The key words being "At that particular time"---------------------i.e. the time he was facing the man.
If we continue the quotation we get this: "Anyway, as I noticed him walking away from me,"------------i.e. just before this-----------"it was kind of dim in there that particular day, and it was hanging out to his side."
At this particular time, Officer Baker was not looking at his face. He saw what the man was wearing
As for his "It was kind of dim in there that particular day", it's laughable: it was not kind of dim in the lunchroom
It isn't really laughable as we don't actually have a clue what the lighting situation was in the room at that time.
Were all the lights on?
We don't know.
What stands in Baker's favour on this point is that it was certainly possible it was dim as there are no windows in that room and it is completely dependent on what lights are switched on. If it was a room with windows, on a bright sunny day, it would have been more difficult to understand.
But Officer Baker is saying the 'jacket' was "similar in color" to the ARREST shirt, not the reddish-brown shirt Mr Oswald changed out of after the shooting. He's trying to be helpful in a Whaley kind of way, and he's painfully aware of what's in his affidavit. What he doesn't know is that his affidavit won't be made public until the 1990s..............
The point I was making here wasn't about the colour, it was about Baker misidentifying the shirt as a jacket because it was hanging out.
Mr. BAKER - I could have mistaken it for a jacket, but to my recollection it was a little colored jacket, that is all I can say.
There can be no argument the colour of the jacket Baker gives is light brown and CE151 is described as a light brown sports shirt.
It is not a massive leap to see how Baker could mistake a shirt for a jacket as it was hanging out.
It is also clear from Baker's testimony that the clothes he sees "Oswald" wearing in the police station are different from those he sees in the TSBD:
Mr. DULLES - Do you recall whether or not he was wearing the same clothes, did he appear to you the same when you saw him in the police station as when you saw him in the lunchroom?
Mr. BAKER - Actually just looking at him,
he looked like he didn't have the same thing on.Mr. BELIN - He looked as though he did not have the same thing on?
Mr. BAKER -
He looked like he did not have the same on.
I understand you can't have Oswald in the 2nd floor lunchroom but Baker's description of his clothes can't really be used to support that point.