Wednesday, April 16, 2025

Anomalies of the warren commission

The report of the house select committee on assassinations, which reinvestigated Kennedy's death in 1979, concluded that there was a "high probability" that two gunmen were involved in the assassination. So the official narrative itself admits to there being more than one shooter, and by proxy admits to the efforts of the warren commission to cover it up.

Magic Bullet The warren commission report states that Lee Harvey Oswald fired three shots from behind Kennedy, one which missed injuring James Tague, another which killed the president, and a third supposedly responsible for inflicting seven other entry and exit wounds upon Kennedy and senator Connally. This notion, known as the Magic Bullet theory, was authored by Arlen Specter. (𓃠) The warren commission reports three bullet casings found under the window of the Texas School Book Depository. However the original crime scene report indicates that two hulls were collected from underneath the sixth floor window, not three. Looking at the updated version of this document, it appears as though someone has taken an ink pen and written 3 over 2. Also photographed by J. Doyle Williams was one live round of a 6.5 munition, obtained from captain Will Fritz. This was allegedly picked up and returned to the FBI by Cpt. J.W. Fritz. (affidavit of Captain J. W. Fritz, jfk-assassination.net) different Documents revealing the chains of custody contradict. With three riffle hulls making their way from Lt. Day to Sims to Fritz, then two rifle hulls from Day to Brown to Williams.

Five bullet fragments were allegedly found in the limousine, and the magic bullet which turned up on a stretcher at parkland, used by neither Kennedy or Conolly. This doesn't account for the 45. caliber slug found on the south side of elmstreet by Sherrif Buddy Walthers, the bullet signe in at the F.B.I. laboratories by Robert Frazier, the bullet reportedly lodged behind Kennedy's ear, or the second fully jacketed bullet found on the stretcher and kept by O.E. Wright because the Dallas police didn’t want it.

Either way, the magic bullet needed to be planted to link to Oswald's Carcano. However the character of the magic bullet as described by the person who found it does not match what we know today as the magic bullet. In 1967 one of the hospital employees who had found the bullet, parkland personnel O.P. Wright, told authors that the bullet he had held that day did not look like the bullet which later turned up in FBI evidence. That claim was in conflict with a July 7th 1964 FBI memo which stated that it did look like the shell he had seen on the day of the murder. Wright said the Bullet had a pointed tip. (Six Seconds in Dallas – Josiah Thompson) This description matches a bullet belonging to an Enfield 303, a gun found at the house of Buell Frazier, who drove Oswald into Dealy Plaza. This would indicate that had Oswald gotten away, Buell Frazier may have been used as a second patsy. 

Number of Holes - A photo from the warren commission, jacket commission exhibit 393 – FBI exhibit c29, shows that the back of Kennedy's jacket has two holes, one just below his collar and the other, five inches down and slightly to the right.

Mauser - Kennedy was supposedly shot with a Carcano. But a Mauser 7.64 was found by police in the northwest stairwell of the TSBD. (Affidavit of Deputy Seymour Weitzman, November 23, 1963 The Portal To Texas History). (Affidavit of Deputy E.L. Boone, November 23, 1963, Boone Testimony, The Portal To Texas History). This information was released to the news. (Warren Commission Exhibit No. 3047). This was also told by Sgt. Gerald Hill to a reporter for WFAA-TV. (Bob Whitten interview of Gerald Hill, November 22, 1963).

Another Mauser would be reported to have been found on the roof of the book depository, caught in a few frames of the Tom Alyea film. A Dallas police official claimed that it had been dropped by a security officer, although no security personnel were stationed at that location. (Gary Shaw – Cover)

Tippit - The official story tells us that Oswald was dropped off by a taxi at his house at 1:00 PM, then walked to 10th and Patton to shoot Officer JD Tippit at 1:16 PM. For this to have been possible, Oswald must have walked 8 miles in 16 minutes. This would have been impossible by foot but just about possible by car. Plus, despite allegedly being shot at 1:16, Tippit's body arrived at the hospital at 1:15. As for the bullets found at the scene, there were two different impressions found on the. Three of them had a notch on the side, indicative of a semi automatic, while the other is completely round suggesting a revolver.

Oswald's buttons - Mary Bledsoe was a witness who supposedly saw Oswald on a bus after the assassination. She also happens to have been Oswald's landlady at 621 North Marsalis. Bledsoe stated that three buttons had been ripped off of Oswald's shirt, although the bus event took place an hour before his buttons were torn off at the theatre.

What's also suspicious is that Mary's son, Porter was in the civil air patrol, and trained by David Ferrie, who we will get to later. She had a cousin called Jewell Germany Jr., who was an air force officer. Germany had a cousin called R.D. Mathews, who was a known associate of Jack Ruby. In October of 63, Ruby placed a call to Mathews home. A day later, according to one account, Ruby was in touch with Oswald. (JFK Forum, Meet the first cousin of both Mary Blesdoe and R.D. Mathews, March 8, 2018, jfkforum.com) Apparently Mary Bledsoe had notes in her testimony, which she said she needed because she forgot what she was meant to say. 

Direction - Supposedly the bullets which killed Kennedy came behind from the book depository. Charles Crenshaw who helped perform Kennedy's autopsy testified that the president's wound entered the front of his head and exited from his lower neck. (𓃠) Dr. Robert McClelland said the same. (𓃠) Doctors in DC, to where Kennedy's body was flown Contradicted him, regarding the hole as an exit wound. Kennedy's autopsy photo's clearly show that the bullet entered from the front. Watching the Zapruder film clearly shows the same. 

In 1997 it was revealed that former president Gerald Ford who was part of the Warren Commission, rewrote the position of the exit wound to be ''at the back of his neck'', in order to quote "clarify meaning". Originally the report had aligned with the autopsy, maintaining that the wound exited from his uppermost back(𓃠)

Smoke - Railroad supervisor, Sam Holland, reported to the FBI to having seen a puff of smoke lingering above the picket fence in front of the grassy knoll. This was also reported by witness Ed Hoffman.

Altered Statements - Witness Jean Hill told police that she heard around six shots from the picket fence. Hill would later claim to Jim Garrison that that her statement to the warren commission had been altered in its report.

Similarly, witness Julia Ann Mercer claimed to have seen Jack Ruby dropping off guns near the grassy knoll, her statement also being altered by the FBI.

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