Monday, April 13, 2015

Interesting character this Kenneth Croy. He sure had a way of popping up. This is how James Norwood put it.



Pat, this addresses Sergeant Kenneth H. Croy.  I admired your turn of the phrase in "Croy got around."  He sure did.  On the assassination weekend, Croy got around to these locations:

(1)  Dealey Plaza at almost the exact time of the assassination

(2)  The Tippit crime scene:  Croy was the first Dallas police officer to arrive at 10th & Patton; in 2009, he claimed to have discovered Oswald's wallet at the crime scene

(3)  The Texas Theater:  Croy testified to the Warren Commission that he drove by the theater, counted the police cars in front and back, then drove off for lunch!

(4)  The basement of Dallas police headquarters on Sunday:  Croy was standing virtually next to Jack Ruby at the time of the murder of Oswald.  The FBI was curious about why Croy did not receive a work reprimand for failing to escort Ruby out of the garage.

*********

Of singular importance is the fact that over the assassination weekend, Croy was unassigned to all four of the areas both.

Kenneth H. Croy's obituary appears at the following site:

http://www.fortstocktonpioneer.com/obituaries/article_8bcbe480-1e14-11e2-a41b-001a4bcf887a.html

We are told in the text above that "the Lord called him home on October 21, 2012." 

While the obituary indicates that Kenny loved "law enforcement," there is no mention of the role he played on one of the most influential dates of the twentieth century:  November 22, 1963.

Two and half years have passed since the obituary above was published.  There have been 0 Tweets, 0 Likes, and 0 comments on this internet publication.  I have been very tempted to start a discussion thread on this site.

To my way of thinking, Kenneth H. Croy is a "person of interest" in the JFK assassination.


James






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