It just goes to weight. There is no way that you can conclude that the gun with the officers' initials was anything other than Oswald's revolver. Even if you think that there is a scintilla of doubt about it, the only other conclusion would be that there was an enormous conspiracy to falsify evidence. The possibility that it was not the gun retrieved from Oswald and was innocently and unintentionally replaced by another gun that just so happened to have fired shells that other officers said they picked up at the Tippit murder scene is a non-starter.
I did not say that Oswald identified the revolver CE143 as belonging to him. The officers did that.
I said that Oswald admitted to carrying a revolver and I was suggesting that you were proposing that there was a conspiracy to "then trick several officers into identifying it as the gun that Oswald admitted he was carrying."
There is no way that you can conclude that the gun with the officers' initials was anything other than Oswald's revolver.I would agree with you if the chain of custody was solid.
Even if you think that there is a scintilla of doubt about it, the only other conclusion would be that there was an enormous conspiracy to falsify evidence. You watch too many movies, I think.. All it would have taken was one person to replace the revolver they took from Oswald with the one that was used to kill Tippit.
The possibility that it was not the gun retrieved from Oswald and was innocently and unintentionally replaced by another gun that just so happened to have fired shells that other officers said they picked up at the Tippit murder scene is a non-starter.
If the revolver was indeed replaced, it was not done innocently or unintentionally.
I did not say that Oswald identified the revolver CE143 as belonging to him. The officers did that. No they didn't. Carroll could not say who he took the revolver from and Hill testified that Carroll had told him it was Oswald's gun. Neither Carroll or Hill knew if it was Oswald's revolver or not!
I said that Oswald admitted to carrying a revolver and I was suggesting that you were proposing that there was a conspiracy to "then trick several officers into identifying it as the gun that Oswald admitted he was carrying." You can call it whatever you want, but the bottom line is that no officer actually saw and initialed that revolver until several hours after Oswald's arrest when Hill showed up at the personnel room with a revolver and told the officers that it was Oswald's. Hill may well have believed that what he said was true, but he really had no way of knowing that for sure, as he merely accepted Carroll's word for it.
None of those officers had to have been part of a conspiracy, if there was one. They were merely acting in good faith but that doesn't mean they were doing the right thing.