Recent Posts

Recent Posts

Pages: [1] 2 3 ... 10
1
Mueller had no proof of conclusion. To suggest there was collusion in lieu of credible evidence is reprehensible misconduct.

It's disingenuous of you and other Trump supporters to accuse Mueller, et al., of failing to prove collusion when "collusion" isn't a legal concept, crime, or theory of liability in U.S. criminal law.
2
    How about separating yourself from the rank-n-file and expanding your currently limited JFK Assassination knowledge?  If you look at Haygood's WC Testimony, his description of what he did inside the railroad yard do Not come close to matching what we see that Counterfeit Motorcycle Cop doing on the Darnell Film. After that, take a look at the Cancellare Photo of Haygood standing atop the Triple Underpass. This pic was snapped Before Haygood jumped down into the railroad yard. Haygood is clearly wearing 2 gloves in that photo. When we 1st see the Counterfeit Cop on the Darnell Film, he is wearing only 1 Glove. The distance between the top of the triple underpass and where we see the counterfeit cop for the very 1st time is only about 40 yds. About the same distance as from a MLB Home Plate to 2nd Base.

You continue to assert, without evidence, that the cop in the Darnell film was "Counterfeit".

FYI: The distance between the back point of home plate and the center of second base is roughly 127' 3". I say roughly because the actual distance is an irrational number. If we are talking about from the front of home plate to the nearest point on second base, subtract 38 inches. Again, an irrationals number.

Quote
What would cause Haygood to remove 1 glove over the course of that extremely limited distance? Nothing would. We are seeing 2 different people in the Cancellare Photo and the Darnell Film. And when you get done reading the Haygood WC testimony, take a look at Tague's WC Testimony. He had a very good view of Haygood from the point of his dumping his motorcycle at the Elm St. curb, to Haygood returning back to his motorcycle. Again, do the research. Raise your bar.   

Here is a perfect example of one of your illogical assumptions. Because you can't think of a reason Haygood would have taken off his glove, you assume he didn't take off his glove. The possibilities are not limited by your inability to think of any.

Your call for me to "do the research" is simply you attempting to shift the burden of proof to me when it is you who are proposing the hypothesis. When you propose a hypothesis, the burden is on you to provide the proof. No one else has the burden of disproving it. You've never seemed to understand that. 
3

No evidence?

ME: Did the Mueller Report say the investigation found no evidence of conspiracy?

GROK: No, the Mueller Report did not say the investigation found "no evidence" of conspiracy (or coordination) between the Trump Campaign and Russia.


Exact Wording from the Report

The key conclusion in Volume I (Executive Summary and main findings) states, "the investigation did not establish that members of the Trump Campaign conspired or coordinated with the Russian government in its election interference activities."

cbsnews.com

This phrasing—"did not establish"—is the report's consistent legal language. It means the evidence gathered was insufficient to prove a criminal conspiracy (or the narrower definition of "coordination" as an agreement—tacit or express—between the campaign and the Russian government on election interference) beyond a reasonable doubt, to the standard required for criminal charges.

In this country one is given the presumption of innocence until proven guilty. Mueller could not prove the Trump or anyone from his campaign conspired with the Russians to influence the election. The presumption is that they did not. If you want to believe innuendos in lieu of real evidence, that is your right. I choose to believe what evidence indicates.

Quote

Mueller's team explicitly noted the distinction:  "A statement that the investigation did not establish particular facts does not mean there was no evidence of those facts."


Completely irresponsible conduct by Mueller. Despite not having evidence of collusion between the Trump Campaign and the Russians, he makes an innuendo that they did. IOW, he suggests what he cannot prove. And you bought the innuendo hook, line, and sinker.

Quote

What the Report Did Find

Russian interference: Russia interfered "in sweeping and systematic fashion" to help Trump and hurt Clinton, via hacking/DNC emails released through WikiLeaks and a social media disinformation campaign.

Links and contacts: The investigation "established" "numerous links" between the Trump Campaign (or associates) and individuals tied to the Russian government. It documented the campaign's interest in, and expectation of benefit from, information stolen by Russia. Examples include the Trump Tower meeting (offering dirt on Clinton as "part of Russia and its government’s support for Mr. Trump"), Paul Manafort sharing polling data, and outreach involving WikiLeaks. The campaign "welcomed" the potential help in multiple instances.


More innuendo. No evidence of collusion.

Quote

No prosecutable conspiracy: Despite these interactions and "multiple offers" of assistance from Russian-affiliated individuals, the evidence did not meet the threshold to charge any Trump Campaign member with conspiracy under federal law. No such charges were brought against campaign officials for coordinating with the Russian government.

In a public statement after the report's release, Mueller reinforced: the investigation found "insufficient evidence to charge a broader conspiracy."



Mueller wants us to believe something he lacks proof of.

Quote

Why the Distinction Matters

Saying "no evidence" would imply the probe found zero indications of any relevant contacts or interactions—which the report explicitly did not conclude (it detailed many).

"Did not establish" is prosecutorial language: the facts uncovered, even with incomplete evidence in some areas (e.g., deleted messages, false testimony, non-cooperating witnesses), were not enough for criminal charges.

This nuance led to debates over summaries and media framing. Attorney General Barr's initial letter quoted the "did not establish" line but also used broader phrasing like "did not find" conspiracy/coordination. The full report is more precise and avoids claiming total absence of evidence.

In summary: The Mueller Report did not claim "no evidence" of conspiracy. It concluded the investigation did not establish (i.e., prove) a criminal conspiracy or coordination, while documenting Russian efforts to assist Trump and the campaign's receptive stance toward them. The bottom-line outcome—no charges for conspiracy with Russia—has been consistent across the report, Barr's summary, and Mueller's own statements.



Bottom line: Mueller had no proof of conclusion. To suggest there was collusion in lieu of credible evidence is reprehensible misconduct.

Quote

The Steele Dossier?

You mean the one whose main source (of unfalsifiable "intel") was a probable KGB agent by the name of Igor Danchenko, whom John Durham rightfully prosecuted, but for the wrong reasons?

Politics is dirty, Corbett.

Especially when one candidate (Trump) has the backing of Putin's professional trolls and the KGB/GRU because the Kremlin knows he'll do a darn good job of destroying America and NATO.

So you excuse misconduct by the Clinton campaign and then feign outrage over alleged, unproven allegations about the Trump campaign. Typical leftist double standard.
4
A lot of mumbo-jumbo to say that while they found no evidence the Trump campaign had conspired with Russians, they wanted to suggest that they had. I'm not interested in what they thought. I care about what they knew and that was that there was no evidence of collusion between the Trump campaign and the Russians to influence the election.

No evidence?

ME: Did the Mueller Report say the investigation found no evidence of conspiracy?

GROK: No, the Mueller Report did not say the investigation found "no evidence" of conspiracy (or coordination) between the Trump Campaign and Russia.

Exact Wording from the Report:

The key conclusion in Volume I (Executive Summary and main findings) states, "the investigation did not establish that members of the Trump Campaign conspired or coordinated with the Russian government in its election interference activities."

This phrasing—"did not establish"—is the report's consistent legal language. It means the evidence gathered was insufficient to prove a criminal conspiracy (or the narrower definition of "coordination" as an agreement—tacit or express—between the campaign and the Russian government on election interference) beyond a reasonable doubt, to the standard required for criminal charges.

Mueller's team explicitly noted the distinction:  "A statement that the investigation did not establish particular facts does not mean there was no evidence of those facts."

What the Report Did Find

Russian interference: Russia interfered "in sweeping and systematic fashion" to help Trump and hurt Clinton, via hacking/DNC emails released through WikiLeaks and a social media disinformation campaign.

Links and contacts: The investigation "established" "numerous links" between the Trump Campaign (or associates) and individuals tied to the Russian government. It documented the campaign's interest in, and expectation of benefit from, information stolen by Russia. Examples include the Trump Tower meeting (offering dirt on Clinton as "part of Russia and its government’s support for Mr. Trump"), Paul Manafort sharing polling data, and outreach involving WikiLeaks. The campaign "welcomed" the potential help in multiple instances.

No prosecutable conspiracy: Despite these interactions and "multiple offers" of assistance from Russian-affiliated individuals, the evidence did not meet the threshold to charge any Trump Campaign member with conspiracy under federal law. No such charges were brought against campaign officials for coordinating with the Russian government.

In a public statement after the report's release, Mueller reinforced: the investigation found "insufficient evidence to charge a broader conspiracy."

Why the Distinction Matters

Saying "no evidence" would imply the probe found zero indications of any relevant contacts or interactions—which the report explicitly did not conclude (it detailed many).

"Did not establish" is prosecutorial language: the facts uncovered, even with incomplete evidence in some areas (e.g., deleted messages, false testimony, non-cooperating witnesses), were not enough for criminal charges.

This nuance led to debates over summaries and media framing. Attorney General Barr's initial letter quoted the "did not establish" line but also used broader phrasing like "did not find" conspiracy/coordination. The full report is more precise and avoids claiming total absence of evidence.

In summary: The Mueller Report did not claim "no evidence" of conspiracy. It concluded the investigation did not establish (i.e., prove) a criminal conspiracy or coordination, while documenting Russian efforts to assist Trump and the campaign's receptive stance toward them. The bottom-line outcome—no charges for conspiracy with Russia—has been consistent across the report, Barr's summary, and Mueller's own statements.

Quote
Let's talk about the Clinton campaign and their funding of the phony Steele Dossier.

The Steele Dossier?

You mean the one whose main source (of unfalsifiable "intel") was a probable KGB agent by the name of Igor Danchenko, whom John Durham rightfully prosecuted, but for the wrong reasons?

Politics is dirty, Corbett.

Especially when one candidate (Trump) has the backing of Putin's professional trolls and the KGB/GRU because the Kremlin knows he'll do a darn good job of destroying America and NATO.

5
Your position is completely illogical, which is also typical for conspiracy hobbyists. The fact that the officer in question cannot be positively identified is not proof that it was not a DPD officer. Absence of proof is not proof of absence. If we accept your "proof" that it is not Officer Haygood, that in no way proves it is not a DPD officer. The rest of your thought process completely escapes me. I see no semblance of logical thinking in your conclusion that "1 +1 = conspiracy". You continue to assert things you are unable to prove.

Do not misconstrue my comments that I have accepted your premise that the Officer in question is NOT Officer Haygood. From my perspective, it might or might not be Haygood. I don't have proof positive one way or another although if I were to place a bet on this issue, i would bet it is Officer Haygood and your argument that it is not is as illogical as all your other conclusions. Conspiracy hobbyists tend to gravitate toward their preconceived belief of a conspiracy. Their line of thinking goes something like this:

If A is true, B must be true.

If B is true, C must be true.

If C is true, there must have been a conspiracy.

They arbitrarily dismiss other plausible explanations of B and do the same with other plausible explanations for C. That doesn't make for a very compelling argument.

    How about separating yourself from the rank-n-file and expanding your currently limited JFK Assassination knowledge?  If you look at Haygood's WC Testimony, his description of what he did inside the railroad yard do Not come close to matching what we see that Counterfeit Motorcycle Cop doing on the Darnell Film. After that, take a look at the Cancellare Photo of Haygood standing atop the Triple Underpass. This pic was snapped Before Haygood jumped down into the railroad yard. Haygood is clearly wearing 2 gloves in that photo. When we 1st see the Counterfeit Cop on the Darnell Film, he is wearing only 1 Glove. The distance between the top of the triple underpass and where we see the counterfeit cop for the very 1st time is only about 40 yds. About the same distance as from a MLB Home Plate to 2nd Base. What would cause Haygood to remove 1 glove over the course of that extremely limited distance? Nothing would. We are seeing 2 different people in the Cancellare Photo and the Darnell Film. And when you get done reading the Haygood WC testimony, take a look at Tague's WC Testimony. He had a very good view of Haygood from the point of his dumping his motorcycle at the Elm St. curb, to Haygood returning back to his motorcycle. Again, do the research. Raise your bar.   
6
  Please stop with all the cops here, there, and everywhere. Everybody and Anybody with even a somewhat limited knowledge of the JFK Assassination KNOWS that Officer Haygood was the only MOTORCYCLE, (White Helmet), Cop back inside the rail road yard immediately after the kill shot. This is and never has been in dispute. Now, if you want to ID this alleged Motorcycle Cop that is filmed at the same time as Walthers, Roger Craig, and Harkness back inside the rail road yard, I would seriously be very interested in seeing a Name attached to this alleged motorcycle cop. This is why I consistently ask, "where is his motorcycle"? He has no motorcycle. Why? Because he is an impostor.

If only that was true. Then you would actually have a point to make, but it isn't so you do not. There were all types of cops present in Dealey Plaza, which is really unfortunate for this off-the-wall theory.

In two years of your advanced research skills, you would have thought you would have taken the time to read what DPD Harkness had to report. DPD Harkness is the one person whose testimony you should have paid the most attention to. DPD Harkness was in charge of a number of Motorcycle cops from the Airport to Dealey Plaza. He establishes the fact that motorcycle cops were present in many locations and especially were already behind the TSBD as he asked for additional personnel. 

Thinking DPD Haygood was the only motorcycle cop in Dealey Plaza is delusional based on the desire to make some kind of bizarre contribution to the JFKA. 

How about loose the conspiracy desperation and familiarize yourself with the people who were there. When you read their testimonies, an entirely different picture emerges than the one you are promoting.

So as not to confuse, I will just post the basic info that shows there were cops of all types all over the area. Basing anything on an isolated picture and declaring that it represents the whole of event is ridiculous.

Mr. HARKNESS - Supervising the traffic officers from Main and Field along the parade route to Elm and Houston

Mr. BELIN - Had the building been sealed off at that time?
Mr. HARKNESS - Not to my knowledge. There were several officers around it, but I don't know whether it had been sealed off or not.

Mr. WALTHERS. And at that time I heard the shots as well as everybody else, but as we got over this fence, and a lot of officers and people were just rummaging through the train yards back in this parking area.
7
You've read the "Cliff Notes" summary of "their" findings?

Are you referring to William Barr's four-page "summary" or his specious twenty-page memo to Trump?

Wikipedia's article on the Mueller Report?

Have you read it?

Here's an excerpt. I know you agree with the first sentence up to the [4] [5] & [6] footnotes, but what about the rest of the paragraph?

While the report concludes that the investigation "did not establish that members of the Trump campaign conspired or coordinated with the Russian government in its election interference activities,"[4][5][6] investigators had an incomplete picture of what happened due in part to some communications that were encrypted, deleted, or not saved, as well as testimony that was false, incomplete, or declined.[7][8][9] The report states that Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election was illegal and occurred "in sweeping and systematic fashion,"[10][11][12] and was welcomed by the Trump campaign as it expected to benefit from such efforts.[13][14][15] It also identifies multiple links between the Trump campaign and Russian officials,[16] about which several persons connected to the campaign made false statements and obstructed investigations.[4] Mueller later stated that his investigation's findings of Russian interference "deserves the attention of every American."[17]

A lot of mumbo-jumbo to say that while they found no evidence the Trump campaign had conspired with Russians, they wanted to suggest that they had. I'm not interested in what they thought. I care about what they knew and that was that there was no evidence of collusion between the Trump campaign and the Russians to influence the election.

But as long as we are dealing in innuendos, let's talk about the Clinton campaign and their funding of the phony Steele Dossier, which they laundered through the Perkins Coie law firm and Fusion GPS. This gave the Clinton campaign plausible deniability that they had directly funded the Steele Dosier. Still, the FEC fined the Clinton campaign $8000 for that piece of deception (BS) and the DNC $105,000. Do you condemn that or is your outrage selective.
8
JC-

My layman's take:

This is an image of JBC at Z-222 (see link below), JBC is sitting straight and upright, looks uninjured to me. You can see Jackie K. is looking with concern towards JFK. The President has already been shot. But JBC looks unharmed.

JBC may, or may not look alarmed (your call good as any) in the next few frames, but at this point he has heard the gunshot. I think he looks alarmed, startled, has sense of an impact behind him.

https://assassinationresearch.com/zfilm/z222.jpg

OK, here we have the left profile of JBC's face (see link below), as he had turned around to look for JFK, after hearing the gunshot. That is what he testified. No sign of blood on JBC. This about 2.8 seconds after JFK has been shot.

JBC never testified to having been spun around by the shot that struck him. He testified that under his own power he turned around.

https://assassinationresearch.com/zfilm/z271.jpg

~Z-295 this is where I think JBC is shot. Hard to tell, as his torso is below the door, out of view.

https://assassinationresearch.com/zfilm/z295.jpg

Here JBC looks possibly to be pain:

https://assassinationresearch.com/zfilm/z298.jpg

More pain:

https://assassinationresearch.com/zfilm/z305.jpg

JBC is registering pain at Z-305, but that is 4.6 seconds after JFK was struck at Z-222.

JFK registered pain almost immediately during-after Z-222, as seen by Jackie K's reaction. Granted, not all people are alike...but seems like stretch that JBC would have such a delayed reaction.

If you read through Dr Shaw's WC and HSCA testimonies, you will see he is skeptical that one shot struck both JBC and JFK, and also wonders aloud where the shot that struck JBC's wrist came from.

Anyways, that my view.

Caveat emptor, and draw your own conclusions.

How can you possibly determine a look of concern on Jackies face from that distance, low resolution of the film, and JBC's head is directly between Jackie's face and Zapruder's camera. As for Connally, I believe Z222 is about the time the bullet struck him. It could have been a split second before, or a split second after but there is no reason to believe his reaction would be instantaneous with the strike. In fact his first visible reaction is the sudden upward motion of his right arm at Z226, the same frame JFK's arms started moving upward.

I agree that JBC had heard the earlier shot but I don't base that on the look on his face which is impossible to discern given the distance and resolution of the camera. What we can determine is that he had turned to his right upon hearing the first shot. We see him start that rightward turn of his torso at Z164. He is not reacting to the sound of the second shot because he would not have heard that by Z222. The muzzle velocity of the Carcano bullet was roughly twice the speed of sound so the bullet would have hit him before the sound reached him which is probably why he doesn't remember hearing the bullet that hit him.

JBC's testimony was that he turned in reaction to the first shot and did NOT see JFK following that first turn. He could only have seen him after he was hit by the second shot which we see in Z271. You are conflating what JBC said about his reaction to the first shot with what he did following the second shot.

Z295 is where you really go off the rails. How could JBC have been shot in the back at that frame. The shot would have had to come from the south side of Elm St. and gone through Nellie Connally first.

Not surprising JBC would be in pain at Z298 since he had been shot about 4 seconds earlier although you couldn't judge that by the look on his face becase again the resolution is too poor to determine the look on anybody's face.

Yes, BOTH men had been hit about 4.5 seconds before Z305. Actually, by my calculations i's 4.6 but let's not quibble. Both men were hit about Z222 and both had been showing obvious signs of distress during that entire time frame..

How could Shaw offer any kind of informed opinion about whether the two men had been hit by one bullet or two. He only saw JBC's wounds. How could he determine whether or not the bullet that hit him had struck JFK first. ER surgeons are trained to patch up victims of gunshot wounds, not determine how their wounds were caused. That requires the expertise of a forensic medical examiner.

If I were you, I would seriously reconsider my view of what happened to JBC and when.
9
You keep insisting I disagreed with the Mueller report. I have already stated and didn't disagree with their finding that there was no evidence the Trump campaign conspired with the Russians to influence the 2016 election. If Mueller found no such evidence, why should I believe there is such evidence. I did state that congressional committees are not infallible, and pointed to the HSCA of a probable conspiracy to assassinate JFK as one example of that. I was making a general observation about congressional committees and you read far more into that than you should have.

I have not read the full Mueller report and if I did I might or might not find things I disagree with. I have read the Cliff Notes summary of their findings. They found evidence that the Russians had worked to influence the outcome of our elections. I would be amazed if they hadn't since they had always done that in the past. In 2016 they had more tools in their toolbox due to the prevalence of social media, especially among younger voters. The Mueller report also found no evidence that Trump campaign had conspired with the Russians to influence the outcome. Of course, the Trump campaign was trying to influence the election. That's what campaigns are all about. There is no evidence the Trump campaign was working with the Russians and Mueller's report stated so.

Now tell us where I have said I disagree with the Mueller Report or the Senate investigating committee.

You've read the "Cliff Notes" summary of "their" findings?

Are you referring to William Barr's four-page "summary" or his specious twenty-page memo to Trump?

Wikipedia's article on the Mueller Report?

Have you read it?

Here's an excerpt. I know you agree with the first sentence up to the [4] [5] & [6] footnotes, but what about the rest of the paragraph?

While the report concludes that the investigation "did not establish that members of the Trump campaign conspired or coordinated with the Russian government in its election interference activities,"[4][5][6] investigators had an incomplete picture of what happened due in part to some communications that were encrypted, deleted, or not saved, as well as testimony that was false, incomplete, or declined.[7][8][9] The report states that Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election was illegal and occurred "in sweeping and systematic fashion,"[10][11][12] and was welcomed by the Trump campaign as it expected to benefit from such efforts.[13][14][15] It also identifies multiple links between the Trump campaign and Russian officials,[16] about which several persons connected to the campaign made false statements and obstructed investigations.[4] Mueller later stated that his investigation's findings of Russian interference "deserves the attention of every American."[17]


10
JC-

My layman's take:

This is an image of JBC at Z-222 (see link below), JBC is sitting straight and upright, looks uninjured to me. You can see Jackie K. is looking with concern towards JFK. The President has already been shot. But JBC looks unharmed.

JBC may, or may not look alarmed (your call good as any) in the next few frames, but at this point he has heard the gunshot. I think he looks alarmed, startled, has sense of an impact behind him.

https://assassinationresearch.com/zfilm/z222.jpg

OK, here we have the left profile of JBC's face (see link below), as he had turned around to look for JFK, after hearing the gunshot. That is what he testified. No sign of blood on JBC. This about 2.8 seconds after JFK has been shot.

JBC never testified to having been spun around by the shot that struck him. He testified that under his own power he turned around.

https://assassinationresearch.com/zfilm/z271.jpg

~Z-295 this is where I think JBC is shot. Hard to tell, as his torso is below the door, out of view.

https://assassinationresearch.com/zfilm/z295.jpg

Here JBC looks possibly to be pain:

https://assassinationresearch.com/zfilm/z298.jpg

More pain:

https://assassinationresearch.com/zfilm/z305.jpg

JBC is registering pain at Z-305, but that is 4.6 seconds after JFK was struck at Z-222.

JFK registered pain almost immediately during-after Z-222, as seen by Jackie K's reaction. Granted, not all people are alike...but seems like stretch that JBC would have such a delayed reaction.

If you read through Dr Shaw's WC and HSCA testimonies, you will see he is skeptical that one shot struck both JBC and JFK, and also wonders aloud where the shot that struck JBC's wrist came from.

Anyways, that my view.

Caveat emptor, and draw your own conclusions.












Pages: [1] 2 3 ... 10