The EOP shot did not cause the large head wound.
It is a sad day when the wound described by the autopsy report and the autopsy doctors is considered a pet theory.
It is a sad day when the wound described by the autopsy report and the autopsy doctors is considered a pet theory.
It is a sad day when the wound described by the autopsy report and the autopsy doctors is considered a pet theory.
It is a sad day when the wound described by the autopsy report and the autopsy doctors is considered a pet theory.
It is a sad day when my misinterpretation of the wound described by the autopsy report and the autopsy doctors is considered a pet theory.
Indeed.
The autopsy surgeons said the large head wound was caused by the bullet that entered the back of the head.
Your pet theory (bolded above) contradicts their conclusion.
Hank
Hypothesizing more than one gunshot wound to the head starts with the existence of the EOP wound. The official conclusion of one head shot cannot be used as evidence for a higher entry wound.
Hypothesizing more than one gunshot wound to the head starts with the existence of the EOP wound. The official conclusion of one head shot cannot be used as evidence for a higher entry wound.
Hypothesizing more than one gunshot wound to the head starts with the existence of the EOP wound. The official conclusion of one head shot cannot be used as evidence for a higher entry wound.
It is a sad day when the wound described by the autopsy report and the autopsy doctors is considered a pet theory.
The EOP shot did not cause the large head wound.
It is a sad day when the wound described by the autopsy report and the autopsy doctors is considered a pet theory.
Hypothesizing more than one gunshot wound to the head starts with the existence of the EOP wound. The official conclusion of one head shot cannot be used as evidence for a higher entry wound.
Hypothesizing more than one gunshot wound to the head starts with the existence of the EOP wound. The official conclusion of one head shot cannot be used as evidence for a higher entry wound.
You cannot hypothesize without common sense.
The number of head-shots on any of the assassination films is exactly 1.
The number of headshots seen by every eye witness on Elm Street, and in the Secret Service chase car was exactly 1.
The number of entry wounds to the skull is exactly 1.
Like said before, to grasp the assassination you must have the ability to count to 2. Understanding the head wound means you should be able to count to 1.
Your problem is clear.
What's the point of counting to 2 if you have chosen to never understand it?
Why do you think head wounds always work like Hollywood?
Why are you expecting witnesses to see a wound that was a small hole covered by his hair?
What's the point of counting to 2 if you have chosen to never understand it?
Yes, I too am saddened when somebody continues to, bewilderingly, claim the autopsy describes a wound to the "EOP", as an argument for additional bullets, and indeed there is something wrong with the autopsy because of draft numbers...
After all, the wound described is clearly from the region of the "cowlick" on the photographs to the large exit wound caused by trauma ejecta. It's just plain sad that people will read the report, and the conclusions of the doctors given in testimony, and still try to pretend decades later recollections Trump this, or that the word "slightly" can be used to better suit their silly hypothesis.
If you want to successfully deconstruct an argument, get it right first.
The three main autopsy doctors, Humes, Boswell, and Finck consistently maintained a lower entry wound under repeated interviewing like the autopsy report implies with "2.5 centimeters to the right and slightly above the EOP". The autopsy report was based in part by measurements of the wounds taken at the autopsy. Five other autopsy witnesses, John Stringer, Francis X. O'Neil, Chester Boyers, Roy Kellerman, Richard Lipsey, have also made statements indicating a lower entry wound. Dr. George Burkley was not asked specifically about the location of the entry wound, but he did verify the autopsy face sheet diagram showing an entry wound roughly in the lower head area. He may have also contributed the line in The Death Of A President about the fatal bullet entering the cerebellum. So he's pretty much a EOP witness. No witness to this small head wound described seeing it on the top of the head. They all indicate a lower location.
The consensus on the autopsy participant accounts is further sealed by the fact that Dr. Finck arrived at the autopsy after the brain had already been removed, yet could still examine this wound on the scalp and skull, and always said that this wound was still completely intact within Kennedy's open cranium. Autopsies remove the brain by first separating most of the top of the skull, so therefore any entry defect on the top of the head would also be separated, especially considering that the area around his large defect was so fractured and breakable that virtually no sawing of the skull had to be done. The three main autopsy doctors also made statements later on indicating that a special incision in the scalp had to be made to expose the entry wound low in his head, after the incision and deflection of the had already been done on the top of his head. The brainstem was also reported to be damaged. Cyril Wecht also once wrote about a possible bullet fragment he identified in the upper neck area.
Gee, I wonder what freaking "slightly" means!
Do you think the red spot on the BOH photos is an entry wound? Well, that was specifically denied by the guy who took the photos, John Stringer, and the three main autopsy doctors. Dr. Boswell even told the HSCA and ARRB that he thought the red spot was a scalp injury related to the large head wound. Think the photographs shows a ruler measuring the wound? The doctors and photographer Stringer have all denied the ruler had any significance. 'Just there to provide Scale'. After all, the back wound photograph shows the ruler some distance away from the actual wound. Think the hair appears to be parted around the red spot? Well the old gang all denied that such washing or parting of the hair happened, but alternately, it could have been a wound of some significance but was not the wound described by the doctors. Perhaps a tear in the scalp like Boswell said, or perhaps an exit for a fragment. It is known that the red spot does not appear to be an actual hole devoid of scalp and bone. It looks two-dimensional. Viewing the autopsy photographs as stereoscopic morphing images will also notice that the red spot appears to be somewhat lower than the HSCA's chosen location on the skull for a higher entry wound. So why doesn't the present official autopsy photo collection show the EOP wound? Well, we know that autopsy photographs have gone missing, and the doctors and photographers have indicated that they remembered close-up photographs of an entry wound in the scalp and surfaces of the skull. The EOP wound could still be compatible with the BOH photographs if it is hiding within his hairline or under a bit of hair. After all, there is witness evidence that a small hole in Kennedy's forehead above his right eye existed, but the existing autopsy photographs do not give a clear view of any hole there (although they definitely suggest some weird activity in that area, with the red 'V' and all). They were probably destroyed by vultures who wanted to keep the forensic evidence as vague as possible.
The three main autopsy doctors and x-ray tech John Ebersole have said that they didn't think the X-rays shows an entry on the top of the head. For every person propped up as an expert who agreed that the X-rays showed an entry defect 4-5 inches above the EOP, there's another that either disagreed or couldn't identify any particular entry defect on the X-rays.
There is no strong case for the cowlick entry theory.
What's the point of counting to 2 if you have chosen to never understand it?
Why do you think head wounds always work like Hollywood?
Why are you expecting witnesses to see a wound that was a small hole covered by his hair?
If you want to successfully deconstruct an argument, get it right first.
The autopsy report was based in part by measurements of the wounds taken at the autopsy.
Autopsies remove the brain by first separating most of the top of the skull, so therefore any entry defect on the top of the head would also be separated,
The three main autopsy doctors also made statements later on indicating that a special incision in the scalp had to be made to expose the entry wound low in his head, after the incision and deflection of the had already been done on the top of his head.
The brainstem was also reported to be damaged
Cyril Wecht also once wrote about a possible bullet fragment he identified in the upper neck area.
Think the photographs shows a ruler measuring the wound?
So why doesn't the present official autopsy photo collection show the EOP wound?
Well, we know that autopsy photographs have gone missing,
the doctors and photographers have indicated that they remembered close-up photographs of an entry wound in the scalp and surfaces of the skull.
After all, there is witness evidence that a small hole in Kennedy's forehead above his right eye existed, but the existing autopsy photographs do not give a clear view of any hole there
They were probably destroyed by vultures who wanted to keep the forensic evidence as vague as possible.
There is no strong case for the cowlick entry theory.