Medical student Evalea Glanges: "There was a bullet hole in the windshield", a through and through bullet hole from front to back .
Glanges story is that she was outside with another student, and walked up to the limousine to touch what she described as a "clean hole" though the windshield. She said that as soon as she did, a Secret Service agent jumped into the car and drove it away so fast it almost took her arm off.
Here's the problem. Maybe more than one.
There were a number of news photographers standing around outside of Parkland. Without any other story to chase they took photos of the limousine and the crowd that rapidly assembled near the ER entrance. For about an hour or two, the limo was the most photographed vehicle on the planet. Robin Unger's collection has at least a dozen of those photographs, which can be rearranged in rough chronological order using the progress of the removal of the bubble top from the car's trunk and its subsequent installation on the car. The earliest photos show a group of people standing against the outside wall of the ER in front of the bumper, with a somewhat corpulent woman in a flower-print dress most prominent among the group. It's a nice dress, BTW. A photo taken shortly later shows that group scattering, with the floral-print dress beating what looks to be a hasty retreat out of frame to the left. From then on, the limo is surrounded by Official-Looking-Guys-In-Suits, with spectators staying a respectful 12-15 feet away. That was the security cordon placed around the car. You think Glanges really penetrated it?
Also in the parking lot were any number of reporters who, like Richard Dudman, couldn't find a story in the hospital and went outside. A sudden, dangerous altercation between the car and a med student would have gone down right in front of them and their camera-wielding counterparts. Yet no one mentioned such a thing.