09-07-2013, 06:25 PM
Bernice
Your photo number seven above, the 1968 aerial shot of the parking lot at the South Knoll, shows an excellent possibility for just such a station wagon as is seen parked there to have been backed up to the treeline facing the motorcade.
Shoot and scoot.
A photo taken moments afterwards would of course show no vehicle there. A silenced weapon wasn't heard by anyone.
A parallel to the second gun in the Ambassador pantry--which is indicated by Thomas Noguchi's analysis of the four shots at Robert F. Kennedy having come from behind and point blank.
Analysis by Anthony DeFiore and Sherry Feister indicate the throat and head shots came from in front, and this translates to the location shown in this photo.
(Oh, I forgot--a church lady was eating her lunch there, feeding the pigeons, and noticed nothing; she saw nothink.)
Your photo number seven above, the 1968 aerial shot of the parking lot at the South Knoll, shows an excellent possibility for just such a station wagon as is seen parked there to have been backed up to the treeline facing the motorcade.
Shoot and scoot.
A photo taken moments afterwards would of course show no vehicle there. A silenced weapon wasn't heard by anyone.
A parallel to the second gun in the Ambassador pantry--which is indicated by Thomas Noguchi's analysis of the four shots at Robert F. Kennedy having come from behind and point blank.
Analysis by Anthony DeFiore and Sherry Feister indicate the throat and head shots came from in front, and this translates to the location shown in this photo.
(Oh, I forgot--a church lady was eating her lunch there, feeding the pigeons, and noticed nothing; she saw nothink.)