Searching for the Truth (Always Telling the Truth Means Never Having to Remember Anything) by Dennis G. Balthaser

Roswell Incident; Once a non-believer, facts don't matter
DGB: Who asked you if you had your camera available and told you to go to General Ramey's office?
JBJ: I was assigned by my city editor, Cullum Greene, after he had just received a "flash" AP Teletype that a "captured" flying saucer was being flown to Ft Worth from Roswell, and wanted photos of the craft. According to Johnson other photographers for the newspaper were not available at that time.
DGB: For the record, I understand that you took 6 photographs (three different setups) on July 8, 1947 in General Ramey's office. Agreed?
JBJ: Yes
DGB: You didn't remember meeting or taking photographs of Major Marcel, until after you looked at the pictures at the University of Texas at Arlington library where they are archived. You then remembered taking Marcel's pictures, and that was based on the markings on the film that was used for the other photographs you did remember taking?
JBJ: Agreed
DGB: The photograph of Irving Newton was not taken by you, agreed?
JBJ: Agreed
When I asked Bond about the unopened packages on the floor, he said, "that there hadn't been time to open them all, and what was opened was in a pile, so he rearranged it for the photo shoot."
Bond had made a statement that the paper in General Ramey's hand in the photographs was a press release that he had handed to Ramey. In my interview with Johnson he admitted he was in error about that.
Bottom line for James Bond Johnson is the fact that he did take 6 photographs in General Ramey's office, but not the one of Irving Newton, and he had no other involvement, although he embellished his involvement in various interviews he had done.
Dennis G. Balthaser
Website: www.truthseekeratroswell.com
Email: truthskr@roswell.net
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