Podcast On Tippit

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Sean Kneringer

Author Topic: Podcast On Tippit  (Read 5301 times)

Online John Mytton

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Re: Podcast On Tippit
« Reply #72 on: Today at 11:21:36 AM »
1. Westbrook testified that the jacket that he found was the same one in evidence. And that's that!

Because cop said so..... HAHAHAHAHAHA... What else did you expect him to say?

A chain of custody is required to avoid exactly this kind of pathetic testimony. In Henry Wade's Dallas a large number of innocent people were found guilty on flawed and manipulated evidence.
A great number of this convictions were later nullified as being unsafe.

But by all means, let's just take the Personnel officer's word for it.   :D

2. The jacket was initialled by Stombaug [sic], meaning he looked at the jacket and according to a FBI report, the jacket in evidence had Oswald's shirt fibers in one of the sleaves. Slam Dunk!

Of course the jacket was marked by Stombaugh. He did so in Washington after the white jacket had already morphed into the grey one that actually belonged to Oswald. If there were fibers in that jacket there is nothing remarkable about that.

3. Marina positively identified the jacket in evidence. Home run!

Of course she did, as the grey jacket belonged to Oswald. The question is when exactly was that jacket placed in evidence? And with that we're back at square one.... COP SAID SO  :D :D :D :D

Quote
Because cop said so.....

This is getting real boring.

Let's make a running list of what you claim, if you tried this BS in court they'd laugh in your face.

The shells at the Tippit crime scene were planted.
Police substituted Oswald's revolver.
Police somehow swapped Oswald's jacket.
The rifle was planted.
The rifle shells were planted.
Lt. Day lied about the palmprint
Lt. Day lied about the Walker bullet.
The FBI lied about the microfilm.
Everyone in the Interrogations lied.
The backyard photos were either faked or a set-up.
The Police planted the bus transfer.
The Police planted revolver bullets on Oswald.
The arresting Police lied.

I could go on but I've made my point, the unimaginable size of your conspiracy as any sane person can see is totally at odds with reality.

JohnM

Online Martin Weidmann

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Re: Podcast On Tippit
« Reply #73 on: Today at 11:26:22 AM »
This is getting real boring.

Let's make a running list of what you claim, if you tried this BS in court they'd laugh in your face.

The shells at the Tippit crime scene were planted.
Police substituted Oswald's revolver.
Police somehow swapped Oswald's jacket.
The rifle was planted.
The rifle shells were planted.
Lt. Day lied about the palmprint
Lt. Day lied about the Walker bullet.
The FBI lied about the microfilm.
Everyone in the Interrogations lied.
The backyard photos were either faked or a set-up.
The Police planted the bus transfer.
The Police planted revolver bullets on Oswald.
The arresting Police lied.

I could go on but I've made my point, the unimaginable size of your conspiracy as any sane person can see is totally at odds with reality.

JohnM

The same old LN crap over and over again. Full of lies and misrepresentations of course....

Most of those claims I have never made. Others are questions about for example chain of custody matter which LNs can never answer.

Online John Mytton

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Re: Podcast On Tippit
« Reply #74 on: Today at 11:29:20 AM »
The clown quotes a rule of evidence for a civil trial, to make a point about a criminal case. No need to say anything more.

The doctrine of precedents I quoted came from criminal cases. You are so stupid!

https://scocal.stanford.edu/opinion/people-v-riser-24135

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/court/ca-court-of-appeal/1832570.html

JohnM

Online Martin Weidmann

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Re: Podcast On Tippit
« Reply #75 on: Today at 12:26:33 PM »
The doctrine of precedents I quoted came from criminal cases. You are so stupid!

https://scocal.stanford.edu/opinion/people-v-riser-24135

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/court/ca-court-of-appeal/1832570.html

JohnM

Conspiracy theorists like to claim that much of the evidence for the Oswald trial would have been inadmissible because the officers lost exclusive custody. As this brief from the O. J. Simpson Civil Trial makes clear, the law is not nearly so rigid.

As this brief from the O. J. Simpson Civil Trial makes clear, the law is not nearly so rigid.

Our resident self-appointed "law-professor" strikes again....

What anybody who understands even the most basic things about the law knows is that in law very little is ever cut and dry. That's why there is jurisprudence. There is no point in finding some quote on the internet and present it as if it has any relationship with another case. Even two cases who look identical could nevertheless have different outcomes,

The National Institute of Justice said this about a chain of custody;

The reason for establishing a chain of custody is to prevent substitution of, tampering with, mistaking the identity of, damaging, altering, contaminating, misplacing or falsifying the evidence.
This principle and procedure creates legal integrity of the evidence. The chain of custody verifies both the legal integrity and the authenticity of all evidence. Without proof of an intact chain of custody, the evidence may be excluded from trial or afforded less weight by the trier of fact. 


Yet, our resident self-appointed legal eagle basically says that COP SAID SO would be enough to ignore or by pass the chain of custody. Hilarious!

« Last Edit: Today at 12:48:31 PM by Martin Weidmann »