But that is not a chain of custody issue. They all establish that the gun came from the scene of the arrest. It is a question of whether it was Oswald's gun or whether it belonged to someone else at the scene. Then the questions would be: what happened to the gun that Oswald admitted having? Was this a gun that a police officer was carrying? If it was a police officer, why was it drawn pointing away from the officers who were wrestling with Oswald? etc. A jury can easily figure that out.
But Hill vouches for it being the gun that Carroll handed him. That's all you need. There is no period when it was not in Carroll or Hill's possession and control until Carroll initialed it.
But that is not a chain of custody issue. They all establish that the gun came from the scene of the arrest.No. It is a chain of custody issue, because you do not get to assume that the revolver now in evidence is in fact that one that came from the scene of the arrest.
Then the questions would be: what happened to the gun that Oswald admitted having?Well, let's see. If the revolver now in evidence isn't the one they took from Oswald, the most logical answer would have to be that the actual revolver was disappeared.
Was this a gun that a police officer was carrying? If it was a police officer, why was it drawn pointing away from the officers who were wrestling with Oswald? etc. A jury can easily figure that out. You are now arguing that the evidence is somehow credible, not because the evidence itself is conclusive but simply because you say so.
But Hill vouches for it being the gun that Carroll handed him. That's all you need. That's the classic "it's true because the cop said so" argument. When you go with that, you can just as easily do away with the chain of custody requirement all together.
There is no period when it was not in Carroll or Hill's possession and control until Carroll initialed it.Actually, we don't know that. And it seems that Hill gave the revolver to Paul Bentley as well.
The bottom line is that Hill handed in a revolver to the evidence room which was initialed by some officers in the personnel room because Hill told them it was Oswald's revolver. You can argue about it all day long, but there simply is no way to know where that revolver came from, other than believing the word of a cop who himself admits that he doesn't know first hand either.