I didn't say that the jacket was zipped up only halfway.
I believe eyewitnesses to a crime make mistakes almost always, when it comes to clothing descriptions. This is obvious. It happens.
Set aside the description of color for a minute. I would like to know what some conspiracy advocates believe happened to the jacket that Oswald was zipping up as he went out the front door of the rooming house. He left the house wearing a jacket and was seen at the shoe store entrance with no jacket. Even if the jacket was rainbow-colored, what happened to it? Why did Oswald get rid of it?
Thanks Alan. I appreciate that. buddy.
Alan, Happy Thanksgiving to you and your loved ones.
Set aside the description of color for a minute. And why would you want to set aside such a crucial part of the description?
I would like to know what some conspiracy advocates believe happened to the jacket that Oswald was zipping up as he went out the front door of the rooming house. He left the house wearing a jacket and was seen at the shoe store entrance with no jacket. Even if the jacket was rainbow-colored, what happened to it? Why did Oswald get rid of it?The only witness you have for Oswald leaving the rooming house wearing a jacket is half blind Earlene "I was concentrating on the television" Roberts and she - as she was trying to get the tv to work - clearly had her back turned to Oswald as he walked through the room towards the door. She only saw him for a (couple of) second(s).
On the other hand, there is evidence from Buell Wesley Frazier that Oswald wore a grey jacket to Irving on Thursday night and returned to the TSBD with the blue/grey jacket that was later found there.
As Marina told us Oswald only had two jackets, one of which was grey, both Roberts and Frazier can't be right. Unless you resolve first that Oswald's grey jacket was in fact at the rooming house for him to put on, you can not argue that he left wearing it.
One more thing about the jacket. When it was found it was described as being white by the officer who called it in. That jacket then somehow disappeared from view for at least 90 minutes. We have no information, no report or chain of custody, to show who brought that particular jacket to the police station. What we do know is that, around the time the officers came back from the first search of Ruth Paine's house, a grey jacket suddenly appeared in Captain Westbrook's possession with initials on it from officers who had not been involved in the discovery of the jacket at the parking lot. Now, how in the world can that be?