Mooney, McCurley, Faulkner, Craig, Hill, Brewer, Haywood, and Weatherford all said that they saw chicken bones and/or a lunch sack lying on top of boxes at the SE window, or next to the SE window.
I asked how many of them had actual crime scene investigation experience. Let’s start with your first one:
Mooney. He was in the writ and execution division of the Sheriff’s Dept. He shuffled legal paperwork for a living. No apparent experience in crime scene investigation.
Craig. He testified that he ran away from home when he was 12 and had no subsequent schooling. He worked on some ranches, went into the army and worked in the motor pool, then was a dishwasher, a cook, a construction worker, and a packager, then went to work for the Sheriff’s Dept. in October of 1959. No apparent aptitude for, or experience in, crime scene investigation.
Haygood [not Haywood]. A motor jockey with no apparent experience in crime scene investigation.
Faulkner. I only found a Sheriff’s report dated 11/22/63 with no mention of any lunch remains. So, I question why you included him in your list.
Hill. Assigned to checking the backgrounds of applicants for the DPD. No apparent experience in crime scene investigation.
McCurley. Deputy Sheriff with no apparent experience in crime scene investigation.
Brewer. He was a motor jockey with no apparent experience in crime scene investigation.
Weatherford. Deputy Sheriff with no apparent experience in crime scene investigation.
None of these give any specific locations just general information. The only one who gave anything that could possibly be considered specific was Mooney. And Mooney qualified his information with qualifications which included “if I remember correctly”, and it could have been on this box or maybe on this other box. It is obvious to me that he really didn’t remember for sure where he saw it.
If you really believe that any of their testimony is evidence that they saw lunch remains at the southeast window or next to the southeast window, then apparently
you have a completely different standard for what you consider to be evidence that you think tends to show a contrary scenario to the official one. Why he hell is that?
Time and time again you claim that there is no evidence that tends to incriminate your idol. But when it comes to evidence that you think tends to exonotate your idol, the sketchiest testimony will do just fine.
None of the officers in your list were there to document the evidence. They were searching for the assassin and the weapon, etc. The actual crime scene investigators who were assigned to this scene provide the real answers. But, as usual, you will claim that there is no evidence (no matter how well it is documented) when it comes to incriminating evidence.