Page:The Case of Sacco and Vanzetti.pdf/28

 The inherent improbability—not to say, as does Dr. Prince, "impossibility"—of making any such accurate identification on the basis of a fleeting glimpse of an unknown man in the confusion of a sudden alarm is affirmed by the testimony of two other eyewitnesses. Ferguson and Pierce, from a window above Splaine and Devlin, on the next floor of the factory, had substantially the same view as the two women. They found it impossible to make any identification.

Thus Ferguson:—

Then Pierce:—