Who Was The Man Who Fired A Shot In Mrs. Lovell Penn?s Pasture?

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Author Topic: Who Was The Man Who Fired A Shot In Mrs. Lovell Penn?s Pasture?  (Read 78176 times)

Offline Rob Caprio

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Re: Who Was The Man Who Fired A Shot In Mrs. Lovell Penn?s Pasture?
« Reply #14 on: September 27, 2018, 02:56:27 PM »
No.

But, I guess some people here make it all too easy to make it look that way.

And, I'm not afraid to call out BS when I see it.

Carry on.

What BS? Be specific.

Offline Tom Scully

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Re: Who Was The Man Who Fired A Shot In Mrs. Lovell Penn?s Pasture?
« Reply #15 on: September 29, 2018, 03:53:44 AM »
What BS? Be specific.

You never permit your condition.... blissfull unawareness, to sometime wane to a level allowing you any inclination
to self-moderate your posted content. This thread was created based on your reaction to you not noticing you know
less than you assume. Things are already complicated without you further muddying the waters.

The 1963 home of Mrs. Lovell T Penn is now a museum in a state park. She was reported to have stated she
wrote the license plate info of the car used by the three men on a piece of paper, but discarded it after determining none
of her farm's livestock had been injured by rifle fire. One author described her as a school teacher....

You might consider bringing your suspicions in for a landing and channeling your indignation away from hand wringing
and toward uncovering what potentially could advance the goal of full awareness.

FWIW, Mrs. Penn's husband claimed in 1936 his car was shot at and hit. The point is the Penn couple seem upstanding.



« Last Edit: September 29, 2018, 03:58:37 AM by Tom Scully »

Offline Joe Elliott

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Re: Who Was The Man Who Fired A Shot In Mrs. Lovell Penn?s Pasture?
« Reply #16 on: September 29, 2018, 04:24:05 AM »
Oswald?s rifle was found in the sniper?s nest. Oswald?s prints were on the rifle. The bullets that killed President Kennedy were ballistically matched to that rifle. And Oswald fled the scene within five minutes.

But the key to this case is finding out who fired a shot in Mrs. Lovell Penn?s pasture.

Offline Joe Elliott

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Re: Who Was The Man Who Fired A Shot In Mrs. Lovell Penn?s Pasture?
« Reply #17 on: September 29, 2018, 04:26:44 AM »

Shouldn?t Andrew ?Andy? Penn be added to the list of the mysterious deaths?

Offline Jerry Freeman

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Re: Who Was The Man Who Fired A Shot In Mrs. Lovell Penn?s Pasture?
« Reply #18 on: September 29, 2018, 09:03:46 PM »
Oswald?s rifle was found in the sniper?s nest. Oswald?s prints were on the rifle. The bullets that killed President Kennedy were ballistically matched to that rifle. And Oswald fled the scene within five minutes.
Hidell's rifle. Oswald's 'prints' were not found on it.
Also, there is no such thing as a Mannlicher-Carcano cartridge. A study there for the interested....
http://personal.stevens.edu/~gliberat/carcano/ammo/history.html
 
 

Offline Walt Cakebread

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Re: Who Was The Man Who Fired A Shot In Mrs. Lovell Penn?s Pasture?
« Reply #19 on: September 29, 2018, 09:24:28 PM »
No.

But, I guess some people here make it all too easy to make it look that way.

And, I'm not afraid to call out BS when I see it.

Carry on.

The problem is....   You don't aren't smart enough to know BS from sterling.....  And you're not smart enough to know that you're lacking.   

Offline Joe Elliott

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Re: Who Was The Man Who Fired A Shot In Mrs. Lovell Penn?s Pasture?
« Reply #20 on: September 30, 2018, 03:28:12 AM »
Hidell's rifle. Oswald's 'prints' were not found on it.
Also, there is no such thing as a Mannlicher-Carcano cartridge. A study there for the interested....
http://personal.stevens.edu/~gliberat/carcano/ammo/history.html
?Hidell?s rifle?. And Oswald had a fake ID on him listing his name as ?Hidell?.

And Oswald?s palmprints were found on the rifle by the Dallas Police.

The FBI failed to find any prints on the rifle, but this is irrelevant. If you had an expert lift the prints off an object, pass the object on to a second expert to life the prints, and so on, until ten experts have attempted to lift prints, you are not going to find that all ten experts successfully lifted the prints. Typically, the prints can only be lifted once, maybe twice. And firearms, which is ?oily metal? can be difficult to successfully lift prints even the first time. So, it?s natural that the first lifting of prints made it impossible for someone else to successfully lift prints.

If this is in error, name a single fingerprint expert, anywhere in the world, who disputes this.