which means you have to believe that your sixth-floor gunman fired at JFK while his view of JFK was obstructed by the oak tree.
Willis could have taken his Z202 photo after hearing a shot fired in the mid-Z150s, the shot that some say made the Connallys and Mrs. Kennedy turn from their left to their right (Mrs. Kennedy begins in the Z170s; she was posing for Croft). The three said the first shot caused them to turn their heads. The Z150s is before the President went behind the foliage.
Willis claimed his slide was taken "instantaneously" with the first shot, but it's an exaggeration. Here's his testimony where he says the first shot caused Mrs. Kennedy to "snap" her head from her left to her right.
Mr. LIEBELER. You couldn’t tell whether he was hit by the first shot? You couldn’t tell whether he had been hit by the first shot or the second shot or the third shot, or by how many shots he had been hit?
Mr. WILLIS. No, sir; except this one thing might be worthy of mention. When I took slide No. 4, the President was smiling and waving and looking straight ahead, and Mrs. Kennedy was likewise smiling and facing more to my side of the street. When the first shot was fired, her head seemed to just snap in that direction, and he more or less faced the other side of the street and leaned forward, which caused me to wonder, although I could not see anything positively. It did cause me to wonder.
Mr. LIEBELER. You say that the President looked toward his left; is that correct? Toward the side of Elm Street that you are standing on, or which way?
Mr. WILLIS. In slide No. 4 he was looking pretty much toward--straight ahead, and she was looking more to the left, which would be my side of the street. Then when the first shot was fired, she turned to the right toward him and he more or less slumped forward, and it caused me to wonder if he were hit, although I couldn’t say.”
Did you look at Z200-207 in slow motion yet? If you do, you can't help but see that starting in Z200, JFK suddenly freezes his waving motion, starts to bring his right hand toward his throat, and starts to rapidly turn his head to the left.
I don't see that as reacting to being shot. He's finished waving and begins to lower his hand, as he did throughout the motorcade. Kennedy's head only gets turned as far as it is in Z225. He doesn't turn his head towards Jackie.
In the animation, I left out the really blurred frames. This explains why the animation has an abrupt change in the right hand between frames 189 and Z193.
You will also see that during this same time frame, Jackie suddenly starts to turn her head from left to right to look at JFK.
There's a little turn by Mrs. Kennedy, but it's a continuation of the larger head turn she began in the Z170s.
Even most of the HSCA experts who analyzed the Zapruder film acknowledged that these movements mean that JFK must have been shot before Z190.
They got it wrong. The last-minute "95% certainty" acoustics testimony suddenly added importance to any Z190-zone "indicators".
The HSCA experts also noted that there is a strong blur episode from Z189-197, which of course indicates a shot was fired a few frames earlier (6 HSCA 27).
Didn't you just accord a 12-frame reaction time to Willis' Z202 shot? So by that measure, a blur episode beginning at Z189 would mean going back 12 frames to Z177. That's eleven frames earlier than your notorious Z188 JFK "cheek puff".
Seems what frames are blurred in Z189-197 have horizontal blur, resulting from Zapruder panning the camera. It may be unsteady there because the sign is beginning to intrude between Kennedy and Zapruder. There's not much blur at all in Z193, Z194 and Z196.
I wonder if
vertical blur might indicate a "startle reaction" by Zapruder.
I also notice that you ignored the fact that Canning said the windshield damage was too high to have been caused by a fragment from the head shot. If you doubt that he said this, go read his analysis/testimony. Ignoring facts that you can't explain won't make them go away.
I also notice that you ignored the fact that Canning found it necessary to ignore the HSCA medical panel's placement of the back wound to get his SBT trajectory to work, which was a damning and revealing admission.
Have you looked at Canning's diagrams? Go look at his diagram that shows his placement of JBC in the limo, and then, again, find me one photo or frame that shows Connally as far left as Canning shows him to be. Let's see it. Z224 destroys, utterly destroys, the fiction that Connally was that far to the left.
Well, you got Canning on that one. He had an inaccurate limousine drawing as his base. With the information we have today, we can slide Connally to his right so he's more in the middle of the jump-seat. Kennedy would merely be slid an equal amount because Canning's relationship of Kennedy to Connally hasn't changed.
Canning didn't assume a firing location for the bullets. To his credit, Canning's use of back-projecting from the wound sites and using a cone for error-margin seems pretty fair-minded.
I further notice that you are still ignoring JFK's dramatic reactions that start in Z226, when he is jolted forward and his hands and elbows are flung upward and forward. These actions show that JFK was hit in the back a frame or two earlier, clearly after he had begun to react to the Z186 shot in Z200-207. WC apologists are caught between a rock and a hard place by these Z226-232 reactions and the Z200-207 reactions, because they obviously could not have been caused by the same bullet. That's why you guys either ignore one or both of these reaction sequences.
I see. And, per critics, wind caused Connally's jacket to pluck forward or the lapel to flip between Z223 and Z224. Something that was not captured on film anywhere else in the motorcade or while they were walking about at Love Field. Amazing, the right side of Connally's jacket--where we know a bullet exited--just happened to be the only place where, per critics, he suffered a random wardrobe malfunction.
Note that Kennedy's right hand is beginning to cup in Z224; in Z225 the hand has closed more and is being moved towards his throat area. These may be involuntary movements by Kennedy to a shot that struck him
ca. Z222. It takes a few frames for Connally's jacket to pluck forward, which offers the possibility he was struck by the same bullet that struck Kennedy.