59 Witnesses Did the Limo Stop at the Grassy Knoll to facilitate the ambush of the
President?
By Vince Palamara
Palamara
is a prolific writer on the assassination, and archives of his work can
be found both
on his own
web page, and also
on
Deanie Richards' JFK Place.
Updated 1998 edition
(based off the original 1991 article "47 Witnesses" that appeared in The
Third Decade, Jan/ March 1992)
-UPI's Four
Days (1964), p. 17---In the right hand picture [a frame from the Muchmore
film], the driver slams on the brakes and the police escort pulls up."
-Newsweek,
12/2/63, p. 2---"For a chaotic moment, the motorcade ground to an uncertain
halt."
-Time,
11/29/63, p. 23---"There was a shocking momentary stillness, a frozen tableau."
-Case Closed
by Gerald Posner (1993), p. 234---"Incredibly, Greer, sensing that something
was wrong in the back of the car, slowed the vehicle to almost a standstill."
AND
-Gerald Posner,
with Dan Rather, on CBS' "Who Killed JFK: The Final Chapter?", 11/19/93---By
turning around the second time and looking at JFK as the car slows down,
Posner says that "What he [Greer] has done is inadvertantly given Oswald
the easiest of the three shots."
1) Houston
Chronicle Reporter Bo Byers (rode in White House Press Bus)---twice
stated that the Presidential Limousine "almost came to a stop, a dead stop";
in fact, he has had nightmares about this. [C-SPAN, 11/20/93, "Journalists
Remember The Kennedy Assassination"; see also the 1/94 Fourth Decade:
article by Sheldon Inkol];
2) ABC Reporter
Bob Clark (rode in the National Press Pool Car)---Reported on the air that
the limousine stopped on Elm Street during the shooting [WFAA/ ABC, 11/22/63];
3) UPI White
House Reporter Merriman Smith (rode in the same car as Clark, above)---"The
President's car, possibly as much as 150 or 200 yards ahead, seemed to
falter briefly" [UPI story, 11/23/63, as reported in Four Days,
UPI, p. 32];
4) DPD motorcycle
officer James W. Courson (one of two mid-motorcade motorcycles)--"The limousine
came to a stop and Mrs. Kennedy was on the back. I noticed that as I came
around the corner at Elm. Then the Secret Service agent [Clint Hill] helped
push her back into the car, and the motorcade took off at a high rate of
speed." [No More Silence by Larry Sneed (1998), p. 129];
5) DPD motorcycle
officer Bobby Joe Dale (one of two rear mid-motorcade motorcycles)---"After
the shots were fired, the whole motorcade came to a stop. I stood and looked
through the plaza, noticed there was commotion, and saw people running
around his [JFK's] car. It started to move, then it slowed again; that's
when I saw Mrs. Kennedy coming back on the trunk and another guy [Clint
Hill] pushing her back into the car." [No More Silence by Larry
Sneed (1998), p. 134];
6) Clemon Earl
Johnson---"You could see it [the limo] speed up and then stop, then speed
up, and you could see it stop while they [sic; Clint Hill] threw Mrs. Kennedy
back up in the car. Then they just left out of there like a bat of the
eye and were just gone." [No More Silence by Larry Sneed (1998),
p. 80];
7) Malcolm
Summers---"Then there was some hesitation in the caravan itself, a momentary
halt, to give the Secret Service man [Clint Hill] a chance to catch up
with the car and jump on. It seems to me that it started back up by the
time he got to the car…"[No More Silence by Larry Sneed (1998),
p. 104];
8) NBC reporter
Robert MacNeil (rode in White House Press Bus)---"The President's driver
slammed on the brakes---after the third shot…" [The Way We Were, 1963:
The Year Kennedy Was Shot by Robert MacNeil (1988), p. 193];
9) AP photographer
Henry Burroughs (rode in Camera Car #2)---"…we heard the shots and the
motorcade stopped." [letter, Burroughs to Palamara, dated 10/14/98];
10) DPD Earle
Brown---". . . The first I noticed the [JFK's] car was when it stopped..after
it made the turn and when the shots were fired, it stopped." [6 H 233];
11)
DPD motorcycle officer Bobby Hargis (one of the four Presidential motorcyclists)---".
. . At that time [immediately before the head shot] the Presidential car
slowed down. I heard somebody say 'Get going.' I felt blood hit me in the
face and the Presidential car stopped almost immediately after that." [6
H 294; Murder From Within by Fred Newcomb & Perry Adams (1974),
p. 71; 6/26/95 videotaped interview with Mark Oakes & Ian Griggs: "That
guy (Greer) slowed down, maybe his orders was to slow down…slowed down
almost to a stop." Like Posner, Hargis feels Greer gave Oswald the chance
to kill Kennedy.];
12) DPD D.V.
Harkness---". . . I saw the first shot and the President's car slow[ed]
down to almost a stop…I heard the first shot and saw the President's car
almost come to a stop and some of the agents [were] piling on the car."
[6 H 309];
13)
DPD James Chaney (one of the four Presidential motorcyclists)---stated
that the Presidential limousine stopped momentarily after the first shot
(according to the testimony of Mark Lane; corroborated by the testimony
of fellow DPD motorycle officer Marion Baker: Chaney told him that "…at
the time, after the shooting, from the time the first shot rang out, the
car stopped completely, pulled to the left and stopped…Now I have heard
several of them say that, Mr. Truly was standing out there, he said it
stopped. Several officers said it stopped completely." [2 H 44-45 (Lane)---refering
to Chaney's statement as reported in the Houston Chronicle dated
11/24/63; 3 H 266 (Baker)];
14) DPD motorcycle
officer B.J. Martin (one of the four Presidential motorcyclists)---saw
JFK's car stop "…just for a moment." [Murder From Within by Fred
Newcomb & Perry Adams (1974), p. 71];
15) DPD motorcycle
officer Douglas L. Jackson (one of the four Presidential motorcyclists)---stated
"…that the car just all but stopped…just a moment." [Murder From Within
by Fred Newcomb & Perry Adams (1974), p. 71];
16) Texas Highway
Patrolman Joe Henry Rich (drove LBJ's car)---stated that "…the motorcade
came to a stop momentarily." [Murder From Within by Fred Newcomb
& Perry Adams (1974), p. 71];
17) DPD J.W.
Foster---stated that "…immediately after President Kennedy was struck…the
car in which he was riding pulled to the curb." [CD 897, pp. 20, 21; Murder
From Within by Fred Newcomb & Perry Adams (1974), p. 97];
18)
Secret Service Agent Sam Kinney (driver of the follow-up car behind JFK's
limo)---indicates, via his report to Chief Rowley, that Greer hit the gas
after the fatal head shot to JFK and after the President's slump to the
left toward Jackie. [18 H 731-732]. From the HSCA's 2/26/78 interview of
Kinney: "He also remarked that 'when Greer (the driver of the Presidential
limousine) looked back, his foot must have come off the accelerator'…Kinney
observed that at the time of the first shot, the speed of the motorcade
was '3 to 5 miles an hour.'" [RIF#180-10078-10493; author's interviews
with Kinney, 1992-1994];
19) Secret
Service Agent Clint Hill (follow-up car, rear of limo)---"…I jumped from
the follow-up car and ran toward the Presidential automobile. I heard a
second firecracker-type noise…SA Greer had, as I jumped onto the Presidential
automobile, accelerated the Presidential automobile forward." [18 H 742;
Nix film; "The Secret Service" and "Inside The Secret Service" videos from
1995];
20) Secret
Service Agent John Ready (follow-up car)---"…I heard what sounded like
fire crackers going off from my post on the right front running board.
The President's car slowed…" [18 H 750];
21) Secret
Service Agent Glen Bennett (follow-up car)---after the fatal head shot
"the President's car immediately kicked into high gear." [18 H 760; 24
H 541-542]. During his 1/30/78 HSCA interview, Bennett said the follow-up
car was moving at "10-12 m.p.h.", an indication of the pace of the motorcade
on Elm Street [RIF#180-10082-10452];
22) Secret
Service Agent "Lem" Johns (V.P. follow-up car)---"…I felt that if there
was danger [it was] due to the slow speed of the automobile." [18 H 774].
During his 8/8/78 HSCA interview, Johns said that "Our car was moving very
slowly", a further indication of the pace of the motorcade on Elm Street
[RIF# 180-10074-10079; Altgens photo];
23) Secret
Service Agent Winston Lawson (rode in the lead car)---"…I think it [the
lead car on Elm Street] was a little further ahead [of JFK's limo] than
it had been in the motorcade, because when I looked back we were further
ahead." [4 H 352], an indication of the lag in the limo during the assassination.;
24) Secret
Service Agent William "Tim" McIntyre (follow-up car)---"He stated that
Greer, driver of the Presidential limousine, accelerated after the third
shot." [RIF#180-10082-10454: 1/31/78 HSCA interview];
25) Mrs. Earle
("Dearie") Cabell (rode in the Mayor's car)---the motorcade "stopped dead
still when the noise of the shot was heard." [7 H 487; Accessories After
the Fact by Sylvia Meagher (1967), p. 4; Murder From Within
by Fred Newcomb & Perry Adams (1974), p. 71];
26) Phil Willis---"…The
[Presidential] party had come to a temporary halt before proceeding on
to the underpass." [7 H 497; Crossfire by Jim Marrs (1989), p. 24];
27) Mrs. Phil
(Marilyn) Willis---after the fatal head shot, "she stated the Presidential
limousine paused momentarily and then sped away under the Triple Underpass."
[FBI report dated 6/19/64;
Photographic Whitewash by Harold Weisberg
(1967), p. 179];
28) Mrs. John
(Nellie) Connally (rode in JFK's limo)---JFK's car did not accelerate until
after the fatal head shot. [4 H 147; WR 50; Best Evidence by David
Lifton (1988), p. 122];
29) Texas Governor
John Connally (rode in JFK's limo and himself a victim of the assassination)---"…After
the third shot, I heard Roy Kellerman tell the driver, 'Bill, get out of
line.' And then I saw him move, and I assumed he was moving a button or
something on the panel of the automobile, and he said 'Get us to a hospital
quick'…at about this time, we began to pull out of the cavalcade, out of
line." [4 H 133; WR50; Crossfire by Jim Marrs (1989), p. 13];
30) Dallas
Morning News reporter Robert Baskin (rode in the National Press Pool Car)---stated
that "…the motorcade ground to a halt." [Dallas Morning News, 11/23/63,
p. 2; Murder From Within by Fred Newcomb & Perry Adams (1974),
p. 71];
31) Dallas
Morning News reporter Mary Woodward (Pillsworth)---"…Instead of speeding
up the car, the car came to a halt."; she saw the President's car come
to a halt after the first shot. Then, after hearing two more shots, close
together, the car sped up. [2 H 43 (Lane); Dallas Morning News,
11/23/63; 24 H 520; "The Men Who Killed Kennedy" 1988]. She spoke forcefully
about the car almost coming to a stop and the lack of proper reaction by
the Secret Service in 1993. [C-SPAN, 11/20/93, "Journalists Remember The
Kennedy Assassination"; see also the 1/94 Fourth Decade: article
by Sheldon Inkol];
32) AP photographer
James Altgens---"He said the President's car was proceeding at about ten
miles per hour at the time [of the shooting]…Altgens stated the driver
of the Presidential limousine apparently realized what had happened and
speeded up toward the Stemmons Expressway." [FBI report dated 6/5/64; Photographic
Whitewash by Harold Weisberg (1967), p. 203] "The car's driver realized
what had happened and almost if by reflex speeded up toward the Stemmons
Expressway." [AP dispatch, 11/22/63; Cover-Up by Stewart Galanor
(1998), Document 28];
33) Alan Smith---"…the
car was ten feet from me when a bullet hit the President in the forehead…the
car went about five feet and stopped." [Chicago Tribune, 11/23/63,
p. 9; Murder From Within by Fred Newcomb & Perry Adams (1974),
p. 71];
34) Mrs. Ruth
M. Smith---confirmed that the Presidential limousine had come to a stop.
[CD 206, p. 9; Murder From Within by Fred Newcomb & Perry Adams
(1974), p. 97];
35) TSBD Supervisor
Roy Truly---after the first shot "…I saw the President's car swerve to
the left and stop somewheres down in the area…[it stopped] for a second
or two or something like that…I just saw it stop." [3 H 221, 266];
36) L.P. Terry---"…The
parade stopped right in front of the building [TSBD]." [Crossfire
by Jim Marrs (1989), p. 26];
37) Ochus V.
Campbell---after hearing shots, "he then observed the car bearing President
Kennedy to slow down, a near stop, and a motorcycle policeman rushed up.
Immediately following this, he observed the car rush away from the scene."
[22 H 845];
38) Peggy Joyce
Hawkins---she was on the front steps of the TSBD and "…estimated that the
President's car was less than 50 feet away from her when he was shot, that
the car slowed down almost coming to a full stop." [Murder From Within
by Fred Newcomb & Perry Adams (1974), p. 97];
39) Billy Lovelady---"I
recall that following the shooting, I ran toward the spot where President
Kennedy's car had stopped." [22 H 662];
40) An unnamed
witness---from his vantage point in the courthouse building, stated that
"The cavalcade stopped there and there was bedlam." [Dallas Times Herald,
11/24/63;
Murder From Within by Fred Newcomb & Perry Adams (1974),
p. 97];
41) Postal
Inspector Harry Holmes (from the Post Office Annex, while viewing through
binoculars)---"…The car almost came to a stop, and Mrs. Kennedy pulled
loose of him and crawled out over the turtleback of this Presidential car."
[7 H 291]. He noticed the car pull to a halt, and Holmes thought: "They
are dodging something being thrown." [The Day Kennedy Was Shot by
Jim Bishop (1967), p. 176];
42) Peggy Burney---she
stated that JFK's car had come to a stop. [Dallas Times Herald,
11/24/63;
Murder From Within by Fred Newcomb & Perry Adams (1974),
p. 97; interestingly, during the 11/20/93 C-SPAN "Journalists Remember"
conference, Vivian Castleberry of the Dallas Times Herald made the
claim that her first cousin, Peggy Burney, was Abraham Zapruder's assistant
"and was next to him when he shot his famous film. She called and said,
'Vivian, today I saw the President die.'"!---See Sheldon Inkol's article
on this conference in the January 1994 Fourth Decade];
43) David Broeder--"…The
President's car paused momentarily, then on orders from a Secret Service
agent, spurted ahead." [Washington Evening Star, 11/23/63, p. 8];
44) Sam Holland---stated
that the Presidential limousine slowed down on Elm Street. [taped interview
with Holland conducted in April, 1965];
45) Maurice
Orr---noted that the motorcade stopped. [Arch Kimbrough, Mary Ferrell,
and Sue Fitch, Chronology, unpublished manuscript; see also Conspiracy
by Anthony Summers, pages 20 & 23];
46) Mrs. Herman
(Billy P.) Clay---"…When I heard the second and third shots I knew someone
was shooting at the President. I did not know if the President had been
hit, but I knew something was wrong. At this point the car President Kenedy
was in slowed and I, along with others, moved toward the President's car.
As we neared the car it sped off." [22 H 641];
47) Mrs. Rose
Clark---"…She noted that the President's automobile came almost to a halt
following the three shots, before it picked up speed and drove away." [24
H 533];
48) Hugh Betzner---"…I
looked down the street and I could see the President's car and another
one and they looked like the cars were stopped…then the President's car
sped on under the underpass." [19 H 467];
49) John Chism---after
the shots he saw "the motorcade beginning to speed up." [Crossfire
by Jim Marrs (1989), p. 29];
50) Bill Newman---after
the fatal head shot "the car momentarily stopped and the driver seemed
to have a radio or phone up to his ear and he seemed to be waiting on some
word. Some Secret Service men reached into their car and came out with
some sort of machine gun. Then the cars roared off…"; "I've maintained
that they stopped. I still say they did. It was only a momentary stop,
but…" [Crossfire by Jim Marrs (1989), p. 70; Murder From Within
by Fred Newcomb & Perry Adams (1974), p. 96] "I believe Kennedy's car
came to a full stop after the final shot." [JFK: Breaking The Silence
by Bill Sloan (1993), p. 169] "…I believe it was the passenger in the front
seat [Roy Kellerman]---there were two men in the front seat---had a telephone
or something to his ear and the car momentarily stopped. Now everywhere
that you read about it, you don't read anything about the car stopping.
And when I say "stopped" I mean very momentarily, like they hit the brakes
and just a few seconds passed and then they floorboarded [sic] and accelerated
on." [11/20/97 videotaped interview with Bill Law, Mark Row, & Ian
Griggs, as transcribed in November Patriots by Connie Kritzberg
& Larry Hancock (1998), p. 362] "One of the two men in the front seat
of the car had a telephone in his hand, and as I was looking back at the
car covering my son, I can remember seeing the tail lights of the car,
and just for a moment they hesitated and stopped, and then they floorboarded
[sic] the car and shot off." [No More Silence by Larry Sneed (1998),
p. 96];
51) Charles
Brehm---"Brehm expressed his opinion that between the first and third shots,
the President's car only seemed to move some 10 or 12 feet. It seemed to
him that the automobile almost came to a halt after the first shot…After
the third shot, the car in which the President was riding increased its
speed and went under the freeway overpass and out of sight." [22 H 837-838];
52) Mary Moorman---"She
recalls that the President's automobile was moving at the time she took
the second picture, and when she heard the shots, and has the impression
that the car either stopped momentarily or hesistated and then drove off
in a hurry." [22 H 838-839];
53) Jean Hill---"…The
motorcade came to almost a halt at the time the shots rang out and I would
say it [JFK's limo] was just approximately, if not---it couldn't have been
in the same position, I'm sure it wasn't, but just a very, very short distance
from where it had been. It [JFK's limo] was just almost stunned." [6 H
208-209; Hill's testimony on this matter was dramatized in the Oliver Stone
movie "JFK" (1991): "The driver had stopped-I don't know what was wrong
with that driver." See also JFK: The Book of the Film (1992), p.
122. Therein is referenced a March 1991 conversation with Jean Hill.];
54) James Leon
Simmons---"…The car stopped or almost stopped." [2/15/69 Clay Shaw trial
testimony; Forgive My Grief Vol. III by Penn Jones, p. 53; High
Treason by Groden & Livingstone (1990 Berkley Edition), p. 22];
55) Norman
Similas---"…The Presidential limousine had passed me and slowed down slightly."
[Liberty Magazine, 7/15/64, p. 13; Photographic Whitewash
by Harold Weisberg (1967), p. 233];
56) Presidential
Aide Ken O'Donnell (rode in the follow-up car)---"…If the Secret Service
men in the front had reacted quicker to the first two shots at the President's
car, if the driver had stepped on the gas before instead of after the fatal
third shot was fired, would Presdient Kennedy be alive today? [as quoted
in Marrs' Crossfire, p. 248, based off a passage from O'Donnell
& Powers' book Johnny, We Hardly Knew Ye] On page 40 of O'Donnell's
book Johnny, We Hardly Knew Ye, the aide reports that "Greer had
been remorseful all day, feeling that he could have saved President Kennedy's
life by swerving the car or speeding suddenly after the first shots." Indeed,
William E. Sale, an airman first class aircraft mechanic assigned to Carswell
AFB and who was stationed at Love Field before, during, and after the assassination,
stated that "when the agent who was driving JFK's car came back to Air
Force One he was as white as a ghost and had to be helped back to the plane
[undated Sale letter, provided to the author by Martin Shackelford];
57) Presidential
aide Dave Powers (rode in the follow-up car)---"…At that time we were traveling
very slowly…At about the time of the third shot, the President's car accelerated
sharply." [7 H 473-475]. On 11/22/88, Powers was interviewed by CBS' Charles
Kuralt. Powers remarked about the remorse Greer felt about not speeding
up in time to save JFK"s life and agreed with Kuralt that, if Greer had
sped up before the fatal head shot instead of afterwards, JFK might
still be alive today [CBS, 11/22/88---this is a very dramatic and compelling
short interview]. If that weren't enough, the ARRB's Tom Samoluk told me
that, during the course of an interview he conducted in 1996 in which the
Board was in the process of obtaining Powers' film, Powers said that he
agreed with my take on the Secret Service!;
58) Texas Senator
Ralph Yarborough (rode in LBJ's car)---"…When the noise of the shot was
heard, the motorcade slowed to what seemed to me a complete stop (though
it could have been a near stop)…After the third shot was fired, but only
after the third shot was fired, the cavalcade speeded up, gained speed
rapidly, and roared away to the Parkland Hospital."; "…The cars all stopped.
I put in there [his affidavit], 'I don't want to hurt anyone's feelings
but for the protection of future Presidents, they [the Secret Service]
should be trained to take off when a shot is fired." [7 H 439-440; Crossfire
by Jim Marrs (1989), p. 482; see also "The Men Who Killed Kennedy" 1988:
"The
Secret Service in the car in front of us kind of casually looked around
and were rather slow to react."];
59) First Lady
Jacqueline Kennedy (rode in the Presidential limousine)---"We could see
a tunnel in front of us. Everything was really slow then…[immediately after
shooting] And just being down in the car with his head in my lap. And it
just seemed an eternity…And finally I remember a voice behind me, or something,
and then I remember the people in the front seat, or somebody, finally
knew something was wrong, and a voice yelling, which must have been Mr.
Hill, "Get to the hospital," or maybe it was Mr. Kellerman, in the front
seat…We were really slowing turning the corner [Houston & Elm]…I remember
a sensation of enormous speed, which must have been when we took off…those
poor men in the front…" [5 H 179-181] Mary Gallagher reported in her book:
"She mentioned one Secret Service man who had not acted during the crucial
moment, and said bitterly to me, 'He might just as well have been Miss
Shaw!'" [My Life With Jacqueline Kennedy by Mary Barelli Gallagher
(1969), p. 342---Secret Service Agent Marty Venker and Jackie biographer
C. David Heymann confirm that this unnamed agent was indeed Greer (Confessions
of an Ex-Secret Service Agent, p. 25; A Woman Called Jackie,
p. 401)] Jackie also told Gallagher that "You should get yourself a good
driver so that nothing ever happens to you" [Ibid., p. 351]
* William Manchester,
who interviewed Greer, tells us what the driver told Jackie on 11/22/63
at Parkland Hospital: "Oh, Mrs. Kennedy, oh my God, oh my God. I didn't
mean to do it[?!?!], I didn't hear[who, Kellerman?], I should have swerved
the car[how about hitting the gas!], I couldn't help it[!]. Oh, Mrs. Kennedy,
as soon as I saw it[?] I swerved. If only I'd seen it in time! Oh!" (Manchester,
p.290). 59 witnesses (10 police officers, 7 Secret Service agents, 37 spectators,
2 Presidential aides, 1 Senator, Governor Connally, and Jackie Kennedy)
and the Zapruder film document Secret Service agent William R. Greer's
deceleration of the presidential limousine, as well as his two seperate
looks back at JFK during the assassination (Greer denied all of this to
the Warren Commission-2HGREER[see his entire testimony]). By decelerating
from an already slow 11.2 mph, Greer greatly endangered the President's
life, and, as even Gerald Posner admitted, Greer contributed greatly to
the success of the assassination. When we consider that Greer disobeyed
a direct order from his superior, Roy Kellerman, to get out of line before
the fatal shot struck the President's head, it is hard to give Agent Greer
the benefit of the doubt. As ASAIC Roy H. Kellerman said: "Greer then looked
in the back of the car. Maybe he didn't believe me"(The Death of a President
by William Manchester, p.160). Clearly, Greer was responsible, at fault,
and felt remorse. In short, Greer had survivor's guilt.
But, then,
stories and feelings changed.
Agent Greer
to the FBI 11/22/63: "Greer stated that he first heard what he thought
was possibly a motorcycle backfire and glanced around and noticed that
the President had evidently been hit [notice that, early on, Greer admits
seeing JFK, which the Zapruder proves he did two times before the fatsal
head shot occurred]. He thereafter got on the radio and communicated with
the other vehicles, stating that they desired to get the President to the
hospital immediately [in reality, Greer did not talk on the radio, and
Greer went on to deny ever saying this during his WC testimony]…Greer stated
that they (the Secret Service) have always been instructed to keep the
motorcade moving at a considerable speed inasmuch as a moving car offers
a much more difficult target than a vehicle traveling at a very slow speed.
He pointed out that on numerous occasions he has attempted to keep the
car moving at a rather fast rate, but in view of the President's popularity
and desire to maintain close liaison with the people, he has, on occasion,
been instructed by the President to "slow down". Greer stated that he has
been asking himself if there was any thing he could have done to have avoided
this incident, but stated that things happened so fast that he could not
account for full developments in this matter(!) [the "JFK-as-scapegoat"
theme…and so much for Greer's remorse from earlier the same day!]."(Sibert
& O'Neil Report, 11/22/63)
Agent Greer
to the FBI 11/27/63: "…he heard a noise which sounded like a motorcycle
backfire. On hearing this noise he glanced to his right toward Kellerman
and out of the corner of his eye noticed that the Governor appeared to
be falling toward his wife [notice that Greer now mentions nothing about
seing JFK hit---he does the same thing in his undated report in the WC
volumes (18 H 723)] He thereafter recalls hearing some type of outcry after
which Kellerman said, "Let's get out of here." He further related that
at the time of hearing the sound he was starting down an incline which
passes beneath a railroad crossing and after passing under this viaduct,
he closed in on the lead car and yelled to the occupants and a nearby police
motorcyclist, "Hospital, Hospital! [nothing about using the radio this
time out]" Thereafter follows a complete physical description of Greer,
as if the FBI agents considered him a suspect, inc. age, height, and color
of eyes! (Sibert & O'Neil Report, 11/29/63)
Critical excerpts
from Greer's 3/9/64 Warren Commission testimony before Arlen Specter:
Mr.
Specter. Were you able to see anything of President Kennedy as you glanced
to the rear?
Mr. Greer.
No, sir; I didn't see anything of the President, I didn't look, I wasn't
far enough around to see the President.
Mr. Specter.
When you started that glance, are you able to recollect whether you started
to glance before, exactly simultaneously with or after that second shot?
Mr. Greer.
It was almost simultaneously that he had--something had hit, you know,
when I had seen him. It seemed like in the same second almost that something
had hit, you know, whenever I turned around. I saw him start to fall.
Mr. Specter.
Did you step on the accelerator before, simultaneously or after Mr. Kellerman
instructed you to accelerate?
Mr. Greer.
It was about simultaneously.
Mr. Specter.
So that it was your reaction to accelerate prior to the time--
Mr. Greer.
Yes, sir.
Mr. Specter.
You had gotten that instruction?
Mr. Greer.
Yes, sir; it was my reaction that caused me to accelerate.
Mr. Specter.
Do you recollect whether you accelerated before or at the same time or
after the third shot?
Mr. Greer.
I couldn't really say. Just as soon as I turned my head back from the second
shot, right away I accelerated right then. It was a matter of my reflexes
to the accelerator.
Mr. Specter.
Was it at about that time that you heard the third shot?
Mr. Greer.
Yes, sir; just as soon as I turned my head
[…]
Mr. Specter.
To the best of your current recollection, did you notice that the President
had been hit?
Mr. Greer.
No, sir; I didn't know how badly he was injured or anything other than
that. I didn't know.
Mr. Specter.
Did you know at all, from the glance which you have described that he had
been hit or injured in any way?
Mr. Greer.
I knew he was injured in some way, but I didn't know how bad or what.
Mr. Specter.
How did you know that?
Mr. Greer.
If I remember now, I just don't remember how I knew, but I knew we were
in trouble. I knew that he was injured, but I can't remember, recollect,
just how I knew there were injuries in there. I didn't know who all was
hurt, even.
Mr. Specter.
Are you able to recollect whether you saw the President after the shots
as you were proceeding toward Parkland Hospital?
Mr. Greer.
No; I don't remember ever seeing him any more until I got to the hospital,
and he was lying across the seat, you know, and that is the first I had
seen of him.
Mr. Specter.
Your best recollection is, then, that you had the impression he was injured
but you couldn't ascertain the source of that information?
Mr. Greer.
Right. I couldn't ascertain the source.
Warren Commission
finding: "The driver, Special Agent William R. Greer, has testified that
he accelerated the car after what was probably the second shot...The Presidential
car did not stop or almost come to a complete halt after the firing of
the first shot or any other shots."(WC Report, page 641)
11/19/64 interview
with Death of a President author William Manchester [RIF#180-10116-10119]---"After
the second shot I glanced back. I saw blood on the Governor's white shirt,
and I knew we were in trouble. The blood was coming out of his right breast.
When I heard the first shot, I had thought it was a backfire. I was tramping
on the accelerator and at the same time Roy was saying, let's get out of
here fast."
But remember
what Roy Kellerman said: "Greer then looked in the back of the car. Maybe
he didn't believe me"(The Death of a President by William Manchester,
p.160).
2/28/78 HSCA
interview [RIF#180-10099-10491]---"The first shot sounded to him like a
backfire. He did not react to it. After the second shot he turned to his
right and saw blood on Governor Connally's shirt. At the same moment he
heard Kellerman say "We're hit. Let's get out of here," or words to that
effect. He said he immediately accelerated and followed the pilot car to
Parkland Hospital [However, DNC Advance man Jack Puterbaugh, who rode in
the pilot car, said they "pulled over and let the motorcade pass" (HSCA
interview 4/14/78). The Washington Post from 2/28/85 reported Greer
as saying that "I just looked straight ahead at the car in which the police
chief was leading our way to the hospital"---this is the lead car. Nevertheless,
the Daniel film and still photos depict the limousine ahead of the
lead car, as it appear it was the lead motorcyclists who actually guided
Greer to Parkland! (see pp. 21-22 and 59 of The Third Alternative
by the author)]
Bill Greer
passed away from Cancer on 2/23/85.
From a 9/17/91
interview with limo driver William Greer's son Richard:
When asked,
"What did your father think of JFK," Richard did not respond the first
time. When this author asked him a second time, he responded: "Well, we're
Methodists..and JFK was Catholic..." (Bill Greer was born and raised in
County Tyrone, Ireland; 2 H 112 - 113)
"My father
certainly didn't blame himself; it's not one of those things - if only
I was driving one mile per hour faster....
"My father
had absolutely no survivor's guilt...he figured that events were kind out
of their control...it was pretty common knowledge that a person riding
in an open car was subject to a bullet at any time..."
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