The firing pin on Oswalds revolver was defective and would not have been able to fire . Automatic shells were also found at the Tippit crime scene . A wallet of Oswalds was found at the Tippit shooting scene . Oswalds hand gun was a revolver not an " Automatic " .
The firing pin on Oswalds [sic] revolver was defective and would not have been able to fire .
Cite?
Btw the killer was seen by several eyewitnesses unloading his gun. The gun that Oswald was arrested with was an exclusive match to the shells found at the scene, which proves beyond all doubt that Oswald's weapon was good enough to produce the matching shells.
When the police arrived Ishowed [sic] one of them where I saw this man emptying his gun and we found a shell.
Barbara Jeanette Davis affidavit 22/11/63
I saw the boy cutting across our yard and he was unloading his gun
Mrs. Virginia Davis affidavit 22/11/63
Mr. BELIN - Well, did you see the man empty his gun?
Mr. BENAVIDES - That is what he was doing. He took one out and threw it.Automatic shells were also found at the Tippit crime scene .
The eyewitnesses saw the Killer manually unload the gun and that's not the way an automatic gun works. And another fact worth noting is that the killer shot Tippit from a close range and the shells were found relatively far away and automatic guns don't send shells that far. Sorry bout that.
A wallet of Oswalds [sic] was found at the Tippit shooting scene .
Well Mike, that's good evidence proving Oswald was there.
Oswalds [sic] hand gun was a revolver not an " Automatic " .
Yep, you got that right. And the Killer who was positively ID'd as Lee Harvey Oswald was seen manually unloading his weapon with shells that were found at the scene and those very shells were an exclusive match to the revolver Oswald was arrested with and it was also the same weapon that Oswald was using when he tried to kill more arresting Officers at the Texas Theatre! Geez Louise it all fits, an open and shut case as they say in the classics!
JohnM