Four firearms experts testified that the empty cartridge cases, found near the crime scene, were fired from the Smith & Wesson 38 special caliber revolver taken from Oswald, when he was arrested at the theatre.And they declared that the four cartridges were fired from this weapon, to the exclussion of all others.
A total of 12 witnesses saw the man with the revolver.Six had picked Oswald out from line ups as the man at the crime scene .Three other identified him from photographs.Two others said he resembled the man at the crime scene. Not claiming this is being ignored.
There is an issue with the time in relation to Oswald getting from his rooming house at around the 1.02+ in time to get to the crime scene to commit murder. But that doesn't rule out Oswald. The eye witnesses and the ballistic evidence are to strong to be dismissed. And both those strong lines of evidence place Oswald at the crime scene.
Four firearms experts testified that the empty cartridge cases, found near the crime scene, were fired from the Smith & Wesson 38 special caliber revolver taken from Oswald, when he was arrested at the theatre.And they declared that the four cartridges were fired from this weapon, to the exclussion of all others. That's fine....Now please
prove that those cartridges were the ones that were picked up at the scene, and tell us
WHEN those cartridges were fired.
A total of 12 witnesses saw the man with the revolver. Yes, that's true... And what did those witnesses say about the manner in which the man unloaded the revolver? Isn't it true that they all said that he unloaded the spent cartridges
ONE AT A TIME as he walked away? The revolver that was allegedly taken from Lee Oswald at the theater was a Smith & Wesson.... Smith and Wesson revolvers are designed to eject the cartridges all at the same time with a single push of the ejector rod. This was demonstrated for the Warren Commission by an FBI agent who was using the revolver from the theater. He pointed out that all of the shells were ejected at the same time and his hand was liberally coated with burned gun powder when he ejected the shells.
The man who shot JD Tippit removed one shell at a time and tossed the shell aside as he walked away....Thus the shells were found scattered over a wide area. Obviously the man was NOT using the Smith & Wesson revolver that was allegedly taken from Lee Oswald at the theater.
There is an issue with the time in relation to Oswald getting from his rooming house at around the 1.02+ in time to get to the crime scene to commit murder. But that doesn't rule out Oswald.So you recognize that Lee Oswald could not have traveled from the rooming house to the murder scene in about three minutes, but you still believe that that fact
"doesn't rule out Oswald"..... Do I have that right?