MicahJava
Illuminator
- Joined
- Jan 26, 2016
- Messages
- 3,039
According to some anonymous layman (e.g, unqualified) internet poster who posts here as "MicahJava". But to my knowledge, this MicahJava person has never quoted any qualified person who has said that.
Don't get scared of big words like "skull" and "brain". The area of skull around the large defect was very brittle and fractured so easily that the doctors had to do "virtually do work with a saw" to remove the pieces of bone. The depressed cowlick fracture was right beside the lower parietal area of the large defect, of course it would have to be separated in the process of removing the brain.
This is also a simple matter of volume. How much wiggle room do you think an unfixed brain has? You remove a human brain, you need to create a big enough opening on the top of the head. It definitely couldn't happen while also keeping the HSCA beveled exit location intact.
How many decades after the fact did Finck make that claim? And why should we rely on on Finck's recollection to overturn the conclusions reached on the night of the autopsy when Finck, Humes, and Boswell had the body in front of them?
Isn't this yet another example of you claiming to agree with the autopsy, but meanwhile attempting to pick holes in it?
Hank
Decades? Try fourteen months.
From Dr. Finck's 1/25/1965-2/1/1965 reports of Kennedy's autopsy to Gen. Blumberg:
"I examined the wounds. The scalp of the back of the head showed a small laceration, 15 X 6 mm. Corresponding to this lesion, I found a through-and-through wound of the occipital bone, with a crater visible from the inside of the cranial cavity. This bone wound showed no crater when viewed from outside the skull. On the basis of this pattern of the occipital bone perforation, I stated that the wound in the back of the head was an entrance."
"THE WOUNDS
The scalp of the vertex is lacerated. There is an open comminuted fracture of the cranial vault, many portions of which are missing.
The autopsy had been in progress for thirty minutes when I arrived. Cdr Humes told me that he only had to prolong the lacerations of the scalp before removing the brain. No sawing of the skull was necessary.
The opening of the large head wound, in the right fronto-parieto-occipital region, is 130 millimeters ( mm ) in diameter.
I also noticed another scalp wound, possibly of entrance, in the right occipital region, lacerated and transversal, 15 x 6 mm.. Corresponding to that wound, the skull shows a portion of a crater, the beveling of which is obvious on the internal aspect of the bone; on that basis, I told the prosectors and Admiral Galloway that this occipital wound is a wound, of ENTRANCE."
Why do I even try?
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