Then why did he do no further processing for the following 3 days?
He was instructed to stop. I have said this before. Why do you keep asking the same question?
He was instructed to stop processing the rifle and the evidence being turned over that night, not the evidence he chose to withhold “for further processing”.
It appears that way to me because Hosty was complaining about having to do the work that he thought the DPD should have already done.
There’s a difference between photographing and cataloguing the evidence being transferred to the FBI that night and documenting and securing the evidence when it is first collected.
Innuendo and suspicions...
Blind faith in “cop said so”. And you aren’t even consistent with that. Exhibit A: Roger Craig. Exhibit B: Paul Landis.
Regardless of your opinion, this is evidence that satisfied the WC.
Is that supposed to be compelling? It didn’t take much to satisfy the WC of anything, given their preordained conclusion.
It is science that could be repeated with the same results. And the WC is who began the questioning.
Real science describes its methodology and results sufficiently enough to be reproducible. It doesn’t just say “trust us, we got this result”. The WC began the question, and then just completely punted on “Hoover said so”. Like I said, they gave more investigative care to where a cab dropped Oswald off. They could have saved all that time, money, and effort by just asking Hoover on 11/24/63, “whodunnit?”
You’re trying to have it both ways. If it “wasn’t his place” then why does he claim to have verbally informed Drain about the print?
Because it was on the rifle that he had been instructed to turn over to the FBI.
Did his superiors instruct him to do that? Like I said, you’re trying to have it both ways.
I disagree. But I don't see how the logistics of getting the evidence to Latona are meaningful to this conversation.
Because the FBI wasn’t aware the lift even existed until 11/29. And yet (according to Hosty), they were supposed to have all the evidence already.
Evidence of authenticity would be helpful if you want to convince others.
Typically an officer who finds evidence identifies it and testifies where he found it, the circumstances, and so on.
Typically evidence handling and documentation procedures are followed so that a cop can’t just come along days, weeks, or months later and say “oh yeah, I have this piece of evidence I didn’t mention before. But trust me, I’m a cop”.