LOL. We have gone through this already. Frazier may honestly but erroneously thought it was not bag he saw Oswald carry that morning. Because he honestly thought so, it would not register as a lie on the polygraph even though it was not true. Good grief. Of course if the polygraph had confirmed that Frazier saw the bag found in the TSBD, you and your nutty kindred would be on here lecturing us on how unreliable such polygraphs are. You still can't explain why Oswald himself would deny carrying a long bag the size estimated by Frazier. If it contained some non-incriminatory item it would have assisted him to admit and direct the DPD to that bag. But instead he denies it. And no such bag matching Frazier's estimate is ever found or accounted for in any way - because it wasn't there. Instead a longer bag is found with Oswald's prints. It doesn't take Sherlock Holmes to puzzle this out. Oswald carried a long bag that morning that contained some incriminatory item (the reason he later had to lie about it). That item was the rifle. The bag he used was long enough because it was found and measured. As a result, there is no reason to speculate or rely upon an estimate of its size. We know how long it was because it was found and measured.
It doesn't take Sherlock Holmes to puzzle this out. Apparently it does, as you seem to be struggling
Frazier may honestly but erroneously thought it was not bag he saw Oswald carry that morning. Because he honestly thought so, it would not register as a lie on the polygraph even though it was not true. Good grief. Or Frazier simply told the truth when he said that the bag he had seen Oswald carry was "definitely a thin, flimsy sack like the one purchased in a dime store".
Being possibly wrong about a size estimate is one thing. Being shown a bag and saying it isn't the one he had seen Oswald carry 16 hours earlier is another. Frazier cleary knew what kind of bag he had seen and it wasn't a heavy duty bag like the one shown to him.
Of course if the polygraph had confirmed that Frazier saw the bag found in the TSBD, you and your nutty kindred would be on here lecturing us on how unreliable such polygraphs are. Pathetic argument. Fact is however that polygraphs are indeed unreliable, but that's not the point. To this day police still use polygraphs to intimidate suspects. Frazier, being a 19 year old kid with no prior contact with police, most likely wouldn't have known how reliable the test was or not. As he was innocent, it didn't matter because all he needed to do (and did) was tell the truth and I might add the record shows that Lt Day believed him!
You still can't explain why Oswald himself would deny carrying a long bag the size estimated by Frazier.I don't have to explain that because - as John Iacoletti has told you a number of times already - Oswald was never asked about a bag
size estimated by Frazier. All Fritz asked him (according to his own report) was if he had carried a long bag. Whatever "long bag" means is open to discussion, but you don't get to add on "size estimated by Frazier" to change the question. It is however extremely telling that you feel the need to misrepresent the facts. There is nothing in the record anywhere that shows that a size estimate by Frazier or anybody else was ever mentioned by Fritz. Oswald could have had no clue just how long the bag was that Fritz was talking about, he probably just knew that the bag he had used wasn't "long" and so he denied it.
If it contained some non-incriminatory item it would have assisted him to admit and direct the DPD to that bag. But instead he denies it. And no such bag matching Frazier's estimate is ever found or accounted for in any way - because it wasn't there.Already explained to you, yet clearly in vain because you keep on repeating the same worthless crap time after time. They did not find "a thin, flimsy sack like the one purchased in a dime store" because they never looked for one. During their search of the TSBD (prior to Frazier's polygraph) they mainly searched the 6th floor and found a bag. At that time they did not know about Frazier's description of the bag and there is no record that they searched the TSBD again after Frazier's polygraph, so your entire argument goes nowhere. Besides (and this has been said to you many times also) absence of evidence isn't evidence of absence. Please try to get that through your thick skull for once!
Instead a longer bag is found with Oswald's prints. There you go again.... the bag actually contained more prints, which could have belonged to other people but were never identified. So, just claiming that the bag had Oswald's prints on it without mentioning the rest is pure dishonesty. As for the prints themselves, we just have to take Latona's word for it, don't we? He was only able to discover two identifiable parcial prints after using silver nitrate, which also destroyed the bag to such extend that a re-examination of the bag was never possible again. But even if those prints did belong to Oswald, the bag was made from TSBD materials and found at the TSBD on a floor where Oswald worked. There is no evidentary value to those prints beyond the fact that they show that Oswald once held that bag.... that's it! Everything else is just your imagination.
Oswald carried a long bag that morning that contained some incriminatory item (the reason he later had to lie about it). That item was the rifle. The bag he used was long enough because it was found and measured. As a result, there is no reason to speculate or rely upon an estimate of its size. We know how long it was because it was found and measured.The trouble with all this nonsense is that you don't have a shred of evidence to prove any of it. It is nothing more than your opinion based on all sorts of bogus assumptions for which you also don't have a shred of evidence....
In fact, your entire post is the same old crap you have posted time after time. What you have not done is deal with the FACT that Frazier on day 1 said to Lt Day that the bag Oswald carried was
"definitely a thin, flimsy sack like the one purchased in a dime store" and told polygrapher R.D. Lewis that it was a
?crickly brown paper sack? and that he told Odum and McNeely a few days later that
"the package was wrapped in a cheap, crinkly, thin paper sack, such as that provided by Five and Ten Cent Stores?Let me guess; Frazier just was honestly mistaken, right? He just couldn't tell the difference between a cheap dime store bag and the heavy duty wrapping paper he probably saw at the TSBD every day, right?