Unbelievable, just give it up Martin, your argument is worthless and has failed!
McDonald took the revolver from Oswald.
McDonald gave the revolver to Carroll.
Carroll gave the revolver to Hill.
Hill kept the revolver on his person till he put his name on it.
Mr. BELIN. Did you keep that gun in your possession until you scratched your name on it?
Mr. HILL. Yes, sir; I did.
Oswald ordered the revolver in the name of his alias, Alek Hidell.
Oswald's application for PO Box 2915
Oswald ordered the revolver, to PO Box, 2915
Seaport sent the revolver to Oswald's PO Box, 2915
The shipping company was Railway Express, PO Box 2915
In Oswald's possessions was a revolver holster.
Multiple eyewitnesses saw Oswald shake the revolver shells from the revolver.
When the police arrived Ishowed [sic] one of them where I saw this man emptying his gun and we found a shell.
Barbara Jeanette Davis, Affidavit
The man that was unloading the gun was the same man I saw tonight as number 2 man in a line up.
Mrs. Virginia Davis, Affidavit
Mr. BELIN - What else did you see?
Mr. BENAVIDES - Then I seen the man turn and walk back to the sidewalk and go on the sidewalk and he walked maybe 5 foot and then kind of stalled. He didn't exactly stop. And he threw one shell and must have took five or six more steps and threw the other shell up, and then he kind of stepped up to a pretty good trot going around the corner.
The revolver shells recovered from the murder scene were exclusively matched to Oswald's revolver.
Mr. EISENBERG. Did you examine the cartridge cases in Exhibit 594 in an attempt to determine whether they had been fired in Exhibit 143, the revolver, to the exclusion of all other revolvers?
Mr. CUNNINGHAM. I did.
Mr. EISENBERG. Can you tell us your conclusion?
Mr. CUNNINGHAM. As a result of my examination, it is my opinion that those four cartridge eases, Commission Exhibit 594, were fired in the revolver, Commission Exhibit 143, to the exclusion of all other weapons.
JohnM
Unbelievable, just give it up Martin, your argument is worthless and has failed! Nice story, but it's the same old superficial one where it is assumed that the revolver Hill marked and submitted to the evidence room is the same one that McDonald took from Oswald.
The only thing that's missing in this "believe me because a cop said so" BS is the actual proof for that assumption.
It's probably in vain, but let me try to dumb it down for you as much as I can.
McDonald took the revolver from Oswald.
McDonald gave the revolver to Carroll.Carroll gave the revolver to Hill.McDonald was in a struggle with Oswald when he took the revolver from him. He claimed that he gave it to Carroll.
Carroll, doesn't say he got a revolver from McDonald. According to his testimony, he saw a pistol pointing at him, during the struggle, which he grabbed and stuck it in his belt.
Now, unless McDonald and Carroll had a extraordinary capability of sight, it's highly unlikely that either man got a good look at the revolver while being in a struggle. Carroll, when asked if he had seen a mark on Oswald's face, said in his testimony that he wasn't paying much attention to anything, because they were trying to get Oswald subdued. That doesn't sound like a man who had a close enough look at a revolver sufficient to identify that weapon more than an hour later.
Hill kept the revolver on his person till he put his name on it.Carroll, who according to Hill was driving the car, says in his testimony that he gave the revolver to Hill in the car as it pulled out from the Texas Theater.
And Hill did indeed say that he kept the revolver on his person until he marked it more than an hour later. Which of course begs the question why he didn't submit it to the evidence room as soon as he arrived at the police station.
Are we really to believe that McDonald and Carroll had a good enough look at the revolver to identify it, more than an hour after the arrest, when Hill took it out of his pocket at the Personnel room? Or did McDonald and Carroll simply mark the revolved because they assumed it was indeed the same one they took from Oswald? And what plausible reason could Hill have had to walk around with a crucial piece of evidence for more than an hour after the arrest, when he could and should have submitted it to the evidence room directly after his arrival at the police station?
Get back to me when you have something of value to add, John
