In 1967, CBS conducted a rifle test that was admittedly more realistic and harder than the WC's rifle test. Thus, it is revealing and important that the CBS test provided more evidence that the lone-gunman theory's version of the shooting is impossible and that Oswald did not shoot JFK.
12 riflemen took part in the CBS test. Only two of them had rifle skills that were comparable to Oswald's rifle skills on his best day at the range as a Marine. On his best day at a Marine rifle range, Oswald barely qualified in the second of three qualification categories, a feat often achieved by new recruits with little or no experience firing rifles. The 10 other riflemen in the CBS test were clearly far more experienced and skilled than Oswald.
Unlike the WC's rifle test, where three Master-rated riflemen fired at stationary target boards from only 30 feet up, the riflemen in the CBS test fired from a 60-foot tower at target boards that were mounted on a sled that moved away from them on a track.
The weapon used in the CBS test was a well-maintained Carcano rifle, not the alleged murder weapon itself. Revealingly, though well-maintained, the rifle jammed several times for the shooters in the CBS test.
The CBS test failed to include important factors of the alleged shooting feat. The CBS riflemen did not fire from a half-open window in cramped quarters. The riflemen were allowed to fire nine practice shots before the test, a luxury that Oswald would not have enjoyed. And, CBS counted as a hit any shot that landed on the target silhouettes, even if it landed far down on the back or far out on the shoulder of the silhouette. Obviously, this had the effect of at least tripling the size of the target for the CBS riflemen, in contrast to the small area of the neck and head allegedly hit by Oswald.
With all these advantages over the conditions of the feat attributed to Oswald, surely at least half of the experienced, highly skilled riflemen in the CBS test scored two hits in 5.6 seconds on their first attempt, right? No. Not even close.
Only one of the 12 CBS shooters managed to score at least two hits in less than 6 seconds on his first attempt, and he was a Maryland state trooper and a highly skilled rifleman. Seven of the 12 riflemen failed to score two hits in under 6 seconds on any of their attempts. In six of the 36 series, the rifle jammed. And keep in mind that CBS counted as a hit any shot that landed anywhere in the target silhouette, no matter how far away it struck from the small area that Oswald allegedly hit.
In short, 10 experienced and highly skilled riflemen tried to duplicate part of Oswald's alleged shooting feat. I say "part" because they got to fire nine practice rounds, because they didn't have to fire in cramped quarters through a half-open window, and because any of their shots that landed anywhere on the target silhouettes, even shots that landed far outside the area that Oswald allegedly hit, were counted as hits. Yet, even in these easier conditions, only one of them managed to score two hits in under 6 seconds on the first attempt, keeping in mind that Oswald would have had only one attempt.
How did the two less-experienced and less-skilled riflemen do? They failed to score two hits in less than 6 seconds on their first attempt. In fact, they failed to do so on any of their attempts.
NOTE: In seven of the series, the riflemen took more than 6 seconds. In six other series, as mentioned, the rifle jammed. In 30 of the series, the riflemen failed to score at least two hits. Again, only one of the riflemen, an experienced and expert gunman, scored two hits in under 6 seconds on his first attempt.
So when you hear quacks like the Haags declare that Oswald's alleged shooting feat would have been "easy," much less that they've actually done it many times, you know they're quacking nonsense.
Any objective analysis of the WC and CBS rifle tests leads to the conclusion that the tests prove that the lone-gunman theory's version of the shooting feat is impossible and that Oswald most certainly did not have the rifle skills to do it.