08-10-2014, 07:03 PM
From memory...
Dr. Earl Rose did a thorough autopsy on Oswald in 1963. He made meticulous notes about scars and other things, and included a precise weight of the brain, which most people say can only be determined by removing it from the skull.... which necessitates a craniotomy, although Rose didn't say that specifically in the autopsy report.
Mortician Paul Groody was present at both the original burial and the 1981 exhumation. Immediately after the exhumation, Groody seemed to believe it was the same man he originally buried. But that evening or the next day, he said, he remembered the craniotomy and seemed absolutely certain the man he re-examined had an intact skull. He even wrote a book about his observations, though I can't recall the name.
The real kicker for me though is that "Lee Harvey Oswald" (American-born LEE Oswald) while in the Marine Corps shot himself just above his left elbow with a derringer pistol. The slug remained in his arm for some days, until doctors made a separate incision in the back of his arm to remove the bullet. Both Rose and Groody clearly indicated there were no scars on Oswald's upper left arm.
Dr. Earl Rose did a thorough autopsy on Oswald in 1963. He made meticulous notes about scars and other things, and included a precise weight of the brain, which most people say can only be determined by removing it from the skull.... which necessitates a craniotomy, although Rose didn't say that specifically in the autopsy report.
Mortician Paul Groody was present at both the original burial and the 1981 exhumation. Immediately after the exhumation, Groody seemed to believe it was the same man he originally buried. But that evening or the next day, he said, he remembered the craniotomy and seemed absolutely certain the man he re-examined had an intact skull. He even wrote a book about his observations, though I can't recall the name.
The real kicker for me though is that "Lee Harvey Oswald" (American-born LEE Oswald) while in the Marine Corps shot himself just above his left elbow with a derringer pistol. The slug remained in his arm for some days, until doctors made a separate incision in the back of his arm to remove the bullet. Both Rose and Groody clearly indicated there were no scars on Oswald's upper left arm.