I don’t know. But the names are included below. It would be interesting to find their oral history transcripts, etc (if any exist). It is amazing to me that no one (especially CT researchers) apparently ever interviewed any of these officers (before Gary Savage). I know that Larry Sneed indicates that most of the DPD officers involved that day were normally very reluctant to talk about the assassination.
Here is a snip from page 77 of “JFK First Day Evidence” by Gary Savage. The quotation marks indicate that these are the words of Rusty Livingston.
“After that [the arraignment of LHO for the murder of JFK] was over with, I went into the Lab Office and talked to the officer who was on duty during the three to eleven shift. He was showing me some of the pictures that they had taken and printed and also pictures of everything that was taken from Oswald’s house, or rooming house. He had all kinds of things that they had taken from there and photographed. They photographed the rifle there too. It was on the counter in the Crime Lab Office where I worked when they photographed it. This had happened sometime during the day. I am sure that Lieutenant Day, who was in charge of the Crime Lab, dusted the rifle that was found on the sixth floor of the School Book Depository, and lifted a partial palm print off the underside of the barrel after the rifle was taken apart. 2 They had the actual print there in the office that night. I compared it myself with Oswald’s palm print, and it looked to me like there was enough there to say yes, it was Oswald’s palm print. I think all the other people on the day shift had already looked at the palm print before I arrived that night, but I went ahead and looked at the palm print myself and was satisfied that it was Oswald’s.”
Rusty went on to tell me that many times, when a print had been lifted at a crime scene and been brought back to the lab for analysis, it would be looked at by the other detectives. “That happened all the time.” He told me. “After we had made a comparison and felt as though we had a match, if someone else was in the office, they’d usually take a look too and help to verify the match.”
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Today some assassination researchers do not believe that Lieutenant Day actually did lift the palm print of Oswald from the rifle. He’d did, however, and most if not all other Crime Lab Officers saw and compared the palm print themselves, including Rusty, Pete Barnes, H.R. Williams, and Bobby Brown. Ample opportunity to compare the palm print lifted from the rifle existed since it remained in the Crime Lab Office for several days, and each officer recalled the lift and had no doubt that it was Oswald’s.
Bobby Brown told Rusty and me that he remembered looking at the palm print lifted by Lieutenant Day. He stated that there was no doubt that it was Oswald’s palm print and said he looked at the palm print the day after the shooting. His scheduled hours for work on Saturday were from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. Brown said that he didn’t come in on the day of the assassination.
Of all LN researchers I feel that you are the one who is most genuinely interested in what actually happened that day.
You must concede that there are two incredibly perplexing aspects to this particular aspect of the case.
1) Day could not make a positive identification of the print he had lifted.
His claim is that he didn't have enough time to work on it but the fact of the matter is that he had the print for days. The importance of this
print cannot be understated - above all evidence it connected Oswald to the murder weapon. It must have been a priority. Yet Day claims
he didn't have enough time to work on it. Yet here we have Rusty making an immediate 'satisfactory' identification.
2) Day is absolutely insistent there was a print on the underside of the barrel when he sent it off with Drain. He was so confident they would
be able to identify the print from the rifle he kept the print he had lifted. Yet, by the time it reached Latona, the morning of the next day,
the print had completely vanished. There was no trace of it. Not the slightest part left. And no indication that any attempt had even been
made to lift a print.
The tinfoil element of CTer's is on full display as far as this forum is concerned, but any reasonable-minded person would look at this and say there is something really not right.