The Brown Paper Bag

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Online Martin Weidmann

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Re: The Brown Paper Bag
« Reply #196 on: April 12, 2026, 02:34:29 PM »
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« Last Edit: April 12, 2026, 02:50:36 PM by Martin Weidmann »

Offline Michael Capasse

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Re: The Brown Paper Bag
« Reply #197 on: April 12, 2026, 02:49:13 PM »
Being specific is not the same as being accurate. Our minds remember some things and not others so we try to fill in the blanks as best we can which leads to inaccurate memories. There is no reason to believe Frazier had greater powers of perception than the rest of us. I'm sure in his mind he was being truthful about what he testified to but like the rest of us, he didn't remember every detail exactly. He got the part about Oswald cupping the bottom of the bag in his palm. We know that because that's where his palm print was. He didn't notice the bag extended several inches above Oswald's shoulder. We know that because the bag was found with Oswald's palm and fingerprint on it and its measured length of 38 inches would not have allowed him to tuck the top end under his armpit.

As the articles I posted pointed out, over time we develop false memories about an event. We get parts of it right and parts of it wrong. You have given us no reason to believe Frazier was any more reliable than any other witnesses. You choose to believe him because you want to believe Oswald was innocent and accepting Frazier's testimony as 100% accurate provides you with the excuse to dismiss a very damning piece of evidence of his guilt. Using unreliable eyewitness testimony to trump very reliable forensic evidence is a very dubious practice.

Too bad it just doesn't apply to Frazier in this case.
 Thumb1: He knew exactly what he saw. You misrepresent that to match your preset conclusions.
« Last Edit: April 12, 2026, 02:51:19 PM by Michael Capasse »

Online John Corbett

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Re: The Brown Paper Bag
« Reply #198 on: April 12, 2026, 03:03:46 PM »
You will never understand or accept that you can not put the bag allegedly found on the 6th floor in Oswald's hand on Friday morning.

To put the bag in Oswald's hands you need two things. Common sense and the ability to compute the answer to 2 +2. I have that cability.

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You just assume it is and call it "very reliable forensic evidence".
If you want to talk about a very dubious practice, this is it!


Oh, so now you find forensic evidence to be dubious. You put absolute faith in the uncorroborated memories of a single witness and you find forensic evidence to be unreliable. Now wonder you can't figure out a double murder case that was so open and shut that the DPD had solved in the first 12 hours.

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There is no reason to believe Frazier had greater powers of perception than the rest of us. I'm sure in his mind he was being truthful about what he testified to but like the rest of us, he didn't remember every detail exactly.

How do you know for a fact that he didn't remember every detail exactly? Or is it just wishful thinking?


Because his memory conflicts with the forensic evidence. Your inability to weigh evidence causes you to put complete faith in eyewitness recollections and reject forensic evidence which has long been accepted by the courts as admissable.

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As the articles I posted pointed out, over time we develop false memories about an event.

Frazier told FBI agent Odum on 12/02/63 that he "observed that Oswald had his package under his right arm, one end of the package being under his armpit and the other end apparently held with his right fingers". You are of course aware of this, right?

Here is Frazier's initial affidavit:
https://jfk-online.com/frazier.html

If you have another source, by all means post it.

If Frazier did make his statement about how Oswald carried the bag earlier, that would give it a bit more weight than his WC testimony but that still doesn't raise it to the level of established fact. Even eyewitness accounts taken in the immediate aftermath of an event can be less than accurate and they just get even more inaccurate over the course of time.


Online John Corbett

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Re: The Brown Paper Bag
« Reply #199 on: April 12, 2026, 03:06:33 PM »
Too bad it just doesn't apply to Frazier in this case.
 Thumb1: He knew exactly what he saw. You misrepresent that to match your preset conclusions.

Why would these findings about eyewitnesses in general not apply to Frazier. What reason do you have to believe Frazier is some kind of super witness who remembers every detail with absolute accuracy?
« Last Edit: April 12, 2026, 03:13:28 PM by John Corbett »

Offline Michael Capasse

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Re: The Brown Paper Bag
« Reply #200 on: April 12, 2026, 03:13:17 PM »
Why wouldn't these findings about eyewitnesses in general apply to Frazier. What reason do you have to believe Frazier is some kind of super witness who remembers every detail with absolute accuracy?

Here's Frazier on 11/22 and for the next 60+ years:
"I noticed that Lee had the package in his right hand under his arm, and the package was straight up and down, and he had his arm down, and you could not see much of the package."   https://jfk-online.com/frazier.html

He doesn't need to be a "super witness" to know exactly what he saw and it is not every detail.
It is very specific and consistent. You're the one that continues to deny that.
« Last Edit: April 12, 2026, 03:16:55 PM by Michael Capasse »

Online Martin Weidmann

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Re: The Brown Paper Bag
« Reply #201 on: April 12, 2026, 03:25:57 PM »
To put the bag in Oswald's hands you need two things. Common sense and the ability to compute the answer to 2 +2. I have that cability.

Oh, so now you find forensic evidence to be dubious. You put absolute faith in the uncorroborated memories of a single witness and you find forensic evidence to be unreliable. Now wonder you can't figure out a double murder case that was so open and shut that the DPD had solved in the first 12 hours.

Because his memory conflicts with the forensic evidence. Your inability to weigh evidence causes you to put complete faith in eyewitness recollections and reject forensic evidence which has long been accepted by the courts as admissable.

Here is Frazier's initial affidavit:
https://jfk-online.com/frazier.html

If you have another source, by all means post it.

If Frazier did make his statement about how Oswald carried the bag earlier, that would give it a bit more weight than his WC testimony but that still doesn't raise it to the level of established fact. Even eyewitness accounts taken in the immediate aftermath of an event can be less than accurate and they just get even more inaccurate over the course of time.

To put the bag in Oswald's hands you need two things. Common sense and the ability to compute the answer to 2 +2. I have that cability.

Hilarious! Common sense is just another word for assumption and wishful thinking, and that's exactly all you will ever have. Your opinions are not fact, evidence or proof!

Oh, so now you find forensic evidence to be dubious.

What you assume isn't forensic evidence! You claiming that it is, is what is dubious.

You put absolute faith in the uncorroborated memories of a single witness and you find forensic evidence to be unreliable.

When you begin to misrepresent what I actually said, you've already lost the argument. The fact that you clearly have an inability to understand what is written doesn't alter that fact.

Because his memory conflicts with the forensic evidence.

Wrong! His memory about how Oswald carried the bag is clearly correct but conflicts with your opinion which you incorrectly call "forensic evidence"

Here is Frazier's initial affidavit:
https://jfk-online.com/frazier.html

If you have another source, by all means post it.


Why would I need to post another source? In his affidavit, on 11/22/63 Frazier says;
 
"I noticed that Lee had the package in his right hand under his arm, and the package was straight up and down, and he had his arm down, and you could not see much of the package."

He repeated it when he talked to FBI agent Odum on 12/02/63 and he is still saying it to this day.

If Frazier did make his statement about how Oswald carried the bag earlier, that would give it a bit more weight than his WC testimony but that still doesn't raise it to the level of established fact.

Just how much earlier than on the same day of the events should Frazier have made his statement?

In your opinion nothing will ever raise to the level of an established fact, because you simply don't want it to be.

Even eyewitness accounts taken in the immediate aftermath of an event can be less than accurate and they just get even more inaccurate over the course of time.

Does this also apply to Earlene Roberts' statements about Oswald leaving the rooming house wearing a jacket? Or is it only limited to witnesses who say things you don't like?
« Last Edit: April 12, 2026, 06:02:55 PM by Martin Weidmann »

Online John Corbett

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Re: The Brown Paper Bag
« Reply #202 on: April 12, 2026, 03:27:56 PM »
Here's Frazier on 11/22 and for the next 60+ years:
"I noticed that Lee had the package in his right hand under his arm, and the package was straight up and down, and he had his arm down, and you could not see much of the package."   https://jfk-online.com/frazier.html

He doesn't need to be a "super witness" to know exactly what he saw and it is not every detail.
It is very specific and consistent. You're the one that continues to deny that.

You are reading more into his statement that is there. Carrying the package under his arm does not preclude the top end sticking up above his shoulder. Frazier was non-specific about what parts of the package you could or couldn't see.