959 - CE 946 showed that the right eye was lighter in shade than the left eye. Likewise the application of June 24, 1963 - CE 781 showed that the mismatch of the eyes occurred in the same manner as on the earlier passport with the right iris being lighter than the left.
Standard forms reflect the rarity of eyes with mismatching colors by omission of separate spaces for the description of each eye. Instead documents provide one space under the heading of eyes. The cited documents of CE 781, CE 946 - Continued, CE 1981 and CE 1989 illustrate this practice.
The official height of Lee Harvey Oswald as determined by the autopsy differs from the height given on other documents. These disagreements are no cause for concern. One can almost expect that random errors would cause the height on one document to differ by an inch or two more or less than the height on another document. However, in this case the differences in height are not randomly distributed. Instead the various documents fall into two distinct categories which have an unchanging two-inch difference in their heights.
Two documents give the height of Lee Oswald as 5' 9''. These are a Marine photograph from the late fifties published as JFK Exhibit F-166 by the HSCA and the autopsy report of November 24, 1963. The Warren Commission published this report as CE 1981.
Four documents list the height of Lee Oswald as 5' 11''. The first document, CE 1989, summarizes the contents of a Department of Defense identification card. This undated item carries an expiration date of December 7, 1962. An application for admission to the Albert Schweitzer College, CE 228, completed while Oswald was still in the Marines is the second document. The third document is the passport application of September 10, 1959, CE 946, completed one day before release from active duty. Likewise the fourth document is the passport application of June 24, 1963, CE 781.
Some people have squared shoulders and others have drooped shoulders. Usually, the shoulder either squared or drooped on one side of the body mirrors the shoulder on the opposite side. This is seen on photos of Oswald. However, other photos show an Oswald with unequal droops of the shoulders.
Three photographs show Lee Oswald had shoulders with equal and moderate droops. These pictures are the Marine photo, JFK Exhibit F-166, taken when Oswald was stationed in Japan, the mug shot taken on August 9, 1963 by the New Orleans Police Department and the Dallas Police Department mug shot of November 23, 1963.
An unequal droop of the shoulders may occur in two ways. The left shoulder may have more droop than the right or the right shoulder may have the excessive droop. The photographs on the passports of September 10, 1959 - CE 946 and June 24, 1963 - CE 781 show excessive droops of the right shoulder.
The various documents describing Oswald enable comparing the eyes, height and shoulders of the subjects.
Comparison of eye color inherently allowed four outcomes. Several photographs showed that both eyes were equally dark while a few pictures showed one eye lighter in shade than the other eye. This latter situation could arise in two ways. Namely the lighter eye is on the right side or on the left side. However, mismatched eyes only appeared with the lighter eye on the right side. The actual photographs place the eyes in two of four possible categories.
Height is rounded to the nearest inch. This practice calls immediate attention to the absence of any document which gives 5' 10'' as the height of Oswald. The absence of reported heights of one inch less than 5' 9'' or one inch more than 5' 11'' is also noted.