Josiah Thompson's long-awaited new book Last Second in Dallas (University Press of Kansas, 2021), published last week, presents powerful evidence in support of the HSCA acoustical evidence, which proved there were at least two gunmen and at least four shots. Thompson's chapters on the acoustical evidence account for 98 pages of the book and include separate contributions by BBN scientists James Barger and Richard Mullen. Some highlights:
You've gotten a little over excited. Thompson has made claims. They are subject to error, and are mostly wrong.
* Thompson utterly, totally, and completely destroys the NRC panel's report. Among other things, Thompson presents evidence that the panel rigged their PCC test to avoid confirming the acoustical evidence.
No, Thompson generally misrepresents what the NRC report says, and there was no rigging of the PCC test. The PCC test showed CHECK was not crosstalk. It still does.
* Thompson demolishes the claim that the Fisher "I'll check it" transmission is not crosstalk. He proves, partly via a PCC test done by Mullen, that it most certainly is crosstalk, and that it proves that the dictabelt's gunfire impulses occurred during the assassination. Interestingly, Thompson notes that years ago Jim Bowles himself recognized the Fisher "I'll check it" transmission as a crosstalk transmission, and that the NRC panel attempted to conceal this fact in its report.
He has not proven the CHECK is crosstalk. He acts like he has, but doesn't actually have the goods there. Mullen's PCC test actually proves the opposite, for reasons that will be explained later. There is no proof anywhere in the book that the impulses occurred during the assassination.
Bowles noted CHECK as a crosstalk, and the NRC panel tested the possibility and found that it was not. There was no concealment. There was no reason to knowingly include Bowles' error in their transcript, and the transcript wasn't the evidence. The recordings are the evidence.
* Thompson once and for all resolves the problem of the Decker "hold everything" transmission, proving that it is irrelevant, that it is not time synchronous, and that it must be the result of an overdub that was produced during the copying process. Thompson, summarizing Barger's new research on the subject, presents evidence that Decker's "hold everything" transmission and the two Bellah transmissions were recorded during a separate recording session and not during the session that recorded the three scientifically established crosstalk transmissions, and that, crucially, they were recorded at a different recording speed.
Again, these are claims. They are wrong. Provably so, and that will be shown.
* Thompson establishes that neither the HSCA nor the NRC panel used the original dictabelt recording, and that the extant recording is a second- or third-generation copy.
He does no such thing. He wants to think so, and tries to cast doubt on it, but no such proof is in the book.
* Interestingly, Thompson reveals that when the NRC panel sent Dr. Barger a draft of their report, Barger replied with an 8-page critique, and that the panel declined to publish Barger's critique and did not address his objections in their report.
There was no expectation that they would publish Barger's letter in their report, and Barger's letter didn't contain anything that would debunk what the panel found.