Quote from: Tim Nickerson on Today at 06:36:13 AM
For goodness sakes Michael, would you just stop and think about what you are posting before actually posting it?
LOL! Yeah, okay. You have done nothing but duck and dodge and bob and weave about the holes in the palmprint story. You're the last person in the world to be telling anyone about thinking about what they're posting before they post it.
You have painted yourself as a fringe online propagandist with your lowlife claim that a respected, Pulitzer-Prize-nominated scholar like Henry Hurt was a "kook." I'd bet good money that you don't even know that Hurt differed with most conspiracy theorists on a number of issues about the assassination.
Quote from: Tim Nickerson at 06:36:13 AM] Latona testified in April of 1964. He never tried to match the lift with the barrel until September of 1964.
Oh, of course! Gosh, it just never occurred to him to check for this until he was asked! This is Exhibit 15 for what I said above. Latona was no rookie. If he had seen non-human impressions in the palmprint, surely, surely it would have occurred to him to check the barrel to see if those impressions came from the barrel, because this would have strengthened his identification. You might want to read Sylvia Meagher's section on the palmprint in
Accessories After the Fact. The entire book is available for free online reading and PDF download:
https://archive.org/details/AccessoriesAfterTheFactJust once, do some homework before you try to see the emperor's new clothes.
Why didn’t they call him back, then? They called Whaley back just to make him say he dropped his passenger off two blocks sooner.
Good questions indeed. Also, why didn't Hoover name the lab examiners in his memo? Why didn't he have them make sworn statements? Why didn't the WC make any effort to verify Hoover's claim?
For that matter, why wouldn't Lt. Day sign the affidavit that the WC wanted him to sign to reaffirm his story about the palmprint? Clearly, because when Day was asked to sign the affidavit, he realized that the WC and/or the FBI doubted his story, that they might discover that he'd lied, and if they ended up finding evidence that he'd lied, he would be in more trouble for signing a second affidavit.
Quote from: Tim Nickerson on Today at 06:36:13 AM
Oswald wasn't at work when he bought the money order. He was at the Post Office on 400 N. Ervay Street when he bought the money order. It was about a half a mile from where he worked. He had fudged his timesheet to make it appear that he never left work that day.
You don't know any of this. You are just repeating the kool-aid you have read in pro-WC books. You clearly have not read anything that challenges the money order story.
I see that now you are willing to entertain the idea of evidence tampering! My, my! Here you have rejected every previous suggestion of evidence tampering, no matter how compelling. But, oh,
now you are willing to posit tampering to explain Oswald's timesheet, apparently not realizing the kind of job Oswald had at the time.
Anyway, leaving aside for a moment the issue of Oswald's timesheet, there is also the fact that the envelope containing the money order was stamped and mailed
in postal zone 12, which was several miles from the North Ervay post office and across the Trinity River. I am guessing you were not aware of this fact.
Now why oh why oh why would anyone buy a money order at one post office and then walk 3 miles to mail it from another post office?
Furthermore, returning to the issue of Oswald's whereabouts at the time the money order was purchased, Jaggars-Stovall records show that Oswald worked from 8:00 AM through 12:15 PM
on nine printing jobs. Like many high-tech companies, Jagger-Stovall tracked each employee's work for the day, not just their hours. Oswald's job at Jaggars-Stovall was not the kind of job that you could disappear from for 2 hours without being noticed, not to mention that he completed nine printing jobs that morning.
Walking to the North Ervay post office, then walking 3 miles to another post office, and then walking back to Jaggars-Stovall would have taken Oswald at least 2 hours.
And it should be noted again that the money order was never cashed, as anyone can see by looking at the money order itself. It has no dated bank endorsement stamp, in fact no bank endorsement stamp of any kind, and does not have the final date stamp that it should have received if it had gone to the Federal Postal Money Order Center in Kansas City after it was cashed.
When the WC asked Klein's to document that they had cashed the $21.45 money order, Klein's sent the commission a deposit statement from their bank, and the commission uncritically accepted it, apparently not realizing--or assuming nobody would notice--that the statement had neither a bank stamp nor a date stamp and that it was dated 2/15/1963, nearly one month
before the money order was even purchased.
It is telling that every single piece of evidence that supposedly incriminates Oswald falls apart when you look at it more closely.