I don’t blame you for trying. I blame you for according more certainty than the actual evidence warrants.
Sharon Simmons to my knowledge never identified herself in the film or described herself as having worn a blue head scarf that day. Karen Westbrook did. Your handwaving and self-serving arguments against her are just that.
And how many times do you need to keep bringing this subjective opinion up? What are you hoping for? How does it further anybody’s understanding of the assassination?
As for the identification of Simmons, Holt and Jacob - the evidence and the arguments emanating from that evidence are there for all to see. Using the Nix, Bronson and Zapruder films in conjunction with their own statements as to where they were standing, it is possible to locate their general position. We then have the Darnell pic which you agree shows Simmons, Holt and Jacob. It is a simple matter of then matching the general characteristics of the Darnell pic with the section of crowd shown in the Z-film to locate their position. And it couldn't be any more obvious. There are no alternatives as to who it is. When there are no alternatives there is a degree of confidence that the identification is correct.
Rather than deal with these arguments you simply label my work "dishonest" and "disingenuous", you use crass phrases like "hand-waving arguments" rather than actually engage in the arguments themselves and you constantly accuse me of stating assumptions as facts. When asked to provide examples of my stating assumptions as facts you were made to look an utter fool.
Time and time again I've asked you to provide an alternative identification based on the arguments presented and you have slithered back under your rock each time. It is something you claimed you could easily do, but have conspicuously failed to do.
All you have presented is your "Westbrook said so" argument, over and over again - no supporting evidence, nothing to back it up.
[And by the way, even though you've been told this before, Westbrook never describes her long-lost headscarf as being blue.]
How does it further anybody’s understanding of the assassination?And what is your understanding of the assassination John?
[I won't hold my breath waiting for an answer to that one]
Back to the topic.
The identification of Westbrook, Calvery, Reed and Hicks in the Z-film is going to be a process of elimination.
Unlike the identification of Simmons, Holt and Jacob, there is no known, clear image of them taken that day showing their faces.
This doesn't mean it is an impossible task.
As already stated, Westbrook describes all four women as being stood together watching the motorcade. This is reflected in the various CE1381's that describe them leaving the building together, "we walked to Elm Street" and "we were standing at this point".
It is reasonable to assume they were stood together watching the motorcade - that is to say, stood next to each other, side by side.
It is also reasonable to assume Westbrook was wearing a headscarf that day as she is insistent on that point.
The General Location.
The Nix and Bell films firmly establish that the last person viewing the motorcade, stood on the north sidewalk of Elm Street, was Bill Newman. There is no-one stood on the sidewalk between him and the Triple Underpass.
The still from the Bronson footage above shows Bill Newman, far left and on the right-hand side, picked out by a red arrow, Sharon Simmons, the woman in the blue headscarf [note to John, this identification will be used until a more credible alternative arises - crying "Westbrook said so" isn't cutting it].
In between Newman and Simmons there are no candidates for the group of four women including Westbrook.
Which brings us to this pic:
On the far right right we see Sharon Simmons, partially obscured by the Stemmons sign. We know from the Bronson pic there is no-one to her right who can be considered a viable candidate for the girls from room 203. Logic dictates they are somewhere to her left.
I will now present the arguments supporting the identification of Westbrook and colleagues in this line of people.
Both Westbrook and Calvery were close enough to witness the headshot. In an interview with Kent Biffle on the day of the assassination Westbrook stated - ""'I saw the president's hair fly up...I knew he was hit,".
In his WC testimony, Billy Lovelady recalls an encounter with Gloria Calvery on the steps of the TSBD building entrance - "It didn't occur to me at first what had happened until this Gloria came running up to us and told us the President had been shot...so we asked her was she for certain or just had she seen the shot hit him or--she said yes, she had been right close to it to see and she had saw the blood and knew he had been hit but didn't know how serious it was."
In his WC testimony Joe Molina recalls Calvery saying "Oh, my God, Joe, he's been shot." They were both horrified. I said "Are you sure he was shot?" She said 'Oh, Joe, I'm sure. I saw his hair fly up and I'm sure he was shot,' something to that extent."
In the Z-frame above we see A J Millican in his hard hat, beyond him are the African American people seen in the Croft picture and beyond that are people who are too far away from the headshot to be considered "right close to it".
It follows that Westbrook, Calvery, Reed and Hicks are located somewhere between Simmons on the right and Millican on the left.
In the pic above I have labelled Simmons on the right and Millican on the left. It is in between these two points we can expect to find Westbrook and co. In order to narrow down the search even further I have labelled John Templin and Ernest Brandt. For years Brandt has been in touch with various researchers such as Dave Reitzes, Don Roberdeau and Harold Weisberg, insisting he is the man wearing the hat. There are newspaper reports of him visiting Dealey Plaza each year wearing his trademark hat. Below is a link to correspondence with Harold Weisberg in which he specifically identifies himself as the man wearing the hat:
https://archive.org/details/nsia-BrandtErnest/nsia-BrandtErnest/Brandt%20Ernest%2001/Brandt was accompanied to Dealey Plaza by one of his customers, John Templin, who he convinced to come along to watch the motorcade.
Simmons, Holt and Jacob are the first three women from right to left. There are then only three more women until we reach Brandt, so these cannot be Westbrook and colleagues.
The search for the girls from 203 has narrowed down to the line of women between John Templin and A J Millican and can be narrowed even further.
In the picture above it appears, at first glance, there are nine women between Millican and Templin. There are in fact ten. It also appears that there are only four women wearing headscarves, but there are in fact five.
Tucked away from view is a short woman wearing a blue coat [picked out with the red arrow in the pic below]:
Although she is obscured in Zapruder, she can be seen clearly in the crop of Altgens 6 [again, picked out with a red arrow]
She is clearly not any of the young ladies in the picture of the workers in room 203 who went to watch the motorcade:
This can only mean one thing - if Westbrook is wearing a headscarf and all four women are stood together, then the group of four women wearing headscarves between Templin and the lady in the blue coat
must be Westbrook, Hicks, Reed and Calvery.
LATER EDIT: As per usual, many of the witness quotes reproduced in this post are lifted from Pat Speer's website.