Friday, October 25, 2013

We know that a large portion of the west side of the doorway was not visible to Altgens or his camera. Just think: most of Doorman's right shoulder was covered up even though he was standing in the center of the doorway. This image demonstrates what Altgens could see and what he could not see.



I have installed Roy Lewis in the image as he appears, and where he appears, in Wiegman. As you can see, he is located on the invisible side to Altgens. So, if Roy Lewis was located the same in Altgens as he was in Wiegman, meaning right next to the west wall, then he couldn't be seen and he couldn't be photographed. Perhaps a little bit of him pierced the curtain, but not much, and certainly not his face.

Roy Lewis heard the gunshots, and unlike Lovelady and Frazier and others, he did not think: firecrackers. He thought: guns. And he also thought that they were coming from the west, the Grassy Knoll. So, it makes perfect sense that he would be looking west as we see him doing.

How much time was there between the Altgens photo and the start of the Wiegman film? They were so close in time that there is debate about which came first. There may have been just a second between them. Therefore, is it reasonable to think that what we are seeing of Roy Lewis in Altgens is valid when it is so different from what we see in Wiegman? And when we add the fact that Doorman's cuff is in front of Roy Lewis' neck, there is even more reason to doubt it.



What we see of Roy Lewis in Wiegman is definitely valid. It goes on for 4 seconds. He is riveted the whole time on what was going on to the west. He is turned west; he is looking west. And he is against the west wall. If it's true that Wiegman started before Altgens, it means that Wiegman subsumes Altgens, and therefore, the Roy Lewis who is turned east in Altgens must be false.

I believe that when you put it all together, meaning: the curtain of invisibility which excluded Lewis to Altgens' view, the cuff of Doorman anomally overlapping Lewis' neck, the testimony of Roy Lewis that he heard gunshots from the west, and the very close temporal association of Altgens and Wiegman, it compels the conclusion that the Roy Lewis in Altgens is bogus. They pasted him in.

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