Not this crap again! If the interrogators were dishonest and got together later they could have well and truly shafted Oswald but instead just recalled the facts as given.
For instance, they could have said;
Oswald said he owned the rifle.
Oswald said he took the long brown package to work.
Oswald said he was on the 6th floor at the time.
Oswald said at the last interrogation on Sunday morning that he actually shot the President.
Oswald said at the last Sunday interrogation that he killed Tippit.
Oswald said he was actually in the backyard photos.
And when Ruby shot Oswald and Oswald was dying, they could have said he confessed, but they didn't.
It's clear that with so many different agencies in the interrogations that they all were compelled to the best of their abilities, to tell the truth.
BTW if you don't trust the interrogations, then why do you always bring up Oswald's "confession" that he bought the revolver in Fort Worth? Doesn't that make you a bit of a hypocrite?
JohnM
If the interrogators were dishonestWho said that the interrogators were dishonest?
It's not about trusting the interrogators, it about questioning the way the interrogations were conducted and (not properly) documented.
It's the assassination of the President of the United States and the DPD can't find a recording device anywhere? Really?
Even worse, they did not even make contemporary notes and relied on memory when writing their reports after Oswald was killed.
Doesn't that make you a bit of a hypocrite?I'm doing exactly what you are constantly doing with one exception;
I take something Oswald is supposed to have said and try to verify one way or the other.
I'm doing so with Oswald seeing Jarman and Norman walking towards the elevators to go to the 5th floor.
First of all, the reports are contradictory, but agree on one point; the reports place Jarman and Norman at the lunchroom location where Oswald said he saw them.
And Jarman and Norman do basically confirm that they were indeed at the location a few minutes before the shots were fired.
Combined, this justifies the conclusion that the interrogators' reports, although wrong on some of the details, can be believed on the point of Oswald telling them about being in the first floor lunchroom.
As for the revolver, iirc several reports mention Oswald telling them that he bought his revolver in Fort Worth. This would be a crucial detail in any honest investigation, yet it was never investigated by anybody, which is a stark contrast to the massive investigation conducted to track down the origine of a label in Oswald's grey jacket. The mere fact that no follow up investigation was conducted could very well be construed as a manipulation of the investigatory record. That, in turn, actually makes the interrogators' report relevant on this point.
Unlike me, what you do, is just accept blindly what's in the interrogators' reports without any kind of verification.
So, no, it doesn't make me a hypocrite at all.
It's clear that with so many different agencies in the interrogations that they all were compelled to the best of their abilities, to tell the truth.Who said that they were not trying to tell the truth?
This is not a black or white thing. I am sure that the interrogators tried to tell the truth. The problem is that, because of the inadequate way the interviews were documented, there is no way to resolve the clear discrepancies between their reports. If this case had even gone to trial the defense would have had a field day with the lack of a verbatim record.