JFK ASSASSINATION: THE FRONT SHOT
The long neglected & obscured facts surrounding the FRONT SHOTS fired at President John F. Kennedy from the SOUTH KNOLL AREA of Dealey Plaza are presented and discussed.
Monday, December 2, 2013
BLOCKBUSTER: LETTER TO MARIE FONZI FROM ANTONIO VECIANA
THIS LETTER IS THE LINK TO EVERYTHING. PLEASE SPREAD THE WORD.
ALL ROADS LEAD BACK TO CONSPIRACY NOW TO THE CIA, MAFIA, CUBANS, LBJ.
http://www.opednews.com/articles/A-Death-Bed-Declaration-C-by-Jim-Lesar-Conspiracy_Federal-Agency-CIA_JFK-Assassination-131201-910.html
IT IS "BACK TO BACON" & THE CONSPIRACY IS REAL
VECIANA (ALPHA 66 / CIA) LINKS HIMSELF WITH THE ABOVE LETTER TO DAVID ATLEE PHILLIPS. DAVID ATLEE PHILLIPS IS DIRECTLY LINKED TO OSWALD IN DALLAS IN FALL 1963 and NEW ORLEANS CONTACT. E. HOWARD HUNT DECLARATION AT HIS DEATH TO HIS SON ST. JOHN HUNT further CORROBORATES THE FACT THAT PHILLIPS AND VECIANA ALONG WITH DAVID MORALES, CORD MEYER, WILLIAM HARVEY, FRANK STURGIS, LBJ and LUCIEN SARTI.
Sunday, November 24, 2013
Dr. Donald T. Curtis confirms the front entrance wound in JFK's throat
Another Doctor in Trauma Room One with President Kennedy on November 22, 1963 attests to the fact that the wound in JFK's throat was an entrance wound! There was a second shooter from the front of the president.
Texas doctor tried to save Kennedy's life
By Jon Mark BeilueMorris News Service – updated Saturday, November 23, 2013 - 11:05pm
A surgery was scheduled for the afternoon, and Don Curtis thought it
best to get a bite to eat in the Parkland Hospital cafeteria while he
could. At about 12:30 p.m., the same ahead seemed routine, or as routine
as it could be in a hospital.
Curtis, who grew up in Amarillo, was 26. He was a resident in oral and maxillofacial surgery at Parkland in Dallas.
But Curtis soon felt the weight of history was thrust upon him.
“I saw what I thought was the president’s car, and it looked like it had just arrived at the ER entrance,” Curtis said. “I was walking down the hall, and a policeman ran up to me and said, ‘Are you a doctor?’ I said, ‘Yes.’ He said, ‘Hurry, come with me.’”
In a matter of seconds, about 12:45 p.m. on Nov. 22, 1963, young Dr. Curtis was in Trauma Room 1 along with Dr. Charles Carrico and a nurse futilely attempting to save the life of President John F. Kennedy.
Curtis didn’t have time to be overwhelmed by the enormity of the moment. He didn’t have time for anxiety. All he could do was be a doctor.
Carrico was at the president’s head. He placed an endotracheal tube down the president’s throat and applied a respirator into the tube to maintain artificial respiration.
Curtis then unbuttoned Kennedy’s bloody shirt and saw what he was certain was a bullet entrance wound in the pretracheal area of the throat. There was large swelling and blood on the president’s neck.
Curtis then moved toward Kennedy’s ankle to perform a cutdown, where an incision is made and a vein is dissected for a catheter.
“I pulled the president’s pants leg up and saw a piece of his brain and that gave me a clue his prognosis was not good,” Curtis said.
By then, the trauma room was filled with every senior doctor as they watched their colleagues work on the president.
Another doctor stepped in to replace Dr. Kemp Clark, a neurosurgeon who’d been working on Kennedy. He pulled up the president’s head to examine the back. Then came the words that will always stay with Curtis.
“He said, ‘Stop. Stop resuscitation. This is incompatible with life.’”
The room was quiet.
“No one knew what to say,” Curtis said. “We just stood there looking at each other.”
With all the hospital chiefs there, Curtis — a first-year resident — thought it best to now excuse himself. But Jackie Kennedy, the presidents’s wife, blocked his exit.
So he remained as each chief examined the fatal head wound and left. Curtis, too, said he “got a good look at it.” The cerebellum of the brain was gone.
Curtis went to tell the patient scheduled for afternoon surgery it was postponed. He made his rounds and then went home. In a meeting the following Monday, one day after assassin Lee Harvey Oswald was killed, the doctors there came to an understanding they would mention as little of what they had seen as possible.
That is until President Lyndon Johnson put together the Warren Commission, a group charged with investigating the assassination. In short time, Curtis had a pre-interview with special counsel Arlen Specter.
To Curtis, it seemed the future Pennsylvania senator was trying to sway, if not intimidate, him about Kennedy’s wounds. Curtis, along with several other Parkland doctors, he said, thought the throat wound was an entrance wound, not an exit one, which would mean more than one assassin.
Specter kept pushing that he see it as an exit wound or a hematoma. Curtis believed later that narrative fit the official Warren report version that Oswald acted alone.
Fifty years ago, there were no burgeoning conspiracy controversies. Curtis, familiar with gunshot wounds from his trauma room work at Parkland, just knew what he saw.
In the official deposition with the Warren Commission on March 24, 1964, Specter asked Curtis 57 questions. Specter’s questions danced around the throat wound.
Curtis tried to put that time behind him. He went on to a long and distinguished career in Amarillo.
It unnerved him, he said, that of around 1,400 people called to testify before the Warren Commission, 118 died unusual and sometimes mysterious deaths. Oliver Stone’s 1991 conspiracy-centric movie, “JFK,” didn’t help.
When the Warren Commission released its report in September 1964, more than 80 percent of Americans believed the veracity of its conclusion that Oswald was a lone demented gunman. Since then, conspiracies have sprouted and never gone away. According to a Gallup poll last month, 61 percent of Americans — including Curtis — believe the assassination was a conspiracy, though that’s down from 75 percent in 2003.
There are those who have known Curtis for 40 years who didn’t know his place in history.
Only as the 50th anniversary approached has he broken his silence, first with a civic club or two, then two weeks ago, at an event at West Texas A&M University.
He could be the only living witness to the events in Trauma Room 1 at Parkland on that day a half-century ago. It’s a notion that has impacted him.
“Through the years, it has been of little interest to me,” Curtis said, “but it has become worrisome to me in the last year. It was a terrible event. And it is still worrisome to me that I can’t reconcile my knowledge of what I saw with the findings of the government.”
• Jon Mark Beilue is an AGN Media columnist. He can be reached at jon.beilue@amarillo.com or (806) 345-3318. His blog and video blog appear on amarillo.com.
Curtis, who grew up in Amarillo, was 26. He was a resident in oral and maxillofacial surgery at Parkland in Dallas.
But Curtis soon felt the weight of history was thrust upon him.
“I saw what I thought was the president’s car, and it looked like it had just arrived at the ER entrance,” Curtis said. “I was walking down the hall, and a policeman ran up to me and said, ‘Are you a doctor?’ I said, ‘Yes.’ He said, ‘Hurry, come with me.’”
In a matter of seconds, about 12:45 p.m. on Nov. 22, 1963, young Dr. Curtis was in Trauma Room 1 along with Dr. Charles Carrico and a nurse futilely attempting to save the life of President John F. Kennedy.
Curtis didn’t have time to be overwhelmed by the enormity of the moment. He didn’t have time for anxiety. All he could do was be a doctor.
Carrico was at the president’s head. He placed an endotracheal tube down the president’s throat and applied a respirator into the tube to maintain artificial respiration.
Curtis then unbuttoned Kennedy’s bloody shirt and saw what he was certain was a bullet entrance wound in the pretracheal area of the throat. There was large swelling and blood on the president’s neck.
Curtis then moved toward Kennedy’s ankle to perform a cutdown, where an incision is made and a vein is dissected for a catheter.
“I pulled the president’s pants leg up and saw a piece of his brain and that gave me a clue his prognosis was not good,” Curtis said.
By then, the trauma room was filled with every senior doctor as they watched their colleagues work on the president.
Another doctor stepped in to replace Dr. Kemp Clark, a neurosurgeon who’d been working on Kennedy. He pulled up the president’s head to examine the back. Then came the words that will always stay with Curtis.
“He said, ‘Stop. Stop resuscitation. This is incompatible with life.’”
The room was quiet.
“No one knew what to say,” Curtis said. “We just stood there looking at each other.”
With all the hospital chiefs there, Curtis — a first-year resident — thought it best to now excuse himself. But Jackie Kennedy, the presidents’s wife, blocked his exit.
So he remained as each chief examined the fatal head wound and left. Curtis, too, said he “got a good look at it.” The cerebellum of the brain was gone.
Curtis went to tell the patient scheduled for afternoon surgery it was postponed. He made his rounds and then went home. In a meeting the following Monday, one day after assassin Lee Harvey Oswald was killed, the doctors there came to an understanding they would mention as little of what they had seen as possible.
That is until President Lyndon Johnson put together the Warren Commission, a group charged with investigating the assassination. In short time, Curtis had a pre-interview with special counsel Arlen Specter.
To Curtis, it seemed the future Pennsylvania senator was trying to sway, if not intimidate, him about Kennedy’s wounds. Curtis, along with several other Parkland doctors, he said, thought the throat wound was an entrance wound, not an exit one, which would mean more than one assassin.
Specter kept pushing that he see it as an exit wound or a hematoma. Curtis believed later that narrative fit the official Warren report version that Oswald acted alone.
Fifty years ago, there were no burgeoning conspiracy controversies. Curtis, familiar with gunshot wounds from his trauma room work at Parkland, just knew what he saw.
In the official deposition with the Warren Commission on March 24, 1964, Specter asked Curtis 57 questions. Specter’s questions danced around the throat wound.
Curtis tried to put that time behind him. He went on to a long and distinguished career in Amarillo.
It unnerved him, he said, that of around 1,400 people called to testify before the Warren Commission, 118 died unusual and sometimes mysterious deaths. Oliver Stone’s 1991 conspiracy-centric movie, “JFK,” didn’t help.
When the Warren Commission released its report in September 1964, more than 80 percent of Americans believed the veracity of its conclusion that Oswald was a lone demented gunman. Since then, conspiracies have sprouted and never gone away. According to a Gallup poll last month, 61 percent of Americans — including Curtis — believe the assassination was a conspiracy, though that’s down from 75 percent in 2003.
There are those who have known Curtis for 40 years who didn’t know his place in history.
Only as the 50th anniversary approached has he broken his silence, first with a civic club or two, then two weeks ago, at an event at West Texas A&M University.
He could be the only living witness to the events in Trauma Room 1 at Parkland on that day a half-century ago. It’s a notion that has impacted him.
“Through the years, it has been of little interest to me,” Curtis said, “but it has become worrisome to me in the last year. It was a terrible event. And it is still worrisome to me that I can’t reconcile my knowledge of what I saw with the findings of the government.”
• Jon Mark Beilue is an AGN Media columnist. He can be reached at jon.beilue@amarillo.com or (806) 345-3318. His blog and video blog appear on amarillo.com.
Saturday, November 23, 2013
IN 3 INTERVIEWS AT WFAA, BILL NEWMAN STATED THAT THE SHOTS AT JFK CAME FROM THE GRASSY KNOLL "THE SHOTS CAME FROM BEHIND US."
BILL NEWMAN IS SEEN AT THE MID RIGHT OF THE ABOVE PHOTO NEXT TO THE THREE POLICE MOTORCYCLE RIDERS (THREE HELMETS SEEN) NO MORE THAN 10 FEET FROM JFK DURING THE FATAL SHOTS.
Bill Newman
testified that the “shots” came from BEHIND US
“over our heads”. Bill Newman did testify on television
immediately after the assassination that he believed that the first shot at the
President was the one that caused JFK to “jump up in his seat”. Then he said, “I don’t know who was hit
first.” That is a strange comment
because in the Z film, first, Kennedy is obviously hit first before Connally,
and second, if Bill Newman stated in his first interview(s) that there were two
shots (with one being the fatal head shot) then how could he be questioning
“who was hit first.” (?)
Nevertheless, Bill Newman said about
the FIRST SHOT AT THE PRESIDENT, “I think it came from the same location (both
the first and third shot came from behind Bill Newman).” Newman stated that both of the shots came
from behind him on “knoll”.
Bill Newman is a very powerful witness
to the JFK Assassination. He stood only
10 to 15 feet from the President at the moment of the fatal head shot. Newman said, “I think it (first shot) came
from the same location (as the 2nd and fatal head shot).” The “it”
that he is referring to is the first shot that hit the President in the throat. The “same location” is that he is referring
to are both of the (2) shots that hit the President which he says came from
behind him at “the same location” on the “knoll”. The only doubt from Newman is that he says
“I think it came from the same location.”
It is a doubt, but it is very hard to refute his claim….HOWEVER,
This is an interview of the Newmans on
television.
This
is a first and second interview in the studio with Bill Newman and his wife
Gayle at WFAA TV with Jay Watson (the Newmans change seating after 1st
interview);
(1)http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ggKineOWIww (Bill is interviewed
twice about the shots) & (2) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3fPpLegSn1k
In
the both interviews, Jay Watson stands and then pulls in a chair to sit, but
Bill & Gayle Newman exchange seats.
Why did Watson have to re-create for television his movement to pull in
a chair to the interview? He did it
twice. Was Watson attempting to create
television scenarios that could be spliced together and used for some other
purpose? It appears to be very odd behavior.
But it does seem to be choreographed.
During
the above interview, Bill Newman states that he bases his belief that the first
shot at the President came from behind him because:
Newman
states in the interview, “I base that (the first shot) primarily on the third
shot, from what I saw of the side of the President’s head coming off, and from
the sound of the rifle, the report of the rifle.” Both Bill & Gayle Newman state that the
first shot sounded like a “firecracker”.
Gayle Newman said that she thought both a firecracker going off and the
President rearing up in his seat were both a “gag” by the President. She stated that the whole thing was a “gag”
by the President.
Further,
Bill Newman was 10 to 15 feet from the President when JFK was hit at Z313. His testimony is vital to this paper, this
case and the conspiracy being proven.
Unfortunately,
Bill Newman makes two statements that discount his eyewitness testimony. The first one is (noted above) where he says
that he bases his testimony of the direction of the first shot at JFK from the
wound that he witnessed to the President’s head coming from the third
shot. It is not an a priori statement of
fact from Bill Newman that the first shot came from behind both he and his
wife, in and of itself. His reliance on
where the third shot came from to locate in his mind and words where the first
shot came from lends his testimony to being questionable.
Second,
in interviews years later, Mr. Newman states that the first two shots came as,
“(he pounds his fist twice) boom, boom, like that.” (Jesse Ventura; TruTv
interview) He infers that the shots came one on top of the other in time and
sound. Then, in the same Ventura
interview, Bill Newman states that a third shot was fired when the presidential
limousine came right in front of his family Z313. In his initial interviews on November 22, 1963,
he repeatedly stated that there was only two shots. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4srCA_Pe5FU
Unfortunately,
in comparison with her husband’s testimony, Mrs. Gayle Newman, during her first
interview immediately after the assassination, stated that JFK was hit with the
first shot and Governor Connally was hit by the second shot. She then stated that JFK was hit in the head
with a third shot. When Gayle Newman is interviewed in a complete interview,
she is alone and holding her son James who has removed his jacket. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3fPpLegSn1k Bill Newman stated
in another television interview take with Jay Watson on that day of the
assassination that he wasn’t sure who got hit first. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ggKineOWIww One can tell that it
is another take of an interview because both Newman and his wife have exchanged
children and one of his children has removed his jacket.
[Many years later, Bill Newman stated that the
first two shots, (“boom, boom… from Ventura interview) hit both JFK and
Connally]Bill Newman bases his initial statement of the first shot location on
the third shot location. However, a
second shot hitting Connally in his back is impossible from the “knoll”
area. Unfortunately in a later interview
at WFAA-TV in the office area of the station and not in the studio, Bill Newman
stated unequivocally that he had only heard two shots and not three: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3fPpLegSn1k Newman states that one shot hit the
President, then there was about “ten seconds” and then the second shot hit the
President. During the office area
interview, the commentator Jay Watson stated again immediately to Bill Newman
that he had heard three shots. As the
interview moved back to the studio, Gayle Newman is interviewed. She has switched children with her husband
and she is now holding James who has removed his jacket (James). Gayle Newman states that she heard and saw
three shots. The first shot hit Kennedy,
the second shot hit Connally and the third shot hit Kennedy in his head.
Unfortunately,
in two separate interview years later (neither being the Ventura interview),
Bill Newman again in both interviews discusses the third shot being at the President’s
head,http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QItg7eEJCxU&http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UpsUD1TXK7M even though he only
discusses two shots at his interviews on the day of the assassination.
The
most difficult part of Bill Newman’s testimony is that he states that he used
the third shot hitting the President in the temple as a reason for stating that
the first shot came from the same location as well. He uses the third shot to justify where the
first shot must have come from
that day. It isn’t as if he is
absolutely sure that the first shot came from the knoll area. He just thinks it did because of where and
what the third shot did to the president’s head when it hit him in the temple.
Author’s note: The
interviewing techniques of Jay Watson of WFAA TV that day are suspicious. The repetitive method that Watson employed
were very strange. For example, Watson
said three times to Bill Newman that he (Newman) was under the viaduct, that
there were shots from different directions, that Newman was on the grass
(Newman corrected him that they were on the curb) and that there were three
shots fired at the President. All the
time Newman was stating that there were only two shots at the President. Watson seemed to be discouraged in his facial
demeanor every time Newman corrected him that he had only heard two shots. Watson also seemed to be discouraged each
time Newman corrected him that he and his family were on the curb of Elm
Street. What is more striking is the
facial expression of grave disappointment by Watson each time Bill Newman
stated that the shots fired at JFK came from ONLY behind him and nowhere else. This point along with the repeated interviews
of Newman at the station and asking them the same questions with the same
inferences and leading guidance towards an answer that he (Watson) wanted seems
to illustrate that Watson was looking to elicit a response from the Newmans
rather than affording them the opportunity to tell their story. Perhaps he was repetitively interviewing them
and suggesting responses to get the Newmans confused so that he could guide
them into a different answer or to discredit them completely (?) Please watch the interviews to discern your
own opinion.
In
another examination of Bill Newman’s words in his TV interviews, it appears
that he states that JFK was looking over to his right hand side after he was
hit by the first shot ~ as Newman states, “To see who shot at him.” In the TV docudrama Trail of Lee Harvey
Oswald, Newman is asked to point and draw a blue line to and surrounding the
position where he believed that a shot was fired at the President. Newman drew a half moon at an area to the
direct behind where Abraham Zapruder was filming. Neither Zapruder nor his secretary Marilyn
Sitzman stated that a shot came from either their own left or right hand side
behind them. However, immediately after
the fatal shot was fired at JFK, Jean Hill testified to the Warren Commission that after
the assassination she watched a man running from the Texas School Book
Depository
towards the picket fence area. This would have been behind Zapruder and Sitzman
and where Newman stated he heard shots coming from. This may be a red herring, but this photo
below shows another man in a plaid shirt running behind the picket fence from
the concrete structure behind Zapruder and Sitzman immediately after the fatal
head shot was fired.
Friday, November 22, 2013
FORMER FRENCH PRESIDENT TODAY! ON FRENCH RADIO: FORD CONFIRMED CONSPIRACY TO HIM IN 1976
A couple of minutes ago on RTL (French Radio) Valery Giscard D'Estaing,
former French President, revealed that back in back in 1976, during an
official trip to the USA, he had a conversation about the JFK
assassination with then-President Gerald Ford.
During this conversation, from a President to another President, Ford admitted that "The Warren Commission didn't do an great job".
According to Giscard D'Estaing, Ford added : " IT WASN'T A LONE ASSASSIN. IT WAS A PLOT. WE KNEW FOR SURE THAT IT WAS A PLOT. BUT WE DIDN'T FIND WHO WAS BEHIND IT"
During this conversation, from a President to another President, Ford admitted that "The Warren Commission didn't do an great job".
According to Giscard D'Estaing, Ford added : " IT WASN'T A LONE ASSASSIN. IT WAS A PLOT. WE KNEW FOR SURE THAT IT WAS A PLOT. BUT WE DIDN'T FIND WHO WAS BEHIND IT"
Thursday, November 21, 2013
DR. JONES CONFIRMS FOR A 3RD TIME! THE FRONT WOUND IN THE THROAT/NECK
IN A THIRD INTERVIEW WITH USA TODAY, DR. RONALD JONES CONFIRMS THE SMALL WOUND IN THE "NECK" ABOVE THE MID LINE.
http://www.usatoday.com/videos/news/nation/2013/11/21/2629517/
http://www.usatoday.com/videos/news/nation/2013/11/21/2629517/
ON PIERS MORGAN LIVE: DR. RONALD JONES CONTINUES TO VERIFY THE FRONT SHOT TO THE THRAOT OF JFK AND THE "LARGE HOLE IN THE BACK OF HIS HEAD"
A special thank you to Bernice Moore for posting this interview on Deep Politics JFK Assassination forum.
THIS IS MORE DEFINITIVE PROOF OF THE LARGE HOLE IN THE BACK OF JFK'S HEAD!
Not only did Dr. Ronald Jones confirm the 1 cm entrance wound in JFK's throat, but he verifies that he saw (In Trauma Room One at Parkland Hospital while looking directly at JFK on the surgery table there)
THE LARGE HOLE IN THE BACK OF PRESIDENT KENNEDY'S HEAD.
http://piersmorgan.blogs.cnn.com/2013/11/13/dr-ronald-jones-on-seeing-jfk-arrive-at-the-hospital-after-being-shot-i-knew-he-had-a-large-wound-in-the-back-of-his-head-and-i-saw-no-evidence-of-life/?iref=allsearch
THIS IS MORE DEFINITIVE PROOF OF THE LARGE HOLE IN THE BACK OF JFK'S HEAD!
Not only did Dr. Ronald Jones confirm the 1 cm entrance wound in JFK's throat, but he verifies that he saw (In Trauma Room One at Parkland Hospital while looking directly at JFK on the surgery table there)
THE LARGE HOLE IN THE BACK OF PRESIDENT KENNEDY'S HEAD.
http://piersmorgan.blogs.cnn.com/2013/11/13/dr-ronald-jones-on-seeing-jfk-arrive-at-the-hospital-after-being-shot-i-knew-he-had-a-large-wound-in-the-back-of-his-head-and-i-saw-no-evidence-of-life/?iref=allsearch
Sunday, November 17, 2013
Dr. Ronald Jones' OUTSTANDING confirmation of the front entrance wound on Face The Nation 11/17/2013
At 3:40 of the video above, Dr. Ronald Jones, chief surgical resident at
Parkland Hospital on 11/22/1963, and now Chairman of Surgery at Baylor University
made a staggering admission in a rather innocent conversation on Face The
Nation with Bob Schieffer on the 11/17/2013 show when he stated, “I saw a small
hole in the President’s throat about ¼ of an inch…before Dr. Perry made a
tracheotomy in the wound in the throat”.
Dr. Jones attested to the fact that Drs. Carrico and Perry were both in
Trauma Room One with him working on the President after the assassination
attempt.
Dr. Carrico attested to the wound collar surrounding the entrance wound in the throat when he said, "(wound collars to entrance wounds are found on ALL entrance wounds) AS THEY ALWAYS ARE" TO HAROLD WEISBERG. See my previous post below.
Dr. Jones attests to the "small wound in the throat about 1/4 of an inch."
THESE DOCTORS ARE NOT LYING!
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