The timing, accuracy and wounds SCREAMS Oswald with his FMJ bolt action rifle

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Author Topic: The timing, accuracy and wounds SCREAMS Oswald with his FMJ bolt action rifle  (Read 44781 times)

Offline Jerry Freeman

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Considering that the head shot was the last shot leads to only one logical conclusion, that whoever was shooting had finally accomplished his mission.
Well there you have it ..."whoever"-- Got their signal from TUM...Here he comes-get ready to fire.



People running up the knoll after that shot....




Online Zeon Mason

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Harold Norman, the closest ear witness right underneath the SE 6th floor SN, heard the 3 shots fired in approximately 4 seconds or less if you measure his several recorded video interviews.

also Norman stated he heard the 1st shot fired, saw JFK "slump' and only AFTER that, did Norman hear 2 more shots fired. So that 1st shot that Nnorman heard, must be 223, because any earlier, JFK has NOT slumped yet.

so 3 shots in 4.8 seconds, of which the SECOND shot must have missed around Z frame 290, followed in about 1 sec by Z 313 head shot.

This rules out a MC rifle firing all 3 shots. Its possible to have fired 2 shots spread apart by 3 seconds but surely improbable to have fired a 3rd shot 1 second after the missed 2nd shot.

This compares well also with James Tague, who thought it was the 2nd or 3rd shot that struck the curb near his position at the tunnel of the Triple overpass, or a fragment of such shot, that may have caused a superficial cut wound on his face.

Lee Bowers, the tower operator behind the stockade GK fence, who saw something like a flash of light that caught his eye, replicated his memory of the shots as spaced also within 3 or 4 seconds just like Harold Norman. Bowers raps his hand on the desk in about 1 sec spacing between 2nd and 3rd shot.
« Last Edit: October 19, 2019, 05:48:30 PM by Zeon Mason »

Online Zeon Mason

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one other thing about Harold Normans ear witnessing is that from about 12:25 until time of first shot fired about 12:30, Norman heard NO NOISE above him, such as any boxes being pushed or a box being placed on the windowledge, or any movement of the shooter above him, including most significantly NO WORKING OF THE BOLT in preparation. So this SE window 6th floor shooter did not get any advantage like the CBS trial shooters had, to be able to prep work the bolt of the rifle to loosen it up, right up to a few seconds before beginning to fire.

Offline John Iacoletti

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one other thing about Harold Normans ear witnessing is that from about 12:25 until time of first shot fired about 12:30, Norman heard NO NOISE above him, such as any boxes being pushed or a box being placed on the windowledge, or any movement of the shooter above him, including most significantly NO WORKING OF THE BOLT in preparation.

But Norman didn't go "click-click-boom-click-click-boom-click-click-boom-click-click".

Offline Bill Chapman

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Inattentional deafness...

Offline Jerry Freeman

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But Norman didn't go "click-click-boom-click-click-boom-click-click-boom-click-click".
By all alleged [I say alleged there] rights should it not have been.... boom click plunk click...boom click plunk click...boom click plunk click ? :-\
That is three shots and three shells ejected. Why not fire that next round [to make sure]? I mean [supposedly] the rifleman was engaged in super rapid fire. Why not squeeze the trigger and go for the left ear using the a fore mentioned timing and accuracy? ::)

Offline Jerry Freeman

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The image above is supposed to prove what....? That it was fired from the 6th floor rifle? It may have been and so what?