Oscar Oscar Oscar...We see that you guys are only just interested in playing the gotcha game here. One fiber or one thread was found [supposedly] and eureka the case is solved? There are threads on everything that can come from anything. Take a fiber from your underwear ....Go play with a microscope and see what walks around.
Jerry, Jerry, Jerry....To paraphrase dean Vernon Wormer of Animal House "Basing your opinions on bad information is no way to go through life, boy."
St. Oswald the Patsys' shirt CE-150 was composed of the following fibers; "Gray-black, dark blue and orange yellow cotton fibers. The orange-yellow and gray-black cotton fibers were of uniform shade and the dark blue fibers were of three different shades.. All the fibers were mercerized and of substantially uniform degree of twist." WR, page 591
".....Stombaugh found that a tiny tuft of fibers had caught on a jagged edge of the rifle's butt plate where it met the end of the wooden stock, and had adhered to this edge.....Stombaugh described these fibers as "fresh" ........Examination showed that the tuft was composed of six or seven orange- yellow, gray-black, and dark-blue cotton fibers. These fibers were compared with fiibers from the shirt, Commission Exhibit No. 150, which was also composed of orange-yellow, gray-black, and dark-blue cotton fibers. The orange-yellow and gray-black tuft fibers matched the comparable shirt fibers in all observable characteristics, i.e., shade and twist. The three dark-blue fibers matched two of the three shades of the dark-blue shirt fibers, and also matched the dark-blue fibers in degree of twist." WR, page 592
Contrary to your ill-advised claim that only one fiber (or thread) was found, the actual count is of the five types of fibers found in CE-150 four of the fibers found in the tuft on CE-139 matched. So, yes. The odds of a fresh tuft of fibers found on CE-139 matching 90% of the fibers found on CE-150 is so low as to be a coincidence that the only logical conclusion is that the evidence presented above points directly at St. Oswald the Patsy having handled CE-139
while wearing CE-150. Add this evidence to all the other evidence that connects ownership of CE-139 to St. Oswald the Patsy, to ownership of CE-150 and of having worn that same shirt on the day of Nov 22, 1963, and all the evidence that points to CE-139 having fired the shots that killed JFK and wounded JBC, and you have solved the crime that links LHO to the murder of JFK and the wounding of JBC.