You have no clue in Kentucky what you are talking about. The projectile that struck Connally's wrist shattered--shattered--the radius bone, which is one of the hardest bones in the body. So whatever hit the wrist did a great deal of damage. That is why even the autopsy doctors, as late as April 1964, before they knew what they were supposed to say on the matter, insisted that CE 399 could not have been the missile that hit Connally's wrist.
But those doctors were not ballistic experts, who run real world tests to see what damage a bullet can do while still being distorted a moderate amount like CE 399.
Dr. Charles Gregory, the surgeon who operated on the wrist, told the WC that the wrist damage indicated that an "irregular missile" had hit the wrist:[/size]
Again, a doctor who was not a ballistic expert, who run real world tests to see what damage a bullet can do while still being distorted a moderate amount like CE 399.
The WC's most experienced and highly qualified wound ballistics expert, Dr. Joseph Dolce, told WC staffers that there was no way CE 399 could have shattered the radius bone without suffering substantial deformity.
Once again the problem is that you have not done the necessary homework to discuss the subject credibly. Go get two or three basic forensic handbooks and read up on why ballistics and forensic experts examine clothing when there's been a shooting.
Again, Dr. Joseph Dolce, a medical doctor who consults with ballistic experts but was not a ballistic expert himself, who run real world tests to see what damage a bullet can do while still being distorted a moderate amount like CE 399.
And let’s talk about Dr. Joseph Dolce a little bit. We can see what he wrote in a letter below. Search for the word “Dolce” the eight of nine occurrences will see the start a letter he wrote with the title:
My Thoughts re President J. F. Kennedy Assassination
By Dr. Joseph R. Dolce, MD FACShttp://22november1963.org.uk/edgewood-arsenal-bullet-tests#dolce-letterAs you alluded to, Dr. Joseph Dolce’s professional opinion is that two bullets from Oswald’s Carcano rifle could not have done all the damage to President Kennedy and Governor Connally. But there is something else he says, that three bullet s from Oswald’s Carcano rifle
could have done all the damage to President Kennedy and Governor Connally. Dr. Joseph Dolce was not a CTer but a LNer who believed that the evidence best supported the theory that Oswald alone killed President Kennedy and wounded Governor Connally. But not with two bullets from Oswald rifle, but with three.
Again, you saw fit to without pertinent information from us. A habit of yours which, perhaps, you are not consciously aware of. So, what you really want us to do, is accept Dr. Dolce’s professional opinion. That two WCC/MC bullets could not have done this. But to reject his equally professional opinion that three WCC/MC bullets could. You want to cherry pick which of his conclusions are correct and which are to be rejected.
Like any CTer, you need multiple shooters, or if forced to go with one shooter, it has to be anyone but Oswald, using his Carcano rifle. Hence, the cherry picking of which of Dr. Dolce’s opinions is correct.
What is my opinion of the 1964 Edgewood tests? That they were insufficient to conclude that the two bullet WCC/MC theory was correct. And insufficient to conclude that the three bullet WCC/MC theory was correct. And insufficient to conclude that both WCC/MC theories are incorrect and that some other theory must be true.
They fired a WCC/MC bullet directly into the wrist of a human cadaver. This is an invalid test. Nothing was done to slow the bullet with soft tissue, or the equivalent, like ballistic gel, to simulate Kennedy’s Neck and Connally’s torso, to see if the bullet could do something like the same amount of damage to Connally’s wrist, while the bullet remained only moderately distorted. Of course, firing directly into the wrist, without slowing it down first, resulted in much greater damage than the damage done to Connally’s wrist, and the bullet receiving much more damage to it than CE 399.
Since 1964, better ballistic tests have been run to show that a WCC/MC bullet could do the damage it did and still emerge being only moderately distorted.
Wrong. It indicated no such thing. If a bullet or bullet fragment had made the front shirt slits, there should have been metallic residue around the slits. But even when the slits were tested with NAA, no metallic traces were detected. Also, if a bullet or fragment had made the slits, there would be fabric missing from them, but there is none. And, we know a bullet or fragment did not cause the slits because there is no hole through the tie knot--only a small nick made by one of the Parkland nurses, and the nick is clearly inward from the left edge of the knot.
So, I take it, your theory is the “slits” in the shirt were not made by a bullet, but by a scalpel, used by a doctor or nurse to hurriedly help remove the shirt.
The slits, whether made from a bullet or from a scalpel, were cut from the inside. This would not be the case if made by a scalpel. No medical professional wound slide the blade of a scalpel between the tight fit of the shirt and the neck to somehow cut the shirt from the inside. Causing the threads to be pushed outward. Only a bullet would do that.
Also, I don’t think the doctor or nurse would cho0se to cut the shirt directly over the wound, although, I am not a medical professional of any sort so I don’t know. But I don’t think they would do that.
I think those “slits” were caused by an exiting bullet alright.
. . .
Huh? Who has ever claimed that the Parkland doctors examined JFK's clothes, much less that they used the clothing as the basis for their conclusion that the throat wound was an entrance wound?
The Parkland doctors concluded that the throat wound was an entrance wound because it was small (3-5 mm), because it was neat, and because it was punched in, not avulsed.
At a minimum, for the Parkland doctors who thought the neck wound was an entrance wound, for their opinions on this matter to be taken seriously, they would have to examine the clothes. One cannot make a good, professional analysis, without checking the clothes. This provides the definitive evidence for the direction of the bullets. Any expert, who declared the direction of the bullet, from the wounds alone, and chooses not to make a close examination of the clothes as well, when readily available, is not behaving in a professional manner. Of course, the Parkland doctors are excused, because this was not part of their jobs. But this still greatly diminishes their conclusions.
And of course you are also waving aside Dr. Carrico's clear, repeated assertion that the throat wound was above the collar, even though that location is supported by his 11/22/63 medical report. You won't even seriously consider his account because it destroys your house of cards. So you reflexively look for any excuse, no matter how lame or arbitrary, to reject it.
I trust what the autopsy photographs show, not the memory of a doctor.