You are taking one sentence out of context. They are clearly talking about the rifle, not the boxes or bag.
The point is that this claim by John appears to be in error:
And your "explanation" of why you think John's above claim is even relevant, which didn't make any sense to begin with, appears to be in error also:
You are taking one sentence out of context. No, I don't. There is nothing to be taken out of context in this sentence;
"We've got a print that matches Oswald, one investigator said." They are clearly talking about the rifle, not the boxes or bag. Nothing clearly about it. You are jumping to a conclusion not justified by the evidence. All the investigator said was that they had
a print that matches Oswald. There is no mention of where the print came from or the rifle for that matter.
The point is that this claim by John appears to be in error: Wrong again. It would only "appear to be in error" is one first accepts that your flawed jump to a conclusion is correct. Since it isn't, John's claim isn't in error.
And your "explanation" of why you think John's above claim is even relevant, which didn't make any sense to begin with, appears to be in error also: And wrong again. All you've got is Wade claiming "from memory", months after Oswald's death, that Fritz told him about the print prior to Oswald's death. The mere fact that Wade claims it doesn't make it so. There is no contemporary record of such a conversation. It's just one more instance where law enforcement (i.e. investigators and prosecutors) is making claims about non existent vital evidence.
What is funny though is that the article clearly shows that Wade was involved in the case from day 1. He may not have been an investigator, but he was there and discussing with the media the evidence he, in the same article, said he wouldn't discuss for fear of contaminating the jury pool.