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61
My memory is pretty good, folks. I remembered this thread started by Duncan at the Ed Forum in 2015: "Prayer Man is a Woman," https://educationforum.ipbhost.com/topic/22243-prayer-man-is-a-woman/#comment-314580. In retrospect, rather prescient. The howls of protest, especially from Robert Prudhomme, are still echoing. In an interesting sidelight, Jimbo pressed Duncan to reveal who John Mytton really is! (In the ultimate insult - to John, not me - shortly after I joined here it was suggested that this Lance punk is in fact a sock puppet of JM's.)
62
Alas, par for the course. At the Ed Forum one time, Jimbo asked "Man, what about that Raleigh phone call?" as though there could scarcely be anything more definitively suspicious. This caused me to launch into one of my exhaustive and exhausting factoid expeditions. When I was done, even Greg Parker at his site acknowledged that Lance "sometimes does good work." Did Jimbo miss a beat? Noooo, of course not. He is still asking "Man, what about that Raleigh phone call?" Like way too many CTers, he simply cannot let go of a conspiratorial factoid; everything must point to a conspiracy - nor can he ever acknowledge a mistake. I fortunately have never met him, but people who have, including fellow CTers, tell me he is a pompous, overbearing, bullying ass. I recently read a gossipy new biography of JFK in which the author thanked "acclaimed historian" Jimbo. I just about fell out of my chair - and I'm sure the phrase was provided by the "acclaimed historian" himself.
63

I think ignore might be the wrong word. But it is very easy for me to discount it enough to allow the possibility of an early first shot being the culprit.


Mr. LIEBELER. How long after did you feel yourself get hit by anything?
Mr. TAGUE. I felt it at the time, but I didn't associate, didn't make any connection, and ignored it. And after this happened, or maybe the second or third shot, I couldn't tell you definitely--I made no connection. I looked around wondering what was going on, and I recall this. We got to talking, and I recall that something had stinged me, and then the deputy sheriff looked up and said, "You have blood there on your cheek." That is when we walked back down there.
Mr. LIEBELER. Do you have any idea which bullet might have made that mark?
Mr. TAGUE. I would guess it was either the second or third. I wouldn't say definitely on which one.
Mr. LIEBELER. Did you hear any more shots after you felt yourself get hit in the face?
Mr. TAGUE. I believe I did.
Mr. LIEBELER. You think you did?
Mr. TAGUE. I believe I did.
Mr. LIEBELER. How many?
Mr. TAGUE. I believe that it was the second shot, so I heard the third shot afterwards.
Mr. LIEBELER. Did you hear three shots?
Mr. TAGUE. I heard three shots; yes sir. And I did notice the time on the Hertz clock. It was 12:29.
Mr. LIEBELER. That was about the time that you felt yourself struck?
Mr. TAGUE. I just glanced. I mean I just stopped, got out of my car, and here came the motorcade. I just happened upon the scene.
It appears from his testimony that he hadn't really thought about which shot hit him, other than recalling that it wasn't the first.  When asked about it whether he heard a shot afterward, he thought and said he did recall hearing a shot after the shot that hit him. Since he heard only three shots, he said it must have been the second that hit him. 

But I agree, by itself it is not reliable.  What makes it much more reliable is the rest of the evidence. 

According to the shot pattern observed by over 40 witnesses, the last two shots were close together and after the midpoint between the first and third shots.  That means that JFK was struck by the first shot (as about 25 witnesses reported) and the second was after z255. The second shot struck JBC in the wrist and sent numerous flecks of lead into the wrist and made a long jagged hole in the french cuff but a non-jagged hole in the jacket pocket and jacket cuff.  That is not only consistent with a fragmenting bullet, but also with the fragments deflecting away from the point of contact with the radius.  The orientation of the wrist up near his chest exit wound after z240 means the fragments would have deflected up.

Greer said that he sensed a "concussion" from something impacting in the car on the second shot. The damage to the windshield frame was just above his right ear. He reported no impact sound from the other shots.  Greer said the second shot was almost simultaneous with his first turn to the rear (z281) when he saw JBC falling back.  We know that on one of the shots fragments struck the windshield and windshield frame. It is at least interesting that the left sun visor appears to move forward between z271 and z272:



A fragment striking the windshield and frame and at least one fragment going a bit higher and striking the road and curb near Tague is consistent with the second shot fragmenting and deflecting upward off the wrist. 

It is not impossible that Tague was wrong in thinking he heard a shot after he was hit, but that would mean that he was hit by a fragment from the head shot. The only problem with the head shot causing the damage to the windshield and a fragment going up over the windshield is that I don't see that it struck anything hard that could have deflected it.  It likely fragmented upon striking the back of the head but that did not change its direction. The bullet or bullet fragments passed through the head and exited on a downward trajectory from the SN.  So I don't see what hard impact would have caused a fragment to deflect upward after that.
64
Why is the Sixth Floor Museum in possession of an extremely early generation copy of the Darnell Film and NOT Sharing it with the public? The Sixth Floor Museum has always been part of the 62+ yr old Cover Up. And this includes the muzzling/$$ of the past Sixth Floor Museum curator Gary Mack.
65
Back in 2018 Jim DiEugenio admitted to me on Facebook that I had proven Prayer Man was too husky to be Oswald...Further analysis showed that Prayer Man was Depository employee Sarah Stanton...This was first shown by Chris Davidson back in 2016 when he enhanced the clearest frame of the Wiegman Film and brought out Stanton's obvious chubby face on Prayer Man...When I tried to press it on the forum on which that theory was promoted they avoided the evidence and ended my membership...

This, however did not stop DiEugenio from blocking me and then going before Congress with a theory he himself admitted was wrong...Nor did it stop Jim from threatening Oliver Stone's credibility by setting him up before the Task Force...The approach to the Task Force has been carefully handled as in-house Prayer Man only...

When the 6th Floor Museum's 1st generation copy of the Darnell Film showed Stanton's female dress neckline on Prayer Man Sandy Larsen hijacked the issue and claimed the obvious Scoop neckline was a CIA forgery designed to cover-up Oswald's work shirt collar...The Prayer Man people are avoiding subpoena-ing that 1st generation copy because they know what it will show...As are the people on the forum that promotes it...

Denis Morrissette found Sarah Stanton in the same Prayer Man spot in the Owens Film...Chris Davidson did photogrammetry and put Stanton's height at 5 foot 3 or so (same as Prayer Man) in Owens...Stanton had the same elbow sleeve length and Scoop neckline in Owens as in Darnell...When this new evidence was posted on the forum that supports the Prayer Man theory the thread was deliberately shunned by the research community...This conclusive evidence was ignored...No processing or analysis of this corroborating evidence was done and the people approaching the Task Force ignored it...
66
Lance, I'm going to give a summary comment on the Tippit case and I would like you to explain if you classify it as "lunatic fringe" and say why. But first, a comment on the real issue you raise of what is the difference between a legitimate differing argument or interpretation of evidence, and "wacky" territory. I have an analogy here you might find instructive. It appears in a book I wrote a couple decades ago, "Showdown at Big Sandy", about a Bible college in east Texas I attended for two years in the 1970s. I was discussing the phenomenon of "cults", which is in some ways parallel to the definitional questions you raise here. What is the difference between a religion one does not personally believe, but which one does not regard it sociologically as a "cult"? At the time I wrote the book, one of the leading (supposedly) authorities on cults was Walter Martin, who wrote a book called "Kingdom of the Cults". He wrote from a conservative Christian perspective, and detailed an encyclopedic taxonomy of all sorts of various offbeat and idiosyncratic religious groups with which American history has been filled, part of America's claim to fame.   

The problem was in among the extensive cult listings in his book, Kingdom of the Cults, he listed Unitarians. Unitarians?? I found that odd. As I noted at the time, Unitarians have produced four American presidents and too many famous scientists to count--how on earth did he have them defined as a "cult"? Well, he gave his reasons, three reasons. Here is what, in his view, made Unitarians a "cult", and I am not making this up: Unitarians do not believe in the Trinity, they do not believe in hell, and they replace the authority of the Bible with reason. Those three things, said Martin, quite logically make Unitarians a "cult". Obviously Unitarians in America are not a "cult", and it is clear what was going with Martin: he was confusing his definition of "heresy" categories (beliefs different from what he considered correct historic Christian doctrines) with a sociological/behaviorial phenomenon, "cultism", not the same thing, a category confusion.

Anyway, here is the text for review. Is this text "lunatic fringe"? Or is that kind of name-calling like Walter Martin's overreach in his labeling? This text is from my website, I wrote it.

[START]
Informal assessment of the Tippit case--a different way to look at it

There are evidence-based grounds for reasonable doubt Oswald killed Tippit, contrary to prevailing mainstream opinion. This has nothing to do with conspiracy theory. It has to do with did he do the crime.

The single strongest crime scene witness of all, because of how close he was from only 15-25 feet away, testified he had an excellent view of the back of the killer’s head and described a block cut rear hairline which, as it stands, is highly credible stand-alone exonerating testimony, given that all photos of Oswald show him with a tapered rear hairline. For good measure this single best crime scene witness of all was a barber. Hard to beat that for a witness favorable to reasonable doubt.

No less than eight (!) crime scene witnesses or witnesses of the fleeing gunman testified that that gunman was wearing a white or light-colored shirt, underneath a partly open zippered jacket. As everyone knows Oswald was seen by Brewer and arrested in a dark brown shirt. This is not an easy massive number of witness testimonies that can easily be accounted for as mistakes. Reasonable doubt grounds number two.

Multiple witness reports had the gunman’s hair described as “black” or very dark brown. Oswald’s appears to have been medium brown, and I am not aware of any independent testimony to a witness seeing Oswald’s hair as “black.” Reasonable doubt grounds number three.

There is a strong–more so for reasons argued earlier than has been acknowledged–argument that two sets of fingerprints lifted from the Tippit patrol car 20 minutes after the crime, deriving from the same one individual, were left by the killer. Those prints were found by expert analysis to be not Oswald’s. Those prints have never been proven to not be the killer’s. Reasonable doubt grounds number four.

The witnesses who identified the gunman as Oswald are less decisive than it appears. For some reason few seem aware that since the time of the Warren Commission in 1964 when the following was not known, studies since then have established–this is mainstream yet seems still not to have percolated consciousness of JFKA related/Tippit case discussions in a perverse illustration of scholarly compartmentalization–that witness facial recognition in cases in which the witness does not already know the person, is not reliable at over 50 feet. Reason: the human eye loses detail with distance, necessary for accurate reliability in facial recognition. This lack of reliability at over 50 feet overrides witnesses’ expressions of confidence or certainty. There goes Callaway (56 feet) and all of the Warren Reynolds auto place witnesses, right there. The Davis sisters-in-law both said they saw the killer’s face only in profile not full face.

This is not to say there isn’t a case against Oswald from the shell hulls Oswald revolver identfication if one does not consider chain of custody issues with those hulls to be significant.

And there is an argument from coincidence/proximity that Oswald was nearby in the midst of a live shooter police manhunt in process.

But the eyewitness identifications incriminating Oswald range from poor to medium quality, none exceptionally strong, with the argument for incrimination relying on the number of them more than their quality.

There is zero weight toward incrimination of Oswald from the killer’s jacket (CE 162)’s fibers, from any expert testimony. That is why neither the FBI nor Warren Commission who knew of those fibers ever claimed they were positive weight evidence of a match to Oswald’s brown shirt, because no expert ever testified to that and it is unlikely any would. Non-expert interpretations don’t count. It is like saying common cooking ingredients prove a certain kind of cake was made.

As for the jacket itself, Marina testified it was Lee’s, and Buell Frazier testified even more emphatically that it definitely was not–that he knew Lee’s gray work jacket and Lee’s was woolen and gray, not the off-white light tan cloth CE 162 which would easily pick up dirt and not be too practical as a daily work jacket in dusty or dirty surroundings doing manual labor. One is not right between Marina and Buell, take your pick.

Here is a clue: there are plenty of photos of Oswald when he was in Minsk, but none of those photos show him wearing CE 162. But the famous Minsk coworkers’ photo shows Oswald in a jacket which appears to be an exact match with Buell Frazier’s description of Oswald’s gray woolen zippered work jacket. Draw your own conclusions from that.

There is a case from the facts of the crime that Tippit’s killer was a professional. Curtis Craford, recent hire by Oswald’s killer Jack Ruby, generously given a room to sleep in exchange for work supposedly at no pay by Ruby at the Carousel Club, was a self-confessed hitman at this stage of his life. He was left-handed as the fingerprints on the Tippit patrol car, if they were from the killer, indicate the killer was. Craford had a full head of hair so dark brown that it appeared black. On this last detail, Craford’s daughter (born after Craford left Dallas and remarried) told me that as a child growing up, for years as a child she thought her father’s hair was black until belatedly learning it was actually dark brown. EXACTLY the police description of the killer’s hair color, first hour, from Callaway and one other witness as two first-hour police radio bulletin sources on that, who saw and told the color of the killer’s hair as they saw it, before there was any influence on witness testimonies of Oswald in the news.

And the Craford daughter told me her father had a habit of talking to himself, compare Scoggins hearing the gunman doing that leaving the crime scene, not a practice or habit known of Oswald.

Craford is known independently to have been mistakenly identified as Oswald by sincere witnesses–time after time, over a half-dozen confirmed. There goes the perception of strength of the witnesses’ Oswald identifications on Tippit and the argument from numbers of weak witnesses. If it’s a choice between Oswald and Craford as the Tippit gunman, it could be either one from the witnesses’ evidence.

Tippit’s killer came to the crime scene walking from the east on foot consistent with an origin point in the approximate vicinity of Jack Ruby’s apartment. Craford was driven home from the Vegas Club by Ruby at ca. 3 am the night before. Ruby could have driven him to his apartment instead of to the Carousel Club as normally. Both Ruby and Ruby’s apartment-mate George Senator, from Senator’s separate bedroom, left the apartment Friday morning. Craford could have been in Ruby’s room without Senator knowing it, then had the empty apartment to himself until the time came to walk to the crime scene four blocks west to flag down an expected arrival of Tippit as he arrived and kill him as a contract execution. Just saying.

I have developed a few things such as this on a case for Craford on Tippit in a way that has not previously been argued, though I have not had time to write the case fully, it is stopped at this moment because of another project (publication of a book on the General Walker case) and I do not know when I will have time. For anyone interested here are the first three chapters start of the case: https://www.scrollery.com/?p=1850.

Also, final point on the arrest. Oswald did have a loaded gun on him at his arrest, he did resist arrest, and he did punch an officer. But he did not attempt to shoot an officer, and he did not say, “it’s all over now” when he stood up. He said that after he was subdued and had stopped resisting, which changes the meaning. See the testimony of Walthers and others present on that timing point. The failed attempt to shoot Oswald’s revolver evidenced by the telltale “click” everyone heard was McDonald attempting unsuccessfully to shoot Oswald with Oswald’s own gun. This is not speculation but fact, from confession of McDonald that he got control of Oswald’s revolver, pointed it intentionally into Oswald’s stomach, had his finger on the trigger, and started intentionally to pull the trigger to shoot him. That’s not speculation, that’s McDonald himself on YouTube. He says he started to pull the trigger to shoot Oswald with the pistol pointed by McDonald intentionally into Oswald’s stomach. That’s McDonald saying that, not me. But Bentley’s hand was injured blocking the hammer which is why McDonald’s attempt to shoot Oswald failed. It was not premeditated on McDonald’s part to shoot Oswald with his own gun. It followed Oswald punching McDonald in the face. But Oswald no more pulled that trigger than Anthony Pretti in Minneapolis tried to shoot ICE officers as was first claimed over national news citing ICE sources. McDonald claimed Oswald did but McDonald clearly did. Once the matter is properly studied and considered it is not even ambiguous, it is as clear as the Anthony Pretti case. Not that this point materially bears on who killed Tippit, but just to clear the deck on this particular long-standing claim. If you read Westbrook in Sneed, Westbrook, the commanding officer at the scene of the Oswald arrest–he knew it was McDonald who pulled that trigger (p. 315).

Anyone is still free to consider Oswald guilty on Tippit. But there is another side to the story that was never investigated.
[END]

Let me start with my Roswell “UFO crash” analogy, because it’s a close analogue to the JFKA and a perfect example of how I approach extraordinary claims. Maybe I should be embarrassed to admit it, but there is nothing I don’t know about this subject. (Apologies to those for whom 500 words is a “book,” as I was accused of writing yesterday on my thread about ghosts, but I don’t deal – most of the time anyway! – in pithy sound bites, and Greg doesn’t either.)

It’s clear that something happened at Roswell in 1947. The Air Force has made two stabs at a mundane explanation, and neither stands up to scrutiny. Citizens and military officials up to the level of General have said that an alien craft crashed and debris and bodies were recovered. Witnesses insist that they and their families and livelihoods were threatened. Important records have mysterious gaps or have disappeared altogether. New Mexico “just happened” to be the epicenter of the atomic bomb program, and the 509th Bombardment Group, the only nuclear weapons unit at the time, “just happened” to be based at Roswell. Like the JFKA, the study of Roswell has been plagued by every imaginable sort of hoax and hoaxster.

The Roswell counterpart to the LN narrative is that a secret Project Mogul balloon crashed; this is demonstrably false for several reasons, and Mogul itself wasn’t even secret. The Air Force’s fallback position – “test dummies” – involves a program that wasn’t even in existence in 1947. By far the most popular “CT” narrative is that an ET craft crashed, technology and bodies were recovered, and this has been covered up at the most ultra-secret level of government secrecy. Even David Grusch, the latest in a long line of supposed insiders to come forward, promotes this narrative.

It’s easy to jump on the ET bandwagon and lose sight of the forest for the trees. I step back and ask threshold questions such as (1) what is the likelihood ETs would be traveling across interstellar space in what apparently resembled 1990’s earthly technology (sufficiently understandable that we have supposedly reverse-engineered much of it); (2) what is the likelihood such craft would crash in New Mexico thunderstorms, even once, let alone in the numbers that people like Grusch insist they have crashed around the world since at least the 1930s; (3) what is the likelihood that ETs would be even vaguely humanoid – two arms with hands, two legs with feet, mouths, big eyes, etc.; and (4) what is the likelihood that multiple generations of “keepers of the secrets” could keep a lid on all this for what is now almost 80 years? I’m forced to admit the likelihood is essentially zero, compelling as some of the testimonial and anecdotal evidence swirling around the ET hypothesis may seem. And yet, something happened – and why can’t we get a plausible mundane explanation after 80 years?

After some 50 years of involvement (The Roswell Incident was published in 1980), I must throw up my hands and admit I have no idea. I wouldn’t call the ET hypothesis “lunatic fringe” but certainly “improbable in the extreme.” And yet, I have no mundane explanation that is any better. My guess (and that’s all it is) is some sort of staged event – staged by an alien intelligence perhaps, or perhaps by the military (in which case, why all the secrecy after 80 years?).

So that’s how I approach JFKA claims and narratives. First and foremost, from the level of “Does this make any sense?” Does it have real-world plausibility? Does it reflect who the supposed participants really were, or have they been reinvented to fit the narrative? Does it fly in the face of better evidence and a simpler, more plausible narrative? When the answer to all of these questions is in the negative, I consign the claim or narrative to the lunatic fringe. In my experience, those in the lunatic fringe ignore all the threshold questions and leap directly into “connecting all the dots,” losing sight of the fact that the claim or narrative makes no sense or is wildly improbable; this is the conspiratorial love of complexity that Tom Bethell and the Dutch psychoanalyst talk about. Eventually, the claim or narrative takes on a cult-like life of its own.

With Tippit, we have a pretty straightforward narrative that extends from Oswald going to his room and getting his revolver to being arrested at the theater with his revolver. What is the raw likelihood that there was some incredible intervening event that either had nothing to do with Oswald, his revolver and the JFKA (i.e., Tippit was murdered for unrelated reasons) or was somehow part of a plot to either eliminate Oswald or further frame him? The JFKA itself framed him about as thoroughly as he could be framed. If the plot was to eliminate him, then why didn’t whomever shot Tippit just shoot Oswald (or shoot Oswald after Oswald shot Tippit)? I have a near-impossible time getting past the “What sense does this make?” question.

At one time, specifically in regard to the questions being raised about Craford in connection with Tippit, I researched him as best I could, all the way up to his death many years later. He was a complete nobody all his life. He was about as much a hitman as my grandmother and about as unlikely a Tippit assassin as one could imagine. Does his departure from Dallas look anything like a hitman on the run? Does the rest of his obscure life look like someone who had any connection to the JFKA or a hit on a policeman? In all the various scenarios into which he is plugged, all that I can see he has going for him is that he vaguely resembled Oswald and had some connection to Ruby.

The Tippit murder was a wholly unexpected, traumatic event with a chaotic aftermath. It isn’t surprising that there are conflicting witness statements and loose threads. Greg has assembled a number of items of reasonable doubt (with respect to those items) and an alternative scenario, just as he has alternative scenarios for the Walker attempt, the Furniture Mart visit and other aspects of the JFKA. They all seem to me to be creative brainstorming that was intended from the get-go to articulate an alternative scenario – and that’s fine because it’s kind of fun, but they do all seem to exemplify the conspiratorial love of complexity. Add them all together, and I say “Impossible, just flat impossible for me to believe the orthodox narrative and the hard evidence supporting it is wrong in that many respects.” I won’t use the phrase “lunatic fringe” because Greg has put a lot of original work into these scenarios and he does seem to acknowledge that he is somewhat “thinking out loud” and merely “suggesting,” as opposed to the aggressive sales job that MTG tries to do.

If there was “something more” to the Tippit shooting, my guess would be that the shooting itself took place as described in the orthodox narrative and the “something more” is to be found in (1) Tippit’s alleged actions in the time before he encountered Oswald and/or (2) the “why” questions that John Corbett chides me for even considering – Why the hell did Tippit stop Oswald? If Tippit thought there was anything suspicious, especially related to the JFKA, why the hell didn’t he take better precautions? Why the hell did Oswald completely short-circuit his escape and make things a hundred times worse for himself by immediately shooting Tippit in front of multiple witnesses?

Wow, 1,267 words. I have written almost three books already this morning! I am the Leo Tolstoy of JFKA forums!  :D :D :D

67
By "bridge" you mean the triple underpass. I don't think the spot you've identified on the triple underpass is a plausible shooting location.

As if any place other than the sixth floor sniper's nest is viable, given the forensic evidence available.
Quote

However, I will point out that the first thing that DPD Chief Jesse Curry and Sheriff Bill Decker did after the shots rang out was to order their men to go to the area of the triple underpass and the railroad yard behind the grassy knoll to see what had happened, clearly indicating they believed shots had come from somewhere in that area.

Which indicates they had no special powers of audio perception and could be fooled as to where the gunshots originated from.
Quote

And of course we know from the photographic evidence that large numbers of people in the plaza, including some police officers, rushed toward the grassy knoll after the shots were fired. We also know that J. C. Price saw a man running away from the grassy knoll fence and into the railroad yard right after the shooting. A number of witnesses said they smelled the pungent odor of gun powder on or near the knoll right after the shooting. And, the Wiegman film shows a small cloud of smoke hanging in front of the trees on the knoll, which confirms the eyewitness accounts of seeing gun smoke emitted from a point just behind the fence on the knoll during the shooting.

All those people rushed to the GK and not one of them saw a gunman. Nor did Lee Bowers who was watching from an elevated position from behind the GK. You guys scoff at the SBT as requiring a magic bullet, then try and tell us there was a magic shooter who disappeared into thin air after firing the kill shot from behind the wooden fence.

As for the smell of gunpowder, the people who reported that were on Elm St. when they smelled it. Unless you want to argue the shooter fired from Elm St., that indicates the smell originated from a location some distance from Elm St. You would have us believe the gunpowder residue they smelled could travel to Elm St. from behind the wooden fence but not from the sniper's nest. A really illogical take on those reports.
68
It wasn’t a lecture. It was an observation. You are free to believe that the Connallys were goofy in maintaining that all three shots struck in the car.

It doesn't require one to think that two people who suddenly found themselves under fire, one of whom was actually hit, would not perceive the situation 100% accurately.

You continue to operate under the preposterous premise that people perfectly remember events. In reality, people remember bits and pieces of events and their minds try to fill in the blanks and not always accurately. JBC had no way of knowing whether the first shot hit inside the limo or not. Nellie would have had no indication of that either. Later, when they were led to believe erroneously that JFK had been hit by the first shot, they came to believe that. Of course we can see that didn't happen because we see JBC reacting to the first shot at about Z-164, just as he described. You would have us believe he only imagined that he heard a shot and the first shot wasn't fired for another 3.5 seconds. You then add to your silliness with the ridiculous conclusion that JBC was only hit in the thigh by that shot and didn't feel it. Instead, for some inexplicable reason, just two frames after his jacket bulged out, his right arm suddenly flipped upward and back down in the span of 9 frames, 0.5 seconds, and immediately went into severe gyrations when he twisted and dipped to his right. You claim it was at this point that he was turning to see JFK and wasn't struck in the back until Z270.

There is no nice way to say this. That is an incredibly stupid interpretation of what the Z-film shows. That is one thing most of the CTs and LNs on this forum can agree on. The only one with a dumber interpretation is Benjamin Cole who doesn't think JBC was hit until Z295. Thanks to him, you only get the silver medal for silliness. Benjamin snatched the gold medal from you.
69
The final shot likely came from the bridge...
Cancellare caught this fellow sitting on the other side of the bridge...
Either a police officer... or dressed up to look like one...
I believe Unger colorized the second pic...
The last pic is a rendition to help viewer orientation...


By "bridge" you mean the triple underpass. I don't think the spot you've identified on the triple underpass is a plausible shooting location.

However, I will point out that the first thing that DPD Chief Jesse Curry and Sheriff Bill Decker did after the shots rang out was to order their men to go to the area of the triple underpass and the railroad yard behind the grassy knoll to see what had happened, clearly indicating they believed shots had come from somewhere in that area.

And of course we know from the photographic evidence that large numbers of people in the plaza, including some police officers, rushed toward the grassy knoll after the shots were fired. We also know that J. C. Price saw a man running away from the grassy knoll fence and into the railroad yard right after the shooting. A number of witnesses said they smelled the pungent odor of gun powder on or near the knoll right after the shooting. And, the Wiegman film shows a small cloud of smoke hanging in front of the trees on the knoll, which confirms the eyewitness accounts of seeing gun smoke emitted from a point just behind the fence on the knoll during the shooting.
70
I love being lectured on the scientific method by a guy who has arrived at one of the goofiest scenarios ever concocted.
It wasn’t a lecture. It was an observation. You are free to believe that the Connallys were goofy in maintaining that all three shots struck in the car. 
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