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from my friend gil jesus

 

 

 

LEE HARVEY OSWALD AND THE ITALIAN RIFLE

 -- convincing evidence that Oswald was framed and did not shoot President Kennedy==and a compilation of the official version

 

As of Jan. 2010, 'WIKI Answers' has been pervaded by official version propaganda. One recent example was a question worded: What rifle did Lee Harvey Oswald Use to Kill President Kennedy? The question was couched as an 'given' fact.  The answer stated the usual--the Italian rifle. It was two sentences long. At present, the answer has been improved to contain all the information in this article, as of Feb. 1, 2010.

  

   Answer to the Wiki question: What rifle did Lee Harvey Oswald Use to Kill President Kennedy?

 

   Controversy in the case resides in the fact that Oswald, and the rifle associated with the murder of JFK, cannot be decisively linked to each other. Lee Harvey Oswald indeed was accused of using a 6.5 x 52 mm Italian Carcano M91/38 bolt-action rifle, serial number C2766. And it is true that the rifle was sold as military surplus through Klein's Sporting Goods Company. However, records indicate that Oswald was at work at Jaggars-Chiles-Stovall at the time he supposedly mailed a money order and order form to obtain the rifle. Oswald kept a meticulous work sheet, accounting for what he was doing every fifteen mnutes or so. The order for the rifle was sent from a post office over 6 miles distant. Oswald's lunch period was too short to have made the trip there and back, as he had no car and bus service to there did not exist. Further, Oswald never left his workplace with others. The order was sent from Dallas to Chicago, IL but arrived, somehow, the very next day, even though it was not sent air mail. Atop that, the order was filled that same day and the rifle was shipped the same day --we are talking about some 24 hours of elapsed time between Dallas and the rifle getting shipped out-- a physical impossibility at the time. 
The serial number of the money order form used shows it was issued late in 1963, not in 1962. The order form was also sloppily written, when Oswald, in fact, due to problems with dyslexia, always carefully printed out such forms. A second order form, for a revolver 'discovered' later, is carefully printed, as if forgers finally learned how to create a better forgery. Belief that the order form was manufactured to frame Oswald is also based on the fact that no box of cartridges was ever found in Oswald's possessions, and that only four bullets could be found. It implies that Oswald never fired the rifle before Nov. 22nd because he had no ammunition. Complicating the matter is the fact that several Dallas police officers originally found a MAUSER, not an Italian rifle, on the 6th floor. See the Youtube videos below: as so many others, the man who made this video "committed suicide." He was honored as Officer of the Year before he got in trouble for testifying, after which he found himself treated badly, and finally, out of a job with the Dallas police.

 

Researcher Gil Jesus has presented a well-regarded list of ten problems with the “killer rifle” as belonging to Oswald, including this argument:

 

Reason #1: MORE THAN ONE 6.5 MANNLICHER-CARCANO RIFLE EXISTED WITH THE
SERIAL NUMBER C2766

The 40" rifle currently in evidence is not the only 6.5 Mannlicher-
Carcano with the serial number of C2766. On page 250 of his book,
Kennedy and Lincoln, the late Dr. John K. Lattimer said the following:

"In l974 and l975, my sons and I had conducted a series of experiments
using a 6.5 mm Mannlicher-Carcano carbine,
model 91-38, serial number C2766, equipped with an Ordinance Optics
Company four power telescope exactly like Oswald's."

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

http://i46.tinypic.com/15p0k7k.jpg

 

 

But Lattimer's wasn't the only 6.5 Mannlicher Carcano with serial
number C2766.

Reason #2. KLEIN'S SPORTING GOODS BOUGHT MORE THAN ONE 6.5 ITALIAN
RIFLE WITH THE SERIAL NUMBER C2766

In volume 11, page 205 of the Warren Commission Hearings, Louis
Feldsott, president of Crescent Firearms, in a sworn affidavit to the
Commission, claimed that he was contacted by the FBI on the evening of
November 22, 1963. They requested that he check his files to see if he
had any records concerning the sale of an Italian-made 6.5 mm. rifle
with the serial number C2766. When he checked, he found that he had
records indicating the rifle was sold to Klein's Sporting Goods on
June 18, 1962. This information of the 6.5 rifle with the serial
number C2766, he said, was conveyed to the FBI on the evening of
November 22, 1963 and all records of the purchase, sale and
transportation of the weapon were given to the FBI.

http://www.history-matters.com/archive/jfk/wc/wcvols/wh11/html/WC_Vol11_0108a.htm

In their tracing of the shipping records of the C 2766 rifle, however,
the FBI makes no mention of the June 1962 sale. They cite, instead,
the February, 1963 sale of 100 rifles from the same dealer, Crescent
Firearms, to Klein's. In that shipment is a list of the rifles' serial
numbers. Included in the list is a 6.5 rifle serial number C 2766.

http://www.history-matters.com/archive/jfk/wc/wcvols/wh21/html/WH_Vol21_0361b.htm

But thanks to the affidavit of Louis Feldsott, we have evidence that
Klein's bought two C 2766 rifles from Crescent Firearms: one in June
1962 and the other in February 1963.

I'll get back to the June 1962 rifle later. Right now I'd like to
concentrate on the February, 1963 rifle.



Reason #3. THE FEBRUARY 1963 RIFLE SHIPMENT WAS FOR THE 36" RIFLE, NOT
THE 40" RIFLE.

The FBI traced the sale of the 40" C2766 rifle backward and claimed
that it was a part of a shipment of 100 rifles weighing 750 lbs. that
was sent to Klein's from Crescent Firearms in February, 1963.

But one researcher found evidence that the shipment was for 36" rifles
ONLY.

In researching for her excellent article on the Oswald rifle, JFK
assassination researcher Martha Moyer checked on wooden shipping
containers used in transporting weapons, and found that all the
containers weighed between 16 and 20 pounds. The 36-inch weapon
allegedly ordered by "Hidell" was advertised as weighing 5 1/2 pounds.
The total weight of 100 such weapons would be 550 pounds. Added to the
weight range of ten wooden shipping containers the result would be a
total of between 710 and 750 pounds.

The delivery receipt from Lifschultz Fast Freight listed the freight
as 10 crates/cartons of guns/rifles and listed the weight at 750 lbs.

http://www.history-matters.com/archive/jfk/wc/wcvols/wh21/html/WH_Vol21_0359a.htm

Had the shipment been of the 40" rifles, at 7 lbs. each, the total
weight including 160-200 lbs. for the crates would have been in the
860-900 lb. range.

Instead, the 750 lbs. consisted of 10 crates at 20 lbs each ( 200 )
and 100 rifles at 5.5 lbs. each ( 550 ) In other words, the shipment
received by Klein's in February, 1963 was indeed a shipment of 36-inch
weapons.

http://www.jfklancer.com/pdf/moyer.pdf

Reason #4. THE RIFLE "HIDELL" ORDERED WAS THE 36" RIFLE
Waldman Exhibit 8 is a copy of the order blank used by "A.Hidell " to
order the rifle from Klein's. On that order form, taken from the
February, 1963 edition of American Rifleman, one can see that Oswald
ordered catalog # C20-T750,

http://www.history-matters.com/archive/jfk/wc/wcvols/wh21/html/WH_Vol21_0364b.htm

which is the 36" rifle as advertised.

 

 

 

http://i45.tinypic.com/1z6gjnb.jpg

 

One can also see that the 40" rifle had a different catalog number,
C20-750. [above]

 

Reason #5. THE SHIPPING MANIFEST INDICATED THAT THE RIFLE THAT WAS
SHIPPED TO "HIDELL" WAS THE 36" RIFLE

 

 

 



Waldman Exhibit 7 is the copy of the shipping manifest that
accompanies the rifle when shipped. It clearly states that the catalog
number of the shipped item is C20-T750 and not C20-750.

http://www.history-matters.com/archive/jfk/wc/wcvols/wh21/html/WH_Vol21_0364a.htm

The ONLY difference in the catalog numbers is the difference between
the 36" rifle and the 40" rifle.

 

http://i45.tinypic.com/1z6gjnb.jpg

 

How important was the catalog number to the folks doing the shipping ?
William Waldman, VP of Klein's Sporting Goods, told the WC that the
catalog numbers for rifles ordered with scopes were different than for
the same rifle without a scope and that the different number described
"the rifle, scope and mount". ( 7 H 362-363 )


Reason #6. THE SHIPPING MANIFEST INDICATED THAT THE COST FOR SHIPPING
WAS FOR THE 36" RIFLE.

The shipping cost is noted in two places, where it says "PP=1.50" for
the cost of Parcel Post, and again in the handwritten column where it
says 150. This is exactly the amount sent by "Hidell" to ship the 36 "
rifle.

http://www.history-matters.com/archive/jfk/wc/wcvols/wh21/html/WH_Vol21_0364a.htm


Reason #7. KLEIN'S DIDN'T RUN OUT OF THE 36" RIFLE UNTIL NOVEMBER,
1963

Klein's 36-inch Italian "carbine" was advertised in Field and Stream
from January, 1962 through November, 1963.

http://www.jfklancer.com/pdf/moyer.pdf

Which means, folks, that Klein's hadn't run out of them at the time of
the "Hidell" order.


Reason # 8. KLEIN'S DIDN'T START SELLING THE 40" RIFLE UNTIL APRIL,
1963

No 40" Italian rifle was advertised by Klein's in The American
Rifleman magazine from October 1962 through February 1963. According
to assassination researcher/author and former detective Ian Griggs,
the 40" "carbine" began to be advertised in The American Rifleman in
April, 1963. Field and Stream did not begin advertising the 40-inch
Italian weapon until September, 1963. It was from the November issue
that Dallas Postal Inspector Harry Holmes submitted his exhibit # 2 as
a "duplicate" to the ad "Hidell" ordered from . ( 20 H 174 )

Many of the Warren Commission apologists contend that Klein's shipped
a 40" rifle in lieu of the advertised rifle because they had run out
of the 36's. But the evidence so far indicates otherwise. In order to
believe that the 40" rifle was shipped to "A. Hidell", you must
believe ALL of the following:

a.) That Klein's shipped a different rifle without notifying the
customer that the rifle he ordered was out of stock.
b.) That Klein's shipped a different rifle than ordered without giving
the customer the option of a refund.
c.) That Klein's shipped a different rifle than ordered and used the
wrong catalog number.
d.) That Klein's shipped a rifle that was 40% heavier for the same
price as the rifle ordered and absorbed any additional shipping
charges and
e.) That Klein's shipped a rifle that had not yet been advertised yet
for sale and continued to advertise a rifle that they no longer had.

In my opinion, that's quite a stretch.


Reason #9. KLEIN'S NEVER MOUNTED SCOPES ON THE 40 " RIFLE

The Klein's employee who originated the idea of mounting a scope on
the rifle was Mitchell Westra. He told the House Select Committee on
Assassinations (HSCA) that Klein's only mounted the scope on the 36
inch MC. (HSCA interview of Westra 2/20/78)

The man who actually mounted the scopes for Klein's was William Sharp,
their in-house gunsmith. He confirmed what Westra testified to: the
package deal with the scope and MC rifle was used by Klein's to market
the 36 inch MC. (HSCA interview of Sharp, 2/21/78)

http://www.ctka.net/2008/von_pein.html

In addition, FBI expert Robert Frazier testified to the WC that in
order to ascertain whether or not Klein's mounted the scope on the
rifle, the FBI asked them to supply a duplicate rifle with a scope and
then had to tell Klein's where on the frame to mount the scope.

Mr. FRAZIER. We contacted the firm, Klein's Sporting Goods in Chicago,
and asked them concerning this matter to provide us with a similar
rifle mounted in the way in which they normally mount scopes of this
type on these rifles, and forward the rifle to us for examination. In
this connection, WE DID INFORM THEM THAT THE SCOPE SHOULD BE IN
APPROXIMATELY THIS POSITION ON THE FRAME OF THE WEAPON.

Mr. EISENBERG. Pardon me, Mr. Frazier. When you say "this position,"
so that the record is clear could you--

Mr. FRAZIER. Oh, yes; in the position in which it now is,
approximately three-eighths of an inch to the rear of the receiver
ring.
( 3 H 396 )

So the FBI told Klein's what "position on the frame" "the scope should
be in". Information that Klein's would not have needed had they
normally mounted "scopes of this type on these rifles".

It's clear from their ads that Klein's was offering the 40" rifle with
a scope. But the evidence indicates that the scopes were not mounted
"in-house".


Reason #10. THE SLING MOUNTS ON THE "BACKYARD" RIFLE ARE NOT THE SAME
AS THE SLING MOUNTS ON THE DEPOSITORY CARCANO

If the rifle depicted in the famous "backyard photographs" is the
rifle that "A.Hidell" ordered, then the rifle removed from the Texas
School Book Depository is not. The reason is that the rifle in CE 134
( an enlargement of CE 133-A ) shows a rifle with a front bottom sling
mount, whereas the rifle removed from the Depository is a rifle with
side sling mounts.

 

http://i42.tinypic.com/25z4g3k.jpg

 

…The subject is covered on my youtube channel in a video entitled, "One
Rifle or Two ?"

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3v_9pOsRL0o

CONCLUSIONS:

There was more than one 6.5 Mannlicher-Carcano with serial number
C2766. Besides John Lattimer's rifle, there's evidence that Klein's
bought two C2766's from Crescent Firearms, one in June 1962 and the
other in February, 1963.

I've discussed fully the February 1963 rifle. It is my conclusion that
the February 1963 shipment of rifles to Klein's was of the 36" rifle
and that one of those, serial number C2766 was shipped to "A.Hidell".

 

 

 


I base this on the evidence of the weight of the rifles and their
crates and the list of the serial numbers in the shipment. I also
conclude that "A.Hidell" ordered a 36" rifle and that he was shipped a
36" rifle. I base that conclusion on the fact that the catalog number
"Hidell" ordered was the same as the catalog number of the 36" rifle
with the scope, that the shipping manifest indicated that the catalog
number shipped was the same as the 36" rifle with the scope, and that
the cost of the shipping was the same as the 36" rifle.

I have found no evidence in the shipping documentation or in the
testimony that would lead me to conclude that "Hidell" was ever
shipped a 40" rifle or a rifle that weighed 7 lbs, 11 1/4 oz.
In fact, I have found no evidence that any other rifle was shipped to
"Hidell" than the rifle he ordered.

And now for the June 1962 C2766. What follows next is my own opinion,
it is speculative because the evidence that would prove or disprove
what I have to say no longer exists.
I believe that the 40" 6.5 Mannlicher-Carcano now in evidence is a
stage prop. I believe that this is the C2766 rifle that was sold to
Klein's in June, 1962, the rifle whose records were turned over to the
FBI on November 22, 1963, only to disappear (like much of the evidence
that didn't support the offical version disappeared ) into thin air.

I believe that the records of this weapon would have indicated who
purchased it and as such, would have revealed the identity of the
person or persons who framed Oswald. And because of this, these
records would never see the light of day.

In my opinion, the person or persons who were responsible for framing
Oswald would have had to know where he was living, his political
views, his weapons purchases and other pertinent information.


Roger Craig is attacked on the Internet by official version defenders, but look at the man and decide for yourself. [See Joe Hall’s website on Roger Craig at:

 

http://www.roger-craig.com/

 

Documents signed by the other officers present who saw the Mauser substantiate the truthfulness of Craig's testimony.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dPIo8B...
and
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1AqqNK...

The Mauser vanished. Why? Was it because the casings found in "the sniper's nest" were from an Italian rifle and did not match the Mauser's bullets? You can see another rifle outlined in the video taken when the Mauser was photographed in the video.

AN EASILY-COPIED SUMMARY OF GIL JESUS’ RESEARCH AS SHOWN ABOVE IS PRESENTED HERE TO SEND TO ANYONE INTERESTED IN HE TRUTH ABOUT THE RIFLE THAT OSWALD SUPPOSEDLY OWNED:


 

 

 

 

TEN REASONS WHY THE “KILLER RIFLE” DID NOT BELONG TO OSWALD


Reason #1: MORE THAN ONE 6.5 MANNLICHER-CARCANO RIFLE EXISTED WITH THE 
SERIAL NUMBER C2766 

The 40" rifle currently in evidence is not the only 6.5 Mannlicher- 
Carcano with the serial number of C2766. On page 250 of his book, 
Kennedy and Lincoln, the late Dr. John K. Lattimer said the following: 

"In l974 and l975, my sons and I had conducted a series of experiments 
using a 6.5 mm Mannlicher-Carcano carbine, 
model 91-38, serial number C2766, equipped with an Ordinance Optics 
Company four power telescope exactly like Oswald's." 

http://i45.tinypic.com/2hmingh.jpg

But Lattimer's wasn't the only 6.5 Mannlicher Carcano with serial 
number C2766. 

Reason #2. KLEIN'S SPORTING GOODS BOUGHT MORE THAN ONE 6.5 ITALIAN 
RIFLE WITH THE SERIAL NUMBER C2766 

In volume 11, page 205 of the Warren Commission Hearings, Louis 
Feldsott, president of Crescent Firearms, in a sworn affidavit to the 
Commission, claimed that he was contacted by the FBI on the evening of 
November 22, 1963. They requested that he check his files to see if he 
had any records concerning the sale of an Italian-made 6.5 mm. rifle 
with the serial number C2766. When he checked, he found that he had 
records indicating the rifle was sold to Klein's Sporting Goods on 
June 18, 1962. This information of the 6.5 rifle with the serial 
number C2766, he said, was conveyed to the FBI on the evening of 
November 22, 1963 and all records of the purchase, sale and 
transportation of the weapon were given to the FBI. 

http://www.history-matters.com/archiv......Vol11_0108a.htm

In their tracing of the shipping records of the C 2766 rifle, however, 
the FBI makes no mention of the June 1962 sale. They cite, instead, 
the February, 1963 sale of 100 rifles from the same dealer, Crescent 
Firearms, to Klein's. In that shipment is a list of the rifles' serial 
numbers. Included in the list is a 6.5 rifle serial number C 2766. 

http://www.history-matters.com/archiv......Vol21_0361b.htm

But thanks to the affidavit of Louis Feldsott, we have evidence that 
Klein's bought two C 2766 rifles from Crescent Firearms: one in June 
1962 and the other in February 1963. 

I'll get back to the June 1962 rifle later. Right now I'd like to 
concentrate on the February, 1963 rifle. 




 

 

 

Reason #3. THE FEBRUARY 1963 RIFLE SHIPMENT WAS FOR THE 36" RIFLE, NOT 
THE 40" RIFLE. 

The FBI traced the sale of the 40" C2766 rifle backward and claimed 
that it was a part of a shipment of 100 rifles weighing 750 lbs. that 
was sent to Klein's from Crescent Firearms in February, 1963. 

But one researcher found evidence that the shipment was for 36" rifles 
ONLY. 

In researching for her excellent article on the Oswald rifle, JFK 
assassination researcher Martha Moyer checked on wooden shipping 
containers used in transporting weapons, and found that all the 
containers weighed between 16 and 20 pounds. The 36-inch weapon 
allegedly ordered by "Hidell" was advertised as weighing 5 1/2 pounds. 
The total weight of 100 such weapons would be 550 pounds. Added to the 
weight range of ten wooden shipping containers the result would be a 
total of between 710 and 750 pounds. 

The delivery receipt from Lifschultz Fast Freight listed the freight 
as 10 crates/cartons of guns/rifles and listed the weight at 750 lbs. 

http://www.history-matters.com/archiv......Vol21_0359a.htm

Had the shipment been of the 40" rifles, at 7 lbs. each, the total 
weight including 160-200 lbs. for the crates would have been in the 
860-900 lb. range. 

Instead, the 750 lbs. consisted of 10 crates at 20 lbs each ( 200 ) 
and 100 rifles at 5.5 lbs. each ( 550 ) In other words, the shipment 
received by Klein's in February, 1963 was indeed a shipment of 36-inch 
weapons. 

http://www.jfklancer.com/pdf/moyer.pdf

Reason #4. THE RIFLE "HIDELL" ORDERED WAS THE 36" RIFLE 
Waldman Exhibit 8 is a copy of the order blank used by "A.Hidell " to 
order the rifle from Klein's. On that order form, taken from the 
February, 1963 edition of American Rifleman, one can see that Oswald 
ordered catalog # C20-T750, 

http://www.history-matters.com/archiv......Vol21_0364b.htm

which is the 36" rifle as advertised. 

http://i46.tinypic.com/15p0k7k.jpg

One can also see that the 40" rifle had a different catalog number, 
C20-750. 

http://i45.tinypic.com/1z6gjnb.jpg



 

 

 

Reason #5. THE SHIPPING MANIFEST INDICATED THAT THE RIFLE THAT WAS 
SHIPPED TO "HIDELL" WAS THE 36" RIFLE 

Waldman Exhibit 7 is the copy of the shipping manifest that 
accompanies the rifle when shipped. It clearly states that the catalog 
number of the shipped item is C20-T750 and not C20-750. 

http://www.history-matters.com/archiv......Vol21_0364a.htm

The ONLY difference in the catalog numbers is the difference between 
the 36" rifle and the 40" rifle. 

http://i45.tinypic.com/1z6gjnb.jpg

How important was the catalog number to the folks doing the shipping ? 
William Waldman, VP of Klein's Sporting Goods, told the WC that the 
catalog numbers for rifles ordered with scopes were different than for 
the same rifle without a scope and that the different number described 
"the rifle, scope and mount". ( 7 H 362-363 ) 


Reason #6. THE SHIPPING MANIFEST INDICATED THAT THE COST FOR SHIPPING 
WAS FOR THE 36" RIFLE. 

The shipping cost is noted in two places, where it says "PP=1.50" for 
the cost of Parcel Post, and again in the handwritten column where it 
says 150. This is exactly the amount sent by "Hidell" to ship the 36 " 
rifle. 

http://www.history-matters.com/archiv......Vol21_0364a.htm


Reason #7. KLEIN'S DIDN'T RUN OUT OF THE 36" RIFLE UNTIL NOVEMBER, 
1963 

Klein's 36-inch Italian "carbine" was advertised in Field and Stream 
from January, 1962 through November, 1963. 

http://www.jfklancer.com/pdf/moyer.pdf

Which means, folks, that Klein's hadn't run out of them at the time of 
the "Hidell" order. 


Reason # 8. KLEIN'S DIDN'T START SELLING THE 40" RIFLE UNTIL APRIL, 
1963 

No 40" Italian rifle was advertised by Klein's in The American 
Rifleman magazine from October 1962 through February 1963. According 
to assassination researcher/author and former detective Ian Griggs, 
the 40" "carbine" began to be advertised in The American Rifleman in 
April, 1963. Field and Stream did not begin advertising the 40-inch

 

 

 

 
Italian weapon until September, 1963. It was from the November issue 
that Dallas Postal Inspector Harry Holmes submitted his exhibit # 2 as 
a "duplicate" to the ad "Hidell" ordered from . ( 20 H 174 ) 

Many of the Warren Commission apologists contend that Klein's shipped 
a 40" rifle in lieu of the advertised rifle because they had run out 
of the 36's. But the evidence so far indicates otherwise. In order to 
believe that the 40" rifle was shipped to "A. Hidell", you must 
believe ALL of the following: 

a.) That Klein's shipped a different rifle without notifying the 
customer that the rifle he ordered was out of stock. 
b.) That Klein's shipped a different rifle than ordered without giving 
the customer the option of a refund. 
c.) That Klein's shipped a different rifle than ordered and used the 
wrong catalog number. 
d.) That Klein's shipped a rifle that was 40% heavier for the same 
price as the rifle ordered and absorbed any additional shipping 
charges and 
e.) That Klein's shipped a rifle that had not yet been advertised yet 
for sale and continued to advertise a rifle that they no longer had. 

In my opinion, that's quite a stretch. 


Reason #9. KLEIN'S NEVER MOUNTED SCOPES ON THE 40 " RIFLE 

The Klein's employee who originated the idea of mounting a scope on 
the rifle was Mitchell Westra. He told the House Select Committee on 
Assassinations (HSCA) that Klein's only mounted the scope on the 36 
inch MC. (HSCA interview of Westra 2/20/78) 

The man who actually mounted the scopes for Klein's was William Sharp, 
their in-house gunsmith. He confirmed what Westra testified to: the 
package deal with the scope and MC rifle was used by Klein's to market 
the 36 inch MC. (HSCA interview of Sharp, 2/21/78) 

http://www.ctka.net/2008/von_pein.html

In addition, FBI expert Robert Frazier testified to the WC that in 
order to ascertain whether or not Klein's mounted the scope on the 
rifle, the FBI asked them to supply a duplicate rifle with a scope and 
then had to tell Klein's where on the frame to mount the scope. 

Mr. FRAZIER. We contacted the firm, Klein's Sporting Goods in Chicago, 
and asked them concerning this matter to provide us with a similar 
rifle mounted in the way in which they normally mount scopes of this 
type on these rifles, and forward the rifle to us for examination. In 
this connection, WE DID INFORM THEM THAT THE SCOPE SHOULD BE IN 
APPROXIMATELY THIS POSITION ON THE FRAME OF THE WEAPON.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Mr. EISENBERG. Pardon me, Mr. Frazier. When you say "this position," 
so that the record is clear could you-- 

Mr. FRAZIER. Oh, yes; in the position in which it now is, 
approximately three-eighths of an inch to the rear of the receiver 
ring. 
( 3 H 396 ) 

So the FBI told Klein's what "position on the frame" "the scope should 
be in". Information that Klein's would not have needed had they 
normally mounted "scopes of this type on these rifles". 

It's clear from their ads that Klein's was offering the 40" rifle with 
a scope. But the evidence indicates that the scopes were not mounted 
"in-house". 


Reason #10. THE SLING MOUNTS ON THE "BACKYARD" RIFLE ARE NOT THE SAME 
AS THE SLING MOUNTS ON THE DEPOSITORY CARCANO 

If the rifle depicted in the famous "backyard photographs" is the 
rifle that "A.Hidell" ordered, then the rifle removed from the Texas 
School Book Depository is not. The reason is that the rifle in CE 134 
( an enlargement of CE 133-A ) shows a rifle with a front bottom sling 
mount, whereas the rifle removed from the Depository is a rifle with 
side sling mounts.

This list of evidentiary comments by Gil Jesus was Posted at http://educationforum.ipbhost.com/index.php?s=7014426ac28cba9212a766f803318374&showtopic=15318&pid=181317&start=0&#entry181317


Marina Oswald, Oswald's wife, at first denied that Oswald owned a rifle. Sequestered and kept incommunicado from the public by the Secret Service, this Russian citizen feared deportation and had a new baby only six weeks old, plus a little toddler born in Russia. If deported, the American-born baby might well have remained behind in the USA. Marina, alone and isolated, soon said Oswald owned a rifle. Later, she said she saw him firing it at leaves. At one point, she said he buried it in the ground to hide it on two occasions. Next, she said he fired at general Walker in Dallas, though the bullet found there was steel-jacketed. Though it could fit the 'killer rifle' it was incorrect ammo and might have jammed in the rifle. te bullet did not match any of the casings found in the TSBD. Though some seven months had passed with no leads in the case, Oswald was charged within a day of is arrest of also attempting to kill Walker. He denied all charges. despite Oswald's denials, the Warren Commission concluded that Oswald sought fame as the reason for killing Kennedy. Interestingly, Walker and Kennedy were ideological enemies, poar opposites politically.

 

Marina Oswald's testimony regarding the walker incident had to be discarded because she also mentioned that she locked Oswald in the bathroom to try to stop him from going out to try to kill a non-present Richard Nixon, who was not in Dallas that day. Also, bathroom doors do not lock from the outside. Only portions of Marina Oswald's story that the Warren Commission found believable to them -- concerning Walker-- were therefore used, even though a witness tstified that he saw more thanone person at the Walker crime scene that night.

 

 



Still later, Marina said Oswald sat on a porch in full view of Magazine Street, New Orleans, dry-firing the rifle for hours. She said he cleaned it with "pipe cleaners." In the end, when shown the rifle, she said she could not identify it. Witness Judyth Vary Baker stated Oswald knew enough about rifles that he would never have ordered a cheap rifle, sight unseen, that had the reputation the Carcano had. Oswald was linked to the rifle by a fake ID card with the name A Hidell. But we now know that other persons also used this fake name. They were all associated with the CIA.
Oswald's links to the CIA are now well-known, since the ARRB forced the release of thousands of new pages of evidence. However, many hundreds of thousands of documents remain censored and hidden. The official versions as supported on some websites focus on the evidence provided by the Warren Commission and are rarely updated to include evidence released since that casts doubts on the conclusion reached by the Warren Commission, which based its conclusions largely on information collected by the FBI, CIA and Dallas police, though witnesses also gave information and evidence in abundance to the Commission.
Interestingly, the Italian rifle was supposed to have been kept in Ruth Paine's garage for several months wrapped in a blanket on a concrete floor where there was a lot of sawdust. No sawdust can be seen on the blanket, however, that was photographed. Ruth Paine's home is where Marina Oswald stayed -- her husband, Lee Oswald, lived in a boarding house much closer to Dallas. How the rifle got into the garage can only be imagined, as Oswald was known not to have it on his person when he arrived, by himself, later, after a trip to Mexico City involving only two suitcases and a small bag, none large enough to hold the rifle even if disassembled.

We do know that Ruth Paine drove the car containing Oswald family belongings from New Orleans, along with Marina and her daughter June, to the Paine house in Irving, Texas in early September, 1963, supposedly also including the rifle, but the Paines and Marina claimed they never saw it. This is the rifle that was supposed to have been brought by Oswald into the TSBD the day of the assassination, Nov. 22, 1963, but nobody saw it brought in, and a witness, Wesley B. Frazier, stated that a small package too short to hold a rifle was the only one he saw with Oswald that day. He had driven Oswald to work that morning. 

A large paper bag that was described as the bag that held the rifle was never photographed at the crime scene. It was indicated with dotted lines on photos later. This paper bag, supposedly 'found' at the sniper's nest (though never photographed there, despite dozens of photos taken that day by officer Studebaker) was analyzed as having come from paper cut from a roll at the TSBD, but no gun pressure marks were on the bag, nor were there proper fold marks, though the bag was far too large to have been sneaked out to take to the Paine garage without being otherwise noticed. The bag was almost pristine, as if it had never had the rifle carried inside it. Also, no gun oil was found inside the bag, although the rifle was described as "well oiled." A few fibers of blanket were supposedly found inside the bag, that could have proven the rifle had been wrapped in the blanket, but the rifle itself did not have a single blanket fiber on its surface. If the blanket had held the rifle, as claimed, the rifle would have had hundreds of blanket fibers sticking to its various surfaces. There were none.


A palm print was announced publically as found inside a part of the unassembled rifle by the Dallas police ONLY AFTER it was returned to them by the FBI, which had found NO fingerprints or palm prints on the rifle whatsoever, though there is no doubt that the FBI had the best forensic crime laboratory in the nation at the time. The Dallas police were better: they now said they had formerly found a partial palm print, and also a partial print on the trigger guard. They said they knew of this before the rifle went to the FBI, and that their scotch tape had removed the latent prints. However, they did not announce any of these prints as in existence until after Oswald was shot and killed, even though much other false information was released to the public, such as a statement that a map showing Oswald's plans to murder Kennedy had been found. This turned out to be a lie, which has now been all but forgotten.
Another lie involved telling the public that Oswald, the purported killer, coldly and evilly ate a chicken dinner and drank a soft drink while waiting for the motorcade. People wanted Oswald's stomach pumped

 

 

 

 

to prove he had done this, but this lie, too, faded away when it was found that a black man had eaten the meal there only fifteen minutes before Kennedy was shot, leaving the bag at the so-called sniper's nest.
Since there was then not enough time for Oswald to have eaten any lunch, as the black man would have seen him there, the chicken lunch story vanished. but between selecting ugly photos of Oswald for newspapers (he looks much better on film), and telling these stories that had to enrage the public, Oswald was immediately considered guilty by the public--it was set in their heads from all that they had been told, true or not.
Concerning the fingerprints, it was later learned that a funeral director stated that the FBI came to the mortuary and took palm prints and fingerprints from Oswald's dead body, and that he had to clean up after them. He said the FBI were there for hours. Only after that were the prints announced to the public and described as having been found on the rifle.
As for the paper sack that supposedly held the rifle when it was 'sneaked' into the TSBD building, the employee in charge of the rolls of paper --used to wrap book cartons--that supposedly supplied the material for the bag, said he never left his area and denied that Oswald ever took any of the paper. However, we have a second bag, as Dallas police ARE on record as having made a 'duplicate' of the bag, as the 'original' was messed up with fingerprint detecting solution. In other words, the only people to have certainly obtained such paper from the paper roll were the Dallas police.


The blanket that supposedly held this rifle was found to have "Oswald's pubic hairs" on it. When examined, the pubic hairs shown in official photos have no bulbs. That is, they are 'cut' hairs. We have to imagine Oswald sitting on the blanket and shaving or cutting with scissors at his pubic area to get the hairs on the blanket! For some time, Oswald was covertly accused of perhaps being a homosexual because autopsy photos showed that his public area was entirely shaved off, but records have now been made public showing the Dallas police shaved his entire pubic area (how humiliating). The police record shows that Oswald's pubic area, chest, and arms were shaved by police to get 'samples.' These 'samples' existed BEFORE the blanket's "Oswald pubic hairs" were 'found.'


Troubling is the fact that a paraffin test for nitrates was also administered to Oswald, with distressing results for a case against him. Those who say paraffin tests are 'no good' for 'proving' that somebody fired a gun or rifle must ask also, "Why, then, did the Dallas police use the test on Oswald?"
The paraffin test, still used today all over the world, showed nitrates on Oswald's hands. This was reported to the public, and the public was told that Oswald had 'fired a gun' without explaining that there were no traces of nitrates on Oswald's cheeks. A rifle such as the Carcano must be held close to the cheek to line it properly for aiming and firing. The rifle was notorious for emitting a lot of nitrates that would have plastered Oswald's face with the residue. The fact is that the public was not told that the paraffin test was negative on Oswald's cheeks and that it was positive that he 'fired a gun' because of residues on his hands (which also can come from handling books -- Oswald's job at the Book Depository). These misleading statements were unconscionable. Boxes stacked at the "sniper's nest" were found to have Oswald's palm prints on several, but he moved boxes there as part of his work. Interestingly, the only unidentified fingerprint was identified only in this century by a certified and experienced fingerprint expert as belonging to Malcolm Wallace, a friend of Vice President Lyndon Johnson who had been charged and found guilty of murder (but Lyndon's influence resulted in a suspended sentence for Wallace-- this was the state of affairs in a corrupt Texas in the mid-20th century). Fingerprints last only a very sort time on cardboard boxes such as were in the sniper's nest, s we must ask ourselves what was Wallace doing there?

Wallace has been linked to several assassinations for corrupt friends of Johnson. He was indicated as having murdered at least one other person who was a threat to Johnson. You can access The Men Who Killed Kennedy series (TMWKK) numbers 7-8-9 (The Smoking Guns, The Love Affair-Baker, and The Guilty Men) to see the banned History Channel documentaries that show the viewer Malcolm Wallace's murderous role, and other unsettling facts, that have been banned by the US media since 2003.

 

 

 

 

 

CENSORSHIP ON THE INTERNET: MANY SOURCES SHOWING OSWALD WAS INNOCENT HAVE BEEN DELETED FROM THE INTERNE AS OF 2010.

 

UPDATE: SORRY, THE VIDEO BELOW HAS BEEN REMOVED, AS HAVE BEEN MANY OTHERS THAT SHOW OSWALD WAS INNOCENT! 
http://www.youtube.com/results?search...

 

HOWEVER, “THE LOVE AFFAIR” VIDEO IS AVAILABLE AT THIS WEBSITE (SEE INDEX OF PAGES).

 

To find all three banned documentaries online is now very difficult.

 

THEIR TITLES:

 

THE GUILTY MEN

THE LOVE AFFAIR

THE SMOKING GUNS.

 

UPDATE: THE DOCUMENTARIES LISTED  ABOVE AND BELOW ARE NO LONGER REACHABLE AT THE WEBSITES BELOW DUE TO CENSORSHIP (‘COPYRIGHTVIOLATIONS’ WHICH DO NOT APPLY, HOWEVER, TO FRONTLINE AND OTHER VIDEOS THAT SHOW OSWALD AS ‘GUIULTY’):

You can also access them together, in one place, at http://www.doctormarysmonkey.com and at http://www.judythvarybaker.com, as well as at other sites, such as at AOL Video, Filestube.com, etc. 

UPDATE: UNFORTUNATELY, MOST OF THESE LINKS NO LONGER WORK BECAUSE OF ‘COPYRIGHT VIOLATIONS…’ THAT DO NOT APPLY, HOWEVER, TO MATERIALS TRYING TO SHOW OSWALD AS GUILTY THA WERE PRODUCED BY THE HISTORY CHANNEL, NBC, ABC, ETC.

Oswald, also accused of killing Officer Tippit with the other firearm he supposedly ordered from Kleins later (tough both weapons supposedly arrived in Oswald's post office box THE SAME DAY-- and by the way, the post office 'lost' the pickup receipt that wuld prove it was Oswald who picked up the packages--though they were supposed to hold on to them for some two years.)...You can view eye-opening information about Oswald's ability to reach Tippit's location in time to kill Tippit HERE:

UPDATE: sorry, this video was ALSO removed—as have been dozens of other videos that show Oswald was innocent:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uf8D6N...


"Did Oswald have time to make it to the Tippit murder scene ?"
Thanks to the Internet, we have [ HAD] information available that casts doubt on Lee Harvey Oswald as Kennedy's killer. There is every indication that the question, as worded,
"What kind of rifle did Lee Harvey Oswald use to kill President Kennedy?"
is yet another way to influence readers to assume that Oswald killed Kennedy, when in fact, we cannot link the rifle directly to Oswald due to evidence that cannot stand the scrutiny of time with the information we now have. And we have not even mentioned "the Magic Bullet" or the fact the the Zapruder film has been substantially altered. We now know, thanks to the research of Doug Horne, who was an appointed member of the ARRB created by Congress, that the Zapruder film, when blown up to high pixel counts, shows that the back of Kennedy's head was painted in black. Yes, painted in black! Right on the film! This hides the explosion of blood and brains that came from the back of Kennedy's head when he was struck by a bullet from the Grassy Knoll. Oswald's building was located behind Kennedy's car, not in front of it. Horne's testimony and much more information about how Oswald was framed for this murder can be found at Black Op radio in a broadcast available for free on the Internet in late 2009. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Besides the information above, providing exculpatory evidence that Oswald was framed and did not soot President Kennedy, additional information is listed below, with a general focus on information about relevant rifles, guns and revolvers:

 

(A) SNIPERS AND ATTEMPTS TO DUPLICATE THE ALLEGED SHOTS FROM THE TSBD 6TH FLOOR WINDOW

(B) NEWS AND ARTICLES

 

Readers and contributors should keep in mind the general timeline and categories of interest:

(1) period of time before Oswald's return from USSR

(2) period of time between Oswald's return from the USSR and November 20, 1963.

(3) period of time from November 21, 1963 to Oswald's death

(4) period of time after Oswald's death, to present

(5) rifle and revolver sources and ammunition

 

 Information about the 'paper bag' described as holding the rifle is on the page "PAPER BAG."

 (A)

A Shooter Looks At The Shot Heard ‘Round The World

 

Recently I finished reading the definitive book (which I highly recommend) on the obviously, government-sanctioned, JFK assassination. Written from the unique perspective of a professional shooter, "Kill Zone: A Sniper Looks at Dealey Plaza," not only demolishes all the arguments of lone-assassin proponents, but examines the myriad reasons why Kennedy was killed.

 

“The reason I knew that Oswald could not have done it, was because I could not have done it,” said former US Marine sniper, Craig Roberts. Credited with numerous kills while serving in Vietnam , Roberts turned an objective eye on the shot heard ‘round the world.  After he visited Dealey Plaza, after viewing the so-called “sniper’s lair,” on the sixth floor of the book depository, and after staring at the large oak tree overspreading much of Elm Street, Roberts said, “I walked away from the window in disgust. I had seen all I needed to know that Oswald could not have been the lone shooter.”

 

But Roberts, a retired police investigator, wanted to know what did happen. Not content to dismiss the improbable feat, he delved into the crime from every angle.

 

“First, I analyzed the scene as a sniper . . . I looked at the engagement angles. It was entirely wrong…Here, from what I could see, three problems arose that would influence my shots. First, the target was moving away at a drastic angle to the right from the window, meaning that I would have to position my body to compete with the wall and a set of vertical water pipes . . . This would be extremely difficult for a right-handed shooter. Second, I would have to be ready to fire exactly when the target emerged past some tree branches that obscured the kill zone. Finally, I would have to deal with two factors at the same time; the curve of the street, and the high-to-low angle formula—a law of physics Oswald would not have known.”

 

Not content with his own critical appraisal, Roberts turned to another, equally knowledgeable shooter. “According to my friend, Gunnery Sergeant Carlos Hathcock, the former senior instructor for the US Marine Corps Sniper Instructor School at Quantico, Virginia, it could not be done as described by the FBI investigators.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

“Let me tell you what we did at Quantico,” Hathcock recalls. “We reconstructed the whole thing: the angle, the range, the moving target, the time limit, the obstacles, everything. I don’t know how many times we tried it, but we couldn’t duplicate what the Warren Commission said Oswald did. Now if I can’t do it, how in the world could a guy who was a non-qual on the rifle range and later only qualified 'marksman' do it?”

 

Of course, sergeant Carlos Hathcock was only the most famous American military sniper in history, credited with a confirmed 93 kills. But apologists for a lone assassin, who continue to enjoy mainstream media sponsorship 40 years later, continue to argue that an average shooter like Oswald, using a decrepit, war surplus weapon, could have killed Kennedy. Case closed.

 

 

(1) SOURCE: http://www.strike-the-root.com/51/herman/herman16.html

by Douglas Herman

  

(2) Period of time between Oswald's return from the USSR and November 20, 1963

 

(3) Faulty Evidence: Problems with the Case against Lee Harvey Oswald - retrieved August 10, 2009

 

Michael T. Griffith, noted Warren Commission critic, wrote this essay in 1994.  Several issues are addressed, including whether Oswald ever ordered the Carcano murder weapon and whether he ever received it.  The main problems he identifies with the first idea are that the money order was purchased for the rifle at a time when Oswald was at work (citing Anthony Summers).  Furthermore, though the order was written in handwriting that experts said was Oswalds, there are forgers able to fool experts (My comment: the forgery of Howard Hughes some years later comes to mind).

 

As far as whether Oswald received the rifle is concerned, Griffith points out that there is no proof that any name other than Oswald's appeared on the form at the post office for authorized recipients.  Also, the Post Office rules in effect then did not allow the local post offices to receive a package for someone not identified on the authorized recipient form.  And yet the package allegedly had the name "A. Hidell" on it!  Also, Anthony Summers and Sylvia Meagher have stated that no one at the Dallas Post Office recalled giving any package to Oswald.

 

So, proof of Oswald's possession or ownership of the murder weapon is dubious, at best.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------

(3)

Notice at time 3:37-3:42 the other rifle. It may well be an officer's rifle resting there, but think
how easy it would have been to bring in a rifle and plant it there while others are searching for a weapon.
Nobody would have questioned a person bringing in a rifle or notice someone leaving without one.

 

-----From Tom Rozoff-----
Sat, Aug 15, 2009 1:45 pm
"The depository revisited - Alyea#2"

YouTube

 

 

The depository revisited - Alyea#2

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-WQr4y1j4Gw&feature=email

(paste this URL into youtube subject line)



Commentary by Deputy Sheriff Roger D. Craig. His presence is shown on the film. Most of the footage is from the not very accessible film made by Tom Alyea - WFAA.

The paper sack with the chicken-bones, and the soda bottle is also filmed. The location of which these items where found has been debated.

The official story is that it was a misconception that the rifle found was a Mauser 7.65 german rifle. The deposition showing the rifle was identified as a Mauser is clearly visible in this film. Mr. Craig insists it was a Mauser. As does Mr. Weitzman. It is also visible in the film,and if it is not one of the deputies' shotguns, there does appear to be another rifle beneath it in one sequence. Look for it: Tom Rozoff notes that it depicts how easily someone could have brought a rifle into the building and left without one.

From 'Evidence of Revision' - Conspiratus Ubiquitus

(5)  MANNICHER-CARCANO SHOOTS BULLET INTO GEL PLUS COWBONE: BLLET IS MASHED; COMPARED TO "MAGIC BULLET"

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tFxt_ChhcgQ&feature=related

Photos of Rifles:

http://groups.google.com/group/Lee-Harvey-Oswald/web/mc%20rifle%20w%20clip%20imposs%20w%20last%20bullet%20chamber.bmp?display=thumb&width=420&height=420Rifle has just been found in the TSBD. Note there is no clip on this rifle.

http://groups.google.com/group/Lee-Harvey-Oswald/web/where%20is%20rifle%20clip%20in%20this%20photo.bmp?display=thumb&width=420&height=420

Earliest Photo of rifle found in the TSBD: where is the clip?

 

Rifle shown to Press by Lt. Day: see the clip?

http://groups.google.com/group/Lee-Harvey-Oswald/web/LEE%20NO%20RESPECT%20FINGERPRINTS%20rifle.jpg?display=thumb&width=420&height=420

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

http://groups.google.com/group/Lee-Harvey-Oswald/web/mannlicher%20carcano%20rifle%20similar%20to%20rifle%20in%20tsbd.jpg?display=thumb&width=420&height=420

Mannlicher-Carcano Rifle disassembled. Note CLIP.

http://groups.google.com/group/Lee-Harvey-Oswald/web/mannlicher%20carcano%20a%20comm-exhb1303-mndc01.jpg?display=thumb&width=420&height=420

Commission Exhibit: here we have a clip. Note mount of sling.

http://groups.google.com/group/Lee-Harvey-Oswald/web/m%20c%20rifle%20cutaway%20in%20color.jpg?display=thumb&width=420&height=420

Cutaway: the clip can be seen inserted in front of the trigger area....

 

 

 

http://groups.google.com/group/Lee-Harvey-Oswald/web/mannlicher%20carcano%20clip%20six%20full%20commission%20ex%20574.jpg?display=thumb&width=420&height=420 Clip…Commission Exhibit

http://groups.google.com/group/Lee-Harvey-Oswald/web/aaaamaddix.jpg?display=thumb&width=420&height=420

Day removes rifle from TSBD as Al Maddox looks on...

 

 

 

 

THE PROBLEMS OF (1) THE RIFLE CLIP

AND (2) THE SLING MOUNTS

 

(1)

PHYSICAL EVIDENCE / The Rifle

THE GUN THAT DIDN'T SMOKE*

 

Copyright © 1994, 1997 by Walter F. Graf and Richard R. Bartholomew

Part Two


"CONFUSION OVER THE RIFLE"
As out of place as a Presbyterian in Hell.
-- Mark Twain, 1912

In the main body of the Warren Report, the rifle, cartridges, cartridge cases, bullets, etc., are described under the heading, "Expert Examination," but there is not a word about the clip on the Mannlicher-Carcano despite that it would be of particular interest, since the Carcano and M-1 Garand were the only clip-fed (directly chambered from a clip) WWII military-use rifles in the world.

Turning to the Warren Report's Appendix X, we have coverage of the description and operation of the Carcano and everything associated with it in the minutest detail, but on the ejection of the clip, silence. This is the key to the operation of this weapon, because it tells the user when to reload. It is important enough to repeat that, on the M-1 Garand, the clip is ejected when the last round is fired, while on the Mannlicher system, the clip is ejected when the last round is chambered.

That was the state of the weapon left at the TSBD. Yet it is not until the Warren Report's Appendix X that, at long last, the silence is broken on the location of the clip. We read that when the rifle was found in the TSBD, it contained a clip. That was the only place in the world where the clip could not be found. It would have fallen out the bottom when the last round was chambered. The word "contained" precludes the slight possibility that the clip was stuck in the magazine.

Events at the crime scene seem to be predicated on 1) somehow a clip was involved, but 2) somehow these events were based on the misconception that the clip, as in the M-1 Garand, was ejected when the last round was fired, not chambered. See the Warren Report's Appendix X.

This latter misconception could have been the reason why Jack Ruby referred to "the confusion over the rifle." For at least twenty-four hours the public was informed the weapon was a Mauser, while it was known internally at the Dallas Police Department to be a Mannlicher-Carcano.

 

 

 

 

 

The delay could have been to allow time to locate a clip, and synchronize stories, when actually it was unnecessary. The clip would have been ejected, and the shooter could have easily pocketed it to avoid identification of fingerprints.

The most plausible explanation is that the only confusion was over when the clip ejected during the load-fire-reload cycle. Trained soldiers throughout the world have filled hundreds of thousands of graves because of failure to understand this cycle on various weapons. So it is understood that people are slow to understand the cycle of this feeding system.64 It seems too ironic, when considering these events, that the Carcano is one of only two clip-fed WWII military-use rifles in the world, and that the misconception was based on the timing of the ejection of this only other clip-fed system, the M-1 Garand.

The facts surrounding these events cry out for explanation because of repeated indications that during the first twenty-four hours the Depository rifle was known internally to be a Mannlicher-Carcano by the Dallas Police Department. And the cry becomes deafening when we add the fact that three days after the assassination, a CIA report identified the gun as a Mauser. Dated November 25, 1963, it reads:

The rifle he [Oswald] used was a Mauser which OSWALD had ordered (this is now known by handwriting examination) from Klein's Mail Order House, Chicago, Illinois. He had the rifle sent to a Post Office Box which Lee OSWALD had rented. In the order for the rifle, Oswald used the name Alex HIDELL.

OSWALD also had in his possession at the time of his arrest (after he also killed a Texas policeman) a U.S. Selective Service Card in the name of Alex HIDELL.65

This seemingly authoritative report was apparently written by an analyst who had not seen the Klein's mail order form he is writing about, since it is an order form for a Mannlicher-Carcano, not a Mauser. The CIA declined to comment on the report. And a CIA-translated, Italian military report, dated six days after the assassination reads, "The weapon which appears to have been employed in this criminal attack is a Model 91 rifle, 7.35 caliber, 1938 modification...The description of a [6.5 caliber] `Mannlicher-Carcano' rifle in the Italian and foreign press is in error."66 And then after weeks to think it over, Wade asked the Commission if a Mauser was German. This is an official who had prosecuted scores of gun shot cases.67 The cry for answers is still deafening. The silence is still equally deafening.

During his testimony, Dallas District Attorney Henry Wade mentioned something about a "situation" and of course no one was interested in what

 

 

 

 

"situation." He implied the situation was the cause of unnatural statements and events at his post-midnight press conference.

Mr. Rankin. What did you say about it?

Mr. Wade. I think I said I thought it was a Mauser or I thought -- was one of those things I didn't know what it was. It was an Italian gun, I think and I really thought I was giving them Italian but Mauser is a German gun, isn't it? But I think you have that -- it was a situation, I don't contend I was right on that because it was a situation somebody asked me that and that is what I thought I was telling them and I never -- all my information came from the police and actually somebody said originally it was a Mauser but it turned out it was not.68

All Wade had to say was, "I called it a Mauser. I was wrong." Instead, he seems to refer to "a situation" in the sense that it was a critical, trying, or unusual state of affairs -- a problem. He even passes the buck to the police. What was the problem? This "situation" was most likely the failure to understand the load-fire-reload cycle when the evidential line was being set up. There is nothing inherently sinister about an evidential line, a starting point has to be established to keep things under control. Why is he so defensive? Even if he was wrong, it should not have been a problem.

Forget where the rifle came from, forget whether Oswald ever had the rifle, rate of fire or accuracy or whether the rifle was fired that day (there appears to be no evidence it was checked for recent firing). Forget everything about the rifle except two things: 1) the Carcano was the evidence on the scene and 2) its load-fire-reload cycle in relation to the state in which the rifle was found was that the last round was chambered.

The first factor was understood on the afternoon of November 22nd. The second factor was misunderstood and may have resulted in what Ruby referred to as the "confusion over the rifle." This confusion governed that afternoon, evening, night and the next day. It resulted in the Warren Commission drawing a conclusion that is completely impossible. It resulted in Henry Wade being forced to make ridiculous statements.

 

Since there is no physical or photographic (and, as discussed below, truthful anecdotal) evidence of a Mauser or a clip at the sixth floor crime scene, the Mannlicher-Carcano was the only weapon in evidence on the sixth floor of the TSBD at 1:22 p.m., November 22nd, 1963. The evidential line therefore had to be set up. Through failure to understand the second factor above, it was mistakenly thought a clip had to be found. A clip was obtained. A period of uncertainty followed. The public had to be informed it was a Mauser (the Carcano's non-clip-fed superficial-twin). As a result, no one asked, "Where's the clip?" When the conspirators realized they must

 

 

 

 

remain committed to the clip (because Day had been photographed leaving the TSBD with the rifle and the clip is shown sticking noticeably out of the bottom of the trigger guard), the cover story was explained away as Weitzman's imagination having only "glimpsed" the murder weapon of the century. This, in all likelihood, is the "situation" Wade was talking about. Neither this nor anything else, however, suggests that Wade had knowledge of what was transpiring. It suggests only that he was being given a "bum steer."69

Why the misunderstanding? The familiar M-1 Garand, the other WWII, military-use, clip-fed rifle, during its load-fire-reload cycle, ejects the clip with a clatter when the last round is fired -- not chambered. And that, of course, is the signal to reload. Being so familiar to everyone, it was not realized the same did not apply to the Mannlicher feeding system.

This "misunderstanding" ruled the afternoon of November 22nd, through the next day, and when the Warren Report was issued. This "misunderstanding" was the "confusion over the rifle" Ruby talked about, the "situation" Henry Wade talked about.70

And because the weapon was apparently never tested for recent firing, a probably unfired rifle was planted supposedly in a state to suggest an actual fire. For rifle experts, the first thing they focus on in picking up the Mannlicher-Carcano is the unusual clip ejection system and the characteristic of the clip getting stuck on occasion. The silence on this subject was deafening at Dallas, and this silence continued through most of the Warren Report. Finally, in the Report's Appendix X, it was dismissed in a terse, tortured manner, dismissed with a sentence that sounds like a thunder clap: "When the rifle was found at the [TSBD] it contained a clip." "Contained" does not mean "stuck in the bottom." Had that been what was observed, it would have been among the very first observations made at the crime scene.

John K. Lattimer, author of Kennedy and Lincoln, and the man who, in 1968, asked for but reported no answer from Day about where the clip was found, dealt with this problem in his own twisted way. He explained his initial concern: "I had thought I had discovered a discrepancy in the Warren Commission report when I read that Oswald's clip was retained...." He reported that in experiments with his four Carcanos, the clip stuck on two. Instead of using the Commission's "rifle contained a clip," he used the phrases "rifles would retain the clip" and "that all these old Carcano rifles would eject the clip when it was empty...was not always so," both quite different from "contained."71 While poetic in rhyme and synonymy, and while adequately describing the partial ejection seen rarely with Carcanos, "retain"-- to hold back -- does not describe the invisible containment of a clip necessitated by the film and testimony documenting what was actually

 

 

 

 

 

 seen and allegedly done with the Carcano in question.

But in debating details about what was or was not reported and what the rifle will or will not do, we could find it easy to lose sight of the basic problem. Either way, it is devastating to the Warren Commission's minority opinion; to those who initially conducted this investigation; and to conspiracy deniers in general.

If the clip was on the sixth floor for everyone to see, the tool mark notwithstanding, how could these men mistake a clip-fed rifle for a non-clip-fed Mauser? If the clip was there, the long-lived Mauser identification does not make sense: unless it was a deliberate lie. And since there was no reason to lie about a Mannlicher-Carcano with a clip, it either was a Mauser, quickly replaced by a Mannlicher-Carcano, or there was no clip. Those are two very good reasons to lie; but in the latter case, only if you think a clip is needed. And until there is evidence of a Mauser or a clip on the sixth floor, the latter explanation must predominate.

Therefore, if there was no clip on the sixth floor, why did the authorities say there was? If the clip was not there -- a perfectly normal situation -- the fact that they said it was does not make sense; unless they knew the rifle was planted, inserted a clip which they erroneously thought it needed, and lied to cover it up. Either way, Oswald was framed. If not for the serious implications, it would be laughable, because they did not need the clip.

As the Warren Report says, "The rifle probably was sold without a clip; however, the clip is commonly available." Given the known chain of custody of the clip, that statement incriminates Lieutenant Day as much as it does anybody.

 

There is no evidence of clip ownership by Lee Harvey Oswald or even by his alleged paper alter ego, Alek James Hidell. In the conflicting evidence of mail-order paperwork used to purchase the alleged murder weapon, one fact is clear: no clip was ordered or purchased. The clip was offered free with the purchase of 108 rounds of ammunition which cost $7.50. The carbine with scope was $19.95, plus $1.50 for postage and handling. The money order was in the amount of $21.45. The order form sent to Klein's Sporting Goods was for only item C20-T750 ("Carbine with brand new good quality 4X scope"). The Klein's shipping order itemized only "1 ITALIAN CARBINE 6.5 W/4X SCOPE...19.95...PP-1.50." No ammunition was ordered or purchased, and no clip was ordered or purchased.72

After showing the clip inside the rifle in a photograph (CE 541) on page 83, the Warren Report first mentions it on page 555 at the end of the section called "The Rifle." Here the reader learns that "As long as there is ammunition in the clip, one need only work the bolt and pull the trigger to

 

 

 

 

fire the rifle." The next, and last, paragraph of this section is entirely about the clip. While this section tells how it is inserted into the rifle, no mention is made of the unique way it is ejected. Of course, if they did that they would have to open a can of threatening worms and explain why the rifle "contained a clip." FBI weapons expert Robert Frazier did testify about the ejection mechanism but said nothing about the clip remaining stuck in the weapon.73

The clip is not mentioned again. Even on pages 565-566, it is not mentioned as one of the "Objects in the Texas School Book Depository Building" dusted for prints. This section comes close when discussing "faint ridge formations" on the metal magazine housing in front of the trigger. (An identifiable fingerprint of Oswald's, according to the PBS Frontline television broadcast, "Who Was Lee Harvey Oswald," first aired on Nov. 16, 1993.) It comes close again when saying "No prints were developed on the cartridge found in the rifle or on the three expended cartridge cases." This statement's sources74 are FBI fingerprint expert Sebastian Latona,75 Lt. Carl Day,76 and CE 2011, pp. 1, 5.

Latona testified that he dusted all parts of the weapon, and he specifically said he found no prints on the ammunition clip. His findings were even reported in an FBI report.77 Since the Warren Report states that "There is no evidence that Oswald wore gloves or that he wiped prints off the rifle,"78 it appears that the FBI would have been forced to explain the absence of prints on the clip had they mentioned Latona's findings.

If the clip was actually there, it is highly unusual (and therefore suspicious) for Day not to have dusted it or mentioned dusting it on the sixth floor. Unlike the cartridges, it had to be handled when it was inserted into the magazine. The absence of prints on the cartridges means that any prints made in the act of loading would most likely be found on the clip. To say there were no prints on the clip but several on the rifle is to say that Oswald was careful not to handle the clip with bare hands yet after loading, handled the rifle with bare hands. Not likely. It is more likely that no clip was found.

Austin, Texas, gunsmith Jim Westbrook, formerly of the Austin Police Department, was asked if the clip could be in the weapon during its disassembled state, thus avoiding fingerprints upon assembly. He said the clip might be loaded disassembled, but not safely. While he would not say it could not be done, he pointed out that handling the rifle would endanger the user and others. He said one could even argue that Oswald left the gun loaded after the Walker shooting, but while loaded, the weapon could not be disassembled and reassembled safely. J.W. Hughes, however, is

 

 

 

 

 

 

certain that it cannot be done at all. He said a loaded clip will not stay in the ammunition "well" when the trigger guard is removed from the rifle.

Westbrook brought up another point concerning claims of Oswald assembling the rifle after he reached the TSBD. He said the rifle would need significant adjustment to align all of the parts for accurate shooting, including the seating of the action and the tension of the screws, requiring a torque wrench. Without such adjusting, even the iron sights could be misaligned. Even if it were possible, taking this kind of care during assembly would not jibe with the extremely unsafe practice of doing it while the gun was loaded.79

It has also been argued that the rifle was found with a clip still "attached" inside of which was that "last" round. Someone then operated the bolt so that the "last" round was chambered, followed by the clip falling out. And, afterward, it is possible that, in order to re-establish the original condition of the rifle found, the finder(s) replaced the round in the clip, or misplaced it in the chamber, and replaced the clip in the rifle.

Researcher Anthony Marsh has given this theory some thought: "The clip does not eject after the last round fired if there is still a live round in the magazine...a live round in the magazine, not chamber...if the last round was still in the magazine, then the clip would not have ejected. After someone ejected the last round to dust it, then the clip could have started falling out. The fact that it is [apparently] only partially ejected when the rifle is being carried out of the TSBD supports the idea that the clip did not fully eject as happens on most M-Cs."80

The clip would have "started falling out" after the last round was chambered, not ejected. And the idea that a clip does not fully eject on most Carcanos is mistaken. A normal empty clip rarely catches during operational ejection on most Carcanos. As discussed above, a clip-jamming effect can be regularly produced with most Carcanos only when an empty clip is inserted and manipulated into the relevant jammed position. Moreover, given the ejection of a last round as described by Fritz and Day, the presence of a "last" round in the clip and not in the chamber sounds impossible. Officially, Oswald had ejected three cartridge cases. Pulling the bolt back ejects the case in the chamber, and positions the next cartridge. When Oswald allegedly ejected the third cartridge, the fourth and last one remaining in the clip would have become chambered, ejecting the clip. The `03 Springfield has a cut off that enables one to work the bolt on an empty chamber and still retain rounds in the magazine. But even if the alleged JFK murder weapon has such an unreported feature, it is hard to imagine using the cut off while shooting at someone.81 Another, more plausible, version of this un-chambered round theory will be discussed in

 

 

 

 

 

 

 this article. Such arguments can distract from the primary issue, however.

If the clip was found "contained" in the rifle, the argument over whether it took a blow torch to remove it or it ejected at launch velocity is irrelevant to the issue of conspiracy. Such arguments are diversions. Resolving them will not acquit the guilty parties. Their resolution will only help reveal which crime: Mauser switch; or clip replacement and Mauser lie. They claimed to have both.

By considering suppositions covering both options (clip and no clip), the truth begins to emerge: the authorities fabricated an explanation that conflicts with opposing conclusions (i.e., clip equals Mauser or Mauser fabrication, and no clip equals both clip fabrication and Mauser fabrication). Did they have a clip or did they have a Mauser? They cannot innocently have both, neither, or either, coexisting with their claims about the clip and the longevity of the Mauser identification. All options for innocence are exhausted. If the crime-scene investigators had left bad enough alone, they could have gotten away with it. Disputing the suppositions will help discover which crime took place. But the fact that these untruths concern a planted rifle, and therefore the framing of Oswald, is indisputable.

There is also the question of whether the rifle removed from the TSBD was tested for recent firing.82 Every conceivable test of this rifle was performed repeatedly, documented, and written about exhaustively over the last thirty years -- except the most obvious one. Why was a test for recent firing not the cornerstone of the Warren Report and the FBI reports? Why was it not at least mentioned by Gerald Posner, a man who claims to have re-indexed the Warren Commission's twenty-six volumes? If Mr. Posner wishes to prove his case with finality and portray the "conspiracy buffs" as frauds, why is he not shouting such test results from the rooftops and selling poster-sized reproductions of them?

The answer, reportedly, is that there is no test for recent firing. But there is a test for whether a gun has been fired since it was last cleaned. On Tuesday, March 31, 1964, John J. McCloy fully expected such a test and asked for the result:

Mr. McCloy. Was there metal fouling in the barrel?

Mr. Frazier. I did not examine it for that.83

A metal fouling test, then, is more accurately a test for recent non-firing. If such a test on the Carcano had been positive, i.e., showing metal fouling in the barrel, the test would be inconclusive regarding when it was last fired. The FBI could have just gone on assuming it was the murder weapon. But if such a test on the Carcano had produced a negative result, i.e., no metal fouling in the barrel, it would have meant the rifle had not been fired since it

 

 

 

 

was last cleaned. Since it had not been cleaned between the time it was allegedly used to kill President Kennedy, and the time it came into the possession of the FBI, a negative metal-fouling test result would have proven the rifle was not the murder weapon. FBI firearms expert Robert Frazier evidently was not as curious as Commissioner McCloy about the condition of this particular barrel.

 

Moreover, McCloy did not ask whether such a test had been performed. He asked for the result of a metal fouling test. In other words, he expected that one had been done routinely. Upon learning that the test had not been done, McCloy asked Frazier: "Could you say roughly how many rounds you think had been fired since it left the factory, with the condition of the barrel as you found it?" Frazier answered, "No, sir; I could not, because the number of rounds is not an indication of the condition of the barrel, since if a barrel is allowed to rust, one round will remove that rust and wear the barrel to the same extent as 10 or 15 or 50 rounds just fired through a clean barrel." McCloy and the other Commissioners and staff present, apparently getting the hint, abandoned that line of questioning without asking the simple question: What would it mean if this "murder weapon" had been found to have no "metal fouling in the barrel?" 

 

As a whole then, the rifle evidence tells the following story of confusion at the crime scene. Fritz and Day, and company found the Mannlicher-Carcano on the sixth floor. It had not recently been fired but was properly set up to look as if it had (last round chambered, no clip). No other WWII military-use rifle ejects a clip upon chambering the last round.

The rifle's discoverers were not as familiar with its ammunition feeding peculiarity as the rifle's planters. Their ignorance created a "situation" (according to Wade) based on "confusion over the rifle" (according to Ruby). The discoverers thought the clip normally ejected after the last round was fired (like the only other clip-fed WWII military-use rifle, the M-1 Garand).

The way they dealt with their confusion -- their first mistake -- reveals the discoverers' roles as accomplices. Innocent, confused discoverers would have reported finding a rifle in an impossible post-firing condition, suspected it was planted, and tested it for recent firing. If it had been fired, they would have eventually realized their mistake and concluded the suspect took the clip with him (a reasonable explanation because of fingerprints). If it had not been fired they would have concluded it was planted despite their mistake. The actual discoverers did none of these things.

When we look through the eyes of persons instinctively reacting to their M-1 operation instincts, we have the reaction of 1) a person not knowing it

 

 

 

was a plant contrasted with 2) a person knowing it was a plant. Assuming in both cases that there was no clip, based on the direct evidence and testimony about the crime scene, the first person's reaction would be that the post-firing condition was impossible and he would go from there. He would look for another weapon and check for recent firing, which is the normal, instinctive reaction in any shooting. The second person, knowing it was a plant, would say something like, "Holy S___, there has to be a clip in there!"

Therefore, the amazing fact that the rifle was never tested for recent firing reveals their knowledge that it had not been fired and was therefore planted. Since the last round was in the chamber, they thought the planters had made a mistake by not including the clip in the gun. They did two things to remedy this assumed error. They sought out an appropriate replacement clip and stalled for time until they were successful.

They purposely misidentified the rifle -- probably first as an Enfield and/or other non-clip-fed rifles -- their second mistake -- to avoid questions about clips. Then they realized there was a rifle closer in appearance to the Carcano. In an attempt to make the fake misidentification more plausible, they quickly changed it to the Carcano's superficial twin, but non-clip-fed, Mauser.

Their third mistake reveals the apparent method by which they chose the Mauser. Paul Mauser's first accepted box-magazine rifle was the 7.65 mm. Belgium 1890 Mauser. By 1963, who would be thinking any rifle was a 7.65 mm. caliber?

Gunsmith and former police officer Jim Westbrook said it was his recollection that the 7.65s were not all that plentiful even when they were the standard. He said he did not think they were much used outside of Germany and Italy. Westbrook speculated that such a number could have come from someone using the metric equivalent of the standard rifle caliber, .3006. He said it is like looking at a Chevy and knowing it is a six-cylinder because that was standard for that model year.84 George Michael Evica, on the other hand, quoted a UPI story with a Dallas dateline, dated November 24th, 1963, which said, "...the 7.65 German-made Mauser was in big demand about two years ago....The rifle takes a 32-caliber shell and is comparable to the American 30.06."85

But regardless of whether 7.65s were common or rare by 1963, if a gun enthusiast had Mausers in mind when looking at the 6.5 mm. (0.26 inch) barrel, or, in this case, a rebarrelled 7.35, and thought of a .3006 inch (7.5 mm.) barrel, why would he not use the newer 7.62 mm. caliber? In 1898 Germany established the 7.92 mm. standard which lasted until the NATO standard of 7.62 mm. went into effect after 1949. The metric equivalent to

 

 

 

 

.3006 inch which should have been foremost in anyone's mind by 1963 would most reasonably have been the current standard of 7.62 millimeters; or at least the previous standard for a half-century of 7.92 millimeters. Even if someone was influenced by the numbers "6.5" stamped on the Mannlicher-Carcano barrel, the moment he said "7.65" the others should have thought he was nuts. Instead, "...the police reported....a Mauser 7.65 rather than a Mannlicher-Carcano 6.5...."86

A surplus of 7.65 German-Mauser rifles sold recently in the Dallas firearms market would certainly explain how that caliber could be foremost in the mind of local conspirators in need of a quick distraction. Otherwise, the only way, apparently, a gun user could have reported (even by mistake) the old 7.65 caliber would be by hurriedly looking Mausers up in a reference book.87 Mausers had been two different calibers for over a half-century -- the lifetime of those at the crime scene. Gerald Posner, inasmuch as he does not mention it in his book Case Closed, also seems to be ignorant of the oddity of the 7.65 caliber designation. Committing to a cover story involving such an old and odd caliber was obviously a horrendous mistake.

To cover that mistake, among other reasons, Deputy Sheriff Roger Craig was apparently forced by the conspirators to lie about seeing a non-existent "7.65 Mauser" tool mark stamped on the barrel, a classic misdirection strategy. Although the story meant conspiracy, it led nowhere and, because it could not be proved, weakened Craig's credibility on other events he witnessed, further protecting the actual conspirators. (See below.)

The bizarre twists in this story bring to mind a fable about an ancient land where confusion reigned. Living there was a devilish imp doing devilish things. To be effective he had to remain behind a fence so as not to be seen by the people. One day he threw a golden apple over the fence for the confused attention of the people. Attention thus diverted, he could continue his devilish ways on his side of the fence. He had an accomplice on the people's side of the fence to guide them in their confusion. He was the "confuser." In modern times, some devil threw a Mannlicher-Carcano over the fence for the world to ponder. The only flaw was that the "confuser," whose duty was to confuse the people, got confused himself over the Mannlicher feeding system. How else can it be explained that the weapon was proclaimed to the people to be a Mauser all that afternoon, after midnight and the next day? How else?

 

* * *

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

"7.65 MAUSER SO STAMPED ON THE BARREL"
It takes your enemy and your friend, working together, to hurt you to the heart; the one to slander you and the other to get the news to you.
-- Mark Twain, 1894

Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Thomas Powers made two observations which students of John F. Kennedy's assassination have been slow to learn: 1) "...espionage, properly conducted, never announces itself. `Stolen' information remains in its accustomed place; the `spy' is a trusted civil servant; the spymaster betrays no sign of special knowledge; even the consumer of the purloined fact may not know whence it came." 2) "...worst of all is when an enemy gains control of your secret apparatus and begins to feed you information of his own choice. Outsiders do not quite believe in such things, but they happen." Perhaps the most difficult aspect of the conspiracy for investigators of JFK's assassination to accept is the fact that some of our most trusted sources have been used to keep us confused about the actual conspiracy.

Philadelphia attorney Vincent J. Salandria, one of the earliest critics of the Warren Commission, wrote in 1971: "I have long believed that the killers actually preempted the assassination criticism by supplying the information they wanted revealed and also by supplying the critics whom they wanted to disclose the data. Does it not make sense that if they could perpetrate a coup and could control the press, they would have endeavored to dominate likewise the assassination criticism?" The facts reveal that one of those compromised sources of information was Roger Craig.88

 

In his 1971 unpublished manuscript, When they Kill a President, former deputy sheriff Roger Craig revealed new details about the discovery of the rifle. On page ten of his original manuscript he wrote:

Lt. Day inspected the rifle briefly then handed it to Capt. Fritz, who had a puzzled look on his face. Seymour Weitzman a deputy constable was standing beside me at the time. Weitzman was an expert on weapons, being in the sporting goods business for many years he was familiar with all domestic and foreign weapons. Capt. Fritz asked if anyone knew what kind of rifle it was. Weitzman asked to see it. After a close examination (much longer than Fritz or Day's examination) Weitzman declared that it was a 7.65 German Mauser, Fritz agreed with him....At that exact moment an unknown Dallas police officer came running up the stairs and advised Capt. Fritz that a Dallas policeman had been shot in the Oak Cliff area. I instictively [sic] looked at my watch and the time was 1:06 P.M. [emphasis

 

 

 

 

in original]

In a 1974 videotaped interview, Craig described Weitzman as a "gun buff." Craig added that Weitzman "had a sporting goods store at one time. He was very good at -- with weapons. And he said, 'It looks like a Mauser.' And he walked over to Fritz. And Captain Fritz was holding the rifle up in the air. And I was standing next to Weitzman -- who was standing next to Fritz. And we weren't more than six to eight inches from the rifle. And stamped right on the barrel -- of the rifle -- was 7.65 Mauser. And that's when Weitzman said, 'It is a Mauser,' and pointed to the 7.65 Mauser stamp on the barrel." That interview was conducted in April 1974 by Lincoln Karle and can be seen in a videotape called Two Men in Dallas: John Kennedy and Roger Craig (Alpa Productions, 1977). In that interview, Craig speaks very slowly and deliberately when he says the words "seven-point-six-five Mauser." In the space of a few sentences the word Mauser is used four times and the caliber is given twice.

On February 8, 1975, thirteen weeks before Craig's untimely death, Massachusetts high school teacher Edgar F. Tatro wrote his first of several letters to Craig. In an article Tatro later wrote detailing that correspondence, he said, "Roger Craig's second letter to me contained a shocker, something I had never seen attributed to him in print before. He had written that the rifle was `a 7.65 Mauser so stamped on the barrel'. If this was accurate, it was new information, to my knowledge, and crucial to a new investigation."89

In a letter to coauthor Richard Bartholomew, Mr. Tatro updated his Craig research. He said, "...After I wrote `Roger Craig and 1984', his best friend and I corresponded for years. She was amazing! From her I learned what was true and false, who forced Roger to embellish his original story, who were disinformation agents among us....I'm afraid his Mauser identification is a lie....It's a complex and tragic story and someday I'll tell it, but several dangerous individuals are still alive and I'd rather not tangle with them."90 While Tatro does not say it specifically, there is reason to believe Craig was forced to lie about the Mauser.

The way Craig wrote about Weitzman and the tool mark (authoritatively), and the way he spoke about it on film (slowly and deliberately) indicates that Craig's revelation -- that the stamp said "7.65 Mauser" -- could have had a sinister purpose. The tool stamp did not read "7.65 Mauser." This falsehood, therefore, smacks of setting up a straw man that can be knocked down. On these guns, the mark, if present at all, shows the caliber without the name.91

Coauthor Walter Graf discovered that "Mauser" existed in the tool stamp on the Chilean Mauser. He also discovered a 6.5 mm. Argentine Mauser,

 

 

 

 

mentioned by Trask as one of the descriptions broadcast the day of the assassination. British researcher Chris Mills learned that the Argentine carbine has "Mauser" in its tool stamp. But these two rare tool marks are even more problematic to Craig's honesty:

M1895 rifles, short rifles and carbines known as "Boer Models" made by Loewe Co. and DWM were distributed to China, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Honduras, Luxembourg, Mexico, The Orange Free State, Persia, Paraguay, the South African Republic (Transvaal), Serbia, Sweden, Venezuela and Uruguay, as well as to Chile. Those ordered by the Orange Free State were marked "O.V.S." Those ordered by the Transvaal had no "special markings." Those ordered by Chile from the Loewe Co. had a tool stamp on the barrel which read, "MAUSER CHILENO MODELO 1895 MANUFACTURA LOEWE BERLIN."92 This Chilean Mauser can be categorized in a Mauser group -- the M1893 and M1895, Boer, or Spanish Mauser, which was mostly 7 mm. but also 6.5 mm. and 7.65 mm. -- that definitely does not include a Carcano look alike.93

Chris Mills confirmed this during a visit to the "Pattern Room" at the British Royal Ordnance Factory. He examined an example of every 7.65 Mauser that has been made. He learned that there were only three that could have been remotely confused with the Carcano: the Belgian 7.65 carbine and the Argentine 7.65. Supposedly one could include the Turkish version, which is visually similar to the Argentine, but it is clearly marked in Arabic script. According to the "Pattern Room" Curator, none of the Mausers had the caliber stamped on the barrel at the point of manufacture, and none of the examples Chris saw had such. The Curator explained that it may have been possible, but rather unlikely, that the caliber was stamped on later if the guns were resold on the U.S. market. This could have been done so that 7.62 ammunition was not used by mistake. One model had the word "Mauser" in its tool stamp: the Argentine carbine. The accompanying text on the engraving, however, was obviously Spanish. Also, the sitting of the word "Mauser" on the weapon is most problematic to Craig's assertions. The weapon reportedly seen by Craig had a scope mounted. The mounting bracket of the scope would have fitted directly over the position of the "Mauser" engraving and none of the wording would have been visible until the scope was removed.94

Craig added "Mauser" for a reason. It could be that Craig purposely misspoke about the stamp as a subtle message to gun experts that he was lying. It may be a variation of the old trick whereby a person in danger cryptically lets someone know something is wrong.

Craig died May 15, 1975 of a rifle wound to the chest. It was ruled a suicide despite the fact that Craig did not own a rifle. A couple of weeks earlier, in an interview with author Michael Canfield, Seymour Weitzman had identified a man from a photograph as the one he saw impersonating a

 

 

 

Secret Service agent in the parking lot north of Dealey Plaza just after the assassination.95 On page eight of his 1971 manuscript, Craig told of a similar encounter between himself and a Secret Service impersonator. With Craig's death, these two eyewitnesses to the same and similar events that Friday afternoon never got a chance to compare their stories for the benefit of researchers.

Craig's carefully chosen words, the oddity of that particular caliber number, and his experience with guns support the idea that it was not a slip of the tongue. And if it was not a slip of the tongue, what else could it be but a lie obvious enough to be easily discredited or draw suspicion to his motive for saying it?

Given that, what then do we make of the Mauser identifications made by several others? Deputy Sheriff Boone said it appeared to be a 7.65 Mauser in two different assassination-day reports96 because, according to his testimony, Fritz identified it to him as such just after its discovery. He said they discussed this while Day prepared to photograph it.97 Twelve hours into the investigation, District Attorney Henry Wade told a reporter it was a Mauser because, Wade swore, the police identified it to him as such. Weitzman's sworn affidavit -- given the next day -- corroborates both Boone and Wade's police sources.

The Warren Report said Weitzman was the source of the error. They based that conclusion on absolutely nothing. Weitzman never testified before the Commission itself. Mark Lane first brought Weitzman's November 23, 1963 affidavit to the Commission's attention on March 4, 1964.98 Nowhere in that affidavit does Weitzman say that he was Boone's source.99 Perhaps that is why it is unmentioned in the Report.100 The Commission called Boone twenty days later. Boone never said Weitzman was his source. After hearing Boone, all they knew was that it started with Fritz, was officially reported twice by Boone, then by the press, then by Weitzman the next day. Weitzman then gave a deposition to Staff Counsel Joseph Ball on April 1, 1964, during which he seemed to perjure himself by saying no one but him said it was a Mauser.

Mr. Ball. In the statement you made to the Dallas Police Department that afternoon, you referred to the rifle as a 7.65 Mauser bolt action?

Mr. Weitzman. In a glance, that's what it looked like.

Mr. Ball. That's what it looked like -- did you say that or someone else say that?

Mr. Weitzman. No; I said that. I thought it was one.101

Weitzman was not asked nor did he volunteer whether he was the source of Boone's reports dated the day before Weitzman's police affidavit. The vagueness of this exchange, as well as the question of perjury made it

 

 

 

 

more important than ever for the Commission to question Weitzman -- especially if they suspected he was the original source of the Mauser identification; but they never called him to testify.

On April 22, 1964, the Commission instead questioned Curry, Fritz and Day. Strangely, Police Chief Jesse Curry and Commissioner McCloy, who with Chief Counsel J. Lee Rankin was questioning Curry, both stated they knew of no police reports or records identifying the weapon as a Mauser -- again raising the question of perjury.102 In 1976, Curry told the Detroit News that "it's more than possible" the rifle could have been switched and that due to lack of security anyone wanting to do so "could have gotten away with it at the time."103 Fritz denied he called it a 7.65 caliber but did not deny he called it a Mauser.104 The November 23, 1963, New York Times, however, quoted him saying it was "of unusual, undetermined caliber."105 That certainly applies to the ancient 7.65, Paul Mauser's original 1890s design, long replaced by the 7.92 Mauser.

Day said, "I didn't describe the rifle to anyone other than police officers." Commission Counsel David Belin's question to Day had been, "Did you ever describe the rifle as anything but a 6.5-caliber with regard to the rifle itself?" Day therefore did not answer the question. Belin pressed him: "Is the description that you used with the police officers the same that you dictated here into the record from your notes?" Day answered, "Yes, sir."106 No such dictation was made,107 or made public, however.

On June 8, 1964, Wade testified that, "...all my information came from the police and actually somebody said originally it was a Mauser but it turned out it was not."108 So on June 8th the Commission knew Fritz was first with the Mauser identification; then it appeared in Boone's sheriff department reports; followed by radio and TV reports; then twelve hours after the assassination -- after Wade saw "some officer wave that gun around" and "saw somebody take it through homicide and give it to the FBI"-- Wade's police sources, who got their information from Day, told Wade it was a Mauser. Only after all this did Weitzman, knowing the penalty for perjury, make his identification in a sworn affidavit the day after the assassination; bringing the minimum time of this ludicrous misidentification to twenty-four hours.

The next and most important parts of this chronology make it impossible to deny there was a deliberate attempt to pass this rifle off as a Mauser. Three full days after the assassination, a CIA report identified the gun as a Mauser. This report did not surface until 1976.109

And a CIA translation of an Italian military intelligence document dated six days after the assassination, also suppressed until 1976, reads, "2. The weapon which appears to have been employed in this criminal attack is a Model 91 rifle, 7.35 caliber, 1938 modification... 3. The description of a `Mannlicher-Carcano' rifle in the Italian and foreign press is in error."110

 

 

 

This later CIA description came from the Italian Armed Forces Intelligence Service (S.I.F.A.R.). As Evica says, "...the 91 series was made up of 6.5 mm. rifles, but the original 38 model was a 7.35 mm. Encountering difficulties, the Italians `began producing many of these rifles as 6.5-millimeter caliber rifles, known as the 6.5-millimeter Model 91/38.' Warren Commission Exhibit 139 (CE 139) is one of those 91/38s, originally a 7.35 mm. rebarreled to 6.5 mm." It was the description of an originally-barreled 6.5-millimeter Mannlicher-Carcano rifle in the Italian and foreign press (and everywhere else) that was in error. The November 28, 1963, Italian S.I.F.A.R. document, shared with the FBI in Rome, ending up at CIA headquarters in the U.S. within hours, raised these important questions, posed by Evica: "If the rifle allegedly discovered by Weitzman and Boone had a Mauser-type bolt action, and if it looked like an American caliber 30.06 or foreign 7.65 mm., why not simply say so? Why not tell the truth before the truth no longer would be believed?...a one millimeter mistake is not so bad...For almost a week, local and national papers remained confused about the precise identity of the rifle. What could have motivated the Dallas Police, the F.B.I., the Secret Service, and even the C.I.A....to keep silent through the thunder of misinformation?"111 A one millimeter mistake is not so bad. But the original, too-prolonged mistake of a clip-fed rifle for a non-clip-fed rifle, which is unavoidable in this "7.65 Mauser" debate, is incredibly bad. To maintain the conspiracy, the clip debate must, even today, be desperately avoided, or confused.

The point of this analysis of Roger Craig's statements is that by the time Craig came around to talking about the rifle, the name Mauser and the 7.65 caliber were old news. Craig added only two new facts. First was his belated eyewitness account of Weitzman as the first person to identify the rifle. And how did Weitzman make this identification? From Craig's second new fact: the "7.65 Mauser" tool mark on the barrel. Craig's statements then became the first and only evidence supporting the Warren Report's claim that Weitzman was the original source of the Mauser misidentification. Those who forced Craig to say this probably knew that the "Mauser" tool mark never existed. Thus, since the "Commission could not accept important elements of Craig's testimony" on other matters,112 it was again possible to prove him wrong where it counted most, and stick to their story that Weitzman was mistaken, having only glanced at the gun before it was removed from its hiding place. Craig's cryptic call for help, if that is what it was, therefore failed.

It should be reemphasized here that before Craig made his claims about the discovery of the rifle, the Commission revealed absolutely nothing to

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 support its claim that Weitzman was the original source for the Mauser identification. The evidence showed (and still shows) that everyone took their cues first from Fritz and then from Day. (Boone did not handle the rifle and his two "Mauser" reports followed both Fritz's and Day's examination at the scene.)

J.W. Hughes did inform the authors of the eyewitness account of WFAA-TV cameraman Tom Alyea which, if true, partially corroborates Craig's and the Commission's claim that the word Mauser was first uttered by Weitzman. That is a long way, however, from a Mauser identification. And if this was the Commission's "source" evidence, they did not reveal it publicly. Perhaps that was because it did not tell exactly the story they wanted told.

According to Hughes, "The type of action `mauser' was the comment that Weitzman said he thought it was and Fritz concurred.

"Tom Alyea and I have talked about this several times. Tom was standing there next to Fritz when Weitzman stated that it was a Mauser rifle and that they saw 7.65 stamped on the action.

"Mannlicher-Carcano does have a 7.35 mm. In the heat of the `find' Weitzman stated `Mauser' and everyone simply agreed. It wasn't until Day was showing the rifle off at the Police Station that it was properly identified as a 6.5 mm Mannlicher-Carcano."113

Although properly identified, it was officially reported to be a Mauser for the next twenty-four hours without an official correction. The point here is that this eyewitness account seems to confirm that there was no Mauser, and that Weitzman, imagining a "7" and a decimal point where there was none, somehow inspired the others present, including Fritz, the ranking officer in charge of the crime scene, to call it something it was not; and as discussed above, even something bizarre.

 

Given Alyea's film of this event, it seems that is probably what happened. The unnecessary complications involved in reenacting this scene make Alyea's claim even more plausible. There is no such thing as a 7.65 Mannlicher-Carcano. If "they saw 7.65 stamped on the action" it was some strange rifle. And if Weitzman misread the caliber on a 7.35 Mannlicher-Carcano, it was also another rifle. The question this raises is the same one we began with: Why in the world would the crime scene investigators enter into a criminal conspiracy to call a weapon easily linked to their suspect something else? Of course, it seems the other confirmation from Alyea's film is that there was no clip seen or handled on the sixth floor.

There is some justification that the word "Mauser," in its earliest use in Dallas, was a redundant generic term for what in effect were nearly all bolt-action rifles. Since "bolt action" would exclude just about all semi-automatic and automatic weapons, there is some justification that the redundancy

 

 

was used to emphasize that very exclusion. It could even be argued that the redundant use of the word "Mauser," in addition to deflecting attention from clip-fed weapons, served the purpose of deflecting attention from early reports of automatic gunfire in Dealey Plaza. Later, Commission attorney Joseph Ball was particularly careful to refer only to "Mauser bolt action" rather than an actual Mauser rifle in his questioning of Weitzman on April 1, 1964.114

But within hours of the assassination, and certainly within months, the trend seemed to focus attention on an actual Mauser, a second rifle.115 This trend was the reverse of what one would expect. One would think, at the later stage, investigators would endeavor to establish that the initial use of the word "Mauser" was one of those inadvertent, honest mistakes: that the word was used loosely. But no. The Warren Commission was, and especially Gerald Ford and staff attorneys Ball and Liebeler were, apparently trying to lend weight to the initial use of the word, even adding the word "German." Even the Commission's earliest and most vocal critic, Mark Lane, helped his professed adversary strengthen the link between "German" and "Mauser," further undermining any chance for a more correct generic interpretation of Weitzman's description.116 Gun experts, of course, know the Mauser 7.65 was anything but solely German. One wonders if those who initiated use of that term for the rifle realized how wrong the usage was.

Two primary sources for the later references to an actual Mauser were Mark Lane and Roger Craig. It is reasonably suspected that Craig was forced to lie. Similar, and earlier, influence over Lane cannot be ruled out. It was Lane who first embellished this trend with the liberal use of the word "German."117 An influential stockholder in Holt, Rinehart and Winston, the publisher of Lane's 1966 book, Rush To Judgment, was Dallas oilman Clint Murchison, suspected by several sober JFK researchers of being a conspirator in the assassination and coverup. Two years before Lane's book was published, Murchison helped arrange a large monetary advance and travel expenses for another author whose book on the assassination was never published. The would-be author was Dallas Judge Joe Brown, dismissed from presiding over Jack Ruby's trial because of that book deal.118 It was not just Lane and Craig, however. Concerted effort was made in the direction of establishing an actual gun of Mauser make. But the possibly unintended result of this direction was the creation of the specter of a second rifle.

Why was attention directed down this avenue? Were they so concerned with the prolonged Mauser misidentification in connection with the clip? Were they so concerned that they were willing to sacrifice the one-assassin/one-rifle scenario by offering a second rifle as a rationalization? After all, the too-prolonged Mauser misidentification was crying for an explanation that eventually had to be met. The idea of a second rifle was

 

 

 

 therefore the apparent lesser of two evils. Conversely, feeling it necessary to go to such lengths as to entertain the idea of a second rifle, shows the seriousness they attached to the initial problem of explaining the prolonged misidentification. From the conspirators' point of view, a conspiracy that can never be proved (i.e., Mauser switch) was far safer than one that could (i.e., fake clip). The benefit to the conspirators in choosing the lesser evil can be judged by the result: a thirty-year debate over a non-existent second rifle, and no debate whatsoever over an all too real, grossly out of place clip.

http://www.assassinationresearch.com/v1n2/gtds3.gif

With regard to another claim made by Craig, a 1:06 p.m. time for the rifle discovery, we draw the reader's attention to the diagram (fig. 3) showing the results of a photogrammetric study by Richard Bartholomew of photos of the outside of the "sniper's window" taken from the front of the TSBD just after the assassination. Reasonably, if there was no clip found with the rifle, it would take time to reach the decision to replace it, and to obtain the fake clip. The ensuing coverup would best be served by making that extra time disappear from the chronology. One way to do that is by falsely claiming the sixth-floor investigation started at a later moment. By all accounts, the rifle was found shortly after the discovery of the three shell casings on the sixth-floor. We can substantially argue that both the shells and the rifle were found earlier than the times "established" by the Warren Commission.

The diagram shows three positions of the sun (A, B, and C) and the length of the shadow each of the positions cast on the bricks to the west of the southeast windows. The solar positions for November 22, 1963, are accurate to within a minute of the given times. They are based on astronomical tables.

 

 

 

The shadow corresponding to position B is seen in a photo taken by Jim Murray showing Sergeant Gerald L. Hill leaning out the arched sixth floor window, pointing to the corner window where shell casings were just found.119 As Trask describes it, Hill responded to Luke Mooney who had just hollered his discovery of the expended shells. Seeing Sheriff Decker and others down on the street, Hill opened the sash of the east side of the arch shaped window pair and requested them to send up the crime lab people. Murray snapped his photo of Hill talking to them. The time, according to the shadow, was 1:03 p.m.

The Warren Report, citing Mooney's testimony as proof, says Mooney found the shells at approximately 1:12. But Mooney put the latest time at "1 o'clock." The Warren Report also cited "transcripts of all radio transmissions from Channel 1 and Channel 2 of the Dallas Police Department...." Between Dispatcher Henslee's announcement of the times 1:11 and 1:12 p.m., Inspector J.H. Sawyer radioed the message: "On the 3rd floor of this book company down here, we found empty rifle hulls and it looked like the man had been here for some time. We are checking it out now."120 (emphasis added)

 

Sawyer may indeed have found additional shells on the third floor at 1:12 because the alleged sixth-floor shells were found ten to fifteen minutes earlier. Fritz testified that he arrived at the TSBD at 12:58, and the Warren Report agreed that he got there "Shortly before 1 p.m." Fritz said, "...it wasn't very long until someone called me and told me...they had found some empty cartridges." Those cartridges were found before 1:03. It is inconceivable that no one would have told Fritz about the shells until nearly ten minutes after Gerald Hill shouted the discovery out the window. Moreover, by the time Hill got to Mooney's location, Mooney had reportedly shouted the discovery out the window himself. Mooney said that after he squeezed behind the boxes where the shells were, he leaned out the window, "saw Sheriff Bill Decker and Captain Will Fritz standing right on the ground...And I told him to get the crime lab officers en route, that I had the location spotted." Mooney then "stood guard to see that no one disturbed anything until Captain Will Fritz approached with his group of officers, city officers." It would appear that Hill was among those city officers. When asked if he was the only officer at that corner, Mooney answered: "At that very moment I was." Although he did not check his watch, Mooney's recollection that he found the shells no later than 1 p.m. is sufficiently supported by the fact that much had happened between that moment and 1:03.121

 

 

 

 

 

 

Mooney testified that he left "that particular area" and joined the search for the rifle when Fritz arrived and picked up the shells. Mooney also said he stayed on the sixth floor "not over 15 or 20 minutes" after he found the location of the three cartridges.122

Photojournalist Tom Alyea was filming the location of the shells when Fritz arrived. Corroborating Alyea's early presence, Mooney testified that "some news reporter...was coming up with a camera" just before he found the shells. Shown in a published frame from Alyea's film are seven or eight men who initially arrived at the location. Gerald Hill appears to be among them. Most of them stayed for about one minute before continuing their search. As discussed below, Alyea said someone yelled out the discovery of the rifle just after Fritz picked up the shells. By then, according to his testimony, Mooney was "about 10 or 15 steps from Officer Boone when he [Boone] hollered, `Here is the gun.'" Strong evidence that the rifle was found much earlier is the time of its first unconfirmed report by WBAP-TV. That report was announced at 1:23, which, if the rifle was found a minute earlier, makes it the fastest report of any event that day, including the next fastest reports by NBC-correspondent Robert McNeil broadcasting live by telephone hook-up. The cartridges were not reported until 2:14. The arrest of Oswald was not reported for over an hour.123 It is therefore likely that Craig was correct about the time the rifle was found. But whether it was found at 1:06 or 1:22, ten to fifteen minutes are unaccounted for during the sixth-floor crime scene investigation.

 

Trask continues the chronology beginning with Day's arrival at about 1:12 p.m. Day and Detective Robert Lee Studebaker took the elevator to the sixth floor and immediately took photographs of the shell casings. Trask is not clear on how many photos they took. But they only had one camera and Day and Studebaker took turns taking two exposures each of each scene photographed. At least six exposures are shot before Day dusted the shells for fingerprints. Four of these six exposures were taken inside the cramped "snipers lair" which took time to position the camera.

Trask continues: "The photos shot, Homicide Detective Richard M. Sims picked up the shells by their ends and gave them to Day, who then processed each one by applying black powder....124

"The three shells were 6.5mm and after they were dusted for prints, Day gave them to Detective Sims. Sims placed the shells in an evidence envelope and marked the envelope with his initials, the date and the time, which was now 1:23 p.m....125

 

"At just about the time Sims and Day were putting the spent rifle casings in the evidence envelope, they and Studebaker were summoned to the northwest corner of the building where a rifle had been spotted hidden

 

 

 

among boxes. Though Studebaker would soon be released to return to the southeast corner to process the pop bottle and the stacked boxes for prints, the senior, more experienced Day would remain with the rifle -- the most important piece of evidence."126

The photo used to determine sun position C shows Studebaker working among the boxes in the southeast corner.127 Since that photo was taken at 2:14 p.m., according to the shadow, it does not disprove this chronology. It also means Studebaker had begun working there well over half an hour before the photo was taken.

 

Trask continues his narrative describing the search for the rifle. When found, Trask writes, "Boone noted the time by his watch as being 1:22 p.m., while Weitzman, glancing at the weapon, though not able to clearly examine it, thought it to be a 7.65 Mauser bolt-action rifle."128

We will return to the subject of the rifle discovery. First, however, there are a couple of observations to be made. Throughout this narrative, Trask describes the movements of WFAA cameraman Tom Alyea, who was driving back to his Dallas TV station from an assignment in Fort Worth. At 12:30 p.m. he found himself in Dealey Plaza. Hearing the commotion on the police radio in his car, Alyea grabbed his camera and some film and arrived at the Depository at about 12:35. He witnessed the chaotic beginning of the search for suspects and joined in because he "wanted to record the gunfight." As things calmed down, Alyea continued filming.129

In describing the discovery of the shells Trask writes, "In recent years Tom Alyea recounts that `The local police were very helpful in assisting me in recording these historical events. Capt. Fritz even picked up the scattered shell casing from behind the barricade and held them in his hand for me to get a close up.' If correct, this may have been at a point following their being photographed and dusted. If not, it violated all concept of police scene documentation. This particular film scene is unfamiliar to the author."130

 

Obviously, it does much more than violate police procedures. What is of equal interest, however, is that it puts a crack in the chronology. Trask told readers that after the photos were taken, Sims picked up the shells by their ends and gave them to Day, who began dusting them. What did they do? Did they throw them back on the floor for Fritz to pick up before putting them in the evidence envelope? And if Fritz handled them, why did the FBI not report finding his fingerprints? Latona testified that he dusted the cartridge cases, "from which I got no prints."131 This is one of several incidents where Alyea's memory, apparently supported by his film, is at odds with the sworn testimony.

 

 

 

 

Another discrepancy deserves attention: Latona reported finding no prints on the reportedly recovered clip. Recall the point made above that if the cartridges did not have prints, then the clip should have been dusted by Day, because logically it was the only thing handled by a shooter during loading. But for the clip to be apparently in the position seen in photos of Day carrying it out of the TSBD (noticeably sticking out of the bottom of the rifle), someone had to touch it.

Published frames of film and still photos of Day handling and dusting the rifle show no clip.132 If, as the Warren Report says, "the rifle contained a clip," then someone either pulled it out enough to be seen, or took it completely out and stuck it back in partially, still noticeably exposed. None of these men were wearing gloves. If the clip was handled, it should have had prints. Fritz is seen in Alyea's film handling the rifle with a white handkerchief. He could have done the same with the clip. But why would they be handling it without dusting it? Everything from the shells to the rifle stock, and the way it was all handled, was described in detail (except for the handkerchief).133 If there was all this handling of the clip, why did none of them mention it? Is this more proof that no clip was found?

Describing the moments right after the rifle's discovery, Trask writes, "By now most everyone on the sixth floor had congregated in the area around the discovered rifle....

"Alyea was right on the spot with the camera poised....As [Day] crouched down to pluck the rifle from its hiding place, Alyea pressed his shutter release button."134 Trask reproduced a frame of Alyea's film in his book next to these statements. It shows Day holding the rifle for Alyea to film. There is no clip visible.

It could be argued that the clip ejected normally, and Oswald put it back in before fleeing. But the absence of fingerprints makes this scenario impossible. As much as it would have helped its case against Oswald, even the Warren Commission admitted there was no evidence Oswald wore gloves or wiped the gun clean.135 No prints means that if Oswald did everything else the Commission claimed, he did not handle the emptied clip. The absence of prints on the clip could therefore support the argument that the clip remained stuck completely inside the magazine. If it were hidden inside the magazine, unfamiliarity with the gun would then innocently explain a failure to realize a clip existed. This argument is too short lived, however, to explain the length of time the Mauser description remained intact. And the discoverers could not have missed the clip when they checked the magazine for additional rounds.

Another innocent explanation is that the rifle's discoverers simply thought the clip had ejected and had not yet been found. Since photographs of Day leaving the building with the rifle apparently show the clip protruding from

 

 

 

 

the magazine, it is reasonable to assume the clip was there but lodged firmly enough not to slip out during the operation of the bolt and subsequent handling at the scene. But as mentioned repeatedly above, when Day and Fritz determined no more rounds were in the magazine, neither man could have avoided seeing the empty clip supposedly stuck inside the magazine.136 

 

If by some miniscule chance they missed seeing the clip at that moment, it could be argued that it was loosened by unreported, clumsy jarring or even dropping of the rifle on the way out of the building. The pride of a veteran evidence handler, along with the significance of this particular evidence, would reasonably explain why Day did not report such clumsiness. But even if no one saw the tool mark -- and Day and Fritz swore they did -- at the moment the clip protruded, it would have become obvious this rifle was not a Mauser. And even given some ludicrous claim he did not notice it then, the HSCA stated, "Later that day, the rifle's six-round cartridge clip was removed by Lieutenant Day in the Dallas Police Crime Laboratory."137 Day knew the rifle was being misidentified and did nothing to correct it. This lack of action helped avoid questions about the clip. Day had an exchange with Belin about this during his testimony:

Mr. Belin. Did you ever hear this rifle referred to as a 7.65 Mauser or as any type of a Mauser?

 

Mr. Day. Yes, sir; it wasn't referred to as that. Some of the newsmen, when I first carried the rifle out, asked me if it was a .30-06, and at another time they asked me if it was a Mauser. I did not give them an answer.138

Alyea's film viewed unedited (along with the Murray photo of Hill), settles many questions about the chronology of events and confirms the fact that no Mauser was found -- only a Mannlicher-Carcano with no clip, meaning that Craig was lying about the Mauser for the reasons stated above, but not necessarily about his other sixth-floor crime scene claims: the time of the rifle discovery, and the initial closeness of the shells to each other.

Those aspects of Craig's story are corroborated by what Alyea says his film showed just prior to the rifle's discovery. Unfortunately, Alyea never saw that part of the film after the film editors finished with it at WFAA-TV.

Alyea claims he was filming the discovery of the spent shells when Fritz arrived and forbade him from squeezing behind the stack of boxes. Instead, says Alyea, Fritz picked up the shells and held them for him to film.

Alyea describes the shells' position before being picked up as being so close together, "they could be covered with a bushel basket." Just after Fritz picked them up, Alyea says, someone yelled out the discovery of the

 

 

 

rifle and Fritz threw them onto the floor. The official Dallas police photographs, Alyea claims, show them where they landed.139

Had these film frames survived the editors "careless" handling, they would be proof of destruction of the crime scene by the head of Homicide Division. It would be easy to discount claims about such incriminating events were it not for the fact that Luke Mooney's testimony indicates that is just what Alyea's film showed:

Mr. Ball. Those were empty shells?

Mr. Mooney. Yes, sir.

Mr. Ball. They were turned over to Captain Fritz?

Mr. Mooney. Yes, sir; he was the first officer that picked them up as far as I know, because I stood there and watched him go over and pick them up and look at them. As far as I could tell, I couldn't even tell what caliber they were, because I didn't get down that close to them. They were brass cartridges, brass shells.140

 

According to J.W. Hughes, who has studied Alyea's film in detail, it begins with scenes of police officers searching the sixth floor, followed by footage of the sniper's nest. It then cuts to the moments after Fritz threw the shells on the floor. Fritz, at that point, is handling an unidentified rifle. The film then cuts to Fritz standing, along with some plain clothes officers, near the boxes where the Mannlicher-Carcano was found. It then cuts to Day removing the rifle from its hiding place.141

 

Another major discrepancy, however, between the crime scene testimony and Alyea's account of these events, is Alyea's claim that Lieutenant Day did not arrive until forty-five minutes after the shells were found. Day was not present, according to Alyea, when the rifle was found. He does say, however, that no one touched the rifle until Day arrived. Alyea also insists that his footage is not a reenactment. After photographing Day dusting the rifle, Alyea was ordered to leave. He left his camera with some police officers, but they did not continue filming. J.W. Hughes said the film also shows that when Day first retrieved the rifle, the bolt was open and no shells were in the ammunition well. Hughes says he cannot determine whether or not the clip was present. But the film does not show Fritz or Day operating the bolt or ejecting a live round.142

 

Was the round in the found rifle chambered? Officially, yes. Fritz said, "After the [Day-Studebaker] pictures had been made then I ejected a live shell, a live cartridge from the rifle."143 Day said, "I picked the gun up by the wooden stock. I noted that the stock was too rough apparently to take

 

 

 

 

fingerprints, so I picked it up, and Captain Fritz opened the bolt as I held the gun. A live round fell out."144 Day also said that he was holding the rifle and examining it with his magnifying glass before Fritz touched it. Day was wrong. When asked about taking precautions against leaving his own prints on the gun, Fritz testified: "He [Day] could have taken mine [fingerprints] but I let him dust first before I ejected a shell." But Day testified that he did not dust any part of the rifle before Fritz ejected the live cartridge. Was Fritz, reportedly renowned for his photographic memory, right? The Tom Alyea film clearly shows that Fritz's hands are all over the rifle while he holds it for Day to look at. The same film shows neither Fritz nor Day operating the bolt, or ejecting a live round. In his book, Trask fudges this chronology to say that the live round was ejected after Alyea filmed Fritz and Day handling the gun and before Day dusted the rifle. Trask says the bolt-opening episode was testified to by Day as "what next transpired," after Alyea filmed "some 40-plus seconds worth of this sequence" showing Fritz holding the gun for Day to examine. Trask is wrong. Day testified, falsely, that he was the only one who had held the rifle before and during the bolt-opening episode.145

 

To believe Trask, and commercially available versions of the film, is to believe that Tom Alyea, with camera ready, inexplicably stopped filming while Fritz handed the gun to Day to examine closely, and while Day held it for Fritz to operate the bolt producing a live bullet. Only after this dramatic scene, according to Trask, did Alyea start filming again to capture Day's routine dusting for fingerprints. Given Alyea's film, neither Day nor Fritz can be believed as to what they did with the gun on the sixth floor. And given Trask's rationalized attempts to reconcile the film with Day's and Fritz's contradictory testimony, he cannot be believed.

 

According to Alyea himself, "Still pictures were taken of the positioning of the rifle, then Lt. Day slid it out from its hiding place and held it up for all of us to see. The world has seen my shot of this many times. Lt. Day immediately turned toward the window behind him and started dusting the weapon for fingerprints. Day was still within the enclosure formed by the surrounding boxes. I filmed him lifting prints from the rifle. He lifted them off with scotch tape and placed them on little white cards. When he had finished, he handed the rifle to Captain Fritz. Fritz pulled the bolt back and a live round ejected and landed on the boxes below. Fritz put the cartridge in his pocket. I did not see Fritz pick up anything other than the live round. If a clip ejected, I didn't notice it, nor did I see Fritz pick up a second object. I have learned that the six round clip for this rifle ejects when the last round is injected into the chamber. If this is the case, there must have been three

 

 

 

 

 rounds in the rifle when it was found. Fritz ejected one... another went into the chamber when the bolt was closed and one still remained in the clip. I have no idea whether the police made a notation of this, or if the rounds were dusted for fingerprints."146 (emphasis added) So it seems that Fritz was more correct about the sequence of events. Alyea is also convincing in saying that a live round was ejected. And his account that no clip was seen, mentioned or handled, even during Fritz's rough-and-tumble working of the loading mechanism, is especially convincing given his attempt to rationalize it with a far more mundane explanation than the HSCA firearms panel's. And the reason Alyea did not film that dramatic opening of the bolt was because it followed Day dusting the rifle, which, as Alyea said, was when he was ordered to stop filming and leave.147 However, one question remains: was the live round chambered?

 

As discussed above, others also claim that the last round was still in the clip, not chambered. Alyea's version of that theory ("three rounds in the rifle") is the most plausible, explaining why the clip was completely inside the magazine. Alyea's theory accounts for two additional live rounds, and, therefore, a clip originally fully loaded with six rounds. But if correct, Alyea's theory means yet another official lie about the state of the rifle when found.148 And it does not explain why Fritz and Day lied about it. Nor does it explain why they were totally silent about the clip. Nor does it explain why the HSCA said the clip's edges were sprung against the magazine walls -- their explanation for why it remained totally stuck inside the rifle during all this handling. It is still more likely that no clip was found.

 

Nonetheless, since the Alyea film does not prove that the clip was present or absent, there remains the slight possibility that a bent clip was stuck in the magazine. If so, it is possible that it was put there by the rifle's planters. The clip's presence would then be the result of a mistake on the part of the planters, not the discoverers, a mistake that is only possible if the planters misunderstood the ejection mechanism, or simply did not think the clip's presence or absence was important. The Mauser cover story, though, would still have been for the purpose of hiding that mistake until it was determined how to deal with it. Obviously, the decision was to say nothing about why the clip was there.


Go To Part 3

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Notes

64. Employees of the main distributor of Carcanos in the U.S. in 1960, Folsom Arms, were so confused about how to load them, the company had to seek foreign help: "[Master Italian gunsmith Luciano Riva] went to New York in December, 1960, and found that at the Yonkers warehouse of Folsom Arms, the Folsom people had attempted to hand-load the Carcanos without success. But the rifles 'loaded with a clip,' Riva remonstrated....Riva showed the Folsom employees how it was done..." (Evica 29).

65. CIA Document No. 1367, declassified spring 1976; cited in Fensterwald 443-44. Henry Hurt, Reasonable Doubt (New York: Henry Holt, 1985) pp. 102-03. Evica 23.

66. Jim Marrs, Crossfire: The Plot that Killed Kennedy (New York Carroll & Graf, 1989) p. 440; hereafter cited as Marrs 440. Evica 53-55.

67. Evica 23; citing 24H (CE 2169) 829.

68. 5H 250.

69. 24H (CE 2169, p. 4) 829. 5H 250.

70. Letter from Walter F. Graf to Richard Bartholomew, Dec. 17, 1996. Evica 23-24. Evica mentions Wade's amazement and disapproval over Chief Curry's Nov. 23rd TV appearance at about 2:30 p.m., during which Curry revealed details of the FBI report identifying the gun as a Mannlicher-Carcano. (5H 228) Wade testified that the report was the first evidence that Curry got directly, rather than through Captain Fritz. Wade implied that Fritz would not have revealed it to the press. Yet, Wade himself gave the false Mauser description to the press in the early hours of that same day, a description that originated with Fritz, according to the known evidence. Therefore, Wade and Fritz apparently preferred the prolonged public falsehood. J. Edgar Hoover twice singled out the FBI's "identification of the gun," to emphasize that "If the case had been in the hands of the FBI none of that information would have been given out." He even expressed regret that the gun's identity had become known before Curry "refrained from further comment" at Hoover's personal insistence. (R 235-36, 5H 115-16.)

71. Lattimer 298-99.

72. R 555 ("commonly available"). R 120 ("paperwork"). Martha Moyer, "Ordering the Rifle," Assassination Chronicles, March 1996, pp. 25-35 ("conflicting evidence"). 17H (CE 773) 635. 21H (Waldman Exhibit Nos. 7 and 8) 703, 704 ("purchase order" and "shipping order"). 17H (CE 788) 677 ("money order").

73. 3H 397-98.

74. R 855 n.132.

 

 

 

 

75. 4H 23.

76. 4H 253-258.

77. 4H 23. 24H (CE 2003 pp. 131-35) 262-64.

78. R 647.

79. Interview of Jim Westbrook by Richard Bartholomew, Sept. 1, 1994. Interview of J.W. Hughes by Richard Bartholomew, Sept. 26, 1994. Ian Griggs, "The Mannlicher-Carcano -- A Practical Experiment in its Reassembly," Dallas `63: The British Forum for Views and Research into the Assassination of President John F. Kennedy, v. 1, no. 3, August 1994, pp. 19-24.

80. E-mail from Anthony Marsh to Richard Bartholomew, "JFK_ASSN" Fidonet discussion group, posted Jul. 16, 1995.

81. Letter from Walter F. Graf to Richard Bartholomew, Feb. 5, 1996.

82. Jim Garrison, A Heritage of Stone (New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1970, Berkley Medallion, 1975) p. 49.

83. 3H

84. Interview: Jim Westbrook by Richard Bartholomew, Sept. 12, 1994.

85. Evica 349 n.5.

86. R 235.

87. When asked how he identified the Mannlicher-Carcano sent to him from Dallas, FBI weapons expert Robert Frazier testified: "I identified it pictorially by comparing it with pictures in reference books" (3H 392).

88. Thomas Powers, The Man Who Kept the Secrets: Richard Helms and the CIA (New York: Knopf/Washington Square Press, 1979) pp. 26-27; hereafter cited as Powers 26-27. Vincent Salandria, "The Assassination of President John F. Kennedy: A Model of Explanation," Computers and Automation magazine, issue 20 (Dec. 1971, pp. 32-40); re-published by the Internet-based publication, Fair Play (http://rmii.com/~jkelin/fp.html, issue 16, May-June, 1997).

89. Edgar F. Tatro, "Roger Craig and 1984," The Continuing Inquiry May 1985, pp. 2-16.

90. Letter from Edgar F. Tatro to Richard Bartholomew, October 25, 1993.

91. Letter from J.W. Hughes to Walter Graf, August 22, 1994.

92. Paul Scarlata, "Classic Commando Weapon," Fighting Firearms Winter `95, pp. 56-61, p. 58: photos, p. 60 (cols. 1, 3), p. 61 (photo).

93. Letter from Walter F. Graf to Richard Bartholomew, March 1996.

94. E-mail from Chris Mills to Richard Bartholomew, 8:59 p.m., Oct. 2, 1996.

95. Michael Canfield and Alan J. Weberman, Coup d'Etat in America: The CIA and the Assassination of John F. Kennedy (New York: The Third Press, 1975) pp. 56-57; hereafter cited as Canfield and Weberman 56-57.

96. Decker Exhibit 5323, pp. 507-09. Meagher, Accessories 96-98.

 

 

 

 

97. 3H 295

98. Meagher, Accessories 96; citing 2H 46.

99. 24H (CE 2003, p. 63).

100. Weisberg, Whitewash 190.

101. 7H 108.

102. 4H 181; cited in Evica 18. Meagher, Accessories 97.

103. Marrs 440.

104. 4H 206.

105. Evica 22.

106. 4H 263.

107. Michael Wiseberg, "The Rifle: Was it a Mauser or Mannlicher-Carcano?" The Third Decade Jan. 1990, p. 10.

108. 5H 250.

109. Hurt 102-03. Evica 23. Fensterwald 443-44.

110. Marrs 440. Evica 53. "Information on The Weapon Presumably Used in the Assassination of President Kennedy," CIA document, Nov. 28, 1963 (author's copy showing numbered comments 1-4, 8 and 9, from Jack White collection (created from full document acquired from Mary Ferrell collection). Letter from Jack White to Richard Bartholomew, Oct. 14, 1994.

111. Evica 4, 53-54, 55.

112. R 160.

113. Letter from J.W. Hughes to Walter Graf, August 22, 1994.

114. "Despite extensive experience with weapons he [UPI reporter Merriman Smith] had thought the sounds in the plaza were three shots from an automatic weapon, and in a subsequent [Nov. 22nd] message he identified them as 'bursts'" (William Manchester, The Death of a President [New York: Harper & Row, 1967] pp. 167-68). "Suddenly we heard three loud, almost painfully loud cracks....the second and third blasts were unmistakable. Gunfire" (Merriman Smith, UPI report, Nov. 23, 1963; Four Days 32). 7H 108, 109 (Weitzman).

115. 26H (CE 3048) 599. R 81, 235, 645-46.

116. Evica 22. Gerald R. Ford, "Piecing Together the Evidence," Life, Oct. 2, 1964, pp. 40-51; cited in Evica 48, 49. Joseph A. Ball, Statement made at Associated Press Managing Editors convention in San Diego, California, Nov. 17, 1966 (see transcript in Richmond, Virginia Times Dispatch, Nov. 27, 1966), cited in Lane, Dissent 126. See also earlier discussion of Liebeler in this article. For evidence of Ford's obfuscation of crucial aspects of the ballistics evidence, see handwritten changes to the draft chapters of the final report that were recommended by Commission member Representative Gerald Ford, Personal Files of J. Lee Rankin, General Counsel of the Warren Commission, President John F. Kennedy

 

 

 

 

 

Assassination Records Collection housed at the National Archives facility in College Park, Maryland; cited in George Lardner, Jr. (The Washington Post), "Ford sought changes in JFK assassination report," Austin American-Statesman, July 3, 1997, p. A8.

117. 2H 46. 5H 560.

118. Wills and Demaris 79-80. Seth Kantor, Who Was Jack Ruby? (New York: Everest House, 1978); originally titled The Ruby Detail, promised by Zebra Books; later published as The Ruby Cover-up (New York: Zebra Books, 1992) p. 236. Murchison and family: Scott 73, 108, 135, 202, 205-08, 211-14, 217-22, 227, 234, 285, 286, 293, 300, 326, 345, 362, 367, 376

119. Trask 523.

120. R 79; citing 3H (CE 1974, p. 176) 285.

121. 4H 204, 205. R 8. 3H 284-85. On the flawed investigation of the shells see: Michael Wiseberg, "Three Cartridge Cases: Chain of Possession," The Third Decade, May 1990, pp. 11-17.

122. 3H 289

123. 3H 284, 289. Tom Alyea, `JFK Facts' Update, Preview Edition, 1993, p. 4; hereafter cited as Alyea 4. Planned as a monthly periodical, subsequent issues of Alyea's `JFK Facts' newsletter have not been published. This rare edition includes four never-before-published frames from his TSBD-search film. WBAP: As It Happened 0:23, 1:14, 1:41, and throughout. "Arrest Report No. 63-98115," Curry 79 (Oswald arrest at 1:40 p.m.).

124. Trask 526.

125. Trask 527. 7H 162-63, 183-86.

126. Trask 529.

127. Trask 536.

128. Trask 529.

129. Trask 520-21.

130. Trask 524. Alyea 5.

131. 4H 23. The authors are aware of the fact that fingerprints are not always left behind, as noted in the Oklahoma City bombing trial of Timothy McVeigh: "Under redirect testimony by the prosecution, however, [FBI fingerprint technician Louis] Hupp said that a person could touch something and still not leave prints. 'It's very common,' he said." But it must be noted that Hupp was a witness testifying for McVeigh's defense, and that his testimony about the absence of McVeigh's prints on key evidence "provided some of the only beneficial evidence for McVeigh," thus far in the trial. ("Expert: McVeigh's prints aren't on key evidence," Associated Press, Austin American-Statesman, May 16, 1997, p. A7.) Such testimony is only beneficial if the circumstances are such that prints can be reasonably expected on the objects in question. If the prints of Kennedy's

 

 

 

 

assassin could be expected by Lt. Day on the shells, and did reportedly exist on the gun itself, the same prints and those of others could reasonably be expected on both the shells and the clip.

132. Trask 533. Alyea 5.

133. Unpublished photos of frames enclosed with letter from J.W. Hughes to Walter Graf, August 22, 1994.

134. Trask 531.

135. R 647.

136. R (17H (CE 541 [3]) 239) 83.

137. 7 HH 355.

138. 4H 263.

139. Interview of J.W. Hughes by Richard Bartholomew, Sept. 26, 1994.

140. 3H 286.

141. Interview of J.W. Hughes by Richard Bartholomew, Sept. 26, 1994.

142. Interview of J.W. Hughes by Richard Bartholomew, Sept. 26, 1994.

143. 4H 205.

144. 4H 258.

145. 4H 206, 258-59. Trask 532.

146. Connie Kritzberg, Secrets From the Sixth Floor Window (Oklahoma: Undercover Press, 1994) p. 45.

147. Alyea 5.

148. Another official lie: Letter from Jack White to Walter Graf, Aug. 3, 1995.


(c) 2002 Walter F. Graf and Richard R. Bartholomew

 

----------------(2)----------------THE PROBLEM OF THE SLING----------

 

the problerm exposed in a newsgroup post:

The Mannlicher Carcano model 91/39 that Oswald is 
> > > holding in the ONE and ONLY photo (CE 133A) that Marina took has dual 
> > > sling swivels because the bottom one of the dual swivels can be seen 
> > > hanging beneath the rifle. At the time I was unaware that there were 
> > > a few Mannlicher Carcanos made with bottom sling swivels only. ( these 
> > > are very rare rifles.) Since I could see the bottom sling swivel 
> > > beneath the front foregrip I assumed that it was the dual sling 
> > > version of the rifle. It matters little because there is no way 
> > > anybody can know if it was a dual sling swivel rofle or a single 
> > > bottom sling swivel rifle......either way it is NOT a single side 
> > > swivel version like the rifle found in the TSBD.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ballistics expert John Ritchson is now deceased, but he presented important information regarding the Mannlicher-Carcano. Here is one of his essays from 1997.

 

Wed, 26 Nov 1997

John Ritchson <jonr2@worldnet.att.net>

Subject: More Evidence Revisited

 "The Unfired Cartridge"

There exists a large color photograph of the alledged physical evidence linking LHO to the JFK murder. The photographer, if memory serves is Michael O'Neill who worked for Life magazine. photograph from DPD, see #6

Somewhat centrally located is an unfired cartridge, designated as CE-141 and sworn into evidence as a WCC 6.5x52mm Mannlicher-Carcano cartridge.

All Winchester cartridges are jacketed with Gilder's Metal which is an alloy of copper and zinc and has a distinct copper color as evidenced by the 6-groove CE-399 also depicted in the color photo blow-up. However this is not the case with the unfired cartridge depicted as CE-141.

This cartridge possesses what is obviously a cupra-nickle alloy jacket which is not used by American bullet makers,but common in European ammunition. Also clearly present is a banded crimp on the neck corresponding to the smooth cannelure commonly found on military surplus ammunition of European manufactor.

The inescapable conclusion,with a high degree of certainty, is that the unfired cartridge,*SWORN* into evidence as a *WINCHESTER* 6.5x52mm Mannlicher-Carcano cartridge, *IS IN FACT* a European Military surplus Carcano cartridge, *PROVING* falsification of if not outright tampering with material evidence in a capitol murder case.

The above additional evidence added to the existing body of evidence presented in the following attached article presents an overwhelming case of not only massive evidence tampering, but of reasonable doubt as to the guilt of LHO.

John Ritchson

------

 

The Shooter:

One thing both LNers and Buffs seem to agree on is that LHO was a rather poor shooter, although the LNers are quick to point out that his shooting skills were obviously adequate. How obvious, and how adaquate is an issue I feel worth exploring.

There is no real record that I can recall off hand of LHO ever being a gun enthusiast or shooter prior to his entrance into the US Marine Corps so I think it safe to say he entered the Marines,wet-nosed and green, as do many if not most recruits. From the very beginning, LHO would be immersed in a society that brooks no loners, malingerers, odd ducks, individualists, screw-offs, and screw-ups, a society which from the very first, ruthlessly culls out the people that demonstrate such traits. To exist in such a society, LHO would have had to be a personable team-player, with the capacity to bond with the men in his unit. Hardly the psychological profile of the loner and outsider that would later be used to describe LHO

 

 

 

.

It would be some 3 weeks, if memory serves, before Marine Boots are introduced to their weapons and the firing range. LHO would have had this long to bond with his unit before it would become apparent that he simply had no proficiency as a shooter, and it was this fact that kept him from being branded a screw-up and rewarded with the obligatory blanket party reserved for GFUs.

There are various types of problem shooters encountered by Drill-Instructors on the rifle range. Some have shooters-flinch, which is a form of recoil anticipation that causes the shooter to jerk instead of squeezing the trigger, resulting in more cases than not, in the shooter completely missing the target. The fact that LHO was fairly consistent in getting his Maggie's Drawers is a strong indication that that he possessed this tendency.

In every training cycle there will be Marine Boots that no matter how well instructed, simply will not possess the manual skills necessary to accurately fire a rifle. LHO was one such person.

Failure to qualify on the rifle-range means a wash-out for the trainee involved, as well as casting the trainers in an unacceptably unfavorable light. The easiest solution is to have another trainee, usually a friend that volunteers, qualify in the place of the problem shooter. Then, because in a combat situation, each soldier's life depends on the combat skills of the other men in his unit, a problem shooter would be assigned a permanent MOS in areas least likely to put them in a combat situation. LHO was assigned as a radar operator in Japan, at a top secret base with virtually no chance of ever seeing combat, and this fact shows that other than his poor shooting, he was in every other way, an exemplary Marine, or at least one that had demonstrated worthiness to receive the training, clearances and confidence to perform an important mission in a top-secret installation.

After his Marine service, there is no evidence that LHO ever joined any shooting clubs or frequented any firing ranges,and was only known to have taken 2 hunting trips prior to Nov63, in which on one was known to have missed hitting a rabbit at close range with a shot-gun.

This is the man the WC Apologists would have you believe,was able to take a poorly made surplus rifle that was assembled on the spot, not sighted in, and accurately place 2 shots at a moving target, wounding both JFK and JBC, and killing JFK.

 

bluebar

The Rifle:

Known as the rifle that was never fired and only dropped once. The WW2 6.5x52mm model 38 Mannlicher Carcano is arguably the worst military rifle ever made. Among its many known defects include but are not limited to,Improperly sized breech and bore, improperly crowned muzzle, incessive or excessive headspace,faulty extractor, worn or faulty trigger-sear, improperly heat treated firing-pin, badly tempered springs, misaligned sights, excessive barrel run-out, all working to make this weapon nearly as dangerous to the shooter as it is to the target.

After WW2, this weapon would flood the world surplus market and thousands would find their way into the American market where they would be purchased mostly by people looking for cheap rifles, and who were not overly concerned with quality. That with reworking they could be turned into an adaquate one-shot deer rifle is the best that could said for this weapon.

There is no evidence that even if LHO had used the Hidell alias to purchase this rifle mail-order, that he ever spent any time with it on a firing range or had it worked over by a gun-smith so would not have had the slightest idea as to how this weapon would shoot or if it would even shoot at all. Dry firing doesn't count and can even damage the firing-pin.

It is inconceivable that had LHO been planning on doing any shooting at all that he would not have used the one weapon that he had trained with and had any hope of being able to

 

 

 

 

 actually effectively shoot, a .30-'06 M1 Garand.The argument that he was too poor to afford such a weapon doesn't wash as Marines are trained to adapt and improvise, and LHO being true to his training would have found a way to acquire this rifle.Also being true to his training he would have taken it to a rifle range and properly sighted it in.

Also LHO would have been trained in the basics of tactical ambush and would have been true to this training as well.If LHO had acted in the manner the WC and its apologists would have you believe, he would have violated nearly every tenet he was trained in. A case in point would be that no military trained shooters would ever outline themselves against a dark backdrop, such as shooting from an open window while positioned in that window. The rifle depicted in the color version of the evidence shows it to possess a stock appearing to be a dark gun-metal blue in color. This is not with a standard military issue service rifle, and it certainly doesn't stack up to the published photos showing LHO holding this rifle which appears to be much lighter in tone.This rifle also clearly has a side mounted sling-swivel contrary to the published photos which show the rifle LHO allegedly holding as clearly having a bottom mounted sling-swivel. Also curious in this photo depiction is the presence of a black leather sling. If memory serves the original reports listed the sling as being a piece of rope.

On a final note, the WC reported that LHO allegedly carried the disassembled rifle into the TBSD wrapped in brown paper. The FBI reported the rifle to be well oiled but upon microscopic examination, could find no evidence of oil anywhere upon the alleged wrapping paper. FYI, brown paper wicks oil like a sponge. He is also alleged to have reassembled the rifle with a dime. I attempted this with 2 Carcanos I had access to, using a circulated pre 64 silver dime and found it to be wider than the screw slots and useless as a assembly tool.

bluebar

The bullets and cartridges:

Some time ago a researcher,Walt Cakebread, discovered an apparent discrepancy between the photos of WC Exhibit CE-399 and HSCA Exhibit CE-399 which were published together so that it was possible to compare the two in single-vision. He then acquired two high-quality photocopies of the respective bullets and precisely measured the lands and grooves of each bullet, which is the markings made on a bullet from contact with the barrel's rifling as it is fired, and is what makes the bullet spin. The measurements revealed the two bullets were fired from different rifles and were in fact, different bullets.

     Wc1-c1HC5-C

 

Mr.Cakebread sent two copies of the Exhibit Photos to me for another opinion. I am now in the process of acquiring archive-quality photocopys for myself, which I will then forward to the chief ballisticians of the Lyman Gun-Sight Company, the Western Cartridge Company, the Sierra, Speer, Hornady reloading companies, and the Hodgen powder company for additional verification.

In the meantime, and in anticipation of such verification, I am prepared to offer up the results of my own preliminary analysis. The photos I am working with are 8x10" reproductions of the actual archive exhibit photo-enlargements. All measurements were made with Starret Precision Instruments. All figures reflect the enlarged dimensions of the respective photos.

The first thing I noticed, looking at the two bullets side by side, was the nearly pristine condition of WC CE-399 and the slightly more marred but very-good condition of HSCA CE-399. Hell, I could pretty much reload either bullet as they are and fire them again.

Near the nose of HSCA CE-399 is a nick of a kind I have seen before in bullets that due to a sloppy action, chamber a bit too steeply, catch-the breech-edge and incur a small gouge when the bolt is slammed home. (note: this is also where the FBI took a sample)

Also if both photos are transposed over each other and exposed to a bright-light,the nose of WC CE-399 will measure .125" longer and will appear noticeably blunter than the nose of HSCA CE-399. The overall condition of HSCA CE-399 is somewhat rougher in appearance than WC CE-399, showing indications of scoring and a distinctly unpronounced groove entirely consistent with having been fired from a slightly oversized barrel or one nearly washed-out, eg. having been fired so many times that the rifling is nearly gone.

WC CE-300, on the other hand possesses an excellent groove in terms of depth and symmetry,with an overall smoothness that is consistent with having been fired from a barrel that was well-cut and finely polished. 
Groove photo

HC-399The extruded lead from the base of HSCA CE-399 is .780" in length and extrudes .009" from the base as opposed to the distinctly dome-shaped extrusion of WC CE-399 which measures .506" in length and extrudes .012". That these diverse measurements could be obtained from different photos of the same bullet, when size and base profile is otherwise equal, is an abject impossibility.

On WC CE-399, the groove-width measures .385" and the land-width measures .400" on HSCA CE-399,the groove-width measures .400 and the land-width measures .650" for a respective difference of .015" in groove-width, and .150" in land-width.

On WC CE-399, the land-width represents 28% of the bullets diameter, and on HSCA CE-399, the land-width represents 45% of the bullets diameter which is 1.45" yielding a circumference of 4.55".

Using the above figures, it is possible to calculate the number of grooves that must exist by simply dividing the circumference by the total of the land and groove figures which in the case of WC CE-399, plainly shows a six-groove bullet,and in the case of HSCA CE-399, just as plainly shows a four groove bullet.

I can only conclude that WC CE-399 was fired from a high quality six-groove barreled rifle, possibly a sniper-rifle, and the bullet represented as HSCA CE-399 was fired from a much cruder four-groove rifle, at least consistent with an MC rifle.

 

 

 

 

 

Around the bullets near their bases is a cut, ridged groove called the cannelure. When passing through the blood and tissue of a live body, it will invariably become packed with organic stuff. Had either bullet passed through a live body they would show evidence of that passing.

One can only speculate on the ways and means, and hows and whys this is so, but the inescapable truth of the matter is WC CE-399 and HSCA CE-399 are TWO DIFFERENT BULLETS, fired from DIFFERENT WEAPONS, and neither one of them impacted a live-body.

Some time ago,researcher Walt Cakebread sent me a photo-reproduction of Exhibit CE-738 taken at Dallas Police Headquarters around 10:00-10:30 pm, on November 22nd,1963. Among the items inventoried, allegedly connected to LHO, are two spent brass cartridges identified as 6.5mm MC cartridges, and one live round identified as an unfired WCC 6.5mm MC cartridge. It is these two items that are the focus of my evaluation.

Measurements are made by Starrett precision instruments,and a Dietzgen precision protractor,and will be in the English system. The unfired cartridge designated as Item-6 of Exhibit CE-738 and identified as a WCC 6.5mm MC Cartridge appears not to be as represented.

I say appears, due to the fact that in the blow-up I'm working from, it is impossible to read the make of the cartridge. However,the primer is clearly visible and is markedly similar to the odd-sized Berdan primer that is characteristic of Italian GI Ammunition and is different in size than the american primers that would be used in WCC Ammo. Also in evidence, is the counterbored neck-step just above the shoulder, that locks the neck into the bullet's cannelure which would not be present in WCC Ammunition.

HC5

Conclusion: The unfired cartridge represented as Item-6 of Exhibit CE-738 more closely resembles an L.B.C.936, 6.5x52mm MC Italian GI cartridge, then it does an American made WCC 6.5x52mm MC Cartridge.(note) Virtually all American bullets are jacketed with Gilders Metal which is an alloy of copper and zinc, with a distinct brassy appearance. The color photos of the unfired cartridge shows a bullet that is distinctly silver in color consistent with the cupra-nickle alloy used by European bullet makers.

The MC Cartridge possesses a shoulder width of .160" and a shoulder bevel of 25 degrees. This is an extremely critical point as measurement of the spent cases show a shoulder width of .186" and a shoulder bevel of 24 degrees, for a difference of .026" in shoulder width and 1 degree of angle in the bevel.

 

Conclusion:That the spent cases more closely resemble a 6.5x54mm Mannlicher-Schoenauer (MS) Cartridge then they do a 6.5x52mm MC cartridge. The distinction made in the above conclusion, if it holds up, is an important one as the Austrian designed MS rifle is prized for its smooth action, magazine efficiency, chambering characteristics and accuracy as opposed to the dismal performance of the MC rifle.

 

 

 

 

Note: Many a custom Mauser is chambered for this cartridge which makes for an excellent medium range deer rifle as well as a sniper rifle.

 

bluebar

 

What this all boils down to is massive evidence fraud,committed upon the American people and the world,by elements within the federal government, underwritten by the Warren Commission,in a capitol murder case.

The whole affair smacks of treason and every individual that had a hand in it should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. I strongly encourage all who would see justice done in this case to write your elected representatives and demand that this case be reopened. Let them know that there can be no closure until the myth that is the WCR be relegated to its rightful place as a piece of historical fiction,and all individuals connected to the murder of JFK and the subsequent coverup be brought before the bar to answer for their crimes.

Regards,

John Ritchson(SSGT.499th TC USATC HG US Army,Class of 69)

(Master-Machinest, Gun-Smith,Ballistician,) (and Survivor of the US Foreign-Policy )

(Experiment in SE Asia.[11bravo7, RVN 70-71])

============article sent to Judyth Baker by John Ritchson =============

 

http://www.jfklancer.com/photos/LHO/IV-15-HSCA.jpg

These items were selected because of the Panel's policy of working just with first generation prints
and original negatives. (158) Only these types of materials contain the most reliable 
photographic information ; subsequent generation materials tend to lose detail in highlight 
and shadow areas, suffer deterioration of tonal quality, and are prone to include new
defects that may impair the accurate representation of the photographic image. CE 133-A, 
CE 133-B, 133A-de Mohrenschildt, 133C-Dees, 133C-Stovall and CE 134 were identified 
Page 6 143 by the Panel as first generation prints. CE749, the original negative to 
CE 133-B, was the only negative recovered from the possession of the Dallas Police Department ; 
consequently, it was the only original nega-tive available to the Panel for analysis. 
There is no official record explaining why the Dallas Police Department failed to give the 
Warren Commission the other original negative.

http://www.jfklancer.com/photos/LHO/133-a.JPG
CE 133-A

 

(378) The photographic prints

examined by the panel were not

 of uniform size. These

variations reflected differences

 in how each had been

produced and developed.

CE 133-A and 133-B were

considered to be drugstore or

photofinisher prints because

they appeared to have been

produced on the type of

commercial photoprinting

machine used by photo

finishers for camera stores, drugstores and mass-produced prints.[Editor’s Note: but Oswald

 prided himself on developing

 his own photographs, as

Demohrenschildt explained in his

Book, “I Am a Patsy!”

http://www.jfklancer.com/photos/LHO/133-b.JPG
CE 133-B

 

(379) The photographs show a slight variation in the horizontal and vertical dimensions of the prints and borders that were caused by artifacts of masking position. On the back of each is the small graphite mark characteristic of automatic printing machines. It indicates to an electric eye scanner where the long continuous roll of prints should be cut into individual snapshots. (See figs. IV-18, IV-19, JFK exhibits F-179 and F-182.) As most drugstore prints, these were apparently cropped slightly for aesthetic purposes by placing a white border around their periphery. Finally, the panel noted that CE 749, the negative to CE 133-B, contained small emulsion tears, which indicated that it had been abused in processing, as well as water spots indicative of improper washing or drying.

http://www.jfklancer.com/photos/LHO/133a-133b.JPG
CE 133-A / CE 133-B

 

380) CE 133-A and 133-B were determined to be first generation because of the presence of very fine lines and marks that were occasioned either by scratches on the film, which were caused by the camera, or by torn or broken emulsion from the negative that occurred during development. Marks so fine and sharp would not have appeared with such definition on a second generation print.

http://www.jfklancer.com/photos/LHO/133a-dem.gif
133A-deMohrenschildthttp://www.jfklancer.com/photos/LHO/133a-dem_back.JPG
133A-deMohrenschildt rear

 

(381) On review of 133A-deMohrenschildt (see figs. IV-2O and IV-21, JFK exhibits F-382 (front) and F-383 (reverse)), the panel noted that it had been probably made in a high quality enlarger with a high quality lens. Nevertheless the print has become yellowed with the passage of time indicating that it was not adequately fixed or washed during the development process.

(382) The uncropped black border around the edge of this print indicates that it was projected in an enlarger with it negative carrier that was larger than the actual full size negative of CE 133-A. This type of equipment might be found in a graphic arts shop or photo printing shop that uses many sizes of negatives. It is also possible that the paper easel might not have had the capability of masking a print this size. As a result, the entire negative area is printed and the unexposed border area outside the full camera aperture has been recorded as black on the print. Because people normally like to have white borders on their pictures, this is an unusual way of presenting a photograph. The sharpness of the markings (from the film scratches) within this black border, as well as the presence of fine scratches and emulsion tears, indicates that this is a first generation print.

http://www.jfklancer.com/photos/LHO/133-b.JPG

CE 133A-Stovall

 

(383) The 133A-Stovall print is approximately 5 by 8 inches. (See fig. IV-22, JFK exhibit F-185.) This is not a standard size for photographic paper. The

person who made the print

probably took a standard size

 sheet of 8- by 10-inch paper and cut it in half. Across the bottom border of the print is a

 black line. The lower right area

 of the white border above the

 black line bears a black circle.

The black border at the bottom

 was caused by light spilling over the bottom border of the easel mark because the mask

was not wide enough to cover it.

 Furthermore, since the mask

 contained a small rivet with a

hole through it, the paper

extending under this rivet hole

 allowed the light from the

enlarger to print the image

through the rivet hole. These

markings are actually sharper

than the photographic image.

The Panel established that this

print was also a first generation

 print, again because of well-defined markings and emulsion tears.

(384) Since the original

negative to CE 133-A was

square shaped (see fig. IV-2O,

JFK exhibit F- 382), and

because 133A-Stovall is

 rectangular (see fig. IV-22. JFK

 exhibit No. F-185), it is

apparent that the Stovall

picture has been cropped with

 a standard white border for

aesthetic reasons.

http://www.jfklancer.com/photos/LHO/133-c.JPG
133C-Stovall / 133C-Dees (White)

 

(385) The 133C-Stovall and

133C-Dees prints (see fig. IV-15) also appear to have been cropped for aesthetic reasons

in a manner similar to 133A-

Stovall.

 Moreover, because these two

 prints had the same

well-defined emulsion tears and

 scratches on them as the other

 first generation prints, they are

 likewise considered to be first

 generation. Both are

enlargements from the original

 negative.

http://www.jfklancer.com/photos/LHO/thumbnails/134-dpd.jpg
CE 134

 

(386) Finally, CE 134 is an

8- by 10-inch enlargement of

the CE 133-A negative.

(See fig. IV-23) It apparently was reproduced by the Dallas Police Department by

enlargement from the original

 negative with an easel set that

 accommodated 8- by 10-inch

 enlarging paper. The back of

the photograph contains an

 impression from a rubber

stamp identifying the Dallas

 Police Department.

(See fig. IV-24) The emulsion

scratches and tears are again

evidence that this is a first

 generation print.

*Dallas police officer R. L. Studebaker testified to the House Select Committee on Assassinations that in 1963, while working in the Dallas Police Department Photography Laboratory, he made numerous copies of the Kennedy photographic evidence for fellow Dallas police officers ; included in the pictures distributed were prints of CE 133-A and CE 133-B as well as of the third pose not seen by the Warren Commission. Testimony of R. L. Studebaker, supra note 127

**Materials and Procedures
(366) The Photographic Evidence Panel examined Warren Commission exhibits CE 133-A and 133-B, the two backyard pictures seized from the Oswald residence by Dallas Police in 1963 ; CE 749, the original negative to CE 133-B, and CE 134, an enlargement of CE 133-A. In addition to these Warren Commission exhibits, the Panel analyzed the four photographs recently discovered by the committee (367)

1.    A photograph designated as 133A-de Mohrenschildt recovered from the estate of the late George de Mohrenschildt ; (155)(368)

2.    A photograph designated as 133C-Deer, obtained from the Dees' widow ; (156) (369)

3.    Photographs designated as 133A-Stovall and 133C-Stovall, obtained from Stovall. (157)


The information immediately above comes from an article printed by Lancer.

at    http://www.jfklancer.com/Rifle.html   retrieved August 17, 2009  -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 

The Great Carcano Swindle

By

Bill MacDowall

(C) 2000

This article reproduced here with the permission of the author

 

 

MURDER WEAPON FOUND!

Within an hour of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy Dallas Police Department (DPD) announced the discovery of a rifle on the 6th floor of the Texas School Book Depository (TSBD) in Dealey Plaza.

Two DPD officers, Eugene Boone and Seymour Weitzman, were present when the weapon was found and both were credited with finding it by the Warren Commission (WC). …Subsequent claims would indicate that the true identity of the rifle found was known to Dallas Police within a very short time of its discovery…

the Carcano superficially resembles the Mauser genre from which it was derived but is betrayed by its inferior build-quality.

Mannlicher Carcano C2766 was allegedly purchased from a Chicago mail order house by an A. Hidell, an alias apparently used by Lee Harvey Oswald. Almost immediately suspicions began to emerge in some quarters that the rifle originally found had been switched for the Mannlicher Carcano linked to Oswald. Oswald had been arrested shortly after the assassination in connection with the killing of DPD officer J.D. Tippit.

Controversy over the true identity of the rifle originally found in the TSBD has continued to rage ever since. In seeking to unravel this mystery it quickly becomes clear that a dark shadow hangs over the testimony of many of the individuals involved in the finding of the TSBD rifle. More than that, it seems highly probable that the chain of evidence linking Lee Harvey Oswald to the ownership and use of Mannlicher Carcano C2766 was fabricated by those charged with responsibility for investigating the assassination of John. F. Kennedy.

 

A RIFLE IS BORN

 

Our story begins not in Dallas but in the Italian town of Terni in 1940. Italian involvement in world war two created an urgent demand for rifles to equip the armed forces. At the Royal Arms Works in Terni (Regio Esercito Terni-RE Terni) north of Rome workers were turning out 2,500 rifles a day. It was here that Mannlicher Carcano C2766 was made.

On pages 21-22 of his 1975 book "The Gun: A Biography of the Gun that Killed John F. Kennedy", Henry S. Bloomgarden described the means by which C2766 acquired its allegedly unique identity:

 

"Each weapon was stamped with its own numbers and marking; together these would brand each gun as a unique entity."

 

 

  He went on to describe one such gun thus:

CAL 6.5 (the calibre of the weapon)

RE TERNI (place of manufacture)

TNI (with a proof mark in the form of a crown)

PG (initials of the bolt handle designer)

SD (initials of the inspector of the rifle)

ROCCA (after Giuseppe Rocca manufacturer of the bolt cocking piece)

C2766 (the serial number)

1940 (the year of manufacture)

According to Bloomgarden:

 

A serial number and letter in combination were stamped into the metal giving a particular unit identity; no other gun would be so marked. One was branded, forever, C2766.

As with much of the lore surrounding C2766, this assertion was only partly accurate. In fact Mannlicher Carcano rifles were being made at several plants throughout Italy. The Model 91/38 Carcano, of which C2766 is an example, was also manufactured by BerettaFNA and Gardone VT as well as the Terni plant. The Royal Arms Works at Terni was, however, the largest producer accounting for around 800,000 units out of a total of 948,000 Model 91/38's made.

The nomenclature, markings and identification of Carcanos varies widely. Specific models are not always marked in like fashion and this often causes confusion, which is reflected in the available Carcano literature. Regardless of Bloomgarden's conviction that each Carcano made bore a unique serial number, the fact is that several Carcanos may have carried the serial number 2766 with or without the "C" prefix.

After the war Carcano rifles and carbines found their way back to the RE Terni plant by the thousand. Most of these weapons had seen service on the battlefields of Europe and Africa and were in poor condition. The Terni plant, which had once manufactured Carcanos now, turned its attention to repairing and restoring the detritus of war.

In 1958, the Italian Ministry of Defence (Ministero della Difesa), offered for sale a consignment of more than 500,000 rifles. Sicilian Attorney Alberto Bagnasco got wind of the Ministry of Defence plans and contacted Philadelphia attorney Andrew Farnese, a business contact, with a view to finding a buyer for the surplus Carcanos.

Farnese contacted Louis and Irving Feldsott, owners of the Folsom Arms Company of New York, who expressed an interest in acquiring the surplus Carcanos but lacked the financial resources necessary to make a bid for the inventory. An approach was then made to Adam Consolidated, who agreed to fund the venture.

The Adams Consolidated/Folsom Arms alliance bid of $1,776,000 was accepted by the Italian Ministry of Defence. In Italy, Irving Feldsott and Alberto Bagnasco agreed the terms of a contract with the Ministry of Defense on behalf of the Adam

 

 

 

Consolidated consortium.

Adam Consolidated were to act as financiers and importers. A new company called Crescent Firearms was incorporated, with Louis Feldsott as President, to distribute the rifles.

 

The contract provided for the supply of approximately 570,000 Carcano Model 91/38 6.5MM rifles and 5300 kilos of assorted spare parts. Some 300,000 of the Carcanos to be supplied were known to be defective to a greater or lesser degree.

Prior to shipping the Carcanos to the United States, Bagnasco was retained by Adam Consolidated to arrange for the renovation and repair of the defective units to make them ready for the US market. Bagnasco contacted the Brecia-based arms company Breda in the hope that they might be interested in contracting for the renovation and repair of the Carcanos but they declined. Breda did, however, suggest that company executive Luciano Riva, a 5th generation gunsmith of some repute, might be interested.

 

Riva was later provided with various sample weapons to work on in order that Adam Consolidated might assess the quality of his workmanship. Riva evidently impressed Adam Consolidated because Bagnasco was soon instructed to offer him the contract. Riva was initially reluctant to enter into a contract with Adam Consolidated on his own account. His stated preference was to carry out the work as a sub-contractor to Breda but eventually he was persuaded to sign the contract.

Under the terms of the contract, Riva was required to renovate and repair damaged or defective weapons and, where appropriate, to shorten or lengthen the barrels of weapons to meet the needs of the US sporting and target shooting fraternities. Additionally, and most importantly, all identifying markings on the weapons were to be removed and the words "Made in Italy" stamped on each barrel.

As Bloomgarden wrote in his book:

 

"A very simple operation, Riva said: To shorten the 91's with long barrels, to lengthen those with short barrels...and to remove the markings and inscribe "Made in Italy" on each weapon - these were easy tasks. Shortening was a matter of sawing; lengthening was a matter of inserting a sleeve; the various digits and letters could be removed by grinding."

So it was that Luciano Riva accepted the contract from Adam Consolidated, repaired, renovated and restored the Carcano rifles entrusted to him and removed all the unique identifying marks, including serial numbers, replacing these with the simple legend "Made in Italy". By reputation, Luciano Riva was a proud and dedicated craftsman who would produce workmanship of the very highest standard for his new benefactors.

On May 24th 1960, Riva signed the contract that charged him with the obligation to renovate and repair 150,000 rifles to be shipped to the United States in four lots as follows:

 

 

 

 

50,000 by end of July 1960

15,000 in August 1960

45,000 in September 1960

40,000 in October 1960

All told, Riva made a total of 12 shipments of Carcanos to Adam Consolidated. The last of these left Riva's Brescia workshop in September 1960. Shipments ceased abruptly when Adam Consolidated and Riva became caught up in a dispute. Riva was angered by Adam Consolidated's failure to pay for the rifles already shipped to the United States whilst Adam Consolidated claimed that large numbers of rifles leaving the Brescia workshop were defective.

Henry Bloomgarden defended Riva against this attack on his competence:

"Riva knew guns. His family had been gunmakers for 5 generations. He knew his work had not been defective. His only failure, towards the end, had been in not removing the identification marks on the last of the guns, as with 2766."

The claim that Riva failed to remove the identifying marks on rifles shipped towards the end is a vital element in the chain of evidence relating to Mannlicher Carcano C2766. Everything I have learned about Riva points to a man who was exploited by Adam Consolidated but was possessed of great professional integrity.

 

 On balance, I am inclined to think that Luciano Riva would have honoured his contract and would have removed the markings on all Carcanos shipped from his workshop. It would seem extremely odd if he had renovated and repaired these rifles as required by his contract and then failed to erase the markings...why would he?

 

Whilst Henry Bloomgarden's book is a helpful resource it falls down in many important respects. He provides no sources for any of the claims he makes and his reliability on the matter of serial numbers is undermined by contradictions in his own reporting. Referring to documentation raised to support shipments he says:

"Riva made 12 shipments, all handled identically...packed ten to a carton, the serial number of each gun was checked and recorded on a slip headed "Crescent Firearms Inc."

WHAT SERIAL NUMBER?

 Bloomgarden makes a further reference to serial numbers on pages 114-115:

"Periodically, Fred Rupp, RFD 2, Mink Road, Perkasie, Pennsylvania, picked up loads of 91's from Harborside Terminal. He brought them to his shop where, under a subcontract with Crescent Firearms, he would clean and test fire each weapon, then ship it from his place to various customers designated to him by Crescent. If a carton was mutilated, he would repack the weapons in a new carton after cleaning and test firing them. The new carton would be numbered by him with the same number as appeared on the original carton picked up from Harborside. If a particular gun did not function properly, he would replace it with another, and he would indicate on the slip the serial number of the weapon removed and the weapon substituted."

Note again the reference to serial numbers when Bloomgarden himself agrees that the serial numbers were to be removed, and in all but a few alleged examples were removed, in accordance with the terms of Riva's contract. Bloomgarden is

 

 

 

 

completely unreliable on the matter of serial numbers and apart from one Carcano allegedly bearing the serial no. C2766 there is no evidence to suggest that Riva did not remove all serial numbers from the rifles he shipped.

It also appears that Fred Rupp had a stockpile of Carcanos, which he could use as replacements if "a particular gun did not function properly.." Since there is no known record of where these "spare" Carcanos came from, it is possible that Rupp, acting for Crescent Firearms had sources other than Riva. Further checks reveal that alternative stocks of Carcanos were being drawn upon by Adam Consolidated/Crescent Firearms.

Adam Consolidated was struggling to meet the terms of the agreement they had signed with the Italian Ministry of Defence. As indicated earlier Adam Consolidated had contracted to buy 570,000 rifles but the hiatus in dealings with Riva meant that only 150,000 had been processed. Under the threat of breech of contract litigation by the Defence Ministry, Adam Consolidated asked Alberto Bagnasco to find an "alternative renovator". This "alternative renovator" was duly found and shipped a further 80,000 rifles to Adam Consolidated.

Mannlicher Carcano C2766 has not yet reached Klein's Mail Order house in Chicago yet its provenance is already looking a little shaky.

 

C2766 WHERE ARE YOU?

Mannlicher Carcano serial no. C2766 was apparently dispatched from Riva's Storo workshops in carton no. 3376 on Crescent Firearms shipping slip no. 3620. Carton no. 3376 was one of 520 such cartons making up a consignment of 5,200 rifles loaded aboard the cargo ship Elettra Fassio at the port of Genoa on September 29th 1960 bound for New York. The ship docked in the USA on October 17th 1960.

It would be another 28 months before the carton said to contain C2766 would find its way from the Harborside Terminal to Fred Rupp's workshop. The reason for this delay was apparently due to the fact that the shipment had been impounded by US Customs on the grounds that Adam Consolidated had undervalued the cargo in an attempt to reduce the amount of duty payable. I have been unable to discover why this one consignment out of the 12 identical consignments shipped from Riva should have been singled out in this way. It may be that Adam Consolidated was simply the victims of a random swoop.

The record shows that between October 1960 and October 1962 , Fred Rupp continued to take delivery of consignments of Carcanos from Harborside without let or hindrance from US Customs. These included rifles shipped from Riva and the 80,000 rifles renovated elsewhere.

 

On February 12th 1963, Fred Rupp dispatched carton no. 3376, said to contain C2766, via North Penn Transfer Company against Crescent Firearms order no. 3178 to Klein's Sporting Goods of Chicago. If the record thus far is to be believed then Klein's took delivery of Mannlicher Carcano serial no. C2766, allegedly one of a very very few rifles

 

 

 

 

 out of a total of 150,000 repaired and renovated by Luciano Riva that did not have its identifying marks removed.

 

Luciano Riva allegedly failed to ensure that all identifying marks were removed from a small number of Carcano rifles. The seemingly arbitrary decision of US Customs to impound that particular consignment of 5,200 rifles out of 150,000 shipped to Adam Consolidated, resulted in the contents of carton no. 3376 being sold to Klein's Sporting Goods. How lucky could the FBI get?

 

KLEIN'S LOSS IS YOUR GAIN

There is nothing like a little white lie to oil the wheels of commerce and the people at Klein's were not above spicing up their marketing copy with a few harmless untruths. The banner on their full page spread in the February 1963 issue of the American Rifleman magazine proclaimed: RECEIVED TOO LATE FOR THE HUNTING SEASON....Klein's loss is your gain!

 

The fact that Klein's had not screwed up on an order or been let down by a supplier resulting in an accumulation of bad stock was by the by. There has to be an excuse for every bargain offer lest the buying public think there may be something wrong with the goods being offered. What better reason than an unspecified faux pas that had left Klein's up to their eyes in guns at a time of the year when the customer's buying inclinations were directed elsewhere?

 

KLEIN'S RECEIVE AN ORDER FROM DALLAS

On 13th March 1963, Klein's received an envelope containing a small order slip clipped from their full-page advert in the February issue of American Rifleman. Mr A. Hidell of Dallas, Texas, had enclosed a US Postal Money Order no. 2,202,130,462 to the value of $21.45 in payment for one Mannlicher Carcano 6.5MM Carbine with scope as advertised with reference no. C20-T750 priced at $19.95 with an additional $1.50 postage and handling. Though the advert offered ammunition and a clip as added extras Mr Hidell did not order either. [Editor’s note: without a clip, bullets in the gun must be loaded and fired one at a time, so to fire in succession, a clip was necessary.  So…where did Oswald later get a clip, and the ammo?]

 

On March 20th 1963, Klein's dispatched a Mannlicher Carcano, apparently bearing the serial no. C2766, to the order of Mr Hidell. whose postal address was P.O. Box 2915, Dallas, Texas.

 

The case against Lee Harvey Oswald depends entirely upon establishing a solid chain of evidence that links him to the Mannlicher Carcano dispatched by Klein's to the order of A. Hidell and places him (Oswald) on the 6th floor of the TSBD with that weapon at 12.30 PM on November 22nd 1963. It will become clear that no such chain of evidence exists.

 

Lee Harvey Oswald rented Dallas Post Box 2915 on October 9th 1962 using his own name. Effectively the address A. Hidell, PO Box 2915 never existed. In order to rent a post box, Oswald was required to fill out Form 1093 (Application for Post Office Box). This was a multi-part form. Part 3 of the application form included a section where the applicant could nominate other persons authorized to collect mail from that particular box. Harry D. Holmes, Dallas Postal Inspector, told the WC that:

 

"Form 1093 includes a place for name of person entitled to receive mail through the box other than the applicant himself."

The ability of Lee Harvey Oswald to collect a package addressed to A. Hidell at Post Box 2915 depends entirely upon A. Hidell being listed as an authorized person in Part 3 of Oswald's application. It should have been an easy matter to verify this by reference to Part 3 of Oswald's application but, as Postal Inspector Harry Holmes told the WC, Part 3 had been destroyed:

 

"...when the box has been closed, Postal Regulations require that they tear off Part 3 and throw it away."

Box 2915 had been closed by Oswald on May 14th 1963.

 

Fortunately, Postal Inspector Holmes is not the final authority on Postal Regulations. The Postal Manual, Section 846.53b, states quite unequivocally that "Part 3 of the box rental application, identifying persons other than the applicant authorized to receive mail must be retained for 2 years after the box is closed."

Harry D. Holmes lied about postal procedures and the WC accepted that lie as fact.

A week after the assassination Harry D. Holmes was quoted in a New York Times article where he stated:

 

"No one other than Oswald was authorized to receive mail at that box".

Holmes could not have made this statement unless he had seen Part 3 of Oswald's application form after the assassination.

Further confirmation that Part 3 of Oswald's application form existed after the assassination and that A. Hidell was not an authorized nominee can be found in the Warren Report (WR). To refute claims made by writer Thomas G. Buchanan in his book "Who Killed Kennedy?", the FBI produced a document that specifically addressed 32 different allegations made by Buchanan. Published in the WR, this document CE 2585, contained the following:

 

12. CLAIM: The Post Office in Dallas to which Oswald had the rifle mailed was kept both under his name and that of A. Hidell.

INVESTIGATION: Our investigation has revealed that Oswald did not indicate on his application that others, including an A. Hidell, would receive mail through the box in question, which was Post Office Box 2915 in Dallas.

As with Harry D. Holmes revelations to the New York Times, the FBI could not have made this determination unless they had seen Part 3 of Oswald's application form. The

 

 

 

 

 

 only conclusion it is possible to draw from this information is that Part 3 of Oswald's

application still existed after John F. Kennedy was assassinated and that Harry D. Holmes and the FBI knew as much. Harry Holmes' story that Postal Regulations required Part 3 of the form to be destroyed when the box is closed was an act of perjury that attempted to hide the fact that an important piece of evidence had been destroyed sometime after the assassination.

 

It cannot be stated strongly enough that Part 3 of Oswald's application form is the one document that underpins the entire chain of evidence linking Oswald to the Carcano and the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. If A. Hidell was authorized to collect mail at Post Box 2915, then Oswald could have taken delivery of the Carcano by masquerading as Hidell. If A. Hidell was not authorized to collect mail at that box then Oswald would not have been able to take delivery of the Carcano package.

 

In practice, when the Carcano package addressed to A. Hidell at Box 2915, was received Post Office staff would have checked the appropriate documentation. They would have noted that Box 2915 was rented in the name of Oswald and that A. Hidell was not authorized to collect mail. An additional check may have been made to establish if A. Hidell was a previous renter of Box 2915 who had left a forwarding address. In the event that these checks proved negative the Carcano package would have been returned to sender.

 

Even exercising great generosity of spirit it is difficult to see any explanation for the destruction of Part 3 of the Oswald application form other than to sustain a false chain of evidence. The WC accepted as fact the sworn testimony of Harry D. Holmes that Part 3 of the form had been destroyed legitimately in line with Postal Regulations. In addition, they allowed Holmes to create a false mechanism by which Oswald could still have collected the Carcano package. This was typical of the "belts and braces" approach the WC used to cover all angles.

 

Holmes claimed that when a package was received, a notice would be placed in the relevant box to advise the holder that a package was waiting to be collected. This would be done, Holmes claimed, regardless of who the package was addressed to, authorized or not. Thereafter, the holder of the box would only have to produce the notice at the collection window to take delivery of the package. Possession of the notice was deemed to be proof of entitlement.

This is how the WC created the foundations of the chain of evidence linking Oswald to the Carcano. It is ironic that the WR could publish the testimony of Holmes claiming that Part 3 of Oswald's application form had been destroyed and the FBI document, CE 2585, proving it had not.

 

All evidence is not equal and in seeking to take a view it is necessary to decide what weight can be placed on any particular piece of evidence. The evidence that Lee Harvey Oswald could not have taken delivery of the Carcano package by any known official means is very strong indeed. It is strengthened even more by the knowledge that Harry D. Holmes offered perjured testimony and that a crucial piece of evidence, Part 3 of the Oswald's application form, was destroyed during the post-assassination period.

 

I think the only plausible interpretation of the facts is that Oswald could not, and did not, take possession of the Carcano package. To sustain the illusion that Oswald did collect the Carcano package, vital evidence was destroyed and additional evidence was fabricated.

 

The Post Box evidence is not the only evidence the WR offers to link Oswald to the Carcano. Other evidence includes the infamous "backyard photographs", the testimony of the DeMohrenschildts and Marina Oswald, the mysterious contents of the brown paper bag Oswald is alleged to have carried into the TSBD on the day of the assassination, the analysis of the handwriting on the Klein's order slip and the apparent linkage between Oswald and the A. Hidell alias.

 

THE BACKYARD PHOTOGRAPHS

An in depth analysis and appraisal of the backyard photographs is beyond the scope of this article and is probably a pointless exercise anyway. For decades the arguments for and against fakery have raged back and forth without any kind of consensus being reached. Far from clarifying matters, experts brought in to appraise the evidence have succeeded only in creating more confusion. On paper the idea of seeking the opinion of an expert witnesses seems a valid one. Sadly, for every expert witness who expresses an opinion it is usually possible to find another equally qualified witness who will express the opposite opinion.

 

The best available evidence on the authenticity of the backyard photographs is to be found in the conclusions of the House Select Committee on Assassinations (HSCA) photographic panel. After extensive tests on the photographs and negatives the panel concluded that the photographs were probably genuine and that the rifle being held by Oswald appeared to be Mannlicher Carcano C2766. A photographic panel spokesman did later concede that "it is possible to make a false photograph that we would not be able to detect." [Editor’s note: more evidence has emerged to refute the validity of the backyard photos. See the backyard Photos Page]

 

In seeking to take a view on the matter of the backyard photographs context is everything. The totality of the evidence surrounding the assassination strongly suggests that Oswald was offered up as a scapegoat by the investigative and intelligence community. There is no doubt that important evidence was tampered with or even destroyed. Witnesses were ignored or "persuaded" to modify their evidence.

Oswald was characterized as a disaffected and feckless loner when the known facts

 

 

 

 

 point more to a young man who was intelligent, thoughtful and probably an intelligence operative.

 

The HSCA photographic panel concede that the backyard photographs could be fake. If they are, then it is likely that the faking was done by experts in the employ of one or other government agency. This is the context in which these photographs must be viewed.

 

Taken in isolation I would have to concede that the photographs probably are genuine but the behaviour and activities of the FBI, CIA and ONI in this case cast grave doubts on the authenticity of any the evidence. I am certainly not confident enough in the backyard photographs to include them in this charted history of C2766.

[Edior’s note since this article was written, a preponderance of evidence has emerged showing that the same head was pasted onto different photos, and that the background was precisely he same in all photos, only blown up or down or tilted to make the scenes appear different. For more information on this subject, see the Backyard Photo Page].

 

THE TESTIMONY

Marina Oswald testified that she had taken the backyard photographs at Lee's request. Whilst she was able to state that Lee did have a rifle her various descriptions of that weapon could in no way be regarded as a positive identification of C2766 to the exclusion of any other rifle. The best guide to the weapon Marina claims to have seen are the backyard photographs. George and Jeanne De Mohrenschildt testified to knowledge of Oswald's rifle but were unable to confirm that the rifle in question was C2766.

It is interesting to note that one of the backyard photographs did not turn up until April 1967. George DeMohrenschildt announced that during a search of luggage held in storage he had uncovered a photograph of Oswald. The photograph was another copy of the backyard image showing Oswald holding the rifle and leftist literature.

 

Oddly, there was an inscription on the back of this photograph written in Russian Cryllic Script. The inscription translated to: "Hunter of Fascists ha-ha-ha!!!". The photograph was endorsed with the words "To my friend George from Lee Oswald 5/IV/63" written in Oswald's hand.

The DeMohrenschildts were unable to throw any light on how the photograph came to be in their luggage. An analysis of the Cryllic inscription revealed that it had originally been written, then rewritten in pencil by someone unfamiliar with the Cryllic alphabet. The Cryllic inscription could not be matched to the handwriting of Lee or Marina Oswald.

 

George DeMohrenschildt's son-in-law Gary Taylor also testifying to seeing a rifle in the Oswald household but was unable to confirm that it was C2766.

 

 

 

 

 

ATTEMPTED MURDER OF GENERAL WALKER

The WC tried to link Oswald and Mannlicher Carcano C2766 to the attempted murder of General Edwin Walker on April 10th 1963. In 1978 the HSCA commissioned Neutron activation tests on the remnants of the bullet CE 573 fired at Walker. The tests were conducted by Dr Vincent P. Guinn who testified that CE573 was "rather characteristic of WCC Mannlicher-Carcano bullet ." This language was typical of that used throughout the WC and HSCA investigations and tends to mislead rather than inform. There was no such thing as a "Mannlicher Carcano bullet". What Dr Guinn should have said was "a 6.5MM WCC bullet that was suitable for a range of weapons including a Mannlicher Carcano 6.5MM." 

I dealt with the Guinn Neutron activation tests at some length in my article "On the Trail of a Magic Bullet". At that time I concluded that "Dr Guinn's work is interesting as far as it goes but in reality that is not very far".

I don't think that Dr Quinn succeeded in demonstrating that the bullet fragments recovered after the Walker shooting and the JFK assassination were fired from C2766. In the case of CE573, the bullet was so badly damaged that no Ballistics evidence linking it to C2766 could be gleaned. The FBI tried to overcome this by stating that CE573 "showed the characteristics of a round that had been fired by a Mannlicher-Carcano".  The following exchange demonstrates the way in which the FBI in the person of Special Agent Andrew M. Newquist tried to create evidence that didn't exist:

 

Mr. McDonald: Did you find similar class characteristics, between the Walker bullet, CE-573, and the panel test bullets that you have before you?

Mr. Newquist: Yes, class characteristics of CE-573 and the class characteristics of the bullets, CE-572, the Federal test from the Oswald firearm and also the panel test fired from the Oswald firearm were consistent in number, width, and direction of twist.

Mr. McDonald: Could your panel reach a conclusion as to the rifle of origin for CE-573 using the evidence available to you?

Mr. Newquist: Would you repeat the question?

Mr. McDonald: Were you able to reach a conclusion as to what rifle fired CE-573, the Walker bullet?

Mr. Newquist: No, we were not, due to the distortion of CE-573, and lacking a significant correspondence of individual characteristics with the test, no conclusion could be reached. However, no significant difference was observed from CE-573 to CE-572, no gross difference was noted to indicate that it had not been fired from it.

Mr. McDonald: But what you are saying is, through distortion, because of impact, the peculiar identifying marks were not able to be found by your panel on CE-573?

Mr. Newquist: That is correct.

Mr. McDonald: And was this the conclusion that the FBI reached in 1963?

Mr. Newquist: That is correct.

 

 

 

 

Neither Mr Newquist nor Dr Guinn offer anything persuasive to suggest that Mannlicher Carcano paused briefly in the backyard of the Walker household en route from Terni to the TSBD.

 

ASSASSINATION DAY

Did Lee Harvey Oswald take a brown paper bag containing a Mannlicher Carcano rifle into the TSBD on the morning of November 22, 1963? Neighbour and co-worker Buell Wesley Frazier drove Oswald to work on the morning of the assassination. The WC called Frazier to testify at the Veterans of Foreign Wars Building, Washington DC. on Wednesday 11th March 1964. Frazier told the commission that he remembered Oswald had a package with him on that morning. WC counsel Joseph A. Ball was keen to establish that this package contained C2766.

When disassembled Mannlicher Carcano C2766 measured approximately 34.8 inches. Frazier offered the following testimony:

 

Mr. Ball: You say he had the package under his arm when you saw him?  

Mr. Frazier: Yes, sir.

Mr. Ball: You mean one end of it under the armpit?   

Mr. Frazier: Yes, sir; he had it up just like you stick it right under your arm like that.   

Mr. Ball: And he had the lower part....   

Mr. Frazier: The other part with his right hand.   

Mr. Ball: Right hand?   

Mr. Frazier: Right.   

Mr. Ball: He carried it then parallel to his body?

Mr. Frazier: Right, straight up and down.

This was not the kind of testimony Joseph Ball wanted to elicit. It was just not physically possible that Oswald could carry a package on that length in the manner described...his arms would not have been long enough. Ball repeatedly tried to shake Frazier's testimony on this point:

 

Mr. Ball: When you saw him get out of the car, when you first saw him when he was out of the car before he started to walk, you noticed he had the package under the arm?

 Mr. Frazier: Yes, sir.

Mr. Ball: One end of it was under the armpit and the other he had to hold it in his right hand. Did the package extend beyond the right hand?

Mr. Frazier: No, sir. Like I say if you put it under your armpits and put it down normal to the side.   

Mr. Ball: But the right hand on, was it on the end or the side of the package?   

Mr. Frazier: No; he had it cupped in his hand.   

Mr. Ball: Cupped in his hand?   

Mr. Frazier: Right.

Frazier remained adamant throughout the cross-examination. Yes Oswald had taken a

package into work that day but the package he saw could not have contained the Mannlicher Carcano.

The testimony of Buell Wesley Frazier was not uncorroborated. Linnie Mae Randle, Frazier's sister, also testified before the commission that day:

 

Mrs Randle: I saw him as he crossed the street and come across my driveway to where Wesley had his car parked by the carport.

Mr Ball: Was he carrying any package?

Mrs Randle: Yes; he was.

Mr Ball: What was he carrying?

Mrs Randle: He was carrying a package in a sort of heavy brown bag, heavier than a grocery bag it looked to me. It was about, if I might measure, about this long, I suppose, and he carried it in his right hand, had the top sort of folded down and had a grip like this, and the bottom, he carried it this way, you know, and it almost touched the ground as he carried it.

Mr Ball: And where was his hand gripping the middle of the package?

Mrs Randle: No, sir; the top with just a little bit sticking up. You know, just like you grab something like that.

Mr Ball: And he was grabbing it with his right hand at the top of the package and the package almost touched the ground?

Mrs Randle: Yes, sir .

At this point Counsel Ball showed the witness a mock-up of the bag allegedly found in the TSBD.

Mr Ball: Now, was the length of it any similar, anywhere near similar?

Mrs Randle: Well, it wasn't that long, I mean it was folded down at the top as I told you. It definitely wasn't that long.

Mr Ball: I see. You figure about two feet long, is that right?

Mrs Randle: A little bit more.

Mr Ball: Is that about right? That is 28 and a half inches.

Mrs Randle: I measured 27 last time.

Mr Ball: You measured 27 once before?

Mrs Randle: Yes, sir .

Jack Dougherty, an Oswald co-worker was the only person to see Oswald arrive at work on the morning of the assassination. Dougherty testified that he didn't see Oswald carry any package into the TSBD on that day.

I find the testimonies of Frazier and Randle very credible...infinitely more credible than many of the witnesses the WC relied upon to "convict" Oswald. In the face of a prolonged and determined effort by Ball to get them to modify their opinions neither would be deflected.

I do not believe that Oswald carried the Mannlicher Carcano into the TSBD that morning in the way the WC claimed. I also have grave doubts over the origins of the paper bag allegedly used.

Crime scene photographs taken at the time do not show the paper bag in position as

 

 

 

good evidence handling practice requires. There is also considerable doubt that Oswald could have had access to the materials required to construct the bag. I would direct the reader to the testimony of TSBD employee Troy Eugene West for further information on this matter.

 

A GUN IS FOUND

At approximately 1.22pm on November 22nd 1963 Dallas Deputy Sheriff Eugene Boone discovered a rifle concealed behind boxes on the 6th floor of the TSBD. Detective Seymour Weitzman was nearby and noticed the weapon almost simultaneously.  Seymour Weitzman identified the rifle as a Mauser 7.65MM Bolt-action rifle. Boone concurred with this identification. Later in the day Eugene Boone prepared a written report in which he confirmed the rifle found to be a Mauser. The next day, Seymour Weitzman swore an "Affidavit in Any Fact" in which he again described the rifle as a Mauser.   This description of the rifle as a Mauser persisted for some considerable time after it was found as noted earlier in this article before finally being confirmed as a Mannlicher Carcano 6.5MM Carbine serial number C2766 (CE 139) Establishing whether the rifle found by Boone was the same weapon we have followed since the time of its manufacture in Italy has not proved easy.

An attempt was made by the WC to show that the original description of the rifle as a Mauser was nothing more than a simple, honest mistake. If this was the case then the record should have been capable of dispelling any lingering doubts that anyone might have had. Regardless of any misidentification of the rifle by Weitzman and others there should exist a detailed and verifiable chain of evidence that shows how the rifle was finally identified, when and by whom.

That chain should detail the means by which the rifle was traced to its supplier and satisfy us that C2766 was genuinely all that it was later purported to be.

I now propose to look in detail at the handling and processing of the rifle eventually entered into evidence as C2766 from the time it was allegedly found through to the conclusions contained in the WR.

 

THE CHAIN OF EVIDENCE

Weitzman and Boone are agreed that immediately after the rifle was found DPD Captain W.J. Fritz, a 42 year veteran in the Dallas Police, took charge of the weapon and ejected one live round from the chamber. A short time later they were joined by Lt. J.C. Day in his capacity as a crime scene investigator. Boone testified:

 

Mr Ball: There is one question. Did you hear anyone refer to this rifle as a Mauser that day?

Mr Boone: Yes I did. And at first, not knowing what it was, I thought it was a 7.65 Mauser.

Mr Ball: Who referred to it as a Mauser that day?

Mr Boone: I believe Captain Fritz. He had knelt down there to look at it, and before he removed it, not knowing what is was, he said that is what it looks like. This is when Lieutenant Day, I believe his name is, the ID man was getting ready to photograph it. We were discussing it back and forth. And he said it looks like a 7.65 Mauser.

 

 

There were several police officers present, some of senior rank and vast experience. There were 2 officers from the identification section, Day and Studebaker, present also. They discussed this weapon back and forth and said it looks like a 7.65 Mauser. The Mannlicher Carcano this rifle was later claimed to be had the words "Made in Italy" and "Cal 6.5" stamped on its barrel...what was there to discuss and speculate about?  WC Counsel Joseph Ball would later question Captain Fritz about the identification of the rifle:

 

Mr Ball: Was there any conversation you heard that this rifle was a Mauser?

Mr. Fritz: I heard all kinds of reports about that rifle. They called it most everything.

Mr. Ball: Did you hear any conversation right there that day?

Mr. Fritz: Right at that time?

Mr. Ball: Yes

Mr. Fritz: I just wouldn't be sure because there were so many people talking at the same time, I might have; I am not sure whether I did or not.

Mr. Ball: Did you think it was a Mauser?

Mr. Fritz: No, sir; I knew...you can read on the rifle what it was and you could also see on the cartridge what caliber it was.

Mr. Ball: Well, did you ever make any...did you ever say that it was a 7.65 Mauser?

Mr. Fritz: No, sir; I am sure I did not.

Mr. Ball: Or did you think it was such a thing?

Mr. Fritz: No, sir; I did not. If I did, the Mauser part, I won't be too positive about Mauser because I am not too sure about Mauser rifles myself. But I am certainly sure that I never did give anyone any different caliber than the one that shows on the cartridges.

Mr. Ball: Did you initial the rifle?

Mr. Fritz: The rifle; no, sir.

Fritz never did answer Joseph Ball's question about a Mauser being discussed...he just ignored it. Two things I find odd here. Texas was the gun capital of the USA, practically everybody had one. Fritz was a 42-year police veteran, 31 of those in homicide and he says he wasn't "too sure about Mauser rifles?" Also, Fritz mentioned that he hadn't initialed the rifle...no officer did. This is a standard evidence handling procedure to assist in the positive identification of exhibits at a later stage.

Seymour Weitzman testified before the WC on April 1, 1964. Far from clearing up doubts over the true identity of the rifle he found his testimony served only to raise suspicions:

 

Mr. Ball: In the statement that you made to the Dallas Police Department that afternoon, you referred to the rifle as a 7.65 Mauser bolt action?

Mr. Weitzman: In a glance, that's what it looked like.

Mr. Ball: That's what it looked like did you say that or someone else say that?

Mr. Weitzman: No; I said that. I thought it was one.

 

 

 

Mr. Ball: Are you fairly familiar with rifles?

Mr. Weitzman: Fairly familiar because I was in the sporting goods business awhile.

On the surface Weitzman's claim that he had only glanced at the rifle seems a fair enough explanation of how the misidentification occurred but later in his testimony he was able to describe that rifle in far greater detail than he could possibly have done if he had only seen it "at a glance".

 

Mr. Ball: I understand that. Now, in your statement to the Federal Bureau of Investigation, you gave a description of the rifle, how it looked.

Mr. Weitzman: I said it was a Mauser-type action, didn't I?

Mr. Ball: Mauser bolt action.

Mr. Weitzman: And at the time I looked at it, I believe I said it was 2.5 scope on it and I believe I said it was a Weaver but it wasn't; it turned out to be anything but a Weaver, but that was at a glance.

Mr. Ball: You also said it was a gunmetal color?

Mr. Weitzman: Yes.

Mr. Ball: Gray or blue?

Mr. Weitzman: Blue metal.

Mr. Ball: And the rear portion of the bolt was visibly worn, is that worn?

Mr. Weitzman: That's right.

Mr. Ball: And the wooden portion of the rifle was what color?

Mr. Weitzman: It was a brown, or I would say not a mahogany brown but dark oak brown.

Mr. Ball: Rough wood, was it?

Mr. Weitzman: Yes, sir; rough wood.

Mr. Ball: And it was equipped with a scope?

Mr. Weitzman: Yes, sir.

Mr. Ball: Was it of Japanese manufacture?

Mr. Weitzman: I believe it was a 2.5 Weaver at the time I looked at it. I didn't look that close at it; it just looked like a 2.5 but it turned out to be a Japanese scope, I believe.

This segment of testimony seriously compromises Seymour Weitzman. I have had the benefit of inspecting a Mannlicher Carcano M91/38 carbine fitted with the same model of Ordinance Optics scope as C2766. This scope bears the following information in highly readable white print against the black cylinder of the scope:

4 x 18 coated

Ordinance Optics Inc

Hollywood, California

010 Japan. OSC

I do not believe for one minute that Seymour Weitzman could have gleaned the information he did about the colour, texture and degree of wear and tear on specific

 

 

 

components of C2766 "at a glance" or that he could remember these in such detail 5 months later. Nor do I believe that having been able to glean so much detail about the appearance and condition of C2766 he could have failed to read the information on the scope and confuse this Japanese instrument with a Weaver.

Some people have tried to suggest that Seymour Weitzman was a firearms expert who could reasonably be expected to know his Mausers from his Mannlichers. I do not believe that there is any evidence to support this assertion. Weitzman does, however, admit to having worked in a sports shop and to being "fairly familiar" with guns. I find it hard to accept that a man with this background, with a working knowledge of guns would not have taken an immediate interest in matters such as the markings and other identifying features of the rifle found. There is ample evidence that the identity of the gun was discussed among the officers present and it is more than likely that Seymour Weitzman contributed more to that discussion and the eventual identification than he has ever been prepared to admit.

 

A "DAY" TO REMEMBER

Lieutenant John Carl Day played a pivotal role in the handling and processing of the rifle found in the TSBD. Day had 23 years police experience including, most recently, 7 years as a supervisor within the Identification Bureau responsible for crime scene analysis. Of all those present when the rifle was found Lt. Day should have known how to handle and record the evidence in order to preserve the chain of possession. Like many others involved in the investigation of the assassination, Lt. Day fell well short of the acceptable standard.

In his capacity as an officer of the Identification Bureau, Lt. Day had certain priorities with regard to the handling of the rifle and these were outlined by Richard Bartholomew in his thought-provoking article "The Gun that Didn't Smoke":

 

Fingerprints take priority during collection because they are the most fragile. But prior to submitting a gun to the crime laboratory, it should be unloaded and all parts that are removable without the aid of tools, and which may leave an imprint on the bullet or cartridge case, should be removed from the gun and properly marked or labeled for identification as they are being collected or as soon as possible thereafter. All of that information, plus any unique characteristics, such as caliber or gauge, make, lot number, and serial number, should be recorded in the investigator's notebook during or immediately after the search.

Perusal of the record of evidence seen and collected on November 22nd 1963 fails to reveal any mention of an ammunition clip. There is no clip mentioned in the Property Clerk's receipt dated November 26th which otherwise lists everything else about the rifle allegedly found. There is no record in either the reports made by the many officers present, or the reports of the conversations between these officers, of anyone having seen a ammunition clip. I have viewed photographs and television footage of the rifle being handled by Lt. Day soon after it was found and there is no sign of any clip. The significance of this clip to the events of that day are many. It is a peculiarity of Mannlicher Carcano rifles that the ammunition clip falls out once the last round in the clip is chambered.

 

 

 

 

When the rifle was found it had a live round in the chamber, which Captain Fritz admitted to ejecting. Other officers present when Fritz ejected the round confirm his admission. As found, either the clip had fallen out of the rifle when the last round was chambered or due to some malfunction had remained in place. As noted earlier, there is no sign of a clip in the magazine. The television footage mentioned shows Lt. Day rotating the rifle in such a way that had there been a clip in the magazine it would have been visible. This only leaves a scenario where the clip fell out, as designed to, when the last round was chambered. So where was the clip?

 

Without this clip the Mannlicher Carcano would only have been capable of firing a single shot at a time making a mockery of the brief time window available for that rifle to have fired all the known shots at the Presidential Motorcade.

 

As one of the more likely sources of fingerprints the clip would have been of immediate interest to Lt. Day but there is no mention of him finding this clip or checking it for fingerprints. What is odd, however, is that photographs taken of Lt. Day leaving the TSBD show a clip projecting from the magazine, a clip that was certainly not there earlier.

 

Something else to consider with regard to the Mannlicher Carcano clip is the fact that it is designed to hold 6 bullets. Since only 3 spent shells and 1 live round were apparently found at the scene it is logical to assume that if there was a clip it only contained 4 bullets at the time the shooting occurred. This is problematic because when a Carcano clip is underloaded the bullets have a strong tendency to fall over making it impossible to load and shoot them properly.

 

After leaving the TSBD Lt. Day said that he took the rifle to the Identification Bureau where it was locked in an evidence box until further checking could be done. This was around 2pm on the afternoon of the assassination. At approximately 2.45pm Lt. Day returned to the TSBD to continue the investigation with other crime scene officers. It was not until about 7pm that evening that Lt. Day returned to the Identification Bureau to begin checking the rifle for fingerprints. It seems a little strange to me that the single most important piece of evidence should be locked away untouched for 5 hours but Lt. Day claims that is what he did.

 

The time factor involved in investigating the rifle are quite important because, by any standard, the FBI were able to trace it to A. Hidell a.k.a. Lee Harvey Oswald extremely quickly. Quicker than they were able to settle on the type of rifle it was apparently.

 

If Lt. Day is to be believed, the FBI trace on the rifle could have begun as early as 2pm because he claims that he was driven back to the Identification Bureau by FBI Special Agent Odum and that Odum called in the description of the rifle. There should be a record of this action on the part of SA Odum to which we can refer but it doesn't exist.

This is not the only Carcano-related evidence that is missing. Lt. Day claimed that upon his return to the Identification Bureau he dictated a report to his secretary that included an accurate description of the Carcano, not a Mauser. This report is missing. Also missing are FBI documents in which Seymour Weitzman and DPD detective C. Dhority provided descriptions of the rifle.

 

TRACING THE CARCANO

Despite the denials of Lt. Day, Captain Fritz and others one thing emerges from the testimony and contemporaneous documentation of the events if November 22nd 1963, no one, but no-one, ever identified the rifle as a Mannlicher Carcano.

Fritz said:

" No, sir; I knew...you can read on the rifle what it was and you could also see on the cartridge what caliber it was".

Lt. Day said:

"On the gun itself, "6.5 caliber C2766, 1940 made in Italy." That was what was on the gun."

In the face of the reported facts it is strange that the FBI were able to trace this "unidentified" rifle to Klein's and thence to Oswald by the early hours of Saturday morning. Personally I do not see any reliable evidence to suggest that the FBI began tracing this rifle before late Saturday night when Lt. Day was ordered to hand the weapon over to FBI Special Agent Vincent Drain. If this is the case then the ability of the FBI to trace the rifle to Klein's almost instantaneously is highly suspicious.

 

People will argue that Lt. Day provided Special Agent Odum with sufficient information to start a trace on the weapon during the drive back to the Identification Bureau around 2pm on the day of the assassination, but where is the evidence? As mentioned earlier there is no record of Special Agent Odum calling in a description of the weapon, there is no written report by Odum detailing his actions that afternoon. All we have is the word of Lt. Day, an experienced officer who did not exactly cover himself in glory by his actions, who proved evasive to the point of deception in important areas of his testimony before the WC and who, in common with many others, had a propensity for failing to follow procedure and lost documentation.

 

There should be no room for speculation about how the rifle was traced. There should exist a detailed public record of how the rifle was identified and how it was traced. All that does exist is an account, in the most general of terms, with no detail of how the trail led to Klein's.

 

Jim Bishop. in his book "The Day Kennedy Was Shot" provides the following narrative:

The New York office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation had traced a big shipment of cheap Italian military rifles to Crescent Firearms, which sold in lots to mail order distributors. Early in the evening, the Dallas office had notified Washington that the rifle found on the 6th floor of the Texas School Book Depository building was a 6.5-caliber Mannlicher-Carcano with the serial number C2766 stamped on it. Alan Belmont had passed this information on to all field offices. The New York group, contacting one gun house after another, found that Crescent had them.

 

 

Unfortunately Jim Bishop's book is another of those apparently scholarly works on the assassination that has no sources. That aside, if his account is right then the FBI did not get a description of this rifle until early evening.

 

What Bishop's account does not say is whether this description was passed on in the early evening Dallas Time or Washington time. Either way, it does appear that if Special Agent Odum was the source of the description and did indeed "Call it in" then it took at least 2 hours, and perhaps as long as 4 hours, for that information to be sent to Washington. That degree of time lag seems unreasonable and for that reason I have doubts that Special Agent Odum was the source of the description the FBI used to trace the rifle. I also have doubts that anyone had identified the rifle as a Mannlicher Carcano by early evening. At best the FBI had a description of a 6.5 mm rifle "Made in Italy" to go on.

 

Supposing that Odum was not the source of the description that started the trace on the rifle then we know that the rifle remained locked in an evidence box until around 7pm when Lt. Day returned to the Identification Bureau to begin checking for fingerprints. It seems more reasonable to conclude that Jim Bishop's reference to "early evening" referred to around 7pm Dallas time when Lt. Day returned to the Identification Bureau.

Jim Bishop continues:

 

The company had cooperated in keeping the office open as the FBI agents watched employees run through the files. The records were not overly precise, but they indicated that C2766 had been sent to Klein's Sporting Goods, Incorporated, at 4540 West Madison Street, Chicago. The Chicago office of the FBI was alerted and, late at night, found William J. Waldeman, Vice-President of Klein's, at his home, 335, Central Avenue, in Wilmette, Illinois.

Jim Bishop goes on to explain how Mr Waldeman agreed to accompany the FBI to his office, how he needed to call in staff to help search the records, how they ransacked the file cabinets. This, it seems, was no quick rummage through the filing cabinet. Klein's, as their turnover indicates, was a company involved in selling a large and diverse range of goods in considerable numbers. It was already after midnight when an invoice from Crescent Firearms was found detailing a shipment of Mannlicher-Carcano 6.5 mm Carbines. These were packed 100 to a box and shipped by the North Penn company.

This prompted a search through the microfilm records at Klein's. Jim Bishop's footnotes reveal:

At 4am. Dallas time, the order for C2766 was located. It was a coupon clipped from the "American Rifleman" of February 1963. It was ordered by A. Hidell, PO Box 2915, Dallas Texas.

This is largely the way in which C2766 was allegedly traced to Klein's and thence to Oswald a.k.a. Hidell. There are variations to be found in the WR and in the assassination literature but all saying essentially the same thing. What they all have in common is an absence of the definitive time when the rifle was identified as a Mannlicher Carcano and a meaningful timeline showing the sequence of events from the time the rifle was allegedly identified until it was traced to Oswald.

 

 

I have strong reservations about how the rifle was supposedly traced in such a short time but cannot prove anything untoward. All I can observe is that, if the FBI did indeed trace this rifle in the time available and in the manner suggested, it was perhaps the only decent, solid example of police work of the entire investigation.

 

We have traced the life of C2766 from the time it was manufactured through to the WC investigation and a sometimes tortuous journey it has been. During the 2 years I have been researching this article one question keeps cropping up in my mind, is the Mannlicher-Carcano serial number C2766 manufactured at Terni in 1940 the same rifle that was found in the TSBD and is now in the National Archives? At times I have even wondered if C2766 was manufactured in 1940 at all.

 

MAUSER OR CARCANO?  

I am as certain as it is possible to be that Boone and Weitzman did not find a Mauser rifle in the TSBD. Apart from the admission of Weitzman and statements attributed to others present at the time, there is no evidence to support the Mauser story. Film and photographic records clearly shows a Carcano, not a Mauser. Some people have claimed that a uniformed police officer was seen bringing a rifle down from the roof of the TSBD. The weapon in question was clearly a police-issue shotgun not a rifle.

 

Ruling out a Mauser does not automatically mean that the rifle actually found was a Mannlicher Carcano C2766. Too many question marks hang over the conduct of many of the officers involved in searching the TSBD in the aftermath of the assassination.

 

Evidence handling procedure was at best poor and at worst corrupt. There is no doubt in my mind that certain parties were guilty of evasion, equivocation and downright dishonesty in their testimony before the WC. Crucial documentary evidence simply vanished presumably because it was thought to contain inconvenient information.

 

Although the Mauser identification may have been made in genuine error, it is difficult to avoid speculating that it persisted much longer than it had to and became a convenient means to confuse the issue of identification for a period of time after the rifle was found.

 

Describing the rifle as a Mauser bolt-action would have had the effect of precluding Carcano specific questions but allow later deniability on the grounds that a Carcano bears a superficial resemblance to a Mauser.

In reaching this conclusion I am mindful of the fact that, at no time during the day of the assassination, despite the incessant media clamour for information, did one single piece of information about the Carcano emerge.

There was no mention anywhere that the rifle was 6.5 mm, no mention that it bore the legend "Made in Italy". Nothing emerged from the DPD that could later be uniquely associated with C2766.

 

 

 

The action of Lt. Day in taking the Carcano back to the Identification Bureau and

locking it up for 5 hours strikes me as suspicious too.

No other item of evidence was more important than the suspected murder weapon. This weapon would hold out the expectation of fingerprints, Ballistics evidence and perhaps be traceable to its owner. It beggars belief that the investigation of the evidence the weapon potentially had to offer was ignored for 5 hours.

In the circumstances, it seems much more likely that the weapon was locked away for the same reason it was misidentified as a Mauser...to preclude Carcano-specific questions in the hours immediately after it was found.

Reading the testimonies provided by Fritz, Boone, Day and Weitzman there are obvious signs of prevarication.

 

Ludicrous though it may now seem, Weitzman was never shown the Carcano during his appearance before the WC and asked to confirm this was the rifle he had found and misidentified.

The Carcano was there, it would have been a simple matter to hand the weapon to him and ask "Is this the rifle you found that day in the TSBD?". Easy to ask, but no-one did.

 

 Co-finder Eugene Boone was shown the rifle but he could not confirm it was the same rifle. Even lawyer-cum-assassination writer Mark Lane got to handle the rifle at the WC hearings, but not Seymour Weitzman.

Proponents of the lone assassin theory dismiss speculation over the rifle as groundless but there is much that needs explaining. The facts as we know them are that the true identity of the rifle did not emerge for some time after it was found. The officers who found the rifle and those, like Fritz, who joined them soon after left a lot to be desired in their professional conduct that day.

 

SO IT WAS A CARCANO?

There is little doubt in my mind that a Carcano was found by Boone and Weitzman but I am not convinced it was the same Carcano later introduced into evidence. A closer look at the post-assassination affidavit and WC testimony of Seymour Weitzman provide valuable clues. Weitzman's affidavit is not that detailed with regard to the rifle found. He simply describes it as:

 

"a 7.65 mm Mauser bolt action with 4/18 scope with a thick brownish-black sling on it."

It seems clear that the rifle was discussed by Weitzman, Boone, Day and Fritz although the latter two deny it.

I do not subscribe to the popular view that Weitzman was a firearms expert but it is likely that he knew more than most. A Mannlicher Carcano is sufficiently similar to a Mauser in appearance to be mistaken for one without a really close examination. It has to be understood that there was no such thing as a unique MauserMauser rifles were made under license by a number of countries. These included Belgium,

 

 

 

Argentina, Turkey and Sweden. It would be unreasonable to suppose that Wietzman would be familiar with the many incarnations of this popular rifle. It would, however, be perfectly reasonable to suppose that Weitzman would recognize a Mauser-type bolt-action rifle, which is precisely what a Carcano is.

 

[Editor’s note: Roger Craig said “Mauser” was inscribed on the rifle in his filmed testimony, and the kind of Mauser in question makes it obvious that “Mauser” could be easily seen stamped on the rifle, just as Craig had said.]

 

I think that Weiztman genuinely thought the rifle he had found was a Mauser. I think he looked at the rifle and reported what he saw. He saw a bolt-action rifle with a brownish-black sling, 4/18 scope and apparently marked 7.65mm.

By the time Weitzman came to testify before the WC his identification of the rifle was already an issue. It became important to dismiss any lingering doubt that Mannlicher Carcano C2766 was the weapon he found.

Seymour Weitzman did what most people would do when faced with the situation he found himself in...he embellished. First he sought to minimize any responsibility for his "mistaken" identification by claiming he only saw the rifle at a glance. He could hardly go on to tell the WC that he knew all along that the rifle was a Carcano so he did the next best thing, he provided a highly detailed physical description of the rifle. The description he provided was sufficiently applicable to C2766 that it served to offset his earlier "mistaken" identification.

Three things stand out in Weitzman's testimony:

 

1) he gave a much more detailed description of the rifle than he could have gleaned "at a glance",

2) he provided largely new descriptive information that did not appear in his affidavit and

3) he was never shown the rifle he was apparently identifying for the purpose of confirmation.

I believe that the detailed description Weitzman provided for the WC was "given" to him sometime after the affidavit and that the report he provided for the FBI was deliberately destroyed because it was incompatible with C2766.

The rifle forever associated with the assassination is a 6.5mm Carcano serial number C2766. I suspect the rifle Seymour Weitzman and Eugene Boone found was actually a 7.35mm Carcano. It is a fact that 7.65mm Mausers were not exactly common in the USA in 1963. Unless Seymour Weitzman had seen something on the rifle that led him to designate it 7.65mm, it is much more likely he would have called it a 7.62mm.

The confusion that surrounds the rifle is virtually impenetrable. If we take Eugene Boone's testimony at face value then it was Fritz who identified the rifle as a Mauser. Fritz would later protest that he had no knowledge of Mausers but coming from a 40-year veteran with 31 years experience as a homicide officer I cannot believe he had never come across Mauser rifles before.

 

 

Even the time the rifle was found is open to interpretation.

It has always been thought that Boone and Weitzman found the Carcano at approximately 1.22pm on the day of the assassination. This is the time Boone claimed to have noted from his watch. In 1971, former Dallas Deputy Sheriff Roger Craig produced a manuscript entitled "When They Kill A President" which was never formally published. Craig's manuscript contained an account of the discovery of C2766:

 

Lt. Day inspected the rifle briefly then handed it to Capt. Fritz, who had a puzzled look on his face. Seymour Weitzman a deputy constable was standing beside me at the time. Weitzman was an expert on weapons, being in the sporting goods business for many years he was familiar with all domestic and foreign weapons. Capt. Fritz asked if anyone knew what kind of rifle it was. Weitzman asked to see it. After a close examination (much longer than Fritz or Day's examination) Weitzman declared that it was a 7.65 German Mauser, Fritz agreed with him....At that exact moment an unknown Dallas police officer came running up the stairs and advised Capt. Fritz that a Dallas policeman had been shot in the Oak Cliff area. I instinctively looked at my watch and the time was 1:06 P.M.

If Roger Craig's account is true then it suggests a rifle was found as much as 16 minutes earlier than the official record claims. It is known that the first media account that a rifle had been found was broadcast by WBAP-TV at 1.23 PM, one minute after the time the rifle was officially discovered. This report seems to have been broadcast far too early to be consistent with the official time the rifle was allegedly found.

Similar question marks exist over the exact time Luke Mooney found the empty shells by the 6th floor window of the TSBD. The Warren Report states that Mooney found the shells at 1.12 PM and claims this timing is supported by Mooney's testimony. Mooney actually testified that he found the shells no later than 1pm.

Captain Fritz said he arrived at the TSBD around 12.58 PM and that it wasn't long before the shells were found.

Discussion of the shells is beyond the scope of this work but the same confusion that surrounds the rifle is apparent in the story of the shells. There is evidence that Captain Fritz was responsible for moving the shells prior to them being photographed. It is a fact that he put the unused bullet ejected from the rifle into his pocket and retained it for several days such that it only found its way onto the Property Clerk's receipt as an afterthought. As mentioned earlier, the clip essential to firing a Carcano in the manner proscribed and from which these shells would have been fed never did appear on the property sheet.

 

PROBLEMS WITH THE SERIAL NUMBER

It is impossible to state with any certainty that C2766 is a serial number uniquely associated with the Carcano alleged to have belonged to Oswald. Unlike a new rifle, the true history of C2766 is not necessarily known. It is entirely possible that C2766 is a hybrid rifle repaired and renovated using parts cannibalized from other Carcanos. Some Carcanos were remodeled and carry 2 serial numbers, the original serial number and a new number added after remodeling. It is also the case that Carcanos were made in a number of factories where the prefix "C" was used for serial numbers. (44)

There is some evidence, though it may be moot, that Klein's sold Carcano rifles and carbines with a C2766 serial number and that Dr Lattimer bought one. (45)

In 1964, J. Edgar Hoover wrote a memo in which he conceded that the serial number C2766 was not necessarily unique. It is known that the FBI did trace a Carcano rifle serial number 2766(prefix unknown) to an unidentified Canadian firearms supplier. The WR Chapter IV quotes the rifle serial number as CS-2766. This might be a typographical error but the prefix "CS" is a valid Carcano serial number.

Serial number duplication is not sufficient by itself to render the WR claims and conclusions unsafe but there are other matters already hinted at that do seriously undermine the official story.

If C2766 is the same rifle the FBI claim they traced to Klein's Sporting Goods of Chicago the fact that it bears any serial number at all is strange. Henry S. Bloomgarden faced this dilemma when he tried to document the history of C2766. Bloomgarden's book purports to be a history of C2766 but it is much more a political statement in support of the anti-gun lobby. In order to make his political statement he had to show C2766 was the same rifle imported by Crescent Firearms, sold on to Klein's and used to assassinate JFK. The fact that Riva was required to remove serial numbers from the rifles he renovated became a problem. To overcome this problem Bloomgarden simply claimed that of all the shipments Riva made, only those in the shipment containing C2766 had their serial numbers intact. (46)

It should not escape attention either that there were literally thousands of Carcanos circulating in the USA with no serial number. A simple enough matter to convert a Carcano without a number to any serial number desired.

 

PROBLEMS WITH THE CARCANO

The Carcano Oswald allegedly ordered from Klein's is not the same as the one entered into evidence by the WC. A coupon clipped from the February 1, 1963 issue, supposedly used by Oswald to order the rifle, shows a Carcano, order number, C20-T750, measuring 36 inches. The rifle entered into evidence, as CE 139 is 39 inches long. Interestingly, the Klein's advert entered into evidence by the WC is for a Carcano of the right length but comes from the November 1963 issue of Field and Stream. This advert was offered to the WC by the ubiquitous Postal Inspector Harry Holmes! (47)

This might be as good a time as any to mention that Harry D. Holmes was more than just a Postal Inspector. In addition to his postal duties, Holmes was an FBI informant. He appeared to have an uncanny knack of being in crucial places at crucial times during the day of the assassination and on subsequent days. Odd though it may seem, he also took part in the interrogation of Oswald at the DPD. (48)

There is a lesser-known problem relating to the Carcano that I believe to be significant. At the time it was recovered C2766 was said to be in generally poor condition with the firing pin in particularly precarious condition due to rusting. It was fitted with a scope that had to be fitted with shims to be used accurately. The problem here is that, according to the evidence, C2766 had only been in Oswald's possession for 8 months. It is claimed that during most of this 8 months the rifle was wrapped in an old [blanket].. How exactly does a reconditioned rifle with a new, professionally fitted

 

 

 

scope, get into such a poor condition in just 8 months? (49)

In contrast to all this evidence suggesting that Oswald had purchased C2766 there was a total absence of any evidence that he ever bought the Western Cartridge Company ammunition that was allegedly used in the assassination. Only 4 bullets were apparently found at the scene, 3 in the form of spent shells and 1 live round in the rifle. Despite thorough searches of property and premises associated with Oswald no ammunition was ever found.

This particular ammunition was part of a consignment of 4 million rounds made by the Western Cartridge Company of Alton, Illinois and shipped in 4 lots numbered 6000 - 6003. The ammunition was apparently purchased by the US Army to supply allies but in reality it was purchased by the CIA for use in the weapons provided to the Cuban rebels being trained for the abortive Bay of Pigs invasion. Part of the consignment found its way on to the surplus market and was available in Dallas. The owners of gun shops stocking this ammunition were questioned but did not recall selling any to Oswald or anyone resembling Oswald.

In fact, investigators were unable to find any of the normal paraphernalia one might expect to find in the possession of a gun owner such as lubricating oil and cleaning kit.

This raises another dilemma. The ammunition allegedly found at the TSBD had marks consistent with it having been chambered more than once. The implication of these marks is that the shells may well have been fired previously, the empty shells collected and then reloaded. Another possibility is that the shells were fired in another rifle and then loaded into C2766 to produce forensic evidence. (50)

Needless to say, Oswald did not appear to own any of the equipment necessary to reload ammunition. In Dallas 2 gun shops stocked Western Cartridge Company 6.5mm ammunition but only one of these reloaded bullets with the same type of hunting load used in the suspect bullets. He was John Masen, a right-wing extremist and member of the notorious Minutemen organization and a man with a history of illegal arms dealing. Perhaps the most significant thing about Masen is that he bore an uncanny physical resemblance to Lee Harvey Oswald. (51)

PROBLEMS WITH THE PAPER TRAIL

The speed with which the FBI were able to trace C2766 to Klein's of Chicago was breathtaking. There were many places that particular type of rifle could have been sourced. The WR contains a version of how the rifle was traced to Hidell a.k.a. Oswald but it lacks the ring of truth:

Shortly after the Mannlicher-Carcano rifle was found on the sixth floor of the Texas School Book Depository Building, agents of the FBI learned from retail outlets in Dallas that Crescent Firearms, Inc., of New York City, was a distributor of surplus Italian 6.5-millimeter military rifles. During the evening of November 22, 1963, a review of the records of Crescent Firearms revealed that the firm had shipped an Italian carbine, serial number C2766, to Klein's Sporting Goods Co., of Chicago, Ill. After searching their records from 10 PM. to 4 am. the officers of Klein's discovered that a rifle bearing

 

 

 

 

 

serial number C2766 had been shipped to one A. Hidell, Post Office Box 2915, Dallas, Tex., on March 20, 1963. (52)

Although the record of how the rifle was traced leaves much to be desired it is clear that the FBI did not learn "shortly after" the assassination that Crescent Firearms Inc of New York was a distributor. Contact was not made directly with the FBI in New York as would be expected if this were true and the call that did alert the FBI Washington Office did not come until early evening. The FBI Washington office circulated details of the rifle to all FBI offices and apparently it was old-fashioned legwork by the FBI in New York that produced the link to Crescent. (53)

Although the official version of events states that Fred Rupp dispatched the Carcano to Klein's in response to their order number 1243 on January 24th 1963, Louis Feldsott of Crescent told the FBI that the rifle was sold to Klein's on June 8th 1962. (54) In June 1962, C2766 was supposedly still impounded by New Jersey customs.

Klein's Vice-President William Waldman claimed that Oswald's money order for $21.45, dated March 12th, was received on March 13, 1963 and was banked that day as part of a deposit amounting to $13,827.98 and this was supported by a deposit slip entered into evidence. The date on the bank slip showing a deposit of $13,827.98 is 15th February 1963. (55)

One of the things that stood out in the paperwork from Klein's was that it was comprehensive to the point of overkill. Strange then that these anomalies should arise. (56)

The order coupon produced by Klein's purports to written in Oswald's hand. Below I indicate why I feel the backyard photographs are fakes and the same general comments apply to the handwriting evidence, which can easily be faked.

PROBLEMS WITH THE DALLAS POST BOX

Without question the problem of Oswald's Dallas post box deals a fatal blow to the Carcano chain of evidence. At the same time, the destruction of the crucial Part 3 of Oswald's application form points to criminal evidence tampering. The destruction of this key piece of evidence points to a deliberate attempt to sustain a false chain of evidence but this may not be the only interpretation. If, as Postal Inspector Harry Holmes and the FBI report claim, A. Hidell was not authorized to collect mail at Oswald's box the implication is that only Oswald could collect mail. If Part 3 of Oswald's form did not contain the names of anyone authorized to collect mail then why destroy it? The existence of a blank Part 3 is in no way injurious to the case made against Oswald by the WC. I strongly believe that there was another person(s) authorized to collect mail at Oswald's box and the document was destroyed to conceal this information. There was at least one Dallas FBI agent whose relationship with Oswald was never fully explained and who had a propensity for destroying evidence. He is only one of a number of individuals whose name might conceivably have appeared on Part 3 of Oswald's application for a post box.[editor’s note: implication is JAMES HOSTY, who admitted destroying a note Oswald gave to him, on orders, after the assassination,

 

 

 

 

well knowing hat Oswald had been arrested for Kennedy’s murder. Then why destroy the message, except that it contained information that would cast the FBI in a bad light?]

The FBI were responsible for destroying the note left by Oswald at Dallas FBI headquarters for Special Agent Hosty and were at least party to the knowledge that Part 3 of Oswald's application form had been deliberately destroyed in the post assassination period. Military intelligence operatives are also known to have destroyed their Hidell file...routinely so they claimed. (57)

Agencies that are capable of destroying evidence that does not suit its purpose are equally capable of creating false evidence that does. The conveniently incriminating backyard photographs of Oswald posing with a rifle he could not have collected from the Dallas Post Office are a case in point. In the absence of any reliable evidence that Oswald could have taken delivery of the Carcano package the backyard photographs cannot be genuine. It is a fact that agencies known to have destroyed vital evidence had the technical expertise to produce impeccable fake photographs. It is known that DPD had a ghost mask image of Oswald posing in the backyard. Such a mask represents a stage in the production of a fake photograph. No satisfactory explanation of when, why and who created this image has ever been forthcoming. (58)

DRAWING CONCLUSIONS

Much of the evidence relating to C2766 is less clear-cut than the WR tried to claim. There are many problem areas that should have been investigated in greater detail to resolve issues raised. For the most part these issues were simply ignored. The chain of evidence that places C2766 in the hands of Lee Harvey Oswald on the 6th floor of the TSBD at 12.30PM on November 22nd 1963 is fatally flawed and evidently contrived. There is no reliable evidence to show that C-2766 is the same rifle Luciano Riva restored, no reliable evidence that C2766 was ordered and sold to Klein's in the manner and on the dates claimed. There is no reliable evidence that the money order Oswald was alleged to have used to purchase the rifle arrived at Klein's on the date and in the manner claimed.

It cannot be satisfactorily established that Oswald could have taken delivery of the Carcano in the way Harry Holmes alleged.

On the day of the assassination no one saw Oswald take any package into the TSBD that could reasonably have contained C2766. Vigorous attempts were made to induce Buell Wesley Frazier, Linne May Randle and Jack Dougherty to say otherwise but these attempts failed. There is strong evidence that Oswald could not have fabricated the bag alleged to have been used to carry C2766 into the TSBD and a complete absence of photographic evidence that the bag ever existed.

The testimonial evidence raises more questions than it ever answers. The conduct and professionalism of the DPD officers involved in the finding and handling of C2766 was dire. The testimonies of Fritz, Day and Weitzman in particular are replete with prevarication and equivocation. In taking the testimony of these officers the WC counsel had ample opportunity to fully air all the issues raised and to clarify the ambiguities. In failing to do so, the WC counsel were culpable.

 

 

 

 

Perhaps most damning of all is the destruction/loss of evidence and the fabrication of new evidence. It must have been apparent to the WC that something was wrong. Why, for example, rely upon Postal Inspector Harry D. Holmes to explain the procedure for handling post box application forms when it would have been a simple matter to obtain the official procedure manual? Why accept the evidence provided by Holmes and the FBI that Hidell was not authorized to collect mail from P.O. Box 2915 when they could not have known this unless they had seen Part 3 of the form supposedly destroyed?

So many years after the assassination it has still been possible to trace the history of C2766 and the evidence tendered in support of it being the assassination weapon. It is not possible to state that Lee Harvey Oswald was not involved in some way with the assassination but I am satisfied that the evidence linking him to C2766 is not legitimate.



 

==============================================

(NOTE: THE OFFICIAL VERSION CONCERNING RIFLE AND REVOLVER IS BELOW. THERE ARE KNOWN PROBLEMS WITH THE EXPERT WHOSE OPINION WAS PREFERRED OVER THE OPINION OF THE FBI'S EXPERT, ETC.  OTHER PROBLEMS HAVE BEEN POINTED OUT IN ESSAYS, AND NEED TO BE INSERTED TO BALANCE THE OFFICIAL VERSION'S LENGTHY DISCUSSION AND PRESENTATION WITH REBUTTAL, AS WOULD HAVE OCCURRED HAD OSWALD GONE TO TRIAL)

TESTIMONY FROM THE WARREN COMMISSION:

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In fact, you would expect many differences. But the comparison is made on the overall pattern, contour, and nature of the marks that are present. 


Q. Again there are dissimilar marks on these two pictures [of the firing-pin depressions on the cartridge case Commission Exhibit No. 543, and a test cartridge case], Mr. Frazier ? 


A. Yes; there are, for the same reason, that metal does not flow the same in every instance, and it will not be impressed to the same depth and to the same amount, depending on the type of metal, the blow that is struck, and the pressures involved. 


Q. Is your identification made therefore on the basis of the presence of similarities, as opposed to the absence of dissimilarities ? 

 

 

 

 


A. No, that is not exactly right. The identification is made on the presence of sufficient individual microscopic characteristics so that a very definite pattern is formed and visualized on the two surfaces. 


Dissimilarities may or may not be present, depending on whether there have been changes to the firing pin through use or wear, whether the metal flows are the same, and whether the pressures are the same or not. 


So I don't think we can say that it is an absence of dissimilarities, but rather the presence of similarities.5 


A bullet or cartridge case cannot always be identified with the weapon in which it was fired. In some cases, the bullet or cartridge case is too mutilated. In other cases, the weapon's microscopic characteristics have changed between the time the suspect item was fired and the time the test item was fired--microscopic characteristics change drastically in a short period of time, due to wear, or over a longer period of time, due to wear, corrosion, and cleaning. Still again, the weapon may mark bullets inconsistently--for example, because the bullets are smaller than the barrel, and travel through it erratically. 6

The Rifle

The rifle found on the sixth floor of the Texas School Book Depository shortly after the assassination was a bolt-action, clip-fed, military rifle, 40.2 inches long and 8 pounds in weight.7 Inscribed on the rifle were various markings, including the words "CAL. 6.5," "MADE ITALY," "TERNI," and "ROCCA"; the numerals "1940" and "40"; the serial number C2766; the letters "R-E," "PG," and "TNI"; the figure of a crown; and several other barely decipherable letters and numbers.8 The rifle bore a very inexpensive Japanese four-power sight, stamped "4 x 18 COATED," "ORDNANCE OPTICS INC.," "HOLLYWOOD CALIFORNIA," and "MADE IN JAPAN'' 9 and a sling consisting of two leather straps, one of

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which had a broad patch, which apparently had been inserted on the rifle and cut to length. 10 The sling was not a standard rifle sling, but appeared to be a musical instrument strap or a sling from a carrying case or camera bag.11 A basic purpose of a rifle sling is to enable the rifleman to steady his grip, by wrapping the arm into the sling in a prescribed manner. The sling on the rifle was too short to use in the normal way, but might have served to provide some additional steadiness. 12 

 

 

 


The rifle was identified as a 6.5-millimeter Mannlicher-Carcano Italian military rifle, Model 91/38. 13 This identification was initially made by comparing the rifle with standard reference works and by the markings inscribed on the rifle. 14 The caliber was independently determined by chambering a Mannlicher-Carcano 6.5 millimeter cartridge in the rifle for fit, and by making a sulfur cast of the inside of the rifle's barrel which was measured with a micrometer. 15 (The caliber of a weapon is the diameter of the interior of the barrel, measured between opposite lands. The caliber of American weapons is expressed in inches; thus a .30-caliber weapon has a barrel which is thirty one-hundredths or three-tenths of an inch in diameter. The caliber of continental European weapons is measured in millimeters. A 6.5-millimeter caliber weapon corresponds to an American .257-caliber weapon, that is, its barrel diameter is about one-fourth inch.) 16 The identification was later confirmed by a communication from SIFAR, the Italian Armed Forces Intelligence Service. This communication also explained the markings on the rifle, as follows: "CAL. 6.5" refers to the rifle's caliber; "MADE ITALY" refers to its origin, and was inscribed at the request of the American importer prior to shipment; "TERNI" means that the rifle was manufactured and tested by the Terni Army Plant of Terni, Italy; the number "C2766" is the serial number of the rifle, and the rifle in question is the only one of its type bearing that serial number; the numerals "1940" and "40" refer to the year of manufacture; and the other figures, numbers, and letters are principally inspector's, designer's, or manufacturer's marks.17 


The Model 91/38 rifle was one of the 1891 series of Italian military rifles, incorporating features designed by Ritter von Mannlicher and M. Carcano. The series originally consisted of 6.5-millimeter caliber rifles, but Model 38 of the series, designed shortly before World War II, was a 7.35-millimeter caliber. Early in World War II, however, the Italian Government, which encountered an ammunition supply problem, began producing many of these rifles as 6.5-millimeter caliber rifles, known as the 6.5-millimeter Model 91/38. 18 The 91/38 has been imported into this country as surplus military equipment, has been advertised quite widely, and is now fairly common in this country. 19 


Like most bolt-action military rifles, the 91/38 is operated by turning up the bolt handle, drawing the bolt to the rear, pushing the bolt forward, turning down the bolt handle, and pulling the trigger. Bringing the bolt forward and turning down the bolt handle compresses the spring which drives the firing pin, and locks the bolt into

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place. When the trigger is pulled, the cocked spring drives the firing pin forward and the cartridge is fired. The face of the bolt boars a lip, called the extractor, around a portion

 

 

 

 

of its circumference. As the bolt is pushed forward, this lip grasps the rim of the cartridge. As the bolt is pulled back, the extractor brings the empty cartridge case with it, and as the cartridge case is being brought back, it strikes a projection in the ejection port called the ejector, which throws it out of the rifle. Meanwhile, a leaf spring beneath the clip has raised the next cartridge into loading position. When the bolt is brought forward, it pushes the fresh cartridge into the chamber. The trigger is pulled, the cartridge is fired, the bolt handle is brought up, the bolt is brought back, and the entire cycle starts again. As long as there is ammunition in the clip, one need only work the bolt and pull the trigger to fire the rifle. 20 


The clip itself is inserted into the rifle by drawing back the bolt, and pushing the clip in from the top. The clip holds one to six cartridges.21 If six cartridges are inserted into the clip and an additional cartridge is inserted into the chamber, up to seven bullets can be fired before reloading.22 When the rifle was found in the Texas School Book Depository Building it contained a clip 23 which bore the letters "SMI" (the manufacturer's markings) and the number "952" (possibly a part number or the manufacturer's code number). 24 The rifle probably was sold without a clip; however, the clip is commonly available.25

Rifle Cartridge and Cartridge Cases

When the rifle was found, one cartridge was in the chamber.26 The cartridge was a 6.5-millimeter Mannlicher-Carcano cartridge, manufactured by the Western Cartridge Co., at East Alton, Ill. This type of cartridge is loaded with a full metal-jacketed, military type of bullet, weighing 160-161 grains. The bullet has parallel sides and a round nose. It is just under 1.2 inches long, and just over one-fourth inch in diameter.27 Its velocity is approximately 2,165 feet per second.28 The cartridge is very dependable; in tests runs by the FBI and the Infantry Weapons Evaluation Branch of the U.S. Army, the C2766 rifle was fired with this Western Cartridge Co. ammunition over 100 times, with no misfires. (In contrast, some of the other ammunition available on the market for this rifle is undesirable or of very poor quality). 29 The cartridge is readily available for purchase from mail-order houses, as well as a few gunshops; some 2 million rounds have been placed on sale in the United States.30 


The presence of the cartridge in the chamber did not necessarily mean that the assassin considered firing another bullet, since he may have reloaded merely by reflex.51 


Apart from the cartridge in the rifle, three expended cartridge cases were found in the southeast portion of the sixth floor of the Texas School Book Depository Building, lying between the south

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COMMISSION EXHIBIT NO. 558 
Bolt face of the C2766 rifle.

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wall and a high stack of boxes which ran parallel to the wall. 32 The cartridge cases were a short distance to the west of the southeast corner window in that wall. 33 Based on a comparison with test cartridge cases fired from the C2766 rifle, the three cartridge cases were identified as having been fired from the C2766 rifle.34 ( See Commission Exhibit No. 558, p. 556.) A test was run to determine if the cartridge-case-ejection pattern of the rifle was consistent with the assumption that the assassin had fired from the southeast window. 35 In this test., 11 cartridges were fired from the rifle while it was depressed 45° downward, and 8 cartridges were fired from the rifle while it was held horizontally. The elevation of the ejected cartridge cases above the level of the ejection port, and the points on the floor at which the ejection cartridge cases initially landed, were then plotted. The results of these tests are illustrated by the diagrams, Commission Exhibits Nos. 546 and 547. Briefly, Commission Exhibit No. 547 shows that with the weapon depressed at a 45° angle, the cartridge cases did not rise more than 2 inches above the ejection port; with the weapon held horizontally, they did not rise more than 12 inches above the ejection port. 36 Commission Exhibit/So. 546 shows that if a circle was drawn around the initial landing points of the cartridge cases which were ejected in the test while the rifle was held depressed at 45°, the center of the circle would be located 86 inches and 80° to the right of the rifle's line of sight; if a circle was drawn around the initial landing points of the cartridge cases ejected while the rifle was held horizontally, the center of the circle would be 80 inches and 90° to the right of the line of sight. In other words, the cartridge cases were ejected to the right of and at roughly a right angle to the rifle. 37 The cartridge cases showed considerable ricochet after their initial landing, bouncing from 8 inches to 15 feet. 38 The location of the cartridge cases was therefore consistent with the southeast window having been used by the assassin, since if the assassin fired from that window the ejected cartridge cases would have hit the pile of boxes at his back and ricocheted between the boxes and the wall until they came to rest to the west of the window.39

The Rifle Bullets

In addition to the three cartridge cases found in the Texas School Book Depository Building, a nearly whole bullet was found on Governor Connally's stretcher and two bullet fragments were found in the front of the President's car. 40 The stretcher bullet weighed 158.6 grains, or several grains less than the average Western Cartridge Co.

 

 

 

6.5-millimeter Mannlicher-Carcano bullet.41 It was slightly flattened, but otherwise unmutilated. 42 The two bullet fragments weighed 44.6 and 21.0 grains, respectively. 43 The heavier fragment was a portion of a bullet's nose area, as shown by its rounded contour and the

Warren Commission Report: Page 558

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(APPENDIX X - Expert Testimony)

character of the markings it bore. 44 The lighter fragment consisted of bullet's base portion, as shown by its shape and by the presence of a cannelure. 45 The two fragments were both mutilated, and it was not possible to determine from the fragments themselves whether they comprised the base and nose of one bullet or of two separate bullets. 46 However, each had sufficient unmutilated area to provide the basis of an identification. 47 Based on a comparison with test bullets fired from the C2766 rifle, the stretcher bullet and both bullet fragments were identified as having been fired from the C2766 rifle. 48

The Revolver

The revolver taken from Oswald at the time of his arrest was a .38 Special S. & W. Victory Model revolver. 49 It bore the serial No. V510210, and is the only such revolver with that serial number, since S. & W. does not repeat, serial numbers. 50 The revolver was originally made in the United States, but was shipped to England, as shown by the English inspection or proof marks on the chambers. 51 The revolver showed definite signs of use but was in good operating condition. 52 The revolver was originally designed to fire a .38 S. & W. cartridge, whose bullet is approximately 12 or 13 grains lighter than the .38 Special, and approximately .12 inches shorter, but has a somewhat larger diameter. 53 In the United States, the .38 Special is considered to be a better bullet than the .38 S. & W.,54 and the revolver was rechambered for a .38 Special prior to being sold in the United States. 55 The weapon was not rebarreled, although the barrel was shortened by cutting off approximately 2 3/4 of its original 5 inches. 56 The shortening of the barrel had no functional value, except to facilitate concealment. 57 


The weapon is a conventional revolver, with a rotating cylinder holding one to six cartridges. It is loaded by swinging out the cylinder and inserting cartridges into the cylinder's chambers. If all six chambers are loaded, the weapon can be fired six consecutive times without reloading. 58 To extract empty cartridge cases, the cylinder is swung out and an ejector rod attached to the cylinder is pushed, simultaneously ejecting all the cartridge cases (and cartridges) in the cylinder. If both live cartridges and expended cartridge cases are in the cylinder, before pushing the ejection rod one can tip the cylinder and dump the live cartridges into his hand. 59 The cartridge cases will not fall out, because they are lighter than the cartridges, and when fired they will have expanded so as to tightly fit the chamber walls. 60 

 

 

 

In a crouched stance a person can fire five shots with the revolver in 3-4 seconds with no trouble, and would need no training to hit a human body four times in four or five shots at a range of 8 feet. 61 A person who had any training with the weapon would not find its recoil noticeable. 62

Warren Commission Report: Page 559

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(APPENDIX X - Expert Testimony)

Revolver Cartridges and Cartridge Cases

When Oswald was arrested six live cartridges were found in the revolver. 63 Three were Western .38 Specials, loaded with copper-coated lead bullets, and three were Remington-Peters .38 Specials, loaded with lead bullets. 64 Five additional live cartridges were found in Oswald's pocket, 65 all of which were Western .38 Specials, loaded with copper-coated bullets. 66 The Western and Remington-Peters .88 Special cartridges are virtually identical--the copper coating on the Western bullets is not a full jacket, but only a gilding metal, put on principally for sales appeal. 67 


Four expended cartridge cases were found near the site of the Tippit killing. 68 Two of these cartridge cases were Remington-Peters .38 Specials and two were Western .38 Specials. 69 Based on a comparison with test cartridge cases fired in the V510210 revolver, the four cartridge cases were identified as having been fired in the V510210 revolver. 70

Revolver Bullets

Four bullets were recovered from the body of Officer Tippit. 71 In Nicol's opinion one of the four bullets could be positively identified with test bullets fired from V510210 revolver, and the other three could have been fired from that revolver. 72 In Cunningham's opinion all four bullets could have been fired from the V510210 revolver, but none could be positively identified to the revolver 73 --that is, in his opinion the bullets bore the revolver's rifling characteristics, but no conclusion could be drawn on the basis of microscopic characteristics. 74 Cunningham did not conclude that the bullets had not been fired from the revolver, since he found that consecutive bullets fired in the revolver by the FBI could not even be identified with each other under the microscope. 75 The apparent reasons for this was that while the revolver had been rechambered for a .38 Special cartridge, it had not been rebarreled for a .38 Special bullet. The barrel was therefore slightly oversized for a .38 Special bullet, which has a smaller diameter than a .38 S. & W. bullet. This would cause the passage of a .38 Special bullet through the barrel to be erratic, resulting in inconsistent microscopic markings. 76 



 

 

Based on the number of grooves, groove widths, groove spacing, and knurling on the four recovered bullets, three were copper-coated lead bullets of Western-Winchester manufacture (Western and Winchester are divisions of the same company), and the fourth was a lead bullet of Remington-Peters manufacture. 77 This contrasts with the four recovered cartridge cases, which consisted of two Remington-Peters and two Westerns. There are several possible explanations for this variance: (1) the killer fired five cartridges, three of which were Western-Winchester and two of which were Remington-Peters; one Remington-Peters bullet missed Tippit; and a Western-Winchester cartridge case and the Remington-Peters bullet that missed were simply not found. (2) The killer fired only four cartridges, three

Warren Commission Report: Page 560

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(APPENDIX X - Expert Testimony)

of which were Western-Winchester and one of which was Remington-Peters; prior to the shooting the killer had an expended Remington-Peters cartridge case in his revolver, which was ejected with the three Western- Winchester and one Remington-Peters cases; and one of the Western-Winchester cases was not found. (3) The killer was using hand-loaded ammunition, that is, ammunition which is made with used cartridge cases to save money; thus he might have loaded one make of bullet into another make of cartridge case. 78 This third possibility is extremely unlikely, because when a cartridge is fired the cartridge case expands, and before it can be reused it must be resized. There was, however, no evidence that any of the four recovered cartridge cases had been resized. 79

The Struggle for the Revolver

Officer McDonald of the Dallas police, who arrested Oswald, stated that he had struggled with Oswald for possession of the revolver and that in the course of the struggle, "I heard the snap of the hammer, and the pistol crossed my left cheek * * * the primer of one round was dented on misfire at the time of the struggle. * * *" so However, none of the cartridges found in the revolver bore the impression of the revolver's firing pin. 81 In addition, the revolver is so constructed that, the firing pin cannot strike a cartridge unless the hammer (which bears the firing pin) has first been drawn all the way back by a complete trigger pull. 82 Had the hammer gone all the way back and then hit the cartridge, it is unlikely that the cartridge would have mis-fired. 83 It would be possible for a person to interject his finger between the hammer and the cartridge, but the spring driving the hammer is a very strong one and the impact of the firing pin into a finger would be clearly felt. 84 However, the cylinder and the trigger are interconnected and the trigger cannot be fully pulled back if the cylinder is grasped. 85 Therefore, if Oswald had pulled on the trigger while McDonald was firmly grasping the cylinder, the

 

 

 

 

 

 revolver would not have fired, and if the gun was grabbed away at the same time the trigger would have snapped back with an audible sound. 86

The Paraffin Test

During the course of the interrogation of Lee Harvey Oswald following the assassination a paraffin test was performed by the Dallas police on both of his hands and his right cheek. The paraffin cast of Oswald's hands reacted positively to the test. The cast of the right cheek showed no reaction. 87 


To perform the paraffin test, layers of warm liquid paraffin, inter-leaved with layers of gauze for reinforcement, are brushed or poured on the suspect's skin. The warm sticky paraffin opens the skin's pores and picks up any dirt and foreign material present at the surface. When the paraffin cools and hardens it forms a cast, which is taken off and processed with diphenylamine or diphenyl-

Warren Commission Report: Page 561

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(APPENDIX X - Expert Testimony)

Mr. CUNNINGHAM. * * * I personally wouldn't expect to find any residues on a person's right cheek after firing a rifle due to the fact that by the very principles and the manufacture and the action, the cartridge itself is sealed into the chamber by the bolt being closed behind it, and upon firing the case, the cartridge case expands into the chamber filling it up and sealing it off from the gases, so none will come back in your face, and so by its very nature, I would not expect to find residue on the right. cheek of a shooter. 92 


The unreliability of the paraffin test has been demonstrated by experiments run by the FBI. In one experiment, conducted prior to the assassination, paraffin tests were performed on 17 men who had just fired 5 shots with a .38-caliber revolver. Eight men tested negative in both hands, three men tested positive on the idle hand and negative on the firing hand, two men tested positive on the firing hand and negative on the idle hand, and four men tested positive on both their firing and idle hands. 93 In a second experiment, paraffin tests were per formed on 29 persons, 9 of whom had just fired a revolver or an automatic, and 20 of whom had not fired a weapon. All 29 persons tested positive on either or both hands. 94 In a third experiment, performed after the assassination, an agent of the FBI, using the C2766 rifle, fired

Warren Commission Report: Page 562

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(APPENDIX X - Expert Testimony)

three rounds of Western 6.5-millimeter Mannlicher-Carcano ammunition in rapid

 

 

succession. A paraffin test was then performed on both of his hands and his right cheek. Both of his hands and his cheek tested negative. 95 

[Editor’s note: this feat—negative evidence of powder blow-by on the hands and cheek—has never been reported by others using a rifle in the condition of “Oswald’s”]


The paraffin casts of Oswald's hands and right cheek were also examined by neutron-activation analyses at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Barium and antimony were found to be present on both surfaces of all the casts and also in residues from the rifle cartridge cases and the revolver cartridge cases. 96 Since barium and antimony were present in both the rifle and the revolver cartridge cases, their presence on the casts were not evidence that Oswald had fired the rifle. Moreover, the presence on the inside surface of the cheek cast of a lesser amount of barium, and only a slightly greater amount of antimony, than was found on the outside surface of the cast rendered it impossible to attach significance to the presence of these elements on the inside surface. Since the outside surface had not been in contact with Oswald's cheek, the barium and antimony found there had come from a source other than Oswald.

 

Furthermore, while there was more barium and antimony present on the casts than would normally be found on the hands of a person who had not fired a weapon or handled a fired weapon, it is also true that barium and antimony may be present in many common items; for example, barium may be present in grease, ceramics, glass, paint, printing ink, paper, rubber, plastics, leather, cloth, pyrotechnics, oilcloth and linoleum, storage batteries, matches and cosmetics; antimony is present in matches, type metal, lead alloys, paints and lacquers, pigments for oil and water colors, flameproof textiles, storage batteries, pyrotechnics, rubber, pharmaceutical preparations and calico; and both barium and antimony are present in printed paper and cloth, paint, storage batteries, rubber, matches, pyrotechnics, and possibly other items. However, the barium and antimony present in these items are usually not present in a form which would lead to their adhering to the skin of a person who had handled such items. 97

The Walker Bullet

On April 10, 1963, a bullet was recovered from General Walker's home, following an attempt on his life. 98 The bullet, which was severely mutilated, weighed 148.25 grains. 99 This bullet had the rifling characteristics of the C2766 rifle and all its remaining physical characteristics were the same as the Western 6.5 millimeter Mannlicher-Carcano bullet. However, while the bullet could have been fired from the C2766 rifle, it was severely multilated and in Frazier's opinion could not be identified as having been fired or not fired from that rifle. 100 Nicol agreed that a positive identification could not be made, but concluded there was "a fair probability" that the bullet had been fired from the same rifle as the test bullets. 101. [Editor’s note: this was false testimony.]