Just a quick addition:
Tomlinson, of course, did testify for the Warren Commission. He was interrogated under oath by Specter at Parkland on March 20, 1964 (almost three months before he was questioned by Odum or some other FBI agent about CE 399). He was grilled about the stretchers, not the bullet.
I was struck by what an amazing and excellent witness he was – excellent in the sense of refusing to allow Specter to put words in his mouth or to be badgered into saying anything other than the truth as he recalled it. A lowly plant engineer, he firmly held his ground.
Read this remarkable exchange. Not only does it mesh well with my imaginary testimony, but I think it gives a good idea as to how the June 1964 conversation about CE 399 might have gone and why CE 2011 said he couldn’t identify it as the bullet he found.
Mr. SPECTER. Do you remember if you told the Secret Service man which stretcher you thought you took off of the elevator?
Mr. TOMLINSON. Well, we talked about taking a stretcher off of the elevator, but then when it comes down on an oath, I wouldn’t say for sure, I really don’t remember.
Mr. SPECTER. And do you recollect whether or not you told the Secret Service man which stretcher you took off of the elevator?
Mr. TOMLINSON. What do you mean?
Mr. SPECTER. You say you can’t really take an oath today to be sure whether it was stretcher A or stretcher B that you took off the elevator?
Mr. TOMLINSON. Well, today or any other day, I’m just not sure of it, whether it was A or B that I took off.
Mr. SPECTER. Well, has your recollection always been the same about the situation, that is, today, and when you talked to the Secret Service man and
when you talked to the FBI man?
Mr. TOMLINSON. Yes; I told him that I wasn’t sure.
Mr. SPECTER. So, what you told the Secret Service man was just about the same thing as you have told me today?
Mr. TOMLINSON. Yes, sir.
Mr. SPECTER. When I first started to ask you about this, Mr. Tomlinson, you initially identified stretcher A as the one which came off of the elevator car?
Mr. TOMLINSON. Yes, I think it’s just like that.
Mr. SPECTER. And, then, when-
Mr. TOMLINSON (interrupting). Here’s the deal- I rolled that thing off, we got a call, and went to second floor, picked the man up and brought him down.
He went on over across, to clear out of the emergency area, but across from it, and picked up two pints of, I believe it was, blood. He told me to hold for him, he had to get right back to the operating room, so I held, and the minute he hit there, we took off for the second floor and I came back to the ground. Now, I don’t know how many people went through that-I don’t know how many people hit them- I don’t know anything about what could have happened to them in between the time I was gone, and I made several trips before I discovered the bullet on the end of it there.
Mr. SPECTER. You think, then, that this could have been either, you took out of the elevator as you sit here at the moment, or you just can’t be sure?
Mr. TOMLINSON. It could be, but I can’t be positive or positively sure, I think it was A, but I’m not sure.
Mr. SPECTER. That you took off of the elevator?
Mr. TOMLINSON. Yes.
Mr. SPECTER. Now, before I started to ask you questions under oath, which have been taken down here, I told you, did I not, that the Secret Service man
wrote a report where he said that the bullet was found on the stretcher which you took off of the elevator- I called that to your attention, didn’t I?
Mr. TOMLINSON. Yes; you told me that.
Mr. SPECTER. Now, after I tell you that, does that hare any effect on refreshing your recollection of what you told the Secret Service man?
Mr. TOMLINSON. No, it really doesn’t-it really doesn’t.
Mr. SPECTER. So, would it be a fair summary to say that when I first started to talk to you about it, your first view was that the stretcher you took off of the elevator was stretcher A, and then I told you that the Secret Service man said it was-that you had said the stretcher you took off of the elevator was the one that you found the bullet off, and when we talked about the whole matter and talked over the entire situation, you really can’t be completely sure about which stretcher you took off of the elevator, because you didn’t push the stretcher that you took off of the elevator right against the wall at first?
Mr. TOMLINSON. That’s right.
Mr. SPECTER. And, there was a lot of confusion that day, which is what you told me before?
Mr. TOMLINSON. Absolutely. And now, honestly, I don’t remember telling him definitely-I know we talked about it, and I told him that it could have been. Now, he might have drawed his own conclusion on that.
Mr. SPECTER. You told the Secret Service agent that you didn’t know where--
Mr. TOMLINSON (interrupting). He asked me if it could have been brought down from the second floor.
Mr. SPECTER. You got the stretcher from where the bullet came from, whether it was brought down from the second floor?
Mr. TOMLINSON. It could have been-I’m not sure whether it was A I took off.
Mr. SPECTER. But did you tell the Secret Service man which one you thought it was you took off of the elevator?
Mr. TOMLINSON. I’m not clear on that-whether I absolutely made a positive statement to that effect.
Mr. SPECTER. You told him that it could have been B you took off of the elevator?
Mr. TOMLINSON. That’s right.
Mr. SPECTER. But, you don’t remember whether you told him it was A you took off of the elevator?
Mr. TOMLINSON. I think it was A-I’m not really sure.
Mr. SPECTER. Which did you tell the Secret Service agent-that you thought it was A that you took off of the elevator?
Mr. TOMLINSON. Really, I couldn’t be real truthful in saying I told him this or that.
Mr. SPECTER. You just don’t remember for sure whether you told him you thought it was A or not?
Mr. TOMLINSON. No, sir; I really don’t remember. I’m not accustomed to being questioned by the Secret Service and the FBI and by you and they are
writing down everything, I mean.
MR. SPECTER. That’s all right. I understand exactly what you are saying and I appreciate it and I really just want to get your best recollection.
We understand it isn’t easy to remember all that went on, on a day like November 22nd, and that a man’s recollection is not perfect like every other part
of a man, but I want you to tell me just what you remember, and that’s the best you can do today, and I appreciate that, and so does the President’s Commission, and that’s all we can ask a man.
Mr. TOMLINSON. Yes, I’m going to tell you all I can, and I’m not going to tell you something I can’t lay down and sleep at night with either.
Mr. SPECTER. Do you know where the stretcher came from that you found on the elevator?
Mr. TOMLINSON. No, sir; I do not. It could have come from two, it could have come from three, it could have come from some other place.