Oh come on, Martin! You can't possibly believe this statement you just wrote (can you?)....
"The problem is though that there is not a shred of evidence there was in fact a rifle in Ruth Paine's garage on 11/21/63."
Marina SAW the damn thing in the garage in October. She testified to that fact. (Or do you want to call her a liar on this point, Martin? A lot of other CTers do call her a liar, of course.)
Plus: We know that LHO had his rifle in New Orleans in the summer of '63. And we also know that all his possessions were transported to Irving in Ruth's car in Sept. '63. Nobody specifically saw the rifle at that time, that's true enough. But let's get out that calculator again and add some things up.....
1. Lee Oswald has possession of a rifle in New Orleans in Summer 1963. (And Marina sees Lee working the bolt of the gun on the screened-in porch in that city.)
2. The Oswald possessions are taken to Ruth Paine's house in Irving, Texas, in September '63.
3. Marina sees the butt end of a rifle in a blanket in the Paine garage in about October of '63.
4. Lee Oswald carries a long-ish paper package into the TSBD on the morning of 11/22/63. (And Lee lies to Buell Wesley Frazier about the contents of that package.)
5. The blanket in Ruth Paine's garage where Marina says Lee kept his rifle was empty when the police picked up that blanket on the afternoon of 11/22/63.
If the above five things are true (and the evidence and testimony demonstrates they are true), then is it reasonable to come to the conclusion that Lee's rifle WASN'T also present in Ruth Paine's garage on 11/21/63? Why would anyone feel compelled to reach such a conclusion after adding up #1 thru #5 above?
Marina SAW the damn thing in the garage in October. She testified to that fact. Actually, she testified that she looked inside the blanked only once, about a week after moving from New Orleans (which means it was late September), and she saw what she believed to be the wooden stock of a rifle. That later morphed into "she saw a rifle". But even if that is true, how does Marina seeing a rifle in late September prove that it was Oswald's rifle, that it was an MC and that it was (still) in Ruth Paine's garage on 11/21/63?
Plus: We know that LHO had his rifle in New Orleans in the summer of '63. How do we know that? Even if we assume that the rifle Oswald was holding in the BY photos was his property, how did that rifle get to New Orleans?
And we also know that all his possessions were transported to Irving in Ruth's car in Sept. '63.So, what? If Oswald succesfully transported "his rifle" from Dallas to New Orleans in another manner, why would he be so foolish to just hand over the weapon to Ruth Paine?
Nobody specifically saw the rifle at that time, that's true enough.Which means that you can only assume there was a rifle amongst those possessions. You're already getting in dangerous "assuming facts not in evidence" territory.
But let's get out that calculator again and add some things up.....1. Lee Oswald has possession of a rifle in New Orleans in Summer 1963. (And Marina sees Lee working the bolt of the gun on the screened-in porch in that city.) That's an
inconclusive assumption based solely on what Marina said. The problem with that is that if you compare her many statements (made to law enforcement officers) prior to her testimony and her actual testimony, you will find enough contradictions to conclude that Marina's word alone is hardly enough to rely on. And there is no other corroboration. Nobody else saw Oswald with a rifle and nobody most certainly saw him with the MC rifle.
2. The Oswald possessions are taken to Ruth Paine's house in Irving, Texas, in September '63.Again, so what? There is no evidence a rifle was among those possessions. You can only
assume there was.
3. Marina sees the butt end of a rifle in a blanket in the Paine garage in about October of '63.And but how does this prove (1) that it was Oswald's rifle, (2) that it was the MC and (3) that it was still there on 11/21/63? You only
assume all that, right?
4. Lee Oswald carries a long-ish paper package into the TSBD on the morning of 11/22/63. (And Lee lies to Buell Wesley Frazier about the contents of that package.)Highly inconclusive. There is no evidence that there was a rifle in that paper bag or, for that matter, that the bag was in fact large enough to contain a broken down MC rifle.
As for lying to Frazier, you first need to know what was actually said and what was in the bag, before you can make the claim that Oswald lied. Without this information you can only
assume he lied.
5. The blanket in Ruth Paine's garage where Marina says Lee kept his rifle was empty when the police picked up that blanket on the afternoon of 11/22/63.How does this tell you that it wasn't empty on 11/21/63? If there was indeed a rifle in there, you really can only
assume that it wasn't removed earlier, right?
If the above five things are true (and the evidence and testimony demonstrates they are true), then is it reasonable to come to the conclusion that Lee's rifle WASN'T also present in Ruth Paine's garage on 11/21/63? Why would anyone feel compelled to reach such a conclusion after adding up #1 thru #5 above?This is selfserving circular logic. The most important remark is "If the above five things are true" and that's a massive "if". And no, the evidence and testimony doesn't demonstrate that they are true. In fact, we've just gone over this "evidence" and it clearly is nothing more than just assumptions and conjecture. If you actually had any kind of evidence to back up those claims 1 thru 5, you would have posted it. But you didn't, for one simple reason; it doesn't exist.
So, I have indeed added up 1 thru 5 and find that they don't add up to the conclusion you attach to your assumptions.
Basically, what you have presented here is a highly circumstantial case, backed up with no significance evidence whatsoever.
I have to ask, David; You do understand the difference between assumptions and actual evidence, right?