I opened this particular conversation with a diagram of the third floor and these words:
"The gap between the stairs and the elevators is about 15ft. Can the encounter described by Baker have taken place in this tiny space?"
From the beginning the conversation has been about the small space between the "Up" stairs and the elevators
No, that's been merely your side of the conversation. You're not exactly noted for your listening skills.
but because you live in a fantasy dream-world you don't seem to have grasped this fundamental point.
Just to get you up to speed - the argument is that this space is too small for the encounter Baker describes in his affidavit. Even though there is barely any detail in the affidavit there is enough to rule out the tiny space on the third floor as the setting for the encounter.
When Baker "calls out" to the man
Incorrect----"called to"
it implies there is the kind of distance involved where someone would have to raise their voice to be heard clearly.
Huh? When Officer Baker says he saw a man walking away from the stairway and called to him it implies he saw a man walking away from the stairway and called to him. No more and no less. If you want to insist on a football field between them, knock yourself out.
What's amusing here, Mr O'Meara, is that your contrived objections to the third floor are set against the background of your ridiculously (ahem)
creative harmonization of the affidavit with the lunchroom encounter story. The reason you're losing this debate is that you have to resort to strained interpretation; I on the other hand don't.
Debating you is as easy as debating a LNer. (There may be a reason for that.)
In the tiny space between the stairs and the elevator Baker and the man would be a few feet apart.
Again, why must Officer Baker necessarily be himself in front of the UP stairs at the moment he calls out? And even if he is, so what?
To repeat: we still have at least three points from which Officer Baker could have seen "a man walking away from the stairway".