Day was following his orders. Day said he told his superiors (Curry and Fritz) about the lift before the time that Drain took the rifle.
Yes, I know he claimed that. It’s uncorroborated by Fritz and Curry, and wasn’t publicly mentioned by Fritz or Curry even though they discussed other evidence, including prints that they had.
If Curry and Fritz had wanted to tell the FBI about the lift, it was up to them to do it.
This would be a “not my job” evasion. But Day is the one who handed the evidence over, not Curry and Fritz.
Remember, the DPD had jurisdiction (not the FBI). The DPD leadership had decided to let the FBI temporarily take the evidence that the FBI had requested. The DPD was not even required to do that.
That’s not relevant. They agreed to turn the evidence over. How could the FBI request something they didn’t even know existed?
I believe that Day stated that he had no other reason than an urgent request to process the gun ASAP. I believe he said that Captain Fritz ordered him to resume processing the rifle after Day had already been stopped earlier. Another snip from "No More Silence", page 237: "Captain Fritz came back a little later and had run across the chief of police. He told me to go ahead and start again on what I had been doing with the gun, which I did. Before I got the picture made, another message came in: 'Drop everything! Don't do anything else!'" I don't believe that there was a requirement to photograph prints first, or even to photograph them at all.
So which is it then? He didn’t think it was necessary, or he didn’t have time?
One thing Speer points out is that the FBI manual is very clear that prints should always be photographed first before trying to develop them, and Latona reiterates that. Yes, Day was not FBI, but he mentions in his testimony having gone through advanced latent-print school conducted by the FBI.
Is the palm print the only item not "submitted via a CSSS? Is there a CSSS that he submitted for the partial prints on the trigger guard for example?
They were still on the rifle, and thus part of it. The rifle had a CSSS. It’s how they logged evidence in the possession of the police department.They were submitted to the Crime Scene Search Section of the Dallas Police Department for (supposedly) safe keeping and control.
First documentation of the palm print by whom, the FBI?
By anybody. Day didn’t get around to writing a report about this for two months.
"Lt. DAY stated he saw no reason for wrapping the palm print on the underside of the barrel with any protective covering since it was protected by the wood stock when fully assembled and that it was not necessary to use cellophane or other protective coating as it would have been on the exposed prints."
Isn't that essentially what I just said? Why are you repeating it?
Apologies. I misread what you wrote. I thought you were saying that Day
didn’t say the foregrip was the reason he didn’t cover it with cellophane. I think the “maybe the part that was sticking out was still protected” speculation is just yet another case of trying to resolve a discrepancy by proposing a hypothetical for which there is no evidence.
I have already indicated a few possibilities that I think are possible earlier in this thread. We will most likely never have a definitive answer that will satisfy everyone as to why Latona didn't find a print.
Frankly, I think your suggestion that Day was just more skilled at locating prints than Latona is the most absurd possibility.
The evidence that it was there includes the actual lift of the palm print, Day's testimony about that lift, and the irregularities the FBI found on the rifle that match the corresponding marks on the lift of the palm print that Day made. You can complain about the evidence all you wish, but it exists.
Hoover’s letter and indistinct smudge with no background details certainly does exist. That doesn’t make it reliable or conclusive evidence.
I could be mistaken, but I think I remember that Drain's report of September 1964 indicated that Day made the claim when Drain talked to him.
You are indeed mistaken. It wasn’t until the time of the HSCA (1977) that Day started claiming he told Drain about the print.
Day said he told Drain about the print on the rifle. Day didn't say he told Drain about the lift.
The question remains,
why the hell not?Day said he sent it on the 26th. Do you not think that a possible explanation for the difference is that it simply took Latona a few days to process some of the other 400+ items before he even knew that the palm print lift was included?
No. Latona said he received it on November 29th.
So, essentially you just don't like the evidence. What else is new?
It has nothing to do with “liking it”. In light of the many discrepancies, contradictions, morphing memories, CYA, and hedging, “Day said so” just doesn’t cut it.