Here's the person I'm talking about. The program identified her as Patricia Ann Donaldson. She's not standing where Anne Donaldson stood.
Capture from "Lost Bullet"; program flipped image horizontally.
It's a matter of Euins' line-of-sight to the limousine relative to background objects. In the "Lost Bullet", his reenactment of his movements had his curb position significantly south of where he marked it on CE 365. Furthermore, the program places the limousine for the first shot on Euins' perspective from beside the pool. If we move Euins' to his 1964 curbside location then that changes his perspective to the limousine relative to background objects.
Euins refers to three background objects:
- "about the time the car got near the black and white sign" ('63)
(presumed to be referring to the Thornton freeway sign; the program
did not duplicate the sign)
"It was just right there at the embankment right there about
where its at right now when the first shot sounded out" (2011)
- "Right as it passed like I say that - that big pillar - pillar there" (2011)
Jerry,
Yes, that's the Donaldson I was referring to.
I'm still a bit confused by your earlier post:
I was showing the VP and VP Security Cars.
The "Lost Bullet" shows Euins in a location that he is not seen in in the Bell Film. And Donaldson says the limousine (stopped at Z334) is about where the first shot occurred. That doesn't even support Holland's theory.
What do you mean by "stopped at Z334" in the context of what the above-pictured "Patricia Ann Donaldson" and Amos Euins said in
The Lost Bullet?
Thanks.
-- Mudd Wrassler Tommy
PS In an earlier post, I got her maiden name wrong. It was "Lawrence," not "Lambert". (since edited)
My bad.
Edit:
At 42:19 Euins is standing by "the pillar," pointing to the limo in the background, and agreeing with Holland that that's approximately where the limo was when Euins heard the first shot. (The limo has just passed by the black-and-white "Hwy 80" signs which are clustered on a pole on the "island" and are out of view in the "frame".)
Euins' and Donaldson's statements in The Lost Bullet (as to where the limo was when the first shot rang out) tend to corroborate and support each other.