Nice try but Dr. Baden wasn't present at JFK's autopsy.
Photographic evidence doesn't trump the descriptions of Kennedy's head wound and missing brain matter from witnesses at Parkland or the witnesses at his autopsy.
"McClelland recounts when he was shown the JFK autopsy photos in 1988. He agreed the photos showed the president’s wounds as he saw them on November 22, 1963. The only exception, said Dr. McClelland, was the photo that showed the right rear JFK’s head. He said that a flap of scalp had been pulled over Kennedy’s fatal wound changing the appearance of the wound.
“That’s where there was a massive hole in the back of his head,” McClelland said. “I looked at that hole from 18 inches for about 12 minutes.”"
https://jfkfacts.org/what-did-dr-mcclelland-think-about-jfks-wounds/
Sorry, photographs don't trump eyewitness accounts? Where does that standard come from? If a photo shows a blue car hitting another car and the eyewitnesses say it was a green car then it was a green car? I thought one thing we all agreed upon was the unreliability of eyewitness accounts and how they must be corroborated?
As to McClelland (who wasn't at the autopsy either): Here is what he wrote/said the day of the assassination.
"From the handwritten statement of Robt McClelland written Nov 22, 1963 at 4:45pm on the cause of death of JFK:
"At approximately 12:45pm on the above date I was called from the second floor of Parkland Hospital and went immediately to the Emergency Operating Room. When I arrived President Kennedy was being attended by Drs Malcolm Perry, Charles Baxter, James Carrico and Ronald Jones. The President was
at that time commatose from a massive gunshot wound of the head with a fragment wound of the trachea. An endotracheal tube and assisted respiration was started immediately by Dr Carrico on duty in the EOR when the President arrived. Drs Perry, Baxter and I then performed a tacheotomy
for respiratory distress and tracheal injury and Drs Jones and Paul Peters inserted bilateral anterior chest tubes for pneumothoracis secondary to the tracheomediastinal injury. In spite of this, at 12:55 he was
pronounced dead by Dr Kemp Clark the neurosurgeon and professor of neurosurgery who arrived immediately after I did. The cause of death was due to massive head and brain injury from a gunshot wound of the left(sic) temple. He was pronounced dead after external cardiac massage failed
and ECG activity was gone."
He said about four hours after seeing JFK that the injury was to the "left temple." Nothing about a injury to the back of the head. If the wound was in the back of the head then how did he see a wound on the temple? Why didn't he write "back" of the head?
BTW, when asked about writing the "left temple" he said he meant the right.
Additionally, he was interviewed by the Texas State Journal of Medicine in January of
1963 1964 about what he saw in the ER. He said this: [T]he cause of death was the massive head and brain injuries from a gunshot wound of the right side of the head."
Again, side of the head. So he says left and then right but not back. So which account of his are your relying upon?
Here's the journal article and McClelland's statement:
https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth599863/m1/105/?q=McClelland