C'mon Dan, that's a loaded question that a shoddy defence lawyer would ask when he realizes his client is guilty beyond all doubt, so no, that question can't be answered without fully exploring the surrounding facts.
But let's hypothesize that Oswald's rifle was used by another assassin and evaluate the probabilities.
Q. Someone broke into the Paine garage and stole Oswald's rifle and took it to his work and did the deed?
A. Oswald didn't have many friends, so it's unlikely that anybody knew that the rifle was there and even if someone perchance broke in and stole the rifle, how the heck would they know where Oswald(who only visited on weekends), even worked? Possibility 0%
Q. Oswald took his rifle to work for show and tell, and a fellow worker grabbed the rifle at lunch and assassinated JFK?
A. Oswald wouldn't take a loaded rifle to work and nobody said they saw a rifle. Possibility -10%
Q. Oswald took his rifle to work and gave it to an assassin?
A. Oswald was dumb but not stupid! Possibility 0%
I guess I could go on making up various scenarios but why bother?
All the evidence points to Oswald and his actions and provable lies at the interrogation proves that he assassinated John F. Kennedy!
JohnM
C'mon Dan, that's a loaded question that a shoddy defence lawyer would ask when he realizes his client is guilty beyond all doubt, so no, that question can't be answered without fully exploring the surrounding facts.It isn't a loaded questions at all, John, and I'm surprised you see it that way.
It's a very simple question with a very simple answer - NO.
It is obviously the case that Oswald's ownership of the rifle does not prove he took the shots.
A child can see that.
The point of the question is to reveal the mentality of people like Richard.
Because Richard believes that Oswald taking the shots is a proven fact he
cannot answer the question.
He just cannot bring himself to answer it.
He cannot accept, on any level, that it is a theory.
It is exactly the same extreme mentality shown by members of the Tinfoil brigade.
And as for your list of scenarios...
It shows the same lack of imagination all LNers display when pretending to think about alternative narratives.
Maybe Oswald was duped into handing his rifle over. Maybe he was ordered to hand it over. Maybe he believed he was part of something he really wanted to be part of, like an assassination attempt on John Connally, so he handed his rifle over willingly.
All the evidence points to Oswald and his actions and provable lies at the interrogation proves that he assassinated John F. Kennedy!All the evidence, John?
The collective statements of 4 eyewitnesses have the man on the 6th floor wearing a white/very light coloured shirt, open at the collar - Oswald wore a brown shirt to work that day.
Amos Euins constantly describes a distinctive bald spot on top of the mans head a few inches behind his hairline. Something Oswald didn't have.
Three eyewitnesses describe "Oswald's" hair but fail to mention it's most distinctive feature - that it is receding. In fact, one of them states that he didn't believe the man had a receding hairline.
Three eyewitnesses describe the man having a fair/light complexion, opposed to Oswald's dark, unshaven complexion.
Brennan thought the man was substantially older than Oswald when he saw (and failed to identify) him.
Hank Norman heard the small empty shells hitting the wooden floor directly above his head but, after the third one, failed to hear Oswald's heavy Oxford work shoes clomping around on the same wooden floor which is strange because Oswald is supposed to have started his descent immediately after the third shot in order to get down to the 2nd floor lunchroom to have an encounter with Baker with 3 seconds to spare.
Maybe Norman doesn't hear the footsteps because, as Brennan reported, when the presidential limo entered the underpass he looked back towards the man who was still stood at the window, a good 8 seconds after the last shot (thus scuppering the 3 second window of opportunity).
Jack Dougherty was supposed to be stood a few feet from the stairs when Oswald descended but he neither saw nor heard anything (remember, heavy Oxford work shoes on a wooden floor).
Same thing on the 4th floor with Dorothy Garner who followed Adams and Styles out and who was in that area when Truly and Baker came up, but no Oswald, and it's not just a case of him coming down the stairs, at the bottom of each staircase he has to walk across the floor in order to get to the next staircase.
None of the other women who came out to the 4th floor storage area reported seeing Oswald either.
Oswald reportedly told his interrogators that he had just purchased a coke when Baker came in. In Sept' '64 Baker wrote a report in which he stated that he saw the man in the lunchroom drinking a coke.
Oswald also told them that while he was having lunch in the domino room he had some kind of encounter with two men who can only be Hank Norman and Junior Jarman. This interaction happened about 5 minutes before the shooting. Arnold Rowland had already seen the man with a rifle on the 6th floor ten minutes before this.
And how do we explain the remains of Bonnie Rays lunch on top of the Sniper's Nest when it was first discovered?
All the evidence, John?
Hardly.
All the evidence regarding who was on the 6th floor before, during and after the assassination points away from Oswald.
And if it's not Oswald on the 6th floor then he was framed for the shooting using his own rifle.