CE 163 was found in the TSBD, no doubt.
The same jacket Frazier is emphatic he didn't recognise and had never seen Oswald wearing.
In contrast to the light grey, long-sleeved, zipper jacket Frazier swears up and down Oswald was wearing that morning and when he dropped him off on Thursday.
A jacket he states three times he is familiar with.
McWatters and, in particular Whaley, put a jacket on Oswald/the guy with the transfer ticket.
So does some kid whose name I can't remember (I want to say Milton)
You do your math Bill and I'll do mine.
PS Why would Brewer see Oswald with a jacket on?
Isn't it nice to being able to pick the evidence you like for your pet theory and ignore everything else?
Oswald had two jackets.
So when Ball asks him about the two jackets "we have shown", he's talking about CE 163 and what other jacket?
Mr. FRAZIER - It was a gray, more or less flannel, wool-looking type of jacket that I had seen him wear and that is the type of jacket he had on that morning.
Mr. BALL - Did it have a zipper on it?
Mr. FRAZIER - Yes, sir; it was one of the zipper types.
Mr. BALL -
It isn't one of these two zipper jackets we have shown?Mr. FRAZIER -
No, sir.CE 163 was found at the TSBD and could have been left there prior to the assassination.
And, on Friday morning, Randle saw Oswald wearing CE 163
Mr. BALL. Well, this one is gray but of these two the jacket I last showed you is Commission Exhibit No. 162, and this blue gray is 163, now if you had to choose between these two?
Mrs. RANDLE. I would choose the dark one.
Mr. BALL. You would choose the dark one?
Mrs. RANDLE. Yes, sir.
Mr. BALL. Which is 163, as being more similar to the jacket he had?
Mrs. RANDLE. Yes, sir; that I remember. But I, you know, didn't pay an awful lot of attention to his jacket. I remember his T-shirt and the shirt more so than I do the jacket.
Mr. BALL. The witness just stated that 163 which is the gray-blue is similar to the jacket he had on. 162, the light gray jacket was not.
Mrs. RANDLE. Yes.
And from this you can't reach the conclusion that Oswald did in fact wear CE 163 to work that morning?
Instead you make up a story in which Mrs Reid (the last person who saw Oswald at the TSBD), Mrs Bledsoe (who claimed to have seen a hole in a shirt sleeve and Mrs Roberts who saw him entering the rooming house wearing only a shirt are all wrong.
But wait, didn't I see the latest change in that theory just now, whereby Oswald took his jacket of on the bus so that Bledsoe could see the hole in the sleeve. Nice story, but maybe you shouldn't be doing math, as you seem to be not very good at it.
Oh btw Roberts was shown CE 162 and thought that the jacket Oswald put on was "darker than that"
Mr. BALL. You say he put on a separate jacket?
Mrs. ROBERTS. A jacket.
Mr. BALL. I'll show you this jacket which is Commission Exhibit 162---have you ever seen this jacket before?
Mrs. ROBERTS. Well, maybe I have, but I don't remember it. It seems like the one he put on was darker than that. Now, I won't be sure, because I really don't know, but is that a zipper jacket?
Go figure. You go through all that desperate trouble to get the grey jacket (CE 162) from Irving (where we both agree it was on Thursday evening) to the rooming house and then Roberts spoils your little party by not identifying CE 162 as the jacket she thought she had seen. Life really is a As I was walking a' alane, I heard twa corbies makin' a mane. The tane untae the tither did say, Whaur sail we gang and dine the day, O. Whaur sail we gang and dine the day? It's in ahint yon auld fail dyke I wot there lies a new slain knight; And naebody kens that he lies there But his hawk and his hound, and his lady fair, O. But his hawk and his hound, and his lady fair. His hound is to the hunting gane His hawk to fetch the wild-fowl hame, His lady ta'en anither mate, So we may mak' our dinner swate, O. So we may mak' our dinner swate. Ye'll sit on his white hause-bane, And I'll pike oot his bonny blue e'en Wi' ae lock o' his gowden hair We'll theek oor nest when it grows bare, O. We'll theek oor nest when it grows bare. There's mony a ane for him maks mane But nane sail ken whaur he is gane O'er his white banes when they are bare The wind sail blaw for evermair, O. The wind sail blaw for evermair.' sometimes... isn't it?