JFK Conspiracy Theories IV: The One With The Whales

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2 things... 1. Kleins did not run out of stock on the 36" until September of '63. 2. Kleins did not start selling the 40" until April '63 which is after the time the WC said LHO bought the rifle.

These assertions of yours are based on what evidence?


Hank, your imagination is ripe! I took the liberty to highlight your inferences and WAGs. Not one of the speculations is supported by evidence outside of your fertile story telling mind.
And I am sure you can provide documentation to support your guess. The only person who can speak to LHO frame of mind is LHO... not you.

Tell me what part of the below you didn't understand:

I was once asked: [emphasis added]
(a) why Oswald bothered to fashion a paper sack out of wrapping paper from the Depository since the rifle was already wrapped within a blanket, and
(b) if he was going to that trouble, why didn't he make the sack long enough to contain the assembled rifle?


I was asked to speculate on Oswald's frame of mind. I did. Your complain goes nowhere.

My speculations were based on the available evidence, such as Oswald ordering a 36" rifle and being shipped a 40" one, which helps account for the 38" package found at his place of work with his prints on it. Again, thinking he owned a 36" rifle, he made a 38" package out of Depository paper and not having measured his rifle at any time, was no doubt surprised to find his 40" weapon didn't fit in his 38" bag. I also explained why he left the blanket behind appearing undisturbed.

If you have better speculations as to Oswald's frame of mind, let's hear them.



Why did the conspirators, who presumably planted the 40-inch weapon on the sixth floor, make a 38-inch sack and plant that instead of planting a 42-inch sack? Didn't they know the length of the rifle they were framing Oswald for owning?
Excellent Straw Men!

You apparently don't understand what a straw man argument is. Yours is, as I asked about what Frazier or Randle said not at all. Instead of answering the question, you changed the subject to those two witnesses and talk about their estimates. I am asking conspiracy theorists to fill in the gaps in typical conspiracy arguments. The fact that you don't even try and instead switch to something you'd rather discuss is most telling.


Why did the conspirators, who presumably planted the 40-inch weapon on the sixth floor, make a 38-inch sack and plant that instead of planting a 42-inch sack? Didn't they know the length of the rifle they were framing Oswald for owning?
First, a Witness that saw LHO carry the sack into the TSBD is required.

We have two, and you go on to mention them both. But both have nothing to do with the question I asked.


Why did the conspirators, who presumably planted the 40-inch weapon on the sixth floor, make a 38-inch sack and plant that instead of planting a 42-inch sack? Didn't they know the length of the rifle they were framing Oswald for owning?
Buell Wesley Frazier witnessed LHO bringing a sack approximately 27" long with him that morning but not a 38" sack. Buell's sister also witnessed seeing a sack the size that her brother saw... outside of that Nobody saw LHO carry a 38" sack into the building that day or any other day. The WC said Frazier was mistaken on the length and then they said his sister was also mistaken yet the cornerstone of the WC saying LHO brought the rifle to work is based on Buell's and his sister's testimony (except for their description of what they say).

You're bringing up points first raised 51 years ago by Mark Lane. They weren't sufficient then, they aren't sufficient now. Please tell us why you expect witnesses to be 100% accurate on the dimensions of something they never handled, never measured, and only estimated the dimensions of. Mark Lane never did enunciate his reasons for quibbling over the estimates, nor tell us what estimates he would accept. If Frazier had estimated 33 inches or 44 inches, would both those estimates likewise exclude Oswald's weapon, as the estimates are too short or too long to be a 38" package? What about 37 inches or 39 inches? What are the upper and lower boundaries you'll accept on estimates?

And if you're going to persist in arguing it wasn't a rifle that Oswald brought into the Depository, please tell us:
(a) what was in the package Oswald brought to the Depository that morning,
(b) what happened to what was in the blanket stored in the Paine garage,
(c) where'd the 'whatever' that Oswald brought into the Depository wound up,
(d) why was the sack found on the sixth floor determined to be long enough to contain the disassembled rifle,
(e) why that sack found on the sixth floor was made in the recent past with Depository paper,
(f) why it had Oswald's prints on it,
(g) How did Oswald's rifle get into the Depository, and
(h) please, tell us why Oswald denied in custody he brought any long sack to the Depository that morning, going as far as claiming Frazier must be mistaken and thinking of some other time?

Try to advance a coherent argument here actually responding to the points I raise. Bonus points if you can actually cite any evidence to support your claims.


So the only 2 people who can put LHO with a package were told they were wrong (the size of the package) by a Committee that never saw the package.

Along with the commission, Oswald was likewise insisting they were wrong, denying he brought any long package to work that day, claiming he only brought his lunch. Do you agree with Oswald here, or are you going to insist he was being less than truthful? If the former, explain why those two witnesses thought they saw a long package. If the latter, explain what Oswald was trying to hide or deceive the police about.


The 36" rifle broken down still had a measurement of 34.8".

Meaningless, since you haven't argued Oswald brought a 36" rifle to the Depository, nor have you argued he was shipped a 36" rifle.


Hank, this is classic, you were complaining about Micah dismissing evidence when it didn't fit his outcome and this is exactly what the WC did. So really your question means nothing; it is only a Red Herring.

Bunk. The Warren Commission dismissed estimates of the length of Oswald's paper sack. Please tell us what are the upper and lower limits of the estimates you would accept. Hopefully you understand neither Wes Frazier or his sister, Linnie Mae Randle, measured the package they saw in Oswald's possession, and thus, some leeway is allowed for them to err in their estimates. Yes? Or are you going to insist that if the witnesses said anything but 38" they were wrong and the erroneous estimate eliminates Oswald?


How did the blanket in the Paine garage which presumably normally contained the rifle Oswald didn't own or ever possess, happen to wind up empty on 11/22/63? If it never contained a rifle, what did it contain when Marina looked inside it and when Michael Paine moved it?
This is another ridiculous question; it is nothing but speculation within a circular argument.

You just dismissed the argument without telling us what was wrong with it. It isn't speculation as Marina Oswald and Michael Paine both testified to handling the blanket in the Paine garage and either seeing something inside (Marina said the butt of a rifle) and feeling something heavy inside (Michael thought there was 'camping equipment' made of iron, based on the weight).
It's likewise not a circular argument, as it relies on those eyewitnesses testimony just to establish that something was inside the blanket prior to the assassination, and that something was determined to be missing a few hours after the assassination. Tell us what was missing and where it went. If you could be so kind.


In order to believe what Hank is saying you need to believe:
That Klein's provided a rifle that had not yet been advertised yet
for sale and continued to advertise a firearm that they no longer had.

More bunk. You don't understand the real world, and publishing, apparently. They understood they would run out of the supply of the shorter weapon and started shipping the longer one, so they modified the advertisement. Remember that the date appearing on any magazine (go check your closest newsstand) is pre-dated so they don't appear out of date sitting on the rack -- that is, the April issue (containing the updated advertisement with the 40" weapon) appeared on newsstands in March, not in April. And was in the process of being prepared in February or sometime in early March at the latest. And Klein's needed some leeway to get the new advertisement to the various publisher(s) so it could be included in the issue being distributed in March (the April issue), so they might have changed the advertisement in early March or late February at the latest and sent it to the publisher then. You don't know the lead times they were working under, and you appear to think the issue marked "April" was actually prepared, printed, and distributed in April, and contained an advertisement that reflected Klein's April inventory. It wasn't. It couldn't. It would be distributed in March, and prepared before that.

My explanations account for what Oswald was actually shipped, according to Klein's records: a 40" rifle bearing the serial number C2766. Your complaint about the April issue is nonsense, as it doesn't take into account that Kleins was already shipping a 40" rifle in March of 1963.

And you still can't answer the simplest questions, like the one I asked here:
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=11817782&postcount=3255

Hank

PS: At most, the issue is Reasonable Doubt, not beyond all doubt. But to understand Reasonable Doubt, you must be able to reason and understand what the word reasonable means. Reasonable doesn't mean insisting estimates must match the actual dimensions, for starters.
 
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My explanations account for what Oswald was actually shipped, according to Klein's records: a 40" rifle bearing the serial number C2766. Your complaint about the April issue is nonsense, as it doesn't take into account that Kleins was already shipping a 40" rifle in March of 1963.
What catalogue number is on the bill of sale a 36" or 40"? Hank, you are not dealing with facts and no matter how many times you attempt to dismiss what I say, it doesn't work. If you wish to be a bully and just spout off at the mouth, then you are doing one fine job. Riddle me the above Hank.
 
The CIA tried to kill Castro how many times (CIA says 8 and Castro says 638)? None of them were successful

It was the mob that actually carried out the attempts, not the CIA, as I understand it. What's your point, that the mob wasn't really trying to kill Castro, or that they were lousy at assassinations?


This is exactly why a Mannlicher Carcano would be used, it excludes all the 30 aut 6's in the area. You do not want a large pool of suspects. If you want to frame someone make sure you have rock solid "planted" evidence that points the finger at your patsy.

We're back at you arguing for a planted weapon. Why is "planted" in quotes? Are you arguing it was actually used in the assassination (and hence, not planted) or just emphasizing the word "planted"?

Please elucidate the evidence for a planted Mannlicher Carcano weapon firing 6.5mm ammo and explain why some of the early statements said it was a Mauser or a Enfield or a Japanese weapon. Explain also why years after the fact, Roger Craig came forward to say he saw a 7.65 Mannlicher Carcano.

Were the plotters unsure of who they were trying to frame? Or were they trying to frame a multitude of patsies? Or were all those early statements wrong?

And, does that mean the 6.5mm fragments found in the limo were legit, along with the 6.5mm nearly whole bullet found in Parkland legit as well?

Or was Oswald's weapon only planted after the real shots were fired by another weapon or more? If that's the case, what happened to the other weapon(s)?

Hmmm?

Hank
 
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What catalogue number is on the bill of sale a 36" or 40"? Hank, you are not dealing with facts and no matter how many times you attempt to dismiss what I say, it doesn't work. If you wish to be a bully and just spout off at the mouth, then you are doing one fine job. Riddle me the above Hank.

First off, we're not supposed to notice you're failing to address any of the earlier issues whatsoever and raising a different one? And calling me names in addition? Those are two well-known logical fallacies - red herring & ad hominem.

Oswald ordered a rifle (C20 - T750) from an advertisement that appeared in the February issue of American Rifleman magazine.
http://www.history-matters.com/archive/jfk/wc/wcvols/wh21/html/WH_Vol21_0364b.htm

That February advertisement pictured a 36" rifle. But the advertisement was likely prepared in January or earlier. Oswald ordered the rifle in mid-March.

Kleins paperwork (a combination order form / shipping form) repeats that C20-T750 catalog number and says he was shipped a rifle bearing the serial number C2766.
http://www.history-matters.com/archive/jfk/wc/wcvols/wh21/html/WH_Vol21_0364a.htm

William Waldman of Kleins explained how this worked here:
http://mcadams.posc.mu.edu/russ/testimony/waldman.htm

Mr. BELIN. Well, I hand you what has been marked as Waldman Deposition Exhibit No. 4 and ask you to state if you know what this is.
Mr. WALDMAN. This is the record created by us showing the control number we have assigned to the gun together with the serial number that is imprinted in the frame of the gun.
Mr. BELIN. Now, this is a photostat, I believe, of records you have in front of you on your desk right now?
Mr. WALDMAN. That's correct.
Mr. BELIN. Do you find anywhere on Waldman Deposition Exhibit No. 4 the serial number C-2766?
Mr. WALDMAN. Yes.
Mr. BELIN. And what is your control number for that?
Mr. WALDMAN. Our control number for that is VC-836.
http://www.history-matters.com/archive/jfk/wc/wcvols/wh21/html/WH_Vol21_0362b.htm
...
Mr. BELIN. Now, when we examined. Waldman Deposition Exhibit No. 1, had a control number of which the last four numbers were T749, and when you shipped the rifle, you had the control number with the last four numbers as T750; otherwise the control number is the same. Could you tell us what accounts for the difference?
Mr. WALDMAN. Yes; these numbers that you referred to are not control numbers, as previously stated. These are known as catalog numbers. The number C20-T749 describes a rifle only, whereas the catalog No. C20-T750 describes the Italian carbine rifle with a four-power scope, which is sold as a package unit.
...
Mr. BELIN. Mr. Waldman, you have just put the microfilm which we call D-77 into your viewer which is marked a Microfilm Reader-Printer, and you have identified this as No. 270502, according to your records. Is this just a record number of yours on this particular shipment?
Mr. WALDMAN. That's a number which we assign for identification purposes.
Mr. BELIN. And on the microfilm record, would you please state who it shows this particular rifle was shipped
Mr. WALDMAN. Shipped to a Mr. A.--last name H-i-d-e-l-l, Post Office Box 2915, Dallas, Tex.
Mr. BELIN. And does it show any serial number or control number?
Mr. WALDMAN. It shows shipment of a rifle bearing our control number VC-836 and serial number C-2766.
Mr. BELIN. Is there a price shown for that?
Mr. WALDMAN. Price is $19.95, plus $1.50 postage and handling, or a total of $21.45.
Mr. BELIN. Now, I see another number off to the left. What is this number?
Mr. WALDMAN. The number that you referred to, C20-T750 is a catalog number.
Mr. BELIN. And after that, there appears some words of identification or description. Can you state what that is?
Mr. WALDMAN. The number designates an item which we sell, namely, an Italian carbine, 6.5 caliber rifle with the 4X scope.

Oswald ordered catalog number C20-T750. He was shipped catalog number C20-T750. He was shipped the weapon with the Klein's *unique* internal control number of VC-836 - that bore the *unique* serial number stamped on the weapon by the manufacturer of C2766. All those numbers are listed on the order / shipping form. It was shipped to his PO box, 2915. Between the time the advertisement his order form came from (dated February, 1963 - on newsstands in January, 1963) showing a 36" rifle and the time they shipped his order (March 20th, 1963), Kleins started shipping the longer, 40" rifles. It's really not a mystery here.

http://www.history-matters.com/archive/jfk/wc/wcvols/wh21/html/WH_Vol21_0364a.htm

This particular rifle was the one found in the Depository after the assassination.
Oswald is shown in the backyard photos holding this particular rifle. Oswald's prints (fingerprints and palmprints) are on this particular rifle.

Hank

PS: Your turn. Now try to answer the questions I raised here:
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=11824191&postcount=3281
 
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First, a Witness that saw LHO carry the sack into the TSBD is required.[/B]

Please indicate where you found this "requirement" for an eyewitness to the precise instant that Oswald entered the TSBD with the sack. Murderers are often convicted, beyond a reasonable doubt, based on the physical evidence of the crime, without any eyewitness testimony that they brought the weapon to the scene. If your expectation is not a requirement of criminal law (even assuming that the standards of a criminal trial are relevant here), where did you find it?
 
The CIA tried to kill Castro how many times (CIA says 8 and Castro says 638)? None of them were successful

Wonder why? Oh that's right, CUBA is an ISLAND, and Castro had an effective counter-intelligence force. That's means just getting into Cuba was a chore.

Hyannis, and Washington D.C. are much easier to reach for an internal assassination team.


This is exactly why a Mannlicher Carcano would be used, it excludes all the 30 aut 6's in the area. You do not want a large pool of suspects. If you want to frame someone make sure you have rock solid "planted" evidence that points the finger at your patsy

Yeah, because every successful black operation needs to be blamed on someone who could lead authorities back to the conspirators. That's why every assassination had a patsy...hold the phone, they didn't have pasties.

The huge problem with 6.5x52mm rounds is that they're not common, which means you can run out of ammo, and then you have to order more - which leaves a paper trail even in 1963. The round is great for long range, and it can pass through two or more human bodies, but it also tells everyone what kind of rifle to look for.

Either way, Oswald did the shooting. His finger prints are still on the weapon. Oswald also scouted locations along the parade route looking for a better location to kill JFK, which he did in the evenings, and would have provided opportunity to bring the weapon into the TSBD. The fact is he brought it with him on the morning of the assassination. His weapon, his place of work, and he fled the scene murdering one DPD officer and attempting to kill a second one.

The facts are solid.

The patsy thing has never been credible.
 
No Other:

Thanks for pointing out some of this stuff.

Another thing is the Money Order problem. The money order allegedly used to purchase the rifle from Klein's sporting goods apparently does not have a bank endorsement stamp, although it appears to have all of the rest of the necessary makings. On the London Education Forum, one time Hank insisted that the "pay to the order of First National Bank of Chicago" was supposed to be the bank endorsement stamp, but Von Pein disagreed and ended up admitting that there is no 'debunking' of this.

Postal regulations in 1960: https://fraser.stlouisfed.org/files/docs/historical/ny%20circulars/1960_04928.pdf

Postal regulations in 1969: https://fraser.stlouisfed.org/files/docs/historical/ny%20circulars/1969_6370.pdf



The following will be accepted for collection as cash items:

...

(3) Postal money orders (United States postal money orders; United States international postal money orders; and domestic-international postal money orders).

...

Postal money orders

Postal money orders will be handled in accordance with an agreement made by the Postmaster General, in behalf of the United States, and the Federal Reserve Banks as depositories and fiscal agents of the United States pursuant to authorization of the Secretary of the Treasury; and with respect to matters not covered by such agreement, the provisions of Regulation J, this circular and our time schedules shall be deemed applicable to all postal money orders. Immediate credit will be given to member banks and non* member clearing banks for postal money orders as provided in our time schedules and simultaneously with such credit we will debit the amount of such money orders against the general account of the Treas*urer of the United States under such symbol numbers as may be assigned by the Treasurer of the United States. Said agreement fur*ther provides in effect that no claim for refund or otherwise with respect to any money order debited against the general account of the Treasurer of the United States and delivered to the representa*tive of the Post Office Department as provided in said agreement (other than a claim based on the negligence of a Federal Reserve Bank) will be made against or through any Federal Reserve Bank; that if the Post Office Department makes any such claim with respect to any such money order, such money order will not be returned or sent to a Federal Reserve Bank, but the Post Office Department will deal directly with the bank or the party against which such claim is made; and that the Federal Reserve Banks will assist the Post Office Department in making such claim, including making their records and any relevant evidence in their possession available to the Post Office Department

...

Endorsements

All cash items sent to us, or to another Federal Reserve Bank direct for our account, should be endorsed without restriction to the order of the Federal Reserve Bank to which sent, or endorsed to the order of any bank, banker or trust company, or with some similar endorsement.
Cash items will be accepted by us, and by other Federal Reserve Banks, only upon the understanding and condition that all prior endorsements are guaranteed by the sending bank. There should be incorporated in the endorsement of the sending bank the phrase, “All prior endorsements guaranteed.” The act of sending or deliver*ing a cash item to us or to another Federal Reserve Bank will, however, be deemed and understood to constitute a guaranty of all prior endorsements on such item, whether or not an express guaranty is incorporated in the sending bank’s endorsement. The endorsement of the sending bank should be dated and should show the American Bankers Association transit number of the sending bank in prominent type on both sides.

Also, why would Hank think it would be crazy to plant fragments? If they truly were found in the limousine, they would've gotten covered in blood and matter anyway. I posted that report saying that three days after sitting in storage, the limousine was still covered in blood and matter. If those fragments got anywhere near the limousine, they're going to get covered in that stuff.
 
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Linnie May Randle saw the bag Oswald was carrying. The day of the shooting, she rushed over to Ruth Paine's house and spoke to police there because she was fairly certain the bag she'd seen had been large enough to transport Oswald's rifle.

She ballparked its size at 3 feet that day.

As far as the 36" vs 40" rifle debate, Oswald clipped his ad from the February edition of American Rifleman (which was on newsstands in January of 1963), which had the 36" Mannlicher Carcano listed under catalog number C20-T750. There was no Klein's ad in the March 1963 edition of American Rifleman. In the April 1963 edition (which was on newsstands in March of 1963), the same catalog number of C20-T750 was used for the 40" Mannlicher Carcano.

Oswald mailed in his form in March.

So, when Klein's received his order form in March of 1963, the current ad at the time (in the April edition of magazines) had C20-T750 as a 40" Mannlicher Carcano, which is what they shipped him.
 
Another thing is the Money Order problem. The money order allegedly used to purchase the rifle from Klein's sporting goods apparently does not have a bank endorsement stamp, although it appears to have all of the rest of the necessary makings. On the London Education Forum, one time Hank insisted that the "pay to the order of First National Bank of Chicago" was supposed to be the bank endorsement stamp, but Von Pein disagreed and ended up admitting that there is no 'debunking' of this.

Hilarious. You yourself quoted this:
Endorsements
All cash items sent to us, or to another Federal Reserve Bank direct for our account, should be endorsed without restriction to the order of the Federal Reserve Bank to which sent, or endorsed to the order of any bank, banker or trust company, or with some similar endorsement.

You lose. The endorsement on the back of the money order reads

PAY TO THE ORDER OF
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF CHICAGO
50 91144
Look here: http://harveyandlee.net/Guns/Money Order.jpg

That "50 91144" is the account number of Klein's at that bank. The purpose of the endorsement is to be able to track back the payment to the company / individual that cashed the money order, in case it's disputed later. It says it should be endorsed as payable to the order of any bank, and certainly the endorsement stamp noting it as payable to the order of THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF CHICAGO satisfies that condition.

Like I said, you lose. Conspiracy theorists are so entrenched in a belief in a conspiracy, they lose sight of what is right in front of them, and deny the plain meaning of the words they read. It should be endorsed as payable to any bank, and it is. It is endorsed PAY TO THE ORDER OF THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF CHICAGO. It has the necessary endorsement per what you yourself quoted was sufficient.



Also, why would Hank think it would be crazy to plant fragments?

Straw man argument. Show where I argued it was 'crazy' to plant fragments. You want to argue for planted fragments, you need to show the evidence for planted fragments. Trying to shift the burden of proof and asking me to disprove your contentions has been covered in detail. It's still a logical fallacy. And changing my argument from what I actually said to something you find easier to argue against is the logical fallacy of a straw man argument.



If they truly were found in the limousine, they would've gotten covered in blood and matter anyway.

How many crime scenes have you been the lead criminologist at? What's that, NONE? Okay, then, why not post the evidence for this claim as well?



I posted that report saying that three days after sitting in storage, the limousine was still covered in blood and matter.

It didn't say that.

Here's what you quoted:

"Late Sunday evening, November 24, the guards were removed from the vehicle and SA Gies and Special Officer Davis and White House Police Officer Hutch began to remove the blood stains and the debris from the car. At that time there were still fragments of bone and hair in the debris of the car which had not been removed by the FBI search team."

I see nothing about the limousine being "covered in blood and matter". Instead, it says "fragments of bone and hair" were found that had not been removed by the FBI. It doesn't say how many or how large or extensive these fragments were. You're simply making stuff up now to fit your beliefs.



If those fragments got anywhere near the limousine, they're going to get covered in that stuff.

Do you actually have a source for this or are you just making stuff up again?

Hank
 
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Please indicate where you found this "requirement" for an eyewitness to the precise instant that Oswald entered the TSBD with the sack. Murderers are often convicted, beyond a reasonable doubt, based on the physical evidence of the crime, without any eyewitness testimony that they brought the weapon to the scene. If your expectation is not a requirement of criminal law (even assuming that the standards of a criminal trial are relevant here), where did you find it?

Mark Lane said it in RUSH TO JUDGMENT, and by golly, if it's good enough for Mark Lane, it's been good enough for almost every conspiracy theorist since, ("No Other" included) no matter how many times it's been pointed out Mark Lane advanced a bogus argument there (as you do above).

Lane devoted all of his Chapter 11 (entitled "The Curtain Rod Story; or The Long and Bulky Package") to trying to dispute the evidence that Oswald brought his rifle to the Depository. And his arguments amount to what we've seen from No Other, the two witnesses that saw the rifle estimated the package they saw as too small to contain a weapon.

That argument is supposed to suffice to convince us to ignore these questions Lane can't answer:

(a) what was in the package Oswald brought to the Depository that morning,
(b) what happened to what was in the blanket stored in the Paine garage,
(c) where'd the 'whatever' that Oswald brought into the Depository wound up,
(d) why was the sack found on the sixth floor determined to be long enough to contain the disassembled rifle,
(e) why that sack found on the sixth floor was made in the recent past with Depository paper,
(f) why it had Oswald's prints on it,
(g) How did Oswald's rifle get into the Depository*, and
(h) please, tell us why Oswald denied in custody he brought any long sack to the Depository that morning, going as far as claiming Frazier must be mistaken and thinking of some other time?

Hank
____________
* Since Oswald's rifle was found in the Depository after the assassination, who are the only persons who had access to BOTH the Paine garage and the Depository, and would therefore be the chief suspects as to who transported it from the Paine garage to the Depository? I listed one person I knew had access to both locations, Lee Harvey Oswald, and asked No Other to feel free to add to the list of those suspects. Of course, he punted.
 
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Do not attempt or allude that I am a CT or Lone Nutter, you have no idea.

Hilarious. I have an excellent idea, based on your arguments advanced thus far, all of them critical of the 'Lone Nut' solution to the crime. So yeah, I call 'em as I see 'em, and I'm calling you a conspiracy theorist until I see evidence to the contrary.



Your use of fallacies is now at the point of absurdity, to actually think a CT or someone who happens to disagree with a point or several points HAS TO HAVE a narrative.

I don't use fallacies (or try not to). I just point the logical fallacies out when my opponents use them. A narrative by the conspiracy theorists would allow us to compare apples to apples -- which narrative fits the known evidence better and does a better job of explaining what happened?

The lack of a compelling opposing narrative hampers your argument. If you had one, you could cite the evidence and show how the evidence fits your narrative, as I do when I cite the evidence pointing to Oswald as the assassin.

Your problem, as a conspiracy theorist, is that you don't have a compelling competing narrative because you don't have any evidence. All you have is outlier anomalies that you don't think fit the narrative we have. So you stress those anomalies, thinking it's sufficient to overturn the narrative on the table. They are not. They never will be.

In many cases the arguments conspiracy theorists advance not only don't fit the conventional narrative, they don't even agree with each other. So we get arguments like
"Oswald's rifle wasn't found on the sixth floor."
"It was found there, but it was planted."
"It was found there, but there's no evidence he fired it."
"Besides, it was a piece of junk rifle and not good enough for the task."
"And besides, he wasn't a good enough shot to accomplish the assassination."

All of those arguments have been advanced by conspiracy theorists. I've pointed this out before, but it sounds a lot like the claims of a young man accused of statutory rape: First, he claims he didn't know her, then he admits he did know her, but says he never touched her, then he offers up the excuse, "She told me she was over 18!"



That level of thinking establishes the baseline of knowledge or lack of when it comes to discussing differences of opinion. You use the fallacies of Appeal to Authority and Appeal to Popular Opinion is childish.

Asking you to familiarize yourself with the preceding arguments advanced in this thread is neither an Appeal to Authority nor an Appeal to Popular Opinion. You apparently don't know what either logical fallacy actually means.



You recycle your statements way too often, it is tiring hearing about your experience on this thread and again your use of the fallacy of Appeal to Authority is exhausted

I have never once cited myself as an authority. I have cited witnesses testimony and expert testimony that agrees with the narrative I believe explains the assassination best. If I happened to repeat those arguments, it's because you ignore them and pointing them out again is deemed a necessary reminder. And remember, the evidence hasn't changed in the past 53+ years, so if the argument was sufficient five or ten or twenty years ago to dismiss a particular conspiracy claim, its repetition should be sufficient now as well.



You and your supporters are the only ones who can make unsupported claims and that all of your evidence should be believed while those who counter what you say, their information is required to go through a litmus test. Stick to facts instead of speculation.

I put my claims through the same "litmus test" I ask of you. If you differ, point out the claims you think I cannot support. I've pointed out plenty of claims you couldn't support, and you just keep changing the subject.



Gaudet has been shown to have inflated his own importance in statements he made to various persons, including to agents of the FBI. This is not uncommon, and a person's claims is not evidence those claims are true. You appear to accept his claims without question, affirming them more than once, but you have provided no evidence his claims are true, and dismissed with a snide remark the in-depth analysis of Gaudet provided to you that was done by the HSCA staff.
You need to provide support for this claim.

Asked and answered. I already did. You dismissed it with a snide remark. I've pointed out your dismissal more than once. Asking me to provide the support once again is disingenuous when you were already provided it and dismissed it. Here's one of the times I pointed it out.
In this case, you're presuming Gaudet's claims about being a CIA Agent are true, and calling those claims his "direct experiences". But you haven't established he was a CIA agent, so you haven't established he had those "direct experiences".

You still need to do that. The HSCA studied the issue in the late 1970s and found evidence contradicting Gaudet's claims. I pointed it out to you. You dismissed it with a snide remark.

Remember this exchange?

The HSCA investigated all this and you can find their conclusions here:
http://www.history-matters.com/archive/jfk/hsca/report/html/HSCA_Report_0124b.htm[/COLOR]
thanks Hank I was not aware that the HSCA even existed, your links are invaluable.


Having given you the information, and seeing you dismiss it, you don't get the benefit of the doubt when you ask for it again.



Once again Hank, I never made a value judgement on Gaudet's comments and if you continue to put words in my mouth and mind without my approval, I will exhaust my paths for remedy.

You have constantly cited his claims, calling them his "direct experiences" (that's a value judgement that they are true) and claiming "Gaudet was a Participant" (again, a value judgment that his claims are true), nor claim that "Gaudet acknowledged he was an employee for the CIA" (again, a value judgment that his claims are true).

If you weren't judging his statements as true, you would not have asserted those were his direct experiences nor would you have asserted he was a participant nor that he admitted being a CIA employee. You asserted all three.

Hank
 
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As usual you twist and add words. Gaudet was a Participant and Walthers was a Spectator.

Without a doubt Walthers was a spectator. She gave a statement to the Sheriff's office the same day as the assassination detailing her recollections of what she thought she saw. You have yet to establish Gaudet was "a participant", nor do you even bother to clarify what he participated in.

The bottom line is you told us you couldn't put credibility in Walthers statement because you didn't know her personally, then you confirmed you didn't know Gaudet personally either. So if you didn't know either, and that's how you assess credibility, why are you citing either? Or trying to establish a difference between them and their statements?

You never did explain.



And when it was pointed out to you that the HSCA researched this issue and determined the record showed Gaudet inflated both how recent his contacts were with the CIA and how involved he was with that organization, you cited his own statements in rebuttal without qualification in any way:
See my previous post Gaudet acknowledged he was an Employee for the CIA
First, what did Gaudet inflate?

Asked and answered. See my prior posts on this subject. Heck, see the point you are responding to (I've now bolded and underscored my point you're pretending not to understand). Your pretense at this late date that you're unaware of my arguments here and they need further explication isn't very convincing when they are right in front of you.

And your citing of Gaudet's statements to the FBI as him acknowledging he was an employee of the CIA shows you accepting his claim at face value without qualification.



Second, if you wish to believe the HSCA then you are a CT'er because they published that LHO most likely did not act alone.

Hilarious. That's the most absurd thing I've read today -- that if I accept a study by a given group I am bound to accept all their conclusions. You really don't have much of an argument if that's how you intend to dismiss their conclusions about Gaudet.



So which is it? You cannot vouch for Gaudet's credibility and truthfulness because you don't know him, or questioning Gaudet's credibility and truthfulness is a "trap door that someone springs when they cannot provide an intelligent rebuttal".

Make up your mind. You appear to be arguing for Walther's eyewitness claim and Gaudet's claims about being a CIA agent until you are asked direct questions about the claims and the veracity of those two persons, and then you back away from those claims, stating you never said they were truthful or accurate or credible because you don't know the person personally:
I do not think about the credibility of the witness, I am no position to put a value judgement on someone that never interfaced with and a person that I do not know.


Yet despite the above, and not knowing Gaudet or Walthers personally, you brought up their statements and appear to argue for what for their statements every chance you get.

Your arguments are hard to reconcile with each other. Can you explain?
Because you cannot reconcile do not ask me to explain what you fail to understand, that is not my problem.


More humor. What you're saying is you don't intend to have a give-and-take conversation with me, that if I ask you any questions about your assertions, you don't have to explain them or the apparent contradictions within them.

If that's going to be your approach, why bother posting here? Write a blog and don't allow comments.

I'm going with "you can't explain those apparent contradictions" until I see evidence to the contrary.

Hank
 
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it's been pointed out Mark Lane advanced a bogus argument there (as you do above).

Hank, I trust you mean the argument that I was questioning, not advancing.

I don't find any problem with the evidence of the bag. The length estimates given by the Fraziers were typical guesses made by eyewitnesses who had no reason to concentrate on the size of the bag that morning. Buell Frazier himself said numerous times during his WC testimony that he didn't look closely at the bag or at Oswald as the latter carried it toward the TSBD.

But I'm not challenging No Other with regard to the facts here. I'm talking about a problem with the typically arbitrary CT standard of proof: beyond-all-cosmic-doubt when the facts support Oswald as the shooter; anything-goes when something points away from Oswald.

My question is still pending for No Other: you say that Oswald's guilt "requires" an eyewitness to his entering the TSBD with the package. Where (apart from Lane or another CT source) do you derive that standard?
 
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Hank, I trust you mean the argument that I was questioning, not advancing.

I don't find any problem with the evidence of the bag. The length estimates given by the Fraziers were typical guesses made by eyewitnesses who had no reason to concentrate on the size of the bag that morning. Buell Frazier himself said numerous times during his WC testimony that he didn't look closely at the bag or at Oswald as the latter carried it toward the TSBD.

But I'm not challenging No Other with regard to the facts here. I'm talking about a problem with the typically arbitrary CT standard of proof: beyond-all-cosmic-doubt when the facts support Oswald as the shooter; anything-goes when something points away from Oswald.

My question is still pending for No Other: you say that Oswald's guilt "requires" an eyewitness to his entering the TSBD with the package. Where (apart from Lane or another CT source) do you derive that standard?


From Martin Hay's review of Beyond Reasonable Doubt by Mel Ayton and David Von Pein:

Let us begin with the Warren Commission's claim, repeated by Ayton and Von Pein, that on the morning of November 22, 1963, Oswald smuggled his cheap, mail-ordered rifle into the Texas School Book Depository building inside a paper bag. As first generation critics of the Warren Report like Harold Weisberg, Mark Lane and Silvia Meagher quickly discovered, reasonable doubt is cast on this allegation by the very testimony on which it is based.

Broken down, the sixth floor rifle was 34.8 inches long. (WR, p. 133) But witnesses Buell Wesley Frazier and Linnie Mae Randle repeatedly swore that the package they saw Oswald carry that morning was, at most, 27-28 inches long. For Ayton and Von Pein this poses no problem at all and they blithely state that Frazier and Randle both "made mistakes in describing the parcel's length..." (ibid, p. 69) As to how they deduced that Frazier and Randle were mistaken when there is literally no evidence overturning their consistent and corroborative estimates is difficult to fathom. Nobody else saw the package Oswald carried that morning, and the fact is that the two different ways in which Frazier and Randle saw Oswald holding the bag corroborate their estimates and prove that it had to be considerably shorter than the rifle it was alleged to contain.

Frazier saw Oswald carrying the bag with one end cupped in his hand and the other tucked under his arm. However, as he discovered during his Commission testimony, it was impossible to carry the rifle in that manner. Commission lawyer, Joseph Ball, handed Frazier the disassembled rifle inside a paper bag and asked him to demonstrate how Oswald had held the package. But when Frazier cupped the bottom end in his hand, the top end extended several inches above his shoulder, almost up to the level of his eye. As Frazier made clear, none of the bag he saw Oswald carrying had been sticking up above his shoulder and he was certain the bottom end was cupped in Oswald's hand. "From what I seen, walking behind," Frazier testified, "he had it under his arm and you couldn't tell he had a package from the back." (WC Vol. 2, p. 243, hereafter expressed as 2H243)

Ayton and Von Pein try to get around this by writing that "...in 1986, Frazier confirmed via Vincent Bugliosi's questions...that the package could have extended beyond Oswald's body and he might not have noticed it." (Ayton and Von Pein, p. 69) This is a gross distortion of what Frazier agreed to, which is that the package could have been "protruding out in front of [Oswald's] body" without him seeing it. He never said that it could have been sticking up above the shoulder or below the hand. To this day Frazier is adamant that the package he saw was around two feet long and that Oswald carried it with one end cupped in his hand and the other tucked under his arm. In other words, it was smaller than the rifle.

Often overlooked is the manner in which Oswald was carrying the package when Randle saw him. She was looking out of her kitchen window as she watched Oswald cross the street toward her house holding a "heavy brown bag." At this time, he held the package by the top and the bottom did not quite reach the ground. (2H248) The only way the 5 foot 9 inch Oswald could have carried a 34.8-inch long rifle down by his side without it dragging along the ground behind him is if he had arms like a T-Rex. Given that Oswald was a normally proportioned human male we can safely conclude from Randle's testimony that the package she saw him carry was considerably shorter than the rifle. It is readily apparent, then, that despite Ayton and Von Pein's assurance that Frazier and Randle "made mistakes in describing the parcel's length," their estimates actually make little difference. Because the two different ways in which Oswald carried it are entirely corroborative and clearly establish that it could not have contained the rifle.

Ayton and Von Pein would no doubt argue that the testimony of Frazier and Randle on this point is negated by the long paper bag; apparently made from wrapping paper and tape from the book depository's shipping department; allegedly found by Dallas police in the so-called "sniper's nest," on the sixth floor of the depository building. But that bag is, to say the least, of dubious origin. As retired British police detective Ian Griggs pointed out in his seminal essay, "The Paper Bag That Never Was," it does not appear in any of the official crime scene photographs, and the first officers on the scene did not see it there. For example, Police Sergeant Gerald Hill told the Commission that the only paper bag he had seen was a "small lunch sack" and remarked of the larger bag, "...if it was found up there on the sixth floor, if it was there, I didn't see it." (7H65) As Griggs points out in his essay, Deputy Sheriffs Luke Mooney and Roger Craig and Police Detective Elmer Boyd all said much the same thing. (See, Griggs, No Case to Answer, pgs. 173-214)

One fact overlooked by Griggs was that on the evening of November 22, 1963, Buell Frazier was given a polygraph examination by Dallas Police Detective R.D. Lewis and, while it was in progress, Lewis showed Frazier the long paper bag supposedly found in the "sniper's nest." Frazier told him that "he did not think that it resembled...the crinkly brown paper sack that Oswald had when he rode to work with him that morning..." (FBI 105-82555 Oswald HQ File, Section 17, p. 100) If Frazier, who got the best look at the package Oswald carried that morning, could not identify the bag produced by Dallas Police, it is difficult to imagine that it could ever have been introduced as evidence in court.

Nevertheless, the bag is seemingly linked to Oswald by a partial right palmprint and a partial left index fingerprint. Yet the obvious question this raises is how these could be the only two prints Oswald left on the bag when he supposedly made it himself using paper and tape from the depository, carried it with him to the Paine home in Irving, used it to wrap his rifle, carried it at least two different ways on his journey back into the depository, and unwrapped his rifle again on the sixth floor. In light of everything outlined above; Frazier and Randle's testimony, the fact that the bag does not appear in crime scene photographs, was not seen by the first officers on the scene, and was not identified by Frazier during his polygraph; the prints cannot be said to in any way prove that Oswald used the bag to carry the rifle. Realistically, all the prints tell us is that he handled the bag briefly at some point. This reviewer would not be the least bit surprised if that occurred whilst Oswald was in police custody.

Though they are careful to omit it all from their book, Ayton and Von Pein are no doubt aware of the serious issues outlined above, so they try to give themselves an out by writing that, "The question of whether or not Oswald took his rifle into work that morning, however, is a moot point. Oswald had plenty of opportunities to hide his rifle in the Book Depository on other occasions." (p. 69) Informed readers will recognize this for the smokescreen that it is. According to the official story, for the two months leading up the assassination, Oswald's alleged rifle was wrapped in a blanket in Ruth Paine's garage. If he did not retrieve it on the morning of the assassination then he never did so because at no other time was he seen taking a package from the Paine home, at no time was any rifle seen at his rooming house, and at no other time did he take a package into the Book Depository. November 22 was his one and only opportunity. Which means that if the package he carried that morning did not contain the rifle--and the preponderance of evidence tells us it did not--then someone else placed it on the sixth floor of the depository building, and Oswald was exactly what he said he was: A patsy.

Just from this instance, one can see why the authors lowered the legal standard. But even at that, an informed reader can see that they do not meet even that lower standard.

Before moving on, let us take note of another example of Ayton and Von Pein misrepresenting Frazier's words to suit their needs. The authors allege that when Frazier and Oswald "arrived at the Book Depository parking lot, Oswald hurried to the building 50 feet ahead of his co-worker...Oswald had never previously walked ahead of Frazier to the building. But Friday, November 22nd was different." (Ibid) The implication here is that Oswald immediately got out of the car and rushed ahead of his workmate because he was in a hurry to get his rifle into the building. The reality is quite different. As Frazier testified, upon arriving at the depository, he sat in his car, "letting my engine run and getting to charge up my battery." (2H227) Oswald had gotten out of the vehicle but, upon realizing Frazier was not with him, stopped and stood "at the end of the cyclone fence waiting for me to get out of the car." (Ibid, 228) Once Frazier shut off the engine and exited the car, Oswald carried on walking but Frazier said he "didn't try to catch up to him because I knew I had plenty of time so I just took my time walking up there." As Frazier told the Commission, he was less interested in catching up with Oswald and more interested in taking a minute to watch the nearby railroad tracks because "I just like to watch them switch the cars..." (Ibid) So quite contrary to the impression Ayton and Von Pein attempt to convey, Oswald did not end up 50 feet ahead of his co-worker because he "hurried," he did so because Frazier purposely lagged behind. Clearly the truth is less supportive of Ayton and Von Pein's agenda than their own version of events.

[NOTE: Over recent years, a number of very knowledgeable researchers have begun to question whether or not Oswald carried any kind of package with him that morning at all. They suggest that Frazier was pressured into telling this story after he was arrested by police on the evening of the assassination. Whilst, on balance, the reviewer believes that Frazier and his sister were telling the truth, the inconsistencies these critics have highlighted should not be summarily dismissed. Readers are referred to chapter 8 of Jim DiEugenio's excellent book, Reclaiming Parkland, for details.]


Reclaiming Parkland, first edition, free Kindle ebook link: http://libgen.io/book/index.php?md5=42A5E4F79FC922F0682935F4FD7F55D3
 
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Hank, I trust you mean the argument that I was questioning, not advancing.

Yes, I was pointing out it's a bogus argument that No Other (& Mark Lane before him) were advancing, and that you were properly questioning.



I don't find any problem with the evidence of the bag.

Only conspiracy theorists do. They never specify what range of guesses (in inches or as a percentage) they would accept as not eliminating Oswald. Any number that didn't match the length of the disassembled rifle would be kicked to the curb by them (or kerb, for those folks on the other side of the Atlantic from me).



The length estimates given by the Fraziers were typical guesses made by eyewitnesses who had no reason to concentrate on the size of the bag that morning. Buell Frazier himself said numerous times during his WC testimony that he didn't look closely at the bag or at Oswald as the latter carried it toward the TSBD.

But I'm not challenging No Other with regard to the facts here. I'm talking about a problem with the typically arbitrary CT standard of proof: beyond-all-cosmic-doubt when the facts support Oswald as the shooter; anything-goes when something points away from Oswald.

Yes, but nonetheless, if one is a conspiracy theorist, because one has no evidence, one must raise the bar for evidence against Oswald to the ceiling; and drop the bar to the floor for evidence pointing to a conspiracy. Those of us here since 2011 have seen this same routine repeated over and over with each conspiracy theorist trying to make a case.


My question is still pending for No Other: you say that Oswald's guilt "requires" an eyewitness to his entering the TSBD with the package. Where (apart from Lane or another CT source) do you derive that standard?

He won't answer. He can't answer. Mark Lane (and numerous other conspiracy authors since) never cited for the claim that eyewitnesses are required for the rifle being brought into the building as No Other claims. So No Other has no valid response here because conspiracy authors don't address this.

No Other also has never tried to answer any of my questions. Questions are ignored, because the conspiracy authors never really try to argue the case by looking at all the evidence. They take one snippet of testimony from a witness (like Walthers seeing two men) and never try to put it into context or compare and contrast with what other witnesses said, and try to resolve the discrepancies... on the contrary, the discrepancies are all they have, and resolving those would kill their cash cow. Mark Lane went to the well HOW MANY TIMES on this subject?

Hank
 
From Martin Hay's review of Beyond Reasonable Doubt by Mel Ayton and David Von Pein:

yada yada.

Why are you telling us what Martin Hay thinks?
He's not here to answer any questions.

What do you think?

Do estimates by eyewitnesses that are off by about 25% eliminate the actual package, especially considering the package recovered from the Depository is large enough to contain the disassembled weapon, AND contains the suspect's print on it, AND his weapon was discovered in the Depository as well?

Please try to offer up a reasoned narrative that explains all this, and accounts for Oswald's claim in custody that he only took his lunch to work that day... no long package put on the back seat.

Can you explain all that? Martin Hay doesn't even try. He's content to quibble over whether estimates overrule the hard evidence (he votes yes).

Hank
 
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Why are you telling us what Martin Hay thinks?

What do you think?

Do estimates by eyewitnesses that are off by about 25% eliminate the actual package, especially considering the package recovered from the Depository is large enough to contain the disassembled weapon, AND contains the suspect's print on it, AND his weapon was discovered in the Depository as well?

Please try to offer up a reasoned narrative that explains all this, and accounts for Oswald's claim in custody that he only took his lunch to work that day... no long package put on the back seat.

Can you explain all that? Martin Hay doesn't even try. He's content to quibble over whether estimates overrule the hard evidence (he votes yes).

Hank

Why should I accept the paper bag taken out of the Depository as the paper bag in evidence?

See here: http://www.patspeer.com/chapter-4c

And just look at how you phrase problems: "Do estimates by eyewitnesses that are off by about 25% eliminate the actual package"

Frazier said the bag was about the size of a large grocery bag, from a grocery store. In the common every day sense, who sees a paper bag that long? Frazier thought of it as a grocery bag. It's the difference between him remembering a common, every day grocery bag and remembering a weird long paper bag stitched together with tape.
 
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[snip] Beyond Reasonable Doubt by Mel Ayton and David Von Pein [snip]

I'm not interested, just now, in whether CTers think they've raised reasonable doubt concerning the package, or whether LNers think that that standard of proof has been met. Any such position begs the question of whether a beyond-a-reasonable-doubt standard is even appropriate for what is now essentially a question of history and historiography. I'm asking No Other--and you, too, Micah, if you have a pertinent opinion--why anyone would or should take the position that an eyewitness to Oswald's entering the TSBD with the package is "required" to establish his guilt, historically or forensically.
 
Hilarious. I have an excellent idea, based on your arguments advanced thus far, all of them critical of the 'Lone Nut' solution to the crime. So yeah, I call 'em as I see 'em, and I'm calling you a conspiracy theorist until I see evidence to the contrary.
Well, there you go again labeling something you know absolutely nothing about. Again, you can yell from a mountain top... it doesn't mean it is correct. You are grasping at straws. Since you have established the desire for labels and by George the label does not have to be correct I will refer to you as a BS'er if you call me a CT'er one more time.





I don't use fallacies (or try not to). I just point the logical fallacies out when my opponents use them. A narrative by the conspiracy theorists would allow us to compare apples to apples -- which narrative fits the known evidence better and does a better job of explaining what happened?
You may want to hone up your understanding of fallacies.

The lack of a compelling opposing narrative hampers your argument.
What argument? You mean the one that I claim you make up your conclusions?
If you had one, you could cite the evidence and show how the evidence fits your narrative, as I do when I cite the evidence pointing to Oswald as the assassin.
You have yet to point out evidence that puts LHO with the rifle in his hand, pulling the trigger on the day JFK was killed. You only state your opinion.

Your problem, as a conspiracy theorist, is that you don't have a compelling competing narrative because you don't have any evidence.
Let me again correct you, I don't claim anything, therefore I have no narrative.
All you have is outlier anomalies that you don't think fit the narrative we have. So you stress those anomalies, thinking it's sufficient to overturn the narrative on the table. They are not. They never will be.
You call them outliers because you can't argue against them, this allows you to dismiss versus providing facts to disprove something that I stated. Your final argument when you are trapped is "how do you know what (fill in the blank) said is true?" That brings the discussion down to the 3rd grade.

In many cases the arguments conspiracy theorists advance not only don't fit the conventional narrative, they don't even agree with each other. So we get arguments like
"Oswald's rifle wasn't found on the sixth floor."
"It was found there, but it was planted."
"It was found there, but there's no evidence he fired it."
"Besides, it was a piece of junk rifle and not good enough for the task."
"And besides, he wasn't a good enough shot to accomplish the assassination."
What does this have to do with the discussion other than poisoning the well? Bring this up to a CT'er.

All of those arguments have been advanced by conspiracy theorists. I've pointed this out before, but it sounds a lot like the claims of a young man accused of statutory rape: First, he claims he didn't know her, then he admits he did know her, but says he never touched her, then he offers up the excuse, "She told me she was over 18!"
non sequitur






Asking you to familiarize yourself with the preceding arguments advanced in this thread is neither an Appeal to Authority nor an Appeal to Popular Opinion. You apparently don't know what either logical fallacy actually means.
If you want me to point out exactly how my claims fit, I will be happy to comply.





I have never once cited myself as an authority. I have cited witnesses testimony and expert testimony that agrees with the narrative I believe explains the assassination best. If I happened to repeat those arguments, it's because you ignore them and pointing them out again is deemed a necessary reminder. And remember, the evidence hasn't changed in the past 53+ years, so if the argument was sufficient five or ten or twenty years ago to dismiss a particular conspiracy claim, its repetition should be sufficient now as well.
Who said the argument was sufficient years ago?





I put my claims through the same "litmus test" I ask of you. If you differ, point out the claims you think I cannot support. I've pointed out plenty of claims you couldn't support, and you just keep changing the subject.
I have pointed it out over and over and you repeat yourself like a broken record. What claim have I made that I failed to support?





You have constantly cited his claims, calling them his "direct experiences" (that's a value judgement that they are true) and claiming "Gaudet was a Participant" (again, a value judgment that his claims are true), nor claim that "Gaudet acknowledged he was an employee for the CIA" (again, a value judgment that his claims are true).
You claim Gaudet was something that I have not seen as evidence and that is a businessman who went to other countries and reported to the CIA. You have never posted evidence to support your comment but you insist that Gaudet lies, yet if I take what he says at face value, I made a value judgement... pretzel logic on your part. Provide evidence that Gaudet lies and that he was only a businessman... then we can discuss it and if you provide it, I could very well change my opinion. By the way, Gaudet being a Participant is not a value judgement, it is reading something and understanding that when he speaks of his experiences he was actually alive and conducting those activities. You read one thing and I read multiple sources and the ones who wish to discount anything related to the CIA states what you state... they were only interviewed by the CIA. McAdams is by far the worse offender. As for the CIA, they never admit that any of their employees work for them as it is against the law to ferret out an Agent, just look at Valerie Pflame.
 
I'm not interested, just now, in whether CTers think they've raised reasonable doubt concerning the package, or whether LNers think that that standard of proof has been met. Any such position begs the question of whether a beyond-a-reasonable-doubt standard is even appropriate for what is now essentially a question of history and historiography. I'm asking No Other--and you, too, Micah, if you have a pertinent opinion--why anyone would or should take the position that an eyewitness to Oswald's entering the TSBD with the package is "required" to establish his guilt, historically or forensically.
I didn't say that. I asked who besides Buell and his sister saw LHO take that package into TSBD? The importance is that the WC puts weight and it is heavy weight on the "fact" that LHO brought the rifle to work that day. The package that the only two who saw LHO carry that package said it was a lot smaller than what the WC said it was. In short, the WC relies on the need for LHO to bring the package to work, it hangs onto the Frazier as a key witness to that event, yet it dismisses Frazier's view. They throw out what they do not want and create a whole new situation due to the composite that they developed. It is a total sham and for those who do not see it that way, they need to explain why the WC was correct in dismissing Frazier's description and why the WC's description is correct.
 
Why should I accept the paper bag taken out of the Depository as the paper bag in evidence?

Because it was taken out of the Depository and bears Oswald's print and was marked into evidence by Detective J.C.Day? All that makes the bag evidence and makes it something that could be introduced as evidence in a criminal trial.

Mr. BELIN. I will now hand you what has been marked as Commission Exhibit 626 and ask you to state if you know what this is, and also appears to be marked as Commission Exhibit 142.
Mr. DAY. This is the sack found on the sixth floor in the southeast corner of the building on November 22, 1963.
Mr. BELIN. Do you have any identification on that to so indicate?
Mr. DAY. It has my name on it, and it also has other writing that I put on there for the information of the FBI.
Mr. BELIN. Could you read what you wrote on there?
Mr. DAY. "Found next to the sixth floor window gun fired from. May have been used to carry gun. Lieutenant J. C. Day."
Mr. BELIN. When did you write that?
Mr. DAY. I wrote that at the time the sack was found before it left our possession.
Mr. BELIN. All right, anything else that you wrote on there?
Mr. DAY. When the sack was released on November 22 to the FBI about 11:45 p.m., I put further information to the FBI reading as follows: "FBI: Has been dusted with metallic magnetic powder on outside only. Inside has not been processed. Lieut J. C. Day."





Speer is not here to debate this. Don't tell me what Speer says. His opinion has no import and would never be admitted into court, nor can I question him here about his opinion. Tell me what you say. I can then ask you any questions I may have.



And just look at how you phrase problems: "Do estimates by eyewitnesses that are off by about 25% eliminate the actual package"

Incomplete quote. What I actually wrote, and you don't tell us what is wrong with it, is this:

Do estimates by eyewitnesses that are off by about 25% eliminate the actual package, especially considering the package recovered from the Depository is large enough to contain the disassembled weapon, AND contains the suspect's print on it, AND his weapon was discovered in the Depository as well?

Please try to offer up a reasoned narrative that explains all this, and accounts for Oswald's claim in custody that he only took his lunch to work that day... no long package put on the back seat.

Can you explain all that? Martin Hay doesn't even try.


Now, explain what is wrong with those points. Or ignore the points I actually made some more and quote me out of context.



Frazier said the bag was about the size of a large grocery bag, from a grocery store. In the common every day sense, who sees a paper bag that long? Frazier thought of it as a grocery bag. It's the difference between him remembering a common, every day grocery bag and remembering a weird long paper bag stitched together with tape.

He did remember a long paper bag. He said it was as long as a grocery bag, but he also said it was a lot narrower. How come you leave that out?
Mr. BALL - What did the package look like?
Mr. FRAZIER - Well, I will be frank with you, I would just, it is right as you get out of the grocery store, just more or less out of a package, you have seen some of these brown paper sacks you can obtain from any, most of the stores, some varieties, but it was a package just roughly about two feet long.
Mr. BALL - It was, what part of the back seat was it in?
Mr. FRAZIER - It was in his side over on his side in the far back.
Mr. BALL - How much of that back seat, how much space did it take up?
Mr. FRAZIER - I would say roughly around 2 feet of the seat.
Mr. BALL - From the side of the seat over to the center, is that the way you would measure it?
Mr. FRAZIER - If, if you were going to measure it that way from the end of the seat over toward the center, right. But I say like I said I just roughly estimate and that would be around two feet, give and take a few inches.
Mr. BALL - How wide was the package?
Mr. FRAZIER - Well, I would say the package was about that wide.
Mr. BALL - How wide would you say that would be?
Mr. FRAZIER - Oh, say, around 5 inches, something like that. 5, 6 inches or there. I don't--
Mr. BALL - The paper, was the color of the paper, that you would get in a grocery store, is that it, a bag in a grocery store?
Mr. FRAZIER - Right. You have seen, not a real light color but you know normally, the normal color about the same color, you have seen these kinds of heavy duty bags you know like you obtain from the grocery store, something like that, about the same color of that, paper sack you get there.


So he estimated maybe 24-27 inches by 5 or 6 inches or thereabouts. That's a length approximately four or five times the width. The size of the sack recovered from the Depository was 38 inches by 8 inches (or 35 inches if the sack was folded over the disassembled rifle). Those dimensions put the length between four and five times the width.

In other words, he got the overall shape correct generally correct, but underestimated both the length and width.

Again, do witness estimates allow you to disregard or throw out the actual evidence recovered at the scene of the crime?

You never answer my questions. Why is that?

Hank
 
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I would love to see a survey where people are asked to estimate length, because my guess is most would not be accurate. The difference between 27 and 34 inches is within any reasonable margin of error.

Here are a list of problems:

Oswald lied about the bag carrying curtain rods to Frazier, and then told DPD that he didn't bring anything with him to work that morning accept a sack lunch, but Frazier even asked Oswald where his usual lunch sack was to which Oswald said he would buy lunch that day...so Oswald could even keep his story straight about the bag.

The bag (constructed using paper AND TAPE from the TSBD) also contained fibers from a blanket. The Carcano was usually wrapped in a blanket. Had the fibers been planted then why not use enough to tie them to the blanket Oswald used? I mean if you're going to frame the guy do it right.

Oswald's room HAD curtains, and there was no need for curtain rods, and he had not talked to his land lady about putting in new ones. These rods were never seen by anyone, and were not found in the TSBD...so what happened to them? Were is the receipt for their purchase? Where's the guy who sold them to Oswald?

:thumbsup:
 
First, a Witness that saw LHO carry the sack into the TSBD is required.
I didn't say that.

No such witness is required. You absolutely did make that claim.


I asked who besides Buell and his sister saw LHO take that package into TSBD?

Technically, neither saw him take it into the Depository and you didn't ask that question originally either*. Linnie Mae Randle didn't see it because she was miles away and only saw Oswald put the long package into her brother's car. Wes Frazier didn't see it because he didn't watch Oswald at the moment he walked into the building.



The importance is that the WC puts weight and it is heavy weight on the "fact" that LHO brought the rifle to work that day.

No, that's their conclusion.
The facts that led to that conclusion were, among others, these:

[1]They had testimony that the weapon was stored at the Paine garage prior to the assassination.

[2]They had testimony that the weapon was recovered in the Depository shortly after the assassination.

[3]They had testimony that Oswald told Wes Frazier he'd be bringing curtain rods on Friday.

[4]They had testimony that Oswald was seen with a long sack (the exact dimensions only estimated by the witnesses) the morning of the assassination.

[5]They had testimony that a long sack was recovered near the sniper's nest and it bore Oswald's print.

[6]They had testimony that Oswald's rifle was recovered on the sixth floor, the same floor the assassin was seen by witnesses at street level.

[7]They had testimony that Oswald denied bringing any long package to work that day, insisting that Wes Frazier must have been thinking of another day.

[8]They had testimony that the blanket in the Paine garage that previously had been seen to contain a rifle was discovered to be EMPTY shortly after the assassination.


Let's hear what you think they should have concluded, and why. If you're going to be critical of their conclusion, tell us what better conclusion the evidence points inexorably towards. Walk us through your argument and your logic step-by-step.



The package that the only two who saw LHO carry that package said it was a lot smaller than what the WC said it was.

The witnesses did not measure it. They estimated it. I asked before, and you failed to answer, what amount or percentage of error do you allow in estimates of this nature? Do tell us the allowable percentage.



In short, the WC relies on the need for LHO to bring the package to work

No, it relies on the evidence to reach that conclusion. Put the above evidence together and show us another, more reasonable conclusion. Bet you can't. Bet you won't. Bet you'll claim you don't have to, because you're not a conspiracy theorist (but you sure sound like one).



it hangs onto the Frazier as a key witness to that event, yet it dismisses Frazier's view.

No, it retains most of what Frazier said, and only concludes his estimate of the bag's dimensions were wrong.



They throw out what they do not want and create a whole new situation due to the composite that they developed. It is a total sham...

Projection. It sounds like what you're doing. The actual bag recovered had Oswald's print on it and was large enough to contain the rifle. You are totally disregarding that bag as evidence, it appears. Along with a lot of other evidence, like Oswald's rifle being recovered on the sixth floor.



...and for those who do not see it that way, they need to explain why the WC was correct in dismissing Frazier's description and why the WC's description is correct.

They dismissed Frazier's estimated dimensions of the bag he saw. They retained the actual measured dimensions of the actual physical bag recovered from the sixth floor that bore Oswald's print.

I would not think that anyone could be foolish enough to argue (as you are doing) that estimates of dimensions should take precedence over the actual measured dimensions. You appear intent on proving me wrong on that.

Hank
_____________
* You didn't ask any questions. You made the series of assertions seen below:
First, a Witness that saw LHO carry the sack into the TSBD is required. Buell Wesley Frazier witnessed LHO bringing a sack approximately 27" long with him that morning but not a 38" sack. Buell's sister also witnessed seeing a sack the size that her brother saw... outside of that Nobody saw LHO carry a 38" sack into the building that day or any other day. The WC said Frazier was mistaken on the length and then they said his sister was also mistaken yet the cornerstone of the WC saying LHO brought the rifle to work is based on Buell's and his sister's testimony (except for their description of what they say). So the only 2 people who can put LHO with a package were told they were wrong (the size of the package) by a Committee that never saw the package. The 36" rifle broken down still had a measurement of 34.8". Hank, this is classic, you were complaining about Micah dismissing evidence when it didn't fit his outcome and this is exactly what the WC did. So really your question means nothing; it is only a Red Herring.
 
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I didn't say that. I asked who besides Buell and his sister saw LHO take that package into TSBD?

You most certainly did say that, at 11:26AM on May 3: "First, a Witness that saw LHO carry the sack into the TSBD is required."

Frazier himself saw Oswald take it out of the car and begin walking ahead of him towards the TSBD. So what do you mean by your statement? And, by the way, if this crime had gone to trial and if Frazier had been put on the stand to rebut the evidence of the bag, his testimony would easily have been called into question by a competent prosecutor. Just look at Frazier's WC testimony and count the number of times he testified that he did not look closely at the bag and really wasn't paying much attention to it.
 
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You claim Gaudet was something that I have not seen as evidence and that is a businessman who went to other countries and reported to the CIA. You have never posted evidence to support your comment...

False. I posted the link to the HSCA determination and you dismissed it with a snide remark. You never did address the points therein.


...but you insist that Gaudet lies

False. I asked you to prove he was telling the truth, despite the HSCA determination to the contrary. You have yet to do so.


yet if I take what he says at face value, I made a value judgement...

Well, yeah. You're accepting what he says without seeking or finding any corroboration anywhere for his claims. That's a value judgment that he is honest.


pretzel logic on your part.

Projection.


Provide evidence that Gaudet lies and that he was only a businessman...

Asked and answered.


... then we can discuss it and if you provide it, I could very well change my opinion.

Provided it days ago. We're still waiting for you to acknowledge its existence.


...By the way, Gaudet being a Participant is not a value judgement, it is reading something and understanding that when he speaks of his experiences he was actually alive and conducting those activities.

No, you're back to assuming he is being truthful. You need to prove that. I don't need to prove he's lying. You brought him up, you cited his claims, you referenced him repeatedly. The burden of proof is on you to prove his claims are truthful. I do not have the burden to disprove your claims. We'll wait.


... You read one thing and I read multiple sources...

Hilarious. You don't know what I've read and how long I've been studying this case. I own and have read over 500 books on the assassination (most of them conspiracy related). I have read the Warren Commission's 26 volumes of evidence and the HSCA's 12 volumes on the JFK assassination. Don't even think to tell me what I've read. You have no clue.


... and the ones who wish to discount anything related to the CIA states what you state... they were only interviewed by the CIA. McAdams is by far the worse offender.

Calling him names is not the same as pointing out his errors of fact. Or pointing out mine. I note you haven't pointed out any errors in my posts. You mostly just change the subject.


...As for the CIA, they never admit that any of their employees work for them as it is against the law to ferret out an Agent, just look at Valerie Pflame.

By that 'logic', we can therefore assume YOU are a CIA agent, as the agency has never denied you work for them. Talk about pretzel logic. You got it in spades.

Hank
 
Still waiting for a conspiracy theorist to reconcile just some of the questions their arguments about the paper bag (and the supposed curtain rods) raise:

(a) what was in the package Oswald brought to the Depository that morning,
(b) what happened to what was in the blanket stored in the Paine garage,
(c) where'd the 'whatever' that Oswald brought into the Depository wound up,
(d) why was the sack found on the sixth floor determined to be long enough to contain the disassembled rifle,
(e) why that sack found on the sixth floor was made in the recent past with Depository paper,
(f) why it had Oswald's prints on it,
(g) How did Oswald's rifle get into the Depository, and
(h) please, tell us why Oswald denied in custody he brought any long sack to the Depository that morning, going as far as claiming Frazier must be mistaken and thinking of some other time?

Asked the above of No Other here (and am still waiting for an answer to any of them):
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=11824191&postcount=3281

Hank
 
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I would love to see a survey where people are asked to estimate length, because my guess is most would not be accurate. The difference between 27 and 34 inches is within any reasonable margin of error.

Here are a list of problems:

Oswald lied about the bag carrying curtain rods to Frazier, and then told DPD that he didn't bring anything with him to work that morning accept a sack lunch, but Frazier even asked Oswald where his usual lunch sack was to which Oswald said he would buy lunch that day...so Oswald could even keep his story straight about the bag.

The bag (constructed using paper AND TAPE from the TSBD) also contained fibers from a blanket. The Carcano was usually wrapped in a blanket. Had the fibers been planted then why not use enough to tie them to the blanket Oswald used? I mean if you're going to frame the guy do it right.

Oswald's room HAD curtains, and there was no need for curtain rods, and he had not talked to his land lady about putting in new ones. These rods were never seen by anyone, and were not found in the TSBD...so what happened to them? Were is the receipt for their purchase? Where's the guy who sold them to Oswald?

:thumbsup:


Good point about the landlady. Gladys Johnson and her husband owned the rooming house on North Beckley that Oswald had been staying at for only a short while and he was only renting a *furnished room* from them. It would be highly inappropriate for a boarder at a rooming house to make unapproved changes to his room. Oswald never sought nor obtained permission to put up his own curtain rods from the Johnsons.

Mr. BALL. How is this room furnished that Oswald rented?
Mrs. JOHNSON. A very small room; it had an old fashioned clothes closet that had a place to hang your clothes and drawer space for your underwear, your socks and everything, and then it also had a cabinet space anyone could have stored food or, well I mean bundles of things, you know, and then I had a dresser and a bed and a heater and a little refrigerated unit.
Mr. BALL. A refrigerating unit?
Mrs. JOHNSON. Yes, sir; a window unit.
Mr. BALL. You mean it cooled the room?
Mrs. JOHNSON. Yes, sir; and it had curtains and venetian blinds.
Mr. BALL. What kind of curtains did it have?
Mrs. JOHNSON. Well, it just had side drapes and panels.
Mr. BALL. Were the curtains on curtain rods?
Mrs. JOHNSON. Yes, sir.
Mr. BALL. They were in the room when he rented it?
Mrs. JOHNSON. Yes, sir.
Mr. BALL. Did Oswald ever talk to you about redecorating his room?
Mrs. JOHNSON. No sir; never mentioned it.
Mr. BALL. Did he ever talk to you about putting up new curtains in his room?
Mrs. JOHNSON. No, sir.
Mr. BALL. Did he ever tell you he was going to get some curtain rods?
Mrs. JOHNSON. No; he didn't.

Mr. BALL. The room had curtain rods on the window when he came in there?
Mrs. JOHNSON. Yes, sir; sure did.
Mr. BALL. Also curtains?
Mrs. JOHNSON. Yes, sir.


Moreover, at one point Oswald had said he would switch to a larger room when one was available, and yet, when he was offered the opportunity to switch to a larger room, he declined. If his room was missing curtain rods, one wonders why Oswald would not take the Johnsons up on their offer and switch to the larger room with curtain rods:
Mr. JOHNSON. I believe that--uh--the little room he took was the only room available at that time.
Mr. BELIN. Had he come any earlier to try and find a room earlier--or not?
Mr. JOHNSON. Uh--Mrs. Roberts said he had been by once before.
Mr. BELIN. And was that little room available then, or not--or don't you remember?
Mr. JOHNSON. I don't remember exactly, I believe, though, that--uh--I believe he looked at it and decided he'd wait awhile. But the next time he came back, why he decided he'd take it.
My wife told him that--uh--if he wanted to take that room, why he could, you know, when we had a larger room and more convenient for him, why he could have it. And so he just--after he got this little room, why he just decided he'd stay in it.

_________

Mr. BALL. Where was he when you first met him, at what place?
Mrs. JOHNSON. At my home--I was between serving hours and I come home for relaxation and to kind of help out. I cooperate in keeping the house and seeing after it, too, and I had returned home that afternoon and he seen the room for rent sign--the first time that he came by, I happened to have just rented the last room that one time. Occasionally, I will have them full and then they just go vacant; people just come in and out, stay a week and then are gone, anyway, at that time, I didn't have a room.
Mr. BALL. The first time he came to see you?
Mrs. JOHNSON. Yes; that's something about 3 weeks before he came back.
Mr. BALL. This was 1026 North Beckley?
Mrs. JOHNSON. Yes.
Mr. BALL. He talked to you?
Mrs. JOHNSON. Yes; the first time and the last time; the first time, he told me he wanted a room and I told him I was very sorry, I just rented the last room and he said he was very sorry, he wanted to get near his work and he didn't have a car and it being on the bus line, he was sorry he missed it. I said, "You noticed the sign." I hadn't had time to take the sign up and I told him, "I will take the sign up and if you notice the sign up again, you might stop by and I will have a room" and sure enough, he came by this second time and so this tiny, little room--it was at one time my library; that's what it was built for, and he came by and I said I only have this small room at the present time. I run an ad, it seems like, at that time, and I said I only have the small room and he looked at it and said, "I will take this room with the understanding I can have a larger room at the time you have one go vacant" and I said to him that's agreeable, so, at the time, I had other vacancies which in just 2 or 3 days I had two or three more accommodations go vacant, so I told him I had other accommodations that are larger and he said, "I find this room to be light and comfortable." It was four windows on the outside wall; it was all light. He said, "I find it to be light and comfortable and worth the money, you don't mind, I will remain in this room," so he didn't even look at the other rooms. He just remained in that room, what I call my library.


Moreover, in custody, Oswald denied the curtain rod story entirely, so conspiracy theorists like MicahJava or No Other can't exactly fall back on a story about curtain rods when the guy they are attempting to defend is denying their claims entirely and claiming he brought no long package to work that day.

Hank
 
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And it's important to remember we only got into the subject of what Wes Frazier and his sister said because No Other changed the subject after I asked these questions:
QUESTIONS FOR THE CONSPIRACY THEORISTS HERE:

Why did the conspirators, who presumably planted the 40-inch weapon on the sixth floor, make a 38-inch sack and plant that instead of planting a 42-inch sack? Didn't they know the length of the rifle they were framing Oswald for owning?

How did the blanket in the Paine garage which presumably normally contained the rifle Oswald didn't own or ever possess, happen to wind up empty on 11/22/63? If it never contained a rifle, what did it contain when Marina looked inside it and when Michael Paine moved it?

He never attempted to respond to either question with a meaningful answer. He basically changed the subject on the first, and hand-waved the second one away.

Hank
 
As there seems to be a lull my I ask one question of the experts? After LHO received his rifle how much time did he spend at the firing range to familiarized himself with it?
 
As there seems to be a lull my I ask one question of the experts? After LHO received his rifle how much time did he spend at the firing range to familiarized himself with it?

That is unknown. While Oswald's life might be the most researched in history - the Warren Commission had the Treasury Department study his finances and they accounted for nearly every penny Oswald ever spent - they couldn't account for all his time and hence there are gaps such that where he was and what he was doing is sometimes unknown.

He might have practiced the Sunday before the assassination at a rifle range. Some people came forward to identify Oswald as the person they saw, but there are reasons to dispute that. He didn't have many opportunities in Dallas before then, as his rifle was stored away in the Paine garage and as far as we can tell, he didn't access it between September and mid-November.

But between March of 1963, when he obtained it and was photographed with it, through September when his rifle was taken back to Dallas and was stored in the Paine garage, he had plenty of opportunity to practice with it. How much and when is, however, as I said, unknown.

Hank
 
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As there seems to be a lull my I ask one question of the experts? After LHO received his rifle how much time did he spend at the firing range to familiarized himself with it?

He would spend evenings down at a river shooting bottles, he sat on his porch dry-firing the rifle.

Oswald went to the Sportsdrome Gun Range in Grand Prairie, TX., on October 26, November 9 or 10, and Sunday, November 17. * As told to Hugh Aynesworth by Howard Price. Price was interviewed by the FBI, but never said that he knew Oswald's name because he didn't want to get involved. Garland Slack was in the stall next to Oswald at the range, remembered him because he got into a shouting match with Oswald after he started shooting targets in other lanes, "He centered them all." *

Marina said Oswald practiced disassembling and reassembling the Carcano for hours.

Does this help?
 
Anybody care to give an opinion on what these object(s) on the skull photographs are?

jlte6oG.jpg


The HSCA basically promoted the interpretation that the area in blue is a beveled exit on the frontal bone margin of the skull cavity, and the marked in yellow is a beveled entrance. But since the skull photographs have been taken after the brain had been removed, how could the skull cavity be so small?

Here's a HSCA sketch of their entry and exit interpretations, with an image of a human brain overlaid. Somebody please tell me how (you think) they removed the brain. MS paint an outline of a hypothetical skull cavity and upload your version to imgur.com.

wBMHA8e.png


bnCM9QI.jpg


Reminders:

1. Dr. Pierre Finck arrived at the autopsy after the skull cavity had been enlarged and the brain removed. Finck's statements indicate that he could still view the small head wound in the skull plainly, as a part of the intact skull and not skull fragments that had been separated.

2. Kennedy's official autopsy report states that the brain weighed 1,500 grams, slightly higher than the average intact, adult male brain. Below is a tracing of an official brain photograph:

z7Hs8Ty.png


3. This is the consistency of an unfixed human brain, as demonstrated by a Doctor: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jHxyP-nUhUY
 
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Anybody care to give an opinion on what these object(s) on the skull photographs are?

https://i.imgur.com/jlte6oG.jpg

Apparently you don't care to give your opinion. You're learning that your opinion is worthless, as you're not a medical professional, nor are you a skilled photo analyst. What did the original three pathologists say? What did all the forensic pathologists who reviewed the extant autopsy materials say?

Did they mention it and give an opinion? What was it? Why do you suppose that was?



The HSCA basically promoted the interpretation that the area in blue is a beveled exit on the frontal bone margin of the skull cavity, and the marked in yellow is a beveled entrance. But since the skull photographs have been taken after the brain had been removed, how could the skull cavity be so small?

"Small" is your interpretation of the image, is it not? Did the forensic pathologists who examined the extant autopsy materials call this wound "small", or are you treating us to your opinion once more? Is this "small" interpretation because of your extensive background as a medical professional, a skilled photographic analyst, both, or neither?

Do you understand photogrammetry, for starters?



Here's a HSCA sketch of their entry and exit interpretations, with an image of a human brain overlaid. Somebody please tell me how (you think) they removed the brain. MS paint an outline of a hypothetical skull cavity and upload your version to imgur.com.

https://i.imgur.com/wBMHA8e.png

https://i.imgur.com/bnCM9QI.jpg

The HSCA already commissioned a medical artist - Ida Dox - to do just that:
[qimg]http://mcadams.posc.mu.edu/dox2big.jpg[/qimg]

Why on earth would you be seeking the opinion of laymen here with little to no medical training or photo analytic skills, for the most part? Can you explain why you're asking us for our opinion?



Reminders:

1. Dr. Pierre Finck arrived at the autopsy after the skull cavity had been enlarged and the brain removed. Finck's statements indicate that he could still view the small head wound in the skull plainly, as a part of the intact skull and not skull fragments that had been separated.

So we're not talking about the massive head wound on the top right side of the head, then, are we? Where did Finck and the rest of the autopsy team locate this small head wound? Regarding the bolded, where did Finck plainly say this, or is this your 'interpretation' of his remarks?



2. Kennedy's official autopsy report states that the brain weighed 1,500 grams, slightly higher than the average intact, adult male brain. Below is a tracing of an official brain photograph:

https://i.imgur.com/z7Hs8Ty.png

And your point is?


3. This is the consistency of an unfixed human brain, as demonstrated by a Doctor: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jHxyP-nUhUY

And your point is?

Hank
 
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Micha, I think we are past the point that you will find anybody showing interest in your questions about photographs. It is clear we will never be able to answer why any marking or feature has any significance to you, nor will you be satisfied with answers that are painfully obvious to the rest of us.

I can not, for example, explain why a cavity looks so small to you, when I do not understand how large you expect it to be, or why you are interpreting it as abnormal or in discrepancy with the autopsy records, just as I can not understand why you thought obvious wounds as red splotches, or find suspicion in the hair being parted around the wound.

Time and again you offer photos that clearly support the Warren commission, and argue as though they show something entirely different.
 
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