Report of the President's Commission on the Assassination of President John F. Kennedy cover
Kennedy, John F

Report of the President's Commission on the Assassination of President John F. Kennedy

Alleged Visit to Austin

A U.S. Selective Service System employee in Austin, Texas, stated that a man identifying himself as “Harvey Oswald” appeared at her office immediately after lunch on September 25 to discuss rectifying his undesirable Marine Corps discharge. However, all information she provided could have been derived from news media by the time she spoke with the FBI, and other Austin residents who should have observed him failed to corroborate her testimony. The Commission determined that the phone call to the Twifords—intended to arrange a Houston meeting that evening—indicates Oswald was in Houston or en route. He could not have traveled from New Orleans to Austin and back to Houston on September 25 unless by air, yet airline records show no such flights, and his limited finances and established frugality made such travel extremely unlikely.

Travel to the Mexican Border

On September 26, Oswald boarded Continental Trailways Bus No. 5133 in Houston, departing at 2:35 a.m. for Laredo via Corpus Christi and Alice. British tourists Dr. and Mrs. John B. McFarland boarded the same bus and noticed Oswald when they awoke around 6 a.m. He told them he was going to Cuba via Mexico City, that he had left New Orleans the previous afternoon, and that he was secretary of the New Orleans Fair Play for Cuba Committee, hoping to see Fidel Castro. The bus was scheduled to arrive in Laredo at approximately 1:20 p.m.

Journey to Mexico City

Oswald crossed the border from Laredo to Nuevo Laredo between 1:30 and 2 p.m. on September 26. He boarded Flecha Roja Bus No. 516 at 2:15 p.m., scheduled to arrive in Mexico City at 9:45 a.m. the following day, holding baggage claim check No. 320435. The McFarlands and two Australian girls who boarded at Monterrey saw him on the bus. He sat next to an elderly Englishman, probably Albert Osborne, an itinerant British preacher, whose denial of sitting beside Oswald the Commission found not credible. During the 20-hour trip, Oswald conversed with the Australian girls, mentioning his visit to Russia, recommending the Hotel Cuba, and apparently falsely claiming prior stays there. He did not speak Spanish, got off at every stop to eat large meals alone, and the bus arrived 15 minutes late at 10 a.m. on September 27.

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