Jerry, I started this thread to confirm no one wants to go near the proof I posted that Priscilla was an official, covert face presented to the Soviet
defectors such as LHO, his wife, and Stalin's daughter and her assignments indicate US gov indifference whether the surveillance subjects were coming to or going from the USSR. Her side gig was pumping, manipulating, and bottling Marina, summer 1964 until 1978.
My experience in these forums is posters claim they are truth seekers but run from actually appraising it when it is presented to them.
Confirmation bias is not fact finding. Tague was irrelevant in June, 1964 because he offered more salesman than substance. He objected with, "hey! look at me!" Didn't he?
Tague was a used car salesman. DPD Buddy Walters asked Tague about
Tague’s cheek injury. The curb section was not cut out and taken to the FBI lab until about
8 months later. Aren’t wheel weights, affixed to the edge of tire rims, also made of lead.
Initially did not Walters claim a bullet was found in that area?
Did he change that claim from a bullet to a piece of skull?
See:
https://www.jfk-assassination.net/death13.htmAI result, displayed above Google search results.
“During the November 22, 1963 assassination of President John F. Kennedy, bystander James Tague was struck on his right cheek by a fragment or concrete debris caused by a bullet ricocheting off a nearby street curb. He was standing near the Triple Underpass in Dealey Plaza.A Dallas Times Herald photo taken shortly after the shooting showed a mark on Tague’s left cheek, leading to a common misconception. Tague later clarified that this mark was from a scuffle with his girlfriend the night before, while the bullet-induced injury was strictly to his right cheek.The resulting scar and fresh damage to the curb—where the FBI later found metallic lead residue—were documented by investigators, proving at least one shot completely missed the presidential limousine. For further context, you can read more via the James Tague Wikipedia page or review the Image of a bullet mark on a curb in Dealey Plaza via The Sixth Floor Museum.“