There are hundreds of problems with the lone-gunman theory. Here are just three of them:
1. The marksmanship feat alleged by the lone-gunman theory was far beyond the ability of the alleged lone gunman, Lee Harvey Oswald, to perform.
False. A Marine recruit is trained to hit a human size target at 200, 300- and 500-yards using iron sights. The furthest shot at Dealey Plaza was 88 yards.
-- Oswald’s Marine rifle scores show that, at best, he was a mediocre marksman, and keep in mind he made those scores using a semi-automatic rifle (no manual bolt to work) and while firing at stationary, ground-level targets, after hours of practice.
False. In his 1956 shooting tests he qualified with a rating of Sharpshooter. Most recruits only qualify as Marksman. Oswald did better than more than half the recruits who qualify as Marines. In the 1959 shooting tests, he barely qualified to be a Marine, but one still has to be a good shot, at 200, 300 and 500 yards, to do that.
Oswald was so proud of his shooting that he sent U. S. Marine Rifle Score Book home to his mother for safekeeping. Why would he do that if his shooting was terrible?
-- Most of Oswald’s fellow Marines who were asked about his shooting skills said he was a poor shot.
How do we know they were Marines who knew and remembered him? Did they remember him? Were they being trained in his same small group? Were they ever Marine recruits?
Do they have a motive to lie about this? Would their names be remembered at all if they answered “I don’t remember how well he shot”, or “I trained at the same time, but I don’t remember him being in our group” or “I was two months ahead of him”? Their only chance to have their own name remembered is to say they knew him, they remembered him and yes, he was a bad shot.
Even someone who was a real Marine, who really did know him, who really did remember him, has a motive to lie. The U. S. Marine Score Book has no motive to lie. And if it is a forgery, why was it sent to his mother at all? In 1956, did the conspirators already know they needed to frame Oswald as an assassin with a rifle? If so, why not frame some Marine who could shoot straight. There is no shortage of candidates.
-- Members of Oswald’s gun club in Minsk, Russia, said he was a poor shot.
False. He was a careless shot. He fired a quick shot the general direction of another member, because the rabbit was also in that general direction. The fact he missed the rabbit made no difference.
-- David Ferrie said Oswald was a terrible shot.
Did David Ferrie know Oswald, outside of a Civil Air Patrol meeting in 1955? Was there any rifle shooting going on at this meeting?
-- One of the most renowned snipers in U.S. Marine Corps history, Carlos Hathcock, tried to duplicate Oswald’s alleged shooting feat but failed to do so. After repeatedly trying and failing to duplicate Oswald’s supposed performance, Hathcock said he did not believe the WC’s shooting scenario.
False. We not have Carlos Hathcock saying that Oswald could not have made those shots. Instead, we have Craig Roberts claiming that Carlos Hathcock said that Oswald could not have made those shots.
If Robert’s story is true, how did Hathcock know what sort of scenario to test? The timing of the shots? The angles of the shots relative to the movement of the limousine? The speed of the limousine for each shot?
Did he have a copy of the Zapruder film? Did he also have still images of the Zapruder film? I would want all of this to come up with estimates.
Did Carlos Hathcock assume a steady speed of 20 mph? Did he use the wrong angles, where the target was moving at right angles and not almost directly away from the shooter?
And if Craig Roberts is telling the truth, why hasn’t any of the known associates of Carlos Hathcock stepped forward and say, yes, I remember Hathcock carrying out these tests at Quantico. And these are the angles used. And these are the speeds used.
-- The Warren Commission (WC) hired three Master-rated riflemen to attempt to duplicate Oswald's alleged shooting feat. They used the alleged murder weapon, the Mannlicher-Carcano that Oswald supposedly used. They missed the head and neck area of the target board silhouettes 18 out of 18 times when they used the scope, and 2 out of 3 times when they used the iron sights. In other words, they missed the head and neck area of the target silhouettes 20 out of 21 times. Several of their misses were far apart on the boards. Some of their shots missed the silhouettes entirely.
True. Stop the presses.
But, military riflemen, firing at a target, just want to hit somewhere in the target, the silhouette of a head, neck and upper torso. Any hit anywhere in these three areas is considered a hit. They don’t get extra credit for hitting the head. So, I imagine they might aim at the ‘fat’ part of the target, the torso?
So, what instructions were they given? Were they told to ignore what they have been taught in the past, to not aim at the ‘fat’ part of the target but at the head?
In contrast, Oswald was, I assume, trying to maximize the odds of a kill. He might have been aiming at the head area for all three shots, which could easily result in one hit on the head and one on the neck.
It is revealing that these experienced, Master-rated riflemen shot so poorly even though they were allowed to take as long as they wanted for the first shot, even though two of them took longer than 6 seconds to fire, even though they were only firing from 30 feet up, and even though they were shooting at stationary--yes, stationary--target boards. Oswald would have been firing from 60 feet up and at a moving target.
The most likely scenario is that the three shots were fired over a span of 8.8 seconds, at z153, z222 and z312. The Warren Commission never said the three shots must have been fired within a 6 second span, only that they may have been fired within a 6 second span, or possibility a longer span of time.
2. The paraffin cast of Oswald’s right cheek proves he did not fire a rifle on the day of the assassination.
But the FBI tested C2766 rifle and WCC ammunition, firing 3 shots rapidly, tested the hands and cheek of the shooter with the paraffin test, and came up negative, just like they did with the paraffin test for Oswald’s cheek.
https://mcadams.posc.mu.edu/factoid2.htm. . .
-- The internal memos make it all the more revealing, and damning, that the WC falsely claimed that “expert testimony” said the paraffin test was “unreliable” (WCR, p. 180). The WC staffers who wrote the report may not have known about the Oak Ridge reenactments, but we know the FBI was aware of them (McKnight, Breach of Trust, pp. 259-260).
But if the paraffin test is reliable, why had most major city police departments drop making the tests by 1963? Why isn’t the paraffin test used today by the police to see if anyone has recently fired a gun?
3. The lone-gunman theory requires the single-bullet theory (SBT). If the SBT is wrong, then at least four shots were fired at JFK and at least two gunmen were involved. The SBT is one of the most ridiculous, dubious theories ever put forth in a criminal investigation.
-- We now know from a number of released documents that on the night of the autopsy, the autopsy doctors positively, absolutely determined that the back wound had no exit point. We also know that even the second version of the autopsy report said the back wound had no exit point and that the throat wound was caused by a fragment from the head shot. The autopsy report that was submitted to the WC was written after Oswald was killed and after the government knew there would be no trial and thus no defense examination of the autopsy materials and no cross-examination of the autopsy doctors. Then and only then did the autopsy doctors claim that the throat wound was the back wound’s exit point.
The neither the back wound nor the throat wound had any exit point? It was just a coincidence that they are on opposite sides of the neck? And the holes in the clothes, both back and throat, indicate a shot from the back.
-- The throat wound gave every appearance of being an entrance wound. It was very small, about 3-5 mm in diameter, and was punched inward. In fact, it was smaller than the back wound.
False. The clothes are used to make the definitive judgement. And the clothes shot the shot came from the back. And how could the shot come from the front without passing through the windshield? Who would be crazy enough to try a shot through the windshield without worrying about the shot being deflected? How could such a shot not go on to strike the back of the limousine or the Secret Service car just a few feet behind?