If you believe the Parkland doctors saw what they claimed to have seen on Kennedy, you have to start with that in determining what happened at the autopsy.
So, Kennedy had that big blow-out wound in the back of his head. I accept that categorically based on what these doctors said.
But obviously, it was not present at the autopsy. One can't believe Humes and Boswell were involved in an outright fraud of that magnitude. At least, I can't. There were too many people standing around that autopsy table. The idea that there was a posterior blow-out wound present that everyone could see but which they all agreed to lie about it is untenable. It is preposterous. Obviously, something was done to make it not be there. And it had to have been done before the official autopsy began.
Of course, that isn't my idea, and I am not trying to take credit for it. I wouldn't dream of doing that. I suppose that David Lifton, author of Best Evidence, is the most frequently cited author associated with the idea.
However, James Douglass, in JFK and the Unspeakable, also addresses it. And at length, he looks at the life of John Leggett, a Dallas-area mortician who was heralded as being the most gifted and talented body restorer there was. This is what Charles Smith said about Liggett in The Men Who Killed Kennedy:
"If he had to build a lip or nose or build an eye orbit or ear he may work all night long doing the re-constructive work on someone that had been maybe shot in the face or automobile accident. He was the best, he would tell you he was the best, and when he finished it the families would tell him he was the best."
Leggett's ex-wife Lois said he received an urgent phone call on November 22 and was ordered to go to Parkland Hospital. He called his wife from Parkland and told her that the President had died, and now he had work to do. Then he was gone; he went missing for 24 hours.
And when he got back, he was wired. He was paranoid. He was scared for his life and for all their lives. He took the whole family to Corpus Christie to hide. And then when Ruby killed Oswald, he experienced relief, and they went back home.
But for Leggett, it was all downhill. He never recovered mentally. His marriage ended, and he eventually got arrested for attempted murder. Then, he reportedly was shot to death by a policeman while trying to escape. It's bizarre. It's freaky. It's weird.
But, is the essence of Leggett's story- that he worked on JFK's body to repair the blow-out wound in back- true? I presume Jim Douglass thinks so since he included it in Unspeakable.
Look: we know it happened because of what the numerous doctors and nurses at Parkland said and showed us. Apparently, Leggett was the best known mortician in the area, and the idea that his wife and step-daughter made up that whole story is preposterous. I say the Leggett story is true.
But, whether you believe the Leggett story or not doesn't matter. What matters is that we have over a dozen reliable, first-hand, medical witnesses who said that Kennedy had a blow-out wound in the back of his head. These were doctors and nurses- highly trained professionals- who could not possibly have been mistaken about what they saw. And just as certain is the fact that that wound was not present at the autopsy. And I say that not because of the photos because photos can be faked. I say it because there were too many people standing around that autopsy table, including JFK's own physician, Dr. George Burkley, who was an Admiral. The idea that every single one of them, including Burkley, would have participated in such a fraud is preposterous.
So, this is one of those ipso-facto situations. Because we know "A" is true, and because we know "C" is true, we can therefore infer that "B" is true, where "B" is the pre-autopsy in which JFK's body was repaired and restored as needed.
Besides, you know Dr. Malcolm Perry didn't make as big an incision on Kennedy's throat for the tracheotomy as what was found at the autopsy, and that also proves that JFK's body was tampered with between Perry and Humes.
There was a pre-autopsy. It is beyond doubt.
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