Andrew I’ll bunch these replies to all your comments (like shots).
-Thanks for the graph, its a good layout. I think that data is similar to what I have seen on pie charts created by Josiah Thompson, and separately by BBN data for the HSCA.
-The primary forensic evidence here is the Zapruder film and the Dorman film. If these are not considered forensic evidence then never mind.
The adjective “forensic” by itself means that it pertains to courts of law. But the term “forensic evidence” has come to refer specifically to the application of scientific methods to evidence for the purpose of establishing facts in a court of law. For evidence to qualify as “forensic evidence” the science must be accepted by a court as being reliable and generally accepted by scientists in the particular field. Not all scientific methods applied to evidence are accepted. So the films themselves are simply photographic evidence.
Then forensic techniques are applied to the evidence. One is a forensic technique based the science of human reactions. This is supported by what is seen when synchronizing the continuous real time evidence of the Dorman film with the Zapruder film. If “anchored testimony”, which is separate from generic testimony, is evidence then that says the exact same thing as the first two.
One may be able to demonstrate, for example, that X number of people turned their heads (or some other movement) in a certain direction within a certain time period. If X was large enough and if they all moved within a short enough period of time, the opinion of a qualified person might be accepted to assess the likelihood that they are reacting to some sort of common stimulus. But if the evidence disclosed more than one possible stimulus, an opinion on what the head turning signified would not be admissible forensic evidence.
In the case of
- I suspect the equal spacing testimonies will not all agree on what they recall is the exact duration, to within hundreds of milliseconds of the spacing, which is what some researches demand. I think most of them seem to have a little shorter estimate than the estimated 5 or 5.2 seconds that I have, but maybe that effect is to be expected. Likewise unequal spacing commenters likely didn't all agree on the spacing to within hundreds of millisecond accuracy either. As such me commenting on your last three comments would have to get into interpretation of the generic witness statements, and what some researches think vs what other researchers think, about what the people making their statements really meant. I will let other testimony gurus argue about that.
I don’t see any obvious nearly simultaneous reactions that would allow one to identify the time of the first or second shots. JFK and JBC turn their heads from looking left to looking right within about half a second and Jackie follows after about a second. But that is also when Mary Woodward and her group shouted to get their attention. The reaction is consistent with that being the common stimulus. And it is not the reaction that many witnesses observed JFK to make to the first shot.
Another restriction on expert evidence is that it has to be needed to interpret evidence. If ordinary people can understand and interpret the evidence, the opinion of an expert would not carry any more weight than that of an ordinary person.
Example: In the case of JFK showing signs of reaction when he emerges from behind the Stemmons sign and JBC showing signs of a reaction a few frames later, there are several problems in using science to relate the two reactions.
First of all, one can conclude that JFK is reacting to his throat wound there but we can’t tell when the reaction began from the film.
The second problem is that the film doesn’t tell us which of the first two shots JFK is reacting to. If it was the first shot (as many witnesses reported that JFK reacted that way to the first shot) there is evidence from the Connallys that JBC was not reacting to being hit in the back but was reacting to hearing it and fearing an assassination of JFK was occurring.
My paragraphs all have equal spacing. Well, I admit that does not guarantee that I am right.
You also had more than three paragraphs.