Yes, Buell Frazier has, indeed, been very consistent when he has made the claim that Oswald carried the bag cupped in his right hand with the other end of the package under Oswald's right armpit.
But....
Mr. Frazier is also on record as having said the following at the 1986 Oswald Mock Trial in London, England:
VINCENT T. BUGLIOSI -- "Mr. Frazier, is it true that you paid hardly any attention to this bag?"
BUELL WESLEY FRAZIER -- "That is true."
BUGLIOSI -- "So the bag could have been protruding out in front of his body, and you wouldn't have been able to see it, is that correct?"
FRAZIER -- "That is true."
Of course that was his answer to that leading question. If the package had protruded out Frazier wouldn't have been able to see that, by looking at Oswald's back as he walked away. Frazier was just being honest, but the mere fact that the bag
"could have been protruding" doesn't automatically mean that it was.
What Frazier
actually saw (looking at Oswald's front side) was a package cupped in Oswald's right hand and under his right armpit and there is no way that a package of 34" would have fitted between the cup of his hand and his armpit. So, even if the package did protrude out, it wouldn't grow because of it.
But Mrs. Randle also told FBI agent James Bookhout on the day of the assassination itself that the package she saw Lee Oswald carrying that same day was "approximately 3 feet" (36 inches) in length (see the 11/22/63 FBI Report below)....
https://www.jfk-assassination.net/russ/testimony/randl_l1.htm
Here we go again... That's what Bookhout claimed in his FD-302 report Linnie Mae Randle had said. This was not an affidavit! Randle did not sign it and never knew about the content. There are plenty of FB-302 reports in circulation that contain incorrect content. In all her official statements, including her testimony Randle remained adamant about the size of the bag.
In fact, on 02/12/63 she was interviewed by FBI agents Odum and McNeely and described to them how Oswald had held the bag. McNeely then did a reconstruction in accordance to Randle's instructions and when they subsequently measured the size of the bag it was 27". So even if Randle misestimated the size when she spoke to Bookhout, she recified it only a few days later.
And there's something else; In her WC testimony, Randle described how Oswald carried the package;
Mrs. RANDLE. He was carrying a package in a sort of a heavy brown bag, heavier than a grocery bag it looked to me. It was about, if I might measure, about this long, I suppose, and he carried it in his right hand, had the top sort of folded down and had a grip like this, and the bottom, he carried it this way, you know, and it almost touched the ground as he carried it.
Mr. BALL. Let me see. He carried it in his right hand, did he?
Mrs. RANDLE. That is right.
Mr. BALL. And where was his hand gripping the middle of the package?
Mrs. RANDLE. No, sir; the top with just a little bit sticking up. You know just like you grab something like that.
Mr. BALL. And he was grabbing it with his right hand at the top of the package and the package almost touched the ground?
Mrs. RANDLE. Yes, sir. Unless you are going to argue that Oswald's legs were longer than 34" (the size of the wooden stock) there is no way the package could have been that size and not touch the ground.
Now, tell me, David, why can Randle be "mistaken" in all her official statements but not in an alleged statement to Bookhout?
So it would appear as if Linnie Mae's bag-length estimate got smaller over a period of time. The reason for this change can never be fully known, of course. But the fact remains (per Bookhout's Nov. 22 report above) that Linnie, in her very first attempt at estimating the size of Oswald's paper bag, said the bag was "approximately three feet" long. And that is just 2 inches away from the actual size of the 38-inch bag that was found in the Sniper's Nest.
There is no need for me to respond to speculation. The mere fact that you give great weight to an internal FBI report that may or may not be correct over all her official statements tells me you're cherry picking and grasping at straws
[BTW / FYI / FWIW --- In the 1964 David Wolper motion picture "Four Days In November", Linnie Mae Randle said the bag was "approximately two-and-a-half feet long" (30 inches). See video below.]
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1G4mVIszdpy7RHsHQskIefrB_F_s1rOnz/view
The operative word here is "approximately"! It's a meaningless estimate.
The evidence shows that the size of the package was determined twice by FBI agents who measured the size after an reenactment, once in Frazier's car and the other in Irving, based upon Randle's instructions. In addition we have Frazier stating that he saw the package fit between the cup of Oswald's hand and his armpit and we have Randle describing the way Oswald carried the package which did not touch the ground.
It's more than just a couple. It's at least double that number, and possibly as many as 5 or 6 officers said they saw the empty paper bag on the sixth floor. Here's a list of the four DPD officers that I usually cite whenever this topic comes up:
J.C. Day [4 H 267]
L.D. Montgomery [7 H 97]
Robert Studebaker [7 H 143-144]
Marvin Johnson [7 H 103]
Actually, if I remember correctly it's six law enforcement officers who said they saw the bag. And there were six other who said they didn't. Those included Deputy Sheriff Luke Mooney (who actually discovered the sniper's nest), DPD Sgt Hill and Detective Boyd, who arrived with Captain Fritz before Studebaker and Day got there.
Yet, on 11/24/63 Studebaker told an FBI agent he found the bag, Lt Day told FBI agent Vincent Drain on 11/30/63 that he found it and Montgomery said in his WC testimony that he handed over the bag to Studebaker and Day. Go figure! Several people claiming to have found the bag and all of them got there after Mooney, Hill and Boyd had already been in the sniper's nest and saw nothing.
A "window sill"? That's the first time I've ever heard that one.
You think there's a window sill tucked away in this bag?....
In reality, of course, there's nothing at all in the above bag.
Well, a window sill was removed from the window in the sniper's nest, or do you deny that?
I simply do not know what's inside there and neither do you, but something is holding up that bag.
Your opinion isn't of course automatically "reality". Btw, have a look at the photo on the left.
How is Montgomery holding that bag if there's nothing in it?
That's total nonsense, Martin. When I say that I think someone was "mistaken", that's precisely what I mean. I'm not calling that person a liar.
Yeah, right... pull the other one.
I would guess it is because his memory of the package is firm and concrete in his own mind, and he sees no reason to change now.
You can guess all you want and so can I. And my guess is that he sees no reason to change his story because he has been telling the truth all along and in a consistent way. Unlike other witnesses (like Brennan and Graig) who changed their story over time, Frazier has always said the same thing.
The WC (and you) may say he's mistaken but that's based on absolutely nothing except flawed circular logic.
And let's not forget that, on Friday evening, only hours after the event and while he was being polygraphed, Frazier was shown the bag found at the TSBD (by then already deemed to be - without a shred of actual evidence - the bag Oswald used to bring in the rifle) and rejected it as the bag he had seen Oswald carry. He described the latter as being "a thin, flimsy sack like the one purchased at a dime store". Why do you think this was ignored by the investigators?
Let's try to reconstruct this is a hypothetical conversation;
Officer 1: We have this man, Frazier, here and he says he saw the bag Oswald carried. It fitted between the cup of Oswald's hand and under his armpit. That's about 27". And we also have his sister saying roughly the same thing.
Officer 2: Yeah, that may well be but we found a larger bag in the TSBD which we think was used to bring the rifle in.
Officer 1: Yes, I know, but Frazier was shown that bag on Friday evening and said it wasn't the one he saw Oswald carry, which was a flimsy dime store kinda bag.
Officer 2: Never mind about all that. We have this big bag and Frazier and Randle are simply mistaken. That's all there is to it.Now, in the real world, does that even strike you as being a normal way to conduct an investigation?
But a lot of people were mistaken about the things they saw and heard on 11/22/63. (And I mean mistakes, not lies.) Nellie Connally being another good example. She always maintained that she witnessed JFK reacting to being hit by the first shot. But a close look at the Zapruder Film shows that Nellie wasn't even looking in JFK's direction in order to see what she always said she saw at the time she says she saw it. But she's not a liar, she's simply mistaken.
So, now you compare the incorrect statement of somebody who witnesses something happening in a blink of an eye, with the observation of Frazier who saw the package far longer and thus was able to get more details right? Pffff
A lot of the Parkland witnesses were "mistaken" too when they said they saw a big hole in the back of JFK's head. But the autopsy photos prove for all time that those witnesses were, indeed, mistaken. (CTer protests notwithstanding, of course.)
Is that why Arlen Specter told Dr. Jones, after a meeting that included discussion about the supposed exit wound being an entrance wound;
"We have people who will testify that they saw him [JFK] shot from the overpass. We do not believe they are credible witnesses... and I don’t want you saying anything about it."
See my last comment about all the mistaken Parkland Hospital witnesses.
Just because you and the WC claim the Parkland doctors were wrong, doesn't mean they were.