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.
Hogwash. Barger's letter, among other things, presented evidence that the Decker "hold everything" transmission had to be an artifact, not crosstalk.
And one would think that the NRC panel would have at least addressed the counter arguments that Barger presented in his letter, but they ignored them because they had no answer for them.
Quote from: Michael T. Griffith on January 30, 2021, 01:05:26 PM
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).
It wasn't random chance. That doesn't mean there was gunfire.
More hogwash. I wonder if you understand what we're talking about here. The NRC panel was responding to BBN's powerful observation about the amazing locational correlations between the gunshot impulse patterns and the test-firing impulse patterns. By disputing one of the values that the BBN scientists assigned, the NRC panel reduced the probability of gunfire from over 99% to 93%.
Figure 22 in the BBN report shows the microphone positions along the motorcycle route where high correlations were obtained. The BBN scientists referred to this figure in explaining why there was less than a 1% probability that chance caused the time-distance correlations:
Even a brief glance at Fig. 22 shows that the microphone locations that correspond to correlations at the three times after the first impulse tend to progress uniformly forward along the motorcade route. This conclusion can be quantified statistically by the chi-square test. If the motorcycle were not moving through Dealey Plaza at the time of the assassination, the distance along the motorcade route would be a meaningless coordinate, and the microphone locations for the correlations that exceed the detection threshold would occur at random. When the chart in Fig. 22 is partitioned into a 2 x 2 table by separating time at 5 sec and distance at 250 ft, we find 1, 6, 8, and 0 correlations in the four sections reading from left to right, top to bottom. But the expected number of correlations to be found in these four sections, if the correlations occurred at random, are 4.2, 2.8, 4.8, 3.2. The value of chi-square for the observed and expected values is equal to 11.4. There is only 1 degree of freedom in this 2 x 2 table, and the probability that this large value of chi-square could occur at random is less than 1%. Therefore, there is little doubt that the distance coordinate is meaningful, and we conclude that the motorcycle was moving through Dealey Plaza and did, in fact, detect the sounds of gunfire. (BBN report, 8 HSCA 104)
The NRC panel made no effort to explain the significance of the fact that their own calculation found a 93% probability that the locational correlations occurred because the impulse patterns on the police tape were recorded by a motorcycle in Dealey Plaza during the assassination. In fact, they did not even specifically mention this. They simply noted that they determined the probability of chance was 7 percent and acted as though they had dealt a strong blow to the BBN report. Yes, 7% is more than "less than 1%," but it is still an extremely low probability of chance.
What makes the locational correlations especially powerful is that they show the correct pace and distance of movement that one would expect if the mic were on a motorcycle that was moving along the motorcade route.