Monday, December 19, 2016

JFK Assassination Secrets Scheduled for 2017 Release

by JOSH SANBURN | Time
 
The tortured path that began with a left turn onto Dealey Plaza on Nov. 22, 1963, will find its unlikely end point this October in College Park, Md. At a National Archives annex, the last remaining documents related to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy are being processed, scanned and readied for release.

For those who believe that the clues to who killed JFK are hidden somewhere deep inside the government’s files, this may be the last chance to find the missing pieces. Under the terms of the 1992 JFK Records Act–a result of Oliver Stone’s 1991 movie JFK, which revived fascination with the idea of a cover-up–the government was given 25 years to make public all related files. The time is up on Oct. 26, 2017. About 3,000 never-before-seen documents, along with 34,000 previously redacted files, are scheduled for release.

The files–many of which trace back to the House Select Committee on Assassinations from the 1970s–promise to be less about second shooters and grassy knolls and more about what the government, particularly the CIA, might have known about assassin Lee Harvey Oswald before Kennedy’s death. (The CIA declined to comment for this story, and the FBI did not respond to a request.) Already, the law has helped fill out one of the most significant periods of the 20th century, revealing information on military plots to invade Cuba; Kennedy’s plans to execute a withdrawal of U.S. forces from Vietnam; and the formation of the Warren Commission, which investigated the assassination.

According to the National Archives, the final batch includes information on the CIA’s station in Mexico City, where Oswald showed up weeks before JFK’s death; 400 pages on E. Howard Hunt, the Watergate burglary conspirator who said on his deathbed that he had prior knowledge of the assassination; and testimony from the CIA’s James Angleton, who oversaw intelligence on Oswald. The documents could also provide information on a CIA officer named George Joannides, who directed financial dealings with an anti-Castro group whose members had a public fight with Oswald on the streets of New Orleans in the summer of 1963.

“The records that are out there are going to fill out this picture,” says Jefferson Morley, an author who’s spent decades researching the assassination.

But Martha Murphy, who oversees the effort at the National Archives, warns that many of the documents may be of little value. She believes that any potentially revelatory information, like Oswald’s CIA file, has already been released–albeit with redactions (that text will be restored for the new release). Most of the trove was deemed “not believed relevant” by the independent Assassination Records Review Board (ARRB) in the 1990s. Still, John Tunheim, who chaired the ARRB, says “something that was completely irrelevant in 1998 may look more tantalizing today.”

For curious observers, even irrelevant documents are better than nothing–and nothing is still a possibility. The law says that if an agency doesn’t want certain files made public, it can appeal to the President, who could decide to hold them back after all. That has prompted almost two dozen authors, academics and former ARRB members to write to the White House counsel urging that all documents be released.

“We’re at the final chapter of JFK disclosure,” Morley says. “Sometimes I think we’re going to win. Sometimes I think it’s a fool’s errand. But we’re going to find out.” [END]




Editor's note

As I pointed out in "National Archives to Keep JFK Secrets until 2017" (2012) and "Fifty-two years of coming to terms with Oswald" (2015), the October 2017 release of JFK documents is the Holy Grail among conspiracy devotees.

Despite the fact that sources at the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) who have seen the documents say there is no smoking gun (Martha Murphy says as much above), and that the Assassination Records Review Board (ARRB) who also reviewed the documents in the 1990s and reiterated then that there is no smoking gun, conspiracy advocates cling to the belief that proof of Oswald’s innocence lies within.

What do you think will happen when the conspirati discover that the documents were largely withheld because they contained information that was considered “security classified” or to protect personal privacy, tax and grand jury information, or “because information in the document reveals the identity of an unclassified confidential source,” as NARA officials who have seen the documents have told us?

More importantly, what do you think will happen when some documents are petitioned to be withheld indefinitely because they reveal living sources or ongoing intelligence methods?
 
Let me guess: Conspiracy fans will cry foul and continue to claim what they’ve always claimed in spite of evidence to the contrary—that the cover-up continues.

Let's face it, if the millions of pages of documents that are already available (many of them now online), and have been available for the better part of 50 years, haven't convinced conspiracy advocates that their charges of conspiracy in the JFK case are false - nothing will. 
 
Year after year, we’re treated to a litany of unsubstantiated and in many cases irrational “reasons” why we’re supposed to ignore the fact that fifty-three years ago a disgruntled sociopath left his rifle behind on the sixth floor of his workplace along with three spent cartridges, fled the scene, armed himself with his own 38-caliber revolver, then used it to murder a police officer who stopped to question him, and finally pulled the same pistol minutes later in a darkened theater and attempted to shoot arresting officers as they closed in.
 
I guess I’ll never understand why it’s so hard for some people to accept reality.

Expect October, 2017 to be no different.


Monday, November 28, 2016

Castro and the Kennedy Assassination

by JAMES PIERESON | Real Clear Politics

It is now largely forgotten, or airbrushed from history, but Castro played a large role in the 1963 assassination of President John F. Kennedy. In the discussions surrounding Castro’s death, it is worth recalling this far-reaching episode in U.S. history.

On the morning after the assassination, The New York Times ran a banner headline across the front page: “KENNEDY IS KILLED BY SNIPER AS HE RIDES IN CAR IN DALLAS; JOHNSON SWORN IN ON PLANE.”

In the middle column the editors ran a signed article by a reporter on the scene about Lee Harvey Oswald, the suspect arrested for the crime. The headline read “Leftist Accused,” with the subtitle “Figure in Pro-Castro Group is Charged.”

Oswald, according to the article, had defected to the Soviet Union in 1959 and returned to the Dallas area in 1962. Since returning to the United States, he had been active in a pro-Castro organization in New Orleans called Fair Play for Cuba.

Several fellow employees placed Oswald on the sixth floor of the Texas School Book Depository where police found the rifle used in the assassination, while witnesses on the street reported seeing a gunman firing from an upper-floor window in that building.

Oswald fled before police could seal off the building, but he was arrested 45 minutes after the assassination in another section of the city after a policeman was gunned down on the street.

Witnesses to that crime directed police to a nearby movie theater where Oswald was arrested still carrying the pistol used to kill the policeman. Within hours, local police identified the rifle used in the assassination as belonging to Oswald and ballistics tests confirmed that the bullets that killed President Kennedy were fired from his weapon.

The hard evidence, as related by the reporter in Dallas, pointed strongly to Oswald as the assassin with his motives linked somehow to Castro, the Soviet Union, and the Cold War. These facts as they circulated from Dallas sent shock waves across the world, suggesting that Castro or perhaps Soviet leaders were behind the assassination of an American president.

Indeed, a spokesman for the District Attorney’s office in Dallas soon asserted that President Kennedy had been assassinated as part of a communist conspiracy. It did not require much political sophistication to understand the explosive implications of this news.

It was to be expected then that prominent public officials and journalists would look for ways to deflect attention away from Oswald’s possible ideological motives and toward other possible causes of the crime.

In the same issue of the New York Times, adjacent to the report from Dallas, readers found an unusual opinion article penned by James Reston, the Washington bureau chief of the Times and at that time the dean of national political journalists. The article was titled, “Why America Weeps: Kennedy Victim of Violent Streak He Sought to Curb in Nation.” Reston wrote:
America wept tonight, not alone for its dead young President, but for itself. The grief was general, for somehow the worst in the nation had prevailed over the best. The indictment extended beyond the assassin, for something in the nation itself, some strain of madness and violence, had destroyed the highest symbol of law and order.
Reston seemed to be searching for an explanation for the assassination that reached beyond the assassin and his possible motives. “The irony of the President’s death,” he continued, “is that his short Administration was devoted almost entirely to various attempts to curb this very streak of violence in the American character.”

Reston went on to observe that “from the beginning to the end of his Administration he was trying to tamp down the violence of extremists on the Right.” Reston suggested that violent tendencies emanating from the radical right were somehow responsible for the death of the president.

Two narratives of the assassination were thus juxtaposed on the front page of The New York Times on the day after the event. One was based upon the facts, which pointed to Oswald as the assassin and to the Cold War as the general context in which the event should be understood. The other was a political narrative, entirely divorced from the facts, that pointed to “extremists on the Right” and a national culture of violence as the culprits in the assassination. Both interpretations could not be correct.

Attentive readers might well have wondered which one would prevail in the days ahead as investigators sifted through the facts. If so, they did not have to wait very long for an answer.

Upon hearing that President Kennedy had died, Chief Justice Earl Warren, soon to head the official commission that investigated the assassination, issued a statement to the press: “A great and good President,” he declared, “has suffered martyrdom as a result of the hatred and bitterness that has been injected into the life of our nation by bigots.”

A few hours later, Chet Huntley, the chief newscaster for NBC, told millions of viewers that the assassination had been brought about by “a sickening and ominous popularity of hatred” across the United States and by influential “pockets of hatred” within the country.

The President’s death, he said, is a “thundering testimonial of what hatred comes to and the revolting excesses it perpetrates.”

Both Warren and Huntley were pointing in the same direction: toward anti-communist zealots and racial bigots as the likely perpetrators of the assassination. There was no evidence for this claim, but that did not deter them from making it.

Within days, Pat Brown, the governor of California, and Charles Taft, the mayor of Cincinnati, organized a series of candlelight vigils across the nation “to pledge the end of intolerance and to affirm that such a tragedy shall not happen in America again.”

The influential columnist Drew Pearson published a syndicated column under the title “Kennedy Victim of Hate Drive.”

The Rev. Adam Clayton Powell (also a congressman) issued a statement shortly after the assassination: “President Kennedy is a martyr of freedom and human rights and a victim of injustice as promulgated by [Gov.] Barnett and [Gov.] Wallace,” referencing the pro-segregation stances of the governors of Mississippi and Alabama.

The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. observed that the assassination had to be viewed against the background of violence against civil rights workers across the American South.

The New York Times published an editorial three days after the assassination (and a day after Oswald was shot in Dallas while in police custody) titled “The Spiral of Hate,” in which the editors declared that “The shame all Americans must bear for the spirit of madness and hate that struck down President Kennedy is multiplied by the monstrous murder of his accused assassin.”

Many followed the logic of this indictment to conclude that all Americans were complicit in President Kennedy’s death because they had tolerated hatred and bigotry in their midst. The murder of Oswald two days after Kennedy was shot undoubtedly played a large role in permitting this narrative to stick.

For his part, President Johnson saw that his job as national leader in that time of crisis was to attach some enduring meaning to the national tragedy. “John Kennedy had died,” he said later, “but his cause was not really clear. I had to take the dead man’s program and turn it into a martyr’s cause.”

In his first speech before the Congress five days after the assassination, Johnson proclaimed that, “no memorial oration or eulogy could more eloquently honor President Kennedy’s memory than the earliest possible passage of the civil rights bill for which he fought so long.”

On the international front, Johnson also feared an escalation of tensions with the Soviet Union and another McCarthy-style “witch-hunt” against leftists should the public conclude that a Communist was responsible for the assassination. Johnson was well aware that Oswald’s pro-Communist background might provoke a backlash among the American people against the Soviet Union and Cuba.

From Washington’s point of view, it was better to deflect blame for the assassination from Communism to some other unpopular target.

In doing so, the U.S. government adopted a line parallel to that promoted by the Soviet Union and Communists around the world. Given Oswald’s background, Soviet and Cuban leaders were understandably concerned that they might be blamed for the assassination. That would have been a reasonable inference from Oswald’s stay in the Soviet Union and his work on behalf of Castro.

The Soviet press soon issued statements to the effect that “rightists” were responsible for the assassination and that the arrest of Oswald was a plot to pin the blame on Castro or the Soviet Union.

A Soviet spokesman said, “Senator Goldwater and other extremists on the right could not escape moral responsibility for the president’s death.”

Castro said much the same thing: The assassination was a “Machiavellian” plan to discredit the Cuban government. Leftists around the world were quick to disown Oswald for fear that his deed would contaminate their cause.

These were the myths and legends that grew up around the Kennedy assassination: That JFK was a victim of hatred and bigotry, a martyr in the crusade for racial justice, and a casualty of extremist politics from the right.

This interpretation flowed naturally from the narrative Reston set forth within hours of the assassination. Strangely enough, this narrative took hold and nourished wild conspiracy theories about the assassination, with most of them fingering the “radical right” or the Mafia or the CIA as likely perpetrators. These legends remain potent to this day.

*****************

But the facts pointed in a different direction and to an entirely different interpretation, toward Castro and his revolution in Cuba as the background for the assassination.

If President Kennedy was a martyr, then he was a martyr in the Cold War struggle against Communism and in his frustrated campaign to rid Cuba of the Castro regime.

Oswald was a communist, or a “Marxist” as he liked to call himself. He defected from the United States to the Soviet Union in 1959, vowing when he did so that he could no longer live under a capitalist system, while telling Soviet officials that he possessed high-level intelligence information to offer them.

He returned to the United States with his Russian wife in 1962 in disappointment with life under Soviet Communism but without giving up his Marxist beliefs or his hatred of the United States.

By 1963 Oswald had transferred his political allegiance to Castro’s Communist regime in Cuba. Oswald was like many radicals of that era who rejected the bureaucratic Communism of the Soviet Union but embraced third world revolutionaries like Castro, Mao, and Ho Chi Minh as the harbingers of the socialist future. Oswald knew that Kennedy had implemented a new doctrine of challenging communist movements in this new theater of revolution.

Nor was Oswald a bigot. He sympathized with the civil rights movement and the ideal of racial equality. In his eyes, racial bigotry was an evil inseparable from American capitalism. Oswald hated the United States, the capitalist system, and everything associated with the “radical right.” He was a creature of the far left, but in contrast to academic or armchair radicals, he was on the lookout for opportunities to act out his radical convictions.

In April of 1963, Oswald took a shot at retired Gen. Edwin Walker as the general sat at his dining table working on his tax return.

Walker was the head of the Dallas chapter of the John Birch Society and a figure then in the news because of his opposition to school integration and his demand for the overthrow of the Castro regime.

A few weeks earlier Oswald had purchased a scoped rifle (later used to shoot President Kennedy) for the purpose of assassinating Gen. Walker. Oswald carefully staked out his prey and planned an escape route. One of the policemen who investigated the crime told reporters that the gunman “meant business” and that Walker was fortunate to have survived.

It was not until after President Kennedy was killed seven months later that Dallas police found documents in the possession of Oswald’s wife that identified Oswald as Walker’s would-be assassin.

The next month, fearful that he might be identified as the assailant in the Walker shooting, Oswald left Dallas for New Orleans where in June of 1963 he established a local chapter of Fair Play for Cuba, a pro-Castro front group ostensibly dedicated to gaining diplomatic recognition for Castro’s regime but in reality designed to provide Oswald with pro-Castro credentials that would gain him admittance to Cuba.

Oswald was filmed in New Orleans circulating leaflets on behalf of the Castro government and was jailed briefly following a street altercation with anti-Castro Cubans.

Soon thereafter he appeared on a local television program to debate American policy toward Cuba and was embarrassed when one of his adversaries pointed out that he had earlier defected to the Soviet Union—a revelation that implied that Oswald’s organization was a Communist front and the Castro regime a “puppet” of the Soviet Union.

With his campaign in New Orleans now blown, Oswald sent his wife and child back to Dallas and then left the city in late September to travel to Mexico City in pursuit of a visa that would permit him to travel to Cuba and then to the Soviet Union. It was then illegal for American citizens to travel to Cuba but supporters of the Cuban revolution circumvented that ban by travelling back and forth via Mexico City.

Oswald took along a dossier of news clippings on his pro-Castro activities to establish his revolutionary bona fides with personnel at the Cuban and Soviet embassies.

While in Mexico City, Oswald made several visits to the Cuban embassy, on one occasion (as was revealed later) threatening the life of President Kennedy.

It was not clear to investigators why Oswald wanted to travel to Cuba, though his wife told them that he wanted to confer with Castro about how he might assist the Cuban revolution. Nevertheless, he returned to Dallas empty-handed after being told that his application would take weeks to process.

Within weeks, officials in Cuba approved his application, though on the condition that he also received a visa to travel from there to the Soviet Union. He was still waiting to hear final word on these applications when he read in early November about President Kennedy’s forthcoming visit to Dallas that would include a motorcade through the downtown area and past the building where he now worked.

Oswald’s motives in shooting President Kennedy were almost certainly linked to his desire to block Kennedy’s campaign to assassinate Castro or to overthrow his government.

After the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962, Kennedy pledged to abandon efforts to overthrow Castro’s regime by force. But the war of words between the two governments continued, and so did clandestine plots (unknown to the public at that time) by the Kennedy administration to eliminate Castro by assassination.

In early September, Castro (aware of these plots) declared in an interview in Havana with an American reporter that U.S. officials would not be safe if they continued efforts to assassinate Cuban leaders. “We are prepared to fight them and answer in kind,” he said.

A transcript of the interview was circulated in the United States on the Associated Press wire and published in the local paper in New Orleans where Oswald was then living.

It may have been Castro’s remarks that sent Oswald off on his trip to Mexico City a few weeks later in pursuit of a travel visa. Investigators later speculated that Oswald may have interpreted Castro’s remarks as a call to assassinate President Kennedy.

U.S. intelligence officials were alarmed at this escalation in Castro’s rhetoric and the implied threat conveyed by these comments. Was Castro aware of U.S. plots to assassinate him? If so, how did he know? Did he intend to retaliate by promoting reciprocal plots against American leaders?

They concluded that among various things Castro might do, he was unlikely to risk an assassination attempt on a U.S. leader. In any case, Castro’s threats had little effect on Kennedy’s determination to get rid of him.

On November 18, four days before he was killed, Kennedy delivered a speech in Miami in which he described the Castro government as “a small band of conspirators that has stripped the Cuban people of their freedom.” Kennedy pledged to restore U.S. assistance and friendship “once Cuban sovereignty has been restored.”

Oswald, an admirer of Castro and other third-world revolutionaries, was acutely attentive to the smoldering war between the American and Cuban governments and to the personal and ideological war of words between Castro and Kennedy.

Nearly a year after the assassination, the Warren Commission issued its official report that identified Oswald as the lone gunman on the basis of a large body of physical evidence that pointed in his direction.

Even so, the Commission, while setting forth conclusive evidence that Oswald alone shot the President, contributed to the confusion by suggesting that he did so for a mix of personal reasons (he could not hold a job, he was having marital problems, etc.) unrelated to his Communist ideology or his admiration for Castro.

In this sense, the Report carried forward the “official” view that required the suppression of ideological motives in the assassination. Though the Commission identified Oswald as the assassin who fired the shots that killed the President, it could not rule out the possibility that he may have acted as part of a broader conspiracy.

Did Castro, or someone in his government, encourage Oswald to carry through on his threat to kill President Kennedy?

This is an intriguing possibility, though admittedly the evidence for it is scanty. Edward J. Epstein, the historian and intelligence expert, has pointed out that Castro (as Castro later acknowledged) was told of the threat Oswald issued while visiting the Cuban embassy in Mexico City. Nevertheless, the Cuban government approved Oswald’s application for a travel visa.

Epstein has also uncovered evidence to prove that Castro was aware of Kennedy’s continuing plots against him. It turned out that officials in the Central Intelligence Agency were confiding in a double agent who reported those clandestine plots back to Havana. It was this information that provoked Castro to issue his threat against American officials in his interview with the American reporter in Havana, and it was this interview when published in the American press that sent Oswald off on his expedition to the Cuban embassy in Mexico City.

Did someone in the Cuban embassy connect the dots between Castro’s threat and Oswald’s visit a few weeks later? Did Oswald connect the dots for them in making his threat against President Kennedy? Did Cuban officials encourage Oswald or, more alarmingly, renew contact with him in some way after he returned to Dallas?

These are intriguing questions that, unfortunately, are unlikely ever to be answered in a conclusive way.

The facts surrounding the JFK assassination make it all the more mysterious as to why liberals and leftists who claim to have admired President Kennedy continued to lionize Castro as some kind of noble idealist.

It was, after all, one of Castro’s supporters who killed President Kennedy – and there is the lingering possibility that Oswald may have been something more than just a supporter.

James Piereson is president of the William E. Simon Foundation and a senior fellow at The Manhattan Institute.

Saturday, November 26, 2016

Fidel Castro Dead at 90

The reign of Oswald’s hero comes to an end

by DALE K. MYERS

Lee Harvey Oswald’s hero, Fidel Castro – the murderous dictator who ruled the Cuban people for fifty-seven years – has died at age 90.

Raul Castro, Fidel’s brother younger brother now age 85, announced the death on state run television Friday.

Born in 1926, Fidel Alejandro Castro Ruiz was the son of a plantation owner who attended the University of Havana Law School in 1945 where he dove into radical politics, immersing himself into Marxist literature, student protests, and demonstrations.

His run for Congress in 1952 was sidelined by the coup led by Fulgencio Batista.

A year later, on July 26, 1953, Castro and his student followers attacked the Moncada barracks in Santiago de Cuba. Many were killed. Castro was captured and sentenced to 15 years in prison.

In 1954, under pressure from civic leaders and to demonstrate that he was not the dictator many were claiming, Batista ordered Castro and his followers released in the wake of the presidential election. It turned out to be a colossal mistake.

Castro fled in exile to Mexico where he plotted his revenge.

He returned two years later, in December 1956, with eighty comrades – including revolutionary and murderer Che Guevara as the group’s physician – and began a campaign of guerilla warfare against the Batista regime wrapped in the cloak of “freedom fighter.”

Batista ordered Castro killed and though the young revolutionary’s death was often reported by the army he managed to stay alive.

Worldwide interest in Castro’s exploits took a significant turn in February, 1957, when The New York Times correspondent and editorial writer Herbert L. Matthews wrote a series of articles that sympathized with the thirty-year-old Castro.

“The personality of the man is overpowering,” Matthews wrote. “Here was an educated, dedicated fanatic, a man of ideals, of courage and of remarkable qualities of leadership.”

The Times repeated Castro’s oratory that Cuba’s future was anything but a Communist state. “He has strong ideas of liberty, democracy, social justice, the need to restore the Constitution, to hold elections,” Matthews wrote.

“You can be sure we have no animosity toward the United States and the American people,” Castro was quoted as saying.

Castro claimed to seek a restored democracy. He promised free elections and vowed to end America’s domination of the Cuba economy, which he claimed caused working-class oppression.

The Batista government denounced the Times articles as fabrications, but they gave new life to Fidel Castro’s stature as a freedom-loving leader and built an aura around him that firearms couldn’t defeat.

By the time Batista fled Cuba, early New Year’s Day morning, 1959, Castro was a god. But the mask of compassion the Times helped create was soon destroyed by Castro’s own actions.

Castro immediately rounded up more than 500 Batista-era officials and had than shot to death following special tribunals. Castro claimed the executions were necessary to the revolution.

Five months later, he began seizing private agricultural property, including land owned by Americans. In early 1960, he ordered American and British refineries in Cuba to accept oil from the Soviet Union.

President Dwight D. Eisenhower cut the sugar quota from Cuba driving Castro to look for economic help from the Soviet Union. In 1961, Eisenhower broke off diplomatic relations and closed the U.S. Embassy when Castro ordered the embassy to reduce its staff from 60 to 18 within 48-hours.

Opposition to the Castro regime began to grow among the Cuban people. Some took up arms while nearly a million fled to Miami.

The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) worked with many exiles in an effort to help them take back Cuba with a beachhead landing on Cuba’s southern coast and a plan to instigate an insurrection.

The New York Times learned of the invasion plans and published a front-page article about it, though they withheld information that the attack was imminent and that the CIA was behind the plans. 

When Cuban-exile forces hit the beaches at the Bay of Pigs ten days later, on April 17, 1961, Castro’s army was waiting. Most of the exiles were killed or captured. The disastrous outcome would be exploited by Castro for the remainder of his days.

If there were any doubts about Castro’s political stance, he removed them in December 1961, when he declared in a long speech, “I am a Marxist-Leninist.”

Castro’s alignment with the Soviet Union and his resentment of the United States came to an inevitable clash in October 1962 when American spy planes discovered that the Soviet Union had built intermediate-range missile bases in Cuba capable of reaching the United States.

Thirteen tense days ended when President Kennedy secretly agreed to remove American missile bases in Turkey and not invade Cuba if the Soviets dismantled the Cuban missile sites.

Multiple efforts by the CIA, under the Kennedy administration, to rid the world of Castro were met with frustration and defeat.

Then, in 1963, Lee Harvey Oswald, an avowed Marxist who saw Castro as a revolutionary hero of the people, took his rifle onto the sixth floor of the Texas School Book Depository in Dallas, Texas, and murdered President John F. Kennedy.

While Oswald’s motives will forever remain unclear, due to the actions of nightclub owner Jack Ruby who shot and killed Oswald less than 48-hours after his arrest, there is no doubt about Oswald’s praise for the Cuban leader, or that Oswald attempted to gain entry to Cuba less than a month before his deed, or that Oswald always felt he was a “revolutionary” himself – one whom the world would have to reckon with some day. 

On November 22, 1963, he made good on that threat.

Much has happened in Cuba since the cigar-chomping, bearded revolutionary climbed out of the jungle thicket in 1959 and promised hope to the Cuban people.

Fidel Castro outlived many of his enemies, but the Cuba he created with his brother Raul, stands as a living example of what can happen when tyranny replaces hope.

Tuesday, November 22, 2016

Holland’s Magic Bullet

A forensic ballistician examines a dubious theory

by DALE K. MYERS and TODD W. VAUGHAN

During the 1986 mock television trial of Lee Harvey Oswald, the late former Los Angeles prosecutor, Vincent Bugliosi, question renowned pathologist Dr. Cyril Wecht about a “magic bullet” of his own creation – one that, by his own admission, was moving in a straight-line on a downward angle, passed through the president’s upper body and exited his throat, but then failed to hit the limousine or anyone in it - apparently vanishing into thin-air!
“Did it broad jump over the car?” Bugliosi asks in a mocking tone.

“No,” Dr. Wecht responds. “[It] need not have performed any remarkable feats.”

“But you don’t know what happened to it?”

“No, I do not,” Wecht acknowledged. [1]
Such is the world of “magic” bullets that not only defy physical law but rational thought as well.

In 2003, another magic bullet entered the lexicon of assassinationology – this one created out of whole cloth by journalist and author Max Holland.

Holland’s theory has morphed over time as demonstrated in the following seven blog articles, each taking Holland to task for his efforts to sell his interesting-at-first-glance but ultimately unsupported theory with supposition, innuendo, and cherry-picked eyewitness testimony:
Holland’s latest version, published in the journal of the Association for Crime Scene Reconstruction, in May, 2016, postulates a wild bullet with truly magical properties.

Pure magic

According to Holland, Oswald’s first errant shot struck a traffic light mast arm without a trace, ricocheted downrange at a ballistically impossible angle, struck a cement sewer cover skirt 327 feet away where it ricocheted again, rippling through the adjacent grassy turf and exiting with enough velocity to hug the downward sloping terrain until it struck a concrete curb 153 feet away, where it ricocheted yet again – this time, steeply upward without chipping away any concrete (leaving behind only a smear of lead), but them magically gained enough increased kinetic energy to strike and gouge out a good-sized portion of the concrete abutment supporting the Triple Overpass, causing eyewitness James Tague to be splattered with shattering concrete and/or bullet fragments which ultimately resulted in a minor injury to his left cheek. [2]

Holland recently wrote a response in Letters to the Editor of the AFTE Journal, the official publication of the Association of Firearm and Tool Mark Examiners (AFTE) (and published this month) [3] complaining about an article describing the forensic work of Lucien C. “Luke” Haag, elder half of the respected father-and-son forensic team of Luke and Michael Haag who have been debunking popular conspiracy theories surrounding the JFK assassination for the better part of two years using 3D laser scanners, Doppler radar, and other high-end forensic equipment.

Holland’s beef centers around the fourth article in the Haag series, “The Missing Bullet in the JFK Assassination” [4] which took Holland’s first shot theory apart point-by-forensic-point. The conclusions were discussed in the May, 2015 blog post, “The Shot that Missed JFK: A New Forensic Study.” [5]

On November 11, 2016, Holland posted a critique adapted from his letter to the AFTE editor on the website, Washington Decoded, for which Holland serves as editor.

The critique, entitled “Lucien Haag’s Flawed Analysis of the First Shot Fired in the JFK Assassination,” [6] authored by Holland and Frank S. DeRonja, takes Haag to task for writing an article that contained “serious deficiencies” as well as “technical, evidentiary, and logical flaws in Haag’s shooting reconstruction analysis” which “invalidate his conclusion as to how the first shot fired by Oswald missed its intended target.”

Holland notes that his letter-to-the-editor appears in the AFTE Journal’s Fall 2016 issue, “along with a response from Haag,” but fails to include any portion or rebuttal of Haag’s lengthy response. Holland simply notes that the AFTE Journal, while online, is behind a paywall and leaves it to his readers to figure out how to get it. Nice.

As a service to interested readers, here are Haag’s published remarks, along with some additional commentary from yours truly.

Haag responds

“As will be shown,” Luke Haag writes in his response to Holland’s letter of complaint, “Mr. Holland, as a journalist and Mr. DeRonja as a metallurgist, haven’t the training or credentials to adequately and properly evaluate my reconstructive efforts in this historic shooting case.

“[I am] at a loss to explain how being a journalist qualifies a person as an expert in shooting scene reconstruction. Likewise, knowledge regarding metals and alloys is of little to no help in measuring the dynamic, physical events in projectile ricochet from various surfaces.

“[As to why Oswald’s first shot missed, I tested four possibilities that had been put forward over the years.] This process is the very essence of The Scientific Method. This is why I stated the following, near the top of page 68 of my [2015] article, Empirical testing of the various possibilities, coupled with the established facts in this historic case, followed by an eliminative process, allows the most likely sequence for Oswald’s three shots, the fates of the associated bullets to be determined, as well as the effective elimination of other postulated explanations. (emphasis in original)

“I am a forensic scientist of some 50-plus years-experience and over 200 presentations before my peers, most of which have dealt with the reconstructive aspects of shootings.

“To take the approach of The Lost Bullet, the 2011 DeRonja/Holland Report, the November 28, 2014 Newsweek article, and the May 2016 article in the Journal of Crime Scene Reconstruction would be the antithesis of The Scientific Method.

“In these publications, Holland and DeRonja took a notion (at best, a hypothesis) and then went looking for something, anything to support it. Not finding any such physical evidence, or producing any reliable test results did not dissuade these writers from clinging to the most recent (final?) idea that Oswald’s first shot struck and ricocheted from the traffic signal mast arm (but left no evidence of it) and the lead core went on to – pick one – (a) strike a grassy area next to a manhole cover, or (b) strike the concrete curb, or (c) strike the grassy area, followed by the concrete curb, and then cause some sort of fragment to strike James Tague in the face.

“Explanation C is depicted as Figure 4 on page 35 of the November 28, 2014 Newsweek article with the exception of James Tague who is missing from this ‘reconstruction’. Explanation B is presented near the end of the 2011 NatGeo’s The Lost Bullet production with the following quote by Mr. Holland: “We believe the bullet hit the signal which deflected it on down Dealey Plaza, and the bullet then hit the curb which is what caused Tague’s injury.” No mention of core-jacket separation here. No mention of the area of turf near a manhole cover. And no mention that Holland and DeRonja knew at that time that a strike to the traffic signal and its back plate would have been obvious and easily excluded.” 

Deflection by the Oak Tree

Holland’s letter to the AFTE editor noted that the “U.S. Secret Service and Federal Bureau of Investigation agents thoroughly inspected the oak tree that partially obscured Oswald’s line of sight down Elm Street” and that they “found no evidence that branches had been struck by a bullet fired from Oswald’s rifle.” Still the Warren Report “claimed deflection by tree branches was a possibility.”

“Frankly, I don’t recall that the Bureau and the Secret Service carried out such an inspection,” Haag responded. “Moreover, I don’t care.”

[JFK Blog Editor’s note – We don’t recall one either. We’ve never seen any document or any photograph that discusses or shows reps from either agency “thoroughly inspecting” the branches of the oak tree. We’d like to see a citation for the tree inspection.]

“I wanted to know,” Haag continued, “(1) what such ballistic damage would look like, (2) how obvious it would be to an investigator or arborist, (3) what sort of velocity loss striking one or more Southern Live Oak branches would induce in a 160 grain WCC Carcano bullet, (4) whether these bullets would fragment in any way as a consequence of striking multiple Southern Live Oak branches, and most of all, (5) what sort of deflection the bullets would experience.

“Figures 7 and 8 on page 71 [of my Spring 2015 AFTE Journal article] show representative examples of the results. Another was documented with high speed videography in the PBS-NOVA presentation, Cold Case: JFK. This experiment, along with others, was repeated at a live-fire demonstration at the 2015 AFTE conference in Dallas, Texas. All tests showed intact, but destabilized bullets with relatively small deflection angles.”

Deflection by the Signal Light

Holland’s letter to the AFTE editor claimed that the “possibility that a traffic signal light at the intersection of Elm and Houston Streets might have deflected the bullet was first raised in the 2011 National Geographic documentary, but that subsequent testing by Holland and DeRonja determined that “a bullet strike caused obvious and extensive damage to the signal light and therefore the signal light was eliminated as a possible obstruction to Oswald’s first shot.” Holland added that their findings were “published on-line to coincide with the premiere of JFK: The Lost Bullet in November 2011.”

“Here’s the problem with the foregoing,” Haag responded. “Holland and DeRonja knew at the time that a strike to the traffic signal and/or its back plate would have been obvious and that these possibilities could be excluded.

“Nonetheless, the audience watching NatGeo’s The Lost Bullet up to the bitter end are left with the clear and distinct impression that this is what happened! This is disingenuous, misleading and intellectually dishonest.

“Mr. Holland’s quote near the end of the show:
‘We (Holland and DeRonja) believe the bullet hit the (traffic) signal which deflected it on down Dealey Plaza and the bullet then hit the (concrete) curb which is what caused (James) Tague’s injury.’ 
The narrator soon follows up by stating,
‘They (Holland & Co.) want to know how a bullet would behave after hitting this obstruction.’
 “But Holland and DeRonja do know, but to tell the NatGeo folks the results of their tests would not leave a very good impression on the audience. The narrator goes on to report that,
‘Holland thinks it’s (the bullet strike to the traffic signal or traffic signal back plate) the key to solving the mystery of the lost bullet.’
“Just as the opening credits state, the NatGeo production was entertainment, not good forensic science.


Fig. 1 Holland and DeRonja Trajectory Reconstruction Figure
[from the November 2014 Newsweek Article]

“But it gets worse. Figure 4 on page 35 of Holland’s November 28, 2014 Newsweek article, The Truth Was Out There (See: Fig.1) now shows the first shot striking the traffic light support mast, the separated lead core traveling straight line down Elm Street to a grassy area next to a manhole cover, ricocheting from this location, then continuing on, straight line to the concrete curb, then presumably somehow resulting in James Tague’s minor facial injury.

“I’ll come back to how ballistically absurd this ‘reconstruction’ is.”

Holland complained to the AFTE editor that “Mr. Haag portrayed the signal light deflection as a hypothesis still in need of testing and he was free to do so. Scientific analysis depends on reproducible results, and it was appropriate for him to conduct his own tests. However, what Mr. Haag cannot do is falsely claim that the signal light hypothesis has been disproved only now, via the tests he designed and conducted. (emphasis in original) All Mr. Haag actually accomplished was to repeat what the interim DeRonja-Holland Report found and reported four years earlier.”

“But they certainly did not report their findings to the NatGeo producer,” Haag rebuts, “And what would Holland and DeRonja know about reproducible results; they only managed to hit a traffic signal back plate once out of 3 attempts with inappropriate ammunition and provided no data on velocity loss or deflection angle and direction.

“They did, however, have a very qualified ballistics expert in their group; Larry Sturdivan, a physicist and life-long wound ballistics expert, who early on in the production of The Lost Bullet advised them of the fallacy of their trajectory reconstruction(s). It should come as no surprise as to why we don’t see Larry Sturdivan (author of The JFK Myths, A Scientific Investigation of the Kennedy Assassination, Paragon House, St. Paul, MN (2005)) ever again after his brief, midpoint appearance in NatGeo’s The Lost Bullet.”

Deflection by the Mast Arm

As to Haag’s chief forensic tests on the mast arm deflection hypothesis, Holland complained that Haag used samples that “differed significantly from the mast arm component of the signal light assembly.”

“The mast arm is a steel pipe two inches in diameter,” Holland wrote. “Mr. Haag’s samples were not only larger in diameter, but had a different wall thickness. In addition, the firing test arrangement depicted in Mr. Haag’s Figures 14-17 did not replicate the orientation and angular position of the mast arm relative to the sixth-floor window.”

“My fourth AFTE-JFK article only showed the first of three (3) steel poles employed for the deflection/velocity loss studies,” Haag writes. “The subsequent poles were standard, 2-inch diameter steel poles. These 2-inch diameter steel poles were even more fragile and susceptible to ballistic damage from a 160-grain full-metal jacketed (FMJ) Carcano bullet than the pole depicted in Figures 14 through 17 in the Spring 2015 AFTE article.

“Deflection and velocity loss values from grazing shots to the 2-inch steel poles were nonetheless quite similar to those presented in my fourth JFK article,” Haag explains.

“Attached are a sequence of five photographs from a shallow grazing shot to a 2-inch diameter steel pole labeled as LCH-1 through LCH-5 appended to this response. (See: Fig. 2-6)

Fig.2 LCH-1
SETUP for GRAZING STRIKES to a 2-INCH STEEL POLE


Fig.3 LCH-2
VIEW BACK to the SHOOTING POSITION


Fig.4 LCH-3
GRAZING STRIKE to 2-INCH DIAMETER STEEL POLE


Fig.5 LCH-4
DEFLECTED CORE and JACKET from GRAZING STRIKE


Fig.6 LCH-5

All of these tests in which shallow, grazing strikes occurred resulted in relatively small deflection angles and high remaining velocities. Extrapolating these results to the geometry of the assassination scene (the 6th floor window and the traffic signal support mast) quickly reveals that the bullet with or without its copper jacket would have struck the asphalt of Elm Street and disintegrated.

“The readers of this response should study the Leica 3D laser scan produced by Michael Haag and Tony Grissim. In order to satisfy the Holland/DeRonja ‘reconstruction’, the grazing strike to the support mast (which they have never found to this day) would have to achieve an angular change of approximately 40 degrees!

“As physicist and wound ballistician Larry Sturdivan has previously pointed out, and I have repeatedly demonstrated, this would have to violate some very basic requirements of the Laws of Physics and terminal ballistics.

“Attached are three (3) Leica 3D lasers scans prepared by Michael Haag (captioned MGH-1, MGH-2 and MGH-3) (See: Fig.7-9) which illustrate the most basic requirements* for a bullet or bullet core to be deflected from the traffic signal support mast and reach James Tague, or to reach a grassy area (“turf” to use Holland and DeRonja’s term) near a manhole cover.

Fig.7 MGH-1


Fig.8 MGH-2
6th FLOOR WINDOW to TRAFFIC MAST to CURB/TAGUE


Fig.9 MGH-3
6th FLOOR WINDOW to TRAFFIC MAST to TURF to CURB

[*Haag’s note: Holland and DeRonja consistently draw straight lines to these locations, but bullets follow curved flight paths when viewed in profile. This is especially true for destabilized bullets and bullet cores because of their very poor ballistic coefficients and reduced velocities. These facts only make matters worse for Holland and DeRonja. [See Haag, L.C., “The Ballistic Coefficients of Ricocheted and Destabilized Bullets”, AFTE Journal, 45:4 (Fall 2013), pp.309-335]]

Holland writes that “Mr. Haag rightly concluded from his testing that a bullet impact by anything other than a shallow grazing strike (emphasis in original) will leave obvious damage, anything from a deep groove to total penetration. However, because DeRonja/Holland found no observable bullet damage in their examination of the mast arm, (emphasis added) he jumped to the conclusion that the mast arm could not have been struck by Oswald’s first shot. Mr. Haag was too hasty in dismissing the possibility of a deflection by a shallow grazing bullet strike that left barely discernable damage. He ignored the fact that such a glancing strike would have removed protective paint from the mast arm, permitting rust corrosion to commence; metal rusting would have obliterated and destroyed a shallow bullet imprint in an estimated 12 years, meaning that examination of the mast arm five decades later was all but doomed to fail.”

“Well, here you have it in their own words,” Haag notes in his rebuttal, “Holland and DeRonja found no observable bullet damage in their examinations of the mast arm. Yet they conclude that this is exactly how poor Mr. Tague sustained his facial injury.”

[JFK Blog Editor’s note – Holland also seems to be acknowledging that even if the mast arm was struck and the evidence of such a strike obliterated by time that it must have been struck at a shallow angle. But this also undermines his own claim that the bullet then was able to change angles significantly and go on toward the sewer cover and Tague. Despite his efforts, he cannot have it both ways.]

Holland’s peer reviewed submission

Holland made certain to mention to the AFTE editor that a “thorough discussion and analysis of a glancing bullet ricochet strike to the signal light mast arm can be found in a May 2016 article by DeRonja and Holland in the on-line, open-access journal of the Association for Crime Scene Reconstruction – suggesting that the membership-only availability of Haag’s work was somehow less accessible, and therefore, to be regarded with suspicion.

“Until very recently,” Haag responded, “[the Association for Crime Scene Reconstruction (ACSR)] journal was unknown to [me]. Given that Holland and DeRonja have excluded a strike to the traffic signal and traffic signal back plate, and only postulate an extremely shallow graze to the mast arm, one has to wonder what sort of a peer review process was carried out on their submission, and most important, what were the credentials of the person or persons conducting such peer review.

“So, AFTE readers who do have a reasonable, to good working knowledge of terminal ballistics and how to design a proper experiment, let’s have a look at this obscure publication and the Holland/DeRonja article.

Ammunition Used by Holland and DeRonja

“In any experiment designed to test a hypothesis in a shooting incident,” Haag wrote, “it is fundamental and axiomatic that the same ammunition be used. The authors abdicate this forensic requirement on page 18 and 19 [of their ACSR article] where they state that they used WW II Italian surplus military ammunition rather than the Western Cartridge Company (WCC) 6.5mm Carcano ammunition involved in the assassination because ‘it is very rare and could not be obtained.’

“It is true that it is rare, but it can be obtained if one knows where to look. This writer has managed to obtain approximately 200 rounds of this ammunition, most, but not all of which have now been consumed in the many experiments leading to my five AFTE articles.

“Holland and DeRonja’s inability to locate the correct ammunition for their experiments may be the consequence of not being criminalists or forensic firearms examiners.

“It gets more troubling when one reads on page 22 [of the ACSR article] that Holland and DeRonja used some unknown Italian ammunition with bullet weights of 145-grains (the WCC Carcano bullets weighed 160-grains) and some Serbian ammunition with 139-gr. Pointed, boat tail bullets (the WCC Carcano bullets were round nosed and much heavier).

Deflection-Bullet Fragmentation-Remaining Velocity

“Figure 15 on page 24 of their article shows a green pole a mere 4 or 5 feet away from the muzzle of the Carcano rifle,” Haag continues. “Only four shots are described, and only one of these (Shot 3) produces a shallow graze to the target pole.

“The authors describe deflection and frequent fragmentation of test-fired bullets that strike an exemplar 2-inch steel mast arm but provide no photographs of any downrange witness panels, the positioning of any such witness panels or any depiction of the integrity or degree of fragmentation of the post-impact bullets.

“Table 3 on page 26 of their article lists deflection angles for Shot 3 (the only relevant shot) as “10° vertical and 21° right” but, as before, Holland and DeRonja provide no photographs to illustrate how these numbers were derived. Even if one assumes these numbers are correct and applicable to a 160 grain WCC bullet, the authors have a long way to go to reach a ricochet angle of 39° to 40°.

“And so does this now decelerated and destabilized bullet or bullet core. [See Mike Haag’s 3D laser scans.] No post-impact velocity data is provided for this bullet. Deflection angles aside, this information is critical in any attempt to explain James Tague’s superficial injury.

“Their speculative ‘reconstruction’ gets really bizarre when they factor in a disturbance in an area of turf next to a manhole cover as the next impact site for this bullet (core), then on to the strike the concrete curb with a steep upward angle (leaving a lead smear) to produce Tague’s minor facial injury.

“But then this projectile, after three ricochet events, now continues on to produce a 3-dimensional defect (crater) high up on a concrete column! (See: Fig.10)

Fig.10 Holland and DeRonja Trajectory Reconstruction Figure 21
[from the May 2016 JACSR Article]

“This should be laughable to any AFTE member who has studied the ricochet behavior of bullets from yielding and unyielding surfaces, but there it is in figures 21, 22 and 23 on pages 31 and 32 of [DeRonja and Holland’s] May 2016 article.

“This writer has to ask again, who peer-reviewed this article?

“Readers should also note the various distances and multiple angular changes involved in figures MGH-1, MGH-2 and MGH-3 for the Holland and DeRonja ‘reconstruction’. Compare these to the much shorter distance and minor angular change, depicted in Figure 23 and Figure 24 in the Spring 2015 AFTE article, for a fragment from the President’s head wound to reach James Tague.”

Pristine Bullet Strike on the Asphalt Pavement

Finally, Holland argued that Haag’s conclusion that the probable fate of Oswald’s first shot was that it struck the asphalt on Elm Street at near muzzle velocity and disintegrated was equally flawed.

“Mr. Haag’s firing tests into pavement at an angle comparable to firing from the sixth-floor window produced deep craters 3 inches wide,” Holland points out. “Figures 18-21, which are photographs from these tests, show bullet impacts produced a clearly visible debris cloud of asphalt particles ejecting from the crater.”

Furthermore, Holland argues, “nobody saw such an eruption in the asphalt on Elm Street” even though “there were at least three dozen eyewitnesses (if not more) in a position to notice a pavement-damaging debris cloud akin to a volcano erupting.”

Even more damning, according to Holland, is that Haag was forced to engage in conjecture to explain the lack of an impact crater asserting “without any testing—that the tell-tale crater would only have lasted a few days. He stated that any efforts—even on the very day of the assassination—to locate pieces of a fired bullet at or near any ‘fresh’ damage site on the Elm Street asphalt were destined to fail. The reason given was that such bullet-caused defects in asphalt quickly ‘morph into nothing more than a vague depression’ and re-acquire the general color and appearance of the adjacent asphalt as a result of traffic, rain, street sweepers, etc.”

“Once again, not true,” Haag responded.

“[As to the bullet craters], no width or depth measurements were provided in the Spring 2015 AFTE article or Figures 18-21. The craters were not particularly deep; approximately 1-inch. But the most important results were that no recognizable bullet fragments could be found in these impact sites, and from past studies of bullet impacts in asphalt, these impact sites very quickly become unrecognizable as being bullet-caused.

“[As far as eyewitnesses to such a bullet strike], in their most recent May 2016 article, [DeRonja/Holland] point out on page 11, point 1 that ‘A witness standing in the vicinity of the traffic signal light structure reported seeing something bounce off the pavement in the lane left of the president’s limousine at the time of the first shot.’

“This unnamed eyewitness is referenced and quoted again on page 28 of [their May 2016] article. [DeRonja/Holland] follow this up with this definitive statement; ‘What this witness observed, in all likelihood, was a bullet jacket fragment striking the pavement after the first shot glanced off the mast arm of the signal light.’

“In their earlier November 20, 2011, Washington Decoded publication, the authors are a little more inclusive; ‘A few witnesses reported seeing an object(s) strike the pavement near the president’s limousine in conjunction with the first shot. Miss Virgie Mae Rackley, for example, who was standing at the northwest corner of Elm and Houston, told the FBI on 24 November 1963, that “after the first shot she saw something bounce from the roadway in front of the presidential automobile.’

“But wait, there’s a little more to Miss Rackley’s recollection which Holland and DeRonja have left out, and it’s important, but certainly of no help to them. But cherry picking of facts and information occurs throughout the Holland and DeRonja articles.

“In her July 22, 1964 Warren Commission testimony [Ms. Rackley] states (p.509)
‘Well, as I said, I thought it was a firecracker. It looked just like you could see the sparks from it and I just thought it was a firecracker and I was thinking that there was somebody was fixing to get in a lot of trouble ...’
“The other unnamed witness referred to in the November 20, 2011 Holland and DeRonja article was likely Royce Skelton who was standing on the triple underpass watching the presidential limousine as it turned onto Elm Street and was now essentially facing [the president’s car]. This witness testified in April 1964 that he saw “smoke” come up off the pavement near the presidential limousine as the shots rang out.

“AFTE readers should be suspicious as to why Holland and DeRonja now use ‘witness’ in the singular in their recent May 2016 article. AFTE readers should now go back and look at my Figures 18-21 in the Spring 2015 issue.

“While we all should have a healthy skepticism of the accuracy of an eye or ear witness’s recollection, Miss Rackley’s description of ‘sparks’ and a firecracker-like event in the street in front of her are much more in keeping with the appearance of my figures 18-21 than a piece of bullet jacket bouncing off the pavement. Royce Skelton’s recollection even more so.

“Frankly,” Haag observes, “I’m surprised that Miss Rackley saw what she has described. Think about it; everyone’s eyes were likely glued on the President and Jackie, not the surface of the street around the presidential limousine.

“Once again, Holland and DeRonja display a lack of practical shooting incident reconstruction. To say something did not happen because it was not observed is naïve and foolhardy.

“The plume of pulverized asphalt and rock depicted in Figures 18-21 of the Spring 2015 AFTE article only last for approximately one second or less. Only a peculiar odor from this highly energetic event might linger longer.

“This brings up another interesting recollection of Virgie Rackley reported to FBI Special Agents Odum and Peggs on the day after the assassination.

“She recalled that she smelled gun smoke after the second shot, but did not know where it was coming from. If we can agree that this odor could not truly be gun smoke from the three shots fired from the 6th floor window, what other explanation might there be? Answer: The pulverized rock and asphalt from a high energy, direct shot into the asphalt.

“[As to the lack of a visible impact crater on Elm Street], the absence of evidence is not evidence of absence. One needs to know in advance what such sites look like and locate them immediately. Even then, it can be difficult to establish such divots or disturbances in asphalt as bullet-caused.

“The rapid degeneration and loss of ‘fresh’ bullet impact characteristics in asphalt are well-known to AFTE members trained and experienced in shooting scene reconstruction. This is a part of every one of the many courses in shooting scene reconstruction that Haag and Haag have taught for years. It is also explained in the chapter on bullet ricochet in our textbook, Shooting Incident Reconstruction, Elsevier/Academic Press (2011), Chapter 9, pp. 159-160).”

A turf ricochet and a curb strike

Holland argues that “within twenty minutes of the assassination, eyewitnesses had led law enforcement personnel to the two locations in Dealey Plaza where a bullet (or portion thereof) struck the ground.”

According to Holland, “the first location (expressly identified as occurring at the instant the first shot was fired) was the turf adjacent to a concrete skirt/manhole cover on the south side of Elm Street, about 325 feet west of the traffic signal light. The second location was further downrange: a concrete curb on the south side of Main Street about 24 feet from the triple underpass.

“To believe Mr. Haag’s claim,” Holland writes, “is to believe that eyewitnesses were able to guide lawmen instantly to relatively subtle evidence of bullet strikes, while what would have been the most obvious impact point—an alleged volcanic eruption on the asphalt—was inexplicably missed. This argument was imaginative but not logical.”

“Readers might note or recall,” Haag responded, “that I have never addressed the purported bullet impact site in the turf near a manhole cover, yet it is described above by Mr. Holland as a fact.

“My failure to comment on it is for good reason. No matter how much one wants to believe that it is bullet-caused, or actually does believe that it is bullet-caused, there is absolutely no physical evidence to support this belief.

“Holland and DeRonja certainly want to believe it as evidenced in their trajectory ‘reconstruction’. But their belief, like so many others, is fatally flawed, and to understand why, one needs to go back to basic Ricochet 101 as taught, as demonstrated many times, and as published by Haag and Haag in their textbook.

Ricochet 101

“Soil, ‘ground’, turf, and grassy locations are all examples of yielding surfaces when it comes to bullet impact and ricochet,” says the man who wrote the textbook. “A number of important and very relevant events transpire when a bullet impacts such surfaces at relatively low incident angles.

“If above the critical angle (typically around -10°), the projectile fails to exit (fails to ricochet). If below the critical angle, the projectile interacts with the substrate over distances on the order of several inches to more than a foot before departing. The consequence is a major loss of velocity and a high departure angle, often exceeding that of the incident angle.

“So now let’s apply these facts to Holland and DeRonja’s ‘reconstruction’ figure.

“They have the deflected bullet traveling straight line to this location. [See Fig.1] But now comes the rub. If this site near the manhole cover was bullet-caused by an event in the Kennedy assassination, the projectile would have lost considerable velocity and departed with a high, upward angle much like a golf ball chipped out of a sand trap. (emphasis in original)

“But, Holland and DeRonja have it once again traveling along a flight path which essentially hugs the terrain until it strikes the concrete curb producing as transfer (or smear) with a steep upward angle, which a much later spectrographic analysis by the FBI Laboratory reports as lead containing traces of antimony. [7]

“Figure LCH-6 is one of many images depicting this apparent lead transfer on the curb near James Tague. (See: Fig.11)


Fig.11 LCH-6
TWO VIEWS of the LEAD-CONTAINING SMEAR on the MAIN STREET CURB

“Rather than disintegrating, Holland and DeRonja now show this bullet (or bullet core) traveling steeply upward to produce an area of shattered concrete in one of the columns of the triple underpass. [8]

“This is laughable. One has to ask – where did this ‘bullet’ gain its renewed kinetic energy to produce the extensive damage to this concrete column?

“Their claim that this crater in the triple underpass is related to the Kennedy assassination is a prime example of seeing what one wishes to see while clinging to a failed hypothesis.”

James Tague’s Injury

As to the superficial wound to James Tague’s left cheek, Holland complains that Haag’s attempt to link Tague’s injury with the third and fatal shot is “remarkable for the contradictory factual information that was left out, presumably because Mr. Haag was unaware of it.”

According to Holland, Haag: (1) failed to “explain the strike to the concrete skirt on Elm Street,” (2) failed to address the bullet impact on the Main Street curb, and (3) failed to tell readers that James Tague told the Warren Commission in sworn testimony “that shots were fired after he was injured” (emphasis in original) which “severely undermines the notion that a fragment from the third shot was responsible for Tague’s wound.”

Holland claimed that the strike to the concrete skirt, “which was expressly associated with the first shot,” posed an “insurmountable obstacle to Mr. Haag’s analysis and was ignored. He preferred to imagine a bullet strike that no one saw instead of accounting for impact evidence that was witnessed and recorded.”

Although Mr. Haag has plenty to say about all of this, allow us to clear up one salient point.

Starvis Ellis and the First Shot

Holland claims that the strike to the concrete skirt and/or turf surround the sewer cover along the south side of Elm Street was “expressly associated with the first shot.” Holland never says who made the association, however, there can only be one answer – Starvis Ellis, one of the five lead motorcycle officers, who claimed to have seen what he presumed later was a bullet impact along the south curb concurrent with the first shot.

Ellis was the left-most (closest to the south Elm curb) motorcycle rider of five riding in formation in front of Chief Curry’s car. The four other lead motorcycle officers were to his right.

During a 1978 House Select Committee on Assassinations (HSCA) interview, fifteen years after the fact, Ellis reported:
“[That he was] some one hundred to one hundred and twenty-five feet in front of JFK’s limousine alongside* the first vehicle** when the first shot sounded.” [9]

[JFK Blog Editor’s note – *His group was actually in front of Curry’s car, **which was the third vehicle in the motorcade.]

“He remembers they had started down the hill on Elm Street and were preparing for the different tempo. He turned to give the signal for increased speed for more spacing, as the first shot was fired.” [10]
In other words, Ellis turned to his right, toward the other lead motorcycle officers which means he was facing away from the south curb.
“He knew some type of weapon had been discharged inasmuch as he saw the debris scatter from the edge of the curb (emphasis added),” the HSCA report continues. “His first impression was that of a fragment grenade. He looked right at JFK, who had turned and looked over his right shoulder. As the President turned back, the Governor started to turn the same way but the next shot was fired and the President seemed to slouch down and Connally flinched. The third shot blew the President’s head up. Chaney came up to his position, advising that the President had been shot. Ellis advised the Chief who ordered the hospital run. During this period of time, he saw his wife’s niece, her husband and their two small children on the grassy knoll. They pushed the children to the ground and covered them with their bodies.” [11]
 In an interview for Larry Sneed’s 1998 book, No More Silence, Ellis recalled more details:
“Midway down Elm I remember waving at my wife’s niece and nephew, Bill and Gayle Newman, who had apparently come out to see the President. About the time I started on a curve on Elm, I had turned to my right to give signals to open up the intervals since we were fixing to get on the freeway a short distance away. That’s all I had on my mind.

“Just as I turned around, then the first shot went off. It hit back there. (emphasis added) I hadn’t been able to see back where Chaney was because Curry was there, but I could see where the shot came down into the south side of the curb. It looked like it hit the concrete or grass there (emphasis added) in just a flash, and a bunch of junk flew up like a white or gray color dust or smoke coming out of the concrete (emphasis added). Just seeing it in a split second like that I thought, ‘Oh, my God!’

“I thought there had been some people hit back there as people started falling (emphasis added). I thought either some crank had thrown a big ‘Baby John’ firecracker and scared them causing them to jump down or else a fragmentation grenade had hit all those people. In any case, they went down! Actually, I think they threw themselves down in anticipation of another shot.

“As soon as I saw that, I turned around and rode up beside the chief’s car and BANG! BANG! two more shots went off: three shots in all! The sounds were all clear and loud and sounded about the same. From where I was, they sounded like they were coming from around where the tall tree was in front of that building.

“Of course, I’m forming an opinion based on where I saw that stuff hit the street (emphasis added), so I knew that it had to come from up that way, and I assumed that all the others came from the same place. But all the time I was moving up, I still didn’t know it was shots until Chaney rode up beside me (emphasis added) and said, “Sarge, the President’s hit!” I asked him how bad, and he replied, “Hell, he’s dead! Man, his head’s blown off!” [12]
Some observations worth noting: First, Ellis’ recollection were recorded fifteen to thirty-five years after the assassination, long after the influence of outside impressions would have taken root.

Second, much of what Ellis says he observed in both interviews doesn’t seem possible given his position in the motorcade, but rather, was more likely gleaned from other accounts and photographs heard and/or seen over the intervening years.

For instance, how could Ellis have seen the curb impact after turning to his right (away from the curb) given his physical location?

In addition, all of his observations about activities in the presidential car – from 100 to 125 feet away (by his own account) seem remote at best especially given that Chief Curry’s car was between them. Yes, Elm Street is curving behind him, but still it would seem that the distance would preclude much of what Ellis claims to have seen.

Further, he mentions the Newmans, but if he actually saw them hit the ground (which occurred after the third shot, and on the north side of the street) then the first shot strike would have to have been much further east at the head of Elm Street, not down near the location of the sewer cover, which was west of the Newmans’ position.

Finally, a photo of Ellis taken by Mel McIntire, (See: Fig 12) shows Ellis (foreground, right) seemingly oblivious (as are his compatriots) of what has happened, well after they left Dealey Plaza. As a matter of fact, Chaney (whom Ellis says notified him of the shooting, and which Ellis told Sneed he was unaware of until Chaney’s notification) can be seen in the same photo (far background, left – in the shadow of the overpass) – not in a position to notify either Chief Curry or Ellis of the shots being fired and the President being hit.

Fig. 12 Mel McIntire photograph showing Starvis Ellis (far right) entering Stemmons Freeway

In fact, Chaney’s notification of Curry and Ellis is believed to have taken place on the ramp to the Stemmons freeway, shortly after the McIntire image was exposed. The photo shows the motorcycles about to enter the freeway ramp.

Holland is quick to embrace the idea that Ellis is referring to a bullet strike at the sewer cover/turf area near the south curb of Elm Street (what a surprise), yet Ellis’ description doesn’t really say that – he repeatedly mentions the impact being at the curb, the concrete, and the street and only once (with Sneed in 1998) does he add “or grass there.” Ellis died August 10, 2005.

Also, worth noting is the fact that Ellis, who rode on to Parkland Hospital with the motorcade, didn’t direct investigators to the sewer cover/turf area as Holland suggests.

It was Dallas Police Officer J.W. Foster who was stationed on the Triple Overpass at the time of the shooting, and who wandered to the south Elm Street curb area on his own about ten minutes after the shots looking for where any bullets might have hit.

Photos by Jim Murray and William Allen show Foster and Dallas Deputy Sheriff Buddy Walthers investigating the area.

Spectators Wayne and Edna Hartman arrived in the area about the same time and described a one-and-a-half-inch diameter gouged out hole and a track under the turf that extended 18-24 inches. Wayne said the track was in line with the Texas School Book Depository. [13]

Officer Foster later testified that he saw a mark on the concrete sewer cover skirt that he thought was where a bullet had struck and ricocheted into the turf, though no bullet or fragments were found. [14]

Dallas police officers guarded the area and took photos, as Holland points out, however, none of the photographs taken by Murray, Allen, or the police show the bullet mark referred to by Officer Foster; nor was any physical evidence ever found demonstrating conclusively that a bullet had actually struck the concrete skirt, the sewer cover itself, or the adjacent turf as initially believed.

Here, once again, Holland cherry-picks eyewitness testimony that is problematic at best to construct a new reality, one in which a preordained vision – his own – is crystal clear.

Haag on Tague

As far as forensics and Tague’s testimony, Mr. Haag found Holland and DeRonja “over-reaching” – once again.

“Regarding the ‘bullet strike to the Main Street Curb’,” Haag wrote, “One will find little or no mention of the suspected projectile strike to the concrete curb in any of my five AFTE-JFK articles, and for good reason.

“The section of the curb with the defect was not collected until many months later. In the years following the assassination, there have been a number of attacks on the issue of bullet lead analysis. But let’s assume for the moment that it is the result of a portion of a lead core of a WCC 6.5mm Carcano bullet.

“Now have a look at the orientation of this presumed lead transfer in Figure LCH-6 to this response and how it fits the Holland and DeRonja reconstruction diagram. A substantially decelerated bullet or lead core from the previous turf strike would be following a descending path at the location of the curb strike, [yet] the deposit on the curb has a decidedly upward track.

With regard to Tague’s testimony about the sequence of shots and his injury, Haag wrote: “James Tague was uncertain regarding the timing of his minor facial injury, but he has never claimed that it was associated with the first shot.

“Here is some of his testimony from July 23, 1964 on the subject given before the Warren Commission in Volume 7, at page 555:
Mr. LIEBELER. How long after did you feel yourself get hit by anything?

Mr. TAGUE. I felt it at the time, but I didn't associate, didn't make any connection, and ignored it. And after this happened, or maybe the second or third shot, I couldn't tell you definitely--I made no connection. I looked around wondering what was going on, and I recall this. We got to talking, and I recall that something had stinged (sic) me, and then the deputy sheriff looked up and said, "You have blood there on your cheek." That is when we walked back down there.

Mr. LIEBELER. Do you have any idea which bullet might have made that mark?

Mr. TAGUE. I would guess it was either the second or third. I wouldn't say definitely on which one.” [15]
Many years after the fact, in his 2003 book, Truth Withheld: A Survivor’s Story, Tague recalled hearing three shots – the pop of a firecracker, a short delay, followed by the crack of two rifle shots in rapid succession – just as he testified 39-years earlier. It was during the latter two shots that he felt a sting to his face.
“…the first shot sounded like a firecracker going off and then [I recall thinking] what kind of fool would light a firecracker with the President going by, that the police were going to grab him and he was in deep trouble. My thought process at that very moment was logical, not rushed, not excited, and I further remember with these thoughts in my mind that I tried to see into the crowd in front of the Schoolbook Depository whether that was the source of the firecracker, and what was going on there. As I was peering into the crowd to see what was going on, there was… the crack of two rifle shots, no echoes, and only a slight reverberation from the second and third gunshots…" [16]
In Tague’s mind, it couldn’t be clearer, there was a notable delay between hearing the first shot and being stung on the face during the second and third shot interval.

Tague repeated the same sequence of events during NatGeo’s JFK: The Lost Bullet broadcast in 2011.

Of course, Tague’s recollections don’t conform to Holland’s first shot mast arm ricochet scenario. Twisting testimony and recollections into a pretzel, Holland tells us only that Tague was uncertain as to which shot caused the sting to his face, but of course, that’s not entirely true.

One thing that Tague has always been certain about (and Holland studiously avoids mentioning) is that it wasn’t the first shot.
One thing that I have always been positive about is that the first shot was not the shot that hit the curb near me…” Tague wrote in 2003. [17]
According to expert ballistician Luke Haag then, which shot produced a fragment capable of striking the Main Street curb with only enough energy to leave a lead smear, and go on to potentially be responsible for Tague’s minor cheek injury?

“So, that there is no mistake, let’s employ The Scientific Method,” Haag writes in his rebuttal to Holland.

“I have repeatedly demonstrated that a shallow, grazing strike to the steel support mast experiences only a few degrees of deflection and cannot come anywhere close to the 40+ degree directional change to go directly to the curb strike [see MGH Figures 1 & 2], or the 36+ degree directional change to go directly to the turf strike near the manhole cover [see MGH-3].

“Moreover, the impact necessary to create these sorts of angular deflections require the bullet to make a deep and destructive contact with the steel support mast which will also result in massive fragmentation and velocity loss of the bullet.

“The bullet which struck President Kennedy in the back and then passed through Governor Connally did not fragment, and became the well-known “pristine” bullet.

“This leaves the President’s head wound from which only two-thirds of the fragmented bullet was recovered. One of these fragments consisted of an empty copper jacket fragment (CE569). This item is shown in LCH-7. (See: Fig.13)

Fig.13 LCH-7
PORTION of a 6.5mm WCC COPPER JACKET sans LEAD CORE

Those portions of the bullet that cleared the windshield of the presidential limousine would have been headed directly toward James Tague’s position. [18]

So, Haag makes clear that even if the traffic mast arm was struck by Oswald’s first shot (and remember there is no physical evidence to indicate that it actually was) it could not have been deflected to the sewer cover skirt, or even further to the Main Street curb, as Holland claims.

The single-bullet that passed through Kennedy and Connally and was later recovered and certainly could not have been responsible for Tague’s injury.

The only remaining possibility is that a fragment from the Kennedy headshot cleared the limousine windshield, struck the Main Street curb (leaving only a smear of lead), and ricocheted to produce Tague’s minor facial injury.

This is also what the 1964 Warren Commission suggested had occurred based on a simple process of elimination. No twisted physical laws, cherry-picked testimony, or hocus-pocus necessary.

Magic bullets and beans

It is becoming increasingly impossible (or perhaps it has already become impossible) for Max Holland to admit that what started as an interesting idea worthy of exploration, and possibly a new theory on which to hang his long-promised book on the assassination, has become a farcical joke as transparent as the Emperor’s new clothes and as phony as Jack’s magic beans.

Holland has managed to create a new magic bullet, one as silly and illogical as the one that Dr. Wecht imagined to have hopped, skipped, or jumped out of the presidential limousine to avoid the reality of the single-bullet theory.

And let’s not forget that even if Holland’s theory was true, it doesn’t move the assassination story one-inch in any direction – Oswald still has plenty of time to murder Kennedy alone with three shots from his high-powered rifle – whether he had 8.3 seconds (as nearly everyone believes) or 11 seconds (as Holland prefers) to fire two additional shots after his first.

Unlike these authors, who have had their fill of Holland-inspired double-talk, forensic scientists like Luke Haag still see dim hope.

“Sorry gentlemen,” Haag wrote in summation to his latest rebuttal, “[your first shot ricochet theory] is ballistically absurd. But I will make you this offer.

If you will provide the proper WCC 6.5x52mm Carcano ammunition and come to Arizona, I will duplicate all of my testing on this subject of a 6.5mm Carcano bullet striking/grazing a steel pole of your choosing at no cost to you with a properly configured M91/38 Carcano rifle. These tests would include using the proper standoff distance, Doppler radar tracking of the bullets, downrange witness panels for documenting the post-impact flight of the bullet or bullet fragments followed by laser measurements of the deflection angles. You are most welcome to photograph and videotape this testing which will take 1 to 2 days to complete.” (emphasis in original)

It is an offer Holland shouldn’t refuse.

Ironically, Holland concludes his own critique of Haag’s work in his AFTE Journal Letter-to-the-Editor thusly:
“Belatedly explaining how the first shot missed is admittedly a difficult task. At a minimum though, it requires a thorough understanding and incorporation of all reliable evidence, along with a willingness to engage in empirical testing to prove or disprove hypotheses. Facts cannot be discounted because they are inconvenient and contradict a preferred hypothesis ...”
 We couldn’t agree more. And please, no more magic bullets. [END]

Source: AFTE Journal – Volume 48 Number 4 – Fall 2016

Source Notes

[1] Testimony of Dr. Cyril Wecht, Transcript of On Trial, July 25, 1986, pp.768-769
[2] DeRonja, Frank S., and Holland, Max, A Technical Investigation Pertaining to the First Shot Fired in the JFK Assassination, Journal, Association for Crime Scene Reconstruction, Vol 20, May 2016, pp.9-33
[3] Author’s Response: “The Missing Bullet in the JFK Assassination,” by L. Haag, AFTE J, Vol47, No2, Spring 2015, pp 67-78 (AFTE Journal – Volume 48 Number 4 – Fall 2016 pages 202-213)
[4] Haag, Lucien C., “The Missing Bullet in the JFK Assassination” (AFTE Journal, 2015 Volume 47, Number 2, Spring, pages 67-78)
[5] http://jfkfiles.blogspot.com/2015/05/the-shot-that-missed-jfk-new-forensic.html
[6] http://www.washingtondecoded.com/site/2016/11/haag.html
[7] See FBI Special Agent Lyndal Shaneyfelt’s testimony before the Warren Commission regarding the mark on the curb at pages 700-701. See: http://aarclibrary.org/publib/jfk/wc/wcvols/wh15/pdf/WH15_Shaneyfelt.pdf
[8] See Holland and DeRonja Figure 21 from the article in the May 2016 Journal of the Association for Crime Scene Reconstruction
[9] HSCA 180-10108-10193, page 2
[10] Ibid.
[11] Ibid.
[12] Sneed, p.145
[13] CD1518
[14] WCT J.W. Foster, 6H252
[15] WCT James Tague, 7H555
[16] Tague, James T., “Truth Withheld: A Survivor’s Story,” Excel Digital Press, Inc., Dallas, Texas, October, 2003, pp.135-137
[17] Ibid., p.137
[18] See Figures 23 and 24 on page 77 of Haag’s “Missing Bullet” article, AFTE Journal, Vol. 47, No. 2, Spring 2015, pp. 67-78