So are you saying that it is a myth that McDonald actually said this (3 H 300):
Mr. MCDONALD. His right hand was on the pistol.
Mr. BALL. And which of your hands?
Mr. MCDONALD. My left hand, at this point.
Mr. BALL. And had he withdrawn the pistol-
Mr. MCDONALD. He was drawing it as I put my hand.
Mr. BALL. From his waist?
Mr. MCDONALD. Yes, sir.
Do you not see any difference between "he was drawing it" and "pulled a gun"? By McDonald's account, was the gun still in the waistband when he grabbed Oswald's hand? If so, then by McDonald's account, Oswald did not pull a gun.
....
Mr. Mr. MCDONALD. Yes, sir. When this hand-we went down into the seats.
Mr. BALL. When your left hand went into the seats, what happened?
Mr. MCDONALD. It felt like something had grazed across my hand. I felt
movement there. And that was the only movement I felt. And I heard a snap.
I didn?t know what it was at the time.
So as far as you're concerned, "I heard a snap" is the same as "Oswald tried to fire the gun"? How many different hands were on this gun when this "snap" supposedly was heard?
? Because that is evidence on which one could easily conclude that Oswald pulled his gun on the arresting officer and pulled the trigger with the gun pointing at the officer.
Was it pointed at the officer? Not according to Officer Walker:
"The gun finally got out of his belt, and it was about waist high and pointed out at about a 45 degree angle. I turned around and I was holding Oswald trying to get his arm up behind him in a hammerlock, and I heard it click. I turned around and the gun was still pointing at approximately a 45 angle. Be pointed slightly toward the screen, what I call.
And not according to Officer Hutson either:
Mr. BELIN. Do you know which way the pistol was pointing when you heard the snap?
Mr. HUTSON. Was pointing toward the back of the seat.
Mr. BELIN. It was pointing toward the back of the seat?
Mr. HUTSON. Yes; toward the screen in the front of the theatre, in that direction.
You may not believe it, but that does not make that evidence mythical. It exists.
Yes, it exists. It just doesn't support the conclusions that you have made.