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JFK Assassination Plus General Discussion And Debate / Re: Undeniable Proof of Fraud: The Impossible JFK Autopsy Brain Photos
« Last post by Michael T. Griffith on Yesterday at 06:23:21 PM »Notice the abject inability of WC defenders to explain the severe conflict between the alleged autopsy brain photos vs. (1) the autopsy skull x-rays, (2) the numerous eyewitness who saw JFK's brain and said it was missing a large amount of tissue (including one of the morticians who reassembled JFK's skull after the autopsy), and (3) the autopsy report's description of the rear head entry wound.
I should add that Dr. Boswell stated in his HSCA interview that JFK's brain was "so torn up it would not have shown a tract" ("Interview with J. Thornton Boswell," HSCA, 8/16/77, p. 2). Yet the brain in the autopsy brain photos looks nothing like this. The brain in the brain photos has only one laceration, a cut that runs vertically from the end of the occipital lobes to the end of the frontal lobe, with the cerebellum being virtually undamaged, with the rear part of the right occipital lobe being undamaged, with the left occipital lobe being undamaged, and with the left frontal and parietal lobes appearing undamaged.
Also, when the ARRB's executive director and general counsel, Jeremy Gunn, interviewed Dr. Finck and asked him if the cerebellum was damaged, at first Finck said there was "extensive damage," but in the very next breath he said "I can't answer that," and when Gunn asked him again, he again said "I can't answer that" ("Deposition of Pierre A. Finck," ARRB, 5/24/96, p. 104).
Of course, if the cerebellum suffered even moderate damage, the autopsy brain photos must be fake, since they show the cerebellum to be undamaged (with the sole exception of some very minor damage on the bottom--and FPP member Dr. George Loquvam said the brain photos do not even show any bleeding in the cerebellum except for some post-mortem bleeding). Yet, a number of medical witnesses who saw JFK's head wounds in Dallas, including Parkland Hospital's chief neurosurgeon, said there was extensive damage to the cerebellum.
The HSCA FPP majority hammered Finck over the autopsy brain photos in an effort to get him to repudiate the EOP site and accept the cowlick site. They repeatedly pointed out that any bullet entering at the EOP site at a downward and rightward angle (1) would have likely damaged the cerebellum, (2) would have certainly at least caused some pre-mortem bleeding in the cerebellum, and (3) absolutely could not have missed tearing through the rear part of the right occipital lobe, and that the brain photos show no damage to the cerebellum, show no bleeding at or near the area of the EOP, and show no damage to the rear section of the right occipital lobe. Nevertheless, Finck doggedly refused to budge, insisting to the very end that the EOP site was correct.
And here's the kicker: The FPP never told Finck that just hours earlier, Dr. John Ebersole, the radiologist at the autopsy, revealed to the FPP that one of the late-arriving skull fragments from Dallas was "a large fragment of the occipital bone" ("Testimony of John H. Ebersole," HSCA, 3/11/78, p. 5). (BTW, Ebersole also told the FPP that there was a large visible wound in "the back of the head," and that he recalled seeing a "gaping occipital wound" [Ibid., pp. 3, 62]).
Ebersole's disclosure that a large fragment of occipital bone arrived from Dallas poses a huge problem for the autopsy brain photos. Since most of the bottom half of the occipital bone lies directly over the cerebellum, and since the top half of the occipital bone lies directly over the right and left occipital lobes, a bullet that blew out a large fragment of occipital bone would have done at least some visible damage to the cerebellum and would have done considerable damage to the rear part of the right and/or left occipital lobe. Yet, no such damage appears in the brain photos. It is no wonder that the FPP sealed Ebersole's testimony--it was not released until the ARRB released it in the mid-1990s.
Finck could have made very good use of Ebersole's disclosure to defend the EOP site, but of course that would have meant saying that the autopsy skull-rays, head photos, and brain photos were unreliable, if not fraudulent, since they show no sizable defect in the occiput, show no damage to the cerebellum anywhere close to the EOP, and show no damage at all to the rear part of the right occipital lobe. As it was, when the discussion over the EOP site grew heated, Finck actually questioned how the autopsy photos of the head had been authenticated ("Testimony of Pierre A. Finck," HSCA, 3/11/78, p. 89). It is no wonder that the FPP sealed Finck's testimony--it, like Ebersole's testimony, was not released until the ARRB released it in the mid-1990s.
I should add that Dr. Boswell stated in his HSCA interview that JFK's brain was "so torn up it would not have shown a tract" ("Interview with J. Thornton Boswell," HSCA, 8/16/77, p. 2). Yet the brain in the autopsy brain photos looks nothing like this. The brain in the brain photos has only one laceration, a cut that runs vertically from the end of the occipital lobes to the end of the frontal lobe, with the cerebellum being virtually undamaged, with the rear part of the right occipital lobe being undamaged, with the left occipital lobe being undamaged, and with the left frontal and parietal lobes appearing undamaged.
Also, when the ARRB's executive director and general counsel, Jeremy Gunn, interviewed Dr. Finck and asked him if the cerebellum was damaged, at first Finck said there was "extensive damage," but in the very next breath he said "I can't answer that," and when Gunn asked him again, he again said "I can't answer that" ("Deposition of Pierre A. Finck," ARRB, 5/24/96, p. 104).
Of course, if the cerebellum suffered even moderate damage, the autopsy brain photos must be fake, since they show the cerebellum to be undamaged (with the sole exception of some very minor damage on the bottom--and FPP member Dr. George Loquvam said the brain photos do not even show any bleeding in the cerebellum except for some post-mortem bleeding). Yet, a number of medical witnesses who saw JFK's head wounds in Dallas, including Parkland Hospital's chief neurosurgeon, said there was extensive damage to the cerebellum.
The HSCA FPP majority hammered Finck over the autopsy brain photos in an effort to get him to repudiate the EOP site and accept the cowlick site. They repeatedly pointed out that any bullet entering at the EOP site at a downward and rightward angle (1) would have likely damaged the cerebellum, (2) would have certainly at least caused some pre-mortem bleeding in the cerebellum, and (3) absolutely could not have missed tearing through the rear part of the right occipital lobe, and that the brain photos show no damage to the cerebellum, show no bleeding at or near the area of the EOP, and show no damage to the rear section of the right occipital lobe. Nevertheless, Finck doggedly refused to budge, insisting to the very end that the EOP site was correct.
And here's the kicker: The FPP never told Finck that just hours earlier, Dr. John Ebersole, the radiologist at the autopsy, revealed to the FPP that one of the late-arriving skull fragments from Dallas was "a large fragment of the occipital bone" ("Testimony of John H. Ebersole," HSCA, 3/11/78, p. 5). (BTW, Ebersole also told the FPP that there was a large visible wound in "the back of the head," and that he recalled seeing a "gaping occipital wound" [Ibid., pp. 3, 62]).
Ebersole's disclosure that a large fragment of occipital bone arrived from Dallas poses a huge problem for the autopsy brain photos. Since most of the bottom half of the occipital bone lies directly over the cerebellum, and since the top half of the occipital bone lies directly over the right and left occipital lobes, a bullet that blew out a large fragment of occipital bone would have done at least some visible damage to the cerebellum and would have done considerable damage to the rear part of the right and/or left occipital lobe. Yet, no such damage appears in the brain photos. It is no wonder that the FPP sealed Ebersole's testimony--it was not released until the ARRB released it in the mid-1990s.
Finck could have made very good use of Ebersole's disclosure to defend the EOP site, but of course that would have meant saying that the autopsy skull-rays, head photos, and brain photos were unreliable, if not fraudulent, since they show no sizable defect in the occiput, show no damage to the cerebellum anywhere close to the EOP, and show no damage at all to the rear part of the right occipital lobe. As it was, when the discussion over the EOP site grew heated, Finck actually questioned how the autopsy photos of the head had been authenticated ("Testimony of Pierre A. Finck," HSCA, 3/11/78, p. 89). It is no wonder that the FPP sealed Finck's testimony--it, like Ebersole's testimony, was not released until the ARRB released it in the mid-1990s.
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