Instead of dealing with a single word, which it seems you don't like, why don't you try to deal with the facts for once?
it is not a part of the discussion that the rest of us are having
Who else is in the discussion, except for you and me? And as I am part of the discussion, the word "exact" is indeed part of the discussion.
Several others are in the discussion. But don't believe me, look for yourself.
Exact: not approximated in any way; precise.
Your use of the word in this discussion is ridiculous. Bowles attempted to determine the timing of the shots down to the hundredth of a second for his purpose of rebuttal of the acoustics experts' report. Even that tolerance isn't "exact." A thousandth of a second is more precise than a hundredth of a second. Atomic clocks are among the most precise timepieces in the world, but even they are not perfect.
But you go on and use the word exact if you wish. And show the world just how ridiculous you are.
Markham's and Bowley's timelines alone justify, IMO, the conclusion that Tippit was in fact shot before 1:10 pm, which makes it nearly impossible for Oswald to have been there.
That is just absurd. What you are doing is making an ad hoc assumption that their timelines were accurate because that fits your crazy idea that it was impossible for Oswald to have been there. The point I have been making is that the voice timestamps on the DPD recordings are not meaningless.
That is just absurd. What you are doing is making an ad hoc assumption that their timelines were accurate because that fits your crazy idea that it was impossible for Oswald to have been there. What is absurd is your inability to deal with what I actually wrote.
I never assumed that their timelines were accurate (as far as estimates go) but I concluded instead that their timelines are linked. Markham saw Tippit being killed and Bowley arrived just after that happened. What is not variable are the distances Markham needed to walk from her home to 10th/Patton (one block) and the bus stop on Jefferson (two blocks) which makes it possible to determine the time needed to walk those distances. Also not variable is the distance Bowley needed to drive from the school where he picked up his daughter to 10th/Patton and the time required for that. And finally, what is not variable is that school are out at the same time every day.
Markham only had to walk one block, taking no more than three minutes at best, to get from her home to 10th/Patton. If Tippit was indeed shot at 1:14 and she saw it, it means that she did not leave home until 1:09 at the lastest. But that would also mean that Bowley would have arrived at least five or six minutes later than the 1:10 that his watch showed, which in turn means he must have kept his daughter waiting for that same amount of time after school was out and not notice it. Do you really think that's likely?
Markham also said that she usually catched the bus at 1:15. The FBI told us the bus schedule had busses arriving at 1:12 and 1:22, so she must have been talking about either the 1:12 bus that was delayed by a couple of minutes or the 1:22 for which she would have been at the bus stop 7 minutes early. It really does not matter which bus it was, because if Markham did indeed normally arrive at the bus stop at 1:15 she simply could not have been at 10th/Patton a minute earlier to witness Tippit's murder if that happened at 1:14 because she would have passed that location at least three minutes earlier.
So, if you wish to push back Markham's timeline to fit Tippit being murdered at 1.14 you also have to push back Bowley's timeline with the same amount of time thus making it inevitable that he would have been late at the school to pick up his daughter and somehow not notice it.
And then of course there is the report of DPD officer Davenport who followed the ambulance to Methodist Hospital on Beckley and said Tippit was declared DOA at 1:15. There is no way that Tippit could have been at the hospital at 1:15 if he was shot at 10th street only a minute earlier.
The only real variable in all this is the estimated time that Tippit was shot. If he was shot between 1:06 and 1:10 the entire timeline fits perfectly and makes sense, but if he was killed at 1:14 nothing else of the combined timelines fits.
The point I have been making is that the voice timestamps on the DPD recordings are not meaningless.Nobody said those transcripts (because that's what we have) are meaningless. There is just simply no guarantee that the times called by the dispatcher were indeed accurate in the real world. Bowles himself said that the clocks used could be as much as two minutes behind or ahead of "offical time". In other words, if the dispatcher calls 1:16 it could very well have been 1:14 or 1:18 in the real world. Such a margin of error alone means that you can not use the transcripts to pin point the exact time of the shooting!