This is the entire post by Carr....
I found the cover sheets to the lab reports which summarize the findings. I also found the interviews of the Ingram family with regard to the recovery. I found the following:
The money was not stuck together with muck. The money was found under just a few inches of sand. They were still bundled with rubber bands, however, the bands crumbled to the touch when they picked them up. The Ingrams took the money to their house and laid it out to dry. The only thing in the lab report was that the money was consistent with being submerged in water and that sand recovered off the money was consistent with silt from the Columbia
From what I have read in the files the best theory I can come up with is that Cooper tied the money bag into a tight enough bundle that it stayed sealed for several years. As time passed the bag was pushed by the elements into a creek or feeder stream, finally into a high velocity creek that eventually pushed it into a tributary that feeds into the Columbia. Once in the Columbia the bag bounces along the bottom, snaging every now and then. Sometime in late 78 or early 79 the bag breaks open near Tina's Bar and a few bundles wash up and are covered buy the sand.
Ok. Let's examine this.
"I found the cover sheets to the lab reports which summarize the findings." Cover sheets plural. Lab reports plural. The "findings" being summarized are not for "all" of the lab reports but only for each separate lab report. Nowhere does SA Carr say:
All of the lab report findings agree! In fact they do not agree. They may compliment each other but they do not duplicate each other or even necessarily form a comprehensive consistent picture.
Why are there multiple lab reports? The most basic answer to that is: because different packets of evidence were sent in separately to be examined. How many separate packets were there? We do not know. SA Carr does not tell us; all Larry says is "reports" and "findings". But there were at minimum three separate reports and findings. (1) The original Ingram bills turned in. (2) Another four bills turned in later for the family by Crystal Ingram. (3) Evidence collected by agents etal during the excavation. At minimum there are three sets of evidence submitted for analysis and each will have a cover sheet(s) and a lab report. Let's call these Submissions Q1, Q2, and Q3 for convenience. So... at the very least we know Larry's "cover sheets and lab reports" represent real-world evidence submissions Q1, Q2, and Q3, etc. It is how-many-ever there were.
From all of the cover sheets SA Carr reports the follow points: (a) The money was not stuck together with muck. (b) The money was found under just a few inches of sand. (c) They were still bundled with rubber bands, however, (d) the bands crumbled to the touch when they picked them up. (e) The Ingrams took the money to their house and laid it out to dry. (f) The only thing in the lab report was that the money was consistent with being submerged in water and that (g) sand recovered off the money was consistent with silt from the Columbia.
The first point is, we have to assume Larry is reading and interpreting the cover sheet summaries correctly, in his report above. I am not satisfied that is the case. For one thing there is the issue of the condition of the money which we know was in some case highly deteriorated. We know as fact that the money was so deteriorated that the FBI could only get an approximate count on the total amount ... finally gauged at $5800 or 290 separate bills. The money was so fragile an accurate count could not be made! And if other agents are to be taken seriously there were other fragments distributed over at least a 4x60 yard field which were not in the count.
Second: "(g) sand recovered off the money was consistent with silt from the Columbia". Sand off the money. Larry does not say "silt deposits between or among the bills...". Is Larry talking about sand recovered "off" the whole bundle(s) only? Or by "off" does he mean "off between the groups of bills" or "off between the bills".
Was there sand between the damned bills!? Yes, there was. That sand is the "silt" Larry mentions. What else is in "silt" besides sand? What types of sand from what minerals? Did the FBI lab techs try to determine that? Did the FBI lab techs run any mineralogy tests on the sand types? Sand types differentiate one sediment type from another and help identify location. Apparently, Larry is saying dredging sediment is not involved because he doesn't mention dredge sediment-silt at all, in spite of the fact the dredging is a fundamental question in this whole issue.
The details would be in the lab reports themselves vs cover sheets. (g) above is a general statement and you cannot draw any hard conclusions from statements like that.
I think until something turns up of a definitive nature in the Cooper money, people are going to continue to cast this find in a number of shades, supporting one theory over another. When the money got to Tina Bar, how it arrived, etc., are going to continue to be debated ... for the forseeable future.