Exactly, on the evening on 11/22/63 he was indeed told to stop processing, which clearly included the palmprint!
Or would you be arguing that they first told him to stop processing the rifle and only later told him to not examine the palmprint as well? If that is what you are claiming, you need of course also explain why Day did not continue to process the palmprint on Friday evening.
That is what Day said. Your contention is your conjecture.
No. That's not what Day said. He said in his WC testimony that he was told to stop processing. You were the one who claimed it was only about the rifle, but you can not explain why Day did not process the crucial palmprint further and actually kept it in his desk for four days. That's why you just say it's my conjecture. You always do something like that when you get stuck and have no answers. It's a desperate sign of weakness!
So, again… why did Day not process the palmprint further when - as you incorrectly claim - he was only told to stop processing the rifle?
IMO, Day's actions are beyond belief. If he really thought the palmprint belonged to Oswald, it would have been a smoking gun! He would have had every reason to want to examine the palmprint as soon as possible. Yet, he shows no interest or curiosity in the print for four days. He places the index card in his desk and ignores it completely for four days. He doesn't complain about or question the order not to process the print further. The biggest crime of the century, Day believes he has conclusive evidence to show Oswald did it and he does...….. absolutely nothing! How can that be deembed credible in any way, shape or form?
Thank you for stating all of that is your opinion.
Of course it is my opinion.... and you have nothing to counter it!
Again you are trying to make something out of nothing. The only palmprint Wade talked about was the print on the boxes! Not the rifle, as you incorrectly claimed in your post #250.
Not in my (already stated) reasoned opinion.
Your opinions are not reasoned. They only serve the purpose of defending a predetermined conclusion.
Anybody who listens to the Wade press conference of 11/24/63 will note that Wade only talks about the palmprint found on a box at the TSBD.
No it doesn't stand to reason at all. After Oswald was killed Wade was free to say what he wanted in the knowledge that there wouldn't be a trial. In the press conference on 11/24/63 he said several things that we now know simply were not true. He could have added the palmprint allegedly found on the rifle but didn't!
Wade knew that the case would continue to be investigated and the facts would come out. He wasn't free to say what he wanted. If he intentionally lied it would come back to bite him. (He did feel a need to outline the evidence to the media to counter the views by some in the media that they might have arrested the wrong man.) Why would he say Oswald's prints were on the rifle if all they had was fingerprints that were not clear enough for ID? You make no sense. Wade was in my (already stated) reasoned opinion referring to the palmprint that Day felt sure was Oswald's. The palmprint was also a big part of the reasons they decided that night, 11/22/63, to charge Oswald with the assassination.
Wade knew that the case would continue to be investigated and the facts would come out. He wasn't free to say what he wanted. If he intentionally lied it would come back to bite him. BS all he would have to say is that he was given erroneous information. It was only a press conference, for crying out loud.
Why would he say Oswald's prints were on the rifle if all they had was fingerprints that were not clear enough for ID? You make no sense. He made all sorts of claims that later turned out not to be true, and none of them came back "to bite him"
Wade was in my (already stated) reasoned opinion referring to the palmprint that Day felt sure was Oswald's. BS. If Day felt so sure that the palmprint belonged to Oswald, why did he not make sure by processing it further, rather than doing absolutely nothing with it for four days.
The palmprint was also a big part of the reasons they decided that night, 11/22/63, to charge Oswald with the assassination. So, they charged Oswald with murder of the President based upon Day's "feeling" and made no effort at all to make sure? Are you for real?
So Wade said one thing but really meant something else.... Nice try to rewrite history! You can contend it all you want, but there is just not a shred of evidence for it.
From wikipedia:
Fingerprint identification, known as dactyloscopy,[8] or hand print identification, is the process of comparing two instances of friction ridge skin impressions (see Minutiae), from human fingers or toes, or even the palm of the hand or sole of the foot, to determine whether these impressions could have come from the same individual.
Palmprints and fingerprints and other prints are all part of fingerprint identification. It is understandable that he would just say fingerprint and it would cover both. Another possibility is: when Wade was told on 11/22/63 they might have just said Oswald's print was found on the rifle and not specified that it was a palmprint.
I have already stated the other reasons to believe he was referring to the palmprint. Those reasons are evidence based on the real circumstances and the words of the people who were there and in a position to know. Not made up out of thin air as you imply.
Your "reasons" are nothing more than conjecture based upon a vague newspaper article and comments made by Wade and Day decades after the events. There is clear and obvious evidence that shows the palmprint on the indexcard did not surface until 11/26/63 and was not processed (by Latona) until 11/29/63.
It is completely hilarious that you argue that Day was not told to stop processing the palmprint on Friday evening, when we know he did in fact not process it at all prior to surrendering it to the FBI on 11/26. It is just as comical that you suggest that Day was in fact also told to stop processing the print, but that he nevertheless somehow made a "tentative match" and it's completely pathetic to claim that Oswald would have been charged with the murder of Kennedy based on that alleged "tentative match" when the DPD had the means and possibility to make absolutely sure there was in fact a match.