I take it you're not acquainted with the concept of parallax.
The top box in Photo 91-001 /072 is forward AND out from the box below it. Move to the south (as in the Day holding Carcano photo) and the line-of-sight to the boxes changes to the viewer.
But nice try.
I can't imagine Weitzman with his face pressed to that dirty oily floor PLUS there being enough room for one of those bulky flashlights they were using.
"I was on the floor looking under the flat at the same time
he was looking on the top side and we saw the gun"
"Yes, sir; this is taken the opposite side the flat I was looking under."
"Boone was looking the top side; I was looking under the flat. We
were looking over everything. I was behind this section of books."
Where does Weitzman say he was looking "beneath the wooden pallet"?
And isn't a "flat" just a collection of the same goods piled up? Do you think Weitzman meant the height of a wooden board when he referenced "the opposite side"?
BTW, Weitzman's comments were just before he authenticated the DPD in-situ photos and drew on an exhibit an arrow pointing to the in situ area.
Where does Weitzman say he was looking "beneath the wooden pallet"? "I was on the floor looking under the flat at the same time he was looking on the top side and we saw the gun"I was on the floor looking under the pallet.....
Let's explain this for you.... Weitzman was ON THE FLOOR .... The fact that Weitzman was ON THE FLOOR and looking west under the pallet ( flat) means that his field of vision was limited to the area under the pallet.....because the boxes of books stacked all around would have blocked his view of the area where the DPD in situ photo depicts the rifle ...In other words If that rifle had been jammed between those boxes Weitzman could not have seen it with his face on the floor..
However Boone could easily have seen the rifle under the pallet after he ha removed a couple of boxes of books that acted as a "roof" over the crevasse in which the rifle lay.... And this is a point that is always swept aside by the Lner's....Boone had to remove a couple of boxes from the top of the crevice and shine his light down into the dark hole before he was able to see a small portion of the rifle's stock. The fact that Boone had to remove those boxes means that the boxes were placed over the top of the hole after the rifle was placed at the bottom of the hole.
The liars pretend that Lee simply dropped the rifle into the hiding place as he dashed by on his way to the second floor lunch room. But the boxes were over the top of the crevasse ..... How did they get there??