02-12-2009, 10:40 AM
Doug Horne was on Coast to Coast AM with George Noory last night.
George devoted the hour to Doug and guest Jim Marrs.
Doug ran down his realization that alteration to the skull was done at Bethesda prior to photographs which then showed the intact occipital.
He explained that Parkland witnesses were correct in describing the cerebellar damage, and that Bethesda witnesses did not dispute that--Robert Blakey to the contrary notwithstanding.
A caller said a man in jail had confessed, and Jim Marrs said that would be Jimmy Files. Files is in Joliet for killing a cop; that Files said he was curbed by an unmarked car and ambushed by four cops in an attempted hit.
Regarding the integrity of the Zapruder film, the chapter The Case for Zapruder Film Tampering: The Blink Pattern by Mike Pincher, J.D., and Roy L. Schaeffer on pages 221-238 of Assassination Science edited by James A. Fetzer, Ph.D., is compelling.
Does the film show the limo stopping. Marrs said "something like fifty people saw it stop. I asked Ralph Yarborough and he said, 'When you throw a basketball in the air, it goes up, then comes down--did it stop?'"
George devoted the hour to Doug and guest Jim Marrs.
Doug ran down his realization that alteration to the skull was done at Bethesda prior to photographs which then showed the intact occipital.
He explained that Parkland witnesses were correct in describing the cerebellar damage, and that Bethesda witnesses did not dispute that--Robert Blakey to the contrary notwithstanding.
A caller said a man in jail had confessed, and Jim Marrs said that would be Jimmy Files. Files is in Joliet for killing a cop; that Files said he was curbed by an unmarked car and ambushed by four cops in an attempted hit.
Regarding the integrity of the Zapruder film, the chapter The Case for Zapruder Film Tampering: The Blink Pattern by Mike Pincher, J.D., and Roy L. Schaeffer on pages 221-238 of Assassination Science edited by James A. Fetzer, Ph.D., is compelling.
Does the film show the limo stopping. Marrs said "something like fifty people saw it stop. I asked Ralph Yarborough and he said, 'When you throw a basketball in the air, it goes up, then comes down--did it stop?'"

