Please explain how I "don't like" whatever point it was that you took off-topic to the post you were replying to.
As for the positive identifications of a fleeing suspect... It's one thing for one witness to be mistaken. It's another thing entirely for nine witnesses to positively identify the same man while none of the other witnesses disagree with these nine witnesses.
Could nine people all be wrong? Sure. But, when arguing that nine people were all wrong, it seems more like arguing from a position of desperation than one based in reality.
Please explain how I "don't like" whatever point it was that you took off-topic to the post you were replying to.You were trying to explain how two witnesses could have seen a different jacket. I pointed out that witnesses often can't be relied upon, because if they get the color of a jacket wrong, they could just as easily get the identification of a man they only saw for seconds wrong. That'what you didn't like and you confirm it in your post.
As for the positive identifications of a fleeing suspect... It's one thing for one witness to be mistaken. It's another thing entirely for nine witnesses to positively identify the same man while none of the other witnesses disagree with these nine witnesses. Except in this case there were no other witnesses who disagreed. Perhaps you should conduct a little experiment where you have nine people watching the same event and then ask them what they saw. Nine witnesses agreeing on a positive identification is simply beyond belief. Even worse, Scoggings, who identified Oswald at the DPD line up, failed to identify the same man to the FBI. There is no credibility in all the witnesses identifying the same man.
Could nine people all be wrong? Sure. No. Nine people collectively couldn't be wrong or right. That's the point. I don't believe for a second that the Davis sisters were really able to identify Oswald as the man they only saw for a few seconds. That's what makes this whole thing incredible.
But, when arguing that nine people were all wrong, it seems more like arguing from a position of desperation than one based in reality.But I'm not arguing that all nine people were wrong. That's not an issue. I am in no position to determine if a witness was right or wrong. The point is that when, out of nine people. nine people identify the same person at a line up, and nobody says they're no sure, you need to question the line up and not the outcome. Witness testimony is the worst kind of evidence there is and over the years it has been proven, beyond any doubt, that incorrect or false witness testimony has put many people behind bars for many years who shouldn't have been there.
I have no confidence in the way the DPD conducted their line ups. That's the bottom line