HSienzant
Philosopher
You're just repeating very flimsy evidence. I can see how the photographs could be misleading, but they aren't the small wound and Boswell knew it.
I could say 'back at ya' but I doubt it would be persuasive to you. You're repeating your assessment, but not giving us any reason to doubt the intent of the photographer or the autopsists. See the four points (a - d) in the post above.
There are lost autopsy photographs. There is also the F8 autopsy photograph.
Neither of which would move the red spot from its location in the photo you did post.
Dr. Humes signed off on the autopsy report with Boswell's wound placements, and so did Dr. Burkley, the President's personal physician, as well as Admiral Galloway, a witness to the autopsy. Humes' descriptions of the wounds created the Rydberg drawings.
But the autopsy does NOT give a specific measurement for the wound placement on the skull. We all know this. So citing Humes and Burkley and Galloway signing off on it does not establish your argument in any way, shape, or form.
The bit of testimony about Humes agreeing with the cowlick entry was given on 9/7/1978, while testimony earlier on 9/16/77 has Humes making no comment when Boswell states on no uncertain terms that remembers the red spot being a small scalp defect, and the real small wound was much lower. Like I've said before, Dr. Humes may simply be forgetting about the reasons why the red spot can not be the small head wound.
And it's going to be more difficult to convince anyone that Humes recollection about the wound was 100% airtight and correct when you're arguing for his failure of memory in the same paragraph.
He also never retracted his earlier comments about the ruler not measuring the red spot. If you think the BOH photos depict the ruler being used to measure the wound, why would they be pulling back the scalp so that the actual location of the wound recedes?
Uh, to show the damage to the skull and the underlying bullet wound there?
You sort of have Humes as half a witness, with the disadvantage of his retractions coming long after he already produced unambiguous evidence proving the cowlick entry wound wrong.
On the other hand, you have Humes as sort of half a witness, with the disadvantage of his original claims being clarified later and admitted to be erroneous.
Do I even need to bring up that they got Humes to intentionally raise the back wound on the Rydberg drawings? This whole situation is just another back wound blunder.
Rydberg drawings are only schematic in nature, as testified to by Dr. Humes. This was previously quoted back to you.
Can there be a more desperate plea for some evidence of a cowlick entry wound? Why not real evidence?
You mean like the back of the head autopsy photo you posted? Isn't that real evidence?
And for the four reasons (a - d) posted, with those unambiguous reasons self-contained within the photo itself?
Hank