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Author Topic: 10 Reasons to Believe That Oswald Was Innocent  (Read 2339 times)

Online John Mytton

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Re: 10 Reasons to Believe That Oswald Was Innocent
« Reply #35 on: Today at 03:15:29 AM »
Griffith, why do you constantly ignore Experts and Scientists who are actually qualified and are real life Scholars in their chosen fields but instead rely on what amounts to garbagemen? Go figure??

Dr. Alfred G. Olivier, who you like to dismiss, is the Chief of the Wound Ballistics Branch and performed practical recreations of Kennedy's head wound, why don't you quote this guy? Oh that's right you have a vested interest in supporting anything but.

Dr. Alfred G. Olivier while using human skulls recreated the shot into the back of Kennedy's head and guess what, the bullet separated into two pieces and closely resembled the recovered bullet fragments recovered from the Presidential Limo. I bet your guy who was seemingly good at taking X-Rays didn't do this experiment but instead postulated his dumb dumdum bullet theory without considering the entirety of the physical evidence.

Mr. SPECTER. Did you formulate any other conclusions or opinions based on the tests on firing at the skull?
Dr. OLIVIER. Well, let's see. We found that this bullet could do exactly--could make the type of wound that the President received.
Also, that the recovered fragments were very similar to the ones recovered on the front seat and on the floor of the car.
This, to me, indicates that those fragments did come from the bullet that wounded the President in the head.
Mr. SPECTER. And how do the two major fragments in 857 compare, then, with the fragments heretofore identified as 567 and 569?
Dr. OLIVIER. They are quite similar.


1. The 2 larger test bullet fragments recovered by Dr. Oliver.





2. The 2 larger bullet fragments recovered from Kennedy's Limo





And contrary to the belief of a hardcore conspiracy theorist, Dr. Oliver showed that the bullet after penetrating a human skull broke up into a shower of smaller lead fragments.

Mr. SPECTER. And under what circumstances have you viewed those before, please?
Dr. OLIVIER. There were, the two larger fragments were recovered outside of the skull in the cotton waste we were using to catch the fragments without deforming them. There are some smaller fragments in here that were obtained from the gelatin within the cranial cavity after the experiment. We melted the gelatin out and recovered the smallest fragments from within the cranial cavity.
-------snip------
Mr. SPECTER. I now hand you a photograph marked Commission Exhibit 859 and ask you what that depicts?
Dr. OLIVIER. These are the smaller fragments that have been labeled, also, Exhibit 857. This picture or some of the fragments labeled 857, these are the smaller fragments contained in the same box.




And just to show you how inadequate your research really is, here's Dr. John Lattimer who also did the same experiment and lo and behold his Carcano Bullet also broke up into two larger fragments.



So Griffith, instead of sweeping the very depths of the sewers in your search for unqualified anybody's that dispute the official findings of the many qualified Experts of the Warren Commission and the HSCA and etc. etc., perhaps you better start embracing these fine upstanding Pillars of Society who have the words TRUTH and Justice emblazoned as their middle names!

BTW, what's also very important is that the headshot bullet broke up into two fragments(CE567 CE569) which subsequently caused the windshield crack and the surrounding frame dent!







And as proven above, a sea of lead fragments as seen in JFK's head X-ray.



JohnM

Online Tom Graves

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Re: 10 Reasons to Believe That Oswald Was Innocent
« Reply #36 on: Today at 05:01:47 AM »
[...]

ME: How much of the bullet that struck JFK in the head was never found?

Perplexity AI: Most of the head‑shot bullet was never recovered; only a few small fragments were found, so the majority of the original 6.5 mm Carcano bullet mass is missing.

Official fragment recovery

Parkland and the limousine yielded only a handful of metal pieces clearly associated with the fatal head shot. Contemporary descriptions and later ballistics work describe:

Two larger jacket/lead fragments on the front seat floor of the limousine.

Several much smaller lead specks seen on the autopsy skull X‑rays and removed as tiny fragments.

One documented fragment weighed about 2.89 g and included part of the lead core, while another weighed about 1.36 g, together still far short of a complete bullet.

How much is “missing” in mass terms

A full 6.5×52 mm Carcano military round typically uses a bullet weighing about 10.4 grams (160 grains). The documented larger recovered fragments from the head shot add up to roughly 4.25 g combined, plus only minute specks beyond that. This means on the order of 6 g or more of bullet mass—well over half, and probably closer to two‑thirds—was never recovered in identifiable form.

Modern finite‑element ballistic reconstructions use these fragment masses and locations, along with skull damage patterns, specifically because most of the bullet’s mass is unaccounted for and must be modeled rather than directly measured.

Context within the broader evidence

For the fatal head shot, the record thus consists of two moderate‑sized fragments plus numerous tiny metallic particles, not anything approaching an intact or nearly intact bullet.
« Last Edit: Today at 05:03:52 AM by Tom Graves »

Online Michael T. Griffith

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Re: 10 Reasons to Believe That Oswald Was Innocent
« Reply #37 on: Today at 01:28:13 PM »

Quote from: Michael T. Griffith on July 14, 2026, 08:05:45 PM
You've misread Summers. Here's what he says about Carolyn Arnold and her FBI statement:[SNIP]


In her discussion with Earl Golz Carolyn Arnold insisted she said 12:25...That was reinforced by her March 1964 FBI statement that listed in plain writing "12:25"...

FBI acted criminally and with intent when it criminally altered both Arnold's and Stanton's key witnessing of Oswald in the 2nd Floor Lunch Room...

You are misreading Carolyn Arnold's statements. You are confusing her departure time with the time she saw Oswald before she departed.

Arnold's 3/18/64 FBI statement says that she left the TSBD at 12:25, that she was standing at the front of the building before then, and that she did not see Oswald at the entrance (CE 1381, p. 7). It says nothing about her seeing Oswald shortly before she left the building. Her 11/26/63 FBI statement has her saying that she left her office between 12:00 and 12:15 and that she "thought" she caught a "fleeting glimpse" of Oswald "standing in the hallway between the front door and the double doors leading to the warehouse, located on the first floor" (FBI file number DL 89-43-1743, 11/26/63).

When she spoke with Earl Golz in 1978 (as Carolyn Arnold Johnston), she repeated that she left the TSBD at 12:25, but she also told Golz that she had never read her two FBI statements, and that she was surprised the statements did not mention that she saw Oswald sitting in the second floor lunchroom while she was getting a drink of water before she headed out to the front of the building ("Was Oswald in Window?", Dallas Morning News, 1978).

This is exactly what she told Anthony Summers when he interviewed her in 1978, after Golz had interviewed her. She told Summes that she saw Oswald in the second-floor lunchroom at 12:15 or "slightly later" and that she was surprised this was not mentioned in her FBI statements.

So you have no reason to distrust Summers. He is one of the most careful, credible, and thorough scholars who has written about the JFK case. In fact, we should read what Summers says about the conflict between Carolyn Arnold's FBI statements and her 1978 account:

Should we believe Arnold’s 1978 recollection or the FBI account of what she told them back in 1963? Memories do blur, not least when much time has passed. One might think the FBI’s contemporary report more trustworthy than Arnold’s. FBI agents, however, are as fallible as other mortals. Mistakes in their reports, seen during research for the author’s biography of J. Edgar Hoover, ranged from spelling errors to outright distortions.

Agents in Dallas after the assassination, we know, worked under intolerable time. “Hoover’s obsession with speed,” former Assistant Director Courtney Evans recalled, “made impossible demands on the field. I can’t help but feel that had he let the agents out there do their work, let things take their normal investigative course, something other than the simple Oswald theory might have been developed. But Hoover’s demand was ‘Do it fast!’ That was not necessarily a prescription for getting the whole truth.”

Other former FBI agents recall having been virtually ordered to avoid leads that might indicate a possible conspiracy, to follow only those that would prove Oswald was the lone assassin.

Let us, then, allow for the possibility that Carolyn Arnold’s 1978 memory is correct, that she did see Oswald downstairs at 12:15 p.m. or later. It is, of course, possible that Oswald scurried upstairs to shoot the President after Arnold saw him in the second-floor lunchroom. Yet, as we have seen, bystander Arnold Rowland said he saw two men in sixth-floor windows, one of them holding a rifle across his chest, at 12:15. Rowland’s wife confirmed that her husband drew her attention to the man, whom he assumed to be a Secret Service agent. There was, of course, no such agent, and no other employees were on the sixth floor at that time.

The time detail -- 12:15 -- is the vital point here. It can be fixed so exactly because Rowland recalled having seen the man with the rifle just as a nearby police radio squawked out the news that the approaching motorcade had reached Cedar Springs Road. The police log shows that the President passed that point between 12:15 and 12:16.

Carolyn Arnold’s given time for leaving her office -- 12:15 or later -- is corroborated by contemporary statements made by her and office colleagues. She told the FBI she finally left the building, after visiting the lunchroom, as late as 12:25 p.m. If Arnold saw Oswald in the lunchroom at 12:15 or after, who were the two men, one of them a gunman, whom Rowland said he saw in the sixth-floor windows? There never was any reliable eyewitness identification of Oswald in the sixth-floor window after he was seen downstairs. (Not In Your Lifetime[/], pp. 92-94)


Summers then proceeds to shred Howard Brennan's specious identification of Oswald as the sixth-floor gunman:

The Commission, however, set store by the evidence of Howard Brennan, a spectator in the street who stood directly opposite the Depository. He said he saw a man moving around at the famous “sniper’s perch” window between 12:22 and 12:24 and that, at the moment of the assassination, he looked up to see the man fire his final shot. Later that day, Brennan was taken to a police identity lineup that included Oswald. He failed to make a positive identification of Oswald as the man he had seen in the window—even though he had seen Oswald’s picture on tele­vision before attending the lineup.

A month later, however, Brennan told the FBI he was sure the man he had seen was Oswald. Three weeks on, he was saying he couldn’t be sure. And many months later, Brennan told the official inquiry that he could have identified Oswald at the lineup but had feared reprisals from the Communists.

Brennan’s testimony was replete with contradiction and confusion. He claimed to have been watching as the last shot was fired, yet saw neither flash, smoke, nor recoil. Testimony showed that, in the immediate aftermath of the tragedy, he did not at once draw attention to what he claimed to have seen in the Book Depository, but joined others hurrying toward the grassy knoll. Questioning suggested that Brennan at first stated he had seen smoke in the area of the knoll. (Not In Your Lifetime[/], pp. 94-95)


So, again, you have no reason to distrust Summers. We are fortunate to have a scholar of his caliber on our side. Many far-left conspiracy theorists view Summers as a "sellout," if not an "Operation Mockingbird plant," because he doesn't share their political views, because he acknowledges that JFK was a flagrant adulterer, and because he doesn't go off on wild tangents about the Vietnam War, 9/11, etc., even though he argues for a Mafia-driven conspiracy and multiple gunmen.

Regarding John Mytton's reply about Olivier's head-shot wound ballistics test, he is once again misrepresenting that test. I have pointed this out to him in other threads, but he has once again misrepresented Olivier's test as supporting the myth of the FMJ-bullet head shot. For one thing, as I've pointed out to Mytton in previous exchanges, the bullet fragmentation seen in the skull x-rays from Olivier's test looks nothing like the fragmentation seen in the JFK autopsy skull x-rays. Also, the FMJ bullets in Olivier's test did not shatter into dozens of tiny fragments, contrary to what Mytton is falsely claiming. There are over 40 tiny fragments in the right-frontal fragment cloud alone in the autopsy skull x-rays, and that's not counting the other fragments near the right orbit, in the rear outer table, and the lone fragment in the left side of the skull. None of the FMJ bullets in Olivier's test produced that many fragments. I'll reply in more detail to Mytton's response today or tomorrow.




« Last Edit: Today at 02:17:51 PM by Michael T. Griffith »

Online John Corbett

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Re: 10 Reasons to Believe That Oswald Was Innocent
« Reply #38 on: Today at 04:30:12 PM »

Summers then proceeds to shred Howard Brennan's specious identification of Oswald as the sixth-floor gunman:

The Commission, however, set store by the evidence of Howard Brennan, a spectator in the street who stood directly opposite the Depository. He said he saw a man moving around at the famous “sniper’s perch” window between 12:22 and 12:24 and that, at the moment of the assassination, he looked up to see the man fire his final shot. Later that day, Brennan was taken to a police identity lineup that included Oswald. He failed to make a positive identification of Oswald as the man he had seen in the window—even though he had seen Oswald’s picture on tele­vision before attending the lineup.

A month later, however, Brennan told the FBI he was sure the man he had seen was Oswald. Three weeks on, he was saying he couldn’t be sure. And many months later, Brennan told the official inquiry that he could have identified Oswald at the lineup but had feared reprisals from the Communists.

Brennan’s testimony was replete with contradiction and confusion. He claimed to have been watching as the last shot was fired, yet saw neither flash, smoke, nor recoil. Testimony showed that, in the immediate aftermath of the tragedy, he did not at once draw attention to what he claimed to have seen in the Book Depository, but joined others hurrying toward the grassy knoll. Questioning suggested that Brennan at first stated he had seen smoke in the area of the knoll. (Not In Your Lifetime[/], pp. 94-95)


The value of Brennan's account is not whom he saw firing the weapon, but where he saw the weapon fired from. That part was corroborated by the three shells found at the very window he identified as the shooter's location. The murder weapon was found a short distance away on the same floor. He pointed that out to a cop within minutes of the shooting. While Brennan later did ID Oswald, I don't put much value in that part. It would be difficult for anyone to make a positive ID from his vantage point but the fact he was able to point out the location of the shooter is very compelling. We don't have to dismiss that part just because his ID of the shooter was less than positive. The forensice evidence found at that location is what makes the case against Oswald.

So, again, you have no reason to distrust Summers. We are fortunate to have a scholar of his caliber on our side. [/quote]

My side is the side of truth and Summers is of little help in establishing that.
Quote

Regarding John Mytton's reply about Olivier's head-shot wound ballistics test, he is once again misrepresenting that test. I have pointed this out to him in other threads, but he has once again misrepresented Olivier's test as supporting the myth of the FMJ-bullet head shot. For one thing, as I've pointed out to Mytton in previous exchanges, the bullet fragmentation seen in the skull x-rays from Olivier's test looks nothing like the fragmentation seen in the JFK autopsy skull x-rays. Also, the FMJ bullets in Olivier's test did not shatter into dozens of tiny fragments, contrary to what Mytton is falsely claiming. There are over 40 tiny fragments in the right-frontal fragment cloud alone in the autopsy skull x-rays, and that's not counting the other fragments near the right orbit, in the rear outer table, and the lone fragment in the left side of the skull. None of the FMJ bullets in Olivier's test produced that many fragments. I'll reply in more detail to Mytton's response today or tomorrow.

So now you expect tests to duplicate the pattern of fragmentation. It doesn't get any sillier than that. Oliver's test showed that an FMJ Carcano round will fragment. The fact the test bullet didn't fragment exactly the way Oswald's Carcano bullet did is not at all significant to people who have common sense.

Online Michael T. Griffith

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Re: 10 Reasons to Believe That Oswald Was Innocent
« Reply #39 on: Today at 05:16:54 PM »
[SNIP]Dr. Alfred G. Olivier while using human skulls recreated the shot into the back of Kennedy's head and guess what, the bullet separated into two pieces and closely resembled the recovered bullet fragments recovered from the Presidential Limo. I bet your guy who was seemingly good at taking X-Rays didn't do this experiment but instead postulated his dumb dumdum bullet theory without considering the entirety of the physical evidence.

Mr. SPECTER. Did you formulate any other conclusions or opinions based on the tests on firing at the skull?
Dr. OLIVIER. Well, let's see. We found that this bullet could do exactly--could make the type of wound that the President received.
Also, that the recovered fragments were very similar to the ones recovered on the front seat and on the floor of the car.
This, to me, indicates that those fragments did come from the bullet that wounded the President in the head.
Mr. SPECTER. And how do the two major fragments in 857 compare, then, with the fragments heretofore identified as 567 and 569?
Dr. OLIVIER. They are quite similar.


1. The 2 larger test bullet fragments recovered by Dr. Oliver.

2. The 2 larger bullet fragments recovered from Kennedy's Limo

And contrary to the belief of a hardcore conspiracy theorist, Dr. Oliver showed that the bullet after penetrating a human skull broke up into a shower of smaller lead fragments.

Mr. SPECTER. And under what circumstances have you viewed those before, please?
Dr. OLIVIER. There were, the two larger fragments were recovered outside of the skull in the cotton waste we were using to catch the fragments without deforming them. There are some smaller fragments in here that were obtained from the gelatin within the cranial cavity after the experiment. We melted the gelatin out and recovered the smallest fragments from within the cranial cavity.
-------snip------
Mr. SPECTER. I now hand you a photograph marked Commission Exhibit 859 and ask you what that depicts?
Dr. OLIVIER. These are the smaller fragments that have been labeled, also, Exhibit 857. This picture or some of the fragments labeled 857, these are the smaller fragments contained in the same box.


And just to show you how inadequate your research really is, here's Dr. John Lattimer who also did the same experiment and lo and behold his Carcano Bullet also broke up into two larger fragments.

BTW, what's also very important is that the headshot bullet broke up into two fragments(CE567 CE569) which subsequently caused the windshield crack and the surrounding frame dent!   JohnM

You posted a virtually identical reply in the thread "LNers Can't Explain the Two Back-of-Head Bullet Fragments," and I answered that reply in detail. Yet, here you are again repeating the same claims about Olivier's test while ignoring the facts that I presented to you in my response. Most of my comments below come from my response in that thread.

As for Dr. Olivier's testimony and his exhibits, do you have any clue how many scholars have examined Olivier's testimony and CE 857 and CE 859 and have noted the glaring holes in his claims? Did you ever ask yourself why Olivier would have showed fragments from only one of the 10 FMJ test shots into skulls? Now why do you suppose he would have done that? What about the fragments from the FMJ bullets fired into the nine other skulls? Hey?

Did you notice that Olivier and Arlen Specter had to go "off the record" after Specter asked Olivier if all the fragments in CE 859 were in CE 857 and after Olivier said they were "supposed to be"? Let's read:

Mr. Specter. Are all of the fragments on 859 contained within 857?
Dr. Olivier. They are supposed to be, photographed and placed in the box. If they dropped out they are supposed to be all there.
(Discussion off the record.)
(5 H 88)


Now, gee, why did they have to go off the record after Olivier gave that answer? Humm? Because there's an obvious difference between the number of fragments seen in CE 857 and the number seen in CE 859? CE 859 shows more fragments than are seen in CE 857.

Yet, even CE 859 shows at least 40% fewer fragments than the autopsy skull x-rays show. The skull x-rays show about 40 tiny fragments just in the right-frontal region alone. To the viewer's left of this fragment cloud we see a number of other fragments that are larger in size than the cloud fragments and that extend upward to a point at least 1 inch from the cowlick site. Not one of the bullets in Olivier's test deposited a "snowstorm" of tiny fragments in the right-frontal region and then created a trail of fragments that ranged upward from that fragment cloud. Not a single one.

In addition, there are at least two fragments on the back of the skull in the autopsy skull x-rays, one in the outer table and another between the galea and the outer table. Not a single one of the bullets in the Olivier's test deposited fragments on or above the outer table. Not a single one.

In Olivier's test, the skulls were coated with a gelatin thick enough to simulate scalp, and the skulls were also filled with gelatin to simulate brain tissue (5 H 87). Yet, the fragmentation pattern created by Olivier's FMJ bullets bears no resemblance to the pattern seen in the JFK autopsy skull x-rays.

As many scholars have noted, Olivier misrepresented his own test data and failed to mention serious contradictions between the wounds in the test skulls and JFK's head wounds. Physicist Howard Roffman noted one of the contradictions:

Ten skulls were fired upon with "Oswald's" rifle under conditions duplicating only those under which Oswald allegedly fired. Only one skull was subsequently shown to the Commission; the bullet that struck it "blew out the right side of the reconstructed skull in a manner very similar to the head wound of the President" (R87). This persuaded the "expert" to conclude--contrary to his beliefs nurtured by prior experience--"that the type of head wounds that the President received could be done by this type of bullet" (R87).

The pictures of this test exhibit printed by the Commission show a gelatin-filled skull with the bone of the entire right side missing (17H854). However, the gelatin underlying this missing bone is completely intact, so utterly undisturbed that it still bears the various minute impressions of the skull that once covered it. This gelatin was supposed to simulate the tissues within the skull (5H87). Yet those tissues, according to the autopsy report, were "lacerated," "disrupted," and "extensively lacerated" (16H981, 983). Obviously, even upon its entering the bony vault of the skull, the test bullet was not capable of producing the extensive damage attributed to it by the Commission. (Presumed Guilty, Associated University Press, 1975, pp. 112-113)


Dr. Don Thomas, a former research scientist for the U.S. Government:

The results also demonstrate another problematic aspect of both Lattimer's and Olivier's experimental results. Contrary to the statements of both men, neither set of experiments resulted in skull damage that resembled Kennedy's head wound. The top right side of Kennedy's cranium was burst open, but the President's face was intact. In Lattimer's and Olivier's skulls, parts of the face were destroyed (Fig. 10.3), which is only to be expected from bullets entering the back of the head. (Hear No Evil, MFF Press, 2010, p. 364)

And, as we have discussed, the 10 bullets that were fired into skulls in Olivier's test produced only about 30 fragments, for an average of three fragments per bullet. Not one of them blew up into dozens of fragments. Not one of them magically deposited two fragments (much less two mid-section fragments) on the outer table of the skull. Remember that Olivier told Howard Donahue that the FMJ bullets in his test only broke into a few fragments each.

I once again invite you to cite a single case in the known history of forensic science where an FMJ bullet struck a a human skull and (1) shattered into dozens of fragments, (2) left two fragments 1 cm below or 9 cm above the entry point, and (3) also ejected its nose and tail from the skull. Find me just one case where this has occurred. Just one.

The give-away is the test skull x-rays from Olivier's test. Even a layman can see that the fragmentation caused by Olivier's FMJ bullets bears no resemblance to the fragmentation seen in the JFK skull x-rays, as I've explained previously.

In the Failure Analysis wound ballistics test, the FMJ bullets only broke into a few fragments.

And, as proved earlier, DiMaio categorically ruled out FMJ bullets in cases where x-rays show a large concentration of dozens of small fragments (he used the term "lead snow storm").

Dr. Olivier said that CE 857 and CE 859 were "supposed to" contain the same fragments, but obviously they do not. This is when Specter took the conversation off-the-record. Now, gee, why do you suppose Specter felt the need to do that?

So it's not 58 fragments in total. It's fewer than 40 fragments, and there is considerable doubt, given the test skull x-rays, that those exhibits contained only fragments from one bullet, not to mention the fact that at least 20 of them were sizable fragments and that the fragmentation pattern they produced in the test skull x-rays bears no resemblance to the pattern seen in the JFK skull x-rays.

Are you ever going to you explain the fact that the x-rays of the test skull show minimal fragmentation?

The skull x-rays from Olivier's test refute your argument. They show minimal fragmentation. CEs 857, 858, and 859, even ignoring the questions about their validity, do not prove your claim. Lattimer's test produced no more than 23 fragments, 8 of which were sizable, which bears no resemblance to the fragmentation seen in the JFK skull x-rays. The FMJ bullets in the Failure Analysis test behaved in the same way that Olivier told Donahue the FMJ bullets in the WC test behaved: they broke into no more than a few fragments.

Crucially, not one of the FMJ bullets in Olivier's test deposited a fragment on the outer table of the skull, yet the JFK skull x-rays show a 6.5 mm object placed over the image of a smaller genuine 6.3 x 2.5 mm fragment on the outer table of the skull.

Even Sturdivan acknowledged that if the 6.5 mm object was an FMJ bullet fragment, it would have had to come from the cross-section, and that there is no way this could have happened in this case. I've already quoted Sturdivan's statement that the 6.5 mm object cannot be from the cross-section of an FMJ bullet, and his statement that no FMJ bullet would deposit fragments on the outer table of the skull. Let's read him again, shall we?

I’m not sure just what that 6.5 mm fragment is. One thing I’m sure it is not is a cross-section from the interior of a bullet. I have seen literally thousands of bullets, deformed and undeformed, after penetrating tissue and tissue simulants. Some were bent, some torn in two or more pieces, but to have a cross-section sheared out is physically impossible. (David Mantik, JFK Assassination Paradoxes, KDP, 2022, p. 21)

In his 2005 book The JFK Myths, Sturdivan explains the 6.5 mm object seen on the autopsy x-rays cannot be from an FMJ bullet in response to Dr. Michael Baden's attempt to use the object as evidence for the debunked cowlick entry site:

It was interesting that it [Baden's description of the 6.5 mm object] was phrased that way, ducking the obvious fact that it cannot be a bullet fragment and is not that near to their [the HSCA medical panel's] proposed entry site. A fully jacketed WCC/MC bullet will deform as it penetrates bone, but it will not fragment on the outside of the skull.

When they break up in the target, real bullets break into irregular pieces of jacket, sometimes complete enough to contain pieces of the lead core, and a varying number of irregular chunks of lead core. It cannot break into circular slices, especially one with a circular bite out of the edge. (pp. 184-185, emphasis added)


Even Larry Sturdivan now admits that the 6.5 mm object is a superimposed image; he argues that it was superimposed by accident, but he has no rational theory for how this alleged accident could have occurred (pp. 184-188).

There is no way the alleged FMJ head-shot bullet could have deposited the circular 6.5 mm object and the McDonnel fragment from its nose on the outer table of the skull, especially since a good chunk of this bullet's nose was allegedly recovered from the limousine. And, pray tell, how would those fragments have ended up 1 cm below the alleged entry point?

Can you name one expert who has ever denied the existence of the small back-of-head fragment seen on the lateral x-rays, the fragment that's at the same vertical level as the 6.5 mm object seen on the AP x-ray? Everyone from the Clark Panel to the HSCA FPP to Dr. Sturdivan to Dr. Riley to Dr. Aguilar to Dr. Mantik, etc., etc., has acknowledged the existence of this fragment, and Dr. Mantik and Dr. Chesser confirmed with multiple OD measurements that the 6.3 x 2.5 mm fragment is metallic.

This is the back-of-head fragment that the Clark Panel and the HSCA FPP erroneously identified as the partner image of the 6.5 mm object seen on the AP x-ray. Even Dr. Fitzpatrick and Dr. Sturdivan have admitted that back-of-head fragment seen on the lateral x-rays cannot be the partner image of the AP x-ray's 6.5 mm object because it is neither as large nor as dense as the 6.5 mm object. Nobody but nobody has ever denied this fragment's existence.

Regarding the McDonnel fragment and the other smaller back-of-head fragments, you still don't seem to understand the basics on this issue. Let me repeat, again: There is a 6.3 x 2.5 mm fragment inside the 6.5 mm object--again, that's the fragment that Dr. Fitzpatrick and Dr. Sturdivan admit cannot be the partner image of the 6.5 mm object seen on the AP x-ray. There is also the McDonnel fragment, which is slightly to the left of the 6.3 x 2.5 mm fragment--and I should add that WC apologists have avoided dealing with this fragment as if it were the Black Death.

The fragment is 6.3 x 2.5 mm, not 6.5 x 2.5 mm. Horizontally, most of the fragment is only about 1.8-2.0 mm in width. It is less than half the size of the 6.5 mm object. See Dr. Mantik's diagram of the fragment. Again, Dr. Mantik and Dr. Chesser both confirmed with multiple OD measurements that the 6.3 x 2.5 fragment is metallic, and even Sturdivan and Fitzpatrick and Riley have acknowledged that it cannot be the partner image of the 6.5 mm object seen on the AP x-ray.

Why didn't the autopsy doctors extract this fragment? The better question is, Why didn't they even mention it in the autopsy report? They most likely saw it but did not dare acknowledge it (1) because they could not associate it with the EOP entry site, since it's about 9 cm (3.5 inches) above the EOP entry wound, (2) because they could not associate it with the low fragment trail described in the autopsy report (i.e., the EOP-to-right-orbit fragment trail), and (3) because it did not line up with the high fragment trail (which trail they also failed to mention in the autopsy report).

One could also ask, Why didn't the autopsy doctors mention the brazenly obvious high fragment trail seen on the lateral skull x-rays? That trail is at least 2 inches above the EOP entry site and is concentrated in the right frontal region. They said nothing about it (1) because it was a separate fragment trail from the low fragment trail that they described in the autopsy report, and (2) because they could not associate it with the EOP entry site.

Sibert and O'Neill's brief entry about a rear-head fragment must have resulted from hearing the autopsy doctors talk about the 6.3 x 2.5 mm fragment. The autopsy doctors chose to suppress the fragment's existence because of the severe problems it posed for their scenario of the shooting. Being at/near the rear "juncture of the skull bone," the fragment was far too high to be associated with the EOP entry site, and there was no other entry wound that could account for its presence at/near the lambda.

So, they opted to suppress its existence. As they did with the high fragment trail, they did not mention the back-of-head fragment in the autopsy report; however, they did not realize that Sibert and O'Neill mentioned the fragment in their 11/26/23 report. This could be one of the reasons that Sibert and O'Neill's report was not included in the WC volumes and was suppressed for years.

The 6.3 x 2.5 mm fragment is indeed the second-largest fragment on the x-rays, second only to the 7 x 2 mm fragment near the right orbit, which is why Sibert and O'Neill said the back-of-head fragment was the second-largest fragment.

As for your comment that in Dr. Lattimer's test, one of the FMJ bullets broke up into "two larger fragments," I again ask, how does this comment address the fact that the x-rays of the skulls from Lattimer's test show no fragments in the skulls? Did you not notice that Lattimer specified that the two fragments that you mention were recovered from outside the skull ("after passing through a skull")?! Do you even read the text in the images that you post before you post them?

I notice that you snipped and ignored the point that not one of the FMJ bullets in the Failure Analysis test broke up into numerous fragments. I might add, as I discuss in my article "Forensic Science and President Kennedy's Head Wounds," that the FMJ bullets in the HSCA's test likewise failed to behave like the ammo that hit JFK in the head. Side-view photos of the HSCA gelatin blocks showed that all of the FMJ bullets punched straight, relatively narrow channels through the gelatin, drastically different from the brain damage that JFK suffered. And I would again note that you still have not explained the fact that no FMJ bullet in the history of forensic science has deposited two bullet fragments on or above the outer table when penetrating a skull.

You realize that Dr. Russell Morgan was a member of the Clark Panel and that he was regarded as one of the best radiologists in the world at the time, right? He was the only radiologist on the panel. But, nah, according to you he had no business talking about what the x-rays showed about the kind of ammo that was used!
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