Bottom line. A slow reaction by the SS agents (even assuming that is true) is not evidence of a conspiracy.
Hill did not have any “reaction” at all to the first shot. He was oblivious to it, even though both Governor Connally in the President’s limousine directly in front of the Secret Service follow up car and Senator Yarborough in the car directly behind the Secret Service follow up car heard the first shot and knew with certainty that it was a rifle shot.
Any clear-thinking person would know that it was because Hill went out drinking in the early morning hours of November 22 after they arrived at the Fort Worth hotel at “about 12:00 midnight,” regardless of having been “on duty for 16 hours.” After drinking and partying at the Press Club until nearly 3:00 a.m., Hill, KGB officer Glen Bennet, and 2 other running board agents took their “party” over to an “all-night beatnik rendezvous” called The Cellar.
Hill’s only reaction to the second shot was to turn and look to see where it came from because, in his hung-over and exhausted condition, he thought it could just be a “firecracker.” Hill reacted only when his “eyes had to cross the Presidential automobile,” and he “saw the President hunch forward and then slump to his left.”
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But let’s get to the
clear and concise “evidence” of the conspiracy to assassinate President Kennedy, which is contained in the official Secret Service reports of KGB officers inside the CIA who had been “detailed” to the Secret Service, all of whom heard shots fired (not firecrackers) and saw shots strike the President before the fatal head shot. And there is a lot more evidence of the conspiracy contained in my book.
The highest-ranking Secret Service agent in the follow-up car was KGB officer Emory Roberts, Roberts, who rode in the front passenger seat next to Kinney, the driver, had the prime position for watching the assassination unfold, as President Kennedy was directly in front of him in the rear seat of the Presidential limousine.
In Roberts’ official report, he wrote that after a bullet struck President Kennedy in the head, he picked up the car radio and told Special Agent Lawson in the lead car, “The President has been hit. Escort us to the nearest hospital fast but at a safe speed . . . . I said, pointing to McIntyre, ‘They got him, they got him,’ continuing I said, ‘You, meaning McIntyre, and Bennett take over Johnson as soon as we stop.’”
Roberts also wrote that at 12:30 p.m., before witnessing the fatal head shot, he witnessed the “first of three shots fired, at which time I saw the President lean toward Mrs. Kennedy.”
With Special Agent John Ready standing just inches away on the right front running board, Roberts clearly saw that “they got him” with the “first” shot, and he clearly saw the President react to the shot, but according to his own Secret Service report, Roberts, the highest-ranking agent in the car, sat there and watched silently for at least five seconds and possibly as many as eight seconds while President Kennedy was being shot to death directly in front of him. Roberts said and did absolutely nothing until President Kennedy was shot in the head.
And there is Special Agent Glen Bennett, another one of the KGB officers inside the CIA who had been “detailed” to the Secret Service. Bennett, who was only “temporarily assigned to the White House Detail,” wrote in his “Protective Assignment” report that after seeing the last shot strike the President in the head, he “immediately hollered ‘he’s hit’” and then “reached for the AR-15 located on the floor of the rear seat. Special Agent Hickey had already picked-up the AR-15.”
But before seeing the last shot strike President Kennedy in the head and before saying anything, Bennett watched silently as President Kennedy was shot in the back.
Bennett wrote that he “looked at the back of the President” and “saw the shot hit the President about four inches down from the right shoulder.” Even though Bennett saw the President take a bullet in the back, Bennett sat there and said absolutely nothing. It was not until one of the assassins’ bullets struck President Kennedy in the head that Bennett hollered, “He’s hit!”
Bennett is the KGB officer who took the three running board agents, Landis, Ready, and Hill, out for drinking and late-night partying in the early morning hours of Assassination Day, November 22.
Roberts, who was sitting in the prime position for witnessing the assassination and who was the highest-ranking agent in the follow-up car, stated very clearly that he sat and watched everything from the first shot to the last without saying a word until it was all over.
Bennett’s report states that at the sound of the first shot he looked at the President and watched everything without saying or doing anything until it was all over.
Special Agent Tim McIntyre, the only KGB officer on a running board, wrote that the President’s car was 200 yards from the underpass “when the first shot was fired,” and “after the second shot” he “looked at the President and witnessed his being struck in the head by the third and last shot.”
McIntyre did not say what he was doing for five to eight seconds after “the first shot was fired,” but the Altgens photo, which can be seen in several of my posts, shows McIntyre focused across the car on Special Agents Ready and Landis, two of the three running board agents that needed to be disabled.
KGB officers Roberts, Bennett, and McIntyre stated in their reports that they tried to locate the source of the shots after the shooting was over, but they said and did absolutely nothing while the shots were being fired. They did not even try to give the appearance of trying to locate the source of the shots.
The reports of KGB officers Roberts, Bennett, and McIntyre describe in detail how President John F. Kennedy was shot to death from the first shot to the last while they silently and patiently watched the entire assassination unfold.
Special Agent George Hickey, the fourth KGB officer working the follow up car, stood up and looked toward the rear, allegedly to “identify” the first shot, and then, in an attempt to either witness the assassination or see if they had already killed the President, he turned to look at the President, whereupon he saw, in his own words, that the second shot “missed” and “there didn’t seem to be any impact against his head.”
Like the reports of his KGB colleagues, Hickey’s report is a blatant admission that he watched to see if the assassination would be successful. His report, bemoaning that the second shot “missed” and “there didn’t seem to be any impact against his head,” perfectly complements Roberts’ report in which Roberts exclaimed, “They got him! They got him!” after the third and final shot struck President Kennedy in the head.
It’s all in my book. Click the link.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07V9JT65Y