The notion that Day would fabricate and lie about finding a print on the rifle is baseless and laughable. What would have been the purpose behind such a highly risky and criminal conduct under the circumstances? Oswald was dead. There would never be a trial in which any evidence would be necessary to convict him. The authorities in charge of the investigation were satisfied of his guilt based upon the existing evidence which was convincing. They had charged Oswald with the crimes. But we are supposed to believe (based on no evidence whatsoever) that Day is going to fabricate this print. It is ludicrous. Some folks have the bizarre Inspector Clouseau-like ability to go through the evidence only to reach an outlandish conclusion that is baseless. Conflating what is "possible" for evidence that the event happened. Because there are some instances in the history of law enforcement where evidence was planted or fabricated, we are supposed to believe that somehow supports the claim that Day fabricated this print. He was a "good ole boy." So he must have framed Oswald thereby allowing the guilty party to escape justice for killing a fellow police officer and the President. It's absurd. There is no evidence that Day fabricated or had any cause to fabricate the print. None.
The notion that Day would fabricate and lie about finding a print on the rifle is baseless and laughable. Baseless??
Is that supposed to be a joke?
Let's start with Day's lie that he never had enough time to work on the palm print in order to make a positive identification.
Latona ID'd the lifted palm print as Oswald's, no problem, so it's not the case that the print couldn't be identified. It was a fundamental part of Day's job, to identify fingerprints, so it's not like Day didn't have the skills to do it.
It is Day's assertion that he simply didn't have enough time to make the identification and that with a bit more time he could've done it.
If you, Richard, find this acceptable as a rational explanation then you need help.
Day had his supposed lift of the palm print and a copy of Oswald's palm print the night of the assassination. He did not need the rifle to compare these prints. The prints taken from the rifle were, by a country mile, the most important pieces of evidence gathered that day as they could place the murder weapon in Oswald's hands. The top priority must have been to make an identification of these prints. There could have been no higher priority.
But that's not what happened.
The palm print lift was not given top priority. A positive identification was not made by the DPD when it was perfectly possible to do so.
The "lift" and the prints from Oswald himself were with Day for more than three days before he handed the evidence over to Drain.
Day lies about not having enough time to make the identification.
While incredibly weak explanations have been put forward for why Latona saw no print on the barrel [which I'll come to in a second], no LNer has tried to come up with an excuse, no matter how lame, to account for this obvious lie.
Why did Day lie about not having enough time to make the identification?
Latona - "...primarily our recommendation in the FBI is simply every procedure to photograph and then lift. Then you choose the one which you feel gives you the best results in your final photograph."It is a basic procedure to be followed every time - photograph the print THEN lift it.
And it's obvious why this is. A photo is perfectly acceptable for use in identifying a print and, according to Latona, is the usual way prints are identified - from a photo, not from the actual print itself. The point being, a photo is non-invasive, it does no harm to the print.
Lifting a print destroys the relationship between the print and the object it is being lifted from. Also, lifting a print is not a guaranteed success, things can go wrong and the lift might not be complete. This is why the print must be photographed BEFORE a lift is attempted.
Day, inexplicably, did the opposite of this.
When he discovered the print on the barrel he did not photograph it immediately, which is strange because he had already photoed the trigger housing prints, so was all set up to do exactly that. Instead, he went straight to lifting the print and, according to the account Day gives in his WC testimony, it was a disaster. Part of the print came off, part of it stayed on the rifle. This is the precise reason a print is photographed before an attempted lift.
Mind-blowingly, Day decides to photograph the barrel AFTER the disastrous attempted lift.
Let that sink in for a minute.
In his report of an interview dated 9/8/64, SA Drain notes:
Lt. DAY stated he had no reason for not photographing this palm print first before attempting to lift it other than in the interest of time." This is the only possible, rational reason for Day not photographing the print before lifting it - in this scenario he knew time was running out and was desperate to have a lift he could try to identify before the evidence was handed over to the FBI. He was so desperate he was willing to chance destroying this most important piece of evidence without making a photographic record of it.
But this didn't happen. According to Day he found out he had to stop working on the rifle AFTER he had lifted the print:
"On the bottom side of the barrel which was covered by the wood, I found traces of a palmprint. I dusted these and tried lifting them, the prints, with scotch tape in the usual manner. A faint palmprint came off. I could still see traces of the print under the barrel and was going to try to use photography to bring off or bring out a better print. About this time I received instructions from the chief's office to go no further with the processing..."
It would appear Day was lying to Drain about why he didn't take a photograph of the print.
And that still leaves us with the question - Why didn't Day take a photo of the palm print before his disastrous attempt to lift it?
Did he forget his most basic training? Was he a completely incompetent buffoon?
He'd already taken photos of the trigger housing prints. He was readying himself to take pictures after he lifted the print. So, it's not like he wasn't prepared to take pictures or that it was in any way a difficulty. He simply decided not to do so. Which is completely inexplicable in any rational way.
Unless, of course,
there was no print to take a photograph of.This is the only rational explanation for this, otherwise inexplicable, lapse in the most basic protocol for dealing with fingerprints.
It also explains how the print Day insisted remained on the barrel 'disappeared' by the time the rifle reached Latona.
Day is insistent that, after his aborted attempt to lift the print, there remained enough of the print left on the barrel to make an identification. In fact, Day claims he felt the amount of print left on the barrel was a better option to make an identification than the faint print he had lifted:
"I could still see traces of the print under the barrel and was going to try to use photography to bring off or bring out a better print."In this case I could still see traces of print on that barrel.Actually I thought the print on the gun was their best bet, still remained on there, and, too, there was another print, I thought possibly under the wood part up near the trigger housing.However, by the time the rifle reached Latona this print had disappeared.
Latona carried out a thorough examination of every piece of the rifle. He got in a photographic expert and a weapons expert to help him in the examination. Latona, who must be considered a leading fingerprint expert with decades of experience did not find the print that Day felt was the "best bet" for identification. Not only that, Latona never found any trace of evidence that a lift had even been attempted:
This print which indicates it came from the underside of the gun barrel, evidently the lifting had been so complete that there was nothing left to show any marking on the gun itself as to the existence of such even an attempt on the part of anyone else to process the rifle.There was no print and nothing to indicate "an attempt on the part of anyone else to process the rifle."
The palm print had completely disappeared. How can this be?
Arguments that have been presented regarding Latona's capability as a fingerprint expert are nonsense for a very simple reason - if Latona missed the print then it would still be there!
How did the print disappear? It seems inconceivable that someone of Latona's expertise simply missed it.
But it's worse than that.
For those who may have missed it the first time, just read through this statement by Day again:
Actually I thought the print on the gun was their best bet, still remained on there, and, too, there was another print, I thought possibly under the wood part up near the trigger housing.Day isn't talking about one print on the rifle barrel - he's talking about
two prints!
What happened to these two prints?
How did they completely disappear by the time they reached Latona?
There are two possible explanations - the barrel was wiped clean before Drain collected it or there was never a print on the barrel in the first place.
In his 1985 book, "Reasonable Doubt", Henry Hurt reports the following from SA Drain:
"You could take the print off Oswald’s card and put it on the rifle. Something like that happened.” At first this appears to be an offhand opinion by someone who doesn't really know anything about fingerprinting. However, in Larry Sneed's book, "No More Silence", Drain goes on to qualify this opinion:
"In one of the books, I was quoted in a footnote as saying that I doubted that a fingerprint had been found on the rifle as claimed by the Dallas Police Department. As I recall, I think my comment was based primarily on our experts in the Single Fingerprint Bureau. That’s the real specialists in fingerprints in the FBI in Washington."
Through Drain we discover that it was the opinion of the "real specialists in fingerprints in the FBI in Washington" that the palm print was a forgery.
The only laughable thing is that you are using the word "baseless" regarding the "notion that Day would fabricate and lie about finding a print on the rifle..."
It is far from baseless.
It is unavoidable.
Your denial regarding these issues is also laughable.