1:10:03
The longer he delays, the more chance
the building will be sealed by police.
1:10:08
Is he guilty? Does he walk
out the nearest staircase?
1:10:13
He buys a Coke...
1:10:15
...and at a slow pace, spotted by Mrs. Reid
on the second floor...
1:10:20
...he strolls out
the more distant front exit...
1:10:22
...where cops have gathered.
1:10:24
Odd, since three shots were fired
from there...
1:10:27
...nobody seals the Depository
for ten more minutes.
1:10:30
Oswald slips out,
as do several other employees.
1:10:33
When he realized something had gone
wrong and Kennedy had been killed...
1:10:38
...he knew there was a problem.
Maybe even that he was the patsy.
1:10:42
An intuition, maybe. The President killed
in spite of his warning.
1:10:46
The phone call that never came.
1:10:48
Perhaps fear now came to Oswald
for the very first time.
1:10:53
Oswald returns to his rooming house
around 1:00 p.m...
1:10:56
...a half hour after the assassination.
1:10:58
A man shot the President!
1:11:00
He puts on his jacket,
grabs his.38 revolver...
1:11:03
...and leaves at 1:04.
1:11:05
Earlene Roberts, the housekeeper,
heard two beeps on a car horn.
1:11:10
Two uniformed cops pulled up
while Oswald was in his room.
1:11:12
Like it was a signal.
1:11:15
Officer Tippet is shot between 1:10
and 1:15, a mile away.
1:11:19
And though no one saw him walking...
1:11:22
...the government says
Oswald covered that distance.
1:11:24
Giving the government the benefit
of the doubt...
1:11:27
...Oswald would've had to jog a mile
in six to eleven minutes...
1:11:30
...then commit the murder,
reverse his direction...
1:11:32
...and walk 3/5ths of a mile
to the Texas Theater...
1:11:36
...and arrive sometime before 1:30.
1:11:44
Is also a useful conclusion.
1:11:45
After all, why would Oswald
kill Officer Tippet...
1:11:48
...unless he just shot the President
and feared arrest?
1:11:51
Domingo Benevides...
1:11:55
...the closest witness to the shooting...
1:11:57
...refused to identify Oswald as the killer
and was never taken to a lineup.