Before responding, I would encourage Martin and others to read Tom Gram's excellent research on CE 2011:
https://investigatejfk.com/2025/01/14/ce2011-and-the-missing-302-reports/#note18.
Tom makes the key point that the WC (i.e., Rankin) had told the FBI that for WC purposes an acceptable chain of custody required ONLY THE FIRST PERSON in the chain - meaning Tomlinson for CE 399 - to identify the item. Because Tomlinson and Wright (and Johnsen and Rowley!) could not positively identify CE 399, the FBI had to work up the chain to Todd. This explains the references in CE 2011. The author of CE 2011 was saying to Rankin, "Tomlinson, Wright, Johnsen and Rowley cannot give us what the WC wants." CE 2011 is talking about an absence of "positive identification."
I never said that Odum testifying had anything directly to do with the chain of custody. His testimony would only serve to verify or discredit the information some unidentified FBI agent provided to the WC in CE 2011. If Odum didn't show CE 399 to Tomlinson and Wright the information in CE 2011 is proven false.
No, it is not proven false. The statements in CE 2011 that Odum was the one who showed the bullets to Tomlinson and Wright would be proven incorrect, that and nothing more. We don't know who the author of CE 2011 was, or where he or she got the information. The reference to Odum, if incorrect, could be and surely was an innocent mistake. If you're going to invent Odum, invent a positive identification as well - right? Someone else could have shown CE 399 to T and W. No big deal. We have no reason to think there is any issue at all except for what an 82-year-old Odum told Thompson and Aguilar 38 years after the event, and he then had a different recollection almost immediately. Try recalling some routine office meeting you had in 1987. It seems to me this is truly much ado about less than nothing.
Why are you misrepresenting this?
I did overstate the case here in saying that Tink Thompson accepted Odum's change of recollection. I sloppily stopped the video too soon. Tink does suggest Odum mentally "filled in," probably on the basis of CE 2011, what "must have occurred" once he recalled having visited with Wright in Wright's office during the WC investigation. Again, we're talking about an 82-year-old Odum 38 years after the events in question. Tink, for obvious reasons, has him sharp as a tack when he doesn't recall being in Wright's office at all and a dissembling old fool when, a few hours later, he does vaguely recall and then fills in the blanks by thinking he must have been there for the reasons stated in CE 2011 because he can't think of any other reason he would've been there. This seems entirely plausible to me, but I can see why a CT salesman like Tink does what he does with it. Why would 82-year-old Odum, 38 years after the fact, have any reason to do anything other than give his best shot at recalling? If he had an agenda, he never would have met with Thompson and Aguilar in the first place or initially have flatly denied what CE 2011 says.
One thing is for sure Odum and Wright looking at the bullet in a transparant plastic bag doesn't match with what Specter told Humes during his testimony;
(The article, previously marked Commission Exhibit No. 399 for identification, was received in evidence.)
Mr. SPECTER - We have been asked by the FBI that the missile not be handled by anybody because it is undergoing further ballistic tests, and it now appears, may the record show,in a plastic case in a cotton background.
OK, and this is significant because ...? The chain of custody does not require the item to be in the same packaging all the time. With CE 399, there was no issue of fingerprints or anything like that. The testimony of Humes was on March 16, 1964, when CE 399 was apparently still being tested. It was sent to Dallas and shown to Tomlinson and Wright some three months later. I'm not following why it being in a transparent plastic bag in June would be of any significance whatsoever. As Tom Gram's piece makes clear, for some items of evidence it was agreed that showing a photograph for identification would be sufficient, but CE 399 was one of several items that were physically sent.
We know that Tomlinson said in his deposition that, a few days after the assassination, SAC Shanklin showed a bullet to him and Wright, in Wright's office (could it be that Odum was present as well and vaguely remembered that?) and that this was the only time he was shown a bullet. We also know that Tomlinson, in 1966, told Marcus the same thing. Now, did Tomlinson simply forget the meeting with Odum, in June 1964,or did that meeting never take place?
In what "deposition" a "few days after the assassination" did Tomlinson say he'd been shown a bullet by Shanklin? You seem to distinguish between this deposition and the 1966 interview of Tomlinson by conspiracy author Marcus as though they were two separate things. As far as I know - feel free to correct me - there is nothing but the nine-page transcript of the Marcus interview. The controversy over all this, with predictable hysteria on both sides, is captured at DVP's site,
https://jfk-archives.blogspot.com/2011/12/dvp-vs-dieugenio-part-76.html#Marcus-Transcript, and an old Google Groups thread,
https://groups.google.com/g/alt.assassination.jfk/c/pwhE-8C4W3g.
I'm not going to go down that rabbit hole. My guess is that by 1966 Tomlinson was conflating some meeting shortly after the assassination that did not involve being shown any bullet with the June 1964 meeting with Odum in which he had been shown CE 399. The found bullet was given to Johnsen (SS), who gave it to Rowley (SS) in Washington, who gave it to Todd (FBI) in Washington - in fact, I believe it was in Washington by the evening of the assassination - so what sense would it make for Shanklin to be showing it to Tomlinson in Dallas a week or so after the JFKA? Tom Gram likewise does not believe Shanklin ever showed a bullet to Tomlinson. (Tomlinson did tell Marcus the bullet he was shown "appeared to be the same" as the one he had found.)
And yet, after questioning the chain of custody, the WC accepted CE 2011 as the only available proof for that same chain of custody. Go figure!
For all the evidentiary items, Rankin had said that an identification by the initial person in the chain would be sufficient. I don't believe the WC "accepted CE 2011 as the only available proof." CE 2011 was the explanation for why Tomlinson, Wright, Johnsen and Rowley wouldn't suffice for a positive identification. I assume what was said in CE 2011, with the addition of Todd's and Frazier's positive identification, was deemed sufficient by Rankin, the WC and apparently the HSCA as well.
You keep assuming that Tomlinson and Wright would say "I have no reason to say it isn't the bullet we found", but what if they said "Odum never showed us any bullet and the one now in evidence as CE 399 isn't the same as the one we found" or even "yes, Odum showed us a bullet but it wasn't the one we found"?
I don't assume that at all. My point all along has been that what might seem to those who don't understand the c-of-c identification requirement like a less-than-positive identification on the part of Tomlinson and Wright would surely suffice for legal purposes. Odum is really irrelevant. If Tomlinson and Wright had said under oath at a deposition, hearing or trial "That absolutely is not the bullet we found and gave to Johnsen," that would have been the end of CE 399. If Wright had said that but been bracketed on either side by Tomlinson and Johnsen saying it was the same bullet, Wright's testimony likely would not have been fatal.