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I very much enjoyed seeing Bill Brown's latest (2026) tour around the J.D. Tippit murder site. Great info. About the only thing I'd feel compelled to add would be this common-sense observation that I wrote in 2011 concerning eyewitness Domingo Benavides:



More Tippit Talk:

https://jfk-archives.blogspot.com/2017/04/jfk-assassination-arguments-part-1242.html

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Just an update:

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The best evidence of Oswald's ability to reach the crime scene within the timeframe of the murder is that multiple witnesses place him there.  There is no doubt that Oswald was at the scene when the murder occurred.  If he was there, then debating whether he had time to be there is pointless.  The thing proves itself.  The CTer mindset is to ignore multiple eyewitnesses who place Oswald at the scene with a gun and instead nitpick the timeline.  It's laughable kook logic.

I don’t have any issue on timing, but you should be aware there are grounds for doubt Oswald was at the crime scene. The single strongest crime scene witness of all, because of how close he was, from only 15-20 feet away, testified he had an excellent view of the back of the killer’s head and described a block cut rear hairline which, as it stands, is highly credible stand-alone exonerating testimony, given that all photos of Oswald show him with a taper rear hairline. For good measure this single best crime scene witness of all at the crime scene was a barber. Hard to beat that for a witness favorable to reasonable doubt.

No less than 8 (!) crime scene witnesses or witnesses of the fleeing gunman testified that that gunman was wearing a white or light-colored shirt, underneath a partly open zippered jacket. As you know Oswald was seen by Brewer and arrested in a dark brown shirt. This is not an easy massive number of witness testimonies that can easily be accounted for as mistakes. Reasonable doubt grounds number two.

Multiple witness reports had the gunman’s hair described as “black” or very dark brown. Oswald’s appears to have been medium brown, and I am not aware of any independent testimony to seeing Oswald’s hair as “black”.

There is a good argument that two sets of fingerprints lifted from the Tippit patrol car 20 minutes after the crime were left by the killer. Those prints have been found by an expert analysis to be conclusively not a match to Oswald. Those prints hsve never been proven to not be the killer’s.

The witnesses who identified the gunman as Oswald are less decisive than it appears. For some reason few seem aware that since the 1964 time of the Warren Commission studies have established—this is mainstream and not too controversial—that witness facial recognition (in cases where the witness does not know the person already) is not reliable at over 50 feet. Reason: the human eye loses detail with distance, necessary for facial recognition. This lack of reliability overrides even when the witness expresses confidence or certainty. There goes Callaway (56 feet) and all of the Warren Reynolds auto place witnesses, right there. The Davis sisters in law both said they saw the killers face only in profile not full face.

This is not to say there isn’t a case against Oswald from the shell hulls weapon ID if one does not consider chain of custody issues with those hulls to be significant, and there is an argument from coincidence that Oswald was nearby in the midst of a live shooter police manhunt. But the eyewitness identifications incriminating Oswald range from poor to medium quality, none exceptionally strong, with the argument for incrimination relying on the number of them more than their quality.

There is zero weight toward incrimination of Oswald from the killer’s jacket (CE 162)’s fibers, from any expert testimony. Thst is why neither the FBI nor WC who knew of those fibers ever claimed they were positive weight evidence of a match to Oswald’s brown shirt, because no expert ever testified to that and it is unlikely any would. Non-expert interpretations don’t count. It is like saying common cooking ingredients prove a certain kind of cake was made. As for the jacket itself, Marina testified it was Lee’s, and Buell Frazier testified even more emphatically that it definitely was not—that he knew Lee’s gray work jacket and it was woolen and gray, not the off-white light tan cloth CE 162 which would easily pick up dirt and not be too practical as a daily work jacket in dusty or dirty surroundings doing manual labor. One is not right between Marina and Buell, take your pick.

I personally believe there is a case Oswald may not have been the gunman despite appearances, and that Tippit’s killer was a professional, Craford. Craford was a self-confessed hitman at this stage of his life, he was left-handed as the fingerprints, if they were from the killer, indicate the killer was. He had a full head of hair so dark brown that it appeared black. Craford’s own daughter told me that as a child growing up for years she thought his hair was black until belatedly learning it was actually dark brown. EXACTLY the police description of the killer’s hair color in the first hour, from Callaway and one other witness I believe as the police sources on that, who saw and told the color of the killer’s hair. And the daughter told me her father had a habit of talking to himself, compare Scoggins hearing the killer doing that (not a practice or habit known of Oswald).

I wrote a bit on a case for Craford instead of Oswald on Tippit in a way that has not previously been argued, ie original stuff, though I have not had time to write the rest of the case and don’t know when I will have time. But if interested you can see the start of the case here: https://www.scrollery.com/?p=1850.

And Craford is known independently to have been mistakenly identified as Oswald by sincere witnesses, and there goes the perception of strength of the witnesses’ Oswald identifications some more, if it’s between Oswald and Craford, could be either one from the witness evidence.

Tippit’s killer came to the crime scene walking from the east on foot consistent with an origin point in the approximate vicinity of Jack Ruby’s apartment. Craford was driven home from the Vegas Club by Ruby at ca 3 am the night before and Ruby could have driven him to his apartment instead of to the Carousel Club as normally. Both Ruby and Senator, from his separate bedroom, left the apartment Friday morning. Craford could have been in Ruby’s room without Senator knowing it, then had the empty apartment to himself until the time came to walk to the crime scene 4 blocks west for an expected arrival of Tippit to flag down as he arrived and kill him as a contract execution. Just saying.

Also, Oswald did have a loaded gun on him at his arrest, he did resist arrest and he did punch an officer. But he did not attempt to shoot an officer, and he did not say “it’s all over now” when he first stood up. He said that after he was subdued and had stopped resisting. And the failed attempt to shoot evidenced by the “click” everyone heard was McDonald attempting unsuccessfully to shoot Oswald with Oswald’s own gun. This is not speculation but fact, from confession of McDonald that he got control of Oswald’s revolver, pointed it intentionally into Oswald’s stomach, and started intentionally to pull the trigger to shoot him. That’s not speculation, that’s McDonald himself on YouTube. But Bentley’s hand was injured blocking the hammer which is why McDonald’s attempt to shoot Oswald failed. It wasn’t premeditated on McDonald’s part, to shoot Oswald with his own gun. It followed Oswald punching McDonald in the face. Oswald no more pulled that trigger than Anthony Pretti in Minneapolis tried to shoot the iCE officers. McDonald claimed Oswald did but McDonald clearly did once the matter is studied, and it is not even ambiguous. Not that this point is decisive on the Tippit case but just to clear the deck on that particular long-standing claim.

Anyone is still free to consider Oswald guilty on Tippit. I’m just saying there is another possible side to the story on serious evidence grounds having nothing to do with conspiracy theorizing. There are grounds for reasonable doubt on Oswald on Tippit. I won’t be spending a lot of time defending this further at this time, but for what it’s worth, a few things to think about here.

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The Democrats continue to eat their own. Establishment Democrat Congressman Dan Goldman has been unseated by a Mamdani backed socialist.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/rep-dan-goldman-unseated-by-mamdani-backed-brad-lander/ar-AA26nGN6?ocid=msedgdhp&pc=EDBBAN&cvid=6a3b3c8e70564ac38e304588862be24e&ei=33

This is reminiscent of AOC's surprise victory over 10 term Congressman Joe Crowley. That victory sent shock waves through the Democrat establishment and caused a major shift in the party's agenda. Most establishment Democrats were in safe seats but once they saw the biggest threat to their job security came from the far left of their own party, they lost their nerve. Most of them knew what the extreme socialists were pushing was nutty but they weren't going to risk their jobs by opposing them so to get along, they went along. That's why the Democrat Party embraced policies that would have been considered insane just ten years earlier. Open borders. Cashless bail. Men in women's locker rooms, bathrooms, and their athletic teams. Nothing was too crazy for the establishment to support. It didn't help Dan Goldman. He got primaried anyway.

The GOP faced a similar dilemma in 2022. They were expecting a red wave in the midterms. In the primaries, the far right candidates were winning most of the primaries against more moderate Republicans. As a result, that lost a few dozen congressional races that would  have been very winnable had they run more moderate candidates. Pragmatism seems to have gone out the window in both parties. Electability seems far less important to primary voters than strict adherence to orthodoxy. The GOP has put the Texas Senate seat by dumping John Cornyn in favor of an unpopular candidate with a lot of baggage. This trend toward more extreme candidates should make the 2026 midterms very interesting.
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Oswald was a well-known commodity to the pro- and anti-Castro communities, especially in New Orleans – Marcello’s turf – long before the JFKA. His uncle Dutz Murret had underworld connections, which in New Orleans meant Marcello connections; the Oswald-Dutz relationship was not a distant one by any means, and Oswald knew of Dutz’s shady activities and discussed them with Marina. JFK’s trip to Dallas was known in September before Oswald visited Mexico City and reportedly made JFK-related threats. I have no idea precisely whose radar Oswald may have been on before or after his employment at the TSBD, but there are numerous possibilities for him coming to the attention of Marcello as either a possible JFKA participant or a patsy.

Also distinctly odd is Oswald’s inquiry about employment at the Allright Parking Garage just a week before the JFKA and his curious interest in the height of the building and its view of downtown Dallas. https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth190240/m1/1/. I muse upon this oddity here: https://www.jfkassassinationforum.com/index.php/topic,4612.0.html.

It’s entirely possible, it seems to me, that Oswald had been recruited into a JFKA plot before the motorcade route was finalized and then – voila – the TSBD in which he happened to be employed turned out to be perfect for both a patsy and a pro in the Dal-Tex or County Records building when the route was finalized. I have a hard time with Orr’s theory of Oswald as a knowing participant because having him shoot from TSBD6 would have been fantastically, absurdly risky for the Mafia (i.e., if he had even the faintest inkling that this was a Mafia plot), but I can easily see him as a patsy in what he thought was a pro-Castro plot, with Marcello et al. having no reason to care if he was captured or killed.

My level of conviction is probably 80% that the LN narrative is true and 20% that a Mafia plot is true, but that 20% could go up substantially if Orr’s trajectory analysis delivers all that he and Schnapf seem to promise.

I am 100 to 0% that Oswald was the shooter. I'll generously make it 99.99 to 0.01% he was acting on behalf of anyone but himself.

You still have the problem of explaining how any plotters could have possibly known 6 weeks in advance that the TSBD was going to be a perfect location to kill JFK from. You seem to suggest that after recruiting Oswald, they got an unbelievable stroke of luck when the found out JFK's motorcade was going to ride right past Oswald's workplace. The were bringing the mountain to Mohammed. What are the odds?

Having people who knew Oswald in New Orleans isn't going to be much of a help. Do you think anyone of those people were even aware of the fact Oswald had taken the job at the TSBD. Even if they did, so what? Would those people even know the motorcade was going past the TSBD.

Oswald getting his job at the TSBD was pure happenstance. It wasn't part of any plot. What if he had taken the job at the parking garage instead of the TSBD. What would these mysterious plotters have done then. I see no plausible scenario in which Oswald taking his job at the TSBD was part of any nefarious plot. There were other reasons I gave up on being a CT but this one was as important as any of them. In 35 years of posing this question to CTs on various forums, I have yet to see a plausible answer.
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Yes.
He never told us. It's a little late to ask him now.
It doesn't need to make sense to you. It made sense to Oswald. He was calling the shots in this episode.

This is a logical fallacy CTs often fall into. They can't understand why Oswald made the decisions he did and did the things he did. They put themselves in Oswald's shoes and think they wouldn't have done that. That's nice but irrelevant. Oswald did the things he thought was best for him. It doesn't matter if it makes sense to anybody but him.

The best evidence of Oswald's ability to reach the crime scene within the timeframe of the murder is that multiple witnesses place him there.  There is no doubt that Oswald was at the scene when the murder occurred.  If he was there, then debating whether he had time to be there is pointless.  The thing proves itself.  The CTer mindset is to ignore multiple eyewitnesses who place Oswald at the scene with a gun and instead nitpick the timeline.  It's laughable kook logic.
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How do you get Oswald into another position to kill JFK. If the motorcade went down Main St. west-to-east he would have faced an almost impossible cross shot from a block away and would be lucky to get off more than one shot as the limo passes the intersection of Main and Houston. The other possibility is the motorcade would have taken Commerce to Houston and then taken Houston to Main to begin the trek through downtown. That presents a whole different set of problems for a shooter from the TSBD.

How do you get him into another building with his rifle? He had no car and didn't know how to drive. If you have somebody take him to another location, that pretty much shoots down the narrative that he was acting alone.

I don't think Oswald would have attempted the assassination if the motorcade had not be routed down Elm St. It was a crime of opportunity. I also can't imagine conspirators using Oswald as a shooter or a patsy if the motorcade had not been routed down Elm St.

Your difficulty in coming up with a plausible scenario using Oswald as a shooter or patsy should tell you why this question was instrumental in me doubting any and all conspiracy theories. There would have to be a plausible explanation for how the conspirators could have known well in advance that TSBD employee Oswald would be useful to them as either the shooter or he patsy. If you are going to postulate him as the patsy, you would also need an explanation for why he was such a cooperative patsy.
Oswald was a well-known commodity to the pro- and anti-Castro communities, especially in New Orleans – Marcello’s turf – long before the JFKA. His uncle Dutz Murret had underworld connections, which in New Orleans meant Marcello connections; the Oswald-Dutz relationship was not a distant one by any means, and Oswald knew of Dutz’s shady activities and discussed them with Marina. JFK’s trip to Dallas was known in September before Oswald visited Mexico City and reportedly made JFK-related threats. I have no idea precisely whose radar Oswald may have been on before or after his employment at the TSBD, but there are numerous possibilities for him coming to the attention of Marcello as either a possible JFKA participant or a patsy.

Also distinctly odd is Oswald’s inquiry about employment at the Allright Parking Garage just a week before the JFKA and his curious interest in the height of the building and its view of downtown Dallas. https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth190240/m1/1/. I muse upon this oddity here: https://www.jfkassassinationforum.com/index.php/topic,4612.0.html.

It’s entirely possible, it seems to me, that Oswald had been recruited into a JFKA plot before the motorcade route was finalized and then – voila – the TSBD in which he happened to be employed turned out to be perfect for both a patsy and a pro in the Dal-Tex or County Records building when the route was finalized. I have a hard time with Orr’s theory of Oswald as a knowing participant because having him shoot from TSBD6 would have been fantastically, absurdly risky for the Mafia (i.e., if he had even the faintest inkling that this was a Mafia plot), but I can easily see him as a patsy in what he thought was a pro-Castro plot, with Marcello et al. having no reason to care if he was captured or killed.

My level of conviction is probably 80% that the LN narrative is true and 20% that a Mafia plot is true, but that 20% could go up substantially if Orr’s trajectory analysis delivers all that he and Schnapf seem to promise.
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Martin W.— a couple of misunderstandings. I didn’t mean Hill was wrong on the 4 pm but I didn’t make that clear enough, that ones on me. I thought you cited him from a later time and that is the kind of thing with Hill one needs to verify and fact check more than normal with Hill, but in this case it agrees with the accounts of others, Walker and Rose, of the wallet being near Oswald and looked at. The harmonization would be Baker first got it but then it was still lying around and others were looking at it, then later (your Hill 4 pm) it was turned in for the storage room and safekeeping. My reference to weak chain of custody was to the Oswald wallet of Bentley through to the 4 pm.

At one point you agreed with me, restating what I said, but believed you were disagreeing. You agreed with me that what Baker said gives no information in establishing anything amiss with the wallet, then said it was silly for me to say what you just said too.

What I fail to see is believing a sensational claim made for the first time 30 years later with zero evidence either that witness or anyone else on earth ever said or heard of the same thing at any time in the previous 30 years, and which is well explained as a simple mistake (Barrett in later memory mistakenly combining a real asking from Westbrook about Oswald wallet ID with Barrett’s memory of being with Westbrook and a wallet at the crime scene, as if that is when Westbrook asked). It’s near zero on the credibility scale on that profile grounds of the claim alone. But once beliefs get started, they have long lives.

I think it makes sense it was Oswald’s wallet at the police station straight through from the theater, and no good reason to suppose a substitution. There’s no actual sound reason against it, and the ID said to be from it has been authenticated as Oswald’s handwriting at points. On the “Hidell” ID issue, I would like to understand that better too and I can think of three scenario possibilities in explanation that I would consider “starters” (viable possible cases for), but none of those involve a secret conveyance of a wallet with Oswald and Hidell ID from the crime scene.

There is a real downside to buying into mistaken theories or reconstructions (as I believe this crime scene Oswald ID Barrett claim is), beyond simply being in error: they create blindness to any real leads and potential real solutions to problems. I’ve seen a hundred examples of such a phenomenon. On this wallet issue I think I’m done here, thank you for the civility of the discussion.
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This thread is asking genuine questions that neither you, nor anyone else, has been able to answer.
How did Bart Kamp come up with the extraordinarily detailed picture of 'Lovelady' from a degraded image? Why can't this detail be recreated from a far superior image?
It's not complicated.
It is beyond simple.
You have no explanation, not even a theory, not even a suggestion.
You offer nothing.
So, why not be a good boy and stick to topics that you can contribute to.

Well, let's see:

1. I contacted Bart Kamp and asked for his explanation of the image. He was kind enough to respond. I shared that response here. Since the title of the thread is "How Did Bart Kamp Create the Lovelady Image?" - well, my little contribution seems rather relevant to me.

2. I repeatedly posted Bart's contact information and challenged anyone with the cojones to do so to contact him directly. While boldly accusing Bart of fakery, no one else had the cojones to contact him. Why? We know why: because Bart, his work and his reputation are way out of your league and it's way more fun to accuse and speculate than actually attempt to resolve an issue that might eviscerate some beloved conspiracy factoid.

Royell is a Grade A buffoon. Everyone here, presumably including you, knows it. If the question as to how Bart enhanced the image is "beyond simple," THEN ASK HIM, DUMBASS.
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No you don't. You cherry-pick your experts.

The experts you claim I cherry picked  were all experts in forensic pathology. I have already acknowledged that that original team were a poor choice to perform a medico-legal autopsy but that's a mistake we just have to live with. Despite their inexperience, that were able to gather enough medical evidence so that a panel of the most respected medical experts in the country were able to conclude that JFK was shot twice with both shots coming from behind him. That dovetails with all the forensic evidence we have that Oswald was the shooter.

You on the other hand rarely if ever cite forensic pathologists to support your claims.
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You pretend to be qualified to decide who is a medical expert and who is not.

I guess I have this goofy idea that forensic medical examiners are the most qualified people to assess the evidence from a medico-legal autopsy. You on the other hand think a radiation oncologist is well suited for that job.
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For days on end you kept citing the HSCA FPP as an unquestionable final authority on the medical evidence--until I proved to you that several of the FPP's findings refute your version of the shooting.

My version of the shooting is that JFK was shot twice from behind with the shot to the back of the head being the one that killed him. Tell me which member(s) of the FPP dispute that.
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Yes, you do keep making the pitiful, embarrassing argument that you don't need to explain the medical evidence, and I keep pointing out why that argument is ludicrous and why it constitutes nothing but a bunch of ducking and dodging, but you just keep repeating it without refuting my counterarguments.

I'm not at all surprised that you find a logical argument to be ludicrous.
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You're still peddling this silly, inane dodge? [/quote}

So you think it is an inane dodge for me to acknowledge I have no expertise in the field of forensic pathology. The truth is that neither you nor I are any more qualified to analyze the medical evidence than the guy who mopped up the autopsy room floor. Your tortured analysis and reliance on people who have no expertise in the field of forensic pathology demonstrates that fact quite nicely.
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You assume that forensic pathologists--well, those who agree with you--are the source of all knowledge when it comes to gunshot wounds,

They are just far more knowledgeable than a radiation oncologist.
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ignoring the fact that they are usually not experts in radiology,

Neither is a radiation oncologist.
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in physics, in neurology, in neuroanatomy, and in ballistics, much less in the recent science of optical-density measurement,

People in those fields are not experts in forensic medicine either unless they have been trained and experienced in that field as well. To the best of my knowledge, none of the people you cite meet that qualification, but you don't care. All you care is they offered a non-expert opinion that fits the narrative you are trying to peddle.
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which field did not begin to be pioneered until the 1950s and was still in its infancy in the 1960s.

So tell us how an expert in that field is qualified to analyse the medical evidence.

You don't seem to understand that the field of medicine has a wide range of specialties, each requiring a unique skill set. When I go see my primary care physician, he has a general knowledge of medicine as a whole but when I have a specific condition, he sends me to a specialist. If I'm having an issue with my prostate (which I have in recent years) he doesn't send me to a gynecologist.
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Forensic pathologists are regular doctors (M.D.s) who have completed a fellowship in forensic pathology after they've been certified in anatomical or clinical pathology.

Yes they have. Radiation oncologists and gynecologists have no specialized training in the field of forensic pathology. So why do you keep citing people outside that area of expertise?

Let's put it this way. If any of the people you've cited outside the field of forensic pathology were summoned to give testimony about a medico-legal autopsy, I doubt there is a judge in the land who would approve of that witness.
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Deep down you must know that it is untenable and evasive to pretend that the findings of wound ballistics experts, radiologists, physicists, radiation oncologists, neurologists, and neuroscientists in the JFK case can be ignored just because they're not forensic pathologists. Your side still cites the research and experiments of Dr. John Lattimer, Dr. Robert Artwohl, Dr. Piziali, even though they were not forensic pathologists.

It's quite easy to ignore people pontificating about fields for which they have no expertise. If I was having trouble with my care, I would ignore the advice of my plumber unless I knew he also had training in auto mechanics.
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But, if you want to talk about forensic experts, let's do that.   

That would be nice for a change.
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Have you ever heard Dr. Milton Helpern, regarded as one of the greatest forensic pathologists of the 20th century? He flatly rejected the SBT.

The issues of the SBT have to do ballistics, not forensic pathology. Cyril Wecht's objections to the SBT aren't based on anything in the medical evidence. They are based on his viewing of the Z-film.
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How about Dr. F. W. Enos? Heard of him? He was the forensic pathologist who served as the consultant to the CBS SBT wound-ballistics test. After setting up and conducting the test, he concluded that the test "disproved" the SBT and said the SBT was "highly improbable."
How about Dr. Robert Kirschner? Heard of him? The Lancet, a leading medical journal, described him as "a pioneering forensic pathologist." He was one of the ARRB's three forensic consultants. He said the SBT was "very dubious."

Since you don't bother to tell us why any of these men disputed the SBT, there is really nothing for me to comment on.
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How about Dr. Halbert Fillinger? Heard of him? He was a nationally recognized forensic pathologist, considered a "giant" in the field, who was known for handling the most serious cases. "The Halbert E. Fillinger Lifetime Achievement Award" was named after him to recognize outstanding contributors to forensic science. Well, guess what? He scoffed at the idea that an FMJ bullet would have deposited a single fragment on the rear outer table of JFK's skull. He added that FMJ bullets will barely even leave any residue at their entry sites, much less a fragment.

That is a question of ballistics, not forensic pathology. He is not commenting on the wounds but on the behavior of a FMJ bullet. Once again you cite opinions of people who haven't stayed in their lane.
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How about Dr. Doug Ubelaker? Heard of him? He was a forensic anthropologist at the Smithsonian Institution and was another one of the ARRB's three forensic experts. He said the head damage in the autopsy photos indicated the bullet hit in the front and traveled from front to back.

A forensic anthropologist is not the same as a forensic pathologist. How many medico-legal autopsies has he performed in his career?

Another swing and a miss by you.
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How about Dr. Joseph Dolce? Heard of him? He was the Army's most knowledgeable expert on wound ballistics in 1964. Dr. Dolce was a battlefield surgeon in the Pacific, for three years, so, needless to say, he dealt with hundreds of gunshot victims. In 1964, he was the chairman of the Army's Wound Ballistics Board. When the WC asked the Army to provide a wound ballistics expert to be the Commission's chief expert on the subject, the Army selected Dr. Dolce. Dr. Dolce's experience and expertise were so highly regarded that if a VIP or member of Congress were injured, Dr. Dolce was asked to review the case. He had much more experience than the WC's two other wound ballistics consultants, Dr. Alfred Olivier and Dr. Arthur Dziemian. Dr. Dolce said the SBT was "impossible" and that the wound ballistics test proved this.

Again, you don't tell us why he said the SBT was impossible. Dr. Cyril Wecht also said it was impossible but when cross examined by Vincent Bugliosi, he couldn't give a medical reason for his opinion.
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When Dr. Dolce informed the WC that the tests proved the SBT was "impossible," they ignored him and began to rely on the more compliant and less qualified Olivier and Dziemian. That's why Olivier and Dziemian were asked to testify but Dolce was not. 

I guess Dolce didn't give the WC a medical reason the SBT was impossible either.
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I know you know something about Dr. Robert Shaw, who was Connally's chest surgeon. Do you know that before he operated on Connally, he had operated on more than 1,000 gunshot wounds of the chest? He, too, flatly rejected the SBT.

Again, you cite somebody outside his field of expertise. How the hell would Shaw know whether the bullet that had hit JBC had first struck JFK. Did he give an explanation for why the entrance wound on JBC's back was elongated.
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Have you heard of Dr. John Nichols? As a professor of pathology at the University of Kansas, he trained forensic pathologists. He, too, flatly rejected the SBT and argued that the head-shot bullet could not have been an FMJ missile.

So now you cite a pathologist on a question of ballistics. Brilliant.
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This is more insincere evasion. A radiation oncologist who is an expert in optical-density (OD) measurement and who is also trained in radiology and holds a doctorate in physics does not need to have performed a medico-legal autopsy to use OD measurements to determine if objects in a skull x-ray are metallic or to determine the thickness of bone in a skull x-ray. You must be kidding.

You still don't seem to understand that a radiation oncologist is not an expert in radiology. I guess you think because the words are similar, they are one and the same.
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Similarly, a recognized expert in neuroanatomy does not need to have performed a medico-legal autopsy to determine the location and relationship of wound paths in autopsy photos of a brain. If anything, a forensic pathologist will consult with a neuroscientist when it comes to such matters.

I'm afraid you are wrong again. I lost count but I think you are 0 for 47. So far.
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Lattimer, Piziali, and Artwohl never performed an autopsy, but you guys still cite them as authorities on JFK's wounds and wound reactions. Lattimer was a urologist. Artwohl was a general surgeon. Piziali was a ballistics expert.

Funny you should mention Bob Artwohl. He came to our Prodigy forum as a CT but converted to the LN side. He credited some of the arguments I had made on the board for changing his mind.

I don't remember ever citing any of the men you mentioned for their opinions on the autopsy.
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How many times are you going to ignore the fact that Dr. Mantik is also certified in radiology?

Is that a fact? No mention of that on his WebMD page.

https://doctor.webmd.com/doctor/david-mantik-41216fdc-e614-4387-8f79-f29b65a264c9-overview

His specialties are family medicine and oncology. It says, "His dual expertise allows him to provide comprehensive primary care while also treating patients with cancer diagnoses." No mention of radiology.

You are not 0 for 48.
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How many times are you going to ignore the fact that radiation oncologists use OD measurements as part of their job?


Yes, they do that after consulting with radiologists.
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How many times are you going to ignore the fact that radiation oncologists are trained in reading x-rays?


No, that's what radiologists are trained to do. I'm sure he has experience looking at x-rays, but that's not his field of expertise.

0 for 49.
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That's part of the reason they receive their certification from the American Board of Radiology. 

This from the ABR website:
"Doctors practicing in the field of Radiology specialize in Diagnostic Radiology, Interventional Radiology, or Radiation Oncology."

Do you happen see the word "OR". It doesn't say "AND". Being trained in one of these disciplines doesn't make one an expert in one of the others. I suppose its possible for someone to be certified in more than one of these specialties, but Mantiks's WebMD page makes no mention of a certification as a radiologist. One family medicine and oncology.

Your streak has extended to half a hundred.
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BTW, Dr. Randy Robertson, a board-certified diagnostic radiologist, has concluded that the JFK autopsy skull x-rays indicate that two bullets hit JFK's head. And, several of the HSCA's radiology/forensic consultants said the x-rays show missing frontal bone, but Baden and the FPP majority ignored this fact and claimed the frontal bone was intact.

Part of the frontal bone was missing. The POSTERIOR of the frontal bone. That means the rear of the frontal bone. That was near the temples to use a layman's term. It was not from the forehead.

0 for 51.
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You have no business even talking about the acoustical evidence. You haven't read one page of the HSCA's extensive materials on the acoustical evidence.

That takes you up to 0 for 52.
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You haven't read even one scholarly defense of the acoustical evidence. You haven't even read the NRC/NAS panel's report, which you cited as evidence against the acoustical evidence.

I'll be nice and only credit you with one misstatement for this. 0 for 53.
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You did not realize that the NAS panel admitted that there was a 93% probability that the timing-moving correlations identified by the BBN acoustical scientists occurred because the dictabelt recorded gunfire in Dealey Plaza, and that there was a 77.7% chance that the 144.9 impulse pattern was gunfire from the grassy knoll.

You have no clue what you are talking about, and you refuse to read anything that refutes what you want to believe on this issue. You just keep repeating these debunked talking points that you've read on some lone-gunman websites. I've read every critique of the acoustical evidence, but you haven't read any research that defends that evidence, and it shows.

The 50% probability finding was a preliminary finding that was made before they conducted the test firing in Dealey Plaza and before they had the BBN research reviewed by Queens College acoustical experts Weiss and Aschkenasy. You'd know this if you had bothered to read a single scholarly defense of the acoustical evidence.

The myth of "cross talk" from Channel 2 was answered by Dr. Barger many years ago, and new research done by BBN scientists in 2019-2020 proves that the Decker transmission is not crosstalk from Channel 2 but is an overdub resulting from the copying process.

Of course, not knowing any better, you repeat the claim that there was no motorcycle in position to record the dictabelt in Dealey Plaza. If there was no motorcycle in position on Houston Street, how do you explain the fact that even the NRC/NAS panel admitted that there's a 93% probability that the timing-movement correlations between the dictabelt impulses and the test-firing impulses occurred because the dictabelt was recorded in Dealey Plaza during the shooting?

If there was no motorcycle in position to record the dictabelt in Dealey Plaza, how did N-waves, muzzle blasts, and muzzle-blast echoes, in the correct order and interval, get recorded on the dictabelt? How is it that the N-waves occurred only in the gunshot impulse patterns? How did windshield distortions get recorded on the dictabelt only when the motorcycle was in position to record them and were not recorded when the motorcycle was not in position to record them? Figure the odds of just those distortions alone happening by coincidence.

I know you'll never read it, but for the sake of others, I again recommend my introduction to the acoustical evidence:

"The HSCA's Acoustical Evidence: Proof of a Second Gunman"
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1KvdvH8gTqFgMn-2vTI5ppg_egWxRKg9U/view?usp=sharing
You're always admonishing me for disregarding eye witness accounts. Here's what the HSCA's own report said about Officer McLain:

"Subsequent to his hearing testimony, McLain stated that he believed he turned on his siren as soon as he heard Curry's order to proceed to Parkland Hospital . He said that everyone near him had their sirens on immediately.(91) Should his memory be reliable, the broadcast of the shots during the assassination would not have been over his radio, because the sound of sirens on the tape does not come until approximately 2 minutes later. The committee believed that McLain was in error on the point of his use of his siren."
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