Actually I did NOT say that the killer dumped the shells in his hand. It's my contention that the killer removed the shells ONE-AT- A- TIME and therefore he was not using a Smith & Wesson. But I did point out that if he had dumped the shells into his (third ) hand then the palm of that hand would have been covered with burned powder residue. Lee Oswald had no gunpowder residue on his hand.
Let me quote you, lest you forgot:
Duh!!....When using a S&W revolver all cartridges ( both spent and unfired) are ejected at once. If the shooter has fired four shells he simply dumps all shells into his hand, and then he can place the two live rounds back in the cylinder and replace the four spent rounds that he has discarded four with live cartridges.
That's what I was responding to when I wrote:
Try this:
While holding a revolver in one hand:
Dump a selection of unfired and fired cartridges into your other hand
Sort the proverbial wheat from the chaff using only the other hand (remembering that hand#1 is preoccupied with holding a pistol)
Reload the unfired cartridges into the cylinder of the pistol
Dump the fired, empty cases
Do all of this while on the move, and without letting go of the pistol.Again, I was pointing out that your contention was untenable given the circumstances. I
never claimed that the Tippit gunman dumped out all the cases into one hand.
What I have said, and continue to maintain, is that the S&W ejector mechanism does not prevent someone from unloading the revolver one round at a time. S&W even provided instructions on how to do this on the box the Model 10s came in:
"
To Remove a Single Shell: --After having swung the cylinder open, press on the ejector rod sufficiently to start the cartridges from the chambers. The fired shell can then be drawn out by hand."
You can see those instructions in this video exactly 3 minutes in:
I've also pointed out that there are other conditions that will require that the cases be removed by hand, such as when the rim of a case slips over the edge of the extractor star, or when a case has swollen stuck in the chamber.