People who try to make something out of nothing will never be satisfied.
Making something out of nothing??
Latona is the supervisor of the latent fingerprint section of the identification division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. He is the FBI's main man for fingerprint identification with decades of experience.
He was examining the weapon that was supposed to have murdered the President, trying to ID the murderer. He had the weapon taken apart and examined every part of the rifle in full.
Not only did he find no palm print, he found no attempt had been made to lift such a print. There was no print on that rifle when it reached Latona a few hours after it had been released by Day.
So, perhaps the print was somehow completely wiped from the barrel in transit. That is the only feasible explanation if Day is being truthful.
That Day insists he had no time to examine the lift he had taken from the rifle with the print taken from Oswald is clearly nonsensical. It's got nothing to do with being asked to stop work on the rifle. Day had the palm print for days and had more than enough time to examine it. Remember, this was the piece of evidence that put the murder weapon in Oswald's hands. To imagine that this would not have been a top priority is delusional.
Something about this really stinks and for you to infer I'm making something out of nothing is unreasonable, to say the least.
Not only did he find no palm print, he found no attempt had been made to lift such a print.That’s not true. He said he found no indication (as in cellophane for an indicator, like the prints on the trigger guard) that a print had been lifted from the bottom of the barrel. There is no way Latona could have determined that no attempt had been made by simply examining the rifle.
So, perhaps the print was somehow completely wiped from the barrel in transit. That is the only feasible explanation if Day is being truthful.There are plenty of explanations. If you read Latona’s testimony you will learn that he chose to use gray powder. Day had used black powder. That difference could have contributed to the problem. Latona also said that even using a lot of various lighting techniques he could barely discern the partial prints on the trigger guard. Yet Day could see these prints clearly in the less than ideal lighting in the TSBD. The differences in powder colors and eyesight perceptions could explain some things. Maybe Latona could see gray on the rifle finish better than he could see black.
You can suspect that there is “something that stinks” if you wish to do that. I really don’t care. If you want to convince others, you might need some evidence.
That Day insists he had no time to examine the lift he had taken from the rifle with the print taken from Oswald is clearly nonsensical. It's got nothing to do with being asked to stop work on the rifle. Day had the palm print for days and had more than enough time to examine it. Remember, this was the piece of evidence that put the murder weapon in Oswald's hands. To imagine that this would not have been a top priority is delusional. Just because you (in hindsight) think Day should have kept working on the palm print lift, doesn’t mean that Day felt that way. He had already done a preliminary examination and believed it was Oswald’s print. He had been told to stop the examination. I could easily understand that he might have decided to not continue until he was told to do so.
Something about this really stinks and for you to infer I'm making something out of nothing is unreasonable, to say the least.I didn’t have anyone specific in mind regarding that generalization. You shouln’t take it personally.