Rigor mortis sets in in about two to three hours after a person dies, stiffening the body in the position it had died in, yet when Bartok examines the dead body, dead for well over two days, it jostles around like it's not been dead for more than an hour.
Jimmy tells Pratt he doesn't rob the people's money, he only robs insured banks, but that is an oxymoron. A bank, insured or not, is the people's money. And even if that bank doesn't hold the money of the town folk, it's insured by the Federal government, which gets it's money from taxation of the people. So either way, it is the money of the people.
Pratt suggests that Jimmy got his inspiration of stealing money from a bank to help pay for an old ladies fore closed home, from Robin Hood, but this is an incorrect analogy. People often mistake that Robin Hood stole from the rich to give to the poor, when in fact that is not what Robin Hood did. He stole from from the king to get back the money of the people who were overtaxed by the tyrant; it was not an issued of poor vs. rich, but right vs. wrong.