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Author Topic: Stop With The Limo Stop  (Read 18956 times)

Offline Michael Welch

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Re: Stop With The Limo Stop
« Reply #104 on: November 13, 2023, 01:13:05 PM »
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Mr. PURDY - A photograph of the back of the President's head. Let me just ask you if that looks like one that you saw, or that matches your recollection. This is the back of the President's head here.
Mr. KNUDSEN - There again, I did not study it in detail. It seems to me that there was a little bit more of the piece of the skull hanging in one of the photographs. Here, this is it.
Mr. PURDY - Now we are referring to Photograph No. 37F, showing the top of the President's head. So it is your testimony here today that these photographs are not inconsistent with the ones that you saw?
Mr. KNUDSEN - No, not at all.


Ebserole did not examine JFK's head and did not participate in the autopsy in any way.
Jenkins did both and in his interview gives a forensic analysis of the injuries he observed.
Who should we be listening to?
Ebersole's recollection of the procedure is almost non-existent, he has no recollection of the head being unwrapped, no recollection of Jenkins or O'Connor assisting and he remembers the neck wound as being sutured.
It must be remembered that Jenkins, who was intimately involved with the procedure, is no WC apologist. He is a CTer through-and-through. He believes the head was surgically altered before it's arrival at Bethesda and has zero reason to uphold the official narrative.
He reports that the whole side of JFK's head came away as they unwrapped it and that it was then put back again. Like the Parkland doctors, who also didn't examine the head wound, Ebersole saw the damage to the back of the head but was unaware the wound was far larger and that it accounted for most of the upper right portion of the skull.

It's the orientation of the image.
If you were looking at JFK's head from directly above the red line would extend beyond the ear.
You're not reading my posts properly.

The autopsy pic is a view from above JFK's head,
The Z-film is a view of JFK's head in profile, a side view.
I get the impression you are being confused by these differing perspectives.
The massive head wound shown in the Z-film extends far behind the ear but it is on top of the head:



So when this injury is viewed from above it should correctly appear as if it is an injury that extends "behind the ear", as you put it.
Also, as John has already pointed out, gravity is dragging down JFK's hair and the matter escaping from his skull which gives a distorted perception of the injury which you don't seem to have taken into account.

Do me a favour Michael.
Rather than just blurting out your next irrelevant point, take a close look at the evidence being presented to you and take it from there.


Hi Dan, What are you talking about! Dr. Ebersole handled JFK's body "from the time the coffin came in until 3:00am the next morning." He did two complete x-rays of the president's skull; the chest and the trunk! He specifically said the back of the president's head was missing and messy!

https://history-matters.com/archive/jfk/arrb/master_med_set/md60/html/Image04.htm

Sincerely yours, Michael



Explore Freedom » Hornberger's Blog » The Mystery of Robert Knudsen
The Mystery of Robert Knudsen
by Jacob G. Hornberger

July 6, 2018

EMAIL


On January 29, 1989, the Washington Post published an obituary of Robert Knudsen, which stated in part:

Robert LeRoy Knudsen, 61, a retired photographer with the White House staff, where he served for 28 years, died Jan. 27 at the Bethesda Naval Hospital after a heart attack. He lived in Annandale. Mr. Knudsen had provided photographic coverage of every president from Harry Truman to Richard M. Nixon, and his photographs chronicled most of the major events at the White House for nearly three decades. He photographed President Truman’s election in 1948 and the election of President Eisenhower in 1952. His pictures included Eisenhower’s meeting with Nikita Krushchev in 1959, the first steps of John F. Kennedy Jr., and President Kennedy’s autopsy. Mr. Knudsen photographed the weddings of Linda and Luci Johnson and Tricia Nixon’s White House wedding. He accompanied President Nixon on his historic trips to China and the Soviet Union in 1972, and photographed Nixon’s farewell in 1974.

Two days later, the New York Times published an obituary of Knudsen, which stated in part:

Mr. Knudsen worked on the White House photography staff in five administrations: Truman, Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson and Nixon. Among his most celebrated photographs were the first pictures of John F. Kennedy’s son, John Jr., walking in the Oval Office at the age of 18 months in May 1962. He photographed the 1948 and 1952 elections of Harry S. Truman and Dwight D. Eisenhower, the historic 1959 meeting between Eisenhower and Nikita Khrushchev, the autopsy of the slain President Kennedy in 1963, President Nixon’s 1972 trips to China and the Soviet Union, Mr. Nixon’s 1974 farewell in the wake of the Watergate scandal and the White House weddings of three daughters of Presidents, Lynda and Luci Johnson and Tricia Nixon.

The pertinent parts of those two obituaries, insofar as this article is concerned, are the following:

Washington Post: “He photographed … President Kennedy’s autopsy.”

New York Times: “He photographed … the autopsy of the slain President Kennedy in 1963.”

According to information provided to the Assassination Records Review Board (ARRB) in the 1990s by Knudsen’s wife and children, on the afternoon of November 22, 1963, the day President Kennedy was shot in Dallas, Knudsen received a telephone call summoning him to Andrews Air Force Base, where the president’s body was being delivered from Dallas on Air Force One.

His family said that Knudsen was gone for three days. When he returned home, he told his family that he had photographed the autopsy of President Kennedy. He also told them that he could not provide any further information because he had been sworn to secrecy. Mrs. Knudsen told the ARRB that her husband treated classified information just like the military does — that he would take it to the grave with him without ever revealing it to anyone.

In 1977, a national photography magazine, Popular Photography, published an interview with Knudsen in which he stated that he had photographed the president’s autopsy and that it was “the hardest assignment of my life.”

No one has ever questioned the integrity, veracity, or competence of Robert Knudsen. He was highly respected, both personally and professionally. It would difficult to find a more credible witness than Robert Knudsen.

There is one big problem, however: Knudsen did not photograph the president’s autopsy. The official autopsy photographer was John T. Stringer, a highly respected autopsy photographer for the U.S. Navy who taught photography at the Bethesda Naval Medical School. It is undisputed that Stringer photographed the president’s autopsy and that Knudsen wasn’t even at the autopsy.

What then are we to make of this? Why would Knudsen make up a story that could easily be exposed as false? Why would he take the chance of sullying the reputation for integrity that he had built up over the decades? Why would he risk a highly prestigious job as a White House photographer by lying about having been the official photographer for the Kennedy autopsy? Why would he give a false story to a national photography magazine knowing that it would be easy to expose the falsity of it? Why didn’t anyone in the U.S. military, which conducted the president’s autopsy, come forward and expose Knudsen’s story as false?

In the 1970s, Knudsen was summoned to testify before the House Select Committee on Assassinations, which was reinvestigating the Kennedy assassination. During his testimony, Knudsen was shown autopsy photographs that are in the official autopsy record.

According to his wife and children, Knudsen returned home and indicated to his family that autopsy photographs he had been shown during his testimony were fraudulent. He said that there were clearly some shenanigans going on and that if anything were ever to blow up, he wanted his family to know that he had had nothing to do with it. Protecting his integrity within his family was obviously extremely important to Robert Knudsen.

If Knudsen was telling the truth, and there is no reason to doubt that he was, then it is clear that on the weekend of the assassination, he photographed a procedure that he believed was the president’s autopsy and that he was made to believe was the president’s autopsy but actually wasn’t the president’s autopsy. It is also clear that whoever convinced Knudsen to believe that he was photographing the official autopsy also swore Knudsen to secrecy by telling him that the entire procedure he was photographing was classifed.

The mystery of Robert Knudsen is compounded by the testimony before the ARRB of Saundra Spencer. She was a U.S. Navy petty officer who worked in the U.S. Navy’s photography lab in Washington, D.C., in 1963. She had a top-secret security clearance and worked closely with the White House on top-secret, classified photographs. No one has ever questioned the integrity, professionalism, and competence of Saundra Spencer. As with Knudsen, it would be difficult to find a more credible witness than Saundra Spencer.

The reason that Spencer was summoned to testify before the ARRB in the 1990s is that the ARRB had learned that on the weekend of the assassination, she had been asked, on a top-secret basis, to develop autopsy photographs of President Kennedy’s body. Pursuant to the culture of secrecy and classified information in the military, Spencer kept her role in developing those autopsy photographs secret for some 30 years, until she was summoned to testify before the ARRB.

During her testimony, Spencer was shown the official autopsy photographs of the President’s body. After carefully examining them, she testified directly and unequivocally that the autopsy photographs in the official record were not the ones that she developed on the weekend of the assassination. She stated that the autopsy photographs she developed showed a large exit-sized wound in the back of President Kennedy’s head, which matched what treating physicians at Parkland Hospital had stated. The photographs in the official record show the back of Kennedy’s head to be fully intact. A large exit-sized wound in the back of the president’s head would, of course, imply a shot fired from the president’s front.

After Spencer’s testimony before the ARRB, no one came forward to challenge, question, or dispute the truthfulness and accuracy of her testimony.

What are we to make of Knudsen and Spencer?

There are two conclusions that can be reasonably drawn: First, the official autopsy of President Kennedy, which was carried out by the U.S. military, was fraudulent and, second, there is no conceivable innocent explanation for having carried out a fraudulent autopsy.

For more information, see my book The Kennedy Autopsy.

 

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Re: Stop With The Limo Stop
« Reply #104 on: November 13, 2023, 01:13:05 PM »


Online Dan O'meara

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Re: Stop With The Limo Stop
« Reply #105 on: November 13, 2023, 06:00:02 PM »
Hi Dan, What are you talking about! Dr. Ebersole handled JFK's body "from the time the coffin came in until 3:00am the next morning." He did two complete x-rays of the president's skull; the chest and the trunk! He specifically said the back of the president's head was missing and messy!

Ebersole did not participate in the autopsy and did not examine the head wound.
If you have different information I'd like to hear it.
He has virtually no recollection of the actual procedure.
What he does remember seems incorrect.

On the other hand we have the account of Jenkins, who did participate in the autopsy and who provides a forensic analysis of the head wound.

Knudsen was not present at Kennedy's autopsy. He would've mentioned it in his HSCA interview.



Offline Royell Storing

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Re: Stop With The Limo Stop
« Reply #106 on: November 13, 2023, 06:43:42 PM »
Ebersole did not participate in the autopsy and did not examine the head wound.
If you have different information I'd like to hear it.
He has virtually no recollection of the actual procedure.
What he does remember seems incorrect.

On the other hand we have the account of Jenkins, who did participate in the autopsy and who provides a forensic analysis of the head wound.

Knudsen was not present at Kennedy's autopsy. He would've mentioned it in his HSCA interview.

  Depends what you mean by, "....participate in the Autopsy". Ebersole personally handled JFK's body several times, along with being the Head Honcho that night regarding the X-Rays.   

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Re: Stop With The Limo Stop
« Reply #106 on: November 13, 2023, 06:43:42 PM »


Offline John Iacoletti

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Re: Stop With The Limo Stop
« Reply #107 on: November 13, 2023, 07:32:31 PM »
Thanks John for confirming that you're still just a sad old Clown and your best effort of refutation is being reduced to maniacally laughing at every piece of rock solid evidence. 

A series of unsubstantiated claims is not "rock solid evidence", or evidence at all.  All it deserves is a LOL.  There's nothing there to "refute".  What can be asserted without evidence can also be dismissed without evidence.

Offline Michael Welch

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Re: Stop With The Limo Stop
« Reply #108 on: November 13, 2023, 07:35:49 PM »
Ebersole did not participate in the autopsy and did not examine the head wound.
If you have different information I'd like to hear it.
He has virtually no recollection of the actual procedure.
What he does remember seems incorrect.

On the other hand we have the account of Jenkins, who did participate in the autopsy and who provides a forensic analysis of the head wound.

Knudsen was not present at Kennedy's autopsy. He would've mentioned it in his HSCA interview.

Hi Dan, Again, what are you talking about! 
John H. Ebersole

Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org › wiki › John_H._Ebersole
Ebersole was the radiologist responsible for the x-rays taken during the autopsy of John F. Kennedy on 22 November 1963 at Bethesda Naval Medical Center. After ...
Died: September 23, 1993 (aged 68); Lancaster, ...‎
Spouse(s): Marion E. Sherwood (1927 - 2004)
‎Biography · ‎U.S. Navy career · ‎NASA · ‎John F. Kennedy autopsy

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Re: Stop With The Limo Stop
« Reply #108 on: November 13, 2023, 07:35:49 PM »


Online Mitch Todd

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Re: Stop With The Limo Stop
« Reply #109 on: November 13, 2023, 11:40:54 PM »
Hi Dan, What are you talking about! Dr. Ebersole handled JFK's body "from the time the coffin came in until 3:00am the next morning." He did two complete x-rays of the president's skull; the chest and the trunk! He specifically said the back of the president's head was missing and messy!

https://history-matters.com/archive/jfk/arrb/master_med_set/md60/html/Image04.htm

Sincerely yours, Michael



Explore Freedom » Hornberger's Blog » The Mystery of Robert Knudsen
The Mystery of Robert Knudsen
by Jacob G. Hornberger

July 6, 2018

EMAIL


On January 29, 1989, the Washington Post published an obituary of Robert Knudsen, which stated in part:

Robert LeRoy Knudsen, 61, a retired photographer with the White House staff, where he served for 28 years, died Jan. 27 at the Bethesda Naval Hospital after a heart attack. He lived in Annandale. Mr. Knudsen had provided photographic coverage of every president from Harry Truman to Richard M. Nixon, and his photographs chronicled most of the major events at the White House for nearly three decades. He photographed President Truman’s election in 1948 and the election of President Eisenhower in 1952. His pictures included Eisenhower’s meeting with Nikita Krushchev in 1959, the first steps of John F. Kennedy Jr., and President Kennedy’s autopsy. Mr. Knudsen photographed the weddings of Linda and Luci Johnson and Tricia Nixon’s White House wedding. He accompanied President Nixon on his historic trips to China and the Soviet Union in 1972, and photographed Nixon’s farewell in 1974.

Two days later, the New York Times published an obituary of Knudsen, which stated in part:

Mr. Knudsen worked on the White House photography staff in five administrations: Truman, Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson and Nixon. Among his most celebrated photographs were the first pictures of John F. Kennedy’s son, John Jr., walking in the Oval Office at the age of 18 months in May 1962. He photographed the 1948 and 1952 elections of Harry S. Truman and Dwight D. Eisenhower, the historic 1959 meeting between Eisenhower and Nikita Khrushchev, the autopsy of the slain President Kennedy in 1963, President Nixon’s 1972 trips to China and the Soviet Union, Mr. Nixon’s 1974 farewell in the wake of the Watergate scandal and the White House weddings of three daughters of Presidents, Lynda and Luci Johnson and Tricia Nixon.

The pertinent parts of those two obituaries, insofar as this article is concerned, are the following:

Washington Post: “He photographed … President Kennedy’s autopsy.”

New York Times: “He photographed … the autopsy of the slain President Kennedy in 1963.”

According to information provided to the Assassination Records Review Board (ARRB) in the 1990s by Knudsen’s wife and children, on the afternoon of November 22, 1963, the day President Kennedy was shot in Dallas, Knudsen received a telephone call summoning him to Andrews Air Force Base, where the president’s body was being delivered from Dallas on Air Force One.

His family said that Knudsen was gone for three days. When he returned home, he told his family that he had photographed the autopsy of President Kennedy. He also told them that he could not provide any further information because he had been sworn to secrecy. Mrs. Knudsen told the ARRB that her husband treated classified information just like the military does — that he would take it to the grave with him without ever revealing it to anyone.

In 1977, a national photography magazine, Popular Photography, published an interview with Knudsen in which he stated that he had photographed the president’s autopsy and that it was “the hardest assignment of my life.”

No one has ever questioned the integrity, veracity, or competence of Robert Knudsen. He was highly respected, both personally and professionally. It would difficult to find a more credible witness than Robert Knudsen.

There is one big problem, however: Knudsen did not photograph the president’s autopsy. The official autopsy photographer was John T. Stringer, a highly respected autopsy photographer for the U.S. Navy who taught photography at the Bethesda Naval Medical School. It is undisputed that Stringer photographed the president’s autopsy and that Knudsen wasn’t even at the autopsy.

What then are we to make of this? Why would Knudsen make up a story that could easily be exposed as false? Why would he take the chance of sullying the reputation for integrity that he had built up over the decades? Why would he risk a highly prestigious job as a White House photographer by lying about having been the official photographer for the Kennedy autopsy? Why would he give a false story to a national photography magazine knowing that it would be easy to expose the falsity of it? Why didn’t anyone in the U.S. military, which conducted the president’s autopsy, come forward and expose Knudsen’s story as false?

In the 1970s, Knudsen was summoned to testify before the House Select Committee on Assassinations, which was reinvestigating the Kennedy assassination. During his testimony, Knudsen was shown autopsy photographs that are in the official autopsy record.

According to his wife and children, Knudsen returned home and indicated to his family that autopsy photographs he had been shown during his testimony were fraudulent. He said that there were clearly some shenanigans going on and that if anything were ever to blow up, he wanted his family to know that he had had nothing to do with it. Protecting his integrity within his family was obviously extremely important to Robert Knudsen.

If Knudsen was telling the truth, and there is no reason to doubt that he was, then it is clear that on the weekend of the assassination, he photographed a procedure that he believed was the president’s autopsy and that he was made to believe was the president’s autopsy but actually wasn’t the president’s autopsy. It is also clear that whoever convinced Knudsen to believe that he was photographing the official autopsy also swore Knudsen to secrecy by telling him that the entire procedure he was photographing was classifed.

The mystery of Robert Knudsen is compounded by the testimony before the ARRB of Saundra Spencer. She was a U.S. Navy petty officer who worked in the U.S. Navy’s photography lab in Washington, D.C., in 1963. She had a top-secret security clearance and worked closely with the White House on top-secret, classified photographs. No one has ever questioned the integrity, professionalism, and competence of Saundra Spencer. As with Knudsen, it would be difficult to find a more credible witness than Saundra Spencer.

The reason that Spencer was summoned to testify before the ARRB in the 1990s is that the ARRB had learned that on the weekend of the assassination, she had been asked, on a top-secret basis, to develop autopsy photographs of President Kennedy’s body. Pursuant to the culture of secrecy and classified information in the military, Spencer kept her role in developing those autopsy photographs secret for some 30 years, until she was summoned to testify before the ARRB.

During her testimony, Spencer was shown the official autopsy photographs of the President’s body. After carefully examining them, she testified directly and unequivocally that the autopsy photographs in the official record were not the ones that she developed on the weekend of the assassination. She stated that the autopsy photographs she developed showed a large exit-sized wound in the back of President Kennedy’s head, which matched what treating physicians at Parkland Hospital had stated. The photographs in the official record show the back of Kennedy’s head to be fully intact. A large exit-sized wound in the back of the president’s head would, of course, imply a shot fired from the president’s front.

After Spencer’s testimony before the ARRB, no one came forward to challenge, question, or dispute the truthfulness and accuracy of her testimony.

What are we to make of Knudsen and Spencer?

There are two conclusions that can be reasonably drawn: First, the official autopsy of President Kennedy, which was carried out by the U.S. military, was fraudulent and, second, there is no conceivable innocent explanation for having carried out a fraudulent autopsy.

For more information, see my book The Kennedy Autopsy.
Knudsen privately told a number of people, including his family, that he'd taken the autopsy photos. However, his name does not appear in the Sibert/O'Neil report as being present in the Bethesda morgue that night. Nor have any known participants placed Knudsen at the autopsy. When Knudsen was asked to put his story on the record, for the HSCA, he failed to claim that the took the photos or attended the autopsy. He only claimed to have been involved in the development of the autopsy photos at Anacostia later that weekend.  This strongly suggests that someone was pulling someone else's leg, to say the least.

Offline Royell Storing

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Re: Stop With The Limo Stop
« Reply #110 on: November 14, 2023, 06:19:52 AM »
Knudsen privately told a number of people, including his family, that he'd taken the autopsy photos. However, his name does not appear in the Sibert/O'Neil report as being present in the Bethesda morgue that night. Nor have any known participants placed Knudsen at the autopsy. When Knudsen was asked to put his story on the record, for the HSCA, he failed to claim that the took the photos or attended the autopsy. He only claimed to have been involved in the development of the autopsy photos at Anacostia later that weekend.  This strongly suggests that someone was pulling someone else's leg, to say the least.

    You are radically underestimating the role Knudsen played in the developing of the autopsy photos when you say, "INVOLVED in the development of the autopsy photos". Knudsen and SA Kellerman picked up the photos that morning and transported them for development. At that point, Knudsen was in charge of the photos being developed. Knudsen held a high security clearance. I believe the confusion over whether Knudsen attended an autopsy stemmed from his having done an interview for some kind of half baked photography mag. The Knudsen article in that mag is why the HSCA subpoena'd Knudsen to appear. The real question is WHY was Knudsen's Testimony SEALED? This also raises the question of how many other WC AND HSCA Testimonies might still remain sealed?

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Re: Stop With The Limo Stop
« Reply #110 on: November 14, 2023, 06:19:52 AM »


Online Dan O'meara

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Re: Stop With The Limo Stop
« Reply #111 on: November 14, 2023, 08:57:32 AM »
Hi Dan, Again, what are you talking about! 
John H. Ebersole

Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org › wiki › John_H._Ebersole
Ebersole was the radiologist responsible for the x-rays taken during the autopsy of John F. Kennedy on 22 November 1963 at Bethesda Naval Medical Center. After ...
Died: September 23, 1993 (aged 68); Lancaster, ...‎
Spouse(s): Marion E. Sherwood (1927 - 2004)
‎Biography · ‎U.S. Navy career · ‎NASA · ‎John F. Kennedy autopsy

It's pretty clear what I'm talking about.
What are you talking about?
Did Ebersole examine the head wound?
And what were you talking about with Knudsen?