Day gave him the rifle as instructed. He said he told Drain verbally about the trace of a print under the foregrip.
That's even less believable. He told Drain about the "trace of a print under the foregrip" that didn't turn out to even be there, but didn't bother to mention that he already lifted it? Was he trying to sabotage the FBI's efforts?
No, Day said he was in the process of setting up the photographing effort when he was told to stop and turn the rifle over to the FBI.
So now you're saying that he didn't get around to trying to photograph it until after he had already lifted it? Doesn't that defeat the purpose of doing the photograph in the first place? Why the different procedure than what he followed for the trigger guard?
Day apparently did document the lift by writing the description, date, and his initials on the card. What supposed other documentation are you talking about?
Didn't tell Drain. Didn't tell anybody else. Didn't submit the evidence via a CSSS. Didn't secure the evidence. Didn't write any kind of report indicating that he had made this lift and what he did with it. The first documented evidence of its existence is after Oswald is dead.
Day said he didn’t cover it with cellophane because the wooden foregrip protected it.
"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."
I will agree that Day should have provided a written note or something like that to indicate there was a print underneath the foregrip.
On this we agree. Especially since there is no evidence that there was actually a print underneath the foregrip when it got to Latona.
Relying on Drain to relay his verbal message was not the best way to handle it.
And there's no evidence that such a verbal message actually transpired. Day didn't start claiming he told Drain anything until years later in response to criticism about it.
Inconsistencies are not necessarily an indication of being untruthful.
Agreed. Otherwise, I would just be calling Day a liar rather than just saying that his story is unbelievable and makes no sense on multiple levels.
Yes, investigators often ask same or similar questions repeatedly to one suspect trying to trip him up to try to determine if they are telling the truth. However, in this instance we are dealing with more than one person. And we are dealing with human memories which are fallible. And the evidence indicates that Day did lift the print from where he said he did on the rifle.
All this "evidence" is, is replacing "Day said so" with "Hoover said so". It's still an unverifiable, unconfirmable claim.
There was over 400 items collected that related to Oswald. Are you suggesting that Drain took all of that evidence to Washington, waited there for it to be processed, and brought it back to Dallas on 11/24/63? And that the lift of the palm print was the only thing that Drain didn’t take with him on 11/22/63?
What I'm saying is that if Drain had really been told about the lift, or even the print, it would have been number one on his list to bring back to the FBI. He wouldn't have just ignored it. This is the only piece of evidence that could be physically connected back to Oswald. Drain wouldn't have just forgotten about it. It just conveniently turned up when there was nothing else that could be used.
Drain was apparently not aware of the lift of the palm print on 11/22/63. Day states that the lift of the palm print was included with the other evidence sent to the FBI on 11/26. Do you have evidence that indicates otherwise?
Yes. Latona said that he got the other materials to be examined (boxes and so forth) on November 27th, and the index card lift on the 29th.
Actually I am trying to understand what it is that you are suggesting happened. Otherwise, I would have exited this conversation a long time ago.
I'm suggesting that the partial palmprint lift known as CE 637 cannot be authenticated as having been lifted from the CE 139 rifle on 11/22/63 as claimed by Carl Day, and that there are too many inconsistencies and discrepancies to accept that as true beyond a reasonable doubt. And that even the Warren Commission had the same reservations until they (for some unfathomable reason) were sufficiently reassured by an equally unauthenticatable claim by Hoover in a letter not given under oath or with enough detail to assess it adequately.