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985 lines
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Article: 568 of sgi.talk.ratical
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From: dave@ratmandu.esd.sgi.com (dave "who can do? ratmandu!" ratcliffe)
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Subject: The Umbrella System: Prelude to an Assassination
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Keywords: pre-planned deception in JFK's assassination was a terrible success
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Organization: Silicon Graphics, Inc.
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Date: Tue, 7 Apr 1992 21:56:52 GMT
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Lines: 984
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The following article appeared in the June 1978 issue of "Gallery Magazine,"
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and is reprinted here with permission of Mr. Sprague. The possibility that
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a very rare and special secret weapon system, developed by the CIA at Fort
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Detrick, Maryland, was used to immobilize JFK, and thus ensure the success
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of "the turkey shoot" carried out in Dealey Plaza is explored in great
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detail below.
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Consider also that until the day of the JFK assassination in 1963,
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there was *no place* that *anybody* outside of the very small CIA
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and Special Forces group (perhaps as many as twenty people) could
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get access to that flechette-launching weapon system or anything
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like it.
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To arrive at a solution to a murder as enigmatic and convoluted as that of
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JFK, we must confront the existence of the netherworld of secret operations
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carried out by covert agencies within our own government: "We have to
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start thinking like the CIA, people. . . . Black is white, and white is
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black." --ratitor
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_____________________________________________________________________________
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November 22, 1963, the day President Kennedy was slain, was bright
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and sunny in Dallas. Why, then, was there a young man with an open
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umbrella on Elm Street, less than 30 feet from the President's car
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as it slowly passed by? Presented below is an answer to this
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puzzle by a former consultant to the House Select Committee on
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Assassinations.
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THE UMBRELLA SYSTEM: PRELUDE TO AN ASSASSINATION
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by Richard E. Sprague and Robert Cutler
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INTRODUCTION:
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To the skeptic who refuses to accept the idea that the Central
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Intelligence Agency was involved in the assassination of John
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Kennedy, nothing could be more convincing than to demonstrate how
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one of the CIA's secret poison and weapon systems was used in the
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assassination. Such a claim would have been scoffed at by
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everyone, but the weapons system itself was made public by Mr.
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William Colby, CIA director; Mr. Richard Helms, former CIA
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director; and Mr. Charles Senseney, a contract weapons designer
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for the CIA in testimony before the Senate Select Committee on
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Intelligence (the Church Committee) in September 1975.
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The system is based on launching devices of various types, used
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to launch a self-propelled, rocket-like dart, or flechette. The
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flechette can carry either a paralyzing or fatal poison.
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The flechette itself is very simple. It is about the same size
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and looks like the tip of a large chicken feather. It is plastic
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and has tiny tail fins. Many varieties were developed for
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different uses. The great advantage of this weapon is that it is
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recoilless, almost silent, and the flechette travels at a high
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velocity which increases after launch. The flechettes can be fired
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singly or in high-impact clusters.
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It is propelled to its target by a solid-state fuel, ignited
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electronically at the launcher. It strikes its target, animal or
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human, dissolves completely in the body leaving no observable
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trace, and totally paralyzes its victim within two seconds.
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The launching devices developed by Mr. Charles Senseney at Fort
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Detrick, Maryland for the CIA included a cane, a fountain pen, soda
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straws, and an umbrella.
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The umbrella was used to shoot President Kennedy.
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The flechette struck JFK in the throat, causing a small entrance
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wound, but leaving no other trace. The missile was about 5
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millimeters in diameter, and the wound was 4 millimeters. The size
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of the wound as compared to the size of the flechette is consistent
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with other findings of this nature. This particular wound,
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officially called an exit wound by the Warren Commission, puzzled
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medical examiners and critics of the Warren Commission alike. The
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critics charged that had the throat wound been an exit wound, it
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could not have been so small.
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JFK was paralyzed by poison contained in the flechette in less
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than two seconds--so paralyzed that the first rifle bullet that hit
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him did not knock him down, but left him in a nearly upright
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position. A second volley of shots fired at JFK a few seconds
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later struck a stationary, visible target. The paralyzing
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flechette shot was fired by a man holding the umbrella launcher.
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He was in close proximity to an accomplice. Using a radio
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transmitter, the accomplice signaled the riflemen through each of
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their respective radiomen in the Dal Tex building, the western end
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of the Texas School Book Depository building, and on the grassy
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knoll.
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An exquisitely timed intelligence murder was performed. The
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paralytic poison allowed two volleys of rifle shots to be fired
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into JFK. He had become a sitting duck.
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In what follows, the basic evidence for this sophisticated
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murder technique and weapon system will be presented. Much of the
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evidence, in the form of photographs, has been under the noses of
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assassination researchers for many years. The testimony given by
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Colby, Helms, and Senseney opened the minds of a small group of
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researchers, who looked at the photographic, medical, and
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ballistics evidence in a new way.
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The coauthors of this article and researcher Christopher
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Sharrett have now been able to clearly show that JFK's
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assassination had to have been a carefully planned, well-executed
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intelligence operation, using CIA weapons and techniques.
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___________________________________________________________________
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| Analysis of JFK's Motions and the Shots: |
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| |
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| Numbers beginning with "Z" are frames of the Zapruder film. |
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| |
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| Crucial to an understanding of the shots and JFK's |
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| reactions to them is an understanding of President |
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| Kennedy's hand, head, and upper torso movements at the |
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| time he was hit by shots, and the motions of Governor |
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| Connally. Contrary to what most media organizations and |
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| some researchers state, JFK's hands did not raise to grasp |
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| at his throat. The Zapruder film shows quite clearly that |
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| just the opposite occurred. Photos #1 through 6, are |
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| frames 189, 190, 204, 224, 225, and 227 from the Zapruder |
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| film. The President's right hand can be seen making what |
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| appears at first to be a slight forward jerk between |
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| frames 189 and 190 (1/18 second) and then snapping |
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| downward from his forehead to a position well below his |
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| throat by frames Z224 and Z225. It also clenches into a |
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| fist. His head, during this two-second timespan, snaps |
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| into a nearly straight-ahead position, and his left hand |
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| raises and clenches into a fist somewhat below his right |
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| hand level. His right fist can be seen to be still moving |
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| downward between frames Z224 and Z225. |
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| The discontinuity between Z189 and Z190 added to the |
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| continuous downward, fist-clenching motion of his right |
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| hand from Z190 to Z225 has been taken by many researchers |
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| as evidence of a shot striking JFK at frame Z189. The |
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| theory of discontinuous motion caused by a transfer of |
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| momentum from an externally applied force is evident here. |
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| Any discontinuity in JFK's motions occurring in the 1/18 |
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| second between frames can be taken as evidence of momentum |
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| transfer from a projectile, rather than being caused by |
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| any internal neurological phenomenon, voluntary or |
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| involuntary. What actually occurs between Z189 and Z190 |
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| is a backward and upward motion of JFK's head. His right |
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| hand remains in a fixed position with respect to the side |
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| of the limousine. This indicates a shot from the front. |
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| A second such discontinuity occurs between frames Z225 |
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| and Z227 (2/18 second), during which time JFK's head and |
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| upper torso are driven forward and down into his clenched |
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| fists. The fists remain in a fixed position with respect |
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| to the side of the limousine. JFK's elbows are flung |
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| upward and outward by the force of a rifle bullet striking |
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| him in the back. This is the shot that caused the back |
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| wound 5 3/4 inches down from the top of his shirt and |
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| created holes in his jacket, his shirt, and his back. It |
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| did not exit at his throat. |
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| A similar analysis of momentum transfer from the rear |
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| causing a discontinuity in motion can be made for Governor |
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| Connally between frames Z237 and Z238 (photos #7 and 8). |
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| Finally, JFK's head motions between frames Z312, Z313, |
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| Z314, and Z321 (shown in photos 9 through 12) demonstrate |
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| two transfers of momentum--one from the rear, between Z312 |
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| and Z313, and another from the right front, between Z313 |
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| and Z314 and up to Z321. The latter bullet drove JFK's |
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| head and upper torso back and to his left, where he |
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| bounced off the rear seat into his wife's arms. |
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|_________________________________________________________________|
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BASIC QUESTIONS:
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Throughout the last fourteen years, a number of questions
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arising from the evidence obtained at Dealey Plaza have puzzled
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serious researchers. While these questions seem to be unrelated,
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all of them are answered in a very logical way by this new
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interpretation of the evidence.
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The questions concern President Kennedy's throat wound, the
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motions of his hands and head before the fatal shot struck, the
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timing of the shots, the absence of bullets, the presence of a man
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carrying an open umbrella, and the trajectory of an early shot from
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in front of JFK. Here are the questions:
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The Throat Wound and Trajectory of the Throat Shot:
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Assuming the throat wound in JFK to be an entry wound, why was
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it so small (4mm)? How could a rifle bullet leave such a small
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wound (about the size of a soda straw)?
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If a bullet did enter JFK's throat, where did it go? Why was no
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trace of a bullet found? The entry wound apparently was not at a
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downward angle. If a bullet *was* fired from the grassy knoll,
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hitting JFK in the throat at Z189 (frame 189 of the film shot by
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Abraham Zapruder), where could it have come from to enter at a
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*nearly horizontal* trajectory, while missing everything in its
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path, including the Stemmons Freeway sign, Abraham Zapruder, a
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small tree, the side of the limousine, Secret Service agent
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Kellerman, Governor Connally, and the limousine windshield? Where
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did the throat shot come from (see photo #13 [CAPTION READS: "TUM
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at lower left of Stemmons sign, The Accomplice farther left. (For
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actual photograph, see Warren Commission Hearing and Exhibits, Vol.
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XXI, P. 770.])
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Why is there a *forward* motion of JFK's right hand between Z189
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and Z190, if a shot hit him from the front at that time? Why
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didn't that bullet drive JFK violently backward (see photos #l and
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2)?
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The Motions of JFK's Hands:
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Why did the President's hands clench into fists and drop below
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his throat as the result of a bullet striking him in the throat?
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Why did his head snap around to the front? These motions, which
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can be observed in photos #1 to 6, Zapruder frames 189, 190, 204,
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224, 225, and 227, appear to be more like a stiffening action,
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taking a little less than two seconds, rather than the grasping at
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his throat described by many casual observers. JFK did not grasp
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at his throat at all.
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Why didn't the bullet fired at frame Z225, striking JFK in the
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back, knock him down on the seat? Why are JFK's fists still in the
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same position after the bullet hits, Z225 to Z227 (see photo #6,
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2/18 second after photo #5)? The motions make it appear that JFK's
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head, torso, and fists were frozen in position at Z225. The bullet
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forced his head and upper torso down and forward into his fists.
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It flung his elbows outward as though they were pivoting around his
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fists and shoulders. Why?
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Why didn't JFK duck or turn or shout after he was hit at Z189?
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His mouth opened, but there is obviously no lip or mouth motion
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between Z224 and the time of the fatal shots. When Governor John
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Connally was hit, he screamed "like a stuck pig," said Jackie
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Kennedy, and rolled to the floor of the car. One bullet went
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completely through Connally, and he is alive today. If JFK had
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been able to fall to the floor after the first, nonlethal bullet
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hit him in the back, he might have lived, too. But he could not,
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because the flechette's poison had paralyzed him. The people who
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thought they heard JFK scream were imagining it.
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The Timing of the Shots:
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Some witnesses said they heard two volleys of shots separated by
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a few seconds. The photographic evidence coupled with other
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evidence shows there actually *were* two volleys of shots: The
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first volley was timed between Z189, when the throat shot hit, and
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Z237, when a shot hit Connally.[1] The back shot hit JFK at Z225.
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The shots in this volley occurred over forty-eight frames, or about
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two and a half seconds. If the Z189 shot is taken out, the other
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two shots were separated by only twelve frames, or about a half-
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second. The earliest overseas press reports, such as NZPA-AAP (New
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Zealand Press Association) datelined Dallas, said, "Three bursts of
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gunfire, apparently from automatic weapons, were heard." These
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earliest reports had not been tampered with.
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The second volley occurred at frames Z312 and Z313, nearly
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simultaneously. The shot that missed could have also been fired at
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about this same time (see photos #9 and 10).
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The questions are:
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Were there two volleys of shots, and if so, why?
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How could shots fired from three or four widely separated
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positions be timed so accurately? Keep in mind that the earliest
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reports said "automatic weapons." On-the-spot witnesses heard
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shots so closely timed that they reported them to be from automatic
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weapons. This takes precision firing under control.
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[1] The authors disagree on the timing of the Connally shot. Cutler
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believes it was fired at Z223, Sprague at Z237, a difference of
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less than a second. In either case, it was part of the first
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volley and was a separate shot from the JFK back shot at Z225.
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The Umbrella and The Umbrella Man (TUM):
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Questions have always been raised about TUM (The Umbrella Man)
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ever since Josiah Thompson and Richard Sprague discovered the open
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umbrella in a series of photographs. Photo #13, a picture taken by
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Phil Willis at Zapruder frame 202, shows TUM with open umbrella.
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Photos #4, 5, and 6 (frames 224, 225, and 227 of Zapruder's film)
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show the umbrella protruding from behind the Stemmons Freeway sign.
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Photo #14 (by Richard Bothun) [CAPTION READS: TA and TUM seconds
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after shooting] shows TUM less than a minute after the shots,
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sitting on the edge of the grass near his original position, with
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another man seated next to him. The umbrella is lying on the
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sidewalk. Photos #15 and 16 (by Wilma Bond) [CAPTIONS READ: TA at
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left, casually walking down Elm Street. AND, TUM, folded umbrella
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in hand, to right of sign.] show TUM a minute later, standing near t
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he highway sign holding the umbrella.
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The temperature was a cool and breezy 68 degrees F. The sky was
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clear blue. No rain had fallen since early that morning. No
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natural reason seemed to exist for a fairly young man to be holding
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an open umbrella over his head while the President of the United
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States was passing by, ten to fifteen feet away (see diagram of
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relative positions of TUM and JFK). An examination of the
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thousands of photographs taken during the Presidential procession
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and in and around Dealey Plaza that day revealed not a single other
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open umbrella.
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Thompson and Sprague's speculations were that TUM was giving
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visual signals--first to go ahead (opening umbrella), then to fire
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a second round (raising umbrella). Afterward, the speculation
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went, he stayed around to see whether anyone had noticed anything
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about the actual shooters.
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A closer analysis of the Zapruder film shows that TUM actually
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raised and lowered the umbrella very rapidly--too rapidly to have
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been a good signal for riflemen as far away as the Dal Tex building
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and the grassy knoll (see photos #3, 4, 5, 6, 17 [CAPTION READS:
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TA's arm raised at right front of limousene (Z228)]). Why did he
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do this?
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Analysis also shows that TUM actually rotated the umbrella.
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This rotation appears in the original Zapruder film, including
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frames up to Z236 that show the umbrella in the space between the
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sprocket holes. Measurements of this rotation show that it tracks
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JFK's position during his travel down Elm Street at this time
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period. Why did TUM rotate the umbrella? If he were an observer,
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he would turn his head, not the umbrella.
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After the shooting, why did TUM sit down and then stand up,
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within a few feet of his position in front of the Stemmons Freeway
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sign, when everyone else in that vicinity ran or jumped away in the
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direction of the grassy knoll? Everyone, that is, except one man
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who sat down next to TUM. Who was he, and where was he when the
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shots were fired, and what was he doing with TUM?
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____________________________________________________________________
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| |
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| No natural reason seemed to exist for a fairly young |
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| man to be holding an open umbrella over his head |
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| while the President was passing by ten or fifteen |
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| feet away. |
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| |
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| Colonel L. Fletcher Prouty of the Defense Department |
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| witnessed a demonstration of the flechette-launching |
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| weapon system in his office in Washington, D.C. in 1960. |
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| Here is his description. |
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| |
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| |
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| It was in my own office, in a part of the Office of the |
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| Secretary of Defense, in the Pentagon in 1960 that I first |
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| saw an early version of the weapon fired. On July 29, |
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| 1960 I flew to Fort Detrick, Maryland by helicopter from |
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| the Pentagon to see developments of this and other new |
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| weapons at that top secret installation. I am able *from |
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| personal and official experience* to support the Sprague- |
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| Cutler thesis that an umbrella weapon was used as part of |
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| the JFK murder plot. |
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| The inventor of the flechette rocket was shown into my |
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| office by a fellow staff member, and I was told that he |
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| had something he wanted to demonstrate to the military to |
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| see if it could be developed into some useful tactical |
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| weapon system. In his hand he held several small plastic |
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| tubes which looked to me like soda straws, about "thick |
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| malt shake" size. Then he showed me a small plastic, |
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| nylon perhaps, rocket. It was a perfectly shaped, |
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| miniature rocket, complete with tail fins. Inside was a |
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| tiny charge of propellant. |
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| Then, without further introduction, the inventor |
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| touched a button, and two tiny flechettes zipped out of |
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| the "straws" and slammed into the thick soundproofing of |
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||
|
| the wall across the office. Only their tail fins stuck |
|
||
|
| out from the wall, and the inventor said that it was a |
|
||
|
| good thing he had only a partial charge in them, because |
|
||
|
| they could easily have gone right through a normal wall |
|
||
|
| panel and acoustic board. |
|
||
|
| This early, unengineered weapon was shaped something |
|
||
|
| like a pistol with a flashlight-size chamber above the |
|
||
|
| grip. The inventor contemplated using about twenty-five |
|
||
|
| or thirty "straws" mounted together and fired all at once |
|
||
|
| or in clusters. This would give a buckshot impact and |
|
||
|
| more effective target coverage. I was impressed. |
|
||
|
| I called my boss' office and introduced the inventor. |
|
||
|
| Again we went through the demonstration. It was not long |
|
||
|
| before the weapon system was under top secret control and |
|
||
|
| was being worked on by some of the military specialists at |
|
||
|
| Fort Detrick. I heard about the development of the weapon |
|
||
|
| many times later, but I did not see it again until it was |
|
||
|
| exhibited at the Church Committee hearings. Shortly after |
|
||
|
| that, when I saw Cutler's first "Umbrella Man" book ("The |
|
||
|
| Umbrella Man: Evidence of Conspiracy"), published in |
|
||
|
| October 1975 and describing an "air-rifle" type umbrella |
|
||
|
| weapon, I wrote to him to explain that I thought it much |
|
||
|
| more likely that The Umbrella Man had used the rocket |
|
||
|
| flechette I had seen demonstrated. |
|
||
|
| It remained for Senseney's Church Committee testimony |
|
||
|
| to close the circle when he stated that he had developed |
|
||
|
| just such an umbrella weapon at the same place I had gone |
|
||
|
| with the earlier weapon---Fort Detrick. The rest of this |
|
||
|
| remarkable story is developed by Sprague and Cutler. |
|
||
|
| As you read this article, consider this: It is against |
|
||
|
| Secret Service directives for anyone to be permitted along |
|
||
|
| the route of the President carrying something as |
|
||
|
| conspicuous a weapon concealer as an umbrella. |
|
||
|
| Furthermore, it is abnormal for anyone standing close to |
|
||
|
| the President to open an umbrella in sunlight, raise it, |
|
||
|
| lower it, and maneuver it as this man did. Why was this |
|
||
|
| permitted by the Secret Service? Who had the power to |
|
||
|
| arrange that TUM not be apprehended with the umbrella |
|
||
|
| weapon that day? |
|
||
|
| Consider also that until the day of the JFK |
|
||
|
| assassination in 1963, there was *no place* that *anybody* |
|
||
|
| outside of the very small CIA and Special Forces group |
|
||
|
| (perhaps as many as twenty people) could get access to |
|
||
|
| that flechette-launching weapon system or anything like |
|
||
|
| it. |
|
||
|
| Someone had the power to ensure TUM's nonapprehension |
|
||
|
| and access to the weapon. That Person was the murderer. |
|
||
|
|__________________________________________________________________|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
THE WEAPON SYSTEM:
|
||
|
|
||
|
The answers to all of these questions and the analysis of the
|
||
|
evidence must begin historically with the development of the weapon
|
||
|
system itself. There is no better way to describe it than to hear
|
||
|
about it from ex-CIA directors William Colby and Richard Helms and
|
||
|
weapon developer Charles Senseney. Here is their testimony before
|
||
|
the Church Committee on September 16 to 18, 1975, as published in
|
||
|
Volume One (1976) of that Committee's final report, under the
|
||
|
title, "Unauthorized Storage of Toxic Agents."
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1975. Testimony of William E. Colby,
|
||
|
director of the Central Intelligence Agency. The Committee met at
|
||
|
10 A.M. in the Russell Building.
|
||
|
Present: Senators Church, Tower, Mondale, Huddleston, Morgan, Hart
|
||
|
of Colorado Baker, Goldwater, Mathias, and Schweiker. Also
|
||
|
present: William G. Miller, staff director, Frederick A. 0.
|
||
|
Schwarz, chief counsel, Curtis Smothers and Paul Michel, Committee
|
||
|
staff members.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Chairman Church: The particular case under examination today
|
||
|
involves the illegal possession of deadly biological poisons which
|
||
|
were retained within the CIA for five years after their destruction
|
||
|
was ordered by the President. . . . The main questions before the
|
||
|
Committee are why the poisons were developed in such quantities in
|
||
|
the first place: why the Presidential order was disobeyed; and
|
||
|
why such a serious act of insubordination could remain undetected
|
||
|
for so many years.
|
||
|
|
||
|
William Colby: The specific subject today concerns the CIA's
|
||
|
involvement in the development of bacteriological warfare materials
|
||
|
with the Army's Biological Laboratory at Fort Detrick, CIA's
|
||
|
retention of an amount of shellfish toxin, and CIA's use and
|
||
|
investigation of various chemicals and drugs. . . . Information
|
||
|
provided by him [a CIA officer not directly associated with the
|
||
|
project] and by two other officers aware of the project indicated
|
||
|
that the project at Fort Detrick involved the development of
|
||
|
bacteriological warfare agents--some lethal--and *associated
|
||
|
delivery systems suitable for clandestine use* [emphasis added].
|
||
|
The CIA relationship with the Special Operations Division at Fort
|
||
|
Detrick was formally established in May 1952.
|
||
|
The need for such capabilities was tied to earlier Office of
|
||
|
Strategic Services World War II experience, which included the
|
||
|
development of two different types of agent suicide pills to be
|
||
|
used in the event of capture and a successful operation using
|
||
|
biological warfare materials to incapacitate a Nazi leader
|
||
|
temporarily.
|
||
|
The primary Agency interest was in the development of
|
||
|
dissemination devices to be used with standard chemicals off the
|
||
|
shelf. Various dissemination devices such as a fountain pen dart
|
||
|
launcher appeared to be peculiarly suited for clandestine use. . .
|
||
|
. A large amount of Agency attention was given to the problem of
|
||
|
incapacitating guard dogs. Though most of the dart launchers were
|
||
|
developed for the Army, the Agency did request the development of a
|
||
|
small, hand-held dart launcher for its peculiar needs for this
|
||
|
purpose. Work was also done on temporary human incapacitation
|
||
|
techniques. These related to a desire to incapacitate captives
|
||
|
before they could render themselves incapable of talking, or
|
||
|
terrorists before they could take retaliatory action. [Or to
|
||
|
prevent guard dogs from barking.]
|
||
|
One such operation involved the penetration of a facility abroad
|
||
|
for intelligence collection. The compound was guarded by watchdogs
|
||
|
which made entry difficult even when it was empty. Darts were
|
||
|
delivered for the operation, but were not used.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Church: Have you brought with you some of those devices which
|
||
|
would have enabled the CIA to use this poison for killing people?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Colby: We have indeed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Church: Does this pistol fire the dart?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Colby: Yes it does, Mr. Chairman. The round thing at the top is
|
||
|
obviously the sight; the rest of it is what is practically a
|
||
|
normal .45, although it is a special. However, it works by
|
||
|
electricity. There is a battery in the handle, and it fires a
|
||
|
small dart. [Self-propelled, like a rocket.]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Church: So that when it fires, it fires silently?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Colby: Almost silently; yes.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Church: What range does it have?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Colby: One hundred meters, I believe; about 100 yards, 100
|
||
|
meters.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Church: About 100 meters range?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Colby: Yes.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Church: And the dart itself, when it strikes the target, does the
|
||
|
target know that he has been hit and [is] about to die?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Colby: That depends, Mr. Chairman, on the particular dart used.
|
||
|
There are different kinds of these flechettes that were used in
|
||
|
various weapons systems, and a special one was developed which
|
||
|
potentially would be able to enter the target without perception.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Church: Is it not true, too, that the effort not only involved
|
||
|
designing a gun that could strike at a human target without
|
||
|
knowledge of the person who had been struck, but also the toxin
|
||
|
itself would not appear in the autopsy?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Colby: Well there was an attempt--
|
||
|
|
||
|
Church: Or the dart?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Colby: Yes; so there was no way of perceiving that the target was
|
||
|
hit.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1975. Richard Helms' testimony:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Huddleston: Mr. Helms, you said you were surprised, or that you
|
||
|
had never seen the dart gun that was displayed here yesterday.
|
||
|
Would you be surprised or shocked to learn that that gun, or one
|
||
|
like it, had been used by agents against either watchdogs or human
|
||
|
beings?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Helms: I would be surprised if it had been used against human
|
||
|
beings, but I'm not surprised it would have been used against
|
||
|
watchdogs. I believe there were various experiments conducted in
|
||
|
an effort to find out how one could either tranquilize or kill
|
||
|
guard dogs in foreign countries. That does not surprise me at all.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Huddleston: Do you know whether or not it was used, in fact,
|
||
|
against watchdogs? Helms: I believe there were experiments
|
||
|
conducted against dogs. Whether it was ever used in a live
|
||
|
operational situation against dogs, I do not recall.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1975. Testimony of Charles A. Senseney:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Senseney: I worked in the Biological Warfare Section of Fort
|
||
|
Detrick from 1953. . . . I was the project engineer of the M-1
|
||
|
dart launcher and following on microorganism projectiles and so
|
||
|
forth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Smothers: Is this a device that looks roughly like a .45 caliber
|
||
|
pistol with a sight mount at the top?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Senseney: This was a follow-on. It was to replace the M-1
|
||
|
projectile to go into the Army stockpile. It did look like a .45.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Smothers: Did the CIA have, Mr. Senseney, the wherewithal to
|
||
|
utilize this dart launcher against humans?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Senseney: No, they asked for a modification to use against a dog.
|
||
|
Now, these were actually given to them, and they were actually
|
||
|
expended, because we got all of the hardware back. For a dog, the
|
||
|
projectile had to be made many times bigger. It was almost the
|
||
|
size of a .22 cartridge, but it carried a chemical compound known
|
||
|
as 46-40.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Smothers: And their interest was in dog incapacitation?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Senseney: Right
|
||
|
|
||
|
Baker: Your principle job with the DOD, I take it, was to develop
|
||
|
new or exotic devices and weapons: is that correct?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Senseney: I was a project engineer for the E-1, which was type
|
||
|
classified and became the M-1. They were done for the Army.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Baker: Did you have any other customers?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Senseney: To my knowledge, our only customer was Special Forces
|
||
|
and the CIA, I guess.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Baker: Special Forces meaning Special Forces of the Army?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Senseney: That is correct.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Baker: And the FBI?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Senseney: The FBI never used anything.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Baker: Looking at your previous executive session testimony,
|
||
|
apparently you developed for them a fountain pen. What did the
|
||
|
fountain pen do?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Senseney: The fountain pen was a variation of an M-1. An M-1 in
|
||
|
itself was a system, and it could be fired *from anything*
|
||
|
[emphasis added]. It could be put into--
|
||
|
|
||
|
Baker: Could it fire a dart or an aerosol or what?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Senseney: It was a dart.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Baker: It fired a dart . . . a starter, were you talking about a
|
||
|
fluorescent light starter?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Senseney: That is correct. Baker: What did it do?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Senseney: It put out an aerosol in the room when you put the
|
||
|
switch on.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Baker: What about a cane, a walking cane?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Senseney: Yes, an M-1 projectile could be fired from a cane; also
|
||
|
an umbrella.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Baker: Also an umbrella. What about a straight pin?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Senseney: Straight pin?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Baker: Yes, sir.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Senseney: We made a straight pin, out at the Branch. I did not
|
||
|
make it, but I know it was made, and it was used by one Mr. Powers
|
||
|
on his U-2 mission.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Huddleston: Were there frequent transfers of material between Dr.
|
||
|
Gordon's [a researcher at Fort Detrick] office and your office,
|
||
|
either the hardware or the toxin?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Senseney: The only frequent thing that changed hands was the dog
|
||
|
projectile and its loaders 46-40. This was done maybe five or six
|
||
|
in one quantity. And maybe six weeks to six months later, they
|
||
|
would bring those back and ask for five or six more. They would
|
||
|
bring them back expended, that is, they bring all of the hardware
|
||
|
except the projectile, okay?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Huddleston: Indicating that they have been used?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Senseney: Correct.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Huddleston: But it could have been used on a human being?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Senseney: There is no reason why it could not, I guess.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Schweiker: Mr. Senseney, I would like to read into the record
|
||
|
[from a CIA document] at this point a quote from paragraph nine
|
||
|
[exhibit 6, document 67]: "When funds permit, adaptation and
|
||
|
testing will be conducted of a new, highly effective disseminating
|
||
|
system which has been demonstrated to be capable of introducing
|
||
|
materials through light clothing, subcutaneously, intramuscularly,
|
||
|
and silently, without pain."
|
||
|
Now, I just have a little trouble, Mr. Senseney, reconciling
|
||
|
your answers in conjunction with this project, when the CIA
|
||
|
document makes clear that one of the very specific purposes of the
|
||
|
funding and the operation was to find a weapon that could penetrate
|
||
|
light clothing subcutaneously, which obviously means through the
|
||
|
skin, and intramuscularly, which obviously means through the
|
||
|
muscles of a person. And are you saying that you have absolutely
|
||
|
no recollection at all that tests or programs were designed to use
|
||
|
any of these devices to permeate clothing on people and not dogs?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Senseney: We put them on mannequins.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Schweiker: What's that?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Senseney: We put clothing on mannequins to see whether we could
|
||
|
penetrate it. These were the requirements. You almost read the
|
||
|
exact requirements that the SDR quoted from the Special Forces
|
||
|
there.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Schweiker: I would not expect you to test them on live human
|
||
|
beings. I would hope that you did use mannequins, Mr. Senseney.
|
||
|
Wouldn't that be directed toward people-usage, though? That is the
|
||
|
point we're trying to establish.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Senseney: That is what the Special Forces direction was. You have
|
||
|
to look at it this way. The Army program wanted this device. That
|
||
|
is the only thing that was delivered to them. It was a spin-off,
|
||
|
of course, from the M-1. The M- 1 was a lethal weapon, meant to
|
||
|
kill a person, for the Army. It was to be used in Vietnam. It
|
||
|
never got there, because we were not fast enough getting it into
|
||
|
the logistics system.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Schweiker: What was the most-utilized device of the ones with
|
||
|
which you worked and supervised?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Senseney: The only thing I know that was really used was the dog
|
||
|
projectile. The other things were in the stockpiles. I don't
|
||
|
think anyone ever requested them.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Schweiker: How do you know for certain it was for dogs?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Senseney: Well that is what they asked us to test them against.
|
||
|
They wanted to see whether they could put a dog to sleep, and
|
||
|
whether sometime later the dog would come back and be on its own
|
||
|
and look normal.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Schweiker: Of the devices that came through you, which of these
|
||
|
were utilized in any capacity other than for testing?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Senseney: That was the only one that I know of--the dog
|
||
|
projectile. I call it a dog projectile. We were developing it
|
||
|
because the scenario read that they wanted to be able to make
|
||
|
entrance into an area which was patrolled by dogs, leave, the dog
|
||
|
come back, and then no one would ever know they were in the area.
|
||
|
So that was the reason for the dog projectile.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Church: Thank you Senator Schweiker. I think it is clear that the
|
||
|
CIA was interested in the development of a delivery system that
|
||
|
could reach human beings, since not many dogs wear clothing. And
|
||
|
you would agree with that, wouldn't you?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Senseney: Yes.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Church: Okay.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Schwarz: Along the same line, I assume you must agree that
|
||
|
spending money in order to make darts of such a character that they
|
||
|
cannot be detected in an autopsy does not have much to do with
|
||
|
dogs?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Senseney: No, that would not have anything to do with dogs.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
SUMMARY OF TESTIMONY:
|
||
|
|
||
|
In 1960, the CIA purchased from the Army at Fort Detrick, Maryland
|
||
|
a poison-dart weapon system, consisting of small flechette-type
|
||
|
projectiles, self-propelled by solid-state rocket fuel, and
|
||
|
launched by a series of devices, including umbrellas. The
|
||
|
flechettes were about 5mm in diameter and about an inch long. The
|
||
|
poisons carried were of two types. One was a lethal poison,
|
||
|
apparently used against enemies in Vietnam. The other was a
|
||
|
quick-acting, paralyzing poison that took effect in less than two
|
||
|
seconds and lasted for several hours. This was intended for use
|
||
|
against dogs guarding a secured enemy area. It had to cause
|
||
|
paralysis fast enough to prevent the dog from barking.
|
||
|
The flechette completely dissolved in the body, leaving no
|
||
|
trace, so that enemy agents would not be suspicious. The dogs
|
||
|
recovered after several hours and behaved as though nothing had
|
||
|
happened.
|
||
|
The launching devices did not have to be very accurately aimed
|
||
|
and fired, because the weapon was designed for close range. The
|
||
|
flechette could hit any part of the body of a dog or human and
|
||
|
still cause complete paralysis. The solid-state fuel was ignited
|
||
|
by completing an electrical circuit.
|
||
|
The umbrella used a battery-powered circuit. The battery and
|
||
|
trigger button were located in the handle of the umbrella. Wires
|
||
|
running up the shaft connected the button and battery to the
|
||
|
igniter, which was mounted on the shaft. The trigger button
|
||
|
activated the igniter, firing the solid propellant, which sent the
|
||
|
flechette through the rocket launcher--a straw-sized metal tube--to
|
||
|
its target.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
WHAT HAPPENED IN DEALEY PLAZA?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Here is the way the assassination team used the weapon system to
|
||
|
kill JFK.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Umbrella:
|
||
|
|
||
|
TUM took aim by sighting along the launcher and tracking JFK as he
|
||
|
moved down Elm Street. He continued to track JFK after firing the
|
||
|
flechette at Z189. He quickly raised and lowered the umbrella
|
||
|
after firing. This motion may have been caused by operating a
|
||
|
reloading mechanism in the umbrella to put a second flechette into
|
||
|
the firing position. It could also have been a signal to a
|
||
|
radioman accomplice to transmit a beep, calling for a second volley
|
||
|
of shots (see next section).
|
||
|
The flechette struck JFK in the throat at Z189, entering above
|
||
|
his collar, creating a 4mm entry wound and causing immediate
|
||
|
paralysis. The trajectory can be seen from photo #13 to have
|
||
|
cleared the edge of the limousine. The flechette was traveling at
|
||
|
an angle from the right front of the limousine, and it missed the
|
||
|
other occupants of the car. The paralysis took place in about one
|
||
|
and a half seconds, from Z189 to Z216. By Z224 (see photo #4),
|
||
|
JFK's arms, fists, head, and shoulders had been in a paralyzed
|
||
|
state for a half-second. The flechette made no noise when
|
||
|
launched, so that no one heard a shot at the time of Z189.
|
||
|
The flechette's momentum was small because it was extremely
|
||
|
lightweight. As a result, only a small transfer of momentum
|
||
|
occurred, driving JFK's head only slightly upward and backward.
|
||
|
This can be detected by a careful comparison of photos #1 and 2,
|
||
|
Z189 and Z190. JFK's right hand can be seen to remain in a fixed
|
||
|
position between these two frames (1/18 second) with respect to the
|
||
|
side of the car. His head moves up and back in comparison to his
|
||
|
hand or the car.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Rifle Shots:
|
||
|
|
||
|
The first rifle shot was fired from the second floor of the Dal Tex
|
||
|
building. It struck JFK in the back, five and three-quarters
|
||
|
inches below his shirt-collar line, at frame Z225. Since JFK's
|
||
|
muscles were paralyzed, he was like a rigid, sitting duck target.
|
||
|
His head and upper torso were driven down and forward, and his
|
||
|
elbows were flung upward and outward, because no muscles would stop
|
||
|
a rotating elbow and arm motion pivoting around two frozen points-
|
||
|
-his fists and his shoulders. (Observe all of these points between
|
||
|
photos #5 and 6, Z225 and Z227--2/18 seconds apart.) If JFK had
|
||
|
been in a nonparalyzed state, the back shot would have knocked him
|
||
|
much farther forward and down.
|
||
|
The flechette dissolved in JFK's body, leaving no trace, except
|
||
|
for the small entrance wound in his neck. The poison would not
|
||
|
have shown up in the autopsy, even if tests for it had been made.
|
||
|
However, because there was no apparent reason to suspect poison, no
|
||
|
tests for it were made.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Timing of the Shots and The Accomplice:
|
||
|
|
||
|
After Jim Hicks made his statement to Jim Garrison's investigators
|
||
|
in 1968 about being a radio coordinator for the firing team,
|
||
|
researchers were convinced that radio communications were used
|
||
|
between radiomen located near each of the riflemen and some central
|
||
|
coordinating transmitter.
|
||
|
Hicks appears at the center of the plaza on the south side of
|
||
|
Elm Street, near Houston Street. In the Zapruder film, he is seen
|
||
|
during the shooting with both hands showing, no radio transmitter
|
||
|
visible, and no other indication that he is doing anything but
|
||
|
observing at the time of the shots (photos #1, 2, and 3). Hicks'
|
||
|
real role was as the radio system supplier and tester. Later Hicks
|
||
|
shows up with the radio in his back pocket, walking down Elm Street
|
||
|
(see photo #18, taken by Willis [CAPTION READS: Hicks in light
|
||
|
jacket with radio in back pocket (Same as #13 above)]).
|
||
|
In 1977, Cutler, Sprague, and Sharrett discovered the real radio
|
||
|
coordinator in a series of photos. In photo #13 he appears with
|
||
|
raised hand, standing to the left of the Stemmons Freeway sign, on
|
||
|
the north curb of Elm Street. He is about twenty feet away from
|
||
|
TUM. Because his identity is unknown, he will be called TA (The
|
||
|
Accomplice) in this article. His raised hand appears in photos #4,
|
||
|
5, and 6. Early observations of his hand concluded he was waving
|
||
|
at the President. Closer analysis shows he was not waving. His
|
||
|
hand remains raised and motionless, except for a slight clenching.
|
||
|
TA can be seen sitting next to TUM in photo #14 and walking away
|
||
|
down Elm Street in photos #15 and 16. The radio can be seen in
|
||
|
photo #19, taken by Jim Towner [CAPTION READS: TA, radio in back
|
||
|
pocket, heading down Elm Street.], in TA's belt at the back, and
|
||
|
also in photos #14 and 15.
|
||
|
TA undoubtedly was using a button-type beeper transmission
|
||
|
technique for signaling all radiomen to have the riflemen shoot in
|
||
|
volleys. The button was in his raised hand. A wire connection to
|
||
|
the battery-powered transmitter was mounted on his belt at the
|
||
|
back. The first beep was transmitted as soon as TUM launched the
|
||
|
flechette. The second beep was transmitted a second or two ahead
|
||
|
of Z312. The first signal triggered rifle shots from the shooter
|
||
|
in the Dal Tex building and the shooter on the west end of the
|
||
|
sixth floor of the TSBD (Texas School Book Depository). The man on
|
||
|
the knoll did not have a clear shot at that time and did not fire.
|
||
|
The Dal Tex shot hit JFK in the back at Z225, and the TSBD shot hit
|
||
|
Connally at Z237.
|
||
|
Three shots were fired in the second volley--by the Dal Tex
|
||
|
rifleman, whose bullet narrowly missed JFK and hit the south curb
|
||
|
of Main Street; by the TSBD rifleman, whose shot struck JFK in the
|
||
|
head at Z312; and the man behind the fence on the grassy knoll,
|
||
|
who now had a clear path and fired the fatal shot. His bullet
|
||
|
struck JFK in the right temple and exploded at Z313. The fourth
|
||
|
rifleman was positioned right by the octagonal structure at the
|
||
|
west end of the semi-circular wall on the grassy knoll north. He
|
||
|
did not shoot, because the Stemmons Freeway sign and a tree were in
|
||
|
his way. He had a clear shot after the limousine had passed the
|
||
|
sign, but by then JFK was dead. He would have fired had the others
|
||
|
missed their target.
|
||
|
TA and TUM got together, for about two minutes, immediately
|
||
|
after the shots, probably to discuss the results and to observe any
|
||
|
police or Secret Service activity in the area (see photo #14).
|
||
|
Then they went in separate directions, up and down Elm Street (see
|
||
|
photos #15 and 16).
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
___________________________________________________________________
|
||
|
| |
|
||
|
| ANSWERS TO THE QUESTIONS: |
|
||
|
| The questions plaguing researchers can now be answered. |
|
||
|
| |
|
||
|
| |
|
||
|
| * The President's small throat wound was caused by a |
|
||
|
| small flechette. |
|
||
|
| |
|
||
|
| * The flechette dissolved, leaving no trace, |
|
||
|
| explaining why no bullet was found. |
|
||
|
| |
|
||
|
| * No bullet was fired from the grassy knoll at the |
|
||
|
| time of the first hit. TUM had a clear shot at Z189. |
|
||
|
| |
|
||
|
| * TUM's flechette was actually moving in a slightly |
|
||
|
| upward trajectory, explaining the backward and upward |
|
||
|
| motion of JFK's head between Z189 and Z190. |
|
||
|
| |
|
||
|
| * The flechette's small momentum explains why there |
|
||
|
| was no violent backward motion. |
|
||
|
| |
|
||
|
| * JFK's fists clenched and his head snapped to face |
|
||
|
| forward while his right hand snapped downward because |
|
||
|
| his muscles were paralyzed quickly by the poison. |
|
||
|
| |
|
||
|
| * The bullet at Z225 didn't knock JFK down, because |
|
||
|
| he was paralyzed. |
|
||
|
| |
|
||
|
| * The paralysis affected the muscles, fixing them in |
|
||
|
| position and preventing those portions of JFK's upper |
|
||
|
| body from moving when he was hit in the back. His |
|
||
|
| elbows were not fixed and were flung outward. |
|
||
|
| |
|
||
|
| * JFK did not make a sound, because his vocal cords |
|
||
|
| were paralyzed (see testimony). |
|
||
|
| |
|
||
|
| * There were definitely two separate volleys of |
|
||
|
| shots. Each of the four gunmen were prepared to |
|
||
|
| shoot twice upon radio coordinating commands. One |
|
||
|
| knoll gunman could not fire the first volley, because |
|
||
|
| of obstructions. The other did not fire at all. |
|
||
|
| |
|
||
|
| * All the questions about TUM and the umbrella are |
|
||
|
| answered by knowing he was using an intelligence |
|
||
|
| weapon system with umbrella launcher and flechette |
|
||
|
| dart. |
|
||
|
| |
|
||
|
| * Raising and lowering the umbrella was a signal to |
|
||
|
| TA for a radio beep to order a second volley. |
|
||
|
| |
|
||
|
| * The umbrella rotated because TUM was tracking JFK. |
|
||
|
| |
|
||
|
| * TUM and TA sat down together to assess what |
|
||
|
| happened. |
|
||
|
| |
|
||
|
| * TA was the radio coordinator and was standing |
|
||
|
| behind TUM, where he could see TUM's signal and |
|
||
|
| transmit a beep to the radiomen, ordering the first |
|
||
|
| volley. |
|
||
|
|_________________________________________________________________|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CONCLUSIONS:
|
||
|
|
||
|
What conclusions can be drawn from this analysis?
|
||
|
|
||
|
FIRST: Some higher-level individuals within the CIA furnished
|
||
|
one of their secret weapons systems to be used in the
|
||
|
assassination. It is doubtful that more than a very few
|
||
|
umbrella launchers were made for the CIA at Fort Detrick.
|
||
|
This may have been the principal reason for the CIA cover-up
|
||
|
that began on November 22, 1963.
|
||
|
|
||
|
SECOND: The degree of sophistication in such a complex
|
||
|
intelligence murder--including the planning for the paralysis,
|
||
|
the radio coordination, the firing positions creating a cross
|
||
|
fire in two volleys, gaining access to the buildings, setting
|
||
|
up a patsy (Oswald), and all of the other techniques used--
|
||
|
indicate that lower-level anti-Castro Cubans, or even Mafia
|
||
|
members, could not have pulled it off without CIA guidance and
|
||
|
supervision. Skill and intelligence training, plus detailed
|
||
|
management, were required from the only organization capable
|
||
|
of running such an operation.
|
||
|
|
||
|
THIRD: The Select Committee on Assassinations and the Senate
|
||
|
Intelligence Committee have a lot more interrogating to do.
|
||
|
They must question the people who designed the weapon system
|
||
|
and those who made it available to the assassination team.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Richard E. Sprague is currently a consultant to the Battelle
|
||
|
Institute, a think tank in Columbus, Ohio, and was formerly a
|
||
|
consultant to the House Select Committee on Assassinations.
|
||
|
He has written numerous books and articles, including the
|
||
|
self-published "The Taking of America 1-2-3."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Robert Cutler is an architect and a assassination researcher.
|
||
|
He has self-published five books on the Kennedy assassination,
|
||
|
the latest of which is "Seventy-six Seconds in Dealey Plaza."
|
||
|
(Information on obtaining books by Mr. Sprague and Mr. Cutler
|
||
|
is available from "Gallery.")
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
--
|
||
|
daveus rattus
|
||
|
|
||
|
yer friendly neighborhood ratman
|
||
|
|
||
|
KOYAANISQATSI
|
||
|
|
||
|
ko.yan.nis.qatsi (from the Hopi Language) n. 1. crazy life. 2. life
|
||
|
in turmoil. 3. life out of balance. 4. life disintegrating.
|
||
|
5. a state of life that calls for another way of living.
|