Below are some of the errors and omissions in Larry Sturdivan’s book
The JFK Myths: A Scientific Investigation of the Kennedy Assassination (Paragon House, 2005). Lone-gunman theorists regard the book as one of the best and most scientific defenses of the lone-shooter scenario in print. However, Sturdivan’s book contains dozens of serious errors and inexcusable omissions, and sometimes offers downright bizarre theories. It is a testament to the sad state of scholarship among lone-gunman theorists.
* In the book’s foreword, which Sturdivan presumably read and approved, Ken Rahn claims that the millions of pages of documents released by the Assassination Records Review Board (ARRB) added “little of substance” to our knowledge of the JFK case, and that nothing in the released documents “pointed the finger at anyone other than Lee Harvey Oswald” (p. 9). This is unbelievably erroneous. Rahn either has not read or has chosen to ignore the many scholarly books that discuss the important, historic disclosures from the released documents, not to mention the documents themselves.
Rahn does not even mention the fact that the ARRB also interviewed numerous witnesses, who provided a great deal of new and important information, and that the ARRB arranged for three medical experts to review the JFK autopsy x-rays and photos, and that those experts' findings contradict key parts of the autopsy report (see, for example,
https://www.jfkassassinationforum.com/index.php/topic,2694.msg97711.html#msg97711).
* Sturdivan rejects the scientific acoustical evidence developed by the House Select Committee on Assassinations (HSCA) (pp. 78-85), but he does so by repeating attacks that were refuted years before he wrote his book. The HSCA’s acoustical experts determined that a Dallas police dictabelt recording made by a patrolman’s microphone during the shooting contained at least four gunshot impulses, providing hard scientific proof that two gunmen were involved, since the alleged lone gunman could have fired only three shots.
Sturdivan repeats the arguments against the acoustical evidence made by a National Research Council (NRC) panel. But Sturdivan knew when he wrote his book that Dr. Donald Thomas, a research scientist at the USDA, had written a detailed response to all of the NRC panel’s arguments.
Dr. Thomas’s first defense of the acoustical evidence was published in 2001 in the journal
Science and Justice. Before being published, Dr. Thomas’s article was reviewed by acoustical expert Dr. James Barger, who was one of the HSCA’s acoustical experts, and by Dr. Brett Ratcliffe, a research scientist at the University of Nebraska.
Sturdivan cites Dr. Thomas’s 2001 article in his endnotes, but he does not mention the article in the body of the book and does not address any of Dr. Thomas observations and arguments. Why not? Here is a link to Dr. Thomas’s 2001 article on the acoustical evidence:
http://www.jfklancer.com/pdf/Thomas.pdfSturdivan appeals to Dale Myers’ 2004 research to argue that Patrolman H. B. McClain was not in the correct location in Dealey Plaza for his mike to have been the source of the sounds recorded on the dictabelt. Myers’ research was summarized in the 2004 ABC News documentary
Beyond Conspiracy; however, Myers did not publish his research until 2007, two years after Sturdivan’s book was published. So perhaps Sturdivan can be excused for not knowing that Dr. Thomas demolished Myers’ research in 2008:
https://www.maryferrell.org/pages/Essay_-_The_Bike_With_the_Mike.htmlHere are four more articles on the validity of the acoustical evidence, including the HSCA report on the subject:
https://www.history-matters.com/archive/jfk/hsca/reportvols/vol8/pdf/HSCA_Vol8_AS_1_Weiss.pdfhttp://pages.prodigy.net/whiskey99/courttv.htmhttps://web.archive.org/web/20091026111324/http://geocities.com/whiskey99a/dbt2002.htmlhttps://www.maryferrell.org/pages/Essay_-_Acoustics_Overview_and_History.htmlThe most exhaustive analysis of the acoustical evidence can be found in chapters 16-19 of Dr. Thomas’s 2010 book
Hear No Evil: Politics, Science, and the Forensic Evidence in the Kennedy Assassination. The chapters consist of 131 pages and, among other things, answer the attacks on the acoustical evidence and present evidence that there is a fifth gunshot impulse on the dictabelt.
* Surprisingly, regarding the location of the rear head entry wound, Sturdivan sides with the autopsy doctors rather than with the Clark Panel, the Rockefeller Commission’s medical panel, and the HSCA’s forensic pathology panel (FPP) (pp. 165-180)! In other words, he chooses the EOP entry site over the cowlick entry site. The two sites are a whopping 4 inches apart, so this is no minor issue. However, in a sad display of pseudo-scholarship, Sturdivan deals with the impossible trajectory posed by the EOP site by theorizing that the bullet, after supposedly entering the skull at a 15-degree downward angle, magically made a sharp right turn and also veered upward to exit the upper-front part of the right parietal bone (p. 180, Figure 54).
Surely Sturdivan knew better. Surely he knew that not one of the bullets in the WC’s ballistics tests veered so markedly. Surely he knew that brain tissue could not have caused such a drastic change in the bullet’s horizontal and vertical trajectory.
Also, Sturdivan says nothing about the fact that the fragment trail described in the autopsy report is nowhere to be seen on the extant x-rays. The autopsy report says this fragment trail started at the EOP and extended to a point just above the right eye. If Sturdivan had addressed this issue, he would have been forced to explain why this low fragment trail does not appear on the extant x-rays. The only fragment trail on the extant x-rays is
above the debunked cowlick entry site.
* Sturdivan discusses the 6.5 mm object seen on the autopsy skull x-rays and admits that it cannot be a bullet fragment from an FMJ bullet, but he lamely theorizes that it is an innocent artifact, and that the small fragment in the back of the head on the lateral x-rays is a bone chip (pp. 168-169). Although Sturdivan mentions Dr. Mantik’s section on the 6.5 mm object in
Assassination Science, he says nothing about Dr. Mantik’s optical density (OD) measurements, which prove that the small back-of-head fragment inside the 6.5 mm object is metallic. Nor does Sturdivan address the fact that the 6.5 mm object is spatially consistent with the small fragment in the back of the head, a fact that argues powerfully against the idea that the object is an innocent artifact.
Sturdivan makes the odd argument that no forger would have planted the 6.5 mm object because it cannot be mistaken for a bullet; surely, says Sturdivan, a forger would have planted something that “could actually be mistaken for a bullet fragment” (p. 168). This is just silly. Three federal medical panels mistook the 6.5 mm object for a bullet fragment: the Clark Panel, the Rockefeller Commission’s medical panel, and the HSCA FPP. Dr. John Lattimer, an ardent defender of the lone-gunman theory, also mistook the 6.5 mm object for a bullet fragment. Did these facts just slip Sturdivan’s mind?
Moreover, Sturdivan says nothing about the other small back-of-head fragment, the one that Dr. McDonnel identified for the HSCA FPP. This fragment is slightly to the left of the fragment inside the 6.5 mm image, about 1 cm below the EOP entry site and just underneath the outer table of the skull. Dr. Mantik has confirmed via OD measurements that this fragment is a bullet fragment. It is hard to believe that Sturdivan was not aware of this fragment. I suspect that Sturdivan chose to say nothing about it because he knew he could not explain it within the context of the lone-gunman theory.
* Sturdivan repeats the myth that neutron activation analysis (NAA) has established that all the bullet fragments recovered from the limo and from Connally’s wrist came from the same production lot of WCC/MC ammo (i.e., Oswald’s alleged ammo), and that the Connally wrist fragments match the chemical composition of CE 399, the magic bullet of the Warren Commission’s (WC’s) infamous single-bullet theory (SBT) (pp. 121-125). In repeating this myth, Sturdivan makes the erroneous claim that no one has found “any credible evidence” that the chain of custody of the fragments is suspect.
In 2007, scientists at Texas A&M University reviewed the NAA research done by the WC and the HSCA and determined that the research was markedly flawed, and they argued that the NAA results indicate that more than one gunman could have been involved:
Chemical and Forensic Analysis of JFK Assassination Bullet Lots: Is A Second Shooter Possible?
https://arxiv.org/pdf/0712.2150.pdfGiven that Sturdivan wrote his book in 2005, he can be excused for not knowing about the 2007 Texas A&M study. However, he has no excuse for falsely claiming that there are no indications that the bullet-fragment evidence is suspect. The 1998 book
Assassination Science, which Sturdivan mentions in his book, presents compelling evidence that the NAA-tested fragments are suspect, but Sturdivan does not address it, and he does not even mention the evidence that many more fragments were recovered from JFK and Connally than are now in evidence.
* Sturdivan says that Dale Myers’ SBT trajectory research is the best ever done (pp. 128-129). Actually, Myers’ SBT trajectory research is atrocious and has been soundly debunked. Myers commits gaffe after gaffe in his SBT writings and diagrams. It is incredible that Sturdivan did not detect any of them. If you want a good sample of the problems with Myers’ SBT trajectory research, read Pat Speers’ analysis of it:
Search for Truth in Dale Myers’ House of Mirrors
http://www.patspeer.com/chapter12c:animania* In his discussion on JFK’s back wound and on the alleged path from C7/T1 to the throat wound (pp. 140-143), Sturdivan does not say a single word about the evidence, including evidence from ARRB interviews and released documents, that on the night of the autopsy, the autopsy doctors positively, absolutely determined that the back wound had no exit point. To read Sturdivan’s book, you would never know this evidence existed.
Moreover, although Sturdivan was aware of Dr. David Mantik’s finding that the x-rays show no path from the back wound to the throat wound without smashing through the spine, he does not even mention it, much less address it. Dr. Mantik first discussed this finding in the 1998 book
Assassination Science, a book that Sturdivan mentions and cites.
Dr. Mantik also discusses this finding in his online paper “The Medical Evidence Decoded,”
https://themantikview.com/pdf/The_Medical_Evidence_Decoded.pdf (pp. 38-40).
* Rather incredibly, Sturdivan supports the jet-effect theory of JFK’s backward movement by citing Dr. John Lattimer’s bogus and discredited head-shot ballistics test (p. 147). Lattimer reported that all the skulls in his test were propelled backward toward the rifle, supposedly proving the jet-effect theory. However, no other test done with FMJ bullets has produced such a result.
Sturdivan mischaracterizes Lattimer’s test by saying that the skulls were propelled backward “from the table.” Actually, Lattimer put the skulls on ladders, not tables. This is an important difference because, as scholars have noted, the ladders absorbed the forward momentum of the bullets and rocked forward, not backward, which in turn caused the skulls to move backward. For more information on Lattimer’s bogus test, see the following article:
http://www.patspeer.com/chapter16:newviewsonthesamesceneFor a scientific critique of the jet-effect theory as an explanation of JFK’s head movement, see the following article by mechanical engineer Tony Szamboti:
http://jfklancer.com/pdf/Jet_Effect_Rebuttal_II_(4-17-2012).pdfSturdivan makes the curious—and accurate—comment that the dramatic reversal of motion of Kennedy’s head and upper body seen between Z312 and Z314 is “far too soon to be a neuromuscular response” and that “it had to be from the physics” (p. 147). Yet, on the very next page, Sturdivan claims that the “true cause” of Kennedy’s violent backward motion was a neuromuscular reaction!
* As mentioned, Sturdivan, after saying that Kennedy’s backward motion happened too soon to be a neuromuscular response, argues the opposite and claims that the violent motion was caused by a neuro spasm—even worse, he cites the irrelevant 1948 goat film as evidence (pp. 148-152). I will not belabor the problems with the neuro-spasm theory and with the goat film that have been noted by so many other scholars. Suffice it to say that anyone with two functioning eyes can look at the goat film and see that the goat’s reaction is nothing like JFK’s reaction.
For information on some of the problems with the neuro-spasm theory, see Dr. Cyril Wecht and Dr. Gary Aguilar’s comments on it:
https://kennedysandking.com/images/pdf/AguilarWechtAFTA2016.pdf* Sturdivan agrees that Jackie Kennedy climbed onto the limo’s trunk in an effort “to rescue a fragment of the President’s shattered skull” (p. 22). How did a skull fragment get blown onto the trunk if the bullet exited above and to the right of the right ear? Sturdivan does not say.
* Sturdivan claims that the package that Oswald brought to work from his house on the morning of the assassination contained the alleged murder weapon, the Mannlicher-Carcano rifle, not curtain rods (pp. 33-34). Sturdivan admits that the two people who saw the bag, Buell Frazier and his sister, both said it was shorter than the bag that was allegedly found in Oswald’s alleged “sniper’s nest” on the sixth floor of the Texas School Book Depository. But Sturdivan says they only said the bag was “a bit shorter” than the supposed rifle bag.
“A bit shorter”? It was much more than “a bit shorter.” Frazier and his sister said Oswald’s bag was 27 inches long. The supposed rifle bag was 38 inches long. Frazier added that Oswald’s bag looked like the standard brown grocery bag that grocery stores used. FBI agents asked Frazier to mark the spot on his car’s back seat where the bag reached when it was placed on the seat with one end against the door. The distance that Frazier marked was 27 inches, exactly as he had previously estimated. Sturdivan mentions none of this.
* Sturdivan paints a superficial, misleading picture of the Tippit shooting and, needless to say, identifies Oswald as Tippit’s killer (pp. 35-36). To read Sturdivan’s version of the Tippit shooting, you would never know that Tippit was shot before Oswald could have walked to the scene (Oswald had no car and did not drive), that two witnesses independently placed Oswald at the Texas Theater at least 10 minutes before Tippit was shot, that the shells found at the Tippit scene were initially and firmly identified as shells from an automatic pistol (not Oswald’s pistol), that Oswald’s pistol was determined to be defective (it would not fire), that the fingerprints found where Tippit’s killer touched the front passenger door of Tippit’s patrol car were not Oswald’s fingerprints, and that the shells entered into evidence had no crime-scene initials on them. For more information on the Tippit shooting, see the following article:
“Did Oswald Shoot Tippit? A Review of Dale Myers’ Book
With Malice”
https://miketgriffith.com/files/malice.htm* Sturdivan repeats the long-debunked myth that the Tague curb “was not chipped” but “only had a lead smear on it” (p. 118). Anyone can look at the initial photos of the curb and readily see that the curb was chipped and had a hole in it. When the
Dallas Morning News published one of the photos of the curb the day after the assassination, it gave the photo the caption “Concrete Scar,” and the narrative under the photo said,
"A detective points to a chip in the curb. . . . A bullet strike from the rifle that took President Kennedy’s life apparently caused the hole." (
Dallas Morning News, 11/23/1963, in Gerald McKnight,
Breach of Trust: How the Warren Commission Failed the Nation and Why, University Press of Kansas, 2015 edition, p. 118)
“Concrete scar,” “chip in the curb, “the hole.” So the editors who viewed the photo did not see a “smear” but a “scar,” “chip,” and “hole.”
* Sturdivan offers a novel, if not comical, explanation for the fact that in the WC’s ballistics tests, bullets fired into cotton wadding emerged with more deformity than CE 399. Sturdivan says this just proves that cotton wadding is “denser than soft tissue” when it is “compressed” by a penetrating bullet (p. 121)! This is beyond silly.
In the many pages of his labored attempt to validate the SBT, Sturdivan says nothing about the 1992 All-American Television wound ballistics test arranged and supervised by Dr. Cyril Wecht, a former president of the American Academy of Forensic Sciences. A 6.5 mm WCC/MC FMJ bullet, i.e., Oswald’s alleged ammo, was fired into a gelatin block that contained two chicken bones positioned several inches apart. The bullet emerged markedly deformed, far more deformed than CE 399.
Nor does Sturdivan mention the 1967 CBS ballistics tests, in which none of the bullets were able to penetrate the simulated thigh. This result led CBS’s expert consultant, Dr. W. F. Enos, to conclude that the SBT was “highly improbable.”
Nor does Sturdivan mention that the chief of the Army's Wound Ballistics Board, Dr. Joseph Dolce, told WC attorneys that the SBT was impossible. Indeed, even though Dr. Dolce believed there was only one gunman, he agreed to appear in the 1995 documentary
Reasonable Doubt: The Single-Bullet Theory to explain why he viewed the SBT as impossible.
* Sturdivan makes the baffling, erroneous claim that autopsy photo F8 shows a frontal view of JFK’s skull (p. 175, Figure 50). However, we have known for many years that in 1966, John Stringer, the medical photographer who actually took the photo, along with the three autopsy doctors and the autopsy radiologist, said F8 was a photo of the back of the head. Dr. David Mantik has confirmed that F8 was taken from a point behind the head. Dr. Mantik notes that one of the ARRB medical experts noted the presence of fatty tissue in the upper left corner of the photo, and that such tissue would only be visible if the photo were taken from a point behind the head. The fact that F8 is a back-of-head photo means that F8 shows a sizable wound in the back of the head (specifically, in the occipital region), which in turn means that the autopsy photos that show the back of the head intact have been altered.