JFK Assassination Forum

JFK Assassination Discussion & Debate => JFK Assassination Discussion & Debate => Topic started by: Charles Collins on June 05, 2019, 12:08:52 PM

Title: Too definitive?
Post by: Charles Collins on June 05, 2019, 12:08:52 PM
I admit that I have not given the HSCA report very much of my attention to date. So this a sincere question rather than a criticism. In its summary of findings, the HSCA say that the WC:

The conclusions of the investigations were arrived at in good faith, but presented in a fashion that was too definitive.

What is that supposed to mean? Does the HSCA get specific and spell this out for any particular conclusion?
Title: Re: Too definitive?
Post by: Charles Collins on June 05, 2019, 02:37:05 PM
Here is one of the HSCA recommendations:

The National Institute of Law Enforcement and Criminal Justice of the Department of Justice and the National Science Foundation should make a study of the theory and application of the principles of acoustics to forensic questions, using the materials available in the assassination of President John F. Kennedy as a case study.

My question:
A case study in how not to do it perhaps?