You are all over the place. Again, Oswald was the only TSBD employee whose prints were identified as being on the SN boxes. That's plural as in multiple different SN boxes with Oswald's prints. If, as you suggest, these boxes had lots of TSBD "staff" handling them then we would expect to find the prints of other TSBD employees. That would marginally support your claim that there was nothing incriminatory about Oswald's prints being on the SN boxes because he worked there. But no other TSBD left identifiable prints on those boxes. Just Oswald. What bad luck for him! I'm not sure what you are babbling about with the police lying or implying that if someone leaves only one fingerprint or palmprint that somehow makes the identification questionable. If Oswald left an identifiable print - even a single fingerprint on a box - that means he touched it. Many of the prints found on these boxes were linked to the DPD or FBI investigators and eliminated from any connection to the assassination.
Many of the prints found on these boxes were linked to the DPD or FBI investigators and eliminated from any connection to the assassination. Really?
Mr. EISENBERG. Mr. Chairman, I would like that box admitted as 653.
Mr. DULLES. It shall be admitted.
Mr. EISENBERG. How many identifiable prints did you find on this carton?
Mr. LATONA. There were seven fingerprints and two palmprints developed on Commission Exhibit 653.
Mr. EISENBERG. That is, identifiable prints?
Mr. LATONA. Identifiable prints.
Mr. EISENBERG.
Did you identify any of those prints as belonging to a specific person?Mr. LATONA.
I did not.Mr. EISENBERG. May I have 654 marked, Box C, Mr. Chairman? Did you also examine Box C?
Mr. LATONA. Box C, yes, sir.
Mr. EISENBERG. May I have that admitted as 654?
Mr. DULLES. It shall be admitted as Commission Exhibit 654.
(Commission Exhibit No. 654 was marked and received in evidence.)
Mr. EISENBERG. Did you find any latent identifiable prints on 654?
Mr. LATONA. I found two fingerprints and one palmprint.
Mr. EISENBERG.
Did you identify them as belonging to a specific individual?Mr. LATONA.
I did not identify them.Mr. EISENBERG.
Now, did you attempt to identify them with Lee Harvey Oswald's known prints?Mr. LATONA.
Yes; and they are not Lee Harvey Oswald's print.Again, Oswald was the only TSBD employee whose prints were identified as being on the SN boxes. That's plural as in multiple different SN boxes with Oswald's prints.Stop lying, "Richard"!
Mr. EISENBERG. So you found 13 identifiable prints, Mr. Latona. Were you able to identify any of these prints as belonging to a specific individual?
Mr. LATONA.
We were able to identify one fingerprint and one palmprint.Mr. EISENBERG. And whose prints were they?
Mr. LATONA.
The fingerprint was identified as Harvey Lee Oswald.Mr. EISENBERG. That is Lee Harvey Oswald?
Mr. LATONA. That is right.
Mr. EISENBERG. And the palm?
Mr. LATONA.
The palmprint was identified also as Harvey Lee Oswald. On all the boxes they found one fingerprint and one palmprint belonging to Oswald. That's the only print they were looking for. None of the other prints belonged to Oswald and they simply did not bother to identify them