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1
Dear Comrade Storing,

To answer your question, there are ten or eleven people (who are, btw, about 20% smaller in Darnell than they are in Wiegman), standing shoulder-to-shoulder in front of your MYSTO "ABANDONED" 1958 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE GETAWAY CAR . . . gasp . . . on both the right and the left sides of the traffic light pole.

In addition to the fact that your MYSTO "ABANDONED" 1958 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE GETAWAY CAR is parked at a size-diminishing angle in Darnell, it is, just like the people standing in front of it, about 20% smaller in Darnell that it would be in Wiegman if they weren't standing shoulder-to-shoulder in front of it.

Hint: Ya gotta scroll down to it.

https://www.jfkassassinationforum.com/index.php/topic,4597.40.html

-- Tom

PS At the 08:57 mark in the National Geographic Video, "Manhunt: The Search for JFK's Killer," as your MYSTO "ABANDONED" 1958 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE GETAWAY CAR is virtually surrounded by policemen, I mean cops, one can see that not only is the driver's side window all the way down, but there's a man sitting behind the wheel.


                                                                           **** NEW IMAGE EVIDENCE COMING SOON  ******
 
   The 8:54 - 8:56 point on the above National Geographic "Manhunt", buttresses my NEW Image Evidence which further exposes the Erroneous ID of Officer Heygood on the Darnell/Martin Films. Over this 8:54 - 8:56 film snippet, on the (L) we see the "Getaway" Car, and on the (R) we see the Huge Gates. The alleged DPD Motorcycle Cop on the Darnell/Martin Films is headed directly toward this "getaway" car and the Huge Gates. No coincidence. This DPD Cop back inside the Rail Road Yard NOT being Officer Haygood, exposes a Conspiracy.            .................  STAY TUNED  ................................
2
I would be far out over my skis if I purported to speak knowledgeably about the Bagley stuff with which TG is obsessed, so I don't want to give that impression. I did, however, read a number of reviews of Bagley's Spy Wars, which apparently serves as TG's bible. One noted that Bagley "rather conveniently" relies heavily on information provided to him by supposed - but unnamed - KGB sources. More than one noted Bagley's bitterness at his downfall with the CIA, a motivation that I believe simply must be taken into consideration in regard to all of Bagley's latter-day revelations.

Set forth below is the review from the London Sunday Times. The reviewer, Christoper Andrew, had met with Nosenko and is the co-author, with defector Vasili Mitrokhin, of several books on the famed 300,000 document Mitrokhin Archive. As you can read, he was distinctly unimpressed with Spy Wars.. The review itself appears at: https://www.thetimes.com/world/us-world/article/spy-wars-moles-mysteries-and-deadly-games-n7j9f67n78p.

I'm going to have to get at least one of the Mitrokhin Archives books, which all seem to be available at Amazon:



Anyway, here's the review of Spy Wars:

Spy Wars is the story of one of the biggest bungles in the history of the CIA. The bungle began in January 1964, two months after President Kennedy was assassinated, with the defection of Yuri Nosenko, a KGB officer, to America. Recruited as a CIA agent 18 months earlier, Nosenko brought with him a number of leads from KGB files, including information that, while staying in the Soviet Union, Lee Harvey Oswald, Kennedy's assassin, had been assessed by the KGB as too mentally unstable to use as an agent.

Nosenko's CIA interrogators, however, found apparent gaps in his story and quickly became suspicious. The intelligence that seemed to exonerate the KGB of involvement with Oswald was, they concluded, Soviet disinformation. Their suspicions were strengthened by a previous KGB defector, Anatoly Golitsyn, an unreliable conspiracy theorist who warned that bogus defectors would be dispatched by the KGB to discredit him. He claimed that Nosenko was one of them.

In April 1964, Nosenko was imprisoned by the CIA, and deprived of ordinary human contact and reading material, while his interrogators tried to make him admit that he was a plant. Nosenko refused. Four years later, he was exonerated by the CIA leadership, given financial compensation and hired as a consultant. Later agency investigations also concluded Nosenko was genuine. Thirty years after his incarceration, he was invited to give a lecture at the CIA and was given a standing ovation.

Tennent "Pete" Bagley was one of Nosenko's main CIA interrogators. Remarkably, in Spy Wars he sticks to his 40-year-old conclusion that Nosenko was a "provocateur" sent by the KGB to deceive the CIA. His book is deeply unconvincing. As Bagley himself admits, although there had been numerous bogus Soviet refugees, "never in the KGB's 45 years . . . had they sent one directly out of their own halls".

Bagley is still angry with his agency colleagues who cleared Nosenko. He dismisses the first report to do so, by Bruce Solie, as "nonsense" and Solie himself as deeply ignorant of the "real Soviet and KGB world". CIA senior management thought differently and gave Solie an award. For Nosenko, Bagley still feels evident contempt. Nosenko, he claims, was clearly ignorant of "things any KGB officer would know about his own workplace". Why the KGB would choose such an ignorant officer for a mission to deceive the CIA is a question that, surprisingly, does not seem to occur to Bagley.

Twenty years ago, I spent an enjoyable day with Nosenko at the Washington home of Cleve Cram, a CIA historian. Nosenko's explanation for his ordeal at the hands of the CIA was far more convincing than that of Spy Wars. He believed he was one of a series of innocent victims of the culture of conspiracy theory that had developed in the CIA's counter-intelligence staff while it was headed by James Jesus Angleton, an able intelligence officer who, partly under the influence of Golitsyn, had developed paranoid tendencies. Angleton even took seriously Golitsyn's claim that the bitter Sino-Soviet split was a charade devised by Moscow and Beijing to deceive the West.

My final encounter with the Nosenko case came in the late 1990s when I was writing a book with another defector, Vasili Mitrokhin, who had smuggled out of KGB archives an unprecedented volume of top-secret material (highly rated by both the CIA and FBI) on operations in America and elsewhere. This material confirmed that Nosenko was a genuine defector. It also revealed that the KGB (unaware that Nosenko had been imprisoned by the CIA) was making plans in the mid1960s to track him down and assassinate him.
3
Just wondering.  An argument continues about the condition of the rear of JFK’s head after the shooting.  Some witnesses said it was blown out, with a large fist sized hole.  These witnesses include Clint Hill, multiple nurses and ER physicians at Parkland Hospital, and the mortician who prepped the body for burial.  Others dispute this, such as the autopsy pathologists.  The autopsy photos show no such wound on the only photo of the rear of the head we have.  Did anyone who saw the rear of JFK’s head after the shooting describe it contemporaneously as “intact”, “whole”, “undamaged”, “normal”, “pristine” or “untouched” or similar words?

Before anyone knew what they were supposed to say, nobody described the back of the head as undamaged. Nobody. In fact, even the autopsy report says the large wound extended into the occiput, but no such wound is seen in the autopsy photos. The F8 autopsy photo may indeed show a back-of-head wound, if you orient it correctly.

We have scientific evidence that the autopsy skull x-rays have been altered.

We have powerful evidence that the autopsy brain photos are fraudulent and do not show JFK's brain.

4
One more, which is somewhat off-topic, but the epistemological aspects of what we see on forums such as this continue to fascinate me.

It occurred to me on our morning walk (4 miles after Achilles surgery on August 21, thanks for asking) that, apart from all the psychological/sociological jargon, there are really four defining characteristics of far-fetched conspiracy thinking (as opposed to more rational conspiracy thinking, such as I credit Larry Hancock with doing). We see these again and again throughout this forum and the JFKA community in general:

1. An inability – more than a mere stubborn refusal, I think – to step back and view things from the proverbial 30,000-foot level. An ability to ask, “How would my theory have worked, from A to Z, out in the real world? What would it actually have looked like, out in the real world? Would it have made any sense, out in the real world?”

2. An obsession with irrelevant minutiae – attaching huge importance to people and evidence that are actually of little or no importance at all. Together with #1, this results in the proverbial inability to see the forest for the trees (and the shrubs, and the weeds, and the pine cones).

3. A perverse desire for everything to be different – indeed, the very opposite – from what common sense and the evidence tell us it is. Those who simply follow the evidence and apply common sense just don’t “get it,” just don’t grasp how diabolical the conspirators were.

4. An almost cult-like reliance on authorities and sources that mainstream historians, academics and researchers regard as being of dubious expertise and reliability. To the conspiracist, the mainstream thinkers likewise just don't "get it" and are either pawns of or fellow travelers with the conspirators.

These collectively result in the conspiracy theory being almost bullet-proof and the conspiracist’s belief being almost unshakeable.

Why these are the defining characteristics of believers in far-fetched conspiracy theories, even believers who are otherwise intelligent and rational and high-functioning, is where the psychological and sociological studies kick in. But you don’t need them to be able to look at many of the denizens of JFKA World and say, “Yes, that’s exactly who he is and what he's doing.”

Whether this has anything to do with anyone on this thread I leave to others to decide.  ::)

Dear FPR,

Why didn't you mention your beloved John L. Hart, again?

You know, the guy DCI Stansfield Turner brought back to assassinate Bagley's character to the HSCA and thereby protect false defector-in-place in Geneva in June 1962 / false (or perhaps rogue) physical defector to the U.S. in February 1964, Yuri Nosenko?

You know, the guy for whom Bagley ripped "a new one" during his own testimony to said committee?

Have you had an opportunity to read it yet?

Here it is for you, again, FPR:

https://www.archives.gov/files/research/jfk/releases/docid-32273600.pdf

(Note: "Mr. X" is KGB true defector, Anatoliy Golitsyn)


From Spy Wars:

To steer a less troubling course [after Angleton was fired in December 1974], [William] Colby appointed to head the Counterintelligence Staff George Kalaris, a man without experience in either counterintelligence or Soviet bloc operations, and, as his deputy, [probable mole] Leonard V. McCoy, a handler of reports, not an operations officer, who had already distinguished himself as a fierce advocate for Nosenko. Now began an extraordinary cleanup inside the Counterintelligence Staff — and the disappearance of evidence against Nosenko. [Newton "Scotty"] Miler’s carefully accumulated notes on this and related cases were removed from the files [by McCoy] and disappeared, along with a unique card file of discrepancies in Nosenko’s statements. 18 Shortly afterward Colby appointed an officer to review the files anew. John L. Hart was assisted by four officers. They worked for six months, from June to December 1976. I caught a glimpse of their aims and work methods when Hart came to Europe to interview me. He had not bothered to read what I had written (though he said nothing new had come to light on the question of Nosenko’s bona fides) and seemed interested only in why, eight years earlier, I had warned that bad consequences might flow from Nosenko’s release. I saw that his aim was not to get at the truth but to find a way to clear Nosenko, so I refused to talk further with him. As I later learned, Hart’s team did not even interview the Counterintelligence Staff officers who had analyzed the case and maintained files on it for nine years. Among them were two veteran analysts who, having come “cold” to the case, had concluded on their own that Nosenko was a plant — and had written their reasons. Hart then wrote a report that affirmed total trust in Nosenko. 19

My comment:

To see how full-of-lies Hart's 1976 report was, you're going to have to read Bagley's HSCA testimony (see above).


-- Tom



5
This is all just based on timing? You caused me to spend $548.97 on "Clyde stuff" and this is all just about ... timing?

We will await your NEW Visual Evidence with eager anticipation - but, as a former competitive runner and enthuistic walker who has a pretty good grasp of 5 minutes, that route doesn't look too difficult to me. To say anything definitive, you would have to know the EXACT time, EXACTLY how Haygood walked/jogged/ran, and the EXACT route Haygood took. You would also have to have a compelling explanation for your Haygood doppelganger; was there some compelling reason he had to be in full motorcycle cop regalia?

As always, going back to my interactions with Cliff Varnell ("The holes in the shirt and jacket prove the SBT is impossible!!!"), I suspect we are going to end up with you declaring something "Impossible!!!" that is "Impossible!!!" due only to assumptions, inferences and speculation on your part. Assumptions, inferences and speculation are not the stuff of which "Impossibilities!!!" are made.

Anyone want to buy some "Clyde stuff" at a steep discount? Photos, autographs, a signed obituary? My wife warned me I was jumping the gun when I tried to corner the market on the basis of thinking Royell was about to blow the LN narrative out of the water.

   This "One Glove Cop" aka Office Haygood, is on the Darnell/Martin films as he WALKS in front of the entire string of passenger train cars. He is also filmed WALKING toward/down the Elm St Ext.
  The Cancellare Photo shows Officer Haygood standing atop the Triple Underpass before he entered the Rail Road Yard. This photo shows Officer Haygood wearing BOTH GLOVES. The Darnell/Martin Films show the alleged Officer Haygood now wearing only 1 glove as he WALKS in front of the entire string of passenger train cars and then WALKS toward/down the Elm St Ext.
    As is obvious above, the Tick/Tock Issue is not the only evidence Proving this "One Glove Cop" is Not Officer Haygood.

         ........................ NEW Visual Evidence Coming Soon ................................................   
6
One more, which is somewhat off-topic, but the epistemological aspects of what we see on forums such as this continue to fascinate me.

It occurred to me on our morning walk (4 miles after Achilles surgery on August 21, thanks for asking) that, apart from all the psychological/sociological jargon, there are really four defining characteristics of far-fetched conspiracy thinking (as opposed to more rational conspiracy thinking, such as I credit Larry Hancock with doing). We see these again and again throughout this forum and the JFKA community in general:

1. An inability – more than a mere stubborn refusal, I think – to step back and view things from the proverbial 30,000-foot level. An inability to ask, “How would my theory have worked, from A to Z, out in the real world? What would it actually have looked like, out in the real world? Would it have made any sense, out in the real world?”

2. An obsession with irrelevant minutiae – attaching huge importance to people and evidence that are actually of little or no importance at all. Together with #1, this results in the proverbial inability to see the forest for the trees (and the shrubs, and the weeds, and the pine cones).

3. A perverse desire for everything to be different – indeed, the very opposite – from what common sense and the evidence tell us it is. Those who simply follow the evidence and apply common sense just don’t “get it,” just don’t grasp how diabolical the conspirators were.

4. An almost cult-like reliance on authorities and sources that mainstream historians, academics and researchers regard as being of dubious expertise and reliability. To the conspiracist, the mainstream thinkers likewise just don't "get it" and are either pawns of or fellow travelers with the conspirators.

These collectively result in the conspiracy theory being almost bullet-proof and the conspiracist’s belief being almost unshakeable.

Why these are the defining characteristics of believers in far-fetched conspiracy theories, even believers who are otherwise intelligent and rational and high-functioning, is where the psychological and sociological studies kick in. But you don’t need them to be able to look at many of the denizens of JFKA World and say, “Yes, that’s exactly who he is and what he's doing.”

Whether this has anything to do with anyone on this thread I leave to others to decide.  ::)
7
This is all just based on timing? You caused me to spend $548.97 on "Clyde stuff" and this is all just about ... timing?

We will await your NEW Visual Evidence with eager anticipation - but, as a former competitive runner and enthuistic walker who has a pretty good grasp of 5 minutes, that route doesn't look too difficult to me. To say anything definitive, you would have to know the EXACT time, EXACTLY how Haygood walked/jogged/ran, and the EXACT route Haygood took. You would also have to have a compelling explanation for your Haygood doppelganger; was there some compelling reason he had to be in full motorcycle cop regalia?

As always, going back to my interactions with Cliff Varnell ("The holes in the shirt and jacket prove the SBT is impossible!!!"), I suspect we are going to end up with you declaring something "Impossible!!!" that is "Impossible!!!" due only to assumptions, inferences and speculation on your part. Assumptions, inferences and speculation are not the stuff of which "Impossibilities!!!" are made.

Anyone want to buy some "Clyde stuff" at a steep discount? Photos, autographs, a signed obituary? My wife warned me I was jumping the gun when I tried to corner the market on the basis of thinking Royell was about to blow the LN narrative out of the water.
8
Just a last update of the route Haygood took through the railroad yard.
Below is a pic by Jim Murray taken shortly after the assassination. Circled on the left is Haygood stood under a tree. Circled on the right is Harkness.



There is only one tree in the railroad yard itself. Below is the updated route of Haygood.
1] Haygood gets off his bike
2] Haygood in Cancellare on the underpass
3] Haygood in Darnell behind Craig
4] Haygood in Darnell walking towards TSBD
5] Haygood in Murray pic under the tree



Can Haygood make this route in 5 minutes?
Easily.
Photographic evidence has Haygood at point [2] about 1 min 40 seconds after shooting. This gives him three to four minutes to walk the route. There is absolutely no reason to believe he could not complete the route in this given time. It's easily done.

   As you can see above, this is a rough estimate as to the extended route that the alleged Officer Haygood would need to take after parking his motorcycle near the Triple Underpass. The 5 minute clock for Officer Haygood started all the way back on Main St as Haygood was turning his motorcycle onto Houston St. Tick/Tock/Tick/Tock. The "One Glove Cop" is NOT Officer Haygood.  ...............  NEW Visual Evidence Coming Soon! ......................... 
9
I haven’t seen the footage that shows one glove missing from Michael Jackson

 :D :D



    If this is Officer Haygood, he has to be back at his motorcycle, down by the Triple Underpass, by 12:35 in order to make his Documented Radio Transmission. It is already past 12:35 when we see this "One Glove Cop" above. This "One Glove Cop" is proof of a Conspiracy.
10
I have close relatives that are cops, both active and retired. They NEVER refer to themselves or those on their 6 as "Policemen".  You show the signs of having been "influenced". Tis a pity.

How many incidents have you had?
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