AAA Bail Bonds Service business card owned by Jack Ruby

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AAA Bail Bonds Service business card owned by Jack Ruby

This AAA Bail Bonds Service business card was originally owned by Jack Ruby. It was one among the evidence collected by the Dallas County District Attorney’s Office during the investigation leading up to the Jack Ruby trial for the murder of Lee Harvey Oswald. It is made of thick white paper with the following text printed in dark blue and red ink:Riverside 8-2009 Riverside 8-4564(Day or Nite)AAABAIL BONDSSERVICEMax RudbergRes. EM 1-7311 106 N. Record

Object Details
Object title:

AAA Bail Bonds Service business card owned by Jack Ruby

Date:

1963

Medium:

Paper

Dimensions:

2 × 3 1/2 in. (5.1 × 8.9 cm)

Credit line:

Loaned Courtesy the Dallas County District Attorney's Office/The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza

Object number:

L2017.1.13.76

Curatorial Note:

In order to ensure its long-term care and preservation and to facilitate public access, the Dallas County District Attorney's Office placed their Jack Ruby Trial Collection (sometimes referred to as "the DA's Jack Ruby file") on long-term loan with The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza in 2017. The Museum is working to make the entire collection accessible through this online collections database. To find out more about this collection or to access materials not yet included here, contact readingroom@jfk.org. - Megan Bryant, Director of Collections and Interpretation

Max I. Rudberg, owner and operator of AAA Bail Bonds Service, told the FBI in December 1963 that Jack Ruby briefly stopped by his office at 106 North Record around 11:00AM on Thursday, November 21, 1963. He was inquiring about an upcoming peace bond hearing in which Ruby was the defendant. The peace bond had been filed by a former Carousel Club performer, Janet Conforto, aka Jada. Rudberg went on to tell the FBI that he had known Ruby for some five years and that Ruby never gave "any indication of having any type political interests." Rudberg's FBI interview is detailed in Warren Commission Exhibit No. 2265. He passed away on June 23, 1972. -- Stephen Fagin, Curator

AAA Bail Bonds Service business card owned by Jack Ruby

This AAA Bail Bonds Service business card was originally owned by Jack Ruby. It was one among the evidence collected by the Dallas County District Attorney’s Office during the investigation leading up to the Jack Ruby trial for the murder of Lee Harvey Oswald. It is made of thick white paper with the following text printed in dark blue and red ink:Riverside 8-2009 Riverside 8-4564(Day or Nite)AAABAIL BONDSSERVICEMax RudbergRes. EM 1-7311 106 N. Record

Object Details
Object title:

AAA Bail Bonds Service business card owned by Jack Ruby

Date:

1963

Terms:

Jack Ruby trial

Evidence

DA's Ruby file

Ruby, Jack

Dallas Police Department

Dallas County District Attorney's Office

Dallas

Medium:

Paper

Dimensions:

2 × 3 1/2 in. (5.1 × 8.9 cm)

Credit line:

Loaned Courtesy the Dallas County District Attorney's Office/The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza

Object number:

L2017.1.13.76

Curatorial Note:

In order to ensure its long-term care and preservation and to facilitate public access, the Dallas County District Attorney's Office placed their Jack Ruby Trial Collection (sometimes referred to as "the DA's Jack Ruby file") on long-term loan with The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza in 2017. The Museum is working to make the entire collection accessible through this online collections database. To find out more about this collection or to access materials not yet included here, contact readingroom@jfk.org. - Megan Bryant, Director of Collections and Interpretation

Max I. Rudberg, owner and operator of AAA Bail Bonds Service, told the FBI in December 1963 that Jack Ruby briefly stopped by his office at 106 North Record around 11:00AM on Thursday, November 21, 1963. He was inquiring about an upcoming peace bond hearing in which Ruby was the defendant. The peace bond had been filed by a former Carousel Club performer, Janet Conforto, aka Jada. Rudberg went on to tell the FBI that he had known Ruby for some five years and that Ruby never gave "any indication of having any type political interests." Rudberg's FBI interview is detailed in Warren Commission Exhibit No. 2265. He passed away on June 23, 1972. -- Stephen Fagin, Curator