"Moved it"? What... did they alter the visual record? Because the visual record supports what the Clark Panel concluded.
Reflecting the scalp to expose the EOP region requires a lot of effort, such as severing of attachments. None of that is mentioned in the autopsy report or their testimonies.
Finck thought there was (or there should have been in retrospect) a photo of the bared entry wound. But they only photographed the entry wound with ther scalp over it. They wanted to preserve the President's body as much as possible.
They stood by Humes' word that he felt some bump under the scalp he--it is my belief--mistook for the EOP. None of them saw the bared scalp wound relative to the bared EOP. In fact Humes measured the scalp wound from the skull's midline, a line not generally visible on the exterior of the occipital bone. The parietal bone, however, exhibits a prominent suture line along the skull's midline.
The skull had numerous fractures radiating from the skull in-shoot. Could have been a fracture edge that Humes mistook for the EOP "bump".
I believe they based it more so on what the lateral X-ray of the skull showed.
"The position of this wound corresponds to the hole
in the skull seen in the lateral X-ray film #2.
"On one of the lateral films of the skull (#2), a hole
measuring approximately 8 mm. in diameter on the
outer surface of the skull and as much as 20 mm.
on the internal surface can be seen in profile
approximately 100 mm. above the external occipital
protuberance. The bone of the lower edge of the
hole is depressed."
Geeze. Even a non-doctor sitting at home in isolation during a pandemic, distracted by the protest coverage on TV, can easily find support for the WCR-LN head shot.
"Logical conclusion"? LOL
Blah, blah, blah and more blah.
Bottom line, the original autopsy doctors, you know the ones who held JFK's skull in their hands, found a through and through bullet hole
slightly above and slightly to the right of the EOP. Low in the back of the skull.
The Clark Panel found a trail of metal particles across the top of JFK's skull. Indicating a bullet wound there. High on the skull at the
cowlick.
Evidence of at least 2 bullets striking JFK in the head.