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Author Topic: Bugliosi's "Conclusion of No Conspiracy"  (Read 49907 times)

Offline Tim Nickerson

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Re: Bugliosi's "Conclusion of No Conspiracy"
« Reply #64 on: June 12, 2018, 07:36:19 PM »
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Wow, Tim.  You left this out:

The committee believes, on the basis of the evidence available to it, that President John F. Kennedy was probably assassinated as a result of a conspiracy. The committee is unable to identify the other gunman or the extent of the conspiracy.

Michael, I left that out because I haven't seen you argue against it. It's not germane to the point I was making. You claim that the government got it right with its report in 1978 . Yet you argue against its concrete findings.

I. FINDINGS OF THE SELECT COMMITTEE ON ASSASSINATIONS IN THE ASSASSINATION OF PRESIDENT JOHN F. KENNEDY IN DALLAS, TEX., NOVEMBER 22, 1963

?A. Lee Harvey Oswald fired three shots at President John F. Kennedy. The second and third shots he fired struck the President. The third shot he fired killed the President.
  • 1.President Kennedy was struck by two rifle shots fired from behind him.
    2.The shots that struck President Kennedy from behind him were fired from the sixth floor window of the southeast corner of the Texas School Book Depository building.
    3.Lee Harvey Oswald owned the rifle. that was used to fire the shots from the sixth floor window of the southeast comer of the Texas School Book Depository building.
    4.Lee Harvey Oswald, shortly before the assassination, had access to and was present on the sixth floor of the Texas School Book Depository building.
    5.Lee Harvey Oswald's other actions tend to support the conclusion that he assassinated President Kennedy.

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Re: Bugliosi's "Conclusion of No Conspiracy"
« Reply #64 on: June 12, 2018, 07:36:19 PM »


Offline Bill Brown

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Re: Bugliosi's "Conclusion of No Conspiracy"
« Reply #65 on: June 12, 2018, 07:51:32 PM »
Duh, the one that said that LHO shot and killed JFK from behind. Playing games won't save you.

You're the one playing games when you attribute things to me that I have not said.  Grow up.

Online Mitch Todd

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Re: Bugliosi's "Conclusion of No Conspiracy"
« Reply #66 on: June 13, 2018, 12:36:00 AM »
The HSCA also said that there was NO recognizable human figure in the sixth floor window. Funny how you choose to ignore that.

I responded to his assertion that the HSCA concluded that there were shots (note plural) fired from the GK. As you are aware, I noted that the HSCA only committed to one shot from the GK, and that was purely on the basis of the WA acoustic study, which turned out to be in error.

But speaking of funny...

What's really, truly funny is that you assumed that the discussion must be about whatever random pet windmill you've chosen to tilt at this minute...whether it had anything to do with the conversation or not.

What's even funnier is, your own source makes clear that there are no photos showing the SN window during the assassination, so there is no reason to expect to see a "recognizable human figure" of an assassin in those photos. You simply have no point.




JFK Assassination Forum

Re: Bugliosi's "Conclusion of No Conspiracy"
« Reply #66 on: June 13, 2018, 12:36:00 AM »


Offline Ross Lidell

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Re: Bugliosi's "Conclusion of No Conspiracy"
« Reply #67 on: June 13, 2018, 05:39:37 AM »
Ross , you are right about the  Warren Report ( Main report that he handed LBJ ) having an index but I don't think the 26 volumes of testimonies and diagrams and pictures has an index. If you find out about the 26 volumes of the Warren Commission Report having an index , I would appreciate it if you let me know. Thanks Ross

Mike,

This is additional information.



Warren Commission Hearings and Exhibits

The Warren Commission published 26 volumes of hearings and exhibits within a few months after issuing its report. Volumes 1 - 5 are hearings conducted by the Commission members in Washington DC. Volumes 6 - 15 are hearings conducted by staff attorneys on location in Dallas, New Orleans, and other places. Volume 15 also contains an index to names and exhibits. Volumes 16 - 26 contain photographed Commission Exhibits, usually abbreviated to CE (i.e., CE 399), plus other exhibits organized by name.

https://www.maryferrell.org/php/showlist.php?docset=1006



Sylvia Meagher was a research analyst at the UN?s World Health Organization. She took a strong interest in the assassination of John F. Kennedy and read the twenty-six volumes of the hearings and exhibits of the Warren Commission: "It was appalling to find how many of the Commission's statements were unsupportable or even completely contradicted by the testimony and/or exhibits... I began to list what is now a long list of deliberate misrepresentations, omissions, distortions, and other defects demonstrating not only extreme bias, incompetence, and carelessness but irrefutable instances of dishonesty."

In 1965 Meagher published Subject Index to the Warren Report and Hearings and Exhibits. As Meagher pointed out, studying the entire twenty-six volumes without a subject index would be "tantamount to a search for information in the Encylopedia Britannica if the contents were untitled, unalphabetized, and in random sequence."

A deep study of the Warren Commission Report convinced her that the its detailed evidence contradicted its general conclusions. Meagher therefore published Accessories After the Fact: The Warren Commission, the Authorities, and the Report (1967). Meagher was unconvinced that Lee Harvey Oswald had been a lone gunman and concluded that the Warren Commission had attempted to cover-up details of the real people behind the assassination. Meagher believed that John F. Kennedy had been killed by a group Anti-Castro exiles.

http://spartacus-educational.com/JFKmeagher.htm



Question: Why wasn't Sylvia Meager killed before she could complete her work? After the Warren Report was published: Conspirators were said to be rubbing-out anyone who might expose the conspiracy!

Offline John Mytton

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Re: Bugliosi's "Conclusion of No Conspiracy"
« Reply #68 on: June 14, 2018, 01:43:58 AM »


4. As mentioned in the introduction of this book, we all know from our own experiences in life that it is almost impossible to keep a secret. And that?s when only a few people, even two, are involved, and even if the matter that one wishes to remain undisclosed isn?t terribly important. Somehow or other the information gets out, and it does so rather quickly, whether induced by one?s conscience, as in a death-bed confession, or through a former wife or mistress, or inadvertently, or simply because people can?t keep their mouths shut.? As I told the jury in London, ?I?ll stipulate that three people can keep a secret, but only if two are dead.? On a national scale we see this phenomenon at work with one presidential administration after another being unable to control, frequently for even a few days, ?leaks? to the media on matters they did not want known. (One example among thousands: USA Today reported on July 19, 2002, that ?recent news leaks [of classified information from a congressional probe of 9-11 intelligence failures] have infuriated the White House and prompted Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld to issue a memo warning that staffers who spill secrets are jeopardizing American lives.?)3 In the Kennedy case itself, we saw that although only a few members of the FBI?s Dallas office were involved, they were unable to keep secret their effort to suppress Oswald?s leaving a threatening note at the Dallas office about ten days or so before the assassination.       
When we apply this literal rule of life to the alleged massive conspiracy the conspiracy theorists claim existed in the murder of the president of the United States?massive not only in the considerable number of people who would have had to be involved* but also in the great number of details and matters that would have had to be suppressed, any one of which could have exposed the plot or given rise to an inference of its existence, and which allegedly included the doctoring of many photographs and X-rays, even the Zapruder film itself, and the murder of over a hundred people to silence them, and then the cover-up of each of these murders?we can be certain that if such a conspiracy took place, its existence would have broken out of its original shell in a thousand different ways, and relatively quickly. Yet after forty-four long years, not one credible word, not one syllable has ever surfaced about any conspiracy to kill Kennedy. (There have been noncredible confessions of guilt in the Kennedy case, nearly all of which have been discussed in depth in this book?for example, Chicago mobster Sam Giancana allegedly telling his brother Chuck that he was behind the murders of JFK, RFK, and Marilyn Monroe, that he met with LBJ and Richard Nixon in Dallas before the assassination and told them he and the CIA were planning to murder JFK, and that Jack Ruby coordinated the whole assassination for Sam. Because none of these confessions are even remotely credible?indeed, many are downright amusing?no serious person has ever paid any attention to them.) The reason why not the slightest trace of a conspiracy has ever been uncovered, of course, is that no such conspiracy ever existed.       
When we add to the above the allegation by conspiracy theorists that a second massive conspiracy existed?by the Warren Commission* and its leading assistant counsels to suppress the truth about the assassination from the American people?and not one word has ever leaked in over forty years of the existence of that conspiracy either, the only reasonable conclusion is that only people who subscribe to rules of absurdity, not rules of life, could possibly believe that a conspiracy to kill Kennedy ever existed. The conspiracy argument in the Kennedy assassination requires the belief that for over forty years a great number of people have been able to keep silent about the plot behind the most important and investigated murder of the twentieth century. In other words, it requires a belief in the impossible. Political columnist Charles Krauthammer, writing in 1992, pointed out the absurdity of the cover-up premise: ?That in a country where the fixing of a handful of game shows could not be held secret, a near-universal assassination conspiracy has remained airtight for 28 years.?4 How, sensible people ask, could such a vast conspiracy remain leakproof for almost four and a half decades, or even four and a half days? British writer D. M. Thomas marvels at the absurdity of the notion that ?a network of conspirators killed Kennedy, corrupted the medical and legal investigations, and buried the truth, all without a hitch.?       
In his book, Loving God, former presidential assistant Charles Colson, in writing about Watergate, said, ?With the most powerful office in the world at stake, a small band of hand-picked loyalists [of President Richard Nixon]?could not hold a conspiracy together for more than two weeks.?
RHVB



JohnM

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Re: Bugliosi's "Conclusion of No Conspiracy"
« Reply #68 on: June 14, 2018, 01:43:58 AM »


Offline John Mytton

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Re: Bugliosi's "Conclusion of No Conspiracy"
« Reply #69 on: June 14, 2018, 01:49:50 AM »





5. Obviously, the more complicated a plot is, the greater the likelihood that something will go wrong and it won?t work. Everyone intuitively knows this, and hence we can assume that if there had been a plot to kill Kennedy, the plotters would have made it as uncomplicated as possible. But the massive conspiracy envisioned by most conspiracy theorists necessarily would be extremely complex, and this fact is greatly exacerbated by the ineptitude of human beings.       
I?m talking about the staggering incompetence at every level of our society, one that normally prevents any group, large or small, including the U.S. government and its agencies, from performing at anywhere near optimum capacity? Indeed, on a scale of one to ten, they normally operate below five. Incompetence is so widely prevalent that I expect it, and when I find competence I am always pleasantly surprised. Let?s look at just one example among a great many, this one at the CIA, the main federal agency conspiracy theorists suspect of being behind the assassination. In 1994, Aldrich Ames, chief of the CIA?s Soviet counterintelligence branch, pleaded guilty to the biggest espionage case in U.S. history. Ames furnished the Soviets U.S. secrets in return for more than $2 million. His perfidy led to the deaths of several Russian undercover agents working for the United States in the Soviet Union. Ames told his interrogators it was ?really easy? to obtain the top-secret information even after he was transferred to anti-narcotics work in the early 1990s.       

In noting that it took an incredible nine years for Ames?s colleagues and superiors at CIA headquarters to catch him, syndicated columnist Mary McGrory wrote that ?Ames and his wife did everything they could to arouse suspicion, living it up in the most provocative manner. What G5-14, on a salary of $69,000-plus, pays half a million in cash [$540,000] for a house in Arlington, Virginia, buys a bright red Jaguar [which he drove to work] and runs up Trumplike charges on his credit card??6 A November 1994 report on the Ames case from the Senate Intelligence Committee found ?gross negligence? (?negligence? being a euphemism here for incompetence) at CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia, and reports from both the Senate Intelligence Committee and the House Select Committee on Intelligence ?agreed that the agency [CIA] is in deep disarray,? a condition, they said, that long predated the Ames case.7       

I mean, in 1986 the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), with billions of dollars spent, and the finest scientific minds available, and with the space shuttle Challenger right in front of their noses for inspection, and with a defective pressure seal wrongly designed and about which they had been advised and warned on numerous occasions, sent seven astronauts to their death because of their dreadful incompetence. Speaking of NASA, on the first day of the Apollo 8 flight that circumnavigated the moon, when Colonel Frank Borman, the commander of the flight, was sending transmissions back to Cape Kennedy, he referred to the Apollo 8 flight as the Gemini 8 flight, a flight he had participated in three years earlier. That?s life in the real world.       

While we?re talking about incompetence, let?s look at an extreme example of it in the Kennedy case itself. Established procedure in the Secret Service during a presidential motorcade is to scan not only the crowds but also the roofs and windows of buildings as the motorcade goes along.8 But apparently, and unbelievably, not one of the sixteen Secret Service agents in the motorcade through Dealey Plaza was looking anywhere near the upper floors of the Book Depository Building. If they had, they would have seen (as several Dealey Plaza witnesses who never had any obligation to look for such things did) a figure or a rifle in the window where Oswald was. But there?s no evidence, from any of the reports of the agents, that they saw anything in Oswald?s window, or even saw the three black Book Depository employees in the two windows beneath Oswald?s window. Pardon my pique, but where in the hell were their heads when the president?s limousine passed by the Book Depository Building, other than up the proverbial place? Special Agent Roy Kellerman told the Warren Commission that in the Secret Service detail protecting the president, ?when you are driving down [the] street?and you have buildings on either side of you, you are going to scan your eyes up and down? the buildings.9 Can you imagine that? Thirty-two trained eyes belonging to sixteen men whose duty and responsibility was to protect the president, and not one of these thirty-two eyes saw Oswald, or a rifle, or anything worthy of their attention in the sniper?s nest window. But several lay people did, and they were only there to watch the motorcade, not watch over the president?s security.       

The question is, How could the vast number of conspirators contemplated by the theorists have pulled off this incredibly complex conspiracy to such a degree of skill?never bumbling or slipping in any way that would reveal or even suggest their existence to one outside their group?that eternal secrecy would be guaranteed? Easy. You see, we know human beings are unable to keep their mouths shut and routinely incompetent, frequently stumbling over their own feet. But the conspirators envisioned by the theorists have their mouths permanently zippered and are extraordinarily competent, even prescient, being able to predict faultlessly all of the many uncontrollable variables in their mission to the point where everything worked perfectly, and with mathematical precision.       

As Richard White, professor of history at the University of Washington, and speaking in a generic sense, says, ?You can?t trust the government to do anything right?except, of course, to conspire and cover up. Then it becomes diabolically efficient. The very people who are wildest for government conspiracies are often the same people who believe the government is incapable of delivering the mail efficiently.?10 In other words, the conspiracists believe that Murphy?s law (whatever can go wrong will go wrong) doesn?t apply to the alleged conspiracy in the assassination and cover-up.       

The above deals with the murder and cover-up. But with the many groups supposedly involved in the conspiracy, like the CIA, mob, anti-Castro Cubans, and military-industrial complex, how could they handle all the logistical complexities and inevitable disagreements among themselves over details during the planning phase leading up to November 22, without anything they did out of the ordinary (and by definition, they would have had to do things out of the ordinary) coming to the attention of just one person outside their group?
RHVB




JohnM

Offline Gary Craig

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Re: Bugliosi's "Conclusion of No Conspiracy"
« Reply #70 on: June 14, 2018, 02:04:05 AM »
Mike,

This is additional information.



Warren Commission Hearings and Exhibits

The Warren Commission published 26 volumes of hearings and exhibits within a few months after issuing its report. Volumes 1 - 5 are hearings conducted by the Commission members in Washington DC. Volumes 6 - 15 are hearings conducted by staff attorneys on location in Dallas, New Orleans, and other places. Volume 15 also contains an index to names and exhibits. Volumes 16 - 26 contain photographed Commission Exhibits, usually abbreviated to CE (i.e., CE 399), plus other exhibits organized by name.

https://www.maryferrell.org/php/showlist.php?docset=1006



Sylvia Meagher was a research analyst at the UN?s World Health Organization. She took a strong interest in the assassination of John F. Kennedy and read the twenty-six volumes of the hearings and exhibits of the Warren Commission: "It was appalling to find how many of the Commission's statements were unsupportable or even completely contradicted by the testimony and/or exhibits... I began to list what is now a long list of deliberate misrepresentations, omissions, distortions, and other defects demonstrating not only extreme bias, incompetence, and carelessness but irrefutable instances of dishonesty."

In 1965 Meagher published Subject Index to the Warren Report and Hearings and Exhibits. As Meagher pointed out, studying the entire twenty-six volumes without a subject index would be "tantamount to a search for information in the Encylopedia Britannica if the contents were untitled, unalphabetized, and in random sequence."

A deep study of the Warren Commission Report convinced her that the its detailed evidence contradicted its general conclusions. Meagher therefore published Accessories After the Fact: The Warren Commission, the Authorities, and the Report (1967). Meagher was unconvinced that Lee Harvey Oswald had been a lone gunman and concluded that the Warren Commission had attempted to cover-up details of the real people behind the assassination. Meagher believed that John F. Kennedy had been killed by a group Anti-Castro exiles.

http://spartacus-educational.com/JFKmeagher.htm



Question: Why wasn't Sylvia Meager killed before she could complete her work? After the Warren Report was published: Conspirators were said to be rubbing-out anyone who might expose the conspiracy!


"Question: Why wasn't Sylvia Meager killed before she could complete her work? After the Warren Report was published: Conspirators were said to be rubbing-out anyone who might expose the conspiracy!"






DISPATCH                           CLASSIFICATION            PROCESSING ACTION
                                     TOP SECRET            MARKED FOR INDEXING
TO       Chiefs, Certain Stations and Bases             X  NO INDEXING REQUIRED
INFO                                                       ONLY QUALIFIED DESK
                                                           CAN JUDGE INDEXING
FROM     The Director of Central Intelligence              MICROFILM
SUBJECT  Countering Criticism of the Warren Report
ACTION REQUIRED - REFERENCES

PSYCH

     1. Our Concern.   From the day of President Kennedy's assassination on,
there has been speculation about the responsibility for his murder.  Although
this was stemmed for a time by the Warren Commission report (which appeared at
the end of September 1964), various writers have now had time to scan the
Commission's published report and documents for new pretexts for questioning,
and there has been a new wave of books and articles criticizing the Commission's
findings.  In most cases the critics have speculated as to the existence of some
kind of conspiracy, and often they have implied that the Commission itself was
involved.  Presumably as a result of the increasing challenge to the Warren
Commission's Report, a public opinion poll recently indicated that 46% of the
American public did not think that Oswald acted alone, while more than half of
those polled thought that the Commission had left some questions unresolved.
Doubtless polls abroad would show similar, or possibly more adverse, results.

     2.  This trend of opinion is a matter of concern to the U.S. government,
including our organization.  The members of the Warren Commission were naturally
chosen for their integrity, experience, and prominence.  They represented both
major parties, and they and their staff were deliberately drawn from all sections
of the country.  Just because of the standing of the Commissioners, efforts to
impugn their rectitude and wisdom tend to cast doubt on the whole leadership of
American society.  Moreover, there seems to be an increasing tendency to hint
that President Johnson himself, as the one person who might be said to have
benefited, was in some way responsible for the assassination.  Innuendo of
such seriousness affects not only the individual concerned, but also the whole
reputation of the American government.  Our organization itself is directly
involved:  among other facts, we contributed information to the investigation.
Conspiracy theories have frequently thrown suspicion on our organization, for
example by falsely alleging that Lee Harvey Oswald worked for us.  The aim of
this dispatch is to provide material for countering and discrediting the claims
of the conspiracy theorists, so as to inhibit the circulation of such claims in
other countries.  Background information is supplied in a classified section and
in a number of unclassified attachments.

     3.  Action.  We do not recommend that discussion of the assassination ques-
tion be initiated where it is not already taking place.  Where discussion is
active, however, addressees are requested:
 
                         DISPATCH SYMBOL AND NUMBER   DATE
9 attachments h/w                                         4/1/67
1 - classified secret              CLASSIFICATION     HQS FILE NUMBER
8 - Unclassified                     TOP SECRET           DESTROY WHEN NO LONGER 
                                                          NEEDED
CONTINUATION OF                    CLASSIFICATION     DISPATCH SYMBOL AND NUMBER
DISPATCH                             TOP SECRET

a.  To discuss the publicity problem with liaison and friendly elite contacts
(especially politicians and editors), pointing out that the Warren Commission
made as thorough an investigation as humanly possible, that the charges of the
critics are without serious foundation, and that further speculative discussion
only plays into the hands of the opposition.  Point out also that parts of the
conspiracy talk appear to be deliberately generated by Communist propagandists.
Urge them to use their influence to discourage unfounded and irresponsible
speculation.

b.  To employ propaganda assets to answer and refute the attacks of the
critics.  Book reviews and feature articles are particularly appropriate for
this purpose.  The unclassified attachments to this guidance should provide
useful background material for passage to assets.  Our play should point out,
as applicable, that the critics are (i) wedded to theories adopted before the
evidence was in, (ii) politically interested, (iii) financially interested, (iv)
hasty and inaccurate in their research, or (v) infatuated with their own theories.
In the course of discussions of the whole phenomenon of criticism, a useful
strategy may be to single out Epstein's theory for attack, using the attached
Fletcher Knebel article and Spectator piece for background.  (Although Mark
Lane's book is much less convincing than Epstein's and comes off badly where
contested by knowledgeable critics, it is also much more difficult to answer
as a whole, as one becomes lost in a morass of unrelated details.)

4.  In private to media discussions not directed at any particular writer, or
in attacking publications which may be yet forthcoming, the following arguments
should be useful:

a.  No significant new evidence has emerged which the Commission did not
consider.  The assassination is sometimes compared (e.g., by Joachim Joesten
and Bertrand Russell) with the Dreyfus case; however, unlike that case, the
attacks on the Warren Commission have produced no new evidence, no new culprits
have been convincingly identified, and there is no agreement among the critics.
(A better parallel, though an imperfect one, might be with the Reichstag fire
of 1933, which some competent historians (Fritz Tobias, A.J.P. Taylor, D.C. Watt)
now believe was set by Van der Lubbe on his own initiative, without acting for
either Nazis or Communists; the Nazis tried to pin the blame on the Communists,
but the latter have been more successful in convincing the world that the
Nazis were to blame.)

b.  Critics usually overvalue particular items and ignore others.  They tend
to place more emphasis on the recollections of individual eyewitnesses (which
are less reliable and more divergent -- and hence offer more hand-holds for
criticism) and less on ballistic, autopsy, and photographic evidence.  A close
examination of the Commission's records will usually show that the conflicting
eyewitness accounts are quoted out of context, or were discarded by the Commis-
sion for good and sufficient reason.

c.  Conspiracy on the large scale often suggested would be impossible to con-
ceal in the United States, esp. since informants could expect to receive large
royalties, etc.  Note that Robert Kennedy, Attorney General at the time and
John F. Kennedy's brother, would be the last man to overlook or conceal any
conspiracy.  And as one reviewer pointed out, Congressman Gerald R. Ford would
hardly have held his tongue for the sake of the Democratic administration, and
Senator Russell would have had every political interest in exposing any misdeeds
on the part of Chief Justice Warren.  A conspirator moreover would hardly choose
a location for a shooting where so much depended on conditions beyond his con-
trol:  the route, the speed of the cars, the moving target, the risk that the
assassin would be discovered.  A group of wealthy conspirators could have
arranged much more secure conditions.

d.  Critics have often been enticed by a form of intellectual pride:  they
light on some theory and fall in love with it; they also scoff at the Commis-
sion because it did not always answer every question with a flat decision one
way or the other.  Actually, the make-up of the Commission and its staff was
an excellent safeguard against over-commitment to any one theory, or against
the illicit transformation of probabilities into certainties.



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e.  Oswald would not have been any sensible person's choice for a co-
conspirator.  He was a "loner," mixed up, of questionable reliability
and an unknown quantity to any professional intelligence service.

f.  As to charges that the Commission's report was a rush job, it emerged
three months after the deadline originally set.  But to the degree that
the Commission tried to speed up its reporting, this was largely due to
the pressure of irresponsible speculation already appearing, in some cases
coming from the same critics who, refusing to admit their errors, are now
putting out new criticism.

g.  Such vague accusations as that "more than ten people have died mysteri-
ously" can always be explained in some more natural way:  e.g., the indi-
viduals concerned have for the most part died of natural causes; the Com-
mission staff questioned 418  witnesses (the FBI interviewed far more
people, conducting 25,000 interviews and reinterviews), and in such a
large group, a certain number of deaths are to be expected.  (When Penn
Jones, one of the originators of the "ten mysterious deaths" line, ap-
peared on television, it emerged that two of the deaths on his list were
from heart attacks, one from cancer, one was from a head-on collision on
a bridge, and one occurred when a driver drifted into a bridge abutment.)

5.  Where possible, counter speculation by encouraging reference to the
Commission's Report itself.  Open-minded foreign readers should still be
impressed by the care, thoroughness, objectivity and speed with which the Com-
mission worked.  Reviewers of other books might be encouraged to add to their
account the idea that, checking back with the report itself, they found it far
superior to the work of its critics.



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Document Number 1035-960
for FOIA Review on SEP 1976


JFK Assassination Forum

Re: Bugliosi's "Conclusion of No Conspiracy"
« Reply #70 on: June 14, 2018, 02:04:05 AM »


Online Mitch Todd

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Re: Bugliosi's "Conclusion of No Conspiracy"
« Reply #71 on: June 14, 2018, 04:28:56 AM »
They saw NO human figure immediately before or immediately after. How do you explain that if you continue to ridiculously claim that LHO was there (and of course there isn't a shred of evil to show that he was)?  Was he Houdini?

It's your assertion. It is up to *you* to explain that we *should* *expect* to see a "recognizable human figure" in any photos of the TSBD, and why we should expect to see it. How long after the last shot was the earliest after-the-fact photo taken? When was the last before-the-fact photo taken of that window? I doubt the sniper spent too much time setting up or bugging out. If the no photo is taken soon enough before or after, there is no good reason to expect anyone to be in the window at the first place.

And, you have to consider the various possible stances the sniper could take, visual obstructions like the boxes in the window or the wall to the east of the window, and the angle of the photographer with the TSBD WRT to these visual obstacles.  You may have a photo showing some part of a person up there, just not a "recognizable human figure," because most of that figure is hidden by some combination of boxes, walls, window mullions, and shadow. You've done none of that. You've simply assert whatever, then petulantly whined that I don't take your assertion seriously.

Which is yet another good reason for me to not to take your assertions seriously.