I accept you criticism Alan, but we can all be wrong about details from a fleeting glimpse of an apparently unimportant individual. I suggest the essential features are consistent, male, black and of thin build. How could Rowland have known that Williams lunch remnants would be originally discovered in the SN? The time he claims for the sightings are consistent too, when all evidence in analysed.
I honestly have no dog in this hunt, Mr Crow, and you have done brilliant work in exploring the Williams timing issue and its ramifications. Where we agree is that Mr Rowland's witnessing--------
however one reads it--------is a disaster for the official story!
Male, black and thin are indeed essential features, but age, hair and color of shirt are hardly inessential ones. Is it
possible that the highly observant Mr Rowland just got some key details wrong? Yes. But
possible doesn't automatically translate into
given. I'm just urging caution, that's all.
As you rightly point out, Messrs Piper and West were photographed because of Mr Rowland's description, but Mr Rowland was never shown a photo of Mr Williams. Ok, but why exactly would an ID of Mr Williams as the 'elderly Negro' have been worse for the 'investigators' than an ID of, say, Mr Piper? Both were employees. To have
either of them hanging out that window while an armed man is standing over at the south-west window is, to say the least, problematical... But, all things being equal, Mr Williams' being ID'd as the 'elderly Negro' would surely have been the lesser headache, no?