Post by Michael Capasse on Feb 20, 2020 12:11:30 GMT -5
State
Richard Snyder, was the senior in charge of citizenship, at the US Embassy in Moscow.
He was asked specifically if he saw Marina in the office in July 1961. He also said no.
Two men, both agreeing on the same thing, both are mistaken about the month.
McVickar, ended his session looking for papers, and discussions off the record
It picks up again in another volume. There appears to be more than we are told.
I haven't gone thru McVickar's second session or Snyder yet, there will be more time in new topics.
But notice the difference in the dynamic these men are questioned vs. Marguerite.
How the commission gets what it wants, when it knows what it needs.
Both men cooperated fully, and the process fell into place.
See how Coleman took charge to get the end results from McVickar.
This is the State Dept., they can alter their own documents, or dates or files.
There is evidence of other officials tampering with dates on other pages in this case
The discrepancy in the dates pushes back the filing of Marina's petition.
An expedition otherwise not in the record, yet two men question and doubt what they are told they did.
The record reflects a result, without documents or files to altercate the official findings.
See how they handled Marguerite.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Richard Snyder | WC Testimony
Foreign Service officer,
stationed in the Embassy in the Soviet Union, 1959-61.
Mr. COLEMAN. On July 8 and July 10, when Oswald was at the Embassy, did you see his wife, Marina?
Mr. SNYDER. Not to the best of my knowledge, Mr. Coleman.
Mr. COLEMAN. Did you have any knowledge that she was also in Moscow?
Mr. SNYDER. I don't really know. I can't say whether at that time I had knowledge that she was or not.
I don't ever recall having seen her, no.
Mr. COLEMAN. When you spoke to Oswald on the 8th or on the 10th of July, did he indicate that his wife was in Moscow?
Mr. SNYDER. I am sorry, I don't know.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
What Really Happened.
Mr. McVICKAR. No; because I think what happened, and I think this is reflected in the record.
I think what happened was that Oswald himself came into Moscow and was interviewed by Mr. Snyder on July 10,
and that he did not have his wife with him, and that he said that he was going to try to get his wife to come
to Moscow in the next few days, so that she could be interviewed in connection with the visa,
but that in fact she did not appear until several weeks later, some time in August.