Recent Posts

Recent Posts

Pages: [1] 2 3 ... 10
1
He knew that JFK had moved.  He mentioned that in his hospital bed interview.  He would also know how difficult it is to miss a target the size of the limousine from anywhere in a place as small as Dealey Plaza.

But JBC doesn’t have to provide that evidence.  There at least 21 witnesses plus another 15 witnesses along Elm St . who put the first shot striking JFK. Then there are the 47 witnesses who recalled the last two shots closer together that further nuke the first shot miss.
A whole lot of so-and-so-said evidence which is all you've got. It's not at all compelling.
Quote

Nellie was no worse a witness than any of the other 20 first shot hit witnesses that you reject.  According to the SBT adherents, all those 80+ witnesses got it completely backward.
Altens did say “almost simultaneously” “a fraction ahead of my picture” in his testimony to the WC but in his wire story written shortly after the events on 22Nov63 he said he heard a noise like fireworks popping and he snapped a picture of the motorcade “at about that time”. The reverberation may have affected his perception of the exact time of the noise.  The WC was suggesting that if he took his photo at the time of a shot that it was the second shot. 
His #5 photo was on Houston just after the turn at Main.
Now you have to make excuses for why one of your witnesses got it so wrong. In what universe is a 2 second difference almost simultaneous.
Quote

His sense of time was a bit peculiar. He thought the shots were quick but estimated the time between first and last to be “less than 30 seconds” (7 H 520).
WOW. Less than 30 seconds. He really zeroed in on it.
Quote

In his 6th Floor interview he said oither agents told him that there was a shot just after he jumped off as he was running beside the QM.
He may have been concentrating on other things when he was running.

The other agents were wrong. Being a SS agent doesn't endow somebody with super powers of perception. They are as prone to error as any other witness.
Quote
 
I suggest that the change in JFK’s head and hand beginning at z193-194 was the beginning of his reaction.
Suggest all you want. Nobody is buying it.
Quote

Because it did not strike bone, he may not have realized what happened and the reaction began with a realization that something was wrong.   It may be that it wasn’t until he tried to breathe about two seconds later that he began struggling to breathe. JBC may have taken about the same time or a bit less to process what he had heard and decide to turn around to see JFK.  So it doesn’t strike me as being unexpected that JBC’s visible reaction began about the time that JFK’s struggling to breathe reaction appeared.
Now you are trying to rationalize. Your theory of what happened isn't the least bit plausible from beginning to end.
Quote
I don’t ignore it at all.  All I am saying is that it is not a reaction to being hit in the back by a bullet. Rather it is a reaction to hearing it and preparing to turn around, which he then does.
Is that what you have convinced yourself of over all these years?
Quote


You ignore the fact that no one said that JBC turned around after the second shot and looked rearward in the 3 seconds following the second shot before laying down?  Hint: maybe it was because he didn’t.
Are you serious? Who needs to be told that is what happened. We can see it with our own eyes. Look at the damn Z271 frame. JBC is looking backward in the direction of Oswald. No way Oswald could shoot him in the back at that frame. It's no wonder you're so mixed up because you base all your beliefs on what people have said instead of looking at the evidence for yourself. The Z-film allows us all to be witnesses to the assassination but you choose to ignore what it is showing us because you want to believe your cockamamie theory instead.
Quote
?? He was trying to get a look JFK, He was sitting on a  low, cramped floor-mounted jump seat. It wasn’t easy to turn around especially since JFK had moved to the left.Without a proper model of a twisted torso the best I can do is ask you to turn around like JBCis at z271 and note the positions of the edge of the right scapula, the fifth rib and the right nipple.
I did. There's no way for someone I was facing could shoot me in the back. That shoots down your silly theory of JBC being shot at Z271.
2
How would JBC have known whether JFK was hit by the first shot or the second.
He knew that JFK had moved.  He mentioned that in his hospital bed interview.  He would also know how difficult it is to miss a target the size of the limousine from anywhere in a place as small as Dealey Plaza.

But JBC doesn’t have to provide that evidence.  There at least 21 witnesses plus another 15 witnesses along Elm St . who put the first shot striking JFK. Then there are the 47 witnesses who recalled the last two shots closer together that further nuke the first shot miss.

Quote
As for Nellie, she didn't get much of anythingu right.JFK and JBC both felt it at the same time and both reacted at the same time when both of them threw their arms upward in perfect unison at Z226. It's no wonder they had a hard time understanding how Oswald could have fired so rapidly AND so accurately if there had been a second shot miss.

Nellie was no worse a witness than any of the other 20 first shot hit witnesses that you reject.  According to the SBT adherents, all those 80+ witnesses got it completely backward.

Quote
This passage shows just how wrong witnesses can be.
" According to Altgens, he snapped the picture "almost simultaneously" with a shot which he is confident was the first one fired."
His photo has been synced to Z255 which isn't even close to the time either the first or second shot was fired. The reality is it was taken 2 seconds after the second shot was fired and hit both men. Altgens statement doesn't even fit your theory that the shots were fired at Z193 and Z271.
Altgens did say “almost simultaneously” “a fraction ahead of my picture” in his testimony to the WC but in his wire story written shortly after the events on 22Nov63 he said he heard a noise like fireworks popping and he snapped a picture of the motorcade “at about that time”. The reverberation may have affected his perception of the exact time of the noise.  The WC was suggesting that if he took his photo at the time of a shot that it was the second shot. 

Quote
I can't find the full set of Altgens photos but it would not surprise me if he actually took photo #5 simultaneously with the first shot, but that's speculation. What isn't speculation is that he got it wrong.
His #5 photo was on Houston just after the turn at Main.

His sense of time was a bit peculiar. He thought the shots were quick but estimated the time between first and last to be “less than 30 seconds” (7 H 520).

Quote
Clint Hill also got it wrong. He only remembers hearing 2 shots. He remembers the shot that hit JFK in the back thinking that was the first shot. He race forward and saw the head shot at what he estimates was 5 seconds. That's pretty close. It was actually 4.9 seconds between the two shots which struck JFK. So which shot didn't he hear.
In his 6th Floor interview he said oither agents told him that there was a shot just after he jumped off as he was running beside the QM.

Quote
An earlier first shot or an intervening shot between the two that hit JFK. It's hard for me to believe he wouldn't have heard an intervening shot between the two which hit JFK.
He may have been concentrating on other things when he was running. 

Quote
So you have JFK reacting to getting shot and JBC reacting to the sound of a shot at precisely the same time and in precisely the same manner, even though according to you that even happened 33 frames, almost 2 seconds earlier.
I suggest that the change in JFK’s head and hand beginning at z193-194 was the beginning of his reaction. Because it did not strike bone, he may not have realized what happened and the reaction began with a realization that something was wrong.   It may be that it wasn’t until he tried to breathe about two seconds later that he began struggling to breathe. JBC may have taken about the same time or a bit less to process what he had heard and decide to turn around to see JFK.  So it doesn’t strike me as being unexpected that JBC’s visible reaction began about the time that JFK’s struggling to breathe reaction appeared.

Quote
You also choose to ignore immediately after his arm flip, JBC doubled over and dipped to his right, then began twisting dramatically in his seat.
I don’t ignore it at all.  All I am saying is that it is not a reaction to being hit in the back by a bullet. Rather it is a reaction to hearing it and preparing to turn around, which he then does. 

You ignore the fact that no one said that JBC turned around after the second shot and looked rearward in the 3 seconds following the second shot before laying down?  Hint: maybe it was because he didn’t.

Quote
And you want to pretend all those gyrations are no in reaction to being shot. Was he anticipating getting shot at 271?
?? He was trying to get a look JFK, He was sitting on a  low, cramped floor-mounted jump seat. It wasn’t easy to turn around especially since JFK had moved to the left.
Quote
How about showing us an ACCURATE drawing of JBC's position at Z271 that show how a bullet could enter his back by his right armpit and exit from the right side of his torso. I know I'll be waiting a long time to see that. Like forever.
Without a proper model of a twisted torso the best I can do is ask you to turn around like JBCis at z271 and note the positions of the edge of the right scapula, the fifth rib and the right nipple.
3
TG--

Started neutral, but based on some on-the-ground facts regarding the physical JFKA, moved into CT camp.

Never bought into extravagant left-wing-Islamo-fascist-KGB narratives regarding JFKA.

James Woolsey's book is informative, but not conclusive.

My guess is small clique involved, likely freelancers with connections to G2, or possibly Alpha 66, although G2'ers had penetrated Alpha 66.

Maybe three people involved in JFKA.
4
TDS..........TDS..........TDS...........TDS

I've always been allergic to traitors.

You, on the other hand, have been so zombified by sixty-plus years of KGB* disinformation, "active measures," and mole-based strategic deception counterintelligence operations that you seem to cherish them.

*Today's SVR and FSB

Zombie . . . Zombie . . . Zombie . . . Zombie
5
Regarding what?

If you had any common sense, you'd realize that "former" KGB counterintelligence officer Vladimir Putin wanted Trump to win because he knew The Traitorous Orange Turd would get the U.S. out of NATO and would tear our country apart.

TDS..........TDS..........TDS...........TDS
6
FL-

I tend to agree with you that Nagell was a troubled man.

The important point raised herein are connections between LHO and the CIA-Bruce Solie.

The JFKA research community has basically split into two main camps: 1. Left-wing ideologues and Islamo-fascists who contend JFK was waxed by the US intel state and Mossad, or 2. Right-wingers who say LHO was LN. 

There are some exceptions; former CIA director James Woolsey wrote a whole book that LHO was a KGB asset. Operation Dragon: Inside the Kremlin's Secret War on America. Others say the Mob perped the JFKA.

Aside from Woolsey, there has been comparatively little research on LHO's ties to G2 and the KGB. Oddly, Woolsey's account resonates with Nagell's.

Of course, KGB and G2 files are not open to research, unlike most (but not all) US files, and beyond that, there must be info that never got into anyone's file, and so we will never know about it.

It is hubris to think by reading available files we have a complete vision into the JFKA. I doubt you have even read all the files that pertain to Clay Shaw. If some CIA-Clay Shaw files were not put online, you have not seen them.

I remain unconvinced by LN narratives, or leftist baloney about the JFKA.

7
Common sense.

Regarding what?

If you had any common sense, you'd realize that "former" KGB counterintelligence officer Vladimir Putin wanted Trump to win because he knew The Traitorous Orange Turd would get the U.S. out of NATO and would tear our country apart.
8
The HSCA saw the file and they realized that Nagell was mentally unstable.

I don't know why people are interested in Nagell. There is nothing there, at all. Even the East
Germans realized he was insane.

All of this is on my blog. I have debunked just about everything Russell wrote about Nagell.

And I have a whole chapter on Nagell in my book, A Heritage of Nonsense.

And you can read the entire STASI file on Nagell on my blog.

fred

Dear fred,

The interesting thing is that probable KGB mole Bruce Solie illegally withheld many Office of Security files from the HSCA.

For example:

E. Howard Hunt, June Viola Cobb, Bernard L. Barker, J. Walton Moore, David Atlee Phillips, Priscilla Johnson McMillan, William Gaudet, Luis Clemente Posada Carriles, Joaquin Godoy y Solis, Nicolas Petrulli, Dorothe Matlack, Norman Rothman, Francisco Rodriguez (Tamayo), Antonio Cuesta-Valle, and Claude B. Capehart.

Nagell's was just one of them.

Regarding Nagell:

ME: Does Dick Russell say anything in The Man Who Knew Too Much that suggests Lee Harvey Oswald was a KGB agent or that U.S. Intelligence was penetrated by a KGB mole?

GROK: Yes, Russell does present claims and interpretations in The Man Who Knew Too Much (first published in 1992) that suggest both possibilities.

The book is a detailed investigation centered on Richard Case Nagell, a figure Russell portrays as a former CIA and KGB operative (and a "comrade-in-arms" of Lee Harvey Oswald) who claimed he was assigned by the Soviets to prevent JFK's assassination—potentially by killing Oswald if necessary. Russell uses Nagell's story, interviews, and documents to explore broader conspiracy angles.

On Oswald as a KGB (or Soviet intelligence) agent/asset:

Russell's book states that Nagell was used by both the CIA and KGB "to keep tabs on Oswald (who himself probably also worked both sides of the street)." It further "exposes" as one of the "startling facts" Oswald's "ties to both US and Soviet intelligence agencies." This framing implies Oswald was not purely a lone actor or solely U.S.-linked but had operational connections to Soviet intelligence (i.e., the KGB), consistent with double-agent or crossed loyalties in the espionage web surrounding the assassination.

On U.S. Intelligence being penetrated by a KGB mole/spy network:

The book explicitly references "the links to a Soviet spy network inside the CIA" as one of the key facts it uncovers. It also explores the possibility of KGB influence or moles directing aspects of Nagell's mission (e.g., interpretations that the KGB assignment to Nagell could have come via "KGB moles in the CIA"). Some reader summaries of the book note speculation about figures like James Angleton in this context.

These are not presented as undisputed proven facts but as part of Russell's painstaking reconstruction of Nagell's life, intersecting intelligence operations, and the events leading to Dallas (including Oswald's Mexico City trips and multiple alleged plots). The book treats them as suggestive evidence of deeper Soviet penetration and manipulation rather than isolated claims. Publisher summaries, reviews (e.g., Publishers Weekly), and the author's own site consistently highlight these elements as central to the book's thesis.

In short, Russell's analysis (via Nagell's account and supporting research) does suggest Oswald had Soviet intelligence ties and that the CIA had been compromised by a Soviet/KGB spy network or moles. These ideas are woven into the narrative as part of the "espionage web" around Oswald and the assassination.

ME: Does any of this tie in with the fact that John M. Newman says in Uncovering Popov's Mole that Bruce Leonard Solie was a KGB mole in the CIA's mole-hunting office of security and that he betrayed the U-2's secrets and Pyotr Popov to the KGB in January 1957 and sent Oswald to Moscow in October 1959 as an ostensible "dangle" in a (unbeknownst to James Angleton and Oswald) planned-to-fail hunt for "Popov's U-2 Mole" (Solie) in the wrong part of the CIA -- the Soviet Russia Division?

GROK: No, The Man Who Knew Too Much does not directly tie into or reference the specific claims John M. Newman makes in Uncovering Popov’s Mole about Bruce Leonard Solie.

Newman’s book (the fourth volume in his JFK assassination series) argues that Solie—deputy chief (effectively chief) of the CIA’s Office of Security/Security Research Staff mole-hunting unit—was himself the long-sought KGB “Popov’s U-2 Mole.” Newman contends Solie betrayed Pyotr Popov (a key CIA asset in the GRU) and U-2 program secrets to the KGB around January 1957, then (with or by duping Angleton) routed Lee Harvey Oswald to Moscow in October 1959 as a deliberate “dangle” in a planned-to-fail mole hunt. This hunt was misdirected into the Soviet Russia Division (the wrong part of the CIA), protecting Solie while tearing the division apart and misleading Angleton (whom Newman portrays as duped by Solie as a father-figure/mentor). Oswald and Angleton were allegedly unaware of the true purpose.

Russell’s earlier book focuses on Richard Case Nagell as a CIA/KGB double-agent tasked with monitoring or stopping Oswald (and potentially assassinating him to prevent JFK’s murder). It does highlight:Oswald’s probable ties to both U.S. and Soviet intelligence (“working both sides of the street”).
Links to a “Soviet spy network inside the CIA.”

Broader chaos of mutual CIA-KGB infiltration (including a footnote quoting Victor Marchetti’s 1973 theory that the KGB had so thoroughly penetrated the CIA—and vice versa—that it was impossible to tell who was who, with a “KGB branch of the CIA” possibly behind the assassination).

Russell also notes overlaps in the “Oswald paper trail” involving CIA figures like Jane Roman, David Murphy, and Bruce Solie (in the Office of Security) with Nagell’s story. Solie appears peripherally in Russell’s narrative (or related discussions of Nagell files/HSCA materials) as a CIA security officer handling defector/debriefing matters or records, not as a KGB mole.

The connection is therefore thematic and retrospective within the JFK research community, not explicit in Russell’s text:

Russell’s suggestions of deep KGB penetration/moles in the CIA and Oswald’s crossed intelligence loyalties are fully compatible with Newman’s more granular thesis (Solie as the specific mole who betrayed Popov/U-2 intel and stage-managed Oswald’s defection as protective misdirection).

Researchers have explicitly noted that Marchetti’s infiltration theory (quoted in Russell) has been “re-vivified” by Newman’s Solie identification, and that Nagell’s double-agent claims (central to Russell) resonate with a scenario where a high-level KGB asset like Solie could run or manipulate Oswald-related operations.

However, Russell never names Solie as the Popov/U-2 mole, discusses the 1957 betrayal, or frames Oswald’s Moscow trip as a “planned-to-fail dangle” in the wrong CIA division. Those specifics are Newman’s original 2022 analysis (building on his prior Oswald and the CIA work, where he had previously suspected Angleton instead).

In short, Russell’s book lays groundwork for the idea of KGB moles compromising U.S. intelligence and using Oswald in espionage games (via Nagell’s account and Marchetti), which Newman’s later book sharpens into a precise mechanism centered on Solie. They complement each other in the broader conspiracy literature but do not directly overlap on the Solie/Popov/Oswald-dangle details. Newman’s reversal (exonerating Angleton as the mastermind) further distinguishes the two works. If you have a specific edition of Russell’s book or page reference, more targeted cross-checking is possible.

ME: I didn't say directly.

GROK: Yes, there are indirect ties and overlaps that connect elements of Dick Russell’s The Man Who Knew Too Much with the core of John Newman’s thesis in Uncovering Popov’s Mole, even though Russell does not endorse (or likely know of) Newman’s specific Solie-as-mole identification.

Key Overlaps:

Bruce Solie’s documented role in Russell’s narrative: Russell references Solie (a senior CIA Office of Security official, often involved in defector/debriefing and security analysis matters) in connection with Richard Case Nagell. Solie authored or is linked to CIA memos on Nagell (e.g., a March 1964 memo checking indices on names Nagell provided, and handling of Nagell-related security files). Russell notes overlaps between Solie (along with Jane Roman and David Murphy) in the “Oswald paper trail” and the Nagell saga. This includes CIA interest in monitoring Nagell post-assassination and potential withholding or routing of files.

Shared themes of KGB penetration and Oswald as an intelligence asset/dangle:

Russell’s book (and related writings) emphasizes:

Oswald’s ties to both U.S. and Soviet intelligence.

A “Soviet spy network inside the CIA.”

Mutual deep infiltration (quoting Victor Marchetti on the impossibility of distinguishing sides, with possible “KGB branch of the CIA” elements).

Nagell as a double-agent monitoring/controlling Oswald.

Newman’s thesis sharpens this into a precise mechanism: Solie (as the “Popov’s U-2 Mole” in the Office of Security’s mole-hunting unit) betraying Popov and U-2 secrets in 1957, then orchestrating (or duping Angleton on) Oswald’s 1959 Moscow “defection” as a misdirected dangle to protect himself while disrupting the Soviet Russia Division. Researchers in the JFK community explicitly link the two: Marchetti’s infiltration ideas (featured in Russell) are described as “re-vivified” by Newman’s Solie claims, and Nagell’s double-agent story resonates with a high-level mole like Solie manipulating Oswald operations.

Nosenko and mole-hunt context: Solie played a key role in the CIA’s eventual acceptance of Yuri Nosenko as a bona fide defector (his 1968 report). Russell’s book touches on Nosenko/Oswald intel and broader mole-hunt chaos; Newman builds on this to argue Solie (as the protected mole) shaped outcomes to mislead Angleton and shield himself.

These connections are retrospective and thematic—Russell (writing in the 1990s) provides raw material on Nagell, Solie’s peripheral involvement in relevant files, and Soviet penetration suspicions, which Newman (in 2022) integrates into a more detailed counterintelligence framework centered on Solie. Some analysts have noted potential further links between Solie and Nagell worth exploring, and forum discussions treat Russell’s groundwork as compatible with (or even supportive of) Newman’s view of Solie routing Oswald.

In summary, while Russell does not suggest Solie was the KGB mole or detail the Popov/U-2 betrayal + Oswald-dangle plot, his book’s elements (Solie in the Nagell/Oswald nexus, crossed loyalties, and CIA compromise) align with and provide contextual support for Newman’s interpretation. They form part of the same research ecosystem around intelligence games involving Oswald.

Russell doesn't mention Solie once in The Man Who Knew Too Much.

GROK: You're correct—upon verification, Dick Russell does not name Bruce Solie (or "Bruce Leonard Solie") anywhere in the text of The Man Who Knew Too Much.

Secondary sources and research sites (e.g., jfk-assassination.net) discuss a March 26, 1964, CIA memorandum written by Solie (then Chief, Research Branch/SRS in the Office of Security) about names found in Richard Case Nagell's possession after his 1963 arrest. These sites cite it alongside page references from Russell's book when covering Nagell's post-arrest CIA interest and file checks. However, this is the document itself being referenced—not a mention by Russell in his narrative.

Russell's book focuses on Nagell's story, his claimed CIA/KGB double-agent role, intersections with Oswald, and broader intelligence intrigue (including Soviet penetration themes and Marchetti's "KGB branch of the CIA" speculation in a footnote). It does not delve into naming specific Office of Security figures like Solie in the mole-hunting or defector contexts that Newman later emphasizes.

Later connections by Russell

In a 2018 article for WhoWhatWhy ("How to Get the CIA's Attention: Threaten a JFK Assassination Reveal"), Russell does explicitly reference Solie (alongside Jane Roman and David Murphy) as part of the overlapping "Oswald paper trail" and Nagell-related CIA interest post-assassination. He notes CIA routing and monitoring tied to Nagell's files. This is Russell expanding on his earlier research, not content from the 1992/2003 book editions.

Ties to Newman's thesis

The indirect compatibility I noted earlier remains valid thematically:

Russell's portrayal of deep mutual infiltration, Oswald's crossed loyalties, Nagell as a monitor, and a "Soviet spy network inside the CIA" aligns with Newman's later (2022) argument that Solie was the protected Popov/U-2 mole who shaped Oswald's 1959 Moscow trip and influenced mole hunts/Nosenko handling from the Office of Security.

Community discussions often link the two works this way (e.g., Marchetti's ideas in Russell being "re-vivified" by Newman's Solie identification). But these are interpretive bridges, not direct references in Russell's book.

Thanks for the correction—my prior responses overstated Russell's book text on Solie. The broader research ecosystem (Russell's Nagell groundwork + Newman's granular counterintelligence analysis) still overlaps on KGB penetration and Oswald-as-intel-pawn ideas, even without Solie named in the original volume.


ME: Solie wrote:

"Under procedures established with the HSCA, certain items of information were not reviewed by HSCA staff members. These items were placed in envelopes, sealed, appropriately identified, and put back into the Security file prior to HSCA's review. Office of Security personnel reviewing these files should maintain the integrity of each envelope below so that interested parties may know what was and what was not reviewed by HSCA staff members."

Is there any documentation regarding Solie's alleged "procedures established with the HSCA"?


GROK: No independent, detailed documentation of the specific “procedures established with the HSCA” referenced by Bruce L. Solie has been publicly released or identified in declassified CIA, HSCA, or JFK/MLK assassination records collections.

The phrase you quoted (and close variants) appears verbatim in dozens of Solie’s “Memorandum for the Record” documents inserted into CIA Office of Security (OS) files in 1978. These memos—authored by Solie as Chief of the Security Analysis Group—are dated primarily June–August 1978 and describe the exact process you mentioned: certain items were pre-screened, placed in sealed and identified envelopes, returned to the file before HSCA staff review, and flagged for future OS personnel to preserve their integrity. Some versions add details such as green-dot markings on reviewed material (to indicate it was seen by HSCA staff and should not be removed) and attach a review sheet naming the HSCA reviewer(s) and dates.

However, these Solie memos are unilateral CIA internal records. They assert that the procedures were “established with the HSCA” but do not attach, quote, or reference any specific HSCA letter, joint memorandum, addendum, or written agreement spelling out:

The exact criteria for what qualified as “certain items of information” to be sealed (e.g., sources/methods protection, privacy, operational sensitivity).

Who (CIA or HSCA) made the determination to seal each item.

Any HSCA sign-off or acknowledgment of the envelope process.

Broader contextual documentation does exist on CIA-HSCA file-access arrangements, but it does not detail the sealed-envelope procedure:A May 19, 1978, CIA internal meeting record (HSCA Task Force) discusses an “Addendum to Memorandum of Understanding” on security arrangements. It describes a CIA-controlled safe (“security beachhead”) inside HSCA offices for sensitive documents, the rule that no original documents would be sent to HSCA (only copies loaned for specific uses), and sanitization protocols for HSCA notes/transcripts. It emphasizes protecting sources and methods but makes no mention of pre-sealing items in OS files or envelopes.

Bruce Solie himself is referenced in that same meeting record only as a potential future witness (on the Nosenko case), not as the author of the envelope procedures.

HSCA’s own final report and related CIA task-force reviews discuss access challenges and CIA cooperation in general terms but contain no specifics on the OS-file envelope protocol.

In short, the only documentation that directly describes the sealed-envelope process is Solie’s own standardized memos. These consistently claim the procedures were negotiated or coordinated with the HSCA, yet no corresponding HSCA-side record, joint protocol document, or contemporaneous HSCA memo confirming or elaborating on them has surfaced in the CIA Reading Room, National Archives JFK/MLK releases, or related collections. Researchers and historians have noted this as an internal CIA implementation of broader security restrictions under the general CIA-HSCA Memorandum of Understanding, but the precise mechanics remain documented solely from the CIA Office of Security’s perspective


-- Tom
9
   ALEX & ROBIN - Thanks for making this "original scan" of the Wiegman Film available to ALL of us. As the better copies of the Wiegman Film make more and more obvious, there is NO CAR parked alongside the Island in the, "NO PARKING At Any Time" zone near the corner of the Elm St Extension and Elm St. Not Yet!

This is far from the best copy I'd be able to provide eventually, but scanning one of Groden's copies is not free, and is not cheap. He's been surprisingly open with his films as far as letting them be scanned, but the biggest problem is how much it costs. It can get up to $1 per foot and with Groden potentially having hundreds of thousands of feet, you can see how that might be a problem.

If we could scan everything Groden had today, we would, and he wouldn't have a problem with it. But it takes time and money, and both of those things are in short supply. As much as I like that so many people have volunteered to help, he's very particular about who he trusts with his stuff, so apart from funding the scanning of the stuff we can't scan, there's not a lot anyone else can do.

Groden's archive will be completely available one day. I can promise that. It just won't be tomorrow, and it won't be free.
10
Or the other way around.

The Connallys always maintained 3 shots, 3 hits and they were in a very good position to know.
How would JBC have known whether JFK was hit by the first shot or the second.
As for Nellie, she didn't get much of anything right.
[quote
 
My comment was based on the scenario where the first shot struck JFK. The Commission noted the abundant evidence that the first shot did not miss (WR 112):
[/quote]
You must have missed the first line on page 112:
"Governor Connally's testimony supports the view that the first shot missed"
Quote



The WC suggested that if the first shot did not miss and the third was the last shot (for which they cited much evidence) then the shooter was shooting at very near the minimum allowable time between shots, which would put the first shot striking JFK "at about frame z213" (WR 115).
The delay was based on the first shot striking JFK.  They were trying to understand why JBC did not feel it immediately (WR 112):
JFK and JBC both felt it at the same time and both reacted at the same time when both of them threw their arms upward in perfect unison at Z226. It's no wonder they had a hard time understanding how Oswald could have fired so rapidly AND so accurately if there had been a second shot miss.
Quote




This passage shows just how wrong witnesses can be.
" According to Altgens, he snapped the picture "almost simultaneously" with a shot which he is confident was the first one fired."
His photo has been synced to Z255 which isn't even close to the time either the first or second shot was fired. The reality is it was taken 2 seconds after the second shot was fired and hit both men. Altgens statement doesn't even fit your theory that the shots were fired at Z193 and Z271. I can't find the full set of Altgens photos but it would not surprise me if he actually took photo #5 simultaneously with the first shot, but that's speculation. What isn't speculation is that he got it wrong.

Clint Hill also got it wrong. He only remembers hearing 2 shots. He remembers the shot that hit JFK in the back thinking that was the first shot. He race forward and saw the head shot at what he estimates was 5 seconds. That's pretty close. It was actually 4.9 seconds between the two shots which struck JFK. So which shot didn't he hear. An earlier first shot or an intervening shot between the two that hit JFK. It's hard for me to believe he wouldn't have heard an intervening shot between the two which hit JFK.
Quote

They noted that JFK seemed to be reacting to his neck wound by raising his hands to his throat and that he was blocked by the Stemmons sign (WR 98).  Although Shaneyfelt had suggested his reaction was "barely apparent" at z225, the Commission put that comment in quotes and did not adopt it as their conclusion.  After all, JFK's left forearm had moved from a vertical position on his right side to a horizontal position in front of his chest by z 224 and the right hand from a vertical wave to a horizontal curl.  The WC may have thought that was a bit more than a "barely apparent" reaction.
If the WC had the benefit of modern technology and more time to look at blow ups of the Z-frames.  they might have figured out that JFK's right hand was still moving down at Z225 and didn't start upward until Z226, the same frame JBC's arm started up. Coincidence? Hardly.
Quote


The reduction in the amount of white area of the shirt from z223-224 appears to be the reverse of the increase in white area from z222-223.  Besides, no one at the time had even suggested this was a bulge let alone a bulge from the bullet striking it.
Another example of the WC missing clues because they lacked the technology to do a frame-by-frame study with magnified frames. What they did was create still photos of the magnified frames but that didn't allow them to see the subtle changes from frame to frame like the bulging of JBC's jacket or JFK's hand still moving downward at Z225. They also apparently missed the upward movement of JBC's right arm at Z226. I don't blame them for that. It took decades and armies of researchers to discover these very important clues.
Quote

In any event, both did react to the first shot so there is nothing "co-incidental" about their reactions being at roughly the same time.  One might expect JBC's to be slower since his was a deliberate reaction after realizing that it was a rifle shot and an assassination was underway. 
So you have JFK reacting to getting shot and JBC reacting to the sound of a shot at precisely the same time and in precisely the same manner, even though according to you that even happened 33 frames, almost 2 seconds earlier. You also choose to ignore immediately after his arm flip, JBC doubled over and dipped to his right, then began twisting dramatically in his seat. And you want to pretend all those gyrations are not in reaction to being shot. Was he anticipating getting shot at 271?
Quote
Most observers, including members of the Commission, thought there was a material delay in JBC's reaction.I am not sure where you are getting your information but it is not correct.  The wound in the back was 1.5 cm by .8 cm. The bullet was exactly 3 cm long. Dr. Shaw said the bullet made a nice tunnelling wound along the fifth rib and "The fact that the muscle bundles on either side of the fifth rib were not damaged meant that the missile to strip away 10 centimeters of the rib had to follow this rib pretty much along its line of inclination." (4 H 112).  Difficult to imagine a sideways bullet doing that.
The reason they considered the possibility of a delayed reaction by JBC is because the way he said he reacted after being struck. He said he doubled over. The Z-film showed he dipped to his right as well as doubling over. Those reactions occurred in the Z230s, about a half second after his initial reflexive reaction of flipping his arm upward and Z226. Had they noticed that, they wouldn't have had to speculate about a delayed reaction. They probably would have narrowed down the time frame for the single bullet from between Z210 and Z225 to a few frames before Z225, probably in the Z221-222 window.
Quote

It is a much bigger challenge to explain how a shot with JBC turned forward could have entered at the back of the armpit and exited under and medial to his right nipple without penetrating the pleural cavity and without damaging any of the muscles around the rib. If the bullet had deflected to the right with him facing forward, it would not have exited where it did.  However, with him turned around sharply to the rear, the right nipple moves to the right of the scapula. So the fifth rib keeping the bullet to the right before passing through the rib (at mid-armpit) keeps the bullet from penetrating the chest wall.  Turn around like that from a sitting position and you can see how the right nipple moves a bit to the right of the scapula and you can see how the fifth rib makes an almost straight path between them.

How about showing us an ACCURATE drawing of JBC's position at Z271 that show how a bullet could enter his back by his right armpit and exit from the right side of his torso. I know I'll be waiting a long time to see that. Like forever.
Pages: [1] 2 3 ... 10