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To: #3Fan
Not every bullet has to have an exit wound. When you look at the evidence, the bullet in the back didn't exit, the "bullet" in the throat didn't exit.

Fascinating. Then why didn't they show up on the neck X-rays?

Oh, right, they must have been those "invisible-to-X-rays" bullets that were so common in 1963. And the shooters (plural) who made those shots chose to use these magic bullets (!) while the other shooter(s) (that's 3+ so far) used ordinary metallic bullets because... um... they liked variety?

Oh, wait, I know -- because despite the fact that the conspiracy theorists all claim that even hitting a "moving target" at all was somehow an "impossible" shot, you'll have us believe that the "additional" gunmen were such perfect shots that they *knew for certain* that they could make shots on a moving target so precisely that they could put them into JFK's neck from two different angles so perfectly that they could create the illusion of a single in-and-out pass-through shot, thus "hiding" their handiwork, because they knew for certain that the doctors weren't going to probe the neck wound too thoroughly *and* that the magic un-X-rayable bullets would have no chance of passing through the neck and spoiling the illusion. What a perfect plan!

Do you guys even *listen* to yourselves?

Oops, wait, they found metallic bullet fragments in the neck wound after all:

EXAMINATION OF X-RAY FILMS

[...]

Films #8, 9 and 10 allowed visualization of the lower neck. Subcutaneous emphysema is present just to the right of the cervical spine immediately above the apex of the right lung. Also, several, small metallic fragments are present in this region. There is no evidence of fracture of either scapula or of the clavicles, or of the ribs or of any of the cervical and thoracic vertebrae.

The foregoing observations indicate that the pathway of the projectile involving the neck was confined to a region to the right of the spine and superior to a plane passing through the upper margin of the right scapula, the apex of the right lung and the right clavicle.

-- from the 1968 Panel Review of Photographs, X-Ray Films, Documents and Other Evidence Pertaining to the Fatal Wounding of President John E Kennedy on November 22, 1963, in Dallas, Texas

The four physicians on the panel were:

1) Carnes, William H., MD, Professor of Pathology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, Member of Medical Examiner's Commission, State of Utah, nominated by Dr. J. E. Wallace Sterling, President of Stanford University.

2) Fisher, Russell S., MD, Professor of Forensic Pathology, University of Maryland and Chief Medical Examiner of the State of Maryland, Baltimore, MD, nominated by Dr. Oscar B. Hunter, Jr., President of the College of American Pathologists.

3) Morgan, Russell H., MD, Professor of Radiology, School of Medicine and Professor of Radiological Sciences, School of Hygiene and Public Health, The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, nominated by Dr. Lincoln Gordon, President of The Johns Hopkins University.

4) Mortiz, Alan R., MD, Professor of Pathology, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH and former Professor of Forensic Medicine, Harvard University, nominated by Dr. John A. Hannah, President of Michigan State University.


179 posted on 02/03/2004 11:15:32 AM PST by Ichneumon
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To: Ichneumon
Fascinating. Then why didn't they show up on the neck X-rays?

Take a look at what the CIA was purchasing from the Army to use against guard dogs. They had made 3 orders for them by November 1963 if I'm not mistaken.

Oh, right, they must have been those "invisible-to-X-rays" bullets that were so common in 1963. And the shooters (plural) who made those shots chose to use these magic bullets (!) while the other shooter(s) (that's 3+ so far) used ordinary metallic bullets because... um... they liked variety?

Again, look at the evidence. Think about what the CIA had.

Oh, wait, I know -- because despite the fact that the conspiracy theorists all claim that even hitting a "moving target" at all was somehow an "impossible" shot, you'll have us believe that the "additional" gunmen were such perfect shots that they *knew for certain* that they could make shots on a moving target so precisely that they could put them into JFK's neck from two different angles so perfectly that they could create the illusion of a single in-and-out pass-through shot, thus "hiding" their handiwork, because they knew for certain that the doctors weren't going to probe the neck wound too thoroughly *and* that the magic un-X-rayable bullets would have no chance of passing through the neck and spoiling the illusion. What a perfect plan!

It didn't take a perfect plan and it didn't go off perfectly. That's why they needed Tippit. If it didn't go off perfectly, they would have to fake an autopsy. Kennedy was hit in the throat from close range by a weapon developed by the Army. A shooter from behind failed to kill Kennedy making it necessary to ambush him in front of the knoll by the rest of the shooters. He was shot three times in front of the knoll. A rear shooter hit him in the back of the head a split second before the other two shots struck him. A .45 hit him from the knoll and striking thick bone near the ear went straight up into the air. It's path can be seen on the Zapruder film. The fatal head shot came from the front. It may be the one that made the bullet hole in the windshield.

Do you guys even *listen* to yourselves? Oops, wait, they found metallic bullet fragments in the neck wound after all:

Like going to the Clinton library to prove Clinton didn't commit treason.

188 posted on 02/03/2004 11:37:18 AM PST by #3Fan
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