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K.C. upon John Kennedy S assassing agreed tentatively to testify at Clay make sure that a certain car was Shaw's trial, although Mrs. Giesbrecht far back on his head." (Accordir destroyed. Ferrie said there was more press reports, Ferrie wore a b was afraid to see her husband get money now at their disposal than ever. red wig and false eyebrows to mixed up in the case, They discussed a meeting to be held ceal burns he had suffered years What spurred Giesbrecht to agree at the Townhouse Motor Hotel in' fore. Giesbrecht says he didn't n to testify was a call he had got in early Kansas City, Missouri, on March 18. the color of his hair.) It seeme summer from Garrison himself. "He There had been no meeting since early him that the man resembled told me that my evidence would be a November of 1963." Laurel "when he gets that look great help to him, and that the pieces During all this time Giesbrecht was he's going to cry. Giesbrecht d locked perfectly into place, although hunched over his calendar pad, strain- really see the second mari's face; he didn't explain how. He confirmed ing to pick up the low voices over the were sitting back to back. He no that Ferrie had been in Winnipeg at piped-in music, the muffled shriek that his chin and neck were b the time and he said that no people of engines through the twin-paned pock-marked and that he wor from Winnipeg were involved. Maybe windows and the conversation of hearing aid in his right ear. Both these men were making connections to about a dozen other people in the were in their middle or late 40's; Minneapolis or Chicago. They just big dim room. He was aware of some wore light tweed suits and loafe happened to be here when I ran into girls at a corner table who laughed Perhaps Giesbrecht was doing them." a lot. much craning around in his chair On that day, February 13, 1964, any rate, two things happened al Giesbrecht had set up an appointment e 'Auntie" flies in simultaneously. The first was the with a client who worked at nearby became aware he was being stare Bristol Aircraft. He arrived at the air- There was more. The meeting would by a man sitting alone across a co port early, shortly after 2 p.m., to be registered under the name of a of the lounge, in front of a n have his first look inside the new textile firm. Ferrie mentioned an drapery separating the lounge and terminal. He sauntered around, went "aunt" who would be flying in from dining room. The second was tha into the Horizon Room, had one California. A name that sounded like conversation behind him changed drink, a Moscow Mule, walked out to Romeniuk came up several times. came innocuous. He can remer have a look at Gerald Gladstone's Ferrie asked about paper or merchan- Ferrie saying that he had flown sculpture, Solar Cone, in a fountain dise coming out of Nevada. Latin airplane like one on the apron outs courtyard near the lounge, called his Accent said it was too risky and that the window a small. execut client, found he had more time to kill, a house or shop had been closed down plane, Giesbrecht thinks it was, W returned to the lounge, sat at the same at a place called Mercury. He said two propellers. table half-way along a wall of win- that good shipment" had reached "I felt a wee bit jittery or excitel dows and ordered a Seven-Up. Two Caracas from Newport. There was he says. "I felt uneasy, uncomfortab men had taken the adjacent table. some speculation that investigation of I put on my overcoat. The conver His back to them, Giesbrecht planned Kennedy's death would not end if the tion had stopped. This third man 7 his sales approach and did some fig- Warren Commission found Oswald just staring at me. He was sort of uring on his weekly calendar pad. At guilty. ugly man. He had a nose that seer some point, probably at about 2.45 Giesbrecht managed to get a fast flat, a fighter's nose. It was a E p.m., he became aware that his neigh- look at the man he later said was nose. He was very fair, with bors were discussing the assassination Ferrie. "I told the FBI that he had flushed cheeks. He was in his in a way that seemed to implicate the oddest hair and eyebrows I'd ever thirties, a big man, odd-looking. I them. seen," he says. "The eyebrows were to walk by him to goi out." He started to listen, then to take wide and sort of streaky. The hair Giesbrecht, feeling uneasy, hu notes. It seemed to him that one of was very shiny and it started quite past Gladstone's Solar Cone into the men had a "Latin" accent; the other, the one he later concluded was Ferrie, an "American" accent. The voices were rather high-pitched, pre- cise-sounding. He sensed that both men were homosexuals. Oswald a pawn "I got the impression that a man named Isaacs was to have been the assassin or one of them, but that he had taken on Oswald to do the dirty work,' Giesbrecht says. "In the opin- ion of these men Oswald was a psycho. One of them said, 'How did Isaacs get mixed up with a psycho like that?' The man I think of as Ferrie won- dered how much Oswald had passed on to his wife or, for that matter, anyone else. Being mixed up with Oswald had been a foolish thing. Ferrie said that Isaacs could be seen on some film of Kennedy getting off a plane shortly before the assassina- tion. These men assured each other that when a man named Hochman or Hoffman got to Isaacs all loose ends At this table in Winnipeg's airport, Richard Giesbrecht took notes while would be tied up. He would also overhearing two men who may have been in on JFK's assassination, Democration Cube",