05-07-2011, 09:34 PM
(This post was last modified: 05-07-2011, 10:47 PM by Betty Chruscielski.)
If the throat wound was an entrance wound, where did the bullet go? It pierced the trachea and the doctors at Parkland used it to perform a tracheostomy. It entered the spinal column as evidenced of the President's decorticate posturing. The doctors at the autopsy were not allowed to follow the tract of the bullet. Is the bullet still in the spinal column?
The back wound was an entrance wound. At the WC the Parkland doctors were asked if they followed the tract of the bullet. They answered, no they hadn't, that it wasn't a priority.
McCloy asks the question in a letter to Rankin:
Why is there no citation of authority with regard to the wound in the president's back and its path through his body?" , http://www.jfklancer.com/McCloy-Rankin.html
Is the bullet still in the President's back?
Regarding the back wound, the autopsy states the back wound is supraclavicular-above the clavicle. It doesn't go through any bone or lung just muscle. Yet when I look at autopsy photos or see demonstrations with those sticks that follow bullet trajectory, none of them have the back wound as supraclavicular.
Is the bullet from the back wound still in his back /neck muscle (or skeleton)?
What velocity/force did these bullets have if they were able to entrance the body but not exit?
The back wound was an entrance wound. At the WC the Parkland doctors were asked if they followed the tract of the bullet. They answered, no they hadn't, that it wasn't a priority.
McCloy asks the question in a letter to Rankin:
Why is there no citation of authority with regard to the wound in the president's back and its path through his body?" , http://www.jfklancer.com/McCloy-Rankin.html
Is the bullet still in the President's back?
Regarding the back wound, the autopsy states the back wound is supraclavicular-above the clavicle. It doesn't go through any bone or lung just muscle. Yet when I look at autopsy photos or see demonstrations with those sticks that follow bullet trajectory, none of them have the back wound as supraclavicular.
Is the bullet from the back wound still in his back /neck muscle (or skeleton)?
What velocity/force did these bullets have if they were able to entrance the body but not exit?