E. Howard Hunt
speaks before Watergate Senate Investigating Committee
in 1973.
Frank Sturgis in
1977.
E. Howard Hunt and Frank Sturgis
Were Watergate Conspirators Also JFK
Assassins?
Howard Hunt and Frank
Sturgis became notorious in 1972 with the start of the Watergate
scandal. Both men plead guilty on a variety of charges in January of
1973.
Frank Sturgis was arrested by police at the Democratic party
headquarters on the sixth floor of Watergate. He was found with four
other men, wearing rubber surgical gloves, unarmed, and carrying
extensive photographic equipment and electronic surveillance devices. He
was officially charged with attempted burglary and attempted
interception of telephone and other conversations. Sturgis was also
apart of the Miami Cuban exile community and involved in various
"adventures" relating to Cuba which he believed were organized and
financed by the CIA.
E. Howard Hunt was one of the "plumbers" and a former White House aid
during the Watergate scandal. He was directly linked to Sturgis and the
other four men that broke into Watergate. He was charged with burglary,
conspiracy, and wiretapping. He served 33 months. Hunt was also a former
employee of the CIA, serving from 1949-1970. He typically performed work
relating to propaganda operations in foreign countries.
To say this punched all kinds of buttons among JFK
conspiracy theorists would be an understatement.
In no time flat the theorists concluded that Hunt and Sturgis were
involved in the death of JFK. It was claimed that they were two of the
three tramps photographed on the day of the assassination. By 1974, when
the
Rockefeller Commission was established to investigate the domestic
activities of the CIA, Hunt and Sturgis were chief suspects in the
assassination of John F. Kennedy. The following section from the
Report to the President by the Commission on CIA Activities Within the
United States outlines the Commission's conclusions.
Chapter 19
Allegations Concerning the Assassination of
President Kennedy
Allegations have been made that the CIA participated in the
assassination of President John F. Kennedy in Dallas, Texas, on November
22, 1963. Two different theories have been advanced in support of those
allegations. One theory is that E. Howard Hunt and Frank Sturgis, on
behalf of the CIA, personally participated in the assassination. The
other is that the CIA had connections with Lee Harvey Oswald or Jack
Ruby, or both of them, and that those connections somehow led to the
assassination. The Commission staff has investigated these allegations.
Neither the staff nor the Commission undertook a full review of the
Report of the Warren Commission. Such a task would have been outside the
scope of the Executive Order establishing this Commission, and would
have diverted the time of the Commission from its proper function. The
investigation was limited to determining whether there was any credible
evidence pointing to CIA involvement in the assassination of President
Kennedy.
A. The Theory That Hunt and Sturgis
Participated in the Assassination
The first of the theories involves charges that E. Howard Hunt and Frank
Sturgis, both convicted of burglarizing the Democratic National
Committee headquarters at the Watergate in 1972, were CIA employees or
agents at the time of the assassination of the President in 1963. It is
further alleged that they were together in Dallas on the day of the
assassination and that shortly after the assassination they were found
in a railroad boxcar situated behind the "grassy knoll," an area located
to the right front of the Presidential car at the time of the
assassination.
Under this theory, Hunt and Sturgis were allegedly in Dallas on
November 22, 1963, and were taken into custody by the police, but were
mysteriously released without being booked, photographed or
fingerprinted by the police-although they were allegedly photographed by
press photographers while they were being accompanied to the Dallas
County Sheriff's office.
It is further contended that the persons shown in these press
photographs bear "striking resemblances" to photographs taken of Hunt
and Sturgis in 1972. Portions of two amateur motion picture films of the
assassination (Zapruder and Nix) are alleged to reveal the presence of
several riflemen in the area of the grassy knoll.
The Hunt-Sturgis theory also rests on the assumption that at least
one of the shots that struck President Kennedy was fired from the area
of the grassy knoll, where Hunt and Sturgis were alleged to be present.
The direction from which the shots came is claimed to be shown by the
backward and leftward movement of President Kennedy's body almost
immediately after being struck by that bullet. Taken together, these
purported facts are cited as the basis for a possible conclusion that
CIA personal participated in the assassination of President Kennedy,
and, at least inferentially, that the CIA itself was involved.
The Commission staff investigated the several elements of this theory
to the extent deemed necessary to assess fairly the allegation of CIA
participation in the assassination. The findings of that investigation
follow.
Findings
1. The Allegation that Hunt and Sturgis
Were CIA Employees or Agents in 1963
E. Howard Hunt was an employee of the CIA in November 1963. He had been
an employee of the CIA for many years before that, and he continued to
be associated with the CIA until his retirement in 1970. Throughout 1963
he was assigned to duty in Washington, D.C., performing work relating to
propaganda operations in foreign countries. His duties included travel
to several other cities in the United States, but not to any place in
the South or Southwest. He lived with his family in the Washington,
D.C., metropolitan area throughout that year, and his children attended
school there.
Frank Sturgis was not an employee or agent of the CIA either in 1963
or at any other time. He so testified under oath himself, and a search
of CIA records failed to discover any evidence that he had ever been
employed by the CIA or had ever served it as an agent, informant or
other operative. Sturgis testified that he had been engaged in various
"adventures" relating to Cuba which he believed to have been organized
and financed by the CIA. He testified that he had given information,
directly and indirectly, to federal government officials, who, he
believed, were acting for the CIA. He further testified, however, that
at no time did he engage in any activity having to do with the
assassination of President Kennedy, on behalf of the CIA or otherwise.
2. The Allegation That Hunt and Sturgis
Were Together in Dallas on the Day of the Assassination
Hunt and Sturgis testified under oath to members of the Commission
staff. They both denied that they were in Dallas on the day of the
assassination. Hunt testified that he was in the Washington, D.C.,
metropolitan area throughout that day, and his testimony was supported
by two of his children(1)
and a former domestic employee of the Hunt family. Sturgis testified
that he was in Miami, Florida, throughout the day of the assassination,
and his testimony was supported by that of his wife and a nephew of his
wife. The nephew, who was then living with the Sturgis family, is now a
practicing attorney in the Midwest.
With the exception of the domestic employee of the Hunt family, all
witnesses directly supporting the presence of Hunt and Sturgis in
Washington, D.C., and Miami, Florida, on the day of the assassination
are family members or relatives. Less weight can be assigned to the
testimony of such interested witnesses if there is substantial evidence
to the contrary. In the absence of substantial conflicting evidence,
however, the testimony of family members cannot be disregarded.
Hunt testifies that he had never met Frank Sturgis before they were
introduced by Bernard Barker in Miami in 1972. Sturgis testified to the
same effect, except that he did not recall whether the introduction had
taken place in late 1971 or early 1972. Sturgis further testified that
while he had often heard of "Eduardo," a CIA political officer who had
been active in the work of the Cuban Revolutionary Council in Miami
prior to the Bay of Pigs operation in April 1961, he had never met him
and did not know until 1971 or 1972 that "Eduardo" was E. Howard Hunt.
Sturgis had also been active in anti-Castro groups, in the Miami area
before, during and after Hunt's assignment on the political aspects of
the Bay of Pigs project in 1960 and early 1961.
Other testimony linked Hunt to Sturgis at a date earlier than 1971.
One witness asserted that Sturgis is a pseudonym; that his name is Frank
Fiorini; and that lie took the name Sturgis from a fictional character
(Hank Sturgis) in a novel written by Hunt in 1949. (Bimini Run).
Sturgis testified that his name at birth was Frank Angelo Fiorini; that
his mother's maiden name was Mary Vona; that his father's name was
Angelo Anthony Fiorini; that his parents were divorced when he was a
child; that his mother subsequently remarried a man named Ralph Sturgis;
and that at his mother's urging he legally changed his name in Norfolk,
Virginia, sometime in the 1950's, to take the last name of his
stepfather.
A search of the relevant court records disclosed that a petition was
filed on September 23, 1952, in the Circuit Court of the City of Norfolk
(Virginia) pursuant to which a Frank Angelo Fiorino petitioned to change
his name to Frank Anthony Sturgis. The petition recited that his mother
had divorced his father about 15 years previously and had married one
Ralph Sturgis, that he had been living with his mother all of his life,
that his mother was known as Mary Sturgis, and that his stepfather also
desired him to change his name to Sturgis. An order of the Court was
entered on September 23, 1952 (the same date as the petition) changing
his name to Frank Anthony Sturgis. The order appears in the records of
the Circuit Court of the City of Norfolk, Virginia. In the petition and
the order relating to the change of name, Fiorini was misspelled
as Fiorino.
In the light of this documentary evidence, no weight can be given to
the claim that Sturgis took his present name from a character in a Hunt
novel-or that the name change was associated in any way with Sturgis'
knowing Hunt before 1971 or 1972.
The personnel, payroll and travel records of the CIA were checked
with respect to E. Howard Hunt. Daily attendance records for the period
are no longer available because they are destroyed in the ordinary
course of the Agency's records disposal system three years after
completion of the audit for each year. What records remain, including
annual leave, sick leave, and travel records, disclose that Hunt had no
out-of-town travel associated with his employment in the month of
November 1963. He used no annual leave and eleven hours of sick leave in
the two-week pay period ending November 23, 1963. The exact date or
dates on which the sick leave was taken could not be ascertained. There
is some indication, however, that some of these eleven hours of sick
leave may have been taken by Hunt on November 22, 1963. He testified
that, on the afternoon of that day, he was in the company of his wife
and family in the Washington, D.C., area, rather than at his employment
duties. That was a Friday, and therefore a working day for employees at
the CIA. Hunt could not recall whether he was on duty with the CIA on
the morning of that day.
Because Sturgis was never an agent or employee of the CIA, the Agency
has no personnel, payroll, leave or travel records relating to him.
"No
credible evidence was found which would contradict their
testimony that they were in Washington, D.C. [Hunt], and Miami,
Florida [Sturgis], respectively."
In examining the charge that Hunt and Sturgis were together in Dallas
on the day of the assassination, the investigators were handicapped by
the fact that the allegation was first made in 1974, more than ten years
after the assassination. Evidence which might have been available at an
earlier time was no longer available. Contacts with relatives, friends,
neighbors or fellow employees (who might have known of the whereabouts
of Hunt and Sturgis on that particular day) could not be recalled. Some
of these persons are now dead. Finally, records which might have been
the source of relevant information no longer exist.
It cannot be determined with certainty where Hunt and Sturgis
actually were on the day of the assassination. However, no credible
evidence was found which would contradict their testimony that they were
in Washington, D.C., and Miami, Florida, respectively.
3. The Allegation That Hunt and Sturgis
Were Found Near the Scene of the Assassination and Taken to the Dallas
County Sheriff's Office
This allegation is based upon a purported resemblance between Hunt and
Sturgis, on the one hand, and two persons who were briefly taken into
custody in Dallas following the assassination.
The shooting of President Kennedy occurred at about 12:30 p.m.,
Dallas time, on November 22, 1963, while the Presidential motorcade was
passing Dealy Plaza as it headed generally westward on Elm Street.
Witnesses to the shooting gave the police varying accounts of where they
thought the shots had come from. On the basis of the sound of the shots,
some believed that they had come from the Texas School Book Depository
building (TSBD), which was behind and slightly to the right of President
Kennedy when he was hit. Others thought the shots had come from the
other directions. Law enforcement officials understandably conducted a
widespread search for evidence relating to the assassination.
Several hours after the shooting, officers of the Dallas Police
Department checked all railroad freight cars situated on tracks anywhere
in the vicinity of Dealey Plaza. About six or eight persons, referred to
as "derelicts," were found in or near the freight cars. These persons
were taken either to the nearby Dallas County Sheriff's office, or to
the Dallas Police Department, for questioning. All were released without
any arrest record being made, or any fingerprinting or photographing
being done by the authorities.
Among the six or eight "derelicts" found in the vicinity of the
freight cars were three men who, according to the arresting officers,
were found in a boxcar about one-half mile south of the scene of
the assassination. They were taken to the Sheriff's office by the Dallas
police officers,who walked northward along the railroad tracks to a
point west of the Texas School Book Depository, then north to Houston
Street and back south to the Sheriff's office. This somewhat circuitous
route was actually the most convenient one available, according to the
Dallas policemen. As the police and the "derelicts" passed the TSBD
building and headed for the Sheriff's office, they were photographed by
several press photographers on the scene. Copies of five of the
photographs showing the "derelicts" were submitted to the Commission's
staff as evidence.
A witness who volunteered his testimony stated on the basis of
hearsay that the three "derelicts" in question were found in a boxcar
situated to the near northwest of the assassination scene, which
would have been to the right front of the Presidential car at the time
of the shooting. Between the area in which that boxcar was claimed by
the witness to be located and that part of Elm Street where the
assassination occurred was a "grassy knoll."
It was alleged by other witnesses (who were associated with the first
witness and who also volunteered testimony) that a bullet fired from the
area of that "grassy knoll" struck President Kennedy in the head. It was
also claimed by the same witnesses that one of the three photographed
"derelicts" bears a "striking" facial resemblance to E. Howard Hunt and
that another bears a "striking" facial resemblance to Frank Sturgis.
Finally, it was alleged that if those two "derelicts" were, in fact,
Hunt and Sturgis, and if the President was in fact struck by a bullet
fired from his right front, the CIA would be shown to be implicated in
the killing of President Kennedy.
The photographs of the "derelicts" in Dallas have been compared with
numerous known photographs of Hunt and Sturgis taken both before and
after November 22, 1963. Even to non-experts it appeared that there was,
at best, only a superficial resemblance between the Dallas "derelicts"
and Hunt and Sturgis. The "derelict" allegedly resembling Hunt appeared
to be substantially older and smaller than Hunt. The "derelict"allegedly
resembling Sturgis appeared to be thinner than Sturgis and to have
facial features and hair markedly different from those of Sturgis.
The witnesses who testified to the "striking resemblance" between the
"derelicts" and Hunt and Sturgis were not shown to have any
qualifications in photo identification beyond that possessed by the
average layman. Their testimony appears to have been based on a
comparison of the 1963 photographs of the "derelicts" with a single 1972
photograph of Sturgis and two 1972 photographs of Hunt.
Over fifty photographs taken of Hunt and Sturgis both before and
after November 22, 1963, were submitted to the FBI photographic
laboratory for a comparison with all known photographs of the
"derelicts." (The FBI assembled a complete set of all photographs of the
"derelicts" taken by the three photographers known to have photographed
them.) The comparison was made by FBI Agent Lyndal L. Shaneyfelt, a
nationally-recognized expert in photo identification and photo analysis.
The report of Agent Shaneyfelt, embodied in a Report of the FBI
Laboratory, dated April 21, 1975, and signed by Clarence M. Kelley,
Director of the FBI, concluded that "neither F. Howard Hunt nor Frank
Sturgis appear as any of the three 'derelicts' arrested in Dallas,
Texas, as shown in the photographs submitted."
With respect to Hunt, it was found that he had a much younger
appearance, a smooth and tightly contoured chin, and a more angular or
pointed chin, compared with the "derelict" in question. The latter was
much older, had a chin with protruding pouches and a more bulbous nose.
With respect to Sturgis, even more distinguishing characteristics
were observed. Sturgis looked like a Latin, whereas the "derelict" had
the general appearance of a Nordic. Sturgis had very black, wavy
hair-and the "derelict" had light or blond hair and straighter hair.
Sturgis had a rather round face with square chin lines; the "derelict"
had an oval face with a more rounded chin. Sturgis and the "derelict"
had markedly different ratios between the length of their noses and the
height of their foreheads. They also had different ear and nose
contours.
Hunt is approximately five feet nine inches tall, and Sturgis is
approximately five feet eleven inches tall. The FBI laboratory made an
on site study in Dallas, using the camera with which the photographs of
the "derelicts" were originally taken; it concluded from the study that
the "derelict" allegedly resembling Hunt was about five feet, seven
inches tall, and that the "derelict" allegedly resembling Sturgis was
about six feet two inches tall, with a one inch margin of error in each
direction. The difference of height between the height of the two
"derelicts" was therefore about seven inches, while the difference
between Hunt's height and that of Sturgis is only about two inches.
The photographs of the "derelicts" on Dallas have been displayed in
various newspapers in the United States, on national television
programs, and in the April 28, 1975, issue of Newsweek magazine.
But no witnesses have provided testimony that either the "derelicts" was
personally known to be Hunt or Sturgis-and no qualified expert was
offered to make such an identification.
4. The Allegation That President Kennedy
Was Struck in the Head by a Bullet Fired From His Right Front
The witnesses who presented evidence they believed sufficient to
implicate the CIA in the assassination of President Kennedy placed much
stress upon the movements of the President's body associated with the
head wound that killed the President. Particular attention was called
the Zapruder film, and especially Frame 312 and the succeeding frames of
that film. It was urged that the movements of the President's head and
body immediately following the head wound evidenced in Frame 313
established that the President was struck by a bullet fired from the
right front of the Presidential car-the direction of the grassy knoll
and the freight car in which "Hunt" and "Sturgis" were allegedly found.
By Frame 312 of the Zapruder film, President Kennedy had already been
wounded by a bullet which had struck him in the region of his neck. His
body is shown to be facing generally toward the front of the
Presidential car. He is leaning toward the left. His head is turned
somewhat toward the left front, and it is facing downward toward the
floor in the rear portion of the car. His chin appears to be close to
his chest.
At Frame 313 of the Zapruder film, the President has been struck by
the bullet that killed him, and his head has moved forward noticeably.
At Frame 314 (which is about 1/18 of a second later) his head is already
moving backward. Succeeding frames of the film show a rapid backward
movement of the President's head and upper body, and at the same time
his head and body are shown to be turning toward his left. Still later
frames show the President's body collapsing onto the back seat of the
car.
The evidence presented to the Warren Commission revealed that the
speed of the Zapruder motion picture camera was 18.3 frames per second.
If the film is projected at that speed, the forward movement of the
President's head from Frame 312 to Frame 313 is not readily perceived.
On the other hand, such forward movement is evident upon careful
measurement of still projections of the relevant frames. It is very
short, both in distance and duration. The backward movement and the
turning of the President's head toward the left are rapid, pronounced
and readily apparent during a running of the film at either normal or
slow speed.
It was claimed that the movement of the President's head and body
backward and to the left is consistent only with a shot having come from
the right front of the Presidential car-that is, from the direction of
the grassy knoll.
Medical and ballistics experts were consulted. Also considered were
(1) the autopsy report on the body of President Kennedy, and (2) the
report of a panel of medical experts, who in February 1968, at the
request of Attorney General Ramsey Clark, reviewed the autopsy report
and the autopsy photographs, x-ray films, motion picture films of the
assassination, the clothing worn by President Kennedy and other relevant
materials.
The autopsy report of James J. Humes, M.D., J. Thornton Boswell,
M.D., and Pierre A. Finck, M.D., described the President's head wounds
as follows:
The fatal wound entered the skull above and to the right of the
external occipital protuberance. A portion of the projectile
traversed the cranial cavity in a posterior-anterior direction (see
lateral skull roentgenograms) depositing minute particles along its
path. A portion of the of the projectile made its exit through the
parietal bone on the right carrying with it portions of the
cerebrum, skull and scalp. The two wounds of the skull combined with
the force of the missile produced extensive fragmentation of the
skull, laceration of the superior sagittal sinus, and of the right
cerebral hemisphere.
In February 1968, a panel of physicians met in Washington, D.C., at the
request of Attorney General Ramsey Clark, to examine the autopsy report,
the autopsy photographs and x-rays, the Zapruder, Nix and Muchmore
motion picture films of the assassination, and various other evidence
pertaining to the death of President Kennedy. Each of the four
physicians constituting the panel had been nominated by a prominent
person who was not in the employment of the federal government. They
were:
William H. Carnes, M.D., Professor of Pathology, University of Utah,
Salt Lake City, Utah; Member of Medical Examiner's Commission, State
of Utah. Nominated by Dr. J. E. Wallace Sterling, President of
Stanford University.
Russel S. Fisher, M.D., Professor of Forensic Pathology,
University of Maryland; and Chief Medical Examiner of the State of
Maryland, Baltimore, Maryland. Nominated by Dr. Oscar B. Hunter,
Jr., President of the College of American Pathologists.
Russel H. Morgan, M.D., Professor of Radiology, School of
Medicine, and Professor of Radiological Science, School of Hygiene
and Public Health, The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore,
Maryland. Nominated by Dr. Lincoln Gordon, President of the Johns
Hopkins University.
Alan R. Moritz, M.D., Professor of Pathology, Case Western
Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio; and former President of
Forensic Medicine, Harvard University. Nominated by Dr. John A.
Hannah, President of Michigan State University.
After reviewing the autopsy photographs, and making their findings
concerning them, the Panel said in its report:
These findings indicate that the back of the head was struck by a
single bullet traveling at high velocity, the major portion of which
passed through the right cerebral hemisphere, and which produced an
explosive type of fragmentation of the skull and laceration of the
scalp. The appearance of the entrance wound in the scalp is
consistent with its having been produced by a bullet similar to that
of Exhibit CE 399.(2)
After a review of the autopsy x-rays, the Panel's report states:
The foregoing observations indicate that the decedent's head was
struck from behind by a single projectile. It entered the occipital
25 mm. to the right of the midline and 100 mm. above the external
occipital protuberance. The projectile fragmented on entering the
skull, one major section leaving a trail of fine metallic debris as
it passed forward and laterally to explosively fracture the right
frontal and parietal bones as it emerged from the head.
The Panel discussed its findings as follows:
The decedent was wounded by two bullets both of which entered his
body from behind.
One bullet struck the back of the decedent's head well above the
external occipital protuberance. Based upon the observation that he
was leaning forward with his head turned obliquely to the left when
this bullet struck, the photographs and x-rays indicate that it came
from a site above and slightly to his right.
The absence of metallic fragments in the left cerebral hemisphere
or below the level of the frontal fosse on the right side together
with the absence of any holes in the skull to the left of the
midline or in its base and the absence of any penetrating injury of
the left hemisphere eliminate with reasonable certainty the
possibility of a projectile having passed through the head in any
direction other than from back to front as described in preceding
sections of this report.
Certain other evidence relating to the source of the bullets that struck
President Kennedy was noted. This included the following:
a. The bullet fragments found in the Presidential car which were
large enough to bear ballistics marks were determined by the FBI to
have been fired by the Oswald rifle found on the sixth floor of the
Texas School Book Depository building, and not from any other
weapon. CE 399 was also fired from that rifle.
b. No physical evidence, such as a rifle, shell casings, bullets,
or damage to the Presidential car, was ever found which would
support a theory that one or more shots were fired from a direction
other than from behind and above the President.
c. Most eyewitnesses testified that three shots were fired. Three
shell casings were found near the window at the southeast corner of
the sixth floor of the Texas School Book Depository building, and
all of them were determined by the FBI to have been fired by the
Oswald rifle to the exclusion of any other weapon. That window was
also the one in which a man firing a rifle was seen by witnesses who
testified before the Warren Commission. The Oswald rifle was found
on the sixth floor of the TSBD building within an hour after the
assassination.
d. No witness at the scene was found who saw any other assassin,
or who saw anyone firing, or disposing of a weapon in any other
location, or heard the bolt of a rifle being operated at any other
location. Three TSBD employees testified before the Warren
Commission that they had been watching that motorcade from open
windows near the southeast corner of the fifth floor of the TSBD
building. One of them testified that he heard not only the three
shots, but also the sound above him of a rifle bolt in action and
that sound of empty shells hitting the floor. All three of them
testified that "debris" fell down from above them at the time of the
shots, and that they talked to each other at that time about the
shots having come from above them.
e. A shot fired from the direct front of the Presidential car can
be ruled out. Such a bullet would have had to pass through the
windshield of the car unless fired from above the overpass just
ahead of the Presidential car. There were no holes in the
windshield, and the overpass was guarded by two policemen in the
presence of some fifteen railroad employees. None of them saw or
heard any shooting take place from the overpass.
Nonetheless, a re-examination was made of the question whether the
movements of the President's head and body following the fatal shot are
consistent with the President being struck from (a) the rear, (b) the
right front, or (c) both the rear and the right front. The Zapruder, Nix
and Muchmore films, a set of all relevant color slides of the Zapruder
film, the autopsy photographs and x-rays, the President's clothing and
back brace, the bullet and bullet fragments recovered, and various other
materials, were reviewed at the request of the Commission staff by a
panel of experts consisting of:
Lieutenant Colonel Robert R. McMeekin, MC, USA; Chief, Division of
Aerospace Pathology, Armed Forces Institute of Pathology,
Washington, D.C.
Richard Lindenberg, M.D., Director of Neuropathology & Legal
Medicine, Department of Mental Health, State of Maryland, Baltimore,
Maryland.
Werner U. Spitz, M.D., Chief Medical Examiner, Wayne County,
Detroit, Michigan.
Fred J. Hodges III, M.D., Professor of Radiology, The Johns
Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland.
Alfred G. Olivier, V.M.D., Director, Department of Biophysics,
Biomedical Laboratories, Edgewood Arsenal, Aberdeen Proving Grounds,
Maryland.(3)
"They were unanimous in finding that the President was struck by
only two bullets, both of which were fired from the rear, and
that there is no medical evidence to support a contention that
the President was struck by any bullet coming from any other
direction."
The Panel members separately submitted their respective conclusions.
They were unanimous in finding that the President was struck by only two
bullets, both of which were fired from the rear, and that there is no
medical evidence to support a contention that the President was struck
by any bullet coming from any other direction.
They were also unanimous in finding that the violent backward and
leftward motion of the President's upper body following the head shot
was not caused by the impact of a bullet coming from the front or right
front.
Drs. Spitz, Lindenberg and Hodges reported that such a motion would
be caused by a violent straightening and stiffening of the entire body
as a result of a seizure-like neuromuscular reaction to major damage
inflicted to nerve centers in the brain.
Dr. Olivier reported that experiments which have been conducted at
Edgewood Arsenal disclosed that goats shot through the brain evidenced
just such a violent neuromuscular reaction. There was a convulsive
stiffening and extension of their legs to front and rear, commencing
forty milliseconds (1/25 of a second) after the bullet entered the
brain. In the past two decades, Dr. Olivier and his associates have
conducted extensive tests on the effects of high velocity bullets fired
into live animals, using high speed photography to record the results.
Dr. Olivier reported that the violent motions of the President's body
following the head shot could not possibly have been caused by the
impact of the bullet. He attributed the popular misconception on
this subject to the dramatic effects employed in television and motion
picture productions. The impact of such a bullet, he explained,
can cause some immediate movement of the head in the direction of
the bullet, but it would not produce any significant movement of the
body. He also explained that a head wound such as that sustained by
President Kennedy produces an "explosion" of tissue at the area where
the bullet exits from the head, causing a "jet effect" which almost
instantly moves the head back in the direction from which the bullet
came.
Drs. Olivier and McMeekin, utilizing enlargement of the film and an
accurate measuring device, made measurements of the movement of the
President's head associated with the head shot. They found that in the
interval between Zapruder Frames 312 and 313, the President's head moved
forward significantly; at Frame 314 (1/18 of a second later) it was
already moving backward and it continued to move backward in succeeding
frames.
Dr. Olivier was of the opinion that the start of the backward
movement resulted from both a neuromuscular reaction and a "jet effect"
from the explosion at the right front of the head where the bullet
exited. Thereafter, the violent backward and leftward movement of the
upper body, he believes, was a continuing result of the neuromuscular
reaction. Dr. McMeekin's report to the Commission contained no reference
to the subject of a "jet effect."
Dr. Olivier credited Dr. Luis Alvarez with originating studies into
the "jet effect" produced by high velocity bullets fired into the head.
Dr. Alvarez is a Nobel Prize-winning physicist at the Lawrence Berkeley
Laboratories, University of California at Berkeley. An article
describing his experiments is soon to be published.
Dr. John K. Lattimer of New York and Dr. Cyril H. Wecht of Pittsburgh
were also interviewed. Each of them has studied in detail the autopsy
photographs, x-rays, and other materials, as well as the motion pictures
of the assassination, and has published the results of his findings.
Dr. Lattimer testified that there was no medical evidence to support
a theory that the President had been hit by a bullet from any direction
other than from the rear and above. The medical evidence showed that the
President had not been hit from the front or right front. Had a second
and nearly simultaneous bullet from the front or right front hit the
President's head after Frame 313 of the Zapruder film, it would either
have encountered no skull (in which case it would have passed through
the brain and exited elsewhere) or it would have struck the skull. In
either case, it would have left evidence which would be revealed by the
autopsy photographs and x-rays.
Dr. Lattimer also testified that he has performed experiments to test
both the damage effects of a bullet fired into the rear of the head (in
the precise area where the President was hit) and the principle of the
"jet effect." He utilized a Mannlicer-Carcano 6.5 millimeter rifle of
the same model as the one found by the Warren Commission to belong to
Lee Harvey Oswald, and ammunition from the same manufacturer and lot
number as that found to have been used by Oswald. The results, he said,
confirmed both the head injuries shown in the autopsy photographs and
x-rays and the principle of the "jet effect." Dr. Lattimer presented to
the Commission staff as evidence a motion picture film and still
photographs showing the results of his experiments.
Dr. Wecht testified that the available evidence all points to the
President being struck only by two bullets coming from his rear, and
that no support can be found for theories which postulate gunmen to the
front or right front of the Presidential car.
In a 1974 article written by Dr. Wecht and an associate, an article
which was made an exhibit in his testimony, Dr. Wecht stated that "if
any other bullet struck the President's head, whether before, after, or
simultaneously with the known shot, there is no evidence for it in the
available autopsy materials." He testified that on the autopsy
photographs of the back of the President's head, there was something
above the hair line which he could not identify at all, and he thought
it was possible that this was an exit wound. He stated that the other
autopsy photographs and the autopsy x-rays provided no support to that
possibility, but he thought it was possible that the physicians who
performed the autopsy could had have missed finding such a wound.
Dr. Wecht said that there was some question about the backward and
leftward movement of the President's head and upper body after Frame
313, but he also said that a neuromuscular reaction could occur within
about one-tenth of a second.
The Commission staff also interviewed by telephone Dr. E. Forrest
Chapman of Michigan, the only other physician who is known to have
studied the autopsy photographs and x-rays. Dr. Chapman declared that if
there were any assassins firing at the President from the grassy knoll,
"they must have been poor shots because they didn't hit anything."
No witness who urged the view that the Zapruder and other motion
picture films proved that President Kennedy was struck by a bullet fired
from his right front was shown to possess any professional or other
special qualifications on the subject.
On the basis of the investigation conducted by its staff, the
Commission believes that there is no evidence to support the claim that
President Kennedy was struck by a bullet fired either from the grassy
knoll or any other position to his front, right front, or right side,
and that the motions of the President's head and body, following the
shot that struck him in the head, are fully consistent with that shot
having come from a point to his rear, above him and slightly to his
right.
5. The Allegation That Assassins (Allegedly
Including "Hunt" and "Sturgis") Are Revealed by the Zapruder and Nix
Films To be Present in the Area of the Grassy Knoll
In further support of his contention that shots were fired at President
Kennedy from the grassy knoll--and inferentially by "Hunt" and
"Sturgis"--a witness called attention to certain frames of motion
picture films taken at the time of that assassination. He asserted that
these frames, including Frames 413 and 454-478 of the Zapruder film,
reveal the presence of other "assassins" bearing rifles in the area of
the grassy knoll.
The Zapruder and Nix films have been carefully reviewed. Frames
alleged to reveal the presence of assassins in the area of the grassy
knoll have been received particularly close attention, together with
those frames immediately preceding them and immediately following them.
In addition, the Commission has had the benefit of a study of these
films by the photographic laboratory of the FBI, and a report on that
study.
"The
Commission staff members who reviewed the films were of the
opinion that the images allegedly representing assassins are far
too vague to be identifiable even as human beings. . .The
conclusion was that the alleged assassin's head was merely the
momentary image produced by sunlight, shadows, and leaves within
or beyond the foliage."
The Commission staff members who reviewed the films were of the
opinion that the images allegedly representing assassins are far too
vague to be identifiable even as human beings. For example, Zapruder
Frames 412, 413, and 414, which have tree foliage in the foreground,
show combinations of light and shadow along their lower margins which
are varyingly shaped somewhat in the form of a rain hat or a German army
helmet of World War II vintage. In Frames 411 and 415, however, the
contours of the shadows are markedly different and bear no resemblance
to a human head--with or without a rain hat or helmet.
Since each frame of the film is only about 1/18 of a second removed
in time from its adjacent frame, it was not believed reasonable to
postulate that an assassin's head would come into view, and then
disappear, directly in front of the Zapruder camera, in the space about
¼ of a second (the elapsed time between Frames 411 and 415), or that the
shape of a head would change so rapidly and markedly.
The conclusion was that the alleged assassin's head was merely the
momentary image produced by sunlight, shadows, and leaves within or
beyond the foliage. The same was true of the "rifle" allegedly in
evidence in Frame 413. Even to make out the rough image of a rifle in
that frame required imagination--and in the adjacent frames, it is
nowhere in evidence.
From the extensive photographic work done in connection with the
Warren Commission investigation, the FBI has a substantial library of
both its own photographs and copies of the photographs and motion
pictures of others taken at the assassination scene.
The place where Abraham Zapruder was standing when he took his famous
motion picture has been established. (He was standing on a concrete wall
elevated approximately four feet, two inches above the ground to his
front.) Based upon an analysis of the direction in which the Zapruder
camera was facing at Frame 413, the FBI Laboratory was able to identify
from other photographs the exact tree shown in that frame. With the aid
of reports from the FBI Laboratory, it was concluded that: (1) The tree
was between 6 feet and 6½ feet high; (2) it was barren of any branches
or leaves to a height about 4 feet high to 4½ feet wide; (3) its foliage
was about 2 feet high and 4 feet wide; (4) the near side of its foliage
was about five feet directly in front of Mr. Zapruder's legs; (5) its
trunk was only a few inches in diameter; (6) only the top of the tree
came within view of the Zapruder camera; (7) it was the only tree in the
immediate vicinity; (8) a human head (even without a helmet) 5 feet in
front of Mr. Zapruder would have occupied about one-half of the total
area of Frame 413 (many times as much as is occupied by the image of the
alleged assassin's head); and (9) it is not reasonable to postulate an
assassin in or behind that tree.
An assassin would be unlikely to hide himself behind the barren trunk
of a tree only a few inches in diameter, with only his head and
shoulders behind the foliage, and with his whole person almost within
arm's length in front of a spectator taking movies of the motorcade.
Neither would such an assassin go unseen and undiscovered, able to make
his escape over open ground with a rifle in hand, again unseen by anyone
among the numerous motorcade police, spectators and Secret Service
personnel present.
A clear photograph of the tree in question, taken on May 24, 1964
(about six months after the assassination), was made a part of the FBI
Laboratory Report. It was marked to show the place where Zapruder was
standing as he took his motion picture.
The FBI photography laboratory was also able to identify the tree in
question on some of the frames of the Nix film, which was also being
taken at the time of the assassination. An examination of those frames
of the Nix film reveals that there was nobody in or behind that tree.
Also made a part of the FBI Laboratory Report was a series of frames
from the Nix film, with the tree in question, Mr. Zapruder, and the
alleged positions of "assassins" separately marked.
A similar examination was made by the FBI photography laboratory of
other frames of the Zapruder and Nix films alleged to reveal assassins
in the area of the grassy knoll. Frames 454 through 478 of the Zapruder
film were found to reveal no formation "identifiable as a human being or
an assassin with a rifle or other weapon." With respect to the Nix film,
the FBI reported that "no figure of a human could be found in the area"
of another alleged rifleman, which was determined to be "approximately
nineteen feet to the right of where Mr. Zapruder was standing and
clearly visible to him." The FBI concluded that the configuration
described as a rifleman was actually produced by some "clump type
shrubbery" in the background.
On the basis of its staff investigation, the Commission believes that
there is no credible basis in fact for the claim that any of the known
motion pictures relating to the assassination of President Kennedy
reveals that presence of an assassin or assassins in the area of the
grassy knoll.
B. The Theory That the CIA Had Relationships
With Lee Harvey Oswald and Jack Ruby
The second theory advanced in support of allegations of CIA
participation in the assassination of President Kennedy is that various
links existed between the CIA, Oswald and Ruby. Lee Harvey Oswald was
found by the Warren Commission to be the person who assassinated the
President. Jack Ruby shot and killed Oswald two days after the
President's assassination.
There is no credible evidence that either Lee Harvey Oswald or Jack
Ruby was ever employed by the CIA or ever acted for the CIA in any
capacity whatever, either directly or indirectly.
Testimony was offered purporting to show CIA relationships with
Oswald and Ruby. It was stated, for example, the E. Howard Hunt, as an
employee of the CIA, engaged in political activity with elements of the
anti-Castro Cuban community in the United States on behalf of the CIA
prior to the Bay of Pigs operation in April 1961. In connection with
those duties, it was further alleged that Hunt was instrumental in
organizing the Cuban Revolutionary Council and that the Cuban
Revolutionary Council had an office in New Orleans. Finally, it was
claimed that Lee Harvey Oswald lived in New Orleans from April to
September 1963, and that a pamphlet prepared and distributed by Oswald
on behalf of the Fair Play for Cuba Committee during that period
indicated that the office of the Fair Play for Cuba Committee was
situated in building which was also the address of the New Orleans
office of the Cuban Revolutionary Council.(4)
It was therefore implied that Hunt could have had contact with
Lee Harvey Oswald in New Orleans during the spring or summer of 1963. No
evidence was presented that Hunt ever met Oswald, or that he was ever in
New Orleans in 1963, or that he had any contact with any New Orleans
office of the Cuban Revolutionary Council.
Hunt's employment record with the CIA indicated that he had no duties
involving contacts with Cuban exile elements or organizations inside or
outside the United States after the early months of 1961. This was more
that two years before Oswald went to New Orleans in April 1963 and more
than a year before Oswald returned to the United States from the Soviet
Union, where he had lived for almost three years.
An example of the testimony relating to an alleged relationship
between the CIA and Jack Ruby consisted of a statement that Frank
Sturgis was engaged in a series of revolutionary activities among Cuban
exiles in the United States in the 1950's and 1960's and that the CIA
also sponsored and organized anti-Castro activities among Cuban exiles
in the United States in 1959 and the early 1960's.
It was further stated that someone once reported to the FBI that Jack
Ruby had engaged in supplying arms to persons in Cuba in the early
1950's in association with a former Cuban President, Carlos Prio, and
that Frank Sturgis also had connections with Carlos Prio during the
1950's and 1960's.
In addition, it was alleged that Frank Sturgis was at one time
(before he escaped from Cuba in June 1959) a director of gambling and
gaming establishments in Havana for the Castro government, and that in
August or September, 1959, Jack Ruby made a trip to Havana at the
invitation of a friend who had interests in gambling establishments in
Cuba and the United States.
Moreover, both Sturgis and Ruby were alleged to have had connections
with underground figures who had interests in the United States and
Cuba.
From this group of allegations, the witness inferred that Sturgis and
Ruby could have met and known each other--although no actual
evidence was presented to show that Ruby or Sturgis ever met each other.
Even if the individual items contained in the foregoing recitations
were assumed to be true, it was concluded that the inferences drawn must
be considered farfetched speculation insofar as they purport to show a
connection between the CIA and either Oswald or Ruby.
Even in absence of denials by living persons that such a connection
existed, no weight could be assigned to such testimony. Moreover,
Sturgis was never an employee or agent of the CIA.
A witness, a telephone caller, and a mail correspondent tendered
additional information of the same nature. None of it was more than a
strained effort to draw inferences of conspiracy from the facts which
would not fairly support the inferences. A CIA involvement in the
assassination was implied by the witness, for example, from the fact
that the Mayor of Dallas at that time was a brother of a CIA official
who had been involved in the planning of the Bay of Pigs operation in
Cuba several years previously, and from the fact that President Kennedy
reportedly blamed the CIA for the Bay of Pigs failure.
The same witness testified that E. Howard Hunt was Acting Chief of a
CIA station in Mexico City in 1963, implying that he could have
had contact with Oswald when Oswald visited Mexico City in September
1963. Hunt's service in Mexico City, however, was twelve years
earlier--in 1950 and 1951--and his only other CIA duty in Mexico covered
only a few weeks in 1960. At no time was he ever the Chief, or Acting
Chief, of a CIA station in Mexico City.
Hunt and Sturgis categorically denied that they had ever met or known
Oswald or Ruby. They further denied that they ever had any connection
whatever with either Oswald or Ruby.
Conclusions
Numerous allegations have been made that the CIA participated
in the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. The Commission staff
investigated these allegations. On the basis of the staff's
investigation, the Commission concluded there was no credible evidence
of any CIA involvement.
Magen Knuth did research and HTML coding for this web
page
1. A son who was nine years old at the time could not
recall whether his parents were present or absent that day ; the fourth
(and youngest) Hunt child was not born then. Mrs. Hunt is now deceased.
2. CE 399 was Warren Commission Exhibit 399, a nearly whole bullet
found in Parkland Memorial Hospital in Dallas on the day of the
assassination.. It was established by ballistics experts as having been
fired by the rifle found on the sixth floor of the TSBD building and
found by the Warren Commission to have belonged to Lee Harvey Oswald.
The Warren Commission determined that bullet passed through President
Kennedy's neck and then struck Governor Connally, who was sitting
directly in front of President Kennedy, and who was taken to Parkland
Hospital.
3. Dr. McMeekin is a forensic pathologist who has done extensive
studies in the field of accident reconstruction, utilizing
computer-assisted analysis of the reactions of human body components to
the application of various forces. Dr. Lindenberg is a prominent
authority in the field of neuropathology, i.e., the pathology of the
brain and nervous system. Dr. Spitz is a forensic pathologist who has
had extensive experience with gunshot wounds and is an editor of a
textbook on forensic pathology. Dr. Hodges is a specialist in radiology
and surgery associated with the brain and nervous system. In 1973-1974
he served as President of the American Society of Neuroradiology. Dr.
Olivier has conducted numerous experiments to study the effects on
animals and humans of penetrating wounds from high velocity bullets.
Drs. Spitz, Lindenberg, and Hodges hold faculty positions in the Medical
Schools of Wayne State University, the University of Maryland, and the
Johns Hopkins University, respectively.
4. Each of these statements is substantially true,
but many other relevant facts disclosed in the Warren Commission Report
are omitted. It is not mentioned, for example, that Oswald made up the
Fair Play for Cuba Committee pamphlets; that the address he stamped on
the pamphlets was never an office of that Committee; that he fabricated
a non-existent New Orleans Chapter of the Committee, a non-existent
President of that Committee, a non-existent office for it: that the
building in question was a former office, rather than a current
office, of an anti-Castro organization when Oswald made up his
pamphlets, and that Oswald had tried to infiltrate the anti-Castro
organization.
I WONDER IF THIS NOTE HAS ANYTHING TO DO WITH THE ASASSINATION? ? ?