MicahJava
Illuminator
- Joined
- Jan 26, 2016
- Messages
- 3,039
So nothing you can quote about Burkley thinking two shots hit the head. You are *presuming* what you need to prove.
Only somebody intentionally ignoring the obvious would choose to ignore the powerful statement of "I would not like to be quoted on that", in response to being asked "Do you agree with the Warren Report on the number of bullets that entered the President's body?". Normal people go 'well, that on Earth is that supposed to mean? are you holding back something?".
So only a hearsay report once removed of what Sprague was told - not by Burkley - but by another person (Illig) who is at best presumably accurately reporting what Burkley told him, and then Sprague is persumably accurately reporting what Illig said.
Note what Illig doesn't say Burkley said. He doesn't say two or more people took part in the shooting. He only claims Burkley has information "indicating that others besides Oswald must have participated" in the assassination. This information could be nothing more than someone encouraging Oswald. It doesn't mean two shots to the head, and it doesn't mean two or more shooters. Once more, you are *presuming* what you need to prove.
While the letter clearly says that "He (Burkley) has information in the Kennedy assassination indicating that others besides Oswald must have participated", implying that this is a matter of the wounds to his body, we do have this hearsay excerpt from Paul L. Hoch's newsletter Echoes Of Conspiracy, Vol. 9, No. 1, 5/31/1987:
"Dr. Burkley's comments to Hurt may well not have been based on what he knew about the medical evidence, according to information recently provided to me. William Manchester, who interviewed Dr. Burkley five times from April 1964 through July 1966, told me that at that time Dr. Burkley said he did not believe in a conspiracy theory, and was emphatic on that point.
Also, Dr. Burkley recently told a relative of his that he did think that Oswald must have been part of a conspiracy, because the way he and his family lived and traveled was indicative of financial support. (This suspicion has been voiced by many people over the years, and the Warren Commission attempted to rebut in in Appendix XIV of the Report.) This relative also asked Dr. Burkley about Lifton's book when it was published; Dr. Burkley did not provide any clarification of the issues involved, nor did he indicate that he agreed
with any of Lifton's analysis.
If there is more information to be obtained about what Dr. Burkley knew, it will probably have to come from existing documents, or as the result of an official inquiry by the Justice Department."
So we have some indication that Burkley may have been interested in conspiracy theorizing beyond issues concerning the wounds to Kennedy's body, but the previous point stands.
An affidavit signed by Burkley, the sole first-person statement by Burkley you cite. In it, he states two shots to the brain would have been *eliminated* if he had testified. Please look up the meaning of the word *eliminated*. It does not mean what you appear to think it means. This calls into question the other statements attributed to Burkley via hearsay, and shows why hearsay statements generally aren't admissible in court.
Hank, if you are smart enough to distort quotes like that, you are smart enough to know what they actually say. Here, Burkley is saying that we would know whether it was one or two bullets if the brain had been sectioned.
Burkley's beliefs are not pertinent here. They do not rise to the level of evidence. Once more, you are *presuming* what you need to prove. Burkley did state: "I saw President Kennedy's wounds at Parkland Hospital and during the autopsy at the Bethesda Naval Hospital. There was no difference in the nature of the wounds I saw at Parkland Hospital and those I observed at the autopsy at Bethesda Naval Hospital", which pretty much destroys any claims of body alteration.[/B]
So are you saying that Burkley saw the original throat wound?