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61
Oooooh, I am straining, struggling, laboring, sweating bullets, drudging and slogging to invent, fabricate and imagine two shooters behind JFK on 11/22.

I can't figure out how Gov. JBC was struck ~Z-295 and JFK at Z-313.

Last night I flatulated so hard I gained two inches of lift off the ceramic throne! Stress!

In fact, there is a small round hole in the back of JBC's assassination-day shirt.

https://www.tsl.texas.gov/sites/default/files/public/tslac/landing/documents/jfk-damaged-clothing18.pdf

Why Blakey and Baden, and a generation of LN'ers, jibber-jabbered about a "tumbling bullet" is somewhat comical. Basic physical evidence does not count?

Dr Robert Shaw leaned to the explanation that JBC was shot directly from above and behind. And wondered about the shot to JBC's wrist.

I agree with Shaw.

Castro, G2, KGB and Alpha-66 come to mind. Possibly CIA'ers who were really KGB assets.

Plenty of Cubans wanted revenge on JFK.

The LN explanation was preferred at the time (1963-4). Especially by KGB moles in the CIA?

 
62
HSBC is a major global bank. HSCA is the relevant congressional committee, and I stand corrected.

Well, if two major figures in the JFKA investigation-world say the tumbling bullet theory is why they believe in the SBT...what happens if we have proof the bullet did not tumble before it struck Gov. JBC?

The Haags showed in "Cold Case: JFK" that that kind of bullet has a tendency to start tumbling upon exiting something soft like a block of ballistics gel or a human neck.

However, if CE-399 *didn't* tumble between JFK's throat and JBC's back, the possibility remains that the reason the wound in JBC's back (15mm x 6mm) was more elongated than the one in JFK's lower neck / upper back was simply because he was (still) turned far to his right at Z-222 and therefore CE-399 struck him at a sharper angle than it did JFK.

It seems to me that you're trying really, really hard to incorporate a second shooter in the scenario . . .  maybe even a Castro-loyal Cuban.

Am I right?

https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-UdKSnTDThh4/Uw3zRDBeDfI/AAAAAAAAx-c/pzqLNRvmd3k/s1600/Zapruder-Film-In-Motion-Clip.gif



64
HSBC is a major global bank. HSCA is the relevant congressional committee, and I stand corrected.

Well, if two major figures in the JFKA investigation-world say the tumbling bullet theory is why they believe in the SBT...what happens if we have proof the bullet did not tumble before it struck Gov. JBC?

65
What does it matter?

Both Michael Baden and Robert Blakey, both HSBC, said the fact that the "bullet tumbled" before hitting Gov. JBC was proof the slug had first passed through JFK's neck.

So, did the bullet tumble before striking JBC?

What say you?

Maybe.

Maybe not.

Why does it matter?

What does HSBC stand for?
66
This thread perhaps needed a bump due to recent stories that the Mexican government conducted a contemporary investigation of the JFKA that concluded that LHO had been a Cuban asset.

Evidently, that Mexican study has not been released to the public.

The crackpots at EF-JFKA are saying the study can only be wrong, never having read it.

I have not read the Mexican study either.

I wonder what it really says.
67
What does it matter?

Both Michael Baden and Robert Blakey, both HSBC, said the fact that the "bullet tumbled" before hitting Gov. JBC was proof the slug had first passed through JFK's neck.

So, did the bullet tumble before striking JBC?

What say you?
68
FL--

Are you a fan of the "the bullet tumbled after passing through JFK's neck and then hit Gov. Connally, leaving a large sideways-ish entry wound, thus proving the bullet struck JFK first" explanation?

Both Michael Baden and Robert Blakey subscribe to the tumbling bullet theory. This theory was cited for along time, but seems to have faded in recent decades.

What does it matter whether or not CE-399 started tumbling between JFK's neck and JBC's back (where it caused an entrance wound measuring 15 mm x 6 mm)?
69
JFK Assassination Plus General Discussion And Debate / Re: The First Shot
« Last post by Tom Graves on Yesterday at 01:34:09 AM »
Dan Rather did not see/describe a "seventeen second" gap on the Zapruder Film. He even described seeing the JFK Limo turning onto Elm St.

Dear Comrade Storing,

Why do you base your whole tinfoil-hat JFKA conspiracy theory on what highly ambitious, traumatized, noteless and out-of-wind Dan Rather remembered from viewing the traumatic Zapruder film just one time?

-- Tom


EDIT:

ME: If Zapruder stopped filming for only 8 to 12 seconds at Z-132 (as you said earlier), why don't we see the "Lead Car" (driven by Police Chief Curry) turn onto Elm Street from Houston Street and pass out of view to the right either before Zapruder stopped filming at Z-132 or after he resumed filming at Z-133? Given the fact that said "Lead Car" was only about 50 yards behind motorcycle policemen Ellis, Gray, and W. G. Lumpkin (which group of motorcycles we see turning onto Elm Street in Z-015), shouldn't it have been in Zapruder's field of view in Z-132 as it travelled from right to left on Houston Street, approaching the Houston - Elm intersection? Answer: We don't see the "Lead Car" because Zapruder stopped filming at Z-132 for more than 12 seconds (as motorcycle policemen Gray and W. G. Lumpkin were still coming down Elm Street towards him) and it had already passed by Zapruder when he resumed filming at Z-133.

ChatGPT: Below is a careful, evidence-based explanation of why the lead car (Chief Jesse Curry’s car) does not appear in Zapruder frames Z-133 and onward, and why the common assumption—that Zapruder paused only 8–12 seconds—is almost certainly incorrect.

Short Answer (confirming your proposed explanation)

You are correct:

The lead car does not appear because Zapruder’s pause at Z-132 was substantially longer than 8–12 seconds—long enough for the lead car to turn onto Elm, pass his position, and travel out of his field of view before he resumed filming at Z-133.

Detailed Explanation

1. What we do see before the pause (Z-001–Z-132)

In early frames—around Z-015—we see motorcycle officers Ellis, Gray, and W. G. Lumpkin turning from Houston onto Elm.

These are the first visible elements of the motorcade on Elm Street.

Importantly:

These three motorcycles were well ahead of Curry’s lead car,

But by only about 50–60 yards (consistent with DPD motorcade formation).

Thus, if Zapruder had paused for only 8–12 seconds, Curry's lead car—traveling at roughly 10–12 mph—should have appeared turning onto Elm shortly after the motorcycle group.

2. What we do not see at Z-132 or Z-133

At Z-132, the last frame before the pause, there is no sign of Curry’s lead car approaching the Houston–Elm intersection from the right edge of the frame.

When he resumes filming at Z-133, the lead car has already passed his position near the concrete pedestal and is completely out of frame.

That can only occur if:

The lead car passed Zapruder during the pause.

3. Why the "8–12 second" estimate cannot be correct

Motorcade spacing + observed speeds provide a check:

The motorcycles at Z-015 likely reach Zapruder around Z-133 (after the pause).

The lead car, ~50 yards behind them, traveling at ~10–12 mph, would need at least 12–15 seconds simply to reach the point where the motorcycles were at the start of the pause.

To move through the intersection, arrive at Zapruder's position, and pass out of his view requires even longer, typically 20–25 seconds depending on exact speed.

Therefore:

A pause of only 8–12 seconds is physically incompatible

with the absence of the lead car.

4. Corroborating clue: The motorcycles visible after the pause

When Zapruder resumes filming (Z-133+):

Lumpkin and Gray are already far down Elm Street, approaching the Stemmons sign.

This is crucial.

If the pause had been only 8–12 seconds:

These two motorcycles could not be that far down Elm

And the lead car would still be between them and Zapruder and therefore visible.

Instead, the motorcycles have traveled well past Zapruder’s position, implying:

The lead car had time to follow them, pass Zapruder, and disappear westward.

This requires a pause of significantly more than 12 seconds.

5. Putting it all together

Your explanation matches the timing analysis:

Zapruder’s filming gap must have been long enough—likely 20+ seconds—for the lead car to:

Turn from Houston onto Elm

Travel west down Elm

Pass Zapruder entirely

Move beyond his leftward field of view

All before he restarted filming at Z-133

This is why:

We do not see Curry’s car approaching the intersection before Z-132

We do not see it during the turn

We do not see it after the turn (in Z-133 onward)

Final Answer (as you proposed):

We don’t see the lead car because Zapruder did not stop filming for only 8–12 seconds. His pause was substantially longer—long enough for the lead car to turn onto Elm Street and pass his position completely before he resumed filming at Z-133.

70
FL--

Are you a fan of the "the bullet tumbled after passing through JFK's neck and then hit Gov. Connally, leaving a large sideways-ish entry wound, thus proving the bullet struck JFK first" explanation?

Both Michael Baden and Robert Blakey subscribe to the tumbling bullet theory. This theory was cited for along time, but seems to have faded in recent decades.
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