You still don't follow. You alleged that finding Oswald's prints on these boxes was merely a function of his "working there" citing the possibility that other TSBD employees left their prints on the boxes to support this claim. That is demonstrably false. There were numerous TSBD employees who worked on that floor. There was only one unidentified print. It belonged to none of them. Thus, your explanation that Oswald's prints were left on the box because he "worked there" is totally undermined. No other employee who "worked there" left any such prints. ONLY Oswald. If you want to entertain that some fantasy assassin who DIDN"T WORK THERE left his prints on these boxes, then knock yourself out. That is an entirely different claim. But your explanation for Oswald's prints being on these boxes is completely destroyed by the evidence. Just because one print is still unidentified after being compared to the TSBD employees who worked on the floor actually undermines your original premise. It is "unidentified" because it did not belong to anyone who "worked there." There is no doubt that some others must have touched the box at some point. Someone packed its contents, and someone delivered it to the TSBD. That, however, has no relevance for why only Oswald's prints are on the box among the TSBD employees who had access to the 6th floor on 11.22.
So many words, and not an answer to my question in sight.
You alleged that finding Oswald's prints on these boxes was merely a function of his "working there" citing the possibility that other TSBD employees left their prints on the boxes to support this claim. That is demonstrably false. There is nothing false about it.
There were numerous TSBD employees who worked on that floor. There was only one unidentified print. It belonged to none of them. Thus, your explanation that Oswald's prints were left on the box because he "worked there" is totally undermined. BS. Even if no other TSBD employee touched those boxes, it still remains factual that Oswald worked in the building and that his job was to take books from boxes as well as moving boxes around.
There is no doubt that some others must have touched the box at some point. At last he sees the light!
Someone packed its contents, and someone delivered it to the TSBD.Prints on cardboard boxes don't last very long. Is it your claim now that somebody delivered those boxes to the TSBD within roughly a day before the crime?
If so, that would also explain how Oswald's prints got on those boxes, as some TSBD employee must have brought those boxes to the 6th floor. That somebody could have been Oswald, right?
Which brings us back to the basic fact that fingerprints found on boxes from an employee whose job it was to move and open those boxes have no evidentiary value at all.