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Author Topic: Chain of custody of CE 399 - big problem or much ado about nothing?  (Read 5723 times)

Online Tom Graves

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Re: Chain of custody of CE 399 - big problem or much ado about nothing?
« Reply #16 on: April 17, 2025, 07:32:59 PM »
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Weedyman,

How many evil, evil bad guys and really, really bad girls do you figure were wittingly involved, altogether, in the planning, the "patsy-ing," the shooting, and the all-important cover up?

Just a few?

Oodles and gobs?

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Re: Chain of custody of CE 399 - big problem or much ado about nothing?
« Reply #16 on: April 17, 2025, 07:32:59 PM »


Offline Tim Nickerson

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Re: Chain of custody of CE 399 - big problem or much ado about nothing?
« Reply #17 on: April 17, 2025, 07:46:48 PM »
I believe they would be necessary. The chain of custody has to extend from the discovery of the item of evidence to it being offered at trial. Particularly with the confusing CE 2011 and Shanklin's AIRTEL, the defense would be arguing precisely what the chain of custody is intended to prevent - i.e., that CE 399 originated with the FBI (Todd and Frazier) and was not in fact the bullet found by Tomlinson and Wright. It was fabricated by the FBI  as an additional item of evidence against Oswald. Hence, I believe Tomlinson and Wright would have been necessary.

My point with the imaginary testimony of Tomlinson was that he could have been just about as "iffy" as he was about the stretcher at his WC testimony and that this still would have satisfied the "identification" requirement. All he really needed to say was "I found a bullet at Parkland and I have no way of knowing with any certainty whether CE 399 is it because I didn't pay that much attention, but I have no reason to say CE 399 isn't it." The identification requirement, as one works through the chain of custody, does not require every witness to testify "Yes, absolutely, no question, that's it." Not at all.

I believe that you are right. I had read different takes on it but this is the one that I had in mind:

According to one position, a "chain-of custody foundation is not required ... for periods before the evidence comes into the possession of law enforcement personnel."

https://scholarlycommons.law.case.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1308&context=faculty_publications

I hadn't bothered to actually read the professor's opinion on it.

Offline Lance Payette

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Re: Chain of custody of CE 399 - big problem or much ado about nothing?
« Reply #18 on: April 17, 2025, 08:20:51 PM »
I believe that you are right. I had read different takes on it but this is the one that I had in mind:

According to one position, a "chain-of custody foundation is not required ... for periods before the evidence comes into the possession of law enforcement personnel."

https://scholarlycommons.law.case.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1308&context=faculty_publications

I hadn't bothered to actually read the professor's opinion on it.

Thanks - that's an excellent article.

I think technically "chain of custody" does refer to the period of custody by agents of the prosecution (police, detectives, etc.). If Johnsen had been present when Tomlinson and Wright found the bullet, T and W would have been irrelevant. But since the bullet came into Johnsen's possession via Wright, and not at the time and location where it was found, then as the article suggests the period before it came into Johnsen's possession (and thus T and W) would be important. Probably in most cases Johnsen's testimony alone would be sufficient, but not with the red flags raised by CE 2011 and Shaklin's AIRTEL. It would be interesting to know what arguments Gerry Spence made about CE 399 at the evidentiary prehearing in the mock trial.

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Re: Chain of custody of CE 399 - big problem or much ado about nothing?
« Reply #18 on: April 17, 2025, 08:20:51 PM »


Offline Lance Payette

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Re: Chain of custody of CE 399 - big problem or much ado about nothing?
« Reply #19 on: April 17, 2025, 09:26:30 PM »
If you choose to keep chiming in, I am simply going to ignore you.

Bla bla bla.... heard it all before....

First you were going to leave this forum which you figured was beneath you, and then - in Trump like fashion - you changed your mind and started an avalanche of arrogant word salad post.

Then you decided that several members were not worth your time and yet here you are consuming a massive amount of time to reply to one of those members.

And now you claim you are going to ignore me.... Of course you are, as your childish insults do not make any kind of impression, your speculative assumptions and your pathetic fictional dialogue simply do not work, it might be your best option to simply run away.

Let's see how long it will take before you start to not ignore me  :D


Oh BTW, whether you like it or not, I reserve the right to reply to any of your selfserving BS posts. You are not the only LN clown who is afraid to reply to my posts!

Oh, dear, what to do with folks like Martin?

Let's see, I am just like Trump, an "LN clown" who is "afraid" to reply to Martin's posts, and a purveyor of "an avalanche of arrogant word salad posts," "childish insults," "pathetic fictional dialogue" and "self-serving BS posts." Well, perhaps.

I think it would be fair to say I've gotten under Martin's skin, yes?

I actually started this narrowly focused thread in a sincere effort to provide a retired lawyer's perspective on how a chain of custody works, what it means for a witness to identify an item of evidence, and why the CT arguments about CE 399 (strictly in relation to the chain of custody) are flawed. I really didn't picture this thread generating any hysteria.

Martin immediately went off on the tangent that I was completely misguided because the Oswald defense would have not objected to the admission of CE 399 at all. I responded to each of his posts at considerable length. By his second post, I was "pathetic" and the purveyor of "self-serving BS," "the diehard LN cult manuscript," and "assumptions, cherry-picked evidence and a massive subjective bias." Later, I was accused of "massively contradicting myself," of possessing an "arrogant big head" and of posting a "word salad" unworthy of a response.

I warned Martin early in our relationship, when he questioned whether I was a lawyer at all, that he was dealing with a master of snarkiness and that if he chose to play this game he was going find out what master-level snarkiness looks like. He didn't take the hint.

Look, people, this is all silliness. Do you not understand that? The verdict of history on the JFKA is never going to change. CTers and LNers live in different realities, simple as that. No minds are ever going to be changed. At some level, who the hell cares who whacked JFK in 1963 anyway? Playing with the issues is kind of fun in the same way jigsaw puzzles (or perhaps chess) are fun, and that's about it. It's mental exercise, but it isn't going anywhere. If you're in love with your theory, go for it - but recognize that you're just playing around with ideas and that others, including LNers, are equally in love with their theories. If you become the functional equivalent of a religious fundamentalist about it, all the fun goes poof.

The problem with Martin and those like him is that they don't get the joke. They become enraged when they aren't taken as seriously as they think they should be taken. NONE OF IT IS SERIOUS, that's the joke. There are even LNers who don't get the joke. Do you think I'm serious with my Caped Factoid Buster nonsense? With assigning folks like Martin to some imaginary bin of those who are Not Worth My Time? Good Lord. On every forum on which I've ever participated - even golf and motorcycle forums - I've found it amusing to create some over-the-top persona and turn him loose. If he makes you come unglued, that's your problem and frankly a source of mirth for me until it reaches the level of upsetting someone to the extent it seems to have done with Martin. If you can't deal with master-level snarkiness, don't provoke me by playing that game; if you can, bring it - the wittier the better!

That being said, I shall herewith release Martin and his compadres from the imaginary Not Worth My Time bin and, if they say anything worthwhile (unlikely, but it could happen!  :D) pledge myself to respond in a restrained and statesmanlike manner worthy of my Golden Gate Baptist Theological Seminary training.

Or maybe not.  :D
« Last Edit: April 17, 2025, 10:43:08 PM by Lance Payette »

Offline Tim Nickerson

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Re: Chain of custody of CE 399 - big problem or much ado about nothing?
« Reply #20 on: April 17, 2025, 09:29:33 PM »
Thanks - that's an excellent article.

I think technically "chain of custody" does refer to the period of custody by agents of the prosecution (police, detectives, etc.). If Johnsen had been present when Tomlinson and Wright found the bullet, T and W would have been irrelevant. But since the bullet came into Johnsen's possession via Wright, and not at the time and location where it was found, then as the article suggests the period before it came into Johnsen's possession (and thus T and W) would be important. Probably in most cases Johnsen's testimony alone would be sufficient, but not with the red flags raised by CE 2011 and Shaklin's AIRTEL. It would be interesting to know what arguments Gerry Spence made about CE 399 at the evidentiary prehearing in the mock trial.

I'm not seeing red flags in CE-2011 and Shanklin's Airtel. They both seem to be saying the same thing. Neither Wright nor Tomlinson could positively identify exhibit C1 as the bullet that they handled at Parkland on Nov 22. Understandably so. The Airtel is misinterpreted by many in the CT camp. Wright and Tomlinson both told Bardwell Odum that the bullet appeared to be the one they handled but they were not positive that it was the same one.  CTs were ecstatic when Thompson and Aguilar reported that Odum denied to them that he had ever handled CE-399. Thompson eventually burst their bubble when he admitted that Odum recovered some memory of being in Wright's office at Parkland and ended up deferring to the FBI document.

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Re: Chain of custody of CE 399 - big problem or much ado about nothing?
« Reply #20 on: April 17, 2025, 09:29:33 PM »


Online Steve M. Galbraith

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Re: Chain of custody of CE 399 - big problem or much ado about nothing?
« Reply #21 on: April 17, 2025, 09:52:57 PM »
Oh, dear, what to do with folks like Martin?

Let's see, I am just like Trump, an "LN clown" who is "afraid" to reply to Martin's posts, and a purveyor of "an avalanche of arrogant word salad posts," "childish insults," "pathetic fictional dialogue" and "self-serving BS posts." Well, perhaps.

I think it would be fair to say I've gotten under Martin's skin, yes?

I actually started this narrowly focused thread in a sincere effort to provide a retired lawyer's perspective on how a chain of custody works, what it means for a witness to identify an item of evidence, and why the CT arguments about CE 399 (strictly in relation to the chain of custody) are flawed. I really didn't picture this thread generating any hysteria.

Martin immediately went off on the tangent that I was completely misguided because the Oswald defense would have not objected to the admission of CE 399 at all. I responded to each of his posts at considerable length. By his second post, I was "pathetic" and the purveyor of "self-serving BS," "the diehard LN cult manuscript," and "assumptions, cherry-picked evidence and a massive subjective bias." Later, I was accused of "massively contradicting myself," of possessing an "arrogant big head" and of posting a "word salad" unworthy of a response.

I warned Martin early in our relationship, when he questioned whether I was a lawyer at all, that he was dealing with a master of snarkiness and that if chose to play this game he was going find out what master-level snarkiness looks like. He didn't take the hint.

Look, people, this is all silliness. Do you not understand that? The verdict of history on the JFKA is never going to change. CTers and LNers live in different realities, simple as that. No minds are ever going to be changed. At some level, who the hell cares who whacked JFK in 1963 anyway? Playing with the issues is kind of fun in the same way jigsaw puzzles (or perhaps chess) are fun, and that's about it. It's mental exercise, but it isn't going anywhere. If you're in love with your theory, go for it - but recognize that you're just playing around with ideas and that others, including LNers, are equally in love with their theories. If you become the functional equivalent of a religious fundamentalist about it, all the fun goes poof.

The problem with Martin and those like him is that they don't get the joke. They become enraged when they aren't taken as seriously as they think they should be taken. NONE OF IT IS SERIOUS, that's the joke. There are even LNers who don't get the joke. Do you think I'm serious with my Caped Factoid Buster nonsense? With assigning folks like Martin to some imaginary bin of those who are Not Worth My Time? Good Lord. On every forum on which I've ever participated - even golf and motorcycle forums - I've found it amusing to create some over-the-top persona and turn him loose. If he makes you come unglued, that's your problem and frankly a source of mirth for me until it reaches the level of upsetting someone to the extent it seems to have done with Martin. If you can't deal with master-level snarkiness, don't provoke me by playing that game; if you can, bring it - the wittier the better!

That being said, I shall herewith release Martin and his compadres from the imaginary Not Worth My Time bin and, if they say anything worthwhile (unlikely, but it could happen!  :D) pledge myself to respond in a restrained and statesmanlike manner worthy of my Golden Gate Baptist Theological Seminary training.

Or maybe not.  :D
If you want him to ignore you just say you think Ruth Paine was the shooter behind the fence. Or Jackie shot JFK. Or Greer. And everything was faked, Oswald was framed, then everything was covered up, then the coverups were covered up ad infinitum. Promote the Lifton theory. The two Oswalds theory. The leprechauns theory. Whatever. Any conspiracy theory. Every conspiracy theory.

Will he challenge your evidence? Ask about chain of possession for that evidence? Raise legal questions? Demand this or that? Nope. Not a thing. You won't hear from him again.
« Last Edit: April 17, 2025, 09:59:53 PM by Steve M. Galbraith »

Offline Lance Payette

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Re: Chain of custody of CE 399 - big problem or much ado about nothing?
« Reply #22 on: April 17, 2025, 10:21:09 PM »
I'm not seeing red flags in CE-2011 and Shanklin's Airtel. They both seem to be saying the same thing. Neither Wright nor Tomlinson could positively identify exhibit C1 as the bullet that they handled at Parkland on Nov 22. Understandably so. The Airtel is misinterpreted by many in the CT camp. Wright and Tomlinson both told Bardwell Odum that the bullet appeared to be the one they handled but they were not positive that it was the same one.  CTs were ecstatic when Thompson and Aguilar reported that Odum denied to them that he had ever handled CE-399. Thompson eventually burst their bubble when he admitted that Odum recovered some memory of being in Wright's office at Parkland and ended up deferring to the FBI document.

I really don't see red flags either. A defense attorney might attempt to impeach Tomlinson or Wright with them, but that would go nowhere for the reasons we both recognize. The authors of the two documents were FBI men who, I believe, were using "identify" in a technical sense and not the sense of "refusal" or "we have a big problem here" as Thompson and Aguilar imply. I wasn't aware of what you say in your final sentence, but that certainly takes the wind out of the Odum thing. The only real puzzle is what was going on with Wright when he met with Thompson in 1967. Martin may even be right, albeit not for the reasons he suggests: the Oswald defense might not have objected to CE 399 at all because the notion that Johnsen and the others were lying and the bullet had been fabricated by firing it into a tank of water is simply too far-fetched and desperate to have much appeal. Much Ado About Nothing does pretty well sum up my view of the arguments about CE 399 having a chain of custody problem or being inauthentic.

Offline Tim Nickerson

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Re: Chain of custody of CE 399 - big problem or much ado about nothing?
« Reply #23 on: April 17, 2025, 10:30:10 PM »
I really don't see red flags either. A defense attorney might attempt to impeach Tomlinson or Wright with them, but that would go nowhere for the reasons we both recognize. The authors of the two documents were FBI men who, I believe, were using "identify" in a technical sense and not the sense of "refusal" or "we have a big problem here" as Thompson and Aguilar imply. I wasn't aware of what you say in your final sentence, but that certainly takes the wind out of the Odum thing. The only real puzzle is what was going on with Wright when he met with Thompson in 1967. Martin may even be right, albeit not for the reasons he suggests: the Oswald defense might not have objected to CE 399 at all because the notion that Johnsen and the others were lying and the bullet had been fabricated by firing it into a tank of water is simply too far-fetched and desperate to have much appeal. Much Ado About Nothing does pretty well sum up my view of the arguments about CE 399 having a chain of custody problem or being inauthentic.


I tried timestamping it at 19:40. Just to let you know in case it doesn't open there for you.
« Last Edit: April 17, 2025, 10:31:11 PM by Tim Nickerson »

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Re: Chain of custody of CE 399 - big problem or much ado about nothing?
« Reply #23 on: April 17, 2025, 10:30:10 PM »