OH BOY DOES THIS MEAN I'LL BE FEATURED IN ANOTHER ONE OF YOUR SILLY "ARGUMENTS" ?
You're confusing Bonnie Ray Williams' paper "sack" that held his chicken lunch with with the police-constructed "gunsack" that was made in the shipping room.
Sheriff Deputy Luke Mooney, who discovered the sniper’s nest, testified that he saw the 8-12 inch high brown paper “lunchsack” that had been left behind by Bonnie Ray Williams. Mooney was asked if he saw a paper bag at any other window:
Mr. BALL. Did you see a paper bag at any other window?
Mr. MOONEY. No, sir; I didn’t. ( 3 H 288 )
He was also asked if he saw anything in the corner.
Mr. BALL. …..Now, was there anything you saw over in the corner?
Mr. MOONEY. No, sir; I didn’t see anything over in the corner. ( 3 H 286 )
Sgt. Gerald Hill, the first DPD officer to arrive, also only saw the lunchsack:
Mr. HILL. The only specifics we discussed were this. You were asking Officer Hicks if either one recalled seeing a sack, supposedly one that had been made by the suspect, in which he could have possibly carried the weapon into the Depository, and I at that time told you about the small sack that appeared to be a lunchsack, and that that was the only sack that I saw, and that I left the Book Depository prior to the finding of the gun. ( 7 H 65 )
Deputy Sheriff Roger Craig:
Mr. BELIN. Was there any long sack laying in the floor there that you remember seeing, or not?
Mr. CRAIG. No; I don’t remember seeing any. ( 6 H 268 )
Detective Boyd, who arrived with Captain Fritz before Day and Studebaker:
Mr. BALL. Did you see any brown wrapping paper near the window where the hulls were found, near the windows alongside which the hulls were found?
Mr. BOYD. I don’t believe I did. ( 7 H 122 )
Incredibly, lacking an actual photograph of the “gunsack” in the sniper’s nest, and with numerous officers who saw the ‘sniper’s nest” testifying that they never saw the “gunsack”, the Warren Commission placed in evidence a photo of the sniper’s nest with the outline of the “gunsack” drawn in!!! ( Studebaker Exhibit F )
Montgomery didn’t recognize it when he saw it, remembered it being “somewhere” and sounded like a man who was covering for his fellow officers:
Mr. MONTGOMERY. Is this the sack right here, now?
Mr. BALL. That’s right–do you remember that?
Mr. MONTGOMERY. I don’t remember the sack being right there–I remember it was there somewhere, but exactly–I don’t.
Mr. BALL. Evidently you don’t know?
Mr. MONTGOMERY. No, sir. ( 7 H 98 )
I believe there’s a lot of evidence here that points to this “gunsack” as having been constructed on the afternoon of the assassination.
First, crime scene photographs prove that it wasn’t where they said they found it.
Second, two different officers said they found it. One claimed to have a witness and stated no one else saw it.
Third, the prints taken from it are proof that Oswald never carried it.
Fourth, there were not enough fibers to say they came from the blanket in the Paine garage.
Fifth, there was no evidence that the rifle was ever inside it.
Sixth, it was IMPOSSIBLE for anyone, Oswald or anyone else, to have constructed this bag without leaving fingerprints. There were prints in that bag, the FBI destroyed them with a chemical.
Seventh, the paper and tape used to construct the bag matched the paper and tape that was on the shipping room table on the afternoon of November 22nd to the exclusion of all others.
The Paper “Gunsack” was made by the Dallas Police in the shipping room of the TSBD on the afternoon of November 22, 1963 after Oswald was in custody.
The markings on the tape were the same as the markings from the tape dispenser in the shipping room. If Oswald took the paper to Irving with him on Thursday night, did he take the tape and dispenser as well ? How could he have done that without anyone knowing ?
The paper on the “gunsack” matched the paper that was on the shipping table on the afternoon of the 22nd.
The tape on the “gunsack” matched the tape that was in the tape dispenser in the shipping room on the afternoon of the 22nd.
This tells me that the paper “gunsack” was made by the Dallas Police in the shipping room of the TSBD on the afternoon of November 22, 1963 after Oswald was in custody. They made the “gunsack” with the paper and tape that was available, then took samples from the same roll and tape.
By doing that they were trying to match the paper and tape from the “gunsack” to the paper and tape from the TSBD ( so they thought ). What they didn’t know was that the rolls of paper were different from roll to roll and the rolls of tape were different from roll to roll so what they were actually doing was matching the paper and tape on the “gunsack” to the TSBD ON THE AFTERNOON OF THE ASSASSINATION.