Here is the latest release of Motorcade 63 (version 2.0):
https://www.marktyler.org/mc63.htmlI added these photos:
Powell
Dillard 2
Dillard 3
The animation now has a few more interesting witnesses and their movements:
Billy Lovelady
Gloria Calvery
Joe Marshall Smith
Edgar Smith
Welcome Barnett
Carolyn Walther
James Powell
The Franzen family
Amos Euins
Howard Brennan
I think Joe Marshall Smith might be the dark shadowy figure at the back of the Bothun 5 photo as the timing and position seems to be a close match.
I slightly changed the route of the knoll runner and the black dog man, as Marilyn Sitzman said they were a couple who ran behind the pergola and were responsible for a bottle smashing onto the ground. This is probably what Lee Bowers described as a "commotion", as the narrative and timeline matches perfectly.
While studying the testimony of the Secret Service agents I noticed that Sam Kinney started his siren in the seconds following the head shot when his car was in the heart of Dealey Plaza. This was corroborated by other witnesses so I consider this to be a major challenge to the dictabelt evidence:
How could the microphone pick up gunshots but not a siren? We know that the microphone picked up sirens 2 minutes later on Stemmons freeway, so why not in Dealey Plaza as well?
More detail of this work is in the handbook section 9.1.1:
https://www.marktyler.org/mc63/mc63_handbook.pdfThe audio from the dictabelt recordings has been added to the video along with some other sounds that the witnesses reported. Back in 1963 every witness would have heard each of these noises in a slightly different way. For example the siren would have been loud and dominant to those closest to Secret Service car. This might explain why the Secret Service agents and James Altgens didn't hear the final shot whereas those by the TSBD heard "three well spaced reverberating shots". The final gunshot would have been louder to them as it was closer, and the siren was further away so it was quieter.
I have updated the handbook regarding the timings of the shots (section 6). I have concluded that while most witnesses say they heard three shots, they are not talking about the same three shots: some say they were equidistant; and some say they were bunched on top of each other. In other words the "consensus" among witnesses regarding three shots is a numerical illusion which disappears upon close inspection.
Many thanks to the people who made suggestions for improvements, and also the researchers whose many decades of work I have used in the book and the video.