Finck had dealt with dozens of gunshot cases, so he had plenty of first-hand experience with how bullets look after they strike bone and tissue. He also studied this kind of stuff at the AFIP. Dr. Shaw and Dr. Gregory likewise had treated dozens, if not hundreds, of gunshot victims, so they had seen how bullets behave when they strike tissue and bone. Shaw said that more bullet fragments were left in the chest than were missing from CE 399, and Gregory said that he removed more fragments from the wrist than were missing from CE 399.
Dolce *was* a ballistics expert. How did you miss that?
Dr. Dolce was not a ballistic expert. He does not make real world tests were bullets are fired into targets, like bones, embedded in ballistic gel, to simulate soft tissue, to observe what damage is done to the bullets. This is done by ballistic experts.
Basically, here is how it works. Forensic pathologists, like Dr. Dolce, work with ballistic experts. The forensic pathologists study the human body. Could a bullet do this amount of damage to the body. Would a bullet of this type do the observed amount of damage to the human body? What would be the effect of this bullet? Could this bullet alone cause death?
It is the ballistic expert who rule on the damage to the bullet. Could the bullet have done this amount of damage and come out in the shape it was found? To put it simply, forensic pathologists should stick to the bodies, ballistic experts should stick to the bullets.
The forensic pathologist does not make sole judgements on:
• Could a bullet penetrate through “X” inches of soft tissue and “Y” inches of bone. Not without consulting a ballistic expert.
• Could a bullet do this amount of damage and come out in this shape. This is a question only for the ballistic expert.
Dr. Dolce giving an opinion on how a WCC/MC FMJ bullet should appear after doing so much damage, would be like the ballistic expert Luke Haag overruling a forensic pathologist and insisting that the bullet taking the path it did could not have caused a collapsed lung. Forensic pathologist should stick to evaluating the damage to the body. Ballistic experts should stick to evaluating the damage to the bullet.
Question:
Which of your “experts” has been called on by a court of law to give opinions on, questions like:
Could this bullet have been fired from this weapon.
Could this bullet have done this damage and come out in the condition it was found? I’m not saying none of them are experts. They are medical experts. But which of them are ballistic experts?
Not at all. Indeed, as I said, the fact that Dolce was not a WC critic makes his ballistics-based and experience-based rejection of the SBT all the more compelling.
Oh, well, if that make it even better for you,
why was I was the one who pointed out that Dr. Dolce said out that all the facts of the case were consistent with Oswald firing all the shots with his Carcano, but causing the damage with 3 bullets, not 2. The truth is you were hoping no one would notice and you could get away with it.
Later on, you state that the Oswald two bullet theory (with the SBT) is even more absurd than the Oswald three bullet theory. So, both theories are absurd. Which means, that the expert you touted, Dr. Dolce, believed in an absurd theory regarding the assassination of President Kennedy. Since this was the case, you had no business citing him as an expert who supports your views. Because he doesn’t. If you must cite him, note to the reader that you have massive disagreements with him on the Kennedy assassination. But on the narrow question of the SBT, you think he makes a good point. Don’t imply he supports your views on the Kennedy assassination.
What you did would be like me saying I know the backwards motion of President Kennedy’s head form z313-z317, can be explained, because Dr. Luis Walter Alvarez, the brilliant Nobel Prize Physicist, found that this is possible. I would not do this because it would be dishonest. Because I totally disagree with his reasons, that it was caused by the Jet Effect. I think he was wrong on this point. I think it was because of a Ballistic Neuromuscular Reaction. So, I am not going to imply that he agreed with my views on the head motion.
And that scenario is ludicrous. The limousine was about 260 feet away, nearly a football field away, from the Tague curb spot when the fatal head shot occurred. There was a reason that the FBI and the WC ignored the Tague wounding until they were forced to deal with it.
Name a valid ballistic expert who finds this scenario, ludicrous.
That theory is even more absurd. Your "stronger theory" is the worst and goofiest--it consists of a wild miss, the ludicrous head-shot-fragment-to-Tague theory, and the SBT. Gosh, this ground has been covered a zillion times, and you guys still get on public boards and post this clown material.
This is where you let slip that Dr. Dolce believed in an absurd theory, admittedly, the less absurd theory (in your view), but still an absurd theory. So much for your expert.
How on earth would even a blind gunman have missed the entire huge limousine? How? So the same guy who performed a shooting feat that the WC's NRA-Master-rated riflemen could not come close to duplicating somehow missed the entire enormous limousine? And no head-shot fragment could have magically cleared the windshield and the roll bar and then traveled 260 feet and either hit Tague hard enough to cut him or hit the curb hard enough to send a concrete fragment streaking to Tague.
Simple. The angular velocity of the target was the highest of the three shots:
Shot 1: z-153 4.8 degrees per second
Shot 2: z-222 1.9 degrees per second
Shot 3: z-312 0.58 degrees per second
https://www.jfkassassinationforum.com/index.php/topic,2640.0.htmlThese are my estimates. I don’t know the exact effect of a target moving at 4.8 degrees per second. I don’t shoot rifles. But it is plausible that this would throw off the aim a great deal.
It is of interest to note, that this scenario, basically accepted by LNers, accounts for the accuracy of the shots. The first shot missing by 5 feet or more, the second by 8 inches, the third by 2 inches. Assuming the center of the head was the target all along, which is reasonable because one would assume that Oswald wanted to kill, not wound. The slower the angular velocity of the target came, the more accurate the shot.
You're lying again. Let me repeat the fact, which you ignored, that the Oak Ridge tests found that every single time the gunman fired a Carcano, the paraffin cast of his cheek tested positive for nitrates with NAA. NAA is far more sensitive than the regular spectrographic testing that was done by local police departments, but it is also much more expensive and labor intensive, and police departments did not want to deal with the expense and hassle of arranging for NAA testing of paraffin casts. False negatives from paraffin casts of cheeks tested with NAA are unheard of, unless a person could take several hours to somehow steam out the nitrates from his cheeks. NAA is simply too sensitive to produce a false negative of a paraffin cheek cast in cases such as Oswald's paraffin cast.
https://mcadams.posc.mu.edu/factoid2.htmIn a third experiment, performed after the assassination, an agent of the FBI, using the C2766 rifle, fired three rounds of Western 6.5-millimeter Mannlicher-Carcano ammunition in rapid succession. A paraffin test was then performed on both of his hands and his right cheek. Both of his hands and his cheek tested negative.
Reliability of the Test
. . . Before the assassination, the FBI had conducted experiments showing the unreliability of paraffin tests. FBI expert Cortlandt Cunningham testified to this in front of the Warren Commission (3H487):
And 17 men were involved in this test. Each man fired five shots from a .38 caliber revolver. Both the firing hand and the hand that was not involved in the firing were treated with paraffin casts, and then those casts treated with diphenylamine. A total of eight men showed negative or essentially negative results on both hands. A total of three men showed positive results on the idle hand, but negative on the firing hand. Two men showed positive results on their firing hand and negative results on their idle hands. And four men showed positive on both hands, after having fired only with their right hands.It is evident that false positives and false negatives occur with the revolvers. After the assassination the Warren Commission directed the FBI to run the same experiment using the C2766 rifle and ammunition which was identical to what was found in the Texas School Book Depository. Cunningham related the results of that experiment (3H494):
CUNNINGHAM: Yes.
We fired the rifle. Mr. Killion fired it three times rapidly, using similar ammunition to that used in the assassination. We reran the tests both on the cheek and both hands. This time we got a negative reaction on all casts.
EISENBERG: So to recapitulate, after firing the rifle rapid-fire no residues of any nitrate were picked off Mr. Killion's cheek?
CUNNINGHAM: That is correct, and there were none on the hands. We cleaned off the rifle again with dilute HCl. I loaded it for him. He held it in one of the cleaned areas and I pushed the clip in so he would not have to get his hands near the chamber—in other words, so he wouldn’t pick up residues, from it, or from the action, or from the receiver. When we ran the casts, we got no reaction on either hand or on his cheek. On the controls, when he hadn't fired a gun all day, we got numerous reactions.
Cunningham had explained earlier why a false negative could arise with the rifle (3H492):
EISENBERG: A paraffin test was also run of Oswald's cheek and it produced a negative result.
CUNNINGHAM: Yes.
EISENBERG: Do your tests, or do the tests which you ran, or your experience with revolvers and rifles, cast any light on the significance of a negative result being obtained on the right cheek?
CUNNINGHAM: No, sir; I personally wouldn’t expect to find any residues on a person's right cheek after firing a rifle due to the fact that by the very principles and the manufacture and the action, the cartridge itself is sealed into the chamber by the bolt being closed behind it, and upon firing the case, the cartridge case expands into the chamber filling it up and sealing it off from the gases, so none will come back in your face, and so by its very nature, I would not expect to find residue on the right cheek of a shooter.
To summarize, both false positives, from nitrates present in ordinary substances other than gunpowder, and false negatives, due to the sealed-chamber design of the C2766, arose in paraffin tests.
Question:
If the paraffin test is a reliable way of finding out if someone had fired a weapon or not, why isn’t it used today. Why had this test been largely discarded by 1963 (except in backwater places like Dallas) and is totally discarded today? As usual, I expect you will dodge my simple question.