Let’s examine more evidence that the autopsy brain photos are fraudulent, that they do not show JFK’s brain.
Dr. Boswell stated in his HSCA interview that "the brain was so torn up it would not have shown a tract" (Memorandum: Interview with J. Thornton Boswell, HSCA, August 16, 1977, p. 2). However, the brain in the autopsy brain photos does not look anything like a brain that was "so torn up" it would not have shown a tract. The brain in the alleged brain photos has virtually no tissue missing, has no damage at all on the left side, and has only one large laceration on the right side.
The HSCA FPP admitted that the brain seen in the x-rays of the isolated brain, i.e., the Group 6 x-rays, shows no anatomical features that associate that brain with the other autopsy photos, but the FPP then claimed that the damage (trauma) to the brain in the Group 6 x-rays, which they noted is mainly in the upper part (“superior aspect”) of the frontal lobes, is “certainly consistent” with the damage seen in the other autopsy photos and x-rays:
From the standpoint of positive identification, the most problematical group of autopsy x-rays are those of Group 6, which show the isolated brain. Here we could find no anatomical features that would associate this brain with the remaining autopsy photographs. However, the trauma to the brain, affecting primarily the superior aspect of the frontal lobes, is certainly consistent with the pattern of cranial trauma observed in the autopsy photographs and X-rays. (7 HSCA 50)
The third sentence in this paragraph is erroneous for a number of reasons. It ignores the fact that the autopsy doctors said the rear head entry wound was slightly above (1 cm above) and 2.5 cm to the right of the external occipital protuberance (EOP), which means the bullet would have torn through the cerebellum. The autopsy doctors reaffirmed the EOP location for the entry wound after reviewing the autopsy photos and x-rays for five hours in 1966. Yet, in the autopsy brain photos, the cerebellum is pristine, undamaged. FPP member Dr. George Loquvam noted that the brain photos show no pre-mortem damage to the cerebellum, not even any bleeding.
This, of course, brings us to the damning and revealing—and now discredited—attempt to move the rear head entry wound upward by an astonishing 4 inches, from 1 cm above the EOP to 1.2 cm above the top point of the occipital bone (i.e., 1.2 cm above the lambda), which is in the area of cowlick. The Clark Panel clumsily began the effort in 1967, while making the brazenly false claim that the high fragment trail is the same fragment trail described in the autopsy report and that the high fragment trail lines up with the revised entry wound site. The HSCA FPP doubled down on the bogus cowlick site for the entry wound, in order to try to explain the high fragment trail and the 6.5 mm object in the rear outer table of the skull.
To believe that the entry wound was in the cowlick, i.e., 1.2 cm above the lambda instead of 1 cm above the EOP, you would have to believe that Humes, Boswell, Finck, and Ebersole mistook a wound that was 10 cm (4 inches) above the EOP for a wound that was 1 cm (0.4 inches) above the EOP.
When the HSCA FPP asked Humes, Boswell, Finck, and Ebersole to identify the wound’s location, they each located the wound near the EOP, right about at the white spot just above the hairline in the back-of-head photo. The FPP found this concerning:
The panel was concerned about the apparent disparity between the localization of the wound in the photographs and X-rays and in the autopsy report and sought to clarify this discrepancy by interviewing the three pathologists, Drs. Humes, Boswell, and Finck, and the radiologist, Dr Ebersole. Each was asked individually to localize the wound of entrance within any one of several of the above-referenced photographs after reviewing the photographs, x-rays, and autopsy report. In each instance they identified the approximate location of the entrance wound on a human skull and within the photographs as being in a position perceived by the panel to be below that described in the autopsy report. They also said it coincided with the rectangular white material interpreted by the panel as brain tissue present on top of the hair near the hairline. Each physician persisted in this localization notwithstanding the apparent discrepancy between that localization and the wound characterized by the panel members as a typical entrance wound in the more superior [the higher] "cowlick” area. (7 HSCA 114)
Here is the core of the problem that faced the HSCA FPP: If the autopsy doctors and Dr. Ebersole were right about the location of the rear head entry wound, the brain photos would have to be rejected as bogus, since the brain photos show a virtually pristine cerebellum and since a bullet entering at the EOP site would have torn through the cerebellum.
Humes, Boswell, Finck, and Ebersole were not the only ones who said the entry wound was at the EOP site. FBI agent Francis O’Neill placed the wound near the EOP in his HSCA wound diagram. The autopsy photographer, John Stringer, said the wound was very close to the EOP.
A key development came in 2005, when former HSCA wound ballistics expert Dr. Larry Sturdivan rejected the cowlick site and endorsed the EOP site in his book The JFK Myths: A Scientific Investigation of the Kennedy Assassination (pp. 165-180). A number of other experts have rejected the cowlick entry site and have endorsed the EOP site, including Dr. Douglas Ubelaker, Dr. Joseph Riley, Dr. David Mantik, Dr. Michael Chesser, Dr. Gary Aguilar, and Dr. Cyril Wecht.
Again, if the autopsy report’s location of the rear head entry wound is correct, and it most certainly is, then the autopsy brain photos cannot be photos of JFK’s brain.