LOL! Well, that clinches it then!
One, the Haags are quacks when it comes to the JFK case. Q. U. A. C. K. S. I’m guessing you haven’t read any of the critiques of their junk science?
The Haags are quacks? You mean the writers who criticize their works are quacks. If the Haags are ‘quacks’, why do judges allow them to testify in murder trails as expert ballistic experts? How many of these ‘critics’ have been allowed to give testimony as experts on ballistics in a court of law?
I challenge you to name them. And no, a medical doctor, giving testimony as a medical expert, does not count as a ballistic expert giving testimony as a ballistic expert.
Two, the ammo that hit Kennedy in the head behaved like frangible ammo, not FMJ ammo. A frangible bullet striking the curb could have sent fragments streaking at high speeds in several directions.
False. WCC/MC will fragment when striking bone at velocities of around 1900 feet per second. They won’t fragment or deform at speeds below 1400 feet per second, even upon striking bone. But they will at the velocity they struck the skull of the President.
Three, I am still waiting for you to provide a shred of evidence that says an FMJ bullet striking a skull at a downward angle would somehow deposit two mid-section fragments 1 cm below the entry point. None of the bullets in the WC’s tests did that. None of the bullets in the Failure Analysis tests did that. And no one has yet been able to find a single documented case where an FMJ bullet behaved in this manner. [/size]
Were any of these experiments conducted with living heads? Couldn’t blood flow move fragments within a head? I am no ballistic expert, but I remember Larry Sturdivan mentioning something along this line in his book “The JFK Myths”.
And would blood flow be even necessary? With the bullet travelling downward, I don’t see how it is that surprising if any fragments ended up 1 cm below the entry point. Surely the bullet, or it’s fragments would likely be passing through that area.