Oh, and one more thing:
"Mr. LIEBELER. Immediately to your left, or toward the back? Of course, now we have other evidence that would indicate that the shots did come from the Texas School Book Depository, but see if we can disregard that and determine just what you heard when the shots were fired in the first place. "
Ya, lets.just.disregard.this, Mr Liebler now ask Tague again if the shots could have come from the TSBD, after he just told you multiple times he thought the shots came from the picket fence.
We will disregard this indeed, because Liebeler is referring to the fact that Tague has
already said that he thought that the book depository was a possible source of the shots, based on his looking around after the shooting was done and noticing something in a window. It turned out not to be the window Oswald was at, but he immediately spotted the possibility that a shooter could have been up there and he might have been hit by something from there.
Later he was asked where he had the impression the sounds came from and he pointed to the grassy area
as his impression of where the sound came from, but he had already mentioned the depository. Libeler is not being in any way 'leading'.
In fact Tague's testimony flies right in the face of your entire argument, because he says, both independently and when asked about it, that he found nothing inconsistent in the notion that his impression of where the shots came from and his spotting of a possible location of the shooter were not one and the same. In other words, he recognises quite well that there can be a discrepancy between those two things and that this is not unusual or grounds for suspicion.