Thanks DVP, that first link you provided (to the email from Vince Bugliosi) is very interesting. Here is a short exerpt with some underlining by me:
About the issue in your e-mail, the whole purpose behind the chain of
possession requirement is to insure that the item being offered into
evidence by the prosecution or defense is what they claim it to be. It
is particularly important when there is no other evidence that the
item is what it is purported to be. We don't have that situation here.
Based on that, and what follows in the email, I am led to believe that the other evidence would be considered at a pre-trial evidentiary hearing. And, that therefore, in this case anyway, the chain of custody is not the only consideration that determines the admissibility of the evidence. And that seems to me to be the way it should be for justice to be served.
Prepare yourself, CTers:
I think Bugliosi was dead wrong! Comically, ludicrously wrong!
Somewhere early in this thread, I saw this quote from Bugliosi on DVP's site and winced:
What is that evidence? Mainly that we know that CE 399 was fired from
Oswald's Carcano rifle to the exclusion of all other weapons (3 H
428-429). This alone and all by itself (and certainly in conjunction
with all the other evidence I set forth in "Reclaiming History" such
as the orientation of Connally's body vis-a-vis Kennedy's, the ovoid
configuration of the entrance wound to Connally's back, etc.), is
highly persuasive evidence that CE 399 not only hit Kennedy but went
on to hit and exit Connally's body.Uh, no. The issue with the chain of custody of CE 399 is whether it is the bullet found at Parkland - that any nothing more.
You don't get to argue backwards: "Hey, it was fired from Oswald's rifle and explains the SBT, ergo it must have been found on a stretcher at Parkland."
The fact it was fired from Oswald's rifle and might explain the SBT is precisely why the defense would suggest it was PLANTED.
Perhaps mock trials have mock chains of custody, but in the real world the chain of custody would be confined to what Tomlinson, Wright, Johnsen, Rowley, Todd and Frazier - those who had custody of it - had to say. As I stated, the issue would be a likelihood CE 399 came into the possession of the authorities in the circumstances they say it did and remained in their custody until trial.
You HAVE TO GET IT ADMITTED INTO EVIDENCE. Then the prosecution and defense can start making their arguments as to how it fits into the case. Whether it was fired from Oswald's rifle or could explain the SBT could still be hotly debated. Indeed, the defense could still argue it was planted at Parkland for Tomlinson to find.
As I've suggested, this isn't a super-demanding standard. Unless Tomlinson and Wright just flat denied CE 399 was the bullet or anything like it, there wouldn't be a problem.
But you don't get to argue backwards from evidence and speculation having nothing to do with the chain of custody.