It contains 31 frames from the film, but they left out the most important ones- the most incriminating ones. There are two huge gaps in which they skipped over portions of the film. The first gap goes from frame 162 to 217. Note that they published grainy black and white frames in the magazine.
So, that's the last frame they show before the limo is on the other side of the sign. But, in the film we have today, he waves at the spectators before he passes behind the sign. So, why didn't they include that? You know that I'm a screenwriter, and that wave at the crowd is a fantastic story element. Nobody would leave that out if they had it. They showed it in October '64. So, why didn't they show it in November '63? It's the most important frame prior to him disappearing behind the sign. I'm thinking that perhaps they didn't have it in November, that they had to fabricate it.
What comes next in the existing film is JFK puts his hand over his face. Nobody talks about it, but that's what's there.
The above isn't real. JFK didn't do that. He must have had a distraught look on his face. He was shot in the back although just with an ice dart. But, he was definitely not having a good time, so they covered up his face with that hand. I can understand why they didn't publish it- with or without a hand. The next frame they published was Z-217.
You notice that this frame doesn't show anything. They might as well have waited until we could see JFK or at least Connally. So, they probably published this just to reduce the size of the span that they were leaving out.
The other big gap occurs from Z-270 to Z-322.
That's right; it goes from one to the other. And that means they left out Brehm and his son, plus Jean Hill and Mary Moorman, and most importantly, they left out the fatal head shot.
Now, why would they leave all that out? And if they had frame 313 as we know it today with the splotch of blood over the side of his face at the instant of impact, why wouldn't they include it? It must be that they didn't have it. As I have been saying, that must have been concocted.
All the rest of what they published shows Jackie climbing onto the back of the limo. The final published frame shows Clint Hill just starting to climb aboard. So, it's mostly just Jackie on the back of the limo. 10 published frames of Jackie on the back of the limo.
They never mentioned Zapruder or anything about the source of the film. In their narrative, they mention JFK waving at the crowd until he disappeared behind the sign, but again, they didn't show it. Their writing about it shows that they wanted to sell it. So again, their not publishing any frames of him waving suggests strongly that they didn't have them yet. Either that, or his waving came much earlier, long before he reached the sign, which they cut out, and they had to do some very complicated film surgery, but after November 29.
I have said many times that they did not do all the alterations to the Zapruder film in a weekend or a week. By October '64, they had a frame of JFK waving. They also had a frame that included Brehm. And they also published Z-313 with the red splotch in October '64. That should tell you that they didn't have that frame in November '63. If they could publish it in October '64, why couldn't they publish it in November '63?
So, they left out two huge swaths of the film that we have today. But, I'm sure they already did a lot of work to it. JFK still gets to the freeway sign too soon. So, that was a swath they cut out for good. It was never coming back.
This is a great find because it shows their criminal intent to manipulate their readers and edit the story of what actually happened. And it also proves that other alterations were made after this.
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