So you are not trying to suggest that the timeline casts doubt on Oswald's guilt? You are just focused obsessively on one pedantic issue for no apparent reason? What is next? An analysis of whether Oswald wore boxers or briefs that day? Of course you are trying to suggest that the timeline casts doubt on Oswald's ability to be present at the time of the crime. Why you won't be honest and just admit that (much like that you are a CTer) is mystifying but humorous. Here is something to ponder. If the totality of evidence places Oswald at the crime scene, do you believe that the timeline analysis is still relevant as to whether he could have been there?
So you are not trying to suggest that the timeline casts doubt on Oswald's guilt? Fool, the timeline is what it is. Whether it casts doubt on Oswald's guilt or not doesn't matter to me. Don't confuse me with yourself. I couldn't care less if Oswald was guilty or not, as long as the evidence shows it conclusively either way. I know that's a foreign concept for you, as you have determined Oswald to be guilty despite the evidence.
If the totality of evidence places Oswald at the crime scene, do you believe that the timeline analysis is still relevant as to whether he could have been there? Of course it is relevant as the timeline provided by the DPD audio recording is part of that "totality of evidence". I fully understand that you don't want it to be, because you can't refute it. It's really very simple; if the timeline shows that Oswald couldn't have been at the scene when the shooting happened, than the "totality of evidence" doesn't place Oswald at the scene, whether you like it or not.
You know this, of course, which is why you want no part of an honest discussion about the evidence. Much easier to just call it a "pedantic issue" and ignore it, right?