On
this date, January 3, 1967, the nightclub operator who shot and killed Harvey
Lee Oswald, died of lung cancer in Dallas, Texas. I will post information about
him from Wikipedia and other news link.
Jack Ruby
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Born
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Jacob Leon Rubenstein
March 25, 1911 Chicago, Illinois, United States |
Died
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January 3, 1967 (aged 55)
Dallas, Texas, United States |
Cause of death
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Pulmonary embolism
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Resting place
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Westlawn Cemetery
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Occupation
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Nightclub operator
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Criminal charge
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Murder of Lee Harvey Oswald
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Criminal penalty
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Death (overturned)
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Parents
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Jack Leon Ruby
(born Jacob Leon Rubenstein; March 25, 1911 – January 3, 1967) was a
nightclub operator in Dallas, Texas. Ruby was originally from Chicago,
Illinois; he moved to Dallas in 1947. On November 24, 1963, Ruby shot and
killed Lee Harvey Oswald who, according to five government investigations, was
the sniper who assassinated U.S. President John F. Kennedy on November 22,
1963. A Dallas jury found Ruby guilty of murdering Oswald, and Ruby was
sentenced to death. Later, Ruby appealed his conviction and death sentence and
was granted a new trial. As the date for his new trial was being set, Ruby
became ill and died of a pulmonary embolism due to lung cancer.
Some
contend Ruby was involved with major figures in organized crime, and conspiracy
theorists widely assert that Ruby killed Oswald as part of an overall plot
surrounding the assassination of President Kennedy. Others have disputed this,
arguing that Ruby's connection with gangsters was minimal at most, or
circumstantial, and also that Ruby was not the sort to be entrusted with such
an act within a high-level conspiracy.
Childhood
and early life
Jack
Ruby was born Jacob Leon Rubenstein to Joseph Rubenstein (1871–1958) and Fannie
Turek Rutkowski (or Rokowsky), both Polish-born, Orthodox Jews, in Chicago, on
March 25, 1911.
The
fifth of his parents' eight surviving children, growing up in the Maxwell
Street area of Chicago, Ruby had a troubled childhood and adolescence, marked
by juvenile delinquency and time spent in foster homes. On June 6, 1922, aged
11, he was arrested for truancy. Ruby eventually skipped school enough times
that he spent time at the Institute of Juvenile Research. Young Ruby sold
horse-racing tip sheets and various other novelties, then acted as business
agent for a local refuse collectors union that later became part of the
International Brotherhood of Teamsters.
In
the 1940s, Ruby frequented race tracks in Illinois and California. He was
drafted in 1943 and served in the Army Air Forces during World War II, working
as an aircraft mechanic at bases in the US until 1946. He had an honorable
record and was promoted to Private First Class. Upon discharge, on February 21,
1946, Ruby returned to Chicago.
In
1947, Ruby moved to Dallas where he and his brothers soon afterward shortened
their surnames from Rubenstein to Ruby. The stated reason for changing the
family name was that he and his brothers had opened up a mail order business
and feared that some customers would refuse to do business with Jews. Ruby
later went on to manage various nightclubs, strip clubs, and dance halls. Among
the strippers Ruby befriended was Candy Barr.
Ruby
developed close ties to many Dallas police officers who frequented his
nightclubs, where he showered them with large quantities of liquor and other
favors. In 1959, Ruby went to Cuba ostensibly to visit a friend, influential
Dallas gambler Lewis McWillie, an associate of Mafia boss Santo Trafficante.
Ruby may have met directly with Trafficante on those visits according to the
testimony of British journalist John Wilson-Hudson who was imprisoned in Cuba
at the time. (Trafficante operated major casinos in Cuba and was briefly
imprisoned after Fidel Castro came to power).
Ruby
never married.
Associations
with organized crime and gunrunning allegations
In
1964, the Warren Commission provided a detailed biography of Ruby's life and
activities to help ascertain whether he was involved in a conspiracy to
assassinate Kennedy. The Commission indicated that there was not a
"significant link between Ruby and organized crime" and said he acted
independently in killing Oswald. Fifteen years later, the House Select
Committee on Assassinations undertook a similar investigation of Ruby and said
that he "had a significant number of associations and direct and indirect
contacts with underworld figures" and "the Dallas criminal
element" but that he was not a "member" of organized crime.
Ruby
was known to have been acquainted with both the police and the Mafia. The HSCA
said that Ruby had known Chicago mobster Sam Giancana (1908-1975) and Joseph Campisi
(1918–1990) since 1947, and had been seen with them on many occasions. After an
investigation of Joe Campisi, the HSCA found:
While Campisi's technical characterization in federal law enforcement records as an organized crime member has ranged from definite to suspected to negative, it is clear that he was an associate or friend of many Dallas-based organized crime members, particularly Joseph Civello, during the time he was the head of the Dallas organization. There was no indication that Campisi had engaged in any specific organized crime-related activities.
Similarly,
a PBS Frontline investigation into the connections between Ruby and
Dallas organized crime figures reported the following:
In 1963, Sam and Joe Campisi were leading figures in the Dallas underworld. Jack knew the Campisis and had been seen with them on many occasions. The Campisis were lieutenants of Carlos Marcello, the Mafia boss who had reportedly talked of killing the President.
A
day before Kennedy was assassinated, Ruby went to Joe Campisi's restaurant. At
the time of the Kennedy assassination, Ruby was close enough to the Campisis to
ask them to come see him after he was arrested for shooting Lee Oswald.
Howard
P. Willens — the third highest official in the Department of Justice and
assistant counsel to J. Lee Rankin — helped organize the Warren Commission.
Willens also outlined the Commission's investigative priorities and terminated
an investigation of Ruby's Cuban related activities. An FBI report states that
Willens's father had been Tony Accardo's next door neighbor going back to 1958.
In 1946, Tony Accardo allegedly asked Jack Ruby to go to Texas with Mafia
associates Pat Manno and Romie Nappi to make sure that Dallas County Sheriff
Steve Gutherie would acquiesce to the Mafia’s expansion into Dallas.
Four
years before the assassination of President Kennedy, Ruby went to see a man
named Lewis McWillie in Cuba. Ruby considered McWillie, who had previously run
illegal gambling establishments in Texas, to be one of his closest friends. At
the time Ruby visited him, in August 1959, McWillie was supervising gambling
activities at Havana's Tropicana Club. Ruby told the Warren Commission that his
August trip to Cuba was merely a social visit at the invitation of McWillie. The
House Select Committee on Assassinations would later conclude that Ruby
"…most likely was serving as a courier for gambling interests." The
committee also found "circumstantial," but not conclusive, evidence
that "…Ruby met with [Mafia boss] Santo Trafficante in Cuba sometime in
1959."
James
E. Beaird, who claimed to be a poker-playing friend of Jack Ruby, told both The
Dallas Morning News and the FBI that Ruby smuggled guns and ammunition from
Galveston Bay, Texas to Fidel Castro's guerrillas in Cuba in the late 1950s.
Beaird said that Ruby "was in it for the money. It wouldn't matter which
side, just [whichever] one that would pay him the most." Beaird said that
the guns were stored in a two-story house near the waterfront, and that he saw
Ruby and his associates load "many boxes of new guns, including automatic
rifles and handguns" on a 50-foot military-surplus boat. He claimed that
"each time that the boat left with guns and ammunition, Jack Ruby was on
the boat."
Blaney
Mack Johnson, an FBI informant, said Ruby was "active in arranging illegal
flights of weapons from Miami" to pro-Castro forces in Cuba in the early
1950s.
Ruby about to shoot Oswald who is being escorted by Dallas police detectives Jim Leavelle and L. C. Graves. |
Timeline
November
21
The
Warren Commission attempted to reconstruct Ruby's movements from November 21,
1963 through November 24. The Commission reported that he was attending to his
duties as the proprietor of the Carousel Club in downtown Dallas and the Vegas
Club in the city's Oaklawn district from the afternoon of November 21 to the
early hours of November 22.
November
22: The assassination of Kennedy
According
to the Warren Commission, Ruby was in the second-floor advertising offices of
the Dallas Morning News, five blocks away from the Texas School Book
Depository, placing weekly advertisements for his nightclubs when he learned of
the assassination of Kennedy around 12:45 pm. Ruby then placed telephone calls
to his assistant at the Carousel Club and to his sister. The Commission stated
that an employee of the Dallas Morning News estimated that Ruby left the
newspaper's offices at 1:30 pm, but indicated that other testimony suggested he
may have left earlier.
White
House correspondent Seth Kantor — who was a passenger in the motorcade — told
the Warren Commission that he went to Parkland Hospital, where Kennedy received
medical care after the shooting, at about 1:30 pm, an hour after President
Kennedy was shot. Kantor said that as he was entering the hospital, he felt a
tug on his coat. He turned around to see Jack Ruby who called him by his first
name and shook his hand. (Kantor said that he had become acquainted with Ruby
while he was a reporter for the Dallas Times Herald newspaper.)
According to Kantor, Ruby asked him if he thought that it would be a good idea
for him to close his nightclubs for the next three nights because of the
tragedy and Kantor responded that he thought that doing so would be a good
idea.
The
Warren Commission dismissed Kantor's testimony, saying that the Parkland
Hospital encounter would have had to take place in a span of a few minutes
before and after 1:30 pm, as evidenced by telephone company records of calls
made by Kantor and Ruby around that time. The Commission also pointed to
contradictory witness testimony and to the lack of video confirmation of Ruby
at the scene. The Commission concluded that "Kantor probably did not see
Ruby at Parkland Hospital" and "may have been mistaken about both the
time and the place that he saw Ruby".
In
1979, the House Select Committee on Assassinations reexamined Kantor's
testimony and stated: "While the Warren Commission concluded that Kantor
was mistaken [about his Parkland encounter with Ruby], the Committee determined
he probably was not."
According
to the Warren Commission, Ruby arrived back at the Carousel Club shortly before
1:45 pm to notify employees that the club would be closed that evening.
Ruby
(also known by the childhood nickname "Sparky") was seen in the halls
of the Dallas Police Headquarters on several occasions after the arrest of Lee
Harvey Oswald on November 22, 1963; and newsreel footage from WFAA-TV (Dallas)
and NBC shows Ruby impersonating a newspaper reporter during a press conference
at Dallas Police Headquarters on the night of the assassination. District
Attorney Henry Wade briefed reporters at the press conference telling them that
Lee Oswald was a member of the anti-Castro Free Cuba Committee. Ruby was one of
several people there who spoke up to correct Wade, saying: "Henry, that's
the Fair Play for Cuba Committee," a pro-Castro organization. Some
speculate that Ruby may have hoped to kill Oswald that night at the police
station press conference. Ruby told the FBI, a month after his arrest for
killing Oswald, that he had his loaded snub-nosed Colt Cobra .38 revolver in
his right-hand pocket during the press conference.
November
24: The murder of Oswald
Later
in the day, after driving into town and sending a money order to one of his
employees, Ruby walked to the nearby police headquarters and made his way to
the basement. At 11:21 am CST — while authorities were escorting Oswald through
the police basement to an armored car that was to take him to the nearby county
jail — Ruby stepped out from a crowd of reporters and fired his .38 revolver
into Oswald's abdomen, fatally wounding him. The shooting was broadcast live
nationally, and millions of television viewers witnessed it.
The
House Select Committee on Assassinations in its 1979 Final Report opined:
…Ruby's shooting of Oswald was not a spontaneous act, in that it involved at least some premeditation. Similarly, the committee believed it was less likely that Ruby entered the police basement without assistance, even though the assistance may have been provided with no knowledge of Ruby's intentions… The committee was troubled by the apparently unlocked doors along the stairway route and the removal of security guards from the area of the garage nearest the stairway shortly before the shooting… There is also evidence that the Dallas Police Department withheld relevant information from the Warren Commission concerning Ruby's entry to the scene of the Oswald transfer.
When
Ruby was arrested immediately after the shooting, he told several witnesses
that he helped the city of Dallas "redeem" itself in the eyes of the
public, and that Oswald's death would spare "…Mrs. Kennedy the
discomfiture of coming back to trial." At the time of the shooting Ruby
said he was taking phenmetrazine, a central nervous system stimulant.
Ruby's
explanation for killing Oswald would be "exposed … as a fabricated legal
ploy", according to the House Select Committee on Assassinations. In a
private note to one of his attorneys, Joseph Tonahill, Ruby wrote: "Joe,
you should know this. My first lawyer Tom Howard told me to say that I shot
Oswald so that Caroline and Mrs. Kennedy wouldn't have to come to Dallas to
testify. OK?"
Another
motive was put forth by Frank Sheeran, allegedly a hitman for the Mafia, in a
conversation he had with the then-former Teamsters boss Jimmy Hoffa. During the
conversation, Hoffa claimed that Ruby was assigned the task of coordinating
police officers who were loyal to Ruby to murder Oswald while he was in their
custody. As Ruby evidently mismanaged the operation, he was given a choice to
either finish the job himself or forfeit his life.
Within
hours of Ruby's arrest for shooting Oswald, a telegram was received at the
Dallas city jail in support of Ruby, under the names of Hal and Pauline
Collins. In one of the Warren Commissions exhibits, Hal Collins is listed as a
character reference by Ruby on a Texas liquor license application.
Mugshot taken of Jack Ruby, taken following
his arrest. (Dallas Police Department photographic records.)
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Prosecution
and conviction
See also: Ruby v.
Texas
After
his arrest, Ruby asked Dallas attorney Tom Howard to represent him. Howard
accepted and asked Ruby if he could think of anything that might damage his
defense. Ruby responded that there would be a problem if a man by the name of
"Davis" should come up. Ruby told his attorney that he "…had
been involved with Davis, who was a gunrunner entangled in anti-Castro efforts."
Davis was identified years later — after research by journalist Seth Kantor —
as being Thomas Eli Davis III, a CIA-connected "soldier of fortune."
Later,
Ruby replaced attorney Tom Howard with prominent San Francisco defense attorney
Melvin Belli who agreed to represent Ruby pro bono. Some observers
thought that the case could have been disposed of as a "murder without
malice" charge (roughly equivalent to manslaughter), with a maximum prison
sentence of five years. Belli attempted to prove that Ruby was legally insane
and had a history of mental illness in his family (the latter being true, as
his mother had been committed to a mental hospital years before). On March 14,
1964, Ruby was convicted of murder with malice, for which he received a death sentence.
During
the six months following the Kennedy assassination, Ruby repeatedly asked,
orally and in writing, to speak to the members of the Warren Commission. The
commission initially showed no interest. Only after Ruby's sister Eileen wrote
letters to the commission (and her letters became public) did the Warren
Commission agree to talk to Ruby. In June 1964, Chief Justice Earl Warren,
then-Representative Gerald R. Ford of Michigan, and other commission members
went to Dallas to see Ruby. Ruby asked Warren several times to take him to
Washington D.C., saying "my life is in danger here" and that he
wanted an opportunity to make additional statements. He added: "I want to
tell the truth, and I can't tell it here." Warren told Ruby that he would
be unable to comply, because many legal barriers would need to be broken and
public interest in the situation would be too heavy. Warren also told Ruby that
the commission would have no way of protecting him, since it had no police
powers. Ruby said he wanted to convince President Lyndon Johnson that he was
not part of any conspiracy to kill Kennedy.
Alleged
conspiracies
The
Warren Commission found no evidence linking Ruby's killing of Oswald with any
broader conspiracy to assassinate Kennedy.
Following
Ruby's March 1964 conviction for murder with malice, Ruby's lawyers, led by Sam
Houston Clinton, appealed to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, the highest
criminal court in Texas. Ruby's lawyers argued that he could not have received
a fair trial in Dallas because of the excessive publicity surrounding the case.
A year after his conviction, in March 1965, Ruby conducted a brief televised
news conference in which he stated: "Everything pertaining to what's
happening has never come to the surface. The world will never know the true
facts of what occurred, my motives. The people who had so much to gain, and had
such an ulterior motive for putting me in the position I'm in, will never let
the true facts come above board to the world." When asked by a reporter,
"Are these people in very high positions, Jack?", he responded
"Yes."
Dallas
Deputy Sheriff Al Maddox claimed: "Ruby told me, he said, 'Well, they
injected me for a cold.' He said it was cancer cells. That's what he told me,
Ruby did. I said you don't believe that bullshit. He said, 'I damn sure do!'
[Then] one day when I started to leave, Ruby shook hands with me and I could
feel a piece of paper in his palm… [In this note] he said it was a conspiracy
and he said … if you will keep your eyes open and your mouth shut, you're gonna
learn a lot. And that was the last letter I ever got from him." Not long
before Ruby died, according to an article in the London Sunday Times, he
told psychiatrist Werner Teuter that the assassination was "an act of
overthrowing the government" and that he knew "who had President
Kennedy killed." He added: "I am doomed. I do not want to die. But I
am not insane. I was framed to kill Oswald."
Eventually,
the appellate court agreed with Ruby's lawyers for a new trial, and on October
5, 1966, ruled that his motion for a change of venue before the original trial
court should have been granted. Ruby's conviction and death sentence were
overturned. Arrangements were underway for a new trial to be held in February
1967 in Wichita Falls, Texas, when on December 9, 1966, Ruby was admitted to
Parkland Hospital in Dallas, suffering from pneumonia. A day later, doctors
realized he had cancer in his liver, lungs, and brain. Three weeks later, he
died.
According
to an unnamed Associated Press source, Ruby made a final statement from
his hospital bed on December 19 that he alone had been responsible for the
murder of Lee Harvey Oswald. "There is nothing to hide… There was no one
else," Ruby said.
Journalist
Seth Kantor — who testified that on the day of the assassination, he
encountered Ruby at Parkland Hospital — also reported that Ruby might have
tampered with evidence while at Parkland. Goaded by the Warren Commission's
dismissal of his testimony, Kantor researched the Ruby case for years. In a later
published book Who Was Jack Ruby?, Kantor wrote:
The mob was Ruby's "friend." And Ruby could well have been paying off an IOU the day he was used to kill Lee Harvey Oswald. Remember: "I have been used for a purpose," the way Ruby expressed it to Chief Justice Warren in their June 7, 1964 session. It would not have been hard for the mob to maneuver Ruby through the ranks of a few negotiable police [to kill Oswald].
In
his book, Contract on America, David Scheim presented evidence that
Mafia leaders Carlos Marcello, Santo Trafficante, Jr. and Jimmy Hoffa ordered
the assassination of President Kennedy. Scheim cited in particular a 25-fold
increase in the number of out-of-state telephone calls from Jack Ruby to
associates of these crime bosses in the months before the assassination.
According to Vincent Bugliosi, both the Warren Commission and the House Select
Committee on Assassinations determined all of these calls were related to Ruby
seeking help from the American Guild of Variety Artists in a matter concerning
two of his competitors. The House Select Committee on Assassinations report
stated "...that most of Ruby's phone calls during late 1963 were related
to his labor troubles. In light of the identity of some of the individuals with
whom Ruby spoke, however, the possibility of other matters being discussed
could not be dismissed."
In
his memoir, Bound by Honor, Bill Bonanno, son of New York Mafia boss
Joseph Bonanno, stated that he realized that certain Mafia families were
involved in the JFK assassination when Ruby killed Oswald, since Bonanno was
aware that Ruby was an associate of Chicago mobster Sam Giancana.
Criticism
In
Gerald Posner's book Case Closed: Lee Harvey Oswald and the Assassination of
JFK, Ruby's friends, relatives and associates stress how upset he was upon
hearing of Kennedy's murder, even crying on occasion, and how he went so far as
to close his money-losing clubs for three days as a mark of respect.
Dallas
reporter Tony Zoppi, who knew Ruby well, claims that one "would have to be
crazy" to entrust Ruby with anything as important as a high-level plot to
kill Kennedy since he "couldn't keep a secret for five minutes… Jack was
one of the most talkative guys you would ever meet. He'd be the worst fellow in
the world to be part of a conspiracy, because he just plain talked too
much." He and others describe Ruby as the sort who enjoyed being at
"the center of attention", trying to make friends with people and
being more of a nuisance.
Death
Ruby
died of a pulmonary embolism, secondary to bronchogenic carcinoma (lung
cancer), on January 3, 1967 at Parkland Hospital, where Oswald had died and
where President Kennedy had been pronounced dead after his assassination. He
was buried beside his parents in the Westlawn Cemetery in Norridge, Illinois.
Popular
culture
Ruby's
shooting of Oswald, and his behavior both before and after the Kennedy
assassination, have been the topic of numerous films, TV programs, books, and
songs. Articles of clothing that Ruby wore when he killed Oswald — including
his suit, hat and shoes — are on display at the Historic Auto Attractions
museum in Roscoe, Illinois.
Film
- In Oliver Stone's 1991 film JFK, Ruby was portrayed by actor Brian Doyle-Murray. Stone's perspective on events draws heavily from conspiracy theory researchers such as Jim Marrs and L. Fletcher Prouty. At least three scenes further detailing Ruby were removed from the film and are only available on DVD. One scene expanded on the Oswald shooting by showing corrupt Dallas police officers allowing Ruby to enter police headquarters through a restricted entrance.
- The 1992 film Ruby speculated on complex motivations that might have propelled Ruby into shooting Oswald. Among these were Ruby's reputation among family and friends as an assiduous, emotionally volatile publicity-seeker, and the influence of his long-time organized crime and Dallas police connections. Ruby was played by Danny Aiello.
Literature
- Ruby is one of the main characters of James Ellroy's novel, The Cold Six Thousand. The plot revolves around the aftermath of the assassination of President Kennedy, and the assassinations of Senator Robert Kennedy and Martin Luther King, Jr. It speculates about government agencies like the CIA and the FBI, as well as figures like J. Edgar Hoover, and their links to Mafia and anti-Castro groups alleged to have been involved in the assassinations.
- In his 1989 novel Libra, Don DeLillo portrays Ruby as being part of a larger conspiracy surrounding the President's assassination, imagining that a mob member persuades Ruby to kill Oswald.
Television
Ruby and Oswald (1978), a made-for-television movie, generally followed
the official record as presented by the Warren
Commission. Ruby's actions and dialogue (as well as those of the people he
comes in contact with) are nearly verbatim re-enactments of testimony given to
the Warren Commission by those involved, according to the opening narration.
Ruby was played by Michael Lerner.
Oklahoma City resident Mary Gray McCoy
visited her friend, Ruby, in jail about a week after Oswald was shot. She
continued to visit him until a few days before his mysterious death. (PHOTO
SOURCE: http://www.news9.com/story/24038306/jack-ruby-friend-jail-visitor-breaks-silence-after-50-years)
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INTERNET SOURCE: http://www.news9.com/story/24038306/jack-ruby-friend-jail-visitor-breaks-silence-after-50-years
Jack Ruby Friend, Jail
Visitor Breaks Silence After 50 Years
Posted: Nov 22, 2013 7:12 AM Updated: Nov 22, 2013 7:12
AM
OKLAHOMA CITY -
Fifty years after Dallas nightclub owner Jack Ruby
killed Lee Harvey Oswald, one of Ruby's good friends is talking publicly for
the first time.
Oklahoma City resident Mary Gray McCoy visited her
friend, Ruby, in jail about a week after Oswald was shot. She continued to
visit him until a few days before his mysterious death.
When President Kennedy was making his way through
the streets of downtown Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963, McCoy was busy working at a
hotel across the street from one of Ruby's nightclubs.
"I don't know just what they did in
there," McCoy said. "They had entertainers, dancers. I was never in
the club."
Now at the age of 100, with a strong long-term
memory, McCoy is finally telling her story.
"[Ruby] never cracked a smile," said
McCoy. "He was all business."
Several times a week, Ruby would stop by McCoy's
hotel to break change after regular banking hours. McCoy says that's how she
met the would-be killer.
McCoy was at home watching TV when she saw Ruby
shoot Oswald in the basement of the Dallas Police Department. McCoy says she
recognized Ruby right away. A week later, jailers she knew allowed her to visit
her friend.
"Jack was a different person all together
[after he was arrested]," McCoy told News 9. "He was so friendly. He
wouldn't mention the shooting or anything bad. [We] just had a normal
conversation."
McCoy would visit Ruby behind bars three times. The
last visit was right before his death. At that time, McCoy says Ruby appeared
to be in good health. Ruby's official cause of death was a pulmonary embolism
caused by lung cancer. That's something McCoy doesn't believe for a second.
"He didn't have cancer," said McCoy.
"They poisoned him. Somebody did."
McCoy is originally from Medicine Park, Okla. She
spent four decades in Dallas before returning to her home state. She is
currently living in northwest Oklahoma City.
McCoy was at home watching TV when she saw
Ruby shoot Oswald in the basement of the Dallas Police Department. (PHOTO
SOURCE: http://www.news9.com/story/24038306/jack-ruby-friend-jail-visitor-breaks-silence-after-50-years)
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