This is a letter I sent to Jim Fetzer, and also Dr. David Mantik, Dr. Alen Salerian, Dr. Robert Morningstar, Greg Burnham, Larry Rivera and other prominent JFK researchers. It concerns the throat shot and the location from which it was taken.
Jim, you just have to think. You know that Oswald as lone gunman from the rear was not a modifiable story. Therefore, why were they shooting JFK from the front at all?
It must be that they decided, in advance, to claim that the hole they were making in his neck was an exit wound.
They knew what the finding was going to be for the back shot: a shallow entrance wound with no exit and no bullet. Well, bullets don't vanish within the body, and they don't stop short the way that one did. But, if they made a hole in his neck, they could claim that the back bullet went through him. And with that, the lone gunman would be intact.
Now, if you say I'm wrong about that, then what you've got is a bunch of guys who were going to claim there was a lone gunman from the rear, even though there was a shot from the front. In other words, you've got lunacy.
The men who did this, I'm not saying they were smart, but they weren't out of touch with reality.
So, the precise location of that throat wound was not an accident. It had to be connectable to the back wound. They weren't planning in advance to say that it went through Connally too. They weren't planning to hit Connally. That was a blunder. But, they were planning in advance to say that it went through Kennedy.
All that has to be true for the lone gunman scenario to work. So, if you're wondering how a shot from the front was going to be integrated in a lone gunman scenario, that's how.
And that's why your theory that Kennedy was shot in the throat from a cubby hole between Main and Commerce at the Triple Underpass can't be true. It would be like trying to hit a quarter from there.
That throat shot was, first of all, deliberate. It's not like they were aiming for his head or his heart. It wasn't a kill shot. It was for show. It was to hide what they did in his back, which was place an ice bullet there which dissolved.
And there was no bullet in his neck. Nobody tampered with him between Elm Street and Parkland. But, when they got to Parkland, Dr. Perry could find no bullet, and he searched for it. He cut the strap muscles just in looking for it. But, there was no bullet there.
So, that throat bullet, like the back bullet, must have dissolved. I'm not saying it was made of ice like the back bullet. But, I am saying it was made of some material that would dissolve on penetration.
So, this was a shot that required pin-point accuracy. The limo had to be stopped or going extremely slowly. And it was taken from the north side of Elm. How do I know that? Because the missile entered in the center of his neck and caused deviation of the trachea to the left. So, the missile was traveling diagonally, from northwest of Kennedy to southeast of him. That trajectory would result in the damage found. So, what is depicted below can't possibly be true.
For a shot from that side to damage the left tracheal rings, the missile would have had to enter on the left side of his neck. It didn't. It entered in the center, and then went on to damage the left tracheal rings. Therefore, it had to be taken from the north side of Elm.
If it wasn't taken by Umbrella Man, then it was taken by someone else on the north side of Elm. But, I think it was taken by Umbrella Man. Because: if it wasn't, then, by coincidence, you've got a guy with an umbrella on a warm sunny day and the indisputable fact that the CIA paid a guy to develop an umbrella gun.
Jim, read this CIA document that was declassified in 2012.
It says that the SOD, the Special Operations Division at Fort Detrick assisted the CIA in developing biological agents for CIA use. It included darts with biological agents that were incapacitating. But, in this case, all they really needed was the hole. JFK was already incapacitated by the back shot.
Now, here is the testimony of Charles Senseney to the Church Committee:
He said that, at the time, he worked for Edgewood Arsenal. Do you know what that was? You know about Operation Paperclip, right? After World War 2, the harvesting of Nazi scientists. The largest number were rocket scientists, including the guy who went on to become the head of NASA, Warhner von Braun. But, the second largest contingent were the chemical weapons engineers, and Edgewood Arsenal was set up as a place for them to work.
Senseney was questioned, at length, by Walter Mondale. Mondale was mostly interested in the poisons that were involved, But, Senseney kept saying that that was not his department, that he was involved in the development of the delivery system, the hardware, which was called the M1. He said that "the M1 projectile could be fired from a cane, also an umbrella."
Now Jim: we had this weird situation of a guy having an umbrella out on a warm, sunny day, and we also know that an umbrella weapon was definitely created. It would be a strange coincidence if those two things weren't related.
This is going to come as a disappointment to Dr. Salerian, but Senseney said on page 169 that shellfish toxin could not be used with the M1, which was the weapon system for canes, umbrellas, etc. But, it doesn't matter. The back shot was the shot that delivered poison to Kennedy. The throat shot didn't have to poison him because he was already poisoned. The throat shot created the exit wound for the back shot. That was its main purpose and perhaps its only purpose. It may not have contained any agent at all. It's only purpose may have been to just put a hole in him.
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