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[D.A. Henry Wade and reporters at Dallas Police Department headquarters]

Description: Original black and white photographic negative taken by a Dallas Times Herald staff photographer. This image shows Dallas County Criminal District Attorney Henry Wade and Captain of Homicide and Robbery J.W. 'Will' Fritz (wearing a hat, standing behind Wade) surrounded by reporters in a hallway at the Dallas Police Department headquarters.
Date: November 23, 1963
Creator: Dallas Times Herald
Partner: The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza
transcript

ABC Special on Assassination Events

Description: Audio recording of an ABC News Radio special on unanswered questions surrounding the assassination of President John F. Kennedy by Lee Harvey Oswald.
Date: September 12, 1964
Duration: 36 minutes 47 seconds
Creator: WFAA-TV (Television station : Dallas, Tex.)
Partner: UNT Libraries Special Collections

[Additional Report by Marvin Johnson on Officer's Duties #2]

Description: Carbon copy of additional report by Marvin Johnson regarding his actions after the assassination of President Kennedy. Johnson writes that on the 30th of November, 1963, he drove to Parkland Hospital to measure the distance from Emergency to the Texas Book Depository Building.
Date: 1963-11-30~
Creator: Dallas (Tex.). Police Department.
Partner: Dallas Municipal Archives

[Additional Report by Marvin Johnson on Officer's Duties #3]

Description: Carbon copy of additional report by Marvin Johnson regarding his actions after the assassination of President Kennedy. Johnson writes that on the 30th of November, 1963, he drove to Parkland Hospital to measure the distance from Emergency to the Texas Book Depository Building.
Date: 1963-11-30~
Creator: Dallas (Tex.). Police Department.
Partner: Dallas Municipal Archives

[Additional Report by Marvin Johnson on Officer's Duties #4]

Description: Carbon copy of additional report by Marvin Johnson regarding his actions after the assassination of President Kennedy. Johnson writes that on the 30th of November, 1963, he drove to Parkland Hospital to measure the distance from Emergency to the Texas Book Depository Building.
Date: 1963-11-30~
Creator: Dallas (Tex.). Police Department.
Partner: Dallas Municipal Archives

[Affidavit by Billy Nolan Lovelady #1]

Description: Handwritten affidavit by Billy Nolan Lovelady. Lovelady was working on the sixth floor on the morning of November 22nd. When the President's car passed by, he and Shelly were standing outside the building. The car was about fifty yards away when shots were heard. Lovelady went back inside the building and escorted some police officers inside. He did not see anyone in the building who was not supposed to be there.
Date: November 22, 1963
Creator: Dallas (Tex.). Police Department.
Partner: Dallas Municipal Archives

[Affidavit by Billy Nolan Lovelady #2]

Description: Handwritten affidavit by Billy Nolan Lovelady. Lovelady was working on the sixth floor on the morning of November 22nd. When the President's car passed by, he and Shelly were standing outside the building. The car was about fifty yards away when shots were heard. Lovelady went back inside the building and escorted some police officers inside. He did not see anyone in the building who was not supposed to be there.
Date: November 22, 1963
Creator: Dallas (Tex.). Police Department.
Partner: Dallas Municipal Archives

[Affidavit by Cecil J. McWatters #1]

Description: Handwritten affidavit by Cecil J. McWatters. McWatters states that he was driving a bus at about 12:40 PM when he picked up a man, who told him that the President had been shot, and then a woman. The woman did not believe that the President had been shot, and the man grinned. McWatters does not recall where he let the man off. He writes that the man looks like the #2 man in the lineup he saw.
Date: November 22, 1963
Creator: Dallas (Tex.). Police Department.
Partner: Dallas Municipal Archives

[Affidavit by Charles Douglas Givens #1]

Description: Handwritten affidavit by Charles Douglas Givens. Givens took a lunch break at noon and went down to the street. He and a friend who worked at a parking lot watched the President's car pass by. When they returned to the parking lot, they heard three shots.
Date: November 22, 1963
Creator: Dallas (Tex.). Police Department.
Partner: Dallas Municipal Archives

[Affidavit by Danny Garcia Arce]

Description: Handwritten affidavit by Danny Garcia Arce, an employee at the Texas Book Depository. Danny worked on the sixth floor on the morning of the 22nd, but went down on the street at lunchtime to watch the parade. He heard three shots and a woman screamed that the president had been shot. Earlier in the day he had seen an old man in a brown suit leave the building and drive off in a black Buick. At 8:00 AM he had seen Lee Harvey Oswald on the first floor of the building. He identified Lee Harvey Oswa… more
Date: November 22, 1963
Creator: Dallas (Tex.). Police Department.
Partner: Dallas Municipal Archives

[Affidavit by Jack E. Dougherty #1]

Description: Handwritten affidavit by Jack E. Dougherty. Dougherty states that he has worked at the Texas School Book Depository since 1952. On the day that the president was assassinated, Dougherty worked on the sixth floor until noon, at which point he went downstairs to eat lunch. He heard shots from the fifth floor which sounded like they were coming from inside the building. He saw Lee Harvey Oswald on the sixth floor before he ate lunch, but not afterward.
Date: 1963-11~
Creator: Dallas (Tex.). Police Department.
Partner: Dallas Municipal Archives

[Affidavit by Johnny Calvin Brewer #1]

Description: Handwritten affidavit of Johnny Calvin Brewer. Brewer stated that he heard on the radio that the president had been shot. Soon after, he saw a man who matched the description of the assailant and followed him to the Texas Theater. The man looked scared and nervous. Brewer asked that the police be called and the suspect was taken away.
Date: November 22, 1963
Creator: Dallas (Tex.). Police Department.
Partner: Dallas Municipal Archives

[Affidavit by Johnny Calvin Brewer #2]

Description: Handwritten affidavit of Johnny Calvin Brewer. Brewer stated that he heard on the radio that the president had been shot. Soon after, he saw a man who matched the description of the assailant and followed him to the Texas Theater. The man looked scared and nervous. Brewer asked that the police be called and the suspect was taken away.
Date: November 22, 1963
Creator: Dallas (Tex.). Police Department.
Partner: Dallas Municipal Archives

[Affidavit by Johnny Calvin Brewer #3]

Description: Photocopy of an affidavit given by Johnny Calvin Brewer. Brewer stated that he heard on the radio that the president had been shot. Soon after he saw a man who matched the description of the assailant and followed him to the Texas Theater. The man looked scared and nervous. Brewer asked that the police be called and the suspect was taken away.
Date: November 22, 1963
Creator: Dallas (Tex.). Police Department.
Partner: Dallas Municipal Archives

[Affidavit by M. L. Baker]

Description: Handwritten affidavit by M. L. Baker. Baker was a motorcycle escort for President Kennedy. He heard three shots and, realizing they were rifle shots, tried to figure out where they came from. Upon finding the building, he entered and was escorted by the building manager to the stairs.
Date: November 22, 1963
Creator: Dallas (Tex.). Police Department.
Partner: Dallas Municipal Archives

[Affidavit by Ruth Paine]

Description: Handwritten affidavit by Ruth Paine. Paine states that she and her husband are separated and that Marina Oswald stays with her in her home. Lee Harvey Oswald, who found work at the Texas School Book Depository, is said to have spent some weekends with his wife. The weekend before the assassination of President Kennedy, however, Lee did not visit his wife.
Date: November 22, 1963
Creator: Dallas (Tex.). Police Department.
Partner: Dallas Municipal Archives

[Affidavit by Seymour Weitzman]

Description: Handwritten statement by Buell Wesley Frazier, age 19, who worked at the Texas School Book Depository. Frazier writes that Lee Harvey Oswald worked at the Texas School Book Depository, as did he. Frazier was in the habit of driving Oswald home with him on weekends, and noted that Oswald's wife lived with Ruth Paine. On the week that the president was shot, Oswald asked to go home with him on a Thursday evening, claiming that he needed to put up curtain rods. On Friday morning, Frazier noticed t… more
Date: 1963-11~
Creator: Dallas (Tex.). Police Department.
Partner: Dallas Municipal Archives
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