You can tell from their replies that lone-gunman theorists here still do not understand why the 6.5 mm object was added to the AP autopsy skull x-ray. The object was added not only to implicate Oswald but (1) to discredit the rear head entry wound described by the autopsy doctors and (2) to provide a superficial basis for future cooperative experts to place the rear head entry wound a whopping 10 cm/4 inches higher on the back of the head, which is exactly what the Clark Panel and the HSCA later did.
Again, we don’t know if this was a 6.5 mm object. You cannot accurately estimate the size of an object in an X-Ray.
How does an X-Ray work? On one side of the head, you have an X-Ray source, that emits X-Rays from a point source. On the other side of the head is an X-Ray plate. Objects made of bone, metal and other material will cast a shadow on the X-Ray plate. If the object is closer to the X-Ray source, and further from the X-Ray plate, it will cast a bigger shadow. If the same object is closer to the X-Ray place, and further from the X-Ray source, it will cast a smaller shadow.
So, if two pennies are taped to opposite sides of the head and the head is X-Rayed, the pennies will not appear to be the same size. The penny closer to the X-Ray source will appear bigger.
So, without knowing where in the head the object is, one cannot accurately know its size. One cannot tell if it was near the alleged entry wound or on the opposite side of the head. It would only be possible to say the object was near the alleged entry wound if it appeared in at least two X-Rays, showing the head from different directions. That is the only way it could be accurately placed in 3-D space.
On a separate point, if the conspirators wanted to establish a false entry location, they would need to modify at least two X-Rays, to establish its location in 3-D space. Indeed, to make it look real, they would need to modify all the X-Rays. This ‘fragment’ should not only appear on some X-Rays but not others. It would need to appear on all of them.
Clearly, at least some of the people running the cover-up recognized very quickly that the rear head entry wound described in the autopsy report was very problematic for the lone-gunman tale. The autopsy doctors wrote in the autopsy report that the wound was “slightly above” and 2.5 cm/1 inch to the right of the external occipital protuberance (EOP). The EOP is the bump in the middle of the lower part of the back of the head.
Since a bullet fired from the alleged sniper’s window would have struck JFK’s head at a markedly downward angle (at least 15 degrees), JFK would have had to be leaning far forward to enable that bullet to exit at a location that was above the entry point and that was in the right parietal region.
No. You have not read the works of a real ballistic expert, like Larry Sturdivan.
Bullet fragments do not travel in straight lines. They follow curved lines within a head. So, either the EOP or cowlick entry works. You don’t need to fake an entry wound to establish a straight line from the sniper’s nest, through the entry wound, through the exit wound. And if this was done, what good would it do? Because the windshield frame and windshield are well above this line.
Larry Sturdivan felt that the EOP entry location was more probable, partly because that location would not require the fragments path to curve too much, to pass through the entry wound, pass through the exit wound, and hit or pass close to the windshield frame.
Equally important, if not more important, the autopsy doctors said they identified the rear entry wound based on skull fragments that were brought to the autopsy late that night, and that part of the entry wound was contained in one of those fragments. This, of course, meant that some occipital bone had been blasted out of the skull, but the back-of-the-head autopsy photo shows no such damage. Also, an occipital bone fragment with part of any entry wound in it could lead to the logical inference that a bullet struck the occiput and then a second bullet struck the front of the head and blew out part of the occiput.
My understanding is that the rear entry wound was in the back of the skull and not part of any skull fragments. It was the exit wound, on the right side of the head near the front that was found in one of the skull fragments, fragmented by the explosive wound. It was these skull fragments that established the location of the
exit wound.
So, for these two reasons—the trajectory issue and the occipital-bone-fragment issue—the autopsy/EOP rear head entry wound had to be ditched and discredited.
No, not with the curved paths of bullet fragments, which are always curved when viewed in ballistic gel.
Anyone who has seen the Zapruder film knows that it does not show Kennedy leaning far enough forward when the head shot strikes to line up with a trajectory from the sixth-floor window to the EOP and through the right parietal area.
Thus, the rear head entry wound had to be moved, and moved substantially, even if it meant making the autopsy doctors look like bumbling idiots. After all, how could anyone “mistake” a wound in the cowlick for a wound that was a whopping 10 cm/4 inches lower, especially when they had two prominent features to use as reference points (the hairline and the EOP)?
Again, you fail to understand that bullet fragment through head and ballistic gel do not follow straight line paths.
Yet, the autopsy doctors vehemently challenged the FPP on the cowlick location. To a man, each autopsy doctor ardently rejected the higher location and insisted that they had seen and handled the rear entry site and were positive that it was only a fraction of an inch above the EOP. They each indicated that it was insulting and unreasonable to suggest that they had mislocated the wound by 4 inches.
Larry Sturdivan believes the autopsy doctors were correct to challenge the cowlick location. The EOP location is probably correct. It actually requires the fragments to curve a lot less if the EOP location is the true location and not the cowlick location.