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1
It's the best I need in this case.
Yes I did. I noticed Sitzman was behind Zapruder.
So you think sound only travels in a vector?
Oh, goody. Another version of what happened from an ear witness. Just how many different ways do you think the JFKA happened?
Eye and earwitness accounts don't prove anything unless you can prove the witness' account is accurate. I trust people's observed reactions far more than I trust their recollections. The Newmans, who were not far from Zapruder reacted by pushing their kids on the ground and shielding them with their bodies.
You're so gullible you think one witness undermines a wealth of evidence which is contrary to their account. I always get a chuckle when somebody starts and argument with, "So-and-so said....." as if what so-and-so said. People choose to believe the witnesses who support what they want to believe. Because there are so many differing versions of what happened, it's not hard to find a witness who will support your argument. I don't accept any witness' account that can't be corroborated through other evidence. We have visual evidence that Zapruder's camera shook noticeably 7-8 frames after the second shot was fired and 7-8 frames after the third shot was fired. Is that just a coincidence? It would have taken about 4 frames for the sound of the muzzle blast to reach Zapruder's ears which leaves another 3-4 frames for a startle reaction, about what that should take.
That is one of the dumbest things I have read on this forum. It is silly to think the sound of the muzzle blast would have dissipated in just 90 yard. You want to be all your eggs in the Sitzman basket as if her account is the definitive story of the JFKA. Foolish.
Funny how his vertigo only kicked in 7-8 frames after the second and third shots.
As expected, a witness gives evidence undermining your naive understanding of this issue and she is totally dismissed.
This is no great shock.
Your post is full of the usual lunacy but this cannot be ignored:

You're so gullible you think one witness undermines a wealth of evidence which is contrary to their account.

The issue at hand is whether or not the sound of the shots were loud enough to startle Zapruder at his location and create 'jiggle' in the Z-film.
My approach has been to take the witness testimony of someone stood right next to Zapruder. This witness reports the sound of the shots was "far off" and a "far away sound". They were certainly not enough to create 'jiggle' in the film.
The distant nature of this sound might explain why neither Zapruder or Sitzman could confidently recall how many shots they heard.
This is evidence directly contradicting the reliability of Jiggle Analysis regarding the Z-film.
However, you insist there is a "wealth of evidence" countering Sitzman's testimony. This is utter nonsense. It's a falsehood. An untruth.
There is not a single scrap of evidence that the shots were loud enough to create a startle reflex at Zapruder's location - not a single scrap!

The problem is your delusion - you believe you are right no matter what. You believe this "wealth of evidence" must exist because you sooo believe you are right
But it does not.
There is not a chance in hell that you will retract the falsehood you have posted, which will make it a deliberate falsehood - a lie.

Please provide this "wealth of evidence" that the sound of the shots was loud enough to create a startle reflex from at Zapruder's position.

2
Official time of death is not always stated precisely as evidenced by JFK's official time of death as 1:00pm CST. The priests who entered the ER to administer the last rights before that time said he was already covered with a sheet when the last rights were administered to the body.

The only reason that I know of why a precise time of death might be important is the provisions of some wills. As executor of my father's will, I know there was a provision that excluded the named heirs in the event they preceded him in death. It also stated that if the order of their deaths could not be determined, it was to be presumed they preceded him in death. I think it would be highly unusual that such a provision would come into play. Perhaps if the people question were both killed in a car or plane crash and both were declared dead at the scene. Hard to say from just a few examples but it looks to me like it might be a common practice to round off the time of death to the nearest 15 minute time frame.

Typically in wills we say "If my beloved but ne'er-do-well son Filbert does not survive me by 120 hours, then his share shall pass to my lovely but morally bankrupt daughter Gwendolyn" or something to that effect, which makes the exact time of death less critical. Some wills specify much longer periods - even up to a year. Almost all states have the Uniform Simultaneous Death Act whereby "if the devolution of property or donative provision in a governing instrument depends on one individual surviving another, and it cannot be established by clear and convincing evidence that the individual survived by 120 hours, such individual will be considered predeceased." It would be rare that the 120 hours would come down to the exact minute, but I suppose it could happen. That will be $342, please.
3
Say what you will about Harvey and Lee, the John Armstrong Collection at Baylor is a goldmine. The snippet I posted above is actually a transcript of an interview with Methodist Hospital ER nurse Lottie Thompson conducted by Earl Holz of the Dallas Morning News. The full transcript is here:

https://digitalcollections-baylor.quartexcollections.com/Documents/Detail/tippitt-shooting-nov.-22-1963-d.o.a.-at-methodist-hospital/690058?item=690059

4
Does anyone know who the interviewer that keeps interrupting Tom Alyea with all kinds of questions? That’s so annoying when they won’t let the interviewee say much of anything before they interrupt again and again…
5
Official time of death is not always stated precisely as evidenced by JFK's official time of death as 1:00pm CST. The priests who entered the ER to administer the last rights before that time said he was already covered with a sheet when the last rights were administered to the body.

The only reason that I know of why a precise time of death might be important is the provisions of some wills. As executor of my father's will, I know there was a provision that excluded the named heirs in the event they preceded him in death. It also stated that if the order of their deaths could not be determined, it was to be presumed they preceded him in death. I think it would be highly unusual that such a provision would come into play. Perhaps if the people question were both killed in a car or plane crash and both were declared dead at the scene. Hard to say from just a few examples but it looks to me like it might be a common practice to round off the time of death to the nearest 15 minute time frame.

Official time of death is not always stated precisely

That's probably true, but it doesn't mean that the official time is always wrong.

6
I found on Facebook this snip of the supposed HSCA interview or testimony of Methodist Hospital nurse Thompson (Lotti or Lottie). I'm mystified as to why I can't seem to locate the document itself.

7
Official time of death is not always stated precisely as evidenced by JFK's official time of death as 1:00pm CST. The priests who entered the ER to administer the last rights before that time said he was already covered with a sheet when the last rights were administered to the body.

The only reason that I know of why a precise time of death might be important is the provisions of some wills. As executor of my father's will, I know there was a provision that excluded the named heirs in the event they preceded him in death. It also stated that if the order of their deaths could not be determined, it was to be presumed they preceded him in death. I think it would be highly unusual that such a provision would come into play. Perhaps if the people question were both killed in a car or plane crash and both were declared dead at the scene. Hard to say from just a few examples but it looks to me like it might be a common practice to round off the time of death to the nearest 15 minute time frame.
8
FWIW: DVP's site has this explanation of the time discrepancy from Dale Myers:

https://jfk-archives.blogspot.com/2010/06/tippit-timelines.html

Due to the inaccuracy of the clocks at Methodist Hospital, there clearly was a time discrepancy. I had seen an interview (or perhaps testimony) with a Methodist Hospital nurse who explained the problem and the FBI's efforts to clarify with Dr. Moellenhoff - but now, naturally, I can't find it. Is this the "pestering" you're referring to? I suppose I can see the FBI trying to nail down a reasonably accurate timeline for exactly the reasons being discussed here. Someone probably saw the 1:15 on the Authorized Permit for Autopsy Form and said "That can't be right" (in terms of a death determination at the hospital). Since Tippit was taken to the ER, there presumably did have to be an official determination that "He's gone," but it sounds like that was sometime between 1:15 and 1:30.

Well then, I have a problem with 4 official documents 2 from the FBI and 2 from DPD - All related to time of death.
Each one is blotched and corrected at the ten minute place mark of time.
https://jfk.boards.net/post/57/thread

Yet, there is this time line ignored:
Helen Markham saw the time when she left Washateria as 1:04p
At 417 E Tenth St. (told to Barry Ernst) -  Mrs. Margie Higgin's, mantle clock at the time of the shooting and a news check on her television as 1:06p
TF Bowley's watch at the time he arrived at the scene as 1:10p

I'm old enough to remember windup watches. It is ridiculous to think nobody knows what time it is.
Except that Tippit was shot at 1:15pm +/-
9
Why is the precise time of death the least bit irrelevant to the question of who shot Tippit?
Your attitude toward everything JFKA-related seems to be little more than "Oswald shot JFKA and there's nothing else to talk about" and "Oswald shot Tippit and there's nothing else to talk about." It's not just the proverbial 30,000-foot level, but more like the 120,000-foot level. Yet here you are, day after day, defending your particular version of the LN narrative with a zeal the Jehovah's Witnesses would envy. "There's nothing to talk about" - but you manage to talk about it pretty much all day every day.

The fact is, it seems to me pretty obvious that Oswald shot Tippit. As with all things JFKA-related, however, there are an almost supernatural number of quirks and discrepancies - an extremely tight timeline, odd behavior by Tippit, conflicting witness accounts, yada yada. Greg Doudna has spent a great deal of time on a scenario, which other CTers of reasonably high quality agree with, that doesn't have Oswald shooting Tippit at all. It sounds wildly implausible to me, but at least it suggests there is something worth talking about. The "precise time" at which several things occurred is pretty critical if it potentially pushes the encounter to a time impossible for Oswald to have been there.

To me, it's at least interesting at the level of trying to assess whether there is any "there" there. That's why I'm also interested in the "why" questions that you find irrelevant: Why did Tippit stop Oswald, if that's what occurred? Why did Tippit get out of his car? Why did Oswald shoot him, if that's what occurred? If the most plausible answer to those "why" questions is something other than the standard LN narrative, then where might that lead?

If one just wants to keep parroting the JFKA equivalent of "The Bible is true and you're going to hell," then I don't see the point.
10
FWIW: DVP's site has this explanation of the time discrepancy from Dale Myers:

https://jfk-archives.blogspot.com/2010/06/tippit-timelines.html

Due to the inaccuracy of the clocks at Methodist Hospital, there clearly was a time discrepancy. I had seen an interview (or perhaps testimony) with a Methodist Hospital nurse who explained the problem and the FBI's efforts to clarify with Dr. Moellenhoff - but now, naturally, I can't find it. Is this the "pestering" you're referring to? I suppose I can see the FBI trying to nail down a reasonably accurate timeline for exactly the reasons being discussed here. Someone probably saw the 1:15 on the Authorized Permit for Autopsy Form and said "That can't be right" (in terms of a death determination at the hospital). Since Tippit was taken to the ER, there presumably did have to be an official determination that "He's gone," but it sounds like that was sometime between 1:15 and 1:30.

Due to the inaccuracy of the clocks at Methodist Hospital, there clearly was a time discrepancy.

Who determined there was an inaccuracy of the clocks?

I had seen an interview (or perhaps testimony) with a Methodist Hospital nurse who explained the problem and the FBI's efforts to clarify with Dr. Moellenhoff - but now, naturally, I can't find it. Is this the "pestering" you're referring to?

I have seen that interview but, as far as I remember, she doesn't mention the "FBI's efforts to clarify with Dr. Moellenhoff." She does say that the FBI kept on calling staff members, so yes, that's the pestering I refered to.

But even if they only contacted Dr. Moellenhoff, just what would be the reason for that? A FD 302 dated November 29, 1963 written by FBI agent C. Lish shows they had already contacted Dr Liguori.

I suppose I can see the FBI trying to nail down a reasonably accurate timeline for exactly the reasons being discussed here.

Ok, but that's not what they did. Instead they muddied the waters by giving a different time in the FD 302 then what the original time confirmed by Davenport was. Even worse, on the FD 302 the time was obviously altered after the fact.

Someone probably saw the 1:15 on the Authorized Permit for Autopsy Form and said "That can't be right" (in terms of a death determination at the hospital).

That's pure speculation. It doesn't match what the nurse said in the interview. According to her it was the FBI who kept asking if the DOA time was correct. How would the FBI even know what the DOA time was and why would they care?

The Authorized Permit for Autospy was only send to Dr. J.M. Pickard. County Health Officer, District Attorney Henry Wade and Captain Fritz. None of these people were present when Tippit was declared DOA and would have no reason to doubt the veracity of the time, unless of course they understood that the time didn't fit with the desired narrative.

Since Tippit was taken to the ER, there presumably did have to be an official determination that "He's gone," but it sounds like that was sometime between 1:15 and 1:30.

More speculation! Davenport, who followed the ambulance, stated that when the ambulance arrived at the hospital the doctors tried to revive Tippit before declaring him DOA at 1:15 PM

There is nothing that could justify a time between 1:15 and 1:30. The attempt to revive Tippit could in fact point to an arrival time of the ambulance before 1:15 PM
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