Hank, the document "Funeral Arrangements for John Fitzgerald Kennedy" recounts events from 11/22/1965 to 11/25/1963. It is not on-the-spot contemporaneous. The passage "CLEARANCE WAS RECIEVED TO PROCEED WITH THE PREPARATION AFTER 11 P.M., NOVEMBER 22, 1963" not only comes AFTER it describes the Kennedy staff selecting the new mahogany casket, AND meeting with Bethesda hospital staff and government officials, it says this under "Saturday, November 23, 1963".
So you think they started to prepare the body on Saturday night after 11pm?
Is that your argument?
https://www.history-matters.com/archive/jfk/arrb/master_med_set/md134/html/md134_0001a.htm
Clearly, the person who typed this up had the choice of putting that line on the 11/22 page or the 11/23 page. Since the embalming procedures started at 11pm on 11/22 and ended near 4pm on 11/23, they opted to put it on the 11/23 page. Another consideration is the 11/22 page is full. So it wouldn't fit there anyway. And that's why they put the date of 11/22/63 in that sentence. Otherwise it would appear the embalming started after 11pm on Saturday, 11/23.
Or are you going with the actual wording of the document that says
"CLEARANCE WAS RECIEVED TO PROCEED WITH THE PREPARATION AFTER 11 P.M., NOVEMBER 22, 1963"?
The first call sheet of Gawler's says the "arrangements" were at 11pm:
https://www.history-matters.com/archive/jfk/arrb/master_med_set/md129/html/md129_0001a.htm
When did Kennedy's staff select the casket? David Powers wrote "around midnight". When was the casket delivered? the funeral home "First Call Sheet" says it was 2 AM.
Again, the delivery of the casket could be separate from the morticians beginning the embalming process.
Are you saving your best stuff for later? Because this is pretty weak.
Gee, I was about to say that to
YOU.
One thing that puzzled me was that the Sibert and O'Neil report states:
At the termination of the autopsy, the following personnel from Gawler’s Funeral Home entered the autopsy room to prepare the President’s body for burial:
JOHN VAN HAESEN
EDWIN STROBLE
THOMAS ROBINSON
Mr. HAGEN
Let's assume this was written on the spot while Sibert and O'Neil [sic] were still there. If the FBI agents left at around 11:00 - 11:30 PM, then how could they have written this down?
Because the autopsy was over (as Sibert and O'Neill noted) and the morticians arrived before they left!
Probably about 11pm. And started the embalming 'after 11pm'.
Doh!
What part of "
At the termination of the autopsy" in that memo did you not understand?
You've already argued that the FBI agents left by about 11:30 or so.
At 11:30 the Gawler's funeral home guys arrived at the morgue. The FBI agents Sibert and O'Neil presumed that this marked the near completion of the autopsy, and that nothing else of value would be learned. So, they departed at around this time with their report only referring to the throat wound as a tracheotomy.
That means the morticians got there and started the embalming 'after 11pm', exactly as the document says.
As some of those morticians have said in interviews, they got to witness some of the autopsy procedures.
People almost always inflate their importance years later. Like fish stories. The Sibert and O'Neill memorandum prepared within a few days of the autopsy says the Gawler's people didn't enter the autopsy room until the autopsy was over. You just quoted it above. Here it is again:
"At the termination of the autopsy, the following personnel from Gawler’s Funeral Home entered the autopsy room..."
So you can believe the contemporaneous FBI memorandum or you can believe the stories the morticians are telling decades later. I know where I'm placing my bet.
The part in Manchester's book describing the autopsy doctors discovering the original small throat wound around midnight was presumably from Joe Hagan or another Gawler's member.
Sorry, this is the conjecture part that is always part of your shtick. It can't be them because they had no business in there before the conclusion of the autopsy, and the FBI memo YOU QUOTED says they only entered after the conclusion of the autopsy.
Well, it's only a fifteen minute drive at most between Gawler's funeral home and Bethesda hospital. The confusion between the accounts of which Gawler's team member came early, who delivered the new casket, who departed Bethesda with the prepared body in the casket, could be explained by the team shuffling back and forth.
Or just plain old human recollection. Which we know is fallible. And which you want to rely on when it supports your case and discard or explain away when it doesn't.
Hank