I'm just attempting to apply common sense to what is being shown. Why would a witness hand their wallet to the police who would flip through it like that? What exactly would he be looking for? Why wouldn't the officer just ask the witness to show him an ID whatever he is looking for in the wallet instead of trying to find it himself? At most, the police would want a name/address of a witness. Why not just ask them to identify themselves instead of taking their wallet and looking through it? If, however, it is Tippit's citation book, the officer would flip through it looking for any indication of who Tippit last encountered. A license plate number or name. That makes some sense.
What can be ruled out is that the police found a discarded wallet at the scene of the murder and never even bothered to radio the identity of a potential suspect. That makes absolutely no sense. But then it gets even worse. We are supposed to entertain the possibility that someone planted a wallet to link Oswald to the Tippit murder but then didn't anticipate that Oswald would have his real wallet upon arrest. Oops. And instead of doing the obvious thing in suppressing the wallet found on Oswald's person, they suppress the much more highly incriminatory wallet that they have taken the time and risk to plant at the crime scene. HA HA HA. Even the most dense and biased CT should be able to see the lunacy of that scenario.
I'm not saying that it is Tippit's citation book. Maybe the police did, for some inexplicable reason, flip through a witness wallet. We don't have enough information to reach a conclusion. The citation book just makes more sense of what is depicted until that possibility is eliminated. For example, by accounting for the citation book in some other manner. It seems odd that it is never mentioned. Even without the "wallet" story, it would make sense to look at Tippit's citation book to see what, if anything, he wrote for his last encounter that day.
I'm just attempting to apply common sense to what is being shown.No you don't, because common sense doesn't dismiss what witnesses said they saw.
Why would a witness hand their wallet to the police who would flip through it like that? Exactly my point. Why would a witness even give his wallet to a police officer after the suspect has already left the scene? That alone destroys Mytton's little theory.
If, however, it is Tippit's citation book, the officer would flip through it looking for any indication of who Tippit last encountered. A license plate number or name. That makes some sense. What doesn't make sense is why the uniformed police officer would give Tippit's citation book to a civilian, as is shown in the video footage?
What can be ruled out is that the police found a discarded wallet at the scene of the murder and never even bothered to radio the identity of a potential suspect. That makes absolutely no sense. It only makes no sense to you because you don't like it. So much for common sense! Croy confirmed in writing that he found a wallet, Barrett said that Westbrook looked through a wallet and asked him about Hidell and Oswald, and the TV crew said it was a wallet which they believed belonged to Tippit, which we now know isn't correct. So, the only reason why you want to rule out that it was a wallet is because in your strawman opinion the police should have broadcast the name of a suspect at a time when they didn't even know that the person the wallet belonged to was in fact a suspect.
We are supposed to entertain the possibility that someone planted a wallet to link Oswald to the Tippit murder but then didn't anticipate that Oswald would have his real wallet upon arrest. Oops.What makes you think that who ever planted the wallet (if that's what happened) did not anticipate that Oswald had a wallet on him? Perhaps what they did not anticipate on was that Bentley made it public knowledge that he took a wallet from Oswald before it could be disappeared? Plans sometimes do go wrong. The LNs are constantly telling us that Oswald expected to die at the TSBD, yet nothing happened and he walked out of the building without anybody paying attention to him!
I still find it amazing that, according to Bill Brown and Dale Myers, Bentley gave the wallet he had taken from Oswald to Lt Baker, who took it to Westbrook's office, and yet, we have Gus Rose, who was the first officer to talk to Oswald at the police station, testify that he was given a wallet by an unidentified person who said it was the suspect's wallet. Please make sense of that. How can a wallet be at two different places at the same time?
And instead of doing the obvious thing in suppressing the wallet found on Oswald's person, they suppress the much more highly incriminatory wallet that they have taken the time and risk to plant at the crime scene. HA HA HA. How do you suppress a wallet, when that wallet having been taken from Oswald by Bentley is already public knowledge? And what makes you think they suppressed the more incriminatory wallet, when they could simply switch one by the other and let some unidentified officer give it to Gus Rose? Ever considered that possibillity?... I doubt it, because police officers would never do such a thing, right?
I'm not saying that it is Tippit's citation book. Maybe the police did, for some inexplicable reason, flip through a witness wallet. We don't have enough information to reach a conclusion. But we do have enough information. There's TV footage showing the wallet being looked through by Westbrook, there is a TV crew that confirmed it was indeed a wallet, there's Croy who confirmed in writing that he found the wallet and there's Barrett who tells us that Westbrook asked him about Oswald and Hidell while looking through the wallet. The only thing we don't have is a time machine!