Here are 10 reasons to believe Lee Harvey Oswald did not shoot JFK:
1. The ammo that hit JFK's head behaved nothing like the ammo that Oswald allegedly used.
The ammo that hit Kennedy's head shattered into dozens of tiny fragments (practically particles) and a few larger fragments, deposited at least three fragments on the rear outer table of the skull, and left two fragments in the very front of the skull near the right orbit. Oswald allegedly used FMJ bullets, but FMJ bullets will never, ever, ever fragment in this manner.
An amazingly stupid claim given that a fragmented FMJ bullet was found on the floor of the limo that had two pieces which were positively matched to Oswald's rifle.
2. Multiple eyewitness accounts clearly indicate that Oswald was not on the sixth floor during the shooting. We now know that the WC was aware of strong eyewitness evidence that Oswald did not come down the stairs after the shooting but suppressed it.
Pure BS. The only person who said he saw Oswald at the time of the shooting was Howard Brennan and he saw him shooting the rifle. There are no witnesses who said they saw Oswald elsewhere at the time of the shooting. There is no one who gives Oswald an alibi.
3. The trajectory of JFK's back wound was slightly upward, both at its entry point and beyond. No sixth-floor gunman could have fired this shot. The only way that a bullet from the sixth-floor window could have hit JFK's back at an upward angle and then tunneled at an upward angle was if JFK had been leaning nearly 60 degrees forward when the bullet struck, a fact admitted by the chairman of the House Select Committee on Assassinations' (HSCA's) medical panel (FPP).
More BS. The entry wound on the back was higher than the exit wound in the front. If you think otherwise, tell us where you think the shot that hit JFK in the back was fired from, your evidence that supports that shot, and where you think that bullet went.
4. PSE polygraph analysis of Oswald's statements that he didn't shoot anyone and that he was just a patsy indicates he was telling the truth.
Oswald never took a polygraph. Do you just type things that pop into your head?
5. Three tests of the paraffin cast of Oswald's right cheek, including the super-sensitive neutron activation analysis (NAA) test, found no traces of nitrates, strongly indicating that he did not fire a rifle on the day of the assassination.
The three tests were the Dallas Police Department's diphenyl-benzidine paraffin test, the FBI's spectrographic paraffin test, and the Oak Ridge NAA paraffin test. The results of the NAA test were suppressed for years until pried loose by a FOIA lawsuit filed by Harold Weisberg.
We now know that Warren Commission (WC) attorney Norman Redlich advised WC member Alan Dulles about the NAA results in an internal memo, stating that they provided "no basis for concluding" that Oswald fired a rifle on 11/22/63. This damning memo only came to light only after a FOIA lawsuit filed by Weisberg.
An FBI agent fired Oswald's rifle and then took a paraffin test on his right cheek. He too tested negative, proving the Carcano could be fired without leaving nitrates on the shooter's cheek. This was explained in the WCR. Have you ever read it?
6.The alleged shooting feat was far beyond Oswald's marksmanship ability. Oswald was not even remotely skilled or experienced enough to have performed the shooting feat that the WC claimed he did. Rifle tests have proven that the alleged shooting feat would have been extremely difficult even for an experienced, world-class rifleman.
Repeating a lie thousands of times over decades will not make it come true. Oswald was capable of consistently hitting a target at ranges of 200 yards and more in order to twice qualify by USMC standards. That was without the aid of a scope. When he shot JFK, his longest shot was only 88 yards and was aided by a scope.
7. Oswald had no motive for shooting JFK. By all accounts, he admired JFK. In the days leading up to the assassination, Oswald was talking with his wife Marina about getting back together and getting their own apartment.
Many WC defenders claim that Oswald shot JFK to prove to the Cubans and/or the Soviets that he was devoted to the Marxist cause, but Oswald behaved nothing like an ideologically motivated assassin. Instead, he fiercely denied shooting JFK at every opportunity, told his family not to believe the "so-called evidence" against him, and said he was a patsy. In contrast, throughout history, assassins who were motivated by ideology have proudly taken credit for their crimes. Oswald did the opposite.
Oswald had a motive. He just didn't tell anybody what it was. The fact that his motive can't be proven doesn't mean he didn't have one.
8. HSCA investigators Ed Lopez and Dan Hardway found evidence that someone was impersonating Oswald in Mexico City about two months before the assassination. The committee decided to suppress the explosive Lopez-Hardway report that presented this evidence, but the report was released in redacted form in 1996 and in a less-redacted form in 2003.
Tell us how that proves Oswald did not shoot JFK in Dallas on 11/22/1963.
9. Anti-Castro Cubans were trying to frame Oswald for the assassination some two months ahead of time. This was revealed by Silvio Odio and corroborated by her sister Annie in 1964. The HSCA, to its great credit, acknowledged that Silvia Odio's account is credible.
We now know that the WC was aware of Odio's account and knew she was a credible witness. In an internal WC memo, one of the Commission’s attorneys, David Slawson, said Odio was “checked out thoroughly” and that “the evidence is unanimously favorable, both as to her character and reliability, and as to her intelligence." Another one of the WC's attorneys, Wesley Liebeler, in another internal memo, expressed doubts about the Commission's rejection of Odio's account, saying "Odio may well be right" and warned that the WC would "look bad if it turns out" she was telling the truth. Nevertheless, the WC rejected Odio's account as "mistaken."
Tell us how those Cubans knew two months in advance that JFK's motorcade would be routed right past Oswald's workplace. It would have been pretty silly to try to frame Oswald without knowing that?
10. When we look at the evidence that supposedly proves Oswald's guilt, we find serious problems with it in virtually every instance. Those few items of evidence that are not fraught with problems are of an indirect nature and do not necessarily prove of his guilt.
Indirect my aching ass. We don't find serious problems with the evidence. Only dedicated Oswald deniers such as yourself reach for any excuse imaginable to dismiss each and every piece of conclusive evidence of Oswald's guilt. The is no universe where the body of evidence could point to Oswald's guilt if he were actually innocent.
In an interview with the Dallas Morning News in November 1969, none other than Dallas police chief Jesse Curry said there was no hard evidence that proved Oswald fired a rifle from the sixth-floor window:
We don't have any proof that Oswald fired the rifle, and never did. Nobody's yet been able to put him in that building with a gun in his hand.
Curry made similar statements in other interviews.
As just one example of the problems with the supposed evidence against Oswald, let's briefly consider the latent palmprint that the Dallas police belatedly claimed to have found on the barrel of the alleged murder weapon.
Lt. J. C. Day claimed to have discovered the latent palmprint on the night of the assassination at around 8:00 PM. Yet, he said nothing about the palmprint to the FBI when he handed over the rifle and other evidence to the FBI the next day, and the palmprint was not forwarded to the FBI until seven days later.
Lt. Day said he could still see the palmprint on the barrel after he lifted it. In fact, he said it was so visible that he thought it was the FBI's "best bet" in terms of fingerprint evidence on the rifle (4 H 261). Yet, when the rifle was examined just hours later by the FBI's Sebastian Latona, not only did Latona find no prints on the barrel, partial or otherwise, but he found no evidence that the barrel had even
been processed for prints.
Incredibly, Lt. Day failed to take a single photo of the palmprint, even though he took photos of the worthless prints on the rifle's trigger guard.
When asked to explain this shocking violation of standard police procedure, Lt. Day said he didn't take photos of the palmprint because Chief Curry called him at around 8:30 and told him to stop all work on the rifle because the FBI would finish what he had started. However, by Lt. Day's own admission, he took a photo of the rifle after Chief Curry called him, but still didn't take a photo of the all-important palmprint.
We now know that even the WC had doubts about the palmprint. An FBI memo released years after the WC dissolved reveals that the Commission's chief counsel, J. Lee Rankin, told the FBI that there was "serious doubt in the minds of the Commission as to whether or not the palm impression that has been obtained from the Dallas Police Department is a legitimate latent palm impression removed from the rifle barrel or whether it was obtained from some other source."
We also now know that when the FBI asked Lt. Day to sign a sworn statement about how he obtained the palmprint, he refused.
These are just some of the problems with the latent palmprint, yet pro-WC books cite the palmprint as strong evidence of Oswald's guilt. For more information on the reasons to doubt the palmprint's value as evidence, see my article https://drive.google.com/file/d/1NzWhdO-Ak3nbuxl8vsy62-fpLTBMBvPx/view?usp=sharing]"Was Oswald's Palmprint Planted
on the Alleged Murder Weapon? Some Questions About the Latent Palmprint"[/url].
Duncan should retitle this thread, 10 Reasons to Laugh at Michael T. Griffith. Not that we needed more reasons to do that.