Let's just go back for a moment to the immortal words of Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes who said; "when you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth"
A credible criminal investigation is conducted by eliminating possibilities to arrive at the only possibility that can not be ruled out and thus, no matter how improbable, must be the truth!
It's possible..it's possible...it's possible....
I can play that game...
It's possible that Klein's sent a 40" rifle to fill an order for a 36" rifle. It's possible that Oswald carried a broken down rifle in a paper bag on Friday morning. It's possible that Buell Wesley Frazier was wrong when he denied that the bag shown to him on Friday evening was the one he had seen Oswald carry. It's possible that Oswald was in fact on the 6th floor of the TSBD at 12:30 and it's possible that he came down the stairs of the TSBD, within 75 seconds after the last shot, without being seen or heard by anybody. It's possible that Oswald somehow managed to get to 10th/Patton in time to kill Tippit. It's possible that DPD officers found the BY photos during the second search of Ruth Paine's house, on Saturday, and that Michael Paine was wrong when he said an FBI agent had shown him a BY photo on Friday evening. It's possible that Oswald did leave the roominghouse of Friday afternoon, wearing a light-grey jacket and that Marina was wrong when she said he was wearing that jacket when he arrived in Irving on Thursday evening. It is possible that Helen Markham took nine minutes to walk one block and arrive at 10th/Patton at 1:12 / 1:13 and that she was wrong when she said she got on her regular bus on Jefferson at 1:15.
It's possible..it's possible...it's possible....
So you think discussing a man's murder is a "game", that say a lot about you!
Anyway, after that bit of unpleasantness let's analyze some of Weidmann's plethora of lies, misrepresentations and fantasies.
1. Oswald ordered C20-T750 from Kleins and Oswald received C20-T750 from Kleins.
2. If the bag fits you can't acquit!
3. Frazier repeatedly says he didn't pay much attention to Oswald's bag.
Mr. BALL - All right. When you got in the car did you say anything to him or did he say anything to you?
Mr. FRAZIER - Let's see, when I got in the car I have a kind of habit of glancing over my shoulder and so at that time I noticed there was a package laying on the back seat, I didn't pay too much attention and I said, "What's the package, Lee?"
And he said, "Curtain rods," and I said, "Oh, yes, you told me you was going to bring some today."
That is the reason, the main reason he was going over there that Thursday afternoon when he was to bring back some curtain rods, so I didn't think any more about it when he told me that.
Mr. BALL - Did it look to you as if there was something heavy in the package?
Mr. FRAZIER - Well, I will be frank with you, I didn't pay much attention to the package because like I say before and after he told me that it was curtain rods and I didn't pay any attention to it, and he never had lied to me before so I never did have any reason to doubt his word.
Mr. BALL - Well, from the way he carried it, the way he walked, did it appear he was carrying something that had more than the weight of a paper?
Mr. FRAZIER - Well, I say, you know like I say, I didn't pay much attention to the package other than I knew he had it under his arm and I didn't pay too much attention the way he was walking because I was walking along there looking at the railroad cars and watching the men on the diesel switch them cars and I didn't pay too much attention on how he carried the package at all.
Mr. BALL - You will notice that this bag which is the colored bag, FBI Exhibit No. 10, is folded over. Was it folded over when you saw it the first time, folded over to the end?
Mr. FRAZIER - I will say I am not sure about that, whether it was folded over or not, because, like I say, I didn't pay that much attention to it.
Mr. BALL - But are you sure that his hand was at the end of the package or at the side of the package?
Mr. FRAZIER - Like I said, I remember I didn't look at the package very much, paying much attention, but when I did look at it he did have his hands on the package like that.
Mr. BALL - Mr. Frazier, we have here this Exhibit No. 364 which is a sack and in that we have put a dismantled gun. Don't pay any attention to that. Will you stand up here and put this under your arm and then take a hold of it at the side?
Now, is that anywhere near similar to the way that Oswald carried the package?
Mr. FRAZIER - Well, you know, like I said now, I said I didn't pay much attention-- 4. The rear stairs are on the opposite side of the building to Elm street. And let's not forget that 90 seconds after the assassination amid all the sirens and screaming, Oswald was on the other side of the 2nd floor vestibule door, moving in a direction away from the stairs and was calmly getting himself a coke!
Mr. DULLES - Had he meanwhile gone on through the door ahead of you?
Mr. BAKER - I can't say whether he had gone on through that door or not. All I did was catch a glance at him, and evidently he was--this door might have been, you know, closing and almost shut at that time.Mr. DULLES - Could you tell us anything more about his appearance, what he was doing, get an impression of the man at all? Did he seem to be hurrying, anything of that kind?
Mr. BAKER - Evidently he was hurrying because at this point here, I was running, and I ran on over here to this door.
Mr. BELIN - What door number on that?
Mr. BAKER - This would be 23.5. We know Oswald was at or very near to the corner of Patton and Tenth because almost a dozen eyewitnesses positively identified him.
6. Markham's time estimate was taken from an unverified timepiece and besides wasn't it Weidmann who called Markham a "Screwball"? Why yes, yes he did!
...who was an even bigger screwball than Markham,
JohnM