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