HARVEY & LEE
Part One-Introduction
Researcher
John Armstrong has gained notoriety within the JFK research community for his
work on a Two-Oswald theory that he calls “Harvey and Lee”. Armstrong has made
several presentations in recent years outlining his hypothesis. According to
the theory, there were two individuals using the name Lee Harvey Oswald and
living a parallel existence. One Oswald would ultimately be framed for the
assassination of JFK while the other escaped undetected, presumably with the
help of whatever government agency or group was responsible for the plot. This
is the first in a series of articles that will attempt to counter the Armstrong
theory.
Mr. Armstrong has been presenting
his ideas to the research community since at least 1996, perhaps longer. Groups
he has appeared before include The JFK Lancer “November in Dallas” conferences
(‘97-’98), The Coalition on Political Assassinations (COPA), and the 1996
Fourth Decade Conference. Who is John Armstrong? According to a recent article
in Texas Monthly Magazine, he is a contractor and oilman who became interested
in the assassination after attending a course on the subject around 1990.[1]
The article mentions that he doesn’t appear to be in it for the money since he
owns a fine home and at least six cars. He seems to be an honest man who
sincerely believes in what he is doing.
I wrote a letter to Mr. Armstrong
in 1997 when I made a decision to rededicate myself to studying the
assassination and Oswald in particular. I was eager to learn what evidence he
had and though I leaned toward believing the Warren Report, I was willing to
keep an open mind. I was pleasantly surprised when he promptly responded with a
three-page letter offering encouragement and pointing me to sources of more
information about his theory. He also said, however, that I should make up my
own mind about the issues and not accept other research unquestioningly. I have
taken that advice to heart and the result is a dissenting opinion. I have spent
considerable time in the past 18 months studying material, including one of Mr.
Armstrong’s videos and substantial printed information.[2]
There are some basic issues that should be examined in detail, including
profundity of the evidence, motivation and reliability of eyewitnesses, and
old-fashioned common sense.
The idea of a “double” or “second”
Oswald is certainly not a new one. The history of such theories dates back at
least as far as 1966 when Richard Popkin, a Professor of Psychology, hit the
shelves with The Second Oswald, which drew little attention. Michael
Eddowes continued the tradition with his 1977 effort, The Oswald File. His idea was that Oswald had not returned from the
Soviet Union at all, but was replaced by a look alike Soviet assassin. Eddowes
was so sure he was right that he managed to convince Marina Oswald that the
body of LHO should be exhumed and autopsied. In 1981, after some legal
wrangling, the corpse was exhumed and examined by a team that included two
forensic pathologists and two forensic odontologists.[3]
The team concluded, “The remains in the grave marked as Lee Harvey Oswald are
indeed Lee Harvey Oswald”.[4]
This was enough to kill Eddowes theory, but apparently not Armstrong’s.
In the late 1970’s, the House
Select Committee on Assassinations looked into the idea of an Oswald double.
They used a team of anthropology consultants to examine the question of whether
there was any photographic evidence of an Oswald imposter. The team examined
photographs from several key periods in Oswald’s life: Marine Corps, Russia,
the famous “Backyard Photos”, New Orleans, and finally photos taken after his
arrest. They concluded, “There are no biological inconsistencies in the Oswald
photographs examined that would support the theory that a second person, or
double, was involved”.[5]
We can think of the “Harvey and
Lee” theory then as a third generation of the idea. So what are the problems I
have with this theory? I will address the issue of eyewitness reliability in
the remainder of this article. Subsequent articles will present a detailed
critique of several of Armstrong’s ideas taken from recent versions of his
presentation.
A major problem with Armstrong’s
ideas is his heavy reliance on eyewitness reports placing Oswald in various
unlikely locations. Armstrong has
Oswald in such places as North Dakota, Ohio, Tennessee, and others where there
is absolutely no evidence that he could have been. I studied the 39-page script
for his 1997 JFK Lancer presentation [6],
for example, and found that more than fifty of his assertions require you to
believe an eyewitness. What’s wrong with that?
The adages “seeing is believing”
or “I saw it with my own eyes” probably describe how most people feel about the
subject. However, eyewitnesses have fallen under increasing scrutiny in recent
years.[7]
The scientific community has conducted a number of studies to determine the
reliability of eyewitnesses and found that their testimony is, by itself,
probably not sufficient cause to convict and send someone to jail. It seems to
make sense then that the many sightings of Oswald in various places should be
held to a high degree of scrutiny. I recently explained my thesis by email to
world-renowned psychologist and eyewitness testimony expert Dr. Elizabeth
Loftus of the University of Washington. While she was aware of no studies
directly relating to eyewitness sightings of the type found in Mr. Armstrong’s
research, she did tell me “the phenomenon you're studying is very real, I
believe”.[8]
Let’s take a closer look at the
phenomenon of eyewitness testimony.
In
July 1998, the CBS newsmagazine “48 Hours” aired an episode titled
“Eyewitness”.[9] The program
featured a segment that chronicled a staged crime experiment enacted before a
group of law students. During a lecture, a man entered the room, grabbed a
briefcase from a desk, and ran back out. The professor then informed the
students that the scene they had witnessed was staged. During the subsequent
discussion, he offered his account of the “crime”. “All I saw”, he said, “is a
guy walking in…it looked like he had an earring on…he looked like he had an
extraordinarily large chin…”.
Later,
the students were interviewed about what they saw by Dr. Solomon Fulero, a
lawyer, Professor of Psychology, and expert on eyewitness testimony. The
students were shown a “lineup”, which consisted of six photos of men similar in
appearance to the “perpetrator”. The six wore the same color shirt, had similar
hairstyle and length, and were photographed against the same background. When
the results of the experiment were given, the students and prospective lawyers
were surprised to find that 80% of them had picked the wrong man. They were
similarly shocked to learn that the real “criminal” had not been in the photo
lineup at all.
Another
lineup was arranged, and this time the real suspect was included. Only 8 out of
35 students fingered the right man. Thirteen of the students picked the man in
the number five position in the lineup. When quizzed as to what feature made
them focus on this particular subject, one student offered, “his chin”. The
student was then shown a video clip of the Professor’s “extraordinarily large
chin comment” made just after the event. While his fellow students laughed, the
embarrassed young man had to admit that he might have been influenced by the
comment. Fulero then observed, “This is fairly typical of the kinds of
post-event information effects that we see. People may remember the
information, but not remember how they got it - but now it’s a part of their
memory”.
Ironically,
or perhaps fittingly, the subject of the Kennedy Assassination eyewitnesses
came up later in the broadcast. Not surprisingly, Jean Hill and her
ever-expanding story of shooters on the grassy knoll was presented as well as
discussions of Howard Brennan and the Newman family. Dr. Fulero again presented
expert commentary and offered this analysis of Hill. “What we have here is a
pretty good real-life case of post-event information”, Fulero later explained.
“People, when they are exposed to information after an event occurs, can
actually incorporate that information into their memory of the initial event
and remember it as though it had occurred at the time”. When asked to sum up
his analysis of Hill, Fulero said with some understatement, “I think she’s a
problematic witness”.
Also featured on the program in a
different segment was Dr. Gary Wells of the University of Iowa whose web site I
managed to locate. On his site I learned the following information would appear
in the 1999 Encyclopedia of Psychology [10]
under the entry “Eyewitness Testimony”. “Eyewitness testimony research includes
studies of the accuracy of witness’s first-hand reports of memory for objects,
actions, time, distance, and people. Memory for people has received a great
deal of research attention because the identification of suspects from lineups
(and photospreads) is particularly powerful, direct evidence of guilt at criminal
trials. Numerous general conclusions about the accuracy of eyewitness
identifications can be derived from staged-crime experiments. False
identifications are surprisingly common in staged-crime experiments. Rates of
false identification in these experiments can range from 5% to 95%, depending
on various other factors…”.[11]
The subject of eyewitnesses and
memory has roots in assassination literature as well. In the July 1992 issue of
the Third Decade, Ph. D. and critic
Dennis Ford offered his views on the subject in a piece called “Assassination
Research and the Pathology of Knowledge”.
Ford writes, “Researchers do not give enough consideration to memory
factors. Often there is a naive belief that witnesses saw what they saw pure
and simple. If skepticism is applied to eyewitness accounts, it is only to
dissenting witnesses. Yet memory research has shown that memory is not a
copy of an event but a reconstruction. Eyewitness reports are unreliable;
contrary to common sense, stress constricts the focus of attention and reduces
memory. People remember what they want. People remember what is plausible.
People remember a blend of observation and conversation about the observation.
People remember what interviewers put in their heads” (emphasis in original).[12]
So it would seem that a theory
relying heavily on eyewitness observation is not well grounded. The next part
of the series will begin a detailed look at Armstrong’s ideas.
[1] Patoski, Joe Nick. “The Two Oswalds”. Texas Monthly Magazine, November 1998.
[2] The material used in preparation of this series includes: Denial #2 by Jerry Robertson (re-titled Harvey & Lee '97) which features Armstrong’s presentation text and supporting documents, the video of Armstrong’s 1997 “November in Dallas” presentation, and miscellaneous internet material.
[3] Norton, L.E., Cottone, J.A., Sopher, I.M., and DiMaio, V.J.M., “The Exhumation and Identification of Lee Harvey Oswald”, Journal of Forensic Sciences, JFSCA, Vol. 29, No. 1, Jan. 1984, pp. 19-38.
[4] Ibid., pp. 32-33.
[5] HSCA Volume VI, pp. 274-78.
[6] JFK Lancer November in Dallas 1997 Conference Presentation Booklet by John Armstrong.
[7] The studies of eyewitness testimony relate largely to testimony provided at trial. It is logical to assume that the information provided by the studies would probably apply to eyewitness observations in general.
[8] Email message from Dr. Elizabeth Loftus, March 4, 1999.
[9] Conclusions and quotes were taken from a video of the segment.
[10] The Encyclopedia of Psychology. American Psychological Association, 1999.
[11] The web site of Gary Wells Ph.D.
[12]
Ford, Dennis. “Assassination Research and the Pathology of Knowledge”. The Third
Decade, July, 1992.