I can guarantee you that those numbers are wrong. I looked at every witness who heard the shots and i found only 6 who heard 1...2.....3 and 9 who said they were about equally-spaced. Over 40 recalled 1.......2....3 and many of those said volunteered that last two shots were in rapid succession/close together. In addition, there are witnesses who put the second shot around z270, such as Altgens, Nellie C., SA George Hickey, and SA Wm. Greer.
Found it:
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/alt.assassination.jfk/_hY71ak_h3oI count 15 in that who said that the first two shots were closer together. I would add Karen Westbrook to that number. In her recent interview with Stephen Fagin of the Sixth Floor Museum, she said that the first two shots were closer together.
You are relying on an interview made 30 years afterward?!!
I wouldn't say that I'm relying on it. I'm just making note of it, that's all. It's worth considering. Particularly if it doesn't contradict something he said much earlier. The same goes for all of the Sneed interviews.
We have gone over this before. In fact, there were only 8 witnesses who said the limo stopped. 19 said it slowed but did not stop and another 20 gave ambiguous statements about whether it stopped or slowed. See my analysis here.
Yes we have gone over it before. I don't count 40 but I count a lot more than 8.
You make my point by arguing that the witnesses did not observe what they said they observed. Your argument that they were wrong is not evidence that they observed what you suggest. The statistical significance of the consistent observations of the "first shot hit", "first shot after z191" and "second shot close to third shot" witnesses is impossible to explain as random error. You need collusion of all those witnesses to explain how they all got their observations wrong in the same way.
Again, I don't understand how my pointing out that witnesses were wrong makes your point. It does just the opposite.
You are still going to be 2.5 inches out and probably 4.8 inches out and possibly as much as 7 inches out.
You have a poor memory. I've demonstrated to you in the past that I can make it fit. And that was using a lateral angle of 10.5 degrees, not the 9 degrees that you have offered. I'll show it to you again but let's see if we can agree on some numbers first.
- A lateral angle of 9 to 10.5 degrees.
- The bullet struck Kennedy at 2 inches to the right of his midline.
- the distance that the bullet travelled through Kennedy's neck was 6.5 inches
- The straight on (shortest) distance from the front of Kennedy's neck to Connally's back was about 24 inches.
- Connally was recessed further into the car than Kennedy 6.4 +/- 2.2 inches -- pages 43 - 47 of "John Kennedy Assassination Film Analysis", ITEK corporation, May 2, 1976
- The thickness of Connally's torso, from the very back of his spine to the front of his sternum, was about 9 inches.
- Connally's torso was rotated to the right by 30 degrees. (HSCA Appendix to Hearings - Volume VI, "The Trajectory Analysis", prepared under the direction of Thomas N. Canning, with the assistance of Clyde C. Snow and C.S. McCamy.)
The hands stay in roughly that position for a while (going by memory). The impression of many was that he was clutching at his throat.
At z224, his hands are not at his neck.