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Author Topic: RIP to the Single-bullet theory?  (Read 46041 times)

Offline Dan O'meara

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Re: RIP to the Single-bullet theory?
« Reply #416 on: October 06, 2023, 06:58:18 PM »
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By matching irregularities found on the rifle barrel to it, the FBI later verified that the palm print lift that was delivered was, in fact, genuine.


The Palm Print

The lift of the palm print from the rifle by Lieutenant Day has sparked controversy over the years due to what has been labeled an "interrupted chain of evidence." This misunderstanding developed from the FBI's intrusion into the Dallas police investigation on the night of the assassination. The rifle was taken away from Lieutenant Day by the FBI before he had completed his analysis of it. At that time, the FBI did not receive the palm print just developed by Lieutenant Day. The print evidence stayed in the Crime Lab Office, and only the rifle was taken by FBI Agent Drain.

Lieutenant Day told us that, after he had photographed the trigger-housing prints and been stopped by Captain Doughty, he continued work on the rifle under the order of Captain Fritz. It was at that time that he noticed a print sticking out from the barrel. He said it was obvious that part of it was under the wooden stock, so he took the stock off and finished dusting the barrel. He said he could tell it was part of a palm print, and so he proceeded with a lift.

He told Rusty and me that he could tell it wasn't put on there recently by the way it took the fingerprint powder. He said what makes a print of this sort is a lack of moisture, and this print had dried out. He said he took a small camel hair brush and dipped it in fingerprint powder and lightly brushed it. He then placed a strip of 2" scotch tape over the developed print and rubbed it down before finally lifting the tape containing the print off and placed it on a card. He said he then compared the lift to Oswald's palm print card and was certain that it was Oswald's. He also said that after the lift, he could still see an impression of the palm print left on the barrel.

Next, Lieutenant Day had intended to photograph the area of the rifle barrel from which the palm print lift had been made, but was again interrupted by Captain Doughty at about 10:00 PM. He was told once again to stop working on the gun and release it to FBI Agent Drain, who would arrive about 11:30 PM. Lieutenant Day did not have time to write any reports about what he had found, but did have time to reassemble the rifle before Drain arrived.

Drain took the rifle from the Dallas police at midnight on the day of the assassination and flew it to the FBI laboratory in Washington, DC.(8) The palm print lift done earlier by Lieutenant Day had left too little powder residue on the rifle barrel to be readily identified a second time when the FBI received it in Washington. The FBI was not aware that the palm print had been lifted at the time of their initial examination of the rifle.

When the FBI received the rifle Saturday in Washington, a comparison of the faint latent fingerprints found by Lieutenant Day on the trigger housing of the rifle was attempted by Sebastian Latona, the Supervisor of the Latent Fingerprint Section of the FBI's Identification Division.(9) In Washington, Latona also photographed the fingerprints on the trigger housing which had already been photographed by Lieutenant Day in Dallas prior to his placing cellophane tape over them.

Latona could not make a positive identification since the fingerprints were extremely faint following the removal of the protective tape. Lieutenant Day's trigger-housing photographs (which Rusty has first generation copies of), made in the Dallas Crime Lab Office, were the best quality photographs made of the fingerprints found on the side of the trigger housing. The Dallas Crime Lab received the rifle back from the FBI in a pasteboard box. It remained unopened in the evidence room along with other physical evidence in the case. After a few days passed, orders came to release all of the physical evidence to the FBI. That is when the palm print was released for the first time to the FBI.

Lieutenant Day said that a few days after all of the evidence was turned over, an FBI Agent came to his house. He wanted to know when Lieutenant Day had lifted the palm print included in the evidence they had received because they had positively identified it themselves as Oswald's palm print. Lieutenant Day got the impression from the Agent that they thought they had missed it and he could "envision J. Edgar Hoover going into orbit." He then informed the Agent that he had lifted the palm print before releasing the gun on the night of the assassination.

The FBI requested and received the remaining physical evidence from the Dallas police on the Tuesday following the assassination, not aware of the palm print's existence. To say the least, they were surprised upon discovering the palm print included with the evidence. By matching irregularities found on the rifle barrel to it, the FBI later verified that the palm print lift that was delivered was, in fact, genuine.

Lieutenant Day believed at the time that he had not completely obliterated the palm print on the barrel after his lift and later stated that he had pointed out the area of the palm print to FBI Agent Drain when turning the rifle over to him. Drain, on the other hand, did not recall being shown the palm print.

Rusty was standing, by as Lieutenant Day gave the rifle to Drain. Rusty told me that Drain was in a hurry to leave and was distracted by another FBI agent who was hurrying him to leave. According to Rusty, "Drain was half listening to Lieutenant Day and half to the other FBI man and evidently didn't get the word about the palm print at that time."

Firstly Jack, when lifting a passage from somewhere it's customary to cite where you're getting it from and maybe even provide a little context.
Secondly, the passage you've posted doesn't deal with a single issue raised in the post you are responding to. Not a single one.
Thirdly, where is the report outlining this "discovery" [a discovery made all the more interesting by the fact the FBI didn't have a clue where the print was supposed to have been taken from].

But there is something I find quite perplexing about the print Day is described as lifting in the passage above:

It was at that time that he noticed a print sticking out from the barrel.

Where, exactly, on the rifle was this print that was sticking out from the barrel?
It couldn't have been "sticking out" on the underside of the barrel at the muzzle end, because there is a metal fixing on the barrel that the stock fixes to [pointed out by red arrow in pic below].

https://ibb.co/ZdHhK7p

Thoughts?

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Re: RIP to the Single-bullet theory?
« Reply #416 on: October 06, 2023, 06:58:18 PM »


Offline Jack Nessan

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Re: RIP to the Single-bullet theory?
« Reply #417 on: October 07, 2023, 03:26:01 AM »
Firstly Jack, when lifting a passage from somewhere it's customary to cite where you're getting it from and maybe even provide a little context.
Secondly, the passage you've posted doesn't deal with a single issue raised in the post you are responding to. Not a single one.
Thirdly, where is the report outlining this "discovery" [a discovery made all the more interesting by the fact the FBI didn't have a clue where the print was supposed to have been taken from].

But there is something I find quite perplexing about the print Day is described as lifting in the passage above:

It was at that time that he noticed a print sticking out from the barrel.

Where, exactly, on the rifle was this print that was sticking out from the barrel?
It couldn't have been "sticking out" on the underside of the barrel at the muzzle end, because there is a metal fixing on the barrel that the stock fixes to [pointed out by red arrow in pic below].

https://ibb.co/ZdHhK7p

Thoughts?

What is not to understand. The barrel of the rifle has imperfections that were used like fingerprints to authenticate the palm print having been taken from the barrel. The whole idea that you were presenting about the palm print being faked is just obviously wrong.

The palm print was on the barrel under the stock. He took the stock off to look for prints and found the palm print. Should he have not removed the stock to look?

Offline Dan O'meara

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Re: RIP to the Single-bullet theory?
« Reply #418 on: October 07, 2023, 08:58:27 AM »
What is not to understand. The barrel of the rifle has imperfections that were used like fingerprints to authenticate the palm print having been taken from the barrel. The whole idea that you were presenting about the palm print being faked is just obviously wrong.

The palm print was on the barrel under the stock. He took the stock off to look for prints and found the palm print. Should he have not removed the stock to look?

What is not to understand.

It's ironic you should write this, Jack, as it appears it is you who is having a hard time understanding what's being said here.

The barrel of the rifle has imperfections that were used like fingerprints to authenticate the palm print having been taken from the barrel.

And this is the thing you don't seem to understand - nobody is saying that the palm print didn't come from the barrel of the rifle!!
I hope that's not blown your mind.
Everyone agrees that the palm print Day finally handed over to the FBI came from the barrel of the rifle.
On the surface of it the letter from Hoover, with the alleged comparison between the forged palm print and the print taken from the barrel of the rifle, appears to confirm that the palm print Day handed over came from the barrel of the rifle. Nobody is disputing this.
How can I be "obviously wrong" when I agree with the point you're making - that the palm print came from the barrel of the rifle?
I get the impression you've kind of stumbled into this discussion without having bothered to read what's gone before.
Please have a quick read of at least the last few pages just for some context before wading in.
Also, you've still not cited where you lifted that passage from.
It's also customary, when responding to a post, to actually deal with the issues raised in that post. If you could have a go at that, that'd be great.

The palm print was on the barrel under the stock. He took the stock off to look for prints and found the palm print. Should he have not removed the stock to look?

It's also customary to actually read the post you are responding to.
I'll try again:

In the passage you posted Day refers to a print he sees "sticking out".
There are other times when Day mentions that he sees a print on the barrel sticking out from underneath the wooden stock.

Are you with me so far?

My question is this - where, on the barrel of the rifle, is this print sticking out from under the wooden stock?
I cannot put it any simpler than that.

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Re: RIP to the Single-bullet theory?
« Reply #418 on: October 07, 2023, 08:58:27 AM »


Offline Martin Weidmann

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Re: RIP to the Single-bullet theory?
« Reply #419 on: October 07, 2023, 09:07:50 AM »
What is not to understand. The barrel of the rifle has imperfections that were used like fingerprints to authenticate the palm print having been taken from the barrel. The whole idea that you were presenting about the palm print being faked is just obviously wrong.

The palm print was on the barrel under the stock. He took the stock off to look for prints and found the palm print. Should he have not removed the stock to look?

So naive...

If you can apply a tape to lift a print from an object, you can also apply a print already on a tape to an object and the result would be the same.

Besides, even if the five so-called "imperfections" are unique to the rifle found at the TSBD, it still tells you nothing about how the print got there (if it ever did) and when it was really lifted.


Offline Jack Nessan

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Re: RIP to the Single-bullet theory?
« Reply #420 on: October 07, 2023, 04:25:17 PM »
What is not to understand.

It's ironic you should write this, Jack, as it appears it is you who is having a hard time understanding what's being said here.

The barrel of the rifle has imperfections that were used like fingerprints to authenticate the palm print having been taken from the barrel.

And this is the thing you don't seem to understand - nobody is saying that the palm print didn't come from the barrel of the rifle!!
I hope that's not blown your mind.
Everyone agrees that the palm print Day finally handed over to the FBI came from the barrel of the rifle.
On the surface of it the letter from Hoover, with the alleged comparison between the forged palm print and the print taken from the barrel of the rifle, appears to confirm that the palm print Day handed over came from the barrel of the rifle. Nobody is disputing this.
How can I be "obviously wrong" when I agree with the point you're making - that the palm print came from the barrel of the rifle?
I get the impression you've kind of stumbled into this discussion without having bothered to read what's gone before.
Please have a quick read of at least the last few pages just for some context before wading in.
Also, you've still not cited where you lifted that passage from.
It's also customary, when responding to a post, to actually deal with the issues raised in that post. If you could have a go at that, that'd be great.

The palm print was on the barrel under the stock. He took the stock off to look for prints and found the palm print. Should he have not removed the stock to look?

It's also customary to actually read the post you are responding to.
I'll try again:

In the passage you posted Day refers to a print he sees "sticking out".
There are other times when Day mentions that he sees a print on the barrel sticking out from underneath the wooden stock.

Are you with me so far?

My question is this - where, on the barrel of the rifle, is this print sticking out from under the wooden stock?
I cannot put it any simpler than that.

Day isn't talking about one print on the rifle barrel - he's talking about two prints!
What happened to these two prints?
How did they completely disappear by the time they reached Latona?
There are two possible explanations - the barrel was wiped clean before Drain collected it or there was never a print on the barrel in the first place.
 
In his 1985 book, "Reasonable Doubt", Henry Hurt reports the following from SA Drain:
 
"You could take the print off Oswald’s card and put it on the rifle. Something like that happened.”
 
At first this appears to be an offhand opinion by someone who doesn't really know anything about fingerprinting. However, in Larry Sneed's book, "No More Silence", Drain goes on to qualify this opinion:
 
"In one of the books, I was quoted in a footnote as saying that I doubted that a fingerprint had been found on the rifle as claimed by the Dallas Police Department. As I recall, I think my comment was based primarily on our experts in the Single Fingerprint Bureau. That’s the real specialists in fingerprints in the FBI in Washington."
 
 
Through Drain we discover that it was the opinion of the "real specialists in fingerprints in the FBI in Washington" that the palm print was a forgery.
 
The only laughable thing is that you are using the word "baseless" regarding the "notion that Day would fabricate and lie about finding a print on the rifle..."

It is far from baseless.
It is unavoidable.
Your denial regarding these issues is also laughable.

How could I have ever missed how sincere your belief that the palm print is authentic. Unfortunately for you, it was authenticated by means of the barrel irregularities which renders all this posting to idle conjecture and supposition and nothing more.

Buy a carcano rifle and take the stock off and it will become painfully obvious to you what Day is talking about. Anything short of that is you just stumbling around in the dark.

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Re: RIP to the Single-bullet theory?
« Reply #420 on: October 07, 2023, 04:25:17 PM »


Online John Iacoletti

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Re: RIP to the Single-bullet theory?
« Reply #421 on: October 07, 2023, 04:51:02 PM »
Unfortunately for you, it was authenticated by means of the barrel irregularities which renders all this posting to idle conjecture and supposition and nothing more.

Jack believes it because J. Edgar Hoover said so. No other details or consistencies necessary.

Offline Dan O'meara

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Re: RIP to the Single-bullet theory?
« Reply #422 on: October 10, 2023, 12:16:23 AM »

How could I have ever missed how sincere your belief that the palm print is authentic. Unfortunately for you, it was authenticated by means of the barrel irregularities which renders all this posting to idle conjecture and supposition and nothing more.

You really don't seem to be grasping this very simple concept Jack.
I am not saying that the palm print Day eventually handed over to the FBI didn't come from the Mannlicher Carcano.
I am saying that it did come from the MC. I can't put it in a way that is simpler for you to understand.
I am agreeing with you that the palm print came from the MC.
I can even go so far as to say the unsubstantiated and unofficial comparison between the palm print Day handed in and the print of the rifle barrel itself "authenticates" that the palm print Day handed in was from the barrel of the MC.
You really do not seem to grasp this simple concept.

Another simple concept that you don't seem to be grasping is that the comparison in the Hoover letter DOES NOT CONFIRM THERE WAS A PRINT ON THE BARREL OF THE RIFLE WHEN DAY FIRST EXAMINED IT.
Hoover's comparison letter CANNOT confirm this. It's impossible.
In my Reply#421 I laid out some serious issues regarding whether or not there was a palm print on the barrel of the MC. Through SA Drain we find out that it was the opinion of the FBI's fingerprint experts that the palm print was forged, that is to say, the palm print was not on the MC when Day first examined it and that he used one of the palm prints taken from Oswald and the MC to execute this forgery - "You could take the print off Oswald’s card and put it on the rifle. Something like that happened.” [SA Vince Drain]

Even though you were initially responding to Reply#421 you never dealt with a single issue raised in that post.
You just keep repeating the same nonsense over and over again.
You are in denial.

Quote
Buy a carcano rifle and take the stock off and it will become painfully obvious to you what Day is talking about. Anything short of that is you just stumbling around in the dark.

There's no need to buy a Carcano.
I posted a link to a picture of a dismantled Carcano and asked you [or any LNer for that matter] a very simple question.
You posted this passage from somewhere you have still refused to cite:

Lieutenant Day told us that, after he had photographed the trigger-housing prints and been stopped by Captain Doughty, he continued work on the rifle under the order of Captain Fritz. It was at that time that he noticed a print sticking out from the barrel. He said it was obvious that part of it was under the wooden stock, so he took the stock off and finished dusting the barrel. He said he could tell it was part of a palm print, and so he proceeded with a lift.


In this passage we learn that Day sees a print "sticking out from the barrel" and that this is the print he lifts from the barrel.
We know that the palm print lift Day took was from the underside of the barrel.
But when we look at a dismantled MC we see there is a piece of metal fixed to the underside of the barrel where the wooden stock attaches to the barrel at the muzzle end.
So, it is impossible for the print to be "sticking out" at this point because of the metal fixing on the underside of the barrel.

SO, WHERE ON THE BARREL IS THE PRINT THAT DAY SAYS IS "STICKING OUT"?

Here's the link to the picture in question so you can see exactly the problem Day has created for himself:

https://ibb.co/ZdHhK7p

Answer the question Jack - where on the barrel of the MC is the print that is "sticking out"?
« Last Edit: October 10, 2023, 12:23:05 AM by Dan O'meara »

Online Charles Collins

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Re: RIP to the Single-bullet theory?
« Reply #423 on: October 10, 2023, 12:56:17 AM »
You really don't seem to be grasping this very simple concept Jack.
I am not saying that the palm print Day eventually handed over to the FBI didn't come from the Mannlicher Carcano.
I am saying that it did come from the MC. I can't put it in a way that is simpler for you to understand.
I am agreeing with you that the palm print came from the MC.
I can even go so far as to say the unsubstantiated and unofficial comparison between the palm print Day handed in and the print of the rifle barrel itself "authenticates" that the palm print Day handed in was from the barrel of the MC.
You really do not seem to grasp this simple concept.

Another simple concept that you don't seem to be grasping is that the comparison in the Hoover letter DOES NOT CONFIRM THERE WAS A PRINT ON THE BARREL OF THE RIFLE WHEN DAY FIRST EXAMINED IT.
Hoover's comparison letter CANNOT confirm this. It's impossible.
In my Reply#421 I laid out some serious issues regarding whether or not there was a palm print on the barrel of the MC. Through SA Drain we find out that it was the opinion of the FBI's fingerprint experts that the palm print was forged, that is to say, the palm print was not on the MC when Day first examined it and that he used one of the palm prints taken from Oswald and the MC to execute this forgery - "You could take the print off Oswald’s card and put it on the rifle. Something like that happened.” [SA Vince Drain]

Even though you were initially responding to Reply#421 you never dealt with a single issue raised in that post.
You just keep repeating the same nonsense over and over again.
You are in denial.

There's no need to buy a Carcano.
I posted a link to a picture of a dismantled Carcano and asked you [or any LNer for that matter] a very simple question.
You posted this passage from somewhere you have still refused to cite:

Lieutenant Day told us that, after he had photographed the trigger-housing prints and been stopped by Captain Doughty, he continued work on the rifle under the order of Captain Fritz. It was at that time that he noticed a print sticking out from the barrel. He said it was obvious that part of it was under the wooden stock, so he took the stock off and finished dusting the barrel. He said he could tell it was part of a palm print, and so he proceeded with a lift.


In this passage we learn that Day sees a print "sticking out from the barrel" and that this is the print he lifts from the barrel.
We know that the palm print lift Day took was from the underside of the barrel.
But when we look at a dismantled MC we see there is a piece of metal fixed to the underside of the barrel where the wooden stock attaches to the barrel at the muzzle end.
So, it is impossible for the print to be "sticking out" at this point because of the metal fixing on the underside of the barrel.

SO, WHERE ON THE BARREL IS THE PRINT THAT DAY SAYS IS "STICKING OUT"?

Here's the link to the picture in question so you can see exactly the problem Day has created for himself:

https://ibb.co/ZdHhK7p

Answer the question Jack - where on the barrel of the MC is the print that is "sticking out"?



it was the opinion of the FBI's fingerprint experts that the palm print was forged

This is a figment of your imagination. You jumped to this conclusion all by yourself.


SO, WHERE ON THE BARREL IS THE PRINT THAT DAY SAYS IS "STICKING OUT"?

Take a look at Jerry Organ’s graphic in post #293 of this thread.

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Re: RIP to the Single-bullet theory?
« Reply #423 on: October 10, 2023, 12:56:17 AM »