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Author Topic: The Walker Case  (Read 29319 times)

Online Charles Collins

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Re: The Walker Case
« Reply #296 on: July 13, 2023, 04:54:30 PM »
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This is where the disconnect is. Nobody has to prove CE2011 false. If you want to rely on it as evidence, you need to demonstrate that it is true. The inconsistencies raise doubt as to its veracity. The anonymous, thirdhand nature of the document raises doubt about its authenticity.

The inconsistencies make it unreliable. If it could be proven false then we would say it’s false, not just unreliable.

If there’s no way to determine what parts are reliable and what parts are not, then an unreliable source is an unreliable source.


This is where the disconnect is. Nobody has to prove CE2011 false. If you want to rely on it as evidence, you need to demonstrate that it is true. The inconsistencies raise doubt as to its veracity. The anonymous, thirdhand nature of the document raises doubt about its authenticity.


All possible doubt is not the same as reasonable doubt. If you want to claim that it is unreliable you need a reasonable doubt, not some inconsistencies that have no answers only innuendo and conjecture. Give us a reasonable doubt. Not some innuendo or conjecture that it is possible it is tainted in some unidentified way.


The inconsistencies make it unreliable. If it could be proven false then we would say it’s false, not just unreliable.

No the inconsistencies do not make it unreliable. The inconsistencies only generate questions which have not been answered. The answers could just as likely (if not more so) lie with faulty memories, faulty interviews (one of which I have pointed out) where words are twisted or “put in the mouths” of the interviewees. You need solid evidence that CE2011 is not accurate before you can claim that it is unreliable.

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Re: The Walker Case
« Reply #296 on: July 13, 2023, 04:54:30 PM »


Online Charles Collins

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Re: The Walker Case
« Reply #297 on: July 13, 2023, 04:58:57 PM »
You seem to be under the impression that reasonable doubt requires proof to the contrary. It doesn’t. It just requires doubt about what’s presented as evidence. Doubt is based on the quality, relevance, and reliability of what’s presented. There’s no speculation involved.

I have provided a legal definition of reasonable doubt. Your idea of “It just requires doubt about what’s presented as evidence” leaves out a crucial word: reasonable. You need a reason to doubt, not just speculation.

Offline Martin Weidmann

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Re: The Walker Case
« Reply #298 on: July 13, 2023, 05:25:50 PM »

This is where the disconnect is. Nobody has to prove CE2011 false. If you want to rely on it as evidence, you need to demonstrate that it is true. The inconsistencies raise doubt as to its veracity. The anonymous, thirdhand nature of the document raises doubt about its authenticity.


All possible doubt is not the same as reasonable doubt. If you want to claim that it is unreliable you need a reasonable doubt, not some inconsistencies that have no answers only innuendo and conjecture. Give us a reasonable doubt. Not some innuendo or conjecture that it is possible it is tainted in some unidentified way.


The inconsistencies make it unreliable. If it could be proven false then we would say it’s false, not just unreliable.

No the inconsistencies do not make it unreliable. The inconsistencies only generate questions which have not been answered. The answers could just as likely (if not more so) lie with faulty memories, faulty interviews (one of which I have pointed out) where words are twisted or “put in the mouths” of the interviewees. You need solid evidence that CE2011 is not accurate before you can claim that it is unreliable.

Translation; I, Charles Collins, do not need to prove that a piece of evidence is authentic. I can just assume it to be. You need to prove - beyond a standard I will never consider reasonable - that it is false.

The world upside down 


Just because a witness or party has written evidence to support his claim does not automatically mean that a judge will allow that evidence to be presented to the jury. One test evidence must meet in order to be deemed admissible by the court is that the evidence must be authentic.

Authentication refers to a rule of evidence which requires that evidence must be sufficient to support a finding that the matter in question is what its proponent claims. The "authenticity" rule relates to whether the subject of an evidentiary offering (generally a tangible thing), is what it purports to be. This is a legal way of saying that evidence must be proven to be genuine to be admissible.

The issue of authenticity must be determined at two stages of a proceeding. First, the court must determine if the proffered item appears sufficiently genuine so that its admission could assist the fact-finder (usually the jury). Second, the fact-finder must ultimately decide whether he believes that the evidence is actually genuine.


https://cochranfirm.com/what-is-authentication/#:~:text=One%20test%20evidence%20must%20meet,is%20what%20its%20proponent%20claims.

« Last Edit: July 13, 2023, 05:35:22 PM by Martin Weidmann »

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Re: The Walker Case
« Reply #298 on: July 13, 2023, 05:25:50 PM »


Offline Martin Weidmann

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Re: The Walker Case
« Reply #299 on: July 13, 2023, 05:33:58 PM »
LOL.  You proved my point.  The DPD indicated that they found Oswald's print on the rifle.  You still don't accept it.  Ignore that and discuss the FBI.  We would be going down this same contrarian rabbit hole if Oswald's prints were found on the note.  You would be telling us it didn't prove he wrote it.  Just touched it etc.  Imply it was the product of fabrication and then deny you are claiming it is the product of fabrication. The same lunacy over and over.   Every single thread on this forum is taken down these same rabbit holes.

The DPD indicated that they found Oswald's print on the rifle.  You still don't accept it.

Lt Day claimed he lifted a print from the rifle after the FBI had already determined there was no trace of a print (or one being lifted) on the rifle. Why in the world would I accept Day's story, after he failed to bring forward the index card with a print on for an entire week and only did so after Oswald was dead and thus unable to dispute it.

You just prefer to believe Day just because it fits your narrative.

Offline John Iacoletti

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Re: The Walker Case
« Reply #300 on: July 13, 2023, 05:35:27 PM »
Old age and an elapsed time frame of almost 440-years are easily demonstrated to be impediments to accurate memories.

You didn’t say his memory could have been impeded. You stated outright that it was faulty. That’s bias.

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And I think that you really should stop referring to CE2011 as anonymous. It is clearly written by the Dallas Office of the FBI and was accepted by the WC as such.

It is anonymous. Nobody knows what person wrote the words or how the information in there was gathered and reported to the author. And it wasn’t “clearly” written by the Dallas office. An office can’t write. And the document you cited just says they made contributions. It doesn’t say who the author was.

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Re: The Walker Case
« Reply #300 on: July 13, 2023, 05:35:27 PM »


Online Andrew Mason

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Re: The Walker Case
« Reply #301 on: July 13, 2023, 05:39:44 PM »
You seem to be under the impression that reasonable doubt requires proof to the contrary. It doesn’t. It just requires doubt about what’s presented as evidence. Doubt is based on the quality, relevance, and reliability of what’s presented. There’s no speculation involved.
All you are saying is that you think that it is reasonable to hold a doubt about a piece of evidence.  But reasonable doubt does not apply to pieces of evidence.  It applies only to the totality of the evidence.  It is an error in law for a judge to instruct a jury that they may apply the standard of proof to each piece of evidence. 

I'll give you an example:  you live in a big city. Your down-the-street neighbour, Bob (you don't know his last name) is about 70 years old and a bit heavy.  He has referred to his wife as Betty and his children as Becky and Art who are grown up.  He also has a dog that he calls Snooks or something like that. From what others said it sounds like used to be teach school and he was pretty good at fixing cars.  One day you see an obituary in the paper for Robert ("Bob") Smith and it says that he died of a heart attack at age 73 and speaks about his wife Betty, children Rebecca and Arthur and his dog Snookie.  It talks about his career teaching at a nearby high school and his passion for old cars.  You conclude, beyond all doubt, that your friend Bob has died.  Although each piece of evidence is really not reliable, in total, the evidence convinces you that the deceased must be Bob.

Offline Martin Weidmann

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Re: The Walker Case
« Reply #302 on: July 13, 2023, 05:45:55 PM »

That’s quite a double standard. Why don’t you require anything of the sort from your anonymous letter writer

It is a reasonable standard and prerequisite if the two “researchers” want anyone to believe them. Why would they include only selected portions of a very ambiguous telephone conversation (due to a “mistake” in which the one document that clarifies what the interviewer is asking about) and turn around and include no transcript for their in-person interview?

No double standard. C2011 is an official FBI document written by the Dallas Office of the FBI. It was admitted into evidence by the WC. Your innuendo that it is somehow tainted is pure speculation. A jury could not consider speculation.

C2011 is an official FBI document written by the Dallas Office of the FBI.

And the head of that office, SAC Shanklin, wrote an Airtel to Washington head office containing information that does not match what is written in CE2011. Go figure!

It was admitted into evidence by the WC.

Which is just about the most meaningless statement you have ever made. The WC picked the evidence they needed to support the predetermined objective.
For crying out loud, they gave themselves the right to edit witness testimony, they introduced CE399 into evidence "subject to later proof" (which never came), they failed to ask crucial questions from crucial witnesses and tried to discredit other witnesses who were saying something they did not want to hear.

Offline John Iacoletti

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Re: The Walker Case
« Reply #303 on: July 13, 2023, 05:46:29 PM »
All possible doubt is not the same as reasonable doubt. If you want to claim that it is unreliable you need a reasonable doubt,

You just don’t think it’s reasonable to question “FBI letter says so”. I do.

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Give us a reasonable doubt. Not some innuendo or conjecture that it is possible it is tainted in some unidentified way.

I gave you reasonable doubt. Again, it’s not necessary to prove it’s false. It’s tainted merely by the unanswerable questions surrounding its existence.

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No the inconsistencies do not make it unreliable. The inconsistencies only generate questions which have not been answered. The answers could just as likely (if not more so) lie with faulty memories, faulty interviews (one of which I have pointed out) where words are twisted or “put in the mouths” of the interviewees.

CE2011 is about as blatant a case of words being put in the mouths of interviewees as you can have. Yet that’s perfectly fine with you. Because FBI.

In the end, it doesn’t matter what hypothetical reason for the inconsistencies is actually true. The issue is that there are inconsistencies, so you can’t determine which is correct. Other than by making excuses like “Odum was old”.

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You need solid evidence that CE2011 is not accurate before you can claim that it is unreliable.

No, you need solid evidence to claim that it is false. It’s unreliable merely because it doesn’t match what some of the people therein stated directly. It has no corroboration whatsoever.

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Re: The Walker Case
« Reply #303 on: July 13, 2023, 05:46:29 PM »