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Author Topic: Parnell Vs Armstrong Bill Brown et al, Can applied tech resolve Who Shot Tippit?  (Read 7345 times)

Offline Tom Scully

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Bill Brown and a number of other "students of the case" believe Lee Harvey Oswald shot Officer JD Tippit while wearing a jacket he surely must have perspired in on that, turning mild and sunny late November, early afternoon in Dallas before leaving the shooting scene, soon allegedly ditching the jacket, found under a car in a nearby lot, presumably to alter his appearance.

26 years after DNA testing played a big role in the OJ Simpson murder trial, no attempt has been made to collect DNA evidence from the controversial jacket. Oswald's assumed hurried walk to the scene of the shooting, the stress of "getting the drop" on an armed DPD officer, firing repeatedly at him, watching him go down, and making his escape certainly resulted in a reasonable possibility, if the jacket in the U.S. Archive is relevant evidence, that it would be worthwhile to attempt to recover DNA evidence from it.

The fact that this has not happened might be related to the mindset of the Army Museum regarding organic material allegedly from the corpse of John Wilkes Booth which it refuses to test for the purpose of settling the question of whether it was Booth who was shot to death in a burning barn in Maryland in mid-April, 1865. The museum's expressed concern is avoidance of damaging the artifacts it claims were Booth's vertebrae.

Historical vertebrae, a sideshow mummy and the lingering ...
https://www.pbs.org/wnet/need-to-know/culture/historical-vertebrae-a-sideshow-mummy-and-the-lingering-mystery-of-john-wilkes-booth/8560/
Since Abraham Lincoln's assassination 146 years ago, questions have persisted about John Wilkes Booth's fate. Historians scoff, but Booth's descendants want to know more.

The National Museum of Health and Medicine and the Lincoln ...
https://lincolnconspirators.com/2014/06/01/the-national-museum-of-health-and-medicine-and-the-lincoln-assassination/
The vertebrae and spinal cord of John Wilkes Booth are still part of the collection of the National Museum of Health and Medicine though they are not currently on display at the Silver Spring facility. Here is a picture of the specimens taken a few years ago by the AP:

Mr. Parnell worked O.T. on this question :
https://wtracyparnell.blogspot.com/2017/01/the-two-marguerites-part-1.html

Another approach... I've found this emerging technology to be the most reliable of several I have used since last fall.:

Choose the middle, verification option of the demo :
https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/services/cognitive-services/face/#demo
(Photo on left appears in Mr. Parnell's blog post. I cropped it out of photo with her spouse Ed Ekdahl and Buick)




Anna Anderson claimed she was Anastasia, daughter of Tsar Nicholas.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anna_Anderson
She nearly convinces this facial recognition software. Anastasia Romanov is on the left in both comparisons.




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Offline John Mytton

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26 years after DNA testing played a big role in the OJ Simpson murder trial, no attempt has been made to collect DNA evidence from the controversial jacket. Oswald's assumed hurried walk to the scene of the shooting, the stress of "getting the drop" on an armed DPD officer, firing repeatedly at him, watching him go down, and making his escape certainly resulted in a reasonable possibility, if the jacket in the U.S. Archive is relevant evidence, that it would be worthwhile to attempt to recover DNA evidence from it.


When Oswald shot Tippit in the head there may have been blood spatter deposited on Oswald's pants?
Edit: But after a quick Google search it's probably too late to make a match.

JohnM

Online Martin Weidmann

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When Oswald shot Tippit in the head there may have been blood spatter deposited on Oswald's pants?
Edit: But after a quick Google search it's probably too late to make a match.

JohnM

If they can extract dna from a mummy they can make a match...... if they want to. But I doubt if they want to.

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Offline Colin Crow

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The sample would need appropriate conditions to preserve the DNA from degradation. Low water environment and cool would be preferable.

Offline Bill Brown

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Bill Brown and a number of other "students of the case" believe Lee Harvey Oswald shot Officer JD Tippit while wearing a jacket he surely must have perspired in on that, turning mild and sunny late November, early afternoon in Dallas before leaving the shooting scene, soon allegedly ditching the jacket, found under a car in a nearby lot, presumably to alter his appearance.

26 years after DNA testing played a big role in the OJ Simpson murder trial, no attempt has been made to collect DNA evidence from the controversial jacket. Oswald's assumed hurried walk to the scene of the shooting, the stress of "getting the drop" on an armed DPD officer, firing repeatedly at him, watching him go down, and making his escape certainly resulted in a reasonable possibility, if the jacket in the U.S. Archive is relevant evidence, that it would be worthwhile to attempt to recover DNA evidence from it.

I don't believe sweat contains DNA.

Skin cells which indeed contain DNA can (but not always, by any means) be released into the sweat but the sweat itself does not contain DNA.

I could be wrong, but this is my understanding of it all, anyway.

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Offline Tom Scully

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I don't believe sweat contains DNA.

Skin cells which indeed contain DNA can (but not always, by any means) be released into the sweat but the sweat itself does not contain DNA.

I could be wrong, but this is my understanding of it all, anyway.

Dated from 2012, only a few cells are required to perform a test, denting "conservation of intact but possibly exculpatory, or not, jacket, for posterity", archivist argument. Assume collection technique refined, since.:
https://nij.ojp.gov/topics/articles/dna-evidence-basics-identifying-gathering-and-transporting
« Last Edit: April 30, 2021, 10:30:43 PM by Tom Scully »

Offline Bill Brown

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Dated from 2012, only a few cells are required to perform a test, denting "conservation of intact but possibly exculpatory, or not, jacket, for posterity", archivist argument. Assume collection technique refined, since.:

But there is no guarantee that any skin cells would be transferred via the sweat that does transfer from someone's arm to the inside of a jacket sleeve, especially if that person was wearing a long sleeve brown shirt.
« Last Edit: April 30, 2021, 11:04:25 PM by Bill Brown »

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Offline Tom Scully

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But there is no guarantee that any skin cells would be transferred via the sweat that does transfer from someone's arm to the inside of a jacket sleeve, especially if that person was wearing a long sleeve brown shirt.
https://maryferrell.org/showDoc.html?docId=62264#relPageId=169




Constant contact with sweat glands in neck, possible dandruff particles "glued" by dried sweat to jacket collar surface.
Skin oil from fingers possibly embedded in areas in vicinity of bottom of zipper track when zipping....
2018 article :
https://theconversation.com/weve-discovered-a-way-to-recover-dna-from-fingerprints-without-destroying-them-98399

https://catalog.archives.gov/id/305140


« Last Edit: May 01, 2021, 12:36:14 AM by Tom Scully »