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11
Not only did the Secret Service miss this early shot, so did everyone else standing in Dealey Plaza. Maybe that should be a clue.

Speaking off the top of my head here, but as I recall several of the women along Elm near the Stemmons sign were consistent in saying that the first shot occurred when JFK was pretty much right in front of them. I was impressed by how many times this leaped out of the FBI statements when I was looking into the Gloria Calvery issue. Isn't that pretty close to where most three-shot fans think the second shot occurred? I don't have Phantom Shot handy at the moment to see how this is dealt with there.
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Some did. Some didn't. JBC heard the first shot and recognized it for it was. So did Agent Bennett. Strictly speaking, neither of these men were "standing in Dealey Plaza" but it shows that others likely heard what they did. I'm not going to go look up what the various witnesses had to say about what they heard. I do know that some of them said they thought the first sound was fireworks or a motorcycle backfire. I don't pretend to know why some people recognized the first sound as a gunshot and some didn't. It's clear that was the case.

No. JBC did not think it was a miss. Bennet is a two shot witness.
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Earl Warren was correct in that the WCR stood on its own and has for almost 62 years. The fact that many people don't accept it is an indictment of them, not the WCR.

Warren was also correct in that they laid out all the evidence they had collected in the 26 volumes. Many of the eyewitness accounts were contradictory and the WC did what they could to resolve those conflicts. In so doing, they gave very logical reasons why they accepted one person's account and not another's. When they were unable to resolve the conflicts, they said so and gave their reasons why. That is why they could never say for certain which of Oswald's 3 shots was the miss which also prevented them from determining how long it took him to fire all three shots.
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Not only did the Secret Service miss this early shot, so did everyone else standing in Dealey Plaza. Maybe that should be a clue.

Some did. Some didn't. JBC heard the first shot and recognized it for it was. So did Agent Bennett. Strictly speaking, neither of these men were "standing in Dealey Plaza" but it shows that others likely heard what they did. I'm not going to go look up what the various witnesses had to say about what they heard. I do know that some of them said they thought the first sound was fireworks or a motorcycle backfire. I don't pretend to know why some people recognized the first sound as a gunshot and some didn't. It's clear that was the case.
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  The above, "shoulda woulda" scenario is comically uninformed. SA Clint Hill was SPECIFICALLY Assigned to protect Jackie Kennedy. Why do you think he was climbing onto the Limo Trunk DIRECTLY behind Jackie Kennedy?

Because that was the closest hand hold.
Quote

Clint Hill was hitting the "hard stuff" the night previous. Other SS Agents were too. Personally, I believe what you are labeling as a "slow response time", is what Joe 6 Pack calls a "hang over". The SS is held to an exceptionally high standard. Those numerous SS Agents downing the "Who Hit John" the night before, failed miserably at even coming close to this high bar.

No evdence the agents were hungover. That is speculation but that is SOP for you.

16
Apparently, the Secret Service agents did not recognize the first sound as being a gunshot. We can speculate why that was but it's possible the roar of the motorcycles accelerating out of the sharp turn onto Elm St. partially muted the sound of the first shot. Clint Hill only remembered hearing 2 shots which tell me he either didn't hear the first shot or could not identify it as a gunshot. When he heard the second shot and saw JFK raise his arms up to his throat level, he started to race toward the limo. Altgens 6 shows us he did not take off until about two seconds after JFK was hit. That seems like a rather slow response time, but it's not surprising he would take that long to figure out what was happening. The photo also shows us the two agents on the other side of the limo were still looking back at the TSBD. Neither of them ever made a move toward the limo even after JFK was shot.

So, yes, the Secret Service response time was slow. I'm sure the agents were trained on what to do in various scenarios, but nothing can prepare one for the actual event when it happens suddenly and unexpectedly. Had the agents immediately recognized what was happening when the first shot was fired and started racing toward the limo immediately, they might have got there in time to prevent the 3rd shot from killing JFK. Had he only been hit in the upper torso, that would have been a serious wound, but he likely would have survived. For many years after the assassination, Clint Hill felt guilty that he did not react sooner than he did. I've always wondered whether the other agents on the running boards had the same feelings of guilt.

Not only did the Secret Service miss this early shot, so did everyone else standing in Dealey Plaza. Maybe that should be a clue.
17
One of the oddest decisions by Warren, one that indicated that someone was directing him, was his order for the WC to not interview Sylvia Duran, the Cuban secretary who met Oswald in Mexico City when he sought a transit visa. According to the two WC staffers who were assigned the Mexico City question, David Slawson and William Coleman, they went to great lengths to arrange an interview. Slawson said that some figures in the CIA (Ray Rocca) actively helped them find Duran and to arrange a meeting. After lengthy negotiations with Duran's lawyer, they finally had something set up to present to Warren. But Warren was, according to Slawson, adamant about not allowing it. Note: Duran would testify to the HSCA.

From the Shenon book:

   
18
Here is the full quote from the Cray book about the alleged conversation.



And this:



Question: If the claim is that WC was ordered not to look into any Soviet involvement why did Warren say there was great pressure to show there was no Soviet involvement? Wouldn't he say we were told not to look for any? Here he is saying something different; they were pressured to show - not hide - any Soviet involvement.

Full book is here: https://archive.org/details/chiefjusticebiog0000cray/page/428/mode/2up

Thanks for that, Steve. Like the infamous Katzenbach "convince the public" memo, I think you can look at the language in various ways, Cui bono? pointed so obviously to the Soviets (in light of Oswald's background) that I think it would have been unrealistic to say "Don't look into it." I take what Warren was saying by "show" was "Look into it but make sure you conclude there was no Soviet involvement."

John’s posts got me sounding like I think LBJ was involved in the JFKA, whereas my first post hopefully makes clear that I think precisely the opposite was the case.

One of the truly fascinating things about the JFKA is that (1) the LN narrative says a mixed-up nobody had a brain fart and killed JFK for no clear reason, but (2) so many, many powerful individuals and groups hated JFK for diverse reasons and stood to benefit from his death that Cui bono? points all over the map and it’s almost impossible to believe none of them had any involvement. Ya gotta love it.

Speculation about LBJ began immediately, which is precisely why the WC was under “great pressure” to exonerate him. They did so only half-assedly, by concluding Oswald acted alone.

This all reminded me of a fascinating little book I wasn’t aware of until perhaps three years ago, when I stumbled upon a 2005 thread at the Ed Forum in which John Simkin mentioned it as having possibly solved the JFKA before the WR was even issued. See https://educationforum.ipbhost.com/topic/2846-thomas-buchanan-did-he-solve-the-jfk-case/#comment-18261. Simkin’s first post is well worth reading, especially for the curious way the book came about (involving the author being contacted by a concerned staffer at the WC, who put him in touch with Ted Kennedy, who put him in touch with Nicholas Katzenbach).

The book is Who Killed Kennedy? by Thomas G. Buchanan. It was published in Europe in May 1964 – first having been serialized in a French newspaper the previous month – and later published in a revised version in the U.S. Because I’m fussy, I tracked down the European original on Advanced Book Exchange.

Buchanan was no wacko. He was a respected journalist, novelist, and civil rights advocate who was blacklisted after joining the Communist Party. https://thomasgbuchanan.com/biography/ Indeed, CIA Director John McCone encouraged Earl Warren to take a close look at Who Killed Kennedy? and deal with the claims. Warren suggested having Buchanan testify, which McCone discouraged because it would obviously give Buchanan a wider forum for his claims.

Who Killed Kennedy? was, of necessity, highly speculative and demonstrably incorrect in some details. The basic thesis is that JFK was killed by ultra-rightwing Texas oil millionaires who were incensed by JFK’s plan to eliminate their fantastically profitable oil-depletion allowance. The book is Texas, Texas, Texas. What’s interesting is that Buchanan realizes his thesis logically implicates LBJ but pointedly doesn’t “go there,” at least by name. As I recall, he posits a mastermind called Mr. X who is pretty clearly LBJ.

Oh, yes, plenty of people were focusing on LBJ early on. That’s my only point. If you haven’t read it, Who Killed Kennedy? in its European version is fascinating as one of the earliest (pre-WR) conspiracy tomes and one that is still highly regarded. Here's the European version, readily available at Advanced Book Exchange. The U.S. edition is on Amazon, but it's quite different.

19
  The above, "shoulda woulda" scenario is comically uninformed. SA Clint Hill was SPECIFICALLY Assigned to protect Jackie Kennedy. Why do you think he was climbing onto the Limo Trunk DIRECTLY behind Jackie Kennedy? Clint Hill was hitting the "hard stuff" the night previous. Other SS Agents were too. Personally, I believe what you are labeling as a "slow response time", is what Joe 6 Pack calls a "hang over". The SS is held to an exceptionally high standard. Those numerous SS Agents downing the "Who Hit John" the night before, failed miserably at even coming close to this high bar.

To have a "hang over" that seriously affects a person requires more than just a few drinks, do you have any proof that they were completely sloshed? In my younger days, I have overindulged and woke up feeling like crap but soldiered on and went to work and could do my job with reasonable efficiency within an hour or two, and by lunch was operating at 100%!
Now, I'm not condoning their actions and if Rowley, Chief of the U.S. Secret Service is correct, a few of them were hardly inebriated.

BTW, this was never a secret and has been known at for least since the Warren report was released, to me it's just an easy target for people who throw stones while living in glass houses.

Mr. RANKIN. Did you learn in connection with the trip when the assassination occurred that certain of the Secret Service agents had been in the press club and what is called the Cellar, at Fort Worth, the night before?
Mr. ROWLEY. Well, that came to my attention through a broadcast that Mr. Pearson made, that the agents were inebriated .the night before at the Fort Worth Press Club. I immediately dispatched Inspector McCann to Fort Worth to investigate the report, and to interview the agents.
Mr. RANKIN. What did you learn?
Mr. ROWLEY. I learned that there were nine agents involved at the Press Club. And I might say this--the agents on duty throughout that day had no opportunity to eat. When they arrived at Fort Worth, they were informed that there was a buffet to be served at the Fort Worth Club. This is what I ascertained in personal interviews. Upon going over there, they leaned there was no buffet, and some of them stayed for a drink. Three, I think, had one scotch, and others had two or three beers. They were in and out--from the time they arrived, I would say roughly around 12:30, until the place closed at 2 o'clock.
Now, after that some of them went to the Cellar. This is a place that does not serve alcoholic beverages. They went there primarily, I think, out of curiosity, because this was some kind of a beatnik place where someone gets up and recites, or plays the guitar.


JohnM
20
TG-

Yes, I suspect LHO was waved through at the Russian border on some sort of sign from whoever the border guards worked for.

It is speculation, of course, but a good guess is LHO was a de facto KGB asset, working for Bruce Solie, himself a de facto KGB asset.

Did de Mohrenschildt induce or encourage LHO to take a potshot at Gen. Walker? The "hunter of fascists ha-ha-ha" BYP photo? Did LHO prove his mettle by doing so?

Then, LHO meets with KGB wetworks man Kostikov in MC, and two other KGB'ers. And pals round with G2 in MC too.

Castro publicly states in September the Kennedy brothers could find out what goes around comes around, when it come to assassination attempts.

Interesting.

So I guess Castro got LHO the job at the TSBD so that he would be in position to assassinate JFK during a motorcade that had not even been planned.
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