Landis, Hickey and Ready react immediately to the first shot.
All three of them turn to their right and rear,
Altgens 6 shows them doing this.
This is an example of the photographic record and witness testimony being in perfect harmony. Something you don't seem to appreciate.
This immediate reaction - turning to their right rear is not shown in the Z-film and we see them until z-207.
All of this is a fact.
There is nothing fanciful.
Like a good little Nutter, you can't accept any evidence that contradicts your little belief system.
Even when multiple witness testimony is confirmed by the photographic record.
All three men state they turned to their right rear as a response to the first shot - fact.
All three men are shown turned to their right rear in Altgens 6 - fact.
The z-film does not show this movement - fact.
Do you agree that these three things are facts?
(I don't expect an answer to that anytime soon).
Dear XXXX XXXX,
Repeat after me: "It doesn't matter much what people say timing-wise and sequence-wise after witnessing a startling, chaotic and traumatic event. What matters are their caught-on-film "startle" and conscious (i.e., non-"startle") reactions."
By the way, I guess you missed this:
Dear "Useful Idiot" O'meara,
(Don't take it literally or too personally -- it's just an old KGB* expression for a gullible person who unwittingly helps its cause.)
It's too bad Roselle and Scearce didn't include Secret Service agent Glen Bennett in their study.
You remember him, don't you?
He's the guy who was sitting behind Dave Powers (who was sitting on the passenger-side jump seat) in the follow-up car and who said he heard what he thought was a firecracker (i.e., Oswald's first, missing-everything shot) after the limo turned onto Elm Street. He said he looked to his right and then straight ahead and that he saw a bullet** strike JFK "about four inches below his right shoulder."
Remember?
Well, why don't you take another "close look" at the Zapruder film and determine in which frame Agent Bennett starts leaning his head to his right to get a good view of JFK around Powers?
Hmm?
To refresh your memory, this is what Bennett wrote:
"At this point I heard what sounded like a firecracker. I immediately looked from the right/crowd/physical area/and looked towards the President who was seated in the right rear seat of his limousine open convertible. At the moment I looked at the back of the President I heard another firecracker noise and saw the shot hit the President about four inches down from the right shoulder."
*Today's SVR and FSB
**CE-399, which wounded both JFK and JBC