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51
Are there any advantages to practicing the manipulation of the bolt that way?
That kind of practice will accustom you to how to effectively and quickly run the bolt. Especially if you aren't already familiar with the rifle. Different bolt action systems have a different feel to them. For instance, the Carcano action is cock-on-open design with a very aggressive primary extraction cam profile. Working the bolt on one feels very different than what you get using a cock-on-close design like an early Mauser or a Lee-Enfield.
52
Victor Marchetti thought it possible the reason the CIA clammed up after the JFKA...was to hide the intensive KGB infiltration of the agency.

John Newman would later write that KGB'er Bruce Solie was running LHO.

Gus Russo would write that G2'ers were somehow involved with LHO in New Orleans. Probably in MC too.

LHO would visit Valery Kostikov, likely KGB wetworks leader, in MC.

I wonder who helped LHO with the Walker shooting? G2'ers?

My take on the Z-film is shots struck Gov. JBC at ~Z-295 and JFK at Z-313. The M-C was a good rifle, and LHO was familiar with guns. (The recent assassination of Kirk, and the just-missed attempt on Trump are clues one doesn't have to be a pro to hit a target at range. The M-C was manufactured to military specs to be accurate to 200 meters).

But LHO could not have fired both those rounds.

So...who were LHO confederates? I don't know.

Question: Where does/did Russo say G2 agents were "somehow involved" with Oswald? I have his two major works - "Brothers in Arms" and "Live by the Sword" - and I can't find him making this. Did he say this elsewhere?

Here is what he wrote in "Live by the Sword." Note all of the qualifiers he has: "If" and "could" and "possibly" and "possible" and "anecdotes."



Nothing in this says that Oswald met with G2 agents or were involved with him in New Orleans. He theorizes - not claims - that Oswald interacted with the anti-Castro exile community and that Cuba had thoroughly infiltrated that community. And from that it's "possible" that Oswald came into contact with those Cuban agents through that infiltration. Again, possibly, could have, maybe. He says similar things about Mexico City. That possibly or maybe or perhaps Oswald met pro-Castro or Cuban agents there. Again, it's all speculative.

Russo's main argument, as I read him, is that these possible connections between Oswald and Cuban agents or pro-Castro people were not adequately investigated after the assassination. Why not? For a mix of reasons - fear that the covert war would be revealed, that the assassination plots and Mob connections would be exposed, that the possible consequences (or rumors) of a Cuban connection would lead to war. But he says these were rumors and claims and allegations and possibilities but nothing proven.
53
You can see the cloud of mist expand and dissipating in the next two or three frames after z313.

It's worth pointing out that the magenta, cyan, and yellow dyes used in color film fade over time, but do not do so at the same rate. Magenta takes longer to degrade than the other two colors. As the other dyes fade, the image becomes increasingly skewed towards magenta, which has the effect of reducing the contrast between magenta (and red and pink) areas and the rest of the photo. The cloud of spray was probably more distinctive in 1963 than it was 30 years later when the Z film was digitized, which would go a long way towards explaining why Dino's recollections do match what many researchers want to expect.

Then again, in 2013, Brugioni was a 90-year old man who'd just been shown copies of film frames that he hadn't seen for 50 years. I doubt it's wise to put so much faith in the detailed reliability of such old memories.

Zapruder and Life saw the film the week of the assassination before any dyes got a chance to fade. Despite Zapruder being paid the equivalent in today's money of 1.5m dollars for the film, and Life paying that much, neither of them saw any differences in the Zapruder film at all. That's the kind of money that would make people observant.
54
  Between the car moving out from under the mist, and the wind gusts being up to 25 MPH, the mist isn't moving backwards because of a frontal shot.  All spray and head matter went upward, forward and down (some of it some 25 feet in front of the limousine which were later recovered by 3 separate people-Burros, Weitzman and Harper) and the mist and lighter matter went back and down. Some of which landed on the trunk lid, Bobby Hargis, B.J. Martin and Clint Hill.

   The direction of blood/brain matter spray aside, I have always had an issue with the continuous lack of speed displayed by the JFK Limo. ASAIC Kellerman described the JFK Limo acceleration as, "jumping out of the god damn street" following the kill shot. We see absolutely nothing remotely resembling that sudden acceleration immediately following the kill shot. SA Clint Hill was able to run the car down and then scale the trunk. And Jackie is also crawling around back there without being tossed around due to any sudden acceleration of the car. Backing up the SA Kellerman description, we do see the JFK Limo blowing past the Lead Car as both vehicles go under the Triple Underpass. The images we are seeing are consistently inconsistent.
55


There is mist in several frames' forwards then backwards.
 
 The violent backward reaction of Gov Connally at about Z340 is visual verification of ASAIC Kellerman's WC description of a "flurry of shells" coming into the car.
56


There is mist in several frames' forwards then backwards.

  Between the car moving out from under the mist, and the wind gusts being up to 25 MPH, the mist isn't moving backwards because of a frontal shot.  All spray and head matter went upward, forward and down (some of it some 25 feet in front of the limousine which were later recovered by 3 separate people-Burros, Weitzman and Harper) and the mist and lighter matter went back and down. Some of which landed on the trunk lid, Bobby Hargis, B.J. Martin and Clint Hill. 
57
Why not practice working the bolt action without a round in the chamber?

To see how hard it is to chamber a round and then eject the "spent shell" by ejecting said complete round?

If you didn't use a round, then there would be nothing to jam the movement of the bolt action. I'd imagine the purpose of practicing the bolt action would be to prevent jams in a live rapid fire situation. So you'd need to use bullets of some sort.
58
I'm not sure. Maybe if you only had a small amount of bullets and you didn't want to waste any by firing bullets while practicing the working if the bolt action.

Why not practice working the bolt action without a round in the chamber?

To see how hard it is to chamber a round and then eject the "spent shell" by ejecting said complete round?
59
I posted this a few weeks ago at another forum:

Dr. Gregory said he thought the bullet entered the top side of JBC's right wrist and exited the bottom side. If so, how could a bullet that exited JBC's chest have done that? We know that JBC was holding his cowboy hat in that hand. Was he holding his cowboy hat really awkwardly near his chest or somewhat lower equally awkwardly when he was shot at Z-222?


Another member replied:

Ai response

Dr. Gregory was absolutely right about the wrist wound orientation, but his interpretation does not contradict the Single Bullet Theory once you factor in Connally’s real arm position.

Three key points:

1️⃣ Connally was NOT holding his hat up by his chest

At Z-222/223, Connally’s right wrist was held low and turned inward, almost flat across his lap. This position is visible in multiple Z-frames.

➡️ He only raises the hat after he has been hit and is reacting.

2️⃣ The bullet exiting Connally’s chest was traveling downward and to his right

This matches:

• the sixth-floor angle,

• Connally’s rotated body position,

• and the inward-turned orientation of his wrist.

Thus, the bullet exiting his chest would naturally continue forward-downward → into the top, radial (thumb-side) portion of his wrist, exactly as Dr. Gregory described.

3️⃣ The wrist wound does NOT require an “awkward” hat-holding position

Connally was holding the hat loosely by the brim, low over his lap.

His wrist was not vertical — it was angled inward and slightly raised.

➡️ When the bullet exited his chest, his wrist was already in the line of fire.

No strange or contorted pose is needed.



Why Dr. Gregory’s testimony actually supports the SBT

People often quote Gregory as if he disproved the SBT — he didn’t.

He said the entry to the wrist slanted downward and toward the thumb side.

That is exactly the direction the bullet would travel after:

1. entering JFK’s back → exiting his throat

2. entering Connally’s back → exiting his chest

3. continuing forward/downward → striking Connally’s wrist

Gregory did not say the wrist wound was inconsistent — he said he could not determine the exact direction without seeing Connally’s arm position at the moment of impact.

The Z-film now shows us that position clearly.



🔍 So the correct reconstruction is:

• At Z-222, Connally is rotated rightward.

• His torso is turned.

• His wrist is low, across his lap, turned inward.

• Hat held loosely by the brim.

• The bullet exits chest → strikes wrist in the orientation Gregory described.

Everything matches the physical evidence.



Bottom Line Answer:

The wrist wound is perfectly consistent with the bullet that exited Connally’s chest.

No awkward hat position is needed.

No second shooter is required.

This is why every modern forensic reconstruction (not just the Warren Commission) reaches the same conclusion.



I believe that the response you quoted has it right. I think that if JBC had not been holding his hat, that the more relaxed position of his palm facing towards his belly would be the expectation. The fact that JBC was holding his hat is what caused the rotation of his forearm such that the palm of his hand would be facing downward instead of the more relaxed position with the palm facing his belly.
60
Are there any advantages to practicing the manipulation of the bolt that way?

I'm not sure. Maybe if you only had a small amount of bullets and you didn't want to waste any by firing bullets while practicing the working if the bolt action.
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