Recent Posts

Recent Posts

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21
There's no "getaway car," man. Give it a rest.

   So why was that car: (1) rolling down the Elm St Extension while the JFK Limo was under fire, (2) then parked outside of the "wide open" Huge Gates, (3) in a "NO PARKING At Any Time" zone, and, (4) abandoned in that same spot for 3+ Hrs following the Kill Shot?
 This "getaway" car went unnoticed for 62+ years. This "getaway" car is Not on the Wiegman Film. Roughly 20 seconds later, the car is on the Darnell Film. It is no coincidence that NBC continues refusing to release their Original Wiegman Film, and their Original Darnell Film.
22
The idea that Michael Griffith can credibly accuse another person of being closed minded is risible.

Amen!
23
And you believe every long-debunked conspiracy theory about the medical evidence...
And, among other items, he keeps repeating the claim that Sirhan *never* admitted to shooting RFK. Even though Sirhan admitted to it in his trial and in multiple interviews.

The idea that Michael Griffith can credibly accuse another person of being closed minded is risible.
24
You are unserious and immune to persuasion.

And you believe every long-debunked conspiracy theory about the medical evidence...
25
Michael T. Griffith can blather on all he likes about his alleged expertise. The fact of the matter is that Richard Case Nagell had absolutely no involvement in the Kennedy assassination and the evidence for his alleged activities absolutely disintegrates upon further study, as Fred Litwin has shown time and time again on his blog.
26
There's no "getaway car," man. Give it a rest.
27
Apparently Jake Maxwell doesn't understand the concept of photo resolution if he thinks he can pick out that level of detail of a human face from these images. Hardly surprising given his absurd claims regarding other photos from Dealey Plaza...
28
What do you expect after sixty-two years of KGB disinformation, including Oliver Stone's self-described mythological ("to counter the myth of the Warren Report") "JFK," which was largely based on Jim Garrison's book, "On the Trail of the Assassins," which in turn was based on a KGB article published in a communist-owned Italian newspaper?

Oh, so your view is a decidedly minority view because of the KGB! Yeah, okay. Thanks for sharing.

THE conspiracy view? LOL! Which one?

This is juvenile nit-picking. There are plenty of differing versions of the lone-gunman theory (e.g., Jim Moore vs. Gerald Posner, Larry Sturdivan vs. most other lone-gunman theorists, Lattimer vs. most other lone-gunman theorists, the autopsy doctors vs. the HSCA medical panel, etc., etc.). Apparently you could not tell that I was speaking generally. "The conspiracy view" refers to the basic position that JFK's death was not merely the work of one man but involved a number of people.

There are a fair number of people who posit a non-conspiracy view that has Oswald only firing two shots and has a Secret Service agent accidentally firing the head shot.

There are gullible people on both sides of the political spectrum, Comrade Griffith.

"Comrade"? No sane person who knows anything about my politics would refer to me in this manner.

Frankly, I'm surprised the moderators allow you to keep spewing your crazy KGB obsessions in this forum to such a degree. You are unserious and immune to persuasion.








29
Uh-huh... so these brilliant assassination plotters planned to have the shooters jump into a car waiting for them in the thick of the murder scene? Your logic leaves as much to be desired as your photographic "analysis."

   Think about it. Traffic was flowing down Elm St only 9 minutes after the Kill Shot. DPD was NOT stopping/checking those cars flowing down Elm St. DPD DID stop/check the cars attempting to exit the railroad yard. Both DPD Officer Smith and DPD Officer Baker actually ran right past that "getaway" car.  That car would have easily mixed into the traffic that was free-flowing down Elm St. only 9 minutes, (maybe less), after the Kill Shot. That car being right outside the "wide open" Huge Gates was a brilliant escape plan. 
30

The Unraveling of Richard Case Nagell

Here is a video about Richard Case Nagell. It is based upon his lawsuit to get full disability from the United States government. He eventually won his lawsuit.

I notice the video does not explain how Nagell had the names of several CIA officers in his notebook. Anyone who claims that Nagell was insane (he most certainly was not) and that he was only a low-level counter-intel officer in the Army needs to explain how in the world he could have known the names of not one or two but six CIA officers.

Here is where my decades of intel experience gives me a broader, deeper perspective. I worked with several Army counter-intel guys. For nearly a year, my direct operational boss was an Army counter-intel guy. I got briefed at least 15 times by Army counter-intel officers/officials. I worked at two NSA sites. I worked several joint intel assignments where we had guys from several three-letter intel agencies, including the CIA. Personally, I never knew of any CIA guys who would even use their real names on assignments, and certainly not in operations. Sometimes you would not even know when someone was CIA--they would be placed under the guise of working for a different agency, and you would find out later that they were CIA.

No Army counter-intel officer working under CIC or in any other CIA-connected capacity is going to know the names of six CIA personnel. That is not going to happen. He will work with one CIA contact, maybe two on rare occasions, and he probably won't even know the CIA guy's real name.

I can assure you that it is astonishing that an Army counter-intel guy would have, much less write down, the names of six CIA personnel. That is extremely suspicious and unusual. If you don't believe me, find someone who has had a TS/SCI clearance, with caveats, and who has worked joint intel assignments, and ask them what they would think if an Army counter-intel guy had the real names of six--not two or three, but six--CIA guys, and also wrote them down, even in a private notebook. I guarantee you they will tell you that this would be extremely unusual and would indicate that the Army counter-intel guy was much more than your usual counter-intel officer.




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