Ruth Hyde Paine (born
September 3, 1932) was a friend of
Marina Oswald, who was living with her at the time of the
JFK assassination. According to four government investigations,
Lee Harvey Oswald stored the 6.
5 mm caliber Carcano rifle that he used to assassinate
U.S. President John F. Kennedy in
Ruth Paine's garage, unbeknownst to her and her husband,
Michael Paine.
Ruth Paine drove Marina Oswald to
New Orleans when the Oswalds moved there in May
1963 and back to
Dallas when they moved again in
September 1963. When the Oswalds resettled in the Dallas area,
Marina and Lee's child, June, moved in with Ruth Paine the suburb of
Irving, Texas while Lee stayed in a boarding house under the name
O.H. Lee. The second
Oswald child was born after Marina moved in. Marina helped with the housework and
Ruth’s
Russian studies while Lee visited on weekends. By this time
Michael and Ruth had separated, though their divorce was amicable and Michael was a frequent visitor. At the suggestion of a neighbor, Ruth Paine told
Lee Oswald about a job opportunity at the
Texas School Book Depository.
Lee Harvey Oswald stayed at the Paine home with Marina and his children unannounced on Thursday night,
November 21, 1963—the night before
President Kennedy was assassinated. When Oswald left for work on the morning of
November 22, he brought a large package that he had kept in the Paine's garage with him to work at the Texas School Book Depository. Oswald's coworker and friend,
Wesley Frazier testified that Oswald told him the bag contained curtain rods. The evidence demonstrated that the package actually contained the rifle used by Oswald in the assassination.
After the assassination, Marina and Lee Oswald's mother
Marguerite briefly stayed with Ruth Paine until Marina was taken into custody by the
Secret Service. Marguerite and Lee's brother
Robert did not like Ruth Paine, which may have influenced Marina Oswald. They thought Paine sought attention for herself, an opinion Marina would later express before the
Warren Commission. Ruth wrote to Marina incessantly, with letters that took an almost desperate tone, but received no response except for a
Christmas card. They met briefly in 1964 but afterwards they would never see each other again. Paine heard news about Marina through author
Priscilla Johnson McMillan until McMillan’s relationship with Marina broke off in the early
1980s.
Eight days after the assassination of President Kennedy, on
November 30, 1963, Ruth Paine inadvertently discovered evidence that Lee Oswald had attempted to assassinate
General Edwin Walker. Among the letters that Ruth Paine repeatedly sent to Marina was a thick book of household advice in
Russian. The book contained an undated note left by Lee for Marina on April 10, 1963 (the day of the
Walker assassination attempt) which Marina would later testify she had concealed. Before the
Kennedy assassination,
Dallas police had no suspects in the Walker shooting.
Ruth Paine testified before the Warren Commission and has been interviewed by a number of authors, including
Johnson, William Manchester and
Gerald Posner. She has appeared in numerous documentaries and even a mock trial of Lee Harvey Oswald. She also testified in
Jim Garrison's trial of
Clay Shaw. Paine was not called to testify before the
House Select Committee on Assassinations.
Articles that have appeared in the mainstream press and publications about Ruth Paine have generally been kind. However, conspiracy theorists have often depicted the Paines in a negative light, attempting to connect them to various conspiracies going back generations, since Michael Paine’s relatives and ancestors held important government and business positions. In
Oliver Stone's
JFK, the Paines are depicted as
Bill and
Janet Williams, played by
Gary Carter and
Gail Cronauer. While most names in the movie JFK were not changed, it has been suggested the Paines were renamed to avoid potential legal action. (The name Janet Williams was used again in the
1993 TV movie Fatal Deception:
Mrs. Lee Harvey Oswald, in which the role was played by Quenby Bakke.
The City of
Irving bought the former Paine home in 2009 and has been restoring it to its 1963 condition to be turned into a museum in time for the 50th anniversary of the Kennedy assassination on November 22,
2013.
Ruth Paine returned to
Pennsylvania and became principal of a
Quaker school, the
Greene Street Friends School located in
Germantown. She soon moved to
St. Petersburg, Florida and earned a master’s degree in psychology from the
University of South Florida. After working for the school system in
Franklin County in the
Florida Panhandle, she returned to
St. Petersburg and worked for the
Hillsborough County, Florida school system until her retirement. She is active in Quaker and liberal charities and organizations and lives in
Santa Rosa, California.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruth_Paine
- published: 29 Oct 2014
- views: 2268