Mark Lane and Charles Brehm

Author Topic: Mark Lane and Charles Brehm  (Read 343 times)

Online Michael Capasse

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Re: Mark Lane and Charles Brehm
« Reply #24 on: Today at 02:59:57 PM »
It was a proper edit for someone who was trying to misrepresent what a witness has said. Mark Lane was a deceitful SOB and it is not at all surprising that he would cut anything a witness said that didn't support the false narrative that Lane was trying to push.

 BS:
He asked which direction the matter flew.
...and Brehm answered him
« Last Edit: Today at 03:02:43 PM by Michael Capasse »

Online Fred Litwin

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Re: Mark Lane and Charles Brehm
« Reply #25 on: Today at 03:21:10 PM »
No, not true. Go read my post. Lane asked him exactly where the shots came from, and he cut out the answer.

fred

Online Michael Capasse

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Re: Mark Lane and Charles Brehm
« Reply #26 on: Today at 03:51:02 PM »
No, not true. Go read my post. Lane asked him exactly where the shots came from, and he cut out the answer.

fred

 :D ...round and round u go.
I wonder what happened to the statement he gave to the Sheriff's Dept on the 22nd

Online Tom Graves

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Re: Mark Lane and Charles Brehm
« Reply #27 on: Today at 04:36:56 PM »
None of this has the least bit of relevance.

For starters, Brehm seems not to have heard the first shot and can be seen in the Z-film still clapping his hands as JFK passed by him, slumping from having been hit by the second shot. Brehm is hardly alone. It appears that some people recognized the first bang as a gunshot and others did not. Connally instantly recognized it as the sound of a high powered rifle while JFK sitting behind him seemed oblivious to it. SS agent Bennett recognized the first sound as a gunshot while he was scanning the crowd to his right. He immediately turned his attention to JFK and saw the second shot strike him high on his upper right back. Meanwhile, SS agent Hill apparently did not recognize the first shot and is seen looking forward toward JFK after the second shot had struck JFK in the back. He heard the third shot as he was racing to the limo but only remembers hearing two shots total. It's a mystery as to why some recognized the first shot for what it was and others did not. Perhaps the accelerating motorcycles coming off the sharp turn on Elm St muffled the sound of that first shot. Perhaps some thought the first shot was a motorcycle backfire.

The direction a piece of skull flew is no indication of the direction of the shot. Only an autopsy can determine that. Entry and exit wounds have distinct characteristics and it is elementary for qualified medical examiners to determine which wounds were entrances. That's why EVERY qualified medical examiner who has seen the autopsy photos and x-rays has concurred with the original finding that JFK was hit by two shots from behind and there is no medical evidence of a shot from any other direction.

Case closed.

Having heard Oswald's first, missing everything shot at "Z-124" (half-a-second before Zapruder resumed filming at Z-133), Glenn Bennett started leaning to his right to see if JFK was okay and George Hickey leaned over and started looking at the pavement.