FAULTY
EVIDENCE:
PROBLEMS
WITH THE CASE AGAINST LEE HARVEY OSWALD
Michael
T. Griffith
2011
@All
Rights Reserved
Fourth
Edition
In 1964 the Warren Commission (WC)
concluded that President John F. Kennedy was assassinated by a lone gunman, Lee
Harvey Oswald, and that there was no conspiracy involved in the killing. The
Commission asserted that Oswald shot JFK from the sixth floor of the Texas
School Book Depository (TSBD) Building in Dallas, Texas, with an Italian-made
6.5 mm Mannlicher-Carcano rifle at 12:30 P.M. on
November 22, 1963.
WC defenders maintain that the case
against Oswald is airtight, and that were he to stand trial today he would be
found guilty of the assassination.
Critics of the WC, on the other
hand, assert that Oswald was framed, that the case against him is flawed at
almost every point, and that an impartial jury would acquit him in a trial
where the normal legal standards of evidence were applied. In their view, not
only is there far more than a reasonable doubt about Oswald's guilt, but the
available evidence shows he did not shoot the President. Most WC critics also
believe that Kennedy was killed as the result of a conspiracy.
In 1992 the American Bar Association
conducted two mock Oswald trials. The first trial ended in a hung jury. In the
second trial the jury acquitted Oswald.
The purpose of this paper is to
examine some of the problems with the case against Lee Harvey Oswald.
Oswald and the Mannlicher-Carcano Rifle
One of the first steps in building a
case against Oswald would be to link him to the alleged murder weapon, the Mannlicher-Carcano rifle. But this is just one of the many
areas where a prosecutor would encounter difficulties. Although at first glance
there appears to be a strong connection between Oswald and the Italian-made
rifle, the link becomes questionable upon further examination.
WC defenders note that the order
form, money order, and envelope used to purchase the Mannlicher-Carcano
were filled out in handwriting identified as Oswald's (see, for example, Moore
48). Furthermore, they point to Oswald's alleged use of the alias "Alek Hidell." The rifle was
sent to Oswald's post office box, but it was ordered in the name of, and
addressed to, "A. Hidell." According to the
Dallas police, Oswald was carrying an "Alek J. Hidell" ID card when he was arrested. Here's where
things get interesting.
To begin with, Oswald was at work
when he is said to have purchased the money order (Summers 213). So who bought
the money order? If Oswald didn't buy it, why does the handwriting on it seem
to be his? There are forgers who can copy a person's handwriting so well that
it is difficult if not impossible to detect their fakery, especially if only a
small quantity of writing is required. Also, the original order form and
envelope were destroyed, so the FBI had to rely on microfilm copies of this
evidence.
Another problem with the connection
between Oswald and the Carcano is that nobody at
Oswald's post office reported giving him a hefty package such as the kind in
which a rifle would be shipped (Summers 59; Meagher 50). In fact, none of those
postal workers reported ever giving Oswald any
kind of a package. Oddly, the FBI apparently made no effort to establish that
Oswald picked up the rifle from the post office, or that he had ever received a
package of any kind there. Furthermore, postal regulations required that only
those persons named on the post office box's registration form could receive
items of mail from the box, yet there is no evidence that Oswald listed the
name of Hidell on the form (Smith 290-291). In fact,
in a report dated 3 June 1964, the FBI stated, "Our investigation has
revealed that Oswald did not indicate
on his application that others, including an 'A. Hidell,'
would receive mail through the box in question" (Meagher 49, emphasis
added).
There is a discrepancy in size
between the weapon ordered by "A. Hidell"
and the rifle that Oswald allegedly left behind on the sixth floor of the TSBD.
"A. Hidell" ordered item C20-T750 from an
advertisement placed by Klein's Sporting Goods in the February 1963 issue of American Rifleman. The rifle that was
listed as item C20-T750 is 36 inches long. However, the Mannlicher-Carcano
that Oswald supposedly abandoned on the sixth floor of the Book Depository
Building is 40.2 inches long (Lifton 20).
There is no question that the amount
of handwriting on the money order, envelope, and order form could have been faked.
The famous "Oswald" note to "Mr. Hunt," signed by Lee
Harvey Oswald, is a case in point, according to lone-gunman theorists
themselves. WC defenders now claim the note was faked by the KGB. Yet, three
renowned handwriting experts examined the note and concluded it was written by
Oswald. The HSCA's handwriting experts could not
decide if the handwriting on the note was Oswald's, but their doubts centered
on the signature. They said the text of the note was in handwriting that
appeared to be Oswald's. So if the "Mr. Hunt" note could have been
faked, then the money order, order form, and envelope certainly could have been
faked as well.
Most conspiracy theorists see the
mail-order murder weapon and the "Hidell"
ID card as evidence of a frame-up. They note the sheer stupidity of it all. In
the Texas of 1963 Oswald could have bought a rifle across the counter with few
if any questions asked. He could have done so and risked only a future
debatable identification by some gun shop worker. Instead, we are told, Oswald
ordered the murder weapon by using the alias "A. Hidell,"
gave his own post office box number, committed his handwriting to paper, and
then went out to assassinate the President of the United States with this same
"Hidell"-purchased rifle and while carrying
a "Hidell" ID card in his wallet!
Many WC critics doubt that Oswald
was carrying the "Hidell" ID card at the
time of his arrest. They point to the fact that the Dallas police said nothing
about the fake ID card until the FBI later announced that the alleged murder
weapon had been ordered by an "A. Hidell."
Critics also note that neither the phony identification nor the use of an alias
is mentioned in the transcripts of the radio traffic between the arresting
officers and the police station (Groden and
Livingstone 183-184; Lane 133-136). One of the officers who brought Oswald to
the police station, Paul Bentley, said he established Oswald's identify by
going through his belongings, and there was no suggestion that Bentley had to
decide whether his suspect was named Oswald or Hidell.
Said Bentley, "On the way to City Hall I removed the suspect's wallet and
obtained his name" (Groden and Livingstone 184).
Additionally, not one of the arresting officers mentioned finding or seeing the
Hidell ID card in their reports to the police chief
two weeks after the assassination (Meagher 186). A further twist comes from the
fact that former FBI agent James Hosty, who worked
out of the Dallas FBI office at the time of the assassination, claims in a
recent book that Oswald's wallet was actually found at the J. D. Tippit murder scene! There is other evidence that an Oswald
wallet was in fact found at the Tippit scene. This is
clear evidence of an attempt to frame Oswald.
If Oswald did order the rifle and
maintain possession of it for a while, he could have been instructed to do so
by those who were framing him to be the patsy for the assassination. If nothing
else, plotters in a conspiracy could have arranged for Oswald to handle the
rifle before the shooting, in order to get some of his prints on the weapon,
though it is doubtful the prints would have been recoverable by the time the
police examined the weapon.
The Dallas police claimed they found
some partial fingerprints on the Carcano's magazine
housing (a part of the trigger guard). The FBI studied these prints the day
after the assassination and determined that they were worthless for
identification purposes. However, in recent years two independent fingerprint
experts examined photographs of the prints and concluded they were Oswald's.
What is odd about these prints is that they were located on a part of the rifle
that would NOT have been handled while it was being fired. Some researchers are
understandably skeptical of the recent identification of the partial prints as
Oswald's. But, if the prints are his, then I would suggest they might have been
made as a result of Oswald being manipulated into handling the rifle shortly
before the shooting, or even after he was taken into custody.
Are the partial prints Oswald's?
Fingerprint experts Jerry Powdrill and Vincent J. Scalice examined photos of the prints in 1993 and concluded
they were Oswald's. Many conspiracy theorists are skeptical of this
identification and point out that the prints were studied carefully in 1963 by
the FBI's Sebastian Latona, a highly skilled and
experienced fingerprint expert, and found to be worthless. WC defenders reply
that Latona didn't have access to the same photos of
the prints that Powdrill and Scalice
were able to use. However, not only was Latona able
to study the original prints themselves, but he had additional pictures taken
of them for examination purposes. Latona's WC
testimony leads many researchers to doubt the validity of Powdrill's
and Scalice's identification. Here is what Latona said about his analysis of the prints:
Mr.
LATONA. I could see faintly ridge formations there. However, examination
disclosed to me that the formations, the ridge formations and characteristics,
were insufficient for purposes of either effecting identification or a
determination that the print was not identical with the prints of people.
Accordingly, my opinion simply was that the latent prints which were there were
of no value. Now, I did not stop there.
Mr.
EISENBERG. Before we leave those prints, Mr. Latona,
had those been developed by the powder method?
Mr.
LATONA. Yes; they had.
Mr.
EISENBERG. Was that a gray powder?
Mr.
LATONA. I assumed that they used gray powder in order to give them what little
contrast could be seen. And it took some highlighting and sidelighting
with the use of a spotlight to actually make those things discernible at all.
Representative FORD. As far as you are concerned.
Mr.
LATONA. That's right.
Mr.
DULLES. Is it likely or possible that those fingerprints could have been damaged
or eroded in the passage from Texas to your hands?
Mr.
LATONA. No, sir; I don't think so. In fact, I think we got the prints just like
they were. There had, in addition to this rifle and that paper bag, which I
received on the 23d--there had also been submitted to me some photographs which
had been taken by the Dallas Police Department, at least alleged to have been
taken by them, of these prints on this trigger guard which they developed. I
examined the photographs very closely and I still could not determine any
latent value in the photograph.
So then I
took the rifle personally over to our photo laboratory. In the meantime, I had
made arrangements to bring a photographer in especially for the purpose of
photographing these latent prints for me, an experienced photographer--I called
him in. I received this material in the Justice Building office of operations
is in the Identification Division Building, which is at 2d and D Streets SW. So
I made arrangements to immediately have a photographer come in and see if he
could improve on the photographs that were taken by the Dallas Police
Department.
Well, we
spent, between the two of us, setting up the camera, looking at prints,
highlighting, sidelighting, every type of lighting
that we could conceivably think of, checking back and forth in the darkroom--we
could not improve the condition of these latent prints. So, accordingly, the
final conclusion was simply that the latent print on this gun was of no value,
the fragments that were there.
After that
had been determined, I then proceeded to completely process the entire rifle,
to see if there were any other prints of any significance or value any prints
of value--I would not know what the significance would be, but to see if there
were any other prints. (4 H 21)
Lone-gunman theorists assert that
the Dallas police found Oswald's palm print on the barrel of the alleged murder
weapon. However, the palm print had no chain of evidence, and the Dallas police
did not tell the FBI about the print until after
Oswald was dead (he was shot by Jack Ruby on November 24). Until late in the
evening of the 24th, journalists assigned to the Dallas police station were
reporting that, according to their police sources, Oswald's prints had NOT been
found on the rifle (Lifton 356 n).
Dallas police officials said the
same thing during public interviews, i.e., that Oswald's prints had not been found on the weapon. When the
FBI's Latona examined the Carcano
on November 23, he did not find Oswald's prints on the weapon. Moreover, Latona said the rifle's barrel did NOT look as though it
had even been processed for prints. There is evidence that suggests the palm
print was obtained from Oswald's dead body at the morgue, or later at the
funeral home (Lifton 354-356 n; cf. Meagher 120-127).
So suspicious was the palm print that even the WC privately had doubts about
the manner in which it was obtained (Garrison 113; Marrs
445; cf. Lane 153-158).
One reason to doubt the origin of
the partial fingerprint and palm print is that it is highly unusual for so many
prints to be found on a weapon. In fact, it's unusual just to find partial
prints on a gun. It's even more unusual to find partial prints AND a palm
print. In the 1973 trial of H. Rap Brown, a police expert with 18 years
experience with the New York Police Crime Lab, Sgt. William Torpey,
testified that during his career he had examined over "500 firearms for
fingerprints and had found only one identifiable print" (O'Hara 778). Torpey continued,
Even when
fingerprints are found on a firearm, they are almost always too smudged to be
useful. One reason is that these weapons are likely to be slightly oily,
especially if well kept. Another is that the person using the weapon holds it
so tightly that the prints are smeared. And if the weapon is fired, the jolt
smears any prints that might otherwise have been useful. (O'Hara 779)
The WC claimed that a paper bag and
a blanket from Ruth Paine's garage also linked Oswald to the alleged murder
weapon. According to the Commission, Oswald used the bag to carry the weapon
into the TSBD on the day of the murder, and the bag was allegedly found in the
sniper's nest. As for the blanket, the Commission said Oswald used the blanket
to store the rifle in the preceding months. Yet, a prosecutor would encounter serious
difficulties in trying to use this evidence to tie Oswald to the Carcano. Sylvia Meagher discusses some of the problems with
these items:
The
Commission . . . offered no firm physical evidence of a link between the paper
bag and the rifle. The [Warren] Report does not mention the negative
examination made by FBI expert James Cadigan. Cadigan said explicitly that he had been unable to find any
marks, scratches, abrasions, or other indications that would tie the bag to the
rifle. Those negative findings assume greater significance in the light of an
FBI report (CE 2974) which states that the rifle found on the sixth floor of
the Book Depository was in a well-oiled condition. It is difficult to
understand why a well-oiled rifle carried in separate parts [as the WC claimed]
would not have left distinct traces of oil on the paper bag, easily detected in
laboratory tests if not with the naked eye. The expert testimony includes no
mention of oil traces, a fact which in itself is cogent evidence against the Commission's
conclusions.
Equally
significant, there were no oil stains or traces on the blanket in which a
well-oiled rifle ostensibly had been stored--not for hours but for months. This
serves further to weaken, if not destroy, the Commission's arbitrary finding
that the Carcano rifle had been wrapped in that
blanket until the night before the assassination. (Meagher 62)
In fact, although the paper bag was
allegedly found in the sniper's nest, incredibly, the Dallas police
"failed" to take a crime-scene photograph of the bag lying in the
nest! The bag does not appear in any of the pictures that were taken of the
sniper's nest that afternoon. Some WC apologists have suggested that Lt. Day
and Detective Studebaker, the two policemen who took snapshots of the nest,
didn't photograph the bag because they didn't notice it. This is surely a
farfetched explanation.
The bag, which the Commission said
measured 38" x 8" and was allegedly shaped "like a gun
case," would have been in plain view and could not possibly have been
"missed" or "overlooked." Since Day and Studebaker
"noticed" the three spent shells lying on the floor, it strains the
imagination to think they would not have noticed the 38" x 8" bag
lying in the same small area. (Rusty Livingston, a former Dallas Police Crime
Lab detective, says the bag was about 42 inches long. In a photo of the bag,
which was taken long after it was "discovered," the bag is seen to
measure 38 inches in length, although there appears to be a four-inch flap
folded over on the left edge of the bag.)
The bag, say some WC supporters, was
folded and thus was not easy to spot. But three of the policemen who saw a bag
in the nest gave no indication that it was folded; they said it was a small bag
and that a partially eaten chicken leg was lying beside it. One police officer
specifically described the bag he saw as a small manufactured bag, such as the
kind found in a grocery store's produce department. Another policeman described
it as an ordinary lunch bag.
The other explanation offered by WC
apologists to explain the "failure" to photograph the bag is that the
bag was "accidentally" removed from the nest before it could be
photographed. However, the police officer who supposedly removed the bag
prematurely indicated that no evidence was removed until after Day and Studebaker "took pictures and everything"
(7 H 97). As one studies the WC testimony about the bag, one is struck by the
utter confusion and contradiction in the accounts. The accounts differ markedly
about where the bag was located, who found it, what it looked like, whether or
not it was folded, whether or not it was even a "bag" at all, when it
was removed from the sniper's nest, and who handled it.
It should be mentioned that for some
reason the bag did not leave the TSBD until three hours after it was supposedly
discovered. The small paper bag seen in the sniper's nest probably had nothing
to do with the long bag that was later presented as evidence by the Dallas
police. Many researchers believe that the police and/or federal agents made the
long bag partly with paper that Oswald had previously handled in an effort to
strengthen the case against him. This would explain why only two of Oswald's
prints were found on the bag (more should have been found), why the bag was devoid
of gun oil even though the Carcano was well oiled
when discovered, and why the bag did not leave the Depository for three hours.
And then there are the shirt fibers
that were found on the Carcano. The fibers were
reportedly found in the crevice between the rifle's butt plate and its wooden
stock. The Commission noted that these fibers were found to match the shirt
that Oswald was wearing when he was arrested at the Texas Theater. However, it
appears that Oswald was not wearing
that shirt at the Book Depository. Many researchers believe the Dallas police
rubbed the butt of the Carcano against the shirt
Oswald was wearing at the theater. Apparently, the police did not realize that
he had changed his clothing at his apartment after the shooting. Not a single
fiber from the shirt that Oswald wore to work was found on the Italian rifle,
nor were any fibers from his T-shirt found in the rifle.
The Commission claimed that Oswald
did not change shirts after the shooting. However, the evidence indicates that
he did in fact change his clothing at the boarding house following the
assassination. Oswald stated during his interrogation that he wore a
long-sleeved shirt and gray pants to work, and that he changed clothes after he
arrived home. The interviewing agent said Oswald described the shirt as
"reddish." A brown, long-sleeved shirt and gray pants were found in
Oswald's apartment by the Dallas police after the shooting.
Additionally, four of the five
witnesses who saw a man in the sixth-floor window said the man was wearing a
"light-colored" regular shirt or jacket; the remaining witness said
it was either a T-shirt or a regular shirt. This does not even come close to
matching the description of the brown, rust-colored shirt that Oswald wore to
work that day. Oswald was seen in that rust-colored shirt less than ninety
seconds after the shooting.
Lone-gunman theorists cite the fact
that the bullet fragments from the limousine were ballistically
matched to the alleged murder weapon. They also argue that the bullet shells
that were found in the sixth-floor sniper's nest were matched to the Oswald
rifle. There are several problems with these arguments. With regard to the
fragments from the limousine, no attempt was made to establish a chain of
evidence for these fragments until
several weeks later, so there is no way to be even reasonably confident
that they actually came from the limousine. Even assuming the fragments are
genuine, the ballistic match does not prove Oswald was the one who was firing
from the sixth-floor window. As mentioned, all five of the witnesses who saw
the sixth-floor gunman said he was wearing a light-colored shirt, whereas
Oswald wore a brown, rust-colored shirt that day.
As for the bullet shells that were
found in the sixth-floor sniper's nest, there are all sorts of objections to
their evidentiary value. For one thing, there is good reason to believe that
one of those shells, CE 543, could have been fired from the alleged murder
weapon because it has a severe dent in its lip. Professor Michael Kurtz
explains:
The third
cartridge case, Commission Exhibit 543, contained a dent in the opening so
large that it could not have held a bullet in it. . . .
In a
letter to the Warren Commission of 2 June 1964, J. Edgar Hoover noted that
Commission Exhibit 543 (FBI Number C6), the case with the dent, had "three
sets of marks on the base of this cartridge case which were not found [on the
other casings]." The case, according to Hoover, had also been loaded into
and extracted from a weapon three times. The only marks linking the case to
Oswald's rifle were marks from the magazine follower. As noted above, Case 543
could not have obtained the marks from the magazine follower on 22 November,
since the last round in the clip must have been the unfired one in the chamber.
Furthermore, Commission Exhibit 543 lacks the characteristic indentation on the
side made by the firing chamber of Oswald's rifle.
Dr. E.
Forrest Chapman, forensic pathologist, who in 1973 was given access to the
assassination materials in the National Archives, noted that Case 543 was
probably "dry loaded" into a rifle. Since the dent was too large for
the case to have contained a bullet on 22 November, it was never fired from
Oswald's rifle. The empty case,
however, for some unknown reason cold have been loaded into a rifle, the
trigger pulled, and the bolt operated. Dr. Chapman discovered this phenomenon
through experiments of his own.
Dr.
Chapman also noted that Case 543 had a deeper and more concave indentation on
its base, at the primer, where the firing pin strikes the case. Only empty cases exhibit such
characteristics. The FBI also reproduced the effect. Commission Exhibit 557
is a test cartridge case, fired EMPTY from Oswald's rifle by the FBI for
ballistics comparison purposes. It, too, contains the dent in the lip and deep
primer impression similar to Case 543.
Thus, the
evidence proves conclusively that Commission Exhibit 543 could not have been
fired from Oswald's rifle. . . . (Kurtz 50-51, emphasis added)
What about the two other cartridge cases,
CE 544 and CE 545? There are problems with them as well. CE 545 does not show
any markings from the bolt of the alleged murder weapon, and there is no
evidence it was fired from that rifle on the day of the assassination. Nor does
CE 545 bear any markings from the firing pin of the Oswald rifle. CE 544 has no
such markings either. Professor Kurtz:
Since
Commission Exhibits 544 and 545 bear no markings from the firing pin of
Oswald's rifle, the evidence proves only that they both had been loaded into the
firing chamber and that Case 544 was ejected through the bolt action, but that
Case 545 was not. . . .
Of the
three cartridge cases, one, Commission Exhibit 543, can be positively
eliminated. The dent in its lip was too deep to permit a bullet to fit inside
the case. it also lacked the characteristic indentation made by the chamber of
Oswald's rifle on all other cases and bullets. . . .
Commission
Exhibit 545 had been inside the firing chamber. However, it lacked the markings
of the bolt of Oswald's rifle. Since the primer cap bore the impression of a
firing pin, and since it did not have a dent similar to that of Case 543, we
can conclude one of two things: Case 545 was indeed fired from Oswald's rifle
and somehow managed to be ejected without being marked by the bolt, or it was
fired from the other rifle into which it had been previously loaded and
ejected. In either case, there is no evidence that this cartridge was fired
from Oswald's rifle on the day of the assassination.
Commission
Exhibit 544 bore the markings of the firing chamber and of the bolt of Oswald's
rifle, and its primer held an impression similar to that made by Oswald's
firing pin. Since the two metal fragments found in the front seat of the
presidential limousine were positively identified as having been fired from
Oswald's rifle, we can reasonably speculate that there is very strong evidence
to believe Case 544 contained a bullet fired at President Kennedy. However, the
possibility that the fragments could have been planted in the limousine, the
strange markings on Case 544, indicating that it, too, had been previously
loaded and ejected from another rifle, and the confusion as to which of the
three cartridge cases was found west of the window give rise to serious doubts
as to whether such speculation is valid. (Kurtz 51-52, 53-54)
What About the Famous Backyard
Rifle Photographs?
"Surely," a good
prosecutor would say, "Oswald is linked to the murder weapon by the three
famous backyard photographs which show him holding the Mannlicher-Carcano
rifle in one hand and radical newspapers in the other?" Furthermore,
lone-assassin theorists point out that the backyard pictures were authenticated
by the panel of photographic experts retained by the House Select Committee on
Assassinations (HSCA, 1976-1979). Again, the evidence looks impressive at first
glance, but let's take a closer look.
The Dallas police said they found
two backyard photographs. These are labeled CE 133-A and B. Each shows the
Oswald figure in a different pose. Although the Dallas police said they found
two negatives, one for A and one for B, only the B negative is known to exist.
A new, and different, backyard photo of Oswald turned up in the possession of
the widow of a former Dallas policeman in 1976. This is 133-C. Then, in 1977, a
much clearer version of 133-A was found among the possessions of George DeMohrenschildt, a wealthy member of the Dallas Russian
community who had intelligence connections and who was a friend of Oswald's.
The DeMohrenschildt family has stated they believe
the photo was planted in their father's belongings to further incriminate
Oswald in the public mind.
According to the WC and the HSCA,
all the backyard snapshots were taken with a cheap, hand-held camera, known as
the Imperial Reflex camera.
When the backyard photos were
examined by Major John Pickard, a former commander of the photographic
department of the Canadian Defense Department, he declared them to be fakes.
Retired Detective Superintendent Malcolm Thompson, a past president of the
Institute of Incorporated Photographers in England, analyzed the pictures and
came to the same conclusion. When the HSCA's
photographic panel concluded that the backyard photos were authentic, Thompson
deferred to the panel on most of the issues concerning the genuineness of the
pictures. However, Thompson said he remained troubled by the chin on Oswald in
the photos, which is different from his chin in other pictures.
There are indications of fraud in
the backyard photos that are obvious even to the layman. For example, the
shadow of Oswald's nose falls in one direction while the shadow of his body
falls in another direction. And, the shadow under Oswald's nose remains the
same in all three photos even when his head is tilted. The HSCA's
photographic panel could offer only an unrealistic reenactment based on highly
improbable assumptions to explain the problematic nose shadow. In the end, the
panel ended up appealing to a vanishing point analysis to explain all of the
variant shadows in the backyard photos. I discussed this matter with a number
of professional photographers, and none of them took the position that a
vanishing point analysis would explain the kinds of conflicting shadows seen in
the backyard pictures.
Another indication of fakery in the
photos is the fact that the HSCA's photographic panel
could find only minute ("very small") differences in the distances
between objects in the backgrounds. This virtual sameness of backgrounds is a
virtual impossibility given the manner in which the pictures were supposedly
taken. In order to achieve this effect, Marina would have had to hold the
camera in almost the exact same position, to within a tiny fraction of an inch
each time, for each of the three photos, an extremely unlikely scenario,
particularly in light of the fact that Oswald allegedly took the camera from
her in between pictures to advance the film.
Furthermore, graphics expert Jack
White has shown that the backgrounds in the photos are actually identical, and
that the small differences in distance were artificially produced by a
technique known as keystoning. I would encourage
those interested in more information on this subject to obtain Mr. White's
video Fake: The Forged Photo that Framed
Oswald. (I realize White's research on the backyard photos has come under
heavy attack by lone-gunman theorists. I would note that two photographic
experts who have studied White's research have concluded that the majority of
his arguments are valid but that some of them are invalid or doubtful.)
Another oddity in the backyard
photos is that in 133-B the Oswald figure is wearing a ring on a finger of his
left hand, but in 133-A the ring is not visible. This is "a curious
difference," says Anthony Summers, "if, as Marina testified, she took
one picture after another in the space of a few moments" (Summers 552 n
65).
The shirt and watch worn by the
Oswald figure in the photos were not found among Oswald's possessions. And the
shirt, a pullover shirt, was not the style that Oswald usually wore.
The 133-A-DEM photo is much clearer
than the snapshots that were allegedly removed from the Paine's garage. It is
so clear and of such high quality that the newsprint is readable on the paper
that the figure is holding. Researchers question whether the cheap, plastic,
mass-produced Imperial Reflex camera could have captured such fine detail from
the distance shown in the photographs. And, again, 133-A-DEM is much clearer
and contains more detail than 133-A and 133-B.
Jack White believes he has found a
telling indication of fraud in the backyard pictures. White maintains that the
printed edge markings of roll film do not appear on the DeMohrenschildt
photo, which was printed full negative, nor on the 133-B negative. This would
indicate that they were made from sheet film, but the Imperial Reflex camera
did not use sheet film; it used only roll film.
Further doubt is cast on the
backyard pictures by the ominous fact that a Dallas commercial photographer who
examined and processed assassination-related photographs for the Dallas police
and the FBI said he saw an FBI agent with a color transparency of one of the
backyard pictures on November 22, which was the day BEFORE the police said they
FOUND the photographs. The photographer further stated that one of the backyard
photos he processed SHOWED NO FIGURE IN THE PICTURE (Marrs
451-452). His account was corroborated by his wife, who also helped process
film on November 22.
Oswald's wife, Marina Oswald, is the
one who supposedly took the backyard pictures. However, in a recently recorded
interview, she said of the backyard photos, "These aren't the pictures i took"
(Livingstone 454, emphasis added).
An important development in this
matter occurred in 1992 when Dallas authorities released previously suppressed
files on the JFK assassination. Among these files were several photos of Lee
Harvey Oswald, two of which are backyard pictures that show clear signs of
tampering. On February 9, 1992, the Houston
Post reported, "One photo of Oswald's backyard in the Oak Cliff
section of Dallas shows clear evidence of darkroom manipulation" (Lane
xxii). The Post further stated that
the manipulation involved "attempts to frame Oswald by 'inserting' him
into the background" of the picture (Lane xxii). The POST provided a
description of the print:
In the
manipulated print in police files Oswald does not appear. Instead, there is a
white silhouette of a human figure holding an apparent rifle and newspapers.
The silhouette appears to be an example of matting, a darkroom technique that
can serve as an intermediate step in the combining of photographic images.
(Lane xxii)
The silhouettes in the pictures
appear to be right around Oswald's height, and they are in poses into which it
appears the Oswald figure would fit.
The big question is, When were the
manipulated prints made? If they were made after the assassination, then they
might represent attempts by the Dallas police to see if the backyard photos
could have been faked. But, if they were made prior to the shooting, they would
constitute undeniable evidence of a conspiracy to frame Oswald.
The POST article went on to report
that Hershal Womack, a photographic expert at Texas
Tech University, has noted "a variety of alleged inconsistencies with the
backyard pictures." I contacted Professor Womack and asked him to comment
on some of these technical inconsistencies. He replied as follows:
April 26,
2001
Mike,
If Lee
Harvey Oswald cocked the shutter each time for Marina as she supposedly stated,
then how did Oswald's leg stay in the same place relative to the dark area next
to his left, photo right knee? Compare in two of the three photos. Measure from
the line on the building on the right and measure to different parts of his
body and I think you will reach the same conclusion. Note the Roscoe White
backyard photo.
Other
measurements from a fixed object like the stair post to portions of his body or
even the pistol appear to be the same or near so. There's no way you could move and go back to the identical spot and take
the same position without drawing the image on the back of the camera.
With this
in mind then how did he get taller if neither he nor the camera moved. Maybe
the camera was on a tripod and lowered which would make him taller but it would
do the same to the post which may be a little taller but the height of Oswald
seems out of proportion to that of the post or vice-versa.
Hershel
Womack
April 27,
2001
Mike,
I very
much enjoyed reading your material and agree with the things you have written
[i.e., my article "A Brief Analysis of the Backyard Rifle Photos"]. I
have tried in my research to concentrate on items that a person with even a
very limited knowledge of photography could understand.
Get 8x10s
of the two Warren Report photos and the Roscoe White photo if possible. If not
get the largest and best photo from a publication or book and enlarge them so
they are identical in size using a couple of reference points. This is because
some of the photos have been enlarged and cropped differently.
Then
measure from his nose to a common point on each side, do the same to other
areas such as the same point on the pistol etc. Measure from identical points
at his feet to different points at his heads. Measure the stairpost.
Hershel
Womack
Those who accept the backyard photos
as genuine argue that the HSCA's vanishing point
analysis proves the pictures are authentic. I asked Mr. Brian Mee, an experienced professional photographer and photo lab
technician, about this argument. He reviewed the comments about the vanishing
point analysis and said he definitely did not consider the analysis to be
conclusive evidence of the photos' authenticity. Researcher David Wimp likewise
takes issue with the evidentiary value of the HSCA's
vanishing point analysis:
[Quoting
from the HSCA photographic evidence panel's report:] "The consistency of
the shadows was also evaluated by application of the vanishing point principle.
The concept of "vanishing point" perspective is widely known with
respect to artists and applies to photography as well."
This is
one of my principal complaints about the conclusion [that the HSCA's vanishing point analysis proves the backyard photos
are authentic]. The concept [of vanishing point] is widely known and would have
been known to a competent forger. Passing the vanishing point test only means
that the test fails to reveal forgery. It really offers no reason for believing
the photos are genuine. Another major complaint is that the vanishing point
test only tests the validity of the shadows in one dimension when the image is
two dimensional. Simply put, the test only says a shadow should fall on a line.
It does not say where on the line the shadow should fall. There are then an
infinite number of shadow configurations that would pass the test when, for a
given scene, only one is correct. The test performed by the panel is quite
simple and quite well known. Testing the shadows in two dimensions is a lot
harder but that is the type of thing I would expect to distinguish the work of
a highly competent panel. (Newsgroup message, 2 June, alt.assassination.jfk
newsgroup)
In addition to the technical
discrepancies in the photos, there were suspicious "irregularities"
concerning the "finding" of the pictures. For starters, although the
Dallas police said two negatives were
found, only one negative is (or ever has been) in evidence. Also, the photos
were supposedly found at the home of Michael and Ruth Paine, where Marina
Oswald had been staying. But the snapshots weren't "found" until the
day after the assassination, even though the Paine's home was searched "by
various waves" of policemen and FBI agents on the afternoon and evening of
the shooting. There are also puzzling irregularities about the
"finding" of the Imperial Reflex camera (see, for example, Meagher
202-205).
One also has to wonder why on earth,
if the photos are authentic, Oswald didn't destroy them prior to November 22.
Indeed, not only this, but it was Oswald who volunteered to the police that
some of his belongings were in the Paines' garage,
where the police allegedly found the backyard photos soon thereafter! And he
told them this AFTER the house had already been thoroughly searched by
"various waves of succeeding policemen, Dallas and Irving and FBI."
Also, what happened to the other
backyard negative that the police supposedly found in the garage? How did all
the previous "waves" of law officers overlook or miss the backyard
photos in their numerous searches of the Oswalds'
belongings? Not only did all the policemen who searched the Paines'
residence "miss" the backyard photos, but so did the FBI agents who
searched the premises. Perhaps all those law enforcement agents
"missed" the photos because they hadn't been planted in the Paines' garage yet.
I'm perfectly willing to believe
Oswald had himself photographed with the alleged murder weapon. I wouldn't be a
bit surprised to learn he actually did that. But I'm not persuaded that the
backyard photos in evidence are really of Oswald.
A quick, easy step that would go far
toward satisfying the doubters would be to simply point to a reenactment photo
that duplicates the variant shadows, or to do a reenactment in that backyard
and duplicate the divergent shadows.
Norman Mailer claims in his book Oswald's Tale that a photo from a 1967
reenactment (i.e., Lawrence Schiller's reenactment) contains variant shadows
identical to those in the backyard pictures. I contacted Mailer, and he
referred me to Schiller. We exchanged a couple letters, and I finally got
Schiller to send me his photo. When I received it, I was struck by the fact
that the picture quite obviously does not
duplicate the variant shadows, especially the neck shadows. I wrote back to
Schiller and pointed out some of the obvious differences between his photo and
the backyard pictures. He never responded. I wrote to Mailer and informed him
of the obvious discrepancies between Schiller's photo and the backyard
pictures. He didn't respond either.
In point of fact the variant shadows
seen in the backyard rifle photos have never been duplicated. The FBI
halfheartedly tried to duplicate them in 1964, but blocked out the head and
neck of the stand-in in the resulting photo. The HSCA failed to duplicate the
variant shadows, and they only tried to replicate the facial shadows--yet they
still failed. As mentioned, Lawrence Schiller claims his 1967 reenactment photo
duplicated the shadows, but even a casual glance at Schiller's photo shows this
is not the case. For example, the shadow on the neck of the backyard figure in
Schiller's photo comes straight down in a straight V-like shape. This is much
different from the neck shadow of the figure in the backyard rifle photos.
In 1966 The London Times conducted its own backyard rifle photo simulation
in an attempt to duplicate the variant shadows. Its photographers failed to do
so. As Stewart Galanor notes in Cover-Up,
The
London Times’s test shows that when the shadow
of the nose falls straight down, the shadow of the body is behind. When the
shadow of the nose veers off to the right, so does the shadow of the body. (p.
81)
Anyone can see this for themselves
in The London Times reenactment
photos, which are shown in document 35 of Galanor's Cover-Up.
Whatever one wants to say about the
backyard rifle photos, it needs to be kept in mind that the variant shadows in
the pictures have NEVER been duplicated.
Before moving on to another subject,
I'd like to present what British photographic expert Malcolm Thompson said
about the backyard rifle photos in a 1978 interview. As mentioned, Thompson
deferred to the HSCA's photographic evidence panel on
most issues, but not all. Thompson remained especially troubled by the
discrepancy between Oswald's chin and the backyard figure's chin. With these
things in mind, I thought some readers would be interested in reading the
interview that Thompson gave on the backyard photos.
First, a little background.
Detective Superintendent Malcolm Thompson ran the Police Forensic Science
Laboratory Identification Bureau for 25 years. He was also an president of the
Evidence Photographers International Council and a fellow of the Institute of
Incorporated Photographers, the Royal Photographic Society and the Institute of
Professional Investigators. Here is the interview he gave on the backyard rifle
photos:
INTERROGATOR.
Mr. Thompson would these photographs be acceptable as evidence in a British
court of law?
Mr.
THOMPSON. No. I have examined these photographs and have established without
doubt that there is retouching on them and it is a basic principle with a
forensic photographer that he would never, never retouch a photograph in any
form of litigation.
INTERROGATOR.
What would happen in a British court of law if photographs like this were
produced as evidence in a murder case?
Mr.
THOMPSON. If they were produced in a murder case then the defending counsel without
doubt would have an expert examine them and if retouching was found on them
then they would not be included in the evidence.
INTERROGATOR.
Are you saying that if photographs like this were produced in a British court
of law in a case, they would be thrown out?
Mr.
THOMPSON. I do. Yes. They would be thrown out.
INTERROGATOR.
What leads you to feel that?
Mr.
THOMPSON. Well primarily the retouching is very very
obvious in certain parts of the picture but more in particular in a perpendicular
pillar here which should be a straight line. When one comes to a point, the
subjects chin, one finds that there is a bulge in a line. Without doubt that
shows this area between the head and the retoucher
has just not been careful enough to maintain the retouching he should which is
within the pillar in what should be a shadow area. Now that is photograph B. In
photograph A we do bit see as a straight pillar, it is not as if the wood has a
flaw at that point there. The flaw is created in photograph B due to the fact
that the retouching has extended over onto the pillar.
INTERROGATOR.
I wonder if you could go through the two photographs and list for me what you
regard as the discrepancies in those photographs.
Mr.
THOMPSON. The backgrounds are very, very similar to the point that either the
camera was on a tripod when the pictures were taken or we are speaking about a
common negative having been used to produce the two backgrounds. They look
dissimilar, there is a horizontal shift and a vertical shift in the two
pictures but that purely and simply, think, is meant to mislead the viewer.
When one
measures the pictures, photograph A is enlarged slightly greater than
photograph B but even allowing for that, the shadow detail in the static areas
of the picture, that is in particular on the staircase here, the shadows are so
exact that there is no doubt in my mind, it is either a common negative used to
produce the two prints or two successive negatives with the camera on a tripod
and neither camera or tripod moved in any way between the two exposures.
There is a
discrepancy up in this area here. At this point I can only assume that someone
has cut out this area and changed its position slightly, it is fractional but
in this picture here we see the horizontal part of neighboring house with a
highlight in this area, whereas in this picture here the horizontal part can be
seen far below the section the angle caused by the upright pillar and the step.
You can see a fractional difference there whereas in this picture the
fractional difference does not exist.
Again with
that if we take a dark triangle here between the roof of the house next door
and the skyline then that angle finishes up level with the shadow of the
staircase there and in the other picture the diactoral
angle is below the shadow of the staircase. Similarly, the vine passing up
through here is in a lower position at that point in that picture than it is in
that picture.
I then
come to the conclusion that part has been raised in photograph B and retouching
done down here to fill up the small gap created. That is again borne out by the
fact that here in photograph A the picture finishes up dark and in photograph B
at that point the picture finishes up gray.
So much
for the background. If we take the body. The body shadows don't relate to the
other shadows in the picture and one can only come, to the conclusion that this
body has been placed in the background and photographed but all the shadows
here are swinging to the left whereas this shadow is slightly to the left but
also behind the body is common to both pictures but when one examines the
shadow content., one sees the gun at an angle to the body which does not relate
to the angle in the shadow. The gun is reaching far more out to the right, more
in a horizontal position here in relation to the body shadow than the gun is
actually being held by the person.
INTERROGATOR.
So you think that those shadows have actually been touched in.
Mr.
THOMPSON. They have been touched in.
Again,
there is something peculiar about this hand. The entire hand and arm is very,
very unnatural. It possibly could have been stuck in afterward; but I can't
relate physiologically the position of that arm to the body.
The butt
of the rifle I think is the telltale in this picture here where we see very,
very little of the butt actually protruding beyond the trouser line and yet
down here having been painted in is a very, very large butt I say very large in
relation to the length of the shadow and we can measure the length of that
shadow in relation to the height of the person and measure off the butt of the
gun as against, the shadow of the butt and that is to me unnatural.
The head
itself, I have seen photographs of Oswald and his chin is not square. He has a
rounded chin. Having said that, the subject in this picture has a square chin
but again it doesn't take any stretch of the imagination to appreciate that
from the upper lip to the top of the head is Oswald and one can only conclude
that Oswald's head has been stuck on to a chin, not being Oswald's chin.
Then to
cover up the montage, retouching has been done both to the right, that is
Oswald's right and Oswald's left and when we consider this area of retouching
here--compare it with what we see in photograph A we have a shadow cast by this
wooden pillar. I have measured those and even allowing for the difference and
degree of enlargement between photograph A and photograph B the area we see in
shadow here is far in excess of what it should be and of course that is the
area to which I referred earlier on where the pillar coming down does not
continue in a straight line but has this bulge in it.
INTERROGATOR.
Are there other things about the face itself which would make you suspicious?
Mr.
THOMPSON. Yes, again we have a shadow underneath the nose. In photographs A and
B you see Oswald's face in a different posture and yet the shadow under the
nose hasn't moved or if it has moved it is only fractional compared with the
actual movement we see in the face and one comes to the conclusion that, it is
the same. picture used for both faces, possibly in this face here he has got a
scowl on his face and there has been retouching done in the chin area which is
what would expect if my conclusion is correct, that this face has been added on
to the chin.
He has a
very, very thick lower lip here which is not consistent with Oswald's lip and
again the shadow underneath the, lip is a horizontal shadow, that is consistent
in both, even allowing for the fact that we have a slight tilt in the head of photograph
B as against that in photograph A.
INTERROGATOR.
Is it easy to make a photo montage like this?
Mr.
THOMPSON. Yes; it is very, very common in the advertising world, professional
photography, advertising photographers do montages all the time because. it is
the easiest way of obtaining the effect they want as against trying to set, up
that effect, it might be an impossible effect to set up, they have got to
resort to a photo montage to do it.
INTERROGATOR.
What about the arm?
Mr.
THOMPSON. The arm in photograph B just doesn't look natural; in fact it looks
as if it has been stuck on the body.
INTERROGATOR.
How easy is it to make a photo montage like this, how would people go about it?
Mr.
THOMPSON. It's not difficult. If one has a background scene, the subject
photographed against a white background making it simpler to cut out the
subject from the back.
INTERROGATOR.
How do you think this photo montage was achieved?
Mr.
THOMPSON. The montage could be achieved by a photograph of the background and a
photograph of a body against a white background and having been cut away from
that white background and then merged as we see, it here and then being in
possession of a photograph of Oswald's head, merely mounting that on to the top
of the body, stuck down and touched in such a way that your lines are not going
to be too, cut and dried between the body and the background and then rephotographed on to a negative and then from that negative
of course producing as many prints as you like and possibly rephotographing
the print from the negative in order to soften down the background and that
would develop each time the photograph was copied.
INTERROGATOR.
Is that very easy to do.
Mr.
THOMPSON. It is not difficult at all, don't ask me to do it, I am a forensic photographer.
The last. thing I would do is to retouch or indulge in any form of montage. My
duty would be to present to the court what I know about the ease and illustrate
what I know about it in straightforward photography but there are retouchers in many facets of professional photography, they
do resort to photo montages, in particular the advertising profession.
INTERROGATOR.
Would the investigator agencies in America like the FBI and the CIA have that
sort of professional expertise themselves
Mr. THOMPSON.
I would hope they don't have it. because it is not part of their duties as
forensic photographers to produce anything in court which has been retouched.
INTERROGATOR.
Yes; but regardless of your hopes, I am asking whether you believe that the professional
agencies in America have that sort of photographic expertise
Mr.
THOMPSON. I wouldn't think they have it but most certainly it wouldn't be
difficult to get access to it. Every moderate studio in America has its retoucher in the same way as the biggest studios in Britain
have their retoucher but in America you do have
photographic artists, profession all to itself, and they are spread all
throughout the United States, access to one of those persons, its mostly ladies
who do it and do an extremely good job in producing from a black and white
picture, anything from anything as far as an oil printing from photographs.
INTERROGATOR.
How quickly could you make a photographic montage like that
Mr.
THOMPSON. I would guess and say that you need at least 4 hours to produce it
and that is working hard and possibly a team working at it, not just one man
but I have no personal experience of how long it takes.
INTERROGATOR.
Would you be prepared to produce yourself those photographs as evidence in
court?
Mr. THOMPSON.
After having examined them definitely not. I couldn't resort to producing
anything in court which was other than just the original print from the
original negative, even to the point if there was a flaw in the negative I'd be
prepared to leave that in the final enlargement for the court purposes. If
trial or the hearing then I could explain away quite simply as it being a flaw
in the negative and possibly have the negative there as evidence. There is no
need to retouch anything in a forensic photograph and certainly in Britain
forensic photographers would just not retouch anything.
INTERROGATOR.
Do you believe, that those photographs are a fake?
Mr.
THOMPSON. I think they are a false and possibly the shadow detail and its
relation to the static scene and the body are the giveaway, plus the fact there
is retouching in sufficient salient places to make one appreciate that
something peculiar has gone in relation to the head and the body and the areas
surrounding it.
INTERROGATOR.
Can you describe what your method was in order to try and determine that?
Mr.
THOMPSON. One measures the pictures first to ascertain the degree of
enlargement, there is no use comparing distances on a picture unless you are
certain that the two pictures you are comparing are of the same degree of
enlargement. In this case they weren't of the same degree of enlargement and
that created slight difficulty in relating one subject to another. After having
done that a very close examination of the fine detail present, in the pictures
brought me to my conclusion.
INTERROGATOR.
Was your method to look for discrepancies
Mr.
THOMPSON. Exactly, that has been my life's work looking for the unusual and
comparing one thing with another to see similarities or dissimilarities and
what in general has been your conclusion in looking at those two photographs.
In general
I have come to the conclusion that we have a montage of three pictures to make
one end product as we see it here today.
INTERROGATOR.
Does it strike you as strange that the police did not find these photographs
until the next day?
Mr.
THOMPSON. Well searches of premises are always difficult things, to carry out
has got to be systematic, there is only one way to carry out a proper search of
a scene of crime or any other premises which might be of interest to the police
and that is there are two officers doing it and one officer systematically
follows round doubling what the other officer has done and in that way then two
pairs of eyes should be better than one pair and nothing of importance should
be missed.
INTERROGATOR.
So does it strike you as strange that in their search, after all connected with
the assassination of a president that they should find such damning evidence
the next day?
Mr.
THOMPSON. It does, it does seem unusual. One would think that the officers
involved would be highly experienced officers, would know and have been trained
to carry out the search of premises.
INTERROGATOR.
Is there any possibility in your mind that those two photographs are genuine?
Mr.
THOMPSON. I don't think there is any possibility having examined them for a
considerable time it is my considered opinion that they are not genuine.
INTERROGATOR.
Thank you very much.
Oswald's Alleged Marksmanship
The WC said Oswald fired at Kennedy
three times, hitting him twice. But could any lone assassin have shot JFK in
the manner described by the WC? Could Oswald have done so? The evidence
strongly suggests that the answer to both of these questions is no.
Oswald was at best only an average
marksman. President Kennedy was a moving target as his limousine traveled on
Elm Street in Dealey Plaza. From the southeast corner
window on the sixth floor of the Book Depository, Oswald would have been firing
at the President from sixty feet up and from over two hundred feet away on
average. Based on the Zapruder film and on eyewitness testimony, the WC
believed that all three shots were fired in slightly less than six seconds.
There are doubts about the capabilities of the alleged murder weapon itself. In
reenactments of the assassination, the expert marksmen hired by the WC were
unable to duplicate Oswald's alleged shooting performance.
Nevertheless, a noted lone-gunman
theorist, Professor Jacob Cohen of Brandeis University, maintains that Oswald's
alleged marksmanship was entirely possible. However, Cohen finds it necessary
to attempt to stretch the assassin's firing time from six seconds to over eight
seconds:
. . .
nothing in [the] Zapruder [film] indicates that a possible third shot, which
missed, had to have come between the
two hits. The Warren Commission concluded only that there were probably three
shots and that the two hits, not the
three shots, came within 5.6 seconds of each other. The miss could have come
first, or last, though it probably came first. That means the gunman had more
than eight seconds to shoot, and more than five seconds--ample time--between
the two hits. Even if the miss had come between the two hits, there would still
have been 2.8 seconds for fire and refire--enough
time even for an amateur used to handling guns, like Oswald. (32-33, emphasis
in original)
There are a number of problems with
Cohen's scenario. To begin with, it is based on an acceptance of the magic- or
single-bullet theory. Essentially, this theory says that a bullet struck
Kennedy in the back of the neck, exited his throat, entered Governor John Connally (who was seated in front of the President) and
caused all of the Governor's extensive wounds. This hypothesis has long been
seriously questioned. In fact, even two members of the WC rejected the theory
outright, and a third member was highly skeptical of it (Groden
and Livingstone 67-68). So, from the outset, Cohen's scenario is based on
strongly disputed speculation. However, for the sake of argument, I will assume
the correctness of the magic-bullet hypothesis in my comments on the shooting
as it relates to Oswald's marksmanship ability, and I will assume only three
shots were fired.
Cohen's suggestion that the miss could
have come last was ruled out by the WC itself. The Zapruder film indicates that
the fatal head wound was the final hit. Furthermore, as the Commission pointed
out, it is just not possible to ignore the substantial eyewitness testimony
that the head shot was "the concluding event in the assassination
sequence" (Moore 195).
It is true that the WC did not
provide a final, definite opinion on which two of the three shots were hits.
However, Jim Moore, a vocal advocate of the lone-gunman theory, acknowledges
that the Commission's report "clearly indicated a leaning by its authors
toward a second-shot miss" (195).
What about Cohen's claim that the
lone assassin actually had more than eight seconds to fire? The majority of the
assassination witnesses agreed that all the shots (whether three, four, or more
in number) were fired within a time span of not more than five to six seconds
(although some witnesses said the shooting took slightly longer). (However,
it's now clear that the witnesses described different groups of shots, as
Robert Harris has so persuasively demonstrated.) The WC agreed with this
testimony and believed that in the Zapruder film the time span between the
first hit on Kennedy and the fatal shot to his head was between 4.8 and 5.6
seconds.
This is not to say that there is no
evidence that the shooting lasted more than six seconds. The Commission, it is
clear, believed that its lone gunman did not fire prior to frame 210 of the
Zapruder film, which would limit the firing time to slightly less than six
seconds. However, if a shot was fired before this time, then the shooting took
more than six seconds. There is, in fact, good evidence that TWO shots were
fired prior to frame 210, one at around frames 145-160 and the other at around
frame 190. The point is that it is extremely unlikely that the gunman in the
sixth-floor window would have fired either shot.
Nearly everyone agrees that the
Z145-160 shot missed. Yet, if the alleged lone gunman fired it, how did he
manage to completely miss, not only Kennedy, but the entire limousine, from 60
feet up and from less than 140 feet away? As for the shot at around Z190, if
the sixth-floor gunman fired it, then he either fired at a time when his view
of the limousine was obscured by the oak tree or he fired during split-second
break in the foliage of the intervening oak tree, at frame 186. However, he
would have had only 1/18th of a second to aim and fire, whereas the human eye
requires 1/6th of a second to register and react to data.
A gunman firing from a building
closer to Main Street, such as the Dal-Tex Building,
would have had a good shot at the president prior to Z210 but this would not
have been the case for someone shooting from the TSBD's
sixth-floor window. The sixth-floor shooter's view of the limousine would have
been obscured from frames 167 to 210, except for the split-second foliage break
at frame 186. Some lone-gunman theorists now suggest that the supposed sole
assassin fired before the President's limousine disappeared behind the intervening
oak tree (from around frames 155-162) and/or during the split-second break in
the oak tree's foliage (frame 186). Yet, as discussed above, it is extremely
unlikely that the sixth-floor gunman fired at either time.
Any half-way sensible assassin in
the sixth-floor window would have waited until frame 210 before firing. It is
particularly hard to imagine that he would have wasted a shot during the
split-second break in the oak tree's foliage. Even the WC expressed great doubt
that its sixth-floor shooter would have fired, much less hit the target, during
the foliage break. The Commission's lone gunman had already passed up a perfect
shot at the President as the limousine drove on Houston Street. Are we also
supposed to believe that he compounded his error by taking a high-risk shot
that had virtually no chance of hitting the target? No, if the sixth-floor
shooter was half the marksman that WC defenders say he was, he would have known
enough to hold his fire until frame 210. And, had he fired at around frames
145-160, he certainly would not have missed, not only JFK, but the entire
limousine. (But even if the sixth-floor gunman had waited until frame 210 to
fire, he would not have had an easy shot. Virtually all WC defenders maintain
that the gunman's first hit came between frames 210 and 224. However, the
Commission determined that for this shot the gunman had less than eight-tenths
of a second to aim and fire because until then the sixth-floor window's view of
the limousine was obscured by the oak tree.)
If one believes that there were only
three shots, and that the gunman in the sixth-floor window fired all of them,
then the only plausible position is to assume that he didn't fire until the
president came out from beneath the oak tree, at frame 210. Therefore, we are
left with the lone gunman scoring hits on his first and third shots, having
less than six seconds to get off three rounds, with a maximum of only 2.8
seconds to fire and refire. The FBI established that
the Carcano's rifle bolt and trigger could not be
operated in less than 2.3 seconds. WC supporters claim that other, later timing
tests prove that the Carcano could have been fired in
well under two seconds per shot. However, not one of those subsequent timing
tests used the alleged murder weapon itself. They used different Carcano rifles, not the one Oswald allegedly fired. When
the FBI tested the supposed murder weapon itself, using expert marksmen, it
established that that weapon could not be fired faster than 2.3 seconds per
shot.
The lone gunman would have faced
other problems as well. The sharpshooters in the WC's rifle tests reported that
as newcomers to the Italian rifle they found the bolt so difficult to operate
that it skewed their aim (Summers 46). The weapon was also found to have an odd
trigger pull.
Other facts about the Mannlicher-Carcano make it extremely doubtful that anyone,
least of all Oswald, could have used it to shoot Kennedy. The rifle needed
metal shims placed under the telescopic sight before the Army testing
laboratory could determine the weapon's accuracy. The metal shims had to be
used because the telescopic sight was so unrelated to the rifle's line of fire,
and so inexpertly attached, that it could not even be adjusted. Lone-gunman
theorists reply that the scope might have been damaged when the rifle was
allegedly thrown down in haste after the shooting, thus creating a need for the
use of shims in realigning the scope. They further suggest that handling of the
scope after the rifle's discovery might have contributed to the scope's being
misaligned. However, photos of the rifle in its hiding place indicate that it
was not hastily thrown down. In fact, it was discovered standing upright
between a narrow gap between two rows of boxes. And the handling of the scope
after the fact should not have caused it to be so misaligned.
Moore asserts that the shot from the
southeast corner window "was not difficult" (49). He adds that he has
visited the window any times and that "the more I stood in the sixth-floor
window, the easier Oswald's feat became" (49). Moore does not explain why
the expert marksmen hired by the WC were unable to duplicate Oswald's alleged
performance. In fact, they failed to do so even though they fired from a tower
that was thirty feet lower than the sixth-floor window, and even though they
fired at stationary targets, while Oswald, of course, would have been faced
with a moving target. I think one of the reasons those shooters could not
repeat Oswald's alleged feat was that they used the alleged murder weapon
itself.
Moore claims that Oswald
"apparently availed himself of many opportunities to work the bolt and to
sight imaginary targets while familiarizing himself with the Carcano in his screened-in back porch" (49). There is
no hard evidence to support this assertion. Any marksman knows there's no
substitute for actually firing a weapon. Dry-runs can't take the place of
actually firing the rifle. And the FBI was unable to find any evidence that
Oswald practiced with the alleged murder weapon in the forty days leading up to
the assassination.
The evidence indicates Oswald had
very little time for target practice in the weeks preceding President Kennedy's
death. Oswald's landlady reported that in the forty days preceding the
assassination Oswald usually watched TV or read after he came home from work.
On the weekends, he would visit his wife and child. When and where did Oswald
have the chance to practice firing at a moving target from sixty feet up and
from an average of two hundred feet away?
And Oswald would have needed lots of
practice. He was at best an average shot. One of his Marine Corps buddies,
Nelson Delgado, reported that Oswald had trouble meeting the minimum Marine
marksmanship standards, and that he was such a poor shot that he often missed
the target completely. In 1977 former Rockefeller Foundation fellow Henry Hurt
interviewed over fifty of Oswald's Marine colleagues. Apparently, not one of
them described the alleged assassin as an excellent shot, and nearly all of
them agreed with Delgado's testimony that Oswald was a poor marksman (Hurt
99-100).
Some WC defenders point to the CBS
television network's reenactment of the assassination as proof that Oswald
could have shot Kennedy. The CBS rifle test was reported in the 1975
documentary The American Assassins
and was presented as evidence of the WC's findings regarding the shooting.
However, CBS's reenactment failed to establish that Oswald could have done what
the WC said he did.
The CBS test was not a realistic
simulation of the shooting feat attributed to Oswald. CBS used eleven expert
riflemen, but Oswald was an average marksman at best. Also, the CBS test
assumed the correctness of the single-bullet theory. Therefore, the shooters
were not required to load and fire their second shot, or any shot, in
approximately one second. They should have been asked to do so since numerous
witnesses from all over Dealey Plaza said two of the
shots came so closely together that they were nearly simultaneous (see, for
example, Menninger 249, 253, 278, 298, and Brown 92-93, 99, 115). Some of these
witnesses said the two shots were so close together that they almost sounded
like a single burst of two bullets from an automatic weapon. No gunman, no
matter how skilled, could have fired the Carcano with
that kind of speed, and, obviously, the CBS shooters were not required to do
so.
It should also be kept in mind that
the CBS reenactment did not take into account such matters as the cramped
conditions in which Oswald would have had to fire, and the fact that in the
forty days preceding the assassination Oswald had few if any chances to target
practice. The riflemen in the CBS test did not use the supposed murder weapon
itself. They used a Carcano, but not the one Oswald
allegedly used.
Additionally, not one of the expert
CBS shooters managed to score at least two hits out of three shots in less than
six seconds on his first attempt, yet Oswald would have had only one attempt.
Seven of the CBS riflemen failed to score two hits on ANY of their attempts.
During the 1986 mock Oswald trial
sponsored by a British television network, Monty Lutz, a former member of the HSCA's firearms panel, testified that to his knowledge no
one had ever duplicated Oswald's alleged shooting performance. (Substantial
portions of the mock trial were released in the form of the video presentation
entitled THE TRIAL OF LEE HARVEY OSWALD, which has been shown on the A&E
Network over the last few years.) Years earlier, FBI marksman and ballistics
expert Robert Frazier said much the same thing during the Clay Shaw trial in
1969.
Oswald's Whereabouts at the Time
of the Shooting
It goes without saying that a key
component in any case against Oswald would be to place him at the scene of the
crime when the crime was committed, i.e., to place him at the southeast corner
window on the sixth floor of the TSBD at the time of the shooting. But here,
too, a prosecutor would be in for some very rough going.
The WC said Oswald was at the
sniper's nest on the sixth floor at the time of the shooting. If so, then how
is it he was seen by the building manager and a pistol-waving police officer
well under ninety seconds afterwards on the SECOND floor, standing in the
lunchroom with a Coke in his hand, giving every appearance of being perfectly
calm and relaxed?
Moore and other lone-gunman
theorists assume that Oswald bought the Coke after the encounter with the
manager and the policeman (53). However, the available evidence indicates
Oswald purchased the Coke before the second-floor encounter (Marrs 50-52). Furthermore, Oswald had no reason to lie
about when he bought the Coke. When he mentioned the Coke-buying during his
questioning, he did so in passing, and he could not have known the important
role the timing of this detail would subsequently play in the investigation. I
agree with what David Lifton has said on this
subject:
The
original news accounts said that when [Officer Marion] Baker first saw Oswald,
the latter was drinking a Coke. This seemingly minor fact was crucial, because
if Oswald had time to operate the machine, open the bottle, and drink some
soda, that would mean he was on the second floor even earlier than the
Commission's reconstructions allowed. In a signed statement Officer Baker was
asked to make in September 1964, at the tail-end of the investigation, he
wrote: "I saw a man standing in the lunchroom drinking a coke." A
line was drawn through "drinking a coke," and Baker initialed the
corrected version. [Dallas] Police Captain Will Fritz, in his report on his
interrogation of Oswald, wrote: "I asked Oswald where he was when the
police officer stopped him. He said he was on the second floor drinking a Coca
Cola when the officer came in." If I were a juror, I would have believed
Oswald already had the Coke in hand, and indeed, had drunk some of it, by the
time the officer entered the lunchroom. (Lifton 351)
It seems doubtful that Oswald could
have made it to the second floor in less than ninety seconds and still have had
time to squeeze out of the sniper's nest, wipe off the rifle, walk across the floor,
and carefully hide the rifle. The evidence indicates that he was seen on the
second floor about sixty to eighty seconds after the shots were fired. The
Dallas police indicated that the alleged murder weapon was carefully hidden
under and between a stack of book boxes at the OPPOSITE end of the sixth floor
from where the shots were supposedly fired. It is reasonable to assume Oswald
would have attempted to wipe his fingerprints off the rifle (at least those
parts that he would have just handled while firing it). Someone wiped off the Carcano before it was "discovered" because the
FBI found no identifiable prints on it when it examined the weapon on November
23. This would mean that in well under ninety seconds Oswald chambered another
round, wiped off the rifle, squeezed out of the sniper's nest, ran all the way
to the opposite end of the sixth floor, took the time to carefully hide the
weapon under some boxes, ran down four flights of stairs to the second floor
(actually eight small flights), made his way to the lunchroom, and then bought
a Coke, and yet did not appear the least bit winded or nervous when seen by the
manager and the policeman.
In most of his statements, Baker
said that Oswald was walking away from him when he spotted him through the small
window on the foyer door. Baker indicated that Oswald was about twenty feet
from him when he saw him. The WC placed Oswald just past the foyer door, about
eighteen feet from Baker when Baker allegedly spotted him. Yet, in Baker's
final statement to the FBI, Baker said that when he spotted Oswald, Oswald was standing in the lunchroom.
The WC staged a reenactment to prove
Oswald could have reached the second-floor lunchroom in about ninety seconds
after supposedly shooting Kennedy. However, the person playing Oswald was only
able to meet the ninety-second time limit when he skipped wiping off the rifle,
simply leaned over as if to drop the weapon on the floor (instead of carefully
hiding it, although there is a conflicting report on this point), and delayed
buying the Coke until after encountering the manager and the police officer (Weberman and Canfield 143-144; see also Brown 200-201, and
Weisberg 110-122). And these are not the only alleged Oswald actions that the
reenactment failed to simulate.
Furthermore, after wiping off the
rifle and stashing it at the opposite end of the sixth floor, Oswald would have
had to use the back stairway to reach the second floor as soon as possible.
However, none of the people who were on or near that stairway heard footsteps
or saw Oswald racing down the stairs for his encounter with the manager and the
policeman (Marrs 53). What's more, if Oswald had come
down the stairs to get to the lunchroom, he would have been seen by Roy Truly,
who was running ahead of Baker.
Another clear indication that Oswald
could not have made it to the second-floor lunchroom in time to be seen by
Baker is the fact that the door to the lunchroom had an automatic closer, and
the building manager, who was running up the stairs leading to the second floor
ahead of the policeman, did not see
the door close (and Baker probably didn't see it closing either, even though he
later tentatively suggested he did to the WC). Notes Harold Weisberg,
With all the deliberateness of all
the so-called reconstructions it still was not possible to get Oswald to and
into that second-floor lunchroom before he would have been seen outside of it
by the building manager, Roy Truly, who was rushing up those stairs ahead of
police officer Marion Baker. Oswald was inside that lunchroom--the door to
which had an automatic closer and with a Coke in his hand when Baker saw him
through the small window in the door, he said, and when Truly, ahead of Baker
and farther up the stairs, did not see him or the door close. (88)
According to WC, Oswald went through
the foyer door just a second or two before Baker spotted him. If so, Truly
would have seen Oswald going through or approaching the door, and if the former
had been the case then the door would have been virtually wide open when Truly
passed it. Yet, Truly said nothing in any of his statements about seeing the
door open or in motion, and he did not see Oswald on the stairs or near the
door. Baker only mentioned this as a faint possibility when he appeared before
the Warren Commission. Even then, Baker said that if the door was moving, it
was almost shut. It would have had to be nearly closed, or else Baker would
have had an even harder time spotting Oswald through its window; as it was,
with the door shut the window would have been at a 45-degree angle to Baker.
Moreover, how could the automatic door have closed or nearly closed behind
Oswald (1) if Oswald was supposedly only a foot or two past the door when Baker
spotted him, and (2) when Truly did not see Oswald coming down the stairs, even
though Truly was running ahead of Baker? In fact, to judge from Truly's WC testimony, the door was CLOSED when Truly saw
it.
Photographs taken of the TSBD before
and after the shooting show that someone was rearranging boxes in the sixth-floor
window shortly after Kennedy was shot. This fact was corroborated by
photographic expert Dr. Robert R. Hunt before the House Select Committee (4
HSCA 422-423). In fact, the Select Committee's photographic panel concluded:
"There is an apparent rearranging of boxes within two minutes after the
last shot was fired at President Kennedy" (6 HSCA 109). Obviously, Oswald
could not have been in the second-floor lunchroom meeting the building manager
and the policeman while moving boxes around on the sixth floor at the same
time. Also, one witness, a law clerk from a nearby building, said she saw
someone in the window a few minutes after the shooting. Another witness said
she saw boxes being moved in the window shortly after the assassination. So who
was moving the boxes so soon after the shooting? Whoever it was, it wasn't
Oswald.
Several people reported seeing TWO
men, one with a rifle, on the sixth floor of the Book Depository shortly before
the shooting (Summers 40-46; Hurt 91-94). WC defenders have pointed out some
inconsistencies in their accounts, but I believe the evidence supports the
essential components of their stories. One of those witnesses saw the two men
on the sixth floor at around 12:15 P.M., which is when Oswald was reportedly
seen by another Book Depository employee eating lunch in the lunchroom on the
SECOND floor. Who were the two men? None of the descriptions of them matches
Oswald. So, whoever they were, evidently Oswald wasn't one of them.
Cohen asserts that two people
identified Oswald in a police lineup as the person they had seen in the
sixth-floor window (33). There was only one such witness, Howard Brennan, and
he gave implausible, contradictory testimony (Marrs
25-27; Lane 83-99; Brown 119-130). In fact, Brennan failed to make a positive
identification of Oswald in a police lineup on November 22, even though he had
seen Oswald's picture on TV beforehand (Summers 78). Only after weeks of
"questioning" by federal agents did Brennan positively identify
Oswald as the sixth-floor shooter. Moreover, a number of points in Brennan's
account actually cast doubt on the official version of the shooting (Brown
119-130). The House Select Committee ignored Brennan's story entirely.
I am inclined to believe that
Brennan did see someone firing from the sixth-floor window, but that the gunman he
saw was not Oswald. I believe Brennan later identified Oswald only because he
was pressured into doing so. Brennan's description of the gunman's clothing
matches that given by four other witnesses who reported seeing a man in the
window. Brennan and the other witnesses described the man's shirt as a regular
"light-colored" shirt. However, as mentioned, Oswald did not wear a
light-colored shirt to work that day. He wore a brown, rust-colored shirt that
day, and he was seen in that shirt in the second-floor lunchroom less than
ninety seconds after the shots were fired. I should add that two witnesses who
saw the sixth-floor gunman said his hair was light-colored or light-brown,
whereas Oswald's hair was solid brown and not light-colored at all.
What About the Magic Bullet?
According to lone-gunman theorists,
the same 6.5 mm bullet which supposedly hit Kennedy in the back of the neck
exited his throat, passed downward through Governor Connally's
back, chest, wrist, and thigh, causing all of his extensive wounds, and yet
emerged in nearly pristine condition to be found at Parkland Hospital shortly
after the President was pronounced dead. This bullet, known to many as the
"magic bullet," is officially listed as Commission Exhibit (CE) 399.
Lone-gunman theorists claim that CE 399 has been ballistically
matched to fragments from Connally's wrist and from
the Presidential limousine, which allegedly proves Oswald shot Kennedy.
It should be pointed out that
initially the WC operated on the assumption that Kennedy and Connally were hit by separate bullets. The single-bullet
theory wasn't even conceived of until the news came out that another bullet had
struck the curb and had caused a piece of concrete to strike a bystander named
James Tague in the face. The Commission tried to
ignore the reports about the errant bullet. Eventually, though, it was forced
to acknowledge that a bullet had missed the limousine. The WC was then left
with only one bullet to account for the President's back and throat wounds plus
all of Governor Connally's extensive wounds. In
response to this dilemma, Commission staffers, led by Arlen Specter, came up
with the single-bullet theory.
Therefore, if the magic-bullet
theory is wrong, the lone-gunman scenario collapses. To put it another way, if
the single-bullet theory is incorrect, then there had to be at least two gunmen
firing at President Kennedy.
The magic-bullet theory is
foundationally dependent on a number of improbable assumptions. The theory
assumes Oswald scored two hits out of three shots in less than six seconds
firing a bolt-action rifle at a moving target from sixty feet up and from over
two hundred feet away on average. The hypothesis also assumes that one of the
bullets which hit President Kennedy struck him in the neck and then exited his
throat. There is considerable evidence against both of these assumptions.
Many assassination researchers find
it hard to take the single-bullet theory seriously because it seems so
implausible on its face. As unlikely as the theory appears at first glance,
however, it looks even more tenuous upon close examination. Even the Kennedy
autopsy doctors were highly skeptical of the theory; one of them called it
"most unlikely," and the other two agreed with that assessment (Groden and Livingstone 64). Dr. Charles Gregory, one of the
physicians who treated Governor Connally, said the
bullet which hit the Governor "behaved as though it had never struck
anything except him" (Groden and Livingstone
64).
CE 399 could not be the same round
that hit Kennedy because more fragments were removed from Connally
than are missing from CE 399. Parkland Nursing Supervisor Audrey Bell says,
"What we took off [Governor Connally] was
greater than what is missing from this bullet [CE 399]." "Much
greater?" Nurse Bell was asked. "Yes," she replied (Livingstone
312). She also said the following:
. . . the
smallest [of the fragments] was the size of the striking end of a match and the
largest at least twice that big. I have seen the picture of the magic bullet,
and I can't see how it could be the bullet from which the fragments I saw
came.(Groden and Livingstone 73)
Furthermore, one fragment reportedly
remained in Connally until the day he died.
Therefore, there is no way the magic bullet could be the same missile that hit Connally (Groden and Livingstone
64, 66, 491 n 9; Summers 38, 546; Livingstone 163, 304, 312).
Several pages could be devoted to
discussing the conflicting and impossible trajectories of the alleged magic
bullet. In testifying before the HSCA, Dr. Cyril Wecht,
a former president of the American Academy of Forensic Sciences and a member of
the Committee's medical panel at the time, summarized some of the problems with
these trajectories:
The [HSCA's medical] panel, to the best of my recollection, was
in unanimous agreement that there was a slight upward trajectory to the bullet
that went through President John F. Kennedy, that is to say, that the bullet
wound of entrance on the President's back, lined up with the bullet wound of
exit in the front of the President's neck drawing a straight line, showed that
vertically the bullet had moved slightly upward, slightly, but upward.
That is
extremely important for two reasons. One, under the single-bullet theory--with
Oswald as the sole assassin, or anybody else, in the sixth floor window,
southeast corner of the Texas School Book Depository Building, you have the
bullet coming down at a downward angle of around 20-25 degrees, something like
that, maybe a little bit less. It had originally been postulated, I think, by
the autopsy team, and the initial investigators, at considerably more. How in
the world can a bullet be fired from the sixth floor window, strike the
President in the back, and yet have a slightly upward direction?
There was
nothing there to cause it to change its course. And then with the slightly
upward direction, outside the President's neck, that bullet then embarked upon
a rollercoaster ride with a major dip, because it then proceeded, under the
single-bullet theory, through Gov. John Connally at a
25 degree angle of declination.
To my
knowledge, there has never been any disagreement among the proponents and
defenders of the Warren Commission report or the critics, about the angle of
declination in John Connally--maybe a degree or two.
We have that bullet going through the Governor at about 25 degrees downward.
How does a bullet that is moving slightly upward in the President proceed then
to move downward 25 degrees in John Connally. This is
what I cannot understand.
My
colleagues on the panel are aware of this. We discussed it, and what we keep
coming back to is, "well, we don't know how the two men were seated in
relationship to each other." I don't care what happened behind the
Stemmons freeway sign, there is no way in the world that they can put that
together; and likewise on the horizontal plane, the bullet, please keep in
mind, entered in the President's right back, I agree, exited in the anterior
midline of the President's neck, I agree, and was moving thence by definition,
by known facts, on a straight line from entrance to exit, from right to left.
And so with that bullet moving in a leftward fashion, it then somehow made an
acute angular turn, came back almost two feet, stopped, made a second turn, and
slammed into Gov. John Connally behind the right
armpit, referred to medically as the right posterior axillary
area. The vertical and horizontal trajectory of this bullet, 399, under the
single-bullet theory is absolutely unfathomable, indefensible, and incredible.
(1 HSCA 344)
Notwithstanding all of the evidence
against the magic-bullet theory, WC defenders continue to hail the neutron
activation analysis (NAA) conducted by Dr. Vincent Guinn for the HSCA. Guinn
analyzed a sample from CE 399 and some alleged fragments from Connally's wrist, from Kennedy's brain, and from the
limousine. He concluded it was "very likely" and "highly
probable" they were from the same ammunition. The HSCA's
chief counsel, G. Robert Blakey, accepted Guinn's NAA
without question, and he continues to portray it as absolute proof of the
single-bullet theory and of Oswald's alleged guilt. Walter Cronkite's 1988 NOVA
documentary, Who Shot President Kennedy?,
portrayed Guinn's conclusions as definitive. Moore and Cohen see Guinn's NAA as
scientific confirmation of the single-bullet theory and of the lone-gunman
scenario, with Oswald, of course, identified as the gunman (Moore 170-171;
Cohen 38). However, in light of the evidence against the magic-bullet theory,
Guinn's conclusions deserve to be viewed with a great deal of skepticism from
the outset. As for Guinn's NAA itself, given the items he tested, as well as
those he did NOT test, his NAA does not support the magic-bullet theory, nor it
evidence of the lone-gunman scenario. In point of fact, Guinn's NAA, even if
valid, does not prove the single-bullet theory, since none of the fragments
that were reportedly seen in Kennedy's neck was included in Guinn's test.
When Guinn began his NAA, he found
that a can which had contained fragments that had apparently struck the
limousine's windshield was empty, so he obviously could not test them (Groden and Livingstone 73). The fragments from Connally's wrist that were tested in 1964 were (and still
are) missing and thus were not subjected to Guinn's NAA, either (Marrs 447). Of the fragment specimens which were available
to Guinn, one of them, CE 569, could not be tested because it was only the
copper jacket with no lead inside (Groden and
Livingstone 73). In addition, Guinn later conceded that none of the wrist fragments available for his test weighed the same as
those listed as evidence by the WC (Groden and
Livingstone 69; Lifton 558-559). Dr. Guinn also
admitted he could not verify the genuineness of the fragments given to him for
testing. These facts alone render Guinn's NAA results suspect, if not
irrelevant.
In 1964 the FBI subjected CE 399 and
fragments from Connally's wrist, from Kennedy's head,
and from the limousine to spectrographic analysis AND to NAA. Both tests indicated the wrist fragments did
not come from CE 399 (Marrs 445-446; Oglesby
87-89). When J. Edgar Hoover informed the WC's chief counsel of the results of
the tests, he tried to put the best possible face on them. With regard to the
spectrographic analysis, Hoover said that "no significant differences were
found." In other words, ". . . differences were found." In
reference to the NAA, he reported that "minor variations in composition
were found." As Hoover well knew, or at least suspected, these differences
indicated that Connally's wrist fragments did not
come from the magic bullet. Perhaps this explains why the results of the FBI's
NAA were concealed until 1974 when their release was forced by a suit filed
under the Freedom of Information Act. Dr. Guinn claims that the FBI's NAA
results actually support his own. He has stated that the FBI experts who
analyzed the '64 test data simply misunderstood the results.
In later years, researchers who
studied Dr. Guinn's own test data found that he inaccurately described his test
samples. Guinn told the Select Committee that his samples were homogeneous, yet
Guinn's own published NAA research shows that his samples were NOT homogeneous.
This is a key point because Guinn's conclusions about the alleged Kennedy and Connally fragments were foundationally based on the
assumption that his test samples were homogeneous.
In 2007 a new study raised questions
about the lone-gunman claims regarding Guinn’s NAA work. Dr. Gary Aguilar:
In May
2007, a second paper appeared reporting on a chemical, forensic and statistical
analysis of bullets derived from the same batch as those supposedly used by
Oswald. The authors, Cliff Spiegelman, professor of
statistics at Texas A&M and an expert in bullet lead analysis, William A.
Tobin, the FBI's former Chief Forensic Metallurgist, William D. James, research
chemist with the Texas A&M Center for Chemical Characterization and Analysis,
and Stuart Wexler, brought considerable expertise to their study. As with Randich and Grant, they also concluded that, "evidence
used to rule out a second assassin is fundamentally flawed." They reported
that, "many bullets within a box of Mannlicher-Carcano
bullets have similar composition." Thus, it was not true, as Guinn had
said, that such matches are extraordinarily rare. (http://www.maryferrell.org/wiki/index.php/Essay_-_Is_Vincent_Bugliosi_Right_that_Neutron_Activation_Analysis_Proves_Oswalds_Guilt)
To conclude this section, I quote
some of Dr. Ronald White's objections to Guinn's conclusions:
Guinn
concluded that CE 399 (the "pristine bullet") and CE 842 (the wrist
fragments) are similar in composition and that CE 567 (the large fragment found
in the limousine), CE 843 (the fragments found in Kennedy's brain), and CE 840
(the small fragments found in the limousine) are similar in composition.
But how
convincing are these "scientific" analyses? First of all, it is
important to note that out of the more than 30 bullet fragments known to be in
the President's head and visible on the X-rays, only two were tested.
Therefore, it is sheer speculation to infer that all of the dust-like fragments
are of the same composition as CE 567. There are also serious flaws relating to
how Guinn deduced two and only two bullets from his own data. Actually his
analyses seem to support the hypothesis that the composition of individual Mannlicher-Carcano bullets are heterogeneous. After testing
four specimens from a single bullet, Guinn's own figures show that the antimony
content ranged from 363+39 to 667+5 and that the silver content ranged from
8.3+0.3 to 15.9+0.5 (HSCA 1978, Vol. 2, p. 549, Appendix F). If the individual
bullets are not uniform in composition, it becomes that much more difficult to
infer identity and difference between bullets. Moreover, although CE 842 and CE
399 are supposed to be similar in composition, CE 842 contained 25% more silver
and 850% more copper than CE 399. It also contained 2,400% more sodium and
1,100% more chlorine. And finally, CE 842 contained 8.1 ppm
aluminum but CE 399 contained none (HSCA 1978, Vol. 2, p. 538, Appendix B).
Therefore, it is difficult to fathom how Guinn could conclude that the two
fragments are similar in composition. (White 393)
Howard Donahue's Research
The late firearms and ballistics
expert Howard Donahue documented a number of important points of evidence that
indicate Oswald did not kill Kennedy. Donahue's theories and research are the
subject of Bonar Menninger's book Mortal
Error (St. Martin's Press, 1992). An examination of all of Donahue's
theories and documentation is beyond the scope of this article. However, I
would like to summarize some of the evidence he presents that would go a long
way toward convincing a jury that Oswald was innocent:
1) The official trajectories given
for the alleged rear entrance wound on JFK's head are incompatible with a shot
from the sixth-floor window.
2) The bullet that mortally wounded
Kennedy in the head behaved like a high-velocity, frangible missile, whereas
Oswald is said to have used medium-velocity, non-frangible ammunition.
3) The reported width of the rear
entrance wound in the head, 6.0 mm, is incompatible with the diameter of a 6.5
mm Carcano bullet. (Dr. James Humes,
the chief autopsist, said he measured the rear
entrance wound on the head and that it was 6 mm wide, which means it could not
have been caused by a 6.5 mm missile.)
4) The windshield damage was too
high to have been caused by a bullet coming down into the car from the alleged
sniper's nest. (Even the HSCA's trajectory expert
admitted that this seemed to be the case.)
5) Several witnesses said two of the
shots came in very rapid succession, nearly simultaneously, too quickly to have
been fired from the bolt-action Mannlicher-Carcano
rifle.
6) Secret Service Agent Roy Kellerman heard Kennedy cry out that he had been hit well
before the Governor was wounded.
7) There do not appear to be any
traces of human tissue on the fragments that were found in the limousine, yet
the WC said these fragments came from the bullet that hit Kennedy in the head.
If these fragments had in fact passed through JFK's skull, they would have
traces of brain tissue, blood, and fluid on them. Donahue went to the National
Archives and, with the aid of a 30-power jeweler's loupe, studied the fragments
from the head shot--or at least what he was told were the fragments from the
head shot--and, to his surprise, found no traces of blood or tissue on them,
not even in their grooves.
8) The 6.5 mm fragment that was
deposited on the outer table of Kennedy's skull in the back of his head could
not have come from the kind of ammunition that Oswald allegedly used. Forensic
science knows of no case where a fully metal-jacketed (FMJ) bullet has ever
deposited a sizable fragment on the outer table of the skull upon entering the
skull. Such behavior by FMJ bullets is simply unheard of.
Conclusion
The problems with the case against
Oswald considered herein are but a handful of those that could be discussed.
There are substantive questions about the validity or significance of virtually
all of the other items of evidence that supposedly identify Oswald as JFK's
assassin.
It is often difficult to judge how a
jury will decide a case. I cannot say for sure that a particular jury would
acquit Oswald of President Kennedy's murder. However, I can say that the case
against Oswald is woefully lacking in substance.
*****************************************************
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Brown, Walt, THE PEOPLE V. LEE
HARVEY OSWALD. New York: Carroll & Graf Publishers, 1992.
Cohen, Jacob. "Yes, Oswald
Alone Killed Kennedy," COMMENTARY, June 1992. 32-40.
Garrison, Jim, ON THE TRAIL OF THE ASSASSINS,
Warner Books Edition, New York: Warner Books, 1988.
Groden, Robert J. and Harrison Edward Livingstone,
HIGH TREASON: THE ASSASSINATION OF PRESIDENT KENNEDY AND THE NEW EVIDENCE OF
CONSPIRACY, Berkley Edition, New York: Berkley Books, 1990.
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Rinehart, and Winston, 1985.
Kurtz, Michael, CRIME OF THE
CENTURY, Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1982.
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Lifton, David S. BEST EVIDENCE, Carroll & Graf
Edition, New York: Carroll & Graf Publishers, 1988.
Livingstone, Harrison Edward, HIGH
TREASON 2, New York: Carroll & Graf Publishers, 1992.
Marrs, Jim, CROSSFIRE: THE PLOT THAT KILLED
KENNEDY, New York: Carroll & Graf Publishers, 1989. A monumental research
effort.
Meager, Sylvia, ACCESSORIES AFTER
THE FACT: THE WARREN COMMISSION, THE AUTHORITIES, AND THE REPORT, New York: Bobbs-Merrill, 1967; Vintage Press, 1976. A classic
critique of the Warren Commission's findings.
Moore, Jim, CONSPIRACY OF ONE, Ft.
Worth: The Summit Group, 1991.
Oglesby, Carl, THE JFK
ASSASSINATION: THE FACTS AND THE THEORIES,New York:
Signet, 1992.
O'Hara, Charles, FUNDAMENTALS OF
CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION, Fifth Edition, Springfield, Illinois: Charles C. Thomas
Publishers, 1981.
Smith, Matthew, JFK: THE SECOND
PLOT, Edinburgh, England: Mainstream Publishing Company Ltd., 1992.
Summers, Anthony, CONSPIRACY,
Updated and Expanded Edition, New York: Paragon House, 1989. One of the most
thorough and scholarly books ever written on the Kennedy assassination.
Weberman, Alan J. and Michael Canfield, COUP D'ETAT
IN AMERICA: THE CIA AND THE ASSASSINATION OF JOHN F. KENNEDY, Revised Edition,
San Francisco, California: Quick American Archives, 1992.
Weisberg, Harold, CASE OPEN: THE
OMISSIONS, DISTORTIONS, AND FALSIFICATIONS OF "CASE CLOSED." New
York: Carroll & Graf Publishers, 1994.
White, Ronald, "Apologists and
Critics of the Lone Gunman Theory: Assassination Science and Experts in
Post-Modern America," in James Fetzer, editor, ASSASSINATION SCIENCE,
Chicago: Catfeet Press, 1998, pp. 377-412.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Michael T. Griffith holds
a Bachelor of Science degree from Excelsior College in Albany, New York, and
two Associate in Applied Science degrees from the Community College of the Air
Force. He is a two-time graduate of the Defense Language Institute in Monterey,
California, in Arabic and Hebrew. He is also a two-time graduate of the U.S.
Air Force Technical Training School in San Angelo, Texas, and holds an
Occupational Instructor Certificate from the Community College of the Air
Force. He is the author of the book Compelling Evidence: A New Look at the
Assassination of President Kennedy (Grand Prairie, TX: JFK-Lancer
Productions and Publications, 1996). His articles on the assassination have
appeared in several journals that deal with the case. In addition, he is the author
of four books on Mormonism and ancient texts.