Monday, February 16, 2026

 So, JFK was shot in the throat, and when he got to the hospital, the surgeon could find no bullet in his throat, and no exit wound for that shot. There is no chance that it was an exit wound. The wound had a diameter of 5 mm, and the Carcano bullet had a diameter of 6.5 mm. There are multiple and diverse reasons that it could not have been an exit wound, and I shan’t devote another second to it.

So, what does that compel us to believe? It compels me to believe that he must have been shot with a dissolvable missile. If you are just hearing that for the first time, I know it sounds farfetched, but you need to get over it because it is like an obligatory move in Chess- where you either make that move or you concede.

But, there is one more consideration. We can’t assume that they shot him in the throat by mistake. We can’t assume that they meant to shoot him in the face or in the chest. There is no basis to go there. Speculation is not unlimited. This isn’t Imagination Day at Kindergarten. Even speculations have to be tied to something concrete, and there is nothing to suggest that they were trying to shoot him in the face or chest.

And there is more. When your head is in its neutral position, the upper part of the throat is covered by the chin. So, it’s only the lower half of the throat that is exposed. So, place your index finger on your Adams Apple and your thumb on the suprasternal notch. Now, pull your hand out and look at the distance between the two. That was the size of the target.

I have some experience shooting, and it started in my youth. My father was a New York City policeman, and he had to go to the police range regularly and practice shooting. Sometimes, I would go with him. He was a very good shot; much better than me. But then again, I was 10 to 12 years old.

But, at what distance could someone reliably hit that tiny little target? And let’s assume it would have been a disaster for the perpetrators if JFK was shot in the face or in the chest. I say that that shot had to be taken at very close range.  The people who think it was taken from very far away and taken through curved glass are not being realistic.

I think it was taken by Umbrella Man, and we have something concrete to support it.  The mechanical engineer Charles Senseney testified to the Church Committee in 1975 that he was hired by the CIA to design an umbrella gun that would shoot dissolvable flechettes, which are darts. Here is the summary on Chat GPT:

Charles Senseney's Testimony to the Church Committee
Charles Senseney, a former CIA weapons developer, provided significant testimony during the Church Committee hearings in 1975. His statements focused on the CIA's involvement in covert operations, including the development of assassination tools.

Key Points from Senseney's Testimony

  • Umbrella Poison Dart Gun: Senseney revealed that he created a specialized weapon designed to deliver poison via a dart, which was intended for covert assassinations

 Now, let’s talk about Umbrella Man. He wound up right at the Kill Zone, and it wasn’t very big; it was very small. I would tell you that it started at the freeway sign and ended at Zapruder. Maybe 30 feet. What percent of the motorcade route was the Kill Zone? The motorcade route was 10 miles, so 52, 800 feet.  Divide that by 30 and you get 176. So, the Kill Zone was only 1/176 of the motorcade route, and Umbrella Man was there. Do you think that was an accident?

Many people have said that Umbrella Man was involved, but only as a spotter and signaler.  But, don’t you think they could have come up with a way to signal without being as ostentatious as waving an umbrella on a sunny day? There’s nothing subtle about that.

The authorities admitted that the limo was moving very slowly down Elm after it completed the turn from Houston. They have admitted that it was only going 11 mph. Do you realize how slow that is? The next time you’re driving, go to an empty parking lot and try driving 11 mph and see how it feels. I go to this park to walk, and it has a long entrance road to get to it. And because it goes by a school, they set the speed limit on this road to 15 mph.

So, you have to drive at 15 mph for a mile to get to the park. And it’s hard. It’s a struggle. So, imagine 11 mph. But wait: 11 is what they claim. It may have been slower than that. It may have been less than 10.

Jean Hill said that she spoke to JFK, saying, “Mr. President, look this way.  We want to take your picture.”  How fast could he have been moving when she said that. Even if he was going 10 mph, he would have passed her before she finished speaking. I think the limo either stopped completely or nearly did. I think it definitely slowed to less than 5 mph when it reached the Kill Zone.

So, Umbrella Man was standing there, at the cusp of the Kill Zone. JFK was approaching him. The limo was going extremely slowly. And JFK was turned towards him, Umbrella Man. And that may have been the spot that the limo stopped completely, just so Umbrella Man could get off that shot from very close range.

Umbrella Man is the one who shot JFK in the throat, and he wasn’t Stephen Louis Witt.



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