Dr. Thompson feels that Dr. Thomas has already sufficiently dealt with the issue of the photographic evidence regarding McClain's location.
https://www.maryferrell.org/pages/Essay_-_The_Bike_With_the_Mike.html
https://www.maryferrell.org/pages/Essay_-_Debugging_Bugliosi.html
Dr. Thompson's approach is to show that the dictabelt recording absolutely, positively contains at least four gunshot impulse patterns that were recorded in Dealey Plaza during the assassination, and that one of the shots came from the grassy knoll. So someone's microphone in Dealey Plaza recorded those gunshots, whether it was McClain's, Beilharz's, Price's, or someone else's mike. Personally, I find Dr. Thomas's research on the bike with the mike convincing.
The gunshot impulse patterns match the unique patterns of gunshots fired in Dealey Plaza. They have the echo speed and locational characteristics of shots that were fired in Dealey Plaza and that were recorded by a motorcycle moving in Dealey Plaza. Dr. Aschkenazy put it this way:
I think it would be helpful to keep in mind that even the NRC panel admitted that there was only a 7% probability that the numerous locational correlations between the dictabelt gunshots and the test-firing gunshots were the result of chance (https://miketgriffith.com/files/hscaacous.pdf, pp. 12-13).
As for the argument that the vast majority of plaza witnesses said they heard three shots and that therefore this disproves the acoustical evidence, it is hard to believe that anyone is still pushing this patently silly, lame argument after all we now know about how the FBI and the DPD manipulated the eyewitness accounts, given that we now know that the shots in two shot groups came within fractions of a second of each other, and given that the Zapruder film plainly and clearly shows reactions to at least five shots.
https://miketgriffith.com/files/6shots.htm
The acoustics experts didn't just say the tape demonstrated four or more shots, they stated the tape picked up these shots from specific locations within the plaza at specific times. The HSCA said the bike with the mic was McLain's, and Thomas agreed.
The Z-film, Dorman film and Hughes film prove, however, that McLain was not where the HSCA said he was when the first shot was fired.
As a consequence, Thomas moved back the time of the first shot to frame 175.
But the Wiegman film and Bond 4 prove Wiegman--who was supposedly 2 cars behind McLain at the time of the first shot--was on the knoll for 7 seconds or more before McLain passed him by. Well, this makes no sense, seeing as he was on foot, and McLain was on a motorcycle.
I pointed this out to those working with Tink on his book early last year. It was too big a problem to overcome, and was subsequently ignored.
Upon reading Tink's book, moreover, it's easy to see why. He spends much of the book going after the Ramsey Panel and Alvarez specifically. And he's probably right to do so. That they may have been correct about the sounds on the tapes not being shots, to be clear, shouldn't lead us to forgive the deceptions Tink discovered in the working papers provided by Hoch.
As stated, my hope was Tink would find a way for the shots to be legit without their being recorded by McLain. I am disappointed that this was not done.