Ok, I do not get it. I don’t see anything that is clearly anyone delivering a shot to someone.
First: how are we sure the person in the life vest in these photos is Fuddy?
Second, while in some of these blurry shots the “black blob” has the form of a wet suited diver coming out of the sea and going back in, but how do we know that is what it is, because if there had been something, who knows what, like black trash bags full of something, from the crash, it might also look like this.
I’m needing a bit more explanation.
That was my thought ... Some sort of debris or even an alternate flotation device floating in water.
This is just one brief clip out of the whole thing. There were other things going on too, which you see when you can look at the whole non-pixelated video frame by frame. ABC really doesn’t want anybody seeing the non-pixelated video at a speed where they can stop the frames.
I wanted to post the non-pixelated video at 1/4th speed so everybody could see exactly what ABC was able to see before they put this video out to the public but ABC won’t let me. What you CAN do, to slow down the pixelated video that is still available, is exactly what I did in the video - which is what I wanted everybody to be able to do so they could see that what I did is not rocket science or manipulated. Go to the GMA and Nightline videos:
the GMA mp4 at http://ondemand.abcnews.com/playback/abcnews/140110_gma_crash_0731_700.mp4
and the Nightline mp4 at http://ondemand.abcnews.com/playback/abcnews/140111_ntl_mayday_1240_700.mp4
Save those mp4 files. Then import them into Windows Movie Maker (which can be downloaded from http://windows.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/get-movie-maker-download ) and under “Video Tools” click the .125x to slow it down to 1/8th speed. You can then click and drag on the blue progress bar to move to the portion that you want to see more closely. Hit pause at the specific spot and press the “Print Screen” button. C&P the image into Paint (or whatever image saving program you use), save it, and then load it into Microsoft Picture Manager (or whatever manager you use) where you can adjust brightness and contrast, zoom in, etc. That way you can analyze what is there.
When everybody can do the same thing that I did, it makes it a lot less advantageous for anybody to do anything to get rid of me. So everybody enjoy, and tell your friends all about it.
Maybe if enough people asked ABC really, really nicely, they’d let us see the clearer images that they got to see...